For the first time, a river is granted official rights and legal personhood in Canada 
By Alliance Muteshekau-shipu CA Source: newswire 2/23/2021

The Muteshekau-shipu Alliance today announced the granting of legal personhood to the Magpie River, through the adoption of two parallel resolutions by the Innu Council of Ekuanitshit and the Minganie Regional County Municipality (RCM). The river is thus assigned nine rights, as well as potential legal guardians responsible primarily for ensuring that these rights are respected. This is the first such case in Canada.

The announcement was made in partnership with the International Observatory on the Rights of Nature (IORN), based in Montreal, Canada, which drafted the resolutions in collaboration with the Alliance. The two resolutions, more than ten pages each and crammed with references, rest on multiple legal bases in national and international law and will help protect the river.
 

The initiative is part of a global movement – particularly active in New Zealand, the United States and Ecuador – to recognize the rights of Nature.

The Magpie River (Muteshekau-shipu in the Innu language) is an internationally renowned river nearly 300 km long. The river is recognized worldwide for its rapids and for whitewater expeditions, most notably by the prestigious National Geographic magazine, which ranked it among the top ten rivers in the world for whitewater rafting. The river's protection has received regional consensus, but the plan to declare the river a protected area has been thwarted for years by state-owned Hydro-Québec, due to the waterway's hydroelectric potential.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4201A Cruickshank River damn would help alleviate our drought issuescomoxvalleyrecord2019-05-30CA
4202Take a hike, see devastation in the Comox Lake watersheddecafnation2019-08-05CA
4203Angling For More Than A Fishcvcollective2021-04-18CA
4204Hooking into the Revelstoke fishing sceneRevelstoke Mountaineer Magazine2017-08-17CA
4205Proposed fish farm permits stall while EPA reviews environmental effectsnews-press2021-04-03US
4206Taiwan responds to NGO reports on forced labor within its fishing fleetseafoodsource2021-04-02TW
4207Salmon with sea lice pulled from storesUPI2012-10-22CA
4208Chesapeake Striped Bass Reproduction At Record Lowbaltimore2012-10-17US
4209Michigan Angler Catches Record-Breaking Great Lakes Muskiedetroit.cbslocal2012-10-20US
4210Mystery Florida eyeball is probably from '10ft swordfish', experts saytheguardian2012-10-12US
4211Rare Gold Saury Worth Weight in Actual Gold, Apparentlysoranews242012-10-05JP
4212Cub Scout catches 'monster' in Texas lakebeaumontenterprise2012-10-05US
4213Южнокорейские компании вложат 11,8 млрд руб. в создание рыбного порта в Приморьеinterfax2021-04-14RU
4214'Scolded us for being female': Woman says fishing trip prize taken away because she is a womanchron2021-03-30US
4215Incredible moment fishermen casually cast their lines out as dozens of frenzied sharks thrash in the shallows next to themdailymail2021-04-01UK
4216State scientists look to purge invasive goldfish from Maine watersbangordailynews2012-10-03IN
4217Wis. voters favor blocking of Asian carpUPI2012-10-02US
4218North Sea cod: Is it true there are only 100 left?BBC News2012-09-30CA
4219'Record-breaking' turbot caught off ShetlandBBC News2012-09-28UK
4220Judge lets fish farm activist off the hookctvnews2012-09-29CA
4221Preserving Old Female Cods Key To Population Conservation; 'Don't Seem To Have Aged Physiologically'Underwatertimes2012-09-26SW
4222Another giant sturgeon caught in Fraser RiverCBC News2012-09-26CA
4223Fisherman forced to throw back big tuna fishCBC News2012-09-20CA
4224Killing one fish species to preserve anothertheglobeandmail2012-09-20CA
4225Wallington man reels in 180lb albino fishyourlocalguardian2012-09-20UK

218 219 220 168 of [221 - pages.]