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British Columbia Premier David Eby’s government is expected to table legislation on Monday, April 20, 2026, to suspend core elements of the province’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA) for one year, independent First Nations sources and government confirmations say.
The proposed bill would also give cabinet the power to extend the suspension beyond one year.
The move follows a B.C. Court of Appeal ruling that the province’s mineral rules are “inconsistent” with DRIPA and Eby’s warning that the decision creates significant litigation risk by effectively requiring immediate implementation of the UN Declaration into provincial law.
The plan has drawn swift and united opposition from major Indigenous bodies — the First Nations Leadership Council, First Nations Summit, Union of BC Indian Chiefs and BC Assembly of First Nations — which have urged MLAs to reject the suspension and called emergency meetings.
The government’s one-seat majority (47 to 46) leaves the legislation’s fate uncertain; Indigenous NDP MLA Joan Phillip has indicated she cannot support the bill.
First Nations leaders warn that suspension could invite legal challenges and undermine reconciliation commitments.
🔗 Based On
GlobalNews: CanadaB.C. First Nations expect DRIPA suspension legislation this week
THE GLOBE AND MAILB.C. tabling legislation to suspend Indigenous law, sources say








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