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Green party Leader Elizabeth May pleads guilty to contempt over pipeline protest

Kennedy Stewart and Elizabeth May hold a banner, blocking the entrance to the Kinder Morgan facility Friday afternoon.

 Kennedy Stewart and Elizabeth May hold a banner, blocking the entrance to the Kinder Morgan facility.Kennedy Stewart and Elizabeth May hold a banner, blocking the entrance to the Kinder Morgan facility Friday afternoon. Photograph By LAUREN BOOTHBY

Green party Leader Elizabeth May has pleaded guilty to a criminal contempt of court charge for violating an injunction at a Kinder Morgan work site in Burnaby, B.C.

May was arrested in March at a Trans Mountain pipeline terminal in Burnaby when she joined activists including New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart, who pleaded guilty to the same charge earlier this month.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Kenneth Affleck had imposed an injunction requiring protesters to stay at least five metres away from two work sites in Burnaby.

After her arrest, May said permits issued for the twinning of the existing Trans Mountain pipeline did not respect the rights of Indigenous people.

Dozens of people have been arrested for protesting against the project, which has been approved by the federal government.

May's lawyer, Alex Ejsmont, said his client apologizes for the harms her actions caused to the court and proposed a fine of $500, adding May entered an early guilty plea that indicates her remorse.

"She takes the position that non-violent civil disobedience has a place in a functioning democracy," he added.