芦Starlight Tour禄 : un p锚cheur micmac dit avoir 茅t茅 abandonn茅 sans bottes ni t茅l茅phone

One of the two Mi鈥檏maq fishers who reported being detained and dumped by federal fisheries officers hours from home in the middle of the night without footwear or phones says they walked for about six hours and feared they would die if they stopped. In this Thursday, April 16, 2020 photo, eel fishermen use dip nets while fishing by lantern light in Yarmouth, Maine. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Robert F. Bukaty

HALIFAX - Hours into a barefoot trek in the middle of the night along a highway in rural Nova Scotia, stranded without a phone, Mi鈥檏maq fisher Kevin Hartling says he and his friend felt that if they stopped walking they might die.

Hartling, who is from Membertou First Nation, and Blaise Sylliboy, from Eskasoni First Nation, say that last week they were detained by federal fisheries officers for fishing near Shelburne, N.S. The two men from Cape Breton say that at around 1 a.m., they were left at a gas station far from home without footwear or cellphones and ended up walking for about six hours before they used a borrowed phone to get through to a friend, who picked them up.

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