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Posted December 07, 2016
North Dakota
Pipeline Protesters Vow to Stay Despite Victory
By James
MacPherson
Protesters
celebrated a major victory in their push to reroute the
Dakota Access oil pipeline away from a tribal water
source but pledged to remain camped on federal land in
North Dakota anyway, despite Monday’s government
deadline to leave.
Hundreds of
people at the Oceti Sakowin, or Seven Council Fires,
encampment cheered and chanted “mni wichoni” — “water is
life” in Lakota Sioux — after the Army Corps of
Engineers refused Sunday to grant the company permission
to extend the pipeline beneath a Missouri River
reservoir.
The Standing
Rock Sioux tribe and its supporters argue that extending
the project beneath Lake Oahe would threaten the tribe’s
water source and cultural sites. The segment is the last
major sticking point for the four-state, $3.8 billion
project.
“The whole
world is watching,” said Miles Allard, a member of the
Standing Rock Sioux. “I’m telling all our people to
stand up and not to leave until this is over.”
Despite the
deadline, authorities say they won’t forcibly remove the
protesters.
The company
constructing the pipeline, Dallas-based Energy Transfer
Partners, released a statement Sunday night slamming the
Army Corps’ decision as politically motivated and
alleging that President Barack Obama’s administration
was determined to delay the matter until he leaves
office.
“The White
House’s directive today to the Corps for further delay
is just the latest in a series of overt and transparent
political actions by an administration which has
abandoned the rule of law in favor of currying favor
with a narrow and extreme political constituency,” the
company said.
President-elect
Donald Trump, a pipeline supporter, will take office in
January, although it wasn’t immediately clear what steps
his administration would be able to take to reverse the
Army Corps’ latest decision or how quickly that could
happen.
That
uncertainty, Allard said, is part of the reason the
protesters won’t leave.
“We don’t know
what Trump is going to do,” Allard said.
Assistant
Secretary for Civil Works Jo-Ellen Darcy said in a news
release that her decision was based on the need to
consider alternative routes for the pipeline’s crossing.
Her full decision doesn’t rule out that it could cross
under the reservoir or north of Bismarck.
“Although we
have had continuing discussion and exchanges of new
information with the Standing Rock Sioux and Dakota
Access, it’s clear that there’s more work to do,” Darcy
said. “The best way to complete that work responsibly
and expeditiously is to explore alternate routes for the
pipeline crossing.”
North Dakota’s
leaders criticized the decision, with Gov. Jack
Dalrymple calling it a “serious mistake” that “prolongs
the dangerous situation” of having several hundred
protesters who are camped out on federal land during
cold, wintry weather. U.S. Rep. Kevin Cramer said it’s a
“very chilling signal” for the future of infrastructure
in the United States.
Attorney
General Loretta Lynch said Sunday that the Department of
Justice will “continue to monitor the situation” and
stands “ready to provide resources to help all those who
can play a constructive role in easing tensions.”
“The safety of
everyone in the area – law enforcement officers,
residents and protesters alike — continues to be our
foremost concern,” she added.
Carla Youngbear
of the Meskwaki Potawatomi tribe made her third trip
from central Kansas to be at the protest site.
“I have
grandchildren, and I’m going to have great
grandchildren,” she said. “They need water. Water is why
I’m here.”
Standing Rock
Sioux tribal chairman Dave Archambault didn’t respond to
messages seeking comment.
Morton County
Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier, whose department has done much
of the policing for the protests, said that “local law
enforcement does not have an opinion” on the easement
and that his department will continue to “enforce the
law.”
U.S. Secretary
for the Interior Sally Jewell said in a statement that
the Corps’ “thoughtful approach … ensures that there
will be an in-depth evaluation of alternative routes for
the pipeline and a closer look at potential impacts.”
Earlier Sunday,
an organizer with Veterans Stand for Standing Rock said
tribal elders had asked the military veterans not to
have confrontations with law enforcement officials,
adding the group is there to help out those who’ve dug
in against the project.
About 250
veterans gathered about a mile from the main camp for a
meeting with organizer Wes Clark Jr., the son of former
Democratic presidential candidate Gen. Wesley Clark. The
group had said about 2,000 veterans were coming, but it
wasn’t clear how many actually arrived.
“We have been
asked by the elders not to do direct action,” Wes Clark
Jr. said. He added that the National Guard and law
enforcement have armored vehicles and are armed,
warning: “If we come forward, they will attack us.”
Instead, he
told the veterans, “If you see someone who needs help,
help them out.”
Some veterans
will take part in a prayer ceremony Monday, during which
they’ll apologize for historical detrimental conduct by
the military toward Native Americans and ask for
forgiveness, Clark said. He also called the veterans’
presence “about right and wrong and peace and love.”
Authorities
moved a blockade from the north end of the Backwater
Bridge with the conditions that protesters stay south of
it and come there only if there is a prearranged
meeting. Authorities also asked protesters not to remove
barriers on the bridge, which they have said was damaged
in the late October conflict that led to several people
being hurt, including a serious arm injury.
“That heavy
presence is gone now and I really hope in this
de-escalation they’ll see that, and in good faith. the
leadership in those camps will start squashing the
violent factions,” Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney said
in a statement, reiterating that any violation will
“will result in their arrest.”
Steven Perry, a
66-year-old Vietnam veteran who’s a member of the Little
Traverse Bay band of Odawa Indians in Michigan, spoke of
one of the protesters’ main concerns: that the pipeline
could pollute drinking water. “This is not just a native
issue,” he said, “This is an issue for everyone.”
Associated
Press writers Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis and Jamie
Stengle in Dallas contributed to this report.
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