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Bakken
6/26/2016 9:14:14 PM
Bakken protest held in rural Boone County


The t-shirt of a Bakken pipeline protester.

A rural Boone County landowner hosted an event with the Bakken Pipeline Resistance Coalition today on his farm.

Dick Lamb says the farm has been in his family for three generations and they are not willing to voluntarily give an easement to Dakota Access to let the Bakken pipeline run under it.

“The particular focus for us today is slightly different than many other protests — this is about the landowners and particularly the use of eminent domain to acquire the land,” Lamb says.

Lamb and his wife Judy have joined other central Iowa landowners in a lawsuit against the Iowa Utilities Board and the board’s decision to allow Dakota Acess to use eminent domain in this situation.

“We all recognize that eminent domain has to be used for the public good in cases of roads, delivering gas, sewer, water (utilities) to our home,” Lamb says, “but this is different. This is an out-of-state corporation, no connection to Iowa, providing no service to Iowa. Simply wants to make a profit by taking our land for use of transporting a hazardous liquid.”

The IUB recently voted to allow the construction of the pipeline to begin in areas where the company has secured the necessary permits and easements. Lamb says that is a setback to their effort, but they prefer to focus on the positive. “This is a David and Goliath situation — but we believe it is not over yet — that’s our motto, we haven’t seen the end of this. And we are going to pursue this to the end,” according to Lamb. “And we believe that it is realistic that we can stop it yet.”

One of the other speakers at the event is Donnielle Wanatee, a member of the Meskwaki Tribe. While the pipeline will not go through Meskwaki territory, Wanatee says it still impacts them.

“It does affect me, because we are in Iowa, we are Iowans. And when this pipeline breaks and contaminates the water, it is Iowans the elders and the children who are going to be the first to go. And so, I cannot turn a blind eye when this type of toxic pipeline is going through the state of Iowa with no benefit to Iowans, really,” Wanatee says.

Wanatee also expressed concern that the pipeline builders have been given permission to drill under sacred Native American ground in Lyon County. “If they can get away with that — with going 85 feet under burial mounds — what is left sacred in the state of Iowa anymore?,” Wanatee asks. “If they can do that to Native Americans, what can they do next to Iowans? What is to say that they can be stopped from doing that to any cemetery they come across in the way of this pipeline.”

Wanatee says this is about more than the people who are protesting right now. She says it extends to future generations as well. “How far down the line are you willing to sacrifice your ancestors or your bloodline for that? It’s like the IUB pimped out my great grandchildren and I don’t even have grandchildren yet,” Wanatee says. “And so that is something that has to change in the state of Iowa.”

The Lambs and other speakers are calling upon the U.S. Army Corps to deny Dakota Access’s request for permits to cross dozens of rivers and waterways and to stop the pipeline. The Bakken Pipeline Resistance Coalition plans a floating protest Saturday from Pilot Mound on the Des Moines River down to north of Fraser. That is a section where the pipeline is supposed to cross the river.

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
8/13/2016 7:23:52 PM
Lakota Lead Native Americans, Ranchers and Farmers in Fight Against Dakota Access Pipeline

2016.13.8_Coppola_BIG.jpg

Amidst the cries of “protect our water, protect our land, protect our peoples,” Native Americans, ranchers and farmers are standing their ground along a highway in North Dakota. They are blocking the crews of Energy Transfer Partners — a Dallas-based company whose workers are protected by both police and armed, private security personnel — from accessing the site of the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

The roughly 1,200-mile-long pipeline would transfer about a half million barrels of oil a day from North Dakota to Illinois. Opponents of its construction worry that a leak or rupture would spell disaster for not only the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, but for all communities along the Missouri River that depend on it for drinking and agriculture.

“The Missouri River gives drinking water to 10 million people. We are protecting everyone. We are standing for everyone.”

At least 10 arrests have been made. Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier told the Bismarck Tribune that those arrested “were not staying within bounds set by law enforcement and getting in the way of surveyors working on the pipeline.” The arrests included a pediatrician and a grandmother who allegedly crossed the highway to check on a buffalo pasture.

As reported by Truthout in May of this year, Lakota youth, protesting the proposed construction of the pipeline, began a relay race from their Spirit Camp in Cannonball, North Dakota, to the office of the Army Corps of Engineers in Omaha, Nebraska, to deliver a petition against the pipeline. The Corps later decided to grant the necessary permits and green light the pipeline’s construction.

The runners decided to then continue their relay all the way to Washington, DC. As they did, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe filed for both a permanent and preliminary injunction to block the pipeline’s construction. The case for the preliminary injunction, filed on August 4 to halt construction immediately, is set to be heard on August 24.

As the tribe prepared for the case, they were issued a 48-hour work notice that informed them construction was set to begin on the Dakota Access Pipeline on the morning of August 10.

That’s when the “Camp of Sacred Stones” was set up in Cannonball, North Dakota, along the Missouri River. LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, the historic preservation officer for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, put the call out to land defenders to come to the camp to peacefully resist through prayer and solidarity.

“When I first started this I thought, wow, I’m probably going to stand all by myself,” Brave Bull Allard told Truthout. “And now people are coming from everywhere. What [the company is] trying to do is get as much pipe in the ground before the government can issue a stop-work order. They are trying to start construction before they go to court.”

Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their allies protest construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their allies protest construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. (Photo: Waniya Locke)

Brave Bull Allard explained to Truthout how the protesters turned the initial construction crews back. They returned soon after with more law enforcement personnel.

“They blocked the crew’s access to the site with teepees and prayer circles. When the crew tried to access it through a different route they were blocked there as well. Police, highway patrol and sheriffs were all there,” she explained. Brave Bull Allard noted that the object of their protest is not the individuals building the pipeline, but the project itself, and the violations it represents.

“Our goal is to not do any harm because the work crews are just people trying to make a living. Our job is to stand here in prayer,” she says.

Stressing their nonviolent intentions, Waniya Locke, also of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, told Truthout how organizers checked protesters for weapons when arriving. “We are asking everybody to come stand with us in prayer. We are asking that people don’t bring weapons. We want nothing but prayer. We have a lot of people from everywhere here and we still need more,” Locke said.

Moreover, she emphasized that the actions are meant to defend a broad range of people who have long depended on the river.

“The Missouri River is over 12,000 years old,” Locke said. “The Missouri River gives drinking water to 10 million people. We are protecting everyone. We are standing for everyone.”

In particular, Locke noted, the Dakota Access Pipeline plan violates the treaty rights of the Great Sioux Nation, of which the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe is a part.

“All permits have been granted,” she said. “It really shows that the government can be bought out. They are not acknowledging that this is treaty land and it belongs to the Lakota/Dakota People according to the 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty.”

“We need people to stand up because that’s the only way the government is going to listen to us. That’s the only way they are going to revoke these permits,” Locke explained.

The Fort Laramie Treaty, signed on April 29, 1868, and bound by the US Constitution, guarantees the Great Sioux Nation absolute and undisturbed access of the Black Hills and lands spanning multiple US states, including the site of the pipeline construction on which they now make their stand.

“They are violating not only my people of Standing Rock, but they are violating ranchers and farmers and everybody else who lives along this river,” Locke said.

“We need people to stand up because that’s the only way the government is going to listen to us. That’s the only way they are going to revoke these permits,” Locke explained.

Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their allies protest construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their allies protest construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. (Photo: LaDonna Brave Bull Allard)The call to stop the pipeline is being heard far and wide. During a stop in New York City’s Union Square, the “People Over Pipelines” runners held a rally to educate people about the pipeline’s consequences. Documentary filmmaker Josh Fox (Gasland) and actresses Shailene Woodley and Rosario Dawson lent their support.

Dawson, through a megaphone, issued a clear message for those who gathered to listen to the group of Lakota runners, some wrapped in their tribal flags.

“When we look at what’s going on in Flint [Michigan], that’s not an anomaly. These are problems that are happening across our planet,” Dawson declared. “As long as we think it’s someone else’s problem, they’re going to continue proliferating…. This water is not just their water, it’s our water. We are going to recognize that water is more valuable than gold. This is a tipping point. We need to take advantage of it, and do something about it.”

“This is not about just a pipeline. It’s about saving the water. It’s about every community that lives along this river.”

Standing side by side with Lakota runner Bobbi Jean Three Legs and others, Dawson spoke to the urgency of the times. “At the moment they don’t have any choice. But sooner or later you’ll all realize that none of us actually have a choice in this. We have to stand up and fight together…. When we do that, we get the chance to say that we were the generation that said enough is enough. So please, keep spreading the message that water is life.”

Woodley arrived at the construction site in North Dakota in time to watch some her good friends being carried away in handcuffs. These events only seeming to solidify her resolve.

Locke, originally from Wakpala, South Dakota, grew up swimming and playing in the Missouri River and drinking its water. Her relationship to the river is as personal to her as it was for her ancestors who thrived along its banks.

It’s the same for Brave Bull Allard, whose land now houses the Sacred Stone Camp. When asked what might happen if the pipeline’s construction goes through, Brave Bull Allard held a long pause as if confused by the question. “I think maybe you’re talking to the wrong person,” she replied. “This is not about just a pipeline. It’s about saving the water. It’s about every community that lives along this river. We are going to win.”

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
8/15/2016 12:41:39 AM
Oceti Sakowin Leads Battle to Stop the Dakota Access Pipeline

by Matt Remle

This week, construction of the Dakota Access pipeline saw an increased escalation of protest as the company moved to begin construction near the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and across the Missouri River. The Dakota Access pipeline is being built by Energy Transfer Partners and Enbridge.

The pipeline has been long opposed by the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, farmers, home owners, environmentalist, defenders of land, water and treaty rights and other regional tribes. Opposition to the pipeline became a central issue to Iowans during the Iowa caucuses when caucus goers sought to get candidates to express their opposition to the pipeline.

Timeline of recent events

On April 1st, the Camp of the Sacred Stones was established on Standing Rock to serve as a spiritual camp to block the construction of the pipeline.

On July 26th, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer’s approved most of the final permits necessary to allow for the construction of the Dakota Access pipeline. The pipeline, is a 1,168-mile, 30-inch diameter pipeline that would carry Bakken crude from western North Dakota to a distribution hub Illinois on route for refinement in the Gulf Coast. Once built, the Dakota Access pipeline will transport as much as 450,000 barrels of oil per day with a future capacity of 570,000 barrels per day.

Proposed route of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Proposed route of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

On July 27th, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, represented by Earthjustice, filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) for violating the National Historic Preservation Act and other laws.

On August 5th, youth from the Oceti Sakowin and allies with the ‘Run for Our Water‘ relay run arrived in Washington D.C. after embarking on a cross country run from North Dakota to deliver a message to President Obama and the Army Corp of Engineers to stop the construction of the pipeline and to protect water, sacred, burial and cultural sites.

On August 10th, workers arrived to began construction of the pipeline across the Missouri River, despite the injunctions filed by tribes.

The following two days protests escalated as numerous people were arrested. The Camp of the Sacred Stones released the following detailing the events of August 11th and 12th.

Ten Arrested As Spirit Camp Warriors Stand in Path of the Dakota Access Pipeline

August 11, 2016
Ladonna Bravebull Allard, Camp of the Sacred Stones, ladonnabrave1@aol.com, (701) 426-2064
Joye Braun, Indigenous Environmental Network, jmbraun57625@gmail.com, (605) 515-4792

Hundreds of defenders from the Camp of the Sacred Stones with Cannon Ball community members and supporters occupied the two main access roads to the Cannon Ball Ranch all day Wednesday, constructing blockades with tipis, banners, and barbed wire to prevent construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They are attempting to halt or stall construction until the preliminary injunction filed by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe is heard on August 24. The tribe holds that the US Army Corps permits violate the National Historic Preservation Act.

Youth from Oceti Sakowin who ran 2,000 miles to the White house to protest the Dakota Access pipeline arrive at from lines in Cannon Ball, ND.

Youth from Oceti Sakowin who ran 2,000 miles to the White house to protest the Dakota Access pipeline arrive at from lines in Cannon Ball, ND.

Local law enforcement affirmed their right to demonstrate and instructed DAPL’s private security forces to leave them alone. The occupation continued through Wednesday night and grew rapidly at dawn on Thursday.

Around 9am, approximately twenty law enforcement units escorted construction crews to a point about halfway between the two roads. Around 10am, DAPL began cutting through the fence to create a new access point to the property. Police established the space with police tape.

Arrest made at Dakota access pipeline protest

Arrest made at Dakota access pipeline protest

Standing Rock members repeatedly asked for workers and law enforcement to produce documents verifying that this new easement had been legally attained, but no proof was shown.

People gathered on either side of the new construction area. Numbers reached over 100 and the crowd included Native and non-Native people, children and elders, and four local Cannonball youth on horseback.

Hundreds Shut Down Construction of Dakota Access Pipeline

August 12, 2016
Construction was halted at a Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) work site Friday when hundreds of Standing Rock Sioux community members and supporters rallied against the destruction of sacred sites along a proposed Missouri River crossing just north of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

Front line water defenders. Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

Front line water defenders. Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

Numbers swelled throughout the day until the Sheriff’s Department decided the situation was unstable and ordered the DAPL workers to stop work and leave. Word spread among the crowd that workers had uncovered potential human remains. Concerned about desecration of burial sites of their ancestors and relatives, the crowd stormed the gate into the easement, pushing the police lines back and taking control of the newly constructed entrance.

Standing Rock Tribal Council Chairman Dave Archambault was arrested during the confrontation along with Councilman Dana Yellow Fat. They were charged with disorderly conduct for pushing back on a police line formed when protesters tried to prevent pipeline workers from leaving the site. Both have been released from Morton County jail.

Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe filed for an injunction last week, disputing the US Army Corps of Engineers finding that the pipeline would have no significant impact on village sites, burial grounds, and historic Sundance grounds in the immediate vicinity of the Missouri River crossing at Lake Oahe.

State Archeologist Paul Pika said Dakota Access routed around the 27 cultural sites within the Lake Oahe easement ‘to the best of their ability’ though the company failed to consult tribal bodies and ignored recommendations of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s Section 106 Historic Preservation Office (THPO).

Section 106 coordinator from the Standing Rock Tribal Historic Office Ladonna Bravebull Allard said,“The tribes are saying no. The tribes say that our water is sacred, that you cannot go through the Missouri River- you cannot because that is an unresolved land claim. We still own this property.”

Senior THPO officer Jon Eagle Sr. said “Keep in mind, we are defending the ancestral homelands of the Oceti Sakowin.”

Tribes all across the nation have sent supporters to Standing Rock to join the demonstrators on the front lines, while buses carrying hundreds more are expected to arrive Monday.

“Of course it’s emotional these are our relatives and ancestors even their archaeological footprint is sacred to us. We care about our people. We care about all people. These workers are paid mercenaries for Energy Transfer.” said Joye Braun, Indigenous Environmental Network community organizer on DAPL , “Our people are traumatized. Watching them rip into the earth preparing to just casually throw our relatives to the wayside to destroy precious water , this is unbearable for them.”

Walk for Water

On August 13th, a Walk for Water was held where people walked from the Cannon Ball River to the gates where the Dakota Access pipeline construction is taking place.

Walk for water. Photo from Camp of the Sacred Stones

Walk for water. Photo from Camp of the Sacred Stones

Walk for water. Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

Walk for water. Photo by Camp of the Sacred Stones.

On Monday, more people are expected to be joining the defenders on the front lines in the effort to stop the pipeline.

by Wakíƞyaƞ Waánataƞ (Matt Remle- Lakota)

Matt Remle (Lakota) is an editor and writer for Last Real Indians and LRInspire. @wakiyan7

Matt Remle (Lakota) is an editor and writer for Last Real Indians and LRInspire. @wakiyan7

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
8/15/2016 3:52:03 PM

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
8/19/2016 10:05:58 PM
Dakota Pipeline Construction Halted Amid Ongoing 'Defiance of Black Snake'

Hillary Clinton called to 'take a stand against this ominous pipeline as well as the brazen violation of our treaty rights'

Construction of the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline has been temporarily halted as protests against the $3.8 billion, 1,172-mile project continued this week at the North Dakota state capitol building as well as at a "spirit camp" at the confluence of the Cannonball and Missouri rivers.

According to the Associated Press, pipeline developers on Thursday agreed to pause construction until a federal court hearing next week in Washington, D.C.—but a spokeswoman for Energy Transfer Partners vowed the work would still be completed by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, Indigenous and environmental activists continue to gather in opposition to the pipeline, with between 1500 and 2000 people currently engaged in active resistance.

"What happens to the Missouri River happens to all of us, all human beings," said actress Shailene Woodley at the Thursday night protest in the capital of Bismarck. "Water is not limited to Indigenous people, water is limited to everyone. Indigenous people right now are the only ones protecting it."

And in Minneapolis on Friday, Indigenous community members and council member Alondra Cano presented a resolution calling on the city to support native resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline. According to the state chapter of climate group 350.org, "The resolution was referred to the Intergovernmental Relations Committee where we will have the opportunity to further educate council members on the issue before it is brought back to the full council and passed."

Furthermore, even as anti-pipeline protesters continue to amass support from high-profile figures ranging from rapper and producer Pharrell Williams to Bernie Sanders' wife, Jane O'Meara Sanders, Hillary Clinton faces calls to step up her opposition to the project.

"Earlier this year, Clinton stumped in Indian country, vying for votes," wrote journalist and Oglala Lakota citizen Simon Moya-Smith at CNN on Friday. "But if she truly supports Native American sovereignty, and if she is sincere about honoring the treaties and protecting sacred sites, then she will take a stand against this ominous pipeline as well as the brazen violation of our treaty rights."

He wrote:

If candidate Clinton does nothing to address this issue yet continues into November promising Native Americans that she is our champion, then her words will be nothing but false promises—just more bombast, more white lies to Indians.

But if she voices her opposition to the pipeline, if she proves to us that she is a woman of her word, then that would send a message that while Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump talks, she acts.

First, though, she has to act. You're up, Mrs. Clinton.

"We are not protesters. We are protectors," wrote Iyuskin American Horse, a Sicangu/Oglala Lakota who has been fighting alongside the Standing Rock Sioux tribe since the spring. "We are peacefully defending our land and our ways of life. We are standing together in prayer, and fighting for what is right. We are making history here. We invite you to stand with us in defiance of the black snake."

Additional demonstrations are planned for the weekend. Follow the resistance under the hashtags #RezpectOurWater, #NoDAPL, and #DakotaAccessPipeline


"It will be a powerful statement," said 350 Minneapolis on Facebook, "for a city as large and influential as Minneapolis (the birthplace of the American Indian Movement), to stand with the Standing Rock Sioux tribe."

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