STAND WITH STANDING ROCK
Protect Protesters' Rights
In January 2016, the Dakota Access Pipeline was unanimously approved for construction, with the aim of creating a direct route to transport crude oil from the North Dakota Bakken region through South Dakota and Iowa into Illinois. The controversial pipeline could destroy ancestral burial grounds and poison the water supply for a sovereign nation — as well as millions of Americans downstream who rely on the Missouri River.
All
eyes were on Standing Rock late last year as unwarranted armored
vehicles rolled in. Law enforcement used automatic rifles, sound
cannons, and concussion grenades against water protectors. An
estimated 300 protesters were injured in November when police in riot
gear used water cannons for hours in subfreezing weather to disperse
them.
Personnel
and equipment pouring in from over 75 law enforcement agencies from
around the country and National Guard troops created a
battlefield-like atmosphere at Standing Rock. Escalated police
militarization was used to intimidate and silence water protectors’
free speech and their right to protest a pipeline which passes near
sovereign territory.
Thousands
from across the globe have joined in solidarity with the Standing
Rock Sioux Tribe to stop the construction of the Dakota Access
pipeline. The protest has brought together 200 or so tribes that
have not united for more than 150 years.
President
Trump took executive action on January 24th 2017
encouraging the Army Corps of Engineers to override environmental
review and speed up construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline near
the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation. Any day now, law
enforcement may try to disperse water protectors with unnecessary and
dangerous use of force. With resilience, water protectors have
already endured militarized crackdowns, police abuse, and daily
intimidation – simply for defending their water rights.
THE
FACTS:
- 1. It is estimated that over 140 protesters, many of whom live in poverty, face felony charges and bonds of $1,500 each.
- 2. North Dakota has received over 3 million dollars in military weapons and equipment through the Department of Defense 1033 program since the program began in the 1990s.
- 3. Law enforcement in North Dakota is in potential violation of 1st Amendment right to free speech, 6th Amendment right to counsel for those subject to incarceration, and the 8th Amendment, which prohibits excessive bail.
Last
holdouts are cleared from main Dakota Access pipeline protest camp
Law
enforcement took control of the largest Dakota Access Pipeline
protest camp Thursday, arresting or moving the few dozen people who
had remained in the mud and snow in one of the largest environmental
protests in American history.
“At
2:09 p.m. (February 23, 2017), Oceti Sakowin protest camp was
completely cleared by law enforcement!” the Morton County Sheriff’s
Office wrote on its Facebook page, referring to the name protesters
gave the camp just north of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s
reservation in North Dakota.
Later,
law enforcement, with the aid of National Guard troops, also began
clearing the smaller Rosebud camp, located across the Cannonball
River. There were no reports of broad confrontations with law
enforcement, though some people could be seen on live-stream videos
being wrestled to the ground and handcuffed.
At
least 30 people had been arrested by early afternoon, but many others
fled toward a third camp, Sacred Stone, the original protest site
established 10 months ago. The camp was set up on private land by a
handful of people from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and others who
have argued that the $3.8-billion, 1,170-mile pipeline threatens the
tribe’s water supply and sacred cultural sites.