Protesting the Dakota Access pipeline, Native Americans march on Washington, D.C.
American Indians and their supporters are rallying in Washington against continued construction of the disputed Dakota Access pipeline.
A federal judge this week declined to halt construction of the final section of the $3.8 billion pipeline, meaning oil could begin flowing through it as early as next week.
The Standing Rock Sioux and other tribes have tried to stop the pipeline, saying it threatens their sovereignty, religious rights and water supply. The final, disputed section of the pipeline would pass under a reservoir that provides water to tribal reservations. The pipeline itself is not on tribal land.
On Friday, protesters marched from the Army Corps of Engineers headquarters to the White House. With the encouragement of President Donald Trump’s administration, the Army authorized construction of the pipeline to start again. That move canceled an environmental study ordered under the administration of President Barack Obama. (AP)
(Photos: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, Kevin Lamarque/Reuters, Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images [2], Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)
See more images from the protests on Yahoo News.
Tag: dapl
Shaun King on Twitter
Bureau of Indian Affairs sending agents to help clear Dakota Access protesters from site
By Juliet Eilperin February 3 at 9:06 PM
The federal government announced Friday that it was dispatching Bureau
of Indian Affairs agents to help clear Dakota Access Pipeline protesters
from the Standing Rock Sioux reservation….
In response to a directive from President Trump, this week the acting secretary of the Army, Robert Speer, ordered the Army Corps of Engineers to expedite review of an easement for the pipeline to run under Lake Oahe….
Acting assistant secretary of Indian affairs Michael S. Black said
the agency had sent “enforcement support and will assist” the tribe “in
closing the protest camps within the Standing Rock Reservation
boundary.”…
The Standing
Rock Sioux Tribe had already passed a tribal resolution asking
protesters to leave and requesting federal aid in closing the camp.
“In
these past few weeks at camp, I see no reflection of our earlier unity,
and without unity we lose,” the tribe’s chairman, David Archambault II,
said in a statement.
Bureau of Indian Affairs sending agents to help clear Dakota Access protesters from site
Standing Rock Sioux on Twitter
Collin Rees on Twitter
Trevor Noah defends Standing Rock protestors.
I hope this won’t fall on deaf ears.
#NoDapl #StandingRock














