Current:Home > ScamsStanding Rock Leaders Tell Dakota Pipeline Protesters to Leave Protest Camp -Mastery Money Tools
Standing Rock Leaders Tell Dakota Pipeline Protesters to Leave Protest Camp
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:05:59
This story was updated Jan. 24, 2017, to reflect President Trump’s presidential memorandum to advance construction of the Dakota Access pipeline.
After months of largely peaceful protests by thousands of demonstrators from across the country who congregated at a camp near Cannon Ball, N.D., to help bring the Dakota Access pipeline to a halt, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has asked the pipeline opponents to go home.
The tribe said it plans to continue its action against the pipeline in the courts, but the protest camp has run its course. The protesters have until Jan. 30 to depart the main camp, according to a resolution passed by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Council in Fort Yates on Friday. It also said the tribe may call on federal law enforcement officials to help them remove protesters from all of the camps and to block their re-entry if they haven’t left in 30 days.
“Moving forward, our ultimate objective is best served by our elected officials, navigating strategically through the administrative and legal processes,” the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe said in a statement. “For this reason, we ask the protectors to vacate the camps and head home with our most heartfelt thanks.”
The plea came a day before the political debate was revived by Donald Trump‘s presidential memorandum on Tuesday calling on the pipeline to be built. Opposition leaders said they had not immediately decided whether to retract their call to clear the camp.
“We are prepared to push back on any reckless decision made by this administration,” Dallas Goldtooth, campaign director for the Indigenous Environmental Network, said Tuesday. “If Trump does not pull back from implementing these orders it will only result in more massive mobilization and civil disobedience on a scale never seen [by] a newly seated president of the United States.”
The call to clear the camp had also highlighted concerns about spring flooding—the camp lies in a flood zone expected to be inundated by spring snowmelt—and economic hardship suffered by the tribe due to a highway closure caused by the ongoing protests. Several hundred protesters have remained in the camp through the winter, down from the high of nearly 10,000 in early December.
The Standing Rock tribe won a major victory against the builder of the $3.8 billion pipeline, Energy Transfer Partners, on Dec. 4 when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers called for a more complete environmental analysis. The process could delay construction by a year or more and could involve rerouting the pipeline. It is still unclear what the Trump administration will do.
Following the Army Corps decision, Standing Rock tribal chairman Dave Archambault urged protesters to return home as their opposition shifted to a legal battle and as potentially life-threatening winter storms and sub-zero temperatures set in. The region has since been hit with record snowfalls, increasing the probability that Oceti Sakowin, the main protest camp which sits on a floodplain near the Missouri River, will be underwater as early as March.
Residents of Cannon Ball, the district of the Standing Rock reservation closest to Oceti Sakowin, passed a resolution last week opposing the establishment of any new winter camp within their district. Residents expressed frustration over a highway closure near the camp that significantly increased the driving time to Bismarck, where many residents work, shop and receive medical care. Residents also expressed concern over the Cannon Ball gym, which has been used as an emergency shelter for pipeline opponents. The community uses the gym for sporting events, meetings and funerals, and it is in need of cleaning and repair.
Archambault continued to press the case against the pipeline speaking alongside former Vice President Al Gore and Amy Goodman, a journalist from Democracy Now, at the Sundance Film Festival last Sunday.
When asked about the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines at a press briefing on Monday, Sean Spicer, Trump’s press secretary, said Trump may attempt to overrule the Army Corp’s decision to halt the pipeline. “I don’t want to get in front of the president’s executive actions,” he said, but the president wants to “maximize our use of natural resources.”
veryGood! (1592)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- North Carolina to launch Medicaid expansion on Dec. 1
- Amazon opening 2 operations facilities in Virginia Beach, creating over 1,000 jobs, Youngkin says
- San Antonio Police need help finding woman missing since Aug. 11. Here's what to know.
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Reba on 'The Voice': An exclusive sneak peek at Season 24 with the new country icon judge
- Officials set $10,000 reward for location of Minnesota murder suspect mistakenly released from jail
- Former New Zealand prime minister and pandemic prep leader says we’re unprepared for the next one
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- More charges filed against 2 teens held in fatal bicyclist hit-and-run video case in Las Vegas
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Euphoria Star Angus Cloud's Mom Shares His Heartbreaking Last Words
- UK police open sexual offenses investigation after allegations about Russell Brand
- Why is Russian skater's hearing over her Olympic doping shrouded in secrecy?
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Video shows California deputy slamming 16-year-old girl to the ground outside football game
- Opposition lawmakers call on Canada’s House speaker to resign for honoring man who fought for Nazis
- McDaniels says he has confidence in offense, despite opting for FG late in game
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
5 dead, including one child, after 2 private planes collide in northern Mexico
The premiere of 'The Golden Bachelor' is almost here. How to watch Gerry Turner find love.
Bermuda premier says ‘sophisticated and deliberate’ cyberattack hobbles government services
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Full transcript: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Face the Nation, Sept. 24, 2023
Judge dismisses manslaughter charges against 6 Michigan prison employees in inmate's death
South Korea parades troops and powerful weapons in its biggest Armed Forces Day ceremony in years