Bureau of Indian Affairs Police gave Sacred Stone Camp a stunning 10 Day Eviction Notice
Published on Feb 16, 2017Breaking News: On Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Council's request the Bureau of Indian Affairs Police gave Sacred Stone Camp a stunning 10 Day Eviction Notice in person at camp that says the entirety of Sacred Stone Prayer Camp needs to go or property can be seized and people charged with trespassing. Share and spread the word!!!!!!!!! LaDonna Tamakawastewin Allard whose family has owned this beautiful land along the Cannonball River where so much healing is taking place for generations and Water Protectors are being targeted for standing up for the Water and Mother Earth! We must ask ourselves why? Why? Follow Johnny Dangers and Johnny K. Dangers for continued on the ground updates and more on defeating the Black Snake that is the Dakota Access Pipeline! Click where it says "Follow" on my profile and change it to "See First" to not miss any #NoDAPL updates. #NoDAPL #WaterisLife #NoKXL #Trump #StandwithStandingRock #TreatyRights #KeepitintheGround #BankExit #DefundDAPL #NoBanNoWall #BlackLivesMatter #Not1More Copyright Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. SOURCE LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVCdEVaO9nw&t=201s
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Send Your Comments on DAPL E.I.S. Write YOUR comment to the Army Corps of Engineers demanding a comprehensive environmental review of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Click here to send your comments! We have added 25 Reasons to Oppose this pipeline below. We’ve also provided links to more information if needed. Stand alongside the indigenous leaders who brought over 500 tribes together to Protect the Water for millions downstream. Stand with the hundreds and thousands of people who braved the cold in North Dakota and loudly proclaimed; MNI WICONI – WATER IS LIFE! Stand with the millions of people supporting us from across the U.S. and around the world – SAY; “NO DAPL!” From the first days in office Trump has made it no secret that he will do whatever he can to finish this and other pipelines. He cares nothing for the future of our nation or people as he pushes us ever-closer to becoming a resource colony for the world. He went another step further and ordered the US Army Corps of Engineers to stop their comprehensive environmental review of the Dakota Access Pipeline and grant the final permit. WE are not going to stand by and allow this to happen…It’s up to us to deny that request. Please add your comments of opposition to DAPL TODAY! A complete review is needed to assess the impacts on drinking water, tribal rights and the climate and we need your help to make it happen so, Please share this page with your social networks with links provided. Thank you! We've added new Email Newsletter Categories for you to receive just the news you want! If you haven't changed your delivery preferences lately, maybe now would be a good time... We've added categories that will ensure you get just the information and action alerts you want. 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Find out more at: www.ienearth.org The Indigenous Environmental Network | PO Box 485 | Bemidji, MN 56619 | http://www.ienearth.org/ (CNN)The US Army Corps of Engineers has been directed to allow the completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline, North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven said on Tuesday. Although the official easement from the Army Corps has yet to be released, Hoeven and Rep. Kevin Cramer praised the move, which will pave the way for the final phase of the controversial $3.7 billion project. Hoeven said in a statement that he had spoken with Acting Secretary of the Army Robert Speer on Tuesday. The Republican senator said he was told that Speer had "directed the Army Corps of Engineers to proceed with the easement needed to complete the Dakota Access Pipeline."The Standing Rock Sioux tribe, which opposes the project, responded that Hoeven's announcement is premature and maintains that further environmental review is needed for the pipeline. Keystone and Dakota Access pipelines: How did we get here? Cramer, R-North Dakota, said he received word that the US Army Corps will grant final approval and that Congressional notification of the decision was "imminent." In his statement, Cramer praised Donald Trump as a "man of action," after the President signed executive actions to advance approval of the Dakota Access oil pipeline last week. The construction had been blocked by President Barack Obama's administration amid vociferous opposition to the project. The Dakota Access Pipeline, stretching 1,172 miles through four states, is completed except for a contested portion under North Dakota's Lake Oahe, half a mile upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux tribe's reservation. The tribe has been concerned that digging the pipeline under a section of the Missouri River would affect the area's drinking water as well as the supply for 17 million Americans living downstream. A final easement is required for Dakota Access to cross beneath Lake Oahe.Standing Rock: It's not over Standing Rock and its allies have protested in North Dakota for months, standing in the path of the pipeline during peaceful demonstrations and clashes that turned violent. In December, protesters celebrated a temporary victory when the Army said it would not -- for the time being -- allow the pipeline to cross under the lake, calling for an official environmental impact statement, a months-long process that would allow the public to weigh in. The tribe vowed to "vigorously pursue legal action" if the Trump administration cuts off the environmental review and grants the easement. Photos: North Dakota pipeline protests "To abandon the [environmental impact statement] would amount to a wholly unexplained and arbitrary change based on the President's personal views and, potentially, personal investments," the tribe said in a statement Tuesday. The Indigenous Environmental Network, a leading tribal organization dedicated to blocking further construction of the project, said on Tuesday: "Make no mistake: we are prepared to mobilize and resist this brazen power grab."CNN's Sara Sidner and Darran Simon contributed to this report. SOURCE LINK / CONTINUE READING... |