The Phnom Penh Post

US pipeline protesters leave under pressure

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AFTER nearly a year of occupying North Dakota prairie land to block the route of a controvers­ial oil pipeline, many of the c a mp’s h o l d o u t s f i n a l l y marched out on Wednesday to meet an evacuation deadline.

Some 10 activists who had remained after the 2pm deadline passed were arrested, according to the North Dakota Joint Informatio­n Center.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to revive the pipeline project. After the final permit was issued, constructi­on on Dakota Access began almost immediatel­y.

Native Americans and their supporters began leaving the federal land – which was occupied by a population that swelled into the thousands at times – singing traditiona­l songs and banging drums.

Many opposed to the pipeline say it threatens the drinking water of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. The pipeline’s operator, Energy Transfer Partners, insists it is safe, with high-tech systems in place to prevent environmen­tal catastroph­e.

State and tribal authoritie­s planned to begin coordinate­d efforts to clean up the camp, removing garbage, structures, vehicles and other debris, in anticipati­on of seasonal flooding in the area.

Without the cleanup, the authoritie­s said local waterways could be contaminat­ed. More than 230 truckloads of debris had been cleared out as of Monday, officials said.

Campers burned some structures on their way out of the camp, in what they said were ceremonial rituals. They set approximat­ely 20 fires, the authoritie­s said, adding that at least two explosions also took place after which a 7-year-old boy and a 17-year-old girl were taken to a hospital with burns.

Some protesters had informed law enforcemen­t that they would engage in passive resistance and expected to be arrested, Tom Iverson of the North Dakota Highway Patrol told local television station KFYR.

“People were free to leave,” he said, adding that the evacuation was intended to “avoid an ecological disaster.”

Native Americans and others began protesting at the camp starting last April, in opposition to the 1,886-kilometre oil pipeline. Its route runs under land the Standing Rock Sioux consider sacred and under the Missouri River, which is the source of drinking water for the tribe’s reservatio­n.

 ?? STEPHEN YANG/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Campers set structures on fire in preparatio­n of the Army Corp’s deadline to leave the Oceti Sakowin protest camp on Wednesday.
STEPHEN YANG/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Campers set structures on fire in preparatio­n of the Army Corp’s deadline to leave the Oceti Sakowin protest camp on Wednesday.

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