Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tribes oppose bioterror tests near Oklahoma graves

- BY JUSTIN JUOZAPAVIC­IUS

TULSA, Okla. — Five Native American tribes that own an Oklahoma site where the U.S. Department of Homeland Security intends to conduct bioterrori­sm drills next year now oppose the government’s plan, saying the agency didn’t inform them about chemicals it plans to release on grounds the tribes consider sacred because more than 100 children are buried there.

The Oklahoma-based Council of Confederat­ed Chilocco Tribes is made up of five tribes that jointly own what’s left of the former Chilocco Indian Agricultur­al School outside Newkirk where the testing would be conducted. The Chilocco school, which operated from the late 1800s until 1980, was one of several federally run boarding schools where the U.S. once sought to assimilate Native American children. The tribes say the federal agency is failing to protect a site with religious and cultural significan­ce.

“Often when a child died at the school, the family didn’t have the money to bring the body home, so they were buried at the school cemetery,” said Heather Payne, a spokeswoma­n for the Otoe-Missouria Tribe.

Many of the graves are unmarked, she said. The site, about 100 miles northwest of Tulsa, near Oklahoma’s border with Kansas, also is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Homeland Security is leasing the site to conduct drills it says will help it determine how authoritie­s can best clean up after a bioterror attack and how much chemicals might penetrate buildings. But the tribal council issued a statement this past week opposing the testing. The tribes say the substances the government plans to release are “potentiall­y dangerous,” though Homeland Security has insisted they’re harmless.

The other tribes that are part of the council are the Kaw Nation, Pawnee Nation, Ponca Tribe and Tonkawa Tribe.

Homeland Security spokesman John Verrico declined to comment on the tribes’ statement until the agency finishes reviewing the more than 300 public comments it has received on the project draft.

The government announced plans for the bioterror drills in a legal notice last month in Newkirk’s weekly newspaper. Many residents found out about the plans after the editor of the Newkirk Herald Journal decided the notice buried in his 900circula­tion paper was frontpage news.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Buildings at the abandoned Chilocco Indian School campus are seen in November in Newkirk, Okla. Five American Indian tribes are opposing plans by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to conduct bioterrori­sm drills at a tribal burial ground and...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Buildings at the abandoned Chilocco Indian School campus are seen in November in Newkirk, Okla. Five American Indian tribes are opposing plans by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to conduct bioterrori­sm drills at a tribal burial ground and...

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