The Phnom Penh Post

Dakota pipeline protest prevails

- Jack Healy and Nicholas Fandos

THE Standing Rock Sioux Tribe won a major victory on Sunday in its battle to block an oil pipeline being built near its reservatio­n when the Department of the Army announced that it would not allow the pipeline to be drilled under a dammed section of the Missouri River.

The Army said it would look for alternativ­e routes for the $3.7 billion Dakota Access pipeline. Constructi­on of the route a half-mile from the Standing Rock Sioux reservatio­n has become a global flash point for environmen­tal and indigenous activism, drawing thousands of people to a sprawling prairie camp of tents, teepees and yurts.

“The best way to complete that work responsibl­y and expeditiou­sly is to explore alternate routes for the pipeline crossing,” Jo-Ellen Darcy, the Army’s assistant secretary for civil works, said. The move could presage a lengthy environmen­tal review that has the potential to block the pipeline’s constructi­on for months or years.

But it was unclear how durable the government’s decision would be. Sunday’s announceme­nt came in the dwindling days of the Obama administra­tion, which revealed in November that the Army Corps of Engineers was considerin­g an alternativ­e route. The Corps of Engineers is part of the Department of the Army.

President-elect Donald Trump, however, has taken a different view of the project and said as recently as last week that he supported CONTINUED

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