Toronto Star

Armed police descend on pipeline protest camp

Flights have been banned over area where months-long demonstrat­ion is boiling over

- JAMES MACPHERSON AND BLAKE NICHOLSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CANNON BALL, N.D. — Police and soldiers, some wearing riot gear and many armed, began an operation on Thursday to remove Dakota Access pipeline protesters camped on private land in the path of the pipeline in North Dakota.

The forcible removal began a day after protesters refused to leave voluntaril­y.

Authoritie­s with trucks, police cars, military Humvees and buses were moving in on the camp at midday, with sirens blaring and officials telling protesters over a loudspeake­r to move out. Police were wearing riot gear, and many were armed. Two helicopter­s and a fixed-wing airplane monitored the operation from the air.

Protesters parked cars on the highway near the camp and slashed the vehicles’ tires to try to slow the authoritie­s.

A months-long dispute over the four-state, $3.8-billion (U.S.) pipeline reached a crisis point when some 200 protesters set up camp on land owned by pipeline developer Energy Transfer Partners. The disputed area is just to the north of a more permanent and larger encampment on federally-owned land where hundreds of protesters have camped for months.

Law enforcemen­t officials de- manded that the protesters leave the private land on Wednesday, but the protesters refused. Thick fog and cloudy skies on Wednesday appeared to stall the law enforcemen­t effort, but the sun came out on Thursday with scattered clouds and a light breeze. Officials have frequently monitored protesters by air.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion is restrictin­g flights over the Cannon Ball area until Nov. 5, allowing only aircraft affiliated with the North Dakota Tactical Operation Center and banning drones.

Some protesters said in advance of the operation that they were resigned to a confrontat­ion.

“I’m here to die if I have to. I don’t want to die but I will,” Didi Banerji, who lives in Toronto but is originally from the Spirit Lake Sioux reservatio­n in North Dakota, said Wednesday.

The activists fear the pipeline could harm cultural sites and drinking water for the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. The company and the state of North Dakota say no sensitive cultural sites have been found.

Protests supporting the Standing Rock Sioux have been ongoing for months, with more than 260 people arrested before Thursday’s operation.

The pipeline is to carry oil from western North Dakota through South Dakota and Iowa to an existing pipeline in Patoka, Ill., where shippers can send it on to Midwest and Gulf Coast markets.

Energy Transfer Partners has said the pipeline is nearly complete other than the work in south central North Dakota.

Local sheriff’s officials had said earlier they didn’t have the resources to immediatel­y remove activists from the private land. But officers called for reinforcem­ents from other states.

The protest has drawn the attention of activists and celebritie­s, including actress-activist Shailene Woodley and Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Stein. Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson and actor Mark Ruffalo were at the protest camp Wednesday, but departed later in the day.

 ?? TOM STROMME/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline parked cars on the highway and slashed the vehicles’ tires to try to slow the authoritie­s on Thursday.
TOM STROMME/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline parked cars on the highway and slashed the vehicles’ tires to try to slow the authoritie­s on Thursday.

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