New Straits Times

US veterans to form human shield

PIPELINE RALLY: Over 2,000 people set to protect protesters ahead of evacuation deadline

- CANNON BALL

MORE than 2,000 United States military veterans plan to form a human shield to protect protesters of a pipeline project near a Native American reservatio­n in North Dakota, organisers said, just ahead of a federal deadline for activists to leave the camp they have been occupying.

It comes as North Dakota law enforcemen­t backed away from a previous plan to cut off supplies to the camp, an idea abandoned quickly after an outcry, and with law enforcemen­t’s treatment of Dakota Access Pipeline protesters increasing­ly under the microscope.

The protesters have spent months rallying against plans to route the US$3.8 billion (RM17 billion) Dakota Access Pipeline beneath a lake near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n, saying it poses a threat to water resources and sacred Native American sites.

Protesters include Native American tribes, environmen­talists and even actors. including Shailene Woodley.

State officials issued an order on Monday for activists to vacate the Oceti Sakowin camp, located on US Army Corps of Engineers land near here, citing harsh weather conditions.

The state’s latest decision not to stop cars entering the protest site indicated local officials will not actively enforce Monday’s emergency order to evacuate the camp issued by Governor Jack Dalrymple.

Dalrymple warned on Wednesday that it was “probably not feasible” to reroute the pipeline, but said he had requested a meeting with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Council to rebuild a relationsh­ip.

“We need to begin now to talk about how we are going to return to a peaceful relationsh­ip.”

The 1,885km pipeline project, owned by Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners LP, is mostly complete, except for a segment planned to run under Lake Oahe, a reservoir

formed by a dam on the Missouri River.

Veterans Stand for Standing Rock, a contingent of more than 2,000 US military veterans, planned to go to North Dakota by this weekend and form a human wall in front of police, protest organisers said on a Facebook page. Organisers could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

“I figured this was more important than anything else I could be doing,” Guy Dull Knife, 69, a Vietnam War army veteran, said at the main camp.

Dull Knife, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe from the Pine Ridge Reservatio­n of South Dakota, said he had been camping at the protest site for months.

Morton County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Rob Keller said in an email his agency was aware of the veterans’ plans, but would not comment further on how law enforcemen­t would deal with demonstrat­ors.

Former US Marine Michael A. Wood Jr is leading the effort along with Wesley Clark Jr, a writer whose father is retired US army general Wesley Clark.

US Representa­tive Tulsi Gabbard, a Democrat from Hawaii and a major in the Hawaii Army National Guard, has said on Twitter she will join the protesters on Sunday.

The Army Corps, citing safety concerns, has ordered the evacuation of the primary protest camp by Monday, but said it would not forcibly remove people from the land.

Local law enforcemen­t said on Tuesday they planned a blockade of the camp, but local and state officials later retreated, saying they would only check vehicles for certain prohibited supplies like propane, and possibly issue fines.

Dalrymple on Wednesday said state officials never contemplat­ed forcibly removing protesters and there had been no plans to block food or other supplies from the camp. Reuters

 ?? AFP pic ?? Snow covering Oceti Sakowin
camp near
the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n in North Dakota on Wednesday.
AFP pic Snow covering Oceti Sakowin camp near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n in North Dakota on Wednesday.

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