Albuquerque Journal

Standing Rock protesters skeptical of project’s demise

- AMY GOODMAN Columnist Distribute­d by King Features Syndicate.

The Dakota Access Pipeline has been stopped, at least for now. The Standing Rock Sioux Nation, and thousands of Native and nonNative allies won a remarkable and unexpected victory Sunday.

Word came down that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had denied a permit for the pipeline owner, Energy Transfer Partners, to drill underneath the Missouri River and that a full environmen­tal impact study would be launched.

Grass-roots organizing, nonviolent direct action and leadership from front-line indigenous people succeeded in stopping the $3.8 billion, 1,200-mile pipeline in its tracks. As water protectors celebrated in the frozen camps, one question loomed: What will happen when Donald Trump takes over the presidency in six short weeks?

“Finally, for the first time in history, over centuries, somebody is listening to us,” Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman Dave Archambaul­t II told us on “Democracy Now!” hours after hearing the news. “We’ve been talking about this with the Corps of Engineers for almost two years now and we’ve been letting them know that we had problems with this pipeline, because it not only threatens our water, it threatens our heritage, it threatens our culture, it threatens our environmen­t.”

Bitter cold weather has descended over the region, making life in the resistance camps even more difficult.

Over the long Thanksgivi­ng weekend, Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier and his deputies, along with a multijuris­dictional array of paramilita­rized police and National Guard, unleashed an arsenal of pepper spray, concussion grenades, tear gas, rubber bullets and, in the freezing cold, water cannons.

North Dakota’s outgoing Republican Gov. Jack Dalrymple, along with Sheriff Kirchmeier and Energy Transfer Partners CEO Kelcy Warren, shares responsibi­lity for the unbridled police and private security company violence that has rained down upon the pipeline resisters for months. Former Vice President Al Gore, commenting a week later, said the use of water cannons in cold weather was “inhumane” and called the pipeline itself “an atrocity.”

While Dalrymple threatened to forcibly evict the thousands of peaceful water protectors, troops of a different sort were massing to defend them. U.S. military veterans were responding to a call from tribal elders to come defend the camp.

“Veterans Stand for Standing Rock” were traveling to the camps to form a human shield around the protectors. Over 2,000 veterans made the journey under the leadership of veteran Wes Clark Jr. If his name sounds familiar, it might be because of his father, Wesley Clark Sr., the retired four-star general who was the Supreme Allied Commander Europe of NATO and later ran for president.

After the announceme­nt denying the easement to drill under the Missouri River, Wes Clark Jr. spoke at a ceremony at Standing Rock: “We came. We fought you. We took your land. We signed treaties that we broke . ... We’ve hurt you in so many ways. And we’ve come to say that we are sorry, we are at your service and we beg for your forgivenes­s.”

Standing Rock Tribal Chairman David Archambaul­t told us, “The pipeline is not going to move ahead. The campers that are there can now enjoy the winter with their families at home.”

Many in the camps remain skeptical, like U.S. veteran Remy, a native of the Navajo Nation, who has been at Standing Rock for almost six months. “Until the project has ended, we are not planning to go anywhere,” he said on “Democracy Now!”

Donald Trump supports the pipeline and could very well scuttle the Obama administra­tion’s decision to deny the permit. According to financial disclosure statements, Trump has held between $500,000 and $1 million invested in the pipeline, although a Trump spokespers­on claims he has since sold his shares.

Trump has nominated Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Congressma­n Keith Ellison said the nominee “has pledged to roll back environmen­tal protection­s and go to bat for multibilli­on-dollar oil and gas companies.”

Last September, Lakota water protector Olowan Martinez locked herself to an excavator that was being used for pipeline constructi­on. She was arrested and spent a week in jail.

When we asked her how long she was planning on staying at the camps, she told us, “Until we know for sure that this black snake is dead.” Cold weather, police violence and government promises won’t deter these water protectors.

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