Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

May 15, 2026

U.S. is Dynamiting Kumeyaay Sacred Mountain for Border Wall Expansion

U.S. is Dynamiting Kumeyaay Sacred Mountain  for Border Wall Expansion


Kumeyaay leader Norma Alicia Mesa said, "That mountain has a life of its own, a breath of its own, a spirituality of its own, and its own energy." 
Video at Al Jazeera https://www.youtube.com/shorts/WURO9ysWza0

Video https://www.bastillepost.com/global/article/5833741-u-s-border-wall-expansion-destroys-sacred-indigenous-site

By Brenda Norrell, Censored News, May 15, 2026

The United States government is dynamiting the sacred place of Kumeyaay, who live on both sides of the border, and blasted two sacred monoliths that were 60 to 120 million years old. The U.S. began blasting Cerro Cuchumá in early April, a historic and sacred site where their medicine people carry out ceremonies, without consultation as required by U.S. federal law.

Kumeyaay leader Norma Alicia Mesa
"They haven't consulted us."

Kumeyaay leader Norma Alicia Mesa said, "They haven't consulted us."

"That mountain has a life of its own, a breath of its own, a spirituality of its own, and its own energy," Mesa said.

Kumeyaay access to their sacred mountain is blocked. Kumeyaay usually travel back and forth in their territory across the so-called border south of San Diego -- but now they are being blocked from crossing.

"The expansion of the U.S.-Mexico border wall has leveled a sacred indigenous site of the Kumeyaay people, threatening cultural heritage and bypassing environmental laws," reports Bastille Post Global.

"Two monoliths that were dynamited, that were exploded or blown up, were from 60 to 120 million years ago. They were considered sacred places for them. This was their temple, and it doesn't exist anymore," said Demian Vega, a coordinator at La Puerta Foundation, a Mexico-based non-profit organization dedicated to protecting natural and cultural heritages in the border area.

Al Jazeera reports, "Indigenous people in Mexico protest the U.S. blasting a sacred ceremonial site with dynamite to build the U.S.-Mexico border wall.⁣"

“It upsets us Kumeyaay to see parts of our sacred land being destroyed,” said one of the people at the protest.

 The Kumeyaay people consider Cerro Cuchumá a sacred site where they hold their ceremonies and medicine people hold initiations. Cerro Cuchumá also functions as a cemetery. ⁣

The area was recognized as a historic and sacred site by the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in October 1992.⁣


"Kuchumá is in Tecate, on the Mexico side of the border. Northern Kumeyaay territory, the Baja Kumiai mobilized to help protect the sacred sites, Kumeyaay said.

Read more and watch videos:

Bastille Post Global https://www.bastillepost.com/global/article/5833741-u-s-border-wall-expansion-destroys-sacred-indigenous-site

Al Jazeera https://www.youtube.com/shorts/WURO9ysWza0


Protest Energy Fuels Uranium Mines at La Sal, Utah, and Grand Canyon, Saturday, May 16, 2026



Protest Energy Fuels Uranium Mines at La Sal, Utah, and Grand Canyon, Saturday, May 16, 2026

Support the White Mesa Ute Community and the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe Protest Energy Fuels’ Uranium Mines at La Sal, Utah,  and near the Grand Canyon! Stop Energy Fuels’ Uranium Mill/Dump next to the White Mesa Ute Community!

SATURDAY, MAY 16, 2026 12 noon at LA SAL JUNCTION
(intersection of Highway 191 and 46 – about 20 miles south of Moab)


Censored News, May 15, 2026

Energy Fuels operates uranium mines near Moab in La Sal, and also operates the Pinyon Plain mine near the Grand Canyon. They also operate the uranium mill next to the White Mesa Ute Community in San Juan County which is turning into an international radioactive dump.

May 11, 2026

Uranium Ore Truck Collision Endangered Navajos near Shonto on Navajo Nation

Uranium Ore Truck Collision Endangered Navajos near Shonto on Navajo Nation




Uranium ore haul truck struck by car endangered Navajos near Shonto, Arizona on the Navajo Nation. Photo courtesy Navajo Police Dept.

A uranium ore haul truck traveling from a uranium mine in the Havasupai's homeland in the Grand Canyon, to a mill site in the White Mesa Ute's community in Utah, was struck by a vehicle, which exposes the danger from the radioactive haul trucks covered only with tarps. The trucks travel from Energy Fuels Pinyon Plain uranium mine in the Grand Canyon in Havasupai ancestral land, through Flagstaff, and across Navajo and Hopi lands before reaching Energy Fuels mill site on Ute ancestral land in southeastern Utah. The radioactive trucks traveling through the western Navajo Nation pose extreme danger because of the lack of hazardous waste emergency response facilities locally. -- Censored News

Navajo Police Department Kayenta District Responds to Crash Involving Uranium Transport Vehicle Near Shonto, Arizona.

May 10, 2026

Border Wall Construction Destroys 1,000 Year Old Sacred Place of Hia-Ced O'odham


Tohono O'odham Nation: 'Devastating and Entirely Avoidable Loss'

Border Wall Construction Destroys 1,000 Year Old Sacred Place of Hia-Ced O'odham


Democracy Now!
https://democracynow.org/donate/sm-de...

Construction crews in Arizona who are building President Trump’s expanded border wall have razed a portion of a Native American archeological site in the Sonoran Desert estimated to be at least 1,000 years old. Aerial photos reveal that bulldozers caused extensive damage to a 280-by-50-foot etching in the desert sand known as an intaglio, which holds special significance for the Hia-Ced O’odham people.

Lorraine Marquez Eiler, co-founder of the International Sonoran Desert Alliance and an elder of the Hia-Ced O’odham, says locals informed both the work crews and Border Patrol officials about the significance of the intaglio. “On Thursday, late afternoon, they were still talking about how to protect the area and went home feeling that they were still working together. On Friday, for whatever reason, the contractors bulldozed the area,” says Marquez Eiler.