Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

September 2, 2011

Natives arrested at White House protesting tar sands


Native delegation with Naomi Klein/Photo Josh Lopez

Photo Tar Sands Action


Photo Josh Lopez


This article has been updated with photos of arrests:

CENSORED NEWS
Also see: Natives arrested at the White House, Narcosphere, on Google News:
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/brenda-norrell/2011/09/native-leaders-arrested-white-house

For Immediate Release
September2, 2011

FirstNations and American Indian Leaders Arrested In Front Of White House To ProtestKeystone XL Pipeline

Press statement

WASHINGTON -- American Indian and Canadian Native leaders were arrested today in front of the White House as they refused to move under orders from the police. Representatives of Native governments and Native organizations from the United States and Canada traveled long distances to join thousands of people that have come to Washington DC during the past two weeks to tell US President Barack Obama not to issue a permit for the construction of a controversial 1,900 mile oil pipeline from Canada to the Gulf Coast.

Last Friday, the US Department of State issued the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) concluding the pipeline would have"no significant impact" on the environment. President Obama now has about three months to determine whether the controversial project is in the national interest of the US.

“The Dene National Assembly in northern Canada passed a resolution standing in solidarity with Native Americans and other people opposing this Keystone XL project. We want the people of America to hear our concerns first hand, as peoples’ that live downstream from the tar sands development” said Chief Bill Erasmus, Dene Regional Chief of Northwest Territories and representative of the Assembly of First Nations, Canada’s largest tribal organization.

Gitz Deranger, Dene from the village of Fort Chipewyan, Alberta, located downstream of the tar sands says, “I have seen the devastation of our environment and people's health with increased cancer deaths. If Obama approves this pipeline, it would only lead to more of our people needlessly dying.”

“This is an issue of our right to say no, as sovereign independent indigenous nations. The US government doesn’t haveour best interest in mind, nor the rights of Mother Earth” says Deb WhitePlume, Lakota grassroots leader, with Owe Aku, an Oglala Lakota organization in South Dakota. “Our Lakota people oppose this pipeline because of the potentialcontamination of the surface water and of the Oglala aquifer. We have thousands of ancient andhistorical cultural resources that would be destroyed across our treaty lands.”

“It’s my responsibility as a woman to stand with Mother Earth against corporate male-dominated greed. White Plume stood proud as her hands were handcuffed behind her back and led away.

“This is amatter of life and death, our way of life and our human rights should not be onthe altar of US energy policy,” says Pat Spears, a Lakota, with IntertribalCouncil on Utility Policy, of South Dakota. “The arrogant pollution from mining and pipelines for tar sands oil is totally unnecessary relative to meeting usoil needs. The building of this pipeline will result in the increase in the cost of oil and its exportation,from the Gulf Coast to other countries. This does not make good economic sense.”

Chief George Stanley, Cree Regional Chief of Alberta spoke eloquently reminding the protesters that the pipeline proposal was initiated under the previous Bush administration and inherited by Obama. “Our First Nations in Alberta have been concerned of the lack of consultation of the pipelines and tar sands expansion. President Obama can do what’s right. For the President to approve this pipeline is not in the national interest of US or Canada.”

Tom Goldtooth,director of the Indigenous Environmental Network whose group organized this Indigenous Day of Action in DC said, “The Canadian tar sands, the proposed Keystone XL and all the other current and proposed pipelines and heavy hauls are weapons of mass destruction leading the path to triggering the final overheating of Mother Earth. President Obama made promises to Native Nations. Here is an opportunity for him to honor those promises and be a man of conscience by standing up to corporate power, address the compounding changes of climate change and over consumption of the resources of Mother Earth; and saying no to the Keystone XL pipeline.”

For more information, hi-resolution photos or to arrange interviews contact:

Clayton Thomas-Muller
Cell: 613297 7515 or email monsterredlight@gmail.com

Melina Laboucan-Massimo
Cell: 347471 6424 or email miyowapan@gmail.com

Or visit www.ienearth.org or www.tarsandsaction.org


Read previous press statement:
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2011/09/media-advisory-thursday-september-1.html
With support coming in from across the Americas, Faith Spotted Eagle said this morning in South Dakota, "The Ihanktonwan Dakota early on filed suit against the Dept of State for this invasion but it was dismissed, we wish we had funds to appeal it. From the Treaty Council of the Ihanktonwan Oyate we complete oppose this erosion of justice and human life."
We'll add other names and photos soon.

Photo Tar Sands Action mobile upload.

Photo: Natives prepare for arrest at the White House today



This article has been updated:
Please see: 'Portraits of Arrests'
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2011/09/natives-portraits-of-arrests-white.html

Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

For Immediate Release
September2, 2011

First Nations and American Indian Leaders Arrested In Front Of White House To Protest Keystone XL Pipeline

Press statement

WASHINGTON -- American Indian and Canadian Native leaders were arrested today in front of the White House as they refused to move under orders from the police. Representatives of Native governments and Native organizations from the United States and Canada traveled long distances to join thousands of people that have come to Washington DC during the past two weeks to tell US President Barack Obama not to issue a permit for the construction of a controversial 1,900 mile oil pipeline from Canada to the Gulf Coast.

Last Friday, the US Department of State issued the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) concluding the pipeline would have"no significant impact" on the environment. President Obama now has about three months to determine whether the controversial project is in the national interest of the US. 

“The Dene National Assembly in northern Canada passed a resolution standing in solidarity with Native Americans and other people opposing this Keystone XL project. We want the people of America to hear our concerns first hand, as peoples’ that live downstream from the tar sands development” said Chief Bill Erasmus, Dene Regional Chief of Northwest Territories and representative of the Assembly of First Nations, Canada’s largest tribal organization.

Gitz Deranger, Dene from the village of Fort Chipewyan, Alberta, located downstream of the tar sands says, “I have seen the devastation of our environment and people's health with increased cancer deaths. If Obama approves this pipeline, it would only lead to more of our people needlessly dying.”

“This is an issue of our right to say no, as sovereign independent indigenous nations.  The US government doesn’t haveour best interest in mind, nor the rights of Mother Earth” says Deb WhitePlume, Lakota grassroots leader, with Owe Aku, an Oglala Lakota organization in South Dakota. “Our Lakota people oppose this pipeline because of the potentialcontamination of the surface water and of the Oglala aquifer. We have thousands of ancient andhistorical cultural resources that would be destroyed across our treaty lands.”

“It’s my responsibility as a woman to stand with Mother Earth against corporate male-dominated greed.  White Plume stood proud as her hands were handcuffed behind her back and led away.

“This is amatter of life and death, our way of life and our human rights should not be onthe altar of US energy policy,” says Pat Spears, a Lakota, with IntertribalCouncil on Utility Policy, of South Dakota. “The arrogant pollution from mining and pipelines for tar sands oil is totally unnecessary relative to meeting usoil needs.  The building of this pipeline will result in the increase in the cost of oil and its exportation,from the Gulf Coast to other countries. This does not make good economic sense.”

Chief George Stanley, Cree Regional Chief of Alberta spoke eloquently reminding the protesters that the pipeline proposal was initiated under the previous Bush administration and inherited by Obama. “Our First Nations in Alberta have been concerned of the lack of consultation of the pipelines and tar sands expansion. President Obama can do what’s right. For the President to approve this pipeline is not in the national interest of US or Canada.”
Tom Goldtooth,director of the Indigenous Environmental Network whose group organized this Indigenous Day of Action in DC said, “The Canadian tar sands, the proposed Keystone XL and all the other current and proposed pipelines and heavy hauls are weapons of mass destruction leading the path to triggering the final overheating of Mother Earth. President Obama made promises to Native Nations. Here is an opportunity for him to honor those promises and be a man of conscience by standing up to corporate power, address the compounding changes of climate change and over consumption of the resources of Mother Earth; and saying no to the Keystone XL pipeline.”

-For more information, hi-resolution photos or to arrange interviews contact:

Clayton Thomas-Muller
Cell: 613297 7515 or email monsterredlight@gmail.com

Melina Laboucan-Massimo
Cell: 347471 6424 or email miyowapan@gmail.com

Or visit www.ienearth.org or www.tarsandsaction.org


Read previous press statement:
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2011/09/media-advisory-thursday-september-1.html
With support coming in from across the Americas, Faith Spotted Eagle said this morning in South Dakota, "The Ihanktonwan Dakota early on filed suit against the Dept of State for this invasion but it was dismissed, we wish we had funds to appeal it. From the Treaty Council of the Ihanktonwan Oyate we complete oppose this erosion of justice and human life."
We'll add other names and photos soon.
Photo Tar Sands Action mobile upload.

September 1, 2011

Tar Sands White House Portraits of Arrests Sept. 1, 2011








Photos by Josh Lopez/Tar Sands Action. Portraits of some of those arresed today at the White House to halt the tar sands XL Pipeline.
See portraits of all today's heroes at the Tar Sands Photostream. Thanks to all the photographers who make this possible each day:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tarsandsaction/
Tomorrow, Friday, Native Americans and First Nations arrested at the White House.

Native Americans and First Nations to be arrested at White House


Native Americans and First Nations To Be Arrested at White House Protesting TransCanada Keystone XL Pipeline

Brenda Norrell
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

Photo Credit Milan Ilnyckyj: Clayton Thomas Muller, Cree, delivering letter to Canadian Consulate in DC on Wednesday.

WASHINGTON -- Native Americans and First Nations will be arrested at the White House on Friday, urging President Obama to say "No"' to the Keystone XL Pipeline that threatens Indian country and the enormous Ogallala aquifer in the heart of the nation.

Urging an end to the pipeline and the dirty tar sands already destroying First Nations homelands in Alberta, Indigenous Peoples join the two week sit-in on Friday, Sept. 2, 2011.

Representatives of Canada’s Assembly of First Nations, First Nations community members, Native Americans from the United States and the Indigenous Environmental Network, will be arrested in front of the White House to protest the proposed Keystone XL pipeline.

"President Obama will decide the fate of this massive project later this fall. Representatives have traveled to the capitol city to wrap up two weeks of the largest mass civil disobedience the United States has seen organized in decades," the delegation said.

First Nation and Native American arrestees will be holding banners saying “Obama honor the Treaties” and “Stop the Keystone XL Pipeline” until they are arrested on Friday.

The delegation invited members of the press to Lafayette Park, across the street from the White House in Washington DC, for a press event to hear statements from Tribal Leaders and community representatives that will start promptly at 11:30 am on Friday.

On Wednesday, the Council of Canadians, the Indigenous Environmental Network and Greenpeace Canada presented a letter addressed to Ambassador Gary Doer at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. demanding an end to lobbying in favour of the Keystone XL pipeline.

“Ambassador Doer has publicly recognized he is actively lobbying for Keystone XL,” says Maude Barlow, National Chairperson of the Council of Canadians. “To pitch the tar sands as the answer to American energy security ignores the destruction of the tar sands and turns away from the sustainable energy future Canada and the U.S. need.”

In May 2011, Alberta saw one of the largest pipeline bursts in the province’s history when 28,000 barrels of crude oil spilled into the local ecosystem near Peace River. In the past year, TransCanada’s first Keystone pipeline has spilled crude oil at least 12 times and contaminated water, air and soil in nearby communities. The spills resulted in catastrophic effects on wildlife and the quality of life of nearby farmers, landowners and Indigenous communities.

First Nations delegates with the Indigenous Environmental Network will also be present outside the Canadian Embassy. They have come to Washington to share their testimonies of the damaging social and health effects the tar sands are having on their communities.

“With the onslaught of tar sands exploitation, we are seeing more people developing serious respiratory illnesses. People of all ages are developing types of cancer that we have never seen in our area, as we have seen the tar sands industry expand,” said Gitz Crazyboy of Fort McMurray, in the heart of the Alberta tar sands.

“What we see is alarming – we are witnessing the complete destruction of the boreal forest as tar sands operations expand.”

The proposed Keystone XL pipeline would carry tar sands oil from Canada to the U.S. The controversial 2,736 kilometre project threatens to pollute freshwater supplies in America’s agricultural heartland and spike air pollution in the Gulf Coast. The pipeline would cross Indian-US treaty territories, water aquifers, rivers, grasslands, cultural sites and ecological sensitive areas. Tar sands operations and its associated infrastructure projects.

Interviews available upon request, please call:
ClaytonThomas-Muller-Indigenous Tar Sands Campaigner
Cell: 613 297 7515 or email monsterredlight@gmail.com
Or Visit www.ienearth.org or www.tarsandsaction.org