Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

August 26, 2011

Day 7 Tar Sands White House Portraits of Arrests






Day 7: Tar Sands White House Arrests
Censored News
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

Photo Credit: Milan Ilnyckyj photos 1, 2 and 3. Photos 4 and 5 by Josh Lopez.

Weather Update for 8/27 and 8/28


News — admin August 26, 2011 at 12:16 pm
Here is an update on our plans for the coming weekend as a result of Hurricane Irene:
Saturday’s demonstration is planned to continue, but anyone concerned about travel arrangements or other issues related to the storm is encouraged to reschedule their plans to join us in the coming week, which we expect to be even bigger and stronger than the one past.We will discuss as a group our plans for tomorrow during this evening’s training session, which will continue as planned, based on the latest weather updates.
Sunday’s demonstration will be cancelled, in the interests of safety, and out of respect for everyone dealing with the immediate effects of this monster storm.
Sunday’s training for Monday’s action is still planned to happen at Mt. Vernon Church at 5pm, barring major power outages or other disruptions.
It does not escape our attention that storms of this size and character will be the new normal on a warmer planet. We are more committed than ever to continuing our campaign to stop Keystone XL and the tar sands development, and we will be back in action Monday.

August 25, 2011

VIDEO: Russell Means thanks all his supporters


A thank you, and health update, from Russell Means, recorded Monday.

Albuquerque Forest Service Shuts Down, Frightened by Peaceful Peaks Protest

Norman Patrick Brown, Navajo, holds sign "President Obama supports destruction of sacred sites." Photo by Ethan Sing


Outta Your Backpack Media/Censored News

Outta Your Backpack Media/Censored News
By Brenda Norrell
Censored News
ALBUQUERQUE -- The Protect the Peaks protest in Albuquerque at the US Forest Service office frightened the Forest Service so much that it shut down, roped off its corridors with police tape and placed police on the roof top.
Louise Benally, Navajo from Big Mountain, Arizona, however, said she was able to enter the building and deliver a letter calling for a halt to the destruction of sacred San Francisco Peaks.
Already, there is clearcutting of the old growth forest for the pipeline of sewage water for snowmaking at the Snowbowl ski resort.
El Grito news covered the protest. "The strength of our heart and our spirit is our prayers, the strength and heart of our prayers is our mountains, and the strength and heart of those mountains is our great spirit," Navajo grassroots organizer Norman Brown told the gathering. "That's how we are tied in to this land. That's how and why we've never given up."
Louise Benally, a Navajo traditional practitioner and resident of the San Francisco Peaks foothills, delivered a letter to the Forest Service, addressed to Corbin Newman, Regional Forester, stating that the federal government is passing judgment on the tribe's religious belief, and failing in its duty as "trustee" to protect "native religions, traditions, and culture that it is otherwise charged to protect."
Read more at El Grito:
Protests were held at Forest Service offices around the west today, including protests in Golden, Colorado, and Vallejo, California, calling for a halt to the destruction of San Francisco Peaks, sacred to 13 Native American Nations. Medicine men gather healing plants on the mountain and hold ceremonies there, where the Snowbowl plans to make snow from wastewater piped in.


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USDA Forest Service, Region 3                                                                       August 25, 2011

Appeal Deciding Officer: Harv Forsgren

333 Broadway SE

Albuquerque, NM 87102

To: Corbin Newman, Regional Forester



RE: Record of Decision:  Arizona Snowbowl Facilities Improvements and Forest Plan

       Amendment #21 by Nora Rasure, Forest Supervisor, February 18, 2005

This letter is presented to you in order to call on you to enact an immediate halt to the destruction and desecration of the Holy San Francisco Peaks, located in Northern Arizona, and to demand that the USDA revoke the Special Use Permit for Arizona Snowbowl for the greater public interest.


The Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for Arizona Snowbowl is currently under review by the USDA in its Draft Report on Sacred Sites. The EIS details the public outcry about the plan to use treated sewage effluent to make snow to "provide a consistent and reliable ski season" for Arizona Snowbowl. It further states that in an effort to build trust with local Native American tribes the USDA will try to reverse some of the damage caused by decisions that have directly contributed to the desecration of sites held sacred to Native American tribes.

However, at the outset of the 60 day public comment period for the Draft Report on Sacred Sites, Arizona Snowbowl had already began clear cutting 40 acres of rare alpine forest and laying a 15 mile pipeline to carry treated sewage water up the Mountain to manufacture snow. The people who hold this mountain sacred implore you as Regional Forester to step in and make the USDA aware that the very mountain your own report’s claim to protect as a show of trust is being devastated. This will destroy any hope of building trust with tribes in the future.


It should also be noted that the Forest Service has violated the MOA with multiple tribal governments, without any recourse by the Coconino National Forest Service. Your position as Regional Forester obligates you to help provide oversight and protections of tribal interests in this matter. The Final EIS is insufficient, faulty, racist, environmentally unsound, scientifically unsound, and is clearly completely biased towards allowing Snowbowl to expand and use effluent water for snowmaking.

As you can see by the national outcry of resistance to the construction of Snowbowl, the citizens of this country strongly object to the decision to approve the Proposed and Preferred Action. Secretary Thomas J. Vilsack needs to be urged to uphold the Environmentally Preferred Action and it is your job as manager of part of this nation’s forests to encourage him to do so.  We demand that you halt construction if at the very least until the Sacred Sites Report is released and taken into consideration.  The entire East side of the Peaks was lost in a fire and it is the Forest Service’s duty to step in and fulfill their responsibilities in protecting the remaining pure wilderness watersheds, which are so rare in Arizona.

The Forest Service decision to expand Snowbowl is a perfect example of what Executive Order (EO) 12898 was created to stop. EO 12898 is an attempt to stop racism within the Federal Government. To continue this desecration would only continue to perpetrate the racism that has been taking place against the indigenous peoples of this land for centuries. Your own EIS clearly states that this will disproportionately affect and has, since 1938, been disproportionately affecting many Native tribes. Remand this decision, as it violates EO 12898, FS policy regarding EO 12898, and EPA policy regarding EO 12898.

 The Forest Service is not delegated with the responsibility of passing judgment on, or measuring the validity of a tribe’s religious belief.  That is, however, exactly what the federal government has done here.  It has forsaken its obligation as “trustee” and effectively undermined the continued viability of native religions, traditions, and culture that it is otherwise charged to protect.  Neither the asserted “improved skiing experience,” nor the undisclosed economic benefit to Arizona Snowbowl Resort Limited Partnership, can legitimately justify the devastating impact this project has on the tribes and on the individuals that hold the San Francisco Peaks sacred. 

The Forest Service is mandated with providing recreation, but it does not mandate recreation at the sake of sacred sites and fragile ecosystems. Artificially creating snow goes against this mandated recreation provision by completely ignoring the natural environment that exists within the SUP and has always existed within the SUP. There is no consistent snow on the Peaks as they are in high desert. In order to stay within Forest Service regulations, CNF should be providing recreation that fits the area the CNF is supposed to be managing—not artificially creating an environment that will benefit the owners of Snowbowl.

Mr. Newman, do your part to halt the construction at Snowbowl so that Mr.Vilsack has the option to remand this decision via the Report on Sacred Sites, primarily because it is unhealthy for all living things and will destroy the rarest ecosystem in Arizona. This decision is not only morally and ethically indefensible, the decision at issue: (1) was based on inaccurate and/or incomplete information; (2) is not supported by the record; and (3) was improper as a matter of law and currently has two lawsuits surrounding the project, one versus the US Forest Service and one against the City of Flagstaff.

Your prompt attention to this emergency situation is greatly appreciated.

Day 6 Portraits of Arrests: Tar Sands White House









Photos by Ben Powless, Mohawk. Arrested today, on Day 6 of the Tar Sands Protest at the White House. North Dakotans joined protesters to stop the fracking of their state.

NOW: 322 Arrests

Ottawa Tar Sands Action Announced

News — admin @ 5:57 pm
“There comes a time…”
There comes a time when you need to take a stand. When sending letters and signing petitions isn’t enough. When together we must say, “enough is enough — not on our watch.”
That time is now. We must act together for the health of our planet, our air, our water, our climate, and our children.
On September 26th we need you to come to Ottawa to join a historic action to oppose the tar sands. In a large peaceful protest, many will be risking arrest to tell the Harper government that we don’t support his reckless agenda; that we want to turn away from the toxic tar sands industry; and that we oppose the direction he’s taking this country.
In the U.S., people by the thousands are taking a stand. From Aug 20th to Sept. 3rd, thousands are pledging to risk arrest in daily acts of civil disobedience to convince President Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline that would bring dirty tar sands oil to the U.S. On
September 26th, we will stand up to Prime Minister Harper to pressure him to stem the tar sands industry at its source.
Tar sands mining and other extreme forms of energy extraction like Arctic drilling, shale fracking, and nuclear power generation send us in the exact opposite direction that we, as a civilization, must go to ensure global survival. If we burn the tar sands, we blot our nation’s reputation; if we leave that carbon in the ground, we’ll do the world an enormous favour.
On September 26th we are asking you to come to Ottawa to participate in one of the largest acts of civil disobedience on the climate issue that Canada has ever seen.
Be a part of turning Canada away from the toxic tar sands industry. Help forge the future we all want to live in.
If you are interested and willing to take action email ottawaaction@gmail.com or go to www.ottawaaction.ca to sign-up today. It will be a powerful day, and more powerful if you’re a part of it.
Sincerely,
The Council of Canadians
Greenpeace Canada
Indigenous Environmental Network
This action has been endorsed by:
Maude Barlow – Chair, Council of Canadians
Shirley Douglas – Canadian television, film and stage actress and activist
George Poitras – Mikisew Cree Indigenous First Nation
James Hansen – Internationally renown Climate Scientist.
Graeme Gibson – author and Member of the Order of Canada.
John O’Connor – Medical Doctor
Clayton Ruby – Member of the Order of Canada and Criminal Lawyer
Judy Rebick – Journalist, political activist and feminist.
Naomi Klein – Author and Journalist
Tom Goldtooth – Director, Indigenous Environmental Network
Bill McKibben – Writer and Environmentalist
Gordon Laxer – Professor of Political Economy
Tony Clarke – Author and director of the Polaris Institute
Bruce Cox – Executive Director Greenpeace Canada
Toghestiy Wet’suwet’en – Wet’suwet’en Nation
Kai Nagata – Ex-CTV Bureau Chief and journalist
James Biggar – Executive Director LeadNow.ca
Joseph B. Uehlein – Labor organizer and environmentalist

Why now?
This summer, 11 veteran U.S. and Canadian scientists and environmentalists — Maude Barlow, Wendell Berry, Tom Goldtooth, Danny Glover, James Hansen, Wes Jackson, Naomi Klein, Bill McKibben, George Poitras, David Suzuki, and Gus Speth — issued a continental call-out. The call was for people right across the U.S. to come to Washington D.C. and join in two weeks of non-violent civil disobedience actions to try to stop the massive tar sands Keystone XL pipeline. The response has been overwhelming
Knowing the horrific impacts a mega-pipeline from the tar sands in Alberta to refineries in the U.S. gulf coast would pose to communities, waterways, ecosystems and the planet, people are signing up by the thousands. They are pledging to risk arrest to draw a line in the sand and say “no.” They’ll deliver that message by daily risking arrest until the project is stopped.
On September 26th, we have a chance to match their courage and do the same in Ottawa.
If you are interested and willing to take action email ottawaaction@gmail.com or go to www.ottawaaction.ca to sign-up today.
« Vient un temps où… >
Vient un temps où il devient nécessaire de prendre position. Où envoyer des lettres et signer des pétitions ne suffit plus. Où nous devons dire ensemble : «C’est assez! Ça ne passera pas avec nous!»
Ce moment est venu. Nous devons passer à l’action ensemble pour protéger la santé de notre planète, de notre air, de notre eau, de notre climat et de nos enfants
Le 26 septembre, nous avons besoin que vous veniez à Ottawa pour participer à un évènement historique contre les sables bitumineux. Dans le cadre d’une grande manifestation pacifique, certains vont risquer de se faire arrêter afin de dire au gouvernement Harper que nous n’appuyons pas son programme irresponsable, que nous voulons tourner le dos à l’industrie toxique des sables bitumineux et que nous nous opposons à l’orientation qu’il veut donner au pays.
Aux États-Unis, ils sont des milliers à prennent position. Du 20 août au 3 septembre, ils prendront le risque de se faire arrêter lors de gestes quotidiens de désobéissance civile pour convaincre le président Obama de rejeter le projet d’oléoduc Keystone XL visant à acheminer le pétrole sale issu des sables bitumineux vers les États-Unis. Le 26 septembre, nous défendrons notre cause face au premier ministre Harper et ferons pression sur lui pour qu’il ferme les robinets de l’industrie des sables bitumineux.
L’exploitation des sables bitumineux et les autres formes extrêmes d’extraction d’énergie telle que le forage dans l’Arctique, le gaz de schiste et la production d’énergie nucléaire nous amènent dans la direction opposée de celle où nous devons aller, en tant que civilisation, si nous voulons assurer la survie de la planète. En brûlant les sables bitumineux, nous entachons la réputation de notre pays. En laissant le carbone sous terre, nous rendons un service énorme à la planète.
Le 26 septembre, nous vous demandons de venir à Ottawa pour prendre part à l’une des plus grandes manifestations de désobéissance civile que le Canada n’ait jamais connue sur la question du climat.
Contribuez à détourner le pays de l’industrie toxique des sables bitumineux. Aidez à forger un avenir où nous voudrions tous vivre.
Si vous souhaitez passer à l’action, envoyez un courriel à ottawaaction@gmail.com ou inscrivez-vous dès aujourd’hui sur www.ottawaaction.ca. Cette journée sera un moment fort ; encore plus fort si vous en faites partie.
Sincèrement,
Le Conseil des Canadiens
Greenpeace Canada
Indigenous Environmental Network
Cet appel à l’action est appuyé par :
Maude Barlow – Présidente du Conseil des Canadiens
Shirley Douglas – Télévision canadienne, actrice de cinéma et de théâtre et activiste
George Poitras – Autochtone de la Première nation crie Mikisew
James Hansen – Scientifique du climat de renommée internationale
Graeme Gibson – Auteur et membre de l’Ordre du Canada
John O’Connor – Médecin en titre
Clayton Ruby – Membre de l’Ordre du Canada et avocat criminaliste
Judy Rebick – Journaliste, activiste politique et féministe
Naomi Klein – Auteure et journaliste
Tom Goldtooth – Directeur de l’Indigenous Environmental Network
Bill McKibben – Écrivain et écologiste
Gordon Laxer – Professeur d’économie politique
Tony Clarke – Auteur et directeur général de l’Institut Polaris
Bruce Cox – Directeur général de Greenpeace Canada
Joseph B. Uehlein – Organisateur syndical et écologiste
Pourquoi maintenant ?
Cet été, 11 scientifiques et écologistes expérimentés américains et canadiens — Maude Barlow, Wendell Berry, Tom Goldtooth, Danny Glover, James Hansen, Wes Jackson, Naomi Klein, Bill McKibben, George Poitras, David Suzuki et Gus Speth — ont lancé un appel à l’échelle du continent. Ils ont demandé à la population américaine de se rendre à Washington D.C. pour prendre part à deux semaines de manifestations de désobéissance civile non-violente pour faire obstacle au projet d’oléoduc Keystone XL. Cet oléoduc doit transporter des quantités massives de pétrole issu des sables bitumineux. La réponse des citoyens américains a dépassé toute espérance.
Étant conscients des impacts horribles qu’un grand oléoduc acheminant les sables bitumineux albertains vers les raffineries américaines sur la côte du golfe du Mexique aurait sur les communautés, les voies navigables, les écosystèmes et la planète, des milliers de gens se sont inscrits et s’inscrivent présentement à la manifestation. Ils s’engagent à prendre le risque de se faire arrêter pour tracer une ligne dans le sable et dire « non ». Ils feront passer ce message en prenant quotidiennement le risque de se faire arrêter jusqu’à ce que le projet soit mis aux oubliettes.
Le 26 septembre, nous aurons l’occasion de montrer le même courage en faisant la même chose à Ottawa.
Si vous êtes prêts à passer à l’action, envoyez un courriel à ottawaaction@gmail.com ou inscrivez-vous dès aujourd’hui sur www.ottawaaction.ca.