Groups warn Oregon mine militia dispute
threatens democracy
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[May 20, 2015]
By Shelby Sebens
PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - A coalition of public
policy advocates warned on Tuesday that a group of armed conservative
activists who have been guarding a mine in southern Oregon for over a
month are a sign of an emerging violent anti-government movement.
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The groups behind the newly formed "Ballots Not Bullets" coalition
said they will seek to promote democracy over what they call
militia-style extremism and will try to counter these kinds of
movements nationwide.
Created by seven organizations including the Coalition to Stop Gun
Violence and Catholics in Alliance for Common Good, Ballots Not
Bullets is a response to an ongoing legal battle between the owners
of a mining claim outside the small Oregon town of Medford and the
U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
Sugar Pine Mine co-owner Rick Barclay summoned guards from the
conservative Oath Keepers activist network following a stop-work
order he received in March after BLM officials said equipment found
on site did not meet requirements.
The armed guards were still guarding the mine as of Tuesday, Oath
Keepers spokeswoman Mary Emerick said, although she would not say
how many.
The founders of Ballots Not Bullets, who say they may lobby Oregon
lawmakers on the issue, describe the dispute as the latest
manifestation of last year's standoff between Nevada rancher Cliven
Bundy and the federal government, in which the BLM sought to seize
Bundy's cattle after he refused to pay grazing fees.
The federal agents backed down after an armed standoff.
"It is a rejection of any kind of democratic compromise and the
endorsement of the use of weapons and violence to get your way,"
said Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center, a coalition
member.
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Emerick said the Oath Keepers do not condone violence and require
that guards be vetted and pass a background check. She said she
thought critics might be basing their opinions on "other incidents
around the country."
More than 100 protesters gathered at the BLM offices in Medford last
month, prompting the agency to close its operations for the day.
Local community groups say some residents were scared when
out-of-state guards were recruited to watch the mine.
"It seems like they're digging in and they're trying to stay,"
Jessica Campbell, organizer for the Rural Organizing Project, an
Oregon activists group, said of the Oath Keepers.
(Reporting by Shelby Sebens; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Daniel
Wallis and Eric Beech)
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