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		As Dakota pipeline saga drags, rancor 
		builds on both sides 
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		 [November 23, 2016] 
		By Terray Sylvester 
 CANNON BALL, N.D. (Reuters) - The September 
		decision by the Obama administration to delay final approval for the 
		Dakota Access Pipeline was intended to give federal officials more time 
		to consult with Native American tribes that have faced dispossession 
		from lands for decades.
 
 But the delays have also caused increased consternation among company 
		officials and led to growing violence between law enforcement and 
		protesters, with both sides decrying the actions of the other in recent 
		days.
 
 Energy Transfer Partners LP's <ETP.N> $3.7 billion Dakota Access project 
		has drawn steady opposition from environmentalists and Native American 
		activists, led by the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. Their tribal lands are 
		adjacent to the Missouri River, where federal approval is needed to 
		tunnel under a 1-mile (1.6 km) stretch to complete the pipeline.
 
 The activist movement has grown steadily since the tribe established 
		Sacred Stone Camp in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, in April, a temporary 
		site founded as a point of resistance to the pipeline. The movement has 
		remained strong even as temperatures have turned frigid.
 
 The most violent clashes took place over this past weekend. Police used 
		water hoses in below-freezing temperatures to keep about 400 protesters 
		at bay, a move criticized by activist groups, the American Civil 
		Liberties Union and elected officials concerned about freedom of 
		expression and the escalation of violence.
 
		
		 
		"Almost the entire camp was in shock," Salim Matt Gras, 64, of Hamilton, 
		Montana, said at the main camp. "They talk about using non-lethal 
		weapons, but when you're talking about soaking people with freezing 
		water in frigid temperatures, that's life-threatening."
 Morton County has said violent protesters have overshadowed the peaceful 
		action by other activists. Police said they had recovered improvised 
		weapons from the scene of the protest including slingshots and small 
		propane tanks rigged as explosives.
 
 “We can use whatever force necessary to maintain peace,” said Jason 
		Ziegler, police chief in Mandan, North Dakota, near Cannon Ball, in a 
		statement Monday. He said the use of water is "less than lethal" 
		compared with protesters' use of slingshots and burning logs.
 
 Both protesters and law enforcement have released statements this week 
		detailing injuries suffered by police and activists, with each side 
		accusing the other of ratcheting up tensions.
 
 Sophia Wilansky, 21, of New York City, was struck on her left arm by a 
		crowd-control grenade fired by police on Monday, according to a 
		statement from Standing Rock's Medic and Healer Council. A spokeswoman 
		for Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, where Wilansky was 
		taken, confirmed she was in serious condition.
 
 North Dakota officials said the explosion that injured the woman was 
		still under investigation, but injuries to her arm were not the result 
		of any tools or weapons used by law enforcement. They cited the recovery 
		of three propane canisters at the site of the explosion.
 
 Standing Rock officials disputed that claim, saying grenade fragments 
		were removed from her arm.
 
		THE BLAME GAME
 There is still no official timeline for approval of the project. The 
		pipeline, set to run 1,172 miles (1,885 km) from North Dakota to 
		Illinois, was delayed in September so the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 
		could re-examine permits that would allow construction under the river.
 
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			A protester named Benji Buffalo displays his collection of weapons 
			used by police against protesters from a confrontation on Sunday 
			during a protest against plans to pass the Dakota Access pipeline 
			near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, near Cannon Ball, North 
			Dakota, U.S. November 22, 2016. REUTERS/Stephanie Keith 
            
			 
			On Nov. 14, final approval was delayed again for additional 
			consultation. That set off executives from Texas-based Energy 
			Transfer Partners, which asked a U.S. district court to declare the 
			project had the legal right to move forward and needed no further 
			approvals. It said the delays were part of a "sham process."
 While President Barack Obama has said the pipeline could be 
			re-routed, ETP chief executive Kelcy Warren has rejected that 
			possibility, adding he is confident the pipeline will be approved 
			once President-elect Donald Trump, who has been supportive of 
			pipeline projects, takes office in late January.
 
 Two weeks ago, on Election Day, ETP said it was moving equipment to 
			the edge of the Missouri River, and would "commence drilling 
			activities" within two weeks of the move's completion. That, too, 
			was seen as a provocation by protesters.
 
 The delays have alarmed elected officials in North Dakota. Governor 
			Jack Dalrymple has urged federal officials to resolve the permitting 
			process and asked for additional support from federal law 
			enforcement. A spokesman for the governor also blamed federal 
			officials for allowing protesters to camp without a permit on 
			federal property.
 
 "They’re shirking their responsibility here and I don’t believe that 
			they fully appreciate the seriousness of what we’ve got here,” 
			spokesman Jeff Zent said of the federal government.
 
 John DeCarlo, associate professor of criminal justice at the 
			University of New Haven in Connecticut, said the state needs to take 
			a more active stance or the situation could deteriorate.
 
 "They have to stop and realize that this is going to take mediation, 
			not force. There's no good that could come out of police using force 
			against indigenous peoples and others who are protesting," said 
			DeCarlo, who is also a former police chief.
 
			
			 
			
			 
			Dave Archambault II, chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux, has for 
			several months asked activists to refrain from violence. On Monday, 
			he did not denounce their actions entirely, saying he believes law 
			enforcement is trying to escalate violence.
 “Any time you’re backed into a corner, you react," he said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Stephanie Keith in Cannon Ball, Ben Klayman 
			in Detroit and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Writing by David 
			Gaffen; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
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