Dakota pipeline protest camp nearly empty
as holdouts face removal
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[February 23, 2017]
By Terray Sylvester
CANNON BALL, N.D. (Reuters) - All but a few
dozen of the last holdouts from a months-long mass protest against a
proposed oil pipeline in North Dakota peacefully vacated their riverside
camp as an eviction deadline passed on Wednesday.
"We've very firm that the camp is now closed," Governor Doug Burgum, a
Republican, told an evening news conference.
Following Wednesday's exodus, Burgum estimated there were 25 to 50
protesters left. He said they were still free to leave voluntarily so
long as they did not interfere with cleanup crews scheduled to enter the
site at 9 a.m. on Thursday.
The encampment has stood since August on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
property at the edge of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation near Cannon
Ball, North Dakota, about 40 miles south of Bismarck, the state capital.
Protesters calling themselves "water protectors" have rallied there
against plans to route the Dakota Access Pipeline beneath a lake near
the reservation, saying the project poses a threat to water resources
and sacred tribal sites.
Dubbed the Oceti Sakowin camp, the site became a focal point for U.S.
environmental activists and Native Americans expressing indigenous
rights, drawing some 5,000 to 10,000 protesters at the height of the
movement in early December.
Most have drifted since away, as tribal leaders urged people to leave
due to harsh winter weather, while pressing their opposition to the
pipeline in court. Roughly 300 demonstrators had remained until this
week.
Protesters and police have clashed multiple times since August, with
more than 700 arrests tallied.
On Wednesday authorities appeared intent on avoiding clashes, though 10
arrests were made as protesters confronted police in riot gear on a
highway outside the camp entrance before the officers retreated around
nightfall.
President Donald Trump has pushed for completion of the pipeline since
he took office last month, signing an executive order that reversed an
Obama administration decision and cleared the way for the $3.8 billion
project to proceed.
Two tribes earlier this month lost a legal bid to halt construction. The
pipeline is due to be complete and ready for oil by April 1, according
to court documents filed Tuesday.
DEADLINE ON THE RIVER
Burgum and the Army Corps of Engineers had set Wednesday's deadline for
protesters to leave, citing hazards posed by impending spring floods
along the Cannonball River.
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Raymond Kingfisher, 59, of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe, sings during
a march on the outskirts of the main opposition camp against the
Dakota Access oil pipeline near Cannon Ball, North Dakota, U.S.,
February 22, 2017. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester
The governor said the handful of demonstrators who remained needed
to make way for crews set to expand a cleanup that began weeks ago
to remove mounds of garbage, debris, human waste and dozens of
abandoned vehicles.
At least three dozen protesters could be seen gathering near the
camp entrance as the afternoon eviction deadline passed, and a few
dozen others were believed lingering elsewhere at the site. Some
vowed to stay put.
"I feel as though now is the time to stand our ground," said Alethea
Phillips, 17, a demonstrator from Michigan who had spent three
months at the camp.
Chase Iron Eyes, a Standing Rock Sioux member, said closing the camp
would not dampen his determination.
"You can't arrest a movement. You can't arrest a spiritual
revolution," he said.
Activists set off fireworks on Wednesday morning, and as freezing
rain and snow fell, some demonstrators ceremonially burned tents and
other structures at the camp.
State officials said protesters had set about 20 fires, and that two
youngsters - a 7-year-old boy and a 17-year-old girl - were taken to
a Bismarck hospital for burns after two explosions occurred, the
governor said.
Authorities have set up an assistance center to provide departing
protesters with food, water and medical check-ups, as well as a
voucher for one night's hotel stay and a bus ride home.
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester in Cannon Ball, North Dakota and
Timothy Mclaughlin in Chicago; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by
Diane Craft and Simon Cameron-Moore)
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