Extract from The Guardian
- Activists released after arrest treated ‘like we’re not human beings’
- Standoff with law enforcement continues with peaceful Saturday rally
Tires burn as soldiers and law enforcement
officers stand in formation to force Dakota Access pipeline
protesters off private land. Photograph: Mike McCleary/AP
Sam
Levin in Cannon Ball, North Dakota
Monday 31 October 2016 05.03 AEDT
Native Americans protesting
against the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL) on Saturday accused law
enforcement officers of cruel and inhumane treatment in jail, but
said mass arrests and violent confrontations with police would not
deter them from fighting construction of the oil project.
Activists were reunited at the Standing Rock camps
in North
Dakota after their release from local jails. Some told the
Guardian police aggressively detained them, crowded them into vans,
wrote numbers on their arms to track them, conducted invasive body
searches and showed a lack of respect for native culture.
“They treat us like we’re not human beings,”
said Russell Eagle Bear, a member of the Rosebud Sioux, who was one
of 141
people arrested on Thursday when protesters tried to block
pipeline construction. “We’re simply numbers to them.”
In tears, Caro Gonzales, a member of the
Chemehuevi tribe who was one
of the first arrested, said police temporarily detained her and three
other women in a large cage that she described as a “dog kennel”.
“We were all crying in pain, saying we needed
medical attention,” said Gonzales, 26, who also goes by the name
Guarding Red Tarantula Woman.
Caro Gonzales: ‘We were all crying in pain.’
Photograph: Sam Levin
The release from jail of the protesters came after
a week of increasingly
tense conflict between Native American activists and a
growing police force seeking to thwart protests against the $3.8bn
pipeline.
The project, which would transport crude oil from
the Bakken oil field to a refinery near Chicago, first sparked
demonstrations in April, when members of the Standing Rock Lakota and
other Native American nations rode
on horseback and established the Sacred Stone “spiritual camp”.
Thousands of activists have since traveled to
Cannon Ball, North Dakota, including members of tribes from across
the US, launching a huge and continuing protest that has become a
rallying cry for indigenous
rights, climate
change activism and environmental conservation.
Leaders of the Standing Rock Sioux say the pipeline, a project of the Texas-based corporation Energy Transfer Partners, threatens the water supply and cultural heritage and would destroy sacred lands. Over the last week, activists have repeatedly attempted to occupy the property where pipeline construction is beginning, leading to daily standoffs that have ended in arrests and violence.
Leaders of the Standing Rock Sioux say the pipeline, a project of the Texas-based corporation Energy Transfer Partners, threatens the water supply and cultural heritage and would destroy sacred lands. Over the last week, activists have repeatedly attempted to occupy the property where pipeline construction is beginning, leading to daily standoffs that have ended in arrests and violence.
Protesters inspect charred vehicles and signs in
front of a law enforcement barricade. Photograph: Stringer/Reuters
The Morton county sheriff’s office and supporting police agencies from across North Dakota and beyond have now made more than 400 arrests, accusing Native American activists, journalists and film-makers of rioting, trespassing, arson, resisting arrest and assaulting officers.
A sheriff spokesman, Rob Keller, told the Guardian
in an email Sunday that “temporary holding cells made of chain link
fences” are only used during mass arrests, and said that medical
and nurse staff address inmates’ needs.
The drama intensified when protesters created
barricades
of fire and set alight vehicles including those meant for
pipeline construction.
Protesters and civil rights groups monitoring the demonstration have argued that police have become overly militarized and dangerously aggressive. Law enforcement officials on Friday admitted to using pepper spray, “bean-bag and sponge rounds”, Tasers and devices that transmit loud bangs and high-pitch tones, in response to what Morton County sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier described as “escalated violent and illegal actions”.
Protesters and civil rights groups monitoring the demonstration have argued that police have become overly militarized and dangerously aggressive. Law enforcement officials on Friday admitted to using pepper spray, “bean-bag and sponge rounds”, Tasers and devices that transmit loud bangs and high-pitch tones, in response to what Morton County sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier described as “escalated violent and illegal actions”.
“We got herded around like cattle,” said Wakia
Chikala, another protester who was arrested on Thursday.
Several members of a youth council that has helped
lead the movement at Sacred Stone told the Guardian they were on the
front lines of Thursday’s standoff and that police attacked them
when they tried to remain peaceful.
“The cops threw me to the ground,” said Wambli
Red Bird, 19, of the Cheyenne River Sioux tribe. “One of them had a
knee on my neck and they were shouting ‘Stop resisting.’ I was
telling them, ‘I’m going peacefully.’”
Lauren Howland: ‘Every time we got maced, we got
right back up.’ Photograph: Sam Levin
“The cop grabbed me and twisted my hand,”
added Lauren Howland, a 21-year-old youth council representative and
member of the San Carlos Apache tribe who is recovering from a broken
wrist sustained in an earlier confrontation with police. “But every
time we got maced, we got right back up.”
Authorities faced widespread criticism from free
speech advocates after police issued an arrest warrant against the
broadcast journalist and Democracy
Now! host Amy Goodman – charges a judge
later rejected. The actor
Shailene Woodley was also arrested at the protest, which has also
attracted visits from the actor Mark Ruffalo and the civil rights
leader Jesse Jackson.
The ground effort to stop the oil project comes a month after a federal judge denied a request from tribal leadership to block construction permits.
The ground effort to stop the oil project comes a month after a federal judge denied a request from tribal leadership to block construction permits.
Activists held a peaceful rally on Saturday,
marching to a bridge where there is now a roadblock and barricade
separating the camp from the pipeline project – where police remain
stationed with large tanks. Tribal leaders sang as law enforcement
helicopters flew above the crowd.
Gonzales said she spent 36 hours behind bars and
was now facing multiple charges, including criminal trespassing and
conspiracy with fire. Police also impounded her motor home, she said,
with all of her belongings.
“I don’t have any clothes or anything,” she
said, sitting in a hotel room in a local casino, where she and others
were recovering from what they described as traumatic jail
experiences.
Gonzales, who lives in Olympia, in Washington
state, and has been at the camp for three months, said she was
arrested while praying. “They slammed us on to the ground,” she
said.
Ticky Black Crow Smith:
‘I’m not giving up.’ Photograph: Sam Levin
She said she was particularly upset by the way
police repeatedly searched her and other Native American women.
“He searched me everywhere, touched everywhere,”
she said, adding that the experience has been emotionally draining.
“I was just crying. I couldn’t physically stop myself.”
Ticky Black Crow Smith, a 29-year-old member of
the Kwatsan tribe, said he was arrested twice in the last week, but
would not stop protesting.
“I’m not giving up,” he said. “DAPL is not
giving up. Why should I?”
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