'Environmental
genocide’: Native Americans quit talks over Keystone XL pipeline
Leaders
from 11 Native American tribes stormed out of a meeting with US
federal officials in Rapid City, South Dakota, to protest the
proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which they say will lead to
‘environmental genocide.’
Native
Americans are opposed to the 1,179-mile (1,897km) Keystone XL
project, a system to transport tar sands oil from Canada and the
northern United States to refineries in Texas for various reasons,
including possible damage to sacred sites, pollution, and water
contamination.
Although
the planned pipeline would not pass directly through any Native
American reservation, tribes in proximity to the proposed system say
it will violate their traditional lands and that the environmental
risks of the project are simply too great.
Russ
Girling, CEO of TransCanada, the company that hopes to build the
pipeline, has promised in the past that Keystone XL will be “the
safest pipeline ever built.”
The
Indian groups, as well as other activist organizations, doubt the
claim, saying the risks involved in the project are too high.
In
an effort to ease their concerns, officials from the Department of
State agreed to meet with tribal leaders on Thursday in the Hilton
Garden Inn in Rapid City, Michigan.
Before
the talks could begin, however, tribal leaders walked out, angered
that the government had sent what they considered low-level
representatives.
In
a press conference following the walkout, tribal leaders took turns
criticizing the project, as well as the Obama administration.
"I
will only meet with President Obama," Bryan Brewer,
president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, told the Rapid City Journal.
Others
mentioned environmental concerns with the proposed pipeline, which
echo the concern of environmental groups across the country.
President
Barack Obama speaks at the southern site of the Keystone XL pipeline
on March 22, 2012 in Cushing, Oklahoma (AFP Photo / Tom Pennington)
Casey Camp-Horinek, an elder with the Southern Ponca Tribe based in Oklahoma, compared the pipeline and other environmental damage to the historical events that had decimated her people during European colonization.
"We
find ourselves victims of another form of genocide, and it's
environmental genocide, and it's caused by the extractive
industries," she said.
Charles
LoneChief, vice president of the Pawnee Business Council,
headquartered in Oklahoma, said the public was misinformed about the
pipeline's environmental risks.
Unlike
a traditional crude oil pipeline, Keystone XL will pump oil that is
collected from tar sands. To turn this substance into a transportable
liquid, oil companies must add chemicals that environmental groups
warn are highly toxic.
"That
gets into our waterways, our water tables, our aquifers, then we have
problems," LoneChief said.
The
US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has estimated that the
Keystone XL pipeline will increase annual US carbon pollution
emissions by up to 27.6 million metric tons – the impact of adding
nearly 6 million cars on the road, according to the Environment News
Service.
Robin
LeBeau, a council representative for the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe
based in South Dakota, pledged to protest against any construction,
even if that meant standing in front of bulldozers.
"What
the State Department, what President Obama needs to hear from us, is
that we are going to be taking direct action," she
said.
I
believe this is going to be one of the biggest battles we are ever
going to have, LeBeau added.
This
is not the first time that Native American groups have spoken out on
the project.
Leaders
from ten Canadian and US indigenous groups gathered in Ottawa,
Ontario in March to protest the construction of pipelines.
“Tar
sands pipelines will not pass through [our] collective territories
under any conditions or circumstances,” the
tribes said at a press conference.
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