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Wednesday, 30 November 2016

News from Standing Rock - 11/29/2016

Delivering supplies to protest camp could warrant $1,000 fine



29 November, 2016

Anyone delivering supplies to the main protest camp in Morton County could be subject to a $1,000 fine for violating the emergency evacuation order, but a local minister said this will not deter her church from providing support.

"It's cold out, really cold, and people need our help. Solidarity doesn't stop when the warm weather stops," minister Karen Van Fossen, of the Bismarck-Mandan Unitarian Universalist Congregation, wrote in an email Tuesday.

"As people of faith and conviction, we are committed to peaceful, prayerful solidarity with Standing Rock. If supplies are needed to survive the long winter, we will do our best to provide them," she said.

Van Fossen has delivered supplies to the Oceti Sakowin camp and hosted prayers and informational sessions over the past several months. The church is raising funds to put a winterized yurt there, according to an online fundraiser.

"We have been a Bismarck-Mandan drop off site for supplies for many months. Local folks have donated everything from diapers to sleeping bags to winterized tents to snack crackers. It has been our honor to carry these items to Standing Rock," she said.

Maxine Herr, spokeswoman for the Morton County Sheriff's Department, said law enforcement is "being observant" of vehicles heading down county roads near the camp and could potentially pull over vehicles suspected of delivering supplies to the camp, which Gov. Jack Dalrymple ordered to be evacuated on Monday. Herr said officers will warn people carrying goods to camp that they could be subject to an infraction with a maximum penalty of $1,000.

"The spirit of it is public safety," Herr said. "It's not safe for them to be down there in those conditions."

A spokesman for the governor said the evacuation order was made with "no intention to block supplies going to the camp."

"The governor signed this evacuation order out of concern for the safety of those that are down there at that camp," said Jeff Zent, spokesman for Dalrymple. "(He) had no intention to create some sort of supply blockade."

Herr said there had not been reports of law enforcement stopping such vehicles as of Tuesday afternoon. There are no plans for a roadblock on Highway 6, the main road to the camp since the Backwater Bridge on Highway 1806 was closed in October, she said.

Herr indicated that prohibited supplies include "anything that goes to sustain living there," including wood, food and blankets. She said the rule applies equally to individuals and businesses ferrying supplies to the camp.

"They need to evacuate," Herr said. "The executive order is clear that it’s public safety. If they ignore it, they have to live with the consequences of potentially freezing to death."

A representative of the American Civil Liberties Union of North Dakota objected Tuesday to the governor’s evacuation order and said the organization is considering litigation.

Jennifer Cook, policy director, said while the governor says safety is the reason for the evacuation order, it’s contradictory to order the evacuation during a winter storm and to restrict people’s access to food and supplies.

It’s a broad order and the enforcement of it is a major concern for the safety and the well-being of the people in the area,” said Cook, adding she has concerns about people’s rights being violated if motorists are cited for delivering supplies to the camp.

There are a lot of constitutional concerns,” Cook said.

Dalrymple issued the mandatory emergency evacuation order Monday to the hundreds of Dakota Access Pipeline protesters camping on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' land near the Missouri River. The edict was given as a winter storm has dumped at least a half foot of snow throughout the central part of the state. It followed an order by the corps that the land will be closed to the public on Monday.

The governor's order means that emergency services will not be made available to people at the camp except on a case-by-case basis. The order is effective since Monday and will remain until he rescinds it.

In a statement Monday night, Standing Rock Tribal Chairman Dave Archambault II called the order "a menacing action meant to cause fear and is a blatant attempt by the state and local officials to usurp and circumvent federal authority."

"The governor cites harsh weather conditions and the threat to human life. As I have stated previously, the most dangerous thing we can do is force well-situated campers from their shelters and into the cold," Archambault said.


ND Gov. Orders Evac Days Before Veterans Descend on Standing Rock


NATIONAL (VFB) — In a move to prevent further support of the Standing Rock protests near Cannon Ball, late Monday afternoon North Dakota Gov. Jack Dalrymple ordered an “emergency evacuation” of the growing Dakota Access Pipeline protest camp sites.

To the protestors, many of whom are Native American, the Governor warned (in proclamation form, no less) “WHEREAS, winter conditions have the potential to endanger human life, especially when they are exposed to these conditions without proper shelter, dwellings, or sanitation for prolonged periods of time.”

The executive order comes just days before thousands of military veterans are scheduled to descend on the Standing Rock to show solidarity with protestors against what many view as a brutal, overhanded crackdown on 1st Amendment rights, among other things.
Air Force Staff Sgt. Tyler Phibbs was present the night of November 20, 2016, when riot police launched their most heavy handed assault against Water Protectors, firing water cannons, flash bang grenades, 40 mm rubber bullets, and tear gas canisters in subzero temperatures.
“My heart aches for the Natives and how they, once again, are being treated inhumanely over what is rightfully theirs,” Phibbs recounted.
tyler_phibbs_standing_rock
N. Oceti Sakowin camp (Nov. 20, 2016)
Adam Easterly, a former Marine Corps Staff Sergeant and decorated combat Veteran, added, “This is fucking bullshit,” and “the Government’s violence will never outlive our ability to protest peacefully.”
Notable Veteran for Bernie, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, is one of the few lawmakers to speak out on the issue, saying “It’s troubling that so many are ignoring what is happening to the people in Standing Rock.”
Despite the Governor’s order, a VetsForBernie.org contingency is returning to standing rock this weekend, along with Phibbs and Easterly. The group is raising funds to give to campers for supplies to last through the winter.
If you can, PLEASE CONTRIBUTE HERE.


Standing Rock protestors served eviction notice as temperatures drop below zero




North Dakota Governor Jack Dalrymple has issued an executive order for protesters to evacuate a campsite near the Dakota Access Pipeline. Concerns of harsh winter and lack of sanitation were cited as reasons for protesters to leave and not return, but as the environmental group Greenpeace points out: the governor showed no concerns for safety when protesters were being shot with rubber bullets. RT America's Simone Del Rosario reports.




Veterans to Serve as ‘Human Shields’ for Dakota Pipeline Protesters




As many as 2,000 veterans planned to gather next week at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota to serve as “human shields” for protesters who have for months clashed with the police over the construction of an oil pipeline, organizers said.

The effort, called Veterans Stand for Standing Rock, is planned as a nonviolent intervention to defend the demonstrators from what the group calls “assault and intimidation at the hands of the militarized police force.”

The veterans’ plan coincides with an announcement on Tuesday by law enforcement officials that they may begin imposing fines to block supplies from entering the main protest camp after a mandatory evacuation order from the governor. Officials had warned earlier of a physical blockade, but the governor’s office later backed away from that, Reuters said.


Protesters have vowed to stay put. Opponents of the 1,170-mile Dakota Access Pipeline have gathered for months at the Oceti Sakowin camp, about 40 miles south of Bismarck. The Standing Rock Sioux and other Native American tribes fear the pipeline could pollute the Missouri River and harm sacred cultural lands and tribal burial grounds.

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