Armed With Riot Gear, Militarized Police Begin Forcibly Clearing DAPL Protest Camp
This post may be updated.
Update, 2:30pm EDT:
Arrests have begun at the recently erected frontline camp in the path of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), as police and military move in on Indigenous water protectors and their allies in North Dakota.
With law enforcement seemingly interfering with cell signal, it is difficult to get a live feed from the ground. Some social media users were able to post video and updates from the scene:
Update, 11:30am EDT:
According to eyewitness accounts, buses full of law enforcement were traveling toward the frontline camp on Thursday morning.
Earlier:
Indigenous water protectors and their allies are prepared for a crackdown by law enforcement on Thursday, vowing to hold ground they reclaimed through eminent domain last weekend despite threats by Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) developer Energy Transfer Partners and local officials.
Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners warned on Tuesday that demonstrators occupying land in the pipeline’s path—land to which both the corporation and local tribes lay claim—must leave or face prosecution. The new frontline camp sits just north of the main protest camp on federal land near Cannon Ball, a town about 50 miles south of Bismarck.
The Associated Press reported:
According to a separate AP report:
But the activists have refused to bend. The Bismarck Tribune quoted protest organizer Mekasi Camp-Horinek, of Oklahoma, as calling out, “No surrender, no retreat!” as he walked away from the negotiations with top law enforcement officials on Wednesday afternoon.
The Tribune reported:
“We’ve got to make our bodies a living sacrifice,” John Perko, a demonstrator from South Dakota, told the newspaper. “This is the most honorable thing I could be doing right now.”
Another member of the movement, Didi Banerji, who lives in Toronto but is originally from the Spirit Lake Sioux reservation in North Dakota, told the AP: “I’m here to die if I have to. I don’t want to die but I will.”
Meanwhile, also on Wednesday, the Morton County sheriff’s office—which the Guardian notes “has been leading the police response to the demonstration and conducted mass arrests over the weekend”—announced that the use of dogs by private security guards against protesters last month was potentially illegal.
The sheriff’s office reportedly determined that “dog handlers were not properly licensed to do security work in the state of North Dakota” and passed the results of its investigation along to to the Morton County States Attorney’s Office and the North Dakota Private Investigators and Security Board for possible charges.
Private security workers were continuing to monitor water protectors on Wednesday afternoon, Leota Eastman Iron Cloud, a Native American activist from South Dakota who has been at the protests for months, told the Guardian by phone. “We’re watching them watching us.”
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