View allAll Photos Tagged DAPL

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

A Water Protectors is helped after being pepper sprayed by authorities. The public witnessed a new level of escalation on October 27, 2016 in the Native struggle at Standing Rock, as police swept through an encampment in the direct path of the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL). The resulting standoff with the National Guard, and police officers from various states, led to more than 100 arrests. Advancing authorities attacked Water Protectors with flash grenades, bean bag launchers, pepper spray and Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs). It is crucial that people recognize that Standing Rock is part of an ongoing struggle against colonial violence. The Dakota Access pipeline (#NoDAPL) is a front of struggle in a long-erased war against Native peoples -- a war that has been active since first contact, and waged without interruption. Photo by Richard Bluecloud Castaneda

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

On September 13th, Atlantans gathered to Stand with #StandingRock! President Obama, please revoke the construction permits for #DAPL. #NoDAPL #AtlantaAgainstDAPL #NoSabalTrail

Follow invisiblehandfilm.com/press-kit/ for more on this coverage or publicherald.org/newscoup. © Joshua B. Pribanic for Public Herald

 

© Joshua B. Pribanic for Public Herald (all rights reserved - contact joshua@publicherald.org for use)

Follow invisiblehandfilm.com/press-kit/ for more on this coverage or publicherald.org/newscoup. © Joshua B. Pribanic for Public Herald

WATER is LIFE © Linda Dawn Hammond/ IndyFoto Jan.28, 2017. Toronto in Solidarity with Standing Rock protest in front of Trump Tower on Bay St. & Adelaide, Toronto #NoDAPL

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

People hold signs over a highway in support of the Standing Rock Nation at the Los Angeles area office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The protest was one of many in a global day of action against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). Photo by Jonathan Alcorn

These are pics from Stop the Dakota Pipeline held yesterday in Linden, Michigan.

The public witnessed a new level of escalation on October 27, 2016 in the Native struggle at Standing Rock, as police swept through an encampment in the direct path of the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL). The resulting standoff with the National Guard, and police officers from various states, led to more than 100 arrests. Advancing authorities attacked Water Protectors with flash grenades, bean bag launchers, pepper spray and Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs). It is crucial that people recognize that Standing Rock is part of an ongoing struggle against colonial violence. The Dakota Access pipeline (#NoDAPL) is a front of struggle in a long-erased war against Native peoples -- a war that has been active since first contact, and waged without interruption. Photo by Richard Castaneda

An officer of the United States Army Corps of Engineers speaks to people holding a sit in in support of the Standing Rock Nation at U.S. Army Corps of Engineers headquarters. The protest was one of many in a global day of action against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) calling on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to cancel the permit for the project. Photo by Robert Meyers

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

Caroling for DAPL Divestment in San Francisco

The public witnessed a new level of escalation on October 27, 2016 in the Native struggle at Standing Rock, as police swept through an encampment in the direct path of the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL). The resulting standoff with the National Guard, and police officers from various states, led to more than 100 arrests. Advancing authorities attacked Water Protectors with flash grenades, bean bag launchers, pepper spray and Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs). It is crucial that people recognize that Standing Rock is part of an ongoing struggle against colonial violence. The Dakota Access pipeline (#NoDAPL) is a front of struggle in a long-erased war against Native peoples -- a war that has been active since first contact, and waged without interruption. Photo by Richard Bluecloud Castaneda

WATER is LIFE © Linda Dawn Hammond/ IndyFoto Jan.28, 2017. Toronto in Solidarity with Standing Rock protest in front of Trump Tower on Bay St. & Adelaide, Toronto #NoDAPL

After the final DAPL permit was granted, the Indigenous Coalition at Standing Rock is calling for February 8th to be an international day of emergency actions to disrupt business as usual and unleash a global intersectional resistance to fossil fuels and fascism. In New York the #NoDAPL ! Emergency Protest Against Easement action was held at Thomas Paine Park (Foley Square)

New Haven rallies in Solidarity with Standing Rock Sioux and against TD Bank’s financing of the Energy Transfer Partners Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), the genocidal desecration of sacred lands, and the violation of Tribal sovereignty and treaties, TD Bank, 994 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut, Tuesday, February 14, 2017.

Woman pushing young children in double stroller in march against Dakota pipeline, other protesters with signs behind her.

Note that her sign posts appear to have been recently used as survey posts.

WATER is LIFE © Linda Dawn Hammond/ IndyFoto Jan.28, 2017. Toronto in Solidarity with Standing Rock protest in front of Trump Tower on Bay St. & Adelaide, Toronto #NoDAPL

*For Immediate Release *

 

*San Francisco residents continue to join a global coalition in protest of

Wells Fargo, as the second-largest financier of Energy Transfer Partners,

backer of the Dakota Access Pipeline*

 

*Thursday, February 23 -- San Francisco, CA *-- San Francisco residents

continue to divest their personal investments from Wells Fargo. *Today, at

Wells Fargo headquarters at 420 Montgomery St. a half dozen protestors

entered holding signs and collectively withdrew over $25k in personal

savings.*

 

“We continue to call on our fellow Californians to divest from Wells Fargo,

given a mounting track record of morally bankrupt and financially risky

business practices. DAPL is an unnecessary pipeline project, and the latest

example of Wells Fargo operating in violation of their own commitment to

human rights,” said Kelly Trombley, a lifetime Wells Fargo customer that

can no longer tolerate doing business with Wells Fargo.

 

*Wells Faro is seeing more cities divest, including Seattle, Davis, Santa

Monica and Alameda, which passed a unanimous vote to divest this week.

*Thousands

more individuals have already closed their accounts and have defunded over

$69 million and counting.

 

On January 24th, President Trump signed a presidential memorandum fast

tracking the Dakota Access Pipeline and environmental reviews of other

projects. The corporations behind DAPL made it clear that they “fully

expect to complete construction of the pipeline without any additional

rerouting in and around Lake Oahe.”

 

However, the completion of DAPL is critically dependent on those 17 banks

that are jointly providing the project loan for the construction of the

pipeline. $3.75 of the $3.8 billion it costs to build the pipeline is on

credit. All of them are facing massive protest against their involvement.

Several banks in the consortium have now also openly criticized the project

sponsors for not being sufficiently responsive to the concerns of the

Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.

 

Johan Frijns, Director of BankTrack, said: “The Dakota Access Pipeline is

becoming a litmus test for all banks involved on how they let

environmental, social and human impacts weigh in when considering finance

for a particular project. In this case, the ongoing violation of the rights

of the Sioux Tribe leave them no other option but to withdraw from the

project.

 

“The protesters at Wells Fargo today join Standing Rock in solidarity and

call on all Wells Fargo customers to continue to pressure Wells Fargo to

terminate their involvement in the DAPL project. We need financial

institutions that are willing to honor their commitments to customers, make

sound investments, and do the right thing-divest from the Dakota Access

Pipeline,” said Trombley

 

*Contacts: *

 

*For Facebook Live coverage of this demonstration,

visit www.facebook.com/kevin.pham.31337

*

 

For inquiries about this demonstration, contact Kelly Trombley,

trombleyk@gmail.com, 925-989-7615

 

For inquiries to the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, contact Nick Pelosi,

Director Corporate Engagement, First Peoples Worldwide,

standingrockdapl@gmail.com, 540-899-6545

 

For inquiries to the Indigenous Coalition at Standing Rock, contact Tara

Houska, National Campaign Director, Honor the Earth, tara@honortheearth.org,

612-226-9404

On September 13th, Atlantans gathered to Stand with #StandingRock! President Obama, please revoke the construction permits for #DAPL. #NoDAPL #AtlantaAgainstDAPL #NoSabalTrail

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

February 16th, 2012

 

OUR TOWN Local Leadership forum

(Online: wiki.tothevillagesquare.org/x/dAPl )

 

Participating in the forum moderated by Tallahassee Democrat Executive Editor Bob Gabordi were (left to right when seated):

 

City Commissioner Gil Ziffer, City Commissioner Nancy Miller, County Commissioner Bryan Desloge, County Commissioner Nick Maddox, County Commissioner Kristin Dozier, County Commissioner John Dailey, and County Commissioner Akin Akinyemi

 

Participating by Skype from Washington DC: Commissioner Andrew Gillum

 

Photo credit: Bob Howard

 

The programming was sponsored by the Tallahassee Democrat, Leadership Tallahassee and The Village Square

The public witnessed a new level of escalation on October 27, 2016 in the Native struggle at Standing Rock, as police swept through an encampment in the direct path of the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL). The resulting standoff with the National Guard, and police officers from various states, led to more than 100 arrests. Advancing authorities attacked Water Protectors with flash grenades, bean bag launchers, pepper spray and Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs). It is crucial that people recognize that Standing Rock is part of an ongoing struggle against colonial violence. The Dakota Access pipeline (#NoDAPL) is a front of struggle in a long-erased war against Native peoples -- a war that has been active since first contact, and waged without interruption. Photo by Richard Bluecloud Castaneda

NoDAPL, Berlin Februar 2017.

Demonstration gegen die Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) und gegen Kredite der BayernLB und der Deutschen Bank für die DAPL in Berlin-Mitte am 17.2.2017.

Rund 70 Menschen beteiligen sich an der Auftaktkundgebung am Tränenpalast und gehen die Friedrichstraße südwärts bis zur Filiale der Deutschen Bank in der Friedrichstraße 191. Nach der Zwischenkundgebung an der Deutschen Bank geht die Demonstration weiter bis in die Kronenstraße zum Hauptsitz der Deutschen Kreditbank Aktiengesellschaft (DBK), eine hundertprozentige Tochter der Bayrischen Landesbank (BayernLB), wo es eine Abschlusskundgebung gibt.

Die Demonstration fordert die sofortige Rücknahme der Kredite von 120 Millionen US$ der BayernLB und 275 Millionen US$ der Deutschen Bank als finanzielle Unterstützung der gefährlichen Dakota Access Pipeline. Abgesehen von der Missachtung der Vertragsrechte der Lakota Sioux Nation, bedroht die DAPL das Trinkwasser von 18 Millionen Menschen flussabwärts. Die BayernLB überdenkt momentan ihre Investition und Mitte Februar sollte diese eine erneute Entscheidung treffen.

Aus dem Demonstrations-Aufruf:

„Wir sagen nein zur DAPL und nein zu Trumps Kriegsagenda und Umweltzerstörung! Wir protestieren gemeinsam, um:

1) Die BayernLB und die Deutschen Bank dazu zu bewegen, keine Kredite an die von der Dakota Access Pipeline auszugeben!

2) Der Welt zu sagen, dass der Anti-LSBTQI Vizepräsident Pence und der Klimakiller Außenminister Rex Tilleron hier in Deutschland nicht willkommen sind!“ (Zur Zeit sind Pence und Tilleron von der US-Regierung zu zwei Konferenzen in Europa)

Die Demonstration in Berlin Teil der weltweiten Aktionswoche ‘Global Week of Action’ gegen die Dakota Access Pipeline und eines gemeinsamen Aktionstages, gleichzeitig demonstrieren heute Menschen in 70 weiteren Städten weltweit gegen DAPL und für die Rücknahme der Bankkredite für die DAPL.

Hintergrund-Infos:

Die Dakota Access Pipeline (kurz: DAPL), auch Bakken Pipeline genannt, ist eine im Bau befindliche Erdölpipeline zwischen der erdölreichen Bakken-Formation in North Dakota und dem Pipelineknotenpunkt Patoka in Illinois. Die Pipeline soll eine Länge von 1.880 km haben und durch die US-Bundesstaaten North Dakota, South Dakota und Iowa bis nach Illinois führen. Ihr Bau wird von US-weiten Protesten begleitet und wurde mehrmals gerichtlich gestoppt.

Initiator des rund 3,8 Milliarden US-Dollar teuren Projekt ist der Pipelinebetreiber Energy Transfer Partners.

Dabei werden 200 Wasserläufe überquert ( "water-crossings" ). Vor allem im Gebiet des sich aus einem weit verzweigten Netz von Zuflüssen speisenden Missouri River verläuft die Pipeline durch eine große Flusslandschaft.

Der Protest gegen die Dakota Access Pipeline ist eine der größten Umweltbewegungen der 2000er Jahre in den USA. Der Protest führte zur größten Zusammenkunft von Indianer Nordamerikas seit 1920.

Die Sioux von Standing Rock wehren sich gegen den Bau der Pipeline über Grabstätten und heiligem Land ihrer Vorfahren. Viele ihrer Grabstätten und heilige Orte wurden bereits zerstört, weitere Zerstörungen wurden angekündigt…

#NoDAPL #WaterISLife #DefundDAPL #WasserIstLeben

#StandWithStandingRock #KeepItInTheGround #BavariaDivests #BankExit

© B. Sauer-Diete/bsd-photo-archiv

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

Senai, camp security, is a jack of all trades at the Oceti Sakowin camp. He stands in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux tribe.

Photo by Aman Dhaliwal, Flickr: amandhaliwal1

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.

Boozhoo to Enbridge - Our Resistance Continues: We canoed from the Cannon Ball River area over to the DAPL corridor along the Missouri River Saturday. We paid a little visit. MNI Wiconi #WaterisLife #ShutDownDAPL #LoveWaterNotOil

 

Solidarity and Support, Red Warrior Camp

+ No Dakota Access in Treaty Territory - Camp of the Sacred...

 

Photos here for sharing: lightroom.adobe.com/shares/f21f287693b94f09a6490a9d17738126

 

Please email honortheearthmedia@gmail.com for any use of photos. These are copyrighted ©2016 honorearth.org | littleredfeatherdesign.com

The public witnessed a new level of escalation on October 27, 2016 in the Native struggle at Standing Rock, as police swept through an encampment in the direct path of the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL). The resulting standoff with the National Guard, and police officers from various states, led to more than 100 arrests. Advancing authorities attacked Water Protectors with flash grenades, bean bag launchers, pepper spray and Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRADs). It is crucial that people recognize that Standing Rock is part of an ongoing struggle against colonial violence. The Dakota Access pipeline (#NoDAPL) is a front of struggle in a long-erased war against Native peoples -- a war that has been active since first contact, and waged without interruption. Photo by Richard Bluecloud Castaneda

Hello,

 

Today, September 13, 2016, Rocky got involved in the fight and showed his solidarity with Standing Rock. Here are a couple photos of his protest in Philly.

 

And links to the tweets:

pic.twitter.com/xkHrxYhvPs

pic.twitter.com/w1C4jSXyQW

pic.twitter.com/MYSksuKYQM

 

Thank you for organizing across the country today.

 

Tala Ra

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