View allAll Photos Tagged DAPL
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
The Haudenosaunee Indians - Or as we are taught in North American schools: the Iroquois. Though you must know - after spending several days at camp with a number of them, they hate being called Iroquois. Haudenosaunee are a historically powerful and important northeast Native American confederacy. They were known during the colonial years to the French as the "Iroquois League," and later as the "Iroquois Confederacy," and to the English as the "Five Nations" (before 1722), and later as the "Six Nations," comprising the Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora peoples." (Wiki)
STOP LINE 3 & DAPL \\ BUILD BACK FOSSIL FREE
Oakland Federal Building
February 27th, 2021
Massive, beautiful STREET MURAL in Oakland, CA., sponsored by Idle No More SF Bay, Climate Justice Street Mural Project, Distributed Sound Collective, 1,000 Grandmothers for Future Generations and East Point Peace Academy.
From the organizers:
"We are here to protect the water, climate and communities in solidarity with indigenous-led movements fighting the Line 3 and (DAPL) Dakota Access Pipe Lines. We call on the Biden/Harris administration to cancel these pipelines and to Build Back Fossil Free-- to end the era of fossil fuel production, and protect communities reeling from the climate and COVID-19"
The big message was "STOP LINE 3 & DAPL \\ BUILD BACK FOSSIL FREE" with 12 groups painting their own visions for future generations.
People rally in support of the Standing Rock Sioux at the New York City 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 Joel Caldwell
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Native American climate and DAPL protest in front of the Trump Hotel, in preparation for Saturday's climate march.
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
St. Paul, Minnesota
February 9, 2017
About 100 people gathered in Mears Park to protest Republican President Trump's recent executive order directing the Army Corps of Engineers to expedite the approval of the last permit needed for the Dakota Access Pipeline. After a few speakers shared their thoughts, the protesters marched in downtown St. Paul.
2017-02-09 This is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Dear Action Network team,
Here are some visual impressions of the solidarity action in Berlin last
week. We gathered in front of the US consulate and between 50 and 60
people showed up throughout the afternoon. We had a whole spectrum of
generations, from new borns to elders and it was the opportunity to
attest the bounds between indigenous communities with the presence of a
young Aboriginal activist Roxley Foley and our guest speaker Red
Haircrow. [1] Red Haircrow is a writer, educator, counselor and
filmmaker of Native American descent (Chiricahua Apache/Cherokee). He's
been living in Berlin for a while and has been active in Native American
education on culture, history, beliefs and current needs, and the
protection and preservation of indigenous rights and sovereignty.
With his speak, he brought the bigger picture through sharing about
systemic violence and the historical context on Turtle Island. He then
gave updates about the situation in Standing Rock and informed us about
the core issue indigenous sovereignty. He ended with the importance of
allyship, explaining how we, people of Europe, can support the movement.
For the two first pictures, the photographer (Bernd Sauerdiete) asked me
to put his copyright _(c)B.Sauer-Diete/bsd-photo-archiv.jpg_ with his
pictures.
The night ones are from someone else, Kieran Behan.
I want to mention that we gathered 220EUR and decided to donate a half
to the legal fund and the other half to the medic and healer council.
It feels like people might be in to host another solidarity action for
December 1st!
I keep you posted if it takes place.
In solidarity from overseas,
Louise Watson.
Links:
------
[1] redhaircrow.com/
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
No DAPL, Berlin November 2016
Protest-Kundgebung gegen die DAPL (Dakota Access Pipeline) vor der US-Botschaft in der Clayallee 170 am 16. November 2016 mit rund 40 Teilnehmer*innen.
Auf dem Foto: Rede von Red Haircrow, ein in Berlin lebender Schriftsteller, Educator, Filmemacher und Chef, mit Native American Abstammung (Chiricahua Apache/Cherokee).
Die Veranstaltung war Teil des International Day of Action (Nov 15 #NoDAPL Day of Action at Army Corps of Engineers), zu dem das Indigenous Environmental Network aufgerufen hatte. Sie fand in Berlin am 16. November statt, da an diesem Tag US-Präsident Obama Berlin besucht.
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…
Seit Ende August 2016 kamen immer mehr Menschen in das Gebiet von Cannon Ball südlich von Bismarck, um den Kampf der Standing Rock Sioux Nation gegen die Pipeline zu unterstützen. Im September 2016 lebten rund 3000 Menschen im "Red Warrior Camp" am Zusammenfluss des Missouri und des Cannonball Rivers.
© B. Sauer-Diete/bsd-photo-archiv
STOP LINE 3 & DAPL \\ BUILD BACK FOSSIL FREE
Oakland Federal Building
February 27th, 2021
Massive, beautiful STREET MURAL in Oakland, CA., sponsored by Idle No More SF Bay, Climate Justice Street Mural Project, Distributed Sound Collective, 1,000 Grandmothers for Future Generations and East Point Peace Academy.
From the organizers:
"We are here to protect the water, climate and communities in solidarity with indigenous-led movements fighting the Line 3 and (DAPL) Dakota Access Pipe Lines. We call on the Biden/Harris administration to cancel these pipelines and to Build Back Fossil Free-- to end the era of fossil fuel production, and protect communities reeling from the climate and COVID-19"
The big message was "STOP LINE 3 & DAPL \\ BUILD BACK FOSSIL FREE" with 12 groups painting their own visions for future generations.
Native American climate and DAPL protest in front of the Trump Hotel, in preparation for Saturday's climate march.
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Washington DC, November 15 2016. A diverse crowd of around three thousand fired up activists variously affiliated with over a hundred different groups gathered in front of offices occupied by the Army Corps Of Engineers (and other agencies including the GAO...) for a rally and march to protect the midwestern plains water and land that rightfully belongs in perpetuity to Native American people. A core group of speakers travelled here from the Dakotas to lead the action. There is some slim hope that President Obama can be persuaded in the waning days of his presidency to refuse 'right of way' on Federal lands for the Dakota Access Pipeline. There was a sad, poignant vibe to the event because the DAPL poisonous snake will almost certainly be 'fast tracked' by the incoming Trump administration. President Elect Donald J. Trump is an investor in the pipeline. The company largely responsible for the pipeline project is headed by a very rich Texan folk music enthusiast/opportunist/OK guitar player who seems to have little understanding of what most folk musicians are trying to express.
Washington DC, The White House, the evening of January 24, 2017. Around a thousand climate justice activists and supporters gathered on Pennsylvania Avenue to protest two memorandums signed by President Trump this morning essentially reauthorizing the previously rejected KXL and DAPL pipeline projects. The KXL memorandum invited TransCanada to re-apply with the promise of a speedy approval with no input from environmental agencies. The DAPL memorandum advises the Army Corp Of Engineers that the project is in our "national interest" and that the environmental review placed on it by Obama should be revoked. After a rally with speeches around a hundred or so folks marched noisily to Trump's Heartbreak Hotel for a secondary rally and 'die in'.
OUR TOWN is a local series sponsored by The Village Square, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Fund at the Community Foundation of North Florida to create an informed and engaged community in Tallahassee, FL.
"OUR TOWN: Fast Forward" is the first in a series of forums to look at new projects, development, ideas, even businesses and restaurants in Tallahassee. The evening served up a speedy brief on everything new, along with food served by food trucks Street Chefs, Banh Mi Palace and The Cravings Truck. Oh and dessert was served by Paisley Cafe.
The program was sponsored by Knight Creative Communities Institute (KCCI) www.kccitallahassee.com, Leadership Tallahassee www.leadershiptallahassee.com, Tallahassee Democrat www.tallahassee.com and Access Tallahassee www.accesstallahassee.com
Photo credit on all pictures: Bob Howard.
Find the program online here:
ttp://wiki.tothevillagesquare.org/x/dAPl
Find Knight Foundation online here:
Find Community Foundation of North Florida online here:
Find The Village Square online here:
AND... the food....
Find Street Chefs online here:
Banh Mi Palace online here:
www.facebook.com/pages/Banh-Mi-Palace/325844864119374
The Cravings Truck online here:
and last but certainly NOT least The Paisley Cafe, MIDTOWN, online HERE: cravingstruck.com/index.html
Yum.
#No DAPL - Stop Dakota Access Pipeline
San Francisco
November 15, 2016
At dawn, thousands gather at San Francisco Civic Center to stand in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux tribe in North Dakota and the massive gathering of Protectors standing against the Dakota Access Pipeline. A sunrise ceremony is followed by a march to the SF Army Corps of Engineers to increase pressure on them to not permit the laying of pipe under the Missouri River, a source of water for the tribe and millions of others.
The protest in San Francisco was one of over 200 actions across the country, calling for a stop to the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline and for the protection of water, sacred sites and the planet from the fossil fuel industry and it's funders.
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
OUR TOWN is a local series sponsored by The Village Square, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Fund at the Community Foundation of North Florida to create an informed and engaged community in Tallahassee, FL.
"OUR TOWN: Fast Forward" is the first in a series of forums to look at new projects, development, ideas, even businesses and restaurants in Tallahassee. The evening served up a speedy brief on everything new, along with food served by food trucks Street Chefs, Banh Mi Palace and The Cravings Truck. Oh and dessert was served by Paisley Cafe.
The program was sponsored by Knight Creative Communities Institute (KCCI) www.kccitallahassee.com, Leadership Tallahassee www.leadershiptallahassee.com, Tallahassee Democrat www.tallahassee.com and Access Tallahassee www.accesstallahassee.com
Photo credit on all pictures: Bob Howard.
Find the program online here:
ttp://wiki.tothevillagesquare.org/x/dAPl
Find Knight Foundation online here:
Find Community Foundation of North Florida online here:
Find The Village Square online here:
AND... the food....
Find Street Chefs online here:
Banh Mi Palace online here:
www.facebook.com/pages/Banh-Mi-Palace/325844864119374
The Cravings Truck online here:
and last but certainly NOT least The Paisley Cafe, MIDTOWN, online HERE: cravingstruck.com/index.html
Yum.
Washington DC, The White House, the evening of January 24, 2017. Around a thousand climate justice activists and supporters gathered on Pennsylvania Avenue to protest two memorandums signed by President Trump this morning essentially reauthorizing the previously rejected KXL and DAPL pipeline projects. The KXL memorandum invited TransCanada to re-apply with the promise of a speedy approval with no input from environmental agencies. The DAPL memorandum advises the Army Corp Of Engineers that the project is in our "national interest" and that the environmental review placed on it by Obama should be revoked. After a rally with speeches around a hundred or so folks marched noisily to Trump's Heartbreak Hotel for a secondary rally and 'die in'.
Initially, daily prayer walks at noon were to the location where the pipeline company originally tried to dig. They were greeted by prayer warriors and the Horse Nation, who came to the front lines to pray for the land being dug up.
Morton County Sheriff's officers started calling in officers from all over the region to come provide relief as they provided protection for the construction crews and began to outwardly show less care for the humans the pipeline threatened.
Both DAPL and the police began intense surveillance of Oceti Sakowin Camp. Around Labor Day, 8,000 people were present.
On Labor Day, September 5th, meer hours after the Tribe's lawyers filed evidence in federal court notifying Dakota Access that their proposed pipeline path crossed sacred burial sites, the company dug up the site. Their security firms attacked, maced and sicceed dogs on pregnant water protectors, children, elders, and others who had come to pray for ancestors whose grave sites the pipeline company had knowingly desecrated.
Daily prayer walks then began to go to the camp formed in the pathway, Sacred Grounds Camp. This place would later be called the 1851 Treaty Camp that was brutally cleared out, elders pulled out of ceremonial sweat in their undergarments, people maced, people and horses shot with rubber bullets. This location would also become the place Bridge 134 was held so that further brutalization would not occur.
yesmagazine.org/the-standing-rock-victory-you-didnt-hear-...
No DAPL, Berlin November 2016
Protest-Kundgebung gegen die DAPL (Dakota Access Pipeline) vor der US-Botschaft in der Clayallee 170 am 16. November 2016 mit rund 40 Teilnehmer*innen.
Auf dem Foto: Rede von Red Haircrow, ein in Berlin lebender Schriftsteller, Educator, Filmemacher und Chef, mit Native American Abstammung (Chiricahua Apache/Cherokee).
Die Veranstaltung war Teil des International Day of Action (Nov 15 #NoDAPL Day of Action at Army Corps of Engineers), zu dem das Indigenous Environmental Network aufgerufen hatte. Sie fand in Berlin am 16. November statt, da an diesem Tag US-Präsident Obama Berlin besucht.
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…
Seit Ende August 2016 kamen immer mehr Menschen in das Gebiet von Cannon Ball südlich von Bismarck, um den Kampf der Standing Rock Sioux Nation gegen die Pipeline zu unterstützen. Im September 2016 lebten rund 3000 Menschen im "Red Warrior Camp" am Zusammenfluss des Missouri und des Cannonball Rivers.
© B. Sauer-Diete/bsd-photo-archiv
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Quese Imc drums, sings & talks at demo, First Nations Standing Rock protester from Oklahoma, 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
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.