Tuesday, November 29, 2016

A Pick-Sloan Winters: Using the Army Corps of Engineers's Duties to Stop the Pipeline

Photo by Rob Wilson

The Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline is slithering down the North Dakota hills, poised to stick its head directly under the Missouri River. Thousands of Water Protectors, people from all over the world, have gathered in and around the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation to stop its descent, and terminate the Black Snake. The Black Snake killer may come in the most unexpected forms, an obscure court ruling, legislation which ruined much of the ecology of the Standing Rock Reservation, and the agency responsible for enacting it - the Army Corps of Engineers.

The Missouri River ravaged Omaha, laying waste to the city with frightening efficiency in 1943. In response, Congress passed the Flood Control Act of 1944, commonly known now as Pick-Sloan. The Army Corps of Engineers and Board of Reclamation were assigned responsibility to enact Pick-Sloan and took control of the river.

Even for those living right on the Missouri River, the name Pick-Sloan is obscure but no legislation changed the nature of the Missouri more. By the time the entire Pick-Sloan plan was enacted, only 1/3 of the river was in a natural state.

After Omaha flooded, America was frantic to assure Omaha and selected other cities’ safety. The government took the opportunity to put a wider, more comprehensive plan covering other commercial and safety aspects of the river in place. Pick-Sloan assigned the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation the task of caring for eight categories related to the river: flood control, navigation, irrigation, power, water supply, recreation, fish and wildlife, and water quality.

The Army Corps of Engineers created a gaggle of hydroelectric dams, including Lake Oahe on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

Lake Oahe Reservoir and hydroelectric dam was created when the Army Corps of Engineers flooded the fertile river lands and displaced a village on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in 1960. A forest was deluged – lost to the water. Bison died. Burial grounds were submerged. Homes were lost. However, unlike other tribes who were also displaced under Pick-Sloan – the Standing Rock Sioux preserved their right to the Missouri River bed running through their reservation.

Just a few miles up the river from Lake Oahe Reservoir are the Water Protector camps. On a hill just above the largest of the Water Protector camps, Oceti Sakowin, the pipeline the pipeline is near completion. Energy Transfer Company, the owner of the Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), is just waiting for a permit from the Army Corps of Engineers to drill under the river and place their pipeline under the river.

The Army Corps of Engineers’ requirements under Pick-Sloan may be the last weapon the Water Protectors have to stop the drill and the pipeline.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Man Pistol-Whips Woman and Opens Fire Near Standing Rock Water Protectors at Anti-Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline Prayer Action



The Bismark area countryside echoed with screams of horror on Saturday when a man pistol-whipped a woman from the window of his truck, then opened fire over the heads of Standing Rock Water Protectors praying near a Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline workspace.

A handful of Water Protectors approached the large white truck with a logo for Four Square Concrete LLC at a Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline workspace Saturday. The driver, a balding white middle-aged man in a red jacket and sunglasses, stepped out of his truck and brandished a pistol at the crowd before returning to his truck. 

Photo: John Willis

He began to advance his truck towards the crowd in a threatening manner.

The people directly in front of the truck shored their footing in order to protect the people in the crowd behind them. People jumped on the running boards on both sides in order to slow his progress. A woman jumped on the driver’s side, gripping onto his door.

The yet unidentified man entered a frenzied state, screaming and shouting, his face textured with engorged veins. Then he pulled out his gun.

In terror filled voices, Water Protectors yelled, “Gun! He has a loaded gun!”

Friday, November 4, 2016

The Army Corps of Engineers Authorized Violence Against Standing Rock Water Protectors

Photo by Rob Wilson Photography


The Standing Rock Water Protectors stood. They stood waste deep in North Dakota water less than half a normal human’s body temperature, downhill from riot police indiscriminately spraying them all with pepper spray, bear mace, tear gas, and rubber bullets. They stood in the face of racist comments. They stood in the path of an oil pipeline, in the way of monied interest, and the weight of a country. They stood to protect the water. They stood and waited for the police to run out of mace so they could pray. They stood in pain, shivering, and afraid. They stood and faced the violence – the violence ordered on them by the Army Corps of Engineers.

In the effort to watch Water Protectors, police rove by foot and car in the high hills overlooking the camps. Water Protectors informed police their surveillance track on federal Army Corps of Engineers land, just across Cantapeta Creek from the camps, was sacred burial grounds. Police’s response was to traipse on the bodies of the Standing Rock Sioux ancestors.

In the middle of the night, Water Protectors made a bridge from wood and moxie. On November 2, they laid the bridge across Cantapeta Creek toward their ancestors and tried to cross. If they could reach the other side, they could put their ancestors to rest, and perform a water ceremony.

Thursday, November 3, 2016

United Nations Investigates Human Rights Violations by Law Enforcement Against Standing Rock Water Protectors


 Photo by Rob Wilson


Standing Rock Water Protectors described human rights violations by law enforcement to United Nations representatives during interviews this week. Water Protectors described being kept in chain link cells resembling kennels, and strip searched. They also report being denied food, water, clothing, attorneys, phone calls, beds, bedding, and access to the restroom.

UN Chair for the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Grand Chief Akile Ch'oh Edward John and UN Observer Roberto Borrero conducted the interviews.

On October 27 police raided a camp set up by the Standing Rock Water Protectors to protect sacred burial grounds and to stop the construction of the Bakken Dakota Access Pipeline. Police employed hundreds of officers, two armored vehicles, tear gas, pepper spray, concussive grenades, rubber bullets, tasers, bean bag guns, batons, and LRADs during the melee. Over 100 people were arrested.

According to interviews, after Water Protectors were arrested at the raid, they were given identification numbers. The identification numbers were written on their forearms in permanent marker. 

When they arrived to Morton County Jail, they were stripped to one layer of clothing and left in cement floored chain link kennels without blankets for hours. At no point were they read their rights. They were denied a phone call even to their attorney.

Protectors were required to give DNA samples to police.