<p></p><h1 class="entry-title"><a href="http://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/2012/03/06/lakotas-arrested-halting-keystone-xl-pipeline-trucks/">http://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/2012/03/06/lakotas-arrested-halting-keystone-xl-pipeline-trucks/</a><br>
</h1><h1 class="entry-title">Lakotas arrested halting Keystone XL pipeline trucks</h1><p>Posted by Brenda Norrell, NarcoNews.com, March 5, 2012</p>
PINE RIDGE, S.D. — Lakotas on Pine Ridge Indian land in South
Dakota were arrested as they blockaded tarsands pipeline trucks from
entering their territory on Monday, March 5.<br><br><div>Lakota human rights activists Alex White Plume, Debra White
Plume, Sam Long Black Cat, Andrew Iron Shell and Terrell Eugene Iron
Shell were arrested late Monday. They were charged with disorderly
conduct and taken to the jail in Kyle, S.D.<span id="more-662"></span><br>
An action alert was sent out shortly before the arrests: “Calling all
Lakota men on the Pine Ridge Reservation to come to Wanblee, South
Dakota.”</div>
<p>The alert said “Pipeline trucks are being held there at the border
by our Lakota Oyate, Oglala Sioux Tribal Police and State Troopers in
an effort to keep them from entering our territory. Even the state
troopers told the trucks they have to turn around and cannot bring
their pipeline or other materials on toour reservation.”</p>
<div>“Pipeline trucks are refusing to turn around claiming they have corporate rights that supersede any other law.”</div>
<div>Reports from the scene say that the trucks are being allowed to
pass, as Lakotas are being arrested attempting to halt the trucks from
entering their sovereign territory.”</div>
<div>Lakotas joined Native Americans and First Nations to protest the
Keystone XL pipeline at the White House in September. Debra White Plume
was among those arrested. Lakotas urged the US to halt the plan for the
pipeline, which would cut through Ogallala Aquifer, and endanger land,
water and people from Alberta, Canada to Texas. First Nations in Canada
are also protesting the pipeline and the ongoing devastation from the
Alberta tarsands in Cree territory.</div>
<div><a href="http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/brenda-norrell/2012/03/lakotas-arrested-halting-keystone-xl-pipeline-trucks#.T1VjBWJPyyM.facebook">http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/brenda-norrell/2012/03/lakotas-arrested-halting-keystone-xl-pipeline-trucks#.T1VjBWJPyyM.facebook</a></div>
<p><strong>Debra White Plume: Oglala Lakota arrested at blockade</strong></p>
<p>By Debra White Plume, Censored News, March 6, 2012</p>
<p>WANBLEE, S.D. — On Monday, March 5 we were called by a lady from
Wanblee village that was forced to pull completely off the highway as
the huge semi-trucks hauling these enormous pieces of equipment took up
the whole highway.</p>
<p>The two trucks were hauling equipment called “treater vessels” from
Houston, Texas to Alberta Canada. These treater vessels arrived in
Texas in August 2011 from South Korea. The papers the truck drivers
gave us say that the treater vessels each were carrying or weighed
229,155 pounds each. The individual value of each vessel is $1,259,593.<br>
The truck drivers said they were given their route by their
headquarters in Canada. The route was worked out with the State of
South Dakota, according to the truckers. They said they were told by
South Dakota that if they go on the route they did they could avoid
paying South Dakota the fee of $50,000 per truck, so they came down
Highway 44 through Interior, Potato Creek and Wanblee.</p>
<p>Wanblee is where we set our blockade. Oglala Sioux Tribal Vice
President Tom Poor Bear was with us. He called state government
officials in Pierre and they verified that yes they gave that route to
the corporation to cross Indian lands.</p><br><p>Apparently, the treater vessel is used to separate gas and oil and
other elements. The device is also used to provide intense heat. Our
Black Hills Sioux Nation Treaty Council, along with the Oglala Sioux
Tribe, have both passed legislation against the Keystone XL oil
pipeline and have adopted the Mother Earth Accord which calls for a
moratorium on the tar sands oil mine as destructive to water, Mother
Earth, all animals and human beings. Whatever these treater vessels are
and where ever they were going, they are much too huge, heavy and
hazardous to be on our roads.</p>
<p>There were about 75 people at the blockade. Approximately 20 cars
parked in front of the semi-trucks, who were accompanied by about a
dozen pickups with flags displaying wide load warnings, etc. They also
had their own electric trucks were traveling with them in order to push
up the power lines in their path.</p>
<p>The trucks were too enormous to turn around. The tribal police
arrested us as we did not want the trucks to proceed across our land.
We were told the tribal police were going to escort the heavy haul
caravan to the reservation border and direct them to the state highways.</p>
<p>Alex White Plume, Sr. and I, along with Sam Long Black Cat, Andrew
Iron Shell, and Terrell Eugene Iron Shell were all arrested by the
tribal police. We were all handcuffed and charged with disorderly
conduct, as the police said there were no other charges to bring
against us. We were taken to Kyle jail.</p>
<p>We stood our ground for our land, our treaty rights, our human
rights to clean drinking water and our coming generations. We did this
in solidarity with the First Nations people in Canada who are being
killed by the tar sands oil mine, which is so big it can be seen from
outer space, it is as big as the state of Florida.</p>
<p>OST Vice President Tom Poor Bear and Alex White Plume of the Black
Hills Sioux Nation Treaty Council stated they will work together to
create enforceable laws that prevent any future heavy hauls of
equipment through the Pine Ridge Reservation. President John Steele was
in Washington, DC and the tribal council representatives for the Eagle
Nest District where Wanblee is located could not be found.</p>
<p>The oldest person on the blockade was Marie Randall. Renabelle Bad
Cob in her wheelchair was in the blockade as well. People from the
village brought pots of soup, fry bread, cases of water, doughnuts, and
coffee. Many stayed and participated in the blockade.</p>
<p>When the tribal police gave a warning to move off the highway or be
arrested, five of us refused to give an inch. All five of us were
arrested. Tribal attorney Sonny Richards was at the jail in Kyle and he
did the paper work necessary to get us all released.</p>
<p>After we were released from the jail, there was a crowd of people
waiting for us. They offered us soda pop and cigarettes. Several people
had bond money ready to bond us out. They offered us rides home and
that was fortunate because we did not have our cars there.</p>
<p>The truck drivers said they did not know they were crossing a Indian
reservation, and would let their corporate office in Canada know that
this was a route to avoid as there were road blocks set up to stop them.</p><p>------------------------------------------</p><p>Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett<br></p>