Unity urged at N.D. protest camp

Standoff, blockade lead to differences over pipeline face-off

Demonstrators stand next to burning tires as armed soldiers and law enforcement officers assemble on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016, to force Dakota Access pipeline protesters off private land where they had camped to block construction. The pipeline is to carry oil from western North Dakota through South Dakota and Iowa to an existing pipeline in Patoka, Ill.
Demonstrators stand next to burning tires as armed soldiers and law enforcement officers assemble on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2016, to force Dakota Access pipeline protesters off private land where they had camped to block construction. The pipeline is to carry oil from western North Dakota through South Dakota and Iowa to an existing pipeline in Patoka, Ill.

CANNON BALL, N.D. -- Protesters trying to block the Dakota Access oil pipeline urged unity Saturday while gathering near the burned-out construction vehicles that served as a barricade between activists and officers a day earlier.

After two days of confrontations with law enforcement officials, about 100 people prayed at the barricade in chilly, cloudy weather in southern North Dakota. The protesters later walked back to a camp where hundreds were staying to support the Standing Rock Sioux's effort to halt construction of the $3.8 billion pipeline.

Dozens of people moved behind the burned vehicles and heavy plywood along a highway Friday, facing concrete barriers, military vehicles and police in riot gear. Don Cuny, the encampment's security leader, said Saturday that the standoff "does not represent" the ongoing protest.

Cuny noted that disagreements have surfaced about how to demonstrate, but he said any instigators would be kicked out of the encampment. Stressing unity, he said: "More numbers make you more powerful."

The Standing Rock Sioux argue that the nearly 1,200-mile pipeline threatens water sources and cultural sites, but the Texas company behind the project, Energy Transfer Partners, insists it is safe. The pipeline is to carry North Dakota crude oil through South Dakota and Iowa to a shipping point in Patoka, Ill.

"Enough is enough. Natives have been ignored throughout history," said Holly Doll, a tribal member who was among more than 60 protesters at another rally Saturday at the state Capitol in Bismarck. "Our voices may be small, but we are strong. This is about looking ahead for future generations and protecting our water."

Only a handful of people, including some observers from Amnesty International, stayed into the evening Friday after protest leaders asked people to return to camp in the aftermath of the vehicle fires. The protest camp is near Cannon Ball, a town about 50 miles south of Bismarck.

Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier described the protesters as "nonconfrontational but uncooperative," and credited Standing Rock Sioux tribal members for helping to ease tensions.

Protest encampments set up to support the tribe have grown to thousands of people, drawing support from American Indians around the country, environmentalists and others, including some celebrities.

The protest escalated last weekend, when demonstrators set up camp on private land along the pipeline's path that recently had been acquired by Energy Transfer Partners. On Thursday, more than 140 people were arrested as law enforcement officials -- bolstered by reinforcements from several states -- slowly moved in.

Kirchmeier said tribal representatives were later allowed onto the private property to remove teepees. Officers arrested one person, but no details were released.

But after that eviction, some protesters worked overnight to create two roadblocks of burned construction equipment and other vehicles.

Jolene White Eagle, 56, a lifelong Cannon Ball resident, watched as law enforcement officers massed near Friday's new blockade and called the police response "nonsense."

"It reminds me of something like a foreign country, what's happened here with all the destruction," she said.

The camp cleared Thursday was just to the north of the more permanent, larger encampment, which has been allowed on federally owned land and is a main staging area for hundreds of protesters.

A federal judge in September denied the tribe's request to block construction after it argued that the Army Corps of Engineers improperly issued permits.

North Dakota officials have said no culturally significant sites have been found in the area. But on the day the judge ruled, three federal agencies stepped in to order construction to halt on Army Corps-owned land around Lake Oahe, a wide spot of the Missouri River, while the Corps reviewed its decision.

Meanwhile, construction has been allowed to continue on private land owned by the developer, with a goal of completion by the end of the year.

Information for this article was contributed by James MacPherson, John Mone and Blake Nicholson of The Associated Press.

A Section on 10/30/2016

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