Thousands Protest Dakota Pipeline, ‘Justice League’ Shows Support

The $3.8 billion worth Dakota Access pipeline may threaten more than 8,000 members of various indigenous tribes.

Suhasini Krishnan
Environment
Updated:
Protesters demonstrate against the  Dakota Access oil pipeline. (Photo: Reuters)
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Protesters demonstrate against the Dakota Access oil pipeline. (Photo: Reuters)
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Thousands of Americans have been protesting the construction of an oil pipeline in North Dakota near Native American land.

The Dakota Access pipeline, worth $3.8 billion, stands to threaten more than 8,000 members of the Standing Rock Sioux and other tribes.

Native Americans in Denver at a rally against the Dakota Access pipeline. (Photo: AP)

Owned by Energy Transfer Partners, the 1,172-mile project is expected to carry nearly a half-million barrels of crude oil daily from North Dakota’s oil fields through South Dakota, to an existing pipeline in Illinois.

Protesters in Chicago. (Photo: AP)

The protests opposing its construction have been on since April. According to Standing Rock Sioux’s lawsuit, the project violates several federal laws, including the National Historic Preservation Act.

A Native American shows his solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. (Photo: AP)

Several eminent personalities and celebrities have come out in support of the movement. In fact, the cast of the Justice League took a break from shooting to record an advertisement for the Change.org petition.

Justice League star-cast have a message. (Photo: Youtube)
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A member of South Dakota’s Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe. (Photo: AP)

On Friday, in an unprecedented verdict, the Federal government overturned the decision of a Federal judge who rejected the tribe’s appeal to stop construction of the pipeline.

Three federal agencies appealed to the pipeline company to “voluntarily pause” work on a segment that tribal officials say holds sacred sites and artifacts.

Protesters in Chicago. (Photo: AP)
The pipeline might contaminate the tribe’s drinking water. (Photo: AP)

Placed within a mile upstream of their reservation, it could impact the drinking water for the tribe and for the million people who rely on it downstream.

The issue around the Dakota Access Pipeline is one of the key debates for indigenous people in the United States to conserve their way of live.

(With inputs from AP)

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Published: 12 Sep 2016,03:16 PM IST

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