Manataka® American Indian Council
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Corporate Criminals vs Keepers of Sacred Eagle Rock
Companies like Kennecott Eagle Minerals are
criminals. To illegally destroy a sacred place with the help of
Michigan law officials is another example of the U.S. breaking its
treaties with Natives for monetary gains.
~Submitted by Helen RedWing Vinson
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Raid at Eagle RockTwo campers arrested, camp destroyed
By Greg Peterson, Indian Country Today correspondent
BIG BAY, Mich. – The
defenders of sacred Eagle Rock sat in a circle and wept as they were
surrounded by dozens of heavily armed state and local police officers who
raided the Eagle Rock encampment the morning of May 27 arresting two campers
at the request of Kennecott Eagle Minerals, who wasted no time destroying
the month-old camp to make way for their nickel and copper mine.
Witnesses say there were about six people at Eagle Rock when police moved in
including four campers who had spent the night and two supporters who
arrived with a warning the raid was imminent. Armed with high-powered
rifles, Michigan State Police and mine security could be seen atop Eagle
Rock scanning the vast Yellow Dog Plains with binoculars apparently looking
for trespassers.
Two handcuffed campers, who refused to leave when ordered by police, were
taken away by sheriff’s deputies and driven nearly one hour to the Marquette
County Jail and were released on bond. Arrested were Keweenaw Bay Indian
Community members Chris Chosa, 28, and Charlotte Loonsfoot, 37, both of
Baraga, Mich.
Loonsfoot was one of three women who set up the encampment April 23
protesting the arrest three days earlier of environmentalist Cynthia Pryor
and hoping to protect Eagle Rock from the Eagle Project nickel and copper
mine. Despite federal treaties that allow Ojibwa to hunt, fish and gather on
the Yellow Dog Plains, the state of Michigan leased the land to Kennecott to
open a sulfide mine. The mine portal is planned near the front of Eagle Rock
and the tunnel will travel underneath the rock.
“Today, we got a message in camp that police were on their way,” said
non-Native camper Catherine Parker of the warning from two members of the
Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve who arrived shortly before police. “Charlotte
and Chris had no intention of leaving voluntarily.”
Parker said the Eagle Rock defenders wept for the land as they sat in a
circle.
“There were a lot of tears and passionate remarks because the people have
come to care a lot about each other out here,” said Parker of Marquette,
Mich. “We have all been working together, Native Americans and whites to
protect something that is tremendously important to us.”
After police arrived, “we stayed as long as we could, we kept asking to stay
with our friends (Chosa and Loonsfoot),” said Parker, wiping away a tear.
“We sat down with them repeatedly, we were pushed verbally numerous times by
law enforcement.”
“It’s breaking my heart,” said a crying Parker as she witnessed heavy
equipment roaring up the entrance to Eagle Rock. “This mine is not going to
perform (safely) as they say it will. What is going to happen if the mine
collapses into the Trout Salmon River?”
Police from several agencies “literally surrounded us in a big circle,” said
Kalvin Hartwig, a member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa who spent
the night of May 26 at Eagle Rock but was not arrested after agreeing to
leave the property with his car.
When police arrived, “three of us and two visitors were down by the sacred
fire and another one of our campers (Charlotte Loonsfoot) was up on the hill
fasting,” Hartwig said. “I think this whole situation is pretty sad.
“The water and this land is at-risk. These people (Kennecott) are here
illegally about to destroy it.”
According to the Save The Wild UP Web site, about 20 police cars were sent
and warned to expect a riot that never occurred. Many supporters and the
media rushed to the scene after hearing the Powell Township emergency
personnel dispatched with instructions to stage at the main entrance to the
mine including an ambulance and fire trucks. No injuries were reported.
Atop a pole at the entrance to the camp, a lone eagle feather fluttered in
the dusty wind as heavy equipment moved in. Mine officials doused the
grandfather fire, uprooted the Eagle Rock Community Garden, removed two
flags from atop Eagle Rock and bulldozed the camp.
Deputies blocked the dusty, remote, seasonal Triple A Road at the mine
entrance but allowed the media and campers to walk the three-quarters of a
mile to the former entrance to the camp that was blocked by heavy machinery
as mine employees erected a metal cyclone fence. The media was not allowed
to see the remains of the encampment.
“They are putting up a fence and they are wrecking our garden we planted,”
said Gabriel Caplett, who has posted daily updates about the campers
activities on the Stand for the Land Blog and has written countless stories
about the fight to stop the mine since it was announced in 2004. “They are
putting out the sacred fire” that has burned since the first night.
There was no word on what happened to the tents and a large cache of food
and other supplies donated by supporters. About 10 campers spent the night
of May 25 at Eagle Rock, but several left to prepare for activities planned
at the rock for Memorial Day weekend.
Two non-Native campers, not present for the raid, broke into tears while
walking to Eagle Rock.
“It’s heartbreaking, it’s really disconcerting to feel the rights of the
corporations have been put above and beyond the rights of the people,” said
Amy Conover of Marquette, Mich. When politicians “get into power they don’t
act on behalf of the people, they act on behalf of the money.”
A Detroit native attending nursing school in Marquette said she “can’t
understand how hardened the hearts have become of the people who are doing
this.”
“To not feel how wrong it actually is – is a very scary thing,” said Laura
Nagle. “The police officer said this is a ‘bummer’ this was happening, it is
not a bummer, it is a catastrophe, a tragedy and a misfortune for us all.
This can be stopped.
Source:
http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/home/content/95060709.html
Submitted by Helen RedWing Vinson
Kennecott Eagle Minerals Rally
Schedule for Rally planned by Michigan Ojibwe against Kennecott Eagle Minerals
Please read, share, and post this widely. Support the People standing against invasion of their treaty lands by mining companies.
Gina Boltz
Director, Native Village Publications
Director, Youth Forum for International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers
Schedule for rally planned by Upper Peninsula Ojibwa, Stand for the Land and several environment groups at Michigan State Capitol in Lansing, Michigan on Thurs. June 3, 2010 following the massive May 27 police raid ordered by Kennecott Eagle Minerals on the defenders of Eagle Rock resulting in arrest of two Ojibwa campers for Trespassing and demanding others leave:
Everyone Please Attend:
The pristine Upper Peninsula of Michigan is in jeopardy from 30 sulfide "acid" mines if the mine planned by Kennecott Eagle Minerals moves forward with protection from Michigan's Democratic Governor Jennifer Granholm and her environmental protection agencies.
June 3rd
11:00 am Meet on Capitol Lawn
11:30 am Reading of the Environmental Justice Petition
Reading a Tribal Rights Statement
Eagle Rock (Song for the People) - sung by Drew Nelson
Other Voices Joining In!
Rachael & Dominic Davis, Jen Sygit, Sam Corbin, & Miko Fossum
1:00 pm Deliver the petitions and Tribal Rights Statement to the Governor's office
3:00 pm Walk to Natural Resources Commission Meeting - 333 E. Michigan Ave - Lansing Center
Message from organizers:
Please distribute to all lists and notify all groups that could possibly attend. We need people, people, people! This may be the one chance for folks in lower Michigan to physically help this cause. Please, please come. Please come to honor those who are fighting for our water, our land and our rights to free expression.
My thanks to you - for all you have done,
Cynthia Pryor
Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve
www.yellowdogwatershed.org
www.standfortheland.com
www.savethewildup.org
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