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azndndude Donating Member (484 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 02:43 PM
Original message
EDIT REQUESTED
Source: Navajo Times

Flagstaff Police Attack and Arrest San Francisco Peaks Marchers
Posted by Brenda Norrell - August 7, 2011 at 6:37 pm

BREAKING NEWS

Updated Monday, Aug. 8

By Brenda Norrell

Photos: Navajo Klee Benally attacked and arrested by Flagstaff, Arizona, police. Photo by Youth of the Peaks.

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. -- Defenders of San Francisco Peaks were arrested during a peaceful march on Sunday and then locked down to halt pipeline construction on Monday at dawn. Native Americans and supporters are continuing their week of action to halt the Snowbowl Resort from the continued destruction of sacred San Francisco Peaks.

Protect the Peaks supporters locked down on Snowbowl Road this morning, Monday, Aug. 8, at 5 am. Peaks defender and police liaision Rudy Preston was arrested at the scene on Monday morning.

Alex Soto, O'odham, reporting from the lockdown, said that Flagstaff and Coconino County officers were cutting away the pipes to the barrels which the eight protesters were locked down with. Construction was halted on the pipeline which would carry sewage water for snowmaking for tourists at the Snowbowl Ski Resort, on sacred San Francisco Peaks.

On Sunday, six people protecting San Francisco Peaks were targeted and arrested during a peaceful march for the protection of the Peaks. San Francisco Peaks defender Klee Benally, Navajo, was among those arrested.

In front of Macy's Coffeehouse on Sunday afternoon, undercover police infiltrated the hundred person march in an attempt to squash the growing anti-Snowbowl movement.

The peaceful march by Native Americans and supporters was surrounded by police from the moment the march formed, marchers said.

One marcher said, "They were just waiting to pounce. And they did!"

The six arrested were released on bail late Sunday. Klee Benally said in a message on Twitter: "Just released from jail. Protect the peaks. The struggle continues."

Supporters protecting San Francisco Peaks said they will continue with a planned protest outside the US Forest Service on Monday at 12:30 p.m.

Native Americans are struggling to defend sacred San Francisco Peaks from snow to be made from sewage water at the Snowbowl tourist resort on the Peaks. The mountains are sacred to 13 Native American Nations. Medicine men gather plants on the Peaks and hold traditional healing ceremonies on the Peaks.

Protect the Peaks said they will continue to resist the destruction of San Francisco Peaks.

Navajos and supporters said that more than one hundred people, including families with children and elders, marched through downtown Flagstaff on Sunday in protest of the destruction and desecration of the San Francisco Peaks by Arizona Snowbowl.

"Demonstrators first gathered at Wheeler Park where they were immediately ordered to leave the public park by the Flagstaff Police Department. As the march wound through downtown Flagstaff demonstrators were met with positive responses and support while dozens of police – many out of uniform -- harassed the demonstrators," Protect the Peaks said in a statement.

"Police cars drove alongside the marchers. As the protesters passed out flyers and carried banners through Flagstaff’s Southside, police violently disrupted the march, grabbing those who were closest to the street and arresting them. As six marchers were handcuffed, the remaining demonstrators continued to yell demands for an end to the Peaks’ destruction."

“As long as Arizona Snowbowl, the Obama Administration’s Forest Service and the City of Flagstaff continue this ecocide and cultural genocide, we will not stop,” said Klee Benally (Dine’), one of the arrested marchers. “We will pray, march, protest, and take whatever action is necessary to ensure that our basic human rights, dignity and environment are safeguarded. Today’s unjustified force from the Flagstaff Police Department demonstrates that they are not on the side of justice or healthy communities. The Forest Service and City of Flagstaff are on the side of corporate interests that are destroying our communities.”
Since May 25, 2011, the owners of Arizona Snowbowl, with the support of the U.S. Forest Service and the Flagstaff City Council, have laid over five miles of a 14.8 mile wastewater pipeline and have clear-cut over 40 acres of rare alpine forest. A current lawsuit against the Forest Service, focusing on human health impacts of wastewater snowmaking, is still under appeal in the 9th Circuit Court. The individuals at today’s march are separate from the Coalition involved in the lawsuit.

Sunday’s march joins four decades of sustained resistance to desecration of the Holy Peaks. Over the past three weeks since Snowbowl began clear-cutting, dozens of protest camps have been established on the mountain.

“The Week of Action is a culmination of efforts to directly address the lack of political will of the Forest Service and City Council to safeguard the community, public health and cultural rights,” said Nadia Del Callejo who was arrested while simply video taping the incident.

“The same profit driven push that has desecrated the Peaks, is the same sickness that has lead to the militarization of the border and is now trying to desecrate South Mountain, which is sacred to all O’odham.” said Alex Soto (Tohono O‘odham ) who was also arrested, “Sacred sites are under attack, but today we said no. Our solidarity in these struggles is re-establishing our traditional networks of support ”

Demonstrators invite everyone to join them Monday, August 8, 12:30 pm at the United States Coconino National Forest Service Office at 1824 S. Thomson St, Wednesday, 12:30pm at High Desert Investment at 504 E Butler Ave and Wednesday, 4:00pm at Flagstaff City Hall.

Protesters vowed to not stop until the desecration of the Peaks stops. “I am not afraid of what will happen to me if I protest, what I am more afraid of is what will happen if I do not stand up for what the Peaks are,” Del Callejo said.
More info at:
protectpeaks@gmail.com
www.truesnow.org


More photos and updates: Censored News: http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com





Read more: http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/



Once again we the Indigenous people of this land face an assault on our lands, culture and spirituality. Spread the word.
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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 02:46 PM
Response to Original message
1. you'll probably have to trim that to 4 paragraphs
just to let you know
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Loudmxr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 02:56 PM
Response to Original message
2. Those Protesters should go back to thier own country!! Doh!... no wait...AHHHH!!
We can learn so much from our first Americans..Like respect for THE LAND.

I love my Verdugo Hills.

That is MY home.
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BeHereNow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:35 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. ME TOO Loudmxr...
Rancho district.
I loves seeing them hills every morning...
I likes riding horses in the park too...
I wonder how long before the county gets their way
and puts another Universal City in Griffith Park...

BHN:hi:
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sdfernando Donating Member (421 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:10 PM
Response to Original message
3. WTF?!?!?!?
Is anybody bothered by this sentence from the article?

"Construction was halted on the pipeline which would carry sewage water for snowmaking for tourists at the Snowbowl Ski Resort, on sacred San Francisco Peaks."

Sewage water for making snow? People will be skiing on this shit (no pun intended)...and it is quite likely that a lot of people will eat some of this snow! What would this snow smell like????

I've never heard of this before?....is this a common practice??...anyone know?...sound pretty gross to me.
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shanti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:16 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. i saw that too
nasty!
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SoapBox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:29 PM
Response to Original message
5. Out of control, so called "law enforcement"...
Police have turned into Storm Troopers, with powers and protections for themselves that we never imagined.

THEY have rights...You do NOT!
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Desertrose Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:34 PM
Response to Original message
6. Damn! This has been going on a long time!
There's this:
"Since May 25, 2011, the owners of Arizona Snowbowl, with the support of the U.S. Forest Service and the Flagstaff City Council, have laid over five miles of a 14.8 mile wastewater pipeline and have clear-cut over 40 acres of rare alpine forest. A current lawsuit against the Forest Service, focusing on human health impacts of wastewater snowmaking, is still under appeal in the 9th Circuit Court. The individuals at today’s march are separate from the Coalition involved in the lawsuit."

But the larger issue is this is sacred land to the Diné and the Hopi. Wastewater so the ones who can afford it can ski?!! ARGGGGH!!

Makes me mad & sad...I have a friends who have been fighting this since the beginning.... :(
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NAZLib Donating Member (15 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-08-11 03:37 PM
Response to Original message
8. "Reclaimed water" not "sewage water"
As a local I'd like to point out that the water in question has been cleaned to the point where it can be (and already is) legally dumped directly into a local stream (Rio De Flag). If they were wasting fresh water on this fiasco I'd probably be out there with the protesters but as it is this seems like a pretty good use for recycled water. These protesters have actually managed to use tax payer money to sue the federal government over this issue and have lost at every turn. I'm not saying the courts got it right but they have had their day in court and their religious beliefs don't supersede the laws of the US. At some point when you start chaining your self to other people's property you're probably going to find your self in jail.
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