Monday 21 November 2016

Police sprayed North Dakota Access Pipeline protesters with a 'water cannon' in freezing weather

standing rock

After months of protest against the proposed North Dakota Access Pipeline, the clash between police and activists heated up Sunday night as temperatures cooled to dangerous levels.

Protesters, many of whom are from the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, have been demonstrating against the oil pipeline that would pass through North Dakota's Lake Oahe, a sacred burial site and major source of drinking water for the Standing Rock Sioux.

Here's what happened on Sunday:

SEE ALSO: People at the front lines of the battle over the Dakota Access Pipeline are calling it a 'death sentence'

DON'T MISS: The $3.7 billion Dakota Access pipeline project hit another snag

The Dakota Access Pipeline is a proposed 1,172-mile oil project that would shuttle half a million barrels of North Dakota-produced oil to refining markets in Illinois. The project is on hold while federal authorities reassess its potential environmental impacts.

Source: Reuters



On Sunday, protesters attempted to remove a barricade on the Backwater Bridge on Highway 1806, which the Indigenous Environmental Network said had been blocking emergency vehicles from reaching the Standing Rock Tribe. Police say the bridge isn't safe to cross.

Source: Indigenous Environmental Network, Morton County Sheriff's Department



The clash quickly escalated.

Source: Bismark Tribune



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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