
Indigenous Groups Are Way Ahead Of Everyone Else At Protecting Forests
And they are turning the Dakota Access protests into a worldwide environmental movement.
| Mon Oct. 10, 2016 6:00 AM EDT

Tribal members from the Ecuadorean Amazon in Cannon Ball, North Dakota
By the time three federal government agencies issued their joint statement[1] halting construction of the Dakota Access pipeline on September 9, there were some 5,000[2] protesters on site in Cannon Ball, North Dakota challenging the project. The groups spread out over a massive campsite on the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, where the tribe says the proposed construction of the pipeline threatens their water source and sacred lands.
After hearing about the…
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