imcsf.indymedia.orgsan francisco bay area indymedia
About Us Contact Us Subscribe Calendar Publish
white themeblack themered themetheme help



printable version - email this article

Dine Navajo Elders & Youth Blockade A Yet To Be Approved Power Plant Already Under Constru
by Dine Monday, Dec. 18, 2006 at 2:14 PM
eneibegaye@mac.com

Burnham, NM Since the 12th of December, 2006, a group of elders and children have begun to cut the access routes to their lands in the Navajo Reservation in North West New Mexico. The cause for this was to stop the entrance of trucks from the Sithe Global and DPA companies, who have planned the construction of a new 1,500 MW coal powered power plant. Alice Gilmore, a neighbor in the community, saw a man from the company doing some preliminary work by her house (drilling for water). This project for a Power Plant has been approved by the local Navajo gobernment, yet has not passed the environmental approvals. However, work has begun about two weeks ago. The decision by the local government does not correspond with the consensus, where a majority of the people present were clearly against the project. In solidarity it is asked of those who wish to colaborate to participate in the road blockade, spread this information, and firewood to bring light and warmth at nights.


*Accion en Desert Rock*

Burnham, NM

Desde el 12 de Diciembre, 2006, un grupo de ancianas y ninos comenzaron a
cortar las rutas de acceso a sus tierras de la Reserva Navajo al Nor-Oeste
de Nuevo Mexico. La causa de esto es para parar la entrada de los camiones
de las companies Sithe Global y DPA, quienes tienen planeado la construcion
de una planta de poder de 1,500 MW.

Alice Gilmore, una vecina de la comunidad, vio a un hombre de la compania
haciendo trabajo preliminario (agujereando la tierra en busca de agua) cerca
de su casa. El projecto de esta Planta de Poder fue aprobado por el gobierno
local, pero aun no han sido aprobados por los organismos amentales. Sin
embargo, ya se han comenzado los trabajos hace dos semanas. La decision por
parte del gobierno Navajo no se han correspondido con las disposiones
planteadas durante los mitines, donde una mayoria de votantes han rechasado
de forma rotunda la propuesta.

En solidaridad se pide a l@s que puedan colaborar difusion de la causa,
participacion en los cortes de ruta, y madera para calentar y alumbrar por
la noche

Sithe Global & DPA are proposing to build the Desert Rock power plant,
a 1,500 MW Coal Fired plant in the Four Corners area on the Navajo
Reservation. This is an area already polluted by 2 other major coal
power plants. Local Navajo residence and community members oppose this
project for many harmful reasons!! This Desert Rock power plant is
still in the environmental review process and has NOT yet been
permitted.

However, Desert Rock company trucks have began moving onto the
backyard of Alice Gilmore, an elderly navajo woman, and her family on
wednesday to begin drilling efforts. Desert Rock officials and police
have not shown any documents or permits to the local residents stating
their purpose or permission to be there. Dine supporters and community
members have joined Alice and her family to blockade the road. They
are elderly women and youth, and they have been camped out on the road
over night since Tuesday! Desert Rock trucks have repeatedly rushed
them and have almost run-over people a number of times as they attempt
to get by. Desert Rock power company is violating the lease rights of
the local Navajo residences and is harassing elderly Navajo women and
youth! This is an urgent time and support is needed!!!


Please read on to find out how you can help! and Please pass this onto
others! (press release and additional article)



Lucy A. Willie stands at the proposed Desert Rock Power Plant
site outside of Burnham on Wednesday where she and
several friends and family stayed overnight to stop a contractor for
Desert Rock Energy Company from doing preliminary work.


What they need:
- More People Support
- Fire wood
- monetary support
- Attention!

how You can Help!

- More People! More people are needed to sit in support! All are welcome!
directions to the area are below:
The site is between Gallup, NM and Shiprock, NM (northeastern, NM).
Take the road between Gallup and Shiprock, the 491. at the Mustang
Service Station (one of the only service stations between the two),
turn East on road #5 towards Burnham Chapter. From Burnham Chapter
turn North onto gravel road #5082. About 10-12 miles up the road turn
West until you see the encampment. There will be markers (balloons)
out on the roads. (if you begin to see a dragline, you've gone too
far)


- Fire wood! it is cold outside and many of the resisters are elderly
women. if you can get firewood to the site it is very very much
needed! the directions to the site are above.


- The resisters are in need of money for gas and food, and also
for bail, if necessary. Please send donations to local resident
and supporter:
Elouise Brown
1015 Glade Lane 34
Farmington, NM 87401
Elouise can also be reached at: thebrownmachine@hotmail.com


- ATTENTION! the more media and observers are present the least likely
Desert Rock is likely to run people over or harass them. contact the
media, tell them what is going on. Contact Navajo Authorities, tell
them you are extremely concerned. Be a legal observer. Spread this
Alert!


Media Contact: Lori Goodman, cell #: (970) 759-1908, e-mail address:
kiyaani@frontier.net


Contact the Following Authorities! Tell them you have heard about
Desert Rock's harassment of Navajo elders and youth. Tell them you are
extremely concerned! If enough people contact these offices they will
know that the world is watching.


Shiprock Police Department
phone: (505) 368-1350
fax: (505) 368-1293




Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley's Office
P.O. Box 9000 Window Rock, Arizona, 86515
phone #: (928) 871- 6352


also: George Hardeen, Navajo Nation Communications Director Office of
the President
Office #: 928-871-7000
Cell #: 928-380-7688
e-mail: georgehardeen@opvp.org




Bureau of Indian Affairs (Gallup Office) they are conducting the
Environmental Impact Statement.
Harrilene Yazzi, NEPA Coordinator Bureau of Indian Affairs, Navajo
Regional Office
P.0. Box 1060 Gallup, New Mexico 87305
Phone: 505-863-8314
Fax: 505-863-8324

Be a Legal Observer - get to the site and help record/witness what is happening

Send this Action Alert Far and Wide!

Thank you for your support!!!

Enei Begaye
Executive Director
Black Mesa Water Coalition
408 E. Route 66, Suite #1
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
Office #: (928) 213-9760




PRESS RELEASE
Wednesday, December 13, 2006


Contacts:
Sarah Jane White, Doodá Desert Rock Committee
(505) 860-6166
Dailan J. Long , Diné CARE, Doodá Desert Rock Committee
(505) 801-0713
Elouise Brown, Doodá Desert Rock Committee
(505) 974-6159
Lori Goodman, Diné CARE
(970) 759-1908


BURNHAM, SANOSTEE & NENANEZAH RESIDENTS BLOCKADE DESERT ROCK PROJECT


Burnham, NM --Burnham, Sanostee & Nenanezah Elders and citizens are
braving the cold to protect the land from the encroaching Diné Power
Authority (DPA) and Sithe Global LLC at the proposed Desert Rock site.
Navajo residents confronted the Diné Power Authority/Sithe Global on
Tuesday afternoon after learning of water drilling that had been
occurring without the knowledge and notification of local residents.


"I have said 'No' over and over again and you keep coming over!"
Nenanezah elder Alice Gilmore exclaimed to Sithe/DPA employees at the
confrontation. For Gilmore, the issue is despicable and uncalled for
since she gave no consent to allow DPA/Sithe into her grazing area.
Members of the Doodá Desert Rock committee gathered to support her
opposition and asked Sithe/DPA to disclose Drilling permits that
allowed drilling activity to occur, to no avail. The residents
refused to leave after the Navajo Nation Police attempted to give
access to DPA/Sithe Global, claiming that permits for the Desert Rock
project are not for public disclosure. The Burnham residents
barricaded the roads to disallow traffic into the Desert Rock site and
have remained in place since the Tuesday incident occurred.


Members of Diné CARE/Doodá Desert Rock Committee met this morning at
the Shiprock Courthouse to get answers about drilling permits yet the
Lieutenant Dempsey denied access to Gilmore and other concerned
residents to view the permits. Residents are asking for: 1.) A copy
of the categorical exclusion that is allowing the drilling activities
to commence. 2.) Copies of the Clean Water Act Sections 401, 402 and
404, that would prove compliance with regulatory requirements have
been met. There are major disturbance taking place and according to
the Clean Air Act, these permits are a pre-requisite for drilling
activity.

The proposed area is home to extended families, but arbitrarily drawn
political boundaries by the Navajo Nation and company representatives
have the families separated into the three chapters: Burnham,
Sanostee, and Nenahnezad. The boundary defining Burnham and Nenahnezad
has been moved south for benefit of DPA/Sithe as recently as two years
ago.

"The local residents are not protesters but are resisters. Who would
be happy if a well is being dug in their backyard especially when it
is done in secrecy? So, how can those residents be considered
protesters when they are simply standing up for their rights to have
clean air, water, and environment." Stated, Elouise Brown of Sanostee.
Burnham, Sanostee and Nenanezah residents are not waiting for remedy;
many have set up camp at the proposed site and are refusing to move
until they get the needed documents. "We're fed up with them," states
Sarah J. White, President of the Doodá Desert Rock Committee, "the
grandmas and the grandpas are being walked over by these monsters and
they're being denied information. We're standing our ground now."
This incident follows accusations made against Sithe/DPA about
environmental injustices, EPA's proposed issuance of prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD) permit Air Quality Permit for Desert
Rock Energy Facility and the creation of Navajo Nation Energy Policies
without public input.
###




Lori Goodman
Dine' CARE
10 A Town Plaza, PMB 138
Durango, CO 81301
PH: (970) 259-0199
FAX: (970) 259-2300
Cell: (970) 759-1908
kiyaani@frontier.net
dinecare.org





Navajo traditional elders blockade power plant site

By Brenda Norrell
U.N. OBSERVER & International Report

BURNHAM, NEW MEXICO, USA – Elderly Navajo women and their children
formed a blockade, built a fire and camped at the site of a proposed
power plant on tribal land in northwest New Mexico. The blockade of
traditional Navajos halted site work in a region that is already toxic
with air and water pollution from power plants, oil and gas wells and
scattered radioactive tailings from the Cold War.
Facing the threat of arrest by tribal police at the blockade, Navajo
elderly, including one medicine man, said they are willing to go to
jail to protect their land and way of life.
Most of the elderly are already ill from living in an area where power
plants have released 100 tons of coal combustion waste that is blowing
in the wind. One of the Navajo elderly resisters is in a wheelchair and
another has severe asthma.
For the second night on Wednesday night, Dec. 13, Navajo resisters
camped in the cold at the site.
"I have said 'No' over and over again and you keep coming over!" said
Nenanezah elder Alice Gilmore, who holds the grazing permit for the
area of the proposed Desert Rock Power Plant. The Navajo Nation and
Sithe Global LLC plan to build the power plant, which would be the
third power plant in the Farmington/Bloomfield area.
Confronting Sithe and Navajo DPA employees, Gilmore was adamant that
she has not given permission for the power plant on her land. Navajo
elders from Burnham, Sanostee and Nenanezah chapter, all taking a bold
action to fight the tribal government and corporate aggression, joined
Gilmore at the blockade.
"We're fed up with them," said Sarah J. White, president of the Doodá
Desert Rock Committee. "The grandmas and the grandpas are being walked
over by these monsters and they're being denied information. We're
standing our ground now."
White said Navajos at the barricade need everything in the way of
food, firewood and supplies.
"We need everything from A to Z," White said.
The blockade was formed just 10 days after Navajo Nation elected
leaders gathered with representatives from 14 countries and formulated
a global ban on uranium mining on Native lands. The power plant
blockade also comes as Navajo Nation leaders are fighting in the
federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to protect San Francisco Peaks
near Flagstaff, Ariz., from the desecration of snowmaking from recycled
wastewater for tourism. The mountain is sacred to 13 area Indian
tribes.
However, both Navajo President Joe Shirley, Jr., and the Navajo Nation
Council support the construction of the Desert Rock Power Plant and
accompanying coalmine, which Navajos say would add more pollution to
the air, land and water, already saturated with disease-causing toxins.
The Navajo Nation tribal government has attempted to censor the voices
of Navajos speaking out against the Desert Rock power plant in New
Mexico and the use of aquifer water for coal mining by Peabody Coal on
the western side of the Navajo Nation in Arizona.
The proposed site of the new Desert Rock power plant is in the Four
Corners Region, targeted since the 1970s as a national sacrifice area
for energy production.
It is also the sacred region of Dinetah, the place of origin of
Navajos. However, the air is so polluted in the region of Dinetah near
Bloomfield that persons with asthma and respiratory diseases find it
difficult to breathe.
Further, Navajos say while they struggle with respiratory diseases,
cancer and the death of their loved ones in this region, many Navajos
must also haul water and live without electricity, since the power
plants on Navajo land primarily provide electricity for non-Indians.
The Navajo blockade comes as O'odham in Sonora, Mexico, challenge a
secret plan by the government of Mexico, with the knowledge of the US
EPA, to create a hazardous waste dump near the sacred site of Quitovac
where O'odham hold ceremonies. The Navajo blockade coincides with an
action by Pima on Gila River tribal land in Arizona to halt expansion
of a hazardous dumpsite.
At the same time, Yaqui in Sonora, Mexico, gathered to prohibit the
use of banned pesticides in agricultural fields, now resulting in
cancer and deaths.
At the proposed new Desert Rock power plant site in New Mexico, Navajo
residents confronted the Diné Power Authority/Sithe Global on Dec. 12,
after discovering that water drilling was carried out without the
knowledge and notification of local Navajo residents.
Members of the Doodá Desert Rock committee gathered to support
Gilmore's opposition and asked Sithe/DPA to disclose drilling permits
that allowed drilling activity to occur. However, no permits were
provided.
The residents refused to leave after the Navajo Nation Police
attempted to give access to DPA/Sithe Global, claiming that permits for
the Desert Rock project are not for public disclosure. The Burnham
residents barricaded the roads to disallow traffic into the Desert Rock
site and Navajos remained at the blockade.
Members of Diné CARE/Doodá Desert Rock Committee met Dec. 13, at the
Shiprock tribal courthouse to get answers about drilling permits.
Navajo residents said a tribal police lieutenant denied Gilmore and
other residents access to view the permits.
Navajo residents are asking for a copy of the categorical exclusion,
which would allow the drilling activities to commence, and copies of
the Clean Water Act Sections 401, 402 and 404, that would prove
compliance with regulatory requirements have been met.
"There are major disturbance taking place and according to the Clean
Air Act, these permits are a pre-requisite for drilling activity,"
Navajo residents said in a public statement.
Further, Navajos say tribal boundary lines were redrawn to accommodate
the power plant corporation.
The proposed area is home to extended families, but arbitrarily drawn
political boundaries by the Navajo Nation and company representatives
have the families separated into the three chapters: Burnham, Sanostee,
and Nenahnezad.
Navajo residents said the boundary defining Burnham and Nenahnezad was
moved to the south for the benefit of DPA/Sithe within the past two
years.
Elouise Brown of Sanostee said, "The local residents are not
protesters but are resisters. Who would be happy if a well is being dug
in their backyard especially when it is done in secrecy? So, how can
those residents be considered protesters when they are simply standing
up for their rights to have clean air, water, and environment."
Burnham, Sanostee and Nenanezah residents are not waiting for remedy;
many have set up camp at the proposed site and are refusing to move
until they get the needed documents.
Navajos said this incident follows accusations made against Sithe/DPA
about environmental injustices, EPA's proposed issuance of prevention
of significant deterioration (PSD) permit Air Quality Permit for Desert
Rock Energy Facility and the creation of Navajo Nation Energy Policies
without public input.


For more information on the Navajo blockade:
Lori Goodman
Dine' CARE
PH: (970) 259-0199
FAX: (970) 259-2300
kiyaani@frontier.net
dinecare.org

add your comments


IMC Network: www.indymedia.org Projects print radio satellite tv video Africa ambazonia canarias estrecho / madiaq nigeria south africa Canada hamilton maritimes montreal ontario ottawa quebec thunder bay vancouver victoria windsor winnipeg East Asia burma jakarta japan manila qc Europe alacant andorra antwerpen armenia athens austria barcelona belarus belgium belgrade bristol bulgaria croatia cyprus estrecho / madiaq euskal herria galiza germany grenoble hungary ireland istanbul italy la plana liege lille madrid malta marseille nantes netherlands nice norway oost-vlaanderen paris/île-de-france poland portugal romania russia scotland sverige switzerland thessaloniki toulouse ukraine united kingdom valencia west vlaanderen Latin America argentina bolivia brasil chiapas chile chile sur colombia ecuador mexico peru puerto rico qollasuyu rosario santiago tijuana uruguay valparaiso Oceania adelaide aotearoa brisbane burma darwin jakarta manila melbourne oceania perth qc sydney South Asia india mumbai United States arizona arkansas atlanta austin baltimore big muddy binghamton boston buffalo charlottesville chicago cleveland colorado danbury, ct dc hawaii houston hudson mohawk idaho ithaca kansas city la madison maine miami michigan milwaukee minneapolis/st. paul new hampshire new jersey new mexico new orleans north carolina north texas nyc oklahoma omaha philadelphia pittsburgh portland richmond rochester rogue valley saint louis san diego san francisco san francisco bay area santa barbara santa cruz, ca seattle tallahassee-red hills tampa bay tennessee united states urbana-champaign utah vermont virginia beach western mass worcester West Asia armenia beirut israel palestine ukraine Topics biotech Process discussion fbi/legal updates indymedia faq mailing lists process & imc docs tech volunteer

© 2000-2003 New Mexico IMC. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the New Mexico IMC. Running sf-active v0.9.2 Disclaimer | Privacy