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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, April 25, 2008
Contact: Elouise Brown, Dooda Desert Rock, 505-947-6159
Jihan Gearon, Indigenous Environmental Network, 218-760-1370
Enei Begay, Black Mesa Water Coaltion, 928-380-6296
Indigenous Peoples from North America Say No to Fossil Fuel Development
Dooda Desert Rock (David) Knocks on Sithe Global’s (Goliath’s)
Door
New York City, NY – A delegation of Indigenous Peoples from all over
the world rallied at Sithe Global LLC in New York City, to ensure that Sithe
understands the impacts of their proposed Desert Rock Energy Project on the
local, Navajo people at the proposed site. Elouise Brown, President of the
Dooda Desert Rock committee, and Enei Begaye, Executive Director of the Black
Mesa Water Coalition, attempted to deliver a letter to Sithe telling them
that local people do not support the project. Sithe did not meet with them.
News reporters accompanied Elouise and Enei into the building, but were ordered
to “leave immediately.” Enei and Elouise, as tribal members of
the Navajo Nation who Sithe Global is doing business with, asked to deliver
a letter to Sithe Global. Receptionists called the Sithe Global office several
times and left two messages, but Sithe never came down or called back. The
receptionists refused to deliver the letter but directed Elouise and Enei
to a messenger center at a different location, where they sent the letter.
“
I don’t understand how the proponents of the Desert Rock Energy Project
from our Navajo Nation can do business with a corporation that will not speak
to members of the Nation who would be directly impacted by the project,” says
Elouise Brown. “At least we know we delivered the letter, and they
have an idea there are many Navajo people opposed to this project, and only
a couple who want the project.”
Outside Indigenous Peoples from all over the world who are in New York for
the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UN PFII), rallied,
chanted, and held signs in solidarity with the Dooda Desert Rock Committee.
Suspiciously, soon after the rally started, large moving trucks were parked
in front of the building, blocking protestors from being seen on the street.
Elouise and Enei were part of the Indigenous Environmental Network delegation
to the UN PFII. Together, the group profiled the disproportionate impacts
their communities face as a result of the expansion of fossil fuel development
in their homelands, resulting in contamination and depletion of water, compounding
climate change, and exacerbating health impacts.
Says Enei Begaye, “These are resource wars. These companies are occupying
sovereign Indigenous territories, and not just in Iraq. In this country,
from the Navajo Nation to the Arctic, the Indian wars continue.”
The letter can be found at http://www.dooda-desert-rock.net <http://www.dooda-desert-rock.net/> .
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