O Shillin Woods na pueina i le taimi o le faalauiloaina e faasaga i le fausiaina o le paipa

Anonim

O le mea na tupu na tupu i le vaituloto o Morton (North Dakota). O le tagata fai mea ma 26 sili atu gaioiga na fai i le fausiaina o le Dakota avanoa ulufale mai. E le i uma le auala e sui ai le auala o le faʻasologa paipa i le isi itu o le vaitafe lea na tatau ona ofi ai i nofoaga tanumia o tagata Initia. E tusa ai ma le masili laupapa, faʻatasi ai ma isi mafaufauga, na ia alu i le taʻavale i le toe foʻi filemu i le tolauapiga, pe a latou fasiotia lelei i auʻau i se loli tele.

27 Na molia tagata ona o le ulufale tulafono i totonu o le teritori o fausia. E moni, o le sui o Kapiro, i lana vaega, fai mai o le tagata ua leva ona tatalaina mai le puipuiga.

Vitio mai le taofiga o Sean na lomia i totonu o le Instagram Prompress NIKKI RED:

#Repost @seekthetruth with @repostapp Everyone please share!! Actress #ShaileneWoodley was arrested in North Dakota while protesting the #DakotaAccessPipeline that will desecrate sacred #NativeAmerican land and pollute water, the incident was captured live on camera. Woodley is seen narrating her own arrest in a video posted on her Facebook page, saying she was headed peacefully back to her vehicle when “they grabbed me by my jacket and said that I wasn’t allowed to continue … and they have giant guns and batons and zip ties and they are not letting me go.” An officer is heard on the video telling the actress that she is being arrested for "trespassing". As she was led away in handcuffs, Woodley says on the video she was among hundreds of protesters but was singled out “because I’m well known, because I have 40,000 people watching.” She is known for her #environmental activism, has previously joined members of North Dakota’s #StandingRockSiouxTribe to protest against the proposed construction of the $3.7 billion project. The 1,100-mile (1770.28-km) pipeline, being built by a group of companies led by Energy Transfer Partners LP, would be the first to bring Bakken shale from North Dakota directly to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast. The group behind the Dakota Access pipeline had planned to start operations in the fourth quarter of this year, but construction has been delayed by demonstrations. On Sunday, a federal court rejected a request by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to halt construction of the Dakota Access pipeline but said that ruling was “not the final word,” as a necessary easement still needed government approval. On Monday, the Department of Justice, U.S. Army and Department of the Interior said that the Army, in the interim, will not authorize construction of the pipeline on Army Corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe. The tribe said the pipeline would leave it vulnerable to contamination from oil spills and would damage historic and culturally significant sites. #NoDAPL #IndigenousPeoplesDay Source: globalnews.ca

Видео опубликовано Nikki Reed (@iamnikkireed)

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