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<a href="http://www.counterpunch.org/norrell10052009.html" eudora="autourl">
http://www.counterpunch.org/norrell10052009.html<br><br>
</a></font><font face="Verdana" size=2 color="#990000">October 5,
2009<br><br>
</font><h1><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=4><b>Takeover in
Hopiland <br><br>
</i></font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=5 color="#990000">A
Dirty New Low for Peabody Coal
</b></font></h1><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=4>By BRENDA
NORRELL <br><br>
</font><font face="Verdana" size=6 color="#990000">F</font>
<font face="Verdana" size=2>ormer chairmen of the Hopi Nation have
revealed that the Hopi Tribal Council has been taken over by a
pro-Peabody Coal faction. Further, Hopi reveal that the tribe's attorney
and the media are being used to carry out Peabody Coal's agenda.<br><br>
Peabody Coal used the same tactic originally to seize Black Mesa for coal
mining and bring about Navajo relocation for coal mining, by way of
attorney John Boyden, who worked for Peabody and the Hopi Tribe. The
media was also coopted in the original seizure of Black Mesa by Peabody
Coal, with the media cheerleading and proclaiming the so-called Navajo
Hopi land dispute.<br><br>
When the Hopi Tribal Council banned "environmentalists," and
Navajo President Joe Shirley, Jr., agreed last week, Navajos and Hopis
defending the land were shocked and appalled.<br><br>
Vernon Masayesva, executive director of Black Mesa Trust and former Hopi
Chairman, points out that Hopi are true stewards and the Hopi Tribal
Council has been taken over by a pro-Peabody Coal faction. Masayesva, in
a letter to Arizona Republic, also points out that the newspaper is
printing only one-side of the story at Hopi, press releases written by a
former employee of the newspaper.<br><br>
Tina May, former senior editor of Arizona Republic, is now the Hopi
Tribal Council's press officer. Masayesva said the Arizona Republic's
coverage is biased.<br><br>
"Arizona Republic has been carrying news releases by Tina May,
public relations officer for the Hopi Tribal Council. She is reporting
only one side of the story. We understand she is a former employee of the
Arizona Republic," he said.<br><br>
"The real story on Hopiland, that is yet to be revealed, is the
take-over of the government by pro-Peabody legislators with the support
of their legal counsel, Scott Canty, and the ensuing corruption and abuse
of power by an illegally constituted Council," Masayesva
said.<br><br>
Referring to the ban, Masayesva said, "To be a Hopi is to be a
conservationist, a caretaker and a steward of planet earth. So, by
implication, the Council has banned all Hopi people from their
land."<br><br>
Masayesva said the Grand Canyon Trust came to Hopiland to install
photovoltaic panels on homes that have no electricity. "It is likely
the project will now be suspended, thanks to our Hopi Tribal
Council."<br><br>
Further, Masayesva said forty individual Hopis have filed a challenge to
the U.S. Office of Surface Mining’s decision to issue a Life-of-Mine
permit to Peabody. The permit would allow Peabody to continue the
destructive surface mining for an additional 15 years after
2011.<br><br>
"Of special concern to the Hopi is the continuing drawdown of
N-aquifer groundwater and the accidental and deliberate destruction of
archaeological sites, burial sites, petroglyphs and other cultural
resources."<br><br>
Klee Benally, Navajo, points out that the US puppet tribal governments
are continuing to appease the United States and corporations. Benally
responded to Navajo President Joe Shirley, Jr.'s comments, stating that
environmentalists are not welcome on Navajoland.<br><br>
Benally said, "I would expect this type of declaration from
totalitarian government dictators, not those who are democratically
elected leaders of Tribal Nations. Considering the history of
colonization and BIA established puppet governments on Native American
lands, Shirley's statement is not surprising.<br><br>
"Attempting to silence the voice and limit the rights of Dine'
people to protect their life, land and liberty is not sovereignty, it is
in the direction of totalitarianism."<br><br>
Benally points out that Shirley uses the catch word
"sovereignty" to defend his stance against anything Shirley
disagrees with. Benally said, "Does sovereignty really mean being
dependent on non-renewable energy that destroys Mother Earth, pollutes
drinking water and air and compromises our holy covenant with nature?
Does it mean being dependent on casinos and outside corporate
interests?'<br><br>
Benally also reminds Shirley of Benally's grandmother, the late Roberta
Blackgoat resisting relocation, who defended the land until her end on
this earth.<br><br>
"My grandmother Roberta Blackgoat once said, ‘I know each tree, each
plant that grows right there. And they know me. The children,
grandchildren, great grandchildren need to be right there. We need them
to get back to the land and live on our ancestors' land.' She said that
the ‘relocatees' die of ‘worriness,' ‘missing their traditional food and
not knowing where to go to pray.' Blackgoat said, ‘As long as I live, I'm
not going to sign' and continued to demand ‘(Peabody) stop destroying the
Mother Earth's liver and blood; the coal and the water.'"<br><br>
"Until her passing she resisted relocation, still abandoned by the
Navajo Nation government, ‘unwelcome' by the Hopi Tribal government, and
as a testimony to the injustices of US law.<br><br>
"Would she still be unwelcome in her homeland Mr. Shirley --- as an
environmentalist, that is a woman who loved her Earth?"<br><br>
In response to the Hopi Tribal Council ban, Alph Secakuku, Hopi council
representative of Sipaulovi (Second Mesa), spoke of the sacred foundation
and destiny of the Hopi people.<br><br>
"We made a sacred covenant with Maasaw, our Supreme Being, to be
good stewards of the Fourth World we live in today. We, as people, all
have the responsibility of being Caretakers of Mother Earth. You care for
it and take from it only what you need, and it will provide for
you.<br><br>
"I never thought I would see the day when being ‘Hopi' meant being
anti-environment, pro-big corporate energy, and actually promoting
pollution and global warming in favor of dollars/money."<br><br>
Secakuku said the ban was the result of the current political coup in the
council.<br><br>
"It is a sad day for Hopi/Tewa people, and I am disappointed. We,
the Hopi/Tewa people, have worked closely for many years with our allies
from the environmental community to protect sacred lands from development
and to stop uranium mining from poisoning our water. Water is life,
therefore, it is sacred. We will continue to work together - tribal
communities and other clean energy jobs advocates - to bring green
economic development to our lands that respects our air and
water."<br><br>
Former Hopi Chairman Ben Nuvamsa also points out the illegality,
absurdity and indignity of the Hopi Tribal Council's ban.<br><br>
"For the record, Indian tribes have no jurisdiction over non-Indians
on reservation lands (see Oliphant v. Suquamish). On the Hopi
Reservation, only the Tribal Chairman has the authority to sign an
exclusion order under Tribal Ordinance 46. So without a Tribal Chairman,
no one can sign such an order. Without meeting these requirements, the
resolution passed by this group is nothing more than a mean-spirited
statement.<br><br>
"Our teachings as Hopi and Tewa people dictate that we should
welcome everyone. It is not Hopi to exclude anyone. As Hopi and Tewa
people, we are raised to be good stewards of our lands so we are all
‘environmentalists' by our cultural teachings and practices.<br><br>
"The ‘environmentalists' have stood by the Hopi Tribe when we
opposed the making of artificial snow on our sacred Nuvatukyaovi (San
Francisco Peaks). They assisted in our opposition to the proposed uranium
mining near the Grand Canyon. They assisted in securing protections for
the American Bald Eagle. So why the opposition to ‘environmentalists'
now? Could it be financial and corporate greed? Absolutely," he said
in a statement.<br><br>
Nuvamsa points out that it the elected tribal leaders compromising
sovereignty.<br><br>
"Some say the ‘environmentalists' are compromising our tribal
sovereignty. I disagree. It is our own ‘tribal leaders' that are the
worst violators of compromising our sovereignty."<br><br>
Navajos at Black Mesa Water Coalition, creating green jobs on Navajoland,
also responded.<br><br>
"We believe that President Shirley is misinformed as to the benefits
of coal mining and coal-fired power plants and out of touch with the kind
of economy the Navajo people want," said Wahleah Johns, also a
Navajo citizen and Co-Director of Black Mesa Water Coalition.<br><br>
"Our organization has been working to support the traditional
lifeways of weavers, ranchers, artisans and a new clean energy economy.
After over 30 years of coal development on the Navajo reservation, most
of our people still live below the national poverty line, and now there
are increasing health problems due to fossil fuel development pollution
and global warming."<br><br>
Black Mesa Water Coalition said that in July of 2009, the Navajo Nation
21st Council officially adopted the Navajo Green Economy Commission and
Fund to begin a process of diversifying the Navajo economy and building
thousands of well-paying Navajo jobs that do not pollute.<br><br>
"The Black Mesa Water Coalition formed the Navajo Green Economy
Coalition, consisting of both Native and non-native organizations and
individuals. This Coalition's partnership with the Navajo Nation's
Speaker of the Council, Lawrence T. Morgan, was a large contributor to
the successful establishment of a Navajo Green Economy plan and is a
model for how tribal governments and tribal citizen's groups can work
together."<br><br>
Calvin Johnson, Navajo in Leupp, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation, fighting
the poisoning of the water, air and land by coal mines and power plants,
said he was appalled by Shirley's statement. Johnson told Shirley that
blaming and disrespecting traditional grassroots people is not the
answer.<br><br>
Johnson said, "We are suppose to protect our people and mother earth
from harmful contaminants that cause numerous health diseases, destroy
sacred sites and deplete and contaminate precious water
resources."<br><br>
Johnson said the Navajo Nation has been providing misinformation about
the proposed Desert Rock power plant. There is no such thing as a clean
coal fired power plant. He said no machine can remove 100 percent of the
sulfur, mercury and other pollutants from coal and burn it free of
emissions.<br><br>
The Sierra Club said it is an honor to work with Hopis and
Navajos.<br><br>
"The Sierra Club is honored to work with our tribal partners in
transitioning to a clean energy future, including the Black Mesa Water
Coalition, Dooda Desert Rock, Hopis Organized for Political Initiatives
(H.O.P.I.), the Navajo Green Economy Coalition, To' Nizhoni Ani,
C-Aquifer for the Diné, and other community organizations," the
Sierra Club said in a statement.<br><br>
While the mainstream media, including Associated Press, continues to
distort and censor the voices of the Navajo and Hopi people, the full
statements are online at Censored News:<br><br>
<a href="http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com">
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com</a>/<br><br>
<b>Brenda Norrell</b> has been a news reporter covering Indian country
and Mexico for 27 years, serving as a staff reporter for Navajo Times,
Lakota Journal and Indian Country Today. She served as a stringer for AP
for five years and USA Today for seven years, covering the Navajo Nation
and federal courts. She was censored and terminated by Indian Country
Today in 2006 and created Censored News. She is a contributor to
CounterPunch.<br><br>
<br><br>
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