Indigenous Leaders Among the 136 Arrested at White House Fossil Fuel Protest

The act of civil disobedience marks the first of five days of protests pressuring President Biden to take stronger action on the climate crisis.
Julie-Dermansky-022
on
Group of seated climate protesters confronted by police by White House fence behind yellow do-not-cross tape
Protester being taking away from a sit-in in front of the White House on the first of five days of protest in Washington, D.C. Credit: Julie Dermansky

On October 11, Indigenous People’s Day, 136 people, including many Indigenous leaders opposing fossil fuel projects, were arrested in front of the White House in Washington, D.C., while calling on President Biden to declare a climate emergency and to stop approving fossil fuel projects. The day marked the first in a five-day-long series of protests in the nation’s capitol organized by the Build Back Fossil Free coalition, which is made up of numerous environmental and social justice advocacy groups. 

Over the course of five days, thousands are expected to bring the message to Biden’s door that he must do more to protect the planet, and many demonstrators are coming prepared to participate in acts of civil disobedience, to make sure the President hears their message before next month’s COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland. These demonstrations, labeled People vs. Fossil Fuels, are being billed as a test for Biden. 

Indigenous women calling for greater climate action in front of the White House. Credit: Julie Dermansky
The People vs. Fossil Fuels rally in front of the White House on October 11. Credit: Julie Dermansky

Pressure on Biden has been rising since he failed to acknowledge vocal, Indigenous-led protests to the Line 3 tar sands oil pipeline, which went online October 1 in Minnesota. As DeSmog recently reported, Indigenous peoples in North America have helped block at least eight major fossil fuel projects, from oil pipelines to LNG export terminals, keeping enormous volumes of carbon pollution out of the atmosphere.

This morning, a few hundred activists marched from Freedom Square to the White House where Indigenous leaders spoke, mostly addressing President Biden, whom they called on to honor his campaign promises to protect the planet. 

Casey Camp Horinek, tribal elder and environmental ambassador for Ponca Nation, marching to the White House on October 11. Credit: Julie Dermansky

“We are going to put our bodies on the line there. If we have to be arrested in order to call attention to what the crisis is and that we need a climate emergency declared, we’ll do that,” said Casey Camp Horinek, long-time activist and tribal elder and environmental ambassador for Ponca Nation, located in what’s now Oklahoma. “There’s been 500 years of people coming into a territory where all things were interdependent and functioning to a time of crisis, where even Biden’s great-grandchildren won’t survive if something doesn’t change.”

Casey Camp Horinek calling on President Biden to declare a climate emergency in front of the White House. Credit: Julie Dermansky

“Joe Biden, you have been making false promises. You stopped Keystone XL — what about DAPL, Line 5, MVP?” Joye Braun, a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux and a national pipeline campaign organizer with the Indigenous Environmental Network, said following Horinek. “Biden has turned a fork tongue, and he needs to be held accountable to the promises he made to Indigenous nations when we helped elect him.” She added, “This is indigenous land. Indigenous peoples will be here for thousands of years. Biden, can you hear us now?” 

Both Horinek and Braun were among those arrested during a sit-in at the White House fence.

The rally on October 11 was the first of five days of climate protests and civil disobedience against policies favoring fossil fuels. Credit: Julie Dermansky

“People are dying right now from the pollutants, the toxins, the climate catastrophes that are happening, and we have to stop the harm,” Siqiñiq Maupin, the executive director of Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, told the crowd. She added that Biden relied on people of color, including Indigenous people, to get into office by promising to tackle climate change but that as President he is continuing to sacrifice their lives for oil and gas. 

Climate protesters leave Freedom Square in Washington, D.C., on a march to the White House on October 11. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Protester in front of the White House demanding that President Biden declare a climate emergency. Credit: Julie Dermansky

After a few speeches while the group was singing this morning in front of the White House, the U.S. Park Police warned that everyone would be arrested if they did not disperse.

Over a hundred remained in front of the White House, including Horinek, Braun, and Maupin. 

Those who didn’t want to get arrested moved across the street to Lafayette Square. 

Protesters in Lafayette Square. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Protesters push back against unsecured barricades after Erica Jones, a member of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe,
was pulled away from the crowd in handcuffs. Credit: Julie Dermansky

While the day’s event was mostly peaceful, tensions arose when Erica Jones, a member of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, who was not among those planning to be arrested, was handcuffed by law enforcement and taken away from the group of protesters across from the White House. Protesting her arrest, some in the crowd pushed back against barricades that were not fastened together. Jones was ultimately let go, and the police were able to secure the barricades. 

Law enforcement handcuffs a protester in front of the White House following a climate sit-in on October 11. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Tensions grew between protesters and police when Indigenous climate activist Erica Jones of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe was handcuffed in front of the White House. Credit: Julie Dermansky

While those who remained in front of the White House were being led away to be processed in tents nearby, the crowd cheered them on from Lafayette Square. Among them was a young girl who chanted, “Thank the water protectors,” over and over. She was given a megaphone and then led a “Water is life” chant, a rallying cry borne out of the Indigenous-led movement against the Dakota Access pipeline in North Dakota. 

Young girl chanting, “Thank the water protectors” in front of the White House on October 11. Credit: Julie Dermansky

“People [were] handed a ticket and asked to pay a $50 fine,”  Jamie Henn, a media spokesperson for Build Back Fossil Free, told DeSmog, “That may change tomorrow.”

U.S. Park Police places a climate protester’s hands in zip ties in front of the White House. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Park Police carry away a climate protester after he refused to leave a sit-in next to the White House fence. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Park Police put a man in zip ties during the People vs. Fossil Fuels rally in front of the White House. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers University’s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

Related Posts

on

An upcoming city policy review offers the best chance to drop “fundamentally misleading” ads designed to appeal to policy makers and consumers.

An upcoming city policy review offers the best chance to drop “fundamentally misleading” ads designed to appeal to policy makers and consumers.
on

A new Environmental Defence analysis reveals that despite government promises to cut, the amount of taxpayers’ money given to the industry remains high.

A new Environmental Defence analysis reveals that despite government promises to cut, the amount of taxpayers’ money given to the industry remains high.
on

The American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, a major oil refining group, is once again behind a push to keep cars running on oil.

The American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, a major oil refining group, is once again behind a push to keep cars running on oil.
on

Energy Transfer and Sunoco claimed the substance was not toxic, but residents don’t trust the results.

Energy Transfer and Sunoco claimed the substance was not toxic, but residents don’t trust the results.