WASHINGTON, Jan 2 (OneWorld.net) - Hopi and Navajo leaders in Arizona are vowing to fight against a U.S. government decision granting a permit to a coal company that that say has exploited their sacred lands and depleted 60 percent of the tribes' only water source.
Opposing the 'rushed' permitting process. © Billy Parish / Black Mesa Water CoalitionBlack Mesa Water Coalition Co-Director Enei Begaye says the permitting process was "flawed and clearly rushed
through before President Bush leaves office." His group is considering taking legal action to reverse the decision to grant the "life of mine" permit to Peabody Coal, which has operated in the area for the past 30 years.
The Black Mesa Water Coalition was founded by a group of young people in 2001. "We decided that something needed to occur in regards to the depletion of our water source by Peabody Energy," said co-founder Lilian Hill in a 2004 interview with In Motion Magazine. "They've been mining coal on Black Mesa for over 30 years and they've been using the water from deep within the earth, from the Navajo Aquifer, to transport coal from Black Mesa to the Mojave Generating Station," explained Hill. "We've seen a huge impact to the land as far as the vegetation, the amount of water that was available within the traditional springs, within the area where we gather water and where we pray....We felt that it was time that the young people stood up and took an active role in helping the elders and helping other groups that were involved in this issue. Helping them to get the word out there and helping to try to put a stop to that type of use of water."
The Universal Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted at the United Nations in September 2007, asserting the rights of indigenous peoples to maintain and strengthen their institutions, cultures, and traditions and pursue their development in keeping with their own needs and aspirations. It also calls for the recognition of indigenous peoples' right to self-determination and control over their land and resources. The United States was among four countries to vote against the Declaration; 143 voted for it.
From: Black Mesa Water Coalition
By Billy Parish, December 23rd, 2008
Flagstaff, AZ - Two days before Christmas, officials from the U.S. Office of Surface Mining (OSM) have granted a permit to Peabody Coal
Company to expand their mining operations on Navajo and Hopi lands,
despite opposition from local communities and problems with the
permitting process including lack of adequate time for public comment
on a significant revision to the permit, insufficient environmental
review, and instability in the Hopi government preventing their
legitimate participation in the process. OSM's "Record of Decision"
(ROD) is the final stage of the permitting process for the proposed
"Black Mesa Project," which would grant Peabody Coal Company a life-of-mine permit for the "Black Mesa Complex" in northern Arizona.
Black Mesa Water Coalition, a Navajo and Hopi citizens organization
working on indigenous sovereignty and environmental protection, has
vowed to stop Peabody
from causing further harm to Black Mesa. "We are looking into our
options for how to stop this process from moving forward, including
legal action. The permitting process was flawed and clearly rushed
through before President Bush leaves office," said Enei Begaye,
Co-Director of Black Mesa Water Coalition.
Wahleah Johns, Co-Director of Black Mesa Water Coalition said, "This
decision will uproot the sacred connection that we have to land, water,
and all living things on Black Mesa. Black Mesa is a female mountain,
sacred to the Navajo people, and has been brutally scarred from over 30
years of coal
mining activity and the resulting loss of 60 percent of our only source
of drinking water. Our ancestors fought hard to retain our homelands,
but even now in 2008 we are up against the same battle to protect our
homelands. The abuse to mother earth needs to stop."
This announcement is consistent with the Bush Administration's history
of releasing controversial decisions on Friday evenings and before
holidays.
Samantha Honani, a Hopi Tewa tribal member, said, "This is
the worst kind of Christmas present. The Hopi Tewa people will not be
in holiday bliss this Christmas but in deep thought and contemplation
of where we are as a tribe and people without a Tribal Leader given
this devastating Record of Decision."
Two weeks ago, a delegation of 40 Navajo and Hopi tribal members,
including Hopi Tribal Chairman Ben Nuvamsa, met with the U.S. Office of
Surface Mining (OSM) at their Denver headquarters in hopes of delaying
OSM's decision. For three hours the Navajo and Hopi representatives
met with OSM officials and presented documents and petitions ratified
by their communities that urge OSM to suspend their decision. Their
unified statement read, "Although we represent two different tribes, we
come today united to protect our shared land and water. Water is the
life source to both our peoples, and Peabody has failed to understand this connection. If the Office of Surface Mining grants a permit to Peabody,
our way of life and spiritual balance will be severely disrupted and
altered. Currently, we are already suffering the damage this industry
has caused over the past 30 years. We believe OSM has been negligent
in fulfilling the NEPA process, and if OSM issues a "Record of
Decision" that would be a breach of the Federal Trust Responsibility.
United we ask the Office of Surface Mining to stop the "Record of
Decision" process."
This decision comes in the midst of Hopi political turmoil. Chairman
Nuvamsa came to represent the Hopi and Tewa people in the battle to
protect the water and lands from further coal
mining in Black Mesa, AZ. "Due to lack of representation on the Hopi
Tribal Council, the Village of Tewa was never afforded the opportunity
to participate in any discussion of the Draft EIS as it applies to Hopi
people and land," stated Chairman Nuvamsa.
Navajo and Hopi citizens were given 45 days to comment on a revised
"Black Mesa Project" Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and
were never offered a public commenting period. Requests for commenting
period extensions were denied by OSM as well as requests for OSM to
come to Navajo and Hopi lands for question and answer meetings.
Two months ago, Arizona Congressman Raúl M. Grijalva wrote to Secretary
of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne to suspend further consideration of Peabody's
permit. "At present, OSM is rushing to approve a life-of-mine permit,
first without making the permit revisions sufficiently available for
public review, and then without adequate environmental review...Mining
at Black Mesa has caused springs on Hopi lands to dry up and
jeopardized the sole source of drinking water for many Hopis and
Navajos. The Secretary, as the trustee for Native American tribes,
must ensure that mining is done responsibly on tribal lands and that
tribes actually want mining to occur. This project does not meet that
test."
Black Mesa Navajo and Hopi residents are concerned about how this
decision will impact the future of their homelands given the history of
Peabody's unwise use of the Navajo Aquifer. "For decades coal
and water from our lands have been taken to power Los Angeles and Las
Vegas. Yet, we have have suffered the loss of our sole source drinking
water to accommodate the over consumption of these areas," says Wahleah
Johns, Co-Director of Black Mesa Water Coalition.
Black Mesa is the ancestral homelands to thousands of Navajo and Hopi
families and is regarded as a sacred mountain to the Navajo people and
plays an integral role in the cultural survival for the future
generations of both the Navajo and Hopi people.
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