First Nations activists join anti-Keystone XL rally in Washington - Action News
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Indigenous

First Nations activists join anti-Keystone XL rally in Washington

A flash-mob round dance in Washington, D.C., organized by an anti-Keystone XL group included dozens of Canadians who say indigenous voices must be heard in the protest against the proposed pipeline.

Dozens of Canadians join Keystone XL pipeline protesters gathering in Washington, D.C.

Cowboy and Indian Alliance protest against Keystone XL pipeline spills into streets in Washington, D.C. (M. Scott Mahaskey)

Its a sight not often seen in Washington, D.C.

Dozens of aboriginal and non-aboriginalpeople holding hands, dancing in a circle in a busy downtown street.

The flash-mob round dance was the latest protest by the Cowboy-Indian Alliance. The group has been in the U.S. capital all week protesting the Keystone XL pipeline.

Althoughlargely comprised ofAmerican farmers, ranchers and tribal communities,the group also includes a few dozen Canadians.

Heather Milton-Lightening, originally from the Pasqua First Nation in Saskatchewan, has been helping to co-ordinate protests in Washington this week.

Crystal Lameman, Heather Milton-Lightening and Clayton Thomas-Muller are three Canadians taking part in the Cowboy and Indian Alliance protest against the Keystone XL pipeline in Washington, D.C. (Rae Louise Breaux)

"Indigenous rights, whether that's treaty rights, inherent rights or aboriginal title [rights] are the last line of defence in terms of protecting the environment," she said.

Milton-Lighteningis co-director of the Indigenous Tar Sands campaign of the Polaris Institute in Ottawa. She says aboriginal inclusion is key in the anti-pipeline protest.

"The environmental organizations and everyone else that's concerned with climate change or mining or whatever it is, they really need to work with our people in a way that's equitable," Milton-Lightening said.

The anti-Keystone events beganon Tuesday in Washington.

The group staged a protest in front of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's home earlier today and yesterday two protesters risked arrest after climbing into the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial.

Kerry is tasked with makinga recommendation to U.S. President Barack Obama on whether the cross-border pipeline should be approved.

This is a protest based in the US that is targeting President Obama and his administration but everyone here knows darn well where this oil is coming from."- Clayton Thomas-Muller, Idle No More activist

The proposed TransCanada pipeline that would carry crude oil from Alberta to the Texas Gulf coast has been in limbo for more than five years. LastFriday,Kerrys department announcedthe review period has been extended pending a Nebraska Supreme Court decision on the pipeline route. Now, a decision may not come until the fall at the earliest.

Although the protest in Washington is focused on Americans, Clayton Thomas Muller says it's important that aboriginal Canadians also be here.

Clayton Thomas-Muller is a campaigner with the Idle No More movement and is in Washington this week to protest the Keystone XL pipeline. (Anna Lee-Popham)

"This is a protest based in the U.S. that is targeting President Obama and his administration, but everyone here knows darn well where this oil is coming from."

Thomas-Muller is originally from Pukatawagan First Nation in Northern Manitoba and now works as a campaigner for the Idle No More movement.

"All roads lead to the same answer. The answer is that the entire economic model of our country called Canada is based on suppressing indigenous rights and based on dispossessing our people from their land so that multi-national corporations can go in there free of any blockades and blockages and extract those natural resources," he said.

"It's important that we're doing all of this in solidarity with First Nations living in Northern Alberta in the midst of the tar sands."

The group is expecting 5,000 peopleto join the protest as they march from the National Mall to the White House tomorrow.

with files from CBC's Meagan Fitzpatrick