Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sacred Native American Burial Sites Blown Up For US Border Wall

Darpan News Desk, 11 Feb, 2020 05:53 PM

    Native American burial sites in Arizona have been blown up by construction crews building the US-Mexico border wall, according to lawmakers and tribal leaders.


    Authorities confirmed that "controlled blasting" has begun in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, a Unesco recognised natural reserve about 185 km west of Tucson, the BBC said in a report on Tuesday.


    The UN had designated Organ Pipe, also known as Monument Hill, as an International Biosphere Reserve in 1976, calling it "a pristine example of an intact Sonoran Desert ecosystem".


    Officials have said that the aim of the project is to construct a 30ft-tall (9m) steel barrier that runs for 43 miles on the national park land.


    Reacting to the development, Raul Grijalva, a Democrat congressman, called the destruction "sacrilegious", adding that the federal government failed to consult the Tohono O'odham Nation.


    According to Grijalva, the chairman of the House Committee on Natural Resources who represents a district that encompasses the area, which shares 400 miles of border with Mexico, the O'odham people buried warriors from the rival Apache tribe there.


    "What we saw on Monument Hill was opposing tribes who were respectfully laid to rest - that is the one being blasted with dynamite," the BBC quoted Grijalva as saying.


    Tribal chairman Ned Norris Jr told the Arizona Republic that even though the land was now controlled by the US government, "we have inhabited this area since time immemorial".


    An internal report from the National Park Service has said that the border wall Trump promised during his 2015 campaign would destroy up to 22 archeological sites within Organ Pipe alone.


    It was reported that the ancient saguaro cacti, which Grijalva said the O'odham people see "as the embodiment of their ancestors", has been destroyed.


    The Trump administration has been able to build sections of the US-Mexico border wall on public land due to the 2005 REAL ID Act, which gives the federal government the right to waive laws that conflict with US national security policy.


    In their bid to build the wall, the White House has waived dozens of laws - including ones that protected Native American graves.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan Players Treated Danish Kaneria Unfairly As He Is Hindu: Shoaib Akhtar

    Kaneria, only the second Hindu to play for Pakistan after his maternal uncle Anil Dalpat, took 261 wickets in 61 Tests at an average of 34.79. He also played 18 ODIs.    

    Pakistan Players Treated Danish Kaneria Unfairly As He Is Hindu: Shoaib Akhtar

    Pompeo Backs Canada On 'Coercive Detentions' Of Canadians In China

    OTTAWA - U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says his country is sticking with Canada in fighting what he calls China's "coercive detentions of Canadian citizens."    

    Pompeo Backs Canada On 'Coercive Detentions' Of Canadians In China

    Indian Citizenship Granted To Pakistani Woman In Jammu And Kashmir

    Indian Citizenship Granted To Pakistani Woman In Jammu And Kashmir
    The certificate of registration granting Indian citizenship to Khatija Praveen, wife of Mohammad Taj, was handed over to her by District Development Commissioner, Poonch, Rahul Yadav at his office, they said.  

    Indian Citizenship Granted To Pakistani Woman In Jammu And Kashmir

    Properties Of 25 'Vandals' During Citizenship Act Protest To Be Attached: Officials

    Officials said around a dozen protestors were detained after stone pelting and arson during a bandh call in the city, but some of them were released after inquiry.  

    Properties Of 25 'Vandals' During Citizenship Act Protest To Be Attached: Officials

    Chinese Embassy Takes Swipe At 'Some Politicians' Over Talk Of Freeing Canadians

    OTTAWA - The Chinese embassy is taking a swing at "some Canadian politicians" over what it describes as "erroneous remarks" about the relationship between the two countries and the cases of two Canadians detained in China.

    Chinese Embassy Takes Swipe At 'Some Politicians' Over Talk Of Freeing Canadians

    Canadian 'Whistleblower' Detained For Years In Middle East To Learn Fate Tuesday

    Canadian 'Whistleblower' Detained For Years In Middle East To Learn Fate Tuesday
    The family of a Canadian geologist jailed in Dubai on fraud charges is cautiously optimistic he'll be exonerated in a court hearing scheduled for Tuesday.

    Canadian 'Whistleblower' Detained For Years In Middle East To Learn Fate Tuesday