The protesters set fire to the camp as a symbolic gesture.
Dozens of law enforcement officers have arrived on the Dakota Access pipeline protest camp on Thursday, Feb. 23, 2017, just a day after some of the activists refused to follow the camp eviction orders the day prior. The authorities took over in a military style, putting an end to the Oceti Sakowin camp, which served as a home to environmental activists and indigenous people since August 2016.
The camp was set up by Native Americans to oppose the construction of the pipeline just north of the Standing Rock Sioux reservation. The route of the pipeline passes under the Missouri river and according to the tribe, the construction has violated treaty rights, threatened the water source and even damaged sacred sites in the area.
Government officials imposed a deadline for the evacuation from the camp on Wednesday, Feb. 22 stating that the inhabitants, known as “water protectors,” are in danger of the possible flooding during the spring thaw.
Protesters have left on Wednesday, but there are still those who chose to remain even on the following day. Authorities had to remove them physically from the site. Here are some of the heartbreaking photos showing the final moments in the camp.
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