Feb. 4th 2006
John LeKay: Can you please tell me about
this National Sacrifice Area, where and what this
is, and where this label came from?
Charmaine White Face: The
idea that our 1868 Treaty Territory is a National Sacrifice
Area, sacrificed to uranium and nuclear radiation, came from
an essay that was written by Winona LaDuke and Ward
Churchill. The essay can be found in a book titled, The
State of Native America, Genocide, Colonization, and
Resistance edited by M. Annette Jaimes, Race and
Resistance Series, South End Press, Boston Massachusetts,
1992. The essay appears as Chapter VIII, Native North
America, The Political Economy of Radioactive Colonialism.
My cousin, Garvard Good Plume,
was given this book by a friend, and had it laying around
for a while. Finally he started reading it and told me
about this chapter. We were just beginning to work on the
abandoned uranium mines in the northwestern corner of South
Dakota, so we were looking for any information we could get
our hands on about uranium mining in our Treaty territory.
This is how it has always
happened with our work in Defenders of the Black Hills. I
guess because we do everything with prayers and
spirituality. The information we need just seems to pop
up. Another example was a young man who was visiting and I
was late getting back to the office from lunch. He went
around the corner and there was a bookstore. He went in and
was browsing and found a book about the minerals in the
southern Black Hills. What was most interesting were the
maps showing the uranium and the abandoned uranium mines in
that area. He bought the book very cheaply and brought it
back. It is a treasure of information.
The National Sacrifice Area just
happens to be the entire 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty
Territory. Coincidence, or planned genocide? This is the
last piece of land that my great-great grandparents knew
could sustain us as the nation the Creator made us to be.
We are the buffalo people, we live with the buffalo on the
grasslands surrounding the sacred Black Hills. This last
land area, if we were left alone like the treaty promised,
would have sustained us and the buffalo, and all the other
natural environment of this area to today. This area
includes all of western South Dakota and parts of Nebraska,
Wyoming, Montana, and North Dakota. The actual land
boundaries are listed in the 1868 Treaty.
When you compare our aboriginal
territory which covered 14 states and parts of 3 Canadian
provinces, then you know that by the time our great-great
grandparents negotiated this final piece of area, we were on
the brink of extinction. We almost were totally extinct
by 1900. The buffalo had all been decimated, and starvation
and illnesses caused almost our complete extinction. This
is genocide.
Again, by declaring our last
territory to be sacrificed to the ravages of nuclear
radiation, then the American government, including it's
people ("of the people, for the people, by the people") are
committing genocide on us again. This might be a little
slower genocide, but when the water, air, land, animals,
birds, and aquifers are all polluted with radiation, and we
have no where else we can go, then we will surely become
extinct from nuclear radiation. Unfortunately, so will
they. Nuclear radiation knows no bounds...nor racial
affiliation.
They have already drilled 7,000
exploratory wells in the Black Hills for In Situ Leach
mining of uranium, and are planning more. There are already
over 1,000 abandoned open-pit uranium mines in this region,
and hundreds of abandoned Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
silos and radar stations that were powered by small nuclear
power plants. What happened to the waste they generated
starting 50 years ago? Above ground, the abandoned open-pit
mines pollute the surface water every time it rains or
snows. The missile silos and radar stations pollute the
shallower aquifers that are usually used by ranchers and
farmers. The radioactive dust from all of these
disturbances blows on grasses and crops, and also gets into
surface water in lakes and ponds, and is ingested by
domestic and wild animals. Yet this region sells its cattle
and crops to the general public. Coal laced with uranium
from this region is also shipped to East Coast power plants.
Unless the Congress really takes
a closer look at the situation here, in the middle of the
United States, the ramifications from this "sacrifice
area" are going to spread to the rest of the country. Dust
and water do not stay in one place. Already we are picking
up readings of increased uranium and radionuclides in the
Missouri River. The states down stream should be checking
their water from the Missouri River for uranium and
radionulcides. In many places, such as eastern South
Dakota, the water is piped away from the Missouri River for
drinking and watering crops. Without testing all the
water, how will anyone know if the water is contaminated
with nuclear radiation?
JL:You
mentioned they have already drilled 7,000
exploratory wells in the Black Hills for In Situ
Leach mining of uranium. What is going on today as
far as mining for uranium is concerned?
CWF:
There is a difference in the way uranium is mined.
In this upper midwest region, in the past starting
in the late 1950s, large open pit mines were dug all
over in South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, and
Wyoming. When the price of uranium dropped in the
early 1970s, these open pit mines were abandoned
leaving radioactive dust and radioactive runoff
water. From what I understand, only North Dakota
cleaned up their open pit mines, but we would still
like to check to make sure. Our skepticism arises
from the lack of public awareness about all of these
and all of the state and federal agencies
responsible for these and the public welfare did
nothing. We would like to make sure the open pit
mines in North Dakota were truly reclaimed including
taking a detector to these places and if they are
still radioactive, checking to see if warning signs
are in place.
We still
don't know about the abandoned mines in Montana and
Wyoming since there are many and we are just a few
volunteers. The distances these cover is also very
large so it would take many days of driving to
monitor these. However, we do know the almost 100
open pit uranium mines in South Dakota have not been
reclaimed, and only one has been looked at for
reclamation. We found only one warning sign on one
mine and none on the others telling the general
public these areas were radioactive.
As In
Situ Leach mining appears not to harm the
environment as much as open pit mines do, they are
the new kinds of mines that are coming into Wyoming
and South Dakota. There is no process in South
Dakota for granting exploration permits for In Situ
Leach mines. So the state uses the general
exploratory mine permit procedure which is lacking
many safeguards for the aquifers as it only requires
the Board of Minerals and the Environment to approve
a permit, not the Board of Water Quality.
Powertech (USA) Inc. bought the leases from another
mining company which had previously drilled 7,000
exploratory holes for uranium in the Black Hills.
They were recently awarded a permit to drill 155
more exploratory wells.
We are
very concerned as the process itself could begin
pollution of the aquifers. A long pipe is inserted
into the ground and a solution is put in to dissolve
the uranium. It also dissolves many other
minerals. Then it is put back down into the
aquifer. Common sense shows that the aquifers will
be polluted even if it is a few exploratory holes,
but more than 7,000 is devastation.
We are
also very upset as there are no safeguards for
burial sites, sacred places, or archeological
sites. In the exploratory process, large equipment
is brought in driving over the land if there are no
roads available. In most of these places, there are
no roads other than a few tracks in the dirt. Many
Indigenous nations from the North American continent
for thousands and thousands of years came to the
sacred Black Hills to pray, bury their special loved
ones, gather medicines, and get healing in the
springs. How many of these places were destroyed
in drilling the initial 7,000 exploratory holes?
But the state will do nothing to protect
these unique and irreplaceable sites, nor do they
require the mining companies to take any precautions
against harming burial, sacred, or archeological
sites. How many more will be harmed with the
drilling of 155 more holes?
There is
a big push on in Wyoming to do In Situ Leach uranium
mining also. We have looked at the numbers from the
press releases by the mining companies and they are
outrageous. There is so much that we don't have
time to check out every one or attend hearings, if
there are any, or submit comments. The state
governments are also in favor of the uranium mining
companies so it is very difficult for the ordinary
person to say or do anything. Other than the money
that comes in, and it's not that much to state
coffers, we keep wondering what is influencing the
state employees and legislators to help the mining
companies since it is at the long term health of
human beings and the environment.
JL: Do you know who these corporations are and who
is connected to these mining corporations?
Politically or other wise?
CWF: If
you use a search engine on the internet and go to
uranium South Dakota, or uranium Wyoming, there are
many sites to find out which mining compnaies and
who is working in them. In South Dakota and
Wyomining, three of the current ones are Energy
Metals, Tournigan, and Powertech. www.powertechuranium.com/s/Home.asp
Since Powertech is
the one that we were up against at a state hearing,
we researched them and know that of their top
management personnel one person formerly worked for
George Bush, another for the EPA, and some others
worked for other large uranium corporations that
caused major devastation to the aquifers in the
Southwest and then left. There is big money behind
these, and evidently big government too. The other
interesting thing about mining companies that come
into this area is that they are usually a Canadian
company with American employees and an American
address as well. Then when things go wrong, they
slip easily across the border back to Canada.
JL. How
has this affected the people that live near there in
terms of cancer, death, birth deformities etc?
CWF:
There are a number of health effects primarily in
western South Dakota where these mines are located.
However, the only health study that was done by the
state Health Department said that they were not
caused by uranium. It was an unfortunate statement
for the state since they had nothing to back up
their statement. There needs to be more in-depth,
independent studies completed as we have information
that says that low-levels of radiation also cause
health risks. We know this is especially true
for the unborn. There need to be studies of the
numbers of miscarriages, still births, birth
defects, and what kinds of birth defects. As four
large reservations are also in western South Dakota,
a comprehensive health study asking for these
specific kinds of data needs to be completed. Since
the Indian Health Service was aware of the hazards
of radiation in western South Dakota for the past
forty years, and also did nothing to remedy
the situation, we do not trust any information they
might provide.
JL;. Do you have statistics of cancer rates,
mortality rates of people that live on Pine ridge
etc?
CWF: As
we are all volunteers operating primarily on
donations, we do not have the personnel to gather
this specific information. It would need to cover
all the reservations in western South Dakota:
Standing Rock, Cheyenne River, Lower Brule, Crow
Creek, Rosebud, Pine Ridge, and include also the
Yankton Sioux Tribe. We are very concerned as the
water sources are polluted with uranium and
radionuclides. We don't know for how long? We only
have a few tests showing the pollution and we need
to gather more, but the tests we have show us the
need for more. JL:. Have you seen an increase in birth deformities
and spontaneous abortions?
CW:
Yes, on all the reservations. I can't speak for the
rest of western South Dakota, but on the reservations,
there has been increasing concern due to the need for
special institutions to handle the needs of birth
deformities.
JL; . When you said that the radioactive dust from
all of these disturbances blows on grasses and
crops, and also gets into surface water in lakes and
ponds, and is ingested by domestic and wild
animals. Yet this region sells its cattle and crops
to the general public. Coal laced with uranium from
this region is also shipped to East Coast power
plants. Do you know how much of the beef gets sold to other
states beside South Dakota?
- CWF: The
wind blows into South Dakota from the North,
Northwest, and West. In all of those directions are
either coal fired power plants or abandoned open pit
uranium mines. This part of the continent is dry.
The wind blows almost daily picking up dust, and
microscopic particles of dust. These all blow over
the state which is primarily agricultural: ranching
for beef and buffalo, or farming for wheat, corn,
sunflowers, and other grains primarily.
-
- The
radioactive dust settles on the grasses and crops
and is eaten by animals, birds, and insects:
domestic and wild. The radiation is soaked in by
the plants and settles in the organs and muscles of
the animals and birds.
radiation landing on food sources has already been
proven by the radioactive fallout from the above
ground testing that was done in the 1950s and 60s in
Nevada. That fallout spread across many parts of
the country including Wyoming and South Dakota. The
National Cancer Institute has information about that
situation and warns people about the signs of
thyroid cancer.
So this
idea of radioactive dust is not new. What is new is
that we are trying to increase the public's
awareness of this situation. In South Dakota,
particularly western South Dakota, we have been hit
twice: once by the above ground detonations, and for
the past forty years by the dust from all of these
abandoned uranium mines and prospects. We are
estimating that there are probably more than one
thousand abandoned uranium mines and prospects in
this region. Our estimates come from a map provided
by the US Forest Service. Since some of these mines
were built on 'private property' then there is no
accurate count of how many there really are.
This
entire region geologically contains uranium. I
mentioned coal fired power plants because North
Dakota is loaded with these and the smoke and
pollution is blown down into South Dakota and then
points south and east. No one tests the coal for
uranium, although the northwest corner of South
Dakota was famous for the uranium being in the
coal. In the processing, the coal was just burned
off and left the uranium. How much of the coal that
is being burned in North Dakota contains uranium and
other radioactive elements?
But the
more important coal, that should be of importance to
the people in the eastern part of the US is the coal
that comes out of Wyoming and is shipped to power
plants in Ohio and New York. That coal is laced
with uranium and how much radioactive pollution is
coming out of those smoke stacks? How many power
companies test their smoke, or their coal, for
radiation?
We
haven't checked to see how much beef gets sold out
of South Dakota, or Wyoming, but it is the majority
of what is produced since both of these states are
sparsely populated. It should not be too hard to
find the information, we just don't have the staff
to do it at this time.
JL:. Do you know if this mining of uranium is for
the military to use in depleted weapons in Iraq,
or for nuclear power plants?
CWF:
Anytime anyone says they only use plutonium for
nuclear weapons, we must remember that plutonium
comes from uranium first.
JL: . What have the local politicians done about
this?
CWF:
The local politicians are in favor of the uranium
companies. JL: . Has the corporate media gone near this story
and if not, why do you think that is?
CWF: Out
here in South Dakota and Wyoming, the outback of the
US, the corporate media only covers something if it
involves Mount Rushmore, or violence with Indians.
This story about uranium mining in the outback is
not important to the rest of the world since the
population being immediately exposed is less than 1
million people. Unfortunately, not covering this
story is causing the rest of the country to be in
the dark about this silent, deadly danger which
is continuing to spread. We call it "America's
Secret Chernobyl". I'm sure if only the people
living in Chernobyl had been affected by the nuclear
accident, then the rest of the world probably would
not have known. However, the cloud dramatically
spread all across Europe and it was impossible for
the media not to cover it. This cloud that is
spreading from the Upper Midwest, from "America's
Secret Chernobyl" has not been as dramatic, but has
been slowly, steadily spreading across the country
and the world through the foodstuffs that are sent
from here. JL: . Do you believe this is a form of slow
genocide?
CWF: For the
Tetuwan* people, yes. We had many treaties with the
United States, Great Britain, and France. The last
treaty we had was the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868
with the United States. The territory delineated in
that treaty for our "absolute and undisturbed use
and occupation" is the same territory that is
currently being inundated with coal and uranium
mines. Our treaty was initially violated by the USA
to mine for gold in the sacred Black Hills. An essay
written by Winona LaDuke and Professor Ward
Churchill states that in 1972, President Richard
Nixon declared this part of the country to be a
National Sacrifice Area to uranium development. Is
it ironic that this includes all of our 1868 Treaty
Territory, or was it planned that way as we have
been approaching the international arena for the
past 25 years for resolution of the Treaty
violations? Is this planned genocide so the USA
will no longer have to remember they signed and
ratified a treaty with us? Is this planned genocide
so the USA will no longer feel guilty for violating
their own Constitution?
The
Great Sioux Nation once covered 14 states and parts
of 3 Canadian provinces. If this genocide is allowed
to continue, we will disappear as a unique nation, a
unique population of human beings with a unique
culture and language. We can't move anyplace else.
We cannot be displaced any where else. This is the
last remnant of our homeland.
*Tetuwan refers to the people of the Great Sioux
Nation who speak the Lakota language. It is a
common mistake to call the Tetuwan by the language
they speak which is Lakota. The Great Sioux Nation
included six other sub-nations besides the Tetuwan,
most of which almost
disappeared.
|