Home » News » Protesters arrested after occupying Interior Dept. lobby

By The Associated Press, published on October 15, 2021

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Protesters gather outside the White House on Oct. 12, 2021, to call on the Biden administration to do more to combat climate change and ban fossil fuels. AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

By MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Protesters held a sit-in Oct. 14 at the Interior Department building in downtown Washington and clashed with police as they challenged fossil-fuel projects and called for the declaration of a climate emergency. Multiple arrests were reported.

 

An Interior Department spokeswoman said a group of protesters rushed the lobby, injuring at least one security officer, who was taken to a nearby hospital. Police and protesters clashed outside the building, and officers used Tasers against several unarmed protesters, a spokeswoman for the protest group said.

 

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland was traveling and was not in the building during the protest.

 

“Interior Department leadership believes strongly in respecting and upholding the right to free speech and peaceful protest,” said Melissa Schwartz, a spokeswoman for Haaland, in a statement. “Centering the voices of lawful protesters is and will continue to be an important foundation of our democracy. It is also our obligation to keep everyone safe. We will continue to do everything we can to de-escalate the situation while honoring First Amendment rights.”

 

She said protesters were taken in for booking.

 

Jennifer Falcon, a spokeswoman for the Indigenous Environmental Network, a coalition of Native American and environmental activists, put the number of people arrested at the Interior Department at 50.

 

The protest was part of “a historic surge of Indigenous resistance” in the nation’s capital that started on Oct. 11, Columbus Day, outside the White House, she said. There, more than 100 people were arrested as protesters linked arms and sat along the White House fence line to call on the Biden administration to do more to combat climate change and ban fossil fuels.

 

The Andrew Jackson statue at the center of Lafayette Park across the street from the White House was defaced with the words “Expect Us” — part of a rallying cry used by Indigenous people who have been fighting against fossil-fuel pipelines. Jackson, a slave-owning president, forced Cherokees and many other Native Americans on deadly marches out of their Southern homelands.

 

Protesters also climbed a flagpole outside the Army Corps of Engineers office, demanding a stop to Line 3, an oil-pipeline expansion under construction in Minnesota. The pipeline will bring tar sands oil from Canada to Wisconsin.

 

Falcon said in an interview that her group had no formal role in that protest, which she said was led by “autonomous, frontline leaders” and “water protectors.”

 

The group called for an end to fossil-fuel projects such as Line 3 and the Dakota Access oil pipeline, as well as abolition of Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs and restoration of millions of acres of land seized from Native Americans.

 

Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo Tribe in New Mexico, is the first Native American Cabinet secretary.

 

Protesters who refuse to obey the law and leave the building after multiple warnings may be arrested, Schwartz said.

 

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