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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Lakota Group Seeks Withdrawal from U.S. Treaties

From the Argus Leader:

WASHINGTON - A group of "freedom-loving" Lakota activists announced a plan Wednesday for their people to withdraw from treaties their forefathers signed with the U.S. government.

Headed by leaders of the American Indian Movement, including activist, actor and Porcupine resident Russell Means, the group dropped in on the State Department and the embassies of Bolivia, Venezuela, Chile and South Africa this week seeking recognition for their effort to form a free and independent Lakota nation. The group plans to visit more embassies in the coming months.

The new nation is needed because Indians have been "dismissed" by the United States and are tired of living under a colonial apartheid system, Means said during a news conference held at Plymouth Congregational Church in northeast Washington. He was accompanied by a bodyguard and three other Lakota activists - Gary Rowland, Duane Martin and Phyllis Young, all of South Dakota.

And
"Our withdrawal (from the treaties) is fully thought out," Means said, referring to peace treaties the Lakota people signed with the government in 1851 and 1868. "We were mandated by our elders in 1974 to do two things. First, to establish relationships with the international community... and the second mandate, of course, was to reestablish our independence."

I caught part of this story on radio news yesterday afternoon, and I'm pretty sure I heard one of the tribal leaders say that she hadn't been told about this plan, that the people behind this move hadn't talked with tribal leadership.

That would be interesting if Means and his group are doing an end-run around their own leadership.

What do you think of this? Is it a viable plan? Could it be done? Should it be done?


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