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INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK
Indigenous Anti-Nuclear Statement:
Yucca Mountain and Private Fuel Storage at Skull Valley
Citizens Awareness Network
The Peoples Summit on High-Level Radioactive Waste,
Wesleyan University Middletown, Connecticut
April
12-14, 2002
The Indigenous Environmental Network, which is a network
of 200 Indigenous organizations, traditional societies, and communities
across North America remain opposed to any United States legislation,
federal or state action, corporate and private or public activity that
would allow the transportation, storage or production of spent nuclear
fuel, high-level nuclear waste, and low-level radioactive waste within
the traditional homelands of Turtle Island, otherwise known as the United
States, Canada and Mexico. As Indigenous peoples of this Turtle Island,
we are rightfully speaking out as the original caretakers of this vast
land that has sustained our tribes for thousands of years. We speak out
as the older brothers and older sisters to our younger brothers and younger
sisters that have migrated and settled into this continent we call Turtle
Island. Please listen to our words.
During the past twelve years, the Indigenous Environmental
Network has witnessed our tribal grassroots, elders, youth, and tribal
leadership from throughout the United States, Canada and Mexico - in what
we describe as Turtle Island - instructing us to remain strong
in defense and protection of our sacred Mother Earth and all our relations.
The concept of all our relations includes all life, all colors
of human and consideration of those yet to be born. Because of this we
express our total opposition to the unsustainable energy plan of nuclear
power and its devastating impacts and deadly effects on our communities.
The nuclear industry has waged an undeclared war against
our Indigenous peoples and Pacific Islanders that has poisoned our communities
worldwide. For more that 50-years, the legacy of the nuclear chain, from
exploration to the dumping of radioactive waste has been proven, through
documentation, to be genocide and ethnocide and a deadly enemy of Indigenous
peoples. The ancestral lands of the Indigenous peoples in the United States
has been used for testing nuclear weapons, experimenting with biological
and chemical warfare agents, incinerating and burying hazardous wastes,
and mining uranium. United States federal law and nuclear policy has not
protected Indigenous peoples, and in fact has been created to allow the
nuclear industry to continue operations at the expense of our land, territory,
health and traditional ways of life. This system of genocide and ethnocide
policies and practices has brought our people to the brink of extinction.
This disproportionate toxic burden called environmental racism
- has culminated in the current attempts to dump much of the nations
nuclear waste in the homelands of the Indigenous peoples of the Great
Basin region of the United States. This action does not provide homeland
security to our Indigenous peoples. Indigenous peoples have already made
countless sacrifices for this countrys nuclear programs
The Indigenous Environmental Network opposes the recent
decision of the United States President George W. Bush designating Yucca
Mountain in Nevada as the country's official repository for highly radioactive
nuclear waste. This is a wrong decision. Based upon scientific studies,
Yucca Mountain is not a suitable site for a nuclear waste repository.
The site has geologic faults and official computer models used to assess
site suitability are riddled with uncertainties. Federal environmental
regulations have been ignored and changed several times to accommodate
this site, thus abandoning protections for drinking water.
According to the spiritual leaders and tribal elders of
the Indigenous tribes of Western Shoshone and Paiute, the
Yucca Mountain is sacred with the regional area having deep cultural and
historical value to their peoples. President W. Bush and many leaders
of Congress do not respect these deep spiritual values and cultural life-ways
that have sustained the Indigenous peoples of this region since time immemorial.
In the eyes of Indigenous peoples that follow the traditional teachings
of our tribal ways, this President and people in Congress do not have
a heart of love and compassion for Life and have clouded minds that put
money above the health and safety of people and all Life.
If the Yucca Mountain site is approved by Congress, it
will store a total of 77,000 tons of highly radioactive waste, most of
it spent fuel from nuclear power plants. The spent fuel, which will remain
dangerous for hundreds of thousands of years, is now stored at dozens
of power plant sites around the country.
If Congress allows the Yucca Mountain site to be approved,
it would begin the largest nuclear waste transportation campaign in history,
possibly endangering residents in 44 states, thousands of towns and cities,
and tribal territories. The United States Department of Energy predicts
that there will be nuclear waste accidents occurring during this transportation
campaign with lives, health, and properties of citizens living and working
along transportation routes endangered by accidents or incidents. Roads,
rails, and waterways in 44 states would become zones of terror for dangerous
radioactive waste shipments en route to Yucca Mountain. More than 40,000
tons of this waste will be containing hundreds of tons of plutonium, the
stuff from which nuclear weapons are made from.
Related to this countrys lack of a nuclear waste
storage plan, the Indigenous Environmental Network furthers its opposition
to the actions of Private Fuel Storage (PFS), a corporate consortium of
8 commercial nuclear utilities, proposing to transport 40,000 metric tons
of high-level radioactive spent fuel waste across the country to an interim
storage facility on the Skull Valley Goshute reservation in Utah.
The Indigenous Environmental Network declares PFS actions as a form of
economic blackmail and corporate oppression on a small Indigenous community
of near 75 adult voting members that have experienced decades of toxic
exposures from Department of Defense experiments with toxic and biological
warfare and failed United States governmental policies that have created
poverty and high unemployment among the Skull Valley Goshute. PFS
is another example of the nuclear industry gambling with the public health
and safety of the Goshute tribal members, the people of Utah and
all citizens that reside along the vast transportation routes of this
country.
The United States government has a long history of abrogating
treaties entered into by the Indigenous tribes of this country and the
United States. If Congress approves Yucca Mountain for a nuclear waste
dump, it will be another attack on the treaty rights of the Western
Shoshone. Western Shoshone Nation of Newe Sogobia, which
extends from Idaho to Southern California, covers much of Nevada. Recognition
of Shoshone sovereign territory was formalized by the United States
government when it signed the Treaty of "Peace and Friendship"
of Ruby Valley in 1863 that guaranteed incoming settlers and military
personnel safe passage through the Western Shoshone (Newe) land.
These territorial boundaries under international law hold the same significance
as those of Canada or Mexico. The Organization of American States (OAS)
has repeatedly upheld Shoshone claims against the United States.
The Western Shoshone is fighting to protect their lands, including
the sacred Yucca Mountain. The Shoshone have claims against the
United States for land that was stolen and illegally occupied in violation
of the Treaty of Ruby Valley of 1863. Although extensive litigation has
taken place, the United States has never to this day been able to show
a document to back its current claim of ownership of this land. This Treaty
is one of the few treaties made between the United States and Indigenous
nations that did not cede any land.
Although the many Indigenous peoples in our vast network
are varied in language and beliefs, we have the common ground of being
Indigenous peoples who have no desire to give up the traditional laws
that the Creator gave us. We have no desire to accept the deadly, unsustainable
ways the colonial government and nuclear industry is trying to force upon
us. We are not asking anyone else to accept our ways, however, we are
exercising our right to live our sustainable lifestyles, practice our
culture, conduct our ceremonies, and raise our children in a land that
is clean, safe and healthy for all our relations.
The Indigenous Environmental Network stands in solidarity
with many concerned non-Indigenous citizens and organizations to stop
this pattern of abusing our natural environment. Every living being, every
creature and every plant has a right to a healthy, sustainable, equitable,
and safe environment. To meet these needs, all communities must have a
viable and sustainable economic base that protects the diversity of our
communities. Nuclear waste jeopardizes the most basic human right, which
is a clean environment. We commit to end the cycle of abuse that has been
initiated by our government, nuclear industry and corporations.
The Indigenous Environmental Network recommends:
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Congress should do what is morally and ethically right
and uphold Nevada Governor Guinn's veto of President Bush's approval
of the Yucca Mountain project.
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Private Fuel Storage member utilities should immediately
withdraw from the PFS consortium so as not to be implicated in such
a dangerously flawed program and a program that could violate the
human rights of tribal members of the Skull Valley Goshute.
-
United State citizens must organize to stop the Department
of Energy and Private Fuel Storage from transporting and storing nuclear
waste across the country to Yucca Mountain, located within the traditional
homelands of the Newe Sogobia and Paiute peoples, and
Skull Valley Band of Goshute.
-
United State citizens must oppose the generation of
more nuclear waste by demanding a moratorium on the building of new
nuclear power plants, a moratorium against re-commissioning old nuclear
power plants and demanding the phase-out of current nuclear power
plants. The continued production of all levels of radioactive waste
and transportation to either an interim or permanent repository does
nothing to solve the nuclear waste problem in our country.
-
United States citizens, the government and the nuclear
industry must accept responsible for the nuclear waste that is generated
every day. We call for state and federal action to be made for on-site
storage of spent nuclear fuel. On-site at or near reactor above-ground
monitored retrievable dry cask storage technology can be used to safely
and economically store high-level radioactive wastes on site for at
least 100 years or until alternative technology is found to safely
dispose this radioactive waste that normally will remain dangerous
for hundreds of thousands of years.
-
The United States, the nuclear industry and all parties
responsible, ensure for the proper clean up of toxic and radioactive
contamination on Indigenous lands, all people of color and disenfranchised
communities of this country, including victims compensation for all
citizens exposed to radiation contamination from nuclear industry
activities and militarization.
-
Governments, including tribal, state, national and
international, to do whatever possible to stop all uranium exploration,
mining, milling, conversion, testing, research, weapons and other
military production, use, and waste disposals onto and into Mother
Earth.
-
Congress increase research and development and funding
allocations for the utilization of sustainable and alternative clean
renewable energy such as solar, wind, and appropriate technologies
that are consistent with our natural laws and respect for the natural
world (environment).
-
We particularly call upon tribal governments and inter-tribal
organizations to measure their responsibilities to our peoples, not
in terms of dollars, but in terms of maintaining our spiritual traditions,
and assuring our physical, mental, spiritual well being. It is our
responsibility to assure the survival of all future generations and
be true caretakers for our Mother Earth.
-
We demand for the United States government, the nuclear
industry and all private sectors that benefited from the legacy of
perpetrating nuclear colonialism upon our Indigenous peoples to pay
up, in the form of developing tribal just transition programs
for sustainable economic development and education and training for
the Indigenous tribal nations that have been the target of these nuclear
waste programs and the legacy of nuclear colonialism.
-
Congress appropriate funding to tribes for capacity
building and development of clean renewable energy projects within
tribal utility infrastructures.
-
Last, but not least, we call upon the United States
to honor all treaty rights, agreements and executive orders entered
into with the Indigenous peoples of this country.
... related to this meeting
- Citizens Awareness Network http://www.nukebusters.org/
for more background see:
DOE rushing to develop a high-level nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain.
yucca_alert.html
Aug 11, 1999 ALERT! Yucca Draft EIS hearings! yucca_mt_3.html
Yucca Proposed Radation Standards yucca_mt_2.html
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ENVIRONMENTAL NETWORK PO Box 485, Bemidji, Minnesota
56619 USA
Tel: + 1 218 751 4967, Fax: + 1 218 751 0561, email: ien@igc.org
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