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From the Amazon to the Navajo Nation, Indigenous Women Roar for Water, Land, and People
From the heart of the Amazon, Indigenous women demand their voices be heard, and oil and mining companies be sanctioned for crimes against humanity for the metals poisoning their rivers and women. While Indigenous women speak out at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York, in the Southwest, outside the Navajo Nation Council, Dine' rally against new coal mining, and the ongoing radioactive uranium trucks endangering their people. Dine' rallying to protect their water, and people from more disease, say Navajo President Buu Nygren is cutting deals in Washington that he has no authority to make and is selling them out.
From the heart of the Amazon, Indigenous women demand their voices be heard, and oil and mining companies be sanctioned for crimes against humanity for the metals poisoning their rivers and women. While Indigenous women speak out at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York, in the Southwest, outside the Navajo Nation Council, Dine' rally against new coal mining, and the ongoing radioactive uranium trucks endangering their people. Dine' rallying to protect their water, and people from more disease, say Navajo President Buu Nygren is cutting deals in Washington that he has no authority to make and is selling them out.
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