Six Nations protests in solidarity with Standing Rock at Brantford mall

Another protest scheduled in Hamilton on Monday morning

Image | Six Nations Standing Rock

Caption: Six Nations residents have been protesting a controversial oil pipeline in North Dakota for months. Their latest protest was Friday at a Brantford mall. (Shane Powless/Youtube)

Brantford's Lynden Park Mall was filled with dancing and drumming on Friday evening as people from Six Nations participated in a "flash mob" in solidarity with Standing Rock Sioux Nation's fight against the construction of a contentious oil pipeline in North Dakota.
The project is the Dakota Access Pipeline and is intended to transport light sweet crude oil from the Bakken oil field near the Canadian border to Illinois.
Indigenous leaders have said the pipeline poses a threat to sacred land and to the water supply they depend on from the Missouri River. Indigenous groups from all over North America have joined them in their protest, and thousands of people are now camping there as the standoff has become more contentious.
Six Nations has been extending support for Standing Rock for months. Six Nations elected chief Ava Hill sent a letter expressing support(external link) in August.
"As the most populated First Nation in Canada with more than 26,000 members; Six Nations of the Grand River is honoured to stand with Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in opposition of the Dakota Access Pipeline," the letter states.
And this video was posted in September:

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A protest is being planned(external link) in Hamilton for Monday morning at 11 a.m. in Gore Park. Thousands of people attended a protest in Toronto on Saturday.