
Image Source: Kyle Martin/For the North Dakota Monitor
In August 2016, representatives from several tribal nations protested the Dakota Access Pipeline in Bismarck. Nick Tilsen, an Oglala Sioux Tribe activist, testified in a 2025 trial that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe led the protests, not Greenpeace. Tilsen criticized the claim that Greenpeace orchestrated the protests, calling it “paternalistic,” and emphasized the complexity and leadership of tribal nations.
Energy Transfer, the pipeline developer, claims Greenpeace supported violent behavior and a misinformation campaign during the protests, seeking $300 million in damages. Greenpeace denies these allegations, stating it only provided support, not coordination.
Tilsen shared that he joined the protests before Greenpeace’s involvement, which was limited to providing supplies and nonviolent action training. He emphasized that the Standing Rock Tribe and other tribal nations led the efforts, with solidarity from over 300 Native nations. Tilsen denied any violence or property destruction during the protests and questioned how Native citizens could be trespassing on land unlawfully taken from them by the U.S. government.
The trial, which involves a dispute over Greenpeace’s role in the protests, is expected to continue for several more weeks.
Learn more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/witness-most-tribal-nations-dakota-150156127.html