Hundreds of people protesting a North Dakota oil pipeline project clashed early Monday with police who fired tear gas, rubber bullets and a water cannon, soaking the crowd in subfreezing temperatures. Protest organisers said 167 people were hurt, including three Native American tribal elders, and that seven people have been hospitalised for severe head injuries.
"The police... targeted the heads and legs of Water Protectors," read a post from the head medic of the Oceti Sakowin Camp, referring to people protesting the contentious project, which is opposed by Native Americans who say it is being built on ancestral lands. The Morton County Sheriff's Department put the number of protesters at 400, saying they were engaged in a "riot" and had started a dozen fires.
The Bismarck Tribune quoted the sheriff's department as saying protesters threw rocks and logs at officers, and one officer was struck in the head. One person was arrested, the report added. "We have seen at least four gunshot wounds, three of them I know to the face and head, rubber bullets," medic Leland Brenholt said in a video posted on social media, adding that police were also using water, pepper spray and tear gas on protesters. "Right now, we are trying to keep people warm, we're trying to get them decontaminated, and treating all kinds of different wounds. People have been hit with (tear gas) canisters in the chest or the leg and that sort of thing."
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