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Senator McCain On His Legislative History of Human Rights Violations

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Feb 11, 2008, 7:56:21 PM2/11/08
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http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3350

Senator McCain On His Legislative History of Human Rights Violations
Race; Posted on: 2008-02-08
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The behavior by Senator John McCain in manipulating the laws and circumstances
of this horrific affair is pervasively criminal.


A public research website: http://www.cain2008.org has brought together
diverse historical elements of factual proof that Senator John McCain's was
the key "point man" introducing, enacting and enforcing law that removed
Dineh-Navajo Families from their reservation on the Black Mesa in Arizona. The
McCain revised law relocated them to Church's Hill, Nevada (a Nuclear Waste
Superfund Site, called "the New Lands" in PL 93-531). The Dineh-Navajo, a
deeply spiritual and peaceful people, engaged in only peaceful resistance to
being moved off lands they'd owned since 1500 A.D. Nonetheless, the Public
Press and UN depicted brutalization, rights deprivation and forcible
relocation.

ACSA study reveals that after assembling a team of "pro-Peabody Western Coal"
Indians and obtaining a false "Hopi-Navajo" Tribal Council designation by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs for these paid Tribal representatives, in the period
1974-1996, Senator McCain was able to get large bands of the Dineh-Navajo
relocated off their lands, so that Peabody Western could mine the coal under
their farms at nominal expense. Common Cause has suggested McCain was
indirectly compensated by street name cash contributions to his Federal
Election Fund during three Presidential runs, and through family business with
Las Vegas Casinos who benefited from the coal driven power he supplied.


According to http://www.cain2008.org, as verified by the Library of Congress
and the Congressional Record, Senator McCain, as author and as chair of the
Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, created the final agreement and amended
1974 Act as captained through the Senate in 1996. Senator McCain proposed a
land partitioning scheme which led to the construction of a fence along the
Dineh Range blocking their ability to field range their cattle (PL S.1973-1
1996 Dineh Proposal for Land Partitioning), eventually leading to seizure of
their cattle for bridging the fence, and capping of their wells, which water
was then sequestered for use by Peabody Western Group.


Continue...
http://acsa2000.net/cain2004.org/Dine-Navajo-PressRelease.htm

News Source: asca

2007-2008 European Americans United.

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