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Breaking News. The United States Supreme Court on Tuesday announced it has declined to hear Apache Stronghold v. United States, a case that could have shielded the sacred Western Apache site of Oak Flat from being turned into a massive copper mine. 

The decision clears the way for the federal government to transfer the land to Resolution Copper, a company largely owned by the Chinese government through its shareholder, Chinalco.

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Oak Flat, known in Apache as Chi’chil Bildagoteel, is located east of Phoenix in Arizona and has long been a site of prayer, ceremony, and cultural identity for the Western Apache. 

It’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places and recognized as a Traditional Cultural Property. Religious ceremonies held there cannot be relocated elsewhere.

Despite its significance, protections for the site were undermined in 2014 when a land swap deal benefiting Resolution Copper was quietly added to a must-pass defense bill in Congress. If allowed to proceed, the company plans to create a crater nearly two miles wide and over 1,000 feet deep, destroying the sacred landscape.

Apache Stronghold, a grassroots coalition made up of Native and non-Native allies, filed suit in 2021 in hopes of stopping the transfer and preserving the area for religious use. 

The effort has gained broad tribal and public support, with 21 of Arizona’s 22 federally recognized tribes opposing the mine, along with the National Congress of American Indians. Polling has shown that three-quarters of Americans also favor protecting Oak Flat.

Earlier this year, the Ninth Circuit ruled against the Apache plaintiffs, stating that the land transfer doesn’t violate federal religious freedom protections. However, five judges dissented, saying the ruling failed to uphold the First Amendment.

“It is hard to imagine a more brazen attack on faith than blasting the birthplace of Apache religion into a gaping crater,” Luke Goodrich, senior counsel at Becket, a legal group representing Apache Stronghold said in a press release. “The Court’s refusal to halt the destruction is a tragic departure from its strong record of defending religious freedom.”

The case has become a flashpoint in the national debate over Indigenous religious freedom, corporate mining interests, and U.S. obligations to tribal nations. Resolution Copper’s parent company, Rio Tinto, has already been at the center of a global scandal for destroying sacred Aboriginal sites in Australia.

“We will never stop fighting, nothing will deter us from protecting Oak Flat from destruction,” Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr., a former San Carlos Apache tribal chairman and leader of Apache Stronghold, said in a statement. “While this decision is a heavy blow, our struggle is far from over. We urge Congress to take decisive action to stop this injustice while we press forward in the courts.”

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About The Author
Kaili Berg
Author: Kaili BergEmail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Staff Reporter
Kaili Berg (Aleut) is a member of the Alutiiq/Sugpiaq Nation, and a shareholder of Koniag, Inc. She is a staff reporter for Native News Online and Tribal Business News. Berg, who is based in Wisconsin, previously reported for the Ho-Chunk Nation newspaper, Hocak Worak. She went to school originally for nursing, but changed her major after finding her passion in communications at Western Technical College in Lacrosse, Wisconsin.