
Tribal members pledge to fight as Supreme Court clears way for copper mine, ditches black lung case
Tribal members vowed to continue fighting a massive copper mine in Arizona that they say will destroy sacred land after the Supreme Court refused to intervene.
The nation's highest court in a split decision rejected a request from the nonprofit grassroots group Apache Stronghold to intervene. In doing so, the justices left a lower court's ruling in place that allows the transfer of federal land in the Tonto National Forest to Resolution Copper, a joint venture between Rio Tinto and BHP, which plans to dig up copper there.
'We will never stop fighting — nothing will deter us from protecting Oak Flat from destruction,' Wendsler Nosie, head of Apache Stronghold and former chair of the San Carlos Apache, 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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Also on Tuesday, the Supreme Court denied a petition by the coal company, Arch Resources, involving a 2024 ruling by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that found the company liable for benefits to certain coal miners disabled by pneumoconiosis, or black lung disease.
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