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Columbus statue attacked in honor of Oct 7

Long Live Palestine! Long live Indigenous resistance everywhere!

In honor of Oct 7 and upcoming Indigenous People’s Day on Oct 14, the Christopher Columbus statue in Central Park, NYC got what it deserved, The colonizer’s ugly face and body was splatterd with red paint and the rest of it covered in “Free Gaza”, “Land Back”, and the inverted red triangles of resistance.

With this action we remember the lives of Palestinians resisting genocide since 1948, and the lives of Indigenous peoples defending their lands since Columbus’s arrival in 1492. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we must continue to fight for our collective liberation. Our struggles are interconnected and our fates intertwined. Attack all symbols and institutions of empire everywhere!

Submitted anonymously over email.

Ancestral land returned to Onondaga Nation in upstate New York

The Onondaga Nation has regained 1,000 acres (405 hectares) of its ancestral land in upstate New York, a tiny portion of the land members say was unjustly taken by the state beginning in the 18th century.

The heavily forested land is south of Syracuse and near the Onondaga’s federally recognized territory. The land, which includes headwaters of Onondaga Creek, was transferred by Honeywell International on Friday under a federal Superfund settlement related to the contamination of the environment, according to the Onondaga Nation.

The land is part of an expanse of 2.5 million acres (1 million hectares) in central New York the Onondagas say was taken over decades by New York beginning in 1788 through deceitful maneuvers that violated treaties and federal law.

Sid Hill, the Tadodaho, or chief, of the Onondaga Nation, said Monday they were grateful to federal and state officials for working with them to return “the first 1,000 acres of the 2.5 million acres of treaty-guaranteed land taken from us over the centuries.”

“This is a small but important step for us, and for the Indigenous land back movement across the United States,” Hill said in a prepared statement.

Rebuffed in U.S. courts, the Onondagas are now pursuing their claim before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which is part of the Organization of American States.

The nation’s case involves a roughly 40-mile-wide (65-kilometer-wide) strip of land running down the center of upstate New York from Canada to Pennsylvania. The Onondagas hope the case spurs negotiations that could lead to the return of some land.

Found on Mainstream Media