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In February 2020, news outlets such as The Intercept, CBS News, and The BBC published articles reporting that Native American burial sites in southern Arizona were at risk of being, or had already been, damaged during construction of a section of the U.S.-Mexico border wall in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. The Intercept, for instance, reported on Feb. 6: These reports originated with credible news outlets, yet some readers found the news hard to believe. We received several queries asking if the reports were true. While we recommend reading the articles published by The Intercept, CBS News, and The BBC, we'll respond to readers' most pressing questions below. Is There a Native American Burial Site on Monument Hill? In early February 2020, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) started construction on a segment of border wall inside Arizona's Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. CBP officials confirmed that controlled blasting had started in an area within the Roosevelt Reservation at Monument Mountain, which is also known as Monument Hill. The Intercept reported: Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument is located in southern Arizona and sits just above the border of the United States and Mexico. To the east of this national park is the Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation. According to tribe leaders, as well as archaeologists, Monument Hill is home to a Native American burial site. In January 2020, Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva surveyed the area with Ned Norris Jr., the chairman of the Tohono O'odham Nation, Peter Steer, the tribe's historic preservation officer, and a group of archaeologists. Here's how Monument Hill was described in a set of briefing notes compiled by Grijalva's staff after the visit: Steer provided similar information to AZ Central. According to Steer, Monument Hill was once used for religious ceremonies and was also the resting place of fallen soldiers. Steer said that bone fragments had also been found on the hill and that the tribe has been able to date back mentions of the hill to the 1600s. AZ Central reported: When Rep. Grijalva visited the area in January 2020, construction had not yet started. The Arizona congressman sent a letter to acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf expressing concern over the border wall's potential impact on the national monument and asked the government to address certain issues, such as the location and schedule for construction and the protection of groundwater resources. Grijalva said that he never received a response to his letter and in February 2020 construction crews began controlled blasting in the area. Grijalva told The Intercept: It’s been really frustrating. [...] You would think that in a situation like this, that involves human remains, burial sites, bone fragments that are traced and dated a thousand years or more back, that there would be some sensitivity, for lack of a better word, on the part of DHS and the administration. There is none. On Feb. 9, 2020, Grijalva posted an update on social media stating that two of the four burial sites that he visited had already been disturbed by the construction of the border wall: Aren't Native American Burial Sites Protected? The U.S. does have laws such as the Environmental Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the Native American Graves Protection Act. However, these laws can be circumvented if the government deems that they are at odd with national security. CBS News reports that the 2005 REAL ID Act gives the government broad power to waive laws that stand in the way of national security: What Has CBP Done to Minimize the Impact of the Border Wall in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument? CBP does have an environmental monitor present during construction; an agency official also said that crews identify the best construction management practices to minimize impacts on the environment to the greatest extent possible. We reached out to CBP for more information about their efforts to minimize the environmental impact of the border wall and will update this article when more information becomes available. Grijalva was skeptical that these environmental monitors would do anything to prevent further damage to these sacred sites. Grijalva told The Intercept that he had zero faith that the Department of Homeland Security's environmental monitor will do anything to avoid, mitigate, or even point out some of the sacrilegious things that are occurring and will continue to occur, given the way they’re proceeding. Are Other Native American Burial or Archaeological Sites at Risk? Grijalva was not the first to raise concerns about the border wall's impact on the area. A 123-page internal report from the park service obtained by The Washington Post via a Freedom of Information Act request warned that the border wall's construction could damage 22 archaeological sites at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument:
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