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A win for Indigenous rights as Biden grants Grand Canyon area national monument status

Nearly 5 million people visit the Grand Canyon each year, but few are aware that the site has been sacred to Indigenous peoples in the region since time immemorial — and that the national park designation of the region essentially kicked them off their homelands a century ago. 

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On Tuesday, President Biden recognized this history by designating the nearly one million-acre region including the Grand Canyon and its surrounding areas as the Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument in Arizona. The announcement follows a 15-year endeavor from a coalition of tribes to protect the region from uranium mining that has polluted the Colorado River. Baaj Nwaavjo means “where tribes roam” for the Havasupai Tribe, while I’tah Kukveni translates to “our ancestral footprints” in Hopi. 

“Establishing the Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument honors our solemn promise to Tribal Nations to respect sovereignty, preserves America’s iconic landscapes for future generations, and advances my commitment to protect and conserve at least 30% of our nation’s land and waters by 2030,” Biden said in a statement.

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Former President Barack Obama previously banned new uranium mines in the Grand Canyon area in 2012, but his policy was set to expire later this year. This is the fifth new national monument established by the Biden administration to protect the country’s natural landscapes, following the designation of the Avi Kwa Ame national monument in Nevada earlier in 2023.

The new designation permanently protects the region from uranium mining, which Republican leaders were quick to oppose, sending a letter to Biden claiming ​​that the protections created for the Grand Canyon would cause the U.S. to over-rely on foreign countries like Russia for uranium. However, The Guardian reported that advocates say the region only contains some 1% of the country’s uranium reserves and that uranium is best mined elsewhere.

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“The Grand Canyon is home to life of all kinds and is an ecosystem we must protect,” said Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren in a statement. “We know from firsthand experience the damage that can be caused by uranium mining and processing that contaminates our water and poisons our animals and our children.”

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