Wednesday 13 January 2016

Armed group calls meeting to talk with Oregon community


A Dont Tread On Me flag flies at the entrance of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge Sunday, Jan. 10, 2016, near Burns, Ore. A small, armed group has been occupying the remote national wildlife refuge in Oregon for a week to protest federal land use policies
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The armed activists occupying a national wildlife refuge in southeastern Oregon said Tuesday that they plan to hold a community meeting this week to explain themselves and inform residents when they will leave.
A member of the anti-government group told reporters that the meeting will be held Friday evening in Burns, 30 miles from the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, The Oregonian newspaper reported (http://bit.ly/1RK65f6 ).
Arizona rancher Robert "LaVoy" Finicum said the location has yet to be determined. He said "there should be a dialogue" but declined to give any specifics about the group's exit plans.
The small group is under pressure from many locals to end the occupation that began Jan. 2. The activists are there to oppose federal land-management policies.
Ammon Bundy, the group's leader, has previously said the group would not leave until a plan was in place to turn over federal lands to local authorities. They also want the release of Dwight and Steven Hammond, father-and-son ranchers convicted of arson who returned to prison last week to serve longer sentences.
The Hammonds' case set off the occupation, but they have distanced themselves from the activists.
Federal, state and local law enforcement are monitoring the occupation but have not taken action. Officials with the Harney County Joint Information Center declined to comment because of the ongoing investigation.
The group tore down a stretch of government-erected fence near the refuge Monday to give a local rancher access to the range. The armed men also have accessed government files and equipment.
At a community meeting that hundreds attended that night, Harney County residents repeatedly asked the group to leave, although some said they shared the activists' frustration with the federal government.
A Burns High School freshman got a standing ovation from the crowd.
"And I just want them to go home so I can feel safe and I can feel like it is home again," 15-year-old Ashlie Presley said with tears in her eyes, referring to the armed men. "I shouldn't have to be scared in my own hometown."

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