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Arrested Oregon protest leader tells holdouts to go home

Eight people including Ammon Bundy (C) were taken into custody and one of his group killed in a dramatic twist to the tense three-week standoff in Oregon/AFP

Eight people including Ammon Bundy (C) were taken into custody and one of his group killed in a dramatic twist to the tense three-week standoff in Oregon/AFP

BURNS, United States, Jan 28 – The leader of an anti-government siege at a US wildlife refuge until his arrest in an operation that left one protester dead urged the remaining armed occupiers to go home.

Eight people including Ammon Bundy were taken into custody and one of his group killed in a dramatic twist late Tuesday to the tense three-week standoff in Oregon involving ranchers and farmers angry over federal land management policies.

Speaking through his attorney, Bundy appealed to the handful of people still holed up in the remote area to end their siege.

“To those remaining at the refuge, I love you. Let us take this fight from here,” said a statement issued via Bundy’s attorney Michael Arnold.

“Please stand down. Go home and hug your families. This fight is ours for now in the courts.”

Bundy paid tribute to the deceased, who was not formally identified, as his “beloved friend” Robert “LaVoy” Finicum, an Arizona rancher who became de facto spokesman for the motley protest movement.

“LaVoy is one of the greatest men and greatest patriots I have ever seen,” Bundy said. “I mourn for him and his family.

“Right now I am asking the federal government to allow the people at the refuge to go home without being prosecuted.”

Authorities have blocked the access road leading into the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge and the occupiers are free to leave, but will be identified as they do so, Greg Bretzing, head of the FBI’s Portland office, said.

“We will continue to look for safe, peaceful procedures on how to bring this to a peaceful conclusion,” he added.

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Last week, some 30 people, including women and children, were at the site, but it was unclear how many remain.

– ‘Kill them’ –

Local authorities and the FBI have also called on those still holed up at the refuge to give up the fight.

“It’s time for everybody in this illegal occupation to move on. There doesn’t have to be bloodshed in our community,” Harney County sheriff David Ward told reporters.

In a livestream that has been broadcasting from the protest site, an armed man was seen urging supporters to join them and to kill any law enforcement officer who tried to prevent their entry.

“There are no laws in this United States now! This is a free-for-all Armageddon!” the man yelled into the camera. “(If) they stop you from getting here, kill them!”

Sheriff Ward held a news conference earlier Wednesday at which he appealed for the protesters to leave and voiced distress that a police attempt to bring a peaceful resolution to the crisis ended in bloodshed.

“It didn’t have to happen,” he said.

Ward said some of the protesters had come to his office the night before with “ultimatums that I couldn’t meet.” He did not elaborate.

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The FBI said it and local authorities then devised a plan to arrest members of the group as they drove on a highway, reportedly headed to a meeting with local people.

Police stopped them on the way but one man died of a gunshot wound during the operation, Bretzing said. Five others including Bundy were arrested at the scene.

The Oregonian reported that two men — including Bundy’s 43-year-old brother Ryan — had disobeyed orders when agents stopped the two cars they were travelling in, and resisted arrest, resulting in shots being fired.

The FBI and Oregon state police later arrested two other men in Burns, the town nearest to the refuge. An eighth person surrendered to police in Arizona, police said.

– ‘Force, intimidation, threats’ –

The Bundy brothers are the sons of Cliven Bundy, 69, a vitriolic anti-government activist who in 2014 engaged in an armed standoff with federal authorities over unpaid cattle grazing fees at his Nevada ranch.

Bundy and the others face a federal felony charge “of conspiracy to impede officers of the United States from discharging their official duties through the use of force, intimidation, or threats,” the FBI said.

The gunmen originally took over the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in protest at the jailing of two local ranchers, Dwight Hammond and his son Steven, who were convicted of arson.

Their demands soon grew to include calls for the government to turn over area federal land to local ranchers. In Oregon, nearly 53 percent of the land is federally owned.

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The Hammonds distanced themselves from the movement and voluntarily began their scheduled prison sentences after the occupation began.

Several members of the local community, notably the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, condemned the takeover, while expressing sympathy for the Hammonds.

In a series of tweets, Oregon Governor Kate Brown acknowledged the trauma to local residents: “Please know I am doing everything in my power to restore normal life to Harney County.”

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