Only a handful of stragglers remain at campsites in North Dakota set up for activists protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Gov. Doug Burgum, a Republican, said during a news conference Wednesday there are only 25 to 50 protesters left at the Riverside campsite.
He said the anti-DAPL activists were still free to leave if they don’t interfere with sanitation crews scheduled to enter the site at 9 a.m. Thursday.
“We’ve very firm that the camp is now closed,” Burgum said at the news conference.
Opposition to the pipeline died down shortly after the Obama administration rejected the hotly contested pipeline route ‚Äì but DAPL opponents were reenergized after President Donald Trump overturned his predecessor’s order.
Standing Rock activists say law enforcement officials should expect a fight from those remaining at the site.
“I feel as though now is the time to stand our ground,” said Alethea Phillips, a demonstrator who spent three months at the camp.
Standing Rock Sioux member, Chase Iron Eyes, said the deadline would not dampen his determination.
“You can’t arrest a movement. You can’t arrest a spiritual revolution,” he said, referring to the seemingly homegrown environmental movement to prevent oil pipeline construction.