| A lawsuit against the pipeline is currently under wa |
A US judge has
rejected a request from two Native American tribes to halt construction
on the controversial Dakota Access oil pipeline.
The final stretch of the $3.8bn (£3bn) pipeline is being built under a North Dakota reservoir. The Standing Rock Sioux and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes have filed a lawsuit against the pipeline, saying it endangers their drinking water.
They also say the pipeline will damage sacred burial sites.
The pipeline, when complete, is expected to transport about 470,000 barrels of crude oil a day from North Dakota to a terminal in Illinois, where it can be shipped to refineries.
| Tribe leaders said they were disappointed at the ruling but would continue to fight the pipeline (Copyright AP) |
The Standing Rock and Cheyenne River tribes asked for a temporary injunction against construction, pending a lawsuit against the pipeline.
| Protesters have been camping near the site of the pipeline ( Copyright Reuters) |
However, developer ETP and the army argued against an emergency injunction, saying there was time for the lawsuit to be heard before oil began to flow through the pipeline.
Construction on the pipeline had stalled for months due to opposition from protesters.
Nearly 700 people have been arrested since protests first began last year, according to law enforcement officials.
The Obama administration announced in September that it would not allow the project to proceed, but Donald Trump overturned the decision in one of his first acts as US president.
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