Shell to Sea campaigner attacked at sea last night

July 15th 2010
At approx­i­mate­ly 7pm last night a num­ber of Shell to Sea cam­paign­ers entered the water in Broad­haven Bay in kayaks and rafts in a peace­ful attempt to pre­vent Shell from bring­ing in a bore­hole drilling plat­form. They were met with 5 Gar­da water unit boats, with approx­i­mate­ly 16 Gar­daí on board.

Beat the Boreholes 1Beat the Boreholes 2July 15th 2010
At approx­i­mate­ly 7pm last night a num­ber of Shell to Sea cam­paign­ers entered the water in Broad­haven Bay in kayaks and rafts in a peace­ful attempt to pre­vent Shell from bring­ing in a bore­hole drilling plat­form. They were met with 5 Gar­da water unit boats, with approx­i­mate­ly 16 Gar­daí on board.

Cam­paign­ers attempt­ed to approach the plat­form but were pre­vent­ed from doing so by Gar­daí who over­turned their kayaks.

One of the cam­paign­ers, Eoin Law­less man­aged to get close to the plat­form. When Gar­daí over­turned his kayak, he swam under the plat­form. A Gar­da then jumped into the water after him, and with­out giv­ing any instruc­tion pro­ceed­ed to drag him from the water into the near by Gar­da boat.

Mr. Law­less said, “I had told Gar­daí that I would leave the area but I was dragged from the water and they pro­ceed­ed to kneel on my back. I was not informed whether I was under arrest or why I was being man­han­dled. One Gar­da then pinched my throat with his two fin­gers and cut off my air sup­ply. He was obvi­ous­ly trained in how to do it. He held me like that for about 90 sec­onds, allow­ing me to take one or two gasps. He kept say­ing into my ear that he had my last breath in his hands.”

“It was ter­ri­fy­ing. I tru­ly believed he might kill me. We need human rights observers to come back down to Mayo as a mat­ter of urgency**” said Mr. Law­less.

Mr. Law­less received med­ical atten­tion at Bel­mul­let Gar­da sta­tion last night.

Shell plan to drill up to 80 bore­holes to sur­vey the Sruth Fha­da Chonn estu­ary for it’s pro­posed raw gas pipeline. The bore­holes are to pro­vide a sur­vey of the estu­ary to deter­mine the final plans for the tun­nel Shell plans to build under the estu­ary link­ing up the off­shore pipeline with the pro­posed inland refin­ery. The new route is still with­in 250m of sev­er­al hous­es and the local com­mu­ni­ty remains opposed to the plans. The estu­ary is a Spe­cial­ly Pro­tect­ed Area & part of the Broad­haven Bay Spe­cial Area of Con­ser­va­tion. The oper­a­tion will dam­age parts of the estu­ary & dis­turb the wildlife there, par­tic­u­lar­ly Atlantic salmon, otters & birds found on the inter­tidal areas.

Shell to Sea plan to try to stop Shell from drilling the bore­holes over the next few months through a cam­paign of peace­ful protest.

ENDS

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion or ver­i­fi­ca­tion please con­tact: Shell to Sea

NOTES TO EDITORS

Shell to Sea is a nation­al cam­paign with active groups based across Ire­land. The Shell to Sea cam­paign has three main aims. 1) To have the Cor­rib gas field exploit­ed in a safe way that will not expose the local com­mu­ni­ty in Erris to unnec­es­sary health, safe­ty and envi­ron­men­tal risks. 2) To rene­go­ti­ate the terms of the Great Oil and Gas Give­away, which sees Ireland’s 10 bil­lion bar­rels of oil equiv­a­lent* off the West Coast go direct­ly to the oil com­pa­nies, with the Irish State retain­ing a 0% share, no ener­gy secu­ri­ty of sup­ply and only 25% tax on prof­its against which all costs can be deduct­ed. 3) To seek jus­tice for the human rights abus­es suf­fered by Shell to Sea cam­paign­ers due to their oppo­si­tion to Shell’s pro­posed inland refin­ery.

* This fig­ure, issued by the Depart­ment of Com­mu­ni­ca­tions, Ener­gy & Nat­ur­al Resources (DCENR) in 2006, esti­mates the amount of gas and oil in the Rock­all and Por­cu­pine basins, off Ire­land ’s west coast, to be 10 BBOE (bil­lion bar­rels of oil equiv­a­lent). Based on the aver­age price of a bar­rel of oil for June 2010 at $75.34 or €59.61, this works out at a val­ue of €596 bil­lion. This does not take account of fur­ther oil and gas reserves off Ire­land ’s south coast or inland. The total vol­ume of oil and gas which right­ful­ly belongs to Ire­land could be sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er. Also, as the glob­al price of oil ris­es in the com­ing years, the val­ue of these Irish nat­ur­al resources will rise fur­ther.

** Front­line report: ‘Break­down in Trust’: http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/node/ 2474 (see p.51)