New Tree Sit in Tasmania

[On Decem­ber 14 2011, the Tas­man­ian for­est defence group] Still Wild Still Threatened…set up a 60m-high tree sit-in at the TN044B log­ging coupe near May­de­na inside the 430,000ha being assessed for reserve sta­tus under the forestry peace deal.

[On Decem­ber 14 2011, the Tas­man­ian for­est defence group] Still Wild Still Threatened…set up a 60m-high tree sit-in at the TN044B log­ging coupe near May­de­na inside the 430,000ha being assessed for reserve sta­tus under the forestry peace deal.

The “Observ­er Tree” will be occu­pied by SWST’s Miran­da Gib­son, who was one of two activists assault­ed by work­ers dur­ing a protest in 2008.

Speak­ing to the media via mobile phone from the plat­form, Ms Gib­son said she would main­tain a blog and a web cam­era to broad­cast to the world.

“It’s a dif­fer­ent approach because one of our major con­cerns is that there is a mis­con­cep­tion out there that the for­est has been pro­tect­ed,” Ms Gib­son said. “We want peo­ple to see what is hap­pen­ing in the forests.”

She said she was com­mit­ted to stay­ing on the plat­form until log­ging in 13 coupes inside the area being assessed for pro­tec­tion stopped.

Tech­ni­cal dif­fi­cul­ties pre­vent­ed Ms Gib­son from speak­ing to jour­nal­ists via video-link, but SWST expect the web­cast to be up in the next few days.

Sen­a­tor Bob Brown yes­ter­day used his tax­pay­er-fund­ed char­ter allowance to hire a heli­copter to allow media out­lets to pho­to­graph and film the tree-sit from the air.

He said Pre­mier Lara Gid­dings and Prime Min­is­ter Julia Gillard were dis­hon­our­ing their own agree­ment by allow­ing Forestry Tas­ma­nia to log the coupes.

“Their word is being clear-felled by what I judge is ille­gal log­ging. If this agree­ment has any legal force then this log­ging is ille­gal,” Sen­a­tor Brown said.

“I didn’t write this agree­ment, I didn’t have any­thing to do with it, but the Prime Min­is­ter did and the Pre­mier did. The Prime Min­is­ter wrote to me and said these forests had been placed in infor­mal reserves.”

Forestry Tasmania’s gen­er­al man­ag­er of oper­a­tions Steve White­ly said the coupe was one of 13 being logged inside the assess­ment area that was iden­ti­fied by inde­pen­dent sched­ulers as nec­es­sary for sup­ply con­tracts.

He described the protest as frus­trat­ing and point­less giv­en that forestry oper­a­tions would shut down for about a month from tomor­row.

“Forestry Tas­ma­nia needs to keep oper­at­ing and we need to select some coupes that are suit­able to meet our cus­tomers’ needs and we’re doing that while there’s a ver­i­fi­ca­tion process going on,” Mr White­ly said.

Ms Kerr said that she would not be deterred by the Christ­mas shut­down. “I’ll stay up here and keep an eye on things and be here ready when they get back,” she said.

 

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