London Remembers Ken Saro-Wiwa protest

In novem­ber 1995, niger­ian writer and activist, ken saro-wiwa, and 8 of his col­leagues were exe­cut­ed by the mil­i­tary regime for cam­paign­ing against the dev­as­ta­tion of the niger delta by oil mul­ti-nation­al shell. yes­ter­day, demon­stra­tors dropped nine noos­es infront of the shell uk head­quar­ters on the south bank to high­light the anniver­sary and high­light the cur­rent strug­gle on the north west of ire­land, where shell is set to trans­form a remote con­ser­va­tion area into an envi­ron­men­tal dis­as­ter zone with pub­lic health and safe­ty impli­ca­tions.

short­ly after mid­day, climbers scaled the lamp­posts out­side the shell hq build­ings on the south bank, and dropped the nine noos­es from a line between the posts. oth­er pro­tes­tors arrived with huge ban­ners, a mega­phone and leaflets, along with a tiny but noisy sam­ba band.

the action soon attract­ed the local secu­ri­ty teams, a cou­ple of over­whelmed com­mu­ni­ty sup­port offi­cers, and then var­i­ous police. police used the new ‘seri­ous organ­ised crime act’ leg­is­la­tion which pro­hibits “unau­tho­rised demon­stra­tions’ with­in an exclu­sion zone around par­lia­ment. at first they claimed that the pro­tes­tors could not demon­strate any­where near to the shell build­ing, but after being shown a map of the exclu­sion zone, con­ced­ed that the action could con­tin­ue on york road at the front of the build­ing.

they hand­ed out many leaflets and edu­cat­ed passers-by of the real un-‘greenwashed’ real­i­ty of shell. one of the par­tic­i­pants was ter­ry clancey who is vis­it­ing from the irish ross­port sol­i­dar­i­ty group. he will be speak­ing at an event at ram­part on sat­ur­day.

after a pause for some late lunch, it was off to the nation­al gallery, where shell is cur­rent­ly spon­sor­ing a rubens exhi­bi­tion. vis­i­tors are charged £7.50 — £9 for entrance, but shell offer free tick­ets to their spe­cial guests, and have held at least two ban­quets in the build­ing, sur­round­ed by the clas­sic art of rubens. as busi­ness men are treat­ed to this sump­tu­ous pri­vate exhi­bi­tion, you can begin to see why shell are so keen to spon­sor this kind of thing — it fits in neat­ly with their green­wash slo­gan of ‘prof­it AND prin­ci­ples’.

for fur­ther info:
on shell gen­er­al­ly www.shellfacts.comwww.corporatewatch.org
on the strug­gle in ire­land www.shelltosea.com
on shell art spon­sor­ship www.artnotoil.org.uk
on protest restric­tions www.freedomtoprotest.org.uk

to con­tact the uk sol­i­dar­i­ty cam­paignstops_hell@yahoo.com

video of the lon­don anti-shell actions on 9th novem­ber
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2005/11/327725.mov

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