E.ON Targeted in Sweden in Solidarity with the Climate Camp

29.09.2008
An E.ON facil­i­ty in the work­ing class dis­trict of Moll­e­van­gen, Mal­mo was tar­gat­ed to high­light E.ON’s plans to build the UK’s first new coal fired pow­er sta­tion for 30 years.

eon grafittied in Sweden29.09.2008
An E.ON facil­i­ty in the work­ing class dis­trict of Moll­e­van­gen, Mal­mo was tar­gat­ed to high­light E.ON’s plans to build the UK’s first new coal fired pow­er sta­tion for 30 years.

Despite E.ON work­ing exten­sive­ly on renew­ables and reduc­ing car­bon emis­sions in Swe­den, the com­pa­ny con­tin­ues to push coal in the UK.

The build­ing of Kingsnorth coal fired pow­er sta­tion on the Hoo penin­su­lar in Kent will cause res­pi­ra­to­ry prob­lems and haz­ardous wastes in the local area, raise the coun­try’s emis­sions to unsus­tain­able lev­els, swerve ener­gy sup­ply into non-renew­able dirty fos­sil fuels rather than renew­ables, and feed a com­mu­ni­ty-frac­tur­ing and pol­lut­ing glob­al coal mar­ket which along with the expan­sion of oth­er fos­sil fuels threat­ens the ecosys­tems of the plan­et.

The cam­paign against kingsnorth, like the poten­tial effects of the 8 new coal fired pow­er sta­tions the UK gov­ern­ment could sanc­tion this Autumn, is glob­al.

Swedish sol­i­dar­i­ty steps up to sup­port this cam­paign in the UK.

The grafit­ti is at a promi­nent inter­sec­tion in the city and will be seen by thou­sands of peo­ple who will ques­tion E.ON’s green spin and con­tra­dic­tion between its’ work in Swe­den and its new coal plans for the UK.

For more infor­ma­tion about the stop kingsnorth cam­paign see www.climatecamp.org.uk

Stalking the Solitaire

29.09.2008
Shell to Sea Kayak­ers vis­it the Soli­taire in Scot­land

29.09.2008
Shell to Sea Kayak­ers vis­it the Soli­taire in Scot­land

At the crack of dawn on Sun­day two Shell to Seas Kayak­ers, the James Con­nel­ly and the Ken Saro Wiwa paid an auda­cious vis­it to the Soli­tiare cur­rent­ly lying 1.5 nau­ti­cal miles off the banks of the Clyde, Scot­land. The kayak­ers want­ed to estab­lish for defi­nate whether the ship was return­ing to Ire­land for a sec­ond attempt at lay­ing the pipe or was to return to Rot­ter­dam for repairs. Ini­tial­ly radio con­tact was made with the ship whose bridge crew refused to dis­close its inten­tions. The activists attempt­ed to board the Soli­taitre but were thwart­ed by secu­ri­ty pres­ence on the pon­toon lying along­side the accom­mo­da­tion lad­der. They then pad­dled around to the Stinger where they were only feet away from a high ten­sion cable that was being winched onto a near­by barge. Work con­tin­ued with com­plete dis­re­gard for the health & safe­ty of the kayak­ers. The kayak crew con­tin­ued to attempt com­mu­ni­ca­tions with the ship’s crew for over an hour in order to estab­lish the next des­ti­na­tion of the Soli­tiare but to no avail.

Mean­while back in Mayo some equip­ment has been removed from the Glen­gad com­pound and the boats that were dredg­ing the bay last Thurs­day have gone back to Bal­ly­glass, an anchor­age just around the head­land. How­ev­er the com­mu­ni­ty in Mayo and its sup­port­ers remain on high alert for the pos­si­ble return of the Soli­taire this year.

New social centre in camberwell, london

26.9.2008
About a year after the evic­tion of the for­mer New Cam­ber­well Cen­tre, a new social cen­tre has been opened in Cam­ber­well, not far away from where the pre­vi­ous one stood.

The build­ing where the Cam­ber­well Cen­tre stood has been left emp­ty for this entire year, and only last week the boards that were placed out­side were seen with a gap to allow phys­i­cal access through the door.

26.9.2008
About a year after the evic­tion of the for­mer New Cam­ber­well Cen­tre, a new social cen­tre has been opened in Cam­ber­well, not far away from where the pre­vi­ous one stood.

The build­ing where the Cam­ber­well Cen­tre stood has been left emp­ty for this entire year, and only last week the boards that were placed out­side were seen with a gap to allow phys­i­cal access through the door.

Any­way — we have a new social cen­tre! — address is 52 Knatch­bull Road, although the entrance is through the gate on Bur­ton rd, and the build­ing is right behind Minet Library.

Meet­ings are hap­pen­ing week­ly already. Elec­tric­i­ty needs sort­ing out (hence call to all autonomous ener­gy gen­er­a­tor sys­tems) and gar­den needs clear­ing. All wel­come to help, get involved …

The next meet­ing is on Tues­day 30th Sep­tem­ber at 7pm

Open­ing Event in New Autonomous Space Cam­ber­well: THE LIBRARY HOUSE

CALLING OUT TO ALL AND EVERYONE A NEW SPACE HAS BEEN OPENED:

THE LIBRARY HOUSE.
52 KNATCHBULL ROAD (behind library, junc­tion with Bur­ton rd)
SE5 9QY
CAMBERWELL

WE ALL HAVE A NEW AUTONOMOUS SPACE IN SOUTH LONDON TO PLAY IN. TOGETHER WITH ALL OUR ENERGY AND IDEAS WE CAN CREATE A NEW AND INSPIRING PLACE EVERYBODY TO EXPERIMENT IN AND ENJOY.

OPENING EVENT
Sat­ur­day 4th of Octo­ber, 3pm onwards, will be our first open day. Food, music, gar­den­ing, work­shops, DIY…

LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOUR KNOWN FACES WITH NEW ONES.

THE LIBRARY HOUSE.

Police attack on London Critical Mass & I Bike MCR Mini Festival & South London CM reminder & Liverpool report

While there was a notable absence of police on the Sep­tem­ber Crit­i­cal Mass ride in Lon­don, we did have one unpleas­ant encounter with a very aggres­sive group of offi­cers from the TSG unit.

While there was a notable absence of police on the Sep­tem­ber Crit­i­cal Mass ride in Lon­don, we did have one unpleas­ant encounter with a very aggres­sive group of offi­cers from the TSG unit.

Trav­el­ling between Vic­to­ria Street and Buck­ing­ham Palace Road on Fri­day night, we ran into a van load of police dressed in over­alls, fleeces and base­ball caps. Their van was an odd sil­ver grey colour and appar­ent­ly was not equipped with a siren or flash­ing lights.

To com­pen­sate for their lack of ade­quate appa­ra­tus the offi­cers, led by # SX 836, attempt­ed to force their way through the mass by knock­ing rid­ers to the ground, and drag­ging oth­ers to the side of the road and dump­ing them on the pave­ment.

At one point SX 836 encour­aged dri­vers of oth­er vehi­cles to ram the mass, telling them “Just dri­ve at them, they’ll get out of the way!” despite the fact that we were all in the mid­dle of a traf­fic jam at the time. Anoth­er offi­cer involved whose num­ber I man­aged to note down was QA 232.

Pho­tos::
http://18hz.deid.net/2008/septembermass/vikings03im.jpg
http://18hz.deid.net/2008/septembermass/vikings01im.jpg

High­er res­o­lu­tion ver­sions of my pho­tos can be fund at

http://www.flickr.com/photos/29703759@N08/sets/72157607617808713/

One hel­l­l­l­ll of a mass (lon­don)

crit­i­cal mass lon­don | 01.10.2008 23:33 | Cli­mate Chaos | Lon­don
And there’s plen­ty more dra­ma to come …

I got out of work at about half past five, so i came down to the south bank ear­ly; the tide was out, so i spent a while strolling on the beach of the Thames. It’s an amaz­ing place — a beach in the mid­dle of a city of sev­en mil­lion peo­ple, and desert­ed except for me and two or three oth­ers. Like a rub­bly, silty secret gar­den.

Back up on ground lev­el, we once again set off a good few ticks after sev­en. Boo hiss. But at least we went through the Kingsway under­pass!

But — shock hor­ror! — with no cops. I did­n’t see a sin­gle poli­ceper­son accom­pa­ny­ing the ride — did my eyes deceive me? How could this be? Any­body know? We did have the cycling ambu­lance­man with us, though.

I’m very pleased to say that, as far as i could tell, the mass ran like clock­work. We kept togeth­er (most­ly — we split into a fast and a slow pack after Buck­ing­ham Palace, and i bounced between the two for a bit), we corked — we even let pedes­tri­ans through! Bril­liant! Pats on backs all round!

Although one thing that was evi­dent was much more aggres­sion from dri­vers, par­tic­u­lar­ly black cab dri­vers. Recent­ly, we’ve always had cop­pers around, and cab­bies have behaved them­selves. Tonight, though, their basic feroc­i­ty was ful­ly in evi­dence. There were two main instances of this that i saw.

The first was on High Hol­born, at the junc­tion where i spoke to the ambu­lance­man — this was why i was stopped. The mass was com­ing along from the east; i think the advance bulk had passed through, and then was a thin­ner stream of us com­ing along behind. A black cab was sat in Grape Street (i think — i’m look­ing at a map here; one of the side streets off on the north, just before the junc­tion), and i imag­ine had been wait­ing a while for the mass to pass. When it thinned out, he took his chance (we had­n’t corked him), and came out onto High Hol­born, turn­ing right, and stay­ing in the right­mos lane. Fifty metres ahead of him was a red light at the junc­tion. Less than fifty metres ahead of him was a mass­er, rid­ing slow­ly. The cab dri­ver drove less slow­ly — he drove right up to with­in inch­es of the mass­er, tail­gat­ed him for ten metres or so, and then quite delib­er­ate­ly drove straight into the back of him. The guy went down, the cab stopped, and a crowd of us clot­ted around the scene. Luck­i­ly, the guy was­n’t hurt.

I was to the left of this, in the sec­ond or third lane over, and a lit­tle way behind the cab; i saw every­thing hap­pen right in front of me. It was quite obvi­ous that the cab dri­ver did it delib­er­ate­ly: the mass­er was rid­ing at a con­stant speed, and the dri­ver accel­er­at­ed, hit­ting him. he had dri­ven to with­in inch­es of him, which is sim­ply not a safe way to dri­ve.

So, we made sure the taxi was­n’t going any­where, took pho­tos of the scene, reg­is­tra­tion plate, dri­ver, etc, and some of us who had seen it gave the guy our details. The cab­bie was­n’t giv­ing his details, though. Some­one called the police, and after a while our friends in blue duly turned up and did their best to work every­one up into a froth­ing rage. Do cops get train­ing in deal­ing with angry pun­ters (oth­er than with a trun­cheon)? Because these guys were to defus­ing con­fronta­tions as Guy Fawkes was to the bomb squad. Any­way, even­tu­al­ly, ques­tions were asked, details were record­ed and exchanged, and the lead cop­per declared that he was record­ing this as a no-injury col­li­sion, and they weren’t going to fol­low it up. Appar­ent­ly delib­er­ate­ly dri­ving into a cyclist does­n’t count as care­less dri­ving or any­thing. He came out with, essen­tial­ly, the usu­al crap about ‘our word against his’. Dur­ing this i had a long chat with the oth­er cop­per, who seemed very nice when he was­n’t try­ing to start a fight, but com­plete­ly clue­less about cycling, and indeed road safe­ty gen­er­al­ly. Still, i’m sure if i want­ed an elec­tri­cian shot dead, he’d be just my man.

I also talked to the mass­er who was hit, his two friends, and a couri­er­ish guy who also stopped. I did­n’t quite get the vic­tim’s name. Nice lad. As i said, he was­n’t hurt, but his back wheel went under the cab’s, and was pret­ty bent. I had a look at it: the hub looked like it should be okay, and the tyre and tube should be fine, but he’s going to need a new rim, (it was a Bon­trager, the poor thing!) spokes, and brake disc. Basi­cal­ly, he’s going to need a new wheel. I could­n’t see any dam­age to the stays, mech, etc, but he needs to take it to a bike shop to get it checked out. He’s got the cab­bie’s insur­ance details; he did­n’t real­ly seem to under­stand about how insur­ance works, but i’m sure he knows some­one who does.

I sug­gest­ed we bend the wheel back into shape so he could at least roll the bike home, so we found a fence and did a bit of ghet­to tru­ing — an essen­tial urban cycling skill, and the sec­ond time i’ve had to do it on a mass! He and a friend set off walk­ing for King’s Cross to catch a train home. I sin­cere­ly hope he did­n’t decide to try and ride — he had rather a touch of teenage invin­ci­bil­i­ty, so i wor­ry he might have.

Any­way, one of his friends had received a sig­nal that the rest of the mass was at Buck­ing­ham palace, so he, the couri­er­ish guy and i set off. We got there a few min­utes before the mass set off again — i just had time to wish Des Kay well with the Lords and ride a lap round the top of the Vic­to­ria Memo­r­i­al.

After that, we start­ed to get spread out, between the main body at the front and a long tail of slow rid­ers. I’m a speed­ster myself, so i was half tempt­ed to go a bit sheep­dog on them and get them mov­ing, but i end­ed up bounc­ing back and forth — going for­ward, help­ing cork or just wait­ing, and being caught up.

Taxi inci­dent num­ber two came as we rode down Theobald’s road. A stream of traf­fic was try­ing to come in from the right, i think from Red Lion Street (again, i’m look­ing at a map and guess­ing), and had been corked. There were only a few peo­ple there, so i looped back and joined them.

At the front of the queue was a taxi dri­ver. He was­n’t very hap­py about being stopped, and insist­ed we move. We did­n’t, of course — the mass was still pass­ing. He got rather upset, and start­ed shout­ing. He then start­ed edg­ing his taxi for­ward — he went from being a foot away from us to actu­al­ly press­ing his right fend­er into my leg and start­ing to push me over; there was anoth­er guy beside me, and a few peo­ple around us, and we made it clear we weren’t going any­where until the mass had passed. It did, and i was set to go — but he was still press­ing into my leg, which meant i actu­al­ly could­n’t get on my bike and move off. If i had, and he’d edged for­ward any fur­ther, i would have gone straight under him. Bit of an impasse, cue much shout­ing.

Even­tu­al­ly, he stopped his engine, got out of his cab, and came up to me and tried to shove my bike out of the way. Because he’d stopped, i was actu­al­ly able to move, and was quite hap­py to do so, so in a way, his move was quite suc­cess­ful! There was a bit more shout­ing, with nei­ther side real­ly want­i­ng to let the oth­er have the last word (although i was silent — i just want­ed to get home and have my din­ner), and a dis­gust­ing drunk old fat man walked over and start­ed shout­ing and shov­ing a lady mass­er about, but even­tu­al­ly we dis­en­tan­gled our­selves and rode on.

By this point, i was get­ting tired and hun­gry, our num­bers were down, and i decid­ed to call it a night. We hit the junc­tion with Rose­bery Avenue, where i turn left. The mass default­ed to head­ing straight on, but a few peo­ple were shout­ing to go left: i men­tioned that i was in favour of that because i want­ed to go home; the girl beside me said she want­ed to go left because she want­ed some dori­tos, which i found quite puz­zling.

It was only after i’d sped away into the night that i realised she’d said ‘bur­ri­tos’, and must have been refer­ring to the real­ly good lit­tle bur­ri­to place at Angel. I could have kicked myself, because i could real­ly have gone for a bur­ri­to right then.

And that, as they say, is that.

http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/cm-london
http://www.criticalmasslondon.org.uk/

========================

I Bike MCR presents a week long series of cycling events and activ­i­ties to cel­e­brate the bicy­cle from 6th-12th Octo­ber 2008

I Bike MCR is a grass­roots vol­un­tary group where every­one gives their time and skills for free. We organ­ise events that aim to pro­mote cycling and to build a strong sup­port­ive cycling com­mi­u­ni­ty in MCR. We do this in our own spare time because we believe that giv­ing our time to make a change will be worth it.

It will be a free fes­ti­val in order to make it acces­si­ble to every­one no mat­ter their eco­nom­ic sit­u­a­tion. We will, how­ev­er, ask for dona­tions to go to help­ing the I Bike MCR cycle cam­paign, you can give mon­ey or time please look here for info:
http://www.ibikemcr.org.uk/minihelp.htm

MINI FESTIVAL TIMETABLE
Every week-day morn­ing we will be hav­ing a group ride from Owen’s Park in Fal­low­field down Oxford Road to the Uni­ver­si­ties so that stu­dents can meet each oth­er and gain con­fi­dence by cycling in togeth­er as a group.

Meet in the carpark area of Owens Park (map)
8.15am, we’ll leave at 8.30am PROMPT to get into uni at 8.45am
We hope this will con­tin­ue after the week fes­ti­val is over.

Mon­day 6th Octo­ber
7.30pm Coun­cil Cham­bers Man­ches­ter Uni­ver­si­ty
Bicy­cle Film Night

Tues­day 7th Octo­ber
Meet 6pm Out­side Man­ches­ter Uni­ver­si­ty refec­to­ry
A bicy­cle tour around our city, tak­ing you to the nicest parks, the best bike shops, cool places to hang out, the best cycle routes, nice land­marks and nice pubs.

Wednes­day 8th Octo­ber
2pm — 5pm Email info@ibikemcr.org.uk to book a place
FREE Bicy­cle Con­fi­dence lessons. Book asap to reserve a place.
No mat­ter whether you need some tips on how to deal with a par­tic­u­lar junc­tion or how to ride one hand­ed you can ben­e­fit from a bike con­fi­dence class with a qual­i­fied cycling instruc­tor.

7pm Bas­ket­ball courts in Platt Fields Park
The Spokes Bicy­cle Dance Troupe,
The all woman Spokes bike dance troupe have an open prac­tice to encour­age more bike lov­ing women to get involved and join them in danc­ing with their bikes to encour­age more women and girls to cycle.

Thurs­day 9th Octo­ber
6pm Whit­worth Park, Den­mark Road
Bicy­cle Polo Prac­tice. We will teach new­com­ers how to play this exhil­a­rat­ing and fun sport.

Fri­day 10th Octo­ber
Reg­is­ter at 6pm, Ride at 7pm…
Meet in the carpark behind the Sand­bar, Grosvenor Street (map)
I Bike MCR Super­heroes Trea­sure­cat.
No mat­ter what bike you’re on or how well you know the city you can take part (and have a chance to win!) in this trea­sure hunt on bicy­cles.

* Dress as a super­hero for more points..go all out!
* Ride as a dynam­ic duo, both peo­ple must be present at each check­point but only one needs to do the task (if you can’t find a part­ner before­hand, don’t wor­ry you’re sure to find one on the night)
* With a final sprint to see which out of your pair is the super­hero and which is the side­kick
* If the phone rings answer it. You may get a secret mis­sion to win more points, then choose if you want to go for fastest time or most points
* Prizes for a wide vari­ety of things NOT JUST FASTEST. inc.Team back at any time with the most points, Win­ner of the final sprint, Best cos­tume and loads more…So it’s open for any­one to win a prize no mat­ter how lit­tle you know the city or how fast you can ride

Amaz­ing prizes from:
Cant­goslo
Baga­boo
Seag­ull Bags
HK Fixed
Knog
Edin­burgh Bicy­cle Co-oper­a­tive
Bicy­cle Bou­tique

Sat­ur­day 11th Octo­ber
Noon at Pic­cadil­ly train sta­tion
or 1.30pm at Delamere For­est Infor­ma­tion Cen­tre
Moun­tain bik­ing in Delamere For­est
(you can hire moun­tain bikes there)

8pm The Sand­bar Grosvenor Street (map)
Moon­light Ride: a 3 hour cir­cu­lar ride into the night with a pub stop.

Sun­day 12th Octo­ber
Noon Meet Sains­bury’s Carpark, off Wilm­slow Road, Fal­low­field
A ride along one of Man­ches­ter’s nicest off road cycle routes, the Fal­low­field Loop, where we will stop off to help cre­ate a mur­al depict­ing the cel­e­bra­tion of the bicy­cle. Every­one wel­come to get involved mak­ing the Fal­low­field Loop brighter and fun. Bring brush­es, tat­ty clothes, paints and lots of enthu­si­asm (don’t wor­ry if you not that artis­tic we’ll find some way for you to help!)

info@ibikemcr.org.uk
http://ibikemcr.org.uk/

========================

The 4th South Lon­don crit­i­cal mass bike ride is this fri­day and every first fri­day of the month.

Come and lib­er­ate the streets of south lon­don, tak­ing the mass to the mass­es not just to shoppers,tourists and irate cab­bies. Meet 6.30pm out­side Peck­ham Library,off Peck­ham High Street.

========================

Big Turnout for Liv­er­pool Crit­i­cal Mass

This mon­th’s crit­i­cal mass was big­ger than ever. The ride end­ed at Next To Nowhere (social cen­tre) where the rid­ers got free refresh­ments and saw a film.

Dozens of cyclists of all ages and back­grounds, from stu­dents to social work­ers, turned out. They includ­ed a vis­i­tor who has recent­ly come from New Zealand and took part in crit­i­cal mass rides there.

After doing a tour around the city cen­tre they stopped at the social cen­tre, where they were giv­en free soup and cakes, and watched a film show­ing the his­to­ry of how the Crit­i­cal Mass rides start­ed in San Fran­cis­co in 1993. The rides in that city grew to thou­sands-strong, and worked beau­ti­ful­ly through col­lec­tive organ­i­sa­tion, with­out com­mit­tees or lead­ers. They had the effect of caus­ing more peo­ple to com­mute by bicy­cle instead of car, and to use the bicy­cle as their nor­mal trans­port. This was dis­rupt­ed when the San Fran­cis­co police decid­ed the cyclists need­ed to be “organ­ised” and made to fol­low offi­cial­ly des­ig­nat­ed routes. Ulti­mate­ly, how­ev­er, the cyclists decid­ed they did­n’t want or need to be organ­ised.

Liv­er­pool Crit­i­cal Mass has not so far had any police inter­fer­ence, and is suc­cess­ful­ly enabling cyclists to use the roads safe­ly, and assert their right to be recog­nised as road users. But as one cyclist said, “If the police want­ed to organ­ise us — how? There are no lead­ers and no-one’s in charge. There’s just a bunch of cyclists who hap­pen coin­ci­den­tal­ly to turn up at the Chi­nese arch on the sec­ond Fri­day of the month, and go for a ride togeth­er.”

A bunch of cyclists may, coin­ci­den­tal­ly, be at the Chi­nese arch on Nel­son Street at 6pm on 12th Novem­ber and 15th Decem­ber. They would wel­come any-one who wants to turn up and ride along with them.

Fight Speciesism! #5 — Out Now

Octo­ber issue of the lat­est anti-speciesist, anti-cap­i­tal­ist, abo­li­tion­ist direct action news is out now.

Fight Speciesism! #5 - Out NowOcto­ber issue of the lat­est anti-speciesist, anti-cap­i­tal­ist, abo­li­tion­ist direct action news is out now.

Anti­speciesist Action is a col­lec­tive of mil­i­tant anti­speciesists and ani­mal rights activists com­mit­ted to con­fronting ani­mal abuse, suf­fer­ing and exploita­tion of non-human beings through the use of direct action.

Arti­cles:

- Sol­i­dar­i­ty for Sean Kirt­ley
— Sol­i­dar­i­ty for Dan Amos
— Oper­a­tion Smash Bar­clays
— Thou­sands of Par­tridges Lib­er­at­ed
— Hunt Sab­bing in York­shire
— Glob­al ALF Roundup
— Mink Freed Across the Globe
— A Crit­i­cal Look at Hier­ar­chy
— Earth News: Berlin & Aus­tralia
— No Bor­ders Resis­tance in Bris­tol

PRINT / SHARE / DISTRIBUTE

FS! #5 — http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/09/409384.html

Saving Iceland Targets International Aluminium Conference

Today, Sep­tem­ber 25, the 11th Inter­na­tion­al Con­fer­ence on Alu­mini­um Aloys (ICAA) met with angry protests. Activists from the envi­ron­men­tal­ist net­work Sav­ing Ice­land dis­rupt­ed the pro­ceed­ings at the Uni­ver­si­ty in Aachen.

Today, Sep­tem­ber 25, the 11th Inter­na­tion­al Con­fer­ence on Alu­mini­um Aloys (ICAA) met with angry protests. Activists from the envi­ron­men­tal­ist net­work Sav­ing Ice­land dis­rupt­ed the pro­ceed­ings at the Uni­ver­si­ty in Aachen. Ear­ly this morn­ing, dur­ing one of Rio Tin­to Alcan’s lec­tures, the fire alarms in the build­ing were put on. Lat­er today — again dur­ing Rio Tin­to Alcan’s lec­ture — stink bombs were thrown and a high vol­ume rape alarm was put on and sus­pend­ed out of reach by green and black heli­um baloons. The audi­to­ri­um was also strewn with infor­ma­tion leaflets. The aim was to call atten­tion to the industry’s sin­gu­lar involve­ment in eco­log­i­cal destruc­tion in Ice­land, as well as on a glob­al scale.

The ICAA con­fer­ence is a week­long event held at a dif­fer­ent inter­na­tion­al loca­tion every 2 years. This is its first appear­ance in Ger­many and as such is run in par­al­lel to the Alu­mini­um trade fair in Essen, about 80 km away. This dou­ble event is sure to call togeth­er all major play­ers of an indus­try that still tries to present itself as hav­ing a green con­science, and with some suc­cess: Alcoa has been includ­ed in the Dow Jones Sus­tain­abil­i­ty Index, for the 7th year run­ning. [1] Envi­ron­men­tal­ists dis­pute this depic­tion in the strongest terms.

Glob­al Impacts
“There is no lev­el on which the con­tin­ued expan­sion of the alu­mini­um indus­try can be pur­sued sus­tain­ably” says Andreas Jager of Sav­ing Ice­land,” In India, for exam­ple, the pri­ma­ry mate­r­i­al, baux­ite, is open-cast mined and refined into alu­mi­na, strip­ping rain­fores cov­ered moun­tains, dis­plac­ing trib­al peo­ple from their land and pol­lut­ing the water sup­ply with “red mud” residue [2, 3]. In Aus­tralia and Jamaica, vir­gin forests are also destroyed for the same prize — and with the same tox­ic con­se­quences [4].

Destruc­tion of Ice­landic Wilder­ness, for weapons
“ In Ice­land, the country’s unique nat­ur­al land­scape is being raid­ed for its ener­gy poten­tial by these multi­na­tion­al invaders: at a time when the world is final­ly wak­ing up to cli­mate change, the effect of our high ener­gy depen­dence, the process of alu­mini­um pro­duc­tion requires colos­sal quan­ti­ties of elec­tric­i­ty, for which it plans to block and har­ness every glacial riv­er, exploit every geot­her­mal field and trans­form Iceland’s wild beau­ty into a spent and pol­lut­ed waste­land, dot­ted with smelters. This does not equate to green ener­gy, par­tic­u­lar­ly con­sid­er­ing that the planned Ice­landic alu­mini­um smelters will far exceed the gen­er­ous 1,600,000 tonnes of emis­sions per­mit­ted to that coun­try under the Kyoto Con­ven­tion [5].

“And the end prod­uct? For the most part, mil­i­tary hard­ware used for destruc­tion of every imag­in­able kind, avi­a­tion, which is increas­ing­ly being shown to be incom­pat­i­ble with a sta­ble cli­mate, and dis­pos­able pack­ag­ing, a symp­tom of our waste­ful soci­ety. There can be no future for this indus­try, above all oth­ers, if we are to avoid envi­ron­men­tal cri­sis.”

Rio Tin­to Alcan’s Envi­ron­men­tal and Human Crimes
Sav­ing Ice­land protests Rio Tinto’s invest­ments in Ice­land and in Africa. In Ice­land the RT-Alcan smelter in Haf­nar­fjor­dur, south­west Ice­land is being upgrad­ed to increase pro­duc­tion. The Budarhals dam is cur­rent­ly being con­struct­ed to pow­er the smelter expan­sion.

“The peo­ple of Haf­nar­fjor­dur vot­ed against expan­sion of the smelter in a local ref­er­en­dum, but still pro­duc­tion is being increased,” says Jager. “The smelter dis­cards its tox­ic spent potlin­ings in a land­fill in the sea that floods at high tide [6]. We do not want more pol­lu­tion and we do not want more dams here in Ice­land, which are destroy­ing our beau­ti­ful wilder­ness. Espe­cial­ly for a com­pa­ny with the most abysmal record in human rights,” states Jager.

Rio Tin­to has been accused of sub­ject­ing it’s work­ers to poi­son­ing in mines, of hav­ing secu­ri­ty guards shoot­ing locals look­ing for small amounts of gold in one of it’s mines and hav­ing union-mem­bers spied upon and fired [7, 8]. It has also hired mer­ce­nary forces against local pop­u­la­tions protest­ing it’s oper­a­tions in Papua and Bougainville [9, 10, 11].

The Nor­we­gian gov­ern­ment has sold its shares in Rio Tin­to because it’s Gras­berg mine in West Papua has dev­as­tat­ed the land of the Amungme and Kamoro tribes. Nor­way sold its almost £500 mil­lion shares in Rio Tin­to fol­low­ing rec­om­men­da­tions from its Coun­cil on Ethics to exclude the com­pa­ny from its gov­ern­ment pen­sion fund [12].

Inter­na­tion­al Sol­i­dar­i­ty
Peo­ple all around the world are wak­ing up and becom­ing aware of the destruc­tion caused by the alu­mini­um indus­try, as well as the sit­u­a­tion in Ice­land. Last week, big ban­ners were hanged up in Copen­hagen say­ing: “The Alu­mini­um Indus­try is Destroy­ing All Major Ice­landic Rivers!” [13].

Foot­notes and fur­ther ref­er­ence:

[1] http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=3182&a…
[2] http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=602&am…

[3] http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=2607&a…
[4] http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=2233&a…
[5] http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?page_id=…
[6] Rio Tin­to Alcan (2008). Alcan Envi­ron­ment: Potlin­ings. http://www.riotintoalcan.is/?PageID=111 [Accessed Sep­tem­ber 24th, 2009].
[7] SBS Aus­tralia (200). Date­line, Report on Rio Tin­to, August 2000.
[8] Asia-Pacif­ic Human Rights Net­work, “Rio Tinto’s Record and the Glob­al Com­pact,” July 13th 2001.
[9] Wikipedia Ger­many (22–7‑2007), http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandline-Af…
[10] Con­tract between PNG Gov­ern­ment and San­d­line: http://coombs.anu.edu.au/SpecialProj/PNG….
[11] Sarei v Rio Tin­to, 456 F.3d 1069 (9th Cir. 2006), USA.
[12] Sur­vival Inter­na­tion­al (2008). Nor­we­gian gov­ern­ment – Rio Tinto’s Papua mine uneth­i­cal. http://www.survival-international.org/ne… [Accessed Sep­tem­ber 24th, 2008]
[13]

CRUSH the Cabot CREDIT Circus

This Thurs­day the 25th of Sept, a call to action came to dis­rupt the far­ci­cal open­ing cer­e­mo­ny of Bristol’s brand new abom­i­na­tion.

CRUNCH the CABOT CREDIT CIRCUSThis Thurs­day the 25th of Sept, a call to action came to dis­rupt the far­ci­cal open­ing cer­e­mo­ny of Bristol’s brand new abom­i­na­tion.

CRUNCH CABOT CREDIT CIRCUS was embla­zoned across the vile new shop­ping complex’s adver­tis­ing hoard in plain view of motorists arriv­ing through the new­ly rout­ed, soon to be con­gest­ed, road sys­tem that snakes around the £500 mil­lion project that offers yet more ster­ile, soul­less, cap­i­tal­ist con­sumerism.

The ridicu­lous tim­ing of the advent of this unnec­es­sary mon­stros­i­ty, dur­ing the so-called ‘cred­it crunch’, offers the oppor­tu­ni­ty to think about just how lit­tle com­mu­ni­ty con­sul­ta­tion took place; about the mass dis­place­ment of the poor­er sec­tions of our com­mu­ni­ty to make way for its con­struc­tion; and about the sheer slap in the face to peo­ple on low-incomes whose lives hang in the bal­ance as banks crum­ble and cred­it becomes scarce. All the while the Bris­tol (Impe­r­i­al) Alliance siphon off what prof­its they might make, out of our city, to Birm­ing­ham, Lon­don and the hands of a few cor­po­rate prof­i­teers.

This rup­ture with the Alliance’s image and ethos – where ‘retail ther­a­py’ has replaced com­mu­ni­ty con­tact and our social inter­ac­tions are increas­ing­ly chan­nelled through mon­e­tary trans­ac­tions and mate­ri­al­ist con­sump­tion – serves as an excla­ma­tion. This is a call for fur­ther and sus­tained action against this odi­ous sym­bol of aggres­sive glob­al cap­i­tal­ism and the gen­tri­fi­ca­tion that is seep­ing into our city.

Already full of emp­ty shops, at such a finan­cial­ly unsta­ble time, if it doesn’t crum­ble of its own accord, this dis­ease must be purged from the city,

BUY LESS, LIVE MORE!

Take your own actions.

Whis­tle crews, musi­cal chair shop inva­sions, dress like the drones that make this sham­bol­ic cir­cus pos­si­ble and cause some mis­chief!

Join the Zom­bie march this Sat­ur­day the 27th of Sept, assem­ble 11am at the Band­stand in Cas­tle Park, sham­ble & lurch from noon.

Buy Noth­ing: Steal Some­thing Day: http://www.buynothingday.co.uk/

CABOT CIRCUS on Indy­media: http://bristol.indymedia.org/article/688930

rossport solidarity action at irish consulate in cardiff & Shell in London

Whilst the soli­taire is in for repairs, we’d thought we’d remind the gov­ern­ment that activists haven’t tak­en their eye off the ball. We also thought we would ded­i­cate this action to Mau­ra.

Cardiff Rossport solidarityWhilst the soli­taire is in for repairs, we’d thought we’d remind the gov­ern­ment that activists haven’t tak­en their eye off the ball. We also thought we would ded­i­cate this action to Mau­ra.

About 12 cli­mate activists from the West­side (thats south wales, bris­tol & bath) occu­pied the irish con­sulate in cardiff for an hour or two today (wednes­day 24th sept). About 5 got into the recep­tion and altered the dec­o­ra­tions, and demand­ed to see the con­sul, who was­n’t at home (to us any­way). Mean­while, out­side a ban­ner pre­vi­ous­ly used on the welsh pipeline cam­paign was held on the steps of the con­sulate, ignor­ing the ridicu­lous­ly irate secu­ri­ty chief :“calm down mate, we are only hold­ing a ban­ner”. Most staff from the build­ing hap­pi­ly took leaflets.

—-

Ban­ner Dropped in Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Ross­port & Mau­ra

On Wednes­day evening a women’s col­lec­tive climbed 2 lamp­posts direct­ly out­side of Shell’s head­quar­ters in Lon­don. After unfurl­ing the ban­ner the police came in large num­bers and harassed the sup­port­ers on the ground. A live­ly protest ensued for about 20 min­utes whilst the climbers stayed up and peo­ple on the ground chant­ed. Infor­ma­tion was giv­en to the folks walk­ing near the area about Ross­port & Shell’s cam­paign of destruc­tion in Coun­ty Mayo.

The police even­tu­al­ly man­aged to cut the ban­ner down. The climbers were arrest­ed and lat­er released with­out charge.

We did this action to show sup­port for the ongo­ing strug­gle of res­i­dents and sup­port­ers in Mayo to send Shell to Hell (or to Sea, depend­ing on when and who). Since late 2000 there has been an on-going attempt by mul­ti-nation­als and the Irish state to destroy a beau­ti­ful remote coastal area in the coun­ty Mayo with a tox­ic refin­ery and high pres­sure pro­duc­tion gas pipeline. The local res­i­dents and sup­port­ers have lead an inspir­ing and sus­tained cam­paign against this con­struc­tion. In the last few weeks there has been a wave of action to stop the pipe-lay­ing ship, the soli­taire, from build­ing. Includ­ed in this was the inspir­ing hunger strike of local school teacher Mau­ra Har­ring­ton.

At the end of last week the soli­taire left the bay for ‘essen­tial repairs.’ Mau­ra came off hunger strike and the cam­paign is work­ing on ensur­ing that it does not come back. For more infor­ma­tion see:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/09/409002.html
http://struggle.ws/rsc/

Camp Bling announces emergency relaunch/new website on third anniversary.

Press release:

Camp Bling ‘Save Pri­o­ry Park!’ road cam­paign

Wednes­day 17th Sep­tem­ber 2008

Con­tact Camp Bling direct­ly on 07866 967601

Or e‑mail camp.bling@yahoo.co.uk

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE.

——————————————————————————————————–

Camp Bling announces emer­gency relaunch on third anniver­sary.

Press release:

Camp Bling ‘Save Pri­o­ry Park!’ road cam­paign

Wednes­day 17th Sep­tem­ber 2008

Con­tact Camp Bling direct­ly on 07866 967601

Or e‑mail camp.bling@yahoo.co.uk

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE.

——————————————————————————————————–

Camp Bling announces emer­gency relaunch on third anniver­sary.

‘The glob­al sit­u­a­tion has changed dra­mat­i­cal­ly since the protest site was first set up specif­i­cal­ly to stop the road — both in terms of the over­all envi­ron­men­tal impacts and accel­er­at­ing pace.’ (www.campbling.org)

Pro­test­ers and sup­port­ers at Camp Bling will mark a third full year of occu­pa­tion to stop the con­tro­ver­sial Pri­o­ry Cres­cent road widen­ing on Tues­day 23rd Sep­tem­ber 2008 with an emer­gency relaunch to address envi­ron­men­tal cat­a­stro­phe as it unfolds and accel­er­ates around the world.

The camp are set to go live with new web­site: http://www.campbling.org on the anniver­sary date, to sup­port their objec­tive to stop the road widen­ing, whilst at the same time tak­ing a dra­mat­ic new turn to dis­cuss crit­i­cal issues such as con­sumer cul­ture, peak oil pro­duc­tion, mass extinc­tion, and the appro­pri­ate response to these and oth­er crises. (1)

Res­i­dent Gavin said, ‘we could not have pre­dict­ed how quick­ly the world was going to change when we first set up Camp Bling three years ago. Now we feel com­pelled to address the fun­da­men­tal need for lifestyle change dur­ing the com­ing crash, as west­ern soci­ety over­shoots the eco­log­i­cal lim­its of the earth.’

Lat­est mem­ber Paul added, ‘fund­ing towards the £13.5m Pri­o­ry Cres­cent scheme is unlike­ly to be grant­ed to the Coun­cil before 2011. A fur­ther three years defend­ing the site will pro­vide ample oppor­tu­ni­ty for us to begin to push a far more rad­i­cal agen­da. We have always walked the walk — now is the time for us to start talk­ing all about it.’ (2)

Peo­ple are invit­ed to vis­it both the vir­tu­al world of the new web­site, plus the real one of the road protest as the Blingers dig in for a fourth win­ter, with a com­pre­hen­sive revamp and ongo­ing build­ing work planned, and sup­port there­fore still very much required from the local com­mu­ni­ty.

——————————————————————————————-

ENDS.

NOTES TO EDITORS:

1) See ‘Tip­ping points’ page at http://www.campbling.org/ for lat­est back­ground data and def­i­n­i­tion of peak oil the­o­ry.

2) Southend Bor­ough Coun­cil lat­est Pri­o­ry Cres­cent cost esti­mate of £11.5m pre­sent­ed to Depart­ment for Trans­port does not include £2m already spent to date.

Nigerian militants halt oil war — round-up & reports

21st Sep­tem­ber 2008
Nige­ri­a’s main mil­i­tant group has declared a cease­fire, fol­low­ing a week of attacks on oil instal­la­tions in the coun­try’s oil-rich Niger Delta.

The Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (Mend) said it had tak­en the deci­sion after appeals from trib­al lead­ers in the region.

MEND in red21st Sep­tem­ber 2008
Nige­ri­a’s main mil­i­tant group has declared a cease­fire, fol­low­ing a week of attacks on oil instal­la­tions in the coun­try’s oil-rich Niger Delta.

The Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (Mend) said it had tak­en the deci­sion after appeals from trib­al lead­ers in the region.

But it warned it would end the truce if attacked by the army again.

Mend declared “war” on Nige­ri­a’s oil indus­try last Sun­day after a fierce mil­i­tary raid on one of its bases.

Mend vowed to “con­tin­ue to nib­ble every day at the oil infra­struc­ture in Nige­ria until the oil exports reach zero”.

“The mil­i­tary and the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria whose unpro­voked attack on our posi­tion prompt­ed this oil war are no match for a guer­ril­la insur­gency of this kind,” it said in a state­ment.

In the past week, mil­i­tants have attacked gas plants, oil instal­la­tions and pipelines in some of the worst vio­lence for two years. [note main­stream news report lan­guage]

The attacks forced oil giant Shell to declare a force majeure on Sat­ur­day — which frees it from con­trac­tu­al oblig­a­tions — on crude oil ship­ments from its Niger Delta facil­i­ties.

Nige­ri­a’s oil pro­duc­tion has been cut by 20% because of unrest in the region over the past few years.

——

MEND ”attacks oil facil­i­ties” in response to mil­i­tary offen­sive

Declar­ing an ”oil war” in response to Sat­ur­day’s attacks on its bases by the mil­i­tary, Niger­ian oil region’s largest mil­i­tant group said Sun­day it had car­ried out ”dead­ly attacks” on the oil indus­try in Rivers state.

In a state­ment e‑mailed to the media, the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) said the attacks, which it tagged ”Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa”, were car­ried out on the Soku Gas Plant, part of Nige­ri­a’s Liq­ue­fied Nat­ur­al Gas project and the Chevron Plat­form in Kula, among oth­ers.

It also said the MEND fight­ers killed over 22 sol­diers.

React­ing to the claim, the spokesman for the Joint Task Force mil­i­tary unit in Rivers state, Lt.-Col. Sagir Musa, con­firmed the MEND attacks on the facil­i­ties, which he tagged ”flam­boy­ant attacks”, in the ear­ly hours of Sun­day.

Musa said the mil­i­tants met ”active resis­tance from the troops guard­ing the facil­i­ties, ”with casu­al­ty on the mis­cre­ants’ side”.

He said no sol­dier was killed while only one sol­dier was wound­ed, say­ing any infor­ma­tion to the con­trary was ”mis­chie­vous pro­pa­gan­da”.

In its state­ment, MEND said: ”About 0100 Hrs, today, Sep­tem­ber 14, 2008, Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa com­menced with heav­i­ly armed fight­ers in hun­dreds of war boats fil­ing out from dif­fer­ent MEND bases across the Niger Delta in sol­i­dar­i­ty to car­ry out destruc­tive and dead­ly attacks on the oil indus­try in Rivers state.

”By dawn, destroyed oil flow sta­tions, gun boats, burst pipelines, dead and injured sol­diers trailed in the after­math of the ‘hur­ri­cane’. Some spe­cif­ic loca­tions include the Soku Gas Plant, Chevron Plat­form at Kula, over 22 well armed sol­diers sent as rein­force­ment were inter­cept­ed, killed and dis­pos­sessed of their weapons, a major crude trunk pipeline at Nem­be creek was blown up at sev­er­al points,” MEND claimed.

It said the oper­a­tion would con­tin­ue until the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria ”appre­ci­ates that the solu­tion to peace in the Niger Delta is jus­tice, respect and dia­logue”.

MEND warned all inter­na­tion­al oil and gas load­ing ves­sels enter­ing the region to drop anchor in the high sea or divert else­where until fur­ther notice, say­ing fail­ure to com­ply is ”tak­ing a fool­hardy risk of attack and destruc­tion of the ves­sel”.

It also repeat­ed its call on oil com­pa­nies oper­at­ing in the Niger Delta to evac­u­ate their staff from their field facil­i­ties, adding that the brief was not to cap­ture hostages but to bring those struc­tures to the ground.

On Sat­ur­day, MEND said the mil­i­tary launched a mas­sive ‘aer­i­al and marine attacks’ on its bases in the oil region, leav­ing sev­en mil­i­tants dead and sev­er­al oth­ers wound­ed.

It also claimed that some of the 22 oil work­ers tak­en hostage by pirates last week but res­cued by MEND were injured in the fight­ing. The 22 work­ers include 5 expa­tri­ates from Britain, South Africa and Ukraine.

Musa also con­firmed Sat­ur­day’s attacks, which he said were in response to an ear­li­er attack on a mil­i­tary patrol by the mil­i­tants.

——

Shell Facil­i­ty comes under Attack in “Oil War”

MEND, mil­i­tantsOil multi­na­tion­al Shell, has again suf­fered a major set back fol­low­ing an attack in on its oil facil­i­ty in Rivers state—Nigeria’s oil region—by a promi­nent Niger Delta mil­i­tant group, MEND, on Mon­day.

The attack is com­ing a day after the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) declared “an oil war” in the oil-rich region.

MEND says that the attack is a response to what it describes as unpro­voked aer­i­al and marine attacks by the Niger­ian Army on one of its posi­tion.

Spokesman of the Joint Mil­i­tary Task Force in Rivers State, Lieu­tenant-Colonel Sagir Musa says that the facil­i­ty was attacked and set alight just after mid­night with “dyna­mite and oth­er explo­sives,” but “the attack was beat­en back.

Colonel Musa says an exchange of gun­fire pit­ted armed men who arrived on a dozen or so speed­boats against a Joint Mil­i­tary Task Force.

The most promi­nent mil­i­tant group in oil-rich south­ern Nige­ria on Sun­day said it had declared an “oil war” and threat­ened all inter­na­tion­al indus­try ves­sels that approach the region.

MEND said in an email to the media it has code-named its oper­a­tion Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa, com­plete­ly razed down the Shell Alakiri oil flow sta­tion.

“About 0100 Hrs, today … Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa com­menced with heav­i­ly armed fight­ers in hun­dreds of war boats fil­ing out from dif­fer­ent MEND bases across the Niger Delta in sol­i­dar­i­ty to car­ry out destruc­tive and dead­ly attacks on the oil indus­try in Rivers state,” the group said.

The “war” was in response to what it says were unpro­voked aer­i­al and marine attacks by the army Sat­ur­day on one of its posi­tions.

Lieu­tenant-Colonel Sagir, ear­li­er Sun­day con­firmed what he said was an abort­ed attack on the Robertkiri facil­i­ty oper­at­ed in Rivers state by US oil giant Chevron.

Chevron con­firmed a shoot­ing inci­dent at the Robertkiri facil­i­ty but said it did not have infor­ma­tion to sug­gest the attack was direct­ed specif­i­cal­ly at the com­pa­ny. It said no expa­tri­ate work­ers were involved in the inci­dent and pro­duc­tion was not impact­ed.

“As a result of on-going pipeline repair work the Robertkiri facil­i­ty … had been shut-in pri­or to the inci­dent. The shoot­ing inci­dent has not had any addi­tion­al impact on cur­rent lev­els of … pro­duc­tion,” com­pa­ny spokesman Scott Walk­er said in an email.

MEND how­ev­er, said that dur­ing the Chevron attack it “inter­cept­ed, killed and dis­pos­sessed of their weapons 22 well armed sol­diers” who were sent in as rein­force­ments.

Chevron said that while none of its employ­ees was hurt as a result of the shoot­ing, ini­tial reports sug­gest that two employ­ees of a local marine ves­sel sup­ply com­pa­ny, Dah­nariq Nige­ria Ltd — which sup­plies small ves­sels to Chevron — might have died.

Roy­al Dutch Shell said it was still inves­ti­gat­ing reports of the attacks on its facil­i­ties.

“The oper­a­tion will con­tin­ue until the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria appre­ci­ates that the solu­tion to peace in the Niger Delta is jus­tice, respect and dia­logue,” MEND said.

The group warned all ves­sels to stay on the high seas and not to come into port. The Niger Delta is an area of creeks and swamps the size of Scot­land locat­ed on the Gulf of Guinea.

“All inter­na­tion­al oil and gas load­ing ves­sels enter­ing the region are warned to drop anchor in the high sea or divert else­where until fur­ther notice. Fail­ure to com­ply is tak­ing a fool­hardy risk of attack and destruc­tion of the ves­sel.”

It also reit­er­at­ed the warn­ing it issued Sat­ur­day to oil com­pa­nies telling them to evac­u­ate their staff from field facil­i­ties.

“Again, we are ask­ing that oil com­pa­nies evac­u­ate their staff from their field facil­i­ties because the brief is not to cap­ture hostages but to bring these struc­tures to the ground,” MEND said.

MEND has made sim­i­lar dra­mat­ic threats in the past about destroy­ing oil facil­i­ties and halt­ing oil exports from the region total­ly but has not so far made good on them, although it has kept up its cam­paign of kid­nap­pings and sab­o­tage.

Tech­ni­cal­ly how­ev­er the group is capa­ble of very ambi­tious attacks. In June its fight­ers attacked Bon­ga, Shel­l’s flag­ship field, 120 kilo­me­tres (74 miles) off the coast of Nige­ria. Until that attack deep­MEND, Niger Delta off­shore facil­i­ties had been thought to be out of reach of mil­i­tant groups.

Ear­li­er this week, Pres­i­dent Umaru Yar’Ad­ua announced the cre­ation of a min­istry for the Niger Delta, in an attempt to bring peace to the region.

The mil­i­tants dis­missed the plan, say­ing 40 oth­er min­istries in exis­tence, have done lit­tle to improve life for Nige­ri­ans.

The kid­nap­ping of oil work­ers and sab­o­tage of oil facil­i­ties have reduced the coun­try’s crude pro­duc­tion by about a quar­ter over the past two years, which cur­rent­ly exports around two mil­lion bar­rels of oil dai­ly.

Unrest in the Niger Delta cost Nige­ria its posi­tion as Africa’s biggest oil pro­duc­er. In April it was over­tak­en by Ango­la, accord­ing to the Orga­ni­za­tion of Petro­le­um Export­ing Coun­tries (OPEC).

MEND Fight­ers Destroy Shell Facil­i­ty In Dawn Raid

Less than 12 hours after mil­i­tants kid­napped Pro­fes­sor Bari­nen­me Fakae, the Vice Chan­cel­lor of the Rivers State Uni­ver­si­ty of Sci­ence and Tech­nol­o­gy, RSUST, at about 7 p.m., last night, in Ogo­ni, while return­ing to Port Har­court, mil­i­tants, in 10 speed­boats, attacked Shell flow sta­tion at Alakiri, at about 1235 a.m., today, in an oper­a­tion” Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa”, Sep­tem­ber 15, 2008.

Accord­ing to MEND, in state­ment post­ed online to PMNews, in Port Har­court, the attack is part of its “con­tin­ued destruc­tive sweep through Rivers state of Nige­ria.”

The group added: “the eye of the storm struck a direct hit at the expan­sive Alakiri flow sta­tion com­plex oper­at­ed by the Shell Petro­le­um Devel­op­ment Company.The facil­i­ty was still burn­ing when we left.”

How­ev­er, Lt. Col. Sagir Musa, the spokesman of the Joint Mil­i­tary Task­force, JTF, spoke on the ear­ly morn­ing attack, con­firm­ing that the attack last­ed for about an hour.

He said the mil­i­tants car­ried out the oper­a­tion with the mas­sive use of bombs, dyna­mites and oth­er weapons of war. Lt. Sagir Musa said that the attack was repelled and the mil­i­tants suf­fered heavy casu­al­ties. He, how­ev­er, feared that the flow­sta­tion must have caught fire “as a result of the cross­fire dur­ing the encounter.”

He claimed that there was no casu­al­ty on the side of the JTF. Because of the trech­er­ous ter­rain and the dif­fi­cul­ty in get­ting authen­tic infor­ma­tion as to the true casu­al­ties in the bat­tle between the mil­i­tants and the JTF, there has been a pro­pa­gan­da war. About atwo weeks ago, the mil­i­tants claimed that they killed 26 sol­diers, but the army head­quar­ters said it was a lie and that none of its bases was attacked.

It’s real­ly dif­fi­cult to get inde­pen­dent con­fir­ma­tion in terms of casu­al­ties as usu­al­ly claimed. But Jomo Gbo­mo, the spokesman for MEND, claimed that “heav­i­ly armed fight­ers from the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta stormed the facil­i­ty and have razed it to the ground as promised. The fool­hardy work­ers and sol­diers who did not heed our warn­ing per­ished inside the sta­tion.

“Resis­tance was nonex­is­tent as the sol­diers fled their dug-in posi­tions, leav­ing behind their col­leagues and the work­ers inside the facil­i­ty to their fate.”

The MEND spokesman fur­ther cau­tioned those in the oil indus­try to steer clear of all oil facil­i­ties in the region because of the”Oil War” it has declared against the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ment for allow­ing its troops to bomb its base at Elem-Tombia, in Dege­ma Local Gov­ern­ment area on Sat­ur­day, 13 Sep­tem­ber.

The camp is owned by a pop­u­lar mili­tia leader known as FARAH. MEND fur­ther warned that “A word is enough for the wise. MEND reit­er­ates its pre­vi­ous warn­ings to ALL oil work­ers in the entire Niger Delta region to evac­u­ate from oil facil­i­ties and halt pro­duc­tion with imme­di­ate effect or they will have them­selves to blame.”

The mil­i­tant group called on “the wives of sol­diers to con­vince their hus­bands to aban­don this duty of injus­tice to avoid becom­ing wid­ows. Fam­i­lies of oil work­ers should offer the same advice. Inter­na­tion­al ves­sels should not come in to load crude oil. Own­ers of such ves­sels should be warned that the ves­sels will suf­fer the same fate of the Alakiri flow sta­tion. Hostages will not be tak­en. Do not be deceived. The Niger­ian mil­i­tary can­not pro­tect you.”

Ear­li­er at the week­end, against the back­drop of mil­i­tary bom­bard­ment of Elem-Tombia, the camp of a gang leader, George Farah, at about 9a.m., Sat­ur­day, that led to uncon­firmed casu­al­ties, the group said it has declared all out oil war tagged “Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa” in the region.

The group’s spokesman, Jomo Gbo­mo, in an e‑mail to PMNews in Port Har­court, said that the oper­a­tion was in sol­i­dar­i­ty with its camp that that was bom­bard­ed by the Joint Task Force.

Accord­ing to the online state­ment, “Fol­low­ing a pre­vi­ous warn­ing that any attack on our posi­tions will be tan­ta­mount to a dec­la­ra­tion of an oil war, the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) has declared an oil war in response to the unpro­voked aer­i­al and marine attacks on a MEND posi­tion in Rivers state of Nige­ria on Sep­tem­ber 13, 2008 by the armed forces of Nige­ria.

“About 0100 Hrs, today, Sep­tem­ber 14, 2008, Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa com­menced with heav­i­ly armed fight­ers in hun­dreds of war boats fil­ing out from dif­fer­ent MEND bases across the Niger Delta in sol­i­dar­i­ty to car­ry out destruc­tive and dead­ly attacks on the oil indus­try in Rivers state. The group furher claimed that “By dawn, destroyed oil flow sta­tions, gun boats, burst pipelines, dead and injured sol­diers trailed in the after­math of the ‘hur­ri­cane’.

“Some spe­cif­ic loca­tions include the Soku Gas Plant, Chevron Plat­form at Kula, over 22 well armed sol­diers sent as rein­force­ment were inter­cept­ed, killed and dis­pos­sessed of their weapons, a major crude trunk pipeline at Nem­be creek was blown up at sev­er­al points.”

MEND vowed that “The oper­a­tion will con­tin­ue until the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria appre­ci­ates that the solu­tion to peace in the Niger Delta is jus­tice, respect and dia­logue. This mil­i­tary-style bul­ly­ing belongs to the past 50 years when the Niger Delta peo­ple respond­ed only with their mouths, pens and plac­ards.” MEND fur­ther stat­ed: “All inter­na­tion­al oil and gas load­ing ves­sels enter­ing the region are warned to drop anchor in the high sea or divert else­where until fur­ther notice. Fail­ure to com­ply is tak­ing a fool­hardy risk of attack and destruc­tion of the ves­sel. Again, we are ask­ing that oil com­pa­nies evac­u­ate their staff from their field facil­i­ties because the brief is not to cap­ture hostages but to bring these struc­tures to the ground.”

Lt. Col. Sagir Musa, the spokesman for JTF, told a local radio sta­tion in Port Har­court that it repelled an attempt by mil­i­tants to attack the Amer­i­can oil giant, Chevron facil­i­ty, in the Okri­ka area of Rivers State.

Mean­while, Mr Bless­ing Wik­i­na, the Act­ing Chief Press Sec­re­tary to Gov­er­nor Chibuike Amaechi, has con­demned the kid­nap of Prof. Fakae last night and called for his uncon­di­tion­al release. Mr. Wik­i­na told P.M.News in a tele­phone inter­view this morn­ing that “the kid­nap of an eru­dite Pro­fes­sor like the RSUST VC is a dis­ser­vice to human­i­ty and cer­tain­ly not part Niger Delta strug­gle.”

He lament­ed that “for a VC who has been involved in human capac­i­ty build­ing for our youths to face the chal­lenges of tomor­row can­not have his free­dom cur­tailed by the same youths he has been labor­ing for all his life as a uni­ver­si­ty teacher from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Nige­ria, Nsuk­ka as a lec­tur­er, Bori Poly­tech­nic as a Provost and until recent­ly, the VC of RSUST appoint­ed by Gov­er­nor Amae­hi to change the for­tunes of the instu­tion.” No group has claimed respon­si­bil­i­ty for the kid­nap.

Niger­ian mil­i­tants launch new attacks in “oil war”
15 Sep 2008

Niger­ian mil­i­tants on Mon­day attacked oil facil­i­ties, killing a guard and forc­ing the evac­u­a­tion of near­ly 100 work­ers, in a third day of fight­ing with secu­ri­ty forces that has dis­rupt­ed oil out­put.

Secu­ri­ty sources said the three days of clash­es were the heav­i­est between the two sides since the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) launched a cam­paign of vio­lence in ear­ly 2006 say­ing it want­ed more local con­trol of the impov­er­ished region’s oil wealth.

MEND declared an “oil war” on Sun­day and warned all oil work­ers to leave the delta imme­di­ate­ly, threat­en­ing to dis­rupt pro­duc­tion fur­ther in the world’s eighth largest oil exporter.

“MEND reit­er­ates its pre­vi­ous warn­ings to all oil work­ers in the entire Niger Delta region to evac­u­ate from oil facil­i­ties and halt pro­duc­tion with imme­di­ate effect or they will have them­selves to blame,” the group said in an e‑mailed state­ment.

Two secu­ri­ty sources in the oil indus­try, who did not want to be named, said more than 100 peo­ple may have been killed by the fight­ing, which has spread to at least sev­en vil­lages in Rivers state.

Up to 115,000 bar­rels per day of oil pro­duc­tion may have been halt­ed since Sat­ur­day, gov­ern­ment offi­cials said. A fifth of the OPEC mem­ber’s oil out­put has already been shut down for the last two years due to the vio­lence.

Oil traders shrugged off the news as prices briefly hit a sev­en-month low near $94 a bar­rel on Mon­day.

GUNBOAT ATTACK

Around 10 mil­i­tant gun­boats attacked a Roy­al Dutch Shell flow sta­tion and gas plant at Alakiri in Rivers state ear­ly Mon­day morn­ing, a mil­i­tary spokesman said.

“The attack last­ed over an hour. Dyna­mite and bombs were mas­sive­ly det­o­nat­ed by the mis­cre­ants,” said Lieu­tenant Colonel Sagir Musa, spokesman for the mil­i­tary task force in Rivers state. “The sit­u­a­tion is being close­ly mon­i­tored and is under con­trol.”

A Shell spokes­woman said a secu­ri­ty guard was killed and four oth­er peo­ple were wound­ed in the attack.

The com­pa­ny has reduced the num­ber of employ­ees at some of its Niger­ian oil­fields, but it could not spec­i­fy how many or from which fields due to secu­ri­ty rea­sons.

An indus­try source said near­ly 100 staff were evac­u­at­ed from the facil­i­ty.

Nige­ri­a’s senior oil work­ers’ union PENGASSAN, rep­re­sent­ing around 25,000 employ­ees, is con­sid­er­ing the evac­u­a­tion of its mem­bers in the Niger Delta due to secu­ri­ty con­cerns, said Bayo Olowoshile, the group’s sec­re­tary gen­er­al.

CASUALTIES

Musa said mil­i­tants incurred heavy loss­es in the last three days and no sol­diers had been killed. He would not spec­i­fy the num­ber of casu­al­ties. MEND said at least 22 sol­diers and sev­en oth­ers were killed since Sat­ur­day. It was not pos­si­ble to inde­pen­dent­ly ver­i­fy claims from either side.

The two oil indus­try secu­ri­ty sources said the fight­ing involved the army, navy and air force.

“This is just the start of a major mil­i­tary offen­sive in the delta that is like­ly to con­tin­ue for the next cou­ple of weeks,” a secu­ri­ty source said.

“The mil­i­tary has declined to say how many peo­ple have died in fear of whip­ping up pub­lic sen­ti­ment against them,” he added.

Musa on Sun­day denied the mil­i­tary had launched a major offen­sive, say­ing it was respond­ing to assaults from mil­i­tants. MEND said the mil­i­tary attacks were unpro­voked.

The Niger Delta is a vast net­work of nar­row creeks and remote vil­lages, and ini­tial reports of fight­ing are often con­fused. The mil­i­tary and the mil­i­tants reg­u­lar­ly accuse each oth­er of pro­pa­gan­da when clash­es take place.

MEND has also attacked a Chevron oil plat­form and Shell-oper­at­ed pipelines and gas plant in the last three days.

The dete­ri­o­rat­ing secu­ri­ty sit­u­a­tion in the delta, home to Nige­ri­a’s oil sec­tor, is con­sid­ered to be the biggest hin­drance to eco­nom­ic growth in Africa’s most pop­u­lous coun­try.
——

MEND ”attacks” major oil pipeline as ‘oil war’ con­tin­ues in Nige­ria
16/09/2008

The ‘oil war’ declared by the Niger Delta’s largest mil­i­tant group entered day four Tues­day with the group claim­ing a fresh attack on a major crude oil pipeline oper­at­ed by Shell at Bakana Front in Dege­ma coun­cil area of Rivers state Mon­day night.

The Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND), which declared the war on Sat­ur­day in response to a mil­i­tary offen­sive against it, said in a state­ment e‑mailed to the media Tues­day that the pipeline was destroyed by its ‘det­o­na­tion engi­neers’ backed by heav­i­ly-armed fight­ers using ‘high explo­sives’.

The mil­i­tary Joint Task Force (JTF) oper­at­ing in the oil region denied any attack took place.

But spokesman, Lt.-Col. Sagir Musa, said the mil­i­tary thwart­ed an attempt by mil­i­tants rid­ing in six speed boats to attack Chevron’s Idama flow sta­tion at about 1am local time Tues­day.

”The attack was com­mend­ably and hero­ical­ly thwart­ed by JTF troops on guard at the sta­tion. Three mil­i­tants’ boats were shat­tered when own troops unwill­ing­ly used RPG to foil the attack. Two boats were sunk with all the occu­pants aboard,” Musa said, adding that only 1 sol­dier was wound­ed in attack.

Both sides have been mak­ing claims and counter-claims since the mil­i­tary launched aer­i­al, land and sea attack on the mil­i­tants’ posi­tion Sat­ur­day, say­ing it was only in response to attacks by the mil­i­tants.

But sources said the mil­i­tary had decid­ed to take on the mil­i­tants to stop, once and for all, the threat they posed to oil pro­duc­tion and peace in the restive region, where MEND’s attacks have slashed oil pro­duc­tion by 20 per cent.

Since Sat­ur­day, MEND claimed to have attack sev­er­al oil pipelines and facil­i­ties owned by Chevron, Shell and the Liq­ue­fied Nat­ur­al Gas (LNG) project, as part of an ‘oil war’ aimed at crip­pling Nige­ri­a’s oil pro­duc­tion.

Mean­while, MEND said it would soon release the two South Africans who were kid­napped by pirates in the region last week, fol­low­ing an appeal from the wife of its leader Hen­ry Okah, who is cur­rent­ly being tried in Nige­ria for gun run­ning, trea­son and oth­er charges.

The South Africans were part of the 22 oil work­ers ‘res­cued’ from kid­nap­pers by MEND. Oth­ers include British, Ukrain­ian and Niger­ian cit­i­zens.

”(Mrs.) Azu­ka Okah, who has arrived into Nige­ria to per­son­al­ly press for their release, has informed us of the respect and hos­pi­tal­i­ty she and her chil­dren have received in South Africa which she con­sid­ers home, since the unjust incar­cer­a­tion of her hus­band in Sep­tem­ber 3, 2007.

”We are impressed by the South African gov­ern­men­t’s respect for the rule of law as some oth­er coun­tries such as Ango­la or Nige­ria would have treat­ed the fam­i­ly dif­fer­ent­ly.

”In con­sid­er­a­tion of the above, MEND will be rec­i­p­ro­cat­ing the ges­ture by releas­ing the two hostages to the care of the South African gov­ern­ment rep­re­sen­ta­tive at the ear­li­est con­ve­nience after work­ing out the modal­i­ties, includ­ing safe­ty con­cerns since the creek is now a war zone,” MEND said in a sep­a­rate state­ment.

——

MEND attacks Shell flow sta­tion as ‘oil war’ con­tin­ues in Niger Delta
17/09/2008

Lagos, Nige­ria — Mil­i­tants using dyna­mites and bombs destroyed Shel­l’s Oru­biri flow sta­tion in Rivers state in Nige­ri­a’s Niger Delta oil region Tues­day night in con­tin­u­a­tion of the ‘oil war’ which they declared as a reprisal for the mil­i­tary offen­sive launched against them on Sat­ur­day.

A state­ment e‑mailed to jour­nal­ists by the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) said mil­i­tants from the group as well as the rival Niger Delta Vol­un­teer Force (NDVF) car­ried out the attack at 2200hrs.

MEND said all the sol­diers on guard at the facil­i­ty were killed and that their house­boat was destroyed.

Spokesman for the Joint Task Force deployed to the region. Lt.-Col. Sagir Musa, con­firmed the attack in his own state­ment, but said no sol­dier was killed.

Musa said mil­i­tants in eight speed boats attacked the facil­i­ty and ”det­o­nat­ed dyna­mites, bombs and lobbed some pieces of hand grenade on the facil­i­ty”.

”It is feared that the facil­i­ty might have caught fire due to intense, spo­radic gun shots and mas­sive dyna­mites and bomb explo­sion,” the mil­i­tary spokesman said.

Mean­while, MEND has repeat­ed its warn­ings to oil com­pa­nies to evac­u­ate their staffers from facil­i­ties in the region, say­ing the oper­a­tion — tagged Hur­ri­cane Bar­bar­rosa — would soon spread from Rivers to oth­er states in the region.

Tues­day night’s attack was the lat­est in a series launched by the region’s largest mil­i­tant group since Sat­ur­day’s air, land and sea offen­sive against the ram­pag­ing mil­i­tants, whose attacks have cut Nige­ri­a’s oil pro­duc­tion by one fifth.

The mil­i­tary has scoffed at the threat by the mil­i­tants to crip­ple Nige­ri­a’s oil pro­duc­tion through their lat­est attacks, say­ing they (mil­i­tary) are capa­ble of defend­ing the ter­ri­to­r­i­al integri­ty of Nige­ria from inter­nal and exter­nal aggres­sion.

——

Mil­i­tants Hit Shell Again, Destroy Anoth­er Pipeline

Less than 24 hours after the vis­it of top Defence Chiefs, led by Air Mar­shal Paul Dike, to mil­i­tary instal­la­tions in Rivers state, MEND has alleged­ly bombed and destroyed a major pipeline at the Eleme-Kal­abari Cawthorne Chan­nel axis, belong­ing to Shell Petro­le­um Devel­op­ment Com­pa­ny, SPDC.

The group also stat­ed that it has released two South African hostages ear­li­er kid­napped by peo­ple the group called sea pirates, unharmed.

Accord­ing to MEND spokesman, Jomo Gbo­mo: “At 18:30hrs today, Sep­tem­ber 18, 2008, fight­ers from the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND), using explo­sives destroyed a major pipeline belong­ing to Shell Devel­op­ment Com­pa­ny at the Eleme-Kal­abari Cawthorne Chan­nel axis in Rivers State of Nige­ria.”

MEND fur­ther claimed that, “a gun­boat patrol that hap­pened to bump into the MEND fight­ers begged for their lives and showed their mag­a­zines to prove that they had not fired from their guns. They were spared and allowed to go, but not until after they had pledged loy­al­ty to the strug­gle and denounced the crim­i­nal­i­ty of the oil com­pa­nies and the gov­ern­ment.”

MEND accused Niger­ian secu­ri­ty agen­cies of lying that they had ear­li­er secured the release of the South Africans abduct­ed by sea pirates. The group stat­ed that it “can cat­e­gor­i­cal­ly con­firm that the two South African hostages res­cued by MEND from sea pirates have been released unharmed today, Sep­tem­ber 18, 2008. The duo were hand­ed over to government’s secret ser­vice offi­cials, who will in turn hand them over to rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the South African High Com­mis­sion in Port Har­court, Rivers State of Nige­ria.

“This gen­uine release puts to rest spec­u­la­tions and anx­i­ety of the fam­i­lies and the peo­ple of South Africa caused by the false state­ment from the obtuse spokesman of the mil­i­tary Joint Task “Fraud” (JTF).

“In this case, the Army had hoped to cash in on a delib­er­ate mis­in­for­ma­tion we put out and take the cred­it for a role they had no part in.” MEND, in two e‑mails sent to P.M.News in Port Har­court, stat­ed that: “We have been won­der­ing how fool­ish he must have looked when they could not pro­duce the hostages they said were released with­out any ran­som pay­ment.”

The rebel group said the release of the South African hostages expos­es the claims by the Army that it secured the release as untrue. “Nige­ri­ans and the world can now see that we have a mil­i­tary of deceit that have lied about their com­bat loss­es and gains, role in extra-judi­cial killings, rape, geno­cide and oil theft.”

As at press time P.M.News was not able to get an offi­cial reac­tion from the Joint Task Force spokesman, Lt. Col. Sagir Musa, as calls to his mobile lines did not go through.

——

Nige­ria mil­i­tants wage most intense oil war for years

Sept 20 — Niger­ian mil­i­tants said on Sat­ur­day they had destroyed anoth­er major oil pipeline in the Niger Delta after a week of the most intense attacks against Africa’s biggest oil and gas indus­try for years.

The Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) said it had attacked a pipeline oper­at­ed by Roy­al Dutch Shell at Bugu­ma Front in Rivers state late on Fri­day and warned its cam­paign was not over.

A Shell spokes­woman in Nige­ria said the com­pa­ny was inves­ti­gat­ing the claim, but gave no fur­ther details.

The Anglo-Dutch giant, the com­pa­ny hard­est hit by the vio­lence, declared a sec­ond force majeure on Bon­ny Light oil ship­ments on Fri­day fol­low­ing the week’s unrest but gave no details on pro­duc­tion.

“MEND will con­tin­ue to nib­ble every day at the oil infra­struc­ture in Nige­ria until the oil exports reach zero,” the group said in an e‑mailed state­ment.

MEND fight­ers have hit pipelines, flow sta­tions and oil and gas facil­i­ties in the Niger Delta every day since last Sun­day, when the group declared an “oil war” in response to what it said were mil­i­tary ground and air strikes.

Shell oper­ates onshore in Nige­ria through its SPDC joint ven­ture, of which it holds 30 per­cent while state oil firm NNPC holds 55 per­cent. Local sub­sidiaries of France’s Total and Italy’s Agip hold the rest.

Shell had already been forced to extend a force majeure on Niger­ian Bon­ny Light exports, which frees it from con­trac­tu­al oblig­a­tions, fol­low­ing an attack on a major pipeline in July.

Such inten­si­ty of attacks across the east­ern Niger Delta, a vast net­work of man­grove creeks, makes assess­ing the impact dif­fi­cult as engi­neers scram­ble to inves­ti­gate exact­ly how much pro­duc­tion has been hit in each loca­tion.

Niger­ian gov­ern­ment offi­cials have said pro­duc­tion has fall­en by 150,000 bar­rels per day (bpd) over the past week, and esti­mate the coun­try’s cur­rent out­put at 1.95 mil­lion bpd.

INTENSE AND SUSTAINED

The attacks this week have large­ly been lim­it­ed to Rivers state in the east­ern Niger Delta but MEND has warned it may extend its cam­paign to oth­er areas on- and off-shore.

The vio­lence has been the most intense and sus­tained since MEND first launched its cam­paign of sab­o­tage in ear­ly 2006, and has includ­ed rel­a­tive­ly rare direct con­fronta­tion with the army.

The world oil mar­ket, which has large­ly focused on the fall­out from the cred­it cri­sis, has found some sup­port from the sit­u­a­tion. Prices trad­ed above $100 on Fri­day.

MEND said it had launched this week’s cam­paign — an oper­a­tion it calls “Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa” — in response to air and naval attacks on one of its bases in Rivers state.

“When (Rivers state gov­er­nor Roti­mi) Amaechi took over, the gov­ern­ment just said that they must kill me and my boys,” one mil­i­tant leader, Ateke Tom, told Reuters tele­vi­sion this week.

“That is why we are fight­ing back,” he said, sur­round­ed by heav­i­ly armed fight­ers.

The mil­i­tants want greater devel­op­ment and a bet­ter liv­ing envi­ron­ment after decades of neglect in the delta, where impov­er­ished vil­lagers live among pol­lut­ed land and water.

The unrest is fuelled by a lucra­tive trade in stolen oil worth mil­lions of dol­lars a day.

Secu­ri­ty experts say the region will nev­er be sta­ble unless an alter­na­tive source of income can be found for the gun­men, busi­ness­men, politi­cians and inter­na­tion­al ship­pers all tak­ing their slice of the ille­gal prof­its.

Niger­ian mil­i­tants step up ‘oil war’ claim­ing sixth attack

Sep­tem­ber 20, 2008
Nige­ri­a’s main armed mil­i­tant group Sat­ur­day said it had destroyed a major pipeline run by Roy­al Dutch Shell in the sixth such attack in the past week as it vowed to paral­yse the key oil sec­tor.

The Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND), the main group fight­ing for a greater share of south­ern Nige­ri­a’s oil wealth for local peo­ple, said the attack took place on Fri­day on a “major pipeline” in Rivers state.

It said the pipeline was locat­ed at Bugu­ma Front in the Asari Toru region and was the lat­est tar­get of the “oil war” it launched on Sun­day and has nick­named “Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa.”

“The mil­i­tary and the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria whose unpro­voked attack on our posi­tion prompt­ed this oil war are no match for a guer­ril­la insur­gency of this kind,” it said.

The MEND on Sat­ur­day vowed to “con­tin­ue to nib­ble every day at the oil infra­struc­ture in Nige­ria until the oil exports reach zero.”

Ear­li­er in the week, Shell con­firmed the first attack on its Alakiri flow sta­tion and a sec­ond on the Greater Port Har­court Swamp Line, both on Mon­day.

As the week went on it became pro­gres­sive­ly more tight-lipped, nei­ther con­firm­ing or deny­ing claims of attacks on its Oru­biri flow sta­tion, Rumuekpe pipeline and anoth­er pipeline at the Elem-Kal­abari Cawthorne Chan­nel axis in Rivers state.

Chevron mean­while has con­firmed two “shoot­ing inci­dents” near its facil­i­ties whilst say­ing it has no rea­son to believe it was specif­i­cal­ly tar­get­ed in either attack.

MEND, which has cut Nige­ri­a’s oil out­put by more than one quar­ter since it first emerged in 2006, on Sun­day declared “war” on the oil indus­try, in what it said was a response to an attack by the Niger­ian army on its posi­tions.

It has threat­ened to spread its raids to neigh­bour­ing states.

On Wednes­day, in a rare day­light attack, MEND said it had blown up a major pipeline, which it said it believed belongs to Shell and to Agip of Italy.

The army and MEND have giv­en con­flict­ing ver­sion of many of the inci­dents, MEND nor­mal­ly say­ing the attack was suc­cess­ful and the army insist­ing it was repelled.

One of the main grous­es of MEND is that the oil wealth of Nige­ria, one of Africa’s top petro­le­um exporters, is basi­cal­ly enjoyed by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment and only a frac­tion of it trick­les down to the locals.

It also accus­es oil com­pa­nies of wreak­ing hav­oc on the envi­ron­ment.

MEND spokesman Jomo Gbo­mo on Sat­ur­day claimed to have grass­roots sup­port.

“The impov­er­ished and neglect­ed inhab­i­tants of oil pro­duc­ing com­mu­ni­ties con­sid­er our actions to these struc­tures as good rid­dance to bad rub­bish,” he said.

“Oil explo­ration has brought only pain to them by way of envi­ron­men­tal dam­age (farm­lands, fish­ing and wild life sanc­tu­ar­ies), harass­ment from the mil­i­tary and rape of under-aged girls by sol­diers, extra-judi­cial killings of young men and devel­op­ment and wealth to oth­er parts of the coun­try at their detri­ment.”

MEND has also warned it will attack the coun­try’s two big deep off­shore fields, Shel­l’s Bon­ga — which was hit in June — and Chevron’s Agba­mi, as well as oil and gas tankers in Niger­ian waters.

The lat­est attack claimed by MEND was cit­ed as a fac­tor in Fri­day’s rise in world oil prices to above 100 US dol­lars a bar­rel.

But ana­lysts said the pre­dom­i­nant rea­son was an improve­ment in mar­ket con­fi­dence after efforts to resolve the US-cen­tred world finan­cial cri­sis which brought pre­dic­tions of fur­ther falls in oil demand.

MEND Con­tin­ues “Oil War” With Sixth Attack on Major Pipeline

The Move­ment Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND) in Niger Delta.for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta ( MEND ) Sat­ur­day said it had destroyed a key pipeline run by Roy­al Dutch Shell in the sixth attack in near­ly as many days and vowed to reduce oil exports to “zero”.

Shell react­ed by declar­ing force majeure on its exports from the Bon­ny ter­mi­nal to release it from con­trac­tu­al deliv­ery oblig­a­tions as a result of the lat­est attacks.

MEND, the main group fight­ing for a greater share of south­ern Nige­ri­a’s oil wealth for local peo­ple, said it had destroyed the “major pipeline” in Rivers state late Fri­day.

It said the pipeline was locat­ed at Bugu­ma Front in the Asari Toru region and was the lat­est tar­get of the “oil war” launched ear­li­er this week and nick­named “Hur­ri­cane Bar­barossa”.

“The mil­i­tary and the gov­ern­ment of Nige­ria whose unpro­voked attack on our posi­tion prompt­ed this oil war are no match for a guer­ril­la insur­gency of this kind”.

MEND promised to “con­tin­ue to nib­ble every day at the oil infra­struc­ture in Nige­ria until the oil exports reach zero.”

Oil and gas account for 90 per­cent of for­eign exchange earn­ings in the coun­try.

Pro­duc­tion cur­rent­ly veers between 1.8 and two mil­lion bar­rels a day against 2.6 mil­lion bar­rels two years ago.

Shell spokesman Pre­cious Okolobo said Sat­ur­day, “We have declared force majeure as a result of the recent attacks on our facil­i­ties.” The action relates to Shel­l’s sup­ply from Bon­ny.

He had ear­li­er said he was check­ing the report of the lat­est inci­dent, and refused to con­firm the impact of the pre­vi­ous five attacks claimed by MEND, say­ing: “We do not com­ment on our dai­ly pro­duc­tion.”

Ear­li­er in the week, Shell con­firmed the first attack on its Alakiri flow sta­tion and a sec­ond on the Greater Port Har­court Swamp Line, both on Mon­day.

As the week went on it became pro­gres­sive­ly more tight-lipped, nei­ther con­firm­ing or deny­ing claims of attacks on its Oru­biri flow sta­tion, Rumuekpe pipeline and anoth­er pipeline at the Elem-Kal­abari Cawthorne Chan­nel axis in Rivers state.

MEND, which has cut Nige­ri­a’s oil out­put by more than one quar­ter since it first emerged in 2006, on Sun­day declared “war” on the oil indus­try, in what it said was a response to an attack by the Niger­ian army on its posi­tions.

It has threat­ened to spread its raids to neigh­bour­ing states.

The army and MEND have giv­en con­flict­ing ver­sion of many of the inci­dents, MEND nor­mal­ly say­ing the attack was suc­cess­ful and the army insist­ing it was repelled.

One of the main grous­es of MEND is that the oil wealth of Nige­ria — now Africa’s sec­ond largest petro­le­um exporter after recent­ly falling from first place — is basi­cal­ly enjoyed by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment and only a frac­tion of it trick­les down to the locals.

It also accus­es oil com­pa­nies of wreak­ing hav­oc on the envi­ron­ment.

MEND spokesman Jomo Gbo­mo on Sat­ur­day claimed to have grass­roots sup­port.

“The impov­er­ished and neglect­ed inhab­i­tants of oil pro­duc­ing com­mu­ni­ties con­sid­er our actions to these struc­tures as good rid­dance to bad rub­bish,” he said.

“Oil explo­ration has brought only pain to them by way of envi­ron­men­tal dam­age (farm­lands, fish­ing and wild life sanc­tu­ar­ies), harass­ment from the mil­i­tary and rape of under-aged girls by sol­diers, extra-judi­cial killings of young men and devel­op­ment and wealth to oth­er parts of the coun­try at their detri­ment.”

MEND has also warned it will attack the coun­try’s two big deep off­shore fields, Shel­l’s Bon­ga — which was hit in June — and Chevron’s Agba­mi, as well as oil and gas tankers in Niger­ian waters.

The pre­vi­ous attack claimed by MEND was cit­ed as a fac­tor in Fri­day’s rise in world oil prices to above 100 dol­lars a bar­rel.

But ana­lysts said the pre­dom­i­nant rea­son was an improve­ment in mar­ket con­fi­dence after efforts to resolve the US-cen­tred world finan­cial cri­sis which brought pre­dic­tions of fur­ther falls in oil demand.

——

Niger­ian mil­i­tants end “oil war” after string of attacks (Roundup)
Sep 21, 2008

Nige­ri­a’s most promi­nent mil­i­tant group said Sun­day it was call­ing a cease­fire after a week of attacks on oil instal­la­tions in the restive Niger Delta province.

Jomo Gbo­mo, spokesman for the Move­ment for the Eman­ci­pa­tion of the Niger Delta (MEND), told Deutsche Presse Agen­tur dpa that the ‘oil war’ it declared last Sun­day was being called off after requests from local elders.

The mil­i­tants attacked plat­forms, pipelines and oil flow-sta­tions owned by Chevron, Shell and Agip dur­ing the week-long step-up in hos­til­i­ties.

The group claimed to have killed dozens of sol­diers dur­ing the attacks, although the mil­i­tary dis­putes the fig­ures.

MEND launched the assaults after Niger­ian troops pound­ed mil­i­tant posi­tions with gun­ships.

Lieu­tenant Colonel Sagir Musa, a spokesman for the mil­i­tary in the Niger Delta, said that the gov­ern­ment was open to an ‘ami­ca­ble res­o­lu­tion of the cri­sis.’

‘We will con­tin­ue to care­ful­ly and firm­ly mon­i­tor the sit­u­a­tion and exer­cise a lim­it­ed lev­el of restraint until MEND’s new posi­tion is seen to have been actu­al­ized,’ he told dpa.

Mil­i­tant groups such as MEND often attack oil instal­la­tions and kid­nap expa­tri­ate work­ers, say­ing they are fight­ing for a greater share of prof­its from oil exploita­tion for the poor of the region.

The gov­ern­ment says they are mere­ly crim­i­nal gangs intent on steal­ing oil and extort­ing mon­ey.

Pri­or to the lat­est string of attacks, the unrest had cut oil pro­duc­tion by around a fifth since ear­ly 2006, help­ing to push up glob­al oil prices and allow­ing Ango­la to sur­pass Nige­ria as Africa’s biggest oil exporter.

Oil com­pa­nies have yet to reveal by how much the lat­est attacks fur­ther cut pro­duc­tion.

Gbo­mo also denied accu­sa­tions by the Niger­ian mil­i­tary that MEND was recruit­ing youths to replace those mem­bers killed in clash­es.

How­ev­er, he warned that fur­ther attacks by the mil­i­tary would spark a more fero­cious response.

‘We hope that the mil­i­tary has learnt a bit­ter les­son,’ he said in a state­ment. ‘The next unpro­voked attack will start anoth­er oil war that will be so fero­cious that it will dim the pleas of the elders.’