Gatwick No Border Camp, September 19th To 24th – new location (due to police harrassment) & events

The camp is now located near Balcombe, West Sussex, south of Crawley.
Camp Infoline: 07949790570 or 07934718677

No Borders CampThe camp is now located near Balcombe, West Sussex, south of Crawley.
Camp Infoline: 07949790570 or 07934718677
Map

Events During The No Border Camp:

Thursday, 20th September
Welcome Demonstration – Crawley Town Centre, 5pm-7pm. To inform people about and invite them to participate in the No Border Camp.

Friday, 21st September:
Gathering at Lunar House, the Home Office reporting centre in East Croydon, 10am-2pm. A convergeance between those who have papers and those who don’t; information-sharing, exchanging stories, food and music.

Saturday 22nd September
Transnational Demonstration at Tinsley House detention dentre at Gatwick, 12pm-2pm. Tinsley House, which has a capacity of 146, was the first purpose-built detention centre in the UK. The new planned Gatwick detention centre is to be built close by.

Later that day, groups will present their work and experiences in a Transnational Forum at the camp.

Workshops
Announced workshops so far include ones with migration controls, ID Cards, practical support of people in detention, the political situation in the Middle East, alternative media, experiences from campaigns against companies and much more.

Full details of all this and more at http://noborders.org.uk/

Rossport solidarity – Leeds, London, Bristol, Reading, Madrid, Ireland (Clare, Belfast) & at Bellanboy

15.09.2007
Yesterday morning at 8am, a banner was hung over the A58 /Leeds Inner Ring Road in solidarity with the day of action against Shell’s plans for a gas pipeline & refinery in Mayo, Ireland.

15.09.2007
Yesterday morning at 8am, a banner was hung over the A58 /Leeds Inner Ring Road in solidarity with the day of action against Shell’s plans for a gas pipeline & refinery in Mayo, Ireland.

The banner read:
Stop Shell Hell in Ireland
www.shelltosea.com

——–

Activists construct ‘high pressure pipeline’ at Irish Embassy in London

Friday morning at 9.30 am, diplomats and passers-by were surprised to witness a “dodgy agreement” between a ‘Shell representative’ and ‘the Taoiseach’, and find a ‘pipeline under construction’ at the Irish Embassy in London. A group of activists had gathered at the Embassy to highlight and shame the Irish Government’s involvement with Shell in the construction of a high pressure raw gas pipeline at Rossport in County Mayo.

The demonstrators unveiled their banner: “Bertie Ahern: Shelling Ireland out!” In the style of Charlie Chaplin, activists dressed as Bertie Ahern and a Shell representative performed a series of ‘dodgy deals’. The Irish Taoiseach “begged” Shell to “Take ownership of our natural resources – for nothing!”, and offered Shell and other oil companies “100% of the profit” with “low taxation”, “garda oppression”, “false prosecutions of protestors” and “the opportunity to destroy EU-protected environments” as sweeteners. The aim of the performance was to draw to attention the irrationality of the government’s support of Shell’s construction of the dangerous and experimental pipeline in Mayo.

Anne-Marie O’Reilly, an activist at the embassy this morning, explained:

“I can understand why Shell would be in favour of these terms and wouldn’t have any objection to the garda baton charging peaceful protestors. But I cannot comprehend why the government would give away Ireland’s resources and allow the destruction of environment and community when there is no benefit to Irish people. Perhaps another story of corruption will emerge when it’s too late to stop the pipeline?”

The action coincided with the sit-down protest at the refinery in Bellinaboy and with ‘Shell to Sea’ solidarity actions in Brighton, Berlin and across Europe.

——–

Bristol Rising Tide did a solidarity demo at the Shell Garage on Muller Road, Eastville, Bristol from 5:30 till 7:30. It was small but perfectly formed, with good leaflets (thanks to Rossport Solidarity posse) and banners (thanks to clever trevor).

Several drivers changed their minds and went elsewhere for their petrol when they saw us or spoke to us about what is going on in Rossport at Shell’s behest. We handed out leaflets at the zebra crossing, where bored and exasperated drivers were trapped in their little metal boxes carping, honking and scratching at each other like battery chickens. It gave them something to read in the extensive traffic jam that sat next to the garage.
Several Irish passers-by showed particular interest.

The forecourt was almost completely empty most of the time we were there, so we effectively shut it down without any police action or other such quotidian aggro.

Photos were taken and will appear shortly if fortune and our silicon masters smile upon us.

Our press release is below.

STARTS

We are at the Shell petrol station on Muller Road in Bristol today (Sep 14th) occupying the forecourt in protest against Shell’s treatment of the people of Rossport, in County Mayo, Ireland.

From 6pm we will be there, in solidarity with the community of Rossport, who have been imprisoned, beaten and intimidated by the Irish police at Shell’s request.

We are activists from Bristol Rising Tide, a group who campaigns about climate change and human rights.

Shell want to build a dangerous and environmentally destructive gas pipeline and refinery right next to people’s houses on unstable marsh land. There is massive opposition in the local community and there has been support for their struggle across Ireland and internationally, with many Shell garages being targeted for demos.

In 2005, 5 men were jailed for 3 months for refusing to allow Shell access to their land. Following their imprisonment the community set up a picket at the proposed refinery site, stopping work for over a year. Last autumn, large numbers of police moved into the area and beat the community off the streets. Numerous people were hospitalized and the police brutality has been internationally condemned. More recently state repression has involved the initiation of malicious prosecutions against prominent local campaigners. Despite the strong forces working against them, the community continues to resist. We are here in support of their struggle.

ENDS
Contact: Bristol Rising Tide 07988 460373 or 07983 350021

Notes for journalists

Major Criticisms of the Project

Unprocessed gas will be piped at uniquely high pressure levels, dangerously close to dwellings and through several SACs’ (special areas of conservation), supposedly under the protection of EU law.
The gas will be processed at a refinery within the catchment area of the local reservoir, Carrowmore lake, which provides the drinking water for 10,000 people.
An Taisce (The Irish National Trust) has stated that if the project goes ahead, Carrowmore Lake will eventually have to be closed as a source of drinking water.
The refinery will be a huge source of air and water pollution. Between 200,000 and 300,000 kg of methane (a major greenhouse gas) will be emitted annually, with the risk of vapor cloud explosions and acid rain.
The site will hold over 5000 tonnes of dangerous chemicals. Over 1500 tonnes of methanol (a highy toxic chemical) are expected to be ‘lost’ each year. This will be emitted, with the waste water, into
Broadhaven bay, “an important area for a number of marine mammal species and for other marine life” according to a report commissioned by Shell. The waste water would also contain heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury and cadmium. Any waste not pumped into the bay will drain instead into Carrowmore Lake.
The project will adversely impact on the livelihoods of the region’s farmers and fishermen due to the massive land, air and water pollution.
All the profits from the gas extraction will go directly to the oil companies, the Irish people will gain nothing.

Further information is available from:
www.gcmonitor.org/article.php?id=576
www.indymedia.ie
www.corribsos.com

http://risingtide.org.uk/bristol

——–

On Friday 14th September, Reading Grassroots Action and others from around Reading took part in a picket of a lcoal Shell garage. This picket was made in solidarity with the anti-pipeline/refinery community struggle taking place in Rossport, Ireland.

We protested for about an hour on the forecourt, giving out many leaflets to drivers. The Police arrived just as we left.

The following leaflet was given out:

NO SHELL HELL IN IRELAND!

In County Mayo, Ireland, a business coalition led by Shell Oil – with the approval of the Irish government and full protection by the police – are planning to:

– Forcibly take land from local residents and build an experimental high pressure gas pipeline (at four times the usual pressure) running next to homes and destroying rare eco-systems. The pipe will run through boggy land with a history of landslides. In Mexico, a pipeline of lower pressure exploded, killing twelve people.

– Construct a gas refinery on unstable bog, using previously untried methods to stabilise the bog surface. Emissions from the refinery will badly pollute the nearby Carrowmore Lake, source of the regional water supply. Concrete being used in the construction has already been found to be faulty.

– Pump toxic waste into Broadhaven Bay, the source of local fishermen’s livelihoods. A research team found that Broadhaven Bay was an important breeding and rearing area for dolphins and whales.
Normal and best practice is to refine the gas offshore, bringing it ashore at much lower pressure. Yet, the government is happy with the danger to local people and is giving Irish gas away for practically nothing, forcing the Irish people to pay the costs. But things are not going to plan…

Shell hoped to have the whole thing up and running by 2003. Yet, with extraordinary courage, local people have protested, blockaded and refused to comply. To date, no work has been able to start on the pipeline, and hardly any work has happened on the refinery.

In 2005, five local farmers were jailed for not allowing Shell on their land, one farmer has suffered a stroke after intimidation by Shell contractors and in late 2006 extreme police violence was used against protestors. However, blockades by local people conitnue taking place every morning and last month, activists from UK took part in an occupation of the site, along with local people and others, stopping work for two hours. This is costing Shell millions!

Today is a day of action against Shell. About 200 people blockaded the refinery this morning by sitting in the entrance way. Roughly 170 then entered the site and stood on machinery to stop work. Unfortunately, riot police are once again protecting the corporation instead of citizens, and there has been heavy violence against peaceful protestors, and several brutal arrests. In spite of this, the sit-down blockade continued, stopping all deliveries to the site.

For more information please visit: www.corribsos.com and www.indymedia.ie

——–


There was a solidarity picket of the Irish Embassy in Madrid, organised by the Federación Anarquista Ibérica, the Iberian section of the International of Anarchist Federations (http://www.iaf-ifa.org/) They have also made up posters about Rossport, and carried articles in their monthly magazine, Tierra y Libertad.

I think the banner reads ‘Shell Destroys the State Complies’

——–

Clare Rossport demo
Clare Shell to Sea Picket – 14th Sept ’07.

In Solidarity with Mayo and today’s Sit-Down Protest at Bellanaboy.

It’s been clear for the last 2 years that the argument against the Shell Corrib Gas Project is won.

And the amount of cars beeping their horns in Ennis this evening is testament to the support for Shell to Sea, genuinely.

The Government continue in their refusal to debate the arguments and negotiate a settlement, and they persist in using force against the protests at Bellanaboy, a protest that has gained national and international support and recognition as … LEGITIMATE & JUST.

Greens – You have buried your heads in the Fianna Fáil mire. Yoy are complicit now. You are proving yourselves to be unreliable and unworthy of trust. The Green Party pumps for Shell.

email clareshelltosea at gmail dot com
phone 085 1607287
——–
Belfast Rossport demo
Solidarity Shell picket in Belfast
Friday September 14, 2007

Belfast Shell to Sea organised a picket of the Shell station in Andersonstown today in solidarity with the national mobilisation in Bellanaboy in Mayo.

Over a dozen activists took part in the picket and distributed leaflets to passing motorists and pedestrians, and received a lot of honking from cars showing their support. Despite it taking place during rush hour and the road being extremely busy, the forecourt of the station was left deserted for most of the time the picket was on.

email shelltoseabelfast at gmail dot com

——–
Bellanboy September 07 blockade
News from protest at Rossport

Text message from the site of proposed refinery reports at 7.30 ” good turn out, over 200 so far, no trucks through the main gates and low police presence”.

Updates

– 8:28
Between 50-120 have just stormed the main gate of the refinery and are heading up the central road to where the machinery is working.

– 8:40
Protesters have gone through the second gate and are on the main site.

– 8:50
Text received from the protest:
“They kept the machines going until the last minute, people are standing on a drilling machine, most work stopped, protesters and cops wandering around enormous site”.

– 8.59
” Two arrests, one badly beaten, getting pushed out pretty aggressively’

– 9:34

The are now over 150 people occupying refinery site. There have been 7 detentions with peaceful protestors being assaulted by several Gardaí who were not in the usual uniform…

At least two protestors were seriously assaulted and taken away.

– 9.47: “Riot police out in force. Protest cordoned off. batons out and lots injured. Three arrested so far”.

– 10:00
Site has been cleared by Public Order Unit with some brutality. Arrestees appear to have been released in Belmullet or along the road.

There’s a sit down protest outside the gate with approximately 170 protestors being ringed by a large force of the country’s finest.

Reports coming in of cops screaming to each other to’break their fucking arms’ with a lot of kicking and punching going on (obviously directed at the peaceful protestors). several cops really went for it but we’ve recorded good video evidence. Cameras and tape are being hidden to avoid a repeat of the incident last year at Lennon’s quarry where a video camera was taken and smashed by the cops.

One fairly serious assault to report and possibly 2 or 3 protestors unaccounted for…

– 10:42
A number of those arrested were released either outside the gates of the main site or once they reached Belmullet. It is unclear as to whether people have been charged or not.

There is a sit down protest outside the gate once more with 170 – 200 protestors being ringed by a large force of the country’s finest.

Costa Nothing strikes again!

15.09.2007 – more coffee, tea and cake handed out by the caffeinated crew

You may have already seen last week’s report about our adventures. If not check this out first.

15.09.2007 – more coffee, tea and cake handed out by the caffeinated crew

You may have already seen last week’s report about our adventures. If not check this out first.

So here’s a brief report from this week’s Costa Nothing.

No pictures as we’re lame and forgot to bring a camera. Oh, actually, I lie. A few pictures were taken by a photographer from the Oxford mail who complained that we were late (supposed to start at 2pm but rolled up at ten past – oh these volunteers – you just CAN’T get the staff these days). Anyway, he got got huffy because one of the crew wouldn’t do an ‘angry’ pose (her default pose is chirpy!) and left quickly to ‘go to Wantage’.

We got through the cake a lot quicker this time, especially as it went to feed some hungry people who had the munchies.

We would like to do it again BUT:
1. It’s getting expensive. We’ve had £4 back in donations – but have spent over £25 for the last two weeks.

2. We’re running on a crew of 5/6. To maintain something like this takes people. The people who have been involved so far are also involved in many other activities, and – believe it or not – have full-time jobs; more people are needed to sustain this campaign.

So we may not do it next week. But if another crew wants to take it on…If you want to come and play then email dizzydaisy[at]riseup.net

Open Day at Titnore Woods

Open Day at Titnore Woods on Saturday 15th September 2007..it all starts at Noon onwards..bring food for the camp..but more importantly youself..

For directions to the camp, go to our website www.protectourwoodland.co.uk

Open Day at Titnore Woods on Saturday 15th September 2007..it all starts at Noon onwards..bring food for the camp..but more importantly youself..

For directions to the camp, go to our website www.protectourwoodland.co.uk

See you there you might need your wellies!!

Call to organise a German climate camp 2008. Plus new climate camp 2007 photo galleries, video (& links to news compilations)

Call to prepare and organise a climate camp in Germany!

1) The idea
2) How the idea emerged and how where we can go from here
3) Why organise a climate camp?
4) Communication

Short haul flights are for birdsCall to prepare and organise a climate camp in Germany!

1) The idea
2) How the idea emerged and how where we can go from here
3) Why organise a climate camp?
4) Communication

1. The Idea

Following the model established by the Camp for Climate Action in the UK, which was held for the second time this year, we want to initiate the process of organising a Climate-Action Camp in Germany in 2008. Just like in the UK we want to create links between the exchange of knowledge (in workshops), self-organised living (in the camp) that minimises our ecological footprint, networking and direct action.

The last two camps in the UK specifically targeted particular installations, against which direct or thematically appropriate actions were organised. Last year’s target was the UK’s largest coal-fired power station, while this year the camp drew attention to the aviation industry and the expansion of London’s Heathrow airport. Whether we should also choose such focal points in Germany should be discussed at the preparatory meetings.

2. How the idea emerged and how where we can go from here

This email and initial call emerged from this year’s Camp for Climate Action in the UK, when several German-speaking people met there who had all, independently of each other, had the idea of organising such a camp in Germany. We hope to use a first planning meeting either on the last weekend in October or the first weekend in November (26.-28.10. / 2.-4.11) somewhere in the geographical centre of Germany to decide how to go on from here. If you want to attend the meeting, go to http://www.doodle.de/yu8vxh39em9zh7s7 and enter your preferred date – we can then select the most suitable date (provided it doesn’t clash with local organisation). Both date and location should be agreed on by the end of September.

3. Why organise a Climate-Action Camp

Climate chaos is a reality. And there’s not much time left to limit the damage. Which is exactly why we can’t simply jump into knee-jerk activism that simply reproduces the causes of the problem. Rather, we need to take profound direct action, without of course excluding people. We also need grounded analyses of the fundamental structures that serve to highlight the urgent need for social transformation and can communicate information about the underlying causes to a wider audience.

Climate Change is not only an ecological problem, but also a question of the distribution of its consequences. It thus also poses social questions. This is why we need immediate and direct action. Of course, we also need to discuss many other questions, for example the following (a first rough list compiled by us in the camp):

– How can we act effectively?
– What does a carbon-neutral life look like? What kind of utopias do we need? Which alternatives can we live already now?
– Why are the media suddenly interested in the issue of climate change? Which interests are pushing this? Are these interests also our own?
– Do we trust states and businesses to save us? Or do we create our own solutions?
– How do we judge the climate change policies pursued until now by environmental NGOs? What are their effects?
– Is it possible to protect the climate in the context of the current socio-economic system? Or is there a need for radical social change?
– Who profits from climate change? And what does that mean for our actions?

A climate camp could pursue these and many other questions, inspire people to think and act politico-ecologically, it could be a space for experimentation, think-tank and a space to network further common actions. Of course, we’d first have to decide:

– What could a climate camp in Germany look like?
– How could it be organised?
– Who would join?

4. Communication

Info:
Website of the UK Camp for Climate Action:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/

Indymedia reports:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/actions/2007/climatecamp/

Website of the UK-based Network for Climate Action
http://www.networkforclimateaction.org.uk

Reports on Indymedia Germany:
http://de.indymedia.org/2007/09/193563.shtml

For future communication sign up to our email list
http://lists.trilos.net/mailman/listinfo/klimacamp

We are also working on setting up some sort of internet-presence. Details to be decided at our first meeting.
http://www.klimacamp.org/

If you want to get in touch with us directly, let us know via the mailing list. We are from different parts of Germany (e.g. Freiburg, Berlin, Wendland region, Bremen) and can maybe travel to where you are to report back from the Camp with fotos and movies (as motivation in the run-up to the first organisational gathering).

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

Camp for Climate Action 2007 video – the insider’s view

A 30 minute film of the climate camp has been edited from material shot on camp by indymedia type media activists working with the climate camp.

New photo galleries by various people from this year’s camp

And the handy compilations of news, photos, audio & video on this site:

Climate Camp Land Occupied & directions
Camp for Climate Action – all the info you need to get there with the right stuff, take action & do workshops
Camp for Climate Action up & running – workshops, eco-infrastructure, litter pick & Bicycology day out, plus assorted photos
Direct actions stations – climate camp
Police actions & (counter-)surveillance at the climate camp; FITwatch
24 hours of climate direct action (mass & affinity group actions spread like wildfire); plus video/audio clips

and news of the US climate convergences & actions on the West Coast and in the South East

Anti-City Academy Teachers Take To The Trees

Saturday 8 August, 2007: For six months teachers have squatted the sports ground on Forty Lane in Wembley, North West London, to protest against a privatised City Academy school being built on the site.

The council threatened to evict them and the sports ground leaseholders if they did not leave. So in true fighting fashion, the teachers, with some advice from Heathrow Airport Climate Camp erected tree platforms right under the noses of the authorities and took to the branches on Friday night.

Wembley City Academy protest 2
Wembley City Academy protest 1
Wembley City Academy protest 3Saturday 8 August, 2007: For six months teachers have squatted the sports ground on Forty Lane in Wembley, North West London, to protest against a privatised City Academy school being built on the site.

The council threatened to evict them and the sports ground leaseholders if they did not leave. So in true fighting fashion, the teachers, with some advice from Heathrow Airport Climate Camp erected tree platforms right under the noses of the authorities and took to the branches on Friday night.

Saturday saw a very loud protest on the ground and from the trees, informing local people of what it means to send your children to a City Academy.

City Academy’s, for those not in the know, are funded by wealthy business people, who get a say in what is and is not being taught.

Other City Academy’s have eradicated any sign of Darwinism and evolution from the classroom, only teaching creationism. Other Academy’s have designed the education program to suit their corporate interests, training children for jobs, not educating them, cutting out activities like art, music and other creative outlets.

One Academy, as one of the teachers told me, does has after-school activities though – a fully working Call Centre, where children as young as 11-years can learn the joys of working your proverbials off in probably the most pitiful form of employment known to the human race.

The protest lasted the weekend, the teachers enduring vicious abuse from the England fans, who descended on Wembley for the England-Israel football match. They could be heard for miles yelling, “Who’s that wanker in the tree” while throwing tomatoes and eggs at the teachers.

But the teachers endured, several giving it back and getting the last laugh when the England fans turned on the Israeli’s with the now historically recorded chant of, “Take you Islam and shove it up your ass.”

Football fan intelligence on parade.

Needless to say, many of the football fans did not grasp the fact that the teachers were trying to save the football pitches for the local children.

Academy Schools do not like play areas for their kids. The proposed Academy at Wembley has no space for play or outside activities.

But as the sun set that Saturday evening, the irony set in. There we were. Sat under the lit-up Wembley Stadium archway, following a national football game, drinking with teachers who were trying to save the last sports ground in the area from becoming breeze-block, concrete and glass. And mass profit for some private investor.

For more information or to support the campaign and oppose all City Academy’s and the rapid privatisation of the UK schooling system, see: http://www.tentcityoccupation.co.uk

Tara SOS – WARRIORS and SUPPLIES URGENTLY NEEDED!!! & recent videos & photos of protests

Friends Of Tara,

Urgent call for support at Lismullin Henge. Contractors have moved in heavy machinery onto Archaeology site to divert the Sacred Gabhra River. SOS. Your help needed now.

Tara Roestown sit-downFriends Of Tara,

Urgent call for support at Lismullin Henge. Contractors have moved in heavy machinery onto Archaeology site to divert the Sacred Gabhra River. SOS. Your help needed now.

Thankyou.

Vigil Ph : 0861758557

This is an emergency callout from the tara front line at Rath Lugh. We are desperate for more people onsite. There are currently ONLY 20 PEOPLE trying to stop work all over the Tara Skryne valley plus the contractors are now trying to divert the Sacred Gabhra River. There is machinery either side of the Lismullen Henge. If you are unable to make it up in person then please contribute by sending up some of the following supplies that are badly needed.

-6mm and 12mm polyprop rope
-Appropriate wood for tree houses and signs
-Tarp and Canvis Material
-Cement
-Sand
-Sleeping bags and blankets
-Climbing equipment / harness etc
-Chains and clips
-Head Torches
-Second hand Bikes
-Sealable containers

You can call the vigil phone for directions to Rathlugh or to arrange for a drop off of supplies to site.
Please network this callout.

For recent videos & photos of protests, check out http://livevideo.com/tarapixie

Global Actions Against Heavy Industry

12.09.2007 – Today, people in South Africa, Iceland, Trinidad, Denmark and America are protesting against heavy industrialisation. This is the first coordinated event of a new and growing global movement that began at the 2007 Saving Iceland protest camp in Ölfus, Iceland. The common target of these protests against heavy industry is the aluminium industry, in particular the corporations Alcan/Rio-Tinto and Alcoa.

12.09.2007 – Today, people in South Africa, Iceland, Trinidad, Denmark and America are protesting against heavy industrialisation. This is the first coordinated event of a new and growing global movement that began at the 2007 Saving Iceland protest camp in Ölfus, Iceland. The common target of these protests against heavy industry is the aluminium industry, in particular the corporations Alcan/Rio-Tinto and Alcoa.

South Africa, around 250 people have marched on Alcan’s headquaters in Johanasburg to protest against Alcan’s preferential energy treatment, ahead of a population of which 30% have no access to electricity. Alcan is to be provided with coal and nuclear powered energy for a new smelter in the Eastern Cape that will consume as much electricity as half of Cape Town, at some of the lowest tarriffs in the world. Today the entrance to the Alcan HQ was blocked for one and a half hours with no one comming in or out.

The organisation Earthlife Africa Jhb, whose member Lerato Maregele attended the Saving Iceland 2007 Conference and protest camp, are taking part in the demonstration and have the following demands: First, Alcan and Eskom, the national power company, fully disclose all the details of their deal, including the actual price of electricity sold. Second, that Eskom allocate a basic lifeline of 100kwh per month to every South African.

Iceland, despite terrible winds and rain today, there have been protests outside the government offices in Reykjavik and a gathering along the islands next proposed dam route, along the river Thjorsa (Þjórsá) at 3pm GMT. Also, the Icelandic Minister for the Environment, Thórunn Sveinbjarnardóttir, was visited at her home this morning to have a friendly chat with activists and receive a letter asking her to clear up her seemingly contradictory green opinions.

The Icelandic government is trying to rush through the construction of numerous new and expanded aluminium smelters to bring the islands total aluminium output up to three million tonnes per year. These hydro and geothermal powered heavy industry projects have been condemned by environmental scientists and lobbying groups. Three dam reservoirs are to be created along the Thjorsa river, where protesters have gathered, to power a new Alcoa smelter near the northern town of Husavik, or an expansion of the Alcan plant in Hafnarfjordur which was vetoed in a local referendum.

“Unemployment in Iceland is 0.9%. So this destruction is only based on the greed of Landsvirkjun [the national power company] and has no economical logic. We are here to show support with the local farmers who are fighting against Landsvirkjun to defend their land and our land.”
– Saving Iceland activist Siggi Hardarson.

Trinidad, activists are remembering the first anniversary of an action in which people confronted plans for an Alcoa smelter in the rural town of Chatam; whilst lawyers are regrouping ahead of a legal battle against the Environmental Management Authority, representing heavy industry, that will be pivotal in the islands development.

“September 12 2006 was the day that activists confronted tractors and police on Foodcrop Road and this day will forever live in the hearts and minds of activists in
Trinidad and Tobago as a crucial moment of our fight for environmental and
social justice.”
– Attillah Springer, Rights Action Group

Pressure from grassroots actions such as this persuaded Prime Minister Patrick Manning to drop plans to build the Alcoa smelter in Chatam. Confronted by four cases against themselves, the EMA, whose two main stakeholders are NEC and the aluminium corporation Alutrint, were significantly turned down by the Judge in their plea that three NGO’s – RAG, PURE and Smelta Karavan should not be able to bring action against them. This important ruling recognises that the issue of heavy industrialisation is to Trinidad national, not merely local. The people Vs EMA continues on Thursday 13th September.

Denmark, at 6pm CEST (4pm GMT) this evening a crowd will march to the Icelandic embassy and the Greenland’s Representation Office with a banner that reads “Global Struggle Against Heavy Industry”. Talks will be given on the global fight against heavy industry and the movement of resistance. Alcoa is in the planning stage of a smelter project in Greenland whilst the prime minister Hans Enoksen is presently in New York to seek loans to finance the hydropower project.

In Australia, residents in the West have acquired the support of US Attorney Erin Brockovitch in a legal battle against Alcoa. The corporation intends to double the output of its operations in the region whilst residents of the nearby town Yarloop are demanding that Alcoa relocate them. They claim that they are “living in a toxic bubble” and that their health has dramatically suffered due to Alcoa’s work.

Further actions may be taking place, we shall send updates out as soon as we get them.

savingiceland [at] riseup.net
http://www.savingiceland.org

Direct Action News From Greece

news from nowhere – http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/

DIRECT ACTION NEWS FROM GREECE

-English: Providing an open database on sabotage-vandalism-rioting and other fine popular arts that blossom throughout the ruins of our post-industrial society. Send your own reports at directactiongr@yahoo.gr

Greek DA news logonews from nowhere – http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/

DIRECT ACTION NEWS FROM GREECE

-English: Providing an open database on sabotage-vandalism-rioting and other fine popular arts that blossom throughout the ruins of our post-industrial society. Send your own reports at directactiongr@yahoo.gr

An attemp to cover-publicise-translate all direct action news, away from the mass media mediation.

http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/

Nearly 30 Months of Neglect: Sparkbrook Social Centre Remains Abandoned

The Cottage of Content social house at 147 Kyrwicks Lane, Sparkbrook has had a turbulent past two years. Following an eviction, criminal damage, an occupation and attempted restoration, followed by another eviction, the building continues to rot on the corner of Montpellier Street, with Birmingham City Council seemingly oblivious to its presence or its potential.

squat logo 7The Cottage of Content social house at 147 Kyrwicks Lane, Sparkbrook has had a turbulent past two years. Following an eviction, criminal damage, an occupation and attempted restoration, followed by another eviction, the building continues to rot on the corner of Montpellier Street, with Birmingham City Council seemingly oblivious to its presence or its potential.

The story of the Sparkbrook social house and community space goes back to April 2005, when on the 11th of that month, Birmingham City Council served an eviction notice on the then occupiers, a Yemeni cultural and social group, who used only part of the building for weekly meetings, English lessons and a variety of other beneficial activities serving the Sparkbrook community, specifically the Yemenis. The notice was served, the occupants evicted, and this key social space was subsequently boarded up in May of 2005.

From that point Birmingham Property Services – the in-house property branch of Birmingham City Council – deemed the property surplus and hoped to auction the space off to the highest bidder. The public space was due to be auctioned on the 19th of July 2006, over a year after it was originally declared surplus. However, prior to this intended sale of public land, then-councillor Hardeman suggested a review of the property and its uses before it’s auction. This review came to nothing, and the auction was still to go ahead as planed.

Regarding the threat of this social building being sold to private developers for profit, a group of enthusiastic activists gained entry to the Cottage on July the 9th, 2006. Their intention was to restore the Cottage back to being an asset to the local community, and in the 69 days their occupation lasted, the collective redecorated the interior, tidied the exterior, repaired plumbing, some wiring and arranged for public meetings to debate the future of this community space.

As a first-hand witness, the work the Cottage collective did in changing the building into a disused run-down shack to a viable and enjoyable community space was both productive and inspirational. Several music nights were organized; a barbeque party went ahead and a modest collection of books were collected, free for anyone in the community to borrow, so long as they returned them. More critically, however, was the campaign started by the collective and endorsed by local residents to save the Cottage of Content.

The City Council issued an eviction notice, and the collective were summoned to Birmingham Priory Courts on the 24th of August 2006. Judge Savage noted that the Council’s claim to the land was in fact was too extensive than it should have been, and informed the Council that they only owned a part of the property in question. Judge Savage however took no interest or sympathy in the Cottage of Content’s case, its possible sale to the private sector, nor the will of the community and the collective to restore it to a rightful public community space. The eviction notice was served, and the occupation ended on September the 15th, 2006. The occupiers who had done so much to the building for the community were forcibly evicted. Following this the council again secured the building from entry and left it to stand for a further nine months.

Twenty-seven months will soon have past from when the prime piece of public real-estate was boarded up back in May 2005. So much has happened to 147 Kyrwicks lane, but regarding the Council nothing much seems to have been done at all. Following enquiries regarding the current state of the property, the Council’s plans and if it is for sale, this particular journalist is still awaiting a reply, almost a week after initially filing my Freedom of Information request.

When returning to the Cottage after almost a year since I covered the occupation and eviction, I found the place in a sorry state. Offensive graffiti scrawled across the sides of the building, evidence of various arson attempts by bored youths, broken glass littered everywhere amongst other things, and a severely unkempt garden that lay testament to the neglect this building suffers from people in high places.

In photographing the building in disrepair I came across three Asian youths local to Sparkbrook, sitting on the benches in the overgrown garden of the Cottage. I took the opportunity to ask them if they knew anything about the building.

“Yes, we knew there was an occupation and we attended one of the meetings, but before long the Council threw them out, and boarded the place back up again, so it was short lived” explains Akbar, 22, who has lived in Sparkbrook all his life.

When asked about the potential of the building for his neighbourhood, Akbar enthused: “There is just so much you can do! For instance I know a lot of young mothers who would love the opportunity of day-care for their children, which would give them the time to work more. This building could provide that.”

Akram, Akbar’s friend, commented on its current state: “It’s a disgrace, I mean look at it. The younger kids try to break into the place and smoke weed or do damage to the inside, because there’s nothing else to do here for the younger youth.”

Akbar agreed: “I’ve even seen a prostitute use that place one time, climbed in through one of the open windows with what I’m guessing was a client. But that was rare, that doesn’t happen all the time. The little kids however, they are always trying to break in, to smoke weed and mess about inside. There’s nothing else for them to do.”

Akbar continues: “In its current state it [the Cottage] is just a magnet for undesirables, you understand? People go here to do things in secret because they know no one will bother them”. “Even though the police have been called here a few times” says Akram, “about the noise and damage, local youth still get into trouble in there”.

“I didn’t have a chance to see much of the work the activists did” continues Akram, referring to the occupation in 2006, “but without a doubt the building would have been in a better state than this – at least it was providing something to the community. This is just a run-down relic of neglect, like they [the Council] have forgotten about it completely”.

Akram may not be far off the truth. Almost 30 months ago the Cottage of Content provided a small but useful and appreciated service to the locals of Sparkbrook. For 24 of those 30 months it has been a “magnet for undesirables”. For the remainder, during the occupation, strides were made in re-establishing the building as a free-for-all community resource. If the Council chose to give the community a chance to handle its own property, who knows what services could be offered, and what potential could be fulfilled at the Cottage of Content?

Notes for editor:

BCC put social space up for auction:
http://www.bondwolfe.net/docs/NEW%20LO-RES%20CATALOGUE.pdf

Start of Occupation:
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/08/346958.html

Cottage of Content Events [during occupation]:
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/08/347378.html

Court Case:
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/08/348962.html
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/08/349118.html

Post-Eviction:
https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/09/351346.html