Demo — in Solidarity with Miriam Rose and Persecuted Saving Iceland Activists

1PM Tues­day 2nd Octo­ber, Ice­landic Embassy meet at Sloane Square
Come and show Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Miri­am Rose, a Sav­ing Ice­land activist from the UK fac­ing depor­ta­tion from Ice­land where she lives for being: “a threat to pub­lic order and secu­ri­ty and fun­da­men­tal soci­etal val­ues” also to show sol­i­dar­i­ty with Ola­fur Pall Sig­gurd­son an Ice­landic activist being framed for “Obstruct­ing a Police Vehi­cle” fol­low­ing an attempt to run him over by a senior police­man.

1PM Tues­day 2nd Octo­ber, Ice­landic Embassy meet at Sloane Square
Come and show Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Miri­am Rose, a Sav­ing Ice­land activist from the UK fac­ing depor­ta­tion from Ice­land where she lives for being: “a threat to pub­lic order and secu­ri­ty and fun­da­men­tal soci­etal val­ues” also to show sol­i­dar­i­ty with Ola­fur Pall Sig­gurd­son an Ice­landic activist being framed for “Obstruct­ing a Police Vehi­cle” fol­low­ing an attempt to run him over by a senior police­man.

Full arti­cle about Miri­am’s Depor­ta­tion: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/09/382239.html

Deportation Alert! Icelandic State Cracks Down on Saving Iceland Activists

The Ice­landic State has hound­ed and harassed Sav­ing Ice­land activists since the net­work was formed in 2004. In the lat­est episode of this sor­did saga; Miri­am Rose, an activist from the UK who lives in Ice­land is threat­ened with depor­ta­tion for being: “a threat to ‘pub­lic order and secu­ri­ty’ and ‘fun­da­men­tal soci­etal val­ues’. She has only ever been con­vict­ed of ‘Dis­obey­ing Police Orders’ con­trary to the dra­con­ian ‘Police Acts’ for which she has served a short prison sen­tence; in soli­tary con­fine­ment in a men’s prison.

The Ice­landic State has hound­ed and harassed Sav­ing Ice­land activists since the net­work was formed in 2004. In the lat­est episode of this sor­did saga; Miri­am Rose, an activist from the UK who lives in Ice­land is threat­ened with depor­ta­tion for being: “a threat to ‘pub­lic order and secu­ri­ty’ and ‘fun­da­men­tal soci­etal val­ues’. She has only ever been con­vict­ed of ‘Dis­obey­ing Police Orders’ con­trary to the dra­con­ian ‘Police Acts’ for which she has served a short prison sen­tence; in soli­tary con­fine­ment in a men’s prison.

On Fri­day 21st Sep­tem­ber, Sav­ing Ice­land activist Miri­am Rose was pre­sent­ed with a let­ter from the Ice­landic Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion threat­en­ing her with pos­si­ble expul­sion from Ice­land. The let­ter claims that due to her par­tic­i­pa­tion in two actions at smelter sites she may be con­sid­ered a threat to ‘pub­lic order and secu­ri­ty’ and ‘fun­da­men­tal soci­etal val­ues’. The let­ter also claims that Sav­ing Ice­land pays activists for being arrest­ed, a claim repeat­ed­ly denied and proven to be false.

Sav­ing Ice­land is an inter­na­tion­al grass roots net­work that uses direct action to con­front the Ice­landic gov­ern­men­t’s Heavy Indus­try Pol­i­cy. The gov­ern­ment are intent on build­ing alu­mini­um smelters to exploit the coun­try’s geot­her­mal and hydro-elec­tric poten­tial, an eco­log­i­cal and envi­ron­men­tal cat­a­stro­phe sold as ‘green ener­gy’. Sav­ing Ice­land also pro­motes and prac­tices sol­i­dar­i­ty with strug­gles against the alu­mini­um indus­try world­wide, such as in Trinidad, South Africa and India.

Miri­am has already served 8 days in prison for protest­ing against the destruc­tion of Ice­landic wilder­ness, for which the UK Green Par­ty Prin­ci­pal Speak­er Dr Derek Wall accused the Ice­landic gov­ern­ment of polit­i­cal harass­ment and demand­ed her imme­di­ate release. In Radio 1 Ice­landic news pro­gram Spegillinn yes­ter­day, the police admit­ted that this was to be the first of many attempt­ed depor­ta­tions of activists.

Miri­am is now wait­ing for a deci­sion by the Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion, hav­ing sub­mit­ted her objec­tion to depor­ta­tion. ‘I am very shocked that the Ice­landic gov­ern­ment con­tin­ue to pun­ish me, after already pay­ing so heav­i­ly for my actions and ideals. This seems to be an attempt to scare peo­ple from protest­ing here, and I find such treat­ment sur­pris­ing in a sup­pos­ed­ly devel­oped democ­ra­cy like Ice­land. I am a peace­ful and edu­cat­ed per­son and have nev­er posed a threat to the police or any oth­er per­son dur­ing my time here. I was intend­ing to set­tle in Ice­land, and have been mak­ing moves to learn Ice­landic and con­tribute to this soci­ety.’

In 2005 the Ice­landic Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion attempt­ed to deport 21 Sav­ing Ice­land activists. Activists were snatched off the streets of Reyk­javik by plain clothes police, held overnight with no food, water or even pre­tense of a legal process. An elder­ly aca­d­e­m­ic with no con­nec­tion to Sav­ing Ice­land was hos­pi­talised with seri­ous head injuries after he wit­nessed activists being bun­dled into an unmarked car. Plain clothes police also broke into build­ings in an attempt to get to activists on the ‘black­list’. The Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion, denied that there was such a list in an inter­view with tabloid paper DV, for­tu­nate­ly Sav­ing Ice­land was able to sup­ply them with a copy com­plete with the Direc­torate’s seal and Hildur Dun­gal’s (the Direc­tor’s) sig­na­ture. Even­tu­al­ly the Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion admit­ted it had no legal right to deport any­one on the list.

In 2006 14 activists were tried and con­vict­ed for ‘Dis­obey­ing Police Orders’ and received prison sen­tences of up to 18 days a small group was also con­vict­ed of ‘Repres­sion of Lib­er­ty’ and sen­tenced to 2 months sus­pend­ed for 3 years on the false wit­ness of a man­ag­er at engi­neer­ing firm Hon­nen where they had attempt­ed to occu­py offices, the same man­ag­er punched and kicked pro­test­ers and slammed a door on some­one’s head.

Ear­li­er this year after Reyk­javik’s first Reclaim the Streets the Ice­landic police began to con­fis­cate pass­port of for­eign activists, some­thing they have no legal author­i­ty to do. The Ice­landic State have also had a long his­to­ry of harass­ing Ice­landic activists, in one case they have alleged­ly made false reports to Inter­pol accus­ing a Sav­ing Ice­land activist of trav­el­ing on a forged pass­port and attempt­ed to strip the activists Ice­landic Cit­i­zen­ship.

If the Ice­landic Police and Immi­gra­tion Direc­torate can get away with deport­ing Miri­am, then they will use depor­ta­tions more fre­quent­ly to silence dis­sent and under­mine sol­i­dar­i­ty with Ice­landic envi­ron­men­tal­ists. They must be stopped!

The web­site of the Direc­torate of Immi­gra­tion is http://www.utl.is/english

The direc­tor’s name is Hildur Dun­gal: hildur@utl.is

See also:
Report on Miri­am’s depor­ta­tion and state­ment from Sav­ing Ice­land:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/983

Report on Miri­am’s Incar­cer­a­tion in Soli­tary Con­fine­ment in a Men’s Prison:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/892

State­ment of Sup­port from UK Green Par­ty:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/985 and @ http://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/3171

Report on Sav­ing Ice­land’s fund­ing:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/846

Report of Pre­vi­ous attempts to Deport Sav­ing Ice­land activists:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/144

Report on how the Ice­landic Immi­gra­tion Direc­torate can behave quite dif­fer­ent­ly if you are pals with a Gov­ern­ment Min­is­ter:
http://www.savingiceland.org/node/759Police Brutakity at Reykjavik's first RTS this summerPolice Brutakity at Reykjavik's first RTS this summer

Report from Anti London Olympics/regeneration march and meeting plus comment

Sun­day the 23rd Sep­tem­ber was a sad day in the his­to­ry of gar­den­ing. It was the day the Manor Gar­dens Allot­ments were closed by the Olympic Deliv­ery Author­i­ty.

Manor allotments demoSun­day the 23rd Sep­tem­ber was a sad day in the his­to­ry of gar­den­ing. It was the day the Manor Gar­dens Allot­ments were closed by the Olympic Deliv­ery Author­i­ty.

It was also the day for­mer allot­ment hold­ers and many oth­er peo­ple decid­ed to march and demon­strate their con­cern over the way in which devel­op­ment and so called regen­er­a­tion is soak­ing up much need­ed green space. Mar­tin Slavin an Olympic researcher was on the march and com­ments “ … so called regen­er­a­tion projects like the Olympics are more about the careers of those involved in the Olympic indus­try, and the prof­its of devel­op­ers and con­struc­tion com­pa­nies than they are about improv­ing the lives of ordi­nary peo­ple”.

The Manor Gar­dens Allot­ments, were a lit­tle piece of the coun­try­side in Lon­don, and were giv­en to the gar­den­ers of East Lon­don by May­or Vil­liers, an old fash­ioned phil­an­thropist, he was ded­i­cat­ed to improv­ing the life of work­ing class Eas­t­en­ders by a trans­fer of resources from him (rich) to the peo­ple of East Lon­don (poor). As well as the allot­ments, the Olympic project has swal­lowed up a huge chunk of land in East Lon­don, most of it com­pul­so­ri­ly pur­chased. The acqui­si­tion of the Olympic Park land is vir­tu­al­ly a mir­ror image of what Major Vil­liers did all those years ago.

The com­pul­so­ry pur­chase of the Olympic Park­land has been fund­ed by pub­lic mon­ey, and as such it can be argued that it should stay in pub­lic own­er­ship, post Olympics, how­ev­er, exact­ly what will hap­pen to the land remains unde­cid­ed, but both Ken Liv­ing­stone and Ruth Kel­ly have pub­licly stat­ed that they plan to bank role the Olympic project by sell­ing off land with­in the park to devel­op­ers when the Games are over. Major Vil­liers would no doubt turn in his grave, as his beau­ti­ful allot­ments along with vir­tu­al­ly the whole STATE AREA site is bull­dozed for a project which will most like­ly result in a trans­fer of land from pub­lic to pri­vate own­er­ship. As the Olympic project runs fur­ther and fur­ther into finan­cial dif­fi­cul­ty the pres­sure will be on to claw back as much mon­ey as pos­si­ble. This will inevitably mean get­ting into bed with prop­er­ty devel­op­ers who, along with the con­struc­tion com­pa­nies, will be the main ben­e­fi­cia­ries of a project that has been flawed from the very begin­ning.

An added tragedy to this sto­ry is that much what will form Olympic Park was pre­vi­ous­ly avail­able for use, on a non-income depen­dent basis, a cycle cir­cuit, allot­ments, social hous­ing, foot­ball pitch­es, lit­tle nooks and cran­nies, were all sorts of mar­gin­al busi­ness and artists had found a foothold. There was also a rave scene at Hack­ney Wick, with tired and dazed ravers leav­ing par­ties on Sun­day morn­ings whilst the well dressed con­gre­ga­tions of the many African Church­es filed by. It was an area that had grown organ­i­cal­ly over more thaan a cen­tu­ry and though it has some rough edges the area had an authen­tic­i­ty rarely found in 21st cen­tu­ry Lon­don. This has been lost to what will more than like­ly be an Olympic lega­cy of expen­sive flats with­in gat­ed com­mu­ni­ties, a ster­ile, pri­vate­ly owned area sim­i­lar to the dock­lands.

It would be impos­si­ble to sell the Olympics to the nation for 3 weeks of sport, it is sim­ply too expen­sive, so those mak­ing their liv­ing out of this project have mar­ket­ed it on the sup­posed ben­e­fits of a lega­cy which remains unplanned. One of the prob­lems is that New labour has con­trol of the project, it has cen­tral gov­ern­ment back­ing and with New Labour also con­trol­ling all 4 of the bor­oughs in which the Olympic Park is sit­u­at­ed, and with the Olympic Deliv­ery Author­i­ty award­ing plan­ning per­mis­sion to itself the Olympic project can be pushed through vir­tu­al­ly unchecked.

Sunday’s march from Hack­ney Town Hall to the new secu­ri­ty gates of the Olympic con­struc­tion site was a sign of the public’s mis­giv­ings over this deeply flawed project. After the march there was a meet­ing where dis­cus­sions were held relat­ing to devel­op­ment and regen­er­a­tion. One inter­est­ing point cov­ered in this dis­cus­sion was the way these large projects evolve. First plans are made, then a so-called con­sul­ta­tion takes place and then the work begins. How­ev­er the meet­ing agreed that the con­sul­ta­tions were gen­er­al­ly a pub­lic rela­tions exer­cise and that they made lit­tle dif­fer­ence to the out­come of projects, which are usu­al­ly forced through despite any pub­lic mis­giv­ings. The Olympics appears to be a case in point.

Tara frontline Action ‑avin it

On Mon­day Sep­tem­ber 24th, thir­ty brave cul­tur­al con­ser­va­tion­ists donned face paints and head­ed off on a route walk from the Rath Lugh direct action camp. Film direc­tor and actor Stu­art Townsend, fresh from the high­ly suc­cess­ful aer­i­al pho­to­graph on the hill attend­ed by an esti­mat­ed 3,000 peo­ple on Sun­day, arrived with four mas­sive bags of shop­ping for Tara’s sol­diers before every­one set off. Stuart’s con­tin­u­ing sup­port is mas­sive­ly appre­ci­at­ed!

On Mon­day Sep­tem­ber 24th, thir­ty brave cul­tur­al con­ser­va­tion­ists donned face paints and head­ed off on a route walk from the Rath Lugh direct action camp. Film direc­tor and actor Stu­art Townsend, fresh from the high­ly suc­cess­ful aer­i­al pho­to­graph on the hill attend­ed by an esti­mat­ed 3,000 peo­ple on Sun­day, arrived with four mas­sive bags of shop­ping for Tara’s sol­diers before every­one set off. Stuart’s con­tin­u­ing sup­port is mas­sive­ly appre­ci­at­ed!

Once on route activists erect­ed bar­ri­cades along the paths of the dig­gers and bull­doz­ers to slow destruc­tion work. Activists pro­ceed­ed to Baron­stown where sev­en to eight dig­gers were occu­pied, climbed and danced upon. The walk con­tin­ued as our mer­ry band arrived at Col­lier­stown, an ancient Fian­na grave­yard. The two dig­gers work­ing when we arrived were quick­ly halt­ed with peo­ple climb­ing into buck­ets of dig­gers, onto roofs and onto their tracks. Songs were sung and peo­ple danced. Work was halt­ed for half an hour before scouts indi­cat­ed that machin­ery was work­ing up ahead at Trevet. We head­ed there and on the way occu­pied anoth­er dig­ger. The dri­ver of this dig­ger refused to turn off his engine despite the fact that activists occu­pied his machine, a clear vio­la­tion of health and safe­ty laws and a sack­able offense.

Our next stop was Trevet, where one bull­doz­er was pre­vent­ed from work­ing by activists. It was then that the Gar­dai made their appear­ance. Tak­ing some of our group aside, names were tak­en and no fur­ther action occurred. As our walk was slight­ly behind sched­ule, when Gar­da offi­cers approached we decid­ed to pick up the pace, keep­ing twen­ty to forty feet between our­selves and the law. Offi­cers con­tin­ued to fol­low us for anoth­er 100 metres before head­ing back the way they came. Hav­ing stopped work for hours it was near din­ner time so we head­ed back to base camp. Through­out the day as we passed the sacred sites in the path of the pro­posed motor­way short talks were giv­en about the his­tor­i­cal and archae­o­log­i­cal sig­nif­i­cance of each site. No one was arrest­ed and a great day was had by all. The cam­paign to pro­tect Tara from the mon­ey mad mile con­tin­ues pick­ing up pace after the phe­nom­e­nal suc­cess of the inter­na­tion­al Harpists for Tara event and John Quigley’s stun­ning aer­i­al pho­tog­ra­phy. Every Mon­day route walks will con­tin­ue.

Com­ple­tion of the M3 through the Tara Val­ley is years away and there is every­thing to play for! Be at the Tara Sol­i­dar­i­ty Vig­il camp on the hill by 9.30 am or at Rath Lugh by 10.00am. Please come, please sup­port and net­work!

www.tarapixie.net
www.savetara.com
www.tarawatch.org
www.indymedia.ie

Critical Mass and Carfree day in Brussels

What a week­end for cyclists. Fri­day evening and the reg­u­lar Brus­sels Crit­i­cal mass was held one week ear­ly to coin­cide with mobil­i­ty week. Around 80 cyclists sprout­ed up at the Porte de Namur and reclaimed the streets of Brus­sels for an hour or two. This month there was a prac­ti­cal theme to cre­ate a DIY cycle lane. Recent­ly the Major of the city decid­ed that the cycle lane along the main boule­vard through cen­tral Brus­sels was a men­ace to traf­fic and even encour­aged cyclist to get in the way of hon­est car dri­ving cit­i­zens. What to do when that Major takes away the cycle path. A sim­ple ques­tion, you get togeth­er with your friends and paint it back again. Get­ting rid of the cycle hat­ing Major will prob­a­bly be the next step but that’s anoth­er action.

Brussels Critical Mass 1
Brussels Critical Mass 2
Brussels Critical Mass 3
Brussels Critical Mass 4
What a week­end for cyclists. Fri­day evening and the reg­u­lar Brus­sels Crit­i­cal mass was held one week ear­ly to coin­cide with mobil­i­ty week. Around 80 cyclists sprout­ed up at the Porte de Namur and reclaimed the streets of Brus­sels for an hour or two. This month there was a prac­ti­cal theme to cre­ate a DIY cycle lane. Recent­ly the Major of the city decid­ed that the cycle lane along the main boule­vard through cen­tral Brus­sels was a men­ace to traf­fic and even encour­aged cyclist to get in the way of hon­est car dri­ving cit­i­zens. What to do when that Major takes away the cycle path. A sim­ple ques­tion, you get togeth­er with your friends and paint it back again. Get­ting rid of the cycle hat­ing Major will prob­a­bly be the next step but that’s anoth­er action.

Brus­sels is a city of con­tra­dic­tions and for Sat­ur­day lunch time the city invit­ed cyclists for a sump­tu­ous nosh up. Any­one who was a cyclist was wel­come to help them­selves. A won­der­ful feast for non veg­e­tar­i­an wine lovers and the deserts were out of this world. Not so good on the cycle lanes but the free food almost makes up for it.

Sun­day was the car­free day and it real­ly was car­free in the whole city, not just one or two streets. It’s hard to describe the dif­fer­ence ban­ish­ing the cars can make to a city. Brus­sels, if only for one day became a place for peo­ple. Swarms of cyclists filled the streets peo­ple on foot could and did move about with­out risk of being run over by impa­tient dri­vers. The sun was shin­ing the air was clean for once and the angry honk­ing of car horns beau­ti­ful­ly absent. If only every day could be like this. The street is a place for peo­ple, city chil­dren need to play and a cup of cof­fee on a pave­ment café some­how tastes bet­ter when there isn’t traf­fic roar­ing by a few feet away. This might just be my opin­ion but the peo­ple of Brus­sels did seem to agree with me, well at least the ones who still remem­ber how to move about with­out a car.

Also for mobil­i­ty week the Brus­sels based envi­ron­men­tal group, Auto-nomie pre­sent­ed an envi­ron­men­tal­ly friend­ly car, tru­ly an envi­ron­men­tal­ly friend­ly car. Zero emis­sions is a thing of the past, this car has neg­a­tive emis­sions. If you care about the plan­et but still want a car that turns heads this is the mod­el for you and the con­ver­sion is cheap and easy. Take out the engine replace is with a few wheel­bar­rows full of good qual­i­ty soil and plant your favorite fruits and veg­eta­bles. Cruis­ing through the streets of Brus­sels in a cus­tomized car like no oth­er is the way to go. When your friends get tired of push­ing what bet­ter way of revi­tal­iz­ing them than a tasty car grown straw­ber­ry. The car was on dis­play in cen­tral Brus­sels all last week.

Join Big Blockade of Faslane Nuclear Base 1st October

Hun­dreds of peace activists will risk arrest on Octo­ber 1st when over a thou­sand peo­ple are expect­ed to join in a “Big Block­ade” of Faslane Naval Base. This will be the cul­mi­na­tion of the Faslane 365 year of actions against Tri­dent, Britain’s weapon of mass destruc­tion. Peo­ple and groups from all over Britain (and abroad) will use diverse non­vi­o­lent meth­ods to block the entrances to the nuclear base and dis­rupt the ongo­ing deploy­ment of Tri­dent.

Faslane 365 logoHun­dreds of peace activists will risk arrest on Octo­ber 1st when over a thou­sand peo­ple are expect­ed to join in a “Big Block­ade” of Faslane Naval Base. This will be the cul­mi­na­tion of the Faslane 365 year of actions against Tri­dent, Britain’s weapon of mass destruc­tion. Peo­ple and groups from all over Britain (and abroad) will use diverse non­vi­o­lent meth­ods to block the entrances to the nuclear base and dis­rupt the ongo­ing deploy­ment of Tri­dent.

As they have done over the past twelve months, the groups and indi­vid­u­als, who will include Mem­bers of the Scot­tish and Euro­pean Par­lia­ments and well-known singers and artists, will high­light the ille­gal­i­ty, inse­cu­ri­ty and waste of resources inher­ent in the deploy­ment and renew­al of Tri­dent. Through­out the day there will be colour­ful, cre­ative and dra­mat­ic actions at the gates, includ­ing many dif­fer­ent kinds of lock-ons and sit-downs.

“This Big Block­ade will be a car­ni­val of resis­tance to cel­e­brate Faslane 365’s achieve­ments in high­light­ing and dis­rupt­ing the ille­gal nuclear deploy­ments over the year,” said Dr Rebec­ca John­son from the Faslane 365 Steer­ing Group. “We will join togeth­er to mark the end of this year’s cam­paign­ing, and to make clear our deter­mi­na­tion to keep up pres­sure on the Scot­tish and UK gov­ern­ments to get rid of Tri­dent and to take the lead in mov­ing the world towards the total elim­i­na­tion of nuclear weapons, in accor­dance with the Nuclear Non-Pro­lif­er­a­tion Treaty and the wish­es of the major­i­ty.”

As diverse groups of activists block­ade the gates, folk leg­ends Leon Rossel­son and Seize the Day will be pro­vid­ing music, and the renowned Roy Bai­ley and David Fer­rard will per­form songs from a forth­com­ing album about the Iraq War. A twelve-mem­ber choir will sing the ora­to­rio Tri­dent — A British War Crime, by Camil­la Can­can­ta­ta, first per­formed at the Edin­burgh High Court in 2005. The Rev. Kathy Gal­loway, leader of the Iona Com­mu­ni­ty, will cel­e­brate a com­mu­nion ser­vice at 10am at the North Gate with Cler­gy Action and Chris­t­ian CND. Sev­er­al Mem­bers of the Scot­tish Par­lia­ment, includ­ing Marlyn Glen (Labour), Robin Harp­er (Green) and Patrick Harvie (Green), as well as Jill Evans MEP (Plaid Cym­ru) have con­firmed their par­tic­i­pa­tion and will be avail­able for inter­views.

Since Faslane 365 start­ed on Octo­ber 1, 2006, thou­sands have par­tic­i­pat­ed and more than 950 peo­ple have been arrest­ed. Par­tic­i­pants have includ­ed elect­ed rep­re­sen­ta­tives from Scot­tish, UK and Euro­pean Par­lia­ments and local coun­cils, Friends of the Earth, Green­peace, Bud­dhists, Chris­tians, ‘Uni­ty!’ union of asy­lum seek­ers, artists, writ­ers, aca­d­e­mics, stu­dents from the UK, Europe and Japan, atom­ic bomb sur­vivors from Nagasa­ki, teach­ers, lawyers, health pro­fes­sion­als and pen­sion­ers. Spe­cif­ic groups have come from many regions of Scot­land, Eng­land and Wales and from eleven oth­er Euro­pean coun­tries, as well as Japan and the Unit­ed States. Promi­nent par­tic­i­pants includ­ed the Bish­op of Read­ing Stephen Cot­terell, for­mer UN Assis­tant Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al Prof Sir Richard Jol­ly, Nobel Peace Lau­re­ate Mairead Maguire, Adri­an Mitchell, A.L.Kennedy, actor Roger Lloyd Pack and singer-song­writer Bil­ly Bragg.

NVDA train­ings and acco­mo­da­tion will be Sun­day after­noon and evening in Glas­gow. Coach­es leave from Edin­burgh at 4:30 am and Glas­gow at 5:30am
Mon­day. For details and to book see www.faslane365.org/1Oct

For fur­ther back­ground infor­ma­tion on Tri­dent, a sum­ma­ry of the polit­i­cal con­text of the cam­paign, and a selec­tion of pho­tos from the year­long block­ade see the full Press Brief­ing Pack on the web­site. www.faslane365.org/1oct/press

Con­tacts: 0845 45 88 365 / 07733 360955 / 07768 312 676
info@www.faslane365.org
http://www.faslane365.org

Playing with Fire: The Story of Daniel McGowan, “eco-terrorism” and the Green Scare

Grow­ing up in New York City, Daniel McGowan saw first-hand how pol­lu­tion fogged the air and fouled the beach­es in some of the city’s poor­est com­mu­ni­ties, set­ting him on a life­long path of envi­ron­men­tal and social jus­tice. But how he end­ed up drenched in gaso­line and set­ting fire to Oregon’s Jef­fer­son Poplar Farms in 2001 and was lat­er tar­get­ed as a “domes­tic ter­ror­ist” is the sto­ry of some­one who cared too much and didn’t know what else to do.

Playing with Fire coverGrow­ing up in New York City, Daniel McGowan saw first-hand how pol­lu­tion fogged the air and fouled the beach­es in some of the city’s poor­est com­mu­ni­ties, set­ting him on a life­long path of envi­ron­men­tal and social jus­tice. But how he end­ed up drenched in gaso­line and set­ting fire to Oregon’s Jef­fer­son Poplar Farms in 2001 and was lat­er tar­get­ed as a “domes­tic ter­ror­ist” is the sto­ry of some­one who cared too much and didn’t know what else to do.

Born in Brook­lyn and raised in Queens’ Rock­away Beach, Daniel McGowan grew up sand­wiched between asphalt and the sky, in a for­est of build­ings and buzzing streets. Until Dec. 7, 2005, the 33-year-old with a round face and a chip­munk smile was most­ly known in local cir­cles for his involve­ment in a vari­ety of activist projects. Today, after a near­ly two-year legal bat­tle that saw him labeled an “eco-ter­ror­ist” by the U.S. gov­ern­ment, McGowan is serv­ing a sev­en-year sen­tence at a fed­er­al prison in Min­neso­ta on 15 counts of arson, attempt­ed arson and con­spir­a­cy to com­mit arson against two pri­vate com­pa­nies in Ore­gon in 2001.

McGowan, whose arrest shocked his fam­i­ly and friends, and his case was lumped togeth­er with nine oth­ers as part of the Fed­er­al Bureau of Investigation’s Oper­a­tion Back­fire, which pro­duced 65 indict­ments for actions at 17 tar­gets, includ­ing pri­vate com­pa­nies, uni­ver­si­ties and gov­ern­ment facil­i­ties across five states from 1996–2001, in what the FBI called a “cam­paign of domes­tic ter­ror­ism.” The actions were all claimed by the Envi­ron­men­tal Lib­er­a­tion Front (ELF) or the Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Front (ALF), an under­ground, decen­tral­ized move­ment of rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ists, which McGowan par­tic­i­pat­ed in between 1999 and 2001 while liv­ing in Eugene, Ore­gon.

“At a cer­tain point, I got involved in the ELF,” McGowan told The Indypen­dent at his Brook­lyn home in June, a few weeks before report­ing to prison. “At the time it seemed like a nat­ur­al pro­gres­sion, but it also coin­cid­ed with my increas­ing grief and rage I was feel­ing about the envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion I saw. I went to Ore­gon and I couldn’t believe how okay peo­ple were with what was going on. We’d dri­ve to the edge of town and you saw the log­ging mills, or you went into the for­est and stum­bled upon a clear cut. It just blew me away. I had to find a way to chan­nel that grief and rage.” The dilem­ma McGowan faced has trou­bled activists for gen­er­a­tions. When you try every form of “accept­able” advo­ca­cy to make change with lit­tle suc­cess, what do you do?

“A Cam­paign of Domes­tic Ter­ror­ism” In the mid­dle of the night on May 21, 2001, McGowan found him­self in the vehi­cle shop of Jef­fer­son Poplar Farms in of Clatskanie, a small town in north­west Ore­gon on the Colum­bia Riv­er. He had just fin­ished lay­ing out soaked gaso­line sheets and tow­els con­nect­ed to a home­made incen­di­ary device, designed to set fire to a fleet of SUVs and the com­pa­ny office. The pri­vate­ly owned facil­i­ty had been select­ed as an ELF tar­get because McGowan and his accom­plices believed it was involved in genet­ic research by grow­ing a hybrid vari­ety of poplar-cot­ton­wood trees that would help tim­ber com­pa­nies replace the region’s old-growth forests with com­mer­cial tree farms.

“We torched Jef­fer­son Poplar because hybrid poplars are an eco­log­i­cal night­mare threat­en­ing native bio­di­ver­si­ty in the ecosys­tem,” the sabo­teurs wrote in a com­mu­nique that was released after the action. “Our forests are being liq­ui­dat­ed and replaced with mono-cul­tured tree farms so greedy, earth-rap­ing cor­po­ra­tions can make more mon­ey.”

“At some lev­el, I thought it [ELF actions] was effec­tive,” McGowan said. “If I would have writ­ten a state­ment that I think genet­ic-engi­neered trees are bad and old­growth log­ging is bad and sent it to every media out­let in the coun­try, it wouldn’t have been paid atten­tion to,” he explained. “There is some­thing real­ly strange about when you attach a state­ment to an arson it sud­den­ly becomes news­wor­thy … it is like pro­pa­gan­da with teeth.”

For McGowan, the actions were part of his search for the right mix of tac­tics to make pos­i­tive change.

“For me, the actions were not grotesque or not about destroy­ing things. I had a hard time get­ting into the mind set to destroy oth­er people’s stuff or even liv­ing [genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied] organ­isms,” he said. “I would get sick before actions, get ner­vous — it was real­ly dif­fi­cult. But I did it because I felt that the oth­er things weren’t work­ing, and that while there was a pre­pon­der­ance of oth­er tac­tics being tried, these tac­tics weren’t being tried and I thought that maybe there is some­thing we can do to help the issue.”

Between 1996 and 2001, an under­ground cell of activists based in Eugene, Ore­gon, called “the Fam­i­ly” in gov­ern­ment doc­u­ments, tar­get­ed fed­er­al and uni­ver­si­ty research facil­i­ties, meat and lum­ber com­pa­nies, a car deal­er­ship, wild horse cor­rals and oth­er “earth rap­ers,” as described by com­mu­niques released at the time.

Accord­ing to the FBI, the string of high pro­file actions that hit 17 tar­gets in the Pacif­ic North­west in the late 1990s caused near­ly $80 mil­lion in prop­er­ty dam­age. These actions are only a few of the more than 600 inci­dents claimed by the ELF and ALF nation­wide since 1996. “I think that’s real­ly what all these actions are about — is real­ly get­ting pub­lic atten­tion to some of these issues,” said Jim Fly­nn, a Eugene-based envi­ron­men­tal­ist in a July 2007 USA Today arti­cle. “If we were able to affect pol­i­cy change through more legal means, then cer­tain­ly that’s the way these peo­ple would go. Nobody enjoys being under­ground, and that lifestyle.”

TO CONTINUE READING ARTICLE, VISIT: http://www.indypendent.org/2007/09/15/enemy-of-the-state/

SIDEBAR ARTICLES:

Why Green Makes the Right See Red
http://www.indypendent.org/2007/09/15/why-green-makes-the-right-see-red/

The Birth of a Buzz­word: “Eco-ter­ror­ism”
http://www.indypendent.org/2007/09/15/the-birth-of-a-buzz-word-eco-terrorism/
NOTE: See Ron Arnold’s response)

The Net Widens: Free Speech on Tri­al
http://www.indypendent.org/2007/09/15/the-net-widens/

Under­ground Eco-defend­ers
http://www.indypendent.org/2007/09/15/underground-eco-defenders/

Please leave com­ments on the arti­cles if you want!

THE INDYPENDENT is the news­pa­per of the NEW YORK INDEPENDENT MEDIA CENTER — www.indypendent.org

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For his address to write to, oth­er eco-pris­on­ers, tips for writ­ing etc, go to http://www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

Sun 23rd Sep: Rally Against Olympic Evictions — on Allotment Demolition Day

Details of March & Ral­ly Against Olympic Evic­tions on Allot­ment Demo­li­tion Day — Sun­day 23rd Sept
Meet 2pm out­side Hack­ney Town Hall

The demo will be in sol­i­dar­i­ty with oth­er evict­ed groups such as Clays Lane Hous­ing Co-op who have already been evict­ed from their homes and traveller/Gypsy com­mu­ni­ties soon to be evict­ed. The demo in Hack­ney calls into ques­tion the exces­sive social, eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal costs of the Olympics as a cat­a­lyst for (de)regeneration.

Marsh Lane allotment protest flierMarsh Lane allotmentsDetails of March & Ral­ly Against Olympic Evic­tions on Allot­ment Demo­li­tion Day — Sun­day 23rd Sept
Meet 2pm out­side Hack­ney Town Hall

The demo will be in sol­i­dar­i­ty with oth­er evict­ed groups such as Clays Lane Hous­ing Co-op who have already been evict­ed from their homes and traveller/Gypsy com­mu­ni­ties soon to be evict­ed. The demo in Hack­ney calls into ques­tion the exces­sive social, eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal costs of the Olympics as a cat­a­lyst for (de)regeneration.

For a leaflet/flyer for this event, click onto the Lifeis­Land web­site:
http://www.lifeisland.org/

“Devel­op­ment” — at what cost?
Their con­sul­ta­tion = we know best

Plan­ning per­mis­sion for the Manor Gar­dens Allot­ments tem­po­rary relo­ca­tion site at Marsh Lane Fields in Waltham For­est was grant­ed on Tues­day June 12th 07. The Lon­don Devel­op­ment Agen­cy’s plan has always been to remove them to make way for a foot­path to the sta­dia need­ed for the four weeks of the Olympics.

Manor Gar­dens, bequeathed to be allot­ments ‘in per­pe­tu­ity’ by their orig­i­nal own­er the ‘Right Hon’ Major Vil­liers, sit in the North cen­tral sec­tion of the Olympic Park. The site has been ear­marked to be vacat­ed on Sun­day 23rd Sep­tem­ber.

How­ev­er, allot­ment hold­ers aren’t going out with a whim­per. Tomor­row, they are going to hold a march and ral­ly on Allot­ment Demo­li­tion Day. Allot­ment hold­ers, sup­port­ers and cam­paign­ers will be meet­ing at 2pm out­side Hack­ney Town Hall, march­ing to Hack­ney Wick Com­mu­ni­ty Asso­ci­a­tion Baths, 80 East­way, E9.

National Camp for Climate Action Meeting Nov 3–4 Oxford

The Cli­mate Camp on its own did­n’t stop cli­mate change — but it’s part of a grow­ing social move­ment that can! Come and take the next steps for­ward at the upcom­ing UK-wide meet­ing on Nov 3–4 in Oxford. Every­one is wel­come, whether you came to the camp, or were sim­ply inspired by it.

Climate camp main marquee at night - planet has no emergency exits bannerThe Cli­mate Camp on its own did­n’t stop cli­mate change — but it’s part of a grow­ing social move­ment that can! Come and take the next steps for­ward at the upcom­ing UK-wide meet­ing on Nov 3–4 in Oxford. Every­one is wel­come, whether you came to the camp, or were sim­ply inspired by it.

The Cli­mate Camp had 4 key aims: edu­ca­tion, direct action, sus­tain­able liv­ing, and build­ing a social move­ment to col­lec­tive­ly tack­le cli­mate change and build a bet­ter world. Region­al meet­ings have been hap­pen­ing up and down the coun­try, and in Oxford we will meet to col­lec­tive­ly share all our ideas for tak­ing our aims fur­ther.

The agen­da for this meet­ing has not yet been set — if you have any ideas about top­ics you think it is impor­tant for us to dis­cuss, or if you are up for help­ing with plan­ning and facil­i­tat­ing this meet­ing, please email meetings@climatecamp.org.uk.

Local groups: please send any write-ups of dis­cus­sions from your debrief meet­ings to website@climatecamp.org.uk, so they can be put on the web­site, and meetings@climatecamp.org.uk, so they can be fed into the nation­al meet­ing agen­da.

Prac­ti­cal info:
The meet­ing will run 11–6 on Sat­ur­day Nov 3 and 10–5 on Sun­day Nov 4.
The venue is the East Oxford Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Princes Street, Oxford (see http://www.eocsc.co.uk/find_us.htm for direc­tions and a map). Veg­an food will be pro­vid­ed at a cost of approx­i­mate­ly £10 a day. Floor acco­mo­da­tion is avail­able (bring a sleep­ing bag!) and do please email oxford@climatecamp.org.uk in advance so we know how many peo­ple are com­ing! If you have any dietary, access, creche, or oth­er needs, please get in touch by email­ing oxford@climatecamp.org.uk.

Fur­ther infor­ma­tion will be added to the web­site, www.climatecamp.org.uk, soon.

Allotment Holders Sowing the Seed of Resistance in Reading

On Mon­day 17th Sep­tem­ber 07 Cow Lane allot­ment hold­ers began their first action against plans to bull­doze the site to make way for a new road as part of the Read­ing sta­tion upgrade.

Cow Lane allotmentsOn Mon­day 17th Sep­tem­ber 07 Cow Lane allot­ment hold­ers began their first action against plans to bull­doze the site to make way for a new road as part of the Read­ing sta­tion upgrade.

See http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/08/377780.html for pre­vi­ous report.

Allot­ment hold­ers where alert­ed to the arrival of sur­vey­ors gath­er­ing infor­ma­tion for the new road design last week. To ensure this event did not go unno­ticed allot­ment hold­ers quick­ly mobilised to greet and dis­miss the sur­vey­ors.

Most allot­ment hold­ers were at work, how­ev­er a small group man­aged to make a very vis­i­ble pres­ence at the gates to the allot­ment site. They erect­ed a 10 metre long ban­ner over the entrance, fash­ioned some makeshift plac­ards and hand­ed out 500 leaflets to pass­ing motorists, many of whom where very sup­port­ive, hoot­ing there horns and stop­ping to take leaflets. The usu­al sharp-wit­ted rant of ‘Get a Job’ was only heard once towards the end of the day. Friends from Com­mon Ground com­mu­ni­ty gar­den and asso­ci­at­ed activists also turned up to show sup­port.

One Land­scape Archi­tect had the audac­i­ty to turn up only to be turned away with a clear mes­sage that we intend to fight to save our allot­ments, and those com­pa­nies involved would not be immune from action.

The allot­ments are under threat due to the clo­sure of one of the Cow Lane bridges and a sub­se­quent diver­sion of the road as a part of devel­op­ment plans for Read­ing sta­tion. The road will also affect the Read­ing Fes­ti­val site, Mobile home res­i­dents and the River­side Sports and social cen­tre.

We also made it into our local rag ( http://www.getreading.co.uk/news/2015/2015224/protest_over_allotment_land)

Find out more about us and our cam­paign at www.cowlane.org.uk

Oth­er allot­ment sites under threat!
www.lifeisland.org
www.eastleigh-allotments-association.org.uk