Peat Bog protesters found not guilty & coal train stoppers mixed result

Two envi­ron­men­tal activists who chained them­selves to machin­ery at a peat bog extrac­tion site at Chat Moss, Sal­ford, Greater Man­ches­ter were acquit­ted by Sal­ford mag­is­trates court last Mon­day 5th July 2010.

BBC News cov­er­age: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bI9U5rcrK2w

Peat bog activists and supporters outside Salford Magistrates court - 5th July 2010Peat bog extraction halted - April 2010 - SalfordPeat bog extraction halted - April 2010 - SalfordTwo envi­ron­men­tal activists who chained them­selves to machin­ery at a peat bog extrac­tion site at Chat Moss, Sal­ford, Greater Man­ches­ter were acquit­ted by Sal­ford mag­is­trates court last Mon­day 5th July 2010.

BBC News cov­er­age: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bI9U5rcrK2w

Iain Hilton from Man­ches­ter Cli­mate Action and Son­ny Khan from Earth First! North West were accused under Sec­tion 4a of the 1986 Pub­lic Order Act for alleged­ly caus­ing “harass­ment, alarm or dis­tress” against employ­ees of Joseph Met­calfe Hor­ti­cul­tur­al Ltd and AW Jenk­in­son For­est Prod­ucts Ltd for their part in a peace­ful protest on Thurs­day 15 April 2010.

http://manchesterclimateaction.wordpress.com/2010/04/28/action-aginst-peat-bog-destruction-in-greater-manchester/

Dur­ing the protest, the court heard how Khan climbed up and locked onto a JCB dig­ger to pre­vent it load­ing peat into a deliv­ery lor­ry. Hilton mean­while scaled and locked him­self to the deliv­ery lor­ry to pre­vent it leav­ing the site. The two defen­dants were protest­ing against the envi­ron­men­tal impacts of peat extrac­tion – which caus­es 3 mil­lion tonnes of CO2 emis­sions per year in the UK accord­ing to Nat­ur­al Eng­land – the equiv­a­lent to the aver­age emis­sions of 350,000 house­holds. [1]

Upon hear­ing evi­dence from three employ­ees who appeared in court as pros­e­cu­tion wit­ness­es, the Dis­trict Judge Jonathan Finestein said that while the protest was “cer­tain­ly an irri­ta­tion and cer­tain­ly cost [the com­pa­nies] mon­ey” he had seen no evi­dence that the defen­dants intend­ed to, or did cause har­ras­ment, alarm or dis­tress as the pros­e­cu­tion had alleged and found them not guilty with­out wait­ing to hear evi­dence from the defence.

A request for a restrain­ing order ban­ning the two defen­dants from peat bog site in Chat Moss was also reject­ed by the Judge.

The pro­tes­tors were joined inside and out­side court by local cam­paign­ers from Save Our North West Green­belt. [2]

Speak­ing out­side court after the ver­dict, Iain Hilton said, “We’ve very pleased with the ver­dict. Our actions were rea­son­able, peace­ful and jus­ti­fied. The entire demo­c­ra­t­ic process of the City of Sal­ford from the Coun­cil to local MPs is against peat extrac­tion and have called for it to stop. The peo­ple of Sal­ford don’t want the peat to be extract­ed, so all we did was enforce everyone’s wish­es.”

Peat bogs are formed over thou­sands of years by the decay­ing rem­nants of plant mat­ter and active­ly soak up car­bon from the atmos­phere, mak­ing them extreme­ly valu­able in the fight against cli­mate change.

Over 94 per cent of the UK’s low­land peat bogs have been dam­aged or destroyed, most­ly in the last 50 years. The pro­tes­tors argue that pro­tect­ing the remain­ing intact peat bogs and restor­ing dam­aged or degrad­ed ones could lock car­bon in the soil and help to active­ly reduce the UK’s car­bon foot­print, as well as help­ing to pro­tect many rare species of plants and ani­mals, pro­tect­ing bio­di­ver­si­ty and a wild and rare habi­tat.

Sal­ford Coun­cil agree that peat extrac­tion must stop and are propos­ing a ban on future extrac­tion at Chat Moss.[3] Plan­ning lead mem­ber Coun­cil­lor Derek Antrobus said: “Curb­ing cli­mate change is a cen­tral aim of the plan­ning sys­tem and peat bog­land is an impor­tant car­bon sink. The Gov­ern­ment has announced the phas­ing out of peat for gar­den­ing so there can be no jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for its con­tin­ued exploita­tion.”

The site at Chat Moss, as well as oth­er peat extrac­tion loca­tions in the area, is owned by cor­po­rate giant Peel Hold­ings, the empire of tax-shy bil­lion­aire John Whit­tak­er. Backed by oil mon­ey of the pow­er­ful Sau­di Olayan fam­i­ly, the group var­i­ous­ly owns: the Traf­ford Cen­tre, Man­ches­ter Ship Canal and three oth­er ports, four air­ports and MediaC­i­tyUK in Sal­ford, just a few famous names with­in a huge prop­er­ty port­fo­lio. They also have a large stake in UK Coal, involved in the con­tro­ver­sial Car­bon Cap­ture and Stor­age coal pow­er plant pro­posed in Ayr­shire in Scot­land, where a direct action cam­paign is also expect­ed by envi­ron­men­tal­ists. Peel are dis­put­ing the ban, which they claim is unjus­ti­fied.

Rachel Dawes from Man­ches­ter Cli­mate Action said, “Peel Hold­ings have huge polit­i­cal pow­er in the North­west. Finan­cial gain is their only inter­est and this comes at the expense of the envi­ron­ment, local­ly and glob­al­ly. Tak­ing direct action is an essen­tial part of the strug­gle against big busi­ness and in sit­u­a­tions like this we have to stand up and say enough is enough.”

Hilton added, “The release of green­house gas­es through peat bog extrac­tion has a dev­as­tat­ing effect on the world’s cli­mate and the destruc­tion of green belt land is deplorable. These are places that should be enjoyed by every­one and not carved up for the sake of prof­it.”

Also speak­ing out­side court Khan said, “We’re hap­py with the sup­port of the local Save Our North­west Green Belt group. We hope it encour­ages more peo­ple to stand up and take action to stop envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion.”

Notes
—————————–

[1] Nat­ur­al Eng­land report — http://www.naturalengland.org.uk/regions/north_east/press_releases/2010/180310.aspx

[2] Save our North West Green Belt and Green Spaces face­book
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=wall&viewas=0&gid=201970218853

[3] http://manchesterclimatefortnightly.blogspot.com/2010/05/mcfly-047-peat-leave-it-as-ground.html

e‑mail: manchester@climatecamp.org.uk
Home­page: http://manchesterclimateaction.wordpress.com/

Oth­er press links
——————————–
The Mule — http://manchestermule.com/article/climate-activists-found-not-guilty

Sal­ford Star — http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=618

——–
Coal Train Court Ver­dict
July 09, 2010

Eigh­teen peo­ple from Bris­tol and Bath were in court yes­ter­day to answer two charges of obstruct­ing the rail­way at Ffos-y-Fran open-cast coal mine in Merthyr Tyd­fil. Sev­en peo­ple who had chained them­selves to the track and six who had been act­ing as sup­port and legal observers all plead­ed guilty to Sec­tion 36 of the Mali­cious Dam­ages Act 1861, and not guilty to Sec­tion 35 of the same act (the sec­tion car­ry­ing the infa­mous life penal­ty). Five peo­ple includ­ing a legal obvser­er and dri­vers plead­ed not guilty to both charges.

Sec­tion 35 was dropped against all 18, cru­cial­ly acknowl­edg­ing that this was not a mali­cious action as orig­i­nal­ly alleged, and Sec­tion 36 was dropped against the 5 who had plead­ed not guilty to it and had clear­ly had noth­ing to do with the obstruc­tion.

Five of the eigh­teen walk out of court with no con­vic­tion. For the oth­er thir­teen, sen­tenc­ing will be on August 13th at Merthyr Crown Court. There will be no prison sen­tences, how­ev­er it appears restrain­ing orders and an £8000 com­pen­sa­tion claim are being con­sid­ered.

Those involved are very grate­ful for the con­tin­ued sup­port of friends in Merthyr Tyd­fil, Bris­tol, Bath, nation­wide and beyond. Hope­ful­ly there will be a big turnout for sen­tenc­ing, when those fac­ing restrain­ing orders will explain for the record why they felt it nec­es­sary to block­ade a coal train.

This Sun­day, Bris­tol & Bath Ris­ing Tide host an evening at Kebele Social Cen­tre in Eas­t­on, recount­ing train block­ades car­ried out by Bris­to­lians over the past 30 years oppos­ing social injus­tices from cli­mate chaos to nuclear waste. Film, food and dis­cus­sion from 6:30pm.

Bath Bomb #31 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #31
free/donation
July 2010
‘Where news goes to die’

George’s Mar­vel­lous Med­i­cine!

Bath Bomb small logoTHE BATH BOMB
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #31
free/donation
July 2010
‘Where news goes to die’

George’s Mar­vel­lous Med­i­cine!

Won­drous news this month as we dis­cov­er that the chan­cel­lor has heal­ing hands rivalling those of the good Lord Jesus. Osborne claims he has the abil­i­ty to cure the dis­abled and reduce the bankers’ debt in the process. Praise be.

It would seem irre­spon­si­ble, uncar­ing and cru­el to ignore the wel­fare for those most vul­ner­a­ble in our soci­ety, espe­cial­ly in the cur­rent cli­mate. Thank­ful­ly, the Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty think, with a dose of George’s mar­vel­lous med­i­cine, one in five peo­ple pre­vi­ous­ly con­sid­ered inca­pable of work will be able to mirac­u­lous­ly attain and keep gain­ful employ­ment. This will cut the deficit and bring noth­ing but hope and hap­pi­ness to those unfor­tu­nate enough to be hand­i­capped.

Despite the lev­el of unem­ploy­ment being so trou­bling, the Tories assure us that those com­ing off sick­ness ben­e­fits will have an easy time find­ing work. It does­n’t mat­ter if they’ve spent long peri­ods out of work; that sure­ly won’t affect employ­ers’ deci­sions. Cer­tain­ly, it won’t influ­ence those already on the dole. That’d be ridicu­lous.

Enough irony.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Con-Dem don’t appear to under­stand the def­i­n­i­tion of inca­pac­i­ty, seem­ing to believe that there are those who are unable and yet, at the same time, able.

Fur­ther issues are seen with the pen­sion age due to rise to 66 and lat­er to 70 and so on. Sim­ply the increase by one year will mean 200,000 extra peo­ple will die with­out reach­ing retire­ment age. It’s cer­tain­ly worth not­ing that those with big salaries and big bonus­es can and do retire ear­li­er with the free­dom their dirty mon­ey brings them. Even more so, high­er wages mean high­er life expectan­cy. The Con­ser­v­a­tives promised no cuts to pen­sions and yet sure­ly these sub­stan­tial­ly are.

In France, there is cur­rent­ly large scale indus­tri­al action over their increase to 62, sure­ly 66 is just tak­ing the piss.

This mon­th’s bud­get deliv­ers freezes on child ben­e­fit and pub­lic sec­tor pay (con­sid­er­ing infla­tion, essen­tial­ly a cut in both). It brings annu­al­ly decreas­ing state ben­e­fits in line with the cost of liv­ing and fur­ther hits on the poor by rais­ing V.A.T. to 20 per­cent. Mean­while, cor­po­rate tax is reduced to leave more mon­ey with the C.E.O.s and share­hold­ers. Clear­ly, Con-Dem could have raised tax­es in order to tack­le the deficit, espe­cial­ly of those with could have raised tax­es in order to tack­le the deficit, espe­cial­ly of those with more mon­ey than they know what to do with, yet they’ve ignored this avenue. Instead the Tories are seek­ing out ways to direct­ly attack the poor­est and most vul­ner­a­ble to keep their bank­ing friends’ pock­ets lined. Cunts!

It’s A SHSEI-ing Shame

Whilst we have giv­en a fair chunk of cov­er­age to the woes of one com­mu­ni­ty activist ini­tia­tive get­ting repeat­ed­ly bounced off the pave­ment by Bath’s pow­ers-that-be, anoth­er local scheme has also been tak­ing it in the chops, but on the qui­et. The brain­child of one Mr Lawrence Buabeng, Snow Hill Skills and Enter­prise Ini­tia­tive, has been slog­ging through coun­cil nego­ti­a­tions for the last four years. Whilst gov­ern­ment direc­tives and strate­gies have been blath­er­ing on about emo­tive touchy-feely terms like ‘com­mu­ni­ty empow­er­ment’, ‘help­ing peo­ple to help them­selves’ and ‘stronger, safer com­mu­ni­ties’, on the ground they offer the exact oppo­site. S.H.S.E.I. is a case in point.

Whilst the scheme has put togeth­er a com­pre­hen­sive, step-by-step and ambi­tious plan (a term its detrac­tors often use against it) to com­bat workless­ness, ill health, and lack of com­mu­ni­ty cohe­sion, it also seeks to regen­er­ate a visu­al­ly-neglect­ed area and recon­nect its peo­ple to their own his­to­ry. Specif­i­cal­ly, it is made up of those peo­ple itself, and aims for ful­fill­ing work, offer­ing the skills and prac­ti­cal train­ing to get it. It also imple­ments local­ly account­able, cost-effec­tive pub­lic ser­vices. Though Lon­don Road is one of the main arter­ies into this World Her­itage city, it is the UK’s third worst pol­lut­ed road and absolute­ly lit­tered with board­ed-up shop fronts. The fact is that the home­less, unem­ployed, ex-offend­ers, and drug-depen­dent who make up a size­able pro­por­tion of the com­mu­ni­ty often have a poor work­ing rela­tion­ship with insti­tu­tion­al bod­ies. When an afflu­ent, phil­an­thropist out­sider rolls in to tell you how to improve your lot, the dis­em­pow­er­ment, the patro­n­is­ing arro­gance, the dis­trust and inequal­i­ty leave a sour taste.

Start­ing off with a film-mak­ing work­shop for youth (four films are already avail­able at http://www.ilovesnowhill.com), the scheme also aims at re-open­ing the gar­den behind Car­o­line House, tak­ing back three build­ings for the com­mu­ni­ty (main­tain­ing them to exact­ing envi­ron­men­tal stan­dards, and put them to use as Her­itage, Skills & Enter­prise Cen­tres), pro­mot­ing child- and elder­ly-care schemes, and explor­ing alter­na­tive eco­nom­ics. The first stage sur­vey of local needs was done for free this spring, whilst the coun­cil’s sur­vey of 170 peo­ple in 2002 gob­bled up around £30,000. The results of the first 100 have been damn­ing, dis­play­ing a 45% rate of localised unem­ploy­ment. The scheme has seen sup­port from a dizzy­ing array of insti­tu­tions: B&NES Her­itage and Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment offi­cer, the local MP, the Local Improve­ment Advi­sor, British Trust for Con­ser­va­tion Vol­un­teers, Somer Hous­ing, Bet­ter Bath Forum, Job Cen­tre Plus, Gen­e­sis Trust, Bath Abbey Home­less Ini­tia­tive, North East Som­er­set Arts and Bath Spa Uni, as well as those local denizens at the bot­tom of the lad­der.

But no, it seems the coun­cil would rather sweep any prob­lems under the car­pet: though Snow Hill has four times as many Job-seek­ers as the nor­mal rate, it is divid­ed neat­ly between the afflu­ent wards of Lam­bridge and Wal­cot, so no one has to get upset by damn­ing sta­tis­tics. For its part, the Lon­don Road Part­ner­ship seeds its mem­bers into com­mu­ni­ty meet­ings to witch-hunt local youth. The Coun­cil seems to be wait­ing for the uppi­ty poor folk to either die off (as two of the S.H.S.E.I. sub-com­mit­tee already have) or do what they’re sup­posed to do, like get a habit or a jail sen­tence. This jus­ti­fies an ever-increas­ing gold-rush of police resources as the upper ech­e­lons mat­ter-of-fact­ly step up the class war. At the same time, they scav­enge the choic­est morsels of the scheme, rather than give cred­it to the dis­ad­van­taged who have put in years of sol­id, unpaid work.

The first hint of back-stab­bing was when B&NES’s Paul Pen­ny­cook all but promised a sum of £45,000 for a workless­ness ini­tia­tive in the area at the turn of the year; but when the cash did arrive, instead of it going to the exist­ing, local­ly-based scheme, it instead fell in the hands of Re:Generate — a team of well-mean­ing young and pol­ished com­mu­ni­ty con­sul­tants from Shrews­bury, cyn­i­cal­ly being used by their high­er ups to under­mine and mar­gin­alise the active com­mu­ni­ty, (who already do work in more need­ed areas like White­way, Twer­ton and Keyn­sham) and instead sink fund­ing into a spate of jum­ble sales.

Things start­ed get­ting ugly from there on in. Although the offi­cial route has­n’t led to many results so far, a com­plaint was lodged with the local author­i­ty ombuds­man, and law suits were ini­ti­at­ed. Alex Schlesinger, chair of the Lon­don Road Part­ner­ship and antiques empo­ri­um emper­or, threat­ened to return fund­ing to sender or waste it on court fees, rather than use it for the scheme — paint­ing him as a self-serv­ing, self-sat­is­fied do-good­er refus­ing to actu­al­ly do any good for those who count. 3 and 4 Long Acre got squat­ted to push the coun­cil in the right direc­tion, but things got even ugli­er when Joanne Long, from B&NES Prop­er­ty Ser­vices, reared her.…face? and start­ed court pro­ceed­ings. The evic­tion took place on Thurs­day the 8th of this month. Prop­er­ty Ser­vices man­age­ment of the build­ing, or mis-man­age­ment, inci­den­tal­ly, bor­ders on crim­i­nal neglect: back in April, they erect­ed scaf­fold­ing round the out­side of the build­ing to car­ry out a sur­veyance, and ‘deal’ with the rain dam­age; how­ev­er, when we say ‘deal’, we mean they did­n’t both­er to patch up the holes in the roof which admits reg­u­lar streams of rain (and the floor­boards are par­tial­ly rot­ten inside, which the squat­ters took pains to reverse), but just put up board­ing to con­ceal the moss grow­ing on the out­side of the brick­work. Rather than return the build­ings over to the needs of the com­mu­ni­ty, they’d rather flog them off to the high­est bid­der, in a des­per­ate bid to pay off coun­cil debts from oth­er mis­takes.

We could go on — we often do, but the sor­ry saga involves a lot more dou­ble-stan­dards, co-option, per­jury and lies. S.H.S.E.I. still has­n’t giv­en up, and if peo­ple of integri­ty want to sup­port it in any way — be it prac­ti­cal, finan­cial or polit­i­cal — drop them an e‑mail at lawrencebuabeng[at]googlemail.com .

Nice Work If You Can Skel­lett

Although the times are hard, it’s nice to know that some folks are get­ting by. Col­in Skel­lett, for exam­ple, own­er of Great West­ern Enter­pris­es, is doing quite nice­ly. G.W.E. spe­cialise in pro­vid­ing busi­ness ser­vices (invent­ing this sea­son’s hottest buzz­words, and oth­er impor­tant stuff) for local coun­cils like B&NES. He was bust­ed by the Lon­don Police Fraud Squad back in 2002 for accept­ing a sup­posed £1 mil­lion bribe for sell­ing off his com­pa­ny Wes­sex Water to Malaysian-owned YTL Pow­er (appar­ent­ly, the mon­ey was pay­ment for the con­sul­tan­cy role he played in the buy-out). It turns out this chair­man of the Ini­tia­tive for Bath and North East Som­er­set just can’t get enough (monop­o­lies, that is). Still on Wes­sex’s board of direc­tors, he also helped out Busi­ness West after their finan­cial trou­ble two years back, by acquir­ing them. Busi­ness West pro­vide busi­ness ser­vices too, for com­pa­nies in the west-coun­try. How­ev­er, G.W.E. also owns the freema­son-like Bath and Bris­tol Cham­ber of Com­merces, who rep­re­sent the inter­ests of large busi­ness­es like banks, super­mar­kets, lawyers and pub­lic trans­port groups.

Then con­sid­er the shin­ing exam­ple of Orwellian dou­ble­s­peak that is ‘Future Bath Plus’. Half-owned by B&NES Coun­cil, they pro­mote Bath’s tourism and World Her­itage rep­u­ta­tion, and have let loose a city cen­tre man­ag­er intent on threat­en­ing pos­i­tive com­mu­ni­ty schemes like the Bath FreeShop. They are also the vehi­cle through which Bath’s Busi­ness Improve­ment Dis­trict scheme is brought in. B.I.D.s, which, if vot­ed in, pop an extra tax levy onto all local busi­ness­es, with the stat­ed aim of pro­mot­ing ‘all’ busi­ness­es in the area, osten­si­bly. The B.I.D. is like­ly to boost CCTV sur­veil­lance and pseu­do-cop pres­ence in the city cen­tre, pri­vatis­ing pub­lic space, and sweep­ing away the home­less, the eth­nic minori­ties and the polit­i­cal­ly active who might just ren­der the high street too unseem­ly for our beloved tourists’ del­i­cate sen­si­bil­i­ties. First seen in this coun­try in Lon­don in 2006, 22 of them have spread now, with par­tic­u­lar out­cry in Ply­mouth, where vast amounts of tax­pay­ers’ mon­ey has been chan­nelled into the pro­mo­tion of the B.I.D. com­pa­nies’ direc­tors, inter­ests whilst com­peti­tors have been high and dry. It’s the same sto­ry of cor­rup­tion through­out the so-called North East Tri­an­gle of Bris­tol, Swin­don and Glouces­ter. Oh, and did we men­tion that our Col­in is the chair of Future Bath Plus?

So, Skel­lett, a close friend of B&NES Coun­cil’s CEO John Everett, is send­ing G.W.E. all over the south-west, accu­mu­lat­ing heaps of tax­pay­er cash through a mul­ti­tude of dis­guis­es, whilst vul­ner­a­ble pub­lic ser­vices face wave after wave of ‘inevitable’ cuts. B&NES claim that last year G.W.E. earned £40,000, but if you include the funds tossed Future Bath Plus and Busi­ness West­’s way, it’s look­ing clos­er to £1.5 mil­lion. Any­one else smell a rat?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_improvement_district”
http://www.bbc.co.uk

A Class (War) Act!

So, the bud­get has been announced and, as expect­ed, it hits the poor­est hard­est, while leav­ing the rich — the same peo­ple who caused the cri­sis — laugh­ing at the rest of us. There is expect­ed to be a min­i­mum of 600,000 redun­dan­cies sole­ly from the pub­lic sec­tor. In Bath alone, the largest employ­ers, B&NES, the MoD, and the Uni­ver­si­ties, are all fac­ing heavy loss­es, with at least three hun­dred coun­cil jobs on the chop­ping block in the next three years. Along with the all-out assault on aver­age peo­ple, Cameron and his Eton chums have decid­ed to reduce the amount of tax paid by cor­po­ra­tions and the ultra rich. But while the old school tie brigade get ready to dish us out a kick­ing, many ordi­nary peo­ple are get­ting pre­pared to bash back. Bob Crow, leader of the 85,000 strong RMT union summed it up best by say­ing “The trade unions must form alliances with com­mu­ni­ty groups, cam­paigns and pen­sion­ers’ organ­i­sa­tions in the biggest show of unit­ed resis­tance since the suc­cess of the anti-poll tax move­ment. Wav­ing ban­ners and plac­ards will not be enough — it will take direct action”. He has also called for ‘gen­er­al and coor­di­nat­ed strike action’ — a call which is being tak­en up by thou­sands around the coun­try prepar­ing to fight back against the dev­as­tat­ing Tory cuts. Already, there have been a spate of protests and actions up and down the coun­try. Where bet­ter to ignite the fight­back in earnest than the Tory Par­ty Con­fer­ence in Birm­ing­ham on Octo­ber the 3rd? Protests are being organ­ised that look set to involve thou­sands of angry peo­ple, and it looks like a coach will be going from Bath. So, if you fan­cy let­ting lord Snooty and the rest of the Thatch­er clones know what you think of their cuts, why not drop B.A.N. an email at bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk. In the mean­time, anti-cuts cam­paigns are spring­ing up left, left and cen­tre, so keep your ear to the ground and take a bit of inspi­ra­tion from our mate Bob Crow, who end­ed his recent speech with a clear mes­sage to all of us — “Don’t fear them — fight them!”

Cli­mate Camp Coun­ters Cym­ru Coal

There will be a Camp For Cli­mate Action tar­get­ing coal in South Wales this August, from the 13th to the 17th.

The direct action net­work will con­verge at a venue in Cardiff on Fri­day the 13th August, from which peo­ple will be tak­en to the camp itself. “Coal is one of the dirt­i­est fos­sil fuels in terms of car­bon. We will take action against open­cast coal min­ing because it trash­es the land, destroys our plan­et and wrecks the health of local peo­ple. Clean coal is a dirty joke”, said spokesper­son Cerys Jones.

Last year’s camp was held next to Ffos-y-fran in Merthyr Tyd­fil, the largest open­cast coal mine in the UK. The camp involved work­shops on cli­mate sci­ence, direct action train­ing, a solar-pow­ered cin­e­ma, com­post toi­lets, solar-heat­ed show­ers, grey­wa­ter sys­tems and wind pow­er.

As part of the con­tin­u­ing cam­paign res­i­dents are now tak­ing Miller Argent to court on the issue of ‘pri­vate nui­sance’. Due to the con­stant clouds of coal dust res­i­dents are unable to open win­dows, or hang wash­ing out. Also, of the 18 coal train block­aders, as men­tioned last month, five have now had their cas­es with­drawn.

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion about the camp, e‑mail: media[at]climatecampcymru.org, or give them a call at 07077 076147.

http://www.risingtide.org.uk
http://www.stopffosyfran.co.uk
http://coalaction.org.uk
http://www.climatecampcymru.org
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2009/aug/12/climate-camp-cymru-blog
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/8270681.stm
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/apr/26/coal-protest-ffos-y-fran

GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Con­tact us by e‑mailing bathbombpress[at]yahoo.co.uk. Large print e‑versions avail­able on request. And for more info on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

UPCOMING EVENTS

Lon­don Road Food Co-op, Wednes­days, 4–7pm, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Lon­don Road
Bathamp­ton Com­mu­ni­ty Grow­ers work­day, Thurs­days, 10am-dusk, Mill Lane, Bathamp­ton, e‑mail thelostplot[at]googlemail.com/ tel Chris 07792 444628
Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard
Recy­cle Your Sun­days, Sun­days, 10.30am, starts Abbey Church­yard, the reg­u­lar series of socia­ble, easy-paced cycle rides, http://www.bathrys.org.uk/ tel Hazel 01225 469199
Bris­tol & South Wales Hunt Sabo­teurs punk & thrash ben­e­fit gig, Fri­day 9th July, 7.30pm, The White Hart, White­hall Road, Bris­tol, feat. Kismet H.C., Death Job, Mutiny Plot and This Ends Here, £5
Intro­duc­to­ry Per­ma­cul­ture Week­end, Sat­ur­day 10th to Sun­day 11th July, Bath City Farm, £50, http://www.transitionbath.org
Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 10th July, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street
Broad­lands Orchard­share Vol­un­teer­ing Day, Sat­ur­day 10th July, 12–4pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php
work­shop: Activist Comms/Radio Train­ing, Sat­ur­day 10th July, 12–4.30pm, Bris­tol Cas­tle Park, sug­gest­ed dona­tion £2; please let us know if you’re plan­ning on com­ing — either e‑mail nickkassam[at]hotmail.com, or text 07796 864 649; bring food for a pic­nic and some­thing water­proof
film & dis­cus­sion: ‘Stop that train!’: direct actions on the rail­ways against cli­mate chaos and nuclear pow­er, Thurs­day 8th July, 6.30pm, Kebele Social Cen­tre, 14 Robert­son Road, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol; host­ed by Bris­tol and Bath Ris­ing Tide
Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru plan­ning gath­er­ing, Sat­ur­day 10th July, the Wyn­d­ham Street Cen­tre, 3–5, Wyn­d­ham Street, Cardiff, South Glam­or­gan CF11 6DQ; e‑mail info[at]climatecampcymru.org
Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru comms train­ing, Sun­day 11th July, Cardiff, e‑mail l3wis85[at]gmail.com
Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Mon­day 12th July, 8–9pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk
cul­ture fes­ti­val: ‘A Taste of Pales­tine’, Tues­day 13th July, 7.30pm, Mason­ic Hall, Frome, £7.50/£4 con­ces­sions, includ­ing food
Bath Mad Pride, Wednes­day 14th July, 2–4pm, Abbey Court­yard; danc­ing, games & enter­tain­ment
work­shop: ‘Organ­i­sa­tion­al Resilience’, Wednes­day 14th July, 9.30am‑5.30pm, the Cre­ater Cen­tre, Smeaton Road, Bris­tol, slid­ing scale pay­ment from £50; http://www.response-ability.org.uk
com­e­dy: Ivor Dem­bi­na’s ‘This Is Not A Sub­ject For Com­e­dy’, Wednes­day 14th July, The Gra­nary, Frome, £5
Raw food work­shop, Wednes­day 14th July, 7pm, the Abun­dant Life Well­ness Cen­tre, 36 New King Street, £10; pre-book­ing essen­tial as num­bers lim­it­ed to 12, tel 01225 318060
Bath Stop the War meet­ing, Wednes­day 14th July, 7.30pm, Friends Meet­ing House, York Street, Bath, BA1 1NG; http://www.bathstopwar.org.uk
Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 14th July, 8.30pm, the Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street
read­ings & food: ‘Arab Writ­ing Today’, Thurs­day 15th July, 7.30pm, Trin­i­ty Hall, Frome, £8
Tolpud­dle Mar­tyr’s Fes­ti­val, Fri­day 16th July to Sun­day 18th, Tolpud­dle, Devon; http://www.tolpuddlemartyrs.org.uk/index.php?page=martyr-s-festival
Two Tun­nels group open day, Sat­ur­day 17th July; walks will start every half hour between 10am and 4pm at the Tuck­ing Mill (south­ern) end of the tun­nel; http://www.twotunnels.org.uk
work­shop: ‘Per­ma­cul­ture Allot­ment Gar­den­ing Tech­niques’, Sat­ur­day 17th July, 1–7pm, Roy­ate Hill Allot­ments, Bris­tol, slid­ing scale pay­ment from £20; http://www.shiftbristol.org.uk
‘Wild Walk’ for­ag­ing day, Sun­day 18th July, 2pm, meet point tba, £10; tel Jonathan to book: 07740 706232
Bath Cycling Cam­paign meet­ing, Mon­day 19th July, 7.30pm, Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street
gig & work­shop: ‘Sur­vival Tales’, Wednes­day 21st July, 7pm, Eas­t­on Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Kil­burn Street, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol, BS5, £5/suggested dona­tion entry — please book in advance: contact[at]survivaltales.uk; http://www.survivaltales.org.uk; with Eirlys Rhi­an­non
gig & work­shop: ‘Sur­vival Tales’, Thurs­day 21st July, 7pm, Kebele Com­mu­ni­ty Co-op, 14 Rober­ston Road, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol, £5/suggested dona­tion entry — please book in advance: contact[at]survivaltales.uk; http://www.survivaltales.org.uk; with Eirlys Rhi­an­non
con­fer­ence: ‘A Sec­ond City Remem­bered: Rethink­ing Bristol’s His­to­ry, 1400–2000’, Fri­day 23rd July to Sat­ur­day 24th July, Muse­um of Bris­tol, The Old Coun­cil House, Corn Street, Bris­tol; orga­nized by the Region­al His­to­ry Cen­tre, Uni­ver­si­ty of the West of Eng­land
Peace News Sum­mer Camp, Fri­day 23rd July to Tues­day 27th, Oxford­shire; http://www.peacenewscamp.info
Bath Ani­mal Action info stall, Sun­day 25th July, 2–4pm, Stall Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk
Tran­si­tion Bath Social, Mon­day 26th July, 7.15pm, the Love Lounge/ back room of the Bell, Wal­cot Street; bring food to share; http://www.transitionbath.org
Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs meet­ing, Mon­day 26th July, 8–9pm, The Bell, tel Justin 07854 062336
Crit­i­cal Mass Bike Ride, Sat­ur­day 31st July, 1pm, Kingsmead Square, http://www.bathcyclingcampaign.org.uk
Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing, Wednes­day 4th to Mon­day 9th August, Der­byshire, £20–30; five days of work­shops, skill shar­ing and plan­ning action, plus low-impact liv­ing with­out lead­ers; e‑mail summergathering[at]earthfirst.org.uk FFI
Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 5th August, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at The Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade, http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com
film: ‘A Grin With­out a Cat: Scenes of the Third World War 1967–1977’, Sat­ur­day 7th August, 7.30pm, the Arnolfi­ni, Bris­tol, http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/710
film: ‘Novem­ber’, Thurs­day 12th August, 6.30pm, the Arnolfi­ni, Bris­tol, £3.00/£2.00; http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/711
film: ‘Lit­tle Dieter Needs to Fly’, Fri­day 13th August, 6.30pm, the Arnolfi­ni, Bris­tol; http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/712
Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru, Fri­day 13th August to Tues­day 17th, http://www.climatecampcymru.org
talk: ‘The Venus Project’, Sat­ur­day 21st August, 1–5pm, Vic­to­ria Rooms — The Audi­to­ri­um Uni­ver­si­ty of Bris­tol, Queens Road, Clifton, Bris­tol, BS8 1SA, £16.02 entry; http://thevpinbristol.eventbrite.com
Camp for Cli­mate Action, Sat­ur­day 21st to Tues­day 24th August, Edin­burgh, http://www.climatecamp.org.uk
film: ‘The War Game’, Sun­day 22nd August, 2.30pm, the Arnolfi­ni, Bris­tol; http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/716
Bath Veg­an Fayre ben­e­fit gig, Fri­day 27th August, Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade; more details tbc
one year part-time ‘Prac­ti­cal Sus­tain­abil­i­ty’ course, starts Sep­tem­ber 2010, Bris­tol; explor­ing per­ma­cul­ture design, organ­ic hor­ti­cul­ture, wood­land man­age­ment, green build­ing, eco­log­i­cal inter­ac­tions, ener­gy, group dynam­ics, re-local­i­sa­tion, cre­at­ing change, com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment and more; http://www.shiftbristol.org.uk
Bath Veg­an Fayre, Sat­ur­day 4th Sep­tem­ber, Man­vers Street Bap­tist Church, 12–4pm, free entry
Bris­tol Anar­chist Book­fair, Sat­ur­day 11th Sep­tem­ber, 10.30–5.30pm, Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bris­tol; e‑mail bristolanarchistbookfair[at]riseup.net; http://www.bristolanarchistbookfair.org
Region­al South West Ani­mal Rights Coali­tion meet­ing, Sun­day 19th Sep­tem­ber, 12–5pm, The Fac­to­ry, Cave Street, cen­tral Bris­tol
anti-Tory demon­stra­tion, Sun­day 3rd Octo­ber, Tory Par­ty Con­fer­ence, Birm­ing­ham more details tbc

Paint­ed Lions As White Ele­phants

Bath’s ele­gant and impos­ing 30s-era Churchill House in South­gate was smashed up, and a giant trash-can stuck in its place. The back of the old Tech col­lege build­ing in Low­er Bor­ough Walls was ripped off by a cow­boy ‘devel­op­er’, leav­ing the rest of it jacked up with a met­al gird­er after he did a run­ner. Only some ugly scaf­fold­ing stops the aban­doned Corn­mar­ket in Wal­cot St. from falling down. The last remain­ing Geor­gian-peri­od lido in the coun­try, the Grade II list­ed Cleve­land Pools, just off Lon­don Road, is falling to bits as a result of years of delib­er­ate coun­cil neglect.

B&NES’s ludi­crous response to this dere­lic­tion is to dump 100 iden­tik­it plas­tic lions on the streets of the city in some lame excuse for ‘street art’, and try to flog the idea to the pub­lic under the ban­ner of ‘Pride in our City’. The spin-doc­tors from B.U.M. (Bath Urban Mafia) must have laboured for min­utes to come up with this oh-so-clever dou­ble mean­ing.

These same coun­cil P.R. hacks describe the dum­mies as ‘pub­lic art’, yet, in the tra­di­tion of Bladud’s Pigs, Sophie Ryder’s hideous giant bril­lo pads, and the decade-old Earth from the Air exhi­bi­tion, they don’t both­er ask­ing the Bath pub­lic what THEY want.

By snub­bing local res­i­dents yet again, they were ask­ing for trou­ble, and they got it. Some of the beasts were smashed up not long after being unloaded, which would seem to show that extreme cen­sor­ship rules, K.O.

Not every­one is tak­en in by the B&NES moral spiel either; the three char­i­ties which are appar­ent­ly to ben­e­fit when the beasts are auc­tioned lat­er in the year, are Off the Record, the Quar­tet Com­mu­ni­ty Foun­da­tion, and the May­or’s relief fund for Bath. Yet the self-same fund­ing areas for young peo­ple, the home­less and the needy are the first to be sav­aged when cuts are made. A £3.4 mil­lion butcher­ing of chil­drens’ ser­vices, to be spread over a three-year peri­od, was announced by B&NES in 2009. So maybe this is why B.U.M. uses smoke and mir­rors to flaunt the lions as some kind of tes­ti­mo­ni­al to their alleged con­cern for the wel­fare of the vul­ner­a­ble in Bath, by using them as giant char­i­ty beg­ging bowls in this pathet­ic pub­lic­i­ty stunt.

Smash­ing News!

After well over a year of wait­ing, the E.D.O. Decom­mis­sion­ers’ tri­al has come to an end, with the result being a unan­i­mous NOT GUILTY ver­dict for all sev­en defen­dants. The Decom­mis­sion­ers are activists who, at the height of Israel’s 2009 geno­cide jol­ly (aka oper­a­tion ‘Cast Lead’) took things into their own hands and smashed up the Brighton fac­to­ry of arms man­u­fac­tur­ers E.D.O./I.T.T., caus­ing upwards of £200,000 of dam­age and destroy­ing heaps of records and research doc­u­ments. The com­pa­ny have long sup­plied Israel with bomb release mech­a­nisms and oth­er nas­ties that they need to main­tain their bru­tal stran­gle­hold over the peo­ple of Gaza. The E.D.O. Sev­en used the defence that by crip­pling the weapons fac­to­ry, they were pre­vent­ing ille­gal war crimes from tak­ing place in Pales­tine, thus mak­ing their actions legal by virtue of pre­vent­ing a big­ger crime from occur­ring. After hear­ing evi­dence direct from Pales­tine and reams of human rights reports, the judge decid­ed that the E.D.O. Sev­en had a point, acquit­ting all. This effec­tive­ly deems the Israeli occu­pa­tion of Gaza ille­gal, E.D.O./I.T.T. immoral and com­plic­it in war crimes, and sets a prece­dent for sim­i­lar action in the future. Whichev­er way the court case had gone, the E.D.O. Sev­en have set an exam­ple for us all — when the pow­er­ful active­ly aid war crimes, it is the job of ordi­nary peo­ple to step in and jam a span­ner in the works and a brick through the win­dow of the war machine.

http://www.smashedo.org.uk

Pre-emp­tive Incar­cer­a­tion For Bath’s ASBO Bas­tards

We here at the Bath Bomb were inter­est­ed to hear about Avon & Som­er­set Con­stab­u­lary’s pre­dic­tions for the future of the city’s youth, with their open day last month. As well as teach­ing up to 2,000 would-be crims how to com­mit unarmed rob­bery with repli­ca firearms, Dis­trict Super­in­ten­dant Gary Davies explained how “This police sta­tion belongs to the peo­ple.” They then pro­ceed­ed to baton charge infants and throw them in the cells, demand­ing char­i­ty bribes from the fam­i­lies to secure their release. Giv­en a stark taste of things to come should she put a foot wrong in the ever-increas­ing­ly dystopi­an police-state of her next sev­en­ty years, nine year-old Abby weep­ing­ly begged her sneer­ing goalers for free­dom. The ter­ri­fied tyke lat­er con­fessed about her cell: “I did­n’t like it. It was quite scary and not very big. I am not going to com­mit a crime as I don’t want to be locked up.”

There Is Such Thing As A Free Lunch

Plans are cur­rent­ly sim­mer­ing away for anoth­er free Bath Veg­an Fayre in the city, to take place on Sat­ur­day the 4th of Sep­tem­ber. The one last year was a great hit, with around 150 folks com­ing through the doors, much chuffed at the qual­i­ty of cru­el­ty-free fare fill­ing their bel­lies. The event was very much a local­ly-focused and a non-cor­po­rate affair, empha­sis­ing that even with the health, ethics and envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits of a plant-based diet, exploita­tion of humans is also on the ‘bad’ list. Many were dis­ap­point­ed by the angle that the Bris­tol Veg­an (sor­ry, ‘Eco Veg­gie’) Fayre took this year, jack­ing up the prices and the pol­ish, and mar­gin­al­is­ing cam­paign­ing groups away to a quar­an­tined-off sep­a­rate enclo­sure, so that peo­ple won’t be dis­tract­ed away from all the con­sumerism to be done. This year, the Bath Veg­an Fayre will take place at the Bap­tist Church Hall on Man­vers Street, but oth­er plans are still pret­ty much open. If you can help organ­ise or improve the event in any way, please get in touch with Bath Ani­mal Action — e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk, or ring them on 07717 130954.

The fol­low­ing month, on the 30th of Octo­ber, Bris­tol Ani­mal Rights Col­lec­tive will put on a sim­i­lar event. A ben­e­fit gig to raise funds is also expect­ed to take place at the Hob­gob­lin pub on the 27th of August — more details to be con­firmed.

Rich Jus­tice

Five employ­ees work­ing at the South African Roy­al Marang Hotel have been caught steal­ing var­i­ous items, and a small sum of mon­ey from some of Eng­land’s mil­lion­aire foot­ball play­ers. It is report­ed the items includ­ed under­wear. The employ­ees were sen­tenced to pay­ing a fine of £524, fol­lowed by three years of prison. This from a ‘World Cup Court’, a very spe­cial kind of court indeed, where the rich get all their stuff returned in one day, and the poor despair for three years after an after­noon’s hijinks.

Jail sel­dom is called for. What resti­tu­tion or repa­ra­tion could the fact of a per­son being jailed accom­plish? Do we have some kind of nat­ur­al duty to spend time behind bars once in a while? No. The ori­gin of the prison sys­tem lies in a medieval con­cep­tion of jus­tice. That is, jus­tice as pun­ish­ment. Jus­tice as an attempt to con­trol the pop­u­la­tion’s behav­iour, and make it fit in the ‘cor­rect’ mould.

Of course, the ‘cor­rect’ mould is arbi­trar­i­ly defined by the author­i­ties, so that we are today incar­cer­at­ing not only actu­al crim­i­nals, who may pose a threat to the gen­er­al pop­u­la­tion were they roam­ing free. But also, and most­ly, peo­ple who either did not do any­thing wrong, or peo­ple whose vic­tims will clear­ly not gain any­thing from them being in jail. How­ev­er, those un-unionised prison labour­ers do make a lot of cheap con­sumerist tat, so it’s not all bad.

Bath Activist Net­work are a local umbrel­la group cam­paign­ing on issues as diverse as devel­op­ment, envi­ron­men­tal­ism, anti-war, ani­mal rights, work­ers’ rights and more. Help­ing to pro­duce the Bath Bomb, we are open to any­one, and our mem­bers range from trade union­ists to anar­chists, lib­er­als and greens, and peo­ple who just want to change Bath for the bet­ter. For details on meet­ings, demos, or just to get in touch, e‑mail bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk or see our web­site: http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

And now, to the dis­claimer: as any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflec­tive of each con­trib­u­tor. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat on. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this dis­claimer do not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflect the opin­ions of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor.

Licence to Spill — Liberate Tate create an oil spill at the Tate — inside & out

On the evening of the 28th of June at approx 7:15pm, Lib­er­ate Tate In protest over BP’s spon­sor­ship of the arts per­formed a “Solemn” oil like spill at the Tate’s Sum­mer par­ty.

Liberate Tate 1Liberate Tate 2On the evening of the 28th of June at approx 7:15pm, Lib­er­ate Tate In protest over BP’s spon­sor­ship of the arts per­formed a “Solemn” oil like spill at the Tate’s Sum­mer par­ty.

Dressed in black and veiled the per­form­ers car­ry­ing black buck­ets with BP logos spewed molasses over the entrance way as onlook­ers watched in amaze­ment as the Port­land stone floor was con­sumed by the black oil like mess.

Feath­ers were scat­tered and filled the air and in the same man­ner of approach the artists grace­ful­ly paced their escape.

Licence to Spill

“Apart from cat­a­stroph­ic spills like the Deep­wa­ter Hori­zon, there are a whole host of adverse impacts that are asso­ci­at­ed with the pro­duc­tion of oil. On the local lev­el, it often involves extreme forms of pol­lu­tion for local com­mu­ni­ties, while region­al­ly oil is fre­quent­ly asso­ci­at­ed with greater mil­i­ta­riza­tion and conflict. Glob­al­ly, car­bon emis­sions, oil com­pa­nies, and our col­lec­tive depen­dence on the prod­uct they push, are tak­ing us ever clos­er to the edge of cli­mate cat­a­stro­phe. ”

To down­load Licence to Spill, a new release from Plat­form, vis­it http://www.carbonweb.org/showitem.asp?article=381&parent=39

Info : http://www.artnotoil.org.uk/

Watch the video of the action : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pz-_2KLt1W0

—–

Anoth­er report, includ­ing what hap­pened inside the ex-gar­den sum­mer par­ty:
Flowery-dressed oil spills
BP-smocked
Sip­ping Pimms and gob­bling canapés many of the guests expressed con­fu­sion at whether these strik­ing actions were ‘art’ or not. Despite inac­cu­rate report­ing in var­i­ous media out­lets, Lib­er­ate Tate would like to claim full respon­si­bil­i­ty for these acts of cre­ative dis­obe­di­ence as art – art that refus­es to pre­tend to do pol­i­tics but is pol­i­tics, art that makes trans­form­ing the world a beau­ti­ful adven­ture.

The Tate Sum­mer Par­ty had been planned to be in the muse­um gar­dens and involve speech­es from BP exec­u­tives. How­ev­er, due to the rumours of dis­rup­tion, Tate was forced to hold the entire event inside the muse­um and no speech­es were made.

As the evening sun baked down on the stone court­yard of Tate Britain and mem­bers of the cul­tur­al and cor­po­rate elite made their way into the par­ty, 13 fig­ures dressed in black, their faces veiled, appeared from around the cor­ner. In a mourn­ful pro­ces­sion the art-activists approached the entrance car­ry­ing large bar­rels brand­ed with the BP logo. Dozens of pho­tog­ra­phers and TV cam­eras swarmed and a moment of tense silence enveloped the area. Some­thing was going to hap­pen.

Then in a per­fect­ly chore­o­graphed moment, the front pha­lanx poured hun­dreds of litres of the black liq­uid all over the entrance, whilst oth­ers threw feath­ers into the air which gen­tly drift­ed down into the huge sticky black pools. The som­bre fig­ures walked calm­ly away, dis­ap­pear­ing into the city, as the secu­ri­ty redi­rect­ed the guests to anoth­er entrance as the cleanup oper­a­tion began.

Mean­while, despite the heavy secu­ri­ty at the door, two Lib­er­ate Tate art-activists man­aged to infil­trate the par­ty wear­ing large flo­ral bouf­fant dress­es under­neath which were con­cealed large sacks filled with the oily molasses. Call­ing them­selves Toni Hay­ward and Bob­bi Dud­ley, they began their per­for­mance in the crowd­ed cen­tral gallery. At first drips began to fall from their hand­bags. “Oh, I seem to have a leak” whis­pered one of them to the lined up wait­ers dressed in bril­liant white, who kind­ly pro­vid­ed nap­kins to stem the spill.

Soon the sacks under their dress­es burst releas­ing tens of litres of ‘oil’ across the shiny par­quet floor. As a crowd formed around them, the two donned BP brand­ed pon­chos and scram­bled on all fours try­ing to clean up the mess using their high heel shoes to pour the slick back into their hand­bags, but to no avail. “Com­pared to the size of the gallery this is a tiny spill, a drop in the ocean,” they apol­o­gised to the view­ers, “we’ll def­i­nite­ly have it cleaned up by, say, August”.

The polite crowd that had formed con­tin­ued to watch appre­cia­tive­ly for anoth­er 20 min­utes, amidst a sea of cam­era-phones. Many began debat­ing among them­selves whether this was art or not (“I think it is. I like it”), whether Tate had organ­ised it, and what their per­son­al aes­thet­ic reac­tions to it were (“If I had seen this out­side, I think I would have felt as I do see­ing it… inside”). More than one invit­ed artist open­ly described this to their fel­low drinkers as the most sophis­ti­cat­ed work in the room.

LIBERATE TATE

Lib­er­ate Tate, is a net­work ded­i­cat­ed to tak­ing cre­ative dis­obe­di­ence against the Tate until it drops its oil com­pa­ny fund­ing. The 28 June art activist per­for­mances fol­low on from last month’s dis­rup­tion of Tate Modern’s 10th Birth­day cel­e­bra­tions by hang­ing dead fish and birds from dozens of giant black heli­um bal­loons.

The net­work was found­ed dur­ing a work­shop in Jan­u­ary 2010 on art and activism, com­mis­sioned by Tate. When Tate cura­tors tried to cen­sor the work­shop from mak­ing inter­ven­tions against Tate spon­sors, the incensed par­tic­i­pants decid­ed to con­tin­ue their work togeth­er beyond the work­shop and set up Lib­er­ate Tate.

www.twitter.com/liberatetate

Images: www.immoklink.com/BP-Tate/index.html

www.youandifilms.com/2010/06/license-to-spill/

See also LIBERATE TATE COMMUNIQUE 1 http://bit.ly/9RFfxJ (MAY 2010)

Full Video Report http://www.youandifilms.com/2010/06/licence-to-spill-full-report/

Just Do It: Get Off Your Arse and Change the World

Doc­u­men­tary fol­low­ing the for­tunes of envi­ron­men­tal activists in 2009 launch­es inno­v­a­tive crowd-fund­ing appeal

***

An affinity group meeting during the Great Climate Swoop at Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station
Doc­u­men­tary fol­low­ing the for­tunes of envi­ron­men­tal activists in 2009 launch­es inno­v­a­tive crowd-fund­ing appeal

***

In ear­ly 2009, Emi­ly James began film­ing the clan­des­tine activ­i­ties of sev­er­al envi­ron­men­tal direct action groups across the UK. Allowed unprece­dent­ed access, Emi­ly doc­u­ment­ed a year of esca­lat­ing action that began in spring with the now infa­mous G20 demon­stra­tions in Lon­don. Always in the thick of it and with ever her trusty cam­era to hand she sad­dled up with The Cli­mate Rush “Bike Rush” as they brought West­min­ster to a stand­still, pitched up with The Cli­mate Camp as they occu­pied Black­heath, masked up with The Great Cli­mate Swoop as they stormed the fences at Rat­cliffe-on-Soar coal pow­er sta­tion, and then accom­pa­nied them all to win­try Copen­hagen as they took their protest to the streets out­side the UN COP 15 cli­mate talks. And those are just the head­lines!

‘Just Do It’ fol­lows the tri­umphs, trau­mas and clan­des­tine activ­i­ties of civ­il dis­obe­di­ent envi­ron­ment activists as they take on the com­bined forces of glob­al cap­i­tal­ism, run away cli­mate change and the pesky Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police. Hav­ing gath­ered over 250 hours of mate­r­i­al, she and her team are now embark­ing on the chal­leng­ing task of turn­ing this footage into a fea­ture length film, which will inspire peo­ple to take action on cli­mate change. Check out the trail­er here: http://just-do-it.org.uk/.

Set for release in 2011, the Just Do it mod­el can be thought of as the ulti­mate in inde­pen­dent film pro­duc­tion. Unlike a TV fund­ed doc­u­men­tary, our inno­v­a­tive crowd-fund­ing mod­el allows us to work com­plete­ly free from exter­nal inter­fer­ence, be it edi­to­r­i­al or styl­is­tic. This means that we can focus entire­ly on mak­ing a film that does jus­tice to the excit­ing footage we have cap­tured. Our pro­duc­tion mod­el gives us com­plete con­trol. This is bot­tom up film­mak­ing, not the usu­al top-down, and it is dri­ven by pas­sion and cre­ative vision, rather than by desire for rat­ings or com­mer­cial imper­a­tive.

“It’s pre­cise­ly the kind of film that wouldn’t get made with­in the exist­ing prof­it and rat­ings-dri­ven fund­ing struc­tures,” explains Just Do It direc­tor, Emi­ly James, “Crowd-fund­ing through dona­tion enables us, as cre­ative artists, to be sup­port­ed by our audi­ence in a more direct way, with­out the involve­ment of cul­tur­al gate­keep­ers. This is anoth­er nail in the cof­fin for tra­di­tion­al media.“

‘Just Do It’ aims to tell an impor­tant sto­ry fre­quent­ly obscured by the agen­da of the cor­po­rate media. If you too think this is a sto­ry which should be told, then please donate here: http://just-do-it.org.uk/fund-this-film — whether it’s a ten­ner or a grand, it will be grate­ful­ly received.

Shell due to start work next week & report from Rossport Solidarity Camp

June 25, 2010
Things are get­ting very busy here — after a peace­ful June Gath­er­ing the camp is once more set to become a focal point for resist­ing Shell pipeline work. Shell are due in the estu­ary any day now to drill 80 bore­holes — pipeline sur­vey work that should take all sum­mer. Yes­ter­day we shut down the Shell office in Bel­mul­let. Today Mau­ra Har­ring­ton was jailed for non pay­ment of fines. Niall and Pat are still in jail. Gen­er­al­ly it seems that lots of peo­ple are wis­ing up to the oil indus­try in the wake of the BP dis­as­ter in the Gulf of Mex­i­co.…

Strength in Community, RossportJune 25, 2010
Things are get­ting very busy here — after a peace­ful June Gath­er­ing the camp is once more set to become a focal point for resist­ing Shell pipeline work. Shell are due in the estu­ary any day now to drill 80 bore­holes — pipeline sur­vey work that should take all sum­mer. Yes­ter­day we shut down the Shell office in Bel­mul­let. Today Mau­ra Har­ring­ton was jailed for non pay­ment of fines. Niall and Pat are still in jail. Gen­er­al­ly it seems that lots of peo­ple are wis­ing up to the oil indus­try in the wake of the BP dis­as­ter in the Gulf of Mex­i­co.…

Stop Shell
Roof Occu­pa­tion Protest at Shel­l’s Bel­mul­let Offices
Cam­paign­ers hung a ban­ner read­ing “Ener­gy should­n’t cost the earth” from the roof of Shell offices in Bel­mul­let on Thurs­day morn­ing at 8am. This protest con­nect­ed the envi­ron­men­tal dis­as­ter suf­fered by the fish­ing com­mu­ni­ty & peo­ple of Louisiana with the threat faced by the fish­ing com­mu­ni­ty and peo­ple of Erris. In par­tic­u­lar the protest was in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Pat O’Don­nell who has been jailed for his coura­geous defense of the seas and his liveli­hood.
The protest blocked the entrance to the offices pre­vent­ing Shell work­ers from enter­ing that day!
Press Release and pho­tos here: http://www.indymedia.ie/article/97054

Fore­shore License Grant­ed — Bore­hole Drilling Immi­nent
Yes­ter­day Shell cir­cu­lat­ed a let­ter giv­ing notice that the bore­hole drilling would com­mence “in the com­ing days”.
Recent­ly Shell got the sign-off from “Green” Min­is­ter John Gorm­ley on plans to bore 80 bore-holes in Sruwad­da­con bay. Once again the com­mu­ni­ty and camp will be oppos­ing the Shell work both on land and at sea. Water-action train­ing is ongo­ing. It will be a sum­mer long job if they get start­ed, so sup­port up here would be great when­ev­er pos­si­ble. Now would be a good time to come.

There have already been con­trac­tors around doing ini­tial sur­veys for the con­tract to con­struct the 5km tun­nel under the estu­ary — one can­di­date com­pa­ny is called ICOP from Italy. Pres­sure on them would be no harm.

Here is their web­site: http://www.icop.it/tool/home.php
And address:
I.CO.P. S.p.A.
via Sil­vio Pel­li­co 2
33031 Basil­iano UD,
Italy

And con­tacts: info@icop.it, tunnelcom@icop.it, fondazioni@icop.it, amministrazione@icop.it, personale@icop.it, acquisti@icop.it, tecnici@icop.it

T. +39 0432–838611
F. +39 0432–838681

Please write to Pat & Niall — polit­i­cal pris­on­ers
As a lot of you are aware Pat O’Don­nell and Niall Har­nett are cur­rent­ly in Castlerea Prison for con­vic­tions aris­ing from protests against the Cor­rib Gas project. You can read more on Pat’s jail­ing here: http://www.shelltosea.com/content/shell-corrib-gas-who-…llies or more on Nial­l’s jail­ing here: http://www.indymedia.ie/article/96547

Please also ‘Like’ the ‘Sup­port Shell to Sea pris­on­ers of con­science’ page on Face­book (if you’re on it): http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Support-Shell-to-Sea-prisoners-of-conscience/112831115416555?ref=ts and Pat’s page at http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Pat-ODonnell/313999028104?ref=ts

Let­ters to Pat and Niall great­ly appre­ci­at­ed -
Pat O Don­nell / Niall Har­nett,
Castlerea Prison,
Har­ris­town,
Castlerea,
Co Roscom­mon,

Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp Wish­list
You might have some­thing lying around that you don’t want or need any­more.
At the moment we could use:

* Wheel­ie bins, plas­tic bar­rels, pal­lets (will prob­a­bly find local­ly)
* Work­ing Recharge­able Pow­er tools
* Boats and out­board motors of any size or make: Pow­er boats, sail boats, rigid sea kayaks would be espe­cial­ly use­ful as they can’t be punc­tured or sunk too eas­i­ly
* Band­saw
* PV pan­els, invert­ers, bat­ter­ies
* Trail­er that a Ford Tran­sit could tow. Some­thing like a horse trail­er and fair­ly weath­er proof would be ide­al to trans­port bikes.
http://www.shelltosea.com
ross­port­sol­i­dar­i­ty­camp at gmail dot com

Annu­al Ross­port Gath­er­ing report

Sup­port­ers from around the world joined in the annu­al gath­er­ing over the past week­end at the Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp at Broad­haven Bay, Coun­ty Mayo in sup­port of the Shell to Sea cam­paign. A large con­tin­gent of cyclists trav­elled from Britain via Merthyr Tyd­fil in Wales where anoth­er cam­paign is focussed to stop an ugly open-cast coal mine which is destroy­ing the envi­ron­ment, pol­lut­ing air and water and endan­ger­ing the com­mu­ni­ty.

The gath­er­ing at Ross­port has been held every year since before the jail­ing of the Ross­port 5 in 2005 — local res­i­dents who refused, for rea­sons of health, safe­ty and clean envi­ron­ment, to allow Shell / Sta­toil to lay an exper­i­men­tal high-pres­sure raw gas pipeline through their prop­er­ties. The Irish gov­ern­ment had, in an unprece­dent­ed move, pro­vid­ed the mul­ti-nation­als with com­pul­so­ry pur­chase orders. The five were giv­en indef­i­nite prison sen­tences but were released after 3 months fol­low­ing mas­sive pub­lic out­cry. A lat­er hear­ing vin­di­cat­ed them when the orig­i­nal pipeline route was reject­ed because of dan­ger­ous prox­im­i­ty to dwellings.

A new route is now being put for­ward, but is still con­sid­ered unac­cept­able by Shell to Sea who believe that the only safe way to bring the gas ashore is by refin­ing it at sea and bring­ing it in at low pres­sure. The dan­gers have been well high­light­ed by dis­as­ters world­wide includ­ing the Piper Alpha explo­sion, the pipeline explo­sion at Carls­bad, New Mex­i­co (August 2000 when a fam­i­ly of 12 liv­ing over 200 metres away were com­plete­ly wiped out), the out­ra­geous death and destruc­tion in Nige­ria and now the BP oil dis­as­ter.

The Merthyr to Mayo cycle ral­ly called at Castlerea prison to sup­port fish­er­man Pat O’Don­nell and fel­low Shell to Sea sup­port­er Niall Har­nett who are both now serv­ing jail terms for obstruct­ing police who had been brought in the ensure Shell employ­ees were not ham­pered in their work — the Irish gov­ern­ment takes care of big busi­ness with­out regard for the liveli­hoods of the local com­mu­ni­ty and the health of their envi­ron­ment !

The whole project was pushed ahead with­out con­sult­ing the local peo­ple — the refin­ery, 9 km inland (select­ed because it was state-owned forestry land) now approach­ing com­ple­tion and the sea­ward pipeline layed. But still no legal­ly per­mit­ted nor local­ly agreed inland route ! And not like­ly to be ! Local cam­paign­ers have had their lives total­ly dis­rupt­ed for more than 10 years now with this non­sense and are utter­ly com­mit­ted to the point of putting their lives on the line, lit­er­al­ly.

Greenwash spill at the BP-sponsored National Portrait Gallery

On Tues­day night (22 June 2010) at 6.07 PM the Lon­don brigade of the Green­wash Guer­ril­las got a call from a pan­icked pedes­tri­an out­side the Nation­al Por­trait Gallery.

BP Portrait Gallery greenwash guerrillasOn Tues­day night (22 June 2010) at 6.07 PM the Lon­don brigade of the Green­wash Guer­ril­las got a call from a pan­icked pedes­tri­an out­side the Nation­al Por­trait Gallery. It seemed that the prize­giv­ing cer­e­mo­ny for BP Por­trait Award was about to start, and tox­ic green­wash had begun to gush uncon­trol­lably from the gallery’s front doors.

Arriv­ing on the scene, armed with the lat­est in green­wash detect­ing equip­ment and wear­ing pro­tec­tive bio­haz­ard suits, the Guer­ril­las
imme­di­ate­ly iden­ti­fied sev­er­al sources of the leak. Green­wash lev­els appeared to be the strongest any­where a bright green BP logo was to be
found: from the mas­sive ban­ners fronting either side of the grand entrance, to the micro­scop­ic embroi­dery on a secu­ri­ty guard’s lapel. The
Guer­ril­las were giv­en the run-around by gallery secu­ri­ty and the Met­ro­pol­i­tan police, who escort­ed Britain’s cul­tur­al estab­lish­ment into
the awards cer­e­mo­ny first at the front, then around the side, then back at the front entrance again. By 7 PM, every­one had con­vened at the front entrance, and the Guer­ril­las set to work to con­tain the leak, quar­an­tine the area, and warn atten­dees against enter­ing the build­ing.

Many clean-up efforts were tried, from throw­ing golf balls and old tires at the leak to try­ing to plug it with mud, but for some rea­son the spill just kept gush­ing. Mean­while, some Guer­ril­las attempt­ed to arm the atten­dees – most of whom, inex­plic­a­bly, were deter­mined to enter the
con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed build­ing – with infor­ma­tion about BP, oil indus­try spon­sor­ship of the arts, and the best way to pro­tect them­selves from
green­wash.

Despite the best efforts of the Guer­ril­las, green­wash unfor­tu­nate­ly con­tin­ues to spew forth from the BP-spon­sored Nation­al Por­trait Gallery
and count­less oth­er oil-spon­sored arts insti­tu­tions across Lon­don. But resis­tance is grow­ing, and this sum­mer might just be remem­bered as the
tip­ping point in the cam­paign to free art from oil.

More info:
http://www.risingtide.org.uk
http://www.artnotoil.org.uk

WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?
BP’s spon­sor­ship of the Nation­al Por­trait Award is green­wash – a way of clean­ing up BP’s tat­tered pub­lic image and cov­er­ing up its shock­ing
envi­ron­men­tal and human rights record.

Green­wash is as tox­ic as oil. With it, BP buys our approval, and hopes we’ll for­get about the gush­er in the Gulf, the 300 000 lives already lost each year due to cli­mate change, and the fact that the com­pa­ny is poised to enter the Cana­di­an tar sands – the most destruc­tive project on earth.

Every pound the Nation­al Por­trait Gallery accepts from BP is taint­ed. In response to chang­ing pub­lic opin­ion, cul­tur­al insti­tu­tions even­tu­al­ly
decid­ed that it was no longer in their best inter­ests to take mon­ey from the tobac­co indus­try. It’s high time we kicked Big Oil out of our
gal­leries too.

Check out a bril­liant video here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-adx5mS2klA

london@risingtide.org.uk
http://www.risingtide.org.uk

Protest against BP — This Saturday 26/06 1pm at Tottenham Hale BP Garage, London

Against cli­mate crimes in the name of prof­it and in sol­i­dar­i­ty with work­ers exploit­ed by giant cor­po­ra­tion BP, come and protest this Sat­ur­day 26 June, 1pm at Tot­ten­ham Hale BP garage.

Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group have organ­ised a protest against giant cor­po­ra­tion BP this Sat­ur­day 26 June, from 1pm at Tot­ten­ham Hale BP Garage (map here: http://tiny.cc/28p38)

Against cli­mate crimes in the name of prof­it and in sol­i­dar­i­ty with work­ers exploit­ed by giant cor­po­ra­tion BP, come and protest this Sat­ur­day 26 June, 1pm at Tot­ten­ham Hale BP garage.

Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group have organ­ised a protest against giant cor­po­ra­tion BP this Sat­ur­day 26 June, from 1pm at Tot­ten­ham Hale BP Garage (map here: http://tiny.cc/28p38)

We aim to draw atten­tion to the many cli­mate crimes BP is respon­si­ble for, all in the name of prof­it, show sol­i­dar­i­ty with work­ers exploit­ed by the cor­po­ra­tion and encour­age peo­ple to build col­lec­tive and local alter­na­tives to the cli­mate cri­sis.

See the text of the leaflet below.
An on-line ver­sion is avail­able here: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/4403399/BP_Protest.pdf

Please cir­cu­late wide­ly, come along, bring ban­ners, plac­ards, etc…

—–

BP – Guilty of Cli­mate Crimes!

Called by Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group as part of Haringey Sus­tain­abil­i­ty Month

The dan­ger­ous greed of BP has seen them trash­ing the plan­et in pur­suit of prof­it – across the world, BP is guilty of cli­mate crimes that should all be front page news.

The Gulf of Mex­i­co: BP’s faulty drilling results in one of the worst oil spills in his­to­ry, killing work­ers, endan­ger­ing wildlife across the region and leav­ing a mas­sive clean-up oper­a­tion.

Cana­da: Extrac­tion of mil­lions of bar­rels of tar sands oil, pro­duc­ing 3–5 times the green­house gas­es of con­ven­tion­al oil, caus­ing mass defor­esta­tion and pol­lut­ing indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties.

Colom­bia In Jan­u­ary, indus­tri­al action organ­ised by trade union­ists in the region of Casanare was severe­ly repressed by BP, with the help of a spe­cial police force known for anti-work­er vio­lence.

Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline: This crude oil pipeline, run­ning through Turkey, Geor­gia and Azer­bai­jan, was financed by BP, vis­i­bly scar­ring the land­scape and wreck­ing areas of great nat­ur­al beau­ty, includ­ing nat­ur­al spring water reserves.

Not to men­tion com­mu­ni­ties across the world! While adding to the wealth of a few, BP is destroy­ing the com­mon wealthe of the many. We need to act local­ly to resist com­pa­nies like BP dic­tat­ing the way our economies are struc­tured – for prof­it and against the envi­ron­ment.

See over for how we can take action col­lec­tive­ly in our com­mu­ni­ties to fight cli­mate change and cre­ate a future sus­tain­able soci­ety.

——————————

Build­ing Alter­na­tives to the Cli­mate Cri­sis

Oppres­sive and destruc­tive cor­po­ra­tions like BP do not serve the gen­er­al inter­est. We need to end our depen­den­cy on oil and fos­sil fuels, which grad­u­al­ly destroys the plan­et and our lives, and aim for the devel­op­ment of renew­able ener­gy man­aged by the com­mu­ni­ty.

We can organ­ise local­ly and take back con­trol of our lives and envi­ron­ment by build­ing sus­tain­able com­mu­ni­ties for the ben­e­fit of all. Peo­ple in Haringey are get­ting togeth­er to form col­lec­tive, grass­roots alter­na­tives and solu­tions to the cli­mate cri­sis.

See below for how to get involved!

Haringey Sol­i­dar­i­ty Group

We are a group of local peo­ple who want to get rid of the cur­rent sys­tem which places prof­it and pow­er before people’s real needs. To do this, we believe we all need to get organ­ised, fight back and take over the deci­sion-mak­ing in com­mu­ni­ties and work­places. We sup­port and par­tic­i­pate in local cam­paigns, spread ideas and help cre­ate effec­tive oppo­si­tion to the pow­ers that be.

www.haringey.org.uk, email info@haringey.org.uk, write to PO Box 2474, Lon­don N8 or call 0845 223 5270

Sus­tain­able Haringey

An inde­pen­dent infor­mal net­work for every­body want­i­ng to make Haringey more sus­tain­able. It brings togeth­er groups and indi­vid­u­als already mak­ing pos­i­tive con­tri­bu­tions and wel­comes those who would like to find out how to do more. In June there are events hap­pen­ing across the bor­ough as part of Sus­tain­abil­i­ty Month.

See www.sustainableharingey.org.uk for fur­ther details

Oil execs gather — we besiege ( + video link)

As oil exec­u­tives gath­ered at a Lon­don hotel for their annu­al strate­gis­ing con­fer­ence on Mon­day 21st June, up to 200 cli­mate activists crossed the riv­er from BP-spon­sored Tate Mod­ern to con­verge on the front entrance with a sam­ba band and a giant p

Drum it Out 1Drum it Out 2As oil exec­u­tives gath­ered at a Lon­don hotel for their annu­al strate­gis­ing con­fer­ence on Mon­day 21st June, up to 200 cli­mate activists crossed the riv­er from BP-spon­sored Tate Mod­ern to con­verge on the front entrance with a sam­ba band and a giant paper-mache oil-cov­ered seabird.

Titled “Drum It Out”, the protest also put the indus­try on tri­al before a Peo­ple’s Court which loud­ly found it guilty of crimes of pol­lu­tion, war crimes, cli­mate crime, and more.

The court heard live tes­ti­mo­ny by wit­ness­es not only from the Gulf, but from Nige­ria, Ghana, Colom­bia, Peru, from Iraq which has suf­fered the dev­as­ta­tion of a war for oil, from Cana­da where indige­nous peo­ple are resist­ing the Tar Sands oil project destroy­ing a land as large as Eng­land, and from Kenya and Chi­na which are suf­fer­ing droughts as a result of the chang­ing cli­mate. “The Gulf of Mex­i­co is not the only dis­as­ter,” the pro­test­ers said — “in fact it’s not even the largest, and in some places this destruc­tion of life has been going on for decades. The oil indus­try is not sus­tain­able. They think they rule the world, but they are fac­ing resis­tance every­where. They can­not come to this hotel and think they will car­ry on busi­ness as usu­al”.

A dead fish award was pre­sent­ed to Bloody Oil in its var­i­ous com­pa­ny guis­es, and a “fish” was deliv­ered to the hotel to be passed on to Con­gress del­e­gates.

Fol­low­ing the tri­al, the main and back entrance were besieged by the drum­ming crowd, with no injuries and no arrests. Two activists who had suc­ceed­ed in pen­e­trat­ing the build­ing were uncer­e­mo­ni­ous­ly eject­ed. The Drum Out will be fol­lowed this Sat­ur­day by a Teach In, at the School of Ori­en­tal and African Stud­ies, where cam­paign­ers will learn more about the ongo­ing resis­tance by work­ers and com­mu­ni­ties in oil regions, will link-up live with organ­is­ers in Ghana, and will dis­cuss how to work togeth­er to bring the indus­try down. One pro­test­er com­ment­ed, “If even half the mon­ey invest­ed in sub­si­dis­ing oil, clean­ing up its dis­as­ters and fund­ing its wars were devot­ed to alter­na­tive forms of ener­gy, peo­ple would­n’t be suf­fer­ing these out­rages, and the plan­et would be safe.”

london[at]climatecamp.org.uk

Watch the Video http://www.youandifilms.com/2010/06/bloody-oil-drum-em-out/

Camp for Climate Action 2010 — Break the Bank!

Sat­ur­day 21 August – Tues­day 24 August 2010
Edin­burgh, Scot­land

* Occu­py and set up the base­camp: 19–20 August
* Four days of train­ing and direct action: 21–24 August
* Day of action against RBS: 23 August
* Return base­camp to nature: 25 August

The Camp for Cli­mate Action is a grass­roots move­ment tak­ing direct

Sat­ur­day 21 August – Tues­day 24 August 2010
Edin­burgh, Scot­land

* Occu­py and set up the base­camp: 19–20 August
* Four days of train­ing and direct action: 21–24 August
* Day of action against RBS: 23 August
* Return base­camp to nature: 25 August

The Camp for Cli­mate Action is a grass­roots move­ment tak­ing direct
action against the root caus­es of cli­mate change. After mobil­is­ing and
help­ing stop the pro­posed third run­way at Heathrow and a new coal fired
pow­er sta­tion at Kingsnorth, we’re grow­ing into a mass move­ment to
reclaim our future from gov­ern­ment and prof­it-hun­gry cor­po­ra­tions.

This year we’re tar­get­ing the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land, and their glob­al
head­quar­ters in Edin­burgh.

Last year RBS were bailed out with £50 bil­lion of pub­lic mon­ey. This
bank is one of the world’s largest investors in oil, gas and coal. From
tar sands extrac­tion in Cana­da to coal infra­struc­ture here in the UK,
we’re pay­ing to trash our future. These projects are not just caus­ing
cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change, but destroy­ing the lives and liveli­hoods of
peo­ple across the globe. Mean­while, we’re told there is no mon­ey left
and we should be braced for decades of pub­lic sec­tors cuts.

Eco­log­i­cal destruc­tion is built into the mechan­ics of the finan­cial
sys­tem, with com­mu­ni­ties dis­en­fran­chised from their own futures. This is
why, in August, peo­ple from across the UK will be con­verg­ing to take
back the pow­er and Break the Bank!

Our sus­tain­able and col­lec­tive­ly-organ­ised base­camp will give you the
chance to learn, train up, and meet like mind­ed indi­vid­u­als. Excit­ing
action plans are cur­rent­ly in the plot­ting stages, so watch this space.

The Camp for Cli­mate Action is made up of peo­ple like you — check out
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk to find out how to get involved.

———————————————————————

SPREAD THE WORD
— Please for­ward this email!
— Invite your friends to the face­book event:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=134368843242381
— All-new fly­ers and stick­ers for the camp are here:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/actions/edinburgh-2010/rbs-flyers-and-stickers
— The just-out ‘Nev­er Mind the Bankers’ RBS news­pa­per is here:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/actions/edinburgh-2010/never-mind-the-bankers

COME TO THE NEXT UK GATHERING
— The next plan­ning gath­er­ing for this sum­mer’s camp will be in
Edin­burgh from 3–4 July. Gath­er­ings are a chance to make deci­sions about
the camp and get involved in the work­ing groups that make the camp
hap­pen. Every­one’s wel­come — full info here:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/get-involved/national-gatherings/next

COME TO THE RBS TEACH-IN
— Tool up on RBS at our teach-in in Leeds on 17 July:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/actions/edinburgh-2010/rbs-teach-in-17-july

GET INVOLVED IN YOUR LOCAL GROUP
— We’ve got groups and neigh­bour­hoods around the coun­try. Details here:
http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/get-involved/local-groups

GET IN TOUCH WITH WORKING GROUPS
— Work­ing groups are the way we organ­ise things, and they need you.
Details here: http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/get-involved/working-groups

QUESTIONS?
— Try info@climatecamp.org.uk or process@climatecamp.org.uk

Bath Bomb #30 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!

Issue #30

free/donation

June ’10

“Fuck­ing Laws at your expense”

Elec­tile Dys­func­tion

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!

Issue #30

free/donation

June ’10

“Fuck­ing Laws at your expense”

Elec­tile Dys­func­tion

As read­ers may have noticed, May the 6th’s hung par­lia­ment (no noos­es, more’s the pity) and sub­se­quent clam­our of back­room deals has led to a coali­tion fea­tur­ing the odi­ous ’18 of our MPs went to Eton’ Con­ser­v­a­tives and the almost-as-posh ‘Tory-lite’ Lib Dems. Now the dust has set­tled, it’s clear that no par­ties have a man­date for the cuts they will try to unleash. No par­ty dared to clear­ly set out what the Finan­cial Times dubbed the “bru­tal” eco­nom­i­cal deci­sions required. That is sim­ply because to do so would have been elec­toral sui­cide. If they had been hon­est about the cuts — the first stage being £6.2 bil­lion hacked from vital pub­lic ser­vices, hun­dreds of thou­sands of jobs and harsh pay slash­es — then nobody would have vot­ed for them. The mar­kets and rul­ing class demand a vicious eco­nom­ic pro­gram (rather than ‘rich tax’) that will mean tur­moil. There will be resis­tance from unions, ser­vice-users and the com­mu­ni­ty alike, with the fight mov­ing from the bal­lot box to the pick­et lines and to the streets. Ordi­nary peo­ple can­not be expect­ed to pay for a cri­sis caused by cor­rupt politi­cians and bankers and, like the peo­ple of Greece, Ire­land, Spain and Roma­nia, we must be pre­pared to fight every cut, and pro­tect every job. Local­ly, B.A.N. and oth­ers are plan­ning to set up a ‘Pub­lic Ser­vices Defence Group’, and every­one is invit­ed to join — to pro­tect our rights, jobs, pay, pen­sions and ben­e­fits. Togeth­er, we can win.

Press­ing Their Luck?

Tesco are now dis­play­ing for pub­lic com­ment their plans to occu­py the for­mer Bath Press site and demol­ish the entire build­ing, leav­ing noth­ing but a wob­bly-look­ing front wall. The new site, to incor­po­rate a ‘com­mu­ni­ty hall’ — pre­sum­ably sim­i­lar to the social improve­ments promised at oth­er Tesco sites, which have almost uni­ver­sal­ly failed to mate­ri­alise — will be Tesco’s first major store in Bath. 650 ‘new jobs’ are also promised. The eco­nom­ics behind this claim are flawed, how­ev­er. As the mar­ket for food is already sat­u­rat­ed here — oth­er­wise there’d be a city-wide out­break of mal­nu­tri­tion — the new store won’t be cre­at­ing any new mar­kets, and so will just be tak­ing cus­tom away from exist­ing stores. As Tesco is renowned for their effi­cien­cy and high income-to-staff ratio, this will cause an over­all drop in employ­ment as oth­er busi­ness­es close or shed staff. In fact, stud­ies have shown that the open­ing of a large super­mar­ket caus­es an over­all loss of 276 jobs per new store opened.

For a more hope­ful out­look, look to Bris­tol, where the anti-Tesco cam­paign on Stokes Croft has left the coun­cil con­sid­er­ing plac­ing a Com­pul­so­ry Pur­chase Order on the site and hand­ing it over to the com­mu­ni­ty, as an indoor mar­ket incor­po­rat­ing local ‘Time Bank’ trad­ing schemes.

GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Con­tact us by email­ing bathbombpress[at]yahoo.co.uk. Large print e‑versions avail­able on request. And for more info on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

Schools Of Hard Cuts

Amongst the raft of cuts the Tories and their pet Lib Dems have unleashed on us, their plans for edu­ca­tion stand out for sheer idio­cy. Dressed up as ‘free­ing teach­ers from bureau­cra­cy and let­ting them teach’, their plans in fact boil down to sell­ing off the entire edu­ca­tion sys­tem whole­sale. Intent on send­ing our schools the same way as the rail­ways and ener­gy com­pa­nies, the Tories intend to auc­tion off schools to com­pa­nies and reli­gious groups. The plan has already been exposed as a fail­ure, with work­ing con­di­tions for teach­ers, attain­ment for pupils and bul­ly­ing man­age­ment all com­ing under scruti­ny in exist­ing acad­e­mies, and the coun­try’s largest acad­e­my group Unit­ed Learn­ing Trust (ULT) being banned from tak­ing on more schools. With sev­er­al schools in Bath explor­ing the acad­e­my route, we spoke to ‘Matt’, a teacher in a local acad­e­my about the prospect of spread­ing the acad­e­my love. “It would be a ter­ri­ble idea,” Matt tells us, “Work­ing in an acad­e­my, you are dri­ven by bul­ly­ing man­age­ment that aren’t bound to fol­low the same pay and con­di­tions that state schools are tied to. Unions are dis­cour­aged, and union mem­bers face ques­tion­ing and har­rass­ment. Every facet of school life is out-sourced to pri­vate com­pa­nies, often lead­ing to a sub­stan­dard pro­vi­sion of edu­ca­tion for the kids. As acad­e­mies are grades dri­ven, teach­ers are rou­tine­ly bul­lied into fak­ing course­work, and low­er abil­i­ty pupils are ignored in favour of C/D bor­der­line kids. On top of that, any­one with enough cash can spon­sor an acad­e­my, mean­ing that some real­ly unsavoury, and right wing reli­gious and cor­po­rate groups con­trol our kids edu­ca­tion. From per­son­al expe­ri­ence, the acad­e­my sys­tem is an unfair and fail­ing sys­tem, for staff and kids.” Four schools in the Bath area are already threat­ened with clo­sure, includ­ing Old­field, to be replaced by two acad­e­mies. With unions already gear­ing up for the fight­back, why not drop an email to your kids school and let them know how you feel about the future of your child being flogged to the high­est bid­der.

Con­sul­ta­tion Stitch-up On The Ken­net And Avon

About 20 trav­el­ling boat dwellers attend­ed the Ken­net and Avon Canal User Group meet­ing on the 29th April where the recent con­sul­ta­tion on set­ting up local moor­ing strate­gies was dis­cussed.

Although 73 out of 98 respons­es to British Water­ways opposed the idea, BW’s Dami­an Kemp told the meet­ing it will go ahead and start set­ting up the first strat­e­gy group on the Ken­net and Avon between Devizes and Bath. BW jus­ti­fied this by say­ing that many of the replies were from groups rather than from indi­vid­u­als, and gave the groups more cre­dence. Boaters chal­lenged this inter­pre­ta­tion as BW did not make clear at any stage that respons­es from groups would be treat­ed dif­fer­ent­ly. Now, many boaters believe that the process was a com­plete sham and the results are being manip­u­lat­ed to sup­port BW’s agen­da of rid­ding live-aboard boaters from the Ken­net and Avon and replac­ing them with “the leisure indus­try”. This is demon­strat­ed by the com­ments of James Young, anoth­er BW employ­ee, describ­ing the process as “a work­ing par­ty to address the prob­lems asso­ci­at­ed with live­aboards.”

Dami­an Kemp, who was appoint­ed in mid 2009 to head the project imple­ment­ing moor­ing strat­e­gy groups on the Ken­net and Avon, inad­ver­tent­ly admit­ted the dis­crep­an­cy. Whilst telling the meet­ing at one point that the respons­es from indi­vid­u­als were giv­en less weight than those from groups, a few min­utes lat­er he con­tra­dict­ed him­self by say­ing that the results were not weight­ed. What is more, Mark Stephens, man­ag­er of the Ken­net and Avon, admit­ted at the meet­ing that there is no addi­tion­al mon­ey in the cur­rent bud­get for a local moor­ing strat­e­gy group, and that to set it up could cut fund­ing in oth­er areas. This all sounds com­plete­ly unwork­able. And why did BW hold a con­sul­ta­tion when Mr Kemp had already been appoint­ed?

These restric­tions will be decid­ed by a steer­ing group in which most of the boat­ing com­mu­ni­ty in this area will not have a say, even though they are the only group that is direct­ly affect­ed. Yet, if BW’s plans go ahead, many will be forced to make a tough choice: lose the home or lose the job. Plen­ty may also be forced to give up their homes to keep their chil­dren in school. BW has already worked with Bathamp­ton and Claver­ton Parish Coun­cils in Sum­mer 2009 to draw up these pro­posed moor­ing restric­tions, which will vast­ly reduce the avail­abil­i­ty of two-week moor­ings between Brad­ford and Bath. Boaters only dis­cov­ered this plot by acci­dent, and were nev­er invit­ed to these meet­ings or informed about them. The min­utes of these meet­ings, maps and asso­ci­at­ed cor­re­spon­dence are pub­lished in an arti­cle enti­tled ‘The Out­er Zone’, see http://kanda.boatingcommunity.org.uk/wordpress/?p=77

The 1995 British Water­ways Act con­fers a statu­to­ry right for boats to cruise the water­ways with­out hav­ing a per­ma­nent moor­ing, so long as they do not remain in any one place for more than four­teen days, or a longer peri­od if there are excep­tion­al cir­cum­stances.

The next boaters’ meet­ing takes place on the 16th of June upstairs at the Geor­gian Lodge Hotel in Brad­ford-on-Avon. For more infor­ma­tion, con­tact info[at]boatingcommunity.org.uk.

http://kanda.boatingcommunity.org.uk

Eco Vil­lage Of The Damned

Back on the 5th of May, after a maze of legal bat­tles, the first incar­na­tion of the Bris­tol Eco Vil­lage was evict­ed. The vil­lagers moved onto a dis­used plot of land in St Wer­burghs in April to set up a com­mu­ni­ty to exper­i­ment with sus­tain­able liv­ing on and improv­ing indus­tri­al­ly con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed land.

The Lon­don-based landown­ers made sev­er­al ille­gal attempts to evict them before final­ly… wait for it… going through legal chan­nels to get their land back, so they could get on with devel­op­ing it at the expense of the local com­mu­ni­ty, the endan­gered newt pop­u­la­tion, and the wider envi­ron­ment. But a mass of local res­i­dents decid­ed they’d rather have a low-impact liv­ing project on their doorstep than prof­it-dri­ven devel­op­ment. On evic­tion day they block­ad­ed the gates that bailiff com­pa­ny Con­stant & Co were attempt­ing to enter the site by. Lat­er they occu­pied a cher­ry-pick­er as it attempt­ed to enter the site. Game on!

How­ev­er the over-arch­ing mem­o­ry of the day will be the sad hos­pi­tal­iza­tion of one vil­lager, cyn­i­cal­ly assault­ed by the bailiffs while atop a tri­pod. Bailiffs dis­re­gard­ed health and safe­ty reg­u­la­tions and col­lapsed the tri­pod, crush­ing the vil­lager’s leg between long stur­dy met­al poles, and then sit­ting on them. Vil­lagers are appeal­ing for any wit­ness­es to come for­ward, par­tic­u­lar­ly those with any video footage of the assault.

The Bris­tol Eco Vil­lage briefly took a new site on the 15th of May, near Tem­ple Meads train sta­tion. Rumours abound about the Eco Vil­lage’s next move, with a pos­si­ble pin­cer move­ment to simul­ta­ne­ous­ly occu­py land adjoin­ing the canal in Bath and a sec­ond site in Bris­tol, being on the cards.

Con­stant & Co are a noto­ri­ous­ly bru­tal col­lec­tion of pondlife (not newts) that proud­ly spe­cialise in forc­ing the vul­ner­a­bly housed onto the streets. Any ‘con­cerns’ can be ‘voiced’ to them at 66 Harpur Street, Bed­ford, MK40 2RA.

Short And Snap­py

Whilst the gov­ern­ment decid­ed on the 12th of May to scrap Heathrow expan­sion and addi­tion­al run­ways at Gatwick and Stanst­ed, at the end of May, North Som­er­set Coun­cil chose a dif­fer­ent path. Ignor­ing not only B&NES and Bris­tol Coun­cils, but also 5,000+ objec­tions, the lat­est find­ings on cli­mate change and World Health Organ­i­sa­tion noise and health guid­ance, they green­light­ed Bris­tol Air­port’s plan­ning appli­ca­tion. Stop Bris­tol Air­port Expan­sion are now look­ing to the Sec­re­tary of State, and are build­ing funds to mount a legal chal­lenge — con­tact them for info at email[at]stopbia.com

Despite expert sci­en­tif­ic advice, the gov­ern­ment has decid­ed to fol­low the Welsh lead (and unsus­tain­able indus­tri­al farm­ing lob­by) and push ahead with a nation­al bad­ger cull, par­tic­u­lar­ly in bovine TB hotspots like Devon and Corn­wall. The annu­al cull in Pem­brokeshire, repeat­ed for five years, costs £10 mil­lion so far, with bal­a­clava’d con­trac­tors aim­ing to kill off 80% of the local pop­u­la­tion. Your local ani­mal rights groups need you!

For the first time in 12 years, the EU has approved the growth of genet­i­cal­ly engi­neered crops. A peti­tion might be all that stands in their way!: http://www.greenpeace.org/GEpetition

EDF’s bid for the pro­posed Hink­ley C nuclear pow­er sta­tion has just had its plan­ning appli­ca­tion delayed a sec­ond time, from ear­ly July to the 1st of Decem­ber. Ener­gy Sec­re­tary Chris Huhne has stat­ed that there will be no gov­ern­ment sub­si­dies avail­able for new nuclear build

Local cam­paign­ing group S.W.A.G. have formed to dis­suade Char­lie from sell­ing off roy­al green­belt land near New­ton St Loe, doomed for the con­struc­tion of 2,000 homes. How­ev­er, they won an unex­pect­ed overkill vic­to­ry when the Con­Dem alliance scrapped Neo-Labour’s plans for 21,300 homes in the local area, and poten­tial­ly the con­test­ed Bus Rapid Tran­sit route, too!

Cat­naps And Chin­wags

It’s been a strange time for Bath’s Black Cat inde­pen­dent com­mu­ni­ty social cen­tre. Thrown out in the rain from their for­mer opu­lent home at the old Porter Butt pub on Lon­don Road (after a storm­ing ‘Nev­er Mind the Vote, Here’s the Folk’ gig) on the 7th of May. Land­lord Julian Rich­er and a dodgy col­lu­sion of Bath police and Man­ches­ter-based JMW solic­i­tor (claim­ing to be a bailiff), rather than go to the trou­ble of legit­i­mate­ly attain­ing a War­rant of Evic­tion, instead just intim­i­dat­ed the res­i­dents to “vol­un­tar­i­ly leave”. Since then those frisky Black Cats have been home­less and gone through an inter­nal shake-up, team­ing up with the Snow Hill Skills and Enter­prise Ini­tia­tive (who have been patient­ly attempt­ing to work with the Coun­cil for four years to set up a grass­roots, pover­ty-break­ing and eco­log­i­cal­ly-sus­tain­able com­mu­ni­ty cen­tre for the local, deprived area) and help­ing birth the ‘Black Kit­ten’ anar­chist free lend­ing library in Stokes Croft, in Bris­tol. Though deter­mined to keep it real and rad­i­cal, the col­lec­tive are cur­rent­ly going through a spate of nego­ti­a­tions over premis­es with Coun­cil and polit­i­cal offi­cials. Who’d have thought it? In the mean­time, there’s every­thing to play for, and the Black Cat is very keen for new vol­un­teers to get involved: con­tact them at bathsocialcentre[at]gmail.co.uk.

http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

EVENTS

Lon­don Road Food Co-op, Wednes­days, 4–7pm, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Lon­don Road

Bathamp­ton Com­mu­ni­ty Grow­ers work­day, Thurs­days, 10am-dusk, Mill Lane, Bathamp­ton, e‑mail thelostplot[at]googlemail.com/ tel Chris 07792 444628

Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard

Recy­cle Your Sun­days, Sun­days, 10.30am, starts Abbey Church­yard, the reg­u­lar series of socia­ble, easy-paced cycle rides, http://www.bathrys.org.uk/ tel Hazel 01225 469199

Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 12th June, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Broad­lands Orchard­share Vol­un­teer­ing Day, Sat­ur­day 12th June, 12–4pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

Pal­la­di­um Bridge Pic­nic: with the Nat­ur­al The­atre Com­pa­ny, Sat­ur­day 12th June, 6pm, Pri­or Park

AmnesTea fund-rais­ing cream tea, Sat­ur­day 12th June, 2.30–5.30pm, 6 Wid­combe Ter­race, BA2 6AJ, http://www.greenbath.org

Wid­combe Ris­ing fes­ti­val, Sun­day 13th June, 1.30–7.30pm, Wid­combe, http://www.widcombe.net

Bris­tol Naked Bike Ride, Sun­day 13th June, loca­tion tbc, http://bristolwnbr.blogspot.com

film: ‘Estab­lish­ing a Food For­est the Per­ma­cul­ture Way’, Sun­day 13th June, 7.30pm, the Love Lounge/ back room of the Bell, Wal­cot Street, £5 entry, http://www.transitionbath.org

Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Mon­day 14th June, 8–9pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Boaters’ Meet­ing, Wednes­day 16th June, 8pm, Geor­gian Lodge Hotel, Brad­ford on Avon

film: ‘Pas­sen­gers’, Wednes­day 16th June, 8pm, Cube Cin­e­ma, Bris­tol, bristolnoborders[at]riseup.net

film: ‘Wel­come’, Thurs­day 17th June, 8pm, Cube Cin­e­ma, Bris­tol, bristolnoborders[at]riseup.net

Bathamp­ton Com­mu­ni­ty Grow­ers work­day, Sat­ur­day 19th June, 10am-dusk, Mill Lane, Bathamp­ton, e‑mail thelostplot[at]googlemail.com/ tel Chris 07792 444628

Coal Train Block­aders ben­e­fit defence gig, Sat­ur­day 19th June, 8pm, the Plough, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol, feat. Ceilidh Minogue, Hero­in Hero and DJs

Bris­tol Anar­chist Book­fair ben­e­fit punk & thrash gig and film, Sun­day 20th June, 6pm, feat. Guara­pi­ta, Pow­er Is Poi­son, Threat Man­i­festo and This Ends Here, £5, http://www.thebastardsquadcollective.wordpress.com

Bath Cycling Cam­paign meet­ing, Mon­day 21st June, 7.30pm, Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

talk: ‘Cli­mate Migrants: Feed­ing Back from the World Peo­ple’s Con­fer­ence on Cli­mate Change’, Wednes­day 23rd June, 7pm, St. Paul’s Learn­ing Cen­tre, 94 Grosvenor Road, Bris­tol

Tran­si­tion Bath Vis­it to Stroud Com­mu­ni­ty Farm, Sat­ur­day 26th June, 8.43am from Bath Spa train sta­tion, http://www.stroudcommunityagriculture.org

Crit­i­cal Mass Bike Ride, Sat­ur­day 26th June, 1pm, Kingsmead Square, http://www.bathcyclingcampaign.org.uk

Bath Ani­mal Action info stall, Sun­day 27th June, 2–4pm, Stall Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Tran­si­tion Bath Social, Mon­day 28th June, 7.15pm, the Love Lounge/ back room of the Bell, Wal­cot Street, http://www.transitionbath.org

Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs meet­ing, Mon­day 28th June, 8–9pm, The Bell, tel Justin 07854 062336

Bath Social­ist Forum: ‘What is Social­ism?’, Mon­day 28th April, 8pm, upstairs at St James Wine Vaults, e‑mail ianjprior[at]aol.com

Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 1st July, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at The Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade, http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

Earth Oven Cook­ing work­shop, Sat­ur­day 3rd July, 10am-4pm, Broad­lands Orchard­share, Box Road, Bath­ford, £25, http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

Bris­tol & South Wales Hunt Sabo­teurs punk & thrash ben­e­fit gig, Fri­day 9th July, 7.30pm, The White Hart, White­hall Road, Bris­tol, feat. Kismet H.C., Death Job, Mutiny Plot and This Ends Here, £5

Intro­duc­to­ry Per­ma­cul­ture Week­end, Sat­ur­day 10th to Sun­day 11th July, Bath City Farm, £50, http://www.transitionbath.org

Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 14th July, 8.30pm, the Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing, Wednes­day 4th to Mon­day 9th August, Der­byshire, £20–30; five days of work­shops, skill shar­ing and plan­ning action, plus low-impact liv­ing with­out lead­ers; e‑mail summergathering[at]earthfirst.org.uk FFI

Camp for Cli­mate Action, Sat­ur­day 21st to Tues­day 24th August, Edin­burgh, http://www.climatecamp.org.uk

Ani­mal Cru­el­ty? Noah Way!

Activists from Bath and Bris­tol have been run­ning a con­cert­ed cam­paign against local ani­mal abus­ing nut­cas­es Noah’s Ark Zoo Farm. This shod­dy estab­lish­ment has a long his­to­ry of neglect towards ani­mals for ‘enjoy­ment’. The zoo has recent­ly been the sub­ject of a coun­cil inves­ti­ga­tion relat­ing to a cat­a­logue of ani­mal wel­fare vio­la­tions, includ­ing ill-treat­ment of the tigress Tira, lead­ing to the death of her and her cubs. To make mat­ters worse, the zoo were caught out hav­ing skinned, behead­ed and buried the moth­er on farm land. In addi­tion to this, the zoo trades ani­mals with the noto­ri­ous ‘Bob­by Roberts’, a cir­cus con­demned by many organ­i­sa­tions includ­ing the RSPCA for the hor­rif­ic con­di­tions and degrad­ing, painful per­for­mances its ani­mals are sub­ject­ed to. As if the dis­gust­ing dis­re­gard with which the zoo treats its ani­mals was­n’t rea­son enough to try and shut them down, the frankly nut­ty views of the zoos cre­ation­ist own­er make them a prime tar­get for any­one who gets annoyed at fairy tales being passed of as fact! The whole zoo is a homage to the pseu­do sci­ence of cre­ation­ism, and numer­ous dis­plays (includ­ing one that depicts the actu­al Noah’s ark as fact) try to con­vince bewil­dered vis­i­tors that the bible is the lit­er­al word of god, and that evo­lu­tion is a myth! While sev­er­al prime exam­ples of the miss­ing link can be seen oper­at­ing the zoo, num­bers of vis­i­tors have been dwin­dling as word of the dis­gust­ing ani­mal cru­el­ty and insane beliefs of the man­age­ment spreads. Activists are hold­ing week­ly demos against the zoo with the aim of clos­ing it down, and are con­fi­dent of suc­cess. To get involved, come along to a demo, or to find out more about the zoo, con­tact Bris­tol Ani­mal Rights Col­lec­tive at barc[at]hotmail.co.uk.

Greek Econ­o­my Crum­bles, Class War Erupts

Ear­ly May saw a mas­sive erup­tion of work­ing class anger greet the EU/IMF pro­posed bailout of the debt-rid­den Greek econ­o­my. The bailout of some 120billion Euros over three years requires the Greek state and ‘social­ist’ gov­ern­ment to enact strin­gent aus­ter­i­ty mea­sures and cuts across all sec­tors of the work­force, except of course for the rich and greedy. Whether this cash comes in time to avoid a Greek state debt default remains to be seen, but it sure has the cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem wor­ried as shares crashed world­wide.

Equal­ly wor­ry­ing for the boss­es is the response from the Greek peo­ple. Mas­sive strikes, protests and riots erupt­ed across Greece on the 1st, the 5th and the 6th of May, and ongo­ing, as the work­ing class made it clear they have no inten­tion of pay­ing for the cap­i­tal­ist cri­sis, nor of accept­ing fur­ther for­eign inter­ven­tion in their affairs. Par­lia­ment was near­ly stormed, min­istry build­ings burned, and sym­bols of cap­i­tal­ism were attacked as strik­ers shut the coun­try down. Such active resis­tance also brings more tragedies to go with the long list of peo­ple from all back­grounds killed and bru­talised in the con­flict. Homes, cafés and social cen­tres were attacked by riot cops using gas, stun grenades and live ammo, and the mil­i­tary was put on full alert.

As the class war rages in Greece, the rest of the Euro­pean rul­ing class look on aghast, ter­ri­fied of the con­ta­gious effects of both the protests and the finan­cial cri­sis, such as the wave of anti-cuts protest sweep­ing Bucharest in mid-May (and the pub­lic ston­ing of econ­o­my min­istry offi­cial Mar­cel Hoara) and the Irish ‘Anglo Irish Bank’ occu­pa­tions and ‘Right to Work’ demos at the same time. They and we know that we too face such attacks on our liv­ing stan­dards as they seek to main­tain the prof­it sys­tem. What nobody knows is how far the Greek resis­tance will go in chal­leng­ing the pow­er of the rul­ing class, nor how far we will fol­low down the same path?

http://libcom.org/news

http://www.occupiedlondon.org

Dis­pro­por­tion­al Mur­der

The Israeli army has once again engaged in its favourite game: Inno­cent Peo­ple Mas­sacre! Last time we left them, the Zion­ists were busy crush­ing all Pales­tin­ian hope by build­ing a huge wall around Gaza, and not let­ting any­one out while killing the peo­ple inside under false pre­texts.

A bunch of civil­ians thought they’d be sneaky, pre­tend­ing to break the siege and all, by sail­ing to Gaza on a flotil­la of boats named ‘Free­dom Flotil­la’. But rais­ing a white flag did­n’t fool our brave sec­tar­i­ans: clear­ly, they were secret­ly work­ing with Hamas to kill Jews. Their instru­ments of death: aid, food, med­ical sup­plies, con­crete.

So, on the 31st, a brave bunch of guys killed 19 peo­ple (all Turk­ish) aboard the Mavi Mar­mara, and wound­ed anoth­er 60. The rest of the crew, some 800 peo­ple, were just kid­napped and deport­ed, Nazi-style, but with­out a camp at the end of the trip. That makes all the dif­fer­ence, you know.

Imme­di­ate­ly after news of the mas­sacre came out, demon­stra­tions were held in many Euro­pean coun­tries. 2,000 peo­ple in Lon­don gath­ered out­side the Israeli embassy to protest the slaugh­ter. If the Israeli army did­n’t kill them all, it prob­a­bly was because they were too far away. Some oth­er day, on a boat in inter­na­tion­al waters, maybe.

The usu­al emp­ty round of out­rage surged in the inter­na­tion­al polit­i­cal com­mu­ni­ty. The com­mon theme of which was, that the Israeli attack was dis­pro­por­tion­al to the threat the boat was rep­re­sent­ing. That’s an under­state­ment, hint­ing at the white-wash­ing of crimes.

The attack was not dis­pro­por­tion­al, it was not self-defence gone awry, it was unjus­ti­fied. The Israeli forces have engaged in a crim­i­nal assault on the aid boat, in inter­na­tion­al waters, and they fired on inno­cent civil­ians. Nat­u­ral­ly, the lat­ter were said to have attacked the Israelis first. Sure, a bunch of civil­ians prob­a­bly thought they were going to beat up the Israeli army and break the siege by force.

More impor­tant than the insan­i­ty of such an ali­bi, even if they had used force against Israeli forces ille­gal­ly assault­ing their ship, it would still be right. The Israelis had no right to be on there. Nei­ther do they have a right to arbi­trar­i­ly pen in 1.5 mil­lion inno­cents like cat­tle. That is, even if this had been a mil­i­tary expe­di­tion to break the siege, by law this would have been the right thing to do.

Every time you focus on details in a con­tro­ver­sy, you end up con­ced­ing the larg­er point, which is the most griev­ous­ly false. This block­ade is ille­gal any­way, and that means force can be used to end it, nev­er mind that the activists were paci­fists engag­ing in aid.

Bath Activist Net­work are a local umbrel­la group cam­paign­ing on issues as diverse as devel­op­ment, envi­ron­men­tal­ism, anti-war, ani­mal rights, work­ers’ rights and more. Help­ing to pro­duce the Bath Bomb, we are open to any­one, and our mem­bers range from trade union­ists to anar­chists, lib­er­als and greens, and peo­ple who just want to change Bath for the bet­ter. For details on meet­ings, demos, or just to get in touch, email bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk or see our web­site: www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

BNPa­thet­ic!

For the aver­age per­son, the last mon­th’s elec­tions have been noth­ing to smile about — cuts, deep­en­ing reces­sion and a choice between twee­dle­dum, twee­dle­dumber and twee­dle-Eton edu­cat­ed toff twat. How­ev­er, one glim­mer of hope came from the dis­mal, yet enter­tain­ing elec­tion cam­paign of the fas­cist BNP. Their cam­paign got off to a cork­er when fuhrer Nick Grif­fin con­tact­ed the police to squeal on his press offi­cer, Mark Col­lett, who is alleged­ly plot­ting to kill him. After kick­ing Col­lett out of the par­ty, then sub­se­quent­ly let­ting him back in, the sec­ond blow came just days before the elec­tion. Simon Ben­nett, the bloke behind the BNP web­site, decid­ed he had had enough and took down the web­site. He then redi­rect­ed vis­i­tors to a page list­ing the dire finan­cial straits of the par­ty as well as numer­ous com­pelling rea­sons not to vote BNP! On the same day, Grif­fin got pelt­ed with rot­ten veg by an angry mob while out on the cam­paign trail. In the South West, the BNP fared no bet­ter, with a strong force of trade union­ists leaflet­ing against the BNP in Chip­pen­ham, Cor­sham and Swin­don, meet­ing a few deject­ed and iso­lat­ed fas­cists along the way. On elec­tion night, the BNP fared ter­ri­bly, los­ing both coun­cil seats of Bark­ing and Dagen­ham, even with Nazi Nick stand­ing as their prospec­tive MP in the area. Mean­while, in Here­ford, 20 anar­chists under a ban­ner read­ing ‘my grand­par­ents did­n’t vote for fas­cists, they shot them’ stormed the polling booth, chas­ing out the BNP can­di­date under a hail of boots and fruits! Local­ly and nation­al­ly, we have final­ly seen a clear indi­ca­tion that soci­ety has seen the BNP for what they are, a gag­gle of white suprema­cist thugs who have no place in civilised soci­ety. With­out gain­ing even a sin­gle seat on polling day, and with grow­ing calls from inside the par­ty for Nick Grif­fin to step down,it looks like we are wit­ness­ing the dis­in­te­gra­tion of the BNP. All they need now is a lit­tle push.

Steeeeerike!

Recent months have seen the unwel­come return of a trend not seen in many decades in this coun­try — the ban­ning of strikes. Both the recent BA cab­in crew, and Rail, Mar­itime and Trans­port work­ers (RMT) sig­nallers’ strikes have been banned by judges for var­i­ous dubi­ous ‘irreg­u­lar­i­ties’ and the fact that the strikes may cause finan­cial dam­age to the com­pa­nies involved (sort of the point of a strike!). With the reces­sion show­ing no sign of going away, and with mas­sive job, pay and ser­vice cuts loom­ing in the near future, this is a wor­ry­ing prece­dent for sti­fling work­ers’ right to raise col­lec­tive griev­ances. On top of this, the Tories hope to esca­late the class war by intro­duc­ing leg­is­la­tion which will all but ban strikes in the hope of chok­ing the mas­sive resis­tance that will inevitably fight back against the upcom­ing cuts. But it is not all doom and gloom. The last year has seen the resur­gence of anoth­er old trend — the wild­cat strike. Real­is­ing that boss­es do not lis­ten to polite requests, sev­er­al fac­to­ries were occu­pied by work­ers last year. If we hope to fight back against the anti-work­er poli­cies of the judi­cia­ry, the employ­ers and the rul­ing class, we need to be pre­pared to take the ini­tia­tive and flout oppres­sive anti strike and protest leg­is­la­tion. We are as pow­er­ful as we want to be. In the words of mar­tyred trade union mil­i­tant Joe Hill ‘If the work­ers took a notion they could stop all speed­ing trains; every ship upon the ocean they can tie with mighty chains’. As some oth­er bloke said ‘when injus­tice becomes law, resis­tance becomes duty’.

Necks On The Line

On the 26th of April, the rail­way line from Ffos-y-Fran open­cast coal mine, near Merthyr Tyd­fil in South Wales, was closed by folk from Bris­tol and Bath Ris­ing Tide. The coal was due to sup­ply the near­by Aberthaw pow­er sta­tion, but nev­er arrived.

Once absolute­ly cer­tain the train would­n’t leave the sta­tion — as the com­pa­ny and work­ers had been informed — the activists locked them­selves to the track using chains and super glue. This sin­gle track is used only by the mine own­ers Miller Argent, and isn’t used by the pub­lic for trav­el.

It took some thir­ty South Wales cop­pers (plus a heli­copter) four and a half hours to remove those locked on. As this hap­pened the police received some incred­i­bly irri­tat­ing news: a sec­ond group had been hid­ing just round the cor­ner and were, as they spoke, emerg­ing and lock­ing onto the tracks with rein­forced lock-on arm tubes. Clear­ly too exhaust­ed from their hard work to take a quick stroll down the line to check this out, the heli­copter took to the skies once more. This swoop even­tu­al­ly con­firmed what it had failed to notice from hours of pre­vi­ous sur­veil­lance — the sec­ond group, now cheer­ful­ly wav­ing from the track. It took the cops until 8pm to arrest every­one and no coal left that day.

Local res­i­dents have been up in arms over the mine since it was first opened, just 30 metres from the near­est home, with many locals join­ing last year’s Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru next to the site. Not only is open­cast min­ing ter­ri­ble for local peo­ple’s health (with black rain and ris­ing lung com­plaints), it also destroys wildlife and local ecosys­tems and con­tributes mas­sive­ly to cli­mate change. In the UK alone, 43 new mines or exten­sions have been applied for or approved in the last three years.

We need to rapid­ly change our ener­gy sys­tems to avert cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate chaos. This will take huge ambi­tion, which the gov­ern­ment is com­plete­ly unable to achieve with its hands in the pock­ets of cor­po­ra­tions. We can’t rely on their false solu­tions any more — it is down to ordi­nary peo­ple to devel­op work­er and com­mu­ni­ty con­trol of our ener­gy sup­ply and our soci­ety.

Mean­while, the 18 (one of which was hand­ed the olympic bail con­di­tions of hav­ing to reside in Corn­wall, and some­how make the dai­ly 150 mile return trip to sign on at Bath cop­shop, all with­out using trains) are back in court in Wales on the 8th of July to enter their pleas. They also have a ben­e­fit gig on the 19th June, 8pm, at the Plough in Eas­t­on.

http://www.risingtide.org.uk

http://www.stopffosyfran.co.uk

http://coalaction.org.uk

Politi­cians ‘Meet’ The ‘Peo­ple’

My dad told me that when he was a boy grow­ing up in the coal­fields before the war that any­one stand­ing for polit­i­cal office had to be able to do three things; do gen­uine pub­lic meet­ings, han­dle heck­lers and dodge turnips thrown from the audi­ence. How times change. Politi­cians now are wor­ried about meet­ing gen­uine vot­ers and dur­ing elec­tions, move around pro­tect­ed from the rab­ble by min­ders and the author­i­ties. Back on the 22nd of April, the three main par­ty lead­ers staged a so called pub­lic debate in Bris­tol, before a spe­cial­ly select­ed audi­ence who had to sit and ask preap­proved ques­tions, like good chil­dren. Out­side, the real elec­tors were being kept away from the meet­ing by lines of police. Around 300 peo­ple — a mix­ture of anar­chists, social­ists, ani­mal rights and anti-war pro­tes­tors one side and a group of sev­en pissed-up Eng­lish Defence Lea­guers on the oth­er — made their voic­es heard. The defend­ers of democ­ra­cy, the police, using batons and hors­es tried sev­er­al times to push the protest away from the Arnolfi­ni Cen­tre, the loca­tion of the debate. The crowd stood firm how­ev­er, and were able to deliv­er some suc­cinct opin­ions to the par­ty lead­ers as they drove in. Police made between sev­en and ten arrests, but were out­foxed at one time by anti-hunt­ing activists aboard a boat who pro­duced anti-blood­sports ban­ners for the ben­e­fit of Cameron and his blood­thirsty toff mates. How­ev­er, because of the secre­tive and con­trolled way this debate was run, who­ev­er won it, it was democ­ra­cy and the peo­ple who lost.

And now, to the dis­claimer: as any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflec­tive of each con­trib­u­tor. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat upon. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this dis­claimer do not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflect the opin­ions of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor.