Outdoor Skillshare//18–21 June, Scotland

**Please for­ward on to your net­works, if you would like some posters/flyers to dis­play, please get in touch**

///Outdoor Skillshare/// 18–21 June

An excit­ing week­end of work­shops and skill­shar­ing in rur­al Scot­land.

Come and learn:
climb­ing and rope access, build­ing tree hous­es, tun­nelling, cook­ing for the mass­es, knot-tying, fire-light­ing, wild foods and more!

**Please for­ward on to your net­works, if you would like some posters/flyers to dis­play, please get in touch**

///Outdoor Skillshare/// 18–21 June

An excit­ing week­end of work­shops and skill­shar­ing in rur­al Scot­land.

Come and learn:
climb­ing and rope access, build­ing tree hous­es, tun­nelling, cook­ing for the mass­es, knot-tying, fire-light­ing, wild foods and more!

At Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp we occu­pied land fac­ing destruc­tion. We lived out­side, grew as a com­mu­ni­ty and took con­tin­u­ous tar­get­ed action.
We want to focus on the skills need­ed to occu­py and defend land with a week­end long event bring­ing peo­ple togeth­er to learn and share the skills for liv­ing out­doors as a com­mu­ni­ty, build­ing defences, resist­ing evic­tions and think­ing about strate­gies for action.

These are trans­fer­able skills that can be tak­en away and used in a wide range of cam­paigns and actions.

This skill­share will be a safe, inclu­sive and par­tic­i­pa­to­ry envi­ron­ment for learn­ing new prac­ti­cal skills and is open to peo­ple of all abil­i­ties and expe­ri­ences. If you have any queries or spe­cial require­ments, please let us know — we will do our best to accom­mo­date every­one’s needs.

We will be ask­ing for dona­tions toward food and oth­er costs from those that can afford it.

If you want to find out more, or if you have skills you want to share then please con­tact us at: outdoorskillshare@riseup.net

//Workshop Timetable//

Fri­day
8:00–10:00 Break­fast
11:00 Work­shop Facil­i­ta­tor Drop-in (2 hours, 11–13:00)
12:00 Con­fi­dence Build­ing and Mutu­al Sup­port (1 hour, 12–13:00)
13:00- 14:00 Lunch
14:00 Deal­ing with Prob­lem Behav­iour and Encour­ag­ing Par­tic­i­pa­tion (1
hour, 14–15:00)
16:00–16:30 Tea Break
16:30 Trip to Main­shill (2 hours, 16:30–18:30)
18:30- 19:00 Wel­come Ses­sion
19:00 Din­ner
20:00 Pub Quiz
22:00 Music. Jam. Fire.
00:00 Bed­time

Sat­ur­day
8:00–10:00 Break­fast
9:30–10:00 Wel­come Ses­sion
10:00 Cook­ing for the Mass­es (3 hours, 10–13:00)
Fire Build­ing and Light­ing (1 hour, 10–11:00)
Tree climb­ing, gen­er­al rope access skills (2 hours, 10–12:00)
Tripods (2 hours, 10- 12:00)
12:00Tool Use and Care (1 hour, 12–13:00)
13:00–14:00 Lunch
14:00 Facil­i­ta­tion for Con­sen­sus (2 hours,14–16:00)
Over­com­ing Oppres­sion (2 hours, 14–16:00)
Tun­nelling (2 hours, 14–16:00)
Veg­an Bak­ing (2 hours, 14–16:00)
16:00 Tea Break
16:30 Legal Observ­ing (1.5 hours, 16:30–18:00)
Self Defence (1.5 hours, 16:30–18:00)
Site Electrics (1.5 hours, 16:30–18:00)
Tac­tics and Strat­e­gy for Defence (1 hour, 16:30–17:30)
18:00 Knots (1 hour, 18–19:00)
Pro­tect­ing Your Habi­tat inc. toi­lets (1 hour, 18–19:00)
Radios (1 hour, 18–19:00)
19:00–20:00 Din­ner
20:00 Films Talks, Craft Ses­sion
22:00 Open Mic
00:00 Bed­time

Sun­day
8:00–10:00 Break­fast
9:30–10:00 Site Meet-up
10:00 First Aid (3 hours, 10–13:00)
Herb and Plant Iden­ti­fi­ca­tion (1 hour, 10–11:00)
Map read­ing and Nav­i­ga­tion for begin­ners (2 hours, 10–12:00)
Tree­house Build­ing (2 hours, 10–12:00)
13:00–14:00 Lunch
14:00 Blockad­ing for Begin­ners (2 hours, 14–16:00)
Fences – get­ting through, over etc. (2 hours, 14–16:00)
Tree climb­ing- advanced, Arbour­ing etc. (2 hours, 14–16:00)
15:00 Comms (1 hour, 15–16:00)
16:00 Tea Break
16:30 Drag­on Dynam­ics Empow­er­ment Skill­share (2 hours 16:30–18:30) Field
Plumb­ing (1.5 hours, 16:30–18:00)
Rec­ces (2 hours 16:30–18:30)
Tree climbing,general rope access skills (2 hours 16:30–18:30)
19:00–20:00 Din­ner
20:00 Music — Per­for­mances
00:00 DJ
03:00 Bed­time

Kids’ Work­shops

Sat­ur­day
10:00 Tree Iden­ti­fi­ca­tion (2 hours, 10–12:00)
14:00 Tree Climb­ing for Kids (aged 10+) (2 hours, 14–16:00)

Sun­day
14:00 Con­sen­sus for Kids (2 hours, 14–16:00)
16:30 Clang, Bang, ShakeyShake, Crash! Mak­ing Instru­ments Out of Trash!
(2 hours, 16:30–18:30)

Lots more info at http://outdoorskillshare.noflag.org.uk

Eviction bosses show up at Black Wood as court hearing delayed

29.3.2010
Hours after the Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp suc­cess­ful­ly pushed back its evic­tion hear­ing at Dun­fermline Sher­iff Court this after­noon, mem­bers of the Nation­al Evic­tion Team includ­ing Mar­tin Leyshon, Head of Resources, vis­it­ed the site to doc­u­ment its defences and pre­sum­ably to begin the process of evict­ing the camp.

29.3.2010
Hours after the Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp suc­cess­ful­ly pushed back its evic­tion hear­ing at Dun­fermline Sher­iff Court this after­noon, mem­bers of the Nation­al Evic­tion Team includ­ing Mar­tin Leyshon, Head of Resources, vis­it­ed the site to doc­u­ment its defences and pre­sum­ably to begin the process of evict­ing the camp.

The Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp is just over a week old so the appear­ance of the Nation­al Evic­tion Team at such short notice and before the evic­tion order for the site has even been grant­ed shows that UK Coal want rid of the camp as soon as pos­si­ble. Fur­ther still, the court papers are full of ref­er­ences to the recent­ly evict­ed Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp, with police advis­ing UK Coal that the longer the camp exists, the hard­er and more cost­ly it will be to remove it.

And of course, they’re right, but num­bers mat­ter too. Please come and join the camp for as long as you can – even if just for a day, it will be great­ly appre­ci­at­ed. The vibe on the camp is good, with defence-build­ing and bar­ri­cad­ing hap­pen­ing all over the place with plen­ty of oppor­tu­ni­ties for peo­ple to get involved and lend a hand. See here for details of how to get the the camp.

The hear­ing for the evic­tion order of the Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp will take place on Thurs­day 1st April at Dun­fermline Sher­iff Court at 14:00. Come down and show your sup­port for the occu­pa­tion if you can.

Final­ly, UK Coal have claimed that the occu­piers of Black Wood have caused fire dam­age to the site, dis­rupt­ed a Great Crest­ed Newt habi­tat and closed access to a foot­path. The Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp finds it iron­ic that a com­pa­ny about to pro­vide fuel to a coal-fired pow­er sta­tion, fan­ning the flames of cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change, caus­ing the forced migra­tion of a pro­tect­ed Newt species and trash­ing their habi­tat on site, and per­ma­nent­ly remov­ing a right of way for the dura­tion of the mine should accuse the camp of these things. The camp sug­gests that hypocrisy and deceit will get UK Coal nowhere.

Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp
coalactionscotland@riseup.net
http://blackwood.noflag.org.uk/

All coal ship movements cancelled at Newcastle Harbour (Australia) blockade

28 March 2010
A mass com­mu­ni­ty protest at the biggest coal port in the world has suc­ceed­ed in pre­vent­ing coal ship move­ments all day today. Hun­dreds of peace­ful pro­test­ers have occu­pied the har­bour since 10am this morn­ing. As the block­ade clos­es, organ­is­ers are hail­ing it a suc­cess.

Newcastle flotilla blockade posterNewcastle flotilla blockade28 March 2010
A mass com­mu­ni­ty protest at the biggest coal port in the world has suc­ceed­ed in pre­vent­ing coal ship move­ments all day today. Hun­dreds of peace­ful pro­test­ers have occu­pied the har­bour since 10am this morn­ing. As the block­ade clos­es, organ­is­ers are hail­ing it a suc­cess.

Nao­mi Hodg­son, spokesper­son for organ­is­ers Ris­ing Tide New­cas­tle, said: “Today was sched­uled to be a busy day in the world’s busiest coal port. Ordi­nar­i­ly, there would have been at least four or five coal ships move in or out of New­cas­tle Har­bour today, but instead there were none.
Newcastle flotilla blockade placards
“This an amaz­ing demon­stra­tion of the pow­er of peace­ful mass action by the com­mu­ni­ty. Hun­dreds of peo­ple unit­ed to protest the rapid expan­sion of the Aus­tralian export coal indus­try – this coun­try’s num­ber one cause of cli­mate change.”

“We suc­ceed­ed in not only shut­ting down the har­bour, but in show­ing the polit­i­cal lead­ers in this coun­try exact­ly what true lead­er­ship on cli­mate change looks like. If Aus­tralia is seri­ous about cli­mate change, we will put an urgent stop to the expan­sion of coal, and begin replac­ing this dev­as­tat­ing indus­try with safe and renew­able alter­na­tives.”

“Coal exports are the num­ber one cause of cli­mate change in Aus­tralia. The coal we export from NSW and Queens­land already accounts for more green­house pol­lu­tion that all onshore sources com­bined,” con­clud­ed Ms Hodg­son.

Why block­ade the world’s biggest coal port?

Now, more than ever, we need to be turn­ing up the heat on the coal indus­try, and their friends in gov­ern­ment. The export coal indus­try is Aus­trali­a’s sin­gle biggest, and fastest grow­ing con­tri­bu­tion to the glob­al cli­mate cri­sis.

New­cas­tle, already the world’s biggest coal port, is open­ing a major new coal export ter­mi­nal over the course of this year, bring­ing the export capac­i­ty of the Hunter Val­ley coal chain to an incred­i­ble 178 mil­lion tonnes of coal per annum. That’s the cli­mate change equiv­a­lent of 30 Bayswa­ter Pow­er Sta­tions. With­in ten years, the coal cor­po­ra­tions plan on export­ing more than 300 mil­lion tonnes of coal per annum — a tripling of cur­rent export capac­i­ty.

Tripling coal exports means tripling coal min­ing. As New­cas­tle coal exports boom, more pre­cious bush­land will be razed, more water­ways pol­lut­ed, more com­mu­ni­ties ripped apart as the transna­tion­al coal com­pa­nies carve their way west­wards into the Liv­er­pool Plains. The prof­its will be export­ed, but the dev­as­ta­tion will stay here in the Hunter. The cat­a­stroph­ic effects of cli­mate change will hurt all around the world.

This mad­ness has to stop. The cli­mate cri­sis is deep­en­ing, and time is fast run­ning out. Politi­cians are fail­ing to take action against the ram­pant coal com­pa­nies, so we have to do it our­selves.

Hun­dreds of peo­ple will be doing just that in New­cas­tle on 28th March, and we’d love you to join us. We’ll be tak­ing to the har­bour in a big way, occu­py­ing the world’s biggest coal port with a mass of peo­ple, and demand­ing:

* an imme­di­ate ban on the expan­sion of the coal indus­try in Aus­tralia,
* a swift phase out of coal, replac­ing all coal indus­try jobs with jobs in renew­able ener­gy and oth­er sus­tain­able indus­tries.

Cli­mate pro­test­ers delay coal ship dock­ing

Cli­mate activists are attempt­ing to pre­vent the dock­ing of the first coal ship at New­castle’s third coal export ter­mi­nal.

The Pana­ma-reg­is­tered bulk car­ri­er Sun­ny Suc­cess is enter­ing New­cas­tle har­bour to receive the first ship­ment of coal from the ter­mi­nal.

Newcastle flotilla blockade climberNewcastle flotilla blockade climber close-upAn activist from Ris­ing Tide is hang­ing from a rope in front of the berth and is block­ing the ship’s access to it.

“The Aus­tralian coal rush is fuelling glob­al cli­mate change and pre­vent­ing us from tran­si­tion­ing to sus­tain­able indus­tries,” said Steve Phillips, spokesper­son for Ris­ing Tide New­cas­tle.

“So far, nei­ther the State nor the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ments have demon­strat­ed that they are seri­ous about cut­ting our biggest sin­gle con­tri­bu­tion to cli­mate change. Instead, coal ports in NSW and Queens­land are under­go­ing mas­sive expan­sions, with exten­sive open cut coal min­ing projects in both states.

“This indus­try is destroy­ing land­scapes, destroy­ing com­mu­ni­ties, and is direct­ly threat­en­ing every­one’s future through major impacts on the glob­al cli­mate. Around the world, species are going extinct, peo­ple are being dis­placed, cli­mat­ic dis­as­ters are becom­ing more fero­cious because of the cli­mate change we have already caused. It is time to get to the root of the prob­lem, and start phas­ing out the coal indus­try.”

“The Aus­tralian export coal indus­try is already this coun­try’s num­ber one cause of cli­mate change, and it is also the fastest grow­ing. New­cas­tle cur­rent­ly exports 100 mil­lion tonnes of coal per annum. Already approved expan­sion projects will dou­ble this fig­ure with­in a few years,” said Steve Phillips.

Approved in March 2007 by the NSW Labor gov­ern­ment, New­castle’s third coal ter­mi­nal will increase the port’s capac­i­ty by 66 mil­lion tonnes per annum, or the equiv­a­lent of 160 mil­lion tonnes of green­house pol­lu­tion. That is rough­ly equiv­a­lent to dou­bling NSW domes­tic green­house pol­lu­tion from all sources.

For more images go to http://drop.io/risingtide
http://www.risingtide.org.au/

Read the report and gawp at the pho­tos of the last impres­sive action at the port, a rail block­ade to inspire us all

Shell apologises

Shell Apol­o­gis­es for Human Rights Vio­la­tions in Niger Delta

The Hague, 27 March 2010

Today, Roy­al Dutch Shell is hold­ing back the tears no more. Shell apol­o­gis­es to all inhab­i­tants of Nigeria’s Niger Delta for the many years of human rights vio­la­tions, for which Shell takes full respon­si­bil­i­ty.

Shell logo burningShell Apol­o­gis­es for Human Rights Vio­la­tions in Niger Delta

The Hague, 27 March 2010

Today, Roy­al Dutch Shell is hold­ing back the tears no more. Shell apol­o­gis­es to all inhab­i­tants of Nigeria’s Niger Delta for the many years of human rights vio­la­tions, for which Shell takes full respon­si­bil­i­ty.

Con­front­ed with mas­sive evi­dence of human rights vio­la­tions that can only be attrib­uted to its oper­a­tions in the Niger Delta, Roy­al Dutch Shell is extreme­ly proud to be the first inter­na­tion­al petro­chem­i­cal com­pa­ny to pub­licly say:

We are sor­ry.

Since Shell first dis­cov­ered oil in the Niger Delta in 1956, the com­pa­ny has rav­ished the land and pol­lut­ed the envi­ron­ment. “We thought these peo­ple didn’t know what was good for them,” explains Brad­ford Houppe, Vice-Pres­i­dent of Shell’s new­ly estab­lished Eth­i­cal Affairs Com­mit­tee. “We nev­er knew that we were bring­ing them impov­er­ish­ment, con­flict, abuse and depri­va­tion. Now we know.” Shell acknowl­edges that it is respon­si­ble for large-scale oil spills, waste dump­ing and gas flar­ing. Each year, hun­dreds of oil spills occur, many of which are caused by cor­ro­sion of oil pipes and poor main­te­nance of infra­struc­ture. “Our fail­ure to deal with these spills swift­ly and the lack of effec­tive clean-up great­ly exac­er­bate their human rights and envi­ron­men­tal impact,” says Houppe. “And that is wrong. It’s just real­ly wrong.”

More than 60 per cent of the peo­ple in the Niger Delta depend on the nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment for their liveli­hood. But due to the oil pol­lu­tion, many of them use pol­lut­ed water to drink and to cook and wash with, and eat fish con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed with oil and oth­er tox­ins. Oil spills and waste dump­ing have also seri­ous­ly dam­aged agri­cul­tur­al land.

The destruc­tion of liveli­hoods and the lack of redress have led peo­ple to steal oil and van­dalise oil infra­struc­ture in an attempt to gain com­pen­sa­tion or clean-up con­tracts. Armed groups engage in large-scale theft of oil and the ran­som­ing of oil work­ers. Gov­ern­ment reprisals fre­quent­ly involve exces­sive force and the col­lec­tive pun­ish­ment of com­mu­ni­ties, thus deep­en­ing gen­er­al anger and resent­ment.

Between 2005 and 2008, the Niger­ian gov­ern­ment received around $36 bil­lion in tax­es and roy­al­ties from Shell. “They have nev­er, not in the slight­est, held us to account for all the wrong we did,” says Houppe. “So with­out tak­ing back any of our apolo­gies, by all means: blame them too!”

A com­pre­hen­sive Plan of Action, fea­tur­ing gen­er­al apolo­gies, detailed apolo­gies, apolo­gies in Braille and apolo­gies in rhyme that Shell employ­ees will hang on the walls in their offices, will be pre­sent­ed at Shell’s Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing on 18 May 2010 in The Hague.

http://shellapologises.com/

Support Indigenous Resistance On Black Mesa!

At the end of an excep­tion­al­ly hard win­ter of Nation­al Emer­gency sta­tus, and the begin­ning of a mud­dy spring, the Dine’ (Nava­jo) fam­i­lies of Big Moun­tain, and sur­round­ing com­mu­ni­ties on Black Mesa con­tin­ue to stand strong on their ances­tral home­lands!

Black Mesa solidarity logoAt the end of an excep­tion­al­ly hard win­ter of Nation­al Emer­gency sta­tus, and the begin­ning of a mud­dy spring, the Dine’ (Nava­jo) fam­i­lies of Big Moun­tain, and sur­round­ing com­mu­ni­ties on Black Mesa con­tin­ue to stand strong on their ances­tral home­lands! For near­ly four decades the com­mu­ni­ties have faced the dev­as­ta­tion of the U.S gov­ern­ment and multi­na­tion­al coal min­ing cor­po­ra­tions exploit­ing their home­lands and vio­lent­ly frac­tur­ing their com­mu­ni­ties. Although the per­mit for the Black Mesa Mine expan­sion did­n’t pass, and hope­ful­ly nev­er will, fam­i­lies remain–resisting the Kayen­ta Mine and forced relo­ca­tion.

“The Big Moun­tain Dine’ elders have endured so much since the 1970s and at the same time, they have defend­ed and pre­served that human dig­ni­ty of nat­ur­al sur­vival, sub­sis­tence and reli­gious val­ues. They have resist­ed the U.S. gov­ern­men­t’s geno­cide poli­cies to vacate lands that Peabody Coal Com­pa­ny rec­og­nized as the Black Mesa coal fields. The Big Moun­tain matri­ar­chal lead­ers always believed that resist­ing forced relo­ca­tion will even­tu­al­ly ben­e­fit all eco­log­i­cal sys­tems, includ­ing the human race. Con­tin­ued res­i­den­cy by fam­i­lies through­out the Big Moun­tain region has a sig­nif­i­cant role in the inter­ven­tion to Peabody Coal’s future plan for Black Mesa coal to be the major source of elec­tri­cal ener­gy, increas­ing every­one’s depen­den­cy on fos­sil fuel and con­tribut­ing to glob­al warm­ing. We will con­tin­ue to fight to defend our home­lands.” –Bahe Kee­d­ini­ihii, Dine’ orga­niz­er and trans­la­tor.

Sup­port­ing these com­mu­ni­ties, whose very pres­ence stands in the way of large-scale coal min­ing, is one way to work on the front lines for cli­mate jus­tice and against a future of cli­mate chaos. There are also oppor­tu­ni­ties for long-term, com­mit­ted sup­port­ers and orga­niz­ers. Black Mesa Indige­nous Sup­port (BMIS) is look­ing for Region­al Coor­di­na­tors to orga­nize year-round sup­port and work towards move­ment build­ing, which would main­tain and enhance com­mu­ni­ca­tion chan­nels between the Big Moun­tain resis­tance com­mu­ni­ties and net­works that are being estab­lished to sup­port the Big Moun­tain resis­tance as well as oth­er local forms of indige­nous resis­tance, while build­ing shared analy­sis, vision and move­ments for the lib­er­a­tion of all peo­ples and our plan­et. Please con­tact us for more infor­ma­tion if you are inter­est­ed.

The fam­i­lies are encour­ag­ing peo­ple to come to Black Mesa now! Sup­port is request­ed all year long!

BMIS is a grass­roots, all-vol­un­teer run col­lec­tive ded­i­cat­ed to work­ing with and sup­port­ing the indige­nous peo­ples of Black Mesa in their Strug­gle for Life and Land who are tar­get­ed by and resist­ing unjust moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing oper­a­tions and forced relo­ca­tion poli­cies of the U.S gov­ern­ment. One of the pri­ma­ry ways that we do this is to hon­or the direct requests of these fam­i­lies to extend their invi­ta­tion to all peo­ple inter­est­ed in sup­port­ing their resis­tance, to come to Black Mesa, to their threat­ened ances­tral home­lands, walk with their sheep, haul water and wood, what­ev­er they ask of us. By com­ing to The Land, we can assist the elders and their fam­i­lies in dai­ly chores, which helps us to engage with the sto­ry that they are telling as well as to claim a more per­son­al stake against envi­ron­men­tal degra­da­tion, cli­mate change, and con­tin­ued lega­cies of colo­nial­ism and geno­cide. We can sup­port by being there so they can go to meet­ings, orga­nize, weave rugs, vis­it fam­i­ly mem­bers who have been hos­pi­tal­ized, rest after a dif­fi­cult win­ter and regain strength for the upcom­ing spring. With spring comes plant­i­ng crops,shearing sheep, and lamb­ing.
COME FOR A MONTH! Or Longer!

The elders on the land are very thank­ful for the sup­port of their resis­tance over the last three decades. We at BMIS are ask­ing those who have come before to con­tin­ue the work you have start­ed by com­ing back.
And for those of you who have nev­er come to the land, we encour­age you to start.
Deep thanks to all who made the Novem­ber Car­a­van hap­pen: let us con­tin­ue the sup­port through the year.

BMIS can assist you in the process of being self-suf­fi­cient on the land, which is vital. We are hap­py to speak with you over the phone or email and we offer impor­tant online resources like the Cul­tur­al Sen­si­tiv­i­ty and Pre­pared­ness Guide­book found on our web­site. Vol­un­teers must read the guide­book and reg­is­ter with BMIS to ensure your safe­ty and be account­able to the fam­i­lies. There are also plen­ty of great doc­u­ments about the cur­rent and back­ground infor­ma­tion found on our website–one of the only on-line resources doc­u­ment­ing this resis­tance.

“This land is being tak­en away because they’ve got pow­er in Wash­ing­ton. We were put here with our Four Sacred Moun­tains ~ and we were cre­at­ed to live here. We know the names of the moun­tains and we know the names of the oth­er sacred places. That is our pow­er. That is how we pray and this prayer has nev­er changed.” ~Kather­ine Smith, Big Moun­tain Elder

www.blackmesais.org
blackmesais@gmail.com — PO Box 23501 Flagstaff, AZ 86002 — 928–773-8086
BMIS can send letters/packages to fam­i­lies, how­ev­er we encour­age you to be in direct com­mu­ni­ca­tion with the fam­i­lies.

Tes­ti­mo­ny from a Sheep­herder:

I have just left after a four month stay on the Land. This was my 14th win­ter stay­ing with Dine’ fam­i­lies resid­ing on the so-called HPL and resist­ing the relo­ca­tion laws by con­tin­u­ing to live on the land of their grand­par­ents of gen­er­a­tions back. It has been an intense win­ter. The big snow­storm was a sight to see, and remind­ed the elders of storms 40 and 80 years past, when there were many more fam­i­lies out there, and most of the elders did­n’t live alone. And yes, the Nation­al Guard and US Army did come out to the fam­i­lies. I won­dered at the irony of the hay, water, and oth­er sup­plies, think­ing how the fam­i­lies have lived under the threat of the Guard com­ing in to take them from their homes.

The OSM Life of Mine per­mit get­ting denied was a pleas­ant sur­prise. I had been look­ing at the hills, mead­ows and rocks that I have come to know, as becom­ing ‘reclaimed’ land through the mine expan­sion, and think­ing of the long, hard fight to come. A sec­ond gen­er­a­tion Black Mesa min­er, and “HPL” res­i­dent stat­ed that he was glad about the per­mit, and ready to see a change back to the old ways of liv­ing and away from min­ing.

The Sup­port­er car­a­van at thanks­giv­ing was a fast and fes­tive, and abun­dant time. About 120 sup­port­ers for the week, but by the end of Jan­u­ary there were only a few sup­port­ers on the land, and a list of fam­i­lies ask­ing for a sheep­herder. We were des­per­ate­ly call­ing out for peo­ple to come, and a few did, but only a few. And I thought, this is where the real sup­port is need­ed- in the long haul, the deep snow.

Back in 1997, and again in 2000 the fam­i­lies were liv­ing under a threat­en­ing “dead­line”, and there were lit­er­al­ly hun­dreds of sup­port­ers on the land for months. I am grate­ful that there is no dead­line as such now, but I do won­der what keeps us sup­port­ers from com­mit­ting to com­ing out, or com­ing back. I have per­son­al­ly placed sev­er­al hun­dred sup­port­ers in the last 12 years, and I mar­vel at how much we strug­gle to ‘get the word out ’ and ‘get sup­port to the Land’.

I am so hon­ored and hum­bled by the lov­ing hos­pi­tal­i­ty I receive from the fam­i­lies. My sons are treat­ed as fam­i­ly, and are grow­ing up know­ing the elders, kids and sup­port­ers, and about fight­ing for and sup­port­ing what is right. I have been raised out there myself in many ways. The Dineh peo­ple have been my teach­ers and men­tors, my inspi­ra­tion. I believe in doing all that I can to hon­or their request and invi­ta­tion to come into the home, the land and the lives of the peo­ple indige­nous to the land ‑what that means and what they are fight­ing for and against. I believe it is at the heart of the most impor­tant work today.

And I am writ­ing this to remind us, you, that their door is open and there is a job to do- some­thing that we are need­ing to under­stand, a con­nec­tion that needs to be made and hon­ored. It is time to come. It is time to come back. Its time to give back.
Please help us do this.

–Tree, BMIS vol­un­teer and vol­un­teer coor­di­na­tor

Black Wood Solidarity Camp handed eviction papers

25.03.2010
This morn­ing a sher­iff offi­cer from Dun­fermline Sher­iff Court hand­ed the new­ly-estab­lished Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp its evic­tion sum­mons, with notice to appear in court on Mon­day morn­ing. Despite not mak­ing an appear­ance yet at the site, it is believed that UK Coal rep­re­sen­ta­tives met with Fife police on Mon­day to dis­cuss how to deal with the occu­pa­tion.

25.03.2010
This morn­ing a sher­iff offi­cer from Dun­fermline Sher­iff Court hand­ed the new­ly-estab­lished Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp its evic­tion sum­mons, with notice to appear in court on Mon­day morn­ing. Despite not mak­ing an appear­ance yet at the site, it is believed that UK Coal rep­re­sen­ta­tives met with Fife police on Mon­day to dis­cuss how to deal with the occu­pa­tion.

UK Coal has been very quick to begin court pro­ceed­ings against the camp and once again, as was the case with the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp, the occu­piers have been giv­en very lit­tle time to respond.

As well as rush­ing court pro­ceed­ings, it is also thought that UK Coal rushed in its con­trac­tors deal­ing with the re-loca­tion of Great Crest­ed Newts, a Euro­pean Pro­tect­ed Specie, the day after the site was occu­pied. As part of the con­di­tions for plan­ning con­sent the newt pop­u­la­tion on site was sup­posed to have been moved before work began. How­ev­er, on Mon­day after­noon a con­voy of con­trac­tors arrived and appeared to start this work.

In addi­tion, an ecol­o­gist has been sur­vey­ing the site this week and told the camp that the work to move the newts was behind sched­ule. Once again, as was the case in Main­shill, eco­log­i­cal sur­veys and work relat­ing to sur­vey­ing the pres­ence of nest­ing birds, bats and oth­er species, is being car­ried out after felling and the destruc­tion of the sites ecosys­tems has begun. All of this high­lights the fact that coun­cils and min­ing com­pa­nies are mere­ly pay­ing lip-ser­vice to ful­fill­ing the legal require­ments in deal­ing with pro­tect­ed species and frag­ile ecol­o­gy, and how employ­ees of envi­ron­men­tal con­sul­tants such as RPS are noth­ing more than eco­log­i­cal box-tick­ers for the min­ing com­pa­nies.

Sup­port­ers and local res­i­dents have con­tin­ued to vis­it the camp and defences are being strength­ened in antic­i­pa­tion of the inevitable grant­i­ng of the evic­tion order on Mon­day. Come to the Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp and stop UK Coal trash­ing this site, the cli­mate and com­mu­ni­ty health!

Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp
coalactionscotland@riseup.net
http://blackwood.noflag.org.uk/

Plane Stupid issues 48hr subvertising challenge

It’s that time of year when every air­line starts aggres­sive­ly adver­tis­ing for your busi­ness. Well, we’ve had enough. Plane Stu­pid is invit­ing all of you to take part in its very own sub­ver­tis­ing com­pe­ti­tion.

Sticker kidIt’s that time of year when every air­line starts aggres­sive­ly adver­tis­ing for your busi­ness. Well, we’ve had enough. Plane Stu­pid is invit­ing all of you to take part in its very own sub­ver­tis­ing com­pe­ti­tion. From Thurs­day 22nd April — Fri­day 23rd April, we’ll be launch­ing 48 hours of stick­er-whack­ing, sub­ver­tis­ing, adbust­ing pan­de­mo­ni­um.

The avi­a­tion indus­try spends mil­lions every year telling us that we’re no good to any­one unless we keep fly­ing with them. So it’s time to hit back! Like tobac­co adverts, avi­a­tion adver­tis­ing needs to become a thing of the past. But until then, let’s sub­ver­tise. Any poster, advert or bill­board is fair game.

Whether you’re a first time activist look­ing for an easy way-in, or an old timer look­ing for some light relief.….….it’s time to take to the streets and reclaim some pub­lic space. Tak­ing part is easy:

1. You can down­load a choice of designs from our Flickr site, or use your design skills to make your own.
2. Print them out on stan­dard, non divid­ed, A4 stick­er paper (avail­able from most print­ers and sta­tion­ers).
3. Then find your near­est avi­a­tion adver­tise­ment.
4. Stick ’em up punk!
5. Take pho­tographs, set up a new tem­po­rary email address in an inter­net cafe (under a pseu­do­nym) and email your images to info@planestupid.com.

The group who stick­ers the most adverts in the 48 hour peri­od wins. Wins what? Prizes! We got the bumper crop of 5 spray cans, Cul­ture Jam by Kalle Lasn, Do It Your­self, A hand­book for chang­ing our world, by the Trapese Col­lec­tive and Scrib­ble­boy by Philip Rid­ley to give away.

Of course don’t feel lim­it­ed to indi­vid­ual stick­ers, think big! You can write your own mes­sage on large stretch­es of blank wall paper to cov­er whole bill boards. Make up some wall paper paste, get a paint roller, a stick it up. If nec­es­sary — attach the roller to a broom han­dle for those hard to reach places. Help­ful­ly, there’s some great how-to guides on t’in­ter­net.

One last point. Please be respect­ful about where you stick­er. Cor­po­rate nas­ties are fine.….but the local old peo­ple’s homes may not appre­ci­ate your art on their walls!

Use your head, and remem­ber to dress well for the occa­sion — caps and scarves are the in thing this sub­ver­tis­ing sea­son. Some offi­cers of the law may be con­vinced that sub­ver­tis­ing is bor­der­line ille­gal, so take a friend as look­out, keep an eye open for CCTV and don’t get caught.

LNG Pipeline protest update… the battle goes on :)

A lot of peo­ple fought long & hard against the 200 mile LNG pipeline from Mil­ford Haven to Glouces­ter. Now that is laid in the ground it is hard to see what is worth fight­ing for.

A lot of peo­ple fought long & hard against the 200 mile LNG pipeline from Mil­ford Haven to Glouces­ter. Now that is laid in the ground it is hard to see what is worth fight­ing for.

Many peo­ple orig­i­nal­ly involved in this cam­paign are against fos­sil fuel use & the fact is that the gas is going to come down that pipe even if it is at a low­er pres­sure. So why keep cam­paign­ing on a lost cause? We owe it to all the peo­ple liv­ing along the length of the pipeline to con­tin­ue to cam­paign against the PRI being built & mak­ing sure that the pipeline is as safe as it can be. We can­not leave it to Nation­al Grid to pro­tect these peo­ple, just look at their track record!

The pipeline is laid and the ter­mi­nals in Mil­ford Haven are now oper­a­tional, noth­ing is going to stop Nation­al Grid using more of the earths resources after spend­ing bil­lions on this project. One of the main con­cerns all along has been safe­ty. This is where we can real­ly make a dif­fer­ence by oppos­ing the PRI ever being built. If there is no PRI then the gas will have to be pumped through the pipeline at a low­er pres­sure which will make it safer for the thou­sands of peo­ple liv­ing near­by. It is vital peo­ple raise their con­cerns about the safe­ty of the pipe. See the local news arti­cle at http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/gloucestershireheadlines/National-Grid-goes-appeal-gas-plant-refusal/article-1870359-detail/article.html#StartComments

When the appeal goes ahead as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble need to get involved to voice their con­cerns & objec­tions. If Nation­al Grid win the appeal then the cam­paign needs to look at whether peo­ple involved want to take fur­ther steps to obstruct Nation­al Grid. This may mean some more direct actions if there are peo­ple will­ing.

Only a few weeks ago a nat­ur­al gas pipeline explod­ed in the USA leav­ing 5 dead and dozens injured. See the news report at http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/nyregion/08explode.html

Please keep an eye on the local press, join the Face­book group, vis­it our Myspace or the Pipeline Twit­ter web­site to keep up to date with news.

Our face­book group is at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2248923913&ref=nf#!/group.php?v=wall&ref=nf&gid=2248923913

The Myspace group is at http://www.myspace.com/fightingthepipe

A new doc­u­men­tary and dis­cus­sion web­site has been set up called Pipeline Twit­ter at http://www.pipelinetwitter.co.uk/

It is real­ly impor­tant that we all keep com­mu­ni­cat­ing! Our email address is fightthepipe@hotmail.co.uk.

BP FORTNIGHT OF SHAME – LONDON MASS ACTION

Save the date!
Sat­ur­day, 10th April. 1PM. Lon­don.

Join us at a secret Lon­don loca­tion for an after­noon of sun, sound sys­tems and sub­ver­sion. Make sure BP knows that they won’t go into the tar sands with­out a fight. Meet­ing point and more details to be announced near­er the time, and keep an eye on:

Party at the pumpsSave the date!
Sat­ur­day, 10th April. 1PM. Lon­don.

Join us at a secret Lon­don loca­tion for an after­noon of sun, sound sys­tems and sub­ver­sion. Make sure BP knows that they won’t go into the tar sands with­out a fight. Meet­ing point and more details to be announced near­er the time, and keep an eye on:
www.tarsandsinfocus.wordpress.com

More info about the BP Fort­night of Shame, April 1 – 15 2010

The BP Fort­night of Shame is a call to action from the UK Tar Sands Net­work, Ris­ing Tide and the Camp for Cli­mate Action to force BP to
reverse their crazy plans to move into Canada’s tar sands – the sin­gle most destruc­tive project on earth. It runs between the annu­al Fos­sil Fools day on April 1st, which in recent years has seen a flur­ry of action against the fos­sil fuels indus­try, and BP’s Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing on April 15th. Grass­roots groups across the UK and around the world, will be tak­ing action in sol­i­dar­i­ty with First Nations com­mu­ni­ties in Cana­da to stop BP’s dead­ly plans in their tracks.

www.tarsandsinfocus.wordpress.com
www.risingtide.org.uk
www.climatecamp.org.uk
www.ienearth.org/cits

Site of New UK Coal Open Cast Mine Occupied in Fife — Black Wood solidarity camp update

Update below…
22nd March 2010: last night twen­ty five activists occu­pied the site of the Blair House Open Cast Coal Site in sol­i­dar­i­ty with near-by com­mu­ni­ties and in direct inter­ven­tion of the envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion that it will cause. Con­trac­tors have been felling trees on the site over the past week, and activists have moved in to stop this work and put an end to UK Coal’s plans for min­ing the Black Wood Wildlife site.

Fife coal campUpdate below…
22nd March 2010: last night twen­ty five activists occu­pied the site of the Blair House Open Cast Coal Site in sol­i­dar­i­ty with near-by com­mu­ni­ties and in direct inter­ven­tion of the envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion that it will cause. Con­trac­tors have been felling trees on the site over the past week, and activists have moved in to stop this work and put an end to UK Coal’s plans for min­ing the Black Wood Wildlife site.

This occu­pa­tion is the sec­ond occu­pa­tion of a UK Coal site in two weeks. The Defend Hunt­ing­ton Lane camp in Shrop­shire has been stop­ping work and felling for near­ly two weeks now [1]. This occu­pa­tion comes two months after the evic­tion of the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp in South Lanark­shire, where 45 arrests were made in an evic­tion that last­ed 5 days [2].

UK Coal have been giv­en per­mis­sion by Fife Coun­cil to mine 720,000 tonnes of coal from the site, a deci­sion that dis­re­gard­ed the wish­es of local res­i­dents. Near­ly 150 peo­ple object­ed to the plan­ning appli­ca­tion for this site and there were no let­ters of sup­port. The Coun­cil, in their defence, would­n’t dare refuse anoth­er open cast coal mine appli­ca­tion after their refusal of ATH Resources mine at Muir Dean on the insis­tence of Cross­gates res­i­dents, was over­turned by the gov­ern­ment and cost them finan­cial­ly.

The plan­ning process was designed to slip the mine past the major­i­ty of peo­ple liv­ing near it. As an exam­ple, the neigh­bour noti­fi­ca­tion for the mine only includ­ed res­i­dents liv­ing with­in 90 metres of the site bound­ary, which only real­ly involved noti­fy­ing a few Oak­ley res­i­dents liv­ing oppo­site the site entrance.

Impacts on near­by com­mu­ni­ties will include noise, dust, HGV move­ments, impact on the land­scape, ecol­o­gy, and loss of recre­ation access. The Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp stands in sup­port of near­by res­i­dents oppos­ing this mine and the inevitable oth­er mines that will be applied for by prof­it-hun­gry UK Coal.

The site is eco­log­i­cal­ly diverse and home to a pop­u­la­tion of Great Crest­ed Newts, a Euro­pean Pro­tect­ed Specie, the Black Wood Wildlife site, des­ig­nat­ed as an area that once had ancient wood­land and is now home to birch forests and oak trees, orchids, breed­ing birds and win­ter­ing birds, bats, red squir­rels and Brown hares, list­ed on the UK Bio­di­ver­si­ty Action Plan. The Cow­strand­burn riv­er will be divert­ed and undoubt­ed­ly pol­lut­ed, along with oth­er water­cours­es in the area.

Some 2.11 mil­lion tonnes of CO2 will be released into the atmos­phere from the com­bus­tion of the coal, with more still being released from the min­ing process. None of this will be cap­tured and stored. New coal mines such as this one under­mine the gov­ern­ments plans to reduce Scot­land’s CO2 emis­sions and high­light the hypocrisy of gov­ern­ment min­is­ters and local coun­cils when it comes to reduc­ing emis­sions.

Fiona Richards, one of the peo­ple cur­rent­ly occu­py­ing the site said, “This new coal mine is only one of 20 such oth­ers to have recent­ly been giv­en plan­ning per­mis­sion in Scot­land. If we are to have any chance of lim­it­ing dan­ger­ous cli­mate change and pro­tect­ing com­mu­ni­ties from car­bon-inten­sive indus­tries, direct action must be tak­en as coun­cil­lors, min­ing com­pa­nies and the gov­ern­ment have shown their unwill­ing­ness to solve the prob­lems we face.”

Press Con­tact: 07806926040

Notes to edi­tors:
[1] http://defendhuntingtonlane.wordpress.com/
[2] http://mainshill.noflag.org.uk/

Direc­tions, wish-list, back­ground info and more at http://coalactionscotland.noflag.org.uk/?page_id=1316

———

Sup­port for Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp need­ed — ancient wood­land being felled
24.3.2010
The wood­land was occu­pied last Sun­day as 25 activists blocked and bar­ri­cad­ed the access road using a scaf­fold­ing tri­pod, and took to the trees putting up nets, plat­forms and tree­hous­es.
Despite the occu­pa­tion, con­trac­tors have con­tin­ued to fell the birch and oak for­est, with occu­piers hav­ing to watch a huge oak being felled metres from the camp. The sound of chain­saws and machin­ery sur­rounds the occu­pied wood­land, with the forest­ed area get­ting small­er and small­er each day, despite the close prox­im­i­ty to dwellings, tents and tree defences. Sup­port and num­bers are need­ed at the camp.

Mean­while, local sup­port for the camp is grow­ing with near-by res­i­dents who opposed plans for the mine vis­it­ing the camp and offer­ing their sup­port. Oth­er vis­i­tors have includ­ed ever-increas­ing ranks of police offi­cers, includ­ing Glasgow’s V‑Division, the tac­ti­cal sup­port unit, who went around with a spot­ter card and video cam­era. There is still a per­ma­nent police “check­point” before the entrance to the camp, but they’re quite friend­ly and might even offer to dri­ve you to the bus stop if you’re lucky.

Look­ing out over the Firth of Forth from the site, over coun­try­side, old coal bings and min­ing com­mu­ni­ties, the Lon­gan­net smoke­stack looms in the dis­tance. ScottishPower’s Lon­gan­net coal-fired pow­er sta­tion is the sec­ond largest in the UK and the des­ti­na­tion for the coal from this site. Due to be “refur­bished”, this is the largest source of CO2 emis­sions in Scot­land and a tes­ta­ment to an archa­ic and dan­ger­ous ener­gy sup­ply.

For as long as places like Lon­gan­net burn coal, whether in Fife, South Lanark­shire or in Colom­bia, com­mu­ni­ties will have their health impact­ed, their land stolen and their envi­ron­ment trashed. The world’s ecosys­tems will con­tin­ue to col­lapse and species extinc­tion will con­tin­ue to spi­ral out of con­trol. Unless, that is, we make a stand. This occu­pa­tion is the sec­ond occu­pa­tion of a UK Coal site in two weeks – and such direct action, root­ed in com­mu­ni­ty strug­gle, offers the only glimpse of hope that we have of stop­ping the whole­sale destruc­tion of the plan­et.

Black Wood Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp
coalactionscotland@riseup.net
http://blackwood.noflag.org.uk/