BUILD GARDENS, NOT PRISONS: International Reclaim the Fields Action Camp 2015

International Reclaim the Fields Action Camp 2015

International Reclaim the Fields Action Camp 2015

When: Friday 28th August (From 6pm) – Wednesday 2nd September 2015

Where: Dudleston Community Protection Camp, Shropshire (near the Wales/England Border).

About:

Reclaim the Fields UK (RTF) was born in 2011, as a star in a wider constellation of food and land struggles that reaches around the globe. Since 2011, camps and other RTF gatherings have helped support local communities in struggle, share skills, develop networks, and strengthen the resistance to exploitation, in Bristol, west London, Gloucestershire, Nottingham and Fife, among other locations.

Every two years there is also an international camp, where people from around Europe and beyond meet together to support a local struggle (standing against exploitative gold mining in Romania, and open cast coal mining in Germany, are some examples). People at these camps have shared their local stories and grown their ideas about resistance and reclaiming our food system, beyond national borders. This year, an international gathering will be held in the UK, in Dudleston, Shropshire, on the Welsh/English border.

The aims of the camp are:
• To support local communities in the west and north west of England, and the north of Wales with their struggles against fracking
• To increase participation in Reclaim the Fields
• To demonstrate visible, active opposition to prison construction
• To support Dudleston Community Protection Camp build a garden and infrastructure to become more self-reliant
• To demonstrate the interconnection between these struggles
• To inspire and radicalise everyone involved

What is happening:

• Two days of Action – Tuesday 1st & Wednesday 2nd September – demonstrations & actions against companies involved in the construction of the North Wales prison, as well as local fracking-related targets.
• Workshops & Skillshares – Over the bank holiday weekend there will be abundant opportunities to learn, share, discuss and connect with other people.
• Building & Growing on the site – Be part of installing gardens & low impact infrastructure at the community protection camp. Learn about permaculture, agroecology, forest gardening, mushroom growing, pallet construction, compost toilet making, off-grid electrics and more.

Why:

• This camp has been organised to support the local community in Dudleston to resist fracking in their area (as well as working with other local anti-fracking groups & protection camps in the North West who have been resisting extreme energy developments for a number of years). To find out more about their struggle visit: http://frack-off.org.uk/blockade/dudleston-community-protection-camp/
• It has also been organised to give attention to the North Wales Prison Project that is being constructed. This will be Europe’s second largest prison holding 2100 prisoners and the first of a number of ‘mega prisons’ that the UK Government wish to build. Click here for more information about the prison, why we are against it & links to articles about the prison industrial complex in the UK

How to get involved:

Click on the links below to find more practical information about the camp and how to get involved:

This is a DIY/DIT(ogether)* camp and everyone is needed to get stuck in to make it happen. People are needed to:
• Support with publicity before the event – sharing the gathering online, putting posters up, encouraging your local group to get involved. People are also needed to help design the programme, respond to emails & plan facilitation.
• Helping with site set up & building infrastructure (planning this in advance & being on site a few days before the gathering)
• Signing up to a shift over the weekend to help with cooking, site set up & safety, being on the welcome tent & so forth
• Supporting local groups to organise actions

If you can help with any of these tasks please email info@reclaimthefields.noflag.org.uk

Spread the word:

• Poster design here: reclaimthefields.noflag.org.uk/wp-conte…

• Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/560637597407933/

Reclaim the Fields International Gathering 2015

Reclaim the Fields

About the camp

Reclaim the Fields (or RTF) UK was born in 2011, as a star in a wider constellation of food and land struggles that reaches around the globe. Since 2011, camps and other RTF gatherings have helped support local communities in struggle, share skills, developed networks, and strengthened the resistance to exploitation, in Bristol, west London, Gloucestershire, Nottingham and Fife among other locations.

Every two years there is also an international camp, where people from around Europe and beyond meet together to support a local struggle (from gold mining in Romania to open cast coal mining in Germany, for example). People share share stories and ideas about resistance and reclaiming our food system beyond national borders. This year, an international gathering will be held in the UK, in Dudleston, Shropshire, on the Welsh/English border.

The aims of the camp are:

  • To support local communities in the west and north west of England, and the north of Wales with their struggles against fracking
  • To increase participation in Reclaim the Fields
  • To demonstrate visible, active opposition to prison construction
  • To support Dudleston Community Protection Camp build a garden and infrastructure to become more self-reliant
  • To demonstrate the interconnection between these struggles
  • To inspire and radicalise everyone involved

What’s taking place?

  • Two days of Action – Tuesday 1st & Wednesday 2nd September – demonstrations & actions against companies involved in the construction of the North Wales prison, as well as local fracking-related targets.
  • Workshops & Skillshares – Over the bank holiday weekend there will be abundant opportunities to learn, share, discuss and connect with other people.
  • Building & Growing on the site – Be part of installing gardens & low impact infrastructure at the community protection camp. Learn about permaculture, agroecology, forest gardening, mushroom growing, pallet construction, compost toilet making, off-grid electrics and more.

Why this camp? Why now?

  • This camp has been organised to support the local community in Dudleston to resist fracking in their area (as well as working with other local anti-fracking groups & protection camps in the North West who have been resisting extreme energy developments for a number of years). To find out more about their struggle visit: http://frack-off.org.uk/blockade/dudleston-community-protection-camp/

Practical Information about the Camp

Click on the links below to find more practical information about the camp and how to get involved:

Getting involved

This is a DIY camp and everyone is needed to get stuck in to make it happen. People are needed to:

  • Support with publicity before the event – sharing the gathering online, putting posters up, encouraging your local group to get involved. People are also needed to help design the programme, respond to emails & plan facilitation.
  • Helping with site set up & building infrastructure (planning this in advance & being on site a few days before the gathering)
  • Signing up to a shift over the weekend to help with cooking, site set up & safety, being on the welcome tent & so forth
  • Supporting local groups to organise actions

If you can help with any of these tasks please email info@reclaimthefields.noflag.org.uk

Who are Reclaim the Fields?

We are a group of peasants, landless and prospective peasants, as well as people who are taking back control over food production.

We understand “peasants” as people who produce food on a small scale, for themselves or for the community, possibly selling a part of it. This also includes agricultural workers.

We support and encourage people to stay on the land and go back to the countryside. We promote food sovereignty (as defined in the Nyéléni declaration) and peasant agriculture, particularly among young people and urban dwellers, as well as alternative ways of life. In Europe, the concept ‘food sovereignty’ is not very common and could be clarified with ideas such as ‘food autonomy’ and control over food systems by inclusive communities, not only nations or states. We are determined to create alternatives to capitalism through cooperative, collective, autonomous, real-needs-oriented, small-scale production and initiatives. We are putting theory into practice and linking local practical action with global political struggles.

In order to achieve this, we participate in local actions through activist groups and cooperate with existing initiatives. This is why we choose not to be a homogeneous group, but to open up to the diversity of actors fighting the capitalist food production model. We address the issues of access to land, collective farming, seed rights and seed exchange. We strengthen the impact of our work through cooperation with activists who focus on different tasks but who share the same vision.

Nevertheless, our openness has some limits. We are determined to take back control over our lives and refuse any form of authoritarianism and hierarchy. We respect nature and living beings, but will neither accept nor tolerate any form of discrimination, be it based on race, religion, gender, nationality, sexual orientation or social status. We refuse and will actively oppose every form of exploitation of other people. With the same force and energy, we act with kindness and conviviality, making solidarity a concrete practice of our daily life.

We support the struggles and visions of la Via Campesina, and work to strengthen them. We wish to share the knowledge and the experience from years of struggle and peasant life and enrich it with the perspectives and strength of those of us who are not peasants, or not yet peasants. We all suffer the consequences of the same policies, and are all part of the same fight.

Read this in: French, German, Spanish

 

Didcot Camp Action Round Up: 18 actions against the fossil fuel industry

<

Blockades, shutdowns, lock-ons, love-ins, tripods and nanas…..Reclaim the Power’s day of action against the fossil fuel industry today (1 June 2015) saw 18 different actions drawing the dots between big energy firms, government ministers, public relations companies, oil arts sponsorship and the fracking industry.

Let’s take a run-down of the day’s events…(more text and pics coming soon!)

Action 1: 9.04am – Npower’s debt collection and pre-payment meter office in Leeds blockaded

We’ve all had the threatening letters from energy companies demanding payment for bills we can’t afford – and today we hit back. Reclaim the Power groups visited RWE Npower’s offices in Leeds and blockaded the front doors. Many households are forced onto pre-payment meters which are more expensive than direct debit accounts.

Action 2: 9.08am – Delegates at World Coal Association conference locked out of Institute of Directors

The coal industry are trying to continue burning fossil fuels by dangling the promise of Carbon-Capture-and-Storage technology. Conference delegates at a World Coal Assocation event found all five entrances to the exclusive Institute of Directors blocked this morning. There no arrests but lots of marigolds.

Action 3: 9.09am “Wind not gas” protest at DECC

Cheeky protesters highlighted the continued fossil fuel bias within the Department for Energy and Climate Change by blockading its steps. Rowan Tilly explained, “Against the advice of their own Committee on Climate Change, the government has approved the construction of up to 30 new gas-fired power stations, and intends to go ‘all out’ for shale gas – with up to two thirds of the UK licensed for fracking. This new dash for gas is recklessly at odds with our national and international obligations on climate change and must be resisted, for both the sake of ourselves and future generations.

“We are now finding ourselves at a stage where we don’t know where government ends and corporations begin and unless we act now we will soon find ourselves be locked into infrastructure which will burn carbon for years to come whilst killing off renewable energy, with political decisions ruled by profit and acting in ignorance of the blatant dangers of climate change. We simply can’t afford to let this happen.”

Action 4: 9.10am – Invesco’s Revolving Door between government and Drax

Continuing this theme, Reclaim the Power activists visited the offices of Invesco – the investment management company which owns 26% of Drax coal-fired power station in Yorkshire. New DECC junior minister Andrea Leadman worked at Invesco for 10 years before taking up her post in government. The revolving doors were literally blocked and banner dropped above the London Wall road.

Action 5: 9.30am – Polishing a turd: office occupation of Media Zoo

Public relations firm ‘Media Zoo’ represent chemicals giant Ineos – who have recently pledged £640 million investment in fracking. Eight activists occupied their offices in Imperial Wharf, London carrying a banner banner reading, ‘Fracking is Shit. You can’t polish a turd.’ They used arm tubes lock ons to stay put. Seven people were arrested around lunch time.

Mediazoo’s website boasts extensive experience of dealing with “industrial disputes”, “fatal accidents” and “child labour”. They are consulting Ineos on PR and media strategy. The CEO of Ineos Upstream Gary Haywood said, “I want Ineos to be the biggest player in the shale gas industry.” Mediazoo were responsible for what UNITE described as Ineos’s “campaign of fear” during the dispute at Grangemouth oil refinery in Scotland when 1400 workers fought cuts to pay, jobs and pensions.

Action 6: 9.45am – Anti-nukes visit Carmargue PR firm

As well as representing RWE Npower, public relations firm Camargue also spin the work of Horizon Nuclear Energy. 12 protesters targeted the firm’s offices in Soho. Clare Jones said, “The public has a right to be informed about the real dangers of nuclear – from cancer to contamination to climate change. For the cost of building one nuclear power station you could build over 1000 offshore wind turbines.”

Action 7: 10.25am – Energy UK lobby group blockaded

Energy UK is the trade body for the Big Six energy companies. They have lobbied the government to introduce the ‘Capacity Market’ into the recent Energy Act (2014) – which uses public money to subsidise new gas power stations. Three people blockaded the entrance, including two in an arm tube lock on.  There were two arrests.

Action 8: 10.30am – Big Six Love-in at Oxfordshire Conservative Party headquarters

Big 6

Action 9: 10.55am – RWE Npower headquarters in Swindon blockaded

Action 10: All morning – Subvertising in Oxford

Action 11: The Bill of Wrongs at British Gas HQ near Oxford

Action 12: 12.11pm – Lancashire Nanas link fracking and gas-fire power stations at Didcot B

Cuadzilla puppet

Action 13: 1.00pm – Van Gogh’s ‘Sunflowers’ rebranded by Shell

Shell rebrand

Action 14: 1.00pm – Avonmouth Biofuel plant invaded

Action 15: 1.30pm – “No stone left unfracked” Tripod fracking rig erected at London City Hall

Boris Saya

Action 16: 1.41pm – Edelman PR firm deliver first fracked baby (trigger warning)

Action 17: 2.00pm – Blockade of Cuadrilla offices in Lichfield (again!)

Cuadrilla HQ

Action 18: 2.30pm – Occupation of Imperial College’s Department of Mining

Warrington fracking coal bed methane lock-on protest

21/4/15

Update:

Cheshire Police has confirmed that one woman and three men have been arrested for aggravated trespass.

At 1.25pm the woman had her chain removed but it was not until 4.30pm that all were arrested.

 

Anti-fracking Protectors Lock on at IGas Warrington coal bed methane compound

At Doe Green Widnes WA8 9TZ

The four protestors locked themselves to security fences around the well heads this morning

Please show local support!

Livestream: http://t.co/5IRjpIcv2q

Local newspaper article

 

Denmark: protest camp against French Shale Gas Company

April 10th, 2015

[ from US EF! Newswire: Editor’s note:  The following piece has been composed from words sent our way as well as from various articles.  As the opposition continues, however, there will be more updates and rebellious cries.  For hindering Total until its contaminated shadow retreats from Denmark and trips on its own grimy machinery! ]

Denmark—On June 25 of last year, after many hours of debate and gathering votes amid the cries of anti-fracking protesters, Denmark’s first drilling license for shale gas was approved in Frederikshavn, a municipality located in northern Denmark.  The warped decision will enable Total—a French oil and gas company and fifth largest international energy company— to begin its degrading exploration and establish a well in nearby Dybvad.

“We had a good and factual debate,” Birgit Stenbak Hansen, Frederikshavn’s mayor, told Jyllands-Posten newspaper. “I am pleased that we can move on in this case after preparing meticulously for the council.”
Although the Danish Government has expressed plans to divert from fossil fuels and has gained an international reputation for “green energy”, its surrendering to Total for the sake of supporting Denmark’s welfare state, as well as its emphasis on ripping through the land in a “responsible manner”, speaks otherwise.

In order for external industries to operate legally within Denmark’s beautiful landscape, they have to be approved by the the Danish Subsoil Act and the Environmental Committee—the entities in place to authorize which companies can spit on them. Through such oversight, Total and North Sea Fund (a state-owned oil and gas co.) were granted two licenses back in 2010, allowing for shale gas potential to be investigated in two areas of Denmark.

Just days ago, we received news that Total is preparing its numb machinery to drill the first test well and locals are retaliating. A protest camp has been established on-site and has been active since the permits began to be exercised.

The atmosphere of the encampment is quite lively with defiant song and the numbers of warriors becoming integrated in the fight is growing.

Throughout the last few days, road blockades have been formed and sustained for 2-3 hours by locals and allies to hinder Total’s truck convoys from entering the site. While the first barricade was dispersed after a brief debate with police, the most recent ended with folks being physically dragged from the scene by cops. As solidarity is fostered between locals and their allies, there will most likely be more blockades and organized revolts to come.

This is the first environmentally-based direct action that is unraveling in Denmark since COP15 , as well as the first against the shale gas industry. Regional mobilization is gaining momentum and voices of those openly opposing Total’ʹs investments are widely circulating.  Organizations including Greenpeace and the Danish Society of Nature Conservation (Danmarks Naturfredningsforening – DN), have also been broadcasting statements of disapproval.


With Alum Shale’s recoverable natural gas deposits being estimated to contain over 6.9 trillion cubic feet, there is quite the bundle of incentive to invite more companies like Total to strut through the landscape. It becomes even more vital, therefore, for organized uprisings, such as the current encampment, to take place.

For Community Autonomy and Earth Liberation!

Upton anti-fracking camp 1st birthday, Cheshire

10th April 2015

Anti-fracking activists are celebrating the Upton Protection Camp’s first birthday with a party open to the community.

The camp was set up last April off Duttons Lane, Upton, to prevent an energy firm drilling an exploratory borehole in the middle of a field.

IGas is scouring the country looking for methane in the underground layers of coal and shale but one potential extraction method, known as fracking, is particularly controversial.

Campaigners fear air and water pollution as well as earthquakes. They also worry it will delay the switch to renewables, like solar power, given climate change.

 

The party

This Saturday (April 11), starting from 2pm, there will be a family picnic and treasure hunt at the site. Then around 3pm there will be a pre-election awareness update with a progress report on how the anti-fracking campaign is going in Upton and West Cheshire.

At 5pm is a barbecue with burgers and sausages available. However, guests are asked to bring their own food and drink or food and drink to share. Home baked cakes or biscuits are ‘very welcome’ as are camping chairs.

From 7pm onwards there will be music and a sing-along. Party-goers are requested to bring acoustic instruments, warm clothes and lanterns or torches.

Anti-frackers feel the camp has been a success in preventing IGas drilling on the field, raising awareness in the community and helping to persuade local politicians to side with them publicly.

Article continued plus photos

Guardian article

 

Protester climbs lorry in protest at fracking site near Immingham

March 12, 2015

The protest, one of the first direct action demonstrations in North East Lincolnshire for decades, caused a halt to traffic for nearly four hours after the 20-year-old refused to descend from the top of the lorry.

March 12, 2015

The protest, one of the first direct action demonstrations in North East Lincolnshire for decades, caused a halt to traffic for nearly four hours after the 20-year-old refused to descend from the top of the lorry.

He threatened to superglue himself to the vehicle, copying the tactic deployed by environmentalists in other parts of the country.

Motorists were forced to seek diversions through Stallingborough and Keelby, many of them HGVs going to and from Immingham Docks.

Police negotiators tried to persuade the man to come down.

Two specialist units from South Yorkshire Police prepared to undertake a tactical manoeuvre involving specially trained officers.

Shortly after 12.30pm, the man surrendered and came down.

Protesters have gathered and set up a small camp at the entrance to the Europa Oil and Gas test drilling site.

Bosses of Europa, who are drilling at Mauxhall Farm, Stallingborough, have repeatedly stated they will not be fracking.

Protesters claimed other test drilling operators had sold their sites to fracking companies once they discover shale gas in other parts of the country.

Video

 

Algeria Fights Back: 40 Police Injured in Anti-Fracking Protests

photo courtesy Imad Mesdoua / Twitter

photo courtesy Imad Mesdoua / Twitter

March 2nd, 2015

from Earth First! Newswire

New developments in a story we’ve been following for some time now.

Tens of thousands of people in Algeria have joined a mass movement to halt fracking. These protests have involved peaceful blockades and marches with broad swaths of society.

The mass movement has been met by state repression, as we reported last week. But instead of deflating the movement, state repression inflamed the anger on the streets. On Sunday, riots erupted in the district of In-Salah in which 40 officers were injured, and the police headquarters, the chief’s house, some police barracks, and a police truck were all set ablaze.

Here’s AFP with more:

Forty police officers were wounded Sunday in clashes with demonstrators opposed to shale gas exploration in the Algerian Sahara, the Interior Ministry announced.

“The town of In-Salah saw incidents involving public order, initiated by a group of young people protesting against shale gas operations in the region,” the ministry said in a statement.

It said the clashes “caused injuries to 40 police officers, including two who were seriously injured.”

Protesters set fire to the headquarters of In-Salah district and the residence of the district chief, as well as part of a police dormitory and a police truck.

The security forces managed to “take control of the situation and bring calm to the city,” the statement said.

Increased protests

Anti-shale gas demonstrations have increased in the cities of the Algerian Sahara since late December, when Algerian oil company Sonatrach announced it had successfully completed its first pilot drilling in the In-Salah region.

Sonatrach announced in early February that its exploratory drilling for shale gas using hydraulic fracturing would continue despite mounting hostility among people living nearby.

Continuous demonstrations were held for two months at In-Salah, the town closest to the drilling sites.

Algeria has seen massive investment in shale gas to compensate for declining oil revenues, but faces opposition from people living near the fields, concerned about the consequences on the environment.

According to international studies, Algeria has the fourth biggest recoverable reserves of shale gas globally, after the United States, China and Argentina.

Earth First! Summer Gathering, August 2015

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspiring and exciting programme and more.

Exciting plans are taking shape.  Get involved by coming along to the EF! Winter Moot in Bristol.

Email: summergathering AT earthfirst.org.uk

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspiring and exciting programme and more.

Exciting plans are taking shape.  Get involved by coming along to the EF! Winter Moot in Bristol.

Email: summergathering AT earthfirst.org.uk