Malaysia: Temiar Blockade and Indigenous Rights

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

The vil­lagers are against the agri­cul­tur­al project of the local gov­ern­ment which would require the cut­ting down of for­est trees in their ances­tral land. The block­ade, their sec­ond attempt at doing so, was made after attempts to nego­ti­ate with the state gov­ern­ment have failed.

The police also refused to nego­ti­ate who removed the bar­ri­cades and arrest­ed the com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dents and their lawyer, Siti Kasim. They were released lat­er that night.

More info and here

police solidarity blockade of shell petrol station

27.1.12

27.1.12

in many years of inde­pen­dent report­ing, i’ve often seen sit­u­a­tions where police have caused larg­er dis­rup­tion than a hand­full of pro­tes­tors, clos­ing roads, some­times clos­ing down busi­ness­es, and some­times mas­sive­ly ampli­fy­ing the pow­er of the pro­tes­tors alone (not that that’s their inten­tion). how­ev­er, this evening was, i think, the first time that they so com­plete­ly did the job of the activists for them, that the cam­paign­ers could sit in a nice warm pub and toast the met, instead of stand­ing around in the cold them­selves.

the protest this evening was called by the cli­mate-con­scious shell-bash­ing ‘lon­don ris­ing tide’ group, in co-ordi­na­tion with the leg­endary activist sam­ba band ‘rhythms of resis­tance’.

each jan­u­ary, the band com­mem­o­rate the life of activist, val jones, a woman who helped put the ross­port coun­ty mayo strug­gles on the polit­i­cal map, and who, as a design­er, pro­duced many bril­liant huge ban­ners for the move­ment. she was sad­ly struck down with motor neu­rone dis­ease and passed away two years ago. in mem­o­ry of val, the com­mem­o­ra­tion takes the form of a shell garage block­ade each year.

so, tonight, the call-out was for a block­ade at the shell sta­tion in old street, the scene of pre­vi­ous block­ades. around twen­ty peo­ple turned up to the meet­ing point, armed with drums, ban­ners, and leaflets. well, actu­al­ly some­one for­got the leaflets, but as it turned out they weren’t need­ed.

the usu­al time-line for these events is that the activists turn up at the garage, the band plays on the fore­court, the large ban­ners are used to close the entrance to the site, and leaflets are hand­ed out to staff, to motorists, and to passers-by. the staff then close the shop and call the police, who turn up after about half an hour. the police warn peo­ple that they might be com­mit­ting aggra­vat­ed tres­pass, and then they force­ful­ly facil­i­tate the con­tin­u­a­tion of the action on the pave­ment, so that the garage opens for busi­ness once more.

how­ev­er, tonight, some­thing was very dif­fer­ent. even before the demo began, the garage went dark, bol­lards block­ing its entrance, and small groups of police lurked on street cor­ners near­by.

so the activists were con­fused. what to do? was there any point attempt­ing a block­ade of a garage that was already closed for busi­ness? pre­vi­ous esti­mates from block­ades show that garages lose sev­er­al thou­sands of pounds of busi­ness when they close, and this is of course part of the point of the protests. also, some­one had for­got­ten the leaflets, so although there was a sug­ges­tion of mov­ing to a dif­fer­ent tar­get, there was the con­cern the protest would­n’t be so effec­tive with­out this ele­ment.

every now and then, some­one went out to check the site, and the garage remained total­ly closed for busi­ness, all lights off, staff locked in their shop, and non­cha­lant street-cor­ner polic­ing. so, anoth­er drink, a bit of food, plans afoot for future actions, and as the cold wind built up, and the wet driz­zle came down, the occa­sion­al check that the police were con­tin­u­ing to car­ry out the activists’ mis­sion.

an hour passed, anoth­er one, a third. wow, this was bet­ter than any pre­vi­ous small-scale block­ade. there was fond rem­i­nisc­ing of the upper street block­ade a few years ago, val and the band present, on a sat­ur­day. this had closed the upper street shell garage for five or six hours, and end­ed with loads of TSG arriv­ing , a cou­ple of arrests, and a lot of details tak­en. but it was a much larg­er scale event with lots of pri­or plan­ning. tonight was always meant to be a small, token, and com­mem­o­ra­tive action.

after three hours, the police scaled down and appeared to leave, but the garage stayed closed for a futher two hours, until final­ly near 11pm it opened for busi­ness once more.

this has to have been the most suc­cess­ful block­ade with­out a sin­gle activist present. maybe they should con­tact the gui­ness book of records. we have the pho­tos, the eye-wit­ness reports.

var­i­ous the­o­ries emerged as to why this hap­pened tonight, but none of us real­ly know, so in the mean­time, the met should be heart­ened that a glass or two was raised to them for their ster­ling work this evening in cost­ing shell five hours-worth of busi­ness at a nor­mal­ly very busy lon­don garage, and thanks to them that a cou­ple of dozen activists stayed warm, safe and con­spir­a­to­r­i­al. 

all involved hope that the met join in with even more sol­i­dar­i­ty for the big block­ade on the 8th feb­ru­ary (occu­py­oil).

Indonesia: Mining permit revoked after mob torches company’s office and frees prisoners

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

The Indone­sian gov­ern­ment has announced that it will revoke the per­mit for a con­tro­ver­sial gold mine after mas­sive riot­ing against the project. The protests were aimed at Sum­ber Min­er­al Nusan­tara a com­pa­ny hop­ing to open the mine on Sum­bawa island.

The crowd, which was thou­sands strong, ran­sacked and burned two gov­ern­ment offices to express their out­rage at the mine which would threat­en the com­mu­ni­ties land and drink­ing water. The mob con­tin­ued on to a near­by deten­tion cen­ter and forced the author­i­ties to release 35 of their com­rades who were arrest­ed at a protest against the mine last year.

Oppo­si­tion to the mine has been ongo­ing for over a year. A sim­i­lar protest last Decem­ber result­ed in two com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers being shot and killed by police.

Tibetan Villagers Halt Mining Project on Sacred Mountain

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

In Tibetan cul­ture, where peo­ple live in inti­mate rela­tion­ship with the nat­ur­al world around them, real­i­ty and mythol­o­gy have a way of blend­ing togeth­er. So it was per­haps no sur­prise to local vil­lagers when, after a Chi­nese min­ing com­pa­ny and local author­i­ties repeat­ed­ly repelled efforts stop a gold min­ing project on the slopes of holy Mount Kawage­bo, the moun­tain appeared to strike back.

Mount Kawage­bo, so sacred that climb­ing is banned, sits on the bor­der between Tibet and China’s Yun­nan Province; its east­ern side is part of the Three Par­al­lel Rivers of Yun­nan Pro­tect­ed Area UNESCO World Her­itage site. In Feb­ru­ary 2011, a small gold-min­ing oper­a­tion start­ed near the vil­lage of Abin, which is on the west­ern side of Kawage­bo, along the path of an 800-year-old pil­grim­age route that cir­cles the moun­tain, attract­ing tens of thou­sands of Tibetans annu­al­ly.

To the local peo­ple, who believe strong­ly in the sacred­ness of Mount Kawage­bo, direct destruc­tion of the moun­tain body, through activ­i­ties like min­ing, is unthink­able. Fur­ther, vil­lagers said the project was start­ed with­out per­mis­sion or pri­or con­sent. Thus began a com­mu­ni­ty effort to halt the project.

Vil­lagers said their attempts to deal direct­ly with the min­ing com­pa­ny result­ed in threats and vio­lence from agents hired by the com­pa­ny, and harass­ment and arrests by local police. On two occa­sions, men armed with wood­en sticks with nails attacked vil­lagers, injur­ing more than a dozen.

After efforts to nego­ti­ate with the local gov­ern­ment failed, vil­lagers pushed $300,000 worth of min­ing equip­ment into the Nu Riv­er. A leader of the group was arrest­ed, but lat­er released when 100 vil­lagers sur­round­ed the local police sta­tion where he was being held. A few months lat­er, how­ev­er, min­ing resumed and ten­sions grew. Harass­ment, death threats and attacks on vil­lagers increased, and some women and chil­dren fled to oth­er vil­lages to escape the vio­lence.

On Jan­u­ary 20, 2012, a vil­lage leader who had tried to con­front the min­ing com­pa­ny was ambushed by local police, tased and arrest­ed. Some 200 com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers sur­round­ed the police sta­tion, and an ensu­ing riot result­ed in vio­lence and injuries on both sides, with at least one vil­lager sent to the hos­pi­tal with seri­ous injuries. The leader was released, but protests con­tin­ued as vil­lagers demand­ed clo­sure of the mine, and hun­dreds more vil­lagers from the sur­round­ing area joined in.

This time, the local gov­ern­ment held nego­ti­a­tions with the com­mu­ni­ty, includ­ing the just-released leader, on behalf of the min­ing com­pa­ny, whose boss had report­ed­ly fled the area. Vil­lagers involved in nego­ti­a­tions said they were offered mon­ey in exchange for allow­ing the min­ing to con­tin­ue, but they refused. On Jan­u­ary 23, with ten­sions mount­ing, a vice-offi­cial from the pre­fec­ture gov­ern­ment ordered the mine closed and the equip­ment trucked out of the vil­lage.

While the per­sis­tence of the com­mu­ni­ty to pro­tect its holy moun­tain ulti­mate­ly paid off, some vil­lagers sug­gest­ed the moun­tain itself had a role to play. Dur­ing the nego­ti­a­tions, many report­ed hear­ing the sound of a trum­pet shell—used in Tibetan reli­gious rituals—coming from the moun­tain, while oth­ers report­ed unusu­al­ly windy weath­er, which stopped once the con­flict was resolved.

A Tibetan hired to pro­vide cater­ing to the mine work­ers described being struck by a phys­i­cal pres­sure that forced him to drop what he was car­ry­ing; only after he prayed did the sen­sa­tion dis­ap­pear. Sev­er­al months ear­li­er, accord­ing to anoth­er account, a vil­lage leader who had accept­ed bribes from the min­ing com­pa­ny died sud­den­ly, and a mem­ber of his fam­i­ly was seri­ous­ly injured in an acci­dent.

He Ran Gao, a researcher who works for the Chi­nese NGO Green Earth Vol­un­teers and has been close­ly involved with the com­mu­ni­ties of the area, described the con­text of these super­nat­ur­al accounts. “In a place like Tibet, peo­ple have an unusu­al sense of divin­i­ty in nature, based on a whole sys­tem of wor­ship and inter­ac­tion, which some­time seems super­sti­tious to mod­ern cit­i­zens,” she said. “But it is not nec­es­sar­i­ly irra­tional or unrea­son­able.”

This sense of nature wor­ship, Gao said, with its atten­dant con­ser­va­tion val­ues, is “bare­ly left due to past com­mu­nism and lat­er eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment.” But in the Himalayas and oth­er moun­tain areas, where non-Han eth­nic­i­ties reside and remain some­what pro­tect­ed, those tra­di­tion­al val­ues can still be found. She described Kawage­bo as a suc­cess sto­ry show­ing “how sacred nature can be” and how it can “still be respect­ed, pro­tect­ed and con­tin­ue to make an impact in people’s lives.”

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Abin is but one of many vil­lages threat­ened by min­ing activities—in most oth­er cas­es, mar­ble quarrying—and a greater over­ar­ch­ing threat to the region: hydro­elec­tric dam devel­op­ment.

Along the Nu (Sal­ween) Riv­er, the longest free-flow­ing riv­er in main­land South­east Asia, a pro­posed 13-dam cascade—including sev­er­al dams in or very close to the World Her­itage site—would wipe out por­tions of the pil­grim­age route around Mount Kawage­bo and dis­place the com­mu­ni­ties of the riv­er val­ley, like­ly deal­ing a blow to their tra­di­tion­al cul­ture as well. Although the project was put on hold in 2004 in the wake of wide­spread protest, it is cer­tain­ly not dead.

Last year, the World Her­itage Com­mit­tee issued a state­ment express­ing con­cern over reports of unap­proved con­struc­tion under way at one dam site on the Nu Riv­er, and sur­vey­ing work—including road-build­ing and drilling—at three oth­ers. It warned that “the many pro­posed dams could cumu­la­tive­ly con­sti­tute a poten­tial dan­ger to the property’s Out­stand­ing Uni­ver­sal Val­ue.”

The com­mit­tee asked Chi­na to sub­mit by Feb­ru­ary 1 of this year a detailed list of all pro­posed dams, as well as mines, that could affect the World Her­itage prop­er­ty, along with the envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ments of any pro­posed projects, pri­or to their approval. The com­mit­tee also request­ed, by the same dead­line, a report on the state of con­ser­va­tion of the prop­er­ty and on the progress made in com­plet­ing a strate­gic envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ment on all of the pro­posed dams and relat­ed devel­op­ment that could impact the site’s World Her­itage val­ue.

Many thanks to He Ran Gao, who pro­vid­ed report­ing and oth­er source mate­r­i­al for this report. He Ran wish­es to thank vil­lagers who pro­vid­ed her with infor­ma­tion, but whose names have been with­eld.

Monsanto takes double hit in January — who’s next?

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

France has held firm in its oppo­si­tion to Monsanto’s genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied MON 810 maize – and the agri-chem­i­cal multi­na­tion­al has admit­ted defeat.

Mon­san­to had been putting legal pres­sure on the French gov­ern­ment to lift its 2008 cul­ti­va­tion ban on MON 810, first­ly with a suc­cess­ful appeal to the Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice, then with a fol­low-up case heard in France’s own high­est court, the Coun­cil of State.

But despite both these insti­tu­tions rul­ing that the ban was “insuf­fi­cient­ly jus­ti­fied in law”, the French Gov­ern­ment, backed by Pres­i­dent Sarkozy, has insist­ed that it will still not allow cul­ti­va­tion of the biotech maize.

Now Mon­san­to has announced that it would not be sell­ing seeds for MON810 in France this year.

France’s stand – and Monsanto’s capit­u­la­tion – has been warm­ly wel­comed by anti-GM lob­by­ists GM Freeze, whose cam­paign direc­tor Pete Riley said: “The deci­sion by Mon­san­to not to mar­ket MON810 seeds in France in 2012 is yet anoth­er sign that Mon­san­to has failed to con­vince the pub­lic or pol­i­cy mak­ers that there is any ben­e­fit to grow­ing to grow­ing GM crops.

“This needs to be acknowl­edged by indus­try and politi­cians and there should be a big shift to agri­cul­tur­al research and devel­op­ment which address­es the future sus­tain­abil­i­ty of farm­ing in Europe. EU pol­i­cy needs to for­get about the bot­tom line of biotech cor­po­ra­tions and focus on devel­op­ing agro-eco­log­i­cal farm­ing which pro­vides for the needs of farm­ers, con­sumers, the envi­ron­ment and future gen­er­a­tions.”

Five oth­er EU coun­tries – Ger­many, Greece, Aus­tria, Lux­em­bourg and Hun­gary – have cur­rent bans on MON810 cul­ti­va­tion in place, and the issue has recent­ly been com­pli­cat­ed by anoth­er Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice rul­ing requir­ing hon­ey con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed with GM pollen to be ful­ly autho­rised as a nov­el prod­uct and labelled as such before it can be sold.

— And from ear­li­er in the month: Mon­san­to attacked by Anony­mous hack­ers! In a thread of hack events from the Anony­mous group, the most recent tar­get has been Monsanto.com. Anony­mous, which briefly knocked the FBI and Jus­tice Depart­ment web­sites offline as well as Music Indus­try web­sites in retal­i­a­tion for the US shut­down of file-shar­ing site Megau­pload, is a shad­owy group of amaz­ing inter­na­tion­al hack­ers. Anony­mous Mes­sage To Mon­san­to: We fight for farm­ers! – Video Tran­script (Cross-Post­ed from Organ­ic Com­mon Sense): “To the free-think­ing cit­i­zens of the world: Anony­mous stands with the farm­ers and food orga­ni­za­tions denounc­ing the prac­tices of Mon­san­to We applaud the brav­ery of the orga­ni­za­tions and cit­i­zens who are stand­ing up to Mon­san­to, and we stand unit­ed with you against this oppres­sive cor­po­rate abuse. Mon­san­to is con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the world with chem­i­cals and genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied food crops for prof­it while claim­ing to feed the hun­gry and pro­tect the envi­ron­ment. Anony­mous is every­one, Any­one who can not stand for injus­tice and decides to do some­thing about it, We are all over the Earth and here to stay. To Mon­san­to, we demand you STOP the fol­low­ing: * Con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the glob­al food chain with GMO’s. * Intim­i­dat­ing small farm­ers with bul­ly­ing and law­suits. * Prop­a­gat­ing the use of destruc­tive pes­ti­cides and her­bi­cides across the globe. * Using “Ter­mi­na­tor Tech­nol­o­gy”, which ren­ders plants ster­ile. * Attempt­ing to hijack UN cli­mate change nego­ti­a­tions for your own fis­cal ben­e­fit. * Reduc­ing farm­land to desert through mono­cul­ture and the use of syn­thet­ic fer­til­iz­ers. * Inspir­ing sui­cides of hun­dreds of thou­sands of Indi­an farm­ers. * Caus­ing birth defects by con­tin­u­ing to pro­duce the pes­ti­cide “Round-up” * Attempt­ing to bribe foriegn offi­cials * Infil­trat­ing anti-GMO groups Mon­san­to, these crimes will not go unpun­ished. Anony­mous will not spare you nor any­one in sup­port of your oppres­sive ille­gal busi­ness prac­tices. AGRA, a great exam­ple: In 2006, AGRA, Alliance for a Green Rev­o­lu­tion in Africa, was estab­lished with fund­ing from Bill Gates and The Rock­e­feller Foun­da­tion. Among the oth­er found­ing mem­bers of, AGRA, we find: Mon­san­to, Novar­tis, Sanofi-Aven­tis, Glax­o­SmithK­line, Proc­ter and Gam­ble, Mer­ck, Mosa­ic, Pfiz­er, Sum­it­o­mo Chem­i­cal and Yara. The fact that these cor­po­ra­tions are either chem­i­cal or phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ers is no coin­ci­dence. The peo­ple of the world see you, Mon­san­to. Anony­mous sees you. Seeds of Oppor­tunism, Cli­mate change offers these busi­ness­es a per­fect excuse to prey on the poor­est coun­tries by swoop­ing in to “res­cue” the farm­ers and peo­ple with their GMO crops and chem­i­cal pes­ti­cides. These cor­po­ra­tions erad­i­cate the tra­di­tion­al ways of the country’s agri­cul­ture for the sake of enor­mous prof­its. The intro­duc­tion of GMOs dras­ti­cal­ly affects a local farm­ers income, as the price of chem­i­cals required for GMOs and seeds from Mon­san­to crip­ples the farmer’s mea­ger prof­it mar­gins. There are even many cas­es of Mon­san­to suing small farm­ers after pollen from their GMO crops acci­den­tal­ly cross with the farmer’s crops. Because Mon­san­to has a patent on theri brand of seed, they claim the farmer is in vio­la­tion of patent laws. These dis­gust­ing and inhu­mane prac­tices will not be tol­er­at­ed. Anony­mous urges all con­cerned cit­i­zens to stand up for these farm­ers, stand up for the future of your own food. Protest, orga­nize, spread info to your friends! SAY NO TO POISONOUS CHEMICALS IN YOUR FOOD! SAY NO TO GMO! SAY NO TO MONSANTO! We are Anony­mous We are legion We do not for­give We do not for­get Expect us” Glob­al Jus­tice Ecol­o­gy Project, an anti-biotech group found­ed by Earth First! activists, also not­ed in a post on the attack that Mon­san­to was also one of the orig­i­nal founders of the GE tree com­pa­ny Arbor­Gen. The Pres­i­dent and CEO of Arbor­Gen, Bar­bara Wells, led Monsanto’s RoundUp Ready soy divi­sion in Brazil. GMO soy in Brazil and oth­er parts of Latin Amer­i­ca has tak­en over vast swaths of Ama­zon and oth­er for­est land, and has dis­placed or poi­soned many com­mu­ni­ties there. Find out more about their cam­paign against Arbor­Gen here. We fight for farm­ers video — http://youtu.be/Q1A-DYK4M4Q DOS attack on Mon­san­to — http://youtu.be/3XutsnEe4VY

Earth First! and Occupy protesters blockade bridge in front of GAIM conference

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

More arrests underway as conference is disrupted by activists inside the resort as well

Palm Beach Coun­ty, Flori­da—Pro­test­ers from the Occu­py move­ment and Ever­glades Earth First! block­ad­ed a Boca Raton bridge yes­ter­day, snarling rush hour traf­fic dur­ing a cock­tail par­ty of cor­po­rate investors at the GAIM USA 2012 con­fer­ence. Among them was Ana Rodriguez, an edi­tor of the Earth First! Jour­nal, which is also pub­lished in Palm Beach Coun­ty. 

Using col­or­ful lock­box­es, three activists, laid on the bridge effec­tive­ly stop­ping rush hour traf­fic from 5–6:30.  Spe­cial oper­a­tions police teams were called to the site to remove the lock­down devices that were link­ing the pro­test­ers togeth­er. The block­aders were cit­ed with three charges, includ­ing: resist­ing with­out vio­lence; obstruct­ing a high­way and vio­la­tion of a munic­i­pal ordi­nance ban­ning what the Boca police called “sleep­ing drag­ons.”

Two of the three arrest­ed, Kevin Young and Don Carter from Occu­py Mia­mi, were released on their own recog­ni­zance. Ana Rodriguez was released today on a $1,500 bond, with the state attor­ney alleg­ing that she was a flight risk to Venezuela, her coun­try of ori­gin.

“Every day we see cor­po­rate pow­er destroy­ing our com­mu­ni­ties.  From envi­ron­men­tal dis­as­ters to pri­vate pris­ons, cor­po­ra­tions are oper­at­ing with impuni­ty,” said Ana Rodriguez before being arrest­ed. “While the bank lead­ers drink cock­tails and toast to increased prof­its, peo­ple across the globe are being hurt by cor­po­rate greed.”

Anoth­er pro­test­er scaled a tree along­side the bridge and hung a large ban­ner that read: “What Would Robin Hood Do?” The ban­ner was tak­en down by a fire truck and con­fis­cat­ed by Boca police.

The protests against GAIM began on Sun­day, Jan­u­ary 22, with 100 peo­ple march­ing in front of the Boca Resort and a flotil­la of boats and canoes along the resort’s water­front.

More pro­test­ers returned this after­noon for day three of the GAIM con­fer­ence, announced as a nation­al day of action against pri­vate pris­ons and deten­tion cen­ters. At the time of this news post, there are reports of more arrests for immi­grant sol­i­dar­i­ty activists dis­rupt­ing the con­fer­ence from the inside.

Sea Shepherd Chases the Japanese Whalers into Yesterday

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

The Japan­ese whal­ing fleet are not where they should be this time of year.

Last year the fleet was oper­at­ing in the Ross Sea. This year their “sci­en­tif­ic sur­vey” was sup­posed to take place in the waters south and west of Tas­ma­nia, east and south of South Africa.

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

The Japan­ese whal­ing fleet are not where they should be this time of year.

Last year the fleet was oper­at­ing in the Ross Sea. This year their “sci­en­tif­ic sur­vey” was sup­posed to take place in the waters south and west of Tas­ma­nia, east and south of South Africa.

Every year they alter­nate. But not this year! Although the whalers attempt­ed to begin their killing oper­a­tions in the waters south­west of Aus­tralia, the Sea Shep­herd ships have chased the entire whal­ing fleet ever east­ward. At 1700 hours AEST, the Bob Bark­er encoun­tered the Yushin Maru No. 3 at 66 Degrees, 22 min­utes South and 179 Degrees, 05 min­utes West.

From being inter­cept­ed 500 miles west of Fre­man­tle, Aus­tralia, the Japan­ese fleet has run over 4,500 nau­ti­cal miles for the last 30 days, all the way into the Ross Sea, far to the East of Aus­tralia. This is an aver­age of 150 miles a day, leav­ing very lit­tle time to kill whales with only one har­poon ves­sel. The oth­er two har­poon ves­sels have either been tail­ing or search­ing for the Sea Shep­herd ships.

“You can say we chased the whale killers into yes­ter­day since we have crossed the Inter­na­tion­al Date Line,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son, of the Sea Shep­herd ship Steve Irwin. “This illus­trates that they real­ly have no sci­en­tif­ic agen­da at all since their so-called sur­vey requires them to “sam­ple” whales from the two dif­fer­ent areas alter­na­tive­ly each year. This is not about sci­ence and it nev­er has been. It’s not even about prof­it any­more because we have negat­ed their prof­its. It’s sim­ply about pride. Whal­ing in the South­ern Ocean has become a heav­i­ly sub­si­dized wel­fare project for an archa­ic indus­try that has no place in the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry.”

Sea Shepherd’s cam­paign, Oper­a­tion Divine Wind, has been chal­leng­ing this year due to the thir­ty mil­lion dol­lars allo­cat­ed to the whal­ing fleet for added secu­ri­ty. This mon­ey was tak­en from the tsuna­mi and earth­quake relief fund.

“They have ten mil­lion dol­lars for every one mil­lion dol­lars we have to finance our three ships,” said Cap­tain Alex Cor­nelis­sen of the Bob Bark­er. “They have the full sup­port of their gov­ern­ment and lit­er­al­ly have a license to kill because if any of us are injured or killed, their gov­ern­ment will back them and jus­ti­fy their actions. Our gov­ern­ments con­demn us just for toss­ing rot­ten but­ter on their decks.”

The chase across the bot­tom of the world involves five ships from the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet and two ships from Sea Shep­herd. The third Sea Shep­herd ship, the Brigitte Bar­dot, was dam­aged by heavy seas and had to return to Fre­man­tle, Aus­tralia for repairs.

Nev­er before has the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet aban­doned one des­ig­nat­ed whal­ing “sur­vey” area for anoth­er. Sea Shep­herd has appar­ent­ly seri­ous­ly dis­rupt­ed the Japan­ese whal­ing plan for this sea­son and has cost them a huge amount in fuel costs. In addi­tion, two of the three har­poon ves­sels have been tak­en away from killing whales in order to tail the Steve Irwin and the Bob Bark­er. The Yushin Maru No. 2 is tail­ing the Steve Irwin and the Yushin Maru No. 3 is tail­ing the Bob Bark­er. This has left only the Yushin Maru to hunt for whales.

Sea Shep­herd has been able to keep the whal­ing fleet on the move and con­tin­ues to track their move­ments by rely­ing on drone oper­a­tions and ten years of expe­ri­ence fol­low­ing the pre­dictable move­ments of the whalers.

Last sea­son the Bob Bark­er was able to chase the Nis­shin Maru all the way to the tip of South Amer­i­ca before they quit and returned to Japan in humil­i­a­tion after tak­ing only sev­en­teen per­cent of their kill quo­ta.

Protesters mount diggers in bid to save trees in Stuttgart

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

Demon­stra­tors against the con­tro­ver­sial “Stuttgart 21” rail project tried to block work­ers from felling more than 30 trees ear­ly on Sun­day. Police removed pro­test­ers from trees and demo­li­tion equip­ment to allow teams to fin­ish the work.

On Sat­ur­day, ral­ly organ­is­ers said some 4,000 peo­ple gath­ered to protest the sta­tion’s con­struc­tion, while police esti­mat­ed the num­ber of demon­stra­tors at 1,200.

About 40 pro­test­ers tried to block teams from clear­ing the trees, but a police spokesman said offi­cers were able to dis­perse the crowd. The work was com­plet­ed by 6 a.m. on Sun­day but had to be stopped twice when two demon­stra­tors climbed on top of demo­li­tion equip­ment.

A spokesper­son for Parkschützer, an ini­tia­tive that aims to pre­serve the park, crit­i­cised the action, say­ing the trees should not have been tak­en down due to wind and poor vis­i­bil­i­ty.

Matthias von Her­rmann of Parkschützer took aim at the state gov­ern­ment in Baden-Würt­tem­berg.

“It is a trav­es­ty when (state) pre­mier Kretschmann con­tin­ues to preach about how the gov­ern­ment has to adhere to the law, but then police are out at a con­struc­tion site with­out a build­ing per­mit,” he said.

The mul­ti-bil­lion-euro project aims to trans­form the Baden-Würt­tem­berg cap­i­tal into a major Euro­pean trans­port hub. The sta­tion has sparked a wave of protests.

Deutsche Bahn wants to replace Stuttgart’s exist­ing train sta­tion with an under­ground one that it says would great­ly improve links between Paris, Vien­na and ulti­mate­ly Budapest.

http://www.thelocal.de/tag/Stuttgart_21

Earth First! Winter Moot, what to expect

This years Earth First! Win­ter Moot takes place in South Lanark­shire, Scot­land. In a months time envi­ron­men­tal­ists from across the UK and beyond will con­verge to dis­cuss and debate. Below is an update from the organ­is­ing col­lec­tive who are work­ing on the pro­gram.

This years Earth First! Win­ter Moot takes place in South Lanark­shire, Scot­land. In a months time envi­ron­men­tal­ists from across the UK and beyond will con­verge to dis­cuss and debate. Below is an update from the organ­is­ing col­lec­tive who are work­ing on the pro­gram.

The Moot 2012 col­lec­tive has felt that at pre­vi­ous EF! Gath­er­ings groups have pri­mar­i­ly attend­ed to recruit for their respec­tive cam­paigns. Yet those who attend EF! Gath­er­ings are pre­dom­i­nant­ly already active, mak­ing them good places for net­work­ing, but not nec­es­sar­i­ly for out­right recruit­ment. We recog­nise the effort gath­er­ing organ­is­ers put into plan­ning agen­das but often the more dis­cur­sive aspects of the gath­er­ings focus on larg­er, abstract ques­tions and debates have often been framed by self-appoint­ed experts. We feel that these dis­cus­sions inef­fec­tive­ly attempt to find answers or reach con­sen­sus where this is inap­pro­pri­ate.

For exam­ple at the first EF! Gath­er­ing 20 years ago the ques­tion was asked: ‘What is EF!?’ 20 years lat­er in 2011 at the last Moot the same ques­tion was still being asked …

The answer is EF! is what we make it, and this year we are going to make it a space in which we can approach our cam­paigns both crit­i­cal­ly and ana­lyt­i­cal­ly by ask­ing more spe­cif­ic and prac­ti­cal ques­tions. Our activism should be con­stant­ly evolv­ing not stuck in a rut ask­ing the same ques­tions again and again.

The agen­da will be designed to ask ques­tions around four key issues: the tac­tics we use; the strate­gies that we employ in our cam­paigns; com­mu­ni­ty sol­i­dar­i­ty; and sus­tain­able activism. There will be no attempt to reach con­clu­sions or con­sen­sus espe­cial­ly about what EF! is. Instead we want to have dis­cus­sions that lead to new ideas that could evolve ongo­ing cam­paigns or give cre­ative inspi­ra­tion to ones that are just get­ting start­ed.

A free space will be pro­vid­ed in which cam­paigns will be able to hold meet­ings and have fur­ther dis­cus­sions if they wish, and there will also be some space giv­en for cam­paign updates with an empha­sis on hon­est analy­sis rather than pro­mo­tion.

For updates and more info check the web­site or email us.

EF!WM Crew
e-mail: efwintermoot@noflag.org.uk
Home­page: http://earthfirstgathering.org.uk

Canadian environmentalists block logging operations for one week and running

18.1.12

18.1.12

Envi­ron­men­tal­ists in Alber­ta, Cana­da have been block­ing log­ging oper­a­tions in the Cas­tle Wilder­ness Area for over a week despite below freez­ing tem­per­a­tures. On Jan­u­ary 11 sev­er­al dozen envi­ron­men­tal­ists, includ­ing local res­i­dents, set up tents on the access road for the log­ging oper­a­tions. Spray Lakes Sawmills wants to log 300 acres of land in the wilder­ness area.

 ”If we keep peo­ple there and the machin­ery idle until spring, that might be a good time — come spring, they won’t be able to do any log­ging. I hope it doesn’t take that long, but we have a lot of com­mit­ted peo­ple, peo­ple com­ing from all over,” said Gor­don Peter­son of the Cas­tle-Crown Wilder­ness Coali­tion (CCWC) told CBC News.

 Accord­ing to CCWC the, “Cas­tle Region is an impor­tant part of the Crown of the Con­ti­nent Ecosys­tem which cov­ers approx­i­mate­ly 27,000 square miles of Alber­ta, BC, and Mon­tana and includes Water­ton Lakes Nation­al Park, Glac­i­er Nation­al Park, and the Bob Mar­shall Wilder­ness.” It also serves as an impor­tant wildlife cor­ri­dor and is crit­i­cal habi­tat for griz­zly bears. In addi­tion to log­ging the Cas­tle Wilder­ness is threat­ened by oil and gas projects in the area.