Indigenous Colombians Clash with Police and Paramilitaries for “Liberation of Mother Earth”

April 2nd, 2015

[NOTE: All faces have been blurred and all names have been withheld for security reasons.]

Clashes have erupted in Colombia’s western department of Cauca as the Nasa Indigenous Peoples press the government to fulfill its promise to return 15,600 hectares to their control. A succession of occupations of sugar plantations has seen the government deploy the army and riot police against them prompting fierce battles across the north of the region.

This is the latest stage in a decades-long struggle for the return of indigenous territory lost to intensive agriculture, a struggle that received international attention in past decades following a wave of massacres. Protected by the Indigenous Guards, the fields remain largely under Nasa control, but an abrupt rise in threats from the “Black Eagles” paramilitary group and the issuance of new eviction orders by the government raise fears that deadly violence may return to the region.

There was no shade to shelter the small party as they crossed the expanse of earth last week, carrying a plantain sapling and a bag of maize. In the middle of the field, its vastness already rippling in the morning heat, they planted the sapling and scattered the seeds of local indigenous maize.

Keeping an eye on the ‘ESMAD’ riot police stationed in the shade of the trees around the hacienda was a local teacher.

“We are recuperating the land” she told IC. “We are replacing the mono-cultivation of the multinationals with the original vegetation. …One day trees will be growing here again: what we are seeing is the liberation of Mother Earth”.

The Indigenous Nasa peoples have been seeking the ‘liberation’ of the territory of the hacienda for years, regularly occupying the fields and buildings, and blocking the road that runs between the property and the Nasa reservation of Huellas.

Behind the line of riot police, soldiers patrolled the buildings of the ‘Hacienda La Emperatriz’. Two weeks ago, on Mar. 17, they had opened fire on the Nasa, citing a leaflet supposedly delivered by the FARC guerrillas claiming to have infiltrated the indigenous demonstrators. Three Nasa were injured by gunfire.

The planters continued sowing the seeds in the growing heat, small handfuls as a symbolic gesture amidst the stumps of sugarcane and the cast tear gas grenades of earlier confrontations. In the distance other groups worked with maize and plantains, often among patches of ground where the sweet fermented smell of burned cane indicated where the plantations had burned during confrontations with the ESMAD.

Finally the calm was broken as the riot police drove an armoured vehicle down the road parallel with the fields, a line of police advancing across the cleared plantations to keep pace with it and firing gas and stun grenades at the Nasa.

The indigenous responded with catapults and slingshots, and the police line was halted halfway across the sugar fields from where they fired stun grenades and gas grenades coated with marbles. These were lobbed high in the air; their explosion shooting the marbles out like bullets.

Other gas and stun grenades were regularly fired parallel with the ground, directly at the bodies of the Indigenous, causing a steady stream of injuries to be treated by the community’s medical teams.

Fierce battles regularly erupted where a stream surrounded with bamboo offered cover for each side to attempt to outflank the other. The Nasa used a three-man catapult against the ESMAD, often forcing them back, while the riot police hidden on the other side of the stream responded with missiles fired blindly at the three. A hostile stalemate over the plantation lasted for the rest of the day, the gas clouds blown sometimes one way, sometimes the other.The plains of Colombia’s western Valle del Cauca department are now an expanse of sugar; road trains of coupled trucks haul the cane from the plantations to be refined or used in the creation of ethanol. Across the plantation of La Emperatriz lie proofs of hours worked and records of fumigation tossed onto the ground in past months by contractors of InCauca, the agro-industrial multinational that runs the largest sugar refinery in Colombia and which dominates the region.

The same plains once supported a landscape of leafy savannah where communities produced numerous crops. One can read of this world as recently as the late nineteenth century in the work of local journalist and chronicler Luciano Rivera y Garrido, who described,

“Riparian forests, thick carpets of dark green… vast plains covered with forests, over there pastures, yonder hamlets… small valleys sowed with seeds, clogged woodlands… quaint huts of peasants… golden light… sapphire sky.”

A mixed landscape has been reborn in the land on the other side of the road. A hacienda similar to La Emperatriz has been meticulously maintained–and now, painted with Nasa symbols and iconography, serves as the community health centre and music schoo..

The surrounding land is held in common though dotted with parcels of land where individual families farm their own mixed crops, interspersed with forest and pasture. The territory of the Huellas reservation was a cattle ranch until the Nasa retook it; the road that forms the boundary between the reservation and La Emperatriz running along the edge of the plain and below the gentle foothills of the Sierra Occidental.

“Before this we had no land”, said a former governor of Huellas. He continued,

“We came from high up and had to work for two days a week for nothing other than the permission to be here through the system of the ‘teraje’. Then around 1971 we established the Association of Indigenous Councils of Northern Cauca (ACIN), and we refused to pay the teraje. The local powers responded with threats and assassinations, but we had found our voice. The elders teach us that we lived in the plains until 1915, when the police came from Cali trip to evict everyone who refused to leave for the mountains.”

ACIN became a driving force in the indigenous movement of Colombia, and as part of the Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca (CRIC) its successes in overcoming state and paramilitary violence to reclaim ancestral land and oppose the export economy of intensive agriculture have gained it support beyond indigenous Colombia.

In 1985, the national government was pressured into passing Decree 865, which led to the establishment of the Commission of Land for the People of Cauca, but the government machinery proceeded at a snail’s pace in realising promises of land reform. In October 1991, with threats and attacks rising against Nasa occupying haciendas, the CRIC and indigenous councils of northern Cauca asked that the Government intervene to prevent a massacre and pass 15,663 hectares to the indigenous community to settle claims. The government did not respond.

On 16 December 1991, 50 armed men in military style uniforms shot 21 Nasa to death in the El Nilo hacienda. An investigation pointed to the involvement of Major Jorge Enrique Durán Argüelles, police commander of the Second District of Santander de Quilichao, and Captain Fabio Alejandro Castañeda Mateus, commander of the anti-narcotics company of that unit, along with numerous police personnel, but the charges were dropped.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights investigated the El Nilo massacre from 1993 to 1997, publishing its recommendations in 2001 urging Colombia to investigate and prosecute those responsible for the massacre, including police officers; to make social and integral reparation to the Nasa people; and to guarantee the non-repetititon of similar acts.

The government had belatedly signed an accord in Bogotá on 23 December 1991 that promised to return the requested land to the Nasa, but only a portion of this has been legally transferred. In 2001 further massacres occurred at Gualanday, San Pedro, and Maya. The government has never accepted responsibility for the massacres, and the return of properties has consistently relied on pressure from the Nasa.

“We lost many people killed in order to reclaim this finca” said the ex-governor of Nasa.

“The narco-traffickers, the land-owners, and the police were all involved. Now they call themselves the Black Eagles or the Rastrojos, but they’re just the same people. When we pressure the government to fulfil its promises to return our land the intimidation increases. Three months ago we had paramilitaries passing along the road in front of the reservation shouting threats against the current governor. They said they were from the Rastrojos but the name is not important.”

We had walked into the foothills to see the transformation of Huellas in the years since it had been passed to indigenous control. Between the land returned to woodland, fields of mixed crops of beans, yuca, plantain, coffee and maize were interspersed with citrus groves and pasture.

The plain spread out beneath us, the endless sugar sugar plantations extending to Cali and beyond; the explosions of gas grenades and white smoke rising beyond the furthest trees of Huellas showed where the daily struggle to reclaim the plains continued.

The current governor emphasized in assemblies each morning that the focus of the struggle was to recuperate the land and to liberate Mother Earth. “We are Indigenous, we know how to care for the land,” she told the community, before its members prepared to return to the struggle at La Emperatriz. “Focus on your replanting of the land, don’t provoke the fighting.” The Nasa would then line up to have their heads bathed in a herbal mixture prepared by the spiritual guide. Then, they would cross from Huellas into La Emperatriz.

The struggle for control of the fields is currently swinging in favour of the Nasa; the increased repression serving only to boost the numbers of those coming to the property. The riot police are growing reluctant to spend each day before the slings and catapults in the fields; but at the same time, as they begin to remain closer to the confines of the buildings of the hacienda the number of threats has multiplied. By night the fields are deserted by the Nasa; “In the dark the police would shoot us dead” they say, “The ‘Black Eagles’ is just the name they use at night”.

A similar pattern of disengagement followed by threats has occurred in the properties between the sugar-producing town of Corinto and neighbouring Nasa communities, where ESMAD police wielded machetes and fired live bullets injuring four Nasa who were contesting the ownership of the sugar plantations of Quebrada Seca and Garcia. The escalation of violence prompted the UN to negotiate an agreement in which the police and army occupied the hacienda buildings of the contested haciendas of Miraflores, Quebrada Seca, Granadillo, and Garcia, while the Nasa are left in possession of the fields. The first two properties are owned outright by InCauca, the sugar company that rents the other two properties as well as La Emperatriz. Nasa have also received firearms injuries from the private security company of InCauca.

A leaflet from the Black Eagles circulated in Corinto last week, promising the “social cleansing” of the area and the eradication of the “bandits” in the sugarcane plantations. The paramilitaries ordered a regional curfew of 10pm. Threatening prominent Nasa, they signed off with: “United for a northern Cauca without Indians”.

This week, the Government issued eviction orders for some of the settlements the Nasa have been establishing in the contested fields around Corinto. From the Monday until Wednesday the same property also seen a Nasa Assembly develop a “plan of life” for the communal ‘recuperation’ of the land. Around the assembly the former sugar-plantation was already growing with indigenous maize, such as the planters had been sowing at La Emperatriz.

During the struggle at La Emperatriz the plantain sapling they had planted was later uprooted when the ESMAD gained control of that part of the field, but in the days that followed it was replanted and likely grows still. The teacher who had spoken of the liberation of Mother Earth as the planters walked through the heat had claimed that the environmental and spiritual dimension of the struggle gave the community a strength that violence couldn’t break. “We will always be here, and we will always demand this land back, not just for ourselves to live as before but also for Mother Earth. We are not like the Government which only knows how to sell things. That is why we will win, that is why we have the patience which will win here.”

Giant Coal Excavator Occupied, Hambacher Forest, Germany

World’s-Biggest-Excavator

The world’s largest excavator, also owned by RWE. Not necessarily the one occupied.

The Hambach Forest, in Southwest Germany, is the site of an ongoing forest and meadow occupation against the expansion of the adjacent lignite (brown coal) mine.

March 15th, 2015

In the night from Saturday to Sunday at about 00:30 am, activists of the anti-coal-movement have occupied an excavator inside the opencast-mine Inden. One person is locked on, three others have climbed the digger with harnesses. A banner reading “Lignite kills. Everywhere.” was dropped.

“The deadlock of the excavator, which is one of the centrepieces of RWE, means a massive intervention in the smooth running of the corporation. Thereby we deliberately disturb the continued exploitation of a source of energy which entire ecosystems fall victim to”, says Konny L. (name changed). “Due to the expansion of the pit people are displaced and dispossessed. At the Hambach mine, an old forest is being cut down, which was since the beginning of the Middle Ages in citizens‘ hands – if a forest can ever belong to someone – and was ever since managed relatively sustainable. Now RWE has bought it, with the sole purpose of utterly destroying it for the profits from coal mining.”

from <a href=https://www.flickr.com/photos/hambacherforst/” class=”wp-image-41791″ height=”201″ src=”/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/69JXeQG.png” width=”357″ />

from https://www.flickr.com/photos/hambacherforst/

However, it is not only the regional consequences that prompt the activist into action. Konny L. illustrates: “The global warming caused by lignite combustion leads to droughts, floods, epidemics, etc. These cost hundreds of thousands of lives and force countless people to flee. “
From the activists‘ perspective, active resistance against a profit-oriented business model is the only way to effectively counteract these problems in order to “end this catastrophe that will sooner or later be felt fiercely worldwide. Those who only think of their own interests or believe in governments and business to do the job, will in the long run destroy their own and future generations‘ livelihoods.”

The occupants have announced to block the work of the excavator for as long as the eviction by the police will take. The occupation is still ongoing.

The digger is locked dead – caused by not even by 10 determined people!
A system is not unstoppable, if the will is there and if people start using their own the heads for decisions, instead of just ruminating given rules and opinions. Then another way of life becomes possible, with no one starving and no one afraid of their own species. A way of life, where people treat each other respectfully and without oppression.
The action is in solidarity with the people in and around Fukushima, who, like so many people worldwide, have become victims to the greed of few. The resistance movements against coal and nuclear energy are going hand in hand, because both sources of energy do (sooner as well as later) cause large-scale environmental destruction and thousands of casualties. We will not be intimidated by repression and threats. Unless all living beings get the possibility to live and grow without human oppression, something is going horribly wrong.

Let’s fix it! Come to Blockupy Action Day in Frankfurt (18.3.), the eviction of the occupied-by-refugees Gerhart-Hauptmann-Schule in Berlin (19.3.), the protests against the G7 summit in Elmau, Bavaria (2.-8.6.).
Let’s live resistance and start rebellion together!

Digger Occupation – News Ticker

The bottom is being cleared – the top is still untouched
07:50

The eviction of the partial occupation by three persons in the lower / mid range of the excavator is has proceeded quite far. One person is already in custody. The V-shaped steel tube, in which another person’s both hands are chained to each other, has already been cut open, presumably by grinding. Thus, it is anticipated that the two other persons won‘t remain on the excavator very much longer.
The three other persons, who occupied the tip of the excavator at 70 meters height with climbing equipment, after all didn‘t have any police contact.
One embedded press person is also, after all, in place.
.

Climbing Cops arrived
about 06:30

The climbing unit of the police is on site and will probably sooner or later start preparing eviction.
.

Trickle is redirected
05:37

A small digger has shown up (or rather a regular-sized one, which is of course tiny in relation to the giant excavator). Using this, the trickle, which (as we all know) threatened to tilt the giant digger and kill the climbers, has been begun to divert. So just in case any autonomous sports groups are around in the mine, please do not under any circumstances sabotage the activities of this digger – it guards the lives of our comrades! (… and along the way, the capital of RWE …)
.

Helicopter doesn‘t do anything
04:05

As mentioned. It came, it saw, and it didn‘t do anything.
.

Police submit a request to God to tilt the excavator
03:39

Some of the uniform wearers were, in company of RWE employees, on the excavator in order to speak to a part of the occupants. According to them, the excavator at it‘s current position is being undermined by a trickle and therefore threatens to tip over. Of course RWE happen to have noticed just right now that they have parked their giant digger in quicksand. Now isn‘t that delightful for the activists, to finally have a meaningful and so very funny reason for not leaving a perilous place?
.

Police arrived
02:07

About 15 policeofficinated‘s have arrived under the digger and made contact with the RWE employees.
By the way, the excavator has not moved despite the threats.
.

RWE workforce once again life threatening
01:08

Staff of RWE pronounced to pivot the occupied excavator after the activists were already on top of it. This indeed could be life-threatening for the climbers, some of whom are located on the tower of the digger and some in moving parts. After this fact had already been clearly pointed out to the empolyees, they explicitly threatened to activate the machines if the people would not within five minutes be down. And an end to the open death threats is not in sight.

Rising Up – turning fences into lock-ons and a second camp springs up

Stapleton allotments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

14th March 2015

Stapleton allotments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

14th March 2015

Protesters are continuing to cause mischief at the Stapleton Allotments where bailiffs are attempting to evict people from trees.MetroBus protesters who have already been removed from the site being bulldozed for a new road have pushed over the temporary fencing and mounted it in defiance.

Meanwhile, one protester has locked himself to a gate with a bicycle D-lock at a second site on the other side of the M32 where a new occupation has sprung up. The new camp has also been served with an eviction notice.

How to dig a protestor out of a hole at Stapleton allotment

More photos

Stapleton Road protest camp eviction continues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13th March 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13th March 2015

The eviction continues into a second day…

Updates:

Day 42..just! 11.59pm. An eventful day with conifers and towers gone and the ent toppled! it was heartbreaking watching the diggers tearing up what has been wildlife habitat , perfect for slow worms and tearing down the water tower and other building that was suspected bats at one point. There was a horrible “rescue” from the water tower with pain inflicted upon the person being “rescued” such a tying his hands behind his back with a cable tie, grabbing his face and his crotch.all caught on film and will be documented as being assaulted as with others. Despite all of this twee dwellers, though cold and tired are in good spirits, welcoming the food and other treats sent up to them ( even hot water bottles!). Tomorrow is another day in the trees – hoping the weekend will draw more people – come down Bristol!

Day 42 1.45pm. The tree protectors in the conifer trees ( not the woodland) have been “rescued” . Two of them chose to scurry down without assistance then one jumped over the herris fence in true squirrel ninja style!
The oaks and the poplars are still full and in high spirits. We managed to get a charged camera up to one so we are hoping to get some good ariel shots of the action soon!
Again, more people on site would be really welcomed and the comradeship between supporters is strong.
We strongly urge people to call Bristol City Council and demand evidence that they have carried out ecological surveys for bats, reptiles and birds ( especially with hibernating bats & slow worms & nesting birds) that their digger & dozer probably have disturbed or even killed! Tel : 0117 922 2000. u might want to Tweet or email Mayor G!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Day 42 7.40am..The dawn chorus was joined today by the twitterings of tree folk, all well fed ( thanks skipchen!)& nestled high in the trees anticipating the arrival of other climbing people – though this time not to join them but to bring them down.

So far all is quiet on the site, now the drone of the all night generators has stopped and there is respite from the glaring spot lights ringing the entire fencing. We are one tree dweller down after a security guard rugby tackled one protestor who had descended from a tree which resulted in suspected broken ribs and a badly sprained ankle. This is being reported as assault. But replacements quickly sprang into action scurrying over fences and up trees in true squirrel style!

There are 10 to15 people left in the trees.

Today we hope for respect both from the bailiffs and contractors both for the people, land and wildlife which yesterday was very sadly in question on many, (but not all) occasions. We are calling all Rising Up supporters to come to the site…the support, cheer and motivation you bring is vital – as are the observing eyes and mouths -which can avert and witness any wrong doings. Join this Rising Up – Resistance is Fertile, come sow your seeds!

Website

More photos

Updates, photos and videos

Burma: Bomb Destroys Mining Company Truck

March 13th, 2015

March 13th, 2015

Mining Company Trucks Being Blocked by Villagers in Namhkam Township on 26 February

A bomb blew up a truck loaded with silicon mineral stone in Aung Myittar Ward, Namhkam Township, Northern Shan State at 7.20pm on 10 March according to Sai Ye, a local resident.

He said: “When the bomb exploded under the engine at the front of the truck some parts of the engine were destroyed but no one was injured in the accident. The truck driver is Sai Pe from Aung Myittar Ward and the explosion happened in front of his home. The explosion was very big, it caused the ground to shake. The whole town was silent after the explosion and there was almost no one on the street.”

 

The destroyed truck belongs to the Ngwe Kabar Kyaw mining company and is a Chinese made six-wheel truck according to Sai Ye.

On 26 February about 300 local residents blocked Ngwe Kabar Kyaw mining company trucks loaded with minerals in Namhkam Township for one and a half hours. The residents stopped the trucks because they are angry that the mining company had never discussed with local residents about carrying out further excavations for minerals at Namseri Stream.

Previously the company had been mining mineral stone from the Namseri Stream, but they stopped their activities after complaints from the villagers and promised to consult them before resuming excavations.

Recently, the company angered the villagers by resuming excavations without consulting them, which led to them blockading the trucks.

The excavations already carried out at Namseri Stream by the company have caused the deterioration of nearby farmlands, which have not yet been addressed according to Sai Hseng Moon, a farmer leader.

He said: “The deterioration of the farmlands along the Namseri Stream due to the mining project, in Phan-Khar Village, have not been repaired yet [for a long time] and now they are going to excavate stone at Hway-Oh Village after getting permission from the Naypyidaw Government, which they never should have given.”

The truck that was blown up was one of the trucks blockaded by the villagers on 26 February, but no one yet knows what group set off the bomb said a source close to the police.

The source said: “The bomb was made of mining explosives and was the same type of bomb that exploded in the house of U Aung Win last year in Namkhan Township. U Aung Win is a township supporting group member and executive committee member of the Shan National League for Democracy (SNLD) party of Namhkam Town.

According to local people there have been several bombs exploding in Namhkam Town, but no one has ever been arrested over the explosions.

Translated by Aung Myat Soe English version written by Mark Inkey for BNI Burma News International

RisingUp in Bristol: eviction begins of allotments protest camp

12th March 2015

After more than a month making a stand against Metrobus plans by living in trees above Stapleton Allotments, protesters look set to be evicted this morning.

12th March 2015

After more than a month making a stand against Metrobus plans by living in trees above Stapleton Allotments, protesters look set to be evicted this morning.

According to a Bristol Post reporter on the scene, at least 30 bailiffs have surrounded a make-shift camp with more being dropped off by bus.

The move comes two days after the council secured a second possession order for land in the area occupied by the Rising Up Group, which has said it will strongly resist any moves to get them off the land.

It is not the first time there has been activity by security staff at the site, however reports from the scene suggest this is the first time bailiffs have been making obvious moves towards the camp.

People have locked into barrels of concrete, up trees, digger diving, naked cat & mouse, locking on to digger arms, concrete blocks in caravans and more!

Day 41! EVICTION UDATE

4.10pm. Update: The attempted eviction is still going on – all of the tree sits are still full of people who are all fine & in good spirits – giving us a show of acrobatics and dare devil climbing here & there!

The heroic person in the meadow tunnel has after 7 hours been brought out – waved an arm but was on a stretcher- hopefully OK. Other people still locked onto trees on the ground and gate!
They have crashed diggers and bulldozers through bird rich wooded area and have managed to swamp one of their bulldozers after digging through a culvert, which 2 people then chose to lock themselves to! ..
Some security and bailiffs have been OK others heavy handed and dangerous – at one point they were about to use an axle grinder to remove a D lock from someone’s neck until we shouted that they could kill him! One woman was pulled around and one bailiff tried to drag her out of a tree – in a totally unsafe manner – all captured on video.

It is a media frenzy, but the usual Rising Up way the atmosphere is somewhat jovial and there is nothing to fear… if you are spectator on the ground. Photos and videos about to be posted. Rising Up call for more people to come down to the site to show their solidarity and witness this spectacle
– COME & SHOW YOUR SUPPORT & SOLIDARITY TODAY! – It is something you will never forget and a story to tell for years to come!

10.30am update Many of the protestors, including legal observers on the ground have forcibly been removed – dragged off by heavy handed bailiffs , one on one, showing completely unreasonable force, one female protestor had her top pulled up whilst a bailiff smoking a fag dropped ash in her face. A bulldozer has started illegally demolishing buildings which have asbestos roofs and a digger has gone through a bird rich woodland area razing trees – despite it being bird nesting season – making this both a worrying and illegal act. Bristol Council “Green Capital” ..hold your head in shame! The world is watching.

8.38am Update: EVICTION IN PROCESS ( ABOUT 1 HR IN) around 70 bailiffs on site – have been very heavy handed dragging off legal observers and other people – 1 on 1 ( they should be 2 people). A climbing team is there and have set up a station and medical tent. Very few police on site – most on the road. They have brought in a digger and an amphibious vehicle and set up medical area…hope not to be needed. All of the tree sits are full and some people still on the ground! COME DOWN , BRING CAMERA, BANNERS, NOISE AND GOOD VIBES!

Website

Updates, photos and videos

 

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

 

Yorkley Court community farm: possession order now in effect/come support us

https://yorkleycourt.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/smalltower.png

12 March 2015

https://yorkleycourt.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/smalltower.png

12 March 2015

Many questions remain around the ownership of Yorkley Court, and the processes which led to Brian Bennett “buying” the farm. Nonetheless,the judge’s order giving Benett posession of the whole farm will come into effect this Thursday 12th March at noon. This means that he will legally have the right to evict us from that point onwards.

We remain committed to our belief that sustainable farming for the benefit of the local community is more important than greedy developers seeking profit with little regard for local people, and we ask anybody that agrees with us for support.

All quiet for now, no sign of bailiffs or bullies..

Eviction could however come at any point, if you would like to join our emergency text – out list, please text 07522 025 889

Lots of people are staying for a while, in case they try to evict soon.. more are always very welcome.

More info

Bristol allotment protest camp: possession is nine tenths of the law! – Second Possession Order granted

This afternoon Judge Denyer QC ruled in favour of Bristol City Council‘s application for an immediate Possession Order for land at Stapleton allotments currently occupied by Rising

This afternoon Judge Denyer QC ruled in favour of Bristol City Council‘s application for an immediate Possession Order for land at Stapleton allotments currently occupied by Rising Up.  Five members of the Rising Up collective stood in court to defend their right to temporarily be on land, without legal representation,  due to a lack of legal aid.

The QC dismissed the arguments of human rights, the necessity to protect the land from destruction and potentially dangerous and unlawful development.  The Rising Up spokespeople cited legislation, case law, public and political support as well evidence of potential breaches in planning and procedure and the need for time to mount a legal case. These were all dismissed in a distinct demonstration of how property rights take precedent over human rights and the rights of nature.

Food security, the rights to protest, the rights to home and family life and to subsist in a sustainable way have once against come into direct conflict with capitalism and short termism. The council have failed to hear, acknowledge and explore the concerns of many, and have prioritised the economic gains of a few private companies – under the guise of a “sustainable” public transport system.

Rising Up Spokesperson Danny Balla states: “Today was a clear indication that the system is broken and reflects why we are currently facing many serious environmental and social crises. In the courtroom we witnessed a failure of the judicial system to facilitate the rights of people to challenge contentious and potentially unlawful decisions.  Judge Denyer even stated how the avenues “to judicially review local planning authorities “are a somewhat illusory right” due to costs involved.

We are once again forced into a position of ethically and morally sound, yet unlawful behaviour by continuing to defend this land. This planning and legal process has been a clear fabrication of any real space for alternative and sustainable thinking.  Riding roughshod over the wants of needs of local people, nature and the future generations of Bristol.”

Today, justice has been obscured by the law, but our determination to resist has risen.  Bristol is Rising up!

 

ZADists Lose Bitter Battle over Controversial Dam

March 7th, 2015

March 7th, 2015

A bitter battle over a dam that has pitted French farmers against environmentalists may have finally come to an close Friday following a ruling by local leaders, though the former are likely to be happiest with the decision.

The departmental council in Tarn, southwest France, voted in favour 46 to 43 of creating a dam and reservoir at around half the size of the originally proposed project.

They also asked the government to forcibly remove “without delay” a group of environmental protesters who have occupied the site of the proposed Sivens dam for the past nine months in an effort to block construction.

A little over an hour later, armed police entered the area to begin clearing the protesters’ camp.

Protests, barricades and tragedy

It may be the final chapter of a saga that has been the source of intense dispute in France for several years – and resulted in the death of at least one protester.

The project, for which planning began in 1989, was conceived to provide better irrigation for local farms by damming the River Tescou to create a reservoir.

After years of deliberation and feasibility studies, the final plans were given official approval in 2004, envisioning the creation of a reservoir holding 1.5 million cubic metres of water.

But the €8.4m-project faced fierce opposition from the start from environmentalists, including France’s green party the EELV, who argued it would mean the destruction of several hectares of wetlands – a haven for wildlife – and benefit only a small number of farms.

In October 2013, members of a radical environmentalist group known as the “Zadistes” began occupying the construction site. Police twice removed the protesters from the site, most recently in May 2014, but both times they returned.

Then, one year later, the dam project made international headlines after a 21-year-old environmental activist, Rémi Fraisse, was killed during a protest after being struck on the head by a flash grenade thrown by police.

His death triggered demonstrations in several cities in France against police brutality, which themselves led to violent clashes with authorities.

The protesters have also provoked the ire of local farmers, who support the dam. Most recently, around 130 farmers set up barricades to stop activists from accessing the site.

Finally, on October 31, 2014, work on the dam was halted and the original plans for the project scrapped entirely by Ecology Minister Ségolène Royal the following January.

Royal gave local authorities two options: build a smaller reservoir of about 750,000 cubic metres further upstream from the original site, or build four separate (and smaller) reservoirs.

It was this first option the general council opted for on Friday, judging the second scenario too expensive.

Council president Thierry Carcenac told AFP that further studies would be carried out to determine exactly where the new reservoir would be built, adding that there was a “leeway of plus or minus 10 percent” on the final size of the dam.

Farmers happy, environmentalists scepical

The government, so long stuck between a rock and a hard place – unable to please both farmers and environmentalists – will be hoping a compromise acceptable to both sides has now been reached.

In a joint statement, Royal and Agriculture Minister Stéphane Le Foll welcomed the council’s decision. The new plan, they said, “while meeting all the criteria of environmental protection, will secure the water supply necessary for agricultural production at a much higher rate.”

However, initial reactions suggest the farmers may be happier than the environmentalists with Friday’s decision.

The FNSEA farmers’ union praised the council’s “courage” and said it now wanted to see “the respect of law, the evacuation of the Zadistes and construction work to start without delay”.

The EELV, in contrast, said the revised project “in the end resolves nothing”, though it welcomed the abandonment of the original plans.

“In the absence of additional studies, there is nothing to suggest that legal doubts over respect for the environment have been alleviated,” the party said in a statement.

Meanwhile, there appeared to be mixed reactions from protesters as the police moved in to disband their camp on Friday.

“Most left the scene quietly,” police spokesperson Stéphane Rappailles told Reuters.

However, others were less willing to give in. Around 25 Zadistes had to be forcibly removed, said Rappailles, while six were arrested.

“[We will] hide in the woods,” one protester, named Christian, told AFP. “We will not leave.”