Mexico: Two Jailed For Earth Liberation Front Actions

Abra­ham López Martínez (age 16) and Fer­mín Gómez Tre­jo (age 17), have been held since Decem­ber 15, 2009 at a youth deten­tion cen­ter in Mex­i­co City. They are accused of dam­ag­ing prop­er­ty and crim­i­nal asso­ci­a­tion, relat­ed to the burn­ing of nine pri­vate­ly-owned cars and a bomb attack against a Harley David­son deal­er, actions claimed by the Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra [Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front]. They are await­ing tri­al. Both are veg­an.

Abra­ham López Martínez (age 16) and Fer­mín Gómez Tre­jo (age 17), have been held since Decem­ber 15, 2009 at a youth deten­tion cen­ter in Mex­i­co City. They are accused of dam­ag­ing prop­er­ty and crim­i­nal asso­ci­a­tion, relat­ed to the burn­ing of nine pri­vate­ly-owned cars and a bomb attack against a Harley David­son deal­er, actions claimed by the Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra [Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front]. They are await­ing tri­al. Both are veg­an.
Write to them via Anar­chist Black Cross-Mex­i­co: cna.mex@gmail.com

Source: http://www.directaction.info/prisoners.htm

Mexico: Coca-Cola targeted by ALF/ELF

On the night of Jan­u­ary 17 we decid­ed to go out to once again prove that this war has not end­ed, that our actions have not stopped and that we con­tin­ue to feel the rage that we have put into every action.
This time we put two pack­ages of explo­sives in the front win­dows of the offices of the bot­tler FEMSA, owned by the filthy multi­na­tion­al Coca-Cola. The win­dows were com­plete­ly destroyed in the explo­sion. The attack was car­ried out in Ecate­pec, Mex­i­co City.

Mexico: Coca-Cola targeted by ALF/ELFOn the night of Jan­u­ary 17 we decid­ed to go out to once again prove that this war has not end­ed, that our actions have not stopped and that we con­tin­ue to feel the rage that we have put into every action.
This time we put two pack­ages of explo­sives in the front win­dows of the offices of the bot­tler FEMSA, owned by the filthy multi­na­tion­al Coca-Cola. The win­dows were com­plete­ly destroyed in the explo­sion. The attack was car­ried out in Ecate­pec, Mex­i­co City.
Coca-Cola is an earth-destroy­ing com­pa­ny that caus­eS the extinc­tion of ani­mal species, that uses extreme human exploita­tion to pro­duce goods like soft drinks, and that claims and pri­va­tizes nat­ur­al resources. Coca-Cola, one of the com­pa­nies direct­ly respon­si­ble for envi­ron­men­tal dete­ri­o­ra­tion, has been vis­it­ed by us, anar­chists and lib­er­a­tionists; we have decid­ed in these cells to focus on qual­i­ty actions, strength­en­ing our­selves to expand our acts of sab­o­tage.
While it is true that 2008 and 2009 were years of quan­ti­ta­tive expan­sion, now it is 2010, a new year, with new strate­gies and new tac­tics, but with the same courage to act.
This action is ded­i­cat­ed with all our desire for free­dom to the pris­on­ers Víc­tor, Emmanuel, Abra­ham, Fer­mín, and Socor­ro of Tijua­na. We hope that direct sol­i­dar­i­ty mul­ti­plies in clan­des­tine actions, for their uncon­di­tion­al lib­er­a­tion.
We pre­pare our weapons for the cli­mate change sum­mit!
Hit­ting hard and flee­ing!

Frente de Lib­eración Ani­mal
Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra

anony­mous com­mu­nique trans­lat­ed by Bite Back

Reclaim the Fields Gathering, Barcelona

Invi­ta­tion to the Reclaim the Fields gath­er­ing
13th 14th and 15th Feb­ru­ary, Can Mas­deu, Barcelona

http://www.reclaimthefields.org/
http://www.canmasdeu.net/

Invi­ta­tion to the Reclaim the Fields gath­er­ing
13th 14th and 15th Feb­ru­ary, Can Mas­deu, Barcelona

http://www.reclaimthefields.org/
http://www.canmasdeu.net/

The Euro­pean Coor­di­na­tion « Reclaim the Fields » (RtF) was born of the gath­er­ings and ini­tia­tive of a small group of young farm­ers and land­less peo­ple linked to Via Campesina, the RtF coor­di­na­tion met last Octo­ber at a Euro­pean camp of over 400 peo­ple involved in many dif­fer­ent small agri­cul­ture and col­lec­tive ini­tia­tive projects. After the camp, new peo­ple were moti­vat­ed to con­tin­ue the process, propos­ing anoth­er meet­ing in Cat­alo­nia, to bring togeth­er peo­ple already involved here in out-of-the-ordi­nary agri­cul­ture and self-pro­duc­tion ini­tia­tives such as col­lec­tive agri­cul­ture and the occu­pa­tion of land and aban­doned vil­lages, pro­duc­ers and con­sumer coop­er­a­tives, the fight against genet­ic engi­neer­ing and for eco­log­i­cal agri­cul­ture, etc.

Aware that net­works already exist around Can Mas­deu and beyond, we invite you to come and meet with us and com­pare expe­ri­ences, and
per­haps cre­ate con­nec­tions that will go beyond this gath­er­ing…

For more infor­ma­tion write to: reclamem-els-camps@pimienta.org.

We will send you more infor­ma­tion about the polit­i­cal con­tent and logis­ti­cal details of the gath­er­ing. You can also sign up on the doo­dle
http://www.doodle.com/avyaivy5a6dy8ug4. We need you to do this to plan for accom­mo­da­tion and food.
The pro­gramme for the gath­er­ing is still being writ­ten.


Euro­pean Coor­di­na­tion Reclaim the Fields

Mainshill Solidarity Camp evicted – not an end, but a beginning

30th Jan­u­ary 2010
Yes­ter­day was the fifth and final day of the evic­tion of the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp – the last two arrests as the final occu­piers were dragged out of the rapid­ly shrink­ing Wood. A total of 45 arrests were made over the course of the evic­tion with close to 70 peo­ple tak­ing part and sup­port­ing the camp.

30th Jan­u­ary 2010
Yes­ter­day was the fifth and final day of the evic­tion of the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp – the last two arrests as the final occu­piers were dragged out of the rapid­ly shrink­ing Wood. A total of 45 arrests were made over the course of the evic­tion with close to 70 peo­ple tak­ing part and sup­port­ing the camp.

All five days saw the vio­lence inflict­ed by the state on those who try to cre­ate pos­i­tive change, and the col­lu­sion between the courts, police and cor­po­ra­tions. But they also saw hero­ic acts of defi­ance, with peo­ple fight­ing off bailiffs until hav­ing their hands and feet cable-tied togeth­er and sup­port­ers main­tain­ing a 24-hour vig­il through­out the evic­tion.

This evic­tion is not an end, but the begin­ning of a cam­paign of com­mu­ni­ty-based rad­i­cal direct action sweep­ing Scotland’s cen­tral belt which can only grow in strength. From actions to stop work on open­cast sites and the shut­ting down of a major coal rail ter­mi­nal for a day (which hap­pened for a third time on Wednes­day), to com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment and sol­i­dar­i­ty result­ing in a sev­en-month occu­pa­tion and a pos­i­tive change in direc­tion for rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ism in Scot­land.

But where can we go next? We’ve hit these cap­i­tal­ists and mon­ey-grab­bers where it hurts most – in the pock­et – and we can’t wait to hear how much it has cost them in total. Over 30 direct actions have tak­en place over the past 12 months, and that’s not includ­ing the evic­tion. Machines have been trashed, health stud­ies pub­lished and bonds been made with those affect­ed by heavy indus­try and the caus­es of cli­mate change. We’ve dug tun­nels, defend­ed trees and climbed onto dig­gers.

The Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp has now been evict­ed, but the strug­gle con­tin­ues!

mainshill@riseup.net
http://mainshill.noflag.org.uk/

Update from the ongoing Mainshill eviction, day 4

The ongo­ing evic­tion of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp entered its fourth day with the strug­gle to clear the sycamores con­tin­u­ing.

Yes­ter­day the bat­tle for the sycamores had start­ed with the removal of the skyraft, and one pro­tes­tor being hauled out of a tree.

Snow and Anarchy at MainshillThe ongo­ing evic­tion of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp entered its fourth day with the strug­gle to clear the sycamores con­tin­u­ing.

Yes­ter­day the bat­tle for the sycamores had start­ed with the removal of the skyraft, and one pro­tes­tor being hauled out of a tree.

Tree­hous­es were destroyed and the remain­ing anti-coal activists were left with­out tarps, bed­ding or in some cas­es, a way down the tree.

Dur­ing the course of today, five oth­er peo­ple were evict­ed from the sycamores.

The hid­den tree­top camp known as ‘Ewok Vil­lage’ was cleared as well with climbers tack­ling some tough defences.

In all, there were nine arrests.

A huge amount of heavy machin­ery has been moved onto site, so oppor­tu­ni­ties for actions to stop work on site are lit­er­al­ly every­where.

“The fight isn’t over yet”, said the almost infa­mous Bar­ry Cad­er, recent­ly released on bail.

Update from day 3 Mainshill eviction

Sev­en more pro­tes­tors were arrest­ed today, Wednes­day 27th Jan­u­ary, in the third day of resis­tance against the evic­tion of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp.

Up a tree at MainshillSev­en more pro­tes­tors were arrest­ed today, Wednes­day 27th Jan­u­ary, in the third day of resis­tance against the evic­tion of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp.

As the tac­tics of the Nation­al Evic­tion Team grew increas­ing­ly aggres­sive and cav­a­lier, spir­its on site remained strong. Climbers attempt­ed to evict the stand of sycamores but were met with deter­mined resis­tance and suc­ceed­ed in only remov­ing one pro­tes­tor. Branch­es have been stripped from the remain­ing trees and tree­hous­es destroyed. The coal activists have been left with­out bed­ding or tarps for the night.

Bull­doz­ers destroyed trees with­in 50metres of a hid­den tree­top camp as the locked-on pro­tes­tors screamed and whis­tled to try and reveal them­selves and stop work. The dis­cov­ery of this fur­ther site has delayed the end of the evic­tion and rais­es doubts about the com­pe­ten­cy of the NET. A search heli­copter had made sev­er­al pass­es over the area but seem­ing­ly failed to find any­thing, despite hov­er­ing over their exact loca­tion for sev­er­al min­utes. As the bull­doz­ers neared the tree­hous­es, sup­port folk out­side site begged the NET to stop the work to secure the area and ensure the safe­ty of those locked-on. Their whis­tles could clear­ly be heard from the front of site but the NET were stub­born in their refusal to accept the pos­si­ble pres­ence of anoth­er occu­pa­tion. Work was final­ly stopped metres from the tree­hous­es. The climb­ing team expect to start try­ing to clear the area, known as ‘Ewok Vil­lage’ tomor­row.

A tree­house, the net, and a skyraft were cleared of occu­pants. Tun­nel teams con­tin­ue to work through the night to clear the under­ground defences.

The 26 peo­ple held and charged over the last two days have all been released on bail, and are charged with either breach of the peace or sec­tion 68(1) of the Crim­i­nal Jus­tice and Pub­lic Order Act 1994.

In sol­i­dar­i­ty with the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp, Raven­struther coal rail ter­mi­nal was shut down for up to five hours this morn­ing as a pro­tes­tor locked on to a dig­ger.

It is still easy to get onto site so come down and sup­port the Main­shill crew from the inside or do some sup­port work from the out­side.

For info about the cam­paign see www.mainshill.noflag.org.uk

European protests to stop bulldozers on uncontacted tribe’s land

26 Jan­u­ary 2010
Pro­tes­tors gath­ered in Lon­don, Madrid and Paris today to oppose the destruc­tion of land belong­ing to one of the world’s last uncon­tact­ed tribes.

26 Jan­u­ary 2010
Pro­tes­tors gath­ered in Lon­don, Madrid and Paris today to oppose the destruc­tion of land belong­ing to one of the world’s last uncon­tact­ed tribes.

The pro­tes­tors stood out­side the Paraguayan embassies in Madrid and Lon­don hold­ing plac­ards read­ing, ‘Save the Ayoreo.’ The Ayoreo-Toto­biegosode are los­ing their for­est to a Brazil­ian com­pa­ny bull­doz­ing it to graze cat­tle for beef.

In Paris, a let­ter was hand­ed in to UNESCO’s head office express­ing their con­cern for the Toto­biegosode. The for­est being destroyed by the cat­tle-ranch­ers is part of a UNESCO ‘bios­phere reserve’, but despite pleas from the Toto­biegosode to stop the destruc­tion UNESCO has yet to respond.

The com­pa­ny, Yaguarete Pora S.A., recent­ly won Survival’s ‘Green­wash­ing Award 2010’ for its deci­sion to cre­ate a ‘nature reserve’ on the Totobiegosode’s land while destroy­ing thou­sands of hectares of their for­est. Yaguarete denies it is act­ing ille­gal­ly and claims the land it is destroy­ing does not belong to the Toto­biegosode, despite the fact that many stud­ies prove it belongs to them and a legal claim made by the Toto­biegosode is based on one of those stud­ies.

See the company’s defor­esta­tion plans.

Satel­lite pho­tos clear­ly show the destruc­tion of the Totobiegosode’s for­est. They are the only uncon­tact­ed tribe in the world los­ing their land to beef.

Sur­vival direc­tor, Stephen Cor­ry, said today, ‘Peo­ple all over the world are begin­ning to wake up to what is hap­pen­ing to the Toto­biegosode. Paraguay risks being more famous for this tragedy than any­thing else.’

2 anti-nuke protests against new build plans

Anti-nuclear activists dis­rupt Par­lia­men­tary Select Com­mit­tee
27.1.2010

Nukes not the answerAnti-nuclear activists dis­rupt Par­lia­men­tary Select Com­mit­tee
27.1.2010

This morn­ing in West­min­ster, dur­ing the Depart­ment of Ener­gy and Cli­mate Change Par­lia­men­tary Select Com­mit­tee on the pro­posed nuclear and oth­er ener­gy Nation­al Pol­i­cy State­ments, two anti-nuclear activists stood and unfurled a ban­ner in the cen­tre of the com­mit­tee room read­ing “Local Democ­ra­cy Dumped.” The ban­ner also fea­tured radi­a­tion sym­bols and drums of radioac­tive waste. A third activist hand­ed out brief­in­gs on why they believe nuclear pow­er is unac­cept­able and an inap­pro­pri­ate tech­nol­o­gy for tack­ing cli­mate change. The three activists were tak­en away and detained inside the House of Com­mons, along with a forth man who was tak­ing pho­tographs. The four were held for over two hours for alleged breach­es of the House reg­u­la­tions, before being released and banned from the Par­lia­men­tary estate for the rest of the day.

Rep­re­sen­ta­tives of ener­gy giants EDF, E.ON and RWE npow­er and of the Asso­ci­a­tion of Elec­tric­i­ty Pro­duc­ers were giv­ing evi­dence before the com­mit­tee of MPs. The pro­test­ers were high­light­ing the lack of local democ­ra­cy asso­ci­at­ed with the new fast-track plan­ning process, which will be used to silence dis­sent­ing local voic­es on major infra­struc­ture projects such as new nuclear pow­er sta­tions and nuclear waste dumps.

Yes­ter­day the four protest­ed with oth­ers out­side the Nuclear New Build Con­fer­ence at Char­ing Cross Hotel (see below)

Nuclear Peo­ple Pow­er / No New Nuclear
http://stopnuclearpower.blogspot.com

Lon­don Con­fer­ence Protest Expos­es Nuclear Green­wash
26.1.2010

A group of nine anti-nuclear cam­paign­ers staged a two-hour protest out­side the Nuclear New Build Con­fer­ence in cen­tral Lon­don this morn­ing in protest at indus­try attempts to paint nuclear pow­er as a “green” tech­nol­o­gy and win pub­lic sup­port for new nuclear reac­tors.

Stand­ing out­side the Guo­man Hotel adja­cent to Char­ing Cross rail­way sta­tion in the morn­ing rush hour dressed in white over­alls and masks, the pro­test­ers dis­played a large ban­ner read­ing “Nuclear Pow­er is Not the Answer to Cli­mate Chaos”, hand­ed out leaflets and detailed brief­in­gs explain­ing why they believe nuclear pow­er to be a false solu­tion to cli­mate change and detail­ing oth­er prob­lems with this form of ener­gy. Dur­ing the demon­stra­tion, the con­fer­ence’s keynote speak­er, for­mer ener­gy min­is­ter Mal­colm Wicks MP, exchanged views on nuclear pow­er and ener­gy pol­i­cy with one of the cam­paign­ers.

The Depart­ment of Ener­gy and Cli­mate Change is cur­rent­ly under­tak­ing a pub­lic con­sul­ta­tion on its draft nuclear Nation­al Pol­i­cy State­ment (NPS). Once this is approved, deci­sions on new nuclear reac­tors will be left to an unelect­ed quan­go called the Infra­struc­ture Plan­ning Com­mis­sion, with no fur­ther oppor­tu­ni­ty for local objec­tions to be heard.
The Gov­ern­ment is keen to push through a new gen­er­a­tion of cost­ly and high­ly con­tro­ver­sial nuclear reac­tors, despite wide­spread oppo­si­tion and the lack of any long-term solu­tion for over 50 years’ worth of high lev­el radioac­tive waste from exist­ing reac­tors. Cam­paign­ers are con­cerned that the high cost of build­ing new reac­tors would divert essen­tial invest­ment from renew­able and decen­tralised ener­gy and ener­gy effi­cien­cy mea­sures. They say that new reac­tors take too long to build and would not in any case make a sig­nif­i­cant con­tri­bu­tion towards meet­ing the UK’s car­bon emis­sion reduc­tion tar­gets. They also remain con­cerned about the health effects of radioac­tive emis­sions, such as the can­cer and leukaemia clus­ters found near nuclear pow­er sta­tions, as indi­cat­ed by the 2007 Ger­man-gov­ern­ment spon­sored KiKK study, and the risk of a ter­ror­ist attack or cat­a­stroph­ic Cher­nobyl-type reac­tor melt­down. A for­mer direc­tor of the Fors­mark nuclear plant in Swe­den said of an inci­dent at the site in 2006: “It was pure luck that there was not a melt­down.”

Daniel Vies­nik, 35, a Lon­don-based activist, said “The nuclear industry’s long his­to­ry of secre­cy, cov­er-ups and shod­dy and dan­ger­ous prac­tices stretch­es back over fifty years. It wants us to believe that a leop­ard can change its spots, but the only thing that real­ly seems to change is the indus­try’s PR tac­tics.”

Ian Mills, 44, a long-term anti-nuclear activist from Chip­pen­ham, Wilt­shire said, “Nuclear pow­er is a dirty, dan­ger­ous and expen­sive dis­trac­tion from the major invest­ment need­ed for a rad­i­cal tran­si­tion to a safe and sus­tain­able low-car­bon future and green indus­try, based on more mod­est con­sump­tion, ener­gy effi­cien­cy and con­ser­va­tion, and renew­able and decen­tralised ener­gy.”

Mell Har­ri­son, 38, East­ern Region CND’s cam­paigns offi­cer, who lives near Sizewell nuclear pow­er sta­tion in Suf­folk, said: “It is frus­trat­ing that we are not includ­ed in the talks hap­pen­ing at the con­fer­ence, espe­cial­ly as the ener­gy needs of the UK con­cerns us all. A seat at the con­fer­ence costs over £1300 and the future costs if new nuclear goes ahead are far greater. Sure­ly now it is time for the nuclear indus­try to be open and account­able? But yet again as we have seen time and time again, all the ‘real’ talk goes on behind closed doors.’ Mell added ’ This protest is just the start- we need real solu­tions to cli­mate change — not nuclear green wash.’

Con­tact: vd2012-npp [at] yahoo.co.uk or mell­c­n­deast [at] cnduk.org
Tel: 07760 161 755 or 07506 234 091
http://stopnuclearpower.blogspot.com
Twit­ter: http://twitter.com/nukepeoplepower

Ravenstruther coal rail terminal shut down + Mainshill eviction continues, 3rd day…

A coal ter­mi­nal in South Lanark­shire was brought to a stand­still this morn­ing when a pro­tes­tor locked him­self to a piece of machin­ery.

At 9am this morn­ing (Wed 27th) a man climbed to the top of a dig­ger and locked him­self to it by his leg, effec­tive­ly shut­ting down Raven­struther coal rail ter­mi­nal.

Ravenstruther coal rail terminal shut downA coal ter­mi­nal in South Lanark­shire was brought to a stand­still this morn­ing when a pro­tes­tor locked him­self to a piece of machin­ery.

At 9am this morn­ing (Wed 27th) a man climbed to the top of a dig­ger and locked him­self to it by his leg, effec­tive­ly shut­ting down Raven­struther coal rail ter­mi­nal.

About 15 trucks full of coal are unable to access the ter­mi­nal and have been forced to dump their load, and the coal train that was being loaded has been stopped.

Raven­struther is where coal from the open-cast mines in South Lanark­shire is loaded onto trains and sent south to pow­er sta­tions such as Drax.

An hour after the action start­ed NETCU and 6 police offi­cers arrived.

This action was tak­en in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp which is in the third day of resist­ing evic­tion.

The Scot­tish Gov­ern­ment is approv­ing up to 33 new open cast coal sites. A pro­tes­tor from Main­shill said: “As Cli­mate Chaos grows expo­nen­tial­ly worse, it is becom­ing more and more impor­tant to resist and obstruct the ever enlarg­ing fos­sil fuel indus­try. We will do every­thing in our pow­er to make the extrac­tion, trans­port, and burn­ing of coal as finan­cial­ly unvi­able as pos­si­ble by con­tin­u­ing to fight against it at every step of the way, from the mines to the pow­er sta­tions.”

——–
Resisting bailiffs climbing into top branches at Mainshill
Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp:

The evic­tion is still ongo­ing. The site perime­ter can­not be secured so there is still mas­sive scope for resist­ing this evic­tion and Scot­tish Coals activ­i­ties gen­er­al­ly, get your­self up to Lanark­shire and get stuck in. Four peo­ple were arrest­ed from the camp this morn­ing (27th).

More infor­ma­tion about the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp and how to get there is avail­able at www.mainshill.noflag.org.uk

First Nation pushes back against ‘Ring of Fire’ mine, rail project

26th Jan­u­ary 2010
A Thun­der Bay min­er­al sym­po­sium of the Matawa First Nations trib­al coun­cil in Feb­ru­ary could be a rau­cous affair.

Matawa camp26th Jan­u­ary 2010
A Thun­der Bay min­er­al sym­po­sium of the Matawa First Nations trib­al coun­cil in Feb­ru­ary could be a rau­cous affair.

The aggres­sive push by Cliffs Nat­ur­al Resources and Cana­da Chrome to devel­op a $1.5 bil­lion chromite deposit in the James Bay ‘Ring of Fire’ and ore haul rail­road has drawn heat from one remote com­mu­ni­ty.

Last week about 15 pro­test­ers from Marten Falls First Nation pitched tents last week at Kop­per and McFauld’s Lakes near the explo­ration camps of Noront Resources and Freewest Resources.

“We’re pre­pared to stay there as long as pos­si­ble,” said Chief Eli Moo­nias, who isn’t pleased that Cana­da Chrome has staked min­er­al claims along a 350-kilo­me­tre long pro­posed rail cor­ri­dor between McFauld’s Lake and the Town of Naki­na in north­west­ern, Ontario.

He’s angry the stak­ing was done in advance of the imple­men­ta­tion of the Ontar­i­o’s Far North Plan­ning Act and wants North­ern Devel­op­ment, Mines and Forestry Min­is­ter Michael Grav­elle to “claw back” those claims.

Moo­nias said his com­mu­ni­ty of 300 was not con­sult­ed by Cana­da Chrome and claims the McFauld’s Lake deposits and most of the pro­posed rail­road cor­ri­dor falls with­in Marten Falls’ tra­di­tion­al ter­ri­to­ry.

We don’t like this under­hand­ed busi­ness,” said Moo­nias. “They should have come to the com­mu­ni­ty to do that.”

Moo­nias said he told min­istry offi­cials in Decem­ber he want­ed a com­mu­ni­ty-based land use plan that will include their 10-year-old strat­e­gy for an access road run­ning into the James Bay Low­lands and even­tu­al­ly link­ing up with Attawapiskat on the coast.

Moo­nias said his com­mu­ni­ty’s posi­tion is to sup­port the mine pro­vid­ed their cor­ri­dor plan is adopt­ed, but Cana­da Chrome has large­ly ignored this.

He said the min­ing com­pa­nies and Queen’s Park must address a list of con­cerns and wants an agree­ment signed with the min­ing com­pa­nies before the protest camps are pulled out.

Cana­da Chrome, a sub­sidiary of KWG Resources has been deal­ing with the Matawa First Nation, a trib­al coun­cil rep­re­sent­ing nine area com­mu­ni­ties, includ­ing Marten Falls.

But Moo­nias said the coun­cil does­n’t speak for his com­mu­ni­ty.
“They’ve got noth­ing to do with tra­di­tion­al ter­ri­to­ries. What hap­pens there is our busi­ness.”
KWG Resources and Cana­da Chrome pres­i­dent and CEO Frank Smeenk chalked up the protest to an inter­nal squab­ble inside the coun­cil.

“We were giv­en to under­stand that we were to fol­low a pro­to­col by the nine mem­bers of Matawa Coun­cil,” said Smeenk, refer­ring to the Matawa Inter­im Min­er­al Mea­sures pro­to­col. “Now we are to under­stand that’s not nec­es­sar­i­ly the case.”

Moo­nias said he nev­er agreed to any such pro­to­col.

“I nev­er heard of it. I’ve got noth­ing to do with that.”

Smeenk said it’s obvi­ous Marten Falls wants to be con­sult­ed with sep­a­rate­ly.

“Eli’s try­ing to get atten­tion to a cause and one of those is one that pre-dates all of us, a plan for a win­ter road.”

Smeenk said he met Moo­nias in Thun­der Bay this month after hear­ing of the com­mu­ni­ty’s plan to block­ade of airstrips at McFauld’s and Kop­per Lakes.

He said the protest may be a nego­ti­at­ing ploy to force the gov­ern­ment to re-open an ille­gal airstrip in the Ring of Fire along the Muketei Riv­er closed down last Novem­ber by the Min­istry of Nat­ur­al Resources.

Marten Falls had part­nered with Wilder­ness North Air to pro­vide a logis­tic sup­port base for the explo­ration efforts.

The MNR said the devel­op­ment of this airstrip was not autho­rized and a war­rant was autho­rized under the Pub­lic Lands Act pro­hibit­ing the use and occu­pa­tion of this airstrip. A restric­tion remains in place until a final deci­sion is made by the MNR regard­ing an ongo­ing inves­ti­ga­tion and review of the airstrip pro­pos­al.

Smeenk said his com­pa­ny has no objec­tions to the airstrip being per­mit­ted for use.

Cana­da Chrome’s pro­posed rail route fol­lows glac­i­er eskers that run north-south through the swampy ter­rain between Naki­na and McFauld’s Lake.

“If God had a place for a rail­road to go that would be it,” said Smeenk.

With an adjoin­ing ser­vice road, Smeenk said near­by com­mu­ni­ties could access it with branch roads as well as run fibre optics and pow­er lines.

Moo­nias said he met pri­vate­ly with Smeenk in Thun­der Bay before Christ­mas to dis­cuss the trans­porta­tion cor­ri­dor and said the com­pa­ny pres­i­dent “made some over­tures.”

Last Sep­tem­ber, Marten Falls signed a com­pen­sa­tion agree­ment with Noront Resources for past explo­ration work already per­formed at their explo­ration camp. Moo­nias said it amount­ed to $2 per metre for holes already drilled, but added no agree­ments for future explo­ration work has been signed with Noront or any oth­er com­pa­ny.

Noront said in a Jan. 18 statement,despite the incon­ve­nience of a “logis­tics halt” at their ice airstrip” it was sup­port­ing the actions of Marten Falls.

Moo­nias said a meet­ing is sched­uled next week with gov­ern­ment offi­cials and some min­ing play­ers in Marten Falls.

He wants the min­ing com­pa­nies to use their win­ter toll roads to haul fuel and bulk items, and for the gov­ern­ment to allow them to fin­ish con­struc­tion of an airstrip to cre­ate a ser­vice hub for McFauld’s Lake.

“We’re say­ing let’s build this strip where the ground is good for the envi­ron­ment and let us build the camps there and do busi­ness.”

Moo­nias said some com­pa­nies had been land­ing on the par­tial­ly-com­plet­ed airstrip last fall. “We told the MNR about it and they shut it down. We’re try­ing to fin­ish that so we can start build­ing our camps there to do busi­ness.”
He also wants jobs and con­tracts to ser­vice these camps instead of the com­pa­nies bring­ing in out­side sup­pli­ers and sup­port per­son­nel.

Moo­nias also wants an envi­ron­men­tal clean-up and com­pen­sa­tion at McFauld’s Lake for raw sewage, grey water, fuel and chem­i­cal spills dumped by explo­ration com­pa­nies in the sum­mer of 2007.

Smeenk expressed con­fi­dence the issue could be resolved to ben­e­fit all and does­n’t sus­pect the protest will raise any red flags with Cliffs Nat­ur­al Resources.

“The First Nations just want to fig­ure out how to get our atten­tion.”

He said it may involve com­mu­ni­ty own­er­ship of the enter­prise and did­n’t rule out a First Nation equi­ty stake in the project.

When asked if the Ontario gov­ern­ment was active­ly involved help­ing in medi­at­ing the dis­pute, Smeenk paused and said he found he found MNDMF and MNR staff to be “exceed­ing­ly help­ful and care­ful of every­one’s rights.”

Anne-Marie Flana­gan, spokes­woman for Michael Grav­elle, said the min­istry is talk­ing with all the par­ties toward resolv­ing a “com­pli­cat­ed sit­u­a­tion” that involves the MNR, the air strip and how peo­ple in the Far North can all ben­e­fit.

“We’re look­ing into the whole sit­u­a­tion because this is some­thing that’s going to have to be sort­ed out big time and rather quick­ly when you look at what Cliffs is doing.

“There has to be rea­son­able deci­sions by the First Nation about what they want to go ahead with and how they want to do it.”

Grav­elle is sched­uled to deliv­er a speech Feb. 10 at the sym­po­sium.

Ontar­i­o’s new­ly revised Min­ing Act includes a dis­pute res­o­lu­tion mech­a­nism for issues between First Nations and min­ing com­pa­nies, but the details of how it is sup­posed to work has yet to be defined since the gov­ern­ment is con­duct­ing anoth­er round of pub­lic con­sul­ta­tion.