Mainshill Solidarity Camp latest

11th July 2009
We’ve made it to the weekend without being evicted and we’ve been rebuilding the defences which were dismantled by Scottish Coal and the police. We’ve been inventing new creative fortifications to dupe the cops and stop the destruction of Mainshill. The support from the local community has continued to be fantastic – we’d like to say a big thank you.

Mainshill defencesMainshill info board11th July 2009
We’ve made it to the weekend without being evicted and we’ve been rebuilding the defences which were dismantled by Scottish Coal and the police. We’ve been inventing new creative fortifications to dupe the cops and stop the destruction of Mainshill. The support from the local community has continued to be fantastic – we’d like to say a big thank you.

Now is the time to come to Mainshill – we need to be prepared for eviction and need more people to come and stay in our treehouses. Here are some pics from the last couple of days – there’s something for everyone!

Also, we’re celebrating our one month birthday on Sunday 19th July with another community picnic – all are welcome.

Update from Rossport Solidarity Camp

10th July 09
Rossport Solidarity Camp remains strong at Glengad with people taking action and planning for ongoing resistance to Shell’s gas pipeline in Erris, both offshore and onshore.

Rossport Solidarity Camp10th July 09
Rossport Solidarity Camp remains strong at Glengad with people taking action and planning for ongoing resistance to Shell’s gas pipeline in Erris, both offshore and onshore.

A recent national meeting of Shell to Sea groups at the camp last weekend saw people motivated to continue with the fight. The camp on the clifftops at Glengad will continue over the coming months and, despite heavy-handed bail conditions which have banned people from Mayo, a steady stream of visitors to the camp keeps spirits high.

The focal point of the camp for a long time has been the arrival of the pipe-laying ship the Solitaire. The ship is now far out into the bay laying pipeline on its way to the well-head. The navy have also left the bay, still leaving a heavy security presence guarding the dredgers as they back-fill over the pipe. The most recent action has focused on the supply ships which go out regularly from Killlibegs in Donegal, to support the Solitaire and the well head construction.

Attention is now also turning to the onshore section of the pipeline which would run from Broadhaven bay for 9km to the refinery under construction at Bellenaboy. Shell have yet to be granted planning permission, although a decision is expected soon. Granting permission would open the way for drilling and construction work across pristine river estuary, peat bogland and heavily contested farmland and commonage.

This remains a very important time to come to the camp to take action against the building of the pipeline at all stages. There are many and varied ways to make a significant contribution. Support is invaluable to sustain the solidarity camp, which has been a target for legal repression, and the local community who have also recently faced traumatic acts of violence.

Whether it is for a few days or a few weeks this summer come and be in this beautiful place and join the solidarity camp in a fight against corporate greed, the arrogance of the state, and environmental and community devastation.

Scottish Coal break through barricades at Mainshill Solidarity Camp with support

8th July 2009
Scottish Coal break through barricades at Mainshill Solidarity Camp with support from Police

8th July 2009
Scottish Coal break through barricades at Mainshill Solidarity Camp with support from Police

The residents of the Mainshill Solidarity Camp (1) were rudely awoken this morning at around 06.30am by members of Strathclyde police who forced their way on to the site. Local police, accompanied by the V division from Glasgow, representatives from Scottish Coal and Apex workers (2) entered the site using a JCB to demolish barricades that had been built by the occupiers. Flat-bed lorries were then brought on site in order to remove all machinery and property of Apex and Scottish Coal including two drilling rigs, a dump truck and two portacabins. More than 5 vans of police officers waited down the A70 to offer reinforcement.

The site near Douglas in South Lanarkshire is one of 20 new open cast coal mines to have been granted planning permission in Scotland, and the development of the Mainshill site will make South Lanarkshire one of the most heavily mined areas of Europe. Scottish Coal’s plans to mine 1.7 million tons of coal from Mainshill makes a mockery of the local community’s objections to the mine and the Scottish Government’s efforts to tackle climate change (3). Lord Home, the landowner who is set to make a tidy profit from the lease of is land to Scottish Coal, is currently being investigated by the FBI and UK authorities for fraud (4).

Anna Key of the camp said “Apex and Scottish Coal have taken this action because they realise that we’re here to stay. We have prevented Apex from undertaking bore sample drilling work for 3 weeks because this work is essential to the development of the mine which the local community does not want and which will have a devastating environmental impact. Coming onto site with such force demonstrates their desperation and the fact that we have been effective in preventing work from happening. They may have their machines but we’re staying here until we win.”

The use of heavy machinery by police this morning was highly irresponsible since tunnels have been dug which can be occupied to defend the site. Luckily nobody was hurt on this occasion but the Chief Inspector has agreed in principle to a safety meeting with the occupiers who have built up multiple defences including tree houses, walkways and nets in the trees. Nick Fuery one of the occupiers, said the camp was defiant: “We’ll be awaiting the arrival of the National Eviction Team by rebuilding barricades and digging in. The residents of Douglas deserve better than Scottish Coal’s plans for the area and we will continue to resist this environmental and social injustice alongside the community for as long as it takes.”

Update (18:15): Drilling has restarted on the site, with security and fencing around the rig. The Scottish coal technical director is endangering the lives of tunnellers. People still needed to come and stop the illegal work!

For interviews on site please ring: 07806926040
For more information please see www.mainshill.noflag.org.uk and http://coalactionedinburgh.noflag.org.uk/

Notes to Editors:

(1) The Mainshill Solidarity Camp has been occupying Mainshill Woods since 18/6/09 in order to resist Scottish Coal’s plans to develop a new open cast coal mine.
(2) Apex, a Wales-based company, has been contracted by Scottish Coal to carry out bore sample drilling work on the site in order to assess where the coal seams lie.
(3) The plans for Mainshill received over 700 formal objections by local residents from a population of 1000. These objections have been farcically dismissed and disregarded. Recent research suggests that mining coal using the open cast method may in fact produce even more carbon emissions than the burning of coal. See http://coalactionedinburgh.noflag.org.uk/?p=386
(4) See http://coalactionedinburgh.noflag.org.uk/?p=542 for more information about the allegations of fraud committed by Lord Home.

Pitched battles over open refuse dump outside Athens

8th July

Pitched battles between locals of Grammatico, outside Athens, and riot police forces over the construction of an open refuse damp with locals digging trenches, building barricades and torching bulldozers; scores have been wounded as battles continue amidst spreading fires.

8th July

Pitched battles between locals of Grammatico, outside Athens, and riot police forces over the construction of an open refuse damp with locals digging trenches, building barricades and torching bulldozers; scores have been wounded as battles continue amidst spreading fires.

More than 1500 locals of the Black Mountain village of Grammatico, outside Athens, have erected barricades and dug trenches in order to stop the beginning of an open refuse damp (XYTA) construction in their area. The locals torched the company’s bulldozers after riot police forces arrested and beat the resisting mayor, refusing to take him to the hospital to treat his wounds.

One of the local council members has been declared: “There are fires everywhere and strong police forces. We are afraid of a massacre. The police is using brutal force and we have scores of wounded citizens. The riot police forces (MAT) have reached our last barricade. If they manage to cross it, then the situation will be out of control. However this will prove hard, as it is our strongest barricade. We have dug the earth planting tractors and bulldozers in it. All the village is here and is ready to fight”. Many people have been arrested during the clashes, and several policemen have been wounded by projectiles. The fire brigade has deployed 3 airplane, 3 helicopters and over 15 fire engines in order to fight the fires caused by the riot police mindless use of tear gas and “blast and flash” grenades and are threatening a children summer camp nearby.

The construction of XYTA around the country has created a chain of violent environmental struggles, whose prototype is Lefkimmi, a Corfu village which has been resisting State plans for 18 months, losing one comrade in the battles with the police.

Strike for Climate Justice! December 11th 2009

Environmental activist & political prisoner Jeff ‘Free’ Luers wrote a prison dispatch in which he made a call out for an International General Strike on December 11 2009 in solidarity with the International Demonstrations on Climate Change during the Copenhagen Climate Summit.

Environmental activist & political prisoner Jeff ‘Free’ Luers wrote a prison dispatch in which he made a call out for an International General Strike on December 11 2009 in solidarity with the International Demonstrations on Climate Change during the Copenhagen Climate Summit.

Around the world people are beginning to feel the heat of global warming, entire nations to tiny communities are suffering the effects of climate change.

Earlier this year deadly wildfires raged across a drought stricken Australia where the continent continues to suffer through one of the worst droughts in its history. In South America, the accelerated melting of Andean glaciers is threatening water supplies in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. In Tanzania 85% of Mt. Kilimanjaro’s glaciers have already melted, severely affecting the availability of water in this African nation. A recent study by the National Center for Atmospheric Research (based in Colorado, USA) has found that global warming has had a much more significant and damaging impact on the world’s rivers than previously realized. The discovery now underscores a growing threat to food and water supplies for millions of people living in some of the world’s poorest regions. Meanwhile an Oxfam report has warned that by 2015 the number of people affected by climate related crises will raise by 54% to 375 million people.

The impact of global warming will not just be felt by the poorer nations who are less able to respond to the crisis. In March some of the world’s top climate scientists warned the U.S. Congresss that severe drought in the western portion of the United States could make tracts of land from California to Oklahoma a waste land, with heat waves in northern cities that could make life impossible.

Recent studies in the Arctic have shown that the melting of Arctic ice is happening faster than any climate models predicted. The rapid melt is threatening to leave the Arctic ice free as early as 2013. The looming crisis is threatening to create millions of climate refugees. As people flee drought plagued regions in search of water, others retreat from coastal regions in order to escape rising flood waters. The impending catastrophe demands immediate action on the part of both industrial and developing countries. However, we need more than just political action, the world needs action from the carbon emitting industries themselves.

Yet, despite the ever growing wealth of scientific evidence that the planet is warming at a disastrous rate due to human activity, industry continues to resist caps on CO2 emmissions. This resistance by the most powerful multinationals is making strict government action and regulation on climate change difficult. Particularly for leaders who fear losing corporate support and money.

The state of California, however, is demonstrating that combating climate change is not only necessary but can be good for the economy. If California were to be ranked as a nation it would be the 7th largest economy in the world. The state, under Governor Schwarzenegger, has signed laws making it mandatory to reduce overall greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, and to 85% of 1990 levels by 2050. More over, these cuts are expected to create an estimated one million jobs.

While most of the world’s governments struggle with what, if any, demands to make toward forcing immediate and strict reductions in carbon emissions, the world’s poor continue to suffer the effects of a warming world. Even the wealthiest nations are unable to avoid the heat, and many industrial countries are beginning to suffer its effects. In early May scientists at Oxford University concluded a study that revealed the world has already burned half of the carbon necessary to bring about a catastrophic rise of 2 degrees celsius (3.6 F) in average global temperature. At this temperature nearly half of the world’s plants and animals will be threatened by extinction. The scientists say that half a trillion tonnes of carbon have been consumed since the Industrial Revolution. In order to avoid a 2 degree celsius rise in temperature, the total amount of carbon burned must be kept below one trillion tonnes. At current rates of consumption that figure will be reached in forty years. Myles Allen, the climate scientist who led the study, had this to say about the threat of climate change. “Mother Nature doesn’t care about dates. To avoid dangerous climate change we will have to limit the total amount of carbon we inject into the atmosphere, not just the emission rate in any given year.”

The world needs to begin the shift toward a non-carbon based economy. Scientists in every nation have reached the same conclusion and are warning that we must take action now to reduce CO2 emissions and invest in clean energy if we are to prevent a nearing global environmental crisis. In nations around the globe the public have demanded action on climate change. Yet, all too often their voices go unheard. There is a growing campaign to change that; reaching across borders and beyond political lines and affiliations in an effort to bring those who will be most affected by climate change together in one powerful voice.

In every nation the working class is the beating heart. It is the workers who keep society running smoothly. But, it is the working class and the working poor who will be hit the hardest by a warmer world. Which means we must harness the power at our finger tips and demand immediate action to be taken to curb greenhouse gas emissions. We need climate justice today, not tomorrow. We need deeds and not promises.

On December 11th in response to the international climate talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, we ask that everyone concerned with global warming and climate change to join us in an International General Strike demanding Climate Action. Our work stoppage can have a global impact. Together, in a show of solidarity and unity, we can demonstrate to world leaders that the global consensus is for action to stop climate change. They can not ignore our voices when we strike.

For one day we will shut the system down and demand that our governments work together to act in our best interests. On December 11th Strike for Climate Justice, Demand Action!

www.strikeforclimatejustice.org

Rossport Solidarity activists board supply ship to Solitaire in Killybegs

Today Shell to sea protestors broke through a weak spot in the armada deployed to defend the Solitaire – the supply port in Killybegs. One S2S activist occupied a tyre at side of Shell ship in Killybegs.

Boarded ship activist in tyreToday Shell to sea protestors broke through a weak spot in the armada deployed to defend the Solitaire – the supply port in Killybegs. One S2S activist occupied a tyre at side of Shell ship in Killybegs. The Solitaire whilst being an enormous ship is dependent on a constant flow of ships bringing supplies from Killybegs in Donegal.

This morning seven kayakers paddled out to the ship, the Toisa Independent, which was being loaded with a fresh batch of pipes for the Solitaire. With very little security the seven paddled up to the boat and as we speak one of the Kayakers is blocking the ship from departing after climbing aboard.

After a weekend where the Sunday papers carried on the usual barrage against Shell to Sea with many claiming the campaign to be over Shell to Sea answered back in style today. The past fortnight saw the Erris area occupied by 200 Shell’s private security IRMS, 300 Gardai (including 150 public order units), the navy backed up by a helicopter and an aeroplane. Todays actions have shown the campaign is far from over

This week sees the state harrasment and intimidation of the campaign step up a gear with over two dozen Shell to sea protestors being hauled before the courts on trumped up charges. But the fight continues!

Shell to Sea demonstration6th July 2009
This afternoon seven Shell to Sea activists in kayaks visited the Toisa Independent, which supplies pipe to the Solitaire, a vessel used by Shell to lay the Corrib gas pipeline. The Solitaire, which left Broadhaven Bay (1) yesterday after laying the first section of pipe for the project, has been the target of several actions recently in the continual campaign against Shell. (2) Despite Shell’s increasingly heavy handed response to protests, Shell to Sea activist’s have continued their fight.

Niall Harnett, speaking from the protest in Killybegs today said “We demand that this port stops supporting the Corrib gas project which is destroying the lives of the people in Erris. There has been much misinformation about the Corrib gas pipeline in the media, as campaigners continue to protest in order to bring a halt to this unsafe project which threatens the homes and livelihoods of many in the local area”. The pipeline would carry unprocessed gas across the region to the refinery at Bellanaboy. (4)

Harnett continued “We are also acting in protest against the theft of Ireland’s natural resources. At a time when unemployment levels are set to reach record numbers and the government attacks ordinary people with levies taxes and pay cuts it is obscene that Shell are allowed to steal billions of euro’s of our resources.” (5)

St.John O Donobhain, also on the protest, said. “Shell’s attempts to pretend the Corrib project is a done-deal is misleading. This is project is unjust, illegal, and immoral. It will fail.”

Shell to Sea activists board supply ship to Solitaire in Killibegs

6th July 2009

Shell to Sea demonstration6th July 2009
This afternoon seven Shell to Sea activists in kayaks visited the Toisa Independent, which supplies pipe to the Solitaire, a vessel used by Shell to lay the Corrib gas pipeline. The Solitaire, which left Broadhaven Bay (1) yesterday after laying the first section of pipe for the project, has been the target of several actions recently in the continual campaign against Shell. (2) Despite Shell’s increasingly heavy handed response to protests, Shell to Sea activist’s have continued their fight.

Niall Harnett, speaking from the protest in Killybegs today said “We demand that this port stops supporting the Corrib gas project which is destroying the lives of the people in Erris. There has been much misinformation about the Corrib gas pipeline in the media, as campaigners continue to protest in order to bring a halt to this unsafe project which threatens the homes and livelihoods of many in the local area”. The pipeline would carry unprocessed gas across the region to the refinery at Bellanaboy. (4)

Harnett continued “We are also acting in protest against the theft of Ireland’s natural resources. At a time when unemployment levels are set to reach record numbers and the government attacks ordinary people with levies taxes and pay cuts it is obscene that Shell are allowed to steal billions of euro’s of our resources.” (5)

St.John O Donobhain, also on the protest, said. “Shell’s attempts to pretend the Corrib project is a done-deal is misleading. This is project is unjust, illegal, and immoral. It will fail.”

Notts 114 – 67 cases dropped

6th July

A further 47 cases are continuing and people will be answering bail over the next couple of weeks – it looks as if police are trying to winnow out ‘ringleaders’. So we need to maintain solidarity for people the police are trying to persecute. Updates on the continuing cases and ideas on how people can help will follow once we have a better idea of what the filth are up to.

6th July

A further 47 cases are continuing and people will be answering bail over the next couple of weeks – it looks as if police are trying to winnow out ‘ringleaders’. So we need to maintain solidarity for people the police are trying to persecute. Updates on the continuing cases and ideas on how people can help will follow once we have a better idea of what the filth are up to.

Protest against climate change denier Nigel Lawson on Friday!

Here is the text of a leaflet to be handed out at the venue, St John’s Chapel, St John’s Road. Meet there at 5.30pm (talk starts 6pm).

CLIMATE change is today pretty much universally recognised to be very real and to be very dangerous.

Here is the text of a leaflet to be handed out at the venue, St John’s Chapel, St John’s Road. Meet there at 5.30pm (talk starts 6pm).

CLIMATE change is today pretty much universally recognised to be very real and to be very dangerous.
There are still a few organisations that are holding out against this inconvenient truth in different ways. ExxonMobil, the world’s largest oil company, is continuing to fund researchers who cast doubt on global warming, despite public promises to cut support for climate-change sceptics, reported The Daily Telegraph on July 2.
The British police also continue to treat demanding action on climate change as a crime, brutally attacking protesters whenever they get the chance, such as at Kingsnorth power station last summer and the City of London in April this year.
Lining up beside these forces is Nigel Lawson, invited by Chichester Festivities to put across the views expressed in his book An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming.
So why has a former financial journalist and Chancellor waded into this rather specialist field of debate?
As Graham Steward noted in The Spectator: “Would we take seriously an appraisal of his time as Chancellor of Exchequer written by someone whose only expertise was in oceanography?”
Others found Lawson’s arguments less than convincing.
Robert Watson, the former head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and now chief scientist to the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, accused Lawson of selective quotation and not understanding “the current scientific and economic debate”. He also wrote in a letter to The Telegraph: “Lord Lawson’s perspective that the UK and Europe are over-reacting to the threat of human-induced climate change is substantially wrong and ignores a significant body of scientific, technological and economic evidence.”
Robin McKie in The Guardian wrote of Lawson’s book: “Although it claims to demolish the cause of global warming, it simply piles up scientific howlers… What really grates is Lawson’s conviction that most of the world’s climatologists, meteorologists, atmospheric physicists, Arctic experts, and biologists, as well as several Nobel Prize winners, are all stupid, misguided and wrong in thinking man-made global warming is real…
“It is breathtaking arrogance, to say the least, although Lawson is not alone in displaying it… These Grumpy Old Deniers feel their lifestyles are threatened by greenies and so reject the entire concept of global warming. ‘With the collapse of Marxism, those who dislike capitalism have been obliged to find a new creed,’ says Lawson.’ For many of them, green is the new red.’ In short, global warming is a commie plot.”
It is clear that Lawson’s position on climate change is political rather than scientific in origin. His position is that he accepts the IPCC’s conclusion that we can expect to see a warming of between 3.2ºF (1.8ºC) and 7.2ºF (4ºC) by the end of this century. But he argues that this would not necessarily be the disaster requiring an immediate cut in carbon emissions – just the message that the Big Business polluters want to hear!
This connection is hardly a surprise coming from Lawson. He was a key proponent of the Thatcher Government’s privatization policy. During his tenure at the Department of Energy he set the course for the later privatizations of the gas and electricity industries and on his return to the Treasury he worked closely with the Department of Trade and Industry in privatizing British Airways, British Telecom, and British Gas.
He also has a background in propaganda, having penned a 1972 report on Subversion in British Industry for the right-wing Institute for the Study of Conflict. He has attended Bilderberg conferences alongside leading bankers and other rulers of the capitalist world and is a non-executive director of N M Rothschild & Sons as well as chairman of the Central European Trust which boasts of co-managing “the largest private equity fund in Central Europe” and chairman of Oxford Investment Partners, which proposes a “multi-asset, unconstrained, investment approach.”
Lawson and the world he represents object to any challenge to the power of high finance and the unsustainable greed of global capitalism – his motives in launching his crusade on climate change are dubious to say the least.
This is a man with an agenda and you can be sure that the interests of the environment and humanity do not feature on it.

Useful links:
www.transitionchichester.org
www.climatecamp.org.uk
www.earthfirst.org.uk
www.greenpeace.org.uk
www.greenpartywestsussex.co.uk
www.schnews.org.uk
www.indymedia.org.uk
www.resurgence.org
www.eco-action.org/porkbolter

Drax 29 defendants found guilty

News is being tweeted out of court – all defendants found guilty of obstruction of the train.
Judge has stated that he will be imposing community service type punishments and no prison time.
Defendants liable for costs and compensation.

Drax 29 shovelling coalNews is being tweeted out of court – all defendants found guilty of obstruction of the train.
Judge has stated that he will be imposing community service type punishments and no prison time.
Defendants liable for costs and compensation.

The 22 were acquitted of actually stopping the train, after evidence that no one knew which of them had donned fake railwaymen’s uniforms and used red flags to bring it to a halt (2 ill & 5 earlier admitted guilt).

A defendant’s summing up (3rd July):

“Members of the jury.

I’m going to try to summarise why we feel that we are not guilty, why we feel that what we did was right, despite the very proper laws against obstructing trains, why we feel that it was the wrong decision of the Crown Prosecution Service to prosecute us in this case, and why we don’t feel that we are guilty of a crime.

I want to start by responding to your request for clarification yesterday about “lawful excuse”. His honour may say [in his summing up] that it’s true that there are ways in law to make space for circumstances, to allow a bigger picture to be considered.

These ways can have different names for different offences — so for example “lawful excuse”, which you asked about yesterday, applies only to the charge of criminal damage. For example, last September, a jury in Kent found six protesters not guilty of committing £30,000 worth of criminal damage to Kingsnorth coal-fired power station, since the group were acting to prevent a greater crime. Those on trial did not disagree that criminal damage is a crime, just that, in certain circumstances, it may be necessary and proportionate to cause some damage to prevent a great crime. That jury agreed.

His honour may explain that there is a legal defence of “necessity”, that applies to most laws, and that it was on the basis of “necessity” — the fact that we believed our actions were going to save lives and that we had to act — that we prepared a legal defence before this trial. Along with many legal professionals we were very disappointed by his honour’s decision prior to the trial that this defence was not available to us in law. Nonetheless we decided not to appeal against it. We felt that you the jury would be free to decide on the facts of a case as you find them – and not just the ones his honour tells you are relevant.

It’s up to you to decide whether what we did was necessary. I would like to emphasise to you that we believed and we still believe that it was urgently necessary to do what we did, and proportionate to the scale of the problem, that the consequences of that train taking coal into Drax are so serious that any reasonable person would understand our reasons for stopping it. To help explain why we were so sure of the links between Drax’s activities and deaths around the world we had expert witnesses lined up to talk to you about the immediate and ongoing harm that Drax’s emissions cause. However from what evidence we have been able to get across to you, with his honour’s indulgence, we hope that you can see that these facts speak for themselves, and our actions, though harmful, were indeed necessary to try to stop a greater harm. And if you agree with that then you still have a legal right – as the jury – to find us not guilty.

You’ve heard it said already I think, that the judge decides about the law, but the jury decide about the facts. What does that mean? It means you the jury can decide as you see fit. You the jury have a constitutional right to follow your own judgement and not necessarily follow the judge’s directions to find us guilty. In other words, you get to make the final decision. In law this principle is called the jury’s power of nullification, and it’s been a right that has been regularly used over the years when juries have felt the law has been applied harshly, or inappropriately, or unjustly, or incorrectly.

Perhaps I can explain this with a quote from a very senior judge, Lord Denning. He said:

“This principle was established as long ago as 1670 in a celebrated case of the Quakers, William Penn and William Mead. All that they had done was to preach in London on a Sunday afternoon. They were charged with causing an unlawful and tumultuous assembly there. The judge directed the jury to find the Quakers guilty, but they refused. The Jury said Penn was guilty of preaching, but not of unlawful assembly. The Judge refused to accept this verdict. He threatened them with all sorts of pains and punishments. He kept them ‘all night without meat, drink, fire, or other accommodation: they had not so much as a chamber pot, though desired’. They still refused to find the Quakers guilty of an unlawful assembly. He kept them another night and still they refused. He then commanded each to answer to his name and give his verdict separately. Each gave his verdict ‘Not Guilty’. For this the judge fined them 40 marks apiece and cast them into prison until it was paid. One of them Edward Bushell, thereupon brought his (case) before the Court of the King’s Bench. It was there held that no judge had any right to imprison a juryman for finding against his direction on a point of law; for the judge could never direct what the law was without knowing the facts, and of the facts the jury were the sole judge. The jury were thereupon set free.”

This was affirmed as recently as 2005, in relation to the case of Wang, where a committee of Law Lords in the highest court in the land, the House of Lords, concluded that: “there are no circumstances in which a judge is entitled to direct a jury to return a verdict of guilty”. So you do have that right to decide for yourselves. And unlike in 1670, his honour won’t be able to fine you, or put you in prison for making what he sees as the wrong decision.

There have been many cases over the years where juries have decided, on reflecting more broadly, to find people not guilty despite directions from the judge. For example, the case of Zelter and others who were accused of damage to an aircraft about to be used for bombing civilians. In all of these and others the judge said that the defendants admitted the offence and so must be found guilty. But the jury chose to look outside the limited view of the court room, and to find them not guilty.

The freedom that you have is what enables the law, where necessary, to move forward. It is what allows you to look beyond the confines of this court to the wider world, and to make a judgement based not just on law, but to make a judgement based on justice. Justice is the force that underpins and breathes life into the law, and it is your role as the jury to see that justice as you see it is done.

We all know that times change, and what was acceptable in one era may not be acceptable in another. You have heard of how it was once legal to own other people, how it was illegal for women to vote. Well one way or another we are going to have to stop burning coal and move on from the fossil fuel era. And that means that the law will eventually have to change and acknowledge the harm that carbon emissions do to all of us, by making them illegal. The only question is whether the law will catch up in time for there to be anything left to protect.

We are not trying to tell you how to decide. We are only trying to say that it is up to you, and we are grateful for that.

I want you to think back to that situation of there being a person on the tracks ahead of that train going on its way to Drax. Members of the Jury, it may sound like a strange thing to say but in truth there is a person on the branch line to Drax. The prosecution have not challenged the facts we presented to you on oath about the consequences of burning coal at Drax. 180 human lives lost every year, species lost forever. There is a direct, unequivocal, proven link between the emissions of carbon dioxide at this power station and the appalling consequences of climate change. That many of those consequences impact on the poor of other nations or people in Hull we don’t know and should not in any way negate the reality of this suffering. We got on that train to stop those emissions, because all other methods in our democracy were failing. Just because we don’t know the name of the person on the tracks or where they live or the exact time and day of their dying, does not in our view mean they are less worthy of protection.

We don’t dispute that there’s a law against obstructing trains. We don’t dispute that obstructing trains is a crime and should continue to be a crime. We just argue that in this case, we should not be found guilty of a crime for trying to block this train on its way to Drax.

On Tuesday the prosecution argued that what we did was quite simply a crime, and as a result we should be found guilty. They were trying to suggest that if you find us not guilty, the whole world would fall apart. We argue that the more likely route to the whole world falling apart is if we continue burning coal in the enormous quantities that it is being burnt at Drax.

His honour may say that we have been telling you stories, that we are trying to introduce emotions into the trial to distort the evidence. But we have been telling you the facts. If those facts move you, that’s because they are moving, and they are what moved us to do what we did.

We are happy to be judged by you, the jury.

Thank you for taking the time to listen to us.”