Sankofa Foundation in Crisis & ASBO social centre disintegration

Amidst the recent disintegration of the ASBO project the Sankofa Foundation has been suffering and surviving, but now the end may be in sight for our Burns Street office.

Sankofa therapist Miriam Hollis recently wrote this message asking for help, which can also be read on the Sankofa blog – sankofafoundation.blogspot.com

Amidst the recent disintegration of the ASBO project the Sankofa Foundation has been suffering and surviving, but now the end may be in sight for our Burns Street office.

Sankofa therapist Miriam Hollis recently wrote this message asking for help, which can also be read on the Sankofa blog – sankofafoundation.blogspot.com

The Sankofa Foundation and impact of vandalism in the immediate short term to the survival of the project

www.sankofafoundation.org.uk

The Sankofa Foundation is a psychotherapeutic service for seekers of asylum and their families, refugees and those granted humanitarian protection. We are based in Nottingham and take referrals from Nottingham, Derby, Leicester and South Yorkshire. In fact, if we have the capacity, we won’t turn anyone away. We are a not for profit service and we do not receive any state or charitable funding. We offer appointments to anyone who is suffering from trauma arising from experiences of torture, imprisonment, violence, witnessing of violence or sexual assault in their country of origin. We also offer support to people suffering from trauma arising from the process of asylum and destitution. Our services are free at the point of delivery and we rely on donations from supporters of The Sankofa Foundation.

History:

Sankofa arose out of another project which was accessed by young people seeking asylum and who were without their families ( Unaccompanied Minors). Due to unexpected funding cuts to the provision of a service to these young people, the decision was made to continue to offer psychotherapy to those young people who were in critical need. Without funding or a base, social services in Nottingham offered a room for meeting with their own referrals. The service continued and was based in the offices of social services over three days a week for over a year. Efforts were made to move towards charitable status. However, when Sankofa became aware that the Local Authority in Nottingham were not complying with the decision in the Hillingdon case 2003, Sankofa needed to relocate in order to support young people to access appropriate guidance and legal advice in pursuit of their rights under the law. Pursuit of charitable status was set aside in order to meet the needs of this very busy time.

Social activists had taken the occupancy of a disused local authority building. Previously, the building, which had been three large Victorian three storey terraces with shared courtyard, had been divided into flats and occupied by tenants of the local authority. However, the buildings had been unused for over eight years, apart from casual use on a regular basis by people with serious drugs habits, and women sex workers. Local residents were upset by what was happening in their neighbourhood and supported the occupation of the buildings by social activists who repaired windows and floors, painted and furnished and set up projects very quickly which benefitted the local area. Within a short amount of time the building, which had been deteriorating fast ( as documented by freelance photographic journalist, Tash) was looking occupied, the gardens were tidied, and the uninspiring back yard was greening up with bath tubs and containers full of herbs and tomatoes, which nasturtiums tumbling out of them in full colour in the summer. A Community Centre was established ( and entered in the Directory of Community Centres), and within the Community Centre, a free shop was opened, inviting donations of useable goods and clothing which were available free to anyone who needed them. A Community lending Library was opened, an internet cafe, a bicycle maintenance workshop, a community arts room with regular activities for children, and a free Community meal once a week for anyone who needed a hot meal ( vegetables donated from local greengrocers).

Into this busy and engaged space, Sankofa was offered a base. Encouraged to approach the Community by Bill Walton of NNRF Destitution Group, our original room was in a disused ground floor flat, and shared with the Community Printworks who had equipment in the kitchen. We had no glass in the windows and only one room was useable due to problems with flooring in an adjacent room. A team worked long into the nights to glaze the windows, fix the flooring and decorate. With furniture obtained through the freecycle network and a computer donated from friends in other counselling services, within a week, Sankofas new therapy room was hosting a meeting which was to have an impact on the provision for unaccompanied asylum seeking children in Nottingham. The Refugee Council (GB) Childrens Panel, the Co-Ordinator of the asylum Project at the Childrens Legal Centre (University of Essex), National Youth Advocacy Service (NYAS) and 23 young people seeking asylum and in the care of the local authority ( with more popping in and out throughout the day) met to discuss the provision made for them in the area. As a result, The Refugee Council, the Childrens Legal Centre, and a local Family Law Solicitor took instructions from many children to demand the right to clothing allowances, better provision in accommodation, and the instigation of care plans. The co-ordinator of the Childrens Legal Centre (asylum project), now the Policy Advisor to the Childrens ‘ Commissioner on children seeking asylum, who was due to spend only one day in Nottingham, worked late into the night and throughout the next day taking statements from children. A year later the Refugee Council Childrens’ Panel had set up a partnership arrangement with the Sankofa Foundation to provide a monthly surgery in Nottingham for minors seeking asylum who had been unable to access care. Although appointments were by arrangement the surgeries were always oversubscribed. NYAS set up and gained funding for a temporary (nine months) post for a worker to write with young people, a survival guide to Nottingham. This guide was to assist young people gain access to support in Nottingham uip to the age of eighteen years, and for the immediate period after this. The appointee undertook the NYAS training for working with young people and has been able to go on to offer a service at NNRF once a week for young people. The Local Authority has made changed to some of their provision and young people became eligible for ongoing care. Although not all the problems were solved by any means, young people seeking asylum in Nottingham benefitted from being heard constructively, and a message has gone out to young people in Nottingham that they have rights and they can have their rights asserted by agencies in Nottingham.

Sankofa continued with the work of meeting individuals for therapy. However, as a member of both the Person Centred Counsellors and Psychotherapists for Social Change, and Psychotherapists and Counsellors for Social Change, we acknowledge that therapists regularly hear stories from disadvantaged, alienated and disempowered people within the Community. Sankofa Foundation is committed to, and active in, ongoing debates within therapy about the ground between confidentiality and using our voice to denounce the inequalities within society that contribute to injustice and therefore stress and mental health problems. We take more and more referrals from GPs who are seeing destitute seekers of asylum in their surgeries, whose mental health problems are exacerbated by the lack of care available to people in this situation.

Sankofa became committed to recycling bedding useful to seekers of asylum made destitute. Often bedding would be made available to seekers of asylum who had arrived in the City at the weekend when other offices were closed. Local students in the area annually seemed to be in a hurry to bin all the household goods accumulated during their studies in the City. Annually the area around the Sankofa office became a rich source of items useful to our client group. We obtained a washing machine which allowed destitute clients to wash their clothing and take newer clothing from our store cupboards. Bedding became available in vast amounts, as did cooking equipment and sundry furniture. We were able to support people in makeshift accommodation who had no furniture or bedding.

Many of our clients have been supported to return to solicitors with reports from Sankofa, enhanced by the hours of research that post graduate students have put into assisting people to find evidence in support of their fresh applications for asylum. Sankofa has reached out to organisation in Iraq and Germany for assistance in gathering primary evidence in support of clients, with German NGOs using their contacts within countries to make enquiries on our behalf. We don’t give legal advice but we do walk beside clients in their quest for support in obtaining information and evidence, helping them to learn the skills necessary, encouraging confidence and ultimately doing the research on behalf of those too debilitated by the process of asylum to try. Of clients who have returned to their country of origin, whether voluntarily or assisted(!) we have endeavoured to stay in touch. We speak with clients returned to Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, Ethiopian. (We have concerns about the quality of commitment from agencies supporting returns and are gathering evidence in support of our concerns.)

A regular weekly film night was held for young people seeking asylum. Films were selected by the audience from a range of films representative of, or made in, or by film directors from, the countries of origin of the audience. In the afternoon of the show, a group of young people would go shopping for ingredients to create a meal which was shared with the rest of the audience on arrival. As the film was shown, fruit and nuts were shared around the room. At the end of the showing young people would share their memories and their feelings about their country of origin and the life that they have left behind, the people that they miss, and the heartache of their lives in their country. These thoughts and feelings were sensitively listened to and shared with audience members from the host community. With these film nights came new and deeper understandings and bridges between people were built. One of the audience on one occasion was the neice of a Kurdish film director, Karzan Sherabayani. (Within a year we assisted Karzan to show his new documentary about Kirkuk at the Broadway cinema, and to host an event at Robinhood Chase with guests Shano dance Company – a Kurdish dance company in the UK who had previously performed at the Edinburgh festival).

It wasn’t long before the Community Print works relocated to the Sumac Centre and Sankofa was fully using the whole space of the original flat. On occasions when our clients were detained, groups of people would collect to run campaigns to prevent the removal of our clients and to help them to get legal advice. There have been many tense and heart warming moments in the anti deportation activities emanating from the office.

Current Crisis

After two years at the Community Centre we must leave. Many of the original social activists have moved on to other projects and Sankofa has remained, actively responding to the therapeutic needs of the asylum seeking community in Nottingham.

It is with heavy hearts that we are now looking urgently for a place to be. Sankofa has been the target of harassment and violent attacks for a year. With the first attack in the summer of last year, , and this year on five separate occasions within a month. The attacks are so vicious and without restraint that it is not possible to attempt to repair. On each occasion doors have been forced and research papers and folders strewn around, computers damaged and made unusable. Refugees and supporters of Sankofa have worked into the night on each occasion to secure the premises for the next day to ensure that client work was not affected. However, the attacks have gained momentum and we have arrived to see the kitchen door so damaged that only the border of the door remained. We have secured inner doors as well as external doors but finally this week, we have arrived to see the back door destroyed again as well as the internal doors, and, more shockingly, the hot water tank ripped out and water gushing all throughout the office and filling up the cellar with nowhere else for the water to go. All the windows have been smashed, and then smashed again. However, the windows and doors on the old Community Centre (unused) and the art room (unused) have remained untouched.

There has been a growing unease about some of the people who have come to occupy the disused premises at the back. On each occasion the police have been called and they are increasingly shocked. Most recently, this week, the police who attended have expressed their own frustration, acknowledging the positive contribution of Sankofa to the area and to the needs of a client group who are increasingly finding it difficult to have therapeutic and health needs met elsewhere. More recently we have observed a small group of men, regulars who frequent the back of the building at night, kicking at the door, running at the door, but the police have not been able to respond quickly enough to make arrests.

At Sankofa we have never had large funding. Our funding base has been relatively small because many donors respond more readily to the immediate material needs of seekers of asylum, particularly when they become destitute. We are such a shoestring operation that where there have been shortfalls in our income and expenditure (on service bills) we have paid the bills ourselves. Our therapeutic skills are provided without fee or salary. Our psychotherapeutic reports to Tribunal and Immigration hearings are commended for their objectivity and thoroughness. Our vision has always been bigger than our budget and we have attempted to deliver a holistic and responsive service regardless of the lack of funding.

Sankofa has been approached on many occasions to write – chapters on therapy with young people seeking asylum, mental health care of asylum seeking women, and more recently for the Journal of Critical Psychology. There simply isn’t the time, because we are running a service across six days in the week, whilst earning a living elsewhere for part of the day. We have been invited to give opinion and to contribute to committee meetings of the House of Commons, and the House of Lords.

At this moment in time we have nowhere to offer sessions next week. The Sankofa Office is damaged beyond repair. We have a waiting list and we are out of funds. Although conversations are taking place next week with a couple of other organisations in the field for very temporary access to space, we urgently need premises and funds to help us to continue the work that we do. We have destitute clients who are struggling to keep going and the devastation of the Sankofa space has been deeply upsetting and disruptive to them. We are trying to continue with house visits – but these necessarily take and mean that we see less people – and by meeting people at NNRF at the destitution group. We have been in discussion with members of Sudanese and Kurdish organisations for a long time about shared spaces and the future vision will be somewhere that we can work together to create family spaces as well as therapeutic spaces within a social action context.

This is an appeal for funds and/or urgent accommodation. Even temporary accommodation will help us to continue in the short term. We also appeal for people with experience of fundraising to help us to continue the work that we do, and to help us to extend our service to those in need. If you would like to talk to us about any aspect of our work please contact us by email Miriam@sankofafoundation.org.uk or by mobile at 07866 733223 as our lanline is not accessible ion the immediate short term.

Thank you ..

Kindest regards,
Miriam Hollis

www.sankofafoundation.org.uk /
sankofafoundation.blogspot.com

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ASBO, The Last Days – for full article & photos, click on this title link

After many meetings and planning, in August 2005, a number of concerned individuals took direct action to squat a large house / block of flats. The place had been empty for the previous seven years and was in a great state of dis-repair.

Because of some bad people that ended up taking over, violently attacking people that tried to stand up to them, the whole project has collapsed. People drifted away being intimidated and at some fear.

There was then an attempt to re-squat the squat, a valiant attempt. But this again was made untenable by the violent activity of only a couple of people that remained there. People being physically attacked and intimidated. The asylum and refugee project that was also housed there was then subjected to numerous break-ins and much damage done to the building, so that they couldn’t remain.

How to Fitwatch

Fitwatch meeting – Saturday 8th March at the LSE (Connaught House, Aldwych) at 2pm. Room H103.

Fitwatch has proved to be a highly effective tactic against surveillance by public order police.

Although really, it is better described as a range of tactics. Some are as simple as taking a picture, or making a note of police numbers. Other tactics are more confrontational and actively prevent the police accumulating the data they use for their ‘preventative’ public order policing. There is a tactic for everyone, and all of them are very effective.

Fitwatch meeting – Saturday 8th March at the LSE (Connaught House, Aldwych) at 2pm. Room H103.

Fitwatch has proved to be a highly effective tactic against surveillance by public order police.

Although really, it is better described as a range of tactics. Some are as simple as taking a picture, or making a note of police numbers. Other tactics are more confrontational and actively prevent the police accumulating the data they use for their ‘preventative’ public order policing. There is a tactic for everyone, and all of them are very effective.

To get involved, you need only bring a camera, placard or banner to your next demo or meeting, and get fitwatching. But you would also be very welcome at the Fitwatch meeting on Saturday so that we can share experiences, develop tactics and create an effective response to FIT and public order policing.

Just as an aside, it seems that even security firms have taken notice. The following testimonials are taken from a Group 4 Securicor briefing, and from the website of the security outfit Inkerman, who make it their business to protect companies from the attention of trouble making protestors. According to Inkerman, we are ‘counter-surveillance’. Sounds posh innit?

8 March 08 – London – The anarchist group, Fitwatch, is arranging a series of meetings that begin in London to discuss the nature of policing at protests and demonstrations. Fitwatch are an active group that prevents Police Forward Intelligence Teams (FIT) from gathering information during protests and demonstrations. Fitwatch insist FIT are an oppressive reflection of the state’s attitude towards protest groups. Fitwatch aim to use the meetings to discuss ongoing tactics and to attract support. The first meeting is to take place at the LSE (Group 4 Securicor)

Another protest group against the use of cameras and surveillance of activists has been established and holds growing weight within activist movements. FITWATCH is a counter-surveillance group, who take photos and try to obtain the personal details and identification numbers of the officers in FIT. Photographs of the officers concerned have been posted on activist websites.”
(Inkerman. See http://www.inkerman.com/static/files/1197479765-theinkermanmonitorecoterror.pdf for their report on ‘eco-terrorism’.)

defycops@yahoo.co.uk
http://www.fitwatch.blogspot.com

Cops use military seige tactics at TAA fundraiser, Brighton.

3.03.2008
A fundraiser for the forthcoming Temporary Autonomous Art project in Brighton was clamped down on heavily on Saturday. Police used violent tactics to attack the building showing there true face yet again. more……..

3.03.2008
A fundraiser for the forthcoming Temporary Autonomous Art project in Brighton was clamped down on heavily on Saturday. Police used violent tactics to attack the building showing there true face yet again. more……..

A fundraiser for the forthcoming Temporary Autonomous Art project in Brighton was clamped down on heavily on Saturday.The gig featured local bands and a sound system in an old supermarket in the city centre.

The police arrived quite early and proceeded to surround the whole building, refusing entry to anyone wishing to enter. This just exacerbated a public order situation on the street which would not have happened if they had left us alone.

Things escalated when, after closing down the entrance we were using, we simply opened another one to allow people to enter the building which we were legally occupying.

Police attacked with pepper spray and dogs after surrounding the whole building with a cordon of vehicles, tape, dog and special ops units. There were several arrests and one person was badly mauled by a police dog and had to go to hospital.

The police then tried to storm the entrance but were held off by hand to hand fighting until we managed to get the door closed and keep them out.

The police then served a section 63 and proceeded to impound living vehicles and equipment. Our legal team think the section 63 was served improperly making the impoundings illegal, so we will be attempting to prosecute.

http://www.subterraneanartbrighton.org/

Camp for Climate Action to target Kingsnorth power station

3.03.2008
Today it was announced that E.ON’s Kingsnorth power station in Kent will be the site of this summer’s Camp for Climate Action, running from 4 th to 11th of August 2008.

Coming on the back of last week’s actions against the proposed third runway at Heathrow, with activists occupying the tailfin of a jet and the roof of the houses of parliament, climate activists promise that 2008 will be “the year of direct action on climate change”.

3.03.2008
Today it was announced that E.ON’s Kingsnorth power station in Kent will be the site of this summer’s Camp for Climate Action, running from 4 th to 11th of August 2008.

Coming on the back of last week’s actions against the proposed third runway at Heathrow, with activists occupying the tailfin of a jet and the roof of the houses of parliament, climate activists promise that 2008 will be “the year of direct action on climate change”.

The protest will begin with a one-day event at Heathrow, the site of the previous year’s camp, before marching across London to Kingsnorth. This is one of eight climate camps targeting coal across the world this summer.

Climate change activists will converge on Kingsnorth power station where owners E.ON plan to build the UK’s first coal fired power station in 30 years. Saturday 9th August has been named a ‘day of mass protest and direct action’ against Kingsnorth to highlight its impact on climate change.

Moving from Heathrow to Kingsnorth highlights government and corporate collusion to expand the fossil fuel economy when the scientific consensus demands the opposite. The camp will bring together thousands of activists for several days of workshops and direct action. The camp will also challenge businesses set to profit from false solutions to climate change such as agrofuels. A day of action targeting the agrofuel industry will be an integral part of the week long camp.

Natasha Edleman said: “Building a new coal-fired power station in the middle of a climate crisis is madness. The science shows that we only have a few years to avert catastrophic climate change. If we let this happen then there are seven more power stations coming. This must be stopped.”

Charlie Owens said: “Biofuels have been proposed as a solution to climate change. But new studies confirm that they are just as dangerous as fossil fuels. And they create the illusion we can carry on as usual. In the end we can only stop climate change if we challenge the growth economy and start putting people and planet first.”

For more information see:

http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/
http://www.StopKingsnorth.org/

* Like Heathrow, Kingsnorth is awaiting the approval of the government. The decision on whether to hold a public inquiry into the power station will be taken by John Hutton, at BERR, in the next six weeks. As with Heathrow, there are accusations of collusion between EON and the government. For more information see: www.greenpeace.org.uk

* Kingsnorth will produce twice as many climate-harming emissions as a third runway at Heathrow. According to the World Development Movement, flights from a third runway at Heathrow will produce as much greenhouse gas as the whole of Kenya.

* If Kingsnorth is built it is likely to open the way to new build coal. Up to seven other similar projects are planned. Growth in coal-power will undermine investment in renewable energy.

* Last year’s camp was on land which is intended for the building of a third runway at Heathrow. The eight-day camp brought together 2000 people on land next to the village of Sipson and shut down BAA’s headquarters for 24 hours. The camp also organised up to 20 smaller actions on other aviation and climate change related targets. There were 70 arrests over the week.

* E.ON has tried to greenwash their plans to build a new plant at Kingsnorth by claiming that it might one day be upgraded to use carbon capture technology. Even by the most optimistic standards, such technology will not be ready until 2020.

* In the weeks before last year’s camp, BAA applied for an injunction to stop the camp taking place. The injunction covered two million members of environmental groups from the RSPB to Greenpeace. The injunction was successfully defeated in the courts.

* In addition to the camp, days of action on climate change are planned for the 1st April (Fossil Fools Day), 1st May (Mayday), 3rd June (highlighting issues to do with food and climate change)

* “Agrofuels” are liquid fuels produced from agricultural crops. These are also referred to as “Biofuels”.

ELF Burn Down Luxury Homes

3.03.2008
Early this morning, at around 4am, three multimillion-dollar model homes in a Seattle suburb were burnt down with messages left by the ELF, “Built Green? Nope black!”, mocking the claims that the homes were environmentally friendly.

3.03.2008
Early this morning, at around 4am, three multimillion-dollar model homes in a Seattle suburb were burnt down with messages left by the ELF, “Built Green? Nope black!”, mocking the claims that the homes were environmentally friendly.

The buildings, originally estimated at $2 million, then re-calculated to be worth $7 million dollars, and were completely destroyed in the fires.

Other messages were spraypainted on homes “Stop Urban Sprawl”; “If you build it we will burn it”; and “Burn the rich.”

A banner was also left saying: “Built green? Nope black! McMansions in RCD’s r not green. ELF”

RCD=rural cluster developments

>>

ELF: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_Liberation_Front

Video: http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/03/03/seattle.fire/#cnnSTCVideo

Sources: http://news.google.co.uk/news?hl=en&tab=wn&ie=UTF-8&ncl=1138828157Seattle houses ELF 2

Japanese Whaling Fleet Confronted By Sea Shepherd + Interview With Nottingham Activist On Board

3.03.2008 – Aboard the M/Y Steve Irwin Southern Oceans —The crew on the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin engaged in a confrontation with the Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru this morning between 0800 and 1000 Hours. The Nisshin Maru cannot outrun the Steve Irwin. After a 12 hour chase the Sea Shepherd ship closed the gap and passed alongside the Nisshin Maru. The crew deployed over two dozen bottles of rotten butter sending a stench throughout the whale killing ship that will remain for days. The crew also threw packets of a slippery chemical onto the deck of the Nisshin Maru. This will make it very difficult to cut up whales. The substance becomes even more slippery with water so it will be difficult to wash it off the decks.

rotten butter throwing Sea Shepherd style3.03.2008 – Aboard the M/Y Steve Irwin Southern Oceans —The crew on the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin engaged in a confrontation with the Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru this morning between 0800 and 1000 Hours. The Nisshin Maru cannot outrun the Steve Irwin. After a 12 hour chase the Sea Shepherd ship closed the gap and passed alongside the Nisshin Maru. The crew deployed over two dozen bottles of rotten butter sending a stench throughout the whale killing ship that will remain for days. The crew also threw packets of a slippery chemical onto the deck of the Nisshin Maru. This will make it very difficult to cut up whales. The substance becomes even more slippery with water so it will be difficult to wash it off the decks.

“I guess we can call this non-violent chemical warfare,” said Captain Paul Watson. “We only use organic, non-toxic materials designed to harass and obstruct illegal whaling operations.” Four armed Japanese Coast Guard officers clearly identified in their uniforms videotaped the confrontation.

The Captain of the Nisshin Maru played a tape over and over again with a woman’s voice saying “Warning, warning, this is the Nisshin Maru captain. Stop your destructive actions immediately. If you dare to board this vessel you will be taken into custody and restrained as illegal intruders under Japanese law.”

Captain Paul Watson radioed the Nisshin Maru to inform them that they had no authority in the Australian Antarctic Territory. Captain Watson ordered the Japanese captain to cease all whaling operations and to comply with the Australian Federal Court ruling that prohibits the Japanese whaling fleet from killing whales in the Australian Antarctic Territorial waters.

The confrontation took place at 63 Degrees 17 Minutes South and 126 Degrees and 20 minutes east. This is 175 miles off the Banzare Coast inside the Australian Economic Exclusion Zone. The Steve Irwin has fallen half a mile off to the starboard side of the Nisshin Maru. “It stinks too bad to remain any closer,” said Todd Emko 32, of New York City.

Not a single whale has been killed since the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin returned to harass the Japanese whaling fleet in the Australian Whale Sanctuary. “They will not be getting their quota this year and that is a certainty,” said Jeff Hanson 35, from Fremantle, Western Australia. “In fact I don’t think they will be getting half their quota.” In total the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has shut down illegal Japanese whaling operations for over four and a half weeks.

=======

Interview With Nottingham Activist In Southern Ocean On Board Sea Shepherd Ship

Dan is an activist from Nottingham who has joined the crew on board the Sea Shepherd vessel Steve Irwin in a bid to stop the illegal whaling activities of the Japanese near Antartica. The mission, named Migaloo, started last December and after refuelling in Melbourne last month, the Sea Shepherd crew is back in the oceans, have managed to track down the whaling fleet and have been in hot persuit of its main vessel, the Yushin Maru No. 2 for the last week. Accoring to one of the crew onboard the ship “the weather is getting colder and we are getting many hours of darkness now. The Antarctic winter is creeping up on us. The seas are getting rougher and we are getting blizzards.” We joined Dan via sattelite phone to ask him about his adventures..

Interview 28/02/08

Dan: Hello?

Q: Hello?

Dan: Eh up, how is it going?

Q: Yeah, I’m fine, how are you?

Dan: Good mate.

Q: And you thought you’d get away with not doing an interview with us? 🙂 (Dan left earlier than anticipated)

Dan: I knew you’d catch up with me eventually..

Q: So how is it going?

Dan: Yeah, I’m alright. We’re in the middle of the southern ocean right now. In a big storm at the moment with things flying around everywhere..

Q: I read some stuff about the seas being really rough, varied at times it would be like sunny and then blizzards and things..

Dan: Yeah, I mean we’ve got about 4 meter waves and I’m not sure what the windspeed is..

Q: But you’re all coping with it?

Dan: Yeah, we didn’t expect it to be this bad, from the weather reports we were getting. But its here now..

Q: Could you explain a little bit about what it is that you guys are doing there at the moment?

Dan: Right now we are chasing the Japanese whaling fleet around the coast of Antartica. We’d like to catch up with them and stop them. By constantly chasing them we’re hoping to reduce their ability to whale. […] They’re certainly not whaling in this weather. The last couple of days they haven’t killed any whales at all.

Q: You’ve been on the chase for a number of days. Is there an end in sight? How long is this gonna go on for?

Dan: I mean depending on the weather and stuff we will carry on until our fuel runs out. Thats still a good few weeks yet, which should bring us to the end of the whaling season actually. We should be leaving the same time as the [whaling] fleet.

Q: Whats your job on the ship?

Dan: Everyone has their set role on the ship. I’m in charge of the deck department. I am also in charge of all the ships cleaning duties, making sure the toilets are clean. Also looking after all the equipment on deck, like the crane and the anchors. I’m also in charge of the inflatable boats which we use on our actions. Making sure they are in good working order and getting people trained up to use them. So thats my job. We’ve got navigators, we’ve got people in the gally cooking, we got people in the engine room making sure we have the power and [there is] also a communications officer, who keeps us in touch with email etc, lots of different jobs.

Q: Why did you decide to join the Sea Shepherd more than any other organisation, for example Greenpeace?

Dan: I’m interested in the Sea Shepherd because of its direct action angle. We don’t do any protesting. We actually physically trying to stop [the whaling fleet]. Not really interested in just protesting, done that before.. I’m concerned with saving [animals] from the seas and ending whaling forever. Its the Sea Shepherd direct angle I’m attracted to..

Q: Because at the moment there are a lot of laws protecting whales.. A lot of laws have been passed, international treaties and all sorts which basically prohibit the whaling, but no one to enforce them and that that is the task that the Sea Shepherd has taken on.

Dan: In this situation the Sea Shepherd is actually playing the role of the Australian navy or coastguard. We’re in Australian waters and Australian territory. The Australian [Federal] Court ruled [recently] that the Japanese whaling [operations] inside their territory is illegal and that it should be restrained. There just isn’t the political will to do that. Japan and Australia are important trading partners. There are numerous laws which are protecting the whales down here, I’m not an expert on all of them, but there is the Convention International Trade In Endangered Species, the UN World Charter for Nature, which is actually empoweres [ordinary] people to enforce these laws, the International Whalings Commission Moratorium on Commercial Whaling, and the Antarctic Treaty protects whales. So they are really blatently breaking a whole bunch of laws. So it is a case of law enforcement, more so that protesting.

Q: Yeah, because I guess there could be a whole load of laws, but if there is no one to enforce them..

Dan: Yeah, its only worth as much as the piece of paper its written on.. These treaties should either not be agreed on or be enforced.

Q: You’re obviously doing a great job down there, is there anything people can do on land to support the stuff you’re doing down there?

Dan: When you go to the Sea Shepherd website there are numerous people you can contact to [confront] them about their inaction. There is Sea Shepherd UK who are constantly raising funds. This ship consumes huge amounts of diesel and then the maintenance and repair. People can be sure that any money they donate will be used directly to [confront] the whalers.

Q: Is there anything you’d like to say to the people in Nottingham, some who you know and will be reading this?

Dan: Hello to everyone I know. Take care of yourselves back there. I’m a bit cold and wet, but yeah, safe so far and I’ll see you all in a few weeks.

Q: Well we wish you all the best, you’re doing a great job down there and there are tonnes of people who really support the stuff you’re doing and we all know its very important so keep up the good work!

Dan: Yeah, cheers mate, take care.

Operation Migaloo (Sea Shepherd)

Sea Shepherd Aussie Crew Prepared to Be Taken as Prisoners to Japan

Hunt Chaos in Derbyshire

Chaos in Monyash – 01/03/2008

On Saturday the 1st March the High Peak Hunt meet at 11.30am at the Bulls Head Inn at Monyash, Derbyshire.

During the course of the next three hours the huntsman lost control of his pack on numerous occasions. This resulted in them causing chaos on the roads and in the fields around the area.

Chaos in Monyash – 01/03/2008

On Saturday the 1st March the High Peak Hunt meet at 11.30am at the Bulls Head Inn at Monyash, Derbyshire.

During the course of the next three hours the huntsman lost control of his pack on numerous occasions. This resulted in them causing chaos on the roads and in the fields around the area.

The footage below shows one event where the pack can be seen running back and forth across a main road. Also during this clip you can see the pack looking for the scent of a hare they had been chasing, all this without the huntsman in the area.

Sabs where the only ones present where they proceeded to slow down the cars driving along the road, thus preventing any loss of life. They also made sure the hunt did not chase any hares they were after.

30 minutes later the same occurred again, with the same result. This time one of the hounds went astray.

When the hunt finally called it a day they were still missing a hound, which eventually came running down the road to the meet 20 minutes after the huntsman had put away the rest of his pack.

To watch the three and a half minute video clip just follow the link off our front page www.nwhsa.org.uk

How can all this happen if they were ‘following a scent’?

info@nwhsa.org.uk

A Climate Camp visits the Government Office in Leeds

29.2.2008
Residents from flood stricken areas of Yorkshire and Humberside today blockaded the Government Office in Leeds to protest at its continued promotion of airport expansion. Inspired by last year’s camp for climate action at Heathrow, the protestors from Hull, South Yorkshire and the Calder Valley used pop-up tents to set up camp outside the main entrance.

Yorkshire RSS protest29.2.2008
Residents from flood stricken areas of Yorkshire and Humberside today blockaded the Government Office in Leeds to protest at its continued promotion of airport expansion. Inspired by last year’s camp for climate action at Heathrow, the protestors from Hull, South Yorkshire and the Calder Valley used pop-up tents to set up camp outside the main entrance.

This morning, concerned and moderate local people have blockaded the entrance to their Government Office. Their message; that with its continued support for expansion of air travel in the region, the Government is flying in the face of science.

Residents from flood stricken areas of Yorkshire and Humberside today blockaded the Government Office at 8 City Walk, Leeds to protest at its continued promotion of airport expansion.

The timing of the protest coincided with the final stages in the adoption of the Regional Spatial Strategy (RSS) – the area’s fifteen year development plan which is currently on the desk of government minister Baroness Andrews, awaiting final approval. The plan allows for a threefold expansion of passenger flights from Yorkshire and Humberside. Bizarrely, voices which you might have expected to argue against this madness seem all to eager – Friends of The Earth made a submission to the RSS suggesting that an expansion of air travel was acceptable. (Maybe they should rename themselves Foes of the Earth?)

Government transport policies were singled out for criticisim by the plan’s Sustainability Appraisal, which commented that any positive impacts of proposed changes to the RSS might not be able to counter wider negative trends.

The protestors made a formal presentation of a scientific briefing for consideration by Baroness Andrews and issued the following statement::-

“We are continually bombarded with messages asking us to “do our bit”, but this should go for government too. It is shameful that their policy to expand aviation and unsustainable economic development is totally at odds with their stated policy to reduce CO2 emissions.

They are flying in the face of science, and undermining any hope of preventing climate change accelerating beyond control. Yorkshire and Humberside will be particularly hard hit, because of our vulnerability to coastal erosion and flooding. This will spell misery for hard working families throughout the region”.

It’s clear that Baroness Andrews needs to instigate a major revision of the regional transport plan element of the RSS to remove the emphasis on airport growth, and to ensure a significant decrease in carbon emissions from our area. A fifteen year plan that ignores its own sustainability appraisal is a bad fifteen year plan, but maybe science and common sense aren’t enough on their own when Government policy is made in the boardrooms of multinationals like BAA?

Limagrain Moves GM Tests To The US due to French ban & decontaminations

FRANCE: February 29, 2008
PARIS – Europe’s largest seed cooperative Limagrain said on Thursday it had moved its research tests into genetically modified (GM) crops to the United States, put off by France’s hostility to GMs and the destruction of test fields.

FRANCE: February 29, 2008
PARIS – Europe’s largest seed cooperative Limagrain said on Thursday it had moved its research tests into genetically modified (GM) crops to the United States, put off by France’s hostility to GMs and the destruction of test fields.

Chairman Pierre Pagesse said Biogemma, Limagrain’s grain and oilseed research unit, would carry around 1,000 tests on GM crops this year in Illinois, in the US corn belt.

Limagrain has a 70 percent stake in the world’s fourth-largest seed maker Vilmorin.

“We have decided to transfer our tests to the United States this year,” Pagesse told Reuters in an interview at the Paris farm show.

“It is with a heavy heart,” he added. “For the first time we will move outside France and even outside the European Union to carry out our tests and this due to the current situation in our country,” Pagesse said.

While GM crops are common in the United States, France and other European countries are dubious about using the new genetic technology in agriculture.

France decided in December to suspend the cultivation of the sole GM crop grown in the European Union, a maize developed by US biotech giant Monsanto, and notified the European Commission earlier this month that it was extending the ban.

Pagesse said the expatriation of the GM tests to the United States, was also prompted by the repetitive attacks carried out by anti-GM activists on Biogemma’s test fields.

CONTRADICTION

The decision, although not irreversible, will inevitably affect the working of Limagrain, which owns 55 percent of Biogemma and totally relies on the company for its GM research, he said.

“I know that to move the intellectual part of the group is to move the group’s epicentre in time,” he said, stressing that the company had probably waited too long to make the move.

Limagrain would keep doing non-GM tests in France but all biotech research, carried out through Biogemma, would be done in the United States, which in the end could penalise Europe as seeds may not be adapted to European soil and pests, he said.

“The company keeps its knowledge but it’s the French peasants who are going to lose out,” he said.

Pagesse argued there was a contradiction between the French ban on the growing of GM maize and massively importing genetically modified animal feed.

“Either it is bad and we should hurry banning imports or we consider that it’s good for consumers, including through animal feed, then we should let French farmers use the technologies that we think are better adapted,” he said.

A government-appointed committee of scientists, farmers, politicians and non-governmental organisations said in January “serious doubts” remained over whether the MON 810 was safe.

The main worry mentioned in the report, which triggered the government’s decision on the ban, concerned dissemination to other crops and biodiversity, not human health.

Stop Heathrow Expansion: Terminal 5 flashmob

ON THE OPENING DAY OF HEATHROW TERMINAL 5

11am on the dot, Thursday 27 March
International Arrivals (Ground Level), Heathrow Terminal 5

T5 flashmob flier front smallON THE OPENING DAY OF HEATHROW TERMINAL 5

11am on the dot, Thursday 27 March
International Arrivals (Ground Level), Heathrow Terminal 5

www.stopairportexpansion.org

Be at T5 International Arrivals at 11am to put on (or strip to reveal) your brightly coloured ‘STOP AIRPORT EXPANSION’ t-shirt: a visible presence of public opposition to the madness of airport expansion. Wander round for a bit, have a coffee, leave when you like.

ORDER YOUR FREE T-SHIRT TODAY: stopairportexpansion@gmail.com or 0845 458 2564.

The Government and BAA see the opening day of Terminal Five – the biggest terminal ever built in the UK, and the subject of the longest Public Inquiry in British history – as an opportunity to put the case for further airport expansion. Join the flash mob* on 27 March to highlight the real problems that airport expansion causes: climate change, noise, air pollution and community destruction.

Download the flyer

* Flash Mob: ‘A large group of people who assemble suddenly in a public place, perform an unusual action for a brief period of time, then quickly disperse’ (Wikipedia).

www.t5flashmob.com

PLEASE NOTE: Almost everything is against the Heathrow byelaws, but wearing a t-shirt is not a crime. So as long as you’re not demonstrating, you’re not breaking the law!