Climate Camp in the City, Critical Mass & the G20 Meltdown Bank of England plus other protests from this week — updated

The urban Cli­mate Camp at Bish­ops­gate by the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange has been report­ed to have over 2000 peo­ple and 150 tents, and has been described as a huge­ly impres­sive infra­struc­ture.

Welcome to the Climate Camp in the CityThe urban Cli­mate Camp at Bish­ops­gate by the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange has been report­ed to have over 2000 peo­ple and 150 tents, and has been described as a huge­ly impres­sive infra­struc­ture. There has been numer­ous the­atri­cal per­for­mances, and sound-sys­tems along­side com­post toi­lets, a med­ical tent, a chil­dren’s area, a cou­ple of work­ing kitchens, speak­ers, ban­ners across the street and numer­ous work­shops. Many peo­ple have been pic­nick­ing there and the camp has been attract­ing passers by and city work­ers. There have been police lines on either side of the camp but peo­ple are allowed in and out. There has been danc­ing near the police lines and the atmos­phere has gen­er­al­ly been described as very good, with office work­ers waiv­ing out of win­dows at the campers.

'Nature doesn't do Bailouts'CC London money-eyes
“Street emp­ty. They beat us out and squashed our tents. But oh what a world we cre­at­ed! Shame on the pow­ers that be.”
— Cli­mate Camp Lon­don

Cli­mate Camp in the City has come to a end as police aggres­sive­ly cleared pro­test­ers from Bish­ops­gate. Sev­er­al hours ear­li­er campers agreed to move to the North to shore up their defences, but after heav­i­ly provoca­tive polic­ing, peo­ple began to try and leave.

Bloodied & put in vanMany campers head home with light injuries after a long evening of intim­i­da­tion and vio­lence from the police. At sev­er­al points they moved in to snatch indi­vid­u­als from the crowd and sent lines of offi­cers into sit­ting campers, unpro­voked. One pro­test­er said “the police act­ed aggres­sive­ly, goad­ing pro­test­ers, but we remained peace­ful and the aim remains strong.” By 2am their aggres­sive tac­tics suc­ceed­ed with most of the campers doing their best to escape the cor­don. Soon after the camp was bro­ken.

Climate Camp in the City tentsCampers claim a vic­to­ry hav­ing held their ground peace­ful­ly for so long, serv­ing food, drink, a vari­ety of work­shops to the campers, and above all, cre­at­ing a pos­i­tive space for change. We also pay homage to the inven­tor of the pop-up tent, for mak­ing today pos­si­ble.

Updates:

01:20 Reports that Cli­mate Camp has been evict­ed by police — peo­ple pushed back and beat­en, won­der­ing how to retrieve their belong­ings.

01:10 — Police pulling peo­ple out of Cli­mate Camp from south­ern perime­ter.

00:30 — Cli­mate Camp par­tic­i­pants have been mak­ing speech­es to the police about why they have been tak­ing action today.

00:20 — Reports from Cli­mate Camp of police using bolt-cut­ters to dis­man­tle the bike bar­ri­cade whilst there is now noth­ing to stop them com­ing in from the North.

23:55 — Police are now mov­ing from south to north push­ing peo­ple out of the space occu­pied by the cli­mate camp, and it’s clear­ing out fast. About 500 peo­ple are left at this point.

23:28 — Push past Liv­er­pool Street as a group are chased at speed pur­sued by police dogs and vans. At least one arrest.

23:18 — Let­ting peo­ple out from South side oppo­site Liv­er­pool St. Lots of police charg­ing, Bot­tles being thrown from out­side camp towards charg­ing cops

22:48 — About 2000 peo­ple in Cli­mate Camp Ket­tle, police want to impose a sec­tion 14 and ID every­one. They’re look­ing to force peo­ple out through the North two at a time. There are police mass­ing at the South End, Due to the amount of campers that does cur­rent­ly not seem fea­si­ble.

22:15 — riot police have moved into the cli­mate camp crowd at bish­ops­gate and are vio­lent­ly drag­ging peace­ful sit­ting pro­test­ers to dis­perse the area

ear­li­er this evening riot police forced their way into the peace­ful cli­mate camp. pro­test­ers held their hands up and shout­ed ‘this is not a riot’ over and over, while ful­ly-kit­ted riot police used shields and batons to push and vio­lent­ly surge for­ward into the camp along the east­ern pave­ment of bish­ops­gate. it seems like­ly this clear­ance oper­a­tion had been planned all day — a line of police vans parked along the east­side had cre­at­ed a ‘walk­way’ along that pave­ment which was effec­tive­ly sep­a­rat­ed from the camp itself. all the riot police had to do was push their way onto that side, and it is clear that was their strat­e­gy. once done, there was a fur­ther stand-off for a while before the next stage to start mov­ing pro­test­ers out one-by-one.

21:35 — we are cur­rent receiv­ing reports from the Cli­mate Camp in the city, that all peo­ple are going to be searched to be allowed out, as well as peo­ple are told to delete pho­tos of offi­cers from their cam­eras, under the threat of seizure. Inter­est­ing­ly the joint com­mit­tee on human rights of the UK par­lia­ment has just made a cou­ple of rec­om­men­da­tion about polic­ing direct­ly con­demn­ing the use of these anti-ter­ror pow­er to police protest. Here are the direct quotes and links.

Democracy is an illusionRec­om­men­da­tions of the UK Par­lia­ment Joint Com­mit­tee on Human Rights con­cern­ing the use of anti-ter­ror pow­ers for stop-and-search:

“93. Whilst we accept that there may be cir­cum­stances where the police rea­son­ably believe, on the basis of intel­li­gence, that a demon­stra­tion could be used to mask a ter­ror­ist attack or be a tar­get of ter­ror­ism, we have heard of no exam­ples of this issue aris­ing in prac­tice. We are con­cerned by the reports we have received of police using counter-ter­ror­ism pow­ers on peace­ful pro­test­ers. It is not clear to us whether this stems from a delib­er­ate deci­sion by the police to use a legal tool which they now have or if indi­vid­ual offi­cers are exer­cis­ing their dis­cre­tion inap­pro­pri­ate­ly. What­ev­er the rea­son, this is a mat­ter of con­cern. We wel­come the Min­is­ter’s com­ments that counter-ter­ror­ism leg­is­la­tion should not be used to deal with pub­lic order or protests. We also wel­come the rec­om­men­da­tion in the new guid­ance to human rights being includ­ed in com­mu­ni­ty impact assess­ments. We rec­om­mend that the new guid­ance on the use of the sec­tion 44 stop and search pow­er be amend­ed to make clear that counter-ter­ror­ism pow­ers should not be used against peace­ful pro­test­ers. In addi­tion, the guid­ance should make spe­cif­ic ref­er­ence to the duty of police to act com­pat­i­bly with human rights, includ­ing, for exam­ple, by spec­i­fy­ing the human rights engaged by protest.”
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200809/jtselect/jtrights/47/4707.htm

Con­cern­ing the impact of the recent leg­is­la­tion about tak­ing pho­tographs of offi­cers in pub­lic the joint com­mit­tee said:

“94. Con­cerns have recent­ly been expressed in the media that a new pro­vi­sion in the Counter Ter­ror­ism Act 2008 makes it a crim­i­nal offence to take and pub­lish a pho­to­graph of a police offi­cer. Sec­tion 76 of the 2008 Act makes it an offence to elic­it or attempt to elic­it infor­ma­tion about an indi­vid­ual who is or has been a con­sta­ble “which is of a kind like­ly to be use­ful to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.”[174] As the Explana­to­ry Notes to the Counter Ter­ror­ism Bill cor­rect­ly stat­ed, the new offence will only be com­mit­ted where the infor­ma­tion in ques­tion is “such as to raise a rea­son­able sus­pi­cion that it was intend­ed to be used to assist in the prepa­ra­tion or com­mis­sion of an act of ter­ror­ism, and must be of a kind that was like­ly to pro­vide prac­ti­cal assis­tant to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.”[175] That is the effect of a deci­sion of the Court of Appeal in a case in 2008[176] inter­pret­ing the same statu­to­ry lan­guage in the sep­a­rate ter­ror­ism offence of pos­sess­ing a doc­u­ment or record con­tain­ing infor­ma­tion of a kind like­ly to be use­ful to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.[177]”

“95. We there­fore do not share the con­cerns expressed in the media that the new offence crim­i­nalis­es tak­ing pho­tographs of the police. How­ev­er, we do regard as sig­nif­i­cant the fact that this is being wide­ly report­ed as a mat­ter of con­cern to jour­nal­ists. Legal uncer­tain­ty about the reach of crim­i­nal offences can have a chill­ing effect on the activ­i­ties of jour­nal­ists and pro­test­ers. We there­fore rec­om­mend that, to elim­i­nate any scope for doubt about the scope of the new offence in section76 of the Counter Ter­ror­ism Act 2008, guid­ance be issued to the police about the scope of the offence in light of the deci­sion of the Court of Appeal, and specif­i­cal­ly address­ing con­cerns about its improp­er use to pre­vent pho­tograph­ing or film­ing police. ”
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200809/jtselect/jtrights/47/4707.htm

20:45 — cur­rent­ly ket­tled in but they are hav­ing a ceilidh/ barn dance so not bro­ken yet! Fuck the po-lice.

18:35 — Riot police baton charge cli­mate camp
Police clearing climate camp in city
Numer­ous reports come in stat­ing the riot police are in the process of attack­ing the peace­ful cli­mate camp. Even in the face of severe and unpro­voked police bru­tal­i­ty the pro­test­ers are main­tain­ing their peace­ful protest.

Despite events through­out the day at the urban cli­mate camp being entire­ly peace­ful, riot police are mobil­is­ing at the camp with 14 riot vans pulling up in addi­tion to the six already present there. While cli­mate campers appealed to the police high­light­ing the peace­ful nature of the protest and the pres­ence of many fam­i­lies with chil­dren, the police stormed into into the camp through a gap in the bicy­cle perime­ter of the camp indis­crim­i­nate­ly attack­ing campers with batons, push­ing fam­i­lies and chil­dren out of tents and destroy­ing sec­tions of the camp. Camomile, Bish­ops­gate and Wom­wood st are closed off hem­ming in the campers. Five police motor bikes pulled up with what looked like sur­veil­lance gear. Anoth­er report comes in from cli­mate camp stat­ing that the police have formed lines at the Liv­er­pool st end of the camp. a third report comes in from an Indy­media vol­un­teer report­ing that he has ‘nev­er seen any­thing like this’ three lines of hel­met­ed riot police are indis­crim­i­nate­ly beat­ing pro­test­ers with batons. Pro­test­ers are not fight­ing back and are main­tain­ing the non-vio­lent nature of their action in spite of this there are report­ed to be at least four arrests. The crowd chants shame on you as the police con­tin­ue to attack campers.

Full 1st April time­line

Video show­ing police tac­tics clear­ing space.

Camp set­ting-up video.

Panora­ma — click through to orig­i­nal for big­ger image: Climate Camp in the City panorama

Anoth­er per­son­al report: I arrived at about 5pm, at the north end of it. Police were already form­ing a line along­side the bar­ri­er that had been erect­ed made up of rail­ings and bikes attached to them, but they were not blockad­ing and every one was free to vis­it, come in and out.

There was a fes­tive atmos­phere, colour­ful tents, ban­ners, street dec­o­ra­tion…

A man with the slo­gan “God is too big for reli­gion” on his t‑shirt then start­ed to try and make every sin­gle riot police­man and woman on the line to smile. “This is an order”, he shout­ed, “and if they don’t com­ply, things will only get worse”. He man­aged to get or steal a smile of every sin­gle police offi­cer includ­ing a police woman who tried just too hard to keep a stony face.

He then pro­ceed­ed to try and hug every one “of these very won­der­ful peo­ple” as a sign of his love. To try to get to their hearts, he asked them if they had chil­dren: “please raise your hands if you do not have chil­dren, or keep your hands down if you do have chil­dren”. None of the police moved their arms but he did not suc­ceed to hug every one of the offi­cers. One of them claimed that he was embar­rass­ing them.

I then pro­ceed­ed to pho­to­graph the rest of the camp. A few police vans had some­how made their way into the mid­dle of the cli­mate camp.

At about 6.15pm the south end of the camp start­ed to get “nasty”. Police charged into the peace­ful peo­ple, bring­ing tents vio­lent­ly down to the ground, but peo­ple man­aged to peace­ful­ly stop the police vio­lence, and a par­ty was estab­lished in front of the police lines.

A few police also moved to the mid­dle of the camp, next to the vans, and it looked like they were try­ing to divide the crowd. But peo­ple kept the area occu­pied and this did­n’t hap­pen.

As it got dark­er, more and more riot police and vans gath­ered at the south end of the camp, and I heard that a demon­stra­tion had formed at the north end of the camp, but that the police were afraid of the grow­ing num­bers and were pre­vent­ing peo­ple from get­ting in or out of the camp. We had been cor­doned off with­out warn­ing.

Three meet­ings were held in the camp. One at the south end, anoth­er at the north end, and anoth­er one in the mid­dle, right in front of police. We were informed that the police had decid­ed to keep us penned for two hours, and that after that, they would allow us out in groups of 20, after tak­ing every one’s pho­to­graph and details.

Some peo­ple con­sid­ered sleep­ing the night in the camp, but it was clear from the begin­ning of the night that police were going to dis­rupt peo­ple’s sleep all through the night, just like it had hap­pened dur­ing the cli­mate camp in the sum­mer, last year, with a heli­copter fly­ing over our heads fir­ing an intense light over the street and with the vans’ strongest lights also focus­ing on the campers.

At about 10.00 I tried my luck to get out of the pen by ask­ing per­mis­sion to leave to one of the police offi­cer. He said, “I can not tell you if you can go out. Ask one of your senior mem­bers (eh?) Your legal observers should know more”. A legal observ­er told me that the police had decid­ed to only allow peo­ple out in groups of two after push­ing the crowd in a way that I did­n’t man­age to under­stand.

It was get­ting cold­er and most peo­ple present in the camp by then had not brought a camp­ing tent or sleep­ing bag. Luck­i­ly peo­ple had brought plen­ty of food, which was wide­ly shared. Music was heard around the camp most of the time, and at about 10.30 mem­bers of Radio Rev­olu­cion gave a taste of their music towards the mid­dle of the street. Police offi­cers looked at the scene in aston­ish­ment and a secu­ri­ty guard inside the build­ing began to video them using his phone, as if he had nev­er in his life seen spon­ta­neous acts of arts hap­pen­ing. After a few songs, ran­dom peo­ple in the crowd took on the micro­phone and the instru­ments and shared their art with a small crowd danc­ing around them.

At about 22.45 we again heard des­per­ate cries from the south end of the street and there we went, to learn that the police had charged again on the peace­ful crowd, using batons and pep­per spray, and to see that the peo­ple had decid­ed to sit down and hold the site as much as pos­si­ble.

I joined some peo­ple that had shared their food with me before and start­ed to help them putting their tent down. It was pret­ty clear that the police were going to charge again so we thought bet­ter to have the tent and oth­er things on our backs than destroyed. As we were in the process of undo­ing the tent, the whole of the police line that was at the north end of the camp moved in and we fran­ti­cal­ly con­tin­ued to undo the tent as the police approached, with peo­ple run­ning ahead of them, cry­ing for help. We decid­ed to stay and con­tin­ue to gath­er and pack every­thing until the police stopped us with their batons.

Strange­ly, they just passed by. It seemed all they want­ed to do was reach the north end of the street and join the cops there.

By then it seemed that there were few­er peo­ple than before and we were informed that, although the police had intend­ed to search every one before leav­ing, they were only doing so ran­dom­ly. We gath­ered tent, sleep­ing bags and food, and head­ed for the con­ver­gence cen­tre unmo­lest­ed.

At 11.30 the street was still cor­doned off and peo­ple were not allowed in, but from the out­side, it looked like the peo­ple who were remained inside the cor­don actu­al­ly want­ed to be there; exit seemed to be allowed.


G20 EF! graffiti
Although for the first half hour or so the police seemed con­tent to watch the protest, scuf­fles start­ed to devel­op around the edges. Most seemed to be caused by groups of police grab­bing masked demon­stra­tors and attempt­ing to unmask them.

——–

Crit­i­cal Mass

At 9.30 we were still wait­ing for more peo­ple to join in Bank Junc­tion. We start­ed off at about 10am, with a big sound sys­tem and lots of peo­ple in cos­tumes.

Our first stop was the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land, RBS, next to Bish­ops­gate. There we were informed that RBS heav­i­ly invest in fos­sil fuels. RBS has recent­ly giv­en a mas­sive loan to EON, the com­pa­ny behind the coal pow­er sta­tion in King­worth, where the last cli­mate camp took place.

Back on Bish­ops­gate, we went then to the Deutche Bank, where again the sound sys­tem per­son informed us that this bank has been active­ly involved in “car­bon trad­ing”, which means plant­i­ng trees to “off­set” the exces­sive car­bon emis­sions that com­pa­nies in the rich part of the world should not be pro­duc­ing if they were com­ply­ing with their com­pa­nies’ signed treaties. This tree-plant­i­ng has been done in lands of indige­nous peo­ples in the poor part of the world that have been how the land that they need for their own food is used for this busi­ness with­out their being able to do any­thing about it. We were told that car­bon trad­ing is now big busi­ness, and that it basi­cal­ly con­sists of sell­ing the air we breath.

From where we were, across the road, was the Car­bon Exchange, which, we’re informed, gives us in the Rich West the abil­i­ty to use more car­bon than we have agreed to use in order to try and stop cli­mate chaos. Big com­pa­nies in devel­op­ing coun­tries are said to be mak­ing mon­ey by sell­ing their car­bon cred­its to big com­pa­nies in rich coun­tries so that they can use more car­bon.

We’re told about a com­pa­ny in South Korea that dis­cov­ered a prod­uct in the 70s that is use­ful to “decar­bon­ate” the air, but for some mys­te­ri­ous rea­son it has not made this dis­cov­ery pub­lic, nor used the prod­uct, until now, so it has been allow­ing the South Kore­an pop­u­la­tion to be unnec­es­sar­i­ly pol­lut­ed for about 40 years. Now that it is sell­ing this prod­uct, this com­pa­ny still makes (10 times?) more mon­ey sell­ing car­bon trade cred­its than pro­duc­ing and sell­ing this de-con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing prod­uct.

Space Hijackers APC outside & guarding RBSAt this point the Space Hijack­ers took on the micro­phone to ask us for sup­port because their tank had been “stopped”, sur­round­ed by police. We went there to show our sup­port but the cops did­n’t seem very pre­pared to allow the tank move peace­ful­ly.

At about 10.30 we moved south towards Lon­don Bridge. Last stop before cross­ing the bridge was a spot next to premis­es of Cater­pil­lar, the com­pa­ny pro­vid­ing home-destroy­ing bull­doz­ers to the Israeli gov­ern­ment, and right next to an “Abbey” branch, now prop­er­ty of Grupo San­tander, cur­rent­ly in the process of buy­ing most of the His­pan­ic world and part of the rest, and object of protests and con­tempt in Spain and Latin Amer­i­ca.

From there crossed Lon­don Bridge and then Tow­er Bridge back to the north bank of the riv­er. Next to the tow­er, we were served with free veg­an food reclaimed from the sys­tem’s dai­ly waste. There we were joined by the Dancers and then moved on to join the Cli­mate Camp.

In the mean­time police had moved on to close all streets that lead to Bank junc­tion to the traf­fic, and at noon they were prepar­ing to com­plete­ly cor­don off the area, allow­ing peo­ple in but not out, except city work­ers.

Police separate crowdAt 12.15 peo­ple were in Bank Junc­tion already penned in and allowed in but not out. In Princess Street there were to lines of cops, sep­a­rat­ed by about 100 metres. The “out­side” line, away from the crowd penned in, was rein­forced with three vans crossed.

At 12.30, Queen Vic­to­ria Street, on the west side of Bank Junc­tion, it did­n’t look like the police had formed a line, but quick­ly formed at the shout of one of their offices, then moved away from the pen, still form­ing a line, and push­ing peo­ple away from the junc­tion, so the police line came to block the access of peo­ple com­ing both from Poul­try Street and Queen Vic­to­ria Street. The police were wear­ing bul­let proof vests.

In Man­sion House Place, a small alley way approach­ing the Junc­tion from St. Stephen’s Row in the South, police were also form­ing two lines sep­a­rat­ed by a few metres, cor­don­ing off the junc­tion and only allow­ing fam­i­lies and city work­ers out.

A sin­gle line of vans com­bined with cops blocked the point where King William Street and Lom­bard Street meet.

A few min­utes lat­er horse mount­ed police were form­ing the lines instead of police­men on foot.

——–

Pho­tos from the G20 Melt­down, and oth­er protests from todayG20 Stop Fooling placard
Police armoured vehicle at G20 | Oth­er pic­tures of police APCs: 2 | 3

FIT spotting from on high
Injured woman at G20
'The Beginning is Nigh' placard
Riot cops at G20
Video of police forced into retreat at G20 Melt­down.

How not to use crowd con­trol bar­ri­ers when deal­ing with the police video — also watch police advances & retreats! Tips for how — see the Guide to Pub­lic Order Sit­u­a­tions.

Violent cops at G20
Link to many oth­er video clips.

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Activist tank at Roy­al Bank of Scot­land

The activist group Space Hijack­ers joined with police to take care of any “bad” demon­stra­tors who might have shown up to anti-G20 protests in the City of Lon­don today. At 10:30 this morn­ing they showed up with a CCTV-equipped armoured vehi­cle in front of the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land and pre­pared to defend the build­ing.

Police spoil­sports refused their help, con­duct­ed thor­ough search of the vehi­cle, and moved them along. They were lat­er arrest­ed out­side News Inter­na­tion­al.

——–

Window-kicking at the G20Despite the media’s apoc­a­lyp­tic pre­dic­tions, the four horse­men (See SchNEWS 667) did at least make it to the Bank of Eng­land. Whether this was a good idea or not is open to ques­tion. It cer­tain­ly brought a mea­sure of may­hem to the finan­cial heart of Lon­don, which seemed large­ly closed down for the dura­tion. Our num­bers were impres­sive – giv­en the short notice and the media hype of extreme vio­lence. But tac­tics adopt­ed gave the Met free rein to place a huge cor­don around the entire demo – the so-called ket­tle.

As soon as the final Black Horse (iron­i­cal­ly the one sym­bol­is­ing land enclo­sure) arrived, police lines rapid­ly snapped into place across the streets sur­round­ing the plaza that the bank sits on. Unfor­tu­nate­ly — although many did suc­cess­ful­ly make a break for it — the major­i­ty of the crowd, with lit­tle idea of what to do (unless they’d read last week’s SchNEWS pub­lic order guide obvi­ous­ly) stood around as this manoeu­vre was exe­cut­ed. Whilst we know that the protests were organ­ised on very short notice, there seemed to be lit­tle aim oth­er than sim­ply get­ting into the area – there were no bust-cards, and no attempts at crowd co-ordi­na­tion.

At first most seemed hap­py to be inside the huge ket­tle – a few sound-sys­tems were blast­ing out and there was even a bizarre out­burst of con­tem­po­rary dance in front of the The Roy­al Exchange. As the hours wore on and the few city types caught in the cir­cle had shown ID and got them­selves extract­ed, it became obvi­ous that if the police had their way no-one was get­ting out ‘til long after dark. No water, no food, not even a toi­let. The rea­son giv­en? — ‘to pre­vent a breach of the peace’.

By around half-one the ket­tle had been tru­ly brought the boil and fight­ing had bro­ken out along Thread­nee­dle St. A line of police were pushed back by a crowd shout­ing, “Let us out”. A few bot­tles were lobbed but even with­out these the cops were forced to give way to the sheer phys­i­cal pres­sure. Alert­ed by the noise, sup­port streamed over from the oth­er exits to rein­force Thread­nee­dle and push the cops back to the junc­tion with Bartholomew Lane. This left the win­dows of Roy­al Bank of Scot­land exposed. They were duly smashed, although riot­ers were out­num­bered by pho­tog­ra­phers by around fif­teen to one. How­ev­er police lines here were too strong to breach.

At around 2.30, the crowd fac­ing a thin­ner police line across Vic­to­ria St sud­den­ly surged for­ward and by sheer weight of num­bers pushed their way through. One of the shovers told SchNEWS, “It was amaz­ing – we were resigned to being in the ket­tle until mid­night but the lines broke right in front of me and con­fused police were shout­ing ask­ing each oth­er, ‘What’s the plan?’”. Despite the rapid deploy­ment of riot cops, pos­si­bly up to a thou­sand peo­ple escaped at this point. Soon the win­dows of HSBC on Cheap­side had gone in.

SchNEWS has heard reports that oth­ers man­aged to sneak or blag their way out over the next few hours but dur­ing the after­noon the noose was grad­u­al­ly tight­ened with baton charges. Eye­wit­ness­es report­ed a sense of pan­ic devel­op­ing inside the pen. Peo­ple were not allowed out until after 8pm and only then after being pho­tographed.

One man, Ian Tom­lin­son is known to have died inside the cor­don. SchNEWS has heard con­flict­ing reports as to whether he was struck by police. Per­haps a coro­ners inquiry into his death will expose police tac­tics to pub­lic glare (unless they invoke their handy new pow­ers to keep it all secret of course).

This report and oth­ers at http://www.schnews.org.uk/archive/news671.htm

——–
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2nd April

Time­line
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Bank of Eng­land vig­il under­way for the man who died at yes­ter­day’s G20 Melt­down protest.
G20 vigil
Around 200 pro­test­ers have gath­ered in the City, on the steps of the Old Exchange by the Bank of Eng­land. Their pres­ence rep­re­sents a spon­ta­neous protest in sol­i­dar­i­ty for the man who died while ket­tled at G20 Melt­down yes­ter­day.

No details of the man’s death have been released. All that’s known is he was around 30-years-old and died while ket­tled with thou­sands of oth­ers out­side the Bank of Eng­land.

Demon­stra­tors are demand­ing answers and an inde­pen­dent inquiry into the man’s death. A wall of con­do­lences for the man who died as sprung up. A minute silence was held also.

Police are oper­at­ing an on off ket­tle pol­i­cy. This appears to be a method of encour­ag­ing peo­ple to leave while they can.

The mood over all is calm. There have been waves of chant­i­ng: SHAME SHAME SHAME ON YOU and WHO’S STREETS? OUR STREETS! to the 200-odd police draft­ed in to “keep the peace.”

While some pro­test­ers have left, many oth­ers con­tin­ue to arrive. Some line the pave­ments out­side the Bank of Eng­land. Police are now attempt­ing to move these peo­ple on.

Inter­view with two eye­wit­ness­es of the events pre­ced­ing the death of Ian Tom­lin­son, the man who died dur­ing anti G20 protests in the City of Lon­don on the 1st of April.

Wit­ness­es State­ment: Death at G20

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Var­i­ous par­tic­i­pants in the City of Lon­don demon­stra­tions on April 1st have come for­ward as wit­ness­es to the col­lapse of a man lat­er iden­ti­fied by author­i­ties as Ian Tom­lin­son. Four dif­fer­ent uni­ver­si­ty stu­dents wit­nessed the col­lapse of Mr. Tom­lin­son. “He stum­bled towards us from the direc­tion of police and pro­test­ers and col­lapsed,” said Peter Apps. “I saw a demon­stra­tor who was a first aider attend to the per­son who had col­lapsed. The man was late 40s, had tat­toos on his hands, and was wear­ing a Mill­wall shirt.”

While the first aider was help­ing the man, anoth­er demon­stra­tor with a mega­phone was call­ing the police over so that they could help.

Natal­ie Lang­ford, a stu­dent at Queen Mary, said “there was a police charge. A lot of peo­ple ran in our direc­tion. The woman giv­ing first aid stood in the path of the crowd.” The run­ning peo­ple, see­ing a guy on the ground, went around them.

Anoth­er demon­stra­tor had already called 999 and was get­ting med­ical advice from the ambu­lance dis­patch­er. “Four police with two police medics came. They told her [the first aider] to ‘move along’.”, said Peter Apps. “Then they pushed her forcibly away from him. They refused to lis­ten to her [the first aider] when she tried to explain his con­di­tion.”

The first aider, who did not wish to be named, said “The police sur­round­ed the col­lapsed man. I was stand­ing with the per­son who’d called 999. The ambu­lance dis­patch­er want­ed to talk to the police, the phone was being held out to them, but the police refused.”

Anoth­er wit­ness, Elias Stoakes, added “we did­n’t see them [the police] per­form CPR.”

Oth­er peo­ple who had tried to stay with the col­lapsed man were also pushed away.

All of the wit­ness­es deny the alle­ga­tion that many mis­siles were thrown.

Accord­ing to Peter Apps, “one bot­tle was thrown, but it did­n’t come close to the police. Noth­ing was thrown after­wards as oth­er demon­stra­tors told the per­son to stop. The per­son who threw the bot­tle prob­a­bly did­n’t real­ize that some­one was behind the ring of police.” All the wit­ness­es said that the demon­stra­tors were con­cerned for the well-being of the col­lapsed man once they real­ized that there was an injured per­son.

Natal­ie Lang­ford said “when the ambu­lance arrived the pro­test­ers got straight out of the way.”

These wit­ness­es are hap­py to give media state­ments.

They can be con­tact­ed through this press liai­son email: g20witnesses@gmail.com

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Police Raid at Earl Street G20 Con­ver­gence Cen­tre

As peo­ple were organ­is­ing to leave the con­ver­gence space at mid-day today police raid­ed. 30–40 peo­ple attempt­ed to pro­tect the space by blockad­ing the main doors. We then con­gre­gat­ed on the top floor and sat in a cir­cle with our arms in the air to show the police that we were not vio­lent. How­ev­er, the police met us with a taser gun, full riot gear and pro­ceed­ed to make us lie face down with our hands on the floor.

We believe two peo­ple were arrest­ed, although we are unsure what they have been charged with. One has been tak­en to hos­pi­tal fol­low­ing an injury. The rest were searched, hand­cuffed and had names, DOB, address­es and pho­tos tak­en.

If any­one has more infor­ma­tion please con­tact legal sup­port urgent­ly: legal@climatecamp.org.uk

Searches/details ille­gal­ly demand­ed before raid begins here.

Police massed outside convergence centreCon­ver­gence cen­tre evic­tion full time­line here.
Convgence centre raid search

——

Police attack Ram­part Social Cen­tre

At around 12:30 this after­noon, 30–50 police arrived at the Ram­part, an activist social cen­tre in Whitechapel, East Lon­don. A for­mer­ly derelict build­ing which had been emp­ty for years, Ram­part was occu­pied by activists and turned into a social and cul­tur­al venue more than four years ago.

When the police arrived, some­one went out­side to speak to them, ask­ing them if they were going to search the place and telling them that if they had a war­rant they could just knock on the door. The police told him not to wor­ry.

A few min­utes lat­er riot police in black uni­forms, wear­ing bal­a­clavas came through a down­stairs win­dow, the door to the roof and a door to an adjoin­ing build­ing. The police broke down the doors and stormed in with drawn tasers, scream­ing at every­one to get down on the ground, jump­ing on them and hand­cuff­ing them. They had a TV crew with them when break­ing in through the door. They were insult­ing peo­ple and say­ing things like “one of you croaked last night”, try­ing to pro­voke a bad reac­tion from peo­ple.

They then demand­ed iden­ti­fi­ca­tion from every­one and checked IDs against what appeared to be a list of spe­cif­ic peo­ple. There were 2 or 3 arrests. The remain­ing peo­ple were then let go.

Right now it’s calm, how­ev­er peo­ple are a bit shak­en after the expe­ri­ence. The cops have left the neigh­bour­hood.

——

Spi­der­man on bail after G20 Lloyds Cli­mate Demo

Alain Robert, oth­er­wise known as ‘Spi­der­man’ for his dar­ing free climbs of urban build­ings was arrest­ed ear­li­er today for climb­ing the Lloyds build­ing in Lon­don in a G20 cli­mate change protest.

Unfurl­ing a ban­ner that adver­tised the cam­paign onehundredmonths.org (which says we have lit­tle under 92 months left to pre­vent cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change), he climbed down from the 9th floor and was arrest­ed by police for aggra­vat­ed tres­pass.

——–
——–

Oth­er inter­est­ing arti­cles from oth­er days:

——

There have been 122 arrests relat­ed to the G20, includ­ing 86 on Wednes­day and 32 on Thurs­day, police said.

——

Police ask train staff to spy on G20 pro­test­ers

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One-man G20 protest on 28th March 2009

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Spoof Finan­cial Times hits Lon­don streets

10000 copies of a spoof Finan­cial Times were dis­trib­uted in Lon­don today.

“Set in 2020, the 12-page paper revealed how action in 2009 reined in cli­mate change, sav­ing bil­lions from extinc­tion. Car­bon rationing didn’t kill us, it explained, despite the incon­ve­nience to multi­na­tion­al com­pa­nies. But we couldn’t have end­less growth with finite resources. Edi­tors even apol­o­gised for sug­gest­ing oth­er­wise.”

The paper is a full-colour repli­ca of the icon­ic pink broad­sheet includ­ing nation­al and inter­na­tion­al pages and edi­to­ri­als and com­ment, pok­ing fun at FT colum­nists. It was fund­ed by dona­tions on the Inter­net, and giv­en away for free by vol­un­teers. Tens of thou­sands of copies were print­ed – almost as many as the FT sells here dai­ly.

http://ft2020.com

Down­load as a PDF file

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Inter­na­tion­al Sol­i­dar­i­tyAotearoa/New Zealand | Fin­land

April 1st 2009 — Fossil Fools’ Day goes global

Today saw not only mass protests in Lon­don ahead of the G20 sum­mit, but local demon­stra­tions in cities around the UK and across the globe. Under the ban­ner of Fos­sil Fools Day, activists held protests at banks, ener­gy com­pa­nies and pow­er sta­tions across the UK, the USA, Cana­da and South Africa to high­light the twin eco­nom­ic and cli­mate crises.

'It's Going to Get Worse' placardToday saw not only mass protests in Lon­don ahead of the G20 sum­mit, but local demon­stra­tions in cities around the UK and across the globe. Under the ban­ner of Fos­sil Fools Day, activists held protests at banks, ener­gy com­pa­nies and pow­er sta­tions across the UK, the USA, Cana­da and South Africa to high­light the twin eco­nom­ic and cli­mate crises.

For more pho­tos vis­it here and if your action isn’t in the list below email us and we’ll add it to the site.

In the UK …

On the eve of the G20, activists descend­ed on Lon­don to high­light the links between the finan­cial and the cli­mate cri­sis. While the ‘Finan­cial Fools Day’ Street Par­ty got under­way out­side the Bank of Eng­land, the Camp for Cli­mate Action set up camp out­side the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange. Their mes­sage: “Stop­ping car­bon mar­kets — because nature doesn’t do bailouts”. It was­n’t until the evening that the police cleared the space — full sto­ry here. Mean­while over at the Excel Cen­tre, the Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change is hold­ing an Ice-berg “Cli­mate Emer­gency” demo.

Ear­li­er in the week, the Oil Goliath BP was felled by Fos­sil Fools Day’s David as BP post­poned its cen­te­nary par­ty at the British Muse­um to be held on April 1st, due to a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by Art Not Oil and Ris­ing Tide.

Plymouth RBS glued for FFDIn Ply­mouth, Ris­ing Tide pen­guins super-glued them­selves to the entrance of RBS to high­light RBS’s fund­ing of fos­sil fuels projects. RBS are one of the biggest investors in the fos­sil fuel indus­try and pro­vid­ed $16 bil­lion to coal-relat­ed com­pa­nies in 2007 alone. Ann Smith of Ris­ing Tide Ply­mouth today said: “RBS is now 57% owned by the UK tax­pay­er. Cli­mate change requires a move to renew­able ener­gy, not con­tin­ued sup­port for the expan­sion of the fos­sil fuel indus­try”. For more pho­tos vis­it This is Ply­mouth

In Oxford­shire, the ear­ly hours of April 1st saw local activists hang­ing ban­ners from bridges over the A34 between Oxford and Did­cot. Ban­ners read “Cau­tion: Cli­mate Change Ahead”, “Give Way to Wind” and “Fos­sil Fool: 3rd exit” com­plete with pic­tures of Did­cot Pow­er Sta­tion. With Did­cot (run by RWE NPow­er) due for de-com­mis­sion­ing in a few years, it is time to pur­sue renew­able options local­ly. One of the activists said: “We want not only Did­cot, but also the gov­ern­ment and the G20 to see the fol­ly of their actions in pur­su­ing unsus­tain­able tech­nol­o­gy. We have an oppor­tu­ni­ty to pur­sue safe, cheap alter­na­tives and ensure a clean­er future. The wise choice would be to grasp this oppor­tu­ni­ty”.

In Portsmouth, mem­bers of Portsmouth Cli­mate Action Net­work and the University’s Peo­ple & Plan­et group took up posi­tion out­side the Nat West Bank in Com­mer­cial Road to encour­ag­ing shop­pers to tell Roy­al Bank of Scot­land — NatWest to stop fund­ing cli­mate chaos. Activists said: “It is our mon­ey that RBS-NatWest is using to extract tar sands, burn coal and fuel cli­mate chaos. We believe that the only way to pre­vent dan­ger­ous cli­mate change is by invest­ment in renew­ables, not in dirty coal. We are call­ing on the pub­lic to con­tact RBS-NatWest and the UK gov­ern­ment and tell them what they think about them bankrolling cli­mate chaos.”

In Bournemouth, mem­bers of direct action group Plane Stu­pid turned up at Bournemouth Air­port to give them a Fos­sil Fool Award for ‘Out­stand­ing con­tri­bu­tion to local, nation­al and glob­al pol­lu­tion’. Tara Bosworth said, “Bournemouth Air­port may well be the biggest sin­gle source of green­house gas emis­sions in Dorset and they are expand­ing their oper­a­tions, more than dou­bling the num­ber of flights, now that’s plane stu­pid and why they are get­ting our Fos­sil Fool award.” A mem­ber of the air­port staff accept­ed the award but declined hav­ing his pic­ture tak­en.

Fos­sil fool themed street the­atre took place in both Frome in Som­er­set and Totnes in Devon. In Totnes, the Inter­na­tion­al Cli­mate Crim­i­nal known as ‘Old King Coal’ was put on tri­al. The pris­on­er, who is not in good health, was led from The Plains up to the Civic Square where he was tried before a jury of local cit­i­zens and school­child­ren. Unfor­tu­nate­ly oth­er mem­bers of the Fos­sil Fools Gang, includ­ing Oil and Gas, remain at large and are a con­tin­ued dan­ger to the plan­et.

In South Africa …

FFD in South Africa - SasolIn Johan­nes­burg, Earth­life Africa award­ed Sasol (the South African Coal, Oil and Gas Cor­po­ra­tion) the pres­ti­gious 2009 Fos­sil Fool of the Year Award for pro­duc­ing 72 mil­lion tonnes of CO2 per year (over 15% of South Africa’s total emis­sions) and for try­ing to build a new coal-to-liq­uid pow­er plant. Although Sasol ini­tial­ly resist­ed accept­ing the award (one can only imag­ine why), the efforts of a deter­mined group of pro­test­ers final­ly forced the taint­ed tro­phy to be accept­ed.
For more infor­ma­tion vis­it: here or here.

In the USA …

Boston Mannequins on FFD 09In Boston, Mass­a­chu­setts, the “Man­nequins For Cli­mate Jus­tice” shut down the Ken­more Square branch of Bank of Amer­i­ca. A man­nequin was chained to the doors of the bank short­ly before open­ing this morn­ing. The lone man­nequin pro­test­er, Guy Fox, said, “Even a dum­my like me can see that Bank of America’s mas­sive loans to coal com­pa­nies and sup­port for the epi­dem­ic of fore­clo­sures and evic­tions has to stop now.” Fox fur­ther said, “Bank of Amer­i­ca seems deter­mined to be so evil it’s almost com­i­cal, but peo­ple resist­ing the bank’s prac­tices will have the last laugh. Hap­py April Fools to all the cap­i­tal­ist fos­sil fools!”

In Berke­ley, Cal­i­for­nia, a bike ride/march high­light­ed BP’s $500 mil­lion deal with Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia. Under this deal, the oil giant BP is invest­ing $500 mil­lion for the uni­ver­si­ty to research bio­fu­els, rais­ing issues of green­wash­ing, false solu­tions, and the inter­ac­tion between a pub­lic uni­ver­si­ty and a pri­vate cor­po­ra­tion.

Asheville FFD 09In Asheville, North Car­oli­na, pro­test­ers declared Gov­er­nor Pur­due to be in bed with Duke Ener­gy, and demand­ed the can­cel­la­tion of the Cliff­side coal plant. In response to the North Car­oli­na Divi­sion of Air Qual­i­ty (DAQ) rul­ing that Duke Energy’s Cliff­side coal plant is a “minor source of emis­sions”, pro­test­ers gath­ered at noon out­side Gov­er­nor Purdue’s West­ern North Car­oli­na office in down­town Asheville to demand that she revoke the plant’s per­mit. In a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by Asheville Ris­ing Tide, pro­test­ers set up a bed in front of Gov­er­nor Purdue’s office with peo­ple in busi­ness suits rep­re­sent­ing Duke CEO Jim Rogers, DAQ head Kei­th Over­cash, and Gov­er­nor Pur­due under sheets and cov­ered in mon­ey. A ban­ner read­ing, “Gov­er­nor Pur­due in bed with Duke Ener­gy” pro­vid­ed a back­drop to the under-the-sheets liai­son.

In Den­ver, Col­orado, a Fos­sil Fools Day ral­ly of con­cerned cit­i­zens, health experts, and envi­ron­men­tal and neigh­bor­hood lead­ers demand­ed a tran­si­tion to clean ener­gy. The ral­ly, led by WildEarth Guardians, and joined by Sier­ra Club, Green­peace, Clean Ener­gy Action, Safe­Minds, stu­dents, church mem­bers, and affect­ed near­by com­mu­ni­ties, was held in the shad­ow of the Chero­kee coal burn­ing pow­er plant at Denver’s Heron Pond Nat­ur­al Area, and called upon Gov­er­nor Rit­ter to help Col­orado seize clean ener­gy solu­tions and keep Col­oradoans safe from coal. Car­ry­ing hand­made signs and hold­ing pin­wheels to sym­bol­ize a tran­si­tion to clean ener­gy, dozens of cit­i­zens demon­strat­ed their frus­tra­tions with the sta­tus quo and their hope for pro­tect­ing their future.

In New Orleans, con­ser­va­tion groups, stu­dents, and con­cerned cit­i­zens joined forces at Entergy’s head­quar­ters to protest about the company’s plans to expand their use of coal pow­er in Louisiana. “Louisiana’s coast is ground zero for cli­mate change impacts,” said ral­ly orga­niz­er Jonathan Hen­der­son. “Enter­gy should be a respon­si­ble neigh­bor and work to lim­it coast-destroy­ing pol­lu­tion and pro­tect rate-pay­ers from future car­bon price increas­es”.

In the spir­it of the “Coal Cir­cus,” stu­dents from Bowl­ing Green, Ken­tucky organ­ised a ‘Mon­ster Mash’ and a crit­i­cal mass bike ride.

Stu­dents in Tempe, Ari­zona, also hopped on their bikes and declared them­selves “too cool for fos­sil fools.”

In Cana­da …

Five actions in one day in down­town Toron­to? No foolin!
Today Rain­for­est Action Net­work activists kicked Fos­sil Fools Day off with a bang, drop­ping ban­ners off of a high­way, greet­ing over 4,000 cars (we count­ed) stuck in dead­lock traf­fic over a peri­od of two hours. From bridges, we broad­cast mes­sages about Roy­al Bank of Cana­da (RBC)’s financ­ing of the Cana­di­an Tar Sands from our makeshift Pirate Radio sta­tion. Our ban­ners read “Pirate Radio 89.9 FM Tune in now” and “Roy­al Bank cre­ates cli­mate chaos. Renew­ables not tar sands.” The pour­ing rain didn’t block our view of car after car reach­ing for the radio dial as they drove under us.

We began by dress­ing up and imper­son­at­ed bank employ­ees. About 16 of us rode ele­va­tors for up to two more hours, chat­ting up oth­er RBC per­son­nel — “Hey, on my way to work today I heard about how RBC is financ­ing the destruc­tion of Native ter­ri­to­ries in Alber­ta, caus­ing peo­ple can­cer and pol­lut­ing the water! Tar Sands are the world’s dirt­i­est oil. Did you know that? I had no idea! I’m telling my man­ag­er right away!”

Mean­while, out­side the HQ, sev­er­al more of us leaflet­ed and held ban­ners read­ing “RBC Cre­ates poi­soned water in our com­mu­ni­ty,” “Renew­ables not tar sands” and “RBC: financ­ing can­cer and tox­ic sludge.”

Back inside, a lone Torontan walked inside the main office with a beau­ti­ful bou­quet of bal­loons. I don’t know where he got the idea to release them in the atri­um, or how a ban­ner read­ing “ROYAL BANK CREATES CLIMATE CHAOS” got attached….I also don’t know how they’re gonna get it down. Watch him do it.

Lat­er that evening, dozens of activists recon­vened out­side RBC head­quar­ters along­side “Tar­bie,” an oil-soaked ver­sion of RBC’s prized mas­cot “Arbie” who explained to passers­by that he and RBC are help­ing finance one of the fastest grow­ing sources of water pol­lu­tion and green­house gas emis­sions on the plan­et, and how they con­flict with the finan­cial giant’s PR promis­es to pro­mote clean water.

To read more on RBC and the Cana­di­an Tar Sands, vis­it It’s Get­ting Hot in Here.

www.fossilfoolsday.org

Callout for organising! Scottish Camp for Climate Action

Build­ing a more sus­tain­able future in four easy steps:
1. Get out your diary and find a pen
2. Open it at the pages for the 4–16 June and 3–10 August
3. Write in very large, bold let­ter­ing: CLIMATE CAMP SCOTLAND across these dates

Camp for Climate Action Scotland bannerBuild­ing a more sus­tain­able future in four easy steps:
1. Get out your diary and find a pen
2. Open it at the pages for the 4–16 June and 3–10 August
3. Write in very large, bold let­ter­ing: CLIMATE CAMP SCOTLAND across these dates
4. Get involved in this excit­ing move­ment for social change and envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice!

What’s the Scot­tish Camp for Cli­mate Action?

Some time between 3–10 August, activists, cam­paign­ers and com­mu­ni­ties from all over Scot­land will set up camp! We will be liv­ing sus­tain­ably and equal­ly, and tak­ing awe-inspir­ing col­lec­tive direct action to hold greedy cli­mate crim­i­nals to account.

In a time of epoch-mak­ing eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal change, we’re going to be mak­ing direct changes for the bet­ter. We’ll be tak­ing con­trol of our lives, of our soci­ety, and stand­ing up for what we believe in. We’ll refuse to believe the greedy pol­luters and financiers, when they say it’s just not the right time to clean up their act. We’ll clean it up for them!

The Camp (whether urban or rur­al) will be a liv­ing exam­ple of col­lec­tive, imag­i­na­tive low-impact liv­ing, full of prac­ti­cal solu­tions. Its not just about plas­tic bags and light bulbs any more, these things iso­late us and dis­tract us from the real prob­lems. Instead, we will work togeth­er to build strong, sus­tain­able and pow­er­ful com­mu­ni­ties.

Whilst we haven’t decid­ed where the camp will be yet, there’s no short­age of options. Whole swathes of air­ports, coal pow­er sta­tions, open cast mines and agro­fu­el instal­la­tions and motor­ways are planned for Scot­land. We also have the lux­u­ry of host­ing the head­quar­ters of inter­na­tion­al banks like RBS and HBOS, whose greed got us into this eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal mess.

What’s hap­pen­ing in the run-up to the camp?

Some time between June 4–16 there will be a Cli­mate Camp Con­ver­gence, with infor­ma­tive and prac­ti­cal work­shops and dis­cus­sions, oppor­tu­ni­ties for build­ing links between cam­paigns, and the chance for us to col­lec­tive­ly plan the future of cli­mate activism across Scot­land. By the time the August Camp rolls around we’ll be a force to be reck­oned with.

How do I get involved now?

Mak­ing this hap­pen needs loads of ideas, ener­gy and input. In short, it needs you. And all your mates!

Come to an organ­is­ing meet­ing!

We organ­ise hor­i­zon­tal­ly, with­out lead­ers, and every­one has input into deci­sions. At the moment, most of the organ­is­ing is being done in Edin­burgh. We want this to change! We plan for local organ­is­ing meet­ings to feed into reg­u­lar Scot­land-wide Gath­er­ings.

Next meet­ing: Edin­burgh, Tues­day 24th March, 7pm
at the Autonomous Cen­tre of Edin­burgh (ACE) www.autonomous.org.uk

The fol­low­ing meet­ing will be on April 7th , 7pm, ACE in Edin­burgh.

On the agen­da, Tues­day 24th:

1.What focus each of the sum­mer con­ver­gences will have: direct action, edu­ca­tion, move­ment build­ing etc, And what some of the spe­cif­ic con­tent will be.
2. What the exact dates of each con­ver­gence will be.

Start organ­is­ing in your area!

- Get organ­is­ing with peo­ple in your area and see how much time, ener­gy and resources you can bring to a Cli­mate Camp in Scot­land. To be effec­tive, Cli­mate Camp Scot­land needs to have strong, decen­tralised groups doing the plan­ning and prepa­ra­tion.

- Please get in touch if you want to help organ­ise Cli­mate Camp Scot­land! so we can work togeth­er to find meet­ing times and loca­tions that as many peo­ple can get to from around the coun­try.

- Host the Cli­mate Camp Scot­land Info Tour in your area, to find out what’s hap­pen­ing this sum­mer, what has to be decid­ed and pre­pared, and how you can get involved.

- Email: climatecampscotland@riseup.net to request the Info Tour and with any ques­tions how­ev­er big or small!

Upcoming action dates, activist gatherings, & the official meetings en route to the Copenhagen climate summit, 2009 — updated

‘Offi­cial’ meet­ings on the Road to Copen­hagen:

31 March to 8 April 2009
First Post-Kyoto Cli­mate Nego­ti­a­tions (UNFCCC Inter­ces­sion­al Meet­ing), Bonn, Ger­many

‘Offi­cial’ meet­ings on the Road to Copen­hagen:

31 March to 8 April 2009
First Post-Kyoto Cli­mate Nego­ti­a­tions (UNFCCC Inter­ces­sion­al Meet­ing), Bonn, Ger­many
The first meet­ing on the “road to Copen­hagen” and first inter­na­tion­al cli­mate meet­ing for the Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tion. Expect­ed Out­come: Broad dis­cus­sions on respec­tive mit­i­ga­tion goals for devel­oped and devel­op­ing coun­tries. How­ev­er, it is unclear whether Pres­i­dent Oba­ma will have a cli­mate nego­tia­tor and under sec­re­tary in place at this time so there will real “nego­ti­at­ing” at this meet­ing. http://unfccc.int/meetings/items/2654.php

2 April 2009
G20 Meet­ing, Lon­don, Eng­land
This will like­ly be Pres­i­dent Oba­ma’s first large-scale meet­ing with oth­er world lead­ers. The agen­da will like­ly look to tack­le the finan­cial cri­sis, but the G20 web­site men­tions the need to “make progress on long-term issues such as cli­mate change and inter­na­tion­al devel­op­ment.” Expect­ed Out­come: Devel­op a com­mit­ment that the glob­al eco­nom­ic recov­ery will fac­tor in car­bon emis­sions. http://www.g20.org/

24–26 May 2009
World Busi­ness Sum­mit on Cli­mate Change, Copen­hagen, Den­mark
The Copen­hagen Cli­mate Coun­cil is orga­niz­ing the World Busi­ness Sum­mit on Cli­mate Change, which will bring togeth­er the busi­ness com­mu­ni­ty, top sci­en­tists, econ­o­mists and oth­er lead­ing thinkers. Expect­ed Out­come: Issue rec­om­men­da­tions for the next inter­na­tion­al glob­al warm­ing agree­ment. http://www.copenhagenclimatecouncil.com/

1–12 June 2009
Sec­ond Post-Kyoto Cli­mate Nego­ti­a­tions (UNFCCC Inter­ces­sion­al Meet­ing), Bonn, Ger­many
Draft nego­ti­at­ing text is expect­ed to be issued before or dur­ing this meet­ing and will like­ly be very gen­er­al with all the con­tentious items placed in brack­ets, but it will be the basis for actu­al nego­ti­a­tions. Expect­ed Out­come: Draft nego­ti­at­ing text. http://unfccc.int/meetings/items/2654.php

8–10 July 2009
G8 Sum­mit, La Mad­dale­na, Italy
The host, Ital­ian Prime Min­is­ter Sil­vio Berlus­coni, does not share the com­mit­ment to address­ing cli­mate change of pre­vi­ous G8 hosts. Address­ing cli­mate at this meet­ing will be crit­i­cal for keep­ing momen­tum toward Copen­hagen. Expect­ed Out­come: G8 Agree­ment set­ting the stage for Copen­hagen
http://www.g8italia2009.it/G8/G8-G8_Layout_locale-1199882116809_Home.htm

31 August – 4 Sep­tem­ber 2009
World Cli­mate Con­fer­ence Three, Gene­va, Switzer­land
The World Cli­mate Con­fer­ences (WCC) is the major “sci­en­tif­ic” meet­ing for 2009 and is the third in a series of inter­na­tion­al meet­ings, orga­nized by the World Mete­o­ro­log­i­cal Orga­ni­za­tion
about glob­al cli­mate issues. The sec­ond WCC in 1979 result­ed in the cre­ation of the U.N.‘s Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Pan­el on Cli­mate Change. http://www.wmo.int/pages/world_climate_conference/index_en.html Expect­ed Out­come: Group will address cli­mate pre­dic­tion, dis­as­ter risk reduc­tion and adap­ta­tion to cli­mate change.

August 2009 (date not set)
Third Post-Kyoto Cli­mate Nego­ti­a­tions (UNFCCC Inter­ces­sion­al Meet­ing), Bangkok, Thai­land
This is the third meet­ing on the “road to Copen­hagen” and, by this point, par­i­ties should have set their nego­ti­at­ing posi­tions so the frame­work for the next inter­na­tion­al treaty can start to be craft­ed. Expect­ed Out­come: Nation’s set nego­ti­at­ing posi­tions. http://unfccc.int/meetings/items/2654.php

21–25 Sep­tem­ber 2009
Unit­ed Nations Gen­er­al Assem­bly Cli­mate Sum­mit, Copen­hagen
New York, New York — *UN Sec­re­tary Gen­er­al Bon Ki Moon has indi­cat­ed that he plans to hold a spe­cial ses­sion with heads of state to address cli­mate change. Expect­ed Out­come: Indi­ca­tions of nation’s nego­ti­at­ing posi­tion for

Octo­ber 2009 (date not set)
Fourth Post-Kyoto Cli­mate Nego­ti­a­tions (UNFCCC Inter­ces­sion­al Meeting/Minister’s Meet­ing), Loca­tion to be deter­mined
Expect­ed Out­come: Final draft text agreed to. This is the final nego­ti­at­ing ses­sion before Copen­hagen and may be attend­ed only by envi­ron­ment min­is­ters mak­ing it a closed door meet­ing designed to set the stage for COP 15.

7–18 Decem­ber 2009
UNFCCC Con­fer­ence of the Par­ties 15, Copen­hagen, Den­mark
If there is to be no gap between the Kyoto Pro­to­col and a new agree­ment, a frame­work must be agreed to at this meet­ing. Expect­ed Out­come: New inter­na­tion­al glob­al warm­ing treaty. http://www.cop15.dk/en

2010 (dates uncon­firmed)
UNFCCC Con­fer­ence of the Par­ties 16, Jamaica

=============

Old dates from this cal­en­dar:

Com­piled at the recent EF! Win­ter Moot (scroll down for your sum­mer of fun — dates up until Decem­ber ’09):

21–22 Feb­ru­ary 2009
No Bor­ders UK gath­er­ing, Bris­tol

26 Feb­ru­ary 2009
Demon­stra­tions at UK Coal Awards (www.climaterush.co.uk) & at UK Coal HQ (www.northernclimaterush.wordpress.com)

5 March 2009
Next Cli­mate Rush, Lon­don
> http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22254

13–15 March 2009
EF! Treeplant­i­ng, Heb­den Bridge
(trees@riseup.net > www.earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22158)

13–15 March 2009
COP15 Inter­na­tion­al Mobil­i­sa­tion Net­work meet­ing, Copen­hagen, Den­mark (www.climateaction09.org)

14–15 March
Nation­al squat meet­up, Bris­tol
(www.squatmeet09.wordpress.com)

21–22 March 2009
Cli­mate Camp Car­bon Trad­ing Edu­ca­tion Week­end, Lon­don
(international@climatecamp.org.uk)

21–22 March 2009
Direct Action train­ing, 10am at Cow­ley Club, Brighton
(www.cowleyclub.org.uk)

1 April 2009 Fossil/Financial Fools Day
G20 Protests + Events List + Loca­tions Map
Squar­ing up to the Square Mile: the Lon­don G20 map

Cli­mate Camp in the City, Lon­don (www.climatecamp.org.uk/g20)
G20 Melt­down at the Bank of Eng­land (www.g20meltdown.org)
Fos­sil Fools’ Day, every­where (www.risingtide.org.uk/fossilfoolsday2009)
Times & resource links > http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22258

* G20 Crit­i­cal Mass
9:00 AM Meet at Bank Junc­tion (Bank tube sta­tion) EC2

* Finan­cial Fools Day Street Par­ty
Assem­ble at Can­non Street, Moor­gate, Liv­er­pool Street or Lon­don Bridge sta­tions 11am to form four march­ing blocks head­ing towards the Bank of Eng­land for 12-noon, in the ‘Square Mile’ of the City of Lon­don.
See: http://www.g‑20meltdown.org/
Bring a portable radio!

* Cli­mate Camp in the City
The cli­mate camp are camp­ing in the Euro­pean Car­bon Exchange, Hasil­wood house, City of Lon­don 12-noon.
See: http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/g20
Final update on what to bring and what to do where at http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22291

* Fos­sil Fools Day: ‘Your Par­ty’s Over!’ *** POSTPONED by BP fol­low­ing police advice. ***
Cli­mate Crim­i­nal BP is cel­e­brat­ing its cen­te­nary with cock­tails and canapes at the British Musem. And we will be there too, between 6–7pm, to say ‘Your party’s over!’
Meet at 6pm at the British Museum’s Gt. Rus­sell St. gate
See: http://www.fossilfoolsdayofaction.org
Bring ban­ners, musi­cal instru­ments, a sense of cli­mate jus­tice and a non­sense of fool­ery.

2 April 2009
* Crash the Stock Exchange
Eat cap­i­tal­ism for break­fast. Dis­rupt the traders whose finan­cial ego­ma­nia per­pet­u­ates glob­al injus­tice: let’s shut­down trad­ing for the day.
Meet out­side the Lon­don Stock Exchange, 10 Pater­nos­ter Square, City of Lon­don, Lon­don EC4M. 7am (traders arrive at 7am, trad­ing com­menc­ing 8am). Near­est tube: St Pauls — have a pleas­ant jour­ney in… tubes might be busy.
* Excel Cen­tre
Direct action all day against the Excel Cen­tre, Can­ning Town where the G20 will be meet­ing
ExCeL Lon­don, One West­ern Gate­way, Roy­al Vic­to­ria Dock, Lon­don, E16 1XL
A coali­tion of groups includ­ing: The Pales­tine Sol­i­dar­i­ty Cam­paign, Stop the War Coali­tion, The British Mus­lim Ini­tia­tive, and CND have called two protests at the G20; a march and ral­ly in cen­tral Lon­don on the after­noon of April 1st, and a protest to the con­fer­ence itself on April 2nd.

3–5 April 2009
Demon­stra­tions at NATO 60TH Anniver­sary Sum­mit, Baden-Baden, Ger­many & Stras­bourg, France
http://dissent.fr/taxonomy/term/165

24 April‑5 May 2009
Coal Car­a­van, cycling from Not­ting­ham, through Der­byshire, York­shire & .
Stop­ping off at a vari­ety of open-cast sites, pow­er sta­tions and oth­er beau­ti­ful places! Full details of how to book, itin­er­ary for where to join.
(caravan@climatecamp.org.uk > www.coalcaravan.org.uk)

25/26th April 2009
Sizewell anti-nuclear Camp and Demo

2–3rd May 2009
Anti-mil­i­tarist con­fer­ence, Brighton
(http://antimilitaristnetwork.noflag.org.uk)

4th May 2009
Smash EDO May­day! May­day! Street par­ty against war and greed, Brighton.
(http://www.smashedo.org.uk)

6 May 2009
A Wake for BP at the oil behe­moth­’s cen­te­nary par­ty

29 May‑1 June
Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp sum­mer gath­er­ing

1 June
Cli­mate Rush Ped­al Pow­er
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22611

6 June 2009
Eco-vil­lage occu­pa­tion, SW Lon­don
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/22593

6–7 June 2009
Nation­al Anar­chist Gath­er­ing, Lon­don
www.conference09.org.uk

11–14 June 2009
Scot­tish Cli­mate Camp Con­ver­gence
(http://climatecampscotland.org.uk)

23th-29th June 2009
Calais No Bor­ders Camp
(http://calaisnoborder.eu.org/)

3–5 July
For­est Cir­cus fes­ti­val, Lap­pers­fort, Bel­gium

8–10 July 2009
Demon­stra­tions at G8 Sum­mit, La Mad­dale­na, Italy

11–12 July 2009
Anti-Mil­i­tarist Net­work Gath­er­ing, Not­ting­ham
(http://www.antimilitaristnetwork.org.uk)

11–19 July 2009
Dan­ish Cli­mate Camp, near Copen­hagen
(http://camp09.dk/)

12–19 July 2009
Das Kli­ma Work­shop Festival/Le camp cli­ma­tique, near Berne, Switzer­land
(http://www.netzwerkzeug.org/)

18th-? July
Sav­ing Ice­land Sum­mer Mobil­i­sa­tion 2009
(www.savingiceland.org)

20–26 July 2009
NO to Ura­ni­um Pow­er — Anti­nu­clear Cli­mate Camp, Ter­vola, Fin­land
(http://www.hyokyaalto.org/category/english)

23rd-27th July 2009, Oxford­shire.
You are invit­ed to Peace News’ first ever sum­mer camp.
(http://www.peacenewscamp.info)

3–9 August 2009
French Camp Action Cli­mat, Notre Dame des Lan­des, Nantes
(www.campclimat.org)

3–9 August 2009
Dutch/Belgian Cli­mate Camp
(www.klimaatactiekamp.org)

3–10 August 2009
Scot­tish Camp for Cli­mate Action
(http://climatecampscotland.org.uk)

13–16 August 2009
Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru, Near Merthyr Tyd­fil, South Wales
(http://climatecampcymru.org)

15–23 August 2009
Irish Cli­mate Camp
(http://www.climatecamp.ie)

18–24 August 2009
Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing, Cum­bria
(www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk)

20–23 August 2009 IN SALENTO, NUCLEAR CLIMATE CAMP, Italy – Lec­ce
More info

21–23 August 2009
Beyond Bor­ders week­end, Not­ting­ham
A week­end of skill­shar­ing and dis­cus­sion about fight­ing bor­der con­trols and show­ing sol­i­dar­i­ty with migrants
(http://beyondbordersweekend.wordpress.com)

27 August‑2 Sep­tem­ber 2009
UK Camp for Cli­mate Action — con­ver­gence with­in the M25/London (www.climatecamp.org.uk)

Sep­tem­ber 2009 (dates uncon­firmed)
Cli­mate Camp, South Aus­tralia
(http://climatecampsa.org)

North Amer­i­can action camps sum­mer 2009
inter­na­tion­al list of Con­ver­gences for Cli­mate Action

12–20 Sep­tem­ber 2009
Bris­tol Co-Mutiny

18–19 Sep­tem­ber 2009
squats and autonomous spaces — 2 days of direct action around hous­ing and the cre­ation of more autonomous spaces at this time of cri­sis. See link

10–11 Octo­ber
Work­ers’ Cli­mate Action con­fer­ence, Lon­don

12–16 Octo­ber 2009
Glob­al Mobil­i­sa­tion in Defence of Moth­er Earth and the Peo­ples
called by the 4th Con­ti­nen­tal Sum­mit of Indige­nous Peo­ples Abya Yala (”Amer­i­ca”)
More info/resources

16–18 Octo­ber 2009
COP15 Inter­na­tion­al Mobil­i­sa­tion Net­work meet­ing
(www.climateaction09.org)

17–18 Octo­ber 2009
The Great Cli­mate Swoop, clos­ing down Rat­cliffe-on-Soar coal-fired pow­er sta­tion
More info

24 Octo­ber 2009
Lon­don Anar­chist Book­fair
(http://www.anarchistbookfair.org)

24 Octo­ber 2009
Inter­na­tion­al Day of Cli­mate Action
http://www.350.org/

31 October‑1 Novem­ber
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/23245

31 Oct‑1 Nov 2009
Gath­er­ing Against the Prison Soci­ety, Brighton
Dis­cus­sions & pre­sen­ta­tions about the strug­gle for lib­er­a­tion, inside and out­side of the prison walls
More info

21–22 Novem­ber 2009
No New Nuclear. Plan­ning to win strate­gis­ing week­end, Lon­don

28 November‑1 Decem­ber 2009
Week­end of Action and Work­shops at Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp

5 Decem­ber 2009
COP15 OUT, a secret plan to take a space in the City of Lon­don away from and after the Wave. It’s time to show our ‘lead­ers’ how we’re going to take action to reduce emis­sions our­selves.

3–9 Decem­ber 2009
Social and Cli­mate Jus­tice Car­a­van from the WTO Min­is­te­r­i­al in Gene­va to the COP15 sum­mit in Copen­hagen.
http://www.climatecaravan.org

7–18 Decem­ber 2009
Demon­stra­tions at COP15 Sum­mit, Copen­hagen, Den­mark
(www.climateaction09.org)
See this arti­cle for back­ground & links to Action Guide & Map

7–18 Decem­ber 2009
Kli­mafo­rum: Peo­ple’s Cli­mate Sum­mit
http://www.klimaforum09.org

11 Decem­ber 2009
* Our Cli­mate! Not Your Busi­ness! (organ­ised direct action to stop Cor­po­ra­tions tak­ing part in COP process)
http://notyourbusiness.hacklab.dk/

12 Decem­ber 2009
* Flood for Cli­mate Jus­tice (demon­stra­tion by FoE)
http://www.foei.org/en/what-we-do/un-climate-talks/global/2009/the-flood-is-coming
* Glob­al day of Action
http://www.globalclimatecampaign.org/
* March for Cli­mate Jus­tice (includ­ing sys­tem change, not cli­mate change bloc)
* Don’t Nuke the Cli­mate! Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action
http://www.dont-nuke-the-climate.org/index.php?lang=en

13 Decem­ber 2009
Hit the Pro­duc­tion of Cli­mate Chaos
http://htp.noblogs.org/
* Farm­ers action (Via Campesina against agro-indus­try)

14 Decem­ber 2009
* No Bor­ders, No Cli­mate Refugees! (Day of action in Copen­hagen. Call to action to inter­na­tion­al no bor­ders groups dur­ing the COP 15 in Copen­hagen)
http://info.interactivist.net/node/13135
* Repa­ra­tions for Cli­mate Debt

15 Decem­ber 2009
* Resis­tance is Ripe! Agri­cul­ture Action Day (Change the food sys­tem not the cli­mate)
http://www.climate-justice-action.org/mobilization/agriculture-action-day/

16 Decem­ber 2009
* RECLAIM POWER! — Push­ing for Cli­mate Jus­tice! (Mass action to enter the COP15 con­fer­ence area and dis­rupt the ses­sions in order to hold a Peo­ple’s Sum­mit for Cli­mate Jus­tice. Con­fronta­tion­al civ­il dis­obe­di­ence)
http://www.climate-justice-action.org

18 Decem­ber 2009
* (last offi­cial day of the sum­mit) — “Nev­er Trust a COP” actions through­out the city
http://www.nevertrustacop.org/

Protests Resume at Tara

30.1.09
Yes­ter­day 13 Tara Activists staged a return to ambush protests . The Video speaks for itself.

Call­ing all Pro­tec­tors of Tara!

Fol­low­ing on from last Thurs­day’s suc­cess­ful day of Direct Action, peace­ful
protest again on Wednes­day 4th Feb

All wel­come

A chairde

30.1.09
Yes­ter­day 13 Tara Activists staged a return to ambush protests . The Video speaks for itself.

Call­ing all Pro­tec­tors of Tara!

Fol­low­ing on from last Thurs­day’s suc­cess­ful day of Direct Action, peace­ful
protest again on Wednes­day 4th Feb

All wel­come

A chairde

To raise funds for Action Days, there will be a Tara Pix­ie buskathon in
Gal­way on Sat­ur­day 6th Feb. Shop Street, 12pm to 5pm

Music, per­form­ers and guests want­ed.

Crash space avail­able but please RSVP ASAP

Lou and Emma Rua ()

Teamhair Abu

***********************************

Sáb­háil Teamhair
Shell Chun Sáille
www.tarapixie.net

Lou McMan­mon
loumcmanmon@gmail.com

Imbolc at Tara

***************CALLING ALL TARA WARRIORS**************

Imbolg is fast approach­ing and the Protest Sea­son is kick­ing off again in style!

DAY OF ACTION for Tara, this Thurs­day 29 Jan­u­ary. Meet­ing Wednes­day night at Vig­il Farm, for actions ear­ly and all day Thurs­day.
Come pre­pared — bring sleep­ing bag, torch, water­proof warm clothes, cam­eras, ban­ners, cos­tumes, musi­cal instru­ments etc etc

***************CALLING ALL TARA WARRIORS**************

Imbolg is fast approach­ing and the Protest Sea­son is kick­ing off again in style!

DAY OF ACTION for Tara, this Thurs­day 29 Jan­u­ary. Meet­ing Wednes­day night at Vig­il Farm, for actions ear­ly and all day Thurs­day.
Come pre­pared — bring sleep­ing bag, torch, water­proof warm clothes, cam­eras, ban­ners, cos­tumes, musi­cal instru­ments etc etc

*All wel­come, please tell lit­er­al­ly every­one. Protests can­not con­tin­ue unless we have the num­bers to sup­port us.
*
If you can­not make it on Thurs­day but would like to help out, we need help with:
Press releas­es
Ban­ner mak­ing mate­ri­als
Cam­eras
Food
Any­thing else you thing that could be help­ful!
Tara is call­ing, the days are get­ting longer and warmer. Protest­ing is great cra­ic, it’s nev­er to late for TARA

For more details con­tact me on the num­ber below
Slán a Pix­ie
Lou

***********************************
00 353 86 3600478
Sáb­háil Teamhair
Shell Chun Sáille
www.tarapixie.net

http://www.savetara.com

Stop the Weymouth Relief Road Update & Videos — wish list & overhanging branch tactic!

Lat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

2 Mile Coppice in summer timeLat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

But the demon­stra­tion, which began last Thurs­day, was con­tin­u­ing on Fri­day and has delayed work at Two Mile Cop­pice.

Pro­tes­tors have now occu­pied a tree branch over­hang­ing neigh­bour­ing land.

In the morn­ing, Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil served a com­pul­so­ry pur­chase order on the land which meant the pro­tes­tors were legal­ly required to leave.

While the oak tree they are in is on land cov­ered by the notice, the branch they occu­py over­hangs adja­cent Wood­land Trust land.

——–

Tat list — What we need

And lat­est update (Sat­ur­day 20th Decem­ber):-

www.greenvoice.com — short­ly to be a web space for us

PLEASE CIRCULATE

update– we have an address of sorts, and dona­tions and xmas gifts would be great !”!!

Cash is ok to send as it is a secure post box, but phonecards for Orange are bet­ter than cash.
Also need AAA and AA bat­ter­ies — Dura­cell and Ener­gis­er or alka­line ONLY.
Rope — Green or blue polypro­pe­lene — 6mm or 10mm thick­ness.
Rope — Sta­t­ic climb­ing line — 10mm or larg­er.
Rope — Dynam­ic climb­ing line — any thick­ness
Rope — arborist lines — we have 2 tree sur­geons liv­ing with us and this rope is use­ful.

sec­ond hand rope is nor­mal­ly FREE from climb­ing cen­tres ‑indoor cen­tres often throw their ropes out every 6 ‑9 months — just call in and ask for it.

Tarps, plas­tic sheet­ing.

Tools — ham­mers, nails, saws, prun­ing saws, bill hooks.

2 way radios, nightvi­sion gog­gles, cat­a­pults (to get rope up), grap­pling hooks. Head torch­es — LED are best.

The Wood­land Trust still own the land that the road is being built on, but have waived their 14 days notice peri­od and told Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil that it is ok to get on with cut­ting down the Ancient wood­land — basi­cal­ly they have thrown in the tow­el with­out even stand­ing up to argue or delay the destruc­tion on their land. The fact that the Wood­land Trust still own the land was record­ed in the Court case of the 18th decem­ber 2008 of Dorset
Coun­ty Coun­cil ’ v ’ Per­sons Unknown in Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court. Her Majesty’s Land Reg­istry in Ply­mouth also con­firmed it.

The peo­ple of Wey­mouth brought Two Mile Copse through pub­lic sub­scrip­tion. Local peo­ple dug deeply into their pock­ets and put their mon­ey into con­serv­ing the land for per­pe­tu­ri­ty, for us and all future gen­er­a­tions.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil have so far not giv­en one pen­ny in com­pen­sa­tion, either to the Wood­land Trust, nor local peo­ple who raised the pub­lic mon­ey to pre­serve the wood in the first place.

—————————-

More update:-

Hi Ho!, HO!, Ho!

Liv­ing up 6 trees at wey­mouth — Two Mile Copse / Ted­dy Bear Woods. I helped fight against
this road back in 1996, and 2004 and we won it then.

BUT now they gone and done it and cut 70% of the trees.….

We have a 400 year old Oak in Ancient Wood­land that’s are pro­tect­ing and 4 Ash trees reach­ing 90 feet up into the sky. Also a tall and healthy young elm.

We have a tree house, a net, lots of walk­ways in the sky and an off route vis­i­tors site on the ground.

GET HELP + MEDIA now if u can.

regards

2 Mile Copse Protest Camp
c/o Lor­ton Barn
Lor­ton Lane
Lit­tle­Moor
Wey­mouth
DT3 5QH

Sor­ry we cur­rent­ly are in the process of arrang­ing a site mobile phone — num­ber to fol­low
short­ly

Links/more below & in pre­vi­ous sto­ry.

—–

Fol­low­ing from the Stop the Wey­mouth Relief Road bul­letin. Appar­ent­ly there is a chain­saw gang now oper­at­ing 1.5 miles fur­ther North from Lit­tle­moor, between Lit­tle­moor and Ridge­way. There are 3 pro­test­ers down there but they need more back up. I have been in con­tact with the pro­test­ers occu­py­ing the sight at Lit­tle­moor. They are in urgent need of more sup­port from locals to help on the ground and oth­ers to help build tree hous­es along the route, all help would be great­ly appre­ci­at­ed.

On site mobiles are 07792717821 / 07807952822

—–
Videos: 1 | 2

COUNCIL chiefs will go to court tomor­row in a bid to remove a grow­ing num­ber of pro­test­ers from the route of Weymouth’s planned relief road.

It comes as the stand-off inten­si­fied in Two Mile Cop­pice as eco-war­riors began mov­ing a fence and telling secu­ri­ty staff it encroached too far into the ancient wood­land.

But today Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil is hop­ing to be grant­ed pos­ses­sion of the land by Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court.

The coun­cil is ask­ing the court to rule that the pro­test­ers must leave the prop­er­ty, and if they agree to that request, when they must leave.

The num­ber of pro­test­ers reached sev­en as a camp was set up beneath an oak tree that stands alone in the fenced off area of the woods.

Four pro­test­ers set up camp and roped off their own area below three more based up inside the tree.

One new arrival, known only as Andy, said: “We are here to stop the road as there are many rea­sons why the wood­land should not be chopped down.

“The oak tree we are in and beneath is hun­dreds of years old.

“We heard about the peo­ple here and want­ed to come to sup­port the action.

“We can help pro­vide food and what­ev­er else they need in the tree.

“If you let the coun­cil go ahead with the road it won’t be long before they want to chop more of this beau­ti­ful wood­land down for devel­op­ment.

“The road won’t actu­al­ly help pre­vent traf­fic con­ges­tion in the end any­way.”

A coun­cil spokesman con­firmed clear­ance work is con­tin­u­ing in the west­ern edge strip of Two Mile Cop­pice and said it is hoped this will be fin­ished before Christ­mas.

She said: “There is a coun­ty court hear­ing today where the coun­ty coun­cil will be ask­ing for an order for the tres­passers to hand over the land to the pos­ses­sion of the coun­cil.”

Nick Pep­per, 41, has camped in the woods since he came down from a tree which has now been chopped down.

Mr Pep­per, who pre­vi­ous­ly lived in Wey­mouth but now lives in Bris­tol, said: “As soon as we received the legal papers to evict the tree we thought we’d bet­ter have a legal­ly legit­i­mate sup­port camp.

“We are pro­tect­ed under the 1977 Crim­i­nal Law Act which stops us from being legal­ly evict­ed or ille­gal­ly assault­ed.

“We’ve actu­al­ly squat­ted in an area of land so we can pro­tect the peo­ple up the tree from intim­i­da­tion or ille­gal activ­i­ty.

“There needs to be open access so we can mon­i­tor what’s going on.”

Titnore Woods battle goes on! Upcoming events & update

DETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

Trees drawingDETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

The freez­ing tem­per­a­tures and stormy con­di­tions mean life is cur­rent­ly no pic­nic for the hardy pro­test­ers camped out in Tit­nore Woods, West Dur­ring­ton, in a last-ditch bid to try and stop a new hous­ing estate and Tesco mega­s­tore from being built over green fields and ancient wood­land.

And grate­ful local sup­port­ers are organ­is­ing a pre-Christ­mas stall in the town cen­tre to bring fes­tive cheer to the tree-house dwellers, who moved onto the site back in May 2006.

They will be col­lect­ing pro­vi­sions for the pro­test­ers under the title “A Ham­per for a Camper” at Hold­er’s Cor­ner, Mon­tague Street, Wor­thing, on Sat­ur­day Decem­ber 20, from 11am.

It wasn’t an easy option when the team of eco-heroes sneaked onto the threat­ened ancient wood­land off Tit­nore Lane at the crack of dawn on a May bank hol­i­day and start­ed build­ing their tree homes before any­one knew what was hap­pen­ing.

Most peo­ple assumed they’d be kicked off again straight away, but the days turned to weeks turned to months turned to years and they’re still there!

The final plan­ning appli­ca­tion isn’t even through yet — they had to rethink part of it — and you can still object, writ­ing to the Wor­thing Bor­ough Coun­cil plan­ning depart­ment at Port­land House, Rich­mond Road, Wor­thing and quot­ing WB/04/00040/OUT.

But, sad­ly, Wor­thing cam­paign­ers against the devel­op­ment have already dis­cov­ered through years of cam­paign­ing, let­ter-writ­ing, peti­tion-rais­ing and large, peace­ful, demon­stra­tions that mon­ey and pow­er don’t lis­ten to the lit­tle peo­ple who know the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong.

We live in a world where even if police com­mit mur­der or theft they can get com­plete­ly off the hook.

We live in a world where politi­cians can lie through their teeth, start wars that kill hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple, and get away with it. We live in a world that is being choked to death by the blind greed of cap­i­tal­ism and yet we are told there is no oth­er option.

The Tit­nore campers are part of that big­ger pic­ture — they have the guts to phys­i­cal­ly put them­selves on the line and say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

Please sup­port them in any way you can — food, sup­plies, a friend­ly vis­it.

There are tough times ahead and we all need to be there for each oth­er.

* 1990s road pro­test­er Jim Hin­dle will be giv­ing a talk at 8pm on Thurs­day Jan­u­ary 29 upstairs at The Rest in Bath Place, Wor­thing. All wel­come.

London Critical Mass report (& recent legal ruling), & Exeter CM announcement

In the week of the law lords’ final rul­ing on the legal sta­tus of crit­i­cal mass, fri­day night saw around 200 cyclists brave the damp and cold to take part in the “com­mon­ly or cus­tom­ar­i­ly held pro­ces­sion” — for the third month in a

London Critical Mass penny farthingsIn the week of the law lords’ final rul­ing on the legal sta­tus of crit­i­cal mass, fri­day night saw around 200 cyclists brave the damp and cold to take part in the “com­mon­ly or cus­tom­ar­i­ly held pro­ces­sion” — for the third month in a row, no police direct­ly accom­pa­nied the ride. the ride itself was most­ly fun and smooth-going, but there was a col­li­sion at mar­ble arch that marred an oth­er­wise suc­ces­ful evening.

the mass went over water­loo bridge and then along the strand to white­hall and par­lia­ment square. after a few cir­cles there, the next stop was out­side new scot­land yard, where a very loud cycle sound sys­tem noti­fied their pres­ence to the police (along with chants of “one-nil, one-nil”). mov­ing on past buck­ing­ham palace and round the back streets of pic­cadil­ly, there was a brief stop at pic­cadil­ly cir­cus.

this is the third month with­out direct police accom­pa­ni­ment, and it seems each time the mass is get­ting bet­ter at con­trol­ling itself and oth­er road traf­fic for the safe­ty and ben­e­fit of all. it seemed that almost every­one was empow­ered to have a go at ‘cork­ing’ (block­ing incom­ing side roads at junc­tions to stop motor vehi­cles from min­gling with the mass). if done firm­ly and polite­ly, the road is kept clear for the whole mass to pass, and then the incon­ve­nience to oth­er motorists is min­imised and the cyclists keep mov­ing safe­ly and freely. also, the front rid­ers stopped every now and then to allow the mass to regroup. mean­while pedes­tri­ans were often catered for and let through at cross­ings etc.

there were an array of dif­fer­ent bikes too, with a cou­ple of mod­ern pen­ny far­things, a very tall ‘dou­ble deck­er’ bike (whose rid­er was heard now and then shout­ing for peo­ple to keep mov­ing — it was a long way down!!), there was a rick­shaw, and at least two sound sys­tems.

after a damp start, the rain held off, things were going smooth­ly until at mar­ble arch, a bicy­cle was hit by an irate motorist who had been briefly held up by a ‘cork’ at the top of park lane and then decid­ed to dri­ve like a lunatic. as sev­er­al cyclists went to aid, the dri­ver at first tried to dri­ve from the scene of the acci­dent, then scraped his own car door by push­ing it hard open against a near­by bicy­cle, and then assault­ed the cyclist by pok­ing him in the eye.

sev­er­al rid­ers kept the car sur­round­ed until police arrived. the first cops were from char­ing cross, and they seemed to be very much on the side of the motorist, even sug­gest­ing that they’d arrest the cyclist who was assault­ed! after a while some padding­ton offi­cers turned up, and act­ed more pro­fes­sion­al­ly, tak­ing details of the var­i­ous wit­ness­es, and even­tu­al­ly arrest­ing and hand­cuff­ing the crazy dri­ver.

a shout out to the cyclists that stuck around to help. next mass on box­ing day — meet (as cus­tom­ar­i­ly!) under water­loo bridge on the south bank at 6–6.30pm (last fri­day of every month)

Since 1994, Lon­don cyclists have been gath­er­ing every sin­gle month to cycle, par­ty and assert their right to the road — the famous Crit­i­cal Mass. 

Amidst oth­er police tac­tics aim­ing to break the d.i.y spir­it of the event, the Police attempt­ed to ban the ride in Sep­tem­ber 2005. The court case and oblig­a­tory appeals that ensued last­ed for 3 years until the 26th of Novem­ber 2008 when the Law Lords ruled in favour of Lon­don Crit­i­cal Mass. A vic­to­ry for Lon­don — but an unclear result for oth­er Crit­i­cal Mass­es around the coun­try.

The Crit­i­cal Mass bicy­cle ride has been going on in Lon­don since 1994 — a month­ly gath­er­ing of cyclist who cycle togeth­er through Lon­don with no planned route and no defined lead­ers or organ­is­ers.

In Sep­tem­ber 1995, the police effec­tive­ly tried to ban Crit­i­cal Mass by claim­ing it was an ille­gal pro­ces­sion, and that the organ­is­ers had to inform the police of the route ahead of the event. This is an exerpt from the leaflet they dis­trib­uted on that occa­sion :

“…Police can impose con­di­tions on pro­ces­sions, demon­stra­tions and oth­er assem­blies, and par­tic­i­pants ren­der them­selves liable to arrest if they fail to com­ply with those con­di­tions. These cycle protests are not law­ful because no organ­is­er has pro­vid­ed police the with the nec­es­sary noti­fi­ca­tion. Your par­tic­i­pa­tion in this event could ren­der you liable to pros­e­cu­tion. Police pol­i­cy in facil­i­tat­ing these events is cur­rent­ly under review…”

It may be dif­fi­cult for the police to accept it, but it is a well known fact that Crit­i­cal Mass has no set organ­is­ers. While some may print leaflets and oth­ers host a web­site, it’s a spon­ta­neous event ; peo­ple just show up on the last Fri­day of the month and ride togeth­er, any­one can go at the front and sug­gest ite­nar­ies. Claim­ing that Crit­i­cal Mass is organ­ised is like claim­ing that traf­fic jams are organ­ised. By their let­ter, the police refused cyclist the sta­tus of ‘traf­fic’ — one of Crit­i­cal Mass’ aim being to show that cyclists are traf­fic and should be allowed to use the road as much as cars.

The Octo­ber 2005 mass saw one of the biggest turnout ever in Lon­don — show­ing how many peo­ple care about Crit­i­cal Mass, and that peo­ple would not let the police stop it. Soon after, Des Key and Friends of the Earth start­ed a court case against the police.

The court case took sev­er­al years and went up to the House of Lords before fin­ish­ing, on the 26th of Novem­ber 2008, rul­ing in favour of crit­i­cal mass. The rul­ing stat­ed that Crit­i­cal Mass was cus­tom­ary, and there­fore did not need to apply for per­mis­sion, or to inform the police.

The rul­ing how­ev­er sug­gests that Crit­i­cal Mass is a pro­ces­sion — refus­ing the idea that cyclist are traf­fic. As such it is not clear how the rul­ing may be used in the future for peo­ple set­ting up new Crit­i­cal Mass­es around the UK who will not be able to claim these are cus­tom­ary events.

Police has been a reg­u­lar fea­ture at Crit­i­cal Mass for the past 3 or 4 years — occa­sion­aly pro­tect­ing cyclists from angry dri­vers, but always try­ing to man­age the ride, shout­ing at peo­ple who tried to do it them­selves and gen­er­al­ly being intim­i­dat­ing towards peo­ple who showed any form of ini­tia­tive. The police were try­ing to trans­form Crit­i­cal Mass into some­thing they could under­stand : an event where par­tic­i­pants are sheep­ish and sim­ply do as the organ­is­ers tell them to do.

It is unclear whether it is relat­ed to this judg­ment, the leav­ing of Ian Blair or oth­er inter­nal police mat­ters, but the police has not been at Crit­i­cal Mass for the past two months. Now that the judge­ment has ruled  in favor of Crit­i­cal Mass, they have even less of a rea­son for show­ing up — and we are going to have to re-learn how to man­age this event our­selves prop­er­ly.

Exeter Crit­i­cal Mass — meet 12.00 on Cathe­dral Green on Sat­ur­day Decem­ber 6th. To get in the mood come along to a screen­ing of “We are traf­fic” at Exeter Phoenix on Thurs­day Decem­ber 4th at 19.00

Thurs­day Decem­ber 4th@ 7.00 — We are Traf­fic Screen­ing -
Exeter Phoenix , Brad­ninch Place, Gandy St, Exeter,

We Are Traf­fic! chron­i­cles the his­to­ry and devel­op­ment of the “Crit­i­cal Mass” bicy­cle move­ment– one of the most spir­it­ed and dynam­ic social/political move­ments of the apa­thet­ic 90’s. In over 200 cities in 14 dif­fer­ent coun­tries, Crit­i­cal Mass has now become a month­ly rit­u­al.

With traf­fic con­ges­tion, pol­lu­tion, and road rage on the rise, grow­ing num­bers around the world are advo­cat­ing for trans­porta­tion alter­na­tives, and Crit­i­cal Mass is at the cut­ting edge of this mind­set.

Show­ing in the Black Box Film, every­one wel­come to stay after to talk about future events/critical mass­es etc and maybe for a drink at North­bridge Inn

Snacks pro­vid­ed — feel free to bring more snacks though!

——————————————————————————

Exeter Crit­i­cal Mass — Sat­ur­day 6th Decem­ber @ 12.00 Cathe­dral Green, Exeter -

Xmas Theme option­al — dec­o­rate your bikes!

WHAT’S IS ALL ABOUT?
Crit­i­cal Mass is often described as an ‘unor­gan­ised coin­ci­dence’. It hap­pens when a lot of cyclists hap­pen to be in the same place at the same time and decide to cycle the same way togeth­er for a while

WHAT’S THE PURPOSE?
“Every­day, all over the world, peo­ple are resist­ing the prob­lem cul­ture of the car by get­ting on their bikes and rid­ing, instead of dri­ving.

Crit­i­cal Mass is a cel­e­bra­tion of the alter­na­tives to cars, pol­lu­tion, acci­dents and the loss of pub­lic spaces and free­doms.

Not an organ­i­sa­tion or group, but an idea or tac­tic, Crit­i­cal Mass allows peo­ple to reclaim cities with their bikes, just by get­ting togeth­er and out-num­ber­ing the cars on the road”

WHAT HAPPENS ON A CRITICAL MASS?
Each one is dif­fer­ent and they fol­low no set route, with the direc­tion being spon­ta­neous­ly cho­sen as peo­ple cycle along. Any­one is free to join or leave the ride as it ped­als along.

The ride lasts no more than a cou­ple of hours (depend­ing on the weath­er!) and usu­al­ly ends in a con­ve­nient­ly placed pub for more drinks.

Most all, they are peace­ful, safe and fun!

DO I NEED A BIKE?
Nope! Crit­i­cal Mass is not just for bikes — skate­boards, roller blades, wheel­chairs, pogo sticks — in fact any form of non-motorised, non-pol­lut­ing are all very wel­come!

Climate suffragettes storm municipal city council! Stop the motorway!

On Novem­ber 12th, 2008 at 5.15 pm. six cli­mate activists dressed in peri­od cos­tumes as suf­fragettes com­plete with big hats, marched into a munic­i­pal city coun­cil meet­ing in Gothen­burg, the sec­ond largest city of Swe­den.

Swedish suffragettes 1Swedish suffragettes 2On Novem­ber 12th, 2008 at 5.15 pm. six cli­mate activists dressed in peri­od cos­tumes as suf­fragettes com­plete with big hats, marched into a munic­i­pal city coun­cil meet­ing in Gothen­burg, the sec­ond largest city of Swe­den.

The politi­cians were debat­ing a new six-lane motor­way, called the Marieholm tun­nel, planned to be built under the riv­er that runs through the city. The six women, activists from the cli­mate net­work Kli­max, stormed in to the meet­ing blow­ing whis­tles. A ban­ner was unfold­ed with the text: “No more tun­nel vision – cli­mate smart pol­i­tics now!” The activists voiced two demands:

Stop Marieholm tun­nel, no more motor­ways.
Local pol­i­tics in accor­dance with the lat­est cli­mate sci­ence.

From the stand oth­er activists and mem­bers of the pub­lic cheered. Leaflets explain­ing the action were hand­ed out. The action com­mem­o­rat­ed the 100 years anniver­sary of the Suf­fragettes burst­ing into the British Par­lia­ment to demand women’s suf­frage.
The offi­cial cli­mate goal of Gothen­burg is to sta­bi­lize the emis­sions caused by the city to a glob­al­ly sus­tain­able and fair lev­el by 2050. Still the politi­cians (con­ser­v­a­tives, lib­er­als and social democ­rats) are cook­ing up plans for a new six-lane motor­way under the riv­er, even though they know that new roads lead to more traf­fic. To build a new motor­way is insan­i­ty. Its the abso­lut last thing we need in these times of cli­mate change!
As did the Suf­fragettes 100 years ago, we are fac­ing an urgent prob­lem of huge injus­tice. It is women all over the world who will suf­fer the worst con­se­quences of cli­mate change, even though it isn’t women who are respon­si­ble for the largest sources of emis­sions. With this action we cel­e­brate the strong women before us who fought for a bet­ter world. We have picked up the torch the suf­fragettes car­ried and we will pass it on!

green­gote­borg at yahoo.se
http://www.klimatet.org