Peru: Amazon Indians Direct Action Against Government

Thou­sands of Ama­zon Indi­ans are protest­ing against the Peru­vian gov­ern­ment. Protests have been going on for more than a week and involve an esti­mat­ed 14,000 Indi­ans from all over the Peru­vian Ama­zon. A road and a riv­er have been block­ad­ed, boats belong­ing to a gas com­pa­ny have been inter­cept­ed, an oil pipeline has been closed, and a hydro­elec­tric plant has been tak­en over.
The protests are in response to new laws passed by the gov­ern­ment. The Indi­ans say the laws under­mine their rights and make it eas­i­er for com­pa­nies to take con­trol of their ter­ri­to­ries.

Thou­sands of Ama­zon Indi­ans are protest­ing against the Peru­vian gov­ern­ment. Protests have been going on for more than a week and involve an esti­mat­ed 14,000 Indi­ans from all over the Peru­vian Ama­zon. A road and a riv­er have been block­ad­ed, boats belong­ing to a gas com­pa­ny have been inter­cept­ed, an oil pipeline has been closed, and a hydro­elec­tric plant has been tak­en over.
The protests are in response to new laws passed by the gov­ern­ment. The Indi­ans say the laws under­mine their rights and make it eas­i­er for com­pa­nies to take con­trol of their ter­ri­to­ries.

‘(We) are the vic­tims of a sys­tem­at­ic vio­la­tion by the Peru­vian state of the fun­da­men­tal rights we have over our ter­ri­to­ries,’ a state­ment from Peru’s nation­al Ama­zon Indi­an organ­i­sa­tion, AIDESEP, said. ‘The per­son respon­si­ble for this is the pres­i­dent, Alan Gar­cia, who has vio­lat­ed Peru’s con­sti­tu­tion and inter­na­tion­al agree­ments pro­tect­ing indige­nous peo­ples’ rights.’

AIDESEP and oth­er indige­nous lead­ers have been in talks with mem­bers of the gov­ern­ment, but these have since bro­ken down. Peru’s prime min­is­ter has said that talks can resume if the protests are called off.

The protests start­ed on August 9, the UN Day for Indige­nous Peo­ples. One of the Indi­ans’ main com­plaints is that the gov­ern­ment has failed to con­sult them about the new leg­is­la­tion, con­tra­ven­ing inter­na­tion­al law and the recent­ly approved UN Dec­la­ra­tion on Indige­nous Peo­ples’ rights.

AIDESEP has called for the protest to go on ‘indef­i­nite­ly’ until their demands are met. These include the repeal of thir­ty-nine laws.

Protests by thou­sands of Ama­zon Indi­ans across the Peru­vian jun­gle have had major impacts on the Peru­vian gov­ern­ment.

The protests have been in response to new laws passed by the gov­ern­ment that the Indi­ans say under­mine their rights and make it eas­i­er for out­siders to seize con­trol of their ter­ri­to­ries.

Fol­low­ing the protests, Peru’s Con­gres­sion­al Com­mis­sion on Andean, Ama­zon­ian and Afro-Peru­vian peo­ples, the Envi­ron­ment and Ecol­o­gy has pro­posed a bill to repeal the two most con­tro­ver­sial laws — Leg­isla­tive Decrees 1015 and 1073. Con­gress is due to vote today on whether to do so.

Peru’s prime min­is­ter has described the Com­mis­sion’s deci­sion as estab­lish­ing ‘a bad prece­dent’ because it was made in response to the protests. Mean­while, Peru’s pres­i­dent appealed to Con­gress not to repeal the two laws, say­ing it would be a ‘his­tor­i­cal­ly seri­ous mis­take’ and would con­demn Indi­an com­mu­ni­ties to ‘anoth­er cen­tu­ry of back­ward­ness and mis­ery.’

The gov­ern­ment has declared a state of emer­gency in some parts of the Peru­vian Ama­zon. There are reports of police fir­ing bul­lets and spray­ing tear gas to dis­perse crowds, leav­ing some Indi­ans wound­ed.

Reports say that Peru’s nation­al Ama­zon Indi­an organ­i­sa­tion, AIDESEP, has called for a sus­pen­sion of the protests.

Earth First! gathering — programme and travel directions

Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing
Eco­log­i­cal Direct Action with­out Com­pro­mise
27 Aug — 1 Sept 2008, Nor­folk
Join us for 5 days of work­shops and plan­ning actions

Trav­el direc­tions:

Earth First! Gathering 2008 - print sizeEarth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing
Eco­log­i­cal Direct Action with­out Com­pro­mise
27 Aug — 1 Sept 2008, Nor­folk
Join us for 5 days of work­shops and plan­ning actions

Trav­el direc­tions:
The gath­er­ing this year will be held at Woolsey­bridge Farm — a love­ly site in Nor­folk with lots of trees and a lit­tle stream. It’s approx­i­mate­ly 1.5 miles NNE of Diss. Diss has reg­u­lar train ser­vices and a whole­food shop. The Grid Ref­er­ence of the site is TM130819. The post code is IP22 5SY.

The site is eas­i­ly acces­si­ble by pub­lic trans­port, you can get the train either to Diss or Nor­wich and then catch the bus route no 1 (Sim­monds) from Diss to Nor­wich or vice ver­sa — this route goes right past the site and we’ll be ask­ing the local bus com­pa­ny if they will stop right out­side the site on request. Or you could walk or cycle — it’s only 1.5miles away from Diss train sta­tion. Please come by pub­lic trans­port if at all pos­si­ble! .
We will run pick-ups from the train sta­tion for any­body who can’t use the bus ser­vice or for larg­er groups of peo­ple. If you need a lift please let us know well in advance (and not in the mid­dle of the night, when you’re at a train sta­tion some­where!). Ring the Gath­er­ing mobile on 07789 331857

For a map and fur­ther details on trav­el includ­ing bus times and direc­tions for dri­vers check out http://earthfirstgathering.org.uk/2008/where.html

Pro­gramme
This year’s pro­gramme focuss­es on info and plan­ning for actions, direct action skills as well as spaces to dis­cuss how we can respond to and deal with the widen­ing eco­log­i­cal, eco­nom­ic and soci­etal crises. We hope there’s some­thing for every­one.
We rec­om­mend that you arrive Tue evening, as work­shops will start on Wednes­day morn­ing and run until Sun­day evening

For more info about the gath­er­ing check out our web­site or email us (though we won’t be able to answer email after 21 Aug, as we’ll be on site set­ting up)

http://www.earthfirst.org.uk, sum­mer­gath­er­ing _ AT _ earthfirst.org.uk

The work­shops

Wednes­day

12:00
Intro­duc­tion to Earth First! and the gath­er­ing
Deal­ing with the main­stream media — how to get your mes­sage across
Basic electrics — for squats and homes.
Cap­i­tal­ism and cli­mate change — how to make the links vis­i­ble in actions
Queer net­work­ing ses­sion

2:30
Self-defence — mixed prac­tise ses­sion
Squat­ting FAQ — shar­ing tips and tricks
Action Recon­nais­sance for begin­ners
Intro­duc­tion to the root caus­es of eco­log­i­cal destruc­tion and an explo­ration of alter­na­tives
Advanced Nav­i­ga­tion

4:30
Sav­ing Ice­land — Intro­duc­tion to the cam­paign
Nuclear waste and nuclear weapons
Con­sen­sus Deci­sion-mak­ing
Intro­duc­tion to Ecol­o­gy
Con­fronting Abu­sive Behav­iours with­in our Com­mu­ni­ties — with­out the police/prison.

6:00
Library Space: Nego­ti­at­ing Safer Sex: tips on putting the the­o­ry into prac­tice, and mak­ing your sex life more fun as well as safer!

8:00
Cin­e­ma: Talk with video on resist­ing rain­for­est destruc­tion in Tas­ma­nia

Thurs­day

10:30
Deal­ing with Pub­lic Order sit­u­a­tions — under­stand­ing police tac­tics and how we can deal with to them/turn them to our advan­tage (runs until lunch)
State and cor­po­rate oppres­sion of the Aus­tralian Abo­rig­ines
Action recon­nais­sance — advanced skill­share, share your most clever tips and tricks for get­ting info for actions
Prac­ti­cal plant iden­ti­fi­ca­tion (begin­ners)
Activist trau­ma and recov­ery

12:00
Sav­ing Ice­land — an eval­u­a­tion of the camp this sum­mer
Secu­ri­ty for Activists Part I: Do’s and don’ts of organ­is­ing action, from arrang­ing to meet, plan­ning and what hap­pens after
Arrest sup­port for actions — how to pro­vide sup­port for your affin­i­ty group, medi­um sized actions or mega camps and gath­er­ings.
Intro­duc­tion to Earth First! and the sum­mer gath­er­ing

2:30
Wom­en’s self-defence — intro­duc­to­ry ses­sion
Food and Cli­mate Action: info for action
How to plan an action
Police liai­son for actions — what it is, its uses and lim­i­ta­tions and how to make it work.
Chang­ing light bulbs or smash­ing the sys­tem. Shar­ing +/- expe­ri­ences of work­ing within/outside the sys­tem

4:30
Oppos­ing nuclear expan­sion: plan­ning for action
How to plan and run a suc­cess­ful medi­um to long-term cam­paign
Night time skills Part I: intro­duc­tion (fol­lowed by prac­tise ses­sion at 8.30pm)
Legal and arrest work­shop
Intro­duc­tion to anar­chist history/potted anar­chist his­to­ries

6:00
Library space: open dis­cus­sion ?Direct action or pub­lic­i­ty stunt??
8:00

Cin­e­ma: Seashep­herd film and talk
8:30

Night time skills Part II — prac­tice your skills in the field.

Fri­day

10:30
Blockad­ing tac­tics
Cli­mate Camp debrief: a crit­i­cal look at the cli­mate camp, its achieve­ments and pol­i­tics
Intro­duc­tion to Earth First! And the sum­mer gath­er­ing
Com­put­er Secu­ri­ty for the non-tech­ni­cal
Prison Abo­li­tion: what’s wrong with prison? what do we mean by abo­li­tion and how can we make it hap­pen?

12:00
Food and cli­mate change: action and cam­paign plan­ning
Self-defence mixed prac­tise ses­sion
Squat­ting to resist — occu­pa­tions to resist the pow­ers of dark­ness
His­to­ry of Earth First!

2:30
The Earth First! Action Update and web­site: feed­back and get­ting involved
Resist­ing agro­fu­els — update on the sit­u­a­tion and action plan­ning
Sea Shep­herd — an intro to its cam­paigns and how to support/get involved.
Grow your own food — share you skills and expe­ri­ence
Queer Activist Forum: Rad­i­cal queers organ­ise for the future!

4:30
Queer Self-Defence: an intro to basic self-defence skills (ver­bal and phys­i­cal)
Set­ting up new direct action groups
Sav­ing Ice­land ? plan­ning actions for the com­ing year
Tech­no-fix­es and cli­mate change ? report by Cor­po­rate Watch
Urban self-reliance and self-suf­fi­cien­cy

7:30
Library: Pris­on­er Sup­port — An infor­mal get togeth­er to dis­cuss the state of pris­on­er sup­port in our move­ments, find out news and get advice on writ­ing to pris­on­ers, as well as mak­ing and writ­ing cards to send to pris­on­ers.

8:00
Cin­e­ma: A talk and film by a trib­al activist from Oris­sa oppos­ing min­ing

Sat­ur­day

10:30
Cam­paigns and Actions Round-up: UK and inter­na­tion­al news (no oth­er work­shops)

12:00
Wom­en’s self-defence prac­tise ses­sion plus run­ning along­side — intro­duc­tion to wom­en’s self-defence
Stop­ping GM test fields — dis­cus­sion on future campaign/actions
Research and destroy — how to research cor­po­ra­tions
Future mod­els of soci­ety — find­ing a path to sus­tain­able liv­ing
Intro­duc­tion to Earth First! and the sum­mer gath­er­ing
Using tripods for blockad­ing

2:30
Leave it in the ground — build­ing resis­tance to new coal min­ing and pow­er sta­tions
Facil­i­ta­tion of meet­ings
Activist Secu­ri­ty Part III: doing actions with­out leav­ing traces
Restora­tion Ecol­o­gy
Cre­at­ing safer spaces
Vis­it to Burston Strike School

4:30
Region­al meet­ings and action plan­ning (no oth­er work­shops)

6:00
Library Space: Work­ing with­out lead­ers — dis­cus­sion about core val­ues of anar­chism

8:00
Cin­e­ma: Smash Edo film and talk

Sun­day
11:00
Self defence mixed prac­tice ses­sion
Sort­ing out ways of com­mu­ni­ca­tion with­in EF!
Using radios on actions
Intro­duc­tion to Earth First! And the sum­mer gath­er­ing
Fences: get­ting over them/taking them down

12:15
The sum­mer gath­er­ing: feed­back on this year’s and get­ting involved in organ­is­ing the next one

2:30
Con­doms, cap­i­tal­ism and cli­mate change
Smash Edo
Intro­duc­tion to nav­i­ga­tion
What’s new in the world of law?
Fem­i­nist Health
Climb­ing trees, lamp posts and any­thing else

4:30
Rad­i­cal pol­i­tics in the age of col­lapse
The Roy­al Bank of Scot­land and Fos­sil Fuel Financ­ing
Get­ting your elec­tric­i­ty from solar pow­er and wind
Rad­i­cal Par­ent­ing
Look­ing after our men­tal health — shar­ing ideas and expe­ri­ences

8:00
Cin­e­ma: films — cli­mate camp footage, ready steady skip etc

Mon­day
Take-down: please stay for a day or two to help take down the site. If you’ve got access to a vehicle/van, it’d be great if you could help trans­port­ing mar­quees, recy­cling etc to the places they need to go. Cheers!

More info about the Earth First! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing
EF! is about direct action to halt the destruc­tion of the Earth. It’s about doing it your­self rather than rely­ing on lead­ers, gov­ern­ments or indus­try.
Direct action is at the heart of it, whether you’re stand­ing in front of a bull­doz­er, shut­ting down an open-cast mine or rip­ping up a field of GM crops.
We’re a loose net­work of peo­ple, groups and cam­paigns com­ing togeth­er for eco­log­i­cal direct action.
Join us for 5 days of work­shops, net­work­ing and plan­ning actions, run with­out lead­ers by every­one who comes along. The gath­er­ing is also a prac­ti­cal exam­ple of low-impact eco-liv­ing and non-hier­ar­chi­cal organ­is­ing.

http://www.earthfirst.org.uk, sum­mer­gath­er­ing _ AT _ earthfirst.org.uk

Maine EF! Says No More Games; Bold Protest Urges LURC to Reject Massive Plum Creek Development

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednes­day, August 13 NOON
Land Use Reg­u­la­to­ry Com­mis­sion (LURC) 18 Elkins Lane — Har­low Build­ing 22 State
House Sta­tion Augus­ta, Maine 04333–0022

For More Infor­ma­tion Con­tact: Logan Perkins — 207–615-5158

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednes­day, August 13 NOON
Land Use Reg­u­la­to­ry Com­mis­sion (LURC) 18 Elkins Lane — Har­low Build­ing 22 State
House Sta­tion Augus­ta, Maine 04333–0022

For More Infor­ma­tion Con­tact: Logan Perkins — 207–615-5158

In a bold stunt today, a dozen peo­ple affil­i­at­ed with Maine Earth First!, protest­ed at the LURC office in Augus­ta. One woman sus­pend­ed her­self 35 feet in the air from a giant tri­pod made of wood­en poles, while oth­ers hula-hooped on the ground below her. Under the ban­ner “LURC: Do the right thing! No Devel­op­ment! Plum Creek can’t buy ME” the con­cerned cit­i­zens gath­ered to make it clear that the only respon­si­ble deci­sion is for LURC to reject Plum Creek’s entire plan. Maine Earth First! is an all-vol­un­teer group of Maine cit­i­zens work­ing toward the pro­tec­tion of all remain­ing wild places in Maine as sources of bio­di­ver­si­ty, cli­mate sta­bil­i­ty and cul­tur­al her­itage.

“The pub­lic has spo­ken and clear­ly told LURC to reject this destruc­tive pro­pos­al.” said Meg Gilmartin from the top of the tri­pod. “The future of Maine is in their hands and they will be held respon­si­ble for the deci­sions they make for gen­er­a­tions to come. Today’s protest should put LURC on notice that their com­plic­i­ty in the destruc­tion of the largest unde­vel­oped area east of the Mis­sis­sip­pi will not be tol­er­at­ed.”

Plum Creek’s Con­cept Plan pro­pos­es to rezone 20,000 acres, an area rough­ly the size of Port­land, for devel­op­ment as part of its Moose­head Lake Con­cept Plan. The plan includes 90,000 acres of con­ser­va­tion ease­ments to sat­is­fy the Land Use Reg­u­la­to­ry Commission’s (LURC) require­ment for a con­ser­va­tion bal­ance. An addi­tion­al 266,000 acres worth ofde­vel­op­ment rights on Plum Creek land will be sold to The Nature Con­ser­van­cy and The Appalachi­an Moun­tain Club for $35 mil­lion. This con­ser­va­tion is being hailed by many as an unprece­dent­ed oppor­tu­ni­ty to pro­tect a large tract of land in North­ern Maine, how­ev­er, the con­ser­va­tion ease­ments only pre­vent fur­ther devel­op­ment. They do not pre­vent grav­el min­ing, spread­ing of sewage sludge, com­mer­cial water extrac­tion, socalled”sustainable forestry,” or oth­er extrac­tive activ­i­ties.

The debate around Plum Creek’s plan has focused in recent months on the future of Lily Bay, slat­ed for a large resort devel­op­ment in the pro­pos­al. The Nat­ur­al Resources Coun­cil of Maine and oth­er large envi­ron­men­tal orga­ni­za­tions have focused their oppo­si­tion to the plan pri­mar­i­ly on pro­tect­ing the pris­tine land around Lily Bay. Even these lim­it­ed efforts have not been suc­cess­ful despite huge pub­lic oppo­si­tion to the devel­op­ment in Lily Bay. When LURC released its rec­om­men­da­tions in June, down­siz­ing the num­ber of acres slat­ed for devel­op­ment in Lily Bay, but not decreas­ing the total num­ber of res­i­dences, they were flood­ed with pub­lic com­ment urg­ing the Com­mis­sion to recon­sid­er its posi­tion on Lily Bay. The pro­test­ers in front of LURC today, how­ev­er are not­stak­ing their oppo­si­tion on just Lily Bay. “We feel that the scope of the debate has been nar­rowed to soon by those who would bar­gain away the North Woods. LURC has heard ample rea­sons from the peo­ple of this state to reject this plan in its entire­ty. This plan is a bad deal for Main­ers and for the North Woods,” said Jessie Dowl­ing, one of the hula-hoop­ers on the ground below the tri­pod.

“What LURC has before it now, is an appli­ca­tion to extend ram­pant devel­op­ment, habi­tat destruc­tion, cli­mate change and mass extinc­tion into one of the most pris­tine unde­vel­oped areas in the coun­try. The stakes for this type of devel­op­ment are incred­i­bly high. LURC has in its sights a his­toric and incred­i­bly sig­nif­i­cant deci­sion to make, and I hope they do the right thing,” said Dowl­ing.

URGENT CALL OUT: MAYO NEEDS YOU! NOW IS THE TIME

Dur­ing the next 2 weeks, the Soli­taire (the biggest pipe lay­ing ship in the world) is set to begin ille­gal­ly con­struct­ing the off­shore sec­tion of the pipeline. It is believed that the Soli­taire is on a pret­ty tight sched­ule & booked up for the next 2 years, so ANY dis­rup­tion pro­vides us with a real oppor­tu­ni­ty to delay the project sig­nif­i­cant­ly.

Dur­ing the next 2 weeks, the Soli­taire (the biggest pipe lay­ing ship in the world) is set to begin ille­gal­ly con­struct­ing the off­shore sec­tion of the pipeline. It is believed that the Soli­taire is on a pret­ty tight sched­ule & booked up for the next 2 years, so ANY dis­rup­tion pro­vides us with a real oppor­tu­ni­ty to delay the project sig­nif­i­cant­ly.

After the suc­cess of Cli­mate Camp, come over to Ire­land and sup­port a com­mu­ni­ty deter­mined to resist Shell…but they need your help!
Although local resis­tance has been ongo­ing, the police and a hired secu­ri­ty force have meant it is incred­i­bly dif­fi­cult. A few weeks ago 13 peo­ple were arrest­ed in Glen­gad (1 man remains in hos­pi­tal). How­ev­er the police are now just escort­ing peo­ple from the site and not arrest­ing peo­ple.

There­fore there is a real need for clever actions to help delay cur­rent con­struc­tion at the land­fall area in Glen­gad and the planned off­shore pipe lay­ing. The local peo­ple are call­ing for your assis­tance at this time.

It is expect­ed that once the off-shore pipe lay­ing is done, there will be anoth­er qui­et peri­od for sev­er­al months before con­struc­tion is due on the onshore sec­tion pos­si­bly next spring or sum­mer, so NOW IS THE TIME TO COME!

If you can­not come over please do what you can from home …organ­ise Ross­port film nights, protest at Shell garages & offices, con­tact the Irish Embassy & media.

Trav­el details on camp web­site www.rossportsolidaritycamp.110mb.com
The cheap­est and eas­i­est way to trav­el from Eng­land-Ire­land is to get a coach or train tick­et that includes fer­ry too. www.sailandrail.com — 08705 455 455 www.coachacross.com
Acco­mo­da­tion is avali­able at the camp house
we can win but we need you
e‑mail: rossportsolidaritycamp@gmail.com
Home­page: http://www.shelltosea.com, www.rossportsolidaritycamp.110mb.com, www.indymedia.ie/mayo

Kondh Tribes Determined to Fight UK Mining Firm in India

OrissaIndia’s Supreme Court has today dealt a dev­as­tat­ing blow to the Don­gria Kondh tribe by giv­ing British FTSE 100 com­pa­ny Vedan­ta per­mis­sion to mine their sacred moun­tain. The tribe say the mine will destroy their way of life for­ev­er. Vedanta’s sub­sidiary Ster­lite plans to mine for baux­ite, the raw mate­r­i­al for alu­mini­um, from Niyam­giri moun­tain in Oris­sa, east­ern India. Vedan­ta is major­i­ty owned by Lon­don-based Indi­an bil­lion­aire Anil Agar­w­al. The Don­gria Kondh say the huge open cast mine will destroy a vast swathe of untouched for­est, and will reduce their most sacred site to an indus­tri­al waste­land. Last month, thir­ty Don­gria Kondh men block­ad­ed a road that is being built through their for­est towards the site of the pro­posed mine. The tribe say they will stage mass protests if min­ing goes ahead.

OrissaIndia’s Supreme Court has today dealt a dev­as­tat­ing blow to the Don­gria Kondh tribe by giv­ing British FTSE 100 com­pa­ny Vedan­ta per­mis­sion to mine their sacred moun­tain. The tribe say the mine will destroy their way of life for­ev­er. Vedanta’s sub­sidiary Ster­lite plans to mine for baux­ite, the raw mate­r­i­al for alu­mini­um, from Niyam­giri moun­tain in Oris­sa, east­ern India. Vedan­ta is major­i­ty owned by Lon­don-based Indi­an bil­lion­aire Anil Agar­w­al. The Don­gria Kondh say the huge open cast mine will destroy a vast swathe of untouched for­est, and will reduce their most sacred site to an indus­tri­al waste­land. Last month, thir­ty Don­gria Kondh men block­ad­ed a road that is being built through their for­est towards the site of the pro­posed mine. The tribe say they will stage mass protests if min­ing goes ahead.

The Don­gria Kondh can­not appeal this deci­sion by the Supreme Court, but they plan to sub­mit anoth­er peti­tion to the Court focus­ing on the ways in which the mine will vio­late their cul­tur­al and reli­gious rights.

Don­gria spokesper­son Jitu Jake­si­ka said, ‘We will become beg­gars if the com­pa­ny destroys our moun­tain and our for­est so that they can make mon­ey. We will give our lives for our moun­tain.’

At this sum­mer’s Earth First! Gath­er­ing Sav­ing Ice­land is organ­is­ing a ses­sion on baux­ite min­ing and heavy indus­try and min­ing in gen­er­al in Oris­sa and around the globe, where there will be the oppor­tu­ni­ty to plan action against Vedan­ta in the UK.

More on devel­op­ments in Oris­sa

Bardon Hit Again

Inspired by an action ear­li­er this year we decid­ed to hit Bar­dons quar­ry in Bur­to-on-trent. Bar­don are part of a group respon­si­ble for the destru­tion of moun­tains at the Glen­san­da Quar­ry in Scot­land. This is one of the largest quar­rys in Europe and exports stone for road con­struc­tion.

Inspired by an action ear­li­er this year we decid­ed to hit Bar­dons quar­ry in Bur­to-on-trent. Bar­don are part of a group respon­si­ble for the destru­tion of moun­tains at the Glen­san­da Quar­ry in Scot­land. This is one of the largest quar­rys in Europe and exports stone for road con­struc­tion.

This can not be allowed. As the secu­ri­ty watched TV we slashed tyres, stripped paint jobs, Glued locks and trashed con­va­y­or belts. All the earth movers were hit and many of the cement and agr­re­gate trucks. This action cost us very lit­tle but should cost bar­don thou­sands.

We all know lob­by­ing gets us lit­tle, we all know that once a moun­tain is gone it is gone for­ev­er, we all know time for the earth is run­ning out. We all have fear that stops us act­ing but we must act.

Cambridge Mill Road Social Centre evicted but car-park squatted

On Fri­day 1st around 9AM, police and bailiffs kicked down the door to the social cen­tre and start­ed evict­ing peo­ple from the premis­es. No advance warn­ing was giv­en. It goes to show that Tesco can nev­er be trust­ed, as they reneged on their promise not to take pos­ses­sion of the build­ing before they need­ed to start build­ing.

On Fri­day 1st around 9AM, police and bailiffs kicked down the door to the social cen­tre and start­ed evict­ing peo­ple from the premis­es. No advance warn­ing was giv­en. It goes to show that Tesco can nev­er be trust­ed, as they reneged on their promise not to take pos­ses­sion of the build­ing before they need­ed to start build­ing.

Tesco were obvi­ous­ly very con­fi­dent that the pre­vi­ous night’s plan­ning meet­ing (to allow them to build waste and air­co facil­i­ties) would find in their favour. As it turned out, their appli­ca­tion was turned down. No doubt Mill Road­’s Broad­way will soon sport a set of shiny met­al win­dow boards.

We cor­doned off part of the car park behind the evict­ed mill road social cen­tre, and are now squat­ting the site.

At 3:15pm today (Fri­day) we cor­doned off part of the car park behind the evict­ed mill road social cen­ter, so at to make a clear bound­ary, and are now squat­ting the site. Please feel free to come and join us. As it is open air, accom­mo­da­tion is camp­ing. If any­one has any spare tar­pau­lin they could give/lend us this would be use­ful.

Earth Liberation Front Claims Arson Against Urban Sprawl

“ELF claims arson on urban sprawl­ing project in Älmhult, Swe­den the 25/7. An esti­mat­ed 2 mil­lion­SEK [approx­i­mate­ly £170,000] vil­la was burnt to the ground, in response to the increas­ing urban sprawl­ing as well in Älmhult as in Swe­den and the civil­i­sa­tion all over.”

Received anony­mous­ly by Bite Back Mag­a­zine.

“ELF claims arson on urban sprawl­ing project in Älmhult, Swe­den the 25/7. An esti­mat­ed 2 mil­lion­SEK [approx­i­mate­ly £170,000] vil­la was burnt to the ground, in response to the increas­ing urban sprawl­ing as well in Älmhult as in Swe­den and the civil­i­sa­tion all over.”

Received anony­mous­ly by Bite Back Mag­a­zine.

Sitting on piles of coal, revolting peasants, trashing things & fixing other things together, it’s the latest EF! Action Update

Smelters smelt­ed and wood­chip­pers chipped, pro­tes­tors around the world have been busy again tak­ing action against the plan­et-trash­ers — read all about it in the lat­est quar­ter­ly EF! Action Update.

This EF!AU is jam packed with excit­ing actions, plus fea­tures on inter­na­tion­al resis­tance against coal in time for this year’s Camp for Cli­mate Action, a resur­gence of anti-genet­ics cam­paign­ing, and pro­pos­als for a rolling block­ade next year of Kingsnorth. You’ll be inspired to Taste the Waste, Leave it in the Ground and who knows what else!

EF! mine rest planets later logoSmelters smelt­ed and wood­chip­pers chipped, pro­tes­tors around the world have been busy again tak­ing action against the plan­et-trash­ers — read all about it in the lat­est quar­ter­ly EF! Action Update.

This EF!AU is jam packed with excit­ing actions, plus fea­tures on inter­na­tion­al resis­tance against coal in time for this year’s Camp for Cli­mate Action, a resur­gence of anti-genet­ics cam­paign­ing, and pro­pos­als for a rolling block­ade next year of Kingsnorth. You’ll be inspired to Taste the Waste, Leave it in the Ground and who knows what else!

With sto­ries of green­wash laid bare, guer­ril­la-gar­den­ing, revolt­ing peas­ants, protest camps against coal mines and air­ports, build­ings burnt down, con­vey­ors and trains stopped, tires deflat­ed, GM fields lib­er­at­ed & ‘tri­als’ decon­t­a­m­i­nat­ed, despite tear-gas, jail threats, and fortress-like field pro­tec­tion, con­tin­u­ing resis­tance in Mayo & Ice­land, and cam­paign suc­cess­es, the diverse uses of super­glue just become mun­dane. Got a bro­ken tea cup or an incin­er­a­tor to shut down? You know what to use!

And if smash­ing green­hous­es or hang­ing about 60 metres up seems wierd, read on…

Also includes full lists of eco­log­i­cal direct action groups, protest camps & sup­port groups. Bat­ter­ies not includ­ed.

Pick up your copy at the Camp for Cli­mate Action or at your near­est social cen­tre. Or drop us a line at actionup­date AT earthfirst.org.uk and we’ll post you as many as you like for dis­trib­ut­ing around town and at events.

Down­load the lat­est EF!AU to share with oth­ers, sub­scribe or check out some past issues. The next issue will come out at the begin­ning of Novem­ber.

And of course, this year’s EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing (click here for lat­est news) is from Wednes­day 27th August to Mon­day 1st Sep­tem­ber 2008, if you want to plot & plan, and laugh & chat with old friends & new.

Saving Iceland Shuts Down Geothermal Drilling Work in Hengill

HELLISHEIDI (ICELAND) – This morn­ing the direct action cam­paign Sav­ing Ice­land has occu­pied one of the main geot­her­mal drill sites in Hengill where the Hell­ishei­di pow­er plant is being expand­ed by Reyk­javik Ener­gy. 20 activists have chained them­selves to machin­ery and have climbed the drill to hang up a ban­ner say­ing “Reyk­javik Ener­gy out of Hell­ishei­di and Yemen”.

HELLISHEIDI (ICELAND) – This morn­ing the direct action cam­paign Sav­ing Ice­land has occu­pied one of the main geot­her­mal drill sites in Hengill where the Hell­ishei­di pow­er plant is being expand­ed by Reyk­javik Ener­gy. 20 activists have chained them­selves to machin­ery and have climbed the drill to hang up a ban­ner say­ing “Reyk­javik Ener­gy out of Hell­ishei­di and Yemen”. They have also occu­pied the pow­er con­trol room of the drill site. The pow­er to the drill was shut off and drilling was stopped for the rest of the day. Sev­en peo­ple got arrest­ed. The protest was aimed at Reyk­javik Ener­gy sup­ply­ing elec­tric­i­ty to alu­mini­um smelters in Ice­land, destruc­tion and pol­lu­tion of the Hengill area and RE’s spon­sor­ing of severe human rights abuse in Yemen.

In the last week, Sav­ing Ice­land took action at the Glen­core and ALCOA head­quar­ters in Switzer­land as well as all Swiss Ice­landic con­sulates, the Ice­landic embassy in Rome, Ice­landic con­sulate in Milan and also the head­quar­ters of Impregi­lo. In Ice­land Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum and Landsvirkjun both saw two actions against them and now Reyk­javik Ener­gy was tar­get­ed.

“We have been camp­ing at Hell­ishei­di for two weeks now and we are wit­ness­ing the scale of destruc­tion, most of which is not very vis­i­ble to the pub­lic. Peo­ple should real­ly come and have a look what is hap­pen­ing here. What used to be a beau­ti­ful nat­ur­al area is now full of tar­mac and pol­lu­tion. It used to be full of tourists. Now the hik­er huts are aban­doned while moun­tains are being blown up to pow­er the Cen­tu­ry smelters,” says Sav­ing Iceland’s Jaap Krater.

Most of the work is being done by East­ern Euro­peans who are liv­ing in a work camp, in sim­i­lar con­di­tions to the Karah­n­jukar con­struc­tion.

Reyk­javik Ener­gy Invest in Yemen
Sav­ing Ice­land also crit­i­cis­es Reyk­javik Ener­gy for it’s invest­ments in Yemen (1,2), a coun­try with a Shari’a regime, where there is no free press and secu­ri­ty ser­vices are rou­tine­ly involved in tor­ture and even extra­ju­di­cial exe­cu­tions (3,4).

“RE say that geot­her­mal invest­ments will ben­e­fit the poor in the coun­try. The real­i­ty is that the ener­gy will not go to the poor. The regime is very cor­rupt and Yemen is even adver­tis­ing for alu­mini­um smelters to come there. If some­one would have said ten years ago: I’m mak­ing a deal with Sadam Hus­sein to help the poor, would you believe them?”
“RE should not make deals with any­one involved in seri­ous human rights vio­la­tions, whether it’s a fun­da­men­tal­ist state or heavy indus­try cor­po­ra­tions,” says Krater.

Impact of Hell­ishei­di exten­sion
The envi­ron­men­tal impact asess­ment for Hell­ishei­darvrikjun says explic­it­ly that the only pur­pose is to sup­ply ener­gy for the Cen­tu­ry expan­sion at Grun­dar­tan­gi and pos­si­ble new ALCAN and Cen­tu­ry plants at Straumsvik and Hel­gu­vik (5). At the same time, farm­ers pay twice as much for elec­tric­i­ty as these cor­po­ra­tions (6).
Sav­ing Ice­land has pub­lished reports doc­u­ment­ing a long list of human rights vio­la­tions of these com­pa­nies (7, 8).

Sav­ing Ice­land spokes­peo­ple Miri­am Rose and Jaap Krater have doc­u­ment­ed the effects of the geot­her­mal pow­er in Hengill in the jour­nal the Ecol­o­gist (9):

“Laced with var­i­ous and some­times tox­ic com­pounds from deep with­in the bedrock, the [geot­her­mal bore­hole] water is either pumped back into the bore­hole – which can lead to geo­log­i­cal insta­bil­i­ty – or is pumped untreat­ed into streams and lakes. This par­tic­u­lar tech­nique has already cre­at­ed a huge dead zone in lake Thing­vallavatn.”

Pic­tures of the phys­i­cal impact of the drilling can be seen on the Sav­ing Ice­land web­site (10 / see below)

About Sav­ing Ice­land
In the last two weeks, Sav­ing Ice­land stopped work at the con­struc­tion site of Cen­tu­ry Aluminum’s planned new smelter in Hel­gu­vík, they block­ad­ed the exist­ing Cen­tu­ry smelter on Hvalfjor­dur, and took a num­ber of actions against Landsvirkjun, Iceland’s nation­al pow­er com­pa­ny. This is part of their fourth sum­mer of direct action against heavy indus­try in Ice­land.
Sav­ing Ice­land was start­ed by Ice­landic envi­ron­men­tal­ists ask­ing for help to protest the Ice­landic wilder­ness, the largest remain­ing in Europe, from heavy indus­try. Alu­mini­um cor­po­ra­tions Alcoa, Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum and Rio Tin­to-Alcan want to con­struct new smelters. This would require exploita­tion of all the geot­her­mal areas in the coun­try, as well as damming all major glacial rivers (see http://www.savingiceland.org/sos).
This year, the fourth action camp to pro­tect Ice­landic nature has been set up near the Hell­ishei­di geot­her­mal plant.

More infor­ma­tion
http://www.savingiceland.org
saving­ice­land at riseup.net

Ref­er­ences

1. Yemen News Agency (2008). Yemen, Ice­landic REI sign doc­u­ment to invest in gen­er­at­ing elec­tric­i­ty by geot­her­mal. http://www.sabanews.net/en/news151190.ht… [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
I2. ceNews (208). Elec­tric­i­ty agree­ment signed between Yemen and Ice­land. http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2008/04/… [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
3. BBC News (2008). Coun­try Pro­file: Yemen. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_… [Accessed July 17th, 2008]
4. Embassy of Yemen in the US (2008). http://www.yemenembassy.org/economic/ind…. [Accessed July 17th, 2008]
5. VGK (2006). Envi­ron­men­tal Impact Ass­es­ment fot Hel­ishei­darvirkjun. VGK, Reyk­javik.
6. Ice­land Review (2007). Cen­tu­ry Smelter to Pay Less for Ener­gy than Farm­ers. June 7th 2007. Also avail­able at http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=821. [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
7. Sav­ing Ice­land (2007). Alcan’s Links to the Arms Indus­try. http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=882 [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
8. Sav­ing Ice­land Press Release (2007). Sav­ing Ice­land Block­ades Cen­tu­ry and ELKEM. http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=841 [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
9. Krater, J., Rose, M., Anslow, M. (2007). Alu­mini­um Tyrants. The Ecol­o­gist 2007 (10). Also avail­able at http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?p=1021 [Accessed July 27th, 2008]
10. Sav­ing Ice­land (2008). Destruc­tion of Hengill. http://savingiceland.puscii.nl/?page_id=… [Accessed July 27th, 2008]