Oxford Tree Protest Tomorrow (plus more photos & personal account)

11.01.2008

Protest at midday tomorrow (Saturday) in Bonn Square. The proposed expansion of Oxford’s Westgate Centre doesn’t just threaten a group of beautiful trees, it also threatens to turn yet more of our city centre into a nightmarish consumer wasteland. Thanks to the people who’ve been up the trees, the Council are now on the back foot and there’s a chance we could force them to scrap the whole stupid scheme – but we need people there!

Oxford tree protest 311.01.2008

Protest at midday tomorrow (Saturday) in Bonn Square. The proposed expansion of Oxford’s Westgate Centre doesn’t just threaten a group of beautiful trees, it also threatens to turn yet more of our city centre into a nightmarish consumer wasteland. Thanks to the people who’ve been up the trees, the Council are now on the back foot and there’s a chance we could force them to scrap the whole stupid scheme – but we need people there!

There’s currently a battle going on in town between some peaceful but determined tree-defenders, the Council, the Westgate Centre and the police (see http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/01/389089.html). Essentially, the Council decided to clear away some trees in preparation for the proposed Westgate expansion without telling anyone, but a group of locals found out and rushed to the trees’ defence.

Obviously, just losing the trees would be bad in itself, but this is also the tip of a much bigger iceberg. The proposed Westgate expansion has been criticised and challenged all the way through the planning process (it would require the demolition of a whole street of sheltered housing and fails to meet the Council’s own climate change building standards, quite apart from being a horrible and unnecessary extension to what is already an ugly temple to rampant consumerism sucking the lifeblood from independent shops and the character out of Oxford city centre). The Council has seemed determined to push it through at any cost, despite all the protests and complaint.

However, one of the major retailers with a place booked in the proposed extension – John Lewis – have reportedly started to get nervous about being associated with such a controversial development. Enough bad publicity from the battle over the trees might just be the last straw that could convince them to pull out – and without John Lewis, the whole execrable expansion plan could collapse!

This is where your help could make a real difference. Tomorrow is the anti-SOCPA protest in London, and people are feeling we should have our own demo (about freedom to protest as well as stopping the Westgate development) in Oxford rather than all our activists going off to London at what could well be the crucial moment. So if you’re up for it please come to Bonn Square at 12 midday tomorrow. Bring banners, noise and everyone you know.

In the meantime, please do go down to show your support (there weren’t many people around this afternoon) and see what needs doing.

Hope to see you tomorrow!

oarc@riseup.net

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I spent 2 days up a tree outside the Westgate Centre in Oxford. This is a short an account of the how and why

Out of My Tree

I thought it might be interesting to any readers who have been following the Oxford Bonn Square and Westgate Centre tree saga last week to put down what happened from my point of view, seeing as it was me that spent 24 hours up the tree outside the Westgate and even good journalists, let alone readers, are bound to draw conclusions that are wide of the true mark
On Wednesday 9th Jan, I received invitations down to see what was happening around the Westgate Centre, where I was told that a number of trees were about to be chopped down. I was a bit dubious about going, as I was about to head off job hunting, my last job having finished just before Christmas but I went down intending to give my support for a short while. All seemed pretty peaceful down at the Westgate and I felt that there wasn’t much I could do as work appeared to have been stopped on the tree-chopping front. I was about to leave when there was a flurry of activity round the corner from where we were, between the Westgate Centre and the multi-storey car park. They had fenced off the area.
Workmen had begun chopping off the branches of one of the magnificent Plane trees next to the car park. Deborah Glass Woodin was visibly upset by this and was trying to prevent the workmen going any further. As a County Councillor she felt that she had been insufficiently informed that this was to happen. It was heart-wrenching to see a concerned five-foot female councillor being dragged off in tears by two carthorse policemen who seemed totally unconcerned that she was doing her duty. This was probably due to ‘Operation Rumble’ whereby the police are instructed to automatically arrest anybody interfering with council workers going about their job. However, as a councillor, Mrs Glass Woodin was going about her job by questioning the work that was going on as she had not been properly informed about it. Despite this she was dragged, tearful and wretched into a police car and prevented from doing the job she was democratically elected to do while the police shoved the rest of us trying to help her out of the way.
Once this bit of excitement was over, a friend and I watched sadly as the first of three trees designated for the chop was sawn up noisily with chainsaws and then fed into a pulping machine. I looked at the next tree in the line. It is a magnificent London Plane, probably around a hundred years old. Its branches soar up over the top of the four storey car park and brush against the top of the Westgate centre. Each branch forks repeatedly into lesser branches and at their very ends are twin seeds that dangle down like spiky chestnut baubles. There are thousands of them decorating the extremities and the tree’s elegant, stretching branches clawing up into the sky are more natural and beautiful than any spire and a welcome relief to the grey surroundings of the concrete blocks it separates. A number of people who live and work in the area have told me that they find them very comforting and I can fully appreciate why now that I have spent a couple of days in one. For anyone content with replacing them with saplings, I would say that they are decades out of date.
The first tree was removed in under half an hour and it was awful to think that this hundred-year-old example was about to follow it efficiently into the pulping machine. There were policeman patrolling around the eight-foot fence in front of it and we watched as a ladder was rested up next to the tree, ready for the workmen to begin the job of sawing off the limbs. A little sunshine lit up the soft khaki colours of the patchwork bark in fawns, greens and browns. The policemen in front of the fence moved away and with the flash of a grin telling us we were doing the right thing, my friend and I sprinted spontaneously at the fence. Suddenly I was over it and running for the ladder before anyone could stop me. Next thing I was scrambling onto the lowest branch looking down at the workmen who frustratedly removed the ladder. I looked back in vain at my friend, who had sadly been pulled back by policemen. Unfortunately for me, he still had the backpack with a thermos of hot coffee in it on his back. Nothing, however, could deflate the triumphant sense of satisfaction I felt that for a while at least this exemplary Plane tree was free from the violent severing that had just been visited on its neighbour.
Why have these trees been designated for hacking? The powers that be at Oxford City Council have seen fit to bless us with a brand new shopping centre to massively extend the one we already. The land itself is owned by the Council and is on a 150 year lease to Coal Pension Properties Ltd that started on March 3rd 1986. The original lease says that there should be “no more parking spaces” on the land than at present and somehow the planning department have interpreted this as to say that “it is incumbent upon the city council to provide at least the same number of parking spaces” there. Given that it is a residential area considered an ‘Air Quality Management Action’ (AQMA) zone due to the illegally high level of pollutants in the air, then surely less parking should be provided there and perhaps more stories added to the Park and Ride car parks that are so often full on the outskirts of the city. This solution would endanger the local residents’ health a lot less and benefit us all by letting fresher air sweep throughout the city.
There is some doubt as to whether the development will happen at all. Capital Shopping have said that if they are to go ahead than they also require the land at Abbey Place across the road from the car park, which at present is home to 18 vulnerable people in 14 houses. This more drastic part of the plan is still under review and could scupper the whole project if it is deemed a bad idea. So why are these amazing Plane trees, whose variegated bark actually absorbs air pollutants, being chopped down before it is sure that the development will go ahead? According to shopkeepers in the Westgate, some of whom have contracts for their businesses on the site until July 2010, Capital Shopping have given the Council half a million pounds to get on with the job and clear the way for the development. Could they have done this so that if the development comes up against any objections, then the developers will be able to say “..well the trees have all gone now so we have to get on with it anyway”? The very rushing of the job makes one suspicious.
Living in a tree is not a way of life I would recommend. Wedging oneself between two trunks so that one doesn’t fall out at night is an exceedingly uncomfortable way of trying to sleep, particularly in winter. Our system of democracy is not perfect in that we only get to vote once every four years and are then obliged to hand over the decision making to a handful of people whose decisions we may often disagree with. What is known as ‘protesting’ is simply exercising our endangered right to disagree with these decisions and ask if there may not be a better answer to the question in hand. England has a proud history of protest that has brought about a number of great benefits to our society, including the emancipation of women.
The amount of support I received while up the tree from both friends and passers-by has been absolutely extraordinary. I have had more thumbs-up than Jenson Button in a race and it is heart-warming and magical to tap into the invisible solidarity of the usually silent public in this way. The most extraordinary event was on Wednesday evening when a group of 9 fairies skipped past in pink dresses and fairy wings. They looked no more than ten years old. They shouted up asking what I was doing and I answered simply that some people wanted to chop the tree down and I didn’t want them to. They waved their magic wands and skipped away chanting “Save the Tree! Save the Tree!” It was the sweetest moment. I only hope their magic holds and our wish is granted.
If the development is planned on ‘council land’ means that this is Oxford City land. That means that this is our land as residents and taxpayers and so decisions on cutting down trees should be decided by all of us. There are a number of aspects about the future Westgate development that have been unsatisfactorily concluded. To begin with, it does not meet a number of reasonable environmental standards…
Personally I don’t think we need any more shops in Oxford. This is a small city with only 140,000 inhabitants. With all the wonderful architecture we have here it seems foolish to try and turn it into a shopping centre when that would risk spoiling the beauty of the city we already have. If we detract from the city’s attractive aesthetic then less people will want to visit here and less money will be spent on local businesses. It seems detrimental, in more ways than one to spend so much money replacing one shopping centre with another one so that we can have more shops that will drain money out of the local economy. Surely we have enough shops already and do we really want to cut down 42 decorative trees in order to make way for more? My foolhardy gesture of spending 24 hours in a tree was a personal challenge made in order to ask a question that on further investigation appears to have an answer in the negative: Is it absolutely necessary to chop these 42 magnificent Plane trees down? Well is it?
While I am in awe of Gabs Chamberlain who has spent over a week defending the beautiful Plane tree in Bonn square by living up it, I don’t intend to follow suit. I feel that I have made my statement and asked my question and if anyone would like to take over the defence of the Westgate Planes then I would enthusiastically encourage them to do so. While I have great affection for them, they are not mine to defend, they are everybody’s. I hope somebody else will. Meanwhile I will take the advice so kindly offered to me by one unsympathetic passer-by and go and get a job. After all, if I didn’t I wouldn’t be able to afford any of the doubtless fabulous products that the Westgate II will have to offer off the stumps of our beloved London Planes.

last tree in Bonn square Oxford occupied, eviction expected at dawn, friday – update

4.01.2008

The last tree left in Bonn square is being occupied in attempt to save it – please get support down there

4.01.2008

The last tree left in Bonn square is being occupied in attempt to save it – please get support down there

apparently the tree is over 100 years old, and there is a preservation order on the memorial to the tirah campaign in afghanistan, but not on the trees which are old and significant also.

If anyone can get media or support down there urgently please

The youtube version for online viewing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5kGNDlOyN0

Full rez for screening
http://blip.tv/file/get/Undercurrents-OxfordTree616.mp4

You can get more videos like this from http://visionontv.net

eviction now expected Mon am

Text messages from the Bonn Square tree protest say that eviction is expected tomorrow morning, around 8 or 9am.

If you are free, please go along and support 🙂

10.01.2008

Today ten protesters turned up to resist the removal of beautiful, mature London Plains trees behind the Westgate Shopping Centre in Oxford city centre.

These trees, along with sheltered housing, and – I was told by a group of young people – the Oxford and Cherwell Valley College students’ pub are being cleared to make way for a gargantuan cathedral to capitalism plus multi-storey car park. As one student sarcastically put it, “Yeah, ‘coz what we really need are more shops”.

Most people spent all day observing the goings-on of council employees and tree ‘surgeons’ and managed – albeit temporarily – to remove one guy rope from one of the trees along the west side of the Westgate car park.

However, this did not deter the Leisure and Parks people from beginning to remove the trees on the north side.

Once they started on the trees, emotions – which were already high – reached fever pitch. Councillor Deborah Glass Woodin was arrested for aggravated trespass (even though she didn’t quite manage to get into the fenced off area) and then held for 5 hours at St Aldates Cop Shop.

One other protester is spending tonight in the trees, braving the gale force winds; I feel slightly guilty for being inside on my laptop writing this report. If you can get down to the site to join him and others please do.

Bruce and friends (not the cops, mind) are on the corner of Norfolk Street, near Castle Street; around the back of the Westgate Centre near the multi-storey carpark. Map here:
http://openstreetmap.com/?mlat=51.75055&mlon=-1.2615&zoom=16

Video on YouTube ( http://youtube.com/watch?v=uXdLcAffXnE).

I counted the rings of the one of the first-felled trees, which you can see in the picture. It was nearly thirty years old; as old as I am.

10th: just heard that Bruce, who has been up one of the trees behind the Westgate shopping centre in Oxford, has finally come down. He spent over 24 hours up the tree – braving the freezing gales and lashing rain from last night and today.

He was joined this morning by a fellow protestor; pics from today’s protest to follow soon.

And worryingly, one of the photographers from the BNP protest in November was on site too. This time he said he was from ITN rather than local news.

Westgate protest continues; court on Monday
9.01.2008

Tree-sitters in Bonn Square (Oxford) opposing the massive expansion of the nearby Westgate shopping centre were served with a court summons today for an eviction hearing on Monday. More action is sorely needed.

Since last Thursday one of the large trees in Bonn Square has been occupied in an attempt to save it from the chainsaws. It is one of around 40 trees, including many large mature ones, in the Westgate area marked for destruction as part of the grotesque expansion of Oxford’s plastic consumerland.

More background on the Westgate scheme is here, amongst other places:
http://matthewsellwood.blogspot.com/2006/10/westgate.html

There have been several eviction rumours in the meantime, but the clearest clue came today when the protesters were served with court papers. Since the hearing is on Monday, any eviction before then would be illegal, and seems unlikely, particularly since the council can easily continue cutting down the other -unoccupied- trees in the meantime. In fact, work has already started on felling the other trees in the area.

If you want to help, or find out more, pop down to Bonn Square. They have a petition which they are asking people to sign and are collecting donations to cover basic costs. If you’re feeling particularly inspired, you could even organise a bunch of people you know to go and disrupt the tree cutting which is taking place right now. Or target the sterile shopping centres, corporate scumbags and corrupt local politicians that are pushing the scheme!

The Westgate Partnership are currently chainsawing trees to make way for the Westgate expansion (this is slightly different from the Bonn Square project, which is linked to the West End ‘regeneration’ but not part of the Westgate expansion per se). This is despite the fact that a public enquiry is still going on over the demolition of Abbey Place housing – a clear indication of what the developers think of the legal process….


9.01.2008

10am – trees being cut down in Paradise Square.

We’ve had a message that trees are being cut down now to make way for the new bloated Westgate shopping centre/temple to Mamon. If you can, get down there as soon as possible.

At the moment tree surgeons are at Paradise square, but probably won’t be for long. Maybe follow the sound of the chainsaws if they’re not there anymore.

Switzerland: Police brutality against RTS. 245 activists detained

3.12.2007
Nearly 500 riot cops with tanks and water cannons stopped a peaceful Reclaim The Streets party. The cops used pepperspray, non-lethal guns and did beat people. They detanied 245 people.

Swiss RTS 13.12.2007
Nearly 500 riot cops with tanks and water cannons stopped a peaceful Reclaim The Streets party. The cops used pepperspray, non-lethal guns and did beat people. They detanied 245 people.

Police hunted people through the streets. In a park they surrounded hundreds of activists. Each activist was filmed and brought to a nearby prison. The prison was absolutely new and it seems it was constructed for arresting protesters. After some hours no one was allowed to go to the toilet or to ask for drinking water. The detainees were forced to be naked. After the arrest people were brought by police not back into the city of Luzern – but in neighbouring villages. Quote of a cop: “We don´t want you in the city”.

Repression is on a new level in Switzerland. Time to act.

Workshop and Building Weekend, this weekend at Bilston Glen

You are invited to the Bilston Glen Workshop and Building Weekend!

This Weekend – Friday 30th to Sunday 2nd
Come down for the whole weekend or for however much you can manage.
Learn new skills and help us with some of our on-going projects in Bilston Glen

You are invited to the Bilston Glen Workshop and Building Weekend!

This Weekend – Friday 30th to Sunday 2nd
Come down for the whole weekend or for however much you can manage.
Learn new skills and help us with some of our on-going projects in Bilston Glen

What’s on:
# Learn how to climb
# Habitat enhancement for birds (relevant info – www.rspb.org.uk)
# Gardening
# Treeplanting
# Building new sleeping spaces
# Dig, dig, dig
# Urban Foraging (tour of the finest bilston skips!)
# Small party on the Saturday night

Come to the woods, bilston always needs you!

Also in a couple of week’s we’ll be having a bilston evening at the Forest Cafe. More info to come.

Links
http://bilstonglen-abs.org.uk
http://www.myspace.com

Bilston Glen Sunday Free Cafe and Outdoor Cinema

You are invited to the Sunday Free Cafe, Last Sunday of EVERY month

Next café – Sunday 25th November
Our usual free food, acousitc music, and specially this sunday…
Bilston Glen OUTDOOR cinema!

You are invited to the Sunday Free Cafe, Last Sunday of EVERY month

Next café – Sunday 25th November
Our usual free food, acousitc music, and specially this sunday…
Bilston Glen OUTDOOR cinema!
We’ll be showing some films about the Spanish Civil War and the Uranium mining in lapland. Maybe more films too… if you want to watch something then please bring it along!
See you in the woods!

see our earthfirstPosted on Categories Capitalism / Globalisation, Climate Chaos, Scotland (Central & Southern), Squatting / Free Spaces / Protest Sites, Unnecessary Developments, Wilderness Defence

Woman’s protest halts phone mast

19th November 2007
A woman has spent the day in a muddy hole outside her house to prevent workmen building a mobile phone mast.

Ruth Taylor beat the workmen to the site in Charlton Road, Keynsham, just before 0800 GMT and stood in the way.

19th November 2007
A woman has spent the day in a muddy hole outside her house to prevent workmen building a mobile phone mast.

Ruth Taylor beat the workmen to the site in Charlton Road, Keynsham, just before 0800 GMT and stood in the way.

Bath and North East Somerset Council (B&NES) refused planning permission for the mast, but failed to tell O2 in the regulated time.

The council has apologised and O2 has said it would meet with residents on Tuesday to discuss their concerns.

I’m not confident we’ll stop it altogether but delighted that we have stalled them
Ruth Taylor

Work had begun to prepare the site for the 13m (42.6 ft) mast but Ruth Taylor decided to take on the telecommunications firm.

“The workmen turned up at about five to eight so I threw on my wellies which I’ve had ready by the door, dashed out here and got here first,” she said.

When they saw Mrs Taylor the workmen went away.

B&NES had 56 days to tell O2 the firm had been refused planning approval but it took them 57 days.

Ongoing negotiations

In a statement the council said: “The council is aware of the concern that failure to notify O2 within the allotted time has caused to local residents and apologises for this.

“The council will as a matter of urgency continue to liaise with the operators and other parties to seek to resolve this situation.

“Negotiations about a possible re-siting of the mast to Riverside at some point in the future are ongoing.

“However the site is not owned by the council or O2, and any decision about this will need to be made by the site owner.”

“There are better places that the council should have looked at and O2 should be looking at and it just is not right,” said Mrs Taylor.

“I’m not confident we’ll stop it altogether but delighted that we have stalled them,” she said.

O2 said they must build the mast due to pressure from the government and the public to boost coverage.

Video of group of residents meeting O2 at site

Road builders raided, Digger diving done at Tara, Ireland

November 9th

Diggers Ahoy!

Road builders offices raided by cultural conservationists.

TARA CAMPAIGN LATEST!

THE TARA cultural conservationists halted work on a controversial section of the proposed new M3 on Thursday.

November 9th

Diggers Ahoy!

Road builders offices raided by cultural conservationists.

TARA CAMPAIGN LATEST!

THE TARA cultural conservationists halted work on a controversial section of the proposed new M3 on Thursday.
Twenty-one campaigners stormed the administrative complex (Dunshaughlin)of the site contractors (SIAC, Ferrovial and Eurolink.)near Tara Hill, occupying offices and filming surprised staff.

Then they went to a nearby construction site and climbed on to bulldozers, stopping roadmaking for an hour-and-a-half.

It was a significant escalation of the long protest, timed to coincide the old Celtic New Year’s Day.

One of the reasons for the action was the EU’s recent court ruling on contractors to stop, in view of the continuing damage to Ireland’s World Heritage Site.

A spokesman for the conservationists said: “This direct action has been taken by concerned citizens of the EU because the Irish government is ignoring European law.”
“Continued attempts have been made to persuade the government to stop the work on this section of the M3 while a decision is reached by the European commission.
“It was a very successful action and many messages of concern were conveyed to the senior management at the administrative site.
Connor McDermot, technical manager, when asked why the graves of our ancestors had been desecrated gave us no comment.
“Information was gathered on illegal road building activities.
“It has come to light that further destruction of this historic valley will be caused by 129 kilometres of slip roads as well as 79 km of motorway and the further development that will inevitably happen if this destruction is allowed.

Campaigners call on all Irish networks to activate and support the Save Tara Valley campaign,help urgently needed.

More reports on frontline action soon.
Video link soon Tech support needed.

http://www.tarapixie.net

Climate Action in Dover

4.11.2007
In the early hours of sunday morning, climate activists made a bold statement about global warming by dropping a banner from a four-storey bulding.

Dover climate action 1Dover climate action 24.11.2007
In the early hours of sunday morning, climate activists made a bold statement about global warming by dropping a banner from a four-storey bulding.

“THE EARTH IS TOO HOT” was clearly visible from the main throughway from the M20 to the busiest port in Britain.

Shortly afterwards two road warning signs were put up on the first roundabout on the approach to Dover informing drivers that there is “CLIMATE CHAOS AHEAD”.

Autumn EF! Action Update out – and advance notice of the Winter Moot, 22-24 February (gathering of eco-activists), Nottingham

The latest issue of the quarterly EF!AU was dished up at the Anarchist Bookfair – bursting at the seams, it had to be turned into a bumper issue, with a round-up of the actions around the time of the Camp for Climate Action, plus loads of action reports from around the world since then – from pieing oil executives, blockading garages & airports, polar bears locking-on, sabotage, prisoners, occupied spaces, digger-diving, GM crop-trashing, to cake and the cunning use of mung beans (oh, and of course, much much more).

The latest issue of the quarterly EF!AU was dished up at the Anarchist Bookfair – bursting at the seams, it had to be turned into a bumper issue, with a round-up of the actions around the time of the Camp for Climate Action, plus loads of action reports from around the world since then – from pieing oil executives, blockading garages & airports, polar bears locking-on, sabotage, prisoners, occupied spaces, digger-diving, GM crop-trashing, to cake and the cunning use of mung beans (oh, and of course, much much more).

Download it to print out and share here. Do get in touch with the editorial collective to let them know if you’re dishing it up round your way, or need paper copies, or want to give them one of the rarer ingredients, dosh (to send it to prisoners, protest camps and far beyond) – their contact details and more are here

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The EF! Winter Moot will happen from 22nd – 24th February 2008, in Nottingham – more details nearer the time, as this is just advance notice.

It’s a gathering for environmental activists – in the past, it’s been a chance for people involved in all kinds of ecological direct action to get together for a weekend indoors to chat about where things are at in the UK, and so improve all aspects of how we work together, in order to take direct action in defence of the earth.

Contact 0845-0223 5254 for more info

Activist Film Festival is seeking submissions

Undercurrents is calling for submissions of short videos and animations on the theme of the festival: social justice and environmental action.

Beyond TV 8 flierUndercurrents is calling for submissions of short videos and animations on the theme of the festival: social justice and environmental action.

Subject: Political Activist videos wanted
From: undercurrents

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS OF FILMS

FOR BEYONDTV FESTIVAL NOVEMBER 2007

What is BEYONDTV?
From November 28 to December 2, 2007, Radical media charity, Undercurrents will host the 8th annual BEYONDTV festival of political documentaries, animations and music videos from inspiring media directors.

Undercurrents is calling for submissions of short videos and animations on the theme of the festival: social justice and environmental action.

Important Note: We do not screen dramas using actors

BEYONDTV will be hosted at the Dylan Thomas Centre and Taliesin Cinema Swansea from November 28 – December 2, 2007

More details at http://www.beyondtvfestival.info
beyondtv@undercurrents.org

Undercurrents
Old Exchange
Pier st
Swansea
SA1 1RY
UK