Protests, Lawsuits and Arson: South American Mine Resistance 12th April

• Four hun­dred pro­test­ers stormed the planned site of the Minas Con­ga mine in Yana­cocha, Peru, and set fire to con­struc­tion equip­ment yes­ter­day. Minas Con­ga would be the biggest gold mine in Peru, and has been the tar­get of sus­tained protests from local indige­nous res­i­dents who say the mine would destroy their water sup­ply. In July, police killed five pro­test­ers in anti-mine clash­es; the deaths led to a pend­ing com­plaint to the Inter-Amer­i­can Human Rights Court.

• On April 3, 30 pro­test­ers crashed the open­ing of the Expom­i­nas trade fair in Quito, Ecuador, where the gov­ern­ment was seek­ing to coax new invest­ments in min­er­al and oil min­ing. Pro­test­ers crashed the inau­gur­al speech by singing a rewrit­ten ver­sion of the pop­u­lar hip-hop song “Lati­noaméri­ca” by Calle 13: “You can­not buy Intag, you can­not buy Mirador, you can’t buy Kim­sacocha, you can’t buy my Ecuador.”

Ecuador is home to a pow­er­ful (large­ly indige­nous) anti-mines move­ment. Left­ist Pres­i­dent Rafael Correa’s sup­port for big min­ing has been a major fac­tor cost­ing him sup­port from much of his for­mer base.

• A Chilean court has sus­pend­ed con­struc­tion of Bar­rick Gold’s long- embat­tled Pas­cua Lama mine, based on com­plaints from local indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties that the mine will destroy their water sup­ply. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the injunc­tion does not affect con­struc­tion in the Argen­tinean por­tion of the project, includ­ing the process plant and tail­ings stor­age facil­i­ty.

Chile suspends Barrick Gold mine on indigenous fears of pollution 11th April

A Chilean court on Wednes­day sus­pend­ed Bar­rick Gold Corp.’s Pas­cua-Lama mine after indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties com­plained that the project is threat­en­ing their water sup­ply and pol­lut­ing glac­i­ers.

A Chilean court on Wednes­day sus­pend­ed Bar­rick Gold Corp.’s Pas­cua-Lama mine after indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties com­plained that the project is threat­en­ing their water sup­ply and pol­lut­ing glac­i­ers.

The appeals court in the north­ern city of Copi­apo charged the Toron­to-based gold min­er with “envi­ron­men­tal irreg­u­lar­i­ties” dur­ing con­struc­tion of the world’s high­est-alti­tude gold and sil­ver mine.

Inte­ri­or Min­is­ter Andres Chad­wick wel­comed the mine’s sus­pen­sion and said he hopes the world’s top gold min­ing com­pa­ny can now fix prob­lems at Pas­cua-Lama.

“We’re not sur­prised at all and we think it is good that through a legal organ­ism, con­struc­tion work is sus­pend­ed while Pas­cua effec­tive­ly attends to the charges already made by the envi­ron­men­tal reg­u­la­tor,” Chad­wick told local Radio Coop­er­a­ti­va.

Bar­rick (TSX:ABX) said Wednes­day it was still await­ing for­mal noti­fi­ca­tion of the injunc­tion halt­ing con­struc­tion on the Chilean side of the Pas­cua-Lama min­ing project and would assess the poten­tial impli­ca­tions when it came.

How­ev­er, it said con­struc­tion activ­i­ties in Argenti­na, where the major­i­ty of the project’s crit­i­cal infra­struc­ture is locat­ed, includ­ing the process plant and tail­ings stor­age facil­i­ty, are not affect­ed.

Mean­while, the start date for the mine strad­dling the Andean bor­der with Argenti­na has already been delayed by more than six months to the sec­ond half of 2014. Cost over­runs have seen the price tag rise from $3 bil­lion to more than $8 bil­lion.

The injunc­tion stems from a con­sti­tu­tion­al rights pro­tec­tion peti­tion filed with the court on Oct. 22 by a rep­re­sen­ta­tive of a Dia­gui­ta indige­nous com­mu­ni­ty and oth­er indi­vid­u­als against Barrick’s Chilean sub­sidiary and the region­al Envi­ron­men­tal Eval­u­a­tion Com­mis­sion.

That move fol­lowed a sim­i­lar peti­tion filed in late Sep­tem­ber by rep­re­sen­ta­tives of four Dia­gui­ta indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties against the Bar­rick sub­sidiary, Com­pa­nia Min­era Neva­da, with the EEC.

The plain­tiffs allege non-com­pli­ance with aspects of the project’s envi­ron­men­tal approval in Chile that have result­ed in neg­a­tive impacts on water sources and con­t­a­m­i­na­tion, or at least the risk of con­t­a­m­i­na­tion, of the Estre­cho and Huas­co rivers, accord­ing to infor­ma­tion sup­plied by Bar­rick.

Daniel McGowan Forbidden From Publishing Articles Without Permission April 10th

After more than sev­en years, the stack of dehu­man­iz­ing and seem­ing­ly uncon­sti­tu­tion­al inter­ac­tions between Daniel McGowan and the Amer­i­can prison sys­tem is now piled so high it is tee­ter­ing over into a recur­sive mess of bleak and Kafkaesque absur­di­ty.

After more than sev­en years, the stack of dehu­man­iz­ing and seem­ing­ly uncon­sti­tu­tion­al inter­ac­tions between Daniel McGowan and the Amer­i­can prison sys­tem is now piled so high it is tee­ter­ing over into a recur­sive mess of bleak and Kafkaesque absur­di­ty.

Last Mon­day, McGowan pub­lished a piece on the Huff­in­g­ton Post that laid out much of his sit­u­a­tion to date. After years in prison for his role in envi­ron­men­tal­ly moti­vat­ed prop­er­ty destruc­tion that was pros­e­cut­ed as acts of ter­ror­ism, he wrote, he was fin­ish­ing up the remain­ing months of his sen­tence in a halfway house in Brook­lyn.

The var­i­ous per­ver­sions of the case that sent McGowan away are well doc­u­ment­ed in the doc­u­men­tary If a Tree Falls: A Sto­ry of the Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front. But, as McGowan wrote, less pub­li­cized is what hap­pened to him a year into his prison term: Despite a flaw­less dis­ci­pli­nary record, McGowan was trans­ferred to an exper­i­men­tal new Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Man­age­ment Unit, a super­max-like extreme-iso­la­tion facil­i­ty some have dubbed a “Lit­tle Guan­tanamo.”

Why was McGowan trans­ferred to a CMU? He nev­er got a good answer to that ques­tion, even after a Free­dom of Infor­ma­tion Act request, so, along with oth­er CMU inmates, he filed a law­suit chal­leng­ing the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the CMUs and alleg­ing that they are effec­tive­ly polit­i­cal pris­ons designed to silence the voic­es of peo­ple whose mes­sage the gov­ern­ment doesn’t like. As it turned out, McGowan was right: Bureau of Pris­ons mem­os dis­cov­ered through the law­suit appear to link his trans­fer to the CMU to the fact that he con­tin­ued to write things the gov­ern­ment found polit­i­cal­ly objec­tion­able.

“While incar­cer­at­ed and through social cor­re­spon­dence and arti­cles writ­ten for rad­i­cal pub­li­ca­tions, inmate McGowan has attempt­ed to unite the rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal and ani­mal lib­er­a­tion move­ments,” one memo states, before dilat­ing on oth­er polit­i­cal state­ments McGowan made in inter­views and his own writ­ing.

McGowan wrote about all of this in his Huff­in­g­ton Post piece last Mon­day. Two days lat­er, the staff at the halfway house to which he had been assigned told him that his work per­mit had been revoked on order of the Bureau of Pris­ons. The next morn­ing, fed­er­al mar­shals arrived and brought him to the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Deten­tion Cen­ter. Once there, he was pre­sent­ed with a doc­u­ment explain­ing that he had vio­lat­ed the terms of his release to the halfway house. Specif­i­cal­ly, the inci­dent report stat­ed that McGowan had vio­lat­ed a prison reg­u­la­tion that stat­ed “an inmate cur­rent­ly con­fined in an insti­tu­tion may not … act as a reporter or pub­lish under a byline.”

That’s right: McGowan was sent back to jail for writ­ing about how he’d been impris­oned in a CMU for writ­ing things.

There’s more: The reg­u­la­tion that the Bureau of Pris­ons cit­ed to jus­ti­fy return­ing him to jail had actu­al­ly been declared uncon­sti­tu­tion­al by a fed­er­al court in 2007, and the Bureau of Pris­ons had final­ly tak­en it off the books in 2010. McGowan’s lawyers men­tioned this to the bureau and to the lawyers rep­re­sent­ing the gov­ern­ment in his law­suit, and he was re-released to the halfway house on Fri­day.

But that’s not the end of it. Back at the halfway house, staff pre­sent­ed McGowan with a doc­u­ment and direct­ed him to sign it. The doc­u­ment stat­ed that “he is not per­mit­ted to have any con­tact with the media with­out approval from the BOP’s Res­i­den­tial Reen­try Man­ag­er. Accord­ing­ly, Res­i­dent McGowan was advised that writ­ing arti­cles, appear­ing in any type of tele­vi­sion or media out­lets, news reports and or doc­u­men­taries with­out pri­or BOP approval is strict­ly pro­hib­it­ed.”

It’s worth not­ing that McGowan hadn’t been asked to sign this doc­u­ment when he first arrived at the halfway house, nor, as far as his lawyers can tell, has any­one there been asked to sign it. In fact, there’s noth­ing in the Bureau of Prison’s pub­lished media pol­i­cy that requires pre-approval before pub­lish­ing any­thing.

“There is no nation­al pro­hi­bi­tion on pub­lish­ing,” Chris Burke, a spokesman for the Bureau of Pris­ons, con­firmed this after­noon.

“I thought I had lost my abil­i­ty to be sur­prised by what the Bureau of Pris­ons does years ago,” said Rachel Meeropol, a lawyer with the Cen­ter for Con­sti­tu­tion­al Rights who’s rep­re­sent­ing McGowan. “But restrict­ing an individual’s free­dom of speech in this man­ner is tru­ly sur­pris­ing. It’s beyond iron­ic that Daniel was retal­i­at­ed against and returned to prison for pub­lish­ing a blog about being retal­i­at­ed against for speak­ing out in prison.”

Here’s the inci­dent report explain­ing McGowan’s return to prison:

Daniel McGowan Inci­dent Report

Oklahoma Grandmother Locks Herself to KXL Heavy Machinery 9th April

ALLEN, OK – Tues­day, April 9, 2013, 9:00 AM – Okla­homa grand­moth­er Nan­cy Zorn, 79, from Warr Acres, has locked her­self to a piece of heavy machin­ery effec­tive­ly halt­ing con­struc­tion on TransCanada’s Key­stone

ALLEN, OK – Tues­day, April 9, 2013, 9:00 AM – Okla­homa grand­moth­er Nan­cy Zorn, 79, from Warr Acres, has locked her­self to a piece of heavy machin­ery effec­tive­ly halt­ing con­struc­tion on TransCanada’s Key­stone XL tox­ic tar sands pipeline. This action comes in the wake of the dis­as­trous tar sands pipeline spill in Mayflower Arkansas, where an esti­mat­ed 80,000 gal­lons of tar sands spilled into a res­i­den­tial neigh­bor­hood and local water­ways.

Using a bike-lock Zorn has attached her neck direct­ly to a mas­sive earth-mover, known as an exca­va­tor, which has brought con­struc­tion of Key­stone XL to a stop.  Zorn is the sec­ond Okla­homa grand­moth­er this year risk­ing arrest to stop con­struc­tion of the pipeline, and her protest is the third in a series of ongo­ing civ­il dis­obe­di­ence actions led by the Okla­homa-based coali­tion of orga­ni­za­tions, Great Plains Tar Sands Resis­tance.

“Right now our neigh­bors in Arkansas are feel­ing the tox­ic affect of tar sands on their com­mu­ni­ty. Will Okla­homa neigh­bor­hoods be next?” asked Zorn before tak­ing action today. “I can no longer sit by idly while tox­ic tar sands are pumped down from Cana­da and into our com­mu­ni­ties. It is time to rise up and defend our home. It is my hope that this one small action today will inspire many to pro­tect this land and our water.”

Exxon Mobil’s recent Pega­sus pipeline spill has forced local res­i­dents to evac­u­ate their homes due to life-threat­en­ing tox­ins released into their neigh­bor­hood. Local fam­i­lies have expe­ri­enced episodes of nau­sea, headaches, and res­pi­ra­to­ry prob­lems due to acute expo­sure to dead­ly chem­i­cals, like ben­zene, that are mixed in with the raw tar sands. Pega­sus was car­ry­ing up to 90,000 bar­rels of tar sands a day before it rup­tured and spilled.  The Key­stone XL pipeline is slat­ed to car­ry over 800,000 bar­rels a day; an alarm­ing 10 times the amount of tar sands.

“In the last two weeks alone there have been at least six dif­fer­ent inland oil spills across the coun­try,” said Eric Wheel­er, an Okla­homa native and spokesper­son for Great Plains Tar Sands Resis­tance. “It’s time to stop refer­ring to pipeline spills as acci­dents, it’s now abun­dant­ly clear that leaks are just part of busi­ness as usu­al. Tar sands hurt every­one they touch, from the indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties in Alber­ta whose water is being poi­soned, to the Gulf Coast com­mu­ni­ties that are forced to breathe tox­ic refin­ery emis­sions. We’re not going to allow this tox­ic stuff in our beau­ti­ful state.”

UPDATE 10:30AM: Nan­cy Zorn has been extract­ed by local law enforce­ment and tak­en into cus­tody. Please con­sid­er con­tribut­ing to Nancy’s bail fund

Taiwan Activists Praise “Tree-Top” Man 8th April

BANGKOK: Tai­wan activists are prais­ing one man’s efforts to bring about change to the envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies of the East Asian coun­try through his demon­stra­tion atop a tree.

BANGKOK: Tai­wan activists are prais­ing one man’s efforts to bring about change to the envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies of the East Asian coun­try through his demon­stra­tion atop a tree. Dubbed the “tree-top” man, Pan Han-chi­ang has vowed to stay in his perch until a local coun­cil ends its con­tro­ver­sial devel­op­ment project.

“I have so much respect for him and what he is doing,” envi­ron­men­tal activist Li Xiun told Bikyanews.com as the protest entered its 12th day on Mon­day.

The gov­ern­ment of New Taipei City, on the out­skirts of the cap­i­tal, plans to build a swim­ming pool and an under­ground park­ing garage in the grounds of a junior high school in the Panchiao dis­trict.

Despite objec­tions from con­ser­va­tion­ists, some near­by res­i­dents and alum­ni and teach­ers of the school, a con­trac­tor start­ed remov­ing five out of the 32 tar­get­ed 40-year-old trees from the cam­pus late last month.

In reac­tion, activist Pan, 46, climbed one of the trees on March 28 and has refused to come down, with meals and water sup­plied by his sup­port­ers on the ground.

“We will sup­ply him with what he needs until the gov­ern­ment changes,” said one of his sup­port­ers.

The sit-in has halt­ed prepara­to­ry work on the project.

“This is the last method we can use now… the protest will con­tin­ue indef­i­nite­ly if the gov­ern­ment decides to go ahead with the project,” his broth­er Pan Han-sheng was quot­ed by AFP as say­ing.

The city gov­ern­ment insists that the project, esti­mat­ed to cost Tw$310 mil­lion ($10.4 mil­lion), is designed to meet pub­lic demand and the trees will be replant­ed else­where.

But oppo­nents ques­tion the wis­dom of remov­ing mature trees – many of them unlike­ly to sur­vive trans­plan­ta­tion – to build the swim­ming pool and espe­cial­ly the under­ground park­ing garage, which they say is unnec­es­sary.

“These trees are part of the col­lec­tive mem­o­ry of tens of thou­sands of stu­dents grad­u­at­ing from the school. It is cru­el to cast off their mem­o­ry,” said Pan Han-sheng.

He said at least 3,000 peo­ple have expressed oppo­si­tion to the project.

Japan Confirms Sea Shepherd Success in the Southern Ocean

Operation Zero Tolerance has been Sea Shepherd’s most effective campaign to date.

The Japan­ese Insti­tute for Cetacean Research, the front organ­i­sa­tion for Japan­ese ille­gal whal­ing activ­i­ties has released their kill records for 2012/

Operation Zero Tolerance has been Sea Shepherd’s most effective campaign to date.

The Japan­ese Insti­tute for Cetacean Research, the front organ­i­sa­tion for Japan­ese ille­gal whal­ing activ­i­ties has released their kill records for 2012/2013.

They want­ed 50 Hump­backs. They took none.

They want­ed 50 Fin whales. They took none.

They want­ed 935 Minke whales. They killed 103.

832 Minke whales not slain! 50 Hump­backs and 50 Fins not slaugh­tered!

Dur­ing the 2010–2011 Oper­a­tion No Com­pro­mise, the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet took 17% of their ille­gal self-allo­cat­ed quo­ta. Dur­ing the 2011–2012 Oper­a­tion Divine Wind, the Japan­ese whalers took 26% of their ille­gal self-allo­cat­ed quo­ta.

 103 Minke whales and zero Fin whales and zero Hump­back whales trans­lates into 9.96% of their com­bined quo­ta. The whalers took only 11% of their Minke whale quo­ta and zero per­cent of their Fin and Hump­back quo­ta.

These per­cent­ages trans­late into a finan­cial dis­as­ter for the Japan­ese whalers. The over­haul of Nis­shin Maru alone cost $24 mil­lion dol­lars. Out­fit­ting, fuelling and oper­at­ing costs added an addi­tion­al esti­mat­ed $11 mil­lion dol­lars. That fig­ure may be much high­er. Going on the con­ser­v­a­tive esti­mate of $35 mil­lion dol­lars, means that it cost the whalers a min­i­mum of $340,000 per whale. There are only two words to describe this, “eco­nom­ic luna­cy”. In addi­tion there is the loss of pres­tige and the anger of the inter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty direct­ed at the Japan­ese peo­ple.

Sea Shep­herd would have reduced the killing much low­er if not for the suck­er punch deliv­ered at the eleventh hour by the Ninth Dis­trict Court of the Unit­ed States that effec­tive­ly knocked Sea Shep­herd USA out of Oper­a­tion Zero Tol­er­ance by grant­i­ng the Japan­ese whalers an injunc­tion against inter­ven­tion by Sea Shep­herd USA.

Sea Shep­herd Aus­tralia imme­di­ate­ly swept up the ban­ner, car­ried it down to the South­ern Ocean and deliv­ered the most deter­mined cam­paign ever mount­ed to shut down the unlaw­ful poach­ing activ­i­ties of the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet in the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary. Sea Shep­herd Aus­tralia pre­dict­ed that the take would not exceed 10% and the over­all take was indeed just under 10%.

“Sea Shep­herd Aus­tralia is elat­ed that we have deliv­ered the worst sea­son to date to these whale poach­ers from Japan. These poach­ers have shown a com­plete dis­re­gard for cetacean life, human life and Aus­tralian and Inter­na­tion­al law. By tar­get­ing pro­tect­ed and endan­gered whales in a whale sanc­tu­ary and risk­ing mas­sive oil spills in the pris­tine Antarc­tic wilder­ness, they are show­ing the world their con­tempt for ocean life and for the glob­al com­mu­ni­ty who has con­sis­tent­ly called for an end to whal­ing,” said Jeff Hansen, Sea Shep­herd Aus­tralia Direc­tor.

“One whale killed is still one whale killed too many. How­ev­er, today we cel­e­brate the fact that with courage and con­vic­tion in the face of great dan­ger and adver­si­ty, the brave crews of the four Sea Shep­herd ships were able to suc­cess­ful­ly pre­vent the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet from reach­ing more than nine­ty per­cent of their self-allo­cat­ed quo­ta. This has meant sav­ing the lives of 932 threat­ened, endan­gered and pro­tect­ed whales,” said Cap­tain Peter Ham­marst­edt.

“Nine years ago on Sea Shep­herd’s first Whale Defense cam­paign the lives of 85 whales were saved. At the con­clu­sion of the 9th Antarc­tic cam­paign, that num­ber has increased 11-fold to 932. Oper­a­tion Zero Tol­er­ance is by far Sea Shep­herd’s most suc­cess­ful cam­paign with the kill num­bers being the low­est since the ille­gal research-whal­ing pro­gram start­ed. It is a def­i­nite­ly an epic moment in Sea Shep­herd’s his­to­ry, how­ev­er it is an even big­ger one for the whales. Nev­er has the sanc­tu­ary been more peace­ful. While the crews and the ships bore the brunt of the vio­lence at the hands of the Japan­ese Whal­ing Fleet, the whales were spared the har­poons,” said Cap­tain Sid­dharth Chakravar­ty.

 

Daniel McGowan Released After Lawyers Confirm He Was Jailed For HuffPost Blog 5th April

Lawyers for envi­ron­men­tal activist Daniel McGowan said in a state­ment Fri­day after­noon that he had been returned to his halfway house in Brook­lyn.

Lawyers for envi­ron­men­tal activist Daniel McGowan said in a state­ment Fri­day after­noon that he had been returned to his halfway house in Brook­lyn. They added that they had con­firmed McGowan was jailed by fed­er­al mar­shals on Thurs­day for his Huff­in­g­ton Post blog post — on the basis of a prison reg­u­la­tion that was declared uncon­sti­tu­tion­al by a judge in 2007.

Their state­ment read:

Daniel McGowan has been released from the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Deten­tion Cen­ter in Brook­lyn where he was tak­en into cus­tody yes­ter­day and is back at the halfway house where he has been resid­ing since his release from prison in Decem­ber. Yes­ter­day, Daniel was giv­en an “inci­dent report” indi­cat­ing that his Huff­in­g­ton Post blog post, “Court Doc­u­ments Prove I Was Sent to Com­mu­ni­ca­tion Man­age­ment Units (CMU) for My Polit­i­cal Speech,” vio­lat­ed a BOP reg­u­la­tion pro­hibit­ing inmates from “pub­lish­ing under a byline.” The BOP reg­u­la­tion in ques­tion was declared uncon­sti­tu­tion­al by a fed­er­al court in 2007, and elim­i­nat­ed by the BOP in 2010. After we brought this to the BOP’s atten­tion, the inci­dent report was expunged.

The Bureau of Pris­ons did not imme­di­ate­ly return a request for com­ment.

The ear­li­er sto­ry …

NEW YORK — The jail­ing of envi­ron­men­tal activist Daniel McGowan is under review, a Fed­er­al Bureau of Pris­ons (BOP) offi­cial said Fri­day morn­ing.

McGowan, who plead­ed guilty to arson linked to the Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front in 2006, was serv­ing out the final months of his sev­en-year sen­tence in a Brook­lyn halfway house when he was jailed by fed­er­al mar­shals Thurs­day morn­ing, alleged­ly for writ­ing a com­men­tary on The Huff­in­g­ton Post crit­i­cal of a harsh­ly restrict­ed fed­er­al prison unit in which he had spent time.

Tra­cy Rivers, a res­i­den­tial reen­try man­ag­er for the BOP in New York, told Huff­Post Fri­day morn­ing, “We are review­ing this case to deter­mine if the actions that were tak­en were appro­pri­ate.”

Rivers declined to say more about why McGowan was moved to the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Deten­tion Cen­ter, cit­ing pri­va­cy issues. But she not­ed that a deter­mi­na­tion would be made in McGowan’s case by the end of Fri­day.

In gen­er­al, Rivers said, pris­on­ers can be pun­ished for vio­lat­ing a BOP rule thatpro­hibits giv­ing inter­views to the news media with­out offi­cial approval. But that rule says noth­ing about pris­on­ers writ­ing blog posts.

McGowan’s wife, Jen­ny Synan, told Huff­Post that nei­ther he, his lawyers nor a BOP offi­cial she talked to about the case had heard of a reg­u­la­tion pro­hibit­ing pris­on­ers from writ­ing blog posts.

In a state­ment Thurs­day, McGowan’s lawyers at the Cen­ter for Con­sti­tu­tion­al Rights said, “If this is indeed a case of retal­i­a­tion for writ­ing an arti­cle about the BOP retal­i­at­ing against his free speech while he was in prison, it is more than iron­ic, it is an out­rage.”

UPDATE: 1:25 p.m. — Daniel McGowan may soon leave jail. His attor­ney with the Cen­ter for Con­sti­tu­tion­al Rights, Rachel Meeropol, told Huff­Post Fri­day after­noon, “We have been told by the BOP that he will be sent back to the halfway house today.”

Daniel McGowan Sent Back to Prison April 4th

Less than a week after Daniel’s arti­cle regard­ing being held in a CMU for his polit­i­cal speech was pub­lished by the Huff­in­g­ton Post, he has been sent back into cus­tody. The fol­low­ing mes­sage is from a sup­port site for Daniel McGowan:

“Just when we thought it was over…. We have some bad news to report. This morn­ing Daniel was tak­en into cus­tody by fed­er­al mar­shals and is now at the fed­er­al deten­tion cen­ter in Brook­lyn get­ting processed.

We are still wait­ing to hear why this has occurred. Con­sid­er­ing his exem­plary behav­ior at the halfway house, approved week­end pass­es and the full-time job he start­ed as soon as he was released back to the city this is all pret­ty insane. The Bureau of Pris­ons has proven to be cru­el and vin­dic­tive time and time again.

Any­way, what YOU can do right now is write to Daniel and send your love! We don’t know how long he will be here, but there is a good chance it will be until his sen­tence offi­cial­ly ends on June 5.

Please write to:
DANIEL McGOWAN
#63794–053
MDC BROOKLYN
METROPOLITAN DETENTION CENTER
P.O. BOX 329002
BROOKLYN, NY 11232

Thanks for your con­tin­ued sup­port!”

There is also an arti­cle post­ed by NYC ABC, which you can read here.

More Charges Brought Against Tar Sands “Megaload” Protesters in Moscow, Idaho 4 April

As some of the last five of over 70 mas­sive parts of an Alber­ta tar sands upgrad­er plant rum­bled through the small, qui­et, col­lege town of Moscow, Ida­ho, at about 11 pm on Sun­day, March 4, four pro­test­ers linked arms and sat down in the mid­dle of Wash­ing­ton Street to stop three of these “mega­loads” weigh­ing 200,000 to 415,000 pounds and mea­sur­ing 150 to 200 feet long.

Police arrest­ed Cass Davis and Jim Prall for resist­ing and obstruct­ing offi­cers and dragged Jeanne McHale and Pat Mon­ger to the side­walk, as anoth­er 40 pro­test­ers voiced their oppo­si­tion to expand­ing tar sands min­ing oper­a­tions.  Again on Tues­day, March 6, when the final two sim­i­lar­ly huge ship­ments crossed this 22,000-person city, demon­stra­tors pound­ed drums, chant­ed slo­gans, played music, and engaged in street the­ater.

Helen Yost tossed a card­board protest sign at the rear of the last mega­load and air-kicked the trans­ports and their police escorts out of town, result­ing in mis­de­meanor charges for throw­ing an object at a mov­ing high­way vehi­cle and attempt­ed bat­tery of a peace offi­cer.

All three accused pro­test­ers are plead­ing not guilty based on the neces­si­ty of their actions induced by their moral oblig­a­tion to direct­ly con­front the caus­es of cli­mate change that are cur­rent­ly killing mil­lions of peo­ple, plants, and ani­mals around the globe.  For their state­ments, please lis­ten to Cass Davis and Jim Prall on Flash­points and Helen Yost on KRFP Radio Free Moscow.  Oth­er arti­cles, pho­tos, and videos of numer­ous mega­load pas­sages and protests are avail­able on the Wild Ida­ho Ris­ing Tide (WIRT) face­book page and web­site.

At about forty direct actions since July 15, 2011, when the ship­ments start­ed tra­vers­ing two-lane High­way 95 sev­er­al nights a week, WIRT mem­bers and their com­mu­ni­ty have prac­ticed sim­ple acts of non-vio­lent civ­il dis­obe­di­ence to draw Amer­i­cans’ atten­tion to ongo­ing crimes against nature and human­i­ty per­pe­trat­ed by one of the wealth­i­est cor­po­ra­tions in the world, Exxon­Mo­bil, and its Cana­di­an sub­sidiary, Impe­r­i­al Oil.

Their strug­gle began in May 2010, when Ida­ho cit­i­zens first learned that Gov­er­nor Butch Otter and the Ida­ho Trans­porta­tion Depart­ment had promised easy Ida­ho pas­sage of at least 207 Kore­an-built mod­ules to boom­ing tar sands oper­a­tions in Cana­da.  Thir­ty four pieces of cheap­ly con­struct­ed equip­ment des­tined for the Kearl Oil Sands Project in north­east­ern Alber­ta arrived in Octo­ber 2010 by barge at the Port of Lewis­ton, Ida­ho, 465 riv­er miles inland from the Pacif­ic Ocean.  ExxonMobil/Imperial Oil orig­i­nal­ly intend­ed to trans­port these mega­loads through the Clear­wa­ter and Lochsa Riv­er val­leys, up a 216-mile stretch of High­way 12 between Lewis­ton and Mis­soula, Mon­tana.

This wild and pris­tine route through the largest wilder­ness com­plex in the low­er 48 states encom­pass­es not a sin­gle over­pass that would pre­vent pas­sage of these gigan­tic com­po­nents weigh­ing up to 600,000 pounds, tow­er­ing 30 feet tall, and crowd­ing the wind­ing, two-lane road with their 24-foot widths and over 200-foot lengths.  Among the first three Nation­al Scenic Byways and one of only 31 All-Amer­i­can Roads, High­way 12 runs through a Wild and Scenic Riv­er fed­er­al ease­ment and car­ries nation­al his­toric sig­nif­i­cance as the par­al­lel riv­er route of the Nez Perce and Lewis and Clark trails.  These des­ig­na­tions and the untram­meled nature of the place fos­ter a vibrant, local, tourism indus­try that has flour­ished even while the nation­al econ­o­my has floun­dered.

But Big Oil and its cor­po­rate inter­est in High­way 12 and oth­er nar­row, rur­al road­ways in Ida­ho and Mon­tana as per­ma­nent, high and wide, indus­tri­al cor­ri­dors to the tar sands naive­ly stum­bled into an ambush in this rugged coun­try.  Since August 2010, region­al cit­i­zens have chal­lenged, delayed, and pos­si­bly per­ma­nent­ly imped­ed Impe­r­i­al Oil’s plans, through four admin­is­tra­tive and dis­trict court cas­es in both states and an Ida­ho Supreme Court hear­ing.  The one ‘test val­i­da­tion mod­ule’ that did tra­verse High­way 12 in April 2011 has remained strand­ed at Lolo Pass, high in the Bit­ter­root Moun­tains, pro­tect­ed from local scorn by ongo­ing pri­vate secu­ri­ty, in mute tes­ta­ment to effec­tive lit­i­ga­tion and cor­po­rate fol­ly.  Dur­ing 2011, less than a dozen oth­er trans­ports with sim­i­lar dimen­sions belong­ing to oth­er com­pa­nies attempt­ed this ardu­ous course.

In Jan­u­ary 2011, Impe­r­i­al Oil began spend­ing $17 mil­lion to split its mod­ules pre­vi­ous­ly cer­ti­fied as “irre­ducible in size” into pieces only 15 feet high for trans­port on High­way 95 north from the port to Inter­states 90 and 15 and Cana­da.  As res­i­dents raged in the streets of Moscow dur­ing over forty protests since High­way 95 ship­ments com­menced in mid-July 2011, Exxon­Mo­bil shift­ed its trans­porta­tion plans in Octo­ber 2011 to the Port of Pas­co and High­way 395 in east­ern Wash­ing­ton.  In Feb­ru­ary 2012, in a law­suit ini­ti­at­ed by Mis­soula Coun­ty Com­mis­sion­ers, a Mon­tana judge mod­i­fied a tem­po­rary court injunc­tion into a per­ma­nent stay, effec­tive­ly bar­ring Impe­r­i­al Oil traf­fic on High­way 12 until the Mon­tana Depart­ment of Trans­porta­tion pro­duces a more thor­ough review of poten­tial project impacts.

Since the Ida­ho Trans­porta­tion Depart­ment first grant­ed over­le­gal load per­mits for these unwel­come behe­moths on Feb­ru­ary 1, 2011, most state and local offi­cials have com­plic­it­ly assent­ed to Impe­r­i­al Oil’s use of Moscow’s beau­ti­ful tree-lined streets and north Idaho’s wind­ing rur­al roads as indus­tri­al cor­ri­dors to the 232-square-mile com­plex of Cana­di­an tar sands mines con­sid­ered the “the most destruc­tive project on earth[1]”.  The moral out­rage of impact­ed cit­i­zens has swelled over almost two years, as spir­it­ed demon­stra­tions have con­front­ed every pas­sage of these Impe­r­i­al Oil trans­ports hauled by Mam­moet and their over­bear­ing con­voys of indus­try paid state, coun­ty, and city police and con­tract­ed pilot vehi­cle dri­vers and flag­gers.  On August 26, about 150 pro­test­ers filled the streets and six cit­i­zens were arrest­ed when they stopped a mega­load for near­ly half an hour.  Two ship­ment mon­i­tors were tar­get­ed and jailed on the fol­low­ing night, and two bicy­clists rid­ing on side­walks near the trans­ports were unlaw­ful­ly detained and charged on Octo­ber 6.

Myr­i­ad offen­sive social and envi­ron­men­tal injus­tices have already and will con­tin­ue to result from this trans­porta­tion project, which has­tens the Alber­ta tar sands devel­op­ment that cli­mate sci­en­tist James Hansen has warned would ensure “game over for the cli­mate.[2]”  Alber­ta upgrad­er plants release sub­stan­tial car­bon diox­ide, green­house gas­es, heavy met­als, and even the dirty tar mix­ture called bitu­men that they process.  Ener­gy- and water-inten­sive min­ing and upgrad­ing process­es release tox­ic emis­sions and waste­water stews that fill vast lagoons.  This exten­sive pol­lu­tion not only poi­sons down­wind and down­stream water, air, and soil, plant and wildlife com­mu­ni­ties, and First Nations vil­lages, it con­tributes to the sin­gle great­est point source of glob­al cli­mate chaos in North Amer­i­ca.  For bil­lions of peo­ple around the plan­et, cli­mate change-dri­ven warm­ing and desta­bi­lized weath­er are threat­en­ing the health and life ways of human pop­u­la­tions with inten­si­fy­ing storms, flood­ing, drought, deser­ti­fi­ca­tion, famine, and ris­ing sea lev­els[3].  The con­ser­v­a­tive Inter­na­tion­al Ener­gy Agency recent­ly report­ed that unless we shift our infra­struc­ture demands from fos­sil fuels to low-car­bon alter­na­tives with­in the next five years, “the results are like­ly to be dis­as­trous.[4]

In Ida­ho, mega­loads have imper­iled the safe­ty and sched­ules of trav­el­ers, delayed and blocked traf­fic with their 22– to 24-foot (two-lane) widths and lengthy con­voys, imped­ed pub­lic and pri­vate emer­gency ser­vices, caused per­son­al injury and prop­er­ty dam­age through numer­ous col­li­sions with vehi­cles, pow­er lines, cliffs, and tree branch­es, degrad­ed our high­ways with wash­board ruts in lane cen­ters, and pum­meled sat­u­rat­ed road beds, crum­bling shoul­ders, and out­dat­ed bridges.  Cit­i­zens con­cerned about the lax state over­sight and myr­i­ad impacts of these over­le­gal loads, who have mon­i­tored and doc­u­ment­ed dan­ger­ous con­voy prac­tices and con­di­tions, have addi­tion­al­ly faced unwar­rant­ed tar­get­ing, sur­veil­lance, intim­i­da­tion, harass­ment, and arrest by state troop­ers sworn to serve pub­lic safe­ty, but who instead pro­tect cor­po­rate inter­ests that com­pro­mise Ida­hoans’ civ­il lib­er­ties and risk the health and well­be­ing of peo­ple, places, and the plan­et.

Ida­ho res­i­dents mon­i­tor­ing, protest­ing, and block­ing tar sands mega­loads are not rad­i­cals but con­cerned cit­i­zens com­pelled by their con­sciences to take a coura­geous and per­sis­tent stand for a liv­able world.  They under­stand that their gov­ern­ment is bro­ken, that Amer­i­cans need to aban­don use of oil, coal, and nat­ur­al gas, and that humans and all oth­er life forms may not be capa­ble of adapt­ing their phys­i­olo­gies, as the U.S. Cham­ber of Com­merce insists, to a rapid­ly warm­ing cli­mate hot­ter than humans have ever expe­ri­enced.  The true rad­i­cals are U.S. Con­gres­sion­al mem­bers who mock wide­ly-accept­ed sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence of cli­mate change and the fos­sil-fuel indus­tries who alter the chem­istry of the Earth’s atmos­phere and who hire pub­lic rela­tions firms to con­found ener­gy issues.

As their con­sciences com­pel them, Wild Ida­ho Ris­ing Tide and Moscow activists seek only to pre­serve the glob­al home that they know and love, for the ben­e­fit of every­one but par­tic­u­lar­ly for the youngest and most vul­ner­a­ble peo­ple.  They are stand­ing on their con­vic­tions in sol­i­dar­i­ty with oth­er com­mu­ni­ties in the path of this indus­tri­al jug­ger­naut, near dozens of tar sands pipeline and trans­porta­tion routes and refiner­ies.  Over the last year, they have come to under­stand that resis­tance to Big Oil is not futile but essen­tial and manda­to­ry for peo­ple of good will to bequeath a liv­able plan­et to all of its present and future inhab­i­tants.  Every resis­tance move­ment that has ever changed the world began with just a few peo­ple express­ing their dis­sat­is­fac­tion and defi­ance, empow­er­ing their fel­low cit­i­zens, and deep­en­ing their resolve to effect long over­due changes.  Through cold and wet win­ter weath­er, often into the ear­ly morn­ing hours, some of the 400 region­al and 940 nation­al mem­bers of WIRT have borne wit­ness to this ongo­ing tar sands atroc­i­ty and opposed its abus­es with all the resources that they can muster.  But they are only among the first wave of a ris­ing tide of resis­tance that tar sands prof­i­teers can expect across our nation.

When vehi­cle-depen­dent Amer­i­cans, who con­sume 97 per­cent of Alber­ta tar sands prod­ucts, import the major­i­ty of their for­eign oil from Cana­da but export a sur­plus, steam clean­ing oily sand to obtain the pur­port­ed best and most secure new source of petro­le­um appears not only unnec­es­sary but expen­sive and exces­sive.  Fur­ther tar sands devel­op­ment in Cana­da and the Amer­i­can West would pro­long the U.S. oil addic­tion admit­ted by George W. Bush, exac­er­bate glob­al warm­ing, and fore­stall tran­si­tions to safe, clean, infi­nite­ly sus­tain­able ener­gy sources.  Polit­i­cal lead­er­ship inde­pen­dent of unac­count­able multi­na­tion­al cor­po­ra­tions that chan­nel mil­lions of dol­lars reaped from tar sands pro­duc­tion to Amer­i­can and Cana­di­an admin­is­tra­tive and leg­isla­tive offi­cials must effec­tive­ly resolve the biggest chal­lenge that human­i­ty has ever faced.

Although Pres­i­dent Oba­ma on his cam­paign trail her­ald­ed “the moment when the rise of the oceans begins to slow and our plan­et begins to heal,” Amer­i­cans con­tin­ue to reel from the insid­i­ous­ly dead­ly effects of fos­sil fuel extrac­tion, as vic­tims of the shame­ful after­maths of the Exxon Valdez and BP Deep­wa­ter Hori­zon spills, water con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed by coal min­ing and hydraulic frac­tur­ing, and exten­sive tar sands dev­as­ta­tion.  We can­not rely on state and nation­al politi­cians, dirty ener­gy exec­u­tives, or indus­try work­ers to hon­or and pro­tect people’s most basic rights and inter­ests.  As life around the world strug­gles with the con­se­quences of our col­lec­tive delay in tak­ing respon­si­ble actions to reverse cli­mate change, we can only hope that investors and finance man­agers real­ize that smart mon­ey will aban­don tar sands projects soon, before emerg­ing grass­roots ini­tia­tives reduce the val­ue of their fis­cal com­mit­ments to out­mod­ed ener­gy sources.

Cat­alyzed by pro­ject­ed atmos­pher­ic car­bon con­cen­tra­tions of more than 450 parts per mil­lion, pos­i­tive feed­back mech­a­nisms could over­shad­ow efforts to rea­son­ably shape ener­gy pol­i­cy, as chaot­ic weath­er rapid­ly trans­forms our land­scapes and infra­struc­ture.  A more sta­ble eco­nom­ic future already thrives through the devel­op­ment of abun­dant domes­tic sources of wind, solar, geot­her­mal, and oth­er non-depletable ener­gy.  Respon­si­ble ener­gy providers can safe­ly har­vest these ample resources in per­pe­tu­ity and offer enough pow­er and mobil­i­ty and bet­ter long-term secu­ri­ty to meet ener­gy needs.  Our inter­na­tion­al ener­gy cri­sis and wide­spread igno­rance of the clear sci­en­tif­ic con­sen­sus on cli­mate change may indeed rep­re­sent the eleventh hour for human­i­ty; our shared response could also sig­nal its finest hour.


[1] Envi­ron­men­tal Defence, Canada’s Tox­ic Tar Sands, The Most Destruc­tive Project on Earth, Feb­ru­ary 2008:http://www.desmogblog.com/sites/beta.desmogblog.com/files/TarSands_TheReport%20final.pdf.

[2] James Hansen, Silence Is Dead­ly, I’m Speak­ing Out Against The Canada‑U.S. Tar Sands Pipeline, Ener­gy Bul­letin, June 4, 2011: http://energybulletin.net/stories/2011–06-04/silence-deadly‑i%E2%80%99m-speaking-out-against-canada-us-tar-sands-pipeline.

[3] Unit­ed Nations Envi­ron­ment Pro­gramme, Poten­tial Impact of Sea-Lev­el Rise on Bangladesh, 2000: http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/potential-impact-of-sea-level-rise-on-bangladesh.

[4] Fiona Har­vey, World Head­ed for Irre­versible Cli­mate Change in Five Years, IEA Warns, If fos­sil fuel infra­struc­ture is not rapid­ly changed, the world will ‘lose for­ev­er’ the chance to avoid dan­ger­ous cli­mate change, The Guardian, Novem­ber 9, 2011:http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/nov/09/fossil-fuel-infrastructure-climate-change.

 

Tar Sands Protestors Chain Themselves To Canadian Consulate Doors 3rd April

Two Seat­tle res­i­dents have chained them­selves to the doors of the Cana­di­an Con­sulate in down­town Seat­tle today protest­ing pro­posed pipelines that would bring Cana­di­an tar sands to Amer­i­can refiner­ies.

Two Seat­tle res­i­dents have chained them­selves to the doors of the Cana­di­an Con­sulate in down­town Seat­tle today protest­ing pro­posed pipelines that would bring Cana­di­an tar sands to Amer­i­can refiner­ies.

“We used to look up to Cana­da as an envi­ron­men­tal leader, but pro­mot­ing extreme ener­gy like tar sands has soiled that rep­u­ta­tion for­ev­er,” said Car­lo Voli, a 47 year old Edmonds res­i­dent, as pro­tes­tors poured fake oil over Cana­di­an and Amer­i­can flags. Voli and Lisa Mar­cus, a 57 year old Seat­tle res­i­dent and grand­moth­er, have U‑Locked their necks to the doors of the consulate’s con­fer­ence room.

Par­tic­i­pants are protest­ing the con­struc­tion of the Key­stone XL pipeline and pro­pos­als to increase the num­ber of tankers car­ry­ing tar sands through the Sal­ish Sea. More than fifty peo­ple have been arrest­ed at sim­i­lar protests around the coun­try this past month. 1

“We’re here to expose the col­lu­sion between the tar sands indus­try and the Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment,” explained Rachel Sto­eve, a recent Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton grad­u­ate who was hold­ing a ban­ner out­side the cheese fac­to­ry, “The Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment and the tar sands indus­try are work­ing togeth­er to bring tar sands to our com­mu­ni­ties. They’re not doing it for our ben­e­fit; they’re doing it for prof­it,”

Cana­di­an Diplo­mats have come under crit­i­cism around the world for their aggres­sive pro­mo­tion of the tar sands indus­try. The Harp­er Admin­is­tra­tion also pro­voked the indige­nous rights move­ment Idle No More when they opened up native lands to devel­op­ment. In March Envi­ron­men­tal Defense, a Toron­to based group, released near­ly one thou­sand pages of inter­nal e‑mails from Cana­di­an diplo­mats out­lin­ing a strat­e­gy to pro­mote the Key­stone XL pipeline with Amer­i­can journalists.2 Last year an inter­nal mem­o­ran­dum released by Post-Media news revealed the Harp­er gov­ern­ment had deployed a net­work of Diplo­mats to lob­by For­tune 500 com­pa­nies in order to counter an envi­ron­men­tal cam­paign tar­get­ing the tar sands.3 In Europe, the Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment has attempt­ed to under­mine the Euro­pean Union’s “Fuel Qual­i­ty Direc­tive” with a lob­by­ing cam­paign that Friends of the Earth described as “pos­si­bly the most vocif­er­ous pub­lic rela­tions cam­paign by a for­eign gov­ern­ment ever wit­nessed in the EU.”4

While the fight against the Key­stone XL pipeline has become a head­line issue for envi­ron­men­tal­ists around the coun­try, Seat­tle res­i­dents point out that Canada’s tar sands are already impact­ing the Sal­ish Sea. All five of Washington’s refiner­ies cur­rent­ly process tar sands mate­ri­als, trans­port­ed by Kinder-Morgan’s Trans-Moun­tain pipeline and oil tankers.5 THe Kinder-Mor­gan has pro­posed twin­ning the Trans-Moun­tain pipeline near­ly tripling its capac­i­ty from 300,000 bar­rels per day to 850,000 bar­rels per day.6

 

“There is no safe method for tar sands trans­port. Kinder Morgan’s plans could bring up to 360 tankers through the Sal­ish Sea7 and the Depart­ment of Ecol­o­gy still has no plan to deal with a tar sands spill. It’s a dis­as­ter wait­ing to hap­pen,” warned Rachel Sto­eve

The Depart­ment of Ecol­o­gy esti­mates a major oil spill could cost the state’s econ­o­my $10 Bil­lion and 165,000 lost jobs as well as wipe out Washington’s res­i­dent Orca pop­u­la­tion.

“We’ve had enough of politi­cians on both sides of the bor­der act­ing as mouth­pieces for the fos­sil fuel indus­try. It’s time for ordi­nary peo­ple to put their bod­ies on the line to pro­tect our region and our cli­mate from extreme ener­gy,” said Voli.