Farm occupied in USA

29 April 2012

We are reclaim­ing this land to grow healthy food to meet the needs of local com­mu­ni­ties. We envi­sion a future of food sov­er­eign­ty, in which our East Bay com­mu­ni­ties make use of avail­able land — occu­py­ing it where nec­es­sary — for sus­tain­able agri­cul­ture to meet local needs.

http://takebackthetract.com/

29 April 2012

We are reclaim­ing this land to grow healthy food to meet the needs of local com­mu­ni­ties. We envi­sion a future of food sov­er­eign­ty, in which our East Bay com­mu­ni­ties make use of avail­able land — occu­py­ing it where nec­es­sary — for sus­tain­able agri­cul­ture to meet local needs.

http://takebackthetract.com/

OCCUPY OIL — THE SEQUEL

Tak­ing place WORLDWIDE on Tues­day 22nd May 2012

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gbXnBXoTzI

#Occu­py­Oil the Sequel: The road to SHELL is paved with bad inten­tions…

Tak­ing place WORLDWIDE on Tues­day 22nd May 2012

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gbXnBXoTzI

#Occu­py­Oil the Sequel: The road to SHELL is paved with bad inten­tions…

BLOODY MONEY: Tar Sands, Ross­port, Niger Delta

On the 8th of Feb this year Occu­py Oil held it first day of mass action.

Shell Sta­tions across the UK and indeed fur­ther afield were block­ad­ed or pick­et­ed. We are back and on the 22nd of May 2012 we are hold­ing Occu­py Oil the Sequel, Roy­al Dutch Shell will be hold­ing their AGM in The Hague with an audio-visu­al link to a satel­lite meet­ing place in Lon­don.

We are call­ing on all occu­piers, groups and indi­vid­u­als to come togeth­er and send a clear mes­sage to Shell.

NIGER DELTA

Shell Oil in the Niger Delta have done untold destruc­tion, the oil giant’s 2008 spills have wrecked liveli­hoods of 69,000 peo­ple and will take 30 years to clean up.

Guardian Arti­cle from 2011: www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/nov/10/shell-nigerian-oil-spills-amnesty

ROSSPORT, CO MAYO, IRELAND

The Oil giant con­tin­ues to destroy the com­mu­ni­ty of Ross­port, Co Mayo Ire­land. Read more about the Shell to Sea cam­paign at www.shelltosea.com

TAR SANDS, CANADA

Roy­al Dutch Shell is one of the largest play­ers in tar sands, pro­duc­ing approx­i­mate­ly 276 000 bar­rels per day or rough­ly 20% of total exports from Alber­ta. Shell has put forth appli­ca­tions to expand its capac­i­ty through new mines and in situ projects, to a pro­ject­ed 770 000 bar­rel per day capac­i­ty. How­ev­er, strong com­mu­ni­ty resis­tance to Shell has dam­aged their rep­u­ta­tion with both share­hold­ers and the pub­lic. Indeed, Shell has been named in five law­suits relat­ed to tar sands devel­op­ments and has faced share­hold­er res­o­lu­tions demand­ing greater clar­i­ty over the risk of tar sands invest­ments.

UK Tar Sands Net­work: www.no-tar-sands.org

It’s time to make a stand. On 22nd of May 2012 we will occu­py petrol sta­tions across the GLOBE. We call on activists to organ­ise your­selves into affin­i­ty groups and join this action world-wide. Make ban­ners, get sound sys­tems and pick tar­gets. As the date approach­es we can co-ordi­nate actions for max­i­mum impact. Let’s send anoth­er shot in our war against the glob­al elites.

E‑MAIL: info@occupyoil.co.uk
TWITTER: @OccupyOil, hash­tag #Occu­py­Oil
FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/events/230582443683609
WEB: www.occupyoil.co.uk

Quebec Police Dismantle Innu Blockade Against Controversial Hydro Complex

March 11, 2012

Que­bec provin­cial police went on the march last Fri­day to dis­man­tle a block­ade that a group of Innu cit­i­zens erect­ed to protest the con­struc­tion of hydro trans­mis­sion lines through their tra­di­tion­al ter­ri­to­ry.

March 11, 2012

Que­bec provin­cial police went on the march last Fri­day to dis­man­tle a block­ade that a group of Innu cit­i­zens erect­ed to protest the con­struc­tion of hydro trans­mis­sion lines through their tra­di­tion­al ter­ri­to­ry.

Accord­ing to avail­able reports, no one was arrest­ed dur­ing the court-backed offen­sive, which the Innu pas­sive­ly tried to resist. How­ev­er, a total of thir­teen peo­ple were arrest­ed, includ­ing ten women.

The blockade/checkpoint went up went up on March 5 after Innu rep­re­sen­ta­tives walked away from nego­ti­a­tions with Hydro-Québec over the pro­posed La Romaine Hydro­elec­tric Com­plex.

The $6.5 bil­lion project includes four new hydro dams that would ulti­mate­ly pro­vide elec­tric­i­ty for var­i­ous indus­tri­al projects includ­ing mines and alu­minum refiner­ies as part of the Plan Nord, “the Que­béc gov­ern­men­t’s plan to rav­age north­ern Québec, with many eco­log­i­cal­ly dev­as­tat­ing projects slat­ed for devel­op­ment on Innu ter­ri­to­ry, or Nitassi­nan, with­out the con­sent of the Innu peo­ple,” com­ments Col­lec­tif sol­idaire anti-colo­nial / Anti-Colo­nial Sol­i­dar­i­ty Col­lec­tive.

The project was approved by Que­bec’s envi­ron­men­tal assess­ment board more than two years ago. How­ev­er, the Innu com­mu­ni­ties of Uashat and Maliote­nam have con­tin­u­ous­ly chal­lenged that deci­sion because, the Innu say that the board failed to con­sid­er how the trans­mis­sion lines for the project would affect their lands.

Speak­ing from the block­ade, Michael MacKen­zie, vice-Chef at Innu Takuaikan Uashat mak Mani-Ute­nam com­ment­ed, Every­thing is peace­ful. There’s no aggres­sion from our side. What we’re doing today is legit­i­mate and this is what it’s come to. Our rights have been tram­pled.”

“We had the Arab Spring, I think we’re now see­ing an Innu Spring,” added Christo­pher Scott, a spokesper­son from the Alliance Romaine, who has been sup­port­ing the Innu.

Clear­ly, Hydro-Québec did­n’t think much of that. Soon after the block­ade set­tled in, the Crown cor­po­ra­tion ran to the Supe­ri­or Court com­plain­ing of loss­es amount­ing to more than $1/2 mil­lion for every day that the block­ade remained in place. It also spiced things up by alleg­ing that it would have to shut down any ongo­ing work on Fri­day, unless the block­ade was dis­man­tled.

On Fri­day after­noon, the Supe­ri­or Court grant­ed Hydro-Québec a tem­po­rary injunc­tion. The Sureté du Québec made their move lat­er that night.

Video

The injunc­tion will be in effect until March 19, 2012, at which time the mat­ter will be dis­cussed in court.

For those in the Mon­tre­al Area, the Anti-Colo­nial Sol­i­dar­i­ty Col­lec­tive is orga­niz­ing a protest for Mon­day March 12 to “Demon­strate our sol­i­dar­i­ty in the face of legal harass­ment by Hydro-Québec and the arro­gance of the Québec state.

 

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

10th March 2012

10th March 2012

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.

The Whalers Head Home!

March 8 2012

The Japan­ese Whal­ing Fleet Leaves the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary

Oper­a­tion Divine Wind is over! The Japan­ese whalers are going home!

March 8 2012

The Japan­ese Whal­ing Fleet Leaves the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary

Oper­a­tion Divine Wind is over! The Japan­ese whalers are going home!

The Japan­ese whal­ing fleet has left the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary and they are head­ing home.  “Once Cap­tain Peter Ham­mer­st­edt and his crew on the Bob Bark­er closed in on the Nis­shin Maru on March 5th, the whal­ing sea­son was effec­tive­ly over for the sea­son,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son on the Sea Shep­herd flag­ship Steve Irwin recent­ly returned and now berthed in Williamstown, Vic­to­ria, Aus­tralia.

Since March 1st, the Bob Bark­er has fol­lowed the Nis­shin Maru as they head­ed steadi­ly north­west­ward. The Japan­ese har­poon ves­sels have stopped tail­ing the Bob Bark­er. The fleet has left the waters of the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary, accord­ing to Cap­tain Peter Ham­marst­edt. The Japan­ese gov­ern­ment secu­ri­ty ves­sel, Shonan Maru #2, has been spot­ted by fish­ing ves­sels at thir­ty degrees South, which is due east of Bris­bane, Aus­tralia indi­cat­ing that the ves­sel is well on its way back to Japan.

It has been a long and dif­fi­cult cam­paign and although hand­i­capped by the tem­po­rary loss of the scout ves­sel the Brigitte Bar­dot, the Steve Irwin and the Bob Bark­er were able to chase the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet for more than 17,000 miles, giv­ing them lit­tle time to kill whales. In addi­tion, two of the three har­poon ves­sels spent more time tail­ing the two Sea Shep­herd ships than killing whales.

“The kill fig­ures will not be released by Japan until April, but in my opin­ion they will not get over 50% for cer­tain and my pre­dic­tion is it will not be above 30%. Not as good as last sea­son, but much bet­ter than all the pre­vi­ous years.”  Said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son. “It has been a suc­cess­ful cam­paign. There are hun­dreds of whales swim­ming free in the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary that would now be dead if we had not been down there for the last three months. That makes us very hap­py indeed.”

The Bob Bark­er will return to Hobart, Tas­ma­nia, the Brigitte Bar­dot is com­plet­ing repairs in Fre­man­tle, and the Steve Irwin is now berthed in Williamstown.

In Decem­ber 2012, if the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet returns to the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary the Sea Shep­herd Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety will launch Oper­a­tion Cetacean Jus­tice with four ships, two heli­copters, four UAV (drones), and 120 vol­un­teers.

“If the Japan­ese whalers return, Sea Shep­herd will return. We are com­mit­ted to the defense of the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary.” Said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son. “No mat­ter how long it takes, no mat­ter how risky or expen­sive. The word “sanc­tu­ary” actu­al­ly means some­thing to us and that some­thing is worth fight­ing for.”

Five Lakota Arrested for Forming Blockade on Pine Ridge Reservation

7 March 2012

Five Lako­ta were arrest­ed Mon­day evening in Wan­blee, South Dako­ta when they formed a block­ade to halt a con­voy of trucks going through the Pine Ridge Indi­an Reser­va­tion.

7 March 2012

Five Lako­ta were arrest­ed Mon­day evening in Wan­blee, South Dako­ta when they formed a block­ade to halt a con­voy of trucks going through the Pine Ridge Indi­an Reser­va­tion.

At issue was there were two trucks that appeared to be haul­ing pipes through the reser­va­tion on their way to Cana­da. The new trucks that were deliv­ered in Texas from South Korea were car­ry­ing pipes used for tar sands pipeline. Totran Trans­porta­tion Ser­vices, Inc., a Cana­di­an com­pa­ny appar­ent­ly want­ed to avoid pay­ing the state of South Dako­ta $50,000 per truck or $100,000 to use its state high­ways. Instead Totran Trans­porta­tion thought they would use the roads on the reser­va­tion. Some 75 Lako­ta thought oth­er­wise.

The two trucks marked “over­size load” on them had in its con­voy sev­er­al pick up vehi­cles that were first spot­ted on the reser­va­tion in the late after­noon.

Once alert­ed about the con­voy and its where­abouts, Alex and Debra White Plume decid­ed to go and stop it. They were joined by oth­ers who formed a human block­ade.

The human block­age halt­ed the trucks. The White Plumes were told by the truck­ers that they had cor­po­rate author­i­ty to uti­lize the BIA roads.

“There are actu­al­ly a num­ber of laws that should pro­tect Indi­an tribes from those who cite cor­po­rate author­i­ty,”

said Char­lotte Black Elk, a well known attor­ney activist from Man­der­son, South Dako­ta.

“I told them nice­ly we did not want any trou­ble,”

Alex White Plume told the Native News Net­work late Mon­day night.

“But we were deter­mined not to let them use our roads. The chief of police for the tribe told me that he was told that the FBI was pre­pared to arrest me and pick me up and take me to jail in two white vans.”

White Plume and his wife, Debra and three oth­ers were arrest­ed and charged with dis­or­der­ly con­duct and tak­en to jail in Kyle, South Dako­ta. The oth­ers arrest­ed were: Sam Long Black Cat, Andrew Iron­shells and Ter­rel Iron­shells. Sev­er­al reports on social media report­ed that Tom Poor Bear, vice pres­i­dent of the Oglala Sioux Tribe was arrest­ed. This proved to be not true.

The five arrest­ed were released on the per­son­al recog­ni­zance bond.

“I was the voice for my grand­chil­dren,”

said an exhaust­ed Debra White Plume from home after being released from jail. White Plume was arrest­ed last sum­mer in front of the White House while protest­ing the Key­stone XL pipeline.

The Oglala Nation and all Amer­i­can Indi­an tribes in South Dako­ta have adamant­ly opposed the Key­stone XL pipeline that was rout­ed through the Pine Ridge and Rose­bud Indi­an Reser­va­tions that would cross the Oglala Sioux Rur­al Water Sup­ply Sys­tem in two places.

Late Mon­day, it was report­ed the Eagle Butte Indi­an trib­al coun­cil met to decide to form a human block­ade on their reser­va­tions if the Tro­tran con­voy attempts to come through their reser­va­tion which is north of the Pine Ridge Indi­an Reser­va­tion.

 

Eureka! The Whaling Fleet Has Been Found and Shut Down!

Cap­tain Paul Wat­son received a Sat phone call from Cap­tain Peter Ham­marst­edt, on the Bob Bark­er, at 2200 Hours (AEST) on March 5th.

“Eure­ka, Paul, we have the Nis­shin Maru in our sights!”

Cap­tain Paul Wat­son received a Sat phone call from Cap­tain Peter Ham­marst­edt, on the Bob Bark­er, at 2200 Hours (AEST) on March 5th.

“Eure­ka, Paul, we have the Nis­shin Maru in our sights!”

The Nis­shin Maru and her three dead­ly har­poon boats were found at 64 Degrees 59 Min­utes South and 130 Degrees 51 Min­utes East at Com­mon­wealth Bay, six­ty miles off the Antarc­tic Coast, inside the Aus­tralian Eco­nom­ic Exclu­sion Zone.

The Yushin Maru No. 3 had just arrived from tail­ing the Steve Irwin. Despite the three har­poon ves­sels deployed to inter­cept the Bob Bark­er, Cap­tain Ham­marst­edt slipped through their web and gained a visu­al iden­ti­fi­ca­tion on the pri­ma­ry tar­get.

Two of the har­poon ves­sels were in pur­suit of whales. All whal­ing activ­i­ty stopped as the Nis­shin Maru began run­ning but the Bob Bark­er is faster and is gain­ing steadi­ly on the hat­ed fac­to­ry ship.

“We have her in our sights and she will not be able to out­run us,” said Bob Bark­er third mate, Vin­cent Burke, of Mel­bourne.

“We have kept them run­ning for two months and that has dis­rupt­ed their oper­a­tions con­sid­er­ably but now with the Bob Bark­er on their stern slip­way, whal­ing is effec­tive­ly shut down for 2012,” said Cap­tain Ham­marst­edt (27) from Swe­den.

The Japan­ese secu­ri­ty ship, Shonan Maru No. 2, is still tail­ing the Steve Irwin present­ly one day from the Bass Strait and is now 1600 nau­ti­cal miles away from the whal­ing fleet. The Steve Irwin suc­cess­ful­ly led the Shonan Maru No. 2 and the Yushin Maru No. 3 away from the Bob Bark­er to allow the Bob Bark­er to lose a tail­ing ves­sel. The key to find­ing the Nis­shin Maru was los­ing the tail­ing ship, and it worked.

“This has been a long and tough cam­paign, with the worst weath­er and ice con­di­tions that we have expe­ri­enced in the entire eight sea­sons we have ven­tured into the South­ern Ocean Whale Sanc­tu­ary,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son. “But despite the tem­po­rary loss of our scout ship, the Brigitte Bar­dot, and our con­stant dogged pur­suit of the Nis­shin Maru, we have kept them on the run, tak­en two of their three har­poon ves­sels off the hunt for two months, severe­ly crip­pled their killing capa­bil­i­ties and now once again we have shut them down 100%. Oper­a­tion Divine Wind has been enor­mous­ly suc­cess­ful.”

Insurrectionary ecological struggle continues (Papua)

News update from the strug­gle against the Indone­sian state, min­ing and log­ging com­pa­nies by Papuan peo­ple.
- a drilling rig is set afire in kam­pung Tabla­su­pa
- five log­ging camps burned by Arso vil­lagers

News update from the strug­gle against the Indone­sian state, min­ing and log­ging com­pa­nies by Papuan peo­ple.
- a drilling rig is set afire in kam­pung Tabla­su­pa
- five log­ging camps burned by Arso vil­lagers

TABLASUPA NICKEL MINING RIG BURNED, THREE ARRESTED

On the morn­ing of 8th Feb­ru­ary 2012, local peo­ple from kam­pung Tabla­su­pa, near to the Papuan cap­i­tal Jaya­pu­ra, burned a drilling rig belong­ing to the min­ing com­pa­ny PT Tabla­su­pa Nikel Min­ing. The action was con­nect­ed to an ongo­ing con­flict between local peo­ple and the com­pa­ny, which plans to mine nick­el on 9629 hectares of land, and is cur­rent­ly car­ry­ing out explo­ration activ­i­ties. Although the com­pa­ny has been giv­en a per­mit by the local Jaya­pu­ra Bupati’s office, the peo­ple of Tabla­su­pa feel that their rights as the hold­ers of cus­tom­ary rights over the land have not been respect­ed.

Two weeks after the machine was burnt, on Feb­ru­ary 20th, police arrest­ed three vil­lagers. Saul Soron­touw, Lam­ber­tus Sei­bo and Kani­sius Kromisian. They have been charged under arti­cle 170 of the Indone­sian penal code, and are being held in Jaya­pu­ra police head­quar­ters. While in prison Saul Soron­touw has been ill with gout, which has caused swellings in his knees. On Feb­ru­ary 28th police demand­ed state­ments from anoth­er six vil­lagers, but they were allowed to go home that evening.

The fol­low­ing state­ment was released by vil­lagers of Tabla­su­pa the day before the action:

State­ment of opin­ion of the Soron­tou-Okoser­ay-Kiswait­ou Eth­nic Group

As hold­ers of rights to cus­tom­ary lands on the area cov­ered by PT Tabla­su­pa Nick­el Min­ing’s Mine Enter­prise Per­mit (IUP), Min­ing Rights (KP) and the Bupati’s rec­om­men­da­tion that allows explo­ration in Kam­pung Tabla­su­pa, Jaya­pu­ra Regency

Regard­ing the as yet unre­solved prob­lems around PT Tabla­su­pa Nick­el Min­ing com­menc­ing explo­ration activites on cus­tom­ary land belong­ing to the peo­ple of kam­pung Tabla­su­pa, the Soron­tou- Okoser­ay- Kiswait­ou eth­nic group wish­es to make the fol­low­ing dec­la­ra­tion:

“Reject PT Tabla­su­pa Nick­el Min­ing”
con­duct­ing explo­ration and min­er­al exploita­tion activ­i­ties with­in the cus­tom­ary bound­aries of the Soron­tou- Okoser­ay- Kiswait­ou eth­nic group.

The rea­sons for our rejec­tion of min­ing activ­i­ties are as fol­lows:
1. The whole ter­ri­to­ry of kam­pung Tabla­su­pa is unsuit­able for min­ing activ­i­ties.
2. The impact of min­ing activ­i­ties would also dam­age the envi­ron­ment of areas that fall with­in the ter­ri­to­ry of neigh­bour­ing vil­lages.
3 To avoid min­ing activ­i­ties caus­ing con­flict with the peo­ple and near­by vil­lages.
4. The effect of min­ing activ­i­ties will dam­age and des­e­crate the envi­ron­ment, and indus­tri­al pol­lu­tion from the mine will con­tribute to glob­al warm­ing and affect the sources of clean water from the Cyclop moun­tains.
5. No con­sen­sus has been reached through a musyawarah sys­tem that would rep­re­sent an agree­ment between the peo­ple of Tabla­su­pa and neigh­bour­ing vil­lages.
6. The hold­ers of cus­tom­ary rights to the land have not giv­en their approval (under the Law on Min­er­al and Coal Min­ing 4/2009 arti­cle 135, com­pa­nies hol­ing a Mine Enter­prise Per­mit can only com­mence activ­i­ties if they have obtained agree­ment from the hold­ers of cus­tom­ary rights on that land).
7. The cus­tom­ary and human rights of the Soron­tou- Okoser­ay- Kiswait­ou eth­nic group must be respect­ed and val­ued by all.

A solu­tion to the devel­op­ment of kam­pung Tabla­su­pa which sup­ports the social econ­o­my and also con­tributes to local busi­ness could include:
-build­ing beach tourism and hotels
-devel­op­ing fish­ing
-sell­ing fresh water.

Such devel­op­ment would involve all the peo­ple of Tablsu­pa either as work­ers or tak­ing roles in a man­age­ment struc­ture and could take the form of an enter­prise or foun­da­tion that was formed by the peo­ple of kam­pung Tabla­su­pa.

This is the mes­sage that the Soron­tou- Okoser­ay- Kiswait­ou eth­nic group wish­es to be known by the gen­er­al pub­lic.

Tabla­su­pa, 07 Feb­ru­ary 2012 .

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WEST PAPUAN COMMUNITY ECOLOGICAL STRUGGLE

On the side­lines of the Papuan Peo­ple’s strug­gle for self-deter­mi­na­tion, at a local lev­el Papuan com­mu­ni­ties con­tin­ue to resist the log­ging and min­ing indus­tries that are destroy­ing their forests. Here are two sto­ries of recent com­mu­ni­ty resis­tance from areas close to the Papuan cap­i­tal Jaya­pu­ra, trans­lat­ed from the Alliance for Democ­ra­cy in Papua web­site www.aldepe.com.

See­ing their for­est destroyed, Arso Vil­lagers Burn Five Log­ging Camps.

Annoyed by hear­ing the sound of chain­saws almost every day, and in addi­tion the reports of vil­lagers who reg­u­lar­ly enter the for­est telling of find­ing log­gers’ camps there, around 20 peo­ple from Arso, both young and old, agreed to check the for­est for them­selves.

This area of for­est is com­mon­ly called the ‘Gold­en Tri­an­gle’, and is divid­ed between the ter­ri­to­ry of three vil­lages, Arso, Work­wana and Wambes.

As they had guessed they would, once inside the for­est they found two sites used by log­gers, which had been con­nect­ed with a track made from off­cuts of wood which the log­gers would use, drag­ging the wood from behind a vehi­cle.

At the first site there was only one camp. At this camp they con­fis­cat­ed two chain­saws and took state­ments from three log­gers who were at the loca­tion. They then forced the log­gers to leave.

The group con­tin­ued to the next loca­tion. Pos­si­bly because the log­gers had received infor­ma­tion from their friends at the first site, there was only one per­son left, and they did­n’t find any chain­saws.

As their emo­tions rose some peo­ple almost hit out at the log­ger, but were held back by oth­ers. At this sec­ond loca­tion, four camps were found, com­plete with tele­vi­sions, speak­ers, sup­plies of food and cloth­ing and so on. Two vehi­cles used for drag­ging wood were also found. In their emo­tion­al state, the peo­ple destroyed and burned the camps and every­thing they found there, along with the camp at the first loca­tion. The two vehi­cles were also burnt.

Accord­ing to state­ments from the log­gers, they had been giv­en per­mis­sion by the cus­tom­ary chief of kam­pung Work­wana, although the Arso vil­lagers felt that they had been cut­ting trees far inside the Arso ter­ri­to­ry.

Sev­er­al peo­ple inter­viewed in kam­pung Arso on Tues­day 6th March explained that they were still angry “It’s so sad to look at that for­est, they even cut very small iron­wood trees.” said Wen­der­li­nus Tuamis, a youth who had par­tic­i­pat­ed that day.

Mean­while, accord­ing to Franky Borot­ian, they had been allow­ing the log­ging to con­tin­ue because pre­vi­ous­ly a vil­lager from Work­wana had asked to use wood to build her house “a sis­ter had asked for per­mis­sion to build a house, but then it turned out some­one used that per­mis­sion for busi­ness pur­pos­es”, he said.

The prob­lem has been passed over to the Cus­tom­ary Coun­cil (Dewan Adat). Vil­lagers asked the Cus­tom­ary Coun­cil to use their wis­dom to resolve the sit­u­a­tion so that con­flicts between the peo­ple would not emerge. Espe­cial­ly since the Gold­en Tri­an­gle had become the area which peo­ple rely on for food, as oth­er areas have been tak­en over by two big oil palm plan­ta­tions, state-owned PTPN II and PT Tan­dan Sawi­ta Papua (Part of Peter Son­dakh’s Rajawali Group)

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RE-POSTED FROM INDONESIAN ANARCHIST WEBSITE  http://hidupbiasa.blogspot.co.uk/

Two arrested for blocking tar sands megaloads in USA

News from Moscow Ida­ho, two arrest­ed blockad­ing Exxon’s mega­load trucks bound with tar sands equip­ment for Alber­ta.

News from Moscow Ida­ho, two arrest­ed blockad­ing Exxon’s mega­load trucks bound with tar sands equip­ment for Alber­ta.

Ear­ly News: More Pro­test­ers Arrest­ed for Block­ing Tar Sands “Mega­loads” in Moscow, Ida­ho

PRELIMINARY NEWS RELEASE

March 5, 2012

Four remark­ably brave activists elud­ed the bar­ri­cades and put their bod­ies between enor­mous Alber­ta tar sands upgrad­er parts and the eco­log­i­cal and cli­mate dev­as­ta­tion they will vis­it on us all.  As three of the last five of 78 ExxonMobil/Imperial Oil mega­loads moved through down­town Moscow, Ida­ho, two pro­test­ers were arrest­ed for link­ing arms and sit­ting down in Wash­ing­ton Street late Sun­day night, March 4.  Police arrest­ed two men but pulled two women to the side and detained and released them when the con­voy passed.  The women did not appre­ci­ate the dis­crim­i­na­tion.

In a video by Joshua Yei­del of a KRFP Radio Free Moscow inter­view, We Won’t Be Acces­sories to Geno­cide: Moscow ID, March 4, 2012, one of the dis­missed women explained her and her many allies’ moti­va­tions for march­ing, chant­i­ng, and even obstruct­ing mega­loads and risk­ing arrest in cold and dark win­ter con­di­tions.  “We’re not going to be acces­sories to geno­cide and cli­mate change and increased can­cer rates and all the oth­er eco­log­i­cal dam­ages that the tar sands intends to cause…”

Wild Ida­ho Ris­ing Tide (WIRT) and com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers have gath­ered along Moscow streets to raise their voic­es in protest more than forty times since July 15, 2011, when the first trans­ports of out­sourced equip­ment rum­bled up to 425,000 pounds on High­way 95 from the Port of Lewis­ton to the cli­mate-wreck­ing tar sands.  Despite heavy, indus­try-spon­sored police pres­ence and clo­sure of entire rights-of-way, some cit­i­zens have entered the cross­walks and streets to briefly block the ship­ments and halt their eco­log­i­cal death march, before state, coun­ty, and city police offi­cers sur­round, harass, and drag them away and/or arrest them.

For a video shot by Joshua Yei­del of Sun­day night’s action, Mega­loads and Arrests, Moscow, Ida­ho, March 4, 2012, please see this video.

Fifty-one of Zachary Johnson’s pho­tos of the March 4 demon­stra­tion are avail­able on the Wild Ida­ho Ris­ing Tide Face­book page

WIRT mem­bers extend our grat­i­tude, love, and high­est esteem to the four good souls who sac­ri­ficed their free­dom to stand up for what’s right last night and to all of the sup­port­ive cit­i­zens on the streets and side­walks, who spoke out and bore wit­ness for a green­er plan­et, health­i­er human­i­ty, and a liv­able, worth­while future for everyone’s descen­dants.  Please join friends and activists at 9 am on Mon­day, March 5, at the Latah Coun­ty Cour­t­house for the arraign­ments of Cass Davis and Jim Prall.  One of their spous­es report­ed that they are doing well in jail.  Besides this brief press release com­piled from WIRT activists’ input, we will send a more com­pre­hen­sive, cam­paign-inclu­sive sto­ry lat­er today.

Mean­while, for more news, pho­tos, videos, and inter­views, please see the WIRT Face­book page and web site/blog and lis­ten to the Cli­mate Jus­tice Forum radio pro­gram on Mon­days at 7:30 to 9:00 pm PST on KRFP Radio Free Moscow.

More info, pho­tos and past protests at http://wildidahorisingtide.org/

Oglala Nationals Roadblock Oil Pipeline Trucks On Pine Ridge Rez

March 5th, 2012, every­one had their ear to the new moc­casin tele­graph. Social net­works, tele­phones, and word of mouth net­works were abuzz with reports of Oglala Lako­ta Nation­als pre­vent­ing oil pipeline mate­ri­als, des­tined for Cana­di­an Tar sands and/or Key­stone XL infra­struc­ture locales or some unknown des­ti­na­tion, from being trans­port­ed across the Pine Ridge Reservation’s Treaty ter­ri­to­ry. Infor­ma­tion trav­elled to Debra and Alex White Plume (Owe Aku, Inc. “Bring Back the Way) and Olowan Mar­tinez that semi-trucks loaded with enor­mous oil pipeline com­po­nents were set to cross Oglala ter­ri­to­ry some­time dur­ing the after­noon on March 5th, 2012; “We did not know where the equip­ment was going, but we knew that these trucks were too huge, too heavy, and too dan­ger­ous to pass our roads. We thought the equip­ment may be going to the Tarsands oil mine, or oth­er oil mines in Cana­da,” Debra White Plume explained.

A call went out via dig­i­tal media and oth­er sources for all able bod­ied and will­ing par­tic­i­pants to mobi­lize and report to Wan­blee, South Dako­ta, for an impromp­tu gath­er­ing of scores of activists ready to block the road with their bod­ies to pre­vent semi-trucks and pipeline com­po­nents from cross­ing Oglala Ter­ri­to­ry. With­in min­utes the con­fronta­tion hap­pened as sev­er­al State and Trib­al police offi­cers and oth­er offi­cials respond­ed to the tense scene. Oglala Trib­al police arrived imme­di­ate­ly with one Sergeant telling the road-block­ers that the South Dako­ta High­way Patrol was parked a few miles down the road at the bor­der between Oglala Coun­try and the State of South Dako­ta but that the SD High­way Patrol would not pro­ceed onto the reser­va­tion. Notably, this Sergeant also advised those present that the FBI (Fed­er­al Bureau of Inves­ti­ga­tion) was en route to the reser­va­tion in two vans from Rapid City, SD. How­ev­er, at the con­clu­sion of the day there were no signs of such FBI pres­ence.

The Texas semi-trucks, trans­port­ing 1.25 Mil­lion-dol­lar “Treater Ves­sels” used in oil, gas and ele­ment sep­a­ra­tion, were stopped in their tracks as they approached the human road­block. The human road­block that fea­tured two Lako­ta grand­moth­ers: Ren­abelle Bad Cob Stand­ing Bear (in her wheel­chair) and Marie Ran­dal (in her 90s). The dri­vers were ques­tioned by those form­ing the block­ade as to why they were cross­ing Oglala lands. One of the dri­vers respond­ed that they did not know they were cross­ing Indi­an land, only that they were fol­low­ing com­pa­ny direc­tives regard­ing their assigned routes and that their Cana­di­an Cor­po­ra­tion had received this par­tic­u­lar route infor­ma­tion as a result of a part­ner­ship with the State of South Dako­ta, whose elect­ed offi­cials have always sup­port­ed the Key­stone XL pipeline. This infor­ma­tion prompt­ed Tom Poor Bear (Vice Pres­i­dent of the Oglala Lako­ta Nation) to phone South Dako­ta State offi­cials in Pierre, SD, inquir­ing as to the nature and ori­gin of the route of the stopped truck­ers. South Dako­ta affirmed to Oglala Vice Pres­i­dent Tom Poor Bear that indeed the State was involved with plan­ning such route, osten­si­bly with­out con­sult­ing the Oglala Lako­ta Nation. The heavy-haul­ing trucks were alleged­ly cut­ting through Oglala coun­try in attempts to avoid a $50,000.00 per-truck-fee to pass through using State of South Dako­ta road­ways.

Dur­ing the road­block, police ordered all those form­ing the road block to dis­perse. This com­mand was heed­ed by most except those will­ing to sac­ri­fice per­son­al free­doms to make their state­ments against big oil and the con­tin­ued mind­less con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of moth­er earth. The fol­low­ing indi­vid­u­als were ulti­mate­ly arrest­ed by Pine Ridge author­i­ties for fail­ing to obey com­mands: Debra White Plume, Alex White Plume, Sam Long Black Cat, Andrew Iron Shell, and Tyrel Iron Shell. The arrests were not with­out effect as the semi-trucks and their pay­loads were rerout­ed and escort­ed off by sev­er­al Oglala sen­tries.

The pro­tec­tors of the earth, all those present who suc­ceed­ed in mak­ing a bold state­ment were backed by stand­ing res­o­lu­tions adopt­ed by the Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Black Hills Sioux Nation Treaty Coun­cil incor­po­rat­ing the terms of the Moth­er Earth Accord. Addi­tion­al­ly, those stand­ing res­o­lu­tions for­bid any for­mal inter­ac­tion with Tran­sCana­da and/or Key­stone XL or oth­er oil pipelines mak­ing over­tures to the Oglala Lako­ta Nation and oth­er landown­ers through­out the cen­ter of Tur­tle Island (North Amer­i­ca).

Las­tre­alin­di­ans was able to catch up with Olowan Sara Mar­tinez and Debra White Plume to piece togeth­er the days hap­pen­ing for our read­ers’ ben­e­fit. Olowan Sara Mar­tinez recalled the stead­fast man­ner in which the mod­ern war­riors of the Oglala Lako­ta respond­ed “it’s clear that our peo­ple will stand by each oth­er when our land is threat­ened”, said Mar­tinez.

Debra White Plume of Owe Aku, Inc. summed up the peo­ples’ sen­ti­ment when she said “It is always good to see that we’re still Indige­nous. We will nev­er stop car­ing for moth­er earth. When the call went out ask­ing for help, the response was imme­di­ate. Peo­ple from the com­mu­ni­ty of Wan­blee – [a major tra­di­tion­al strong­hold dur­ing the ten­sion and vio­lent filled 1970s between the fed­er­al­ly backed goon squads and the Amer­i­can Indi­an Move­ment backed tra­di­tion­als *con­text pro­vid­ed by Las­tre­alin­di­ans ] poured out in num­bers offer­ing huge pots of soup, cof­fee, and oth­er pro­vi­sions for any­one will­ing to take a stand. The peo­ple will always help each oth­er.”

Las­tre­alin­di­ans was advised that since Oglala Pres­i­dent Steele is cur­rent­ly in Wash­ing­ton, DC on offi­cial busi­ness, Oglala Vice Pres­i­dent, Tom Poor Bear, is call­ing a meet­ing of the Trib­al Coun­cil, today March, 6, 2012, to address the road­block cir­cum­stances and any future occur­rences of this sort. The Oglala Trib­al Coun­cil and In-house attor­neys are draft­ing leg­is­la­tion to pro­hib­it heavy trucks from com­ing onto the reser­va­tion as this writ­ing hap­pens; “It does not mat­ter what trucks are car­ry­ing, if they are this big and heavy they are too dan­ger­ous for our roads”, Debra White Plume reit­er­at­ed. Last­ly, the Oglala Trib­al Coun­cil will con­sid­er leg­is­la­tion pro­hibit­ing any ves­sels or equip­ment to be used in Tarsands oil devel­op­ment from cross­ing Oglala Ter­ri­to­ry.