Aussies occupy drill rig to protest coal mining

6.02.12

6.02.12

One Aus­tralian activist has been released pend­ing sum­mons for ‘inter­fer­ing with a motor vehi­cle’ today after stop­ping drilling in Bac­chus Marsh. Paul Con­nor locked him­self  to the top of Man­tle Mining’s 8.5 metre-tall drill rig while hang­ing a ban­ner that read ‘No New Coal Bac­chus Marsh’. Anoth­er cam­paign­er, local moth­er Natasha Mills, also locked her­self to the drill rig at ground lev­el, sur­round­ed by a sup­port crew of 15 oth­er Quit Coal activists who occu­pied the drill site to stage a ‘pic­nic’, which fea­tured pro­duce from local farms.

‘We are eat­ing local­ly grown food to illus­trate what is at stake here’ said Mills, who is cur­rent­ly 7 and a half months preg­nant with her sec­ond child. ‘This project will destroy prime agri­cul­tur­al land, all for the sake of a quick buck and the burn­ing of brown coal, one of the most envi­ron­men­tal­ly harm­ful prac­tices pos­si­ble.

‘Mantle’s project has so lit­tle sup­port here among locals in Bac­chus Marsh that our May­or, our State MP and our Fed­er­al MP have all come out against it’ she con­tin­ued. ‘It’s just wrong, and we’re not going to let it hap­pen.’

The Quit Coal action drew a bar­rage of media atten­tion, with every major tele­vi­sion sta­tion in atten­dance. For a sam­ple of the media atten­tion, click on ‘dirty fight’ on the Ten News web­site here.

After 4 and a half hours chained to the top of the drill rig, Con­nor was cut free by Police from the Search & Res­cue squad with an angle-grinder. ’We need Vic­to­ri­ans to join this fight along­side us till we win it’ he said. ‘We can’t ignore the urgent warn­ings from cli­mate sci­en­tists that we need to move away from coal, and blind­ly seek to dig it up and sell it off over­seas. We have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to the world not to allow brown coal exports to begin, for the first time ever, here in Vic­to­ria.’

Because the site was on pub­lic land and they had not bro­ken any laws, the remain­ing Quit Coal activists occu­py­ing the site were not arrest­ed. They chose to com­ply with a police request and end­ed the protest peace­ful­ly, mind­ful that the police could oth­er­wise phys­i­cal­ly remove them fol­low­ing the move on order.

Man­tle also issued a state­ment say­ing that while they sup­port the right to peace­ful protest, our action will not affect their future oper­a­tions.

Quit Coal will see about that.

Videos and more at http://quitcoal.org.au/blog/

Indigenous groups shut down Interamerican highway to protest Panama mining laws

An indige­nous Ngobe pro­test­er was killed by a gun­shot wound to the chest dur­ing con­fronta­tions with the police this morn­ing, 5th Feb­ru­ary, in San Félix, Pana­ma. It has been con­firmed that three more peo­ple have been hurt with local res­i­dents insist­ing many more are injured. In flat con­tra­dic­tion, the Secu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Jose Muli­no has stat­ed that his offi­cers are not car­ry­ing guns. In retal­i­a­tion to the death, Ngobe pro­tes­tors have set light to a police sta­tion in San Félix.

Since 30th Jan­u­ary, demon­stra­tors have been posi­tioned at var­i­ous points along the inter­na­tion­al Inter­amer­i­can high­way using branch­es, pieces of wood, met­al and rocks to block the road. They are protest­ing against the gov­ern­men­t’s deci­sion to remove a law that would pro­vide envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion to their lands. The police con­tin­ue to deny that there has been any vio­lence, although on Thurs­day 2nd Jan­u­ary there were reports of up to 7 peo­ple injured in attacks involv­ing tear gas.

Ear­ly 2011 saw sim­i­lar actions by thou­sands of Ngobe who protest­ed the gov­ern­men­t’s amend­ment of the nation­al min­ing law 415, which would have allowed for the com­mis­sion of mines and oth­er projects in the region. In March 2011, after talks between gov­ern­ment offi­cials and Ngobe lead­ers, it was agreed that arti­cle 5, which will pro­tect the entire Comar­ca from explo­ration and exploita­tion, would be writ­ten into the min­ing law 415.

Although the gov­ern­ment has begun the explo­ration of oth­er mines in Pana­ma, the semi-autonomous Comar­ca holds an extreme­ly con­sid­er­able amount of min­er­al wealth. Not only is it home to Cer­ro Col­orado – the sec­ond largest cop­per deposit in the world – but it hold sev­er­al small but sig­nif­i­cant sites already under explo­ration by for­eign min­ing com­pa­nies.

Cor­ri­ente Resources Inc. have report­ed­ly been work­ing in the area since 2009 with the assis­tance of the con­sul­tan­cy firm, Kokopel­li, owned by Cana­di­an Don Clarke. Kokopel­li’s role is, accord­ing to its own web­site, “to work direct­ly with indus­try to build sus­tain­able, respect­ful and respon­si­ble rela­tion­ships with Indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties.”

Don Clarke was also Vice Pres­i­dent of sus­tain­able devel­op­ment for Ecua­cor­ri­ente, a sub­sidiary of Cor­ri­ente Resources Inc, a com­pa­ny which was alleged­ly at the cen­tre of human rights abus­es and social con­flicts in Ecuador.

In ear­ly Jan­u­ary, Hec­tor Lopez, leader of the Asso­ci­a­tion for the Rights and Social Devel­op­ment of the Ngäbe-Bugle Peo­ple, stat­ed at the Nation­al Assem­bly that he opposed arti­cle 5 as it would affect devel­op­ment in the region, and in his opin­ion, vio­late law 10, a found­ing law of the Comar­ca. Lopez is strong­ly in favor of min­ing in the region and believes the Ngobe should receive 50% of min­ing prof­its.

How­ev­er, Celio Guer­ra, pres­i­dent of the tra­di­tion­al Ngabe Bugle Coun­cil also stat­ed in Jan­u­ary that “the peo­ple who protest­ed last year in San Felix spoke loud and clear. We don’t want min­ing in the Comar­ca.”

As protests con­tin­ue to swell on the high­way, there are grow­ing con­cerns over Pana­ma’s free­dom of press. On 20th Jan­u­ary, a Cana­di­an jour­nal­ist and fix­er, Rosie Simms, was denied entry into the coun­try. She had been work­ing on behalf of the Cana­di­an broad­cast­er CBS who were cov­er­ing a sto­ry about Cana­di­an min­ing com­pa­nies in Latin Amer­i­ca.

Many believe that this is symp­to­matic of a wider issue relat­ing to free­dom of press. A recent report by Reporters With­out Bor­ders revealed that Pana­ma has dropped 58 places on the free­dom of press index since 2010.

As the protests con­tin­ue, oth­er parts of the coun­try have joined in sol­i­dar­i­ty. In Donoso dis­trict, Colón province, a group of Ngobe and campesinos have blocked a road to the Petaquil­la min­ing project. In Bocas del Toro province, Banana plan­ta­tion work­ers have announced that they will strike in 73 hours unless the gov­ern­ment hon­ors its agree­ments. Truck­ers, stuck in San Felix, have also pledged to strike. In the cap­i­tal, many peo­ple have tak­en to streets in sup­port of the Ngobe.

After five days of protests there is major dis­rup­tion through­out Pana­ma. Mar­ket sell­ers in the cap­i­tal have report­ed loss­es of up to $10,000. In Bocas del Toro, Banana Com­pa­nies have esti­mat­ed a loss of $270,000 due to road clo­sures. Accord­ing to the Cham­ber of Com­merce the econ­o­my could face a total loss of over 10 mil­lion dol­lars.

Mean­while, the Cos­ta Rican gov­ern­ment has expressed con­cern that 270 of its cit­i­zens remain stuck in Pana­ma due to the road clo­sures. Pres­sure has been increas­ing for all sides to enter into talks.

UN rep­re­sen­ta­tives in Pana­ma have urged both Ngobe lead­ers and the gov­ern­ment to begin ‘a peace­ful dia­logue’ and ‘to avoid vio­lence.’ Although Pres­i­dent Mar­tinel­li has said the sit­u­a­tion is ‘reach­ing a lim­it,’ he has refused to reach out to the Ngobe. He also con­tin­ues to under­mine the legit­i­ma­cy of the protests by accus­ing oppo­si­tion par­ties of ‘manip­u­lat­ing’ them.

In a con­tin­u­al dis­tor­tion of the facts, the gov­ern­ment has been using mis­lead­ing rhetoric such as ‘kid­napped’ and ‘hostages’ when refer­ring to trav­el­ers delayed on the high­way.

Yes­ter­day morn­ing, 4th Feb­ru­ary, mobile phone cov­er­age was sus­pend­ed along a large stretch of the high­way where the pro­test­ers are con­cen­trat­ed. Lat­er in the after­noon, six teach­ers were arrest­ed in the city of San­ti­a­go whilst protest­ing in sol­i­dar­i­ty.

The sit­u­a­tion is extreme­ly charged and ten­sion is mount­ing across the coun­try. As vio­lence con­tin­ues to unfold in San Félix, jour­nal­ists and human rights orga­ni­za­tions are being denied access to the area. The gov­ern­ment con­tin­ues to spread dis­in­for­ma­tion and there have been no attempts so far to reach out to the Ngobe and begin peace­ful talks.

India police arrest dozens of villagers for protesting against new toxic dump

4th Feb 2012

A total of 47 indige­nous peo­ple were arrest­ed and anoth­er 5 need­ed hos­pi­tal treat­ment after hun­dreds of Indi­an police and Vedan­ta secu­ri­ty guards con­front­ed a peace­ful demon­stra­tion two weeks ago in the state of Oris­sa, India.

On Jan­u­ary 21, a group of vil­lagers came togeth­er to protest against a new tox­ic mine waste dump that threat­ens to dis­rupt their way of life.

4th Feb 2012

A total of 47 indige­nous peo­ple were arrest­ed and anoth­er 5 need­ed hos­pi­tal treat­ment after hun­dreds of Indi­an police and Vedan­ta secu­ri­ty guards con­front­ed a peace­ful demon­stra­tion two weeks ago in the state of Oris­sa, India.

On Jan­u­ary 21, a group of vil­lagers came togeth­er to protest against a new tox­ic mine waste dump that threat­ens to dis­rupt their way of life.

Despite the peace­ful nature of the pro­test­ers, as seen in the fol­low­ing video by Amnesty Inter­na­tion­al, the 47 vil­lagers were sub­se­quent­ly charged with “attempt­ed mur­der” and “riot­ing”.

Amnesty Inter­na­tion­al is call­ing for the obvi­ous­ly-false charges to be dropped. They’re also urg­ing the gov­ern­ment to release the pro­test­ers; and to prop­er­ly take their needs and rights into account before let­ting the com­pa­ny pro­ceed with the new waste dump.

Just pri­or to the arrests, Amnesty alleged that the Uk-based min­ing giant has­n’t done any­thing to clean up exist­ing pol­lu­tion at the site of its Lan­ji­garh alu­minum refin­ery beside Niyam­giri moun­tain in Oris­sa.

Sim­i­lar­ly, “The Indi­an author­i­ties have remained silent on the issues of clean­ing up the refin­ery and mon­i­tor­ing the health of local com­mu­ni­ties. They must act on this now,” said Amnesty Inter­na­tion­al’s India researcher Ramesh Gopalakr­ish­nan.

“The red mud pond, which col­lects tox­ic waste by-prod­ucts from the refin­ery, cov­ers an area of approx­i­mate­ly 38 hectares. The pond is full to the brim and suf­fered seri­ous leaks dur­ing last year’s mon­soons,” explains Amnesty.

Two weeks ago, the High Court of Oris­sa reject­ed the com­pa­ny’s plan to expand the Lan­ji­garh refin­ery after find­ing that the project is in vio­la­tion of Indi­a’s envi­ron­men­tal laws.

The wel­comed deci­sion is the lat­est in a long line of legal set­backs for the com­pa­ny.

Cascadia Forest Defense blockades the Governor’s Mansion in Oregon

On Feb­ru­ary 3 Cas­ca­dia For­est Defend­ers (CFD) block­ad­ed the entrance to the Ore­gon Governor’s Man­sion with a mound of christ­mas trees. Activists held ban­ners, read­ing “Ral­ly at the State Land Board Meet­ing Feb. 14” and “KITZHABER LIES, FOREST DIE!” One per­son was arrest­ed.

On Octo­ber 11th 2011, Gov­er­nor John Kitzhaber approved a plan to almost dou­ble log­ging in the Elliott State For­est. Vot­ers, expect­ing a green Gov­er­nor, are out­raged at the hypocrisy of his actions. “The old Elliott State For­est man­age­ment plan already allowed an appalling amount of clearcut­ting,” says Erin Grady, a mem­ber of CFD, “The State Land Board made a 60 year com­mit­ment to this plan in 1995. And only six­teen years lat­er, they just threw the whole plan in the trash!” If log­ging in the Elliott con­tin­ues at the cur­rent rate, this for­est will be gone with­in our life­time.

In the past year, there has been wide­spread dis­ap­point­ment regard­ing Kitzhaber’s deci­sions towards the Elliott. For­est activist Echo Live­ly says, “If any­one was unsure about it before, we can now be sure that Kitzhaber is in the pock­et of indus­try in Ore­gon.” Anoth­er for­est advo­cate com­ments, “The only thing green about Kitzhaber is the mon­ey.” Kitzhaber has made many mis­takes man­ag­ing envi­ron­men­tal issues in Ore­gon, but there is still time to save this cru­cial rain­for­est of the Pacif­ic North­west.

CFD invites any and all who are enraged with Kitzhaber and oth­er mem­bers of the State Land Board to attend a ral­ly at their next meet­ing on Feb­ru­ary 14th at 10:00am. It will be held out­side the Depart­ment of State Lands locat­ed in Salem at 775 Sum­mer St. NE. Come tell Kitzhaber that we won’t let our forests be destroyed with­out a fight.

-Cas­ca­dia For­est Defend­ers

Malaysia: Temiar Blockade and Indigenous Rights

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

The vil­lagers are against the agri­cul­tur­al project of the local gov­ern­ment which would require the cut­ting down of for­est trees in their ances­tral land. The block­ade, their sec­ond attempt at doing so, was made after attempts to nego­ti­ate with the state gov­ern­ment have failed.

The police also refused to nego­ti­ate who removed the bar­ri­cades and arrest­ed the com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dents and their lawyer, Siti Kasim. They were released lat­er that night.

More info and here

Indonesia: Mining permit revoked after mob torches company’s office and frees prisoners

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

The Indone­sian gov­ern­ment has announced that it will revoke the per­mit for a con­tro­ver­sial gold mine after mas­sive riot­ing against the project. The protests were aimed at Sum­ber Min­er­al Nusan­tara a com­pa­ny hop­ing to open the mine on Sum­bawa island.

The crowd, which was thou­sands strong, ran­sacked and burned two gov­ern­ment offices to express their out­rage at the mine which would threat­en the com­mu­ni­ties land and drink­ing water. The mob con­tin­ued on to a near­by deten­tion cen­ter and forced the author­i­ties to release 35 of their com­rades who were arrest­ed at a protest against the mine last year.

Oppo­si­tion to the mine has been ongo­ing for over a year. A sim­i­lar protest last Decem­ber result­ed in two com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers being shot and killed by police.

Tibetan Villagers Halt Mining Project on Sacred Mountain

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

In Tibetan cul­ture, where peo­ple live in inti­mate rela­tion­ship with the nat­ur­al world around them, real­i­ty and mythol­o­gy have a way of blend­ing togeth­er. So it was per­haps no sur­prise to local vil­lagers when, after a Chi­nese min­ing com­pa­ny and local author­i­ties repeat­ed­ly repelled efforts stop a gold min­ing project on the slopes of holy Mount Kawage­bo, the moun­tain appeared to strike back.

Mount Kawage­bo, so sacred that climb­ing is banned, sits on the bor­der between Tibet and China’s Yun­nan Province; its east­ern side is part of the Three Par­al­lel Rivers of Yun­nan Pro­tect­ed Area UNESCO World Her­itage site. In Feb­ru­ary 2011, a small gold-min­ing oper­a­tion start­ed near the vil­lage of Abin, which is on the west­ern side of Kawage­bo, along the path of an 800-year-old pil­grim­age route that cir­cles the moun­tain, attract­ing tens of thou­sands of Tibetans annu­al­ly.

To the local peo­ple, who believe strong­ly in the sacred­ness of Mount Kawage­bo, direct destruc­tion of the moun­tain body, through activ­i­ties like min­ing, is unthink­able. Fur­ther, vil­lagers said the project was start­ed with­out per­mis­sion or pri­or con­sent. Thus began a com­mu­ni­ty effort to halt the project.

Vil­lagers said their attempts to deal direct­ly with the min­ing com­pa­ny result­ed in threats and vio­lence from agents hired by the com­pa­ny, and harass­ment and arrests by local police. On two occa­sions, men armed with wood­en sticks with nails attacked vil­lagers, injur­ing more than a dozen.

After efforts to nego­ti­ate with the local gov­ern­ment failed, vil­lagers pushed $300,000 worth of min­ing equip­ment into the Nu Riv­er. A leader of the group was arrest­ed, but lat­er released when 100 vil­lagers sur­round­ed the local police sta­tion where he was being held. A few months lat­er, how­ev­er, min­ing resumed and ten­sions grew. Harass­ment, death threats and attacks on vil­lagers increased, and some women and chil­dren fled to oth­er vil­lages to escape the vio­lence.

On Jan­u­ary 20, 2012, a vil­lage leader who had tried to con­front the min­ing com­pa­ny was ambushed by local police, tased and arrest­ed. Some 200 com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers sur­round­ed the police sta­tion, and an ensu­ing riot result­ed in vio­lence and injuries on both sides, with at least one vil­lager sent to the hos­pi­tal with seri­ous injuries. The leader was released, but protests con­tin­ued as vil­lagers demand­ed clo­sure of the mine, and hun­dreds more vil­lagers from the sur­round­ing area joined in.

This time, the local gov­ern­ment held nego­ti­a­tions with the com­mu­ni­ty, includ­ing the just-released leader, on behalf of the min­ing com­pa­ny, whose boss had report­ed­ly fled the area. Vil­lagers involved in nego­ti­a­tions said they were offered mon­ey in exchange for allow­ing the min­ing to con­tin­ue, but they refused. On Jan­u­ary 23, with ten­sions mount­ing, a vice-offi­cial from the pre­fec­ture gov­ern­ment ordered the mine closed and the equip­ment trucked out of the vil­lage.

While the per­sis­tence of the com­mu­ni­ty to pro­tect its holy moun­tain ulti­mate­ly paid off, some vil­lagers sug­gest­ed the moun­tain itself had a role to play. Dur­ing the nego­ti­a­tions, many report­ed hear­ing the sound of a trum­pet shell—used in Tibetan reli­gious rituals—coming from the moun­tain, while oth­ers report­ed unusu­al­ly windy weath­er, which stopped once the con­flict was resolved.

A Tibetan hired to pro­vide cater­ing to the mine work­ers described being struck by a phys­i­cal pres­sure that forced him to drop what he was car­ry­ing; only after he prayed did the sen­sa­tion dis­ap­pear. Sev­er­al months ear­li­er, accord­ing to anoth­er account, a vil­lage leader who had accept­ed bribes from the min­ing com­pa­ny died sud­den­ly, and a mem­ber of his fam­i­ly was seri­ous­ly injured in an acci­dent.

He Ran Gao, a researcher who works for the Chi­nese NGO Green Earth Vol­un­teers and has been close­ly involved with the com­mu­ni­ties of the area, described the con­text of these super­nat­ur­al accounts. “In a place like Tibet, peo­ple have an unusu­al sense of divin­i­ty in nature, based on a whole sys­tem of wor­ship and inter­ac­tion, which some­time seems super­sti­tious to mod­ern cit­i­zens,” she said. “But it is not nec­es­sar­i­ly irra­tional or unrea­son­able.”

This sense of nature wor­ship, Gao said, with its atten­dant con­ser­va­tion val­ues, is “bare­ly left due to past com­mu­nism and lat­er eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment.” But in the Himalayas and oth­er moun­tain areas, where non-Han eth­nic­i­ties reside and remain some­what pro­tect­ed, those tra­di­tion­al val­ues can still be found. She described Kawage­bo as a suc­cess sto­ry show­ing “how sacred nature can be” and how it can “still be respect­ed, pro­tect­ed and con­tin­ue to make an impact in people’s lives.”

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Abin is but one of many vil­lages threat­ened by min­ing activities—in most oth­er cas­es, mar­ble quarrying—and a greater over­ar­ch­ing threat to the region: hydro­elec­tric dam devel­op­ment.

Along the Nu (Sal­ween) Riv­er, the longest free-flow­ing riv­er in main­land South­east Asia, a pro­posed 13-dam cascade—including sev­er­al dams in or very close to the World Her­itage site—would wipe out por­tions of the pil­grim­age route around Mount Kawage­bo and dis­place the com­mu­ni­ties of the riv­er val­ley, like­ly deal­ing a blow to their tra­di­tion­al cul­ture as well. Although the project was put on hold in 2004 in the wake of wide­spread protest, it is cer­tain­ly not dead.

Last year, the World Her­itage Com­mit­tee issued a state­ment express­ing con­cern over reports of unap­proved con­struc­tion under way at one dam site on the Nu Riv­er, and sur­vey­ing work—including road-build­ing and drilling—at three oth­ers. It warned that “the many pro­posed dams could cumu­la­tive­ly con­sti­tute a poten­tial dan­ger to the property’s Out­stand­ing Uni­ver­sal Val­ue.”

The com­mit­tee asked Chi­na to sub­mit by Feb­ru­ary 1 of this year a detailed list of all pro­posed dams, as well as mines, that could affect the World Her­itage prop­er­ty, along with the envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ments of any pro­posed projects, pri­or to their approval. The com­mit­tee also request­ed, by the same dead­line, a report on the state of con­ser­va­tion of the prop­er­ty and on the progress made in com­plet­ing a strate­gic envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ment on all of the pro­posed dams and relat­ed devel­op­ment that could impact the site’s World Her­itage val­ue.

Many thanks to He Ran Gao, who pro­vid­ed report­ing and oth­er source mate­r­i­al for this report. He Ran wish­es to thank vil­lagers who pro­vid­ed her with infor­ma­tion, but whose names have been with­eld.

Monsanto takes double hit in January — who’s next?

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

France has held firm in its oppo­si­tion to Monsanto’s genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied MON 810 maize – and the agri-chem­i­cal multi­na­tion­al has admit­ted defeat.

Mon­san­to had been putting legal pres­sure on the French gov­ern­ment to lift its 2008 cul­ti­va­tion ban on MON 810, first­ly with a suc­cess­ful appeal to the Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice, then with a fol­low-up case heard in France’s own high­est court, the Coun­cil of State.

But despite both these insti­tu­tions rul­ing that the ban was “insuf­fi­cient­ly jus­ti­fied in law”, the French Gov­ern­ment, backed by Pres­i­dent Sarkozy, has insist­ed that it will still not allow cul­ti­va­tion of the biotech maize.

Now Mon­san­to has announced that it would not be sell­ing seeds for MON810 in France this year.

France’s stand – and Monsanto’s capit­u­la­tion – has been warm­ly wel­comed by anti-GM lob­by­ists GM Freeze, whose cam­paign direc­tor Pete Riley said: “The deci­sion by Mon­san­to not to mar­ket MON810 seeds in France in 2012 is yet anoth­er sign that Mon­san­to has failed to con­vince the pub­lic or pol­i­cy mak­ers that there is any ben­e­fit to grow­ing to grow­ing GM crops.

“This needs to be acknowl­edged by indus­try and politi­cians and there should be a big shift to agri­cul­tur­al research and devel­op­ment which address­es the future sus­tain­abil­i­ty of farm­ing in Europe. EU pol­i­cy needs to for­get about the bot­tom line of biotech cor­po­ra­tions and focus on devel­op­ing agro-eco­log­i­cal farm­ing which pro­vides for the needs of farm­ers, con­sumers, the envi­ron­ment and future gen­er­a­tions.”

Five oth­er EU coun­tries – Ger­many, Greece, Aus­tria, Lux­em­bourg and Hun­gary – have cur­rent bans on MON810 cul­ti­va­tion in place, and the issue has recent­ly been com­pli­cat­ed by anoth­er Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice rul­ing requir­ing hon­ey con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed with GM pollen to be ful­ly autho­rised as a nov­el prod­uct and labelled as such before it can be sold.

— And from ear­li­er in the month: Mon­san­to attacked by Anony­mous hack­ers! In a thread of hack events from the Anony­mous group, the most recent tar­get has been Monsanto.com. Anony­mous, which briefly knocked the FBI and Jus­tice Depart­ment web­sites offline as well as Music Indus­try web­sites in retal­i­a­tion for the US shut­down of file-shar­ing site Megau­pload, is a shad­owy group of amaz­ing inter­na­tion­al hack­ers. Anony­mous Mes­sage To Mon­san­to: We fight for farm­ers! – Video Tran­script (Cross-Post­ed from Organ­ic Com­mon Sense): “To the free-think­ing cit­i­zens of the world: Anony­mous stands with the farm­ers and food orga­ni­za­tions denounc­ing the prac­tices of Mon­san­to We applaud the brav­ery of the orga­ni­za­tions and cit­i­zens who are stand­ing up to Mon­san­to, and we stand unit­ed with you against this oppres­sive cor­po­rate abuse. Mon­san­to is con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the world with chem­i­cals and genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied food crops for prof­it while claim­ing to feed the hun­gry and pro­tect the envi­ron­ment. Anony­mous is every­one, Any­one who can not stand for injus­tice and decides to do some­thing about it, We are all over the Earth and here to stay. To Mon­san­to, we demand you STOP the fol­low­ing: * Con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the glob­al food chain with GMO’s. * Intim­i­dat­ing small farm­ers with bul­ly­ing and law­suits. * Prop­a­gat­ing the use of destruc­tive pes­ti­cides and her­bi­cides across the globe. * Using “Ter­mi­na­tor Tech­nol­o­gy”, which ren­ders plants ster­ile. * Attempt­ing to hijack UN cli­mate change nego­ti­a­tions for your own fis­cal ben­e­fit. * Reduc­ing farm­land to desert through mono­cul­ture and the use of syn­thet­ic fer­til­iz­ers. * Inspir­ing sui­cides of hun­dreds of thou­sands of Indi­an farm­ers. * Caus­ing birth defects by con­tin­u­ing to pro­duce the pes­ti­cide “Round-up” * Attempt­ing to bribe foriegn offi­cials * Infil­trat­ing anti-GMO groups Mon­san­to, these crimes will not go unpun­ished. Anony­mous will not spare you nor any­one in sup­port of your oppres­sive ille­gal busi­ness prac­tices. AGRA, a great exam­ple: In 2006, AGRA, Alliance for a Green Rev­o­lu­tion in Africa, was estab­lished with fund­ing from Bill Gates and The Rock­e­feller Foun­da­tion. Among the oth­er found­ing mem­bers of, AGRA, we find: Mon­san­to, Novar­tis, Sanofi-Aven­tis, Glax­o­SmithK­line, Proc­ter and Gam­ble, Mer­ck, Mosa­ic, Pfiz­er, Sum­it­o­mo Chem­i­cal and Yara. The fact that these cor­po­ra­tions are either chem­i­cal or phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ers is no coin­ci­dence. The peo­ple of the world see you, Mon­san­to. Anony­mous sees you. Seeds of Oppor­tunism, Cli­mate change offers these busi­ness­es a per­fect excuse to prey on the poor­est coun­tries by swoop­ing in to “res­cue” the farm­ers and peo­ple with their GMO crops and chem­i­cal pes­ti­cides. These cor­po­ra­tions erad­i­cate the tra­di­tion­al ways of the country’s agri­cul­ture for the sake of enor­mous prof­its. The intro­duc­tion of GMOs dras­ti­cal­ly affects a local farm­ers income, as the price of chem­i­cals required for GMOs and seeds from Mon­san­to crip­ples the farmer’s mea­ger prof­it mar­gins. There are even many cas­es of Mon­san­to suing small farm­ers after pollen from their GMO crops acci­den­tal­ly cross with the farmer’s crops. Because Mon­san­to has a patent on theri brand of seed, they claim the farmer is in vio­la­tion of patent laws. These dis­gust­ing and inhu­mane prac­tices will not be tol­er­at­ed. Anony­mous urges all con­cerned cit­i­zens to stand up for these farm­ers, stand up for the future of your own food. Protest, orga­nize, spread info to your friends! SAY NO TO POISONOUS CHEMICALS IN YOUR FOOD! SAY NO TO GMO! SAY NO TO MONSANTO! We are Anony­mous We are legion We do not for­give We do not for­get Expect us” Glob­al Jus­tice Ecol­o­gy Project, an anti-biotech group found­ed by Earth First! activists, also not­ed in a post on the attack that Mon­san­to was also one of the orig­i­nal founders of the GE tree com­pa­ny Arbor­Gen. The Pres­i­dent and CEO of Arbor­Gen, Bar­bara Wells, led Monsanto’s RoundUp Ready soy divi­sion in Brazil. GMO soy in Brazil and oth­er parts of Latin Amer­i­ca has tak­en over vast swaths of Ama­zon and oth­er for­est land, and has dis­placed or poi­soned many com­mu­ni­ties there. Find out more about their cam­paign against Arbor­Gen here. We fight for farm­ers video — http://youtu.be/Q1A-DYK4M4Q DOS attack on Mon­san­to — http://youtu.be/3XutsnEe4VY

Earth First! and Occupy protesters blockade bridge in front of GAIM conference

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

More arrests underway as conference is disrupted by activists inside the resort as well

Palm Beach Coun­ty, Flori­da—Pro­test­ers from the Occu­py move­ment and Ever­glades Earth First! block­ad­ed a Boca Raton bridge yes­ter­day, snarling rush hour traf­fic dur­ing a cock­tail par­ty of cor­po­rate investors at the GAIM USA 2012 con­fer­ence. Among them was Ana Rodriguez, an edi­tor of the Earth First! Jour­nal, which is also pub­lished in Palm Beach Coun­ty. 

Using col­or­ful lock­box­es, three activists, laid on the bridge effec­tive­ly stop­ping rush hour traf­fic from 5–6:30.  Spe­cial oper­a­tions police teams were called to the site to remove the lock­down devices that were link­ing the pro­test­ers togeth­er. The block­aders were cit­ed with three charges, includ­ing: resist­ing with­out vio­lence; obstruct­ing a high­way and vio­la­tion of a munic­i­pal ordi­nance ban­ning what the Boca police called “sleep­ing drag­ons.”

Two of the three arrest­ed, Kevin Young and Don Carter from Occu­py Mia­mi, were released on their own recog­ni­zance. Ana Rodriguez was released today on a $1,500 bond, with the state attor­ney alleg­ing that she was a flight risk to Venezuela, her coun­try of ori­gin.

“Every day we see cor­po­rate pow­er destroy­ing our com­mu­ni­ties.  From envi­ron­men­tal dis­as­ters to pri­vate pris­ons, cor­po­ra­tions are oper­at­ing with impuni­ty,” said Ana Rodriguez before being arrest­ed. “While the bank lead­ers drink cock­tails and toast to increased prof­its, peo­ple across the globe are being hurt by cor­po­rate greed.”

Anoth­er pro­test­er scaled a tree along­side the bridge and hung a large ban­ner that read: “What Would Robin Hood Do?” The ban­ner was tak­en down by a fire truck and con­fis­cat­ed by Boca police.

The protests against GAIM began on Sun­day, Jan­u­ary 22, with 100 peo­ple march­ing in front of the Boca Resort and a flotil­la of boats and canoes along the resort’s water­front.

More pro­test­ers returned this after­noon for day three of the GAIM con­fer­ence, announced as a nation­al day of action against pri­vate pris­ons and deten­tion cen­ters. At the time of this news post, there are reports of more arrests for immi­grant sol­i­dar­i­ty activists dis­rupt­ing the con­fer­ence from the inside.