California: Saboteurs Knock Out Phone & Internet Service

April 10, 2009
Van­dals chopped fiber-optic cables and killed land­lines, cell phones and Inter­net ser­vice for hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple in San­ta Clara, San­ta Cruz and San Ben­i­to coun­ties on Thurs­day.

April 10, 2009
Van­dals chopped fiber-optic cables and killed land­lines, cell phones and Inter­net ser­vice for hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple in San­ta Clara, San­ta Cruz and San Ben­i­to coun­ties on Thurs­day.

The sab­o­tage essen­tial­ly froze oper­a­tions in parts of the three coun­ties at hos­pi­tals, stores, banks and police and fire depart­ments that rely on 911 calls, com­put­er­ized med­ical records, ATMs and cred­it and deb­it cards.

The first four fiber-optic cables were cut short­ly before 1:30 a.m. in an under­ground vault along Mon­terey High­way north of Blos­som Hill Road in south San Jose, police Sgt. Ron­nie Lopez said. The cables belong to AT&T, and most of the ser­vice dis­rup­tion came from this attack.

Four more under­ground cables, at least two of which belong to AT&T, were cut about two hours lat­er at two loca­tions near each oth­er along Old Coun­ty Road near Bing Street in San Car­los. Two addi­tion­al lines were sliced on Hayes Avenue in South San Jose.

In each case, the van­dals had to pry up heavy man­hole cov­ers with a spe­cial tool, climb down a shaft and chop through heavy cables. The four cables cut in San Jose were about the width of a sil­ver dol­lar and were encased in tough plas­tic sheath. One cable con­tained 360 fibers, and the oth­er three had 48 fibers each.

The van­dal­ism comes as AT&T is in talks with the Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Work­ers of Amer­i­ca for a con­tract cov­er­ing more than 80,000 employ­ees, who have been work­ing under their old deal since it expired at 11:59 p.m. Sat­ur­day. Union mem­bers vot­ed in late March to autho­rize a strike but have not sched­uled one.

http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/7166

Climate Camp in the City, Critical Mass & the G20 Meltdown Bank of England plus other protests from this week — updated

The urban Cli­mate Camp at Bish­ops­gate by the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange has been report­ed to have over 2000 peo­ple and 150 tents, and has been described as a huge­ly impres­sive infra­struc­ture.

Welcome to the Climate Camp in the CityThe urban Cli­mate Camp at Bish­ops­gate by the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange has been report­ed to have over 2000 peo­ple and 150 tents, and has been described as a huge­ly impres­sive infra­struc­ture. There has been numer­ous the­atri­cal per­for­mances, and sound-sys­tems along­side com­post toi­lets, a med­ical tent, a chil­dren’s area, a cou­ple of work­ing kitchens, speak­ers, ban­ners across the street and numer­ous work­shops. Many peo­ple have been pic­nick­ing there and the camp has been attract­ing passers by and city work­ers. There have been police lines on either side of the camp but peo­ple are allowed in and out. There has been danc­ing near the police lines and the atmos­phere has gen­er­al­ly been described as very good, with office work­ers waiv­ing out of win­dows at the campers.

'Nature doesn't do Bailouts'CC London money-eyes
“Street emp­ty. They beat us out and squashed our tents. But oh what a world we cre­at­ed! Shame on the pow­ers that be.”
— Cli­mate Camp Lon­don

Cli­mate Camp in the City has come to a end as police aggres­sive­ly cleared pro­test­ers from Bish­ops­gate. Sev­er­al hours ear­li­er campers agreed to move to the North to shore up their defences, but after heav­i­ly provoca­tive polic­ing, peo­ple began to try and leave.

Bloodied & put in vanMany campers head home with light injuries after a long evening of intim­i­da­tion and vio­lence from the police. At sev­er­al points they moved in to snatch indi­vid­u­als from the crowd and sent lines of offi­cers into sit­ting campers, unpro­voked. One pro­test­er said “the police act­ed aggres­sive­ly, goad­ing pro­test­ers, but we remained peace­ful and the aim remains strong.” By 2am their aggres­sive tac­tics suc­ceed­ed with most of the campers doing their best to escape the cor­don. Soon after the camp was bro­ken.

Climate Camp in the City tentsCampers claim a vic­to­ry hav­ing held their ground peace­ful­ly for so long, serv­ing food, drink, a vari­ety of work­shops to the campers, and above all, cre­at­ing a pos­i­tive space for change. We also pay homage to the inven­tor of the pop-up tent, for mak­ing today pos­si­ble.

Updates:

01:20 Reports that Cli­mate Camp has been evict­ed by police — peo­ple pushed back and beat­en, won­der­ing how to retrieve their belong­ings.

01:10 — Police pulling peo­ple out of Cli­mate Camp from south­ern perime­ter.

00:30 — Cli­mate Camp par­tic­i­pants have been mak­ing speech­es to the police about why they have been tak­ing action today.

00:20 — Reports from Cli­mate Camp of police using bolt-cut­ters to dis­man­tle the bike bar­ri­cade whilst there is now noth­ing to stop them com­ing in from the North.

23:55 — Police are now mov­ing from south to north push­ing peo­ple out of the space occu­pied by the cli­mate camp, and it’s clear­ing out fast. About 500 peo­ple are left at this point.

23:28 — Push past Liv­er­pool Street as a group are chased at speed pur­sued by police dogs and vans. At least one arrest.

23:18 — Let­ting peo­ple out from South side oppo­site Liv­er­pool St. Lots of police charg­ing, Bot­tles being thrown from out­side camp towards charg­ing cops

22:48 — About 2000 peo­ple in Cli­mate Camp Ket­tle, police want to impose a sec­tion 14 and ID every­one. They’re look­ing to force peo­ple out through the North two at a time. There are police mass­ing at the South End, Due to the amount of campers that does cur­rent­ly not seem fea­si­ble.

22:15 — riot police have moved into the cli­mate camp crowd at bish­ops­gate and are vio­lent­ly drag­ging peace­ful sit­ting pro­test­ers to dis­perse the area

ear­li­er this evening riot police forced their way into the peace­ful cli­mate camp. pro­test­ers held their hands up and shout­ed ‘this is not a riot’ over and over, while ful­ly-kit­ted riot police used shields and batons to push and vio­lent­ly surge for­ward into the camp along the east­ern pave­ment of bish­ops­gate. it seems like­ly this clear­ance oper­a­tion had been planned all day — a line of police vans parked along the east­side had cre­at­ed a ‘walk­way’ along that pave­ment which was effec­tive­ly sep­a­rat­ed from the camp itself. all the riot police had to do was push their way onto that side, and it is clear that was their strat­e­gy. once done, there was a fur­ther stand-off for a while before the next stage to start mov­ing pro­test­ers out one-by-one.

21:35 — we are cur­rent receiv­ing reports from the Cli­mate Camp in the city, that all peo­ple are going to be searched to be allowed out, as well as peo­ple are told to delete pho­tos of offi­cers from their cam­eras, under the threat of seizure. Inter­est­ing­ly the joint com­mit­tee on human rights of the UK par­lia­ment has just made a cou­ple of rec­om­men­da­tion about polic­ing direct­ly con­demn­ing the use of these anti-ter­ror pow­er to police protest. Here are the direct quotes and links.

Democracy is an illusionRec­om­men­da­tions of the UK Par­lia­ment Joint Com­mit­tee on Human Rights con­cern­ing the use of anti-ter­ror pow­ers for stop-and-search:

“93. Whilst we accept that there may be cir­cum­stances where the police rea­son­ably believe, on the basis of intel­li­gence, that a demon­stra­tion could be used to mask a ter­ror­ist attack or be a tar­get of ter­ror­ism, we have heard of no exam­ples of this issue aris­ing in prac­tice. We are con­cerned by the reports we have received of police using counter-ter­ror­ism pow­ers on peace­ful pro­test­ers. It is not clear to us whether this stems from a delib­er­ate deci­sion by the police to use a legal tool which they now have or if indi­vid­ual offi­cers are exer­cis­ing their dis­cre­tion inap­pro­pri­ate­ly. What­ev­er the rea­son, this is a mat­ter of con­cern. We wel­come the Min­is­ter’s com­ments that counter-ter­ror­ism leg­is­la­tion should not be used to deal with pub­lic order or protests. We also wel­come the rec­om­men­da­tion in the new guid­ance to human rights being includ­ed in com­mu­ni­ty impact assess­ments. We rec­om­mend that the new guid­ance on the use of the sec­tion 44 stop and search pow­er be amend­ed to make clear that counter-ter­ror­ism pow­ers should not be used against peace­ful pro­test­ers. In addi­tion, the guid­ance should make spe­cif­ic ref­er­ence to the duty of police to act com­pat­i­bly with human rights, includ­ing, for exam­ple, by spec­i­fy­ing the human rights engaged by protest.”
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200809/jtselect/jtrights/47/4707.htm

Con­cern­ing the impact of the recent leg­is­la­tion about tak­ing pho­tographs of offi­cers in pub­lic the joint com­mit­tee said:

“94. Con­cerns have recent­ly been expressed in the media that a new pro­vi­sion in the Counter Ter­ror­ism Act 2008 makes it a crim­i­nal offence to take and pub­lish a pho­to­graph of a police offi­cer. Sec­tion 76 of the 2008 Act makes it an offence to elic­it or attempt to elic­it infor­ma­tion about an indi­vid­ual who is or has been a con­sta­ble “which is of a kind like­ly to be use­ful to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.”[174] As the Explana­to­ry Notes to the Counter Ter­ror­ism Bill cor­rect­ly stat­ed, the new offence will only be com­mit­ted where the infor­ma­tion in ques­tion is “such as to raise a rea­son­able sus­pi­cion that it was intend­ed to be used to assist in the prepa­ra­tion or com­mis­sion of an act of ter­ror­ism, and must be of a kind that was like­ly to pro­vide prac­ti­cal assis­tant to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.”[175] That is the effect of a deci­sion of the Court of Appeal in a case in 2008[176] inter­pret­ing the same statu­to­ry lan­guage in the sep­a­rate ter­ror­ism offence of pos­sess­ing a doc­u­ment or record con­tain­ing infor­ma­tion of a kind like­ly to be use­ful to a per­son com­mit­ting or prepar­ing an act of terrorism.[177]”

“95. We there­fore do not share the con­cerns expressed in the media that the new offence crim­i­nalis­es tak­ing pho­tographs of the police. How­ev­er, we do regard as sig­nif­i­cant the fact that this is being wide­ly report­ed as a mat­ter of con­cern to jour­nal­ists. Legal uncer­tain­ty about the reach of crim­i­nal offences can have a chill­ing effect on the activ­i­ties of jour­nal­ists and pro­test­ers. We there­fore rec­om­mend that, to elim­i­nate any scope for doubt about the scope of the new offence in section76 of the Counter Ter­ror­ism Act 2008, guid­ance be issued to the police about the scope of the offence in light of the deci­sion of the Court of Appeal, and specif­i­cal­ly address­ing con­cerns about its improp­er use to pre­vent pho­tograph­ing or film­ing police. ”
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200809/jtselect/jtrights/47/4707.htm

20:45 — cur­rent­ly ket­tled in but they are hav­ing a ceilidh/ barn dance so not bro­ken yet! Fuck the po-lice.

18:35 — Riot police baton charge cli­mate camp
Police clearing climate camp in city
Numer­ous reports come in stat­ing the riot police are in the process of attack­ing the peace­ful cli­mate camp. Even in the face of severe and unpro­voked police bru­tal­i­ty the pro­test­ers are main­tain­ing their peace­ful protest.

Despite events through­out the day at the urban cli­mate camp being entire­ly peace­ful, riot police are mobil­is­ing at the camp with 14 riot vans pulling up in addi­tion to the six already present there. While cli­mate campers appealed to the police high­light­ing the peace­ful nature of the protest and the pres­ence of many fam­i­lies with chil­dren, the police stormed into into the camp through a gap in the bicy­cle perime­ter of the camp indis­crim­i­nate­ly attack­ing campers with batons, push­ing fam­i­lies and chil­dren out of tents and destroy­ing sec­tions of the camp. Camomile, Bish­ops­gate and Wom­wood st are closed off hem­ming in the campers. Five police motor bikes pulled up with what looked like sur­veil­lance gear. Anoth­er report comes in from cli­mate camp stat­ing that the police have formed lines at the Liv­er­pool st end of the camp. a third report comes in from an Indy­media vol­un­teer report­ing that he has ‘nev­er seen any­thing like this’ three lines of hel­met­ed riot police are indis­crim­i­nate­ly beat­ing pro­test­ers with batons. Pro­test­ers are not fight­ing back and are main­tain­ing the non-vio­lent nature of their action in spite of this there are report­ed to be at least four arrests. The crowd chants shame on you as the police con­tin­ue to attack campers.

Full 1st April time­line

Video show­ing police tac­tics clear­ing space.

Camp set­ting-up video.

Panora­ma — click through to orig­i­nal for big­ger image: Climate Camp in the City panorama

Anoth­er per­son­al report: I arrived at about 5pm, at the north end of it. Police were already form­ing a line along­side the bar­ri­er that had been erect­ed made up of rail­ings and bikes attached to them, but they were not blockad­ing and every one was free to vis­it, come in and out.

There was a fes­tive atmos­phere, colour­ful tents, ban­ners, street dec­o­ra­tion…

A man with the slo­gan “God is too big for reli­gion” on his t‑shirt then start­ed to try and make every sin­gle riot police­man and woman on the line to smile. “This is an order”, he shout­ed, “and if they don’t com­ply, things will only get worse”. He man­aged to get or steal a smile of every sin­gle police offi­cer includ­ing a police woman who tried just too hard to keep a stony face.

He then pro­ceed­ed to try and hug every one “of these very won­der­ful peo­ple” as a sign of his love. To try to get to their hearts, he asked them if they had chil­dren: “please raise your hands if you do not have chil­dren, or keep your hands down if you do have chil­dren”. None of the police moved their arms but he did not suc­ceed to hug every one of the offi­cers. One of them claimed that he was embar­rass­ing them.

I then pro­ceed­ed to pho­to­graph the rest of the camp. A few police vans had some­how made their way into the mid­dle of the cli­mate camp.

At about 6.15pm the south end of the camp start­ed to get “nasty”. Police charged into the peace­ful peo­ple, bring­ing tents vio­lent­ly down to the ground, but peo­ple man­aged to peace­ful­ly stop the police vio­lence, and a par­ty was estab­lished in front of the police lines.

A few police also moved to the mid­dle of the camp, next to the vans, and it looked like they were try­ing to divide the crowd. But peo­ple kept the area occu­pied and this did­n’t hap­pen.

As it got dark­er, more and more riot police and vans gath­ered at the south end of the camp, and I heard that a demon­stra­tion had formed at the north end of the camp, but that the police were afraid of the grow­ing num­bers and were pre­vent­ing peo­ple from get­ting in or out of the camp. We had been cor­doned off with­out warn­ing.

Three meet­ings were held in the camp. One at the south end, anoth­er at the north end, and anoth­er one in the mid­dle, right in front of police. We were informed that the police had decid­ed to keep us penned for two hours, and that after that, they would allow us out in groups of 20, after tak­ing every one’s pho­to­graph and details.

Some peo­ple con­sid­ered sleep­ing the night in the camp, but it was clear from the begin­ning of the night that police were going to dis­rupt peo­ple’s sleep all through the night, just like it had hap­pened dur­ing the cli­mate camp in the sum­mer, last year, with a heli­copter fly­ing over our heads fir­ing an intense light over the street and with the vans’ strongest lights also focus­ing on the campers.

At about 10.00 I tried my luck to get out of the pen by ask­ing per­mis­sion to leave to one of the police offi­cer. He said, “I can not tell you if you can go out. Ask one of your senior mem­bers (eh?) Your legal observers should know more”. A legal observ­er told me that the police had decid­ed to only allow peo­ple out in groups of two after push­ing the crowd in a way that I did­n’t man­age to under­stand.

It was get­ting cold­er and most peo­ple present in the camp by then had not brought a camp­ing tent or sleep­ing bag. Luck­i­ly peo­ple had brought plen­ty of food, which was wide­ly shared. Music was heard around the camp most of the time, and at about 10.30 mem­bers of Radio Rev­olu­cion gave a taste of their music towards the mid­dle of the street. Police offi­cers looked at the scene in aston­ish­ment and a secu­ri­ty guard inside the build­ing began to video them using his phone, as if he had nev­er in his life seen spon­ta­neous acts of arts hap­pen­ing. After a few songs, ran­dom peo­ple in the crowd took on the micro­phone and the instru­ments and shared their art with a small crowd danc­ing around them.

At about 22.45 we again heard des­per­ate cries from the south end of the street and there we went, to learn that the police had charged again on the peace­ful crowd, using batons and pep­per spray, and to see that the peo­ple had decid­ed to sit down and hold the site as much as pos­si­ble.

I joined some peo­ple that had shared their food with me before and start­ed to help them putting their tent down. It was pret­ty clear that the police were going to charge again so we thought bet­ter to have the tent and oth­er things on our backs than destroyed. As we were in the process of undo­ing the tent, the whole of the police line that was at the north end of the camp moved in and we fran­ti­cal­ly con­tin­ued to undo the tent as the police approached, with peo­ple run­ning ahead of them, cry­ing for help. We decid­ed to stay and con­tin­ue to gath­er and pack every­thing until the police stopped us with their batons.

Strange­ly, they just passed by. It seemed all they want­ed to do was reach the north end of the street and join the cops there.

By then it seemed that there were few­er peo­ple than before and we were informed that, although the police had intend­ed to search every one before leav­ing, they were only doing so ran­dom­ly. We gath­ered tent, sleep­ing bags and food, and head­ed for the con­ver­gence cen­tre unmo­lest­ed.

At 11.30 the street was still cor­doned off and peo­ple were not allowed in, but from the out­side, it looked like the peo­ple who were remained inside the cor­don actu­al­ly want­ed to be there; exit seemed to be allowed.


G20 EF! graffiti
Although for the first half hour or so the police seemed con­tent to watch the protest, scuf­fles start­ed to devel­op around the edges. Most seemed to be caused by groups of police grab­bing masked demon­stra­tors and attempt­ing to unmask them.

——–

Crit­i­cal Mass

At 9.30 we were still wait­ing for more peo­ple to join in Bank Junc­tion. We start­ed off at about 10am, with a big sound sys­tem and lots of peo­ple in cos­tumes.

Our first stop was the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land, RBS, next to Bish­ops­gate. There we were informed that RBS heav­i­ly invest in fos­sil fuels. RBS has recent­ly giv­en a mas­sive loan to EON, the com­pa­ny behind the coal pow­er sta­tion in King­worth, where the last cli­mate camp took place.

Back on Bish­ops­gate, we went then to the Deutche Bank, where again the sound sys­tem per­son informed us that this bank has been active­ly involved in “car­bon trad­ing”, which means plant­i­ng trees to “off­set” the exces­sive car­bon emis­sions that com­pa­nies in the rich part of the world should not be pro­duc­ing if they were com­ply­ing with their com­pa­nies’ signed treaties. This tree-plant­i­ng has been done in lands of indige­nous peo­ples in the poor part of the world that have been how the land that they need for their own food is used for this busi­ness with­out their being able to do any­thing about it. We were told that car­bon trad­ing is now big busi­ness, and that it basi­cal­ly con­sists of sell­ing the air we breath.

From where we were, across the road, was the Car­bon Exchange, which, we’re informed, gives us in the Rich West the abil­i­ty to use more car­bon than we have agreed to use in order to try and stop cli­mate chaos. Big com­pa­nies in devel­op­ing coun­tries are said to be mak­ing mon­ey by sell­ing their car­bon cred­its to big com­pa­nies in rich coun­tries so that they can use more car­bon.

We’re told about a com­pa­ny in South Korea that dis­cov­ered a prod­uct in the 70s that is use­ful to “decar­bon­ate” the air, but for some mys­te­ri­ous rea­son it has not made this dis­cov­ery pub­lic, nor used the prod­uct, until now, so it has been allow­ing the South Kore­an pop­u­la­tion to be unnec­es­sar­i­ly pol­lut­ed for about 40 years. Now that it is sell­ing this prod­uct, this com­pa­ny still makes (10 times?) more mon­ey sell­ing car­bon trade cred­its than pro­duc­ing and sell­ing this de-con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing prod­uct.

Space Hijackers APC outside & guarding RBSAt this point the Space Hijack­ers took on the micro­phone to ask us for sup­port because their tank had been “stopped”, sur­round­ed by police. We went there to show our sup­port but the cops did­n’t seem very pre­pared to allow the tank move peace­ful­ly.

At about 10.30 we moved south towards Lon­don Bridge. Last stop before cross­ing the bridge was a spot next to premis­es of Cater­pil­lar, the com­pa­ny pro­vid­ing home-destroy­ing bull­doz­ers to the Israeli gov­ern­ment, and right next to an “Abbey” branch, now prop­er­ty of Grupo San­tander, cur­rent­ly in the process of buy­ing most of the His­pan­ic world and part of the rest, and object of protests and con­tempt in Spain and Latin Amer­i­ca.

From there crossed Lon­don Bridge and then Tow­er Bridge back to the north bank of the riv­er. Next to the tow­er, we were served with free veg­an food reclaimed from the sys­tem’s dai­ly waste. There we were joined by the Dancers and then moved on to join the Cli­mate Camp.

In the mean­time police had moved on to close all streets that lead to Bank junc­tion to the traf­fic, and at noon they were prepar­ing to com­plete­ly cor­don off the area, allow­ing peo­ple in but not out, except city work­ers.

Police separate crowdAt 12.15 peo­ple were in Bank Junc­tion already penned in and allowed in but not out. In Princess Street there were to lines of cops, sep­a­rat­ed by about 100 metres. The “out­side” line, away from the crowd penned in, was rein­forced with three vans crossed.

At 12.30, Queen Vic­to­ria Street, on the west side of Bank Junc­tion, it did­n’t look like the police had formed a line, but quick­ly formed at the shout of one of their offices, then moved away from the pen, still form­ing a line, and push­ing peo­ple away from the junc­tion, so the police line came to block the access of peo­ple com­ing both from Poul­try Street and Queen Vic­to­ria Street. The police were wear­ing bul­let proof vests.

In Man­sion House Place, a small alley way approach­ing the Junc­tion from St. Stephen’s Row in the South, police were also form­ing two lines sep­a­rat­ed by a few metres, cor­don­ing off the junc­tion and only allow­ing fam­i­lies and city work­ers out.

A sin­gle line of vans com­bined with cops blocked the point where King William Street and Lom­bard Street meet.

A few min­utes lat­er horse mount­ed police were form­ing the lines instead of police­men on foot.

——–

Pho­tos from the G20 Melt­down, and oth­er protests from todayG20 Stop Fooling placard
Police armoured vehicle at G20 | Oth­er pic­tures of police APCs: 2 | 3

FIT spotting from on high
Injured woman at G20
'The Beginning is Nigh' placard
Riot cops at G20
Video of police forced into retreat at G20 Melt­down.

How not to use crowd con­trol bar­ri­ers when deal­ing with the police video — also watch police advances & retreats! Tips for how — see the Guide to Pub­lic Order Sit­u­a­tions.

Violent cops at G20
Link to many oth­er video clips.

——–

Activist tank at Roy­al Bank of Scot­land

The activist group Space Hijack­ers joined with police to take care of any “bad” demon­stra­tors who might have shown up to anti-G20 protests in the City of Lon­don today. At 10:30 this morn­ing they showed up with a CCTV-equipped armoured vehi­cle in front of the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land and pre­pared to defend the build­ing.

Police spoil­sports refused their help, con­duct­ed thor­ough search of the vehi­cle, and moved them along. They were lat­er arrest­ed out­side News Inter­na­tion­al.

——–

Window-kicking at the G20Despite the media’s apoc­a­lyp­tic pre­dic­tions, the four horse­men (See SchNEWS 667) did at least make it to the Bank of Eng­land. Whether this was a good idea or not is open to ques­tion. It cer­tain­ly brought a mea­sure of may­hem to the finan­cial heart of Lon­don, which seemed large­ly closed down for the dura­tion. Our num­bers were impres­sive – giv­en the short notice and the media hype of extreme vio­lence. But tac­tics adopt­ed gave the Met free rein to place a huge cor­don around the entire demo – the so-called ket­tle.

As soon as the final Black Horse (iron­i­cal­ly the one sym­bol­is­ing land enclo­sure) arrived, police lines rapid­ly snapped into place across the streets sur­round­ing the plaza that the bank sits on. Unfor­tu­nate­ly — although many did suc­cess­ful­ly make a break for it — the major­i­ty of the crowd, with lit­tle idea of what to do (unless they’d read last week’s SchNEWS pub­lic order guide obvi­ous­ly) stood around as this manoeu­vre was exe­cut­ed. Whilst we know that the protests were organ­ised on very short notice, there seemed to be lit­tle aim oth­er than sim­ply get­ting into the area – there were no bust-cards, and no attempts at crowd co-ordi­na­tion.

At first most seemed hap­py to be inside the huge ket­tle – a few sound-sys­tems were blast­ing out and there was even a bizarre out­burst of con­tem­po­rary dance in front of the The Roy­al Exchange. As the hours wore on and the few city types caught in the cir­cle had shown ID and got them­selves extract­ed, it became obvi­ous that if the police had their way no-one was get­ting out ‘til long after dark. No water, no food, not even a toi­let. The rea­son giv­en? — ‘to pre­vent a breach of the peace’.

By around half-one the ket­tle had been tru­ly brought the boil and fight­ing had bro­ken out along Thread­nee­dle St. A line of police were pushed back by a crowd shout­ing, “Let us out”. A few bot­tles were lobbed but even with­out these the cops were forced to give way to the sheer phys­i­cal pres­sure. Alert­ed by the noise, sup­port streamed over from the oth­er exits to rein­force Thread­nee­dle and push the cops back to the junc­tion with Bartholomew Lane. This left the win­dows of Roy­al Bank of Scot­land exposed. They were duly smashed, although riot­ers were out­num­bered by pho­tog­ra­phers by around fif­teen to one. How­ev­er police lines here were too strong to breach.

At around 2.30, the crowd fac­ing a thin­ner police line across Vic­to­ria St sud­den­ly surged for­ward and by sheer weight of num­bers pushed their way through. One of the shovers told SchNEWS, “It was amaz­ing – we were resigned to being in the ket­tle until mid­night but the lines broke right in front of me and con­fused police were shout­ing ask­ing each oth­er, ‘What’s the plan?’”. Despite the rapid deploy­ment of riot cops, pos­si­bly up to a thou­sand peo­ple escaped at this point. Soon the win­dows of HSBC on Cheap­side had gone in.

SchNEWS has heard reports that oth­ers man­aged to sneak or blag their way out over the next few hours but dur­ing the after­noon the noose was grad­u­al­ly tight­ened with baton charges. Eye­wit­ness­es report­ed a sense of pan­ic devel­op­ing inside the pen. Peo­ple were not allowed out until after 8pm and only then after being pho­tographed.

One man, Ian Tom­lin­son is known to have died inside the cor­don. SchNEWS has heard con­flict­ing reports as to whether he was struck by police. Per­haps a coro­ners inquiry into his death will expose police tac­tics to pub­lic glare (unless they invoke their handy new pow­ers to keep it all secret of course).

This report and oth­ers at http://www.schnews.org.uk/archive/news671.htm

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2nd April

Time­line
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Bank of Eng­land vig­il under­way for the man who died at yes­ter­day’s G20 Melt­down protest.
G20 vigil
Around 200 pro­test­ers have gath­ered in the City, on the steps of the Old Exchange by the Bank of Eng­land. Their pres­ence rep­re­sents a spon­ta­neous protest in sol­i­dar­i­ty for the man who died while ket­tled at G20 Melt­down yes­ter­day.

No details of the man’s death have been released. All that’s known is he was around 30-years-old and died while ket­tled with thou­sands of oth­ers out­side the Bank of Eng­land.

Demon­stra­tors are demand­ing answers and an inde­pen­dent inquiry into the man’s death. A wall of con­do­lences for the man who died as sprung up. A minute silence was held also.

Police are oper­at­ing an on off ket­tle pol­i­cy. This appears to be a method of encour­ag­ing peo­ple to leave while they can.

The mood over all is calm. There have been waves of chant­i­ng: SHAME SHAME SHAME ON YOU and WHO’S STREETS? OUR STREETS! to the 200-odd police draft­ed in to “keep the peace.”

While some pro­test­ers have left, many oth­ers con­tin­ue to arrive. Some line the pave­ments out­side the Bank of Eng­land. Police are now attempt­ing to move these peo­ple on.

Inter­view with two eye­wit­ness­es of the events pre­ced­ing the death of Ian Tom­lin­son, the man who died dur­ing anti G20 protests in the City of Lon­don on the 1st of April.

Wit­ness­es State­ment: Death at G20

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Var­i­ous par­tic­i­pants in the City of Lon­don demon­stra­tions on April 1st have come for­ward as wit­ness­es to the col­lapse of a man lat­er iden­ti­fied by author­i­ties as Ian Tom­lin­son. Four dif­fer­ent uni­ver­si­ty stu­dents wit­nessed the col­lapse of Mr. Tom­lin­son. “He stum­bled towards us from the direc­tion of police and pro­test­ers and col­lapsed,” said Peter Apps. “I saw a demon­stra­tor who was a first aider attend to the per­son who had col­lapsed. The man was late 40s, had tat­toos on his hands, and was wear­ing a Mill­wall shirt.”

While the first aider was help­ing the man, anoth­er demon­stra­tor with a mega­phone was call­ing the police over so that they could help.

Natal­ie Lang­ford, a stu­dent at Queen Mary, said “there was a police charge. A lot of peo­ple ran in our direc­tion. The woman giv­ing first aid stood in the path of the crowd.” The run­ning peo­ple, see­ing a guy on the ground, went around them.

Anoth­er demon­stra­tor had already called 999 and was get­ting med­ical advice from the ambu­lance dis­patch­er. “Four police with two police medics came. They told her [the first aider] to ‘move along’.”, said Peter Apps. “Then they pushed her forcibly away from him. They refused to lis­ten to her [the first aider] when she tried to explain his con­di­tion.”

The first aider, who did not wish to be named, said “The police sur­round­ed the col­lapsed man. I was stand­ing with the per­son who’d called 999. The ambu­lance dis­patch­er want­ed to talk to the police, the phone was being held out to them, but the police refused.”

Anoth­er wit­ness, Elias Stoakes, added “we did­n’t see them [the police] per­form CPR.”

Oth­er peo­ple who had tried to stay with the col­lapsed man were also pushed away.

All of the wit­ness­es deny the alle­ga­tion that many mis­siles were thrown.

Accord­ing to Peter Apps, “one bot­tle was thrown, but it did­n’t come close to the police. Noth­ing was thrown after­wards as oth­er demon­stra­tors told the per­son to stop. The per­son who threw the bot­tle prob­a­bly did­n’t real­ize that some­one was behind the ring of police.” All the wit­ness­es said that the demon­stra­tors were con­cerned for the well-being of the col­lapsed man once they real­ized that there was an injured per­son.

Natal­ie Lang­ford said “when the ambu­lance arrived the pro­test­ers got straight out of the way.”

These wit­ness­es are hap­py to give media state­ments.

They can be con­tact­ed through this press liai­son email: g20witnesses@gmail.com

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Police Raid at Earl Street G20 Con­ver­gence Cen­tre

As peo­ple were organ­is­ing to leave the con­ver­gence space at mid-day today police raid­ed. 30–40 peo­ple attempt­ed to pro­tect the space by blockad­ing the main doors. We then con­gre­gat­ed on the top floor and sat in a cir­cle with our arms in the air to show the police that we were not vio­lent. How­ev­er, the police met us with a taser gun, full riot gear and pro­ceed­ed to make us lie face down with our hands on the floor.

We believe two peo­ple were arrest­ed, although we are unsure what they have been charged with. One has been tak­en to hos­pi­tal fol­low­ing an injury. The rest were searched, hand­cuffed and had names, DOB, address­es and pho­tos tak­en.

If any­one has more infor­ma­tion please con­tact legal sup­port urgent­ly: legal@climatecamp.org.uk

Searches/details ille­gal­ly demand­ed before raid begins here.

Police massed outside convergence centreCon­ver­gence cen­tre evic­tion full time­line here.
Convgence centre raid search

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Police attack Ram­part Social Cen­tre

At around 12:30 this after­noon, 30–50 police arrived at the Ram­part, an activist social cen­tre in Whitechapel, East Lon­don. A for­mer­ly derelict build­ing which had been emp­ty for years, Ram­part was occu­pied by activists and turned into a social and cul­tur­al venue more than four years ago.

When the police arrived, some­one went out­side to speak to them, ask­ing them if they were going to search the place and telling them that if they had a war­rant they could just knock on the door. The police told him not to wor­ry.

A few min­utes lat­er riot police in black uni­forms, wear­ing bal­a­clavas came through a down­stairs win­dow, the door to the roof and a door to an adjoin­ing build­ing. The police broke down the doors and stormed in with drawn tasers, scream­ing at every­one to get down on the ground, jump­ing on them and hand­cuff­ing them. They had a TV crew with them when break­ing in through the door. They were insult­ing peo­ple and say­ing things like “one of you croaked last night”, try­ing to pro­voke a bad reac­tion from peo­ple.

They then demand­ed iden­ti­fi­ca­tion from every­one and checked IDs against what appeared to be a list of spe­cif­ic peo­ple. There were 2 or 3 arrests. The remain­ing peo­ple were then let go.

Right now it’s calm, how­ev­er peo­ple are a bit shak­en after the expe­ri­ence. The cops have left the neigh­bour­hood.

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Spi­der­man on bail after G20 Lloyds Cli­mate Demo

Alain Robert, oth­er­wise known as ‘Spi­der­man’ for his dar­ing free climbs of urban build­ings was arrest­ed ear­li­er today for climb­ing the Lloyds build­ing in Lon­don in a G20 cli­mate change protest.

Unfurl­ing a ban­ner that adver­tised the cam­paign onehundredmonths.org (which says we have lit­tle under 92 months left to pre­vent cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change), he climbed down from the 9th floor and was arrest­ed by police for aggra­vat­ed tres­pass.

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Oth­er inter­est­ing arti­cles from oth­er days:

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There have been 122 arrests relat­ed to the G20, includ­ing 86 on Wednes­day and 32 on Thurs­day, police said.

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Police ask train staff to spy on G20 pro­test­ers

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One-man G20 protest on 28th March 2009

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Spoof Finan­cial Times hits Lon­don streets

10000 copies of a spoof Finan­cial Times were dis­trib­uted in Lon­don today.

“Set in 2020, the 12-page paper revealed how action in 2009 reined in cli­mate change, sav­ing bil­lions from extinc­tion. Car­bon rationing didn’t kill us, it explained, despite the incon­ve­nience to multi­na­tion­al com­pa­nies. But we couldn’t have end­less growth with finite resources. Edi­tors even apol­o­gised for sug­gest­ing oth­er­wise.”

The paper is a full-colour repli­ca of the icon­ic pink broad­sheet includ­ing nation­al and inter­na­tion­al pages and edi­to­ri­als and com­ment, pok­ing fun at FT colum­nists. It was fund­ed by dona­tions on the Inter­net, and giv­en away for free by vol­un­teers. Tens of thou­sands of copies were print­ed – almost as many as the FT sells here dai­ly.

http://ft2020.com

Down­load as a PDF file

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Inter­na­tion­al Sol­i­dar­i­tyAotearoa/New Zealand | Fin­land

April 1st 2009 — Fossil Fools’ Day goes global

Today saw not only mass protests in Lon­don ahead of the G20 sum­mit, but local demon­stra­tions in cities around the UK and across the globe. Under the ban­ner of Fos­sil Fools Day, activists held protests at banks, ener­gy com­pa­nies and pow­er sta­tions across the UK, the USA, Cana­da and South Africa to high­light the twin eco­nom­ic and cli­mate crises.

'It's Going to Get Worse' placardToday saw not only mass protests in Lon­don ahead of the G20 sum­mit, but local demon­stra­tions in cities around the UK and across the globe. Under the ban­ner of Fos­sil Fools Day, activists held protests at banks, ener­gy com­pa­nies and pow­er sta­tions across the UK, the USA, Cana­da and South Africa to high­light the twin eco­nom­ic and cli­mate crises.

For more pho­tos vis­it here and if your action isn’t in the list below email us and we’ll add it to the site.

In the UK …

On the eve of the G20, activists descend­ed on Lon­don to high­light the links between the finan­cial and the cli­mate cri­sis. While the ‘Finan­cial Fools Day’ Street Par­ty got under­way out­side the Bank of Eng­land, the Camp for Cli­mate Action set up camp out­side the Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange. Their mes­sage: “Stop­ping car­bon mar­kets — because nature doesn’t do bailouts”. It was­n’t until the evening that the police cleared the space — full sto­ry here. Mean­while over at the Excel Cen­tre, the Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change is hold­ing an Ice-berg “Cli­mate Emer­gency” demo.

Ear­li­er in the week, the Oil Goliath BP was felled by Fos­sil Fools Day’s David as BP post­poned its cen­te­nary par­ty at the British Muse­um to be held on April 1st, due to a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by Art Not Oil and Ris­ing Tide.

Plymouth RBS glued for FFDIn Ply­mouth, Ris­ing Tide pen­guins super-glued them­selves to the entrance of RBS to high­light RBS’s fund­ing of fos­sil fuels projects. RBS are one of the biggest investors in the fos­sil fuel indus­try and pro­vid­ed $16 bil­lion to coal-relat­ed com­pa­nies in 2007 alone. Ann Smith of Ris­ing Tide Ply­mouth today said: “RBS is now 57% owned by the UK tax­pay­er. Cli­mate change requires a move to renew­able ener­gy, not con­tin­ued sup­port for the expan­sion of the fos­sil fuel indus­try”. For more pho­tos vis­it This is Ply­mouth

In Oxford­shire, the ear­ly hours of April 1st saw local activists hang­ing ban­ners from bridges over the A34 between Oxford and Did­cot. Ban­ners read “Cau­tion: Cli­mate Change Ahead”, “Give Way to Wind” and “Fos­sil Fool: 3rd exit” com­plete with pic­tures of Did­cot Pow­er Sta­tion. With Did­cot (run by RWE NPow­er) due for de-com­mis­sion­ing in a few years, it is time to pur­sue renew­able options local­ly. One of the activists said: “We want not only Did­cot, but also the gov­ern­ment and the G20 to see the fol­ly of their actions in pur­su­ing unsus­tain­able tech­nol­o­gy. We have an oppor­tu­ni­ty to pur­sue safe, cheap alter­na­tives and ensure a clean­er future. The wise choice would be to grasp this oppor­tu­ni­ty”.

In Portsmouth, mem­bers of Portsmouth Cli­mate Action Net­work and the University’s Peo­ple & Plan­et group took up posi­tion out­side the Nat West Bank in Com­mer­cial Road to encour­ag­ing shop­pers to tell Roy­al Bank of Scot­land — NatWest to stop fund­ing cli­mate chaos. Activists said: “It is our mon­ey that RBS-NatWest is using to extract tar sands, burn coal and fuel cli­mate chaos. We believe that the only way to pre­vent dan­ger­ous cli­mate change is by invest­ment in renew­ables, not in dirty coal. We are call­ing on the pub­lic to con­tact RBS-NatWest and the UK gov­ern­ment and tell them what they think about them bankrolling cli­mate chaos.”

In Bournemouth, mem­bers of direct action group Plane Stu­pid turned up at Bournemouth Air­port to give them a Fos­sil Fool Award for ‘Out­stand­ing con­tri­bu­tion to local, nation­al and glob­al pol­lu­tion’. Tara Bosworth said, “Bournemouth Air­port may well be the biggest sin­gle source of green­house gas emis­sions in Dorset and they are expand­ing their oper­a­tions, more than dou­bling the num­ber of flights, now that’s plane stu­pid and why they are get­ting our Fos­sil Fool award.” A mem­ber of the air­port staff accept­ed the award but declined hav­ing his pic­ture tak­en.

Fos­sil fool themed street the­atre took place in both Frome in Som­er­set and Totnes in Devon. In Totnes, the Inter­na­tion­al Cli­mate Crim­i­nal known as ‘Old King Coal’ was put on tri­al. The pris­on­er, who is not in good health, was led from The Plains up to the Civic Square where he was tried before a jury of local cit­i­zens and school­child­ren. Unfor­tu­nate­ly oth­er mem­bers of the Fos­sil Fools Gang, includ­ing Oil and Gas, remain at large and are a con­tin­ued dan­ger to the plan­et.

In South Africa …

FFD in South Africa - SasolIn Johan­nes­burg, Earth­life Africa award­ed Sasol (the South African Coal, Oil and Gas Cor­po­ra­tion) the pres­ti­gious 2009 Fos­sil Fool of the Year Award for pro­duc­ing 72 mil­lion tonnes of CO2 per year (over 15% of South Africa’s total emis­sions) and for try­ing to build a new coal-to-liq­uid pow­er plant. Although Sasol ini­tial­ly resist­ed accept­ing the award (one can only imag­ine why), the efforts of a deter­mined group of pro­test­ers final­ly forced the taint­ed tro­phy to be accept­ed.
For more infor­ma­tion vis­it: here or here.

In the USA …

Boston Mannequins on FFD 09In Boston, Mass­a­chu­setts, the “Man­nequins For Cli­mate Jus­tice” shut down the Ken­more Square branch of Bank of Amer­i­ca. A man­nequin was chained to the doors of the bank short­ly before open­ing this morn­ing. The lone man­nequin pro­test­er, Guy Fox, said, “Even a dum­my like me can see that Bank of America’s mas­sive loans to coal com­pa­nies and sup­port for the epi­dem­ic of fore­clo­sures and evic­tions has to stop now.” Fox fur­ther said, “Bank of Amer­i­ca seems deter­mined to be so evil it’s almost com­i­cal, but peo­ple resist­ing the bank’s prac­tices will have the last laugh. Hap­py April Fools to all the cap­i­tal­ist fos­sil fools!”

In Berke­ley, Cal­i­for­nia, a bike ride/march high­light­ed BP’s $500 mil­lion deal with Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia. Under this deal, the oil giant BP is invest­ing $500 mil­lion for the uni­ver­si­ty to research bio­fu­els, rais­ing issues of green­wash­ing, false solu­tions, and the inter­ac­tion between a pub­lic uni­ver­si­ty and a pri­vate cor­po­ra­tion.

Asheville FFD 09In Asheville, North Car­oli­na, pro­test­ers declared Gov­er­nor Pur­due to be in bed with Duke Ener­gy, and demand­ed the can­cel­la­tion of the Cliff­side coal plant. In response to the North Car­oli­na Divi­sion of Air Qual­i­ty (DAQ) rul­ing that Duke Energy’s Cliff­side coal plant is a “minor source of emis­sions”, pro­test­ers gath­ered at noon out­side Gov­er­nor Purdue’s West­ern North Car­oli­na office in down­town Asheville to demand that she revoke the plant’s per­mit. In a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by Asheville Ris­ing Tide, pro­test­ers set up a bed in front of Gov­er­nor Purdue’s office with peo­ple in busi­ness suits rep­re­sent­ing Duke CEO Jim Rogers, DAQ head Kei­th Over­cash, and Gov­er­nor Pur­due under sheets and cov­ered in mon­ey. A ban­ner read­ing, “Gov­er­nor Pur­due in bed with Duke Ener­gy” pro­vid­ed a back­drop to the under-the-sheets liai­son.

In Den­ver, Col­orado, a Fos­sil Fools Day ral­ly of con­cerned cit­i­zens, health experts, and envi­ron­men­tal and neigh­bor­hood lead­ers demand­ed a tran­si­tion to clean ener­gy. The ral­ly, led by WildEarth Guardians, and joined by Sier­ra Club, Green­peace, Clean Ener­gy Action, Safe­Minds, stu­dents, church mem­bers, and affect­ed near­by com­mu­ni­ties, was held in the shad­ow of the Chero­kee coal burn­ing pow­er plant at Denver’s Heron Pond Nat­ur­al Area, and called upon Gov­er­nor Rit­ter to help Col­orado seize clean ener­gy solu­tions and keep Col­oradoans safe from coal. Car­ry­ing hand­made signs and hold­ing pin­wheels to sym­bol­ize a tran­si­tion to clean ener­gy, dozens of cit­i­zens demon­strat­ed their frus­tra­tions with the sta­tus quo and their hope for pro­tect­ing their future.

In New Orleans, con­ser­va­tion groups, stu­dents, and con­cerned cit­i­zens joined forces at Entergy’s head­quar­ters to protest about the company’s plans to expand their use of coal pow­er in Louisiana. “Louisiana’s coast is ground zero for cli­mate change impacts,” said ral­ly orga­niz­er Jonathan Hen­der­son. “Enter­gy should be a respon­si­ble neigh­bor and work to lim­it coast-destroy­ing pol­lu­tion and pro­tect rate-pay­ers from future car­bon price increas­es”.

In the spir­it of the “Coal Cir­cus,” stu­dents from Bowl­ing Green, Ken­tucky organ­ised a ‘Mon­ster Mash’ and a crit­i­cal mass bike ride.

Stu­dents in Tempe, Ari­zona, also hopped on their bikes and declared them­selves “too cool for fos­sil fools.”

In Cana­da …

Five actions in one day in down­town Toron­to? No foolin!
Today Rain­for­est Action Net­work activists kicked Fos­sil Fools Day off with a bang, drop­ping ban­ners off of a high­way, greet­ing over 4,000 cars (we count­ed) stuck in dead­lock traf­fic over a peri­od of two hours. From bridges, we broad­cast mes­sages about Roy­al Bank of Cana­da (RBC)’s financ­ing of the Cana­di­an Tar Sands from our makeshift Pirate Radio sta­tion. Our ban­ners read “Pirate Radio 89.9 FM Tune in now” and “Roy­al Bank cre­ates cli­mate chaos. Renew­ables not tar sands.” The pour­ing rain didn’t block our view of car after car reach­ing for the radio dial as they drove under us.

We began by dress­ing up and imper­son­at­ed bank employ­ees. About 16 of us rode ele­va­tors for up to two more hours, chat­ting up oth­er RBC per­son­nel — “Hey, on my way to work today I heard about how RBC is financ­ing the destruc­tion of Native ter­ri­to­ries in Alber­ta, caus­ing peo­ple can­cer and pol­lut­ing the water! Tar Sands are the world’s dirt­i­est oil. Did you know that? I had no idea! I’m telling my man­ag­er right away!”

Mean­while, out­side the HQ, sev­er­al more of us leaflet­ed and held ban­ners read­ing “RBC Cre­ates poi­soned water in our com­mu­ni­ty,” “Renew­ables not tar sands” and “RBC: financ­ing can­cer and tox­ic sludge.”

Back inside, a lone Torontan walked inside the main office with a beau­ti­ful bou­quet of bal­loons. I don’t know where he got the idea to release them in the atri­um, or how a ban­ner read­ing “ROYAL BANK CREATES CLIMATE CHAOS” got attached….I also don’t know how they’re gonna get it down. Watch him do it.

Lat­er that evening, dozens of activists recon­vened out­side RBC head­quar­ters along­side “Tar­bie,” an oil-soaked ver­sion of RBC’s prized mas­cot “Arbie” who explained to passers­by that he and RBC are help­ing finance one of the fastest grow­ing sources of water pol­lu­tion and green­house gas emis­sions on the plan­et, and how they con­flict with the finan­cial giant’s PR promis­es to pro­mote clean water.

To read more on RBC and the Cana­di­an Tar Sands, vis­it It’s Get­ting Hot in Here.

www.fossilfoolsday.org

Activists occupy Hazelwood power station in Earth Hour direct action

“Switch off Coal and Switch on Renew­ables” was the very clear mes­sage being sent to State and Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ments this Earth Hour by com­mu­ni­ty cli­mate activists who occu­pied Hazel­wood Pow­er Sta­tion in Vic­to­ri­a’s Latrobe Val­ley on Sat­ur­day March 28.

Switch off Coal at Hazlewood protest

“Switch off Coal and Switch on Renew­ables” was the very clear mes­sage being sent to State and Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ments this Earth Hour by com­mu­ni­ty cli­mate activists who occu­pied Hazel­wood Pow­er Sta­tion in Vic­to­ri­a’s Latrobe Val­ley on Sat­ur­day March 28.

View the video — http://www.engagemedia.org/Members/bento/videos/Hazelwood.m4v/view
Switch Off Hazel­wood Blog — http://switchoffcoal.wordpress.com/

Louise Mor­ris, one of the Hazel­wood pro­test­ers from Friends of the Earth, said every hour should be Earth Hour, accord­ing to an ABC Report. 3 activists locked on to equip­ment ear­ly Sat­ur­day morn­ing with 30 more present protest­ing for the shut­down of one of the most pol­lut­ing coal pow­er sta­tions in the world and call­ing for a rapid tran­si­tion to renew­able ener­gy tech­nolo­gies.

“If we’re seri­ous about cli­mate change, we actu­al­ly need to be switch­ing off coal and switch­ing on renew­ables rather than just switch­ing off our lights for one hour once a year,” she said.

On the Switch Off Hazel­wood Blog Louise Mor­ris said:

“Hazelwood’s car­bon pol­lu­tion emis­sions, at 17 mil­lion tonnes annu­al­ly, are equiv­a­lent to about 5% of Australia’s annu­al green­house gas emis­sions – the same amount as Kevin Rudd’s emis­sion reduc­tion tar­get for 2020. “

“By shut­ting down Hazel­wood this year, we could achieve this 5% tar­get imme­di­ate­ly, and then adopt prop­er emis­sion reduc­tion tar­gets as the cli­mate sci­ence demands. It’s time to get down to the real busi­ness of tran­si­tion­ing Aus­tralia away from pol­lut­ing fos­sil fuels and switch­ing onto renew­able ener­gy,” said Ms Mor­ris.

“Gov­ern­ments are hap­py to pro­vide token sup­port for cli­mate change by switch­ing off their lights for an hour, once a year, but if they are seri­ous on cli­mate change it’s clear Hazel­wood needs to be decom­mis­sioned this year.”

“This Earth Hour we need to acknowl­edge it is time to do so much more than just switch off our lights for an hour. We need to switch off our reliance on dirty coal and switch onto job rich renew­able ener­gy sources.”

ELF Mexico Torch Earth Destroying Machines, Yet Again

“Today [March 23rd] the Guadala­jara, Jalis­co sky was illu­mi­nat­ed by the abo­li­tion­ist fire of the Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra (FLT/ELF) when we decid­ed to break the social order imposed by the tech­no-indus­tri­al civ­i­liza­tion; on the night of March 22 a machine that destroys the earth was reduced to ash­es and a big stone broke the win­dow of a bank.

ELF Mexico Torch Earth Destroying MachinesELF Mexico Torch Earth Destroying Machines“Today [March 23rd] the Guadala­jara, Jalis­co sky was illu­mi­nat­ed by the abo­li­tion­ist fire of the Frente de Lib­eración de la Tier­ra (FLT/ELF) when we decid­ed to break the social order imposed by the tech­no-indus­tri­al civ­i­liza­tion; on the night of March 22 a machine that destroys the earth was reduced to ash­es and a big stone broke the win­dow of a bank.

Maybe we have not col­lapsed the sys­tem of dom­i­na­tion with these actions, but it begins with actions like these.

From prac­tice comes suc­cess.

Guadala­jara Méx­i­co ELF”

anony­mous report trans­lat­ed by http://directaction.info

Fight Speciesism! #8 — Out Now

Spring 2009 issue of the lat­est anti-speciesist, anti-cap­i­tal­ist, abo­li­tion­ist direct action news is out now.

Arti­cles: SHAC 7 sol­i­dar­i­ty, oper­a­tion sink­ing ship, hunt sab­bing, mink released, ‘fash­ion’ shop closed, lib­er­a­tionists arrest­ed, max mara cam­paign, inter­na­tion­al actions, pris­on­er let­ters, police under attack, alf vs wagenin­gen uni, pris­on­er sup­port, mon­keys fight back, netcu, bull­ring riots, aeta 4, earth lib­er­a­tion, mex­i­can actions, whale wars, riot­ing in lon­don and edo smashed.

Fight Speciesism! #8 - Out Now Spring 2009 issue of the lat­est anti-speciesist, anti-cap­i­tal­ist, abo­li­tion­ist direct action news is out now.

Arti­cles: SHAC 7 sol­i­dar­i­ty, oper­a­tion sink­ing ship, hunt sab­bing, mink released, ‘fash­ion’ shop closed, lib­er­a­tionists arrest­ed, max mara cam­paign, inter­na­tion­al actions, pris­on­er let­ters, police under attack, alf vs wagenin­gen uni, pris­on­er sup­port, mon­keys fight back, netcu, bull­ring riots, aeta 4, earth lib­er­a­tion, mex­i­can actions, whale wars, riot­ing in lon­don and edo smashed.

FS! #8 https://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2009/03//424982.pdf

PRINT / SHARE / DISTRIBUTE

Anti­speciesist Action is a col­lec­tive of mil­i­tant anti­speciesists and ani­mal lib­er­a­tionists com­mit­ted to con­fronting ani­mal abuse, suf­fer­ing and exploita­tion of non-human beings through the use of direct action.

Philippines: Thousands protesting open pit gold mine

March 23, 2009

Thou­sands of local vil­lagers in the Mas­bate province of the Philip­pines, are in their sec­ond week of protest­ing the “unwel­come and unsafe” pres­ence of the Filmin­era Min­ing Cor­po­ra­tion (FMC).

MasbateMarch 23, 2009

Thou­sands of local vil­lagers in the Mas­bate province of the Philip­pines, are in their sec­ond week of protest­ing the “unwel­come and unsafe” pres­ence of the Filmin­era Min­ing Cor­po­ra­tion (FMC).

Work­ing in part­ner­ship with Aus­trali­a/­Cana­da-based com­pa­ny, Cen­tral Gold Asia (CGA), Filminera’s open pit gold mine in Aro­roy was sched­uled to be ful­ly oper­a­tional on March 20th, but a mas­sive show of local oppo­si­tion halt­ed the com­pa­ny from mov­ing ahead.

On March 14, as many as 4,000 vil­lagers from Aro­roy bar­ri­cad­ed them­selves in front of the mine site.

A bat­tal­ion of sol­diers was flown in to pro­tect the mine site soon after the protest began, reports the CBCP. A sec­ond report from the CBCP explains that, as of March 18, there were “about 50 armed men belong­ing to Alpha Com­pa­ny 22nd CAFGU Bat­tal­ion who are roam­ing around the min­ing site, while three boats of the 9th Infantry Bat­tal­ion of the Philip­pine Army are anchored at the municipality’s shores and most of its men are con­duct­ing check points and search­es.”

For­tu­nate­ly the mil­i­tary hasn’t tak­en any action yet, but they could make a move at any moment.

Mean­while, the com­pa­ny has declared a “five-day work hol­i­day” at the mine, and giv­en away free ban­quets, bin­go socials “and all sorts of sports” to try and hol­low-out the pro­test­ers’ legit­i­mate demands.

The vil­lagers are ask­ing the gov­ern­ment to revoke Filminera’s min­ing per­mit, and to repeal the Min­ing Act of 1995 “which favors for­eign com­pa­nies” over envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion, human rights, and indige­nous peo­ples rights.

A num­ber of pri­ma­ry con­cerns are fuel­ing the demands, as the dio­cese of Mas­bate Social Action Foun­da­tion Inc. (DIMASAFI) explains in a recent state­ment:

Cen­tral Gold Asia, at the begin­ning of its activ­i­ty has paint­ed a rosy pic­ture before the eight (8) impact­ed com­mu­ni­ties with promis­es of employ­ment and social devel­op­ment. After years of explo­ration, it began to show its ugly face:

  • An open pit min­ing with wide tracks of land being scraped while moun­tains and hills are being flat­tened, leav­ing the com­mu­ni­ties agape at the unex­pect­ed sight;
  • farm­ers being dis­placed with mea­gre mon­e­tary com­pen­sa­tion and relo­cat­ed in near­by cat­tle graz­ing land with no pos­si­bil­i­ty of farm­ing activ­i­ties;
  • the small scale min­ers with thou­sands of depen­dents being dri­ven out of their place of work result­ing in their scam­per­ing every­where to dig for their sur­vival;
  • rivers being closed with embank­ment for the con­struc­tion of the tail­ings pond, and some rivers rerout­ed, with the con­se­quent dry­ing up of rice fields and fish ponds and water source of a near­by com­mu­ni­ty;
  • age-old trees being bull­dozed with plants and crops to the dis­ap­point­ment of farm­ers who have tilled the land for many years;
  • the source of drink­ing water that serves the near­by com­mu­ni­ty being cut off;
  • the port of Bar­rera, a long time source of liveli­hood of the peo­ple resid­ing along the coast­lines, now being made the catch basin of the mine tox­ic wastes in case of over­flow and the pos­si­ble con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of the 21,000 hectares of 68 fish­pond own­ers in 9 barangays.

The sit­u­a­tion for local com­mu­ni­ties will con­tin­ue to dete­ri­o­rate if the mine becomes ful­ly oper­a­tional.

How­ev­er, if sup­port and sol­i­dar­i­ty is an indi­ca­tion, it’s that the mine will nev­er see the full light of day.

As of March 23, the protest is attend­ed by at least 7,000 vil­lagers, fish­er­folk, and oth­er con­cerned cit­i­zens. Sev­er­al NGO’s and Ecu­meni­cal groups, includ­ing the Catholic Church, have also expressed their sup­port for the vil­lagers.

It appears that the local gov­ern­ment sup­ports them aswell. Aroroy’s Sang­gu­ni­ang Pan­lalaw­igan (leg­is­la­ture) “has slammed them for lack­ing even the basic require­ment of an Envi­ron­ment Com­pli­ance Cer­tifi­cate,” notes a press release from Alyansa Tig­il Mina, a coali­tion of NGO’s opposed to large scale min­ing. “It was also recent­ly revealed that FMC lacks a Mayor’s per­mit and a busi­ness per­mit.”

Contacts

  • Rodne R. Galicha (ATM Sites of Strug­gles Offi­cer): 09087421905
  • Mar­cial Velasco/Danilo Cor­puz (ACRA Mem­bers of the Board): 09209190274
  • E‑mail: kalikasan101@gmail.com Web­site: www.alyansatigilmina.net

Newcastle Coal Port closed down by Climate Protestors

21st March 2009

21st March 2009
Cli­mate pro­tes­tors have closed down the Port of New­cas­tle for the day, with a peace­ful block­ade of coal load­ing facil­i­ties. The Port of New­cas­tle is the world’s largest coal port, trans­fer­ring coal mined in the Hunter val­ley for export. Hun­dreds of pro­tes­tors gath­ered at Horse­shoe Beach with many launch­ing kayaks, canoes and small boats to block­ade the har­bour. New­cas­tle Port Cor­po­ra­tion can­celled all ships com­ing into the har­bour for the day due to safe­ty con­cerns.

NSW Greens MP Lee Rhi­an­non who par­tic­i­pat­ed in the block­ade organ­ised by cli­mate action group Ris­ing Tide Aus­tralia, was report­ed in an AAP news report “These peo­ple sent a seri­ous mes­sage that the gov­ern­ment, if they are going to be seri­ous about cli­mate change, they must address the coal indus­try,”

“On aver­age some eight ves­sels enter the port each day,” she said. “So it has been a suc­cess. It is the fourth time this block­ade has been held and each time it attracts plen­ty of sup­port and we will con­tin­ue with future peace­ful actions if we think it’s nec­es­sary.”

Ris­ing Tide spokes­woman Car­ly Phillips told the New­cas­tle Her­ald before the protest that “Aus­tralians are com­ing togeth­er to occu­py the world’s biggest coal port and this coun­try’s sin­gle biggest con­tri­bu­tion to cli­mate change,” she said. “Peo­ple are angry that State and Fed­er­al gov­ern­ments are over­see­ing a mas­sive expan­sion of coal exports at a time when the indus­try needs des­per­ate­ly to be phased out.”

Lee Rhi­an­non esti­mat­ed 500 peo­ple par­tic­i­pat­ed in the peace­ful block­ade.

Back­ground Inter­view: Car­ly Phillips speak­ing with Erin Smith on Com­mu­ni­ty Radio 2SER’s Razors Edge Pro­gram, March 18, 2009 — Block­ade planned at the world’s biggest coal port

Sources:

UK: Traps destroyed, shooting pens trashed, birds set free

“under the pink skies of a set­ting sun and across the rolling hills of the coun­try­side activists found a large shoot­ing estate; two squir­rel traps and a fox trap were destroyed. a lone bird trapped inside a cage was care­ful­ly tak­en from her prison and set free. 4 shoot­ing enclo­sures were destroyed; net­ting cut, wires cut, wood snapped, bat­tery sup­plies cut off, posts torn from the ground. enclo­sures used for shoot­ers to hide their cow­ard­ly faces and shoot ani­mals were destroyed.

UK: Traps destroyed, shooting pens trashed, birds set freeUK: Traps destroyed, shooting pens trashed, birds set free“under the pink skies of a set­ting sun and across the rolling hills of the coun­try­side activists found a large shoot­ing estate; two squir­rel traps and a fox trap were destroyed. a lone bird trapped inside a cage was care­ful­ly tak­en from her prison and set free. 4 shoot­ing enclo­sures were destroyed; net­ting cut, wires cut, wood snapped, bat­tery sup­plies cut off, posts torn from the ground. enclo­sures used for shoot­ers to hide their cow­ard­ly faces and shoot ani­mals were destroyed.

until all are free!”

report­ed anony­mous­ly to http://directaction.info

Arizona, US: Vivisector and mining executive visted at home

“Tuc­son Vivi­sec­tor Katal­in Gothard and Rose­mont min­ing scum­bag Kathy Arnold get a spe­cial home vis­it from Tuc­son H.A.A.N.D! (Hooli­gans Attack At Night Duh!) agents of change. Sol­i­dar­i­ty ded­i­ca­tion with those four recent­ly arrest­ed

“Tuc­son Vivi­sec­tor Katal­in Gothard and Rose­mont min­ing scum­bag Kathy Arnold get a spe­cial home vis­it from Tuc­son H.A.A.N.D! (Hooli­gans Attack At Night Duh!) agents of change. Sol­i­dar­i­ty ded­i­ca­tion with those four recent­ly arrest­ed

Beneath a secu­ri­ty blan­ket of dark­ness dur­ing the ear­ly morn­ing hours of Fri­day, Feb­ru­ary 20, Tuc­son H.A.A.N.D. (Hooli­gans Attack At Night Duh!) vis­it­ed the homes of Uni­ver­si­ty of Ari­zona Vivi­sec­tor Katal­in M. Gothard and Rose­mont Cop­per (RC) Direc­tor of Envi­ron­men­tal & Reg­u­la­to­ry Affairs Kathy Arnold.

We chose Kathy Arnold because of all her work she does with RC as their Direc­tor of Envi­ron­men­tal & Reg­u­la­to­ry Affairs. RC is attempt­ing to mine in the beau­ti­ful San­ta Rita Moun­tains for cop­per. We say no mine thank you!
Min­ing in the San­ta Ritas would threat­en numer­ous species, plants and sen­si­tive wild areas. Min­ing for cop­per to build solar pan­els is a false solu­tion and unac­cept­able. The San­ta Ritas are part of the Sky Island Region a Bio­log­i­cal Hotspot home to 404 bird species, 117 rep­tile species, 26 amphib­ian species, thou­sands of plant species. A num­ber of these species are endem­ic to this region. The San­ta Ritas should nev­er be home to a mine.

Dear Kathy destroy­ing the land of wild ani­mals and plants for more ingre­di­ents of a larg­er Infra­struc­ture night­mare is no way to live. You should know that our envi­ron­ment is no place for you to hold your twist­ed affairs! We slashed your tire so that maybe you will think of the Moun­tain Lions and Black Bears that live where you want to build a mine. We bet the etch­ing cream on the win­dow of your house will leave a last­ing impres­sion of our vis­it. Maybe the cost of replac­ing it will make you think twice about the last­ing irre­place­able costs your com­pa­nies pro­posed mine would inflict on the San­ta Ritas.

Katal­in Gothard is an assis­tant Pro­fes­sor (Vivi­sec­tor) with­in the Depart­ment of Phys­i­ol­o­gy, Col­lege of Med­i­cine Life Sci­ences in North Room 327 of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ari­zona Tuc­son, her Phone # is (520) 626‑1448. Her Email is kgothard@email.arizona.edu.
Her home addy is [removed by Indy­bay]. Her home # is [removed by Indy­bay].
Katal­in makes a liv­ing by per­form­ing research on rhe­sus mon­keys. Her research pro­ce­dures involve screw­ing met­al plates into the monkey’s skulls and affix­ing mag­net­ic search coils to their eyes. After these med­ical pro­ce­dures are per­formed she then trains the mon­keys to tol­er­ate head immo­bi­liza­tion and to fix­ate on objects pre­sent­ed on a com­put­er mon­i­tor.
What the fuck type of dement­ed mind could do such a thing? Appar­ent­ly, Katal­in Gothard and her cohorts.

To the sound of Coy­otes howl­ing in the moun­tains we lift­ed the util­i­ty cov­er to your water in front of your house, turned the water off and the poured in cement to make sure it stayed off for a damn long time! We bet it’s a lit­tle hard­er to wash the blood off your hands and scrub away all those thoughts of tor­tur­ing mon­keys all day long huh Katal­in. If you insist on work­ing, get a real job!

Kathy, stay the fuck away from our moun­tains you sick fuck! Katal­in, Leave the mon­keys alone (your a sick fuck too)!

We ded­i­cate this action to our four CA com­rades in the fight against vivi­sec­tion that were arrest­ed the same day.

Y’all fools can keep try­ing to stop us by throw­ing us in jail. Cause you can’t lock up Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Sol­i­dar­i­ty for the land and Ani­mals, duh!”

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/02/21/18572574.php