Eco village occupation in Windsor this June


On Sat­ur­day 09th June, we will be walk­ing from Syon Lane Com­mu­ni­ty Allot­ment in West Lon­don to Wind­sor.  We will be camp­ing for one night on the route. Our aim is to start a com­mu­ni­ty on a piece of dis­used land on the Crown Estate.
We plan to grow our own food, make shel­ters and live sus­tain­ably: to show an alter­na­tive to our sys­tem of cri­sis. We call for the right for every­one to be able to use the dis­used land to live on, free the yoke of debt and rent.
If you share our vision, and you are will­ing to work to achieve it, we wel­come you to join us.
Meet­up Details
Meet at Syon Lane Com­mu­ni­ty Allot­ment on Sat 09th
June from 11 a.m. We will be depart­ing at 1 p.m sharp.
 
Bring camp­ing equip­ment, warm  cloth­ing, mug, bowl, spoon and a torch. Also please bring seeds and any use­ful equip­ment if you can.
Should you wish to meet us in Wind­sor, or at some oth­er point along the jour­ney, please call the num­bers below on the day.
If  you would like to know more about this  project, please vis­it: www.diggers2012.wordpress.com or email  diggers2012@yahoo.co.uk
Alter­na­tive­ly you can call or text the fol­low­ing num­bers: 07963 475 195 / 07905 283 114 to find  out more.
Syon Lane Com­mu­ni­ty Allot­ment Direc­tions and map.
Street Address: The lane adja­cent to Plat­form 1, Syon Lane Sta­tion, Roth­bury Gar­dens, Isle­worth, Mid­dle­sex, TW7 5JG
Get­ting to the site: We are sit­u­at­ed on the long strip of land adja­cent to Plat­form 1 of Syon Lane Sta­tion, which is on the south­ern rail­way line com­ing from Lon­don Water­loo via Kew Bridge and Houn­slow.
Near­est Tube: Oster­ley – Turn left out of the sta­tion, fol­low the Great West Road until you reach Syon Lane, then turn right. Then turn right down a foot­path before you cross the rail­way bridge, it will lead you through to Roth­bury Gar­dens, and you will see our site entrance oppo­site.
Near­est bus stop:Lon­don Road – Busch Cor­ner (237/267/235) – Come up either Spur Road or Syon Lane until you reach the rail­way bridge. Then go onto Plat­form 1 and fol­low the foot­path between two met­al fences, you will see our entrance on your left.
Map link: http://g.co/maps/ga6mn

http://diggers2012.wordpress.com/
https://www.facebook.com/events/388997621152693/
http://london.indymedia.org/events/12282
https://twitter.com/#!/freetheland

Occupy Oil the Sequel and #RIPShell

“These peo­ple have more rights than us” was the response of the police to an irate dri­ver.  He was attempt­ing to refu­el at the Shell Garage in Old Street, Lon­don.  Pro­test­ers had man­aged to block­ade the sta­tion in the last action of a very suc­cess­ful day against Shell Oil.

Activists from Occu­py Oil in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Anony­mous UK closed the sta­tion for almost an hour. The pro­test­ers were car­ry­ing Anti Shell ban­ners, plac­ards and a cof­fin to rep­re­sent the destruc­tive nature of this 1% com­pa­ny.

On the 22nd of May activists from Occu­py Oil held demon­stra­tions in Lon­don and Las Vegas (See Video of action here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Td8NNinikyc) against Dutch Shell Oil, who were hold­ing their Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing at The Hague and Lon­don via video link.

The morn­ing began with six activists leav­ing St Paul’s Cathe­dral with a cof­fin and ban­ner to make a sym­bol­ic funer­al pro­ces­sion through the streets of the City of Lon­don.

We were greet­ed with a small police pres­ence; this scaled back polic­ing response was pos­si­bly as a result of their behav­ior on the 12th of May, When peace­ful demon­stra­tors from Occu­py May were assault­ed and ket­tled out­side of the Bank of Eng­land.
In a very dig­ni­fied cer­e­mo­ny, the 6 activists and cof­fin took around 40 min­utes to get to the loca­tion of the AGM, which was being held at the Bar­bi­can Cen­tre

Lit­tle did we know at the time that we were being fol­lowed and pho­tographed not by the police but by a pri­vate secu­ri­ty firm. This lat­est intim­i­da­tion fits in well with their behav­iour else­where as point­ed out by Marc Vallee at the recent #netpol2012 con­fer­ence.

@marc_vallee At #netpol2012 today I men­tioned that a pri­vate intel­li­gence com­pa­ny had con­tact­ed me for infor­ma­tion on direct action protest groups.
@marc_vallee The groups are: @climatecamp @RisingTide_UK @NoTarSands &@UKuncut « I will be pro­vid­ing the groups with the rel­e­vant evi­dence. #netpol2012

Despite the intim­i­da­tion the whole day was very suc­cess­ful with garages closed and Shel­l’s Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing dis­rupt­ed with zero arrests,
Our mes­sage is clear, “TO HELL WITH SHELL“
www.occupyoil.co.uk
@OccupyOil

Spectre of Shell Reapers hangs over AGM

22nd May 2012

 

22nd May 2012

 

At today’s Shell AGM link at the Bar­bi­can the suits on the Shell board were giv­en a 3 hour grilling, with ques­tion­ers focus­ing atten­tion on its envi­ron­men­tal and human rights crimes around the world. Spread through­out the audi­to­ri­um hood­ed Lon­don Ris­ing Tide & friends’ grim Shell reapers, stood silent­ly await­ing direc­tion from the board toward their next appoint­ment with Shell induced death and envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion.  They stood motion­less for almost an hour while Messrs Ollila and Voss­er, Chair­man & CEO, attempt­ed to defend Shel­l’s rav­en­ous pur­suit of prof­it above all else at the expense of : the pris­tine Arc­tic- where drilling and prob­a­bly spilling will begin in the sum­mer; the Cana­di­an bore­al for­est-where Tar Sands “extrac­tion” has increased by 100k bar­rels per day;  the once beau­ti­ful fish spawn­ing grounds of the Niger Delta- now clogged with a “Deep­wa­ter Hori­zon’s” worth of oil every year; and lis­tened intent­ly to Voss­er spout­ing that so-called “eth­i­cal com­pa­ny sta­tus” was “very close to my heart and we are dri­ving sus­tain­abil­i­ty”. 

We all know where its being dri­ven.  Remem­ber cli­mate change?

Cli­mate change may not be a fash­ion­able sub­ject these days, but it’s already claim­ing 300,000 lives a year. Glac­i­ers are dis­ap­pear­ing, sea lev­els are ris­ing and extreme weath­er is becom­ing more extreme. As tem­per­a­tures rise, we’ll see more flood­ing, drought, dis­ease, famine and war, cre­at­ing hun­dreds of mil­lions of refugees  and destroy­ing entire ecosys­tems and species.  We can’t  afford to for­get about cli­mate change – or the fact that com­pa­nies like Shell are at the heart of the prob­lem and a shift to Fos­sil Fuel Gas and land grab­bing bio­fu­els isn’t help­ing!

Mean­while out­side, many more Shell Grim Reapers man­aged to gain entry into the lob­by before being eject­ed by what one share­hold­er inside referred to as “over the top secu­ri­ty”. There they met with Occu­py Shell Oil cof­fin bear­ers who had processed the cor­po­rate body of Shell from St.Pauls Cathe­dral to be laid to rest at the feet of a 6 degree Cel­sius glob­al tem­per­a­ture rise this cen­tu­ry. There among the share­hold­ers, City cops and many pri­vate secu­ri­ty and cor­po­rate spies, the Shell Reapers hand­ed out leaflets to inform of impend­ing Shell dev­as­ta­tion.

A del­e­ga­tion from Indige­nous peo­ples attend­ed Shell’s main Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing in The Hague, Nether­lands, they detailed the mas­sive human and eco­log­i­cal rights vio­la­tions and eco­nom­ic dev­as­ta­tion that Shel­l’s oper­a­tions have brought to local com­mu­ni­ties. The tar sands devel­op­ment in  Alber­ta, Cana­da cov­ers an area the size of Eng­land, with tox­ic lakes so huge they are vis­i­ble from space, leak­ing poi­sons into the local water sup­ply.  The effects that tar sands  are hav­ing on local First  Nations com­mu­ni­ties  are dev­as­tat­ing. Not  only are indige­nous  liveli­hoods and  futures being  destroyed, but  com­mu­ni­ties on land  where tar sands extrac­tion has been imposed  are expe­ri­enc­ing dis­turbing­ly  high rates of rare forms of can­cer and auto-immune dis­eases.

Eriel Deranger, com­mu­ni­ty mem­ber and spokesper­son for the Athabas­ca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN), Alber­ta – an Indige­nous com­mu­ni­ty resid­ing down­stream from tar sands oper­a­tions and who are cur­rent­ly suing Shell for vio­lat­ing past agree­ments, stat­ed:

“Tar sands extrac­tion projects on our tra­di­tion­al lands are being approved at a pace that is both irre­spon­si­ble and irrepara­bly destruc­tive. Peo­ple in the com­mu­ni­ty of Fort Chipewyan
are gen­uine­ly afraid. Our food and water sources are con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed, result­ing in a fear of eat­ing tra­di­tion­al foods and erod­ing the con­tin­u­a­tion of our cul­tur­al and sub­sis­tence lifestyles. Yet Shell plans to aggres­sive­ly expand its activ­i­ties, dou­bling pro­duc­tion. The Athabas­ca Chipewyan First Nation is call­ing on Shell to meet its past agree­ments and halt expan­sion until our broad­er con­cerns about the cumu­la­tive impacts of tar sands oper­a­tions are addressed.”

Ron Plain, from Aamji­w­naang First Nation, Ontario – which has been called ‘the most pol­lut­ed place in North Amer­i­ca’ by the Nation­al Geo­graph­ic Soci­ety, and the ‘the most con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed air­shed in Cana­da’ by the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion due to its prox­im­i­ty to ‘Chem­i­cal Val­ley’ where Shell’s and oth­er tar sands oper­a­tors’ refiner­ies are caus­ing seri­ous health and repro­duc­tive impacts – said:

“Aamji­w­naang is the first com­mu­ni­ty in the world to expe­ri­ence birth ratios of 2 girls to 1 boy due to endocrine dis­rup­tion from the pol­lu­tion. This is the first step towards extinc­tion. Shell have admit­ted that their cur­rent facil­i­ty, which is locat­ed at the fence­line of Aamji­w­naang, ‘could not meet today’s envi­ron­men­tal reg­u­la­tions or stan­dards.’ But Shell’s pro­pos­al for a new facil­i­ty with­in Aamji­w­naang ter­ri­to­ry was recent­ly denied by Cana­da for a whole host of envi­ron­men­tal, social and oth­er rea­sons. The cor­po­rate response to that set-back was to build onto the anti­quat­ed facil­i­ty the equip­ment need­ed to process more tar sands bitu­men.”

Robert Thomp­son, Chair­man of REDOIL and an Inu­pi­at from Kak­tovik, a vil­lage on the edge of the Arc­tic Ocean in Alas­ka, where Shell plans to drill off­shore in Arc­tic waters this sum­mer, said:

“Shell plans to drill in the Arc­tic this sum­mer with­out the proven tech­nol­o­gy or infra­struc­ture to deal with inevitable spills. They have not demon­strat­ed the abil­i­ty to clean up spills with­in or from under the ice or dur­ing storms. Our cul­ture depends on a clean ocean, and we have sub­sist­ed in this region for 12,000 years. We oppose Shell’s plans that have the poten­tial to destroy the cul­ture of our peo­ple and will fur­ther push the plan­et into irre­versible cli­mate change.”

Ben Pow­less, a Mohawk from Six Nations in Ontario, rep­re­sent­ing the Indige­nous Envi­ron­men­tal Net­work, said:

“Not only have Shell rev­eled in being a cli­mate crim­i­nal, they have also been exposed as fight­ing the Euro­pean Union’s pro­posed Fuel Qual­i­ty Direc­tive, in col­lu­sion with the Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment. Their con­tin­ued envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion and vio­la­tion of Indige­nous rights across Cana­da, Alas­ka and Nige­ria show that Shell needs to change their oper­a­tions or face increas­ing protest and oppo­si­tion across the world. Our orga­ni­za­tion is sup­port­ing an Indige­nous-led cam­paign against Shell’s extreme ener­gy projects to bring togeth­er front­line impact­ed com­mu­ni­ties.”

To find out more about the Cana­di­an Indige­nous Tar Sands Cam­paign, see:http://ienearth.org/tarsands.html

 So, what else can we do about Shell in Lon­don?

Apart from street cor­ner Petrol Garage block­ades we can wage war on cor­po­rate brand­ing. Join us to help kick Shell-out Spon­sor­ship = buy­ing us off .

 Shel­l’s spon­sor­ship acts as a green­washed blind­fold to pre­vent us see­ing the  rav­ages of fron­tier oil extrac­tion bound­aries being pushed. When we chal­lenge this, we strike a blow at Shell’s brand, chip away at its pow­er and move towards the day when Big Oil – like Big Tobac­co – is no longer seen as social­ly accept­able. As we once kicked the tobac­co com­pa­nies out of our cul­tur­al insti­tu­tions we must now do the same to the oil indus­try.

Lon­don Ris­ing Tide, c/o 62 Fieldgate Street, Lon­don E1 1ES;

tel: 07708 794665

 

Arrests as climate activists and anti-cuts protesters disrupt UK Energy Summit

3/5/12

Today is the Big 6 Ener­gy Bash- an action against the Big 6 ener­gy com­pa­nies and the gov­ern­ment rak­ing in bil­lions of pounds while peo­ple suf­fer from fuel pover­ty, cli­mate change and the cuts.

3/5/12

Today is the Big 6 Ener­gy Bash- an action against the Big 6 ener­gy com­pa­nies and the gov­ern­ment rak­ing in bil­lions of pounds while peo­ple suf­fer from fuel pover­ty, cli­mate change and the cuts.

Today hun­dreds of pro­test­ers from cli­mate and anti-cuts groups across the coun­try have teamed up to block the UK Ener­gy Sum­mit in the City of Lon­don. [1] They descend­ed on the con­fer­ence venue at 11.45 am this morn­ing, and intend say they intend to remain there to dis­rupt the UK Ener­gy Sum­mit. At least 300 pro­test­ers tar­get­ed all of the main entrances to the Sum­mit venue, attempt­ing to push past police to enter the con­fer­ence.

The UK Ener­gy Sum­mit [2] involves CEOs of the Big Six ener­gy com­pa­nies, who have recent­ly come under wide­spread crit­i­cism for draw­ing in record prof­its whilst one quar­ter of UK house­holds have been pushed into fuel pover­ty. [3] The event is tak­ing place place at The Grange Hotel, near St Paul’s Cathe­dral.

The protest con­gre­gat­ed at four loca­tions before descend­ing on the sum­mit: Tate Mod­ern, St Paul’s, City Thames­link and Canon St. En route to the sum­mit venue, pro­test­ers used “any means nec­es­sary” to get their mes­sage out by using stick­ers, chalk and noise to draw atten­tion to the protest. Once they arrived at The Grange Hotel, they attempt­ed to enter the hotel build­ing with ban­ners and giant mod­el dinosaurs as a ref­er­ence to the out­dat­ed “dinosaur tech­nol­o­gy” of fos­sil fuels. Reports have been of police vio­lence when at least two peo­ple were arrest­ed, with one pro­test­er pos­si­bly knocked uncon­scious by police.

The Cli­mate Jus­tice Col­lec­tive (CJC) is a nation­al net­work – which says it tack­les cor­po­rate con­trol, fuel pover­ty and cli­mate change – is behind the protest titled ‘The Big Six Ener­gy Bash’. Stem­ming from the colour­ful and con­fronta­tion­al Cli­mate Camp [4], CJC says it is also close to the Occu­py move­ment.

Oth­er groups sup­port­ing the Big Six Ener­gy Bash are: UK Uncut, Occu­py Lon­don, Dis­abled Peo­ple Against the Cuts, Glob­al Women’s Strike, Kick Nuclear, UK Tar Sands Net­work, Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change, Bio­fu­el­watch, Bris­tol Ener­gy Coop­er­a­tive, Stop Nuclear
Pow­er Net­work, Lon­don Ris­ing Tide and Fuel Pover­ty Action.

Bil­lie Black­wood, CJC said: “The UK Ener­gy Sum­mit is a clas­sic 1% stitch up. It is cor­po­rate elites, includ­ing the gov­ern­ment, con­spir­ing to keep the sta­tus quo of high ener­gy prices, soar­ing prof­its, grow­ing cli­mate insta­bil­i­ty and dis­as­ter cap­i­tal­ism. This con­fer­ence is the wrong peo­ple ask­ing the wrong ques­tions and propos­ing the wrong solu­tions.”

Katharine Jones, an anti-cuts pro­test­er from Man­ches­ter said: “The UK Ener­gy sum­mit gives the Big Six an oppor­tu­ni­ty to push the gov­ern­ment fur­ther into their pock­ets. The gov­ern­ment are putting more peo­ple into fuel pover­ty through bru­tal wel­fare cuts; it’s great that groups like UK Uncut and Dis­abled Peo­ple Against the Cuts are team­ing up with cli­mate activists to oppose the cor­po­rate con­trol that is dri­ving pover­ty, aus­ter­i­ty and cli­mate cri­sis.”

The protest has been organ­ised around themed ‘blocs’. Each bloc reflects a dif­fer­ent aspect of cli­mate injus­tice and has played a dif­fer­ent strate­gic role in dis­rupt­ing the conference.[5]

• The Robin Hood Bloc focus­es on the ener­gy monop­oly of the Big Six ener­gy providers which con­trol 99% of domes­tic ener­gy in the UK. Using Robin Hood imagery it calls for ‘Tak­ing the pow­er back’ and putting ‘Peo­ple before prof­it’.

• The Dirty Ener­gy Bloc promis­es ‘Dirty ener­gy, dirty bass-lines and dirty busi­ness.’ It rep­re­sents destruc­tive fos­sil fuel ener­gy sources such as frack­ing, tar sands, deep sea oil drilling and open cast coal, that are cost­ing the earth and dri­ving up the cost of our
fuel bills.

• The Fos­sil Free Futures Bloc is fam­i­ly-friend­ly and aims to dri­ve the Big Six Ener­gy Dinosaurs into extinc­tion. This bloc demon­strates the colour and cre­ativ­i­ty of the demo­c­ra­t­ic, fair and clean alter­na­tives to the pre­his­toric ener­gy com­pa­nies’ fuels and think­ing.

• The Hous­ing Bloc will speak out for warm homes and com­mu­ni­ty con­trol. The bloc expos­es the role of Big Six prof­i­teer­ing along­side gov­ern­ment degra­da­tion and pri­vati­sa­tion of hous­ing as the main fac­tors dri­ving fuel pover­ty.

[1] Details of the protest can be found at
 http://climatejusticecollective.org/bigsixenergybash, on Twit­ter
(@CJ_Collective) and on Face­book
( https://www.facebook.com/events/116076668516532/)

[2] Details of the UK Ener­gy Sum­mit can be found at
 http://www.economistconferences.co.uk/event/uk-energy-summit-2012/5964

[3] See  http://www.independent.co.uk/money/spend-save/four-million-homes-in-debt-to-energy-giants-7619404.html;
 http://www.mirror.co.uk/money/city-news/a‑quarter-of-brits-are-living-in-fuel-poverty-139644;
 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/big-firms-15bn-bonanza-as-cold-and-fuel-poverty-bite-6720013.html.

[4] See www.climatecamp.org.uk

[5] Pro­tes­tors have signed up to join a bloc online at climatejusticecollective.org/bigsixbash and receive SMS text alerts about the meet­ing place and action plan for their bloc.

climatejusticecollective@gmail.com
http://climatejusticecollective.org/

Take the Flour Back! anti-GM wheat action 27 May — final details

‘Take the Flour Back’ will be a nice day out in the coun­try, with pic­nics, music from Seize the Day and a decon­t­a­m­i­na­tion. It’s for any­one who feels able to pub­li­cal­ly help remove this threat and those who want to show their sup­port for them.

What to bring, action you should take before the 27th May, trans­port info and more info on the web­site — http://taketheflourback.org/

How to get there, OS map and pho­to of the new fence

OCCUPY OIL — THE SEQUEL

Tak­ing place WORLDWIDE on Tues­day 22nd May 2012

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

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

Tak­ing place WORLDWIDE on Tues­day 22nd May 2012

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

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

BLOODY MONEY: Tar Sands, Ross­port, Niger Delta

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

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

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

NIGER DELTA

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

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

ROSSPORT, CO MAYO, IRELAND

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

TAR SANDS, CANADA

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

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

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

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

Save Leyton Marsh Camp & Boules stop work

29th March 2012

29th March 2012

The tent occu­pa­tion which sprang up on Sat­ur­day in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the Cam­paign to Save Ley­ton Marsh has entered its 5th day.  The camp con­tin­ues to grow with sup­port­ers arriv­ing every day.  Local res­i­dents and cam­paign­ers vis­it all day long pro­vid­ing sup­port, bring­ing sup­plies and chat­ting with the campers.  Basic facil­i­ties have been set­up includ­ing a field kitchen and wash­ing up area.  There is also a com­mu­ni­ca­tions tent.  

No con­struc­tion work has tak­en place on the Ley­ton Marsh site since Fri­day when local cam­paign­ers from the Save Ley­ton Marsh group stood in front of lor­ries pre­vent­ing them from enter­ing the site.  On Mon­day, the occu­pa­tion campers joined with local res­i­dents stand­ing in front and lying down under lor­ries.  

Today a Police Com­mu­ni­ty Sup­port Offi­cer arrived at the camp in the ear­ly morn­ing to inform the group that the Olympic Deliv­ery Author­i­ty will be com­ing to the camp on Fri­day morn­ing.  The PCSO said that the pur­pose of the vis­it was to nego­ti­ate with the Save Ley­ton Marsh Cam­paign and Campers about the sit­u­a­tion (an update will be pub­lished when more info is known).  

The occu­piers wel­come any and all sup­port. There is plen­ty of space for more peo­ple to get involved. It is locat­ed Behind Lee Val­ley Ice Cente on Lea Bridge Rd, Ley­ton Map: http://tinyurl.com/6ntfscy

For more info check out: 

http://saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com/

http://www.gamesmonitor.org.uk/

 

—–

23rd March 2012

This Morning’s game of boules was a real joy. We man­aged to talk to a lot of peo­ple, includ­ing the police, the site man­ag­er, who said noth­ing, pass­er-bys . We pre­vent­ed at least 4 trucks (8am) to enter the site. It was all very peace­ful and joy­ful. Every­one want­ed to play boules, even the police and the gate keep­ers on site were tempt­ed.

Update: no lor­ries entered the site all day. This was real­ly great team work in action…So they give the LVPRA plan­ning per­mis­sion for ‘assem­bly and leisure’ on Ley­ton Marsh and we take them at their word. Walk­ers of the world unite, you have noth­ing to lose but some boules!

Pho­tos at http://saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com/2012/03/23/boules/

Shell targeted in anti-greenwash stunt at international conference

27.03.2012

27.03.2012

Yes­ter­day’s pres­ti­gious Plan­et Under Pres­sure 2012 con­fer­ence in the Inter­na­tion­al Con­fer­ence Cen­tre (ICC) at the ExCeL Cen­tre, Lon­don was inter­rupt­ed by two Lon­don Ris­ing Tide pro­test­ers.

Dur­ing a pan­el dis­cus­sion enti­tled “The plan­et in 2050”, at the exact moment that Shel­l’s senior ener­gy advi­sor Mar­tin Haigh was about to speak the two pro­test­ers walked calm­ly across the stage, ban­ner in hand, and were greet­ed with a loud, spon­ta­neous round of applause from hun­dreds of peo­ple in the audi­ence. As the pro­test­ers left the audi­to­ri­um they were reward­ed with hand shakes, thumbs up and anoth­er round of applause. Haigh was flus­tered and respond­ed with words along the lines of “No-one will want to lis­ten to me after that!”

Lon­don Ris­ing Tide are ask­ing why Shell were ever allowed to take part in this con­fer­ence in the first place, giv­en their record of envi­ron­men­tal and human rights atroc­i­ties in Nige­ria, Ire­land, and Cana­da to name but a few places, and their invest­ments in car­bon-inten­sive fos­sil fuels such as oil from tar sands and shale gas, while aban­don­ing fund­ing for renew­able ener­gies.

More infor­ma­tion:

Ris­ing Tide:  http://risingtide.org.uk/
Shell To Sea:  http://shelltosea.com/

bikes alive bike blockade protest at king’s cross

12.3.12

12.3.12

ear­li­er this evening, a cou­ple of dozen cyclists brought a lit­tle chaos to the junc­tions out­side king’s cross sta­tion in protest at new rev­e­la­tions over TfL’s com­plic­i­ty in road deaths there. despite dozens of deaths and injuries to cyclists at the dan­ger­ous king’s cross road inter­sec­tions, it has recent­ly come to light that between 2005 and 2009, TfL actu­al­ly instruct­ed its plan­ners to ignore the needs of cyclists.

also, where the plan­ners, buchanan and part­ners, made bicy­cle-friend­ly rec­om­men­da­tions, their draft report was watered down by TfL before final pub­li­ca­tion.

tonight’s protest, attract­ing just a cou­ple of dozen cyclists and pedes­tri­ans, held up traf­fic by pro­cess­ing slow­ly in a route up and down the euston road out­side the sta­tion, while more than 200 explana­to­ry leaflets were dis­trib­uted to passers-by. it was the lat­est in a series of fort­night­ly actions, and the next one, to which all pedes­tri­ans and human-pow­ered vehi­cles are invit­ed, will begin prompt­ly at 6.30pm on mon­day the 26th march.

lat­er that week, fri­day 30th will cel­e­brate the 15th anniver­sary of crit­i­cal mass in lon­don.

more info at http://bikesalive.wordpress.com
also see http://www.criticalmasslondon.org.uk/main.html

Latest Updates from Protect the Wilderness & Reclaim the Fields

The Pro­tect the Wilder­ness cam­paign attend­ed a court hear­ing on Mon­day 5th brought by Glouces­ter­shire Coun­ty Coun­cil. This morn­ing, the Judge gave pos­ses­sion to the coun­cil. An evic­tion is very like­ly in the imme­di­ate days.

The Pro­tect the Wilder­ness cam­paign attend­ed a court hear­ing on Mon­day 5th brought by Glouces­ter­shire Coun­ty Coun­cil. This morn­ing, the Judge gave pos­ses­sion to the coun­cil. An evic­tion is very like­ly in the imme­di­ate days.

How­ev­er Pro­tect the Wilder­ness would like to con­firm that the Reclaim the Fields Gath­er­ing hap­pen­ing this week will still be going ahead with a whole three days of work­shops, activ­i­ties and actions as pre­vi­ous­ly adver­tised.

For any­one attend­ing:

    *You will be fed, warm, com­fort­able & inspired!
    *You will be able to camp safe­ly in the for­est, please bring a tent & bed­ding if pos­si­ble oth­er­wise there is a large com­mu­nal yurt pro­vid­ed with bed­ding & blan­kets avail­able
    *There will be enough food for every­one
    *There will be a fire-pit & warm spaces to be

And final­ly, you will be free to choose your involve­ment with the evic­tion & any sol­i­dar­i­ty need­ed with the Wilder­ness Cen­tre. There are safe spaces as well as oppor­tu­ni­ties to become involved in defend­ing the space — it is com­plete­ly your choice! This is a great chance to learn about your rights and see the results of our work here at the wilder­ness cen­tre.

So please join Pro­tect the Wilder­ness & Reclaim the Fields in cel­e­brat­ing our shared strug­gles for access­ing land to grow food for our com­mu­ni­ties & to live land-based lives.

As a reminder, here is a taster of what will be hap­pen­ing the next few days:

     *Intro­duc­tions to land rights, Reclaim the Fields UK & Euro­pean con­stel­la­tions, Seed Sov­er­eign­ty, WWOLF (woof­ing with teeth) and Reclaim the Field Trips
    *Work­shops includ­ing com­post­ing gen­der, occu­py­ing land, pro­tect­ing bee pop­u­la­tions, food sov­er­eign­ty and more.
    *Skill­shares, guer­ril­la gar­den­ing, music & feast­ing!

For more infor­ma­tion about the gath­er­ing please see:
http://www.reclaimthefields.org.uk/spring-gathering-2012/

More info about the Wilder­ness Cen­tre: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Protect-the-Wilderness-Centre-Forest-of-Dean/321890141176064

Who to con­tact if need­ed: 07811 726 372

Direc­tions: Bus/train to Glouces­ter then get the 24/24a to Mitcheldean (takes about 30 mins) get off when you see the church (near the hair­dressers) and ask some­one for direc­tions or notice oth­er RTFers. Oth­er­wise call the num­ber above & you will be col­lect­ed.

Resis­tance is Fer­tile!