Notre-Dame-des-Landes: Three ‘Vinci’ lackeys chased out of the ZAD (and their vehicles sabotaged)

sabotaged biologist’s vehicle

Wednesday morning [April 29th 2015], in Vigneux-de-Bretagne, three biologists from Angers who came to study marbled newt were chased off by a dozen masked individuals.

In recent days, scientists from Gecco (Ecology and Conservation of Vertebrates Group), a Faculty of Sciences laboratory in Angers, have been taking samples on the ZAD. The concessionaire appointed by the state, mandated by Vinci, are studying the functionality of amphibian populations on the zone affected by the airport project. In this case the marbled newt.

Wednesday morning, they were acting in a place called La Fremière, north of Vigneux-de-Bretagne, when they saw a dozen hooded people arrive. They asked them to leave the premises after breaking windows and windscreens and puncturing their car tires.

By the time the gendarmes had arrived at the scene, the persons unknown had fled. There were no arrests. A complaint was filed.

Germany: Police and Security Clear Barricades in Hambach Forest

Police, RWE and securities appeared at the occupations in the Hambach Forest.

28 April 2015: At around 11 o’clock, police, RWE and securities appeared at the occupations in the Hambach Forest. They cut several climbing ropes, imposed dismissals and surrounded the living barricade.
This is not the first time climbing ropes where cut as a sabotage. This is a life threatening and useless action on behalf of the police and RWE.

This happens after the ‚dialog‘ in the state parliament in Düsseldorf with the police, the ministry of internal affairs, the parties, RWE and the regional initiative on the 20th of April this year. After the annual general assembly of RWE last week and the human chain in Garzweiler last weekend.
This is supposed to be the energy transition and the dialog that is held. The interest of economy and those who are payed by them are in the foreground. On the 21th of may, the administrative court in Aachen will decide if the meadow occupation could be immediately evicted. This is a callout to all people who want to resist against the destruction of landscape.
Pics of the action [here]

News

06:28 am
Night is passing and a new day is rising… at the moment one person is in front of the police station, with banners and information. The police told to register a picket(?). If not the banners should be removed. the outcome remains open…

05:50 am
During the night, the persons in front of the police station was switched. It remains calm with no rain. Come around and bring breakfast. Hof coffee and tee are welcome.

02:37 am
A sign of life from the cellars of the courts of this city. The press and a person in front of the police station are determined to stay until our friend is released. In front of the police station, a guitar is playing and from the cellars one can hear the Anti RWE song from Mona&Hummel. You can listen to it here: http://monaundhummel.noblogs.org/musik/

01:28 am
Blankets, Matrasses and rice to eat have been brought. Here you can find a film documenting the assaults of the RWE security against activists. They are apparently talking about the supposed digger occupation of 06.04.2015.

01:20 am
Greetings from the police station in Kalk, we are preparing for a long night.

00:05 am
Several people are at the police station in Cologne/Kalk, to show solidarity with our arrested friend. She is happy about support, as well as blankets, hot tee and cups. The hot chocolate is almost gone! Come around!

23:30 pm
We are online again and have installed a press location and an EA in Cologne. If you want to know more about the course of events around our arrested frend. This number is reachable around the clock: 0049 15753511306

18:oo pm
We just received the sad message that a friend of ours, who has previously been held captured in Hürth, has now been transfered to the prison n Cologne/Kalk. A release is not in sight. As she has been locked on, they charge her pf ‚resistance against executory officers‘We send you power and strenght… . The police operation was commissioned by the regional forest department Rhein Erft. One of the many institutions which are closely related to RWE and who support the depletion of the Hambach Forest, as has been shown in the last years during similar operations.

16:31 pm
The police retreated from the forest. Apparently the operation was enforced by the forest department of NRW.

15:30 pm
Heavy machinery of RWE is still on it’s way through the forest and on the former highway A4, clearing the barricades. The first supporters are arriving in front of the police station in Hürth.

14 pm
More police cars/trucks arrive and drive towards the forest occupations.

13:50 pm
RWE evicted the Hedgehog with the help of police, now they cut a swath of destruction through the forest.

13:30 pm
The police just announced that the person locked in the Hedgehog has been brought tot he police station in Bergheim, accompanied by a medic.

12:50 pm
The person in the Hedgehog is evicted. They will start with the destruction of the habitat.

12:30 pm
The situation around the Hedgehog is tense. There, RWE security and diverse police departments have surrounded the place and plan to destroy the barricades in the forest and evict and destroy the Hedgehog (a big, living barricade). On person locked themselves in the Hedgehog to stop further useless destruction of nature with their own body.
The Hedgehog is located at the former meeting point in the forest, where some RWE securities stole a statue of Christ a few months ago.
Apart from this, the helpers of nature destruction have left the meadow, Oaktown and Beechtown for now. Arrested people are set free, nothing else is known so far.

12 pm
People are arrested in the Hambach Forest

11:40 am
Activists are surrounded and dismissals are imposed

 

Also, support the Hambach Defenders on 16 May:

from Hambach Forest Occupation
Support the environmental movement. Meadow under legal pressure

We at the Hambacher Forest have been resisting environmental destruction by the largest coal mine in Western Europe for the last three years experiencing 3 major evictions and numerous police and security actions. Now we are facing a new peril. Our support camp with its vegan kitchen, theater, infoshop and 2 libraries, numerous living and guest spaces is facing legal proceedings in Aachen on the 21st of May with a demonstration of support on May 16th in Cologne.
The Meadow Support Camp has become a canvas for building with strawbail, green roofs, renewable energy and biodynamic farming. It is also a home to many activists including two families with children. Supporting at the same time two forest occupations, direct action campaigs and public events.
We would like to call for international solidarity and support in the form of legal assistance in Germany as well as internationally. Please contact the court involved:

Demonstration on the 16th of May
Against coal mining in rheine area
Cologne / Ehrenfeld 14 o‘clock

Prozess on the 21st of May
Achen Administrative Court
Adalbertsteinweg 92
im Justizzentrum
52070 Aachen
fax 0241 9425 83204
tel 0241 9425 0

This is the court that will be attempting to use building code regulations to destroy structures in the Meadow Support Camp. It is the same regulations that are regularly used against earthship, straw bail and other informal architecture and spaces in favor of resource extraction rich(wasteful and destructive) habitats and interests.

‘Civil war’ Brewing Over Disputed Greek Goldmine

A police bus blocks a road as gold mine workers protest against the government’s plan to scrap a gold mine project in the Halkidiki peninsula, northern Greece, in Skouries on February 15, 2015

April 12th, 2015

Scrawled on the homes of the village of Megali Panagia in northern Greece are slogans emblematic of the deep rift caused in this society by a controversial Canadian gold mining project.

“Goldmines are a curse for every nation,” reads one — others are more profane.

For the past three years, the investment of Hellenic Gold — a subsidiary of Canadian firm Eldorado Gold — has deeply divided the local communities of the Halkidiki peninsula, even setting family members at each others’ throats.

In Megali Panagia itself, tit-for-tat attacks on shops and cars belonging to rival factions have been going on for years.

Until now, most of the demonstrations were by residents fearing that the project will cause irreversible harm to the forested Halkidiki peninsula, one of Greece’s most popular tourist areas.

But the arrival in January of a new leftist government that opposes the investment has sparked a mobilisation among Hellenic Gold employees afraid of losing their jobs.

“A civil war is unfolding and the government must clear this situation up immediately,” says Yiorgos Kyritsis, a legal representative for the anti-mining faction.

“I know of one pending lawsuit concerning a beating between two brothers,” he told AFP.

Earlier this month, riot police were sent in when the rival groups came close to clashing in an oak forest between the villages of Stratoni, where Hellenic Gold has its base, and Ierissos, which opposes the project.

– ‘There will be blood’ –

Police minister Yiannis Panousis later said some of the protesters were firing bolts from slingshots.

Panousis warned “there will be casualties” unless the situation is resolved.

The new leftist government has clearly declared its opposition to the project, with Energy and Environment Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis recently pledging to “employ all possible legal means” to halt it.

After the latest protest Lafazanis went further, accusing the company of acting “as a state within a state” and mobilising its staff to cause violence.

“Nobody can blackmail the government… Greece is not a banana republic,” Lafazanis’ ministry said in a statement.

In a similar vein, the daily newspaper of the ruling Syriza party, Avgi, branded the protesting miners “mercenaries”.

The mine employees, who plan to protest in Athens on April 16, counter that it is they who have faced intimidation and violence from the so-called environmental faction since the project was first announced in 2011.

In the town of Ierissos, where most residents oppose the project, families of miners live in a “climate of terror”, says their union representative Christos Zafeiroudas.

“What is dangerous is that this hatred has even passed to the children in the local schools. The company may leave one day, but we still live here,” he told AFP.

In 2012, dozens of miners trashed an observation post manned by anti-mine activists in the mountain of Skouries, near a planned expansion site of the mine project.

In turn, in a pre-dawn raid in 2013, hooded militants threw Molotov cocktails at the mine worksite, wounding a guard and damaging equipment.

The police station of Ierissos was later ransacked after two local men were arrested on suspicion of participating in that attack.

The minister in charge at the time said the anti-mine protesters saw themselves as real-life versions of the feisty Gauls that take on the Roman Empire in the Asterix comic books.

“We are facing opposition from a section of the local community that wants to impose its own law and operate like a Gaulish village,” then public order minister Nikos Dendias said.

Hellenic Gold says it plans to invest 1.3 billion euros ($1.38 billion) in the area overall, and extract 9.6 million ounces of gold.

Its operations, it says, have been repeatedly vetted and cleared by the authorities.

Anti-mine protesters claim the project will cause irreversible harm to the environment, draining and contaminating local water reserves and filling the air with hazardous chemicals including lead, cadmium, arsenic and mercury.

It is likely to also affect the area’s agricultural and tourism economy, they say.

The previous conservative government had supported the investment, arguing that it would create hundreds of jobs in the recession-hit country where the unemployment rate now stands at over 25 percent.

Another Canadian company, TVX, began an operation in Halkidiki nearly two decades ago before pulling out in 2003.

Denmark: protest camp against French Shale Gas Company

April 10th, 2015

[ from US EF! Newswire: Editor’s note:  The following piece has been composed from words sent our way as well as from various articles.  As the opposition continues, however, there will be more updates and rebellious cries.  For hindering Total until its contaminated shadow retreats from Denmark and trips on its own grimy machinery! ]

Denmark—On June 25 of last year, after many hours of debate and gathering votes amid the cries of anti-fracking protesters, Denmark’s first drilling license for shale gas was approved in Frederikshavn, a municipality located in northern Denmark.  The warped decision will enable Total—a French oil and gas company and fifth largest international energy company— to begin its degrading exploration and establish a well in nearby Dybvad.

“We had a good and factual debate,” Birgit Stenbak Hansen, Frederikshavn’s mayor, told Jyllands-Posten newspaper. “I am pleased that we can move on in this case after preparing meticulously for the council.”
Although the Danish Government has expressed plans to divert from fossil fuels and has gained an international reputation for “green energy”, its surrendering to Total for the sake of supporting Denmark’s welfare state, as well as its emphasis on ripping through the land in a “responsible manner”, speaks otherwise.

In order for external industries to operate legally within Denmark’s beautiful landscape, they have to be approved by the the Danish Subsoil Act and the Environmental Committee—the entities in place to authorize which companies can spit on them. Through such oversight, Total and North Sea Fund (a state-owned oil and gas co.) were granted two licenses back in 2010, allowing for shale gas potential to be investigated in two areas of Denmark.

Just days ago, we received news that Total is preparing its numb machinery to drill the first test well and locals are retaliating. A protest camp has been established on-site and has been active since the permits began to be exercised.

The atmosphere of the encampment is quite lively with defiant song and the numbers of warriors becoming integrated in the fight is growing.

Throughout the last few days, road blockades have been formed and sustained for 2-3 hours by locals and allies to hinder Total’s truck convoys from entering the site. While the first barricade was dispersed after a brief debate with police, the most recent ended with folks being physically dragged from the scene by cops. As solidarity is fostered between locals and their allies, there will most likely be more blockades and organized revolts to come.

This is the first environmentally-based direct action that is unraveling in Denmark since COP15 , as well as the first against the shale gas industry. Regional mobilization is gaining momentum and voices of those openly opposing Total’ʹs investments are widely circulating.  Organizations including Greenpeace and the Danish Society of Nature Conservation (Danmarks Naturfredningsforening – DN), have also been broadcasting statements of disapproval.


With Alum Shale’s recoverable natural gas deposits being estimated to contain over 6.9 trillion cubic feet, there is quite the bundle of incentive to invite more companies like Total to strut through the landscape. It becomes even more vital, therefore, for organized uprisings, such as the current encampment, to take place.

For Community Autonomy and Earth Liberation!

Giant Coal Excavator Occupied, Hambacher Forest, Germany

World’s-Biggest-Excavator

The world’s largest excavator, also owned by RWE. Not necessarily the one occupied.

The Hambach Forest, in Southwest Germany, is the site of an ongoing forest and meadow occupation against the expansion of the adjacent lignite (brown coal) mine.

March 15th, 2015

In the night from Saturday to Sunday at about 00:30 am, activists of the anti-coal-movement have occupied an excavator inside the opencast-mine Inden. One person is locked on, three others have climbed the digger with harnesses. A banner reading “Lignite kills. Everywhere.” was dropped.

“The deadlock of the excavator, which is one of the centrepieces of RWE, means a massive intervention in the smooth running of the corporation. Thereby we deliberately disturb the continued exploitation of a source of energy which entire ecosystems fall victim to”, says Konny L. (name changed). “Due to the expansion of the pit people are displaced and dispossessed. At the Hambach mine, an old forest is being cut down, which was since the beginning of the Middle Ages in citizens‘ hands – if a forest can ever belong to someone – and was ever since managed relatively sustainable. Now RWE has bought it, with the sole purpose of utterly destroying it for the profits from coal mining.”

from <a href=https://www.flickr.com/photos/hambacherforst/” class=”wp-image-41791″ height=”201″ src=”/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/69JXeQG.png” width=”357″ />

from https://www.flickr.com/photos/hambacherforst/

However, it is not only the regional consequences that prompt the activist into action. Konny L. illustrates: “The global warming caused by lignite combustion leads to droughts, floods, epidemics, etc. These cost hundreds of thousands of lives and force countless people to flee. “
From the activists‘ perspective, active resistance against a profit-oriented business model is the only way to effectively counteract these problems in order to “end this catastrophe that will sooner or later be felt fiercely worldwide. Those who only think of their own interests or believe in governments and business to do the job, will in the long run destroy their own and future generations‘ livelihoods.”

The occupants have announced to block the work of the excavator for as long as the eviction by the police will take. The occupation is still ongoing.

The digger is locked dead – caused by not even by 10 determined people!
A system is not unstoppable, if the will is there and if people start using their own the heads for decisions, instead of just ruminating given rules and opinions. Then another way of life becomes possible, with no one starving and no one afraid of their own species. A way of life, where people treat each other respectfully and without oppression.
The action is in solidarity with the people in and around Fukushima, who, like so many people worldwide, have become victims to the greed of few. The resistance movements against coal and nuclear energy are going hand in hand, because both sources of energy do (sooner as well as later) cause large-scale environmental destruction and thousands of casualties. We will not be intimidated by repression and threats. Unless all living beings get the possibility to live and grow without human oppression, something is going horribly wrong.

Let’s fix it! Come to Blockupy Action Day in Frankfurt (18.3.), the eviction of the occupied-by-refugees Gerhart-Hauptmann-Schule in Berlin (19.3.), the protests against the G7 summit in Elmau, Bavaria (2.-8.6.).
Let’s live resistance and start rebellion together!

Digger Occupation – News Ticker

The bottom is being cleared – the top is still untouched
07:50

The eviction of the partial occupation by three persons in the lower / mid range of the excavator is has proceeded quite far. One person is already in custody. The V-shaped steel tube, in which another person’s both hands are chained to each other, has already been cut open, presumably by grinding. Thus, it is anticipated that the two other persons won‘t remain on the excavator very much longer.
The three other persons, who occupied the tip of the excavator at 70 meters height with climbing equipment, after all didn‘t have any police contact.
One embedded press person is also, after all, in place.
.

Climbing Cops arrived
about 06:30

The climbing unit of the police is on site and will probably sooner or later start preparing eviction.
.

Trickle is redirected
05:37

A small digger has shown up (or rather a regular-sized one, which is of course tiny in relation to the giant excavator). Using this, the trickle, which (as we all know) threatened to tilt the giant digger and kill the climbers, has been begun to divert. So just in case any autonomous sports groups are around in the mine, please do not under any circumstances sabotage the activities of this digger – it guards the lives of our comrades! (… and along the way, the capital of RWE …)
.

Helicopter doesn‘t do anything
04:05

As mentioned. It came, it saw, and it didn‘t do anything.
.

Police submit a request to God to tilt the excavator
03:39

Some of the uniform wearers were, in company of RWE employees, on the excavator in order to speak to a part of the occupants. According to them, the excavator at it‘s current position is being undermined by a trickle and therefore threatens to tip over. Of course RWE happen to have noticed just right now that they have parked their giant digger in quicksand. Now isn‘t that delightful for the activists, to finally have a meaningful and so very funny reason for not leaving a perilous place?
.

Police arrived
02:07

About 15 policeofficinated‘s have arrived under the digger and made contact with the RWE employees.
By the way, the excavator has not moved despite the threats.
.

RWE workforce once again life threatening
01:08

Staff of RWE pronounced to pivot the occupied excavator after the activists were already on top of it. This indeed could be life-threatening for the climbers, some of whom are located on the tower of the digger and some in moving parts. After this fact had already been clearly pointed out to the empolyees, they explicitly threatened to activate the machines if the people would not within five minutes be down. And an end to the open death threats is not in sight.

ZADists Lose Bitter Battle over Controversial Dam

March 7th, 2015

March 7th, 2015

A bitter battle over a dam that has pitted French farmers against environmentalists may have finally come to an close Friday following a ruling by local leaders, though the former are likely to be happiest with the decision.

The departmental council in Tarn, southwest France, voted in favour 46 to 43 of creating a dam and reservoir at around half the size of the originally proposed project.

They also asked the government to forcibly remove “without delay” a group of environmental protesters who have occupied the site of the proposed Sivens dam for the past nine months in an effort to block construction.

A little over an hour later, armed police entered the area to begin clearing the protesters’ camp.

Protests, barricades and tragedy

It may be the final chapter of a saga that has been the source of intense dispute in France for several years – and resulted in the death of at least one protester.

The project, for which planning began in 1989, was conceived to provide better irrigation for local farms by damming the River Tescou to create a reservoir.

After years of deliberation and feasibility studies, the final plans were given official approval in 2004, envisioning the creation of a reservoir holding 1.5 million cubic metres of water.

But the €8.4m-project faced fierce opposition from the start from environmentalists, including France’s green party the EELV, who argued it would mean the destruction of several hectares of wetlands – a haven for wildlife – and benefit only a small number of farms.

In October 2013, members of a radical environmentalist group known as the “Zadistes” began occupying the construction site. Police twice removed the protesters from the site, most recently in May 2014, but both times they returned.

Then, one year later, the dam project made international headlines after a 21-year-old environmental activist, Rémi Fraisse, was killed during a protest after being struck on the head by a flash grenade thrown by police.

His death triggered demonstrations in several cities in France against police brutality, which themselves led to violent clashes with authorities.

The protesters have also provoked the ire of local farmers, who support the dam. Most recently, around 130 farmers set up barricades to stop activists from accessing the site.

Finally, on October 31, 2014, work on the dam was halted and the original plans for the project scrapped entirely by Ecology Minister Ségolène Royal the following January.

Royal gave local authorities two options: build a smaller reservoir of about 750,000 cubic metres further upstream from the original site, or build four separate (and smaller) reservoirs.

It was this first option the general council opted for on Friday, judging the second scenario too expensive.

Council president Thierry Carcenac told AFP that further studies would be carried out to determine exactly where the new reservoir would be built, adding that there was a “leeway of plus or minus 10 percent” on the final size of the dam.

Farmers happy, environmentalists scepical

The government, so long stuck between a rock and a hard place – unable to please both farmers and environmentalists – will be hoping a compromise acceptable to both sides has now been reached.

In a joint statement, Royal and Agriculture Minister Stéphane Le Foll welcomed the council’s decision. The new plan, they said, “while meeting all the criteria of environmental protection, will secure the water supply necessary for agricultural production at a much higher rate.”

However, initial reactions suggest the farmers may be happier than the environmentalists with Friday’s decision.

The FNSEA farmers’ union praised the council’s “courage” and said it now wanted to see “the respect of law, the evacuation of the Zadistes and construction work to start without delay”.

The EELV, in contrast, said the revised project “in the end resolves nothing”, though it welcomed the abandonment of the original plans.

“In the absence of additional studies, there is nothing to suggest that legal doubts over respect for the environment have been alleviated,” the party said in a statement.

Meanwhile, there appeared to be mixed reactions from protesters as the police moved in to disband their camp on Friday.

“Most left the scene quietly,” police spokesperson Stéphane Rappailles told Reuters.

However, others were less willing to give in. Around 25 Zadistes had to be forcibly removed, said Rappailles, while six were arrested.

“[We will] hide in the woods,” one protester, named Christian, told AFP. “We will not leave.”

Earth First! Summer Gathering, August 2015

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspiring and exciting programme and more.

Exciting plans are taking shape.  Get involved by coming along to the EF! Winter Moot in Bristol.

Email: summergathering AT earthfirst.org.uk

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspiring and exciting programme and more.

Exciting plans are taking shape.  Get involved by coming along to the EF! Winter Moot in Bristol.

Email: summergathering AT earthfirst.org.uk

Italy – No TAV: Convictions and Tear Gas on the Motorway

 

 

scontri27.6.2011Maddalena1

(June 27th, 2011: Eviction of the Free Republic of Maddalena)

February 3rd, 2015

from Contra Info

NO TAV (No to the High Speed Train) movement, which is based in the Susa Valley (Italy) in Piedmont and which opposes the creation of the new high speed railway line between Turin and Lyon in France. This line is part of a EU project which plans to connect Lyon to Budapest and then onto Ukraine

The so-called ‘No TAV mega-trial’ has finished at first instance, in which 53 comrades are involved over the eviction resistance of the Free Republic of Maddalena on June 27th, 2011, and for the attack of the construction site of Chiomonte on July 3rd that followed. Charges of causing bodily-harm and aggravated violence, resistance against custodial staff of the public authority, defacement and covering faces (masking up) became sentences which varied between a few months and four and a half years in prison for 47 defendants. Heavy sentences, but less than the requests of the prosecutors Pedrotta and Quaglino—who, on October 7th, 2014, demanded 200 years of prison in total—except for a few comrades, against whom the judge decided to tighten the screw a bit more than what was proposed by the prosecution. On the other hand, six people were acquitted of charges.

When leaving the room, the No TAV supporters present at the trial invaded and blocked the route of Corso Regina Margherita for about twenty minutes in both directions, at the point of the bunker room [the special court of Torino, built into the Vallette jail, near the beginning of the motorway], to protest against the sentences given by the judges.

Another gathering happened the same afternoon at Bussoleno train station at 6pm. This transformed into a march of about 250 people, who at first blocked the main road, then tried to invade the motorway. The police managed to put themselves in the way in time to prevent this first attempt, but then were quickly bypassed by a large group of protesters, who scattered through the meadows, and seized one of the two sides of the motorway. The occupation of the motorway lasted approximately half an hour until the arrival of other police forces that attacked with shots of tear gas and some charges. Five comrades were arrested during these events, two of whom were released shortly after. The motorway was then reopened, well protected by officers, whilst the main road was still blocked. At around 11.30pm, the three No TAV arrested during the police charges on the motorway were then released with a summons to the court.

Translated and (a tiny bit) adapted from Macerie

A large protest has been called on February 21st in Turin to demonstrate that everything continues and that the 145 years of prison-time which were distributed do not diminish the determination of the No TAV struggle

More Info (in Italian)

Roybon, France: Open Barricade Festival

zadroybon-400x519

zadroybon-400x519

The 7th, 8th and 9th February 2015 an OPEN BARRICADE Festival will take place on the zone à défendre (ZAD) of Chambarans, against deforestation and the construction of a Center Parcs. Two days of building original barricades of course.

Meet Saturday 7th February at 10am at Lake Roybon, starting at midday for a picnic at 1pm on the zone, then building barricades and cabins to occupy and defend the zone.

Bring building materials, tools, all your mates and waterproof and warm clothes.

For the programme; workshops, shows, canteens and Saturday night concert. Detailed program to come.

http://zadroybon.noblogs.org/

 

from Squat.net

Thousands Join Second Week of Protest against Privatization of Turkey’s Caretta Beach

by 

by MUĞLA / Hurriyet Daily News

January 5th, 2015

A vigil held against the privatization of the protected beach of İztuzu on the Mediterranean coast will enter its second week today, with activists mobilizing to prevent a company from building recreational facilities on the site, a major nesting ground for Caretta Caretta turtles.

Local activists were prompted to action after officials from DALÇEV, the company that won the tender to operate the beach facilities, entered the area with three construction vehicles around midnight on Dec. 29, 2014, after a court lifted a stay of execution order on the privatization process.

The incident triggered fury among local activists, who spontaneously gathered near the beach and launched their resistance. They celebrated New Year’s Eve in İztuzu and thousands of activists are now attending the vigil.

“We were three in the beginning. Then we became five. Now our number has reached 2,000 people,” said Tuğba Özge Musaoğlu, a local who was among the first to join the impromptu protest.One of the last untouched seashores along Turkey’s coasts, İztuzu is located within an archaeological site and has a special protected status that bans any construction on the site. The sandy beach is also globally known for being one of the main breeding grounds for loggerhead turtles, also known as Caretta Caretta.

But the beach’s environmental importance has not prevented the authorities’ privatization attempt, which was eventually won by DALÇEV last June, a local company that also has British partners.

“We wouldn’t even lay our towels in the areas were the turtles deposit their eggs. And then, one morning, we learned that construction machines had entered the site. This place was ours and we want it to remain like that, because it is the locals who will take care of it the best,” Musaoğlu said.

The particularly photogenic giant turtles are on the red list of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) due to the destruction of their habitat.

Activists have remained at the entrance of the İztuzu beach after Gendarmerie officers refused to allow activists to hold a vigil inside the protected area.

Legal trouble has ensued following the privatization, as the process was initially suspended by a court order on June 23, 2014. But the stay of execution was lifted in late September, with the Muğla Governor’s Office ordering the authorities of Ortaca district, which İztuzu is a part of, to evacuate the facilities at the beach. The privatization was then challenged by the Ortaca Municipality, with the Muğla Administrative Court ruling for a stay of execution for a second time. The same court lifted the order on Dec. 22, giving the go-ahead to the company to take over the facilities. But only three days later, a district court again ruled to suspend the execution of the privatization.

Adding fuel to the legal turmoil, the Environment Ministry on Jan. 5 confirmed that the tender land had now been taken over by the firm “in accordance with the cancellation of the stay of execution order.”

Human rights abuse

Main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) lawmaker Mahmut Tanal, who joined the protest at İztuzu, said any action regarding İztuzu would amount to a human rights violation. “This would seriously hurt Muğla’s tourism, economy and the right for people to live in a healthy environment. What the state has to do is protect and develop the environment,” Tanal said.

For their part, officials from DALÇEV claim they came to the site after the latest ruling lifting the stay of execution had been announced. “We should normally have taken over in June. But the facilities owned by the Ortaca Municipality were not given to us. The municipality opened several lawsuits against us,” said the company’s executive committee head, Ramazan Oruç, emphasizing that if they did not undertake any action it was due to their “respect for justice.”

He also dismissed claims that their arrival to the site near midnight was an attempt to raid the facilities.

“The governor’s office announced the court decision at 5 p.m. So we entered the facilities [at night]. We are not here to occupy. We would have entered during the morning if the decision had been announced during the morning,” Oruç said.

The recent transfer of authorities regarding privatizations to governor’s offices instead of municipalities has hurt locals as it means they have less control over decisions on such sensitive matters.

A recent hospital project for sea turtles near İztuzu also raised controversy with activists objecting to the construction of the facility within the protected area. Their action was successful in obtaining the cancelation of the project but prompted Environment Minister İdris Güllüce to accuse them of fanaticism.

Many international environmental and animal rights groups, including the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), expressed their opposition to the establishment of a hospital in İztuzu.