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

 

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

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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.