Earth First! Winter Moot (Bristol): 20th-22nd February 2015 /full programme

A week­end gath­er­ing for peo­ple involved or want­i­ng to know more about eco­log­i­cal direct action around the UK includ­ing fight­ing open­cast coal, frack­ing, GM, nuclear pow­er, new road build­ing and quar­ries with dis­cus­sions and cam­paign plan­ning — empha­sis on the tac­tics and strate­gies, com­mu­ni­ty sol­i­dar­i­ty and sus­tain­able activism.

Shar­ing sto­ries, skills, tac­tics, updates & analy­ses of the rad­i­cal eco­log­i­cal move­ment

Cost scale £20 to £30 . This includes full veg­an meals and accom­mo­da­tion. Arrive Fri­day evening (pro­gramme starts at 7pm), leave Sun­day (ends by 4pm). It will be an indoor floor sleep­ing space so bring a warm sleep­ing bag and mat to

Kebele Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre 14 Robert­son Road Eas­t­on Bris­tol BS5 6JY
TrainTo Sta­ple­ton rd , two stops from Bris­tol TM then 7min walk —

Earth First! is a net­work of peo­ple and cam­paigns who fight eco­log­i­cal destruc­tion and the forces dri­ving it. We believe in non-hier­ar­chi­cal organ­is­ing of Direct Action, to con­front, stop and even­tu­al­ly reverse the forces that are respon­si­ble for the destruc­tion of the Earth and its inhab­i­tants. EF! is not a cohe­sive group or cam­paign, but a con­ve­nient ban­ner for peo­ple who share sim­i­lar philoso­phies to work under and doing it our­selves rather than rely­ing on gov­ern­ments or indus­try.

For info or offers southwest.earthfirst@riseup.net www.earth­first.org.uk

Down­load the (ready-to-print) fly­er

 

Pro­gramme sub­ject to change:

Starts 7pm Fri­day with din­ner, fol­lowed by films & an intro to EF!

On Sat­ur­day, break­fast is before the 9:30am start with cam­paigns round-ups and legal & secu­ri­ty work­shops.  After lunch we’ll be look­ing at strate­gic think­ing (see below) and at 5 explor­ing the rela­tion­ship between Reclaim the Pow­er and EF!

On Sun­day we’ll con­tin­ue those explo­rations from 10am.  After lunch, there’ll be a work­shop on sus­tain­able activism, and a chance to get involved in organ­is­ing the EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing.  Please stay for that if you can and get involved. 

 

Work­shops include:

Intel­li­gent Resis­tance: strat­e­gy and its imple­men­ta­tion in the mod­ern world

Sum­ma­ry: Strong strat­e­gy has always been a key ele­ment of suc­cess­ful resis­tance move­ments. Whether it be the anar­chist move­ments of rev­o­lu­tion­ary Spain, or the con­tem­po­rary fight against frack­ing, a sol­id strat­e­gy is proven to be indis­pens­able.‘Intel­li­gent Resis­tance’ is a basic intro­duc­tion to strate­gic thought and action and looks to pro­vide those in atten­dance with a prac­ti­cal set of the­o­ret­i­cal tools to take away and apply to their own move­ments and prac­tice.

Sus­tain­ing Resis­tance: avoid­ing ‘Burn out”

This is a taster work­shop from a much longer ten day work­shop and offers a range of tools, col­lec­tive and per­son­al, which can make our activism more effec­tive and help us avoid burn out stay­ing in for the long haul.

Reclaim the Pow­er meets Earth First!”

How can Earth First! and Reclaim the pow­er coex­ist in the future strug­gles and is there a need for col­lab­o­ra­tion between oth­er camps or a con­sol­i­da­tion of resources?

Legal Defence Mon­i­tor­ing:

A taster ses­sion in how to be an effec­tive LDM on actions and demos.

Cam­paigns go-round:

Dates for your diary and what resis­tance is going on around the world and your back yard..

Live Streamers Make Great Informants

from We Cop Watch

There are many ways to effec­tive­ly doc­u­ment the move­ment while pro­tect­ing the space, its move­ments and people’s pri­va­cy. Live Stream­ing is gen­er­al­ly NOT one of them.

from We Cop Watch

There are many ways to effec­tive­ly doc­u­ment the move­ment while pro­tect­ing the space, its move­ments and people’s pri­va­cy. Live Stream­ing is gen­er­al­ly NOT one of them.

A com­mon issue with Stream­ers is their dis­play of enti­tle­ment, often cit­ing the val­ue of bring­ing the move­ment to the peo­ple. But Stream­ers have a hard time admit­ting that the police find their work more valu­able then demon­stra­tors.

In a world of voyeurism and exhi­bi­tion­ists, Stream­ers often get car­ried away, inter­pret­ing their role as being a nar­ra­tor for the move­ment. They often film peo­ple with­out their con­sent, plac­ing more val­ue in pre­sent­ing to their view­er­ship, then pro­tect­ing the group that is already tak­ing risks by just get­ting out into the street to protest.

 

live-streamers-make-great-informants_1-800x428

One of the biggest prob­lems with stream­ing is that it gives real time infor­ma­tion to the police as far as what peo­ple are present, the group’s inten­tions, as well as its loca­tion and routes. Embed­ded Stream­ers give police a tac­ti­cal advan­tage when try­ing to con­duct mass arrests.

An even more trag­ic con­tract Stream­ers impose on demon­stra­tors is the raw, unedit­ed, archived video that is often made pub­lic and avail­able online for law enforce­ment to use lat­er to help iden­ti­fy and tar­get peo­ple.

Before we move to “Stream­er Solu­tions” lets review some “Stream­er tac­tics” that are favor­able to law enforce­ment, and almost always at the expense of the peo­ple.

Very Poor Stream­er Eti­quette:
Call­ing Peo­ple out by Name on Streams.

Peo­ple don’t go to protests for oth­er peo­ple to call them out on streams that are put up per­ma­nent­ly online for law enforce­ment to review.

Film­ing Peo­ples’ Iden­ti­ties on Streams

Law enforce­ment use streams to tar­get and iden­ti­fy peo­ple for repres­sion and arrest

Nar­rat­ing your Inter­pre­ta­tion of what Kind of Action is Tak­ing Place

Stream­ers often divulge per­son­al opin­ions rather than facts when nar­rat­ing about actions. Are you pre­pared to be a wit­ness for law enforce­ment in the future?

Film­ing Direct Actions

Every­thing you film, can and will be used against pro­test­ers if law enforce­ment has any­thing to do with it.

Nar­rat­ing Logis­tics and Tac­tics

At the height of Occu­py Oak­land, Under­cov­ers were being called into cer­tain FTP protests because of the “no Live Stream­ing” / “no Twit­ter­ing” tac­tic.

live-streamers-make-great-informants_2
FTP march­es are ongo­ing Fuck the Police march­es that take place in Oak­land and across the Bay.

Nar­rat­ing Group Routes

Police have a much eas­i­er time arrest­ing peo­ple in the streets when they have Stream­ers nar­rat­ing the group’s routes. You don’t need Under­cov­ers and heli­copters when you have a front-row seat.

If you want to be help­ful to the move­ment, be hon­est about your inten­tions. Is your view­er­ship more impor­tant than the peo­ple you are stand­ing with? Do you want to be doing some­thing that ben­e­fits the police over the peo­ple? Every action, every mass mobi­liza­tion, has a sto­ry that can be told. But folks need to either start hold­ing “non stream­ing” actions again, or stream­ers should stop oper­at­ing as infor­mants for the police.

If any of these issues are con­cern­ing to you, maybe con­sid­er NOT “Live Stream­ing” your next protest. Pick up a still cam­era, con­duct some audio inter­views, heck shoot some video. There’s no rea­son why you can’t go home after a protest and pro­duce some con­tent that is use­ful and not harm­ful. But in case it’s not in your blood to con­sid­er oth­er peo­ple on that lev­el, here are some good Live Stream tac­tics.

“Good” Livestream Tac­tics

  • Stand hun­dreds of feet away from the group so the low qual­i­ty record­ing doesn’t pick up con­ver­sa­tions or peo­ples’ iden­ti­ty.
  • Don’t film peo­ples’ iden­ti­ty with­out their con­sent.
  • Don’t nar­rate inten­tions, tac­tics, loca­tions, or des­ti­na­tions.
  • Wear a bright shirt that says “Live Stream­er” or “Infor­mant.”

More “Real Good” Livestream Tac­tics

  • Live Stream an event, pan­el, or dis­cus­sion where all par­ties con­sent.
  • Live Stream a demo or action where all par­ties involved con­sent.
  • Live Stream your inter­ac­tions when being stopped, ques­tioned, or harassed by law enforce­ment. (maybe put your chan­nel on pri­vate!)

Be safe out there, and make it safer for the mass­es by con­sid­er­ing them when you point a cam­era at them!

Borras anti-fracking camp eviction & new camp (Wrexham, Wales)

27/11/14 — camp evic­tion:

27/11/14 — camp evic­tion:

Bailiffs have arrived a tBor­ras & Holt Pro­tec­tion Camp which has been under threat of evic­tion for sev­er­al days.

Police have also blocked off road access to the anti-frack­ing camp.

Bor­ras Road near Wrex­ham has been blocked since 9am, with the police report­ed to have arrived on site at 8.30am.

Locals also turned up to sup­port pro­test­ers this morn­ing express­ing fur­ther seri­ous con­cerns over the envi­ron­men­tal impact of uncon­ven­tion­al under­ground gas extrac­tion. About 13 police offi­cers were by the camp, mon­i­tor­ing pro­ceed­ings while Baliffs got to work dis­man­tling the struc­tures.

At one point, a ‘Legal Observ­er’ tried to get over the fence into the camp on a num­ber of occa­sions but was man-han­dled back over the gate by Baliffs. Even­tu­al­ly he was led away by police and arrest­ed for Breach of the Peace.

After about 5 hours, all pro­tec­tors were removed from the camp, and a new one was set up across the road! 

 

Wrexham anti-fracking campaigners given midnight deadline to clear protest camp

21st Nov 2014

21st Nov 2014

Anti- frack­ing cam­paign­ers in Wrex­ham have until mid­night tonight to leave a protest camp.

It comes after a failed court­room bid today to stop bailiffs evict­ing them.

The pro­test­ers have not yet revealed whether they will com­ply with the order to hand back the land to the farm­ers who own it or resist the bailiffs.

Last month, pro­test­ers set up the Bor­ras Com­mu­ni­ty Pro­tec­tion Camp at Com­mon­wood Farm, Wrex­ham to cam­paign against plans by GP Ener­gy to explore the extrac­tion of gas there.

Sev­er­al weeks on and the small scale camp has been turned into a mini-com­mu­ni­ty com­plete with a watch­tow­er, show­er, extend­ed kitchen with food stocks, a car­a­van rest area, tepee play area for chil­dren and toi­lets.

Today’s Man­ches­ter High Court case involved an appli­ca­tion on behalf of father and son landown­ers Ter­ence Andrew Jones and Ter­ence Neal Jones against per­sons unknown to take pos­ses­sion of the land where test drilling for gas is planned­ed.

The landown­ers were rep­re­sent­ed by a Queens’s Coun­sel bar­ris­ter.

Marc Jones, of Frack Free Wrex­ham group, said the judge grant­ed the “per­sons unknown” per­mis­sion to stay at the site until 11.59pm on Fri­day when their camp must be cleared.

If the campers are not gone by the dead­line then bailiffs can move in over the week­end.

Mr Jones said: “The option is to leave the site or stay there.”

Pro­test­ers against under­ground test drilling for gas had said they have been over­whelmed by the sup­port they have received.

One of the pro­test­ers Chris­sy, who did not wish to give her sec­ond name, said the lev­el of sup­port from the local com­mu­ni­ty had been great.

She has said: “We have had so much sup­port it has been over­whelm­ing. The peo­ple around here are so much more clued up about what is going on and want to get involved.

“In oth­er areas where we have been protest­ing and organ­ised a pub­lic meet­ing, usu­al­ly you get 20 peo­ple attend­ing, 30 would be con­sid­ered good.

“But when we had the first meet­ing at the Cun­liffe Arms here, we had 150 peo­ple which was fan­tas­tic.

“Peo­ple have been drop­ping off all kinds of sup­plies for us, from food to wood to build our shel­ters and burn for heat. We asked for one fire extin­guish­er and got 10. It’s amaz­ing how quick this camp has built up.”

The camp was set up after Wrex­ham Council’s deci­sion to refuse pro­pos­als to drill for under­ground gas there, was over­turned.

Under­ground gas drilling has been shroud­ed in con­tro­ver­sy across the world.

ZAD Calls Out for International Day Against Police on November 22nd

ZADremiNovem­ber 22nd: an inter­na­tion­al day against police vio­lence and repres­sion

ZADremiNovem­ber 22nd: an inter­na­tion­al day against police vio­lence and repres­sion

The repres­sion that falls on those who oppose the mafia-like projects of politi­cians is ever more vio­lent.

The Social­ist par­ty com­ing to pow­er hasn’t changed any­thing.

The police, the gen­darmes and the army injure and muti­late as much as ever, maybe even more, surf­ing on the wave of fas­cism that is ris­ing up under the guise of a world eco­nom­ic cri­sis, and thanks to their weapons, becom­ing always more effi­cient with the empha­sis on mil­i­tary tech­nol­o­gy.

Even more wor­ri­some than con­stant­ly increas­ing war bud­gets is the unwill­ing­ness of cops, gen­darmes, sol­diers and their politi­cian boss­es to take respon­si­bil­i­ty for their vio­lence. The omnipres­ence and unre­strained usage of flash­balls, defen­sive ball launch­ers, and explo­sive grenades are some con­crete exam­ples.

The dis­course is also sim­pli­fied, glossed over, and the vio­lence made to seem mun­dane. When we ask the cops in front of us if they are proud to have killed, they smile or threat­en us. One of the police author­i­ties in the Tarn recent­ly affirmed that those who oppose the “forces of order” should expect vio­lence and even­tu­al injury.

And, some days ago, the police killed. Again.

We, who were gath­ered togeth­er in Testet to fight against this death­ly project of the Sivens dam, we lost a friend. In the ear­ly hours of Sun­day, Octo­ber 26th, a few meters from sol­diers of the State, armed and pro­tect­ed by their weapons and shields, Rémi Fraisse was mur­dered by the armed branch of the State.

By the lev­el shot of a mercenary’s grenade, most like­ly aimed at his head, the explo­sive hit between the base of his neck and his shoul­der. This despite that even the inter­nal laws of the armed branch­es of the State for­bid lev­el shots at a cer­tain dis­tance and also for­bid aim­ing at the head, or with some weapons, aim­ing at all.

This was not an acci­dent. It’s even sur­pris­ing that such a dra­ma hasn’t hap­pened ear­li­er. The attack­ing police, gen­darmes, and sol­diers brake their own laws every day (of the evic­tions). We’ve lost track of the knees, hands, stom­achs and heads that have been tar­get­ed. Their extra­or­di­nary and ille­gal vio­lence leaves its trace on all of us, whether phys­i­cal or emo­tion­al. This time it took some­one with it: Rémi Fraisse.

But even if Rémi’s mur­der is head­lin­ing the night­ly news and embar­rass­ing the gov­ern­ment, don’t believe that it’s an excep­tion.

At the end of August, an “ille­gal” migrant died in a car with the BAC (a noto­ri­ous­ly vio­lent under­cov­er police force) while being brought to the air­port. It was almost ten years ago that the teenagers Zyed Ben­na and Bouna Tra­oré died hid­ing in an elec­tric trans­former after being chased there by the police. We’re not even men­tion­ing deaths in war for eco­nom­ic inter­ests, in Mali or else­where…

We’ve stopped count­ing on the charges pressed by those close to the ones mur­dered by an armed branch of the State. None of these tri­als have result­ed in prison sen­tences.

We want rapid and implaca­ble jus­tice for the mur­der­ers in the armed branch­es of the State.

We demand that start­ing now, there is a legal amnesty for all those arrest­ed for their oppo­si­tion to the Sivens dam, who we con­sid­er to be almost polit­i­cal pris­on­ers.

We also demand the total dis­ar­ma­ment of the mul­ti­ple armed branch­es of the State, to end the mur­ders, the “mis­takes” and the vio­lence of police, gen­darmes, and mil­i­tary.

Thus we join the call of the ZAD of Notre Dame des Lan­des to demon­strate every­where against police repres­sion on Sat­ur­day, Novem­ber 22nd, 2014.

We call upon every per­son and every group that feels con­cerned by the dan­ger rep­re­sent­ed by the State’s police forces to make actions and protest from wher­ev­er they are.

Let’s make Novem­ber 22nd a nation­al and inter­na­tion­al day against the vio­lence of armed branch­es of the State, but let’s not for­get that every day, before and after the 22nd, is a good day to make an insur­gency against the exis­tence of an insti­tu­tion which muti­lates and mur­ders for a “law-based” state and their prof­itable, mafia-like, and dev­as­tat­ing projects.

Indignons-nous !

pro­pos­al–

Where did it come from, the grenade that killed Rémi? Strate­gic pro­pos­al for what comes next.
Rémi was killed by a police con­cus­sion grenade, Sun­day Octo­ber 26th. What hap­pened to him could have hap­pened to any one of us, any­where. Some days lat­er, Thurs­day the 30th, in a north­ern neigh­bor­hood in Blois, a young man lost an eye to a state rub­ber bul­let. Sat­ur­day in Nantes, a demon­sta­tor took a rub­ber bul­let to the face and lost his nose. How many times must his­to­ry repeat itself?

We are not mak­ing demands to State pow­er, for the con­vic­tion of the cop who shot him, or the res­ig­na­tion of a high­er police offi­cial, or even the Min­is­ter of the Inte­ri­or. For the death of Rémi to res­onate every­where and pro­voke a real move­ment, we pro­pose to orga­nize our­selves local­ly and nation­al­ly against the infra­struc­tures that main­tain order.

These are the infra­struc­tures which make pos­si­ble the ter­ror­ism of the State, which we are con­front­ed with in the “ghet­tos” as well as in our social move­ments. These are the infra­struc­tures which orga­nize the police occu­pa­tion of our ter­ri­to­ries and our exis­tences. It is also them who are deployed as soon as a move­ment of oppo­si­tion or con­tes­ta­tion adven­tures out­side of tra­di­tion­al paths cor­doned off by pow­er­less­ness.

France is an expert in main­tain­ing order, by neu­tral­iz­ing all efforts of peo­ple to rise up/bring them­selves up. It exports glob­al­ly it’s knowl­edge, weapons, and forms to many for­eign police forces. It has also par­tic­i­pat­ed in crush­ing move­ments across the world, as in the insur­rec­tions of the Arab Spring in 2011. Didn’t Michèle Alliot-Marie brag to have pro­vid­ed French exper­tise in counter-insur­rec­tion to the Ben Ali regime? Par­a­lyz­ing the infra­struc­ture of the police is an act which, out­side of the nation­al con­text, sup­ports all those who orga­nize to strug­gle in oth­er places and have to dodge French bul­lets.

The fac­to­ries that make grenades, uni­forms, and equip­ment for the police, their vehi­cles and their tele­vised pro­pa­gan­da, the logis­ti­cal plat­forms that orga­nize food sup­plies for the troops; for us they are all tar­gets. Out­side of occa­sion­al con­fronta­tions or deploy­ments, the con­tin­ued exis­tence of the armed group known as the nation­al police depends on these resources.
The announce­ment that a cer­tain type of offen­sive grenade has been sus­pend­ed will not bring about a “return to calm”. What’s at stake in this move­ment, born on Octo­ber 25th, is dis­arm­ing the police. Flash­balls, tasers, con­cus­sion grenades, have suf­fi­cient­ly muti­lat­ed, injured, or killed in these past cou­ple of years.

We are no longer in the era of Malik Oussekine or Vit­tal Michalon*. Not a sin­gle union, not a sin­gle left­ist orga­ni­za­tion called out for peo­ple to take the streets after Rémi’s death. They are in fact so afraid of the streets, they are reduced to orga­niz­ing vir­tu­al protests like those pro­posed by the Green Par­ty (#occu­py­sivens).

What can we expect from the “Occu­piers” who “con­demn the vio­lence of both sides” by care­ful­ly omit­ting which camp is equipped for war and which has a few cob­ble­stones? That one side kills peo­ple and the oth­er express­es their rage by break­ing win­dows? At a time when the left is decom­pos­ing, when the far right are on the upswing, why is there not a sin­gle reac­tion from left­ist polit­i­cal par­ties, NGO’s, or unions, after this police mur­der?

This week, 90 protests were orga­nized in around 60 cities. We address our call-out to this autonomous pow­er in the mak­ing. The col­lec­tive emo­tion expressed in rage and con­tem­pla­tion is legit­i­mate, but won’t be enough to change the sit­u­a­tion.

We call for a long term strat­e­gy, con­sist­ing of harass­ing and col­lect­ing infor­ma­tion on all those who sup­port repres­sion, to dis­rupt all the tech­ni­cal ways which per­mit it to be armed, to move, to feed itself, and more. These objec­tives encom­pass a diver­si­ty of tac­tics that cor­re­spond to the resources and lim­i­ta­tions of groups and indi­vid­u­als. Noise demos out­side police sta­tions and bar­racks, ver­bal harass­ment of patrols, suing the police for injuries, sab­o­tage, street demos; it’s the simul­ta­ne­ous usage of all these tac­tics that will help us to estab­lish a favor­able “rap­port de force” against the police, in our neigh­bor­hoods and in our strug­gles.

A call-out is com­ing soon to orga­nize demos in front of police weapons man­u­fac­tur­ers. A list of strate­gic places will also appear soon. This is a strate­gic propo­si­tion that we are address­ing to all those that are assem­bling, agi­tat­ing, and orga­niz­ing so that the back­lash against this lat­est police mur­der spreads and grows.

*Malik Oussekine was killed by police in the stu­dent strikes of 1986, and Vit­tal Michalon in an anti-nuclear demon­stra­tion in 1977

from Anar­chist News

Wrexham Borras drill site occupied — Please support the camp

Camp banner19.10.2014

Camp banner19.10.2014

GP Ener­gy (who were bought out by Dart who in turn have been bought out by IGas) applied for plan­ning per­mis­sion to do an explorato­ry drill for coal bed methane (CBM) at Bor­ras, Wrex­ham. Frack-off describes coal bed methane as the evil twin of shale gas. Wrex­ham coun­cil refused the appli­ca­tion back in March after at lot of work by local peo­ple to edu­cate the plan­ning com­mit­tee on the dan­gers of uncon­ven­tion­al gas extrac­tion. The suc­cess of this was at least in part due to increased aware­ness of the issues as a result of a test drill hap­pen­ing at the same time in near­by Farn­don. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the Wales Plan­ning Inspec­tor over­turned the coun­cil’s deci­sion ear­li­er this month — on some dis­tinct­ly dodgy grounds — and the site is now under immi­nent threat of test drilling, even though it is in an area where the gov­ern­men­t’s own report has indi­cat­ed CBM extrac­tion isn’t fea­si­ble due to the geol­o­gy.

A pub­lic meet­ing has been called for 23 Octo­ber in Bor­ras but, in advance of that, the site has been occu­pied this week­end and a com­mu­ni­ty pro­tec­tion camp set up. Sup­port (includ­ing more campers) and sup­plies need­ed. Please get there if you can. Post­code LL13 9TG. There’s a camp Face­book group or you can con­tact Frack-Free Wrex­ham for more infor­ma­tion.

an idyllic spot - let's keep it that way

Camp flier
Camp fli­er

Flier for meeting and camp info
Fli­er for meet­ing and camp info

Around 25 peo­ple were on site this after­noon. Those who had been camp­ing since Fri­day said they were over­whelmed with the num­ber of peo­ple who’d called round to the camp to wish them well and drop off sup­plies, water, build­ing mate­ri­als, camp­ing gear and all sorts of oth­er use­ful stuff. As well as a group of tents in the mid­dle, a com­post toi­let had already been built, as well as a shel­ter by the fire and a kitchen under con­struc­tion.

Com­mu­ni­ty Pro­tec­tion Camps can only suc­ceed with the sup­port of the local com­mu­ni­ty, so if you live local­ly, or fur­ther afield, and care about pro­tect­ing the coun­try­side, air, water, food… (prop­er­ty own­ers might also care about their prop­er­ty val­ues which are liable to plum­met in areas where drilling goes ahead), please call in to the camp and see what’s need­ed. There’s a warm wel­come for all friend­ly vis­i­tors — just turn up. Police pres­ence so far has been low key.

The site is quite mud­dy, par­tic­u­lar­ly around the gate, so bear that in mind if you’re plan­ning to go into the field. If you’re dri­ving, park­ing is pos­si­ble on the verge along­side the gate and if you’re trav­el­ling by bus, the site is about 1 mile from the Holt Lodge Inn. Take the turn­ing near­ly oppo­site the Holt Lodge into Shep­herds Rd. Fol­low this road right to the end, turn left at the T‑junction and the site is on the left just after the Bor­ras vil­lage sign. The C56 bus from Wrex­ham or Chester, both of which have rail­way sta­tions, stops at the Holt Lodge Inn. A camp phone num­ber will be avail­able soon.

Frack Free Wrex­ham
- e‑mail: frack­freewrex­ham [AT] riseup.net

Round-up of fracking protests, after Reclaim the Power

18.8.14

Cuadrilla office occu­pa­tion
 
On Mon­day 18th at 12:00am a group of eleven activists from the Reclaim the Pow­er camp near Black­pool occu­pied frack­ing com­pa­ny Cuadrilla’s north­ern head­quar­ters.
Sev­er­al mem­bers of the group have since secured them­selves in place in the foy­er of the build­ing using plas­tic “arm tubes”. Two activists each insert an arm into oppo­site ends of the same pipe, “lock­ing on” to each other’s hands in var­i­ous ways. They intend to remain in the office until they are removed by police.
 
Cuadrilla PR com­pa­ny PPS occu­pied by cam­paign­ers in Man­ches­ter — “Tak­ing the PPS!”
 
Anti-frack­ing activists from Reclaim the Pow­er staged a protest out­side the Char­lotte Street, Man­ches­ter, offices of Polit­i­cal Plan­ning Ser­vices (PPS), the con­tro­ver­sial PR firm cur­rent­ly rep­re­sent­ing Cuadrilla. The offices had been closed in appar­ent antic­i­pa­tion of a poten­tial protest.

Six pro­test­ers dressed in tox­ic haz­ard suits talked to to passers-by and office work­ers who share the PPS build­ing about the envi­ron­men­tal dan­gers of frack­ing, fuel pover­ty, and the government’s recent report, show­ing that a reliance on fos­sil fuels would lead to a rise in domes­tic fuel bills over the next four decades, in con­trast to a focus on sus­tain­able ener­gy, which would lead to low­er bills.

 
Sal­ford ban­ner drop
 
Anti-frack­ing cam­paign­ers from Sal­ford have hung a ban­ner from a bridge at Sal­ford Media City as part of a day of action by Reclaim the Pow­er. The ban­ner states that 884,000 gal­lons of radioac­tive frack­ing water has been dumped into the Man­ches­ter Ship Canal.
 
Bank die-in
 
A group of activists have just staged a “die-in” at the Black­pool branch of HSBC, the bank pro­vid­ing its ser­vices to Cuadrilla.  Our activists stag­ing the “die-in” are wear­ing T‑shirts with their very own HSBC acronym — ‘Help­ing Shaft Black­pool’s Com­mu­ni­ty!’
 
Reclaim the Pow­er activists take action against coun­cil­lors and haulage com­pa­ny in order to high­light dis­rup­tion from frack­ing to local com­mu­ni­ties and the envi­ron­ment
 
At 7:50 this morn­ing a group of anti-frack­ing cam­paign­ers from the Reclaim the Pow­er camp in Black­pool vis­it­ed the homes of local coun­cil­lors with vest­ed inter­ests in sup­port­ing frack­ing in Lan­cashire.
 
Frack­ing haulage com­pa­ny block­ad­ed
At 8:00 a sep­a­rate group of activists set up a block­ade of the Total Envi­ron­men­tal Tech­nol­o­gy premis­es out­side of Hull in East York­shire. The activists, includ­ing York­shire locals, glued the doors closed in order to shut down the site. A haulage com­pa­ny used by Cuadrilla and the frack­ing indus­try, Total Envi­ron­men­tal Tech­nol­o­gy lor­ries are cur­rent­ly being used to remove waste and used frack­ing chem­i­cals – “frack flu­ids” – from live sites.
 
 
 
 
 

Rath­lin Ener­gy frack­ing site block­ad­ed at Craw­ber­ry Hill – Secu­ri­ty Guards use extreme and bru­tal force against pro­tes­tors

This morn­ing, a group of cam­paign­ers have occu­pied and shut down a new frack­ing site at Craw­ber­ry Hill, East York­shire.  Three pro­tes­tors are locked and and two are super­glued onto the out­side gate.  Secu­ri­ty guards have used bru­tal and dis­pro­por­tion­ate force, in one case, pulling an old­er woman with so much force that they grabbed her shirt and exposed her body and pour­ing water over pro­tes­tors. The protest fol­lows a num­ber of safe­ty breach­es com­mit­ted by Rath­lin Ener­gy at near­by West New­ton drilling site.   A num­ber of local res­i­dents are on site, show­ing their sup­port for the protest.

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Live stream

 

IGas HQ occu­pied by pro­test­ers

15 Cam­paign­ers from Bal­combe, Bar­ton Moss and across the coun­try have block­ad­ed both entrances to the iGas head­quar­ters, 7 Down Street, West­min­ster, Lon­don, W1J 7AJ. Police have arrived at the site along­side secu­ri­ty, but look unlike­ly to act soon.

IGas were respon­si­ble for explorato­ry drilling at Bar­ton Moss. The drilling saw over 6 months of local protests.

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Protest

 

 

 

 

Swansea Uni­ver­si­ty Bay Cam­pus shut down by res­i­dents and stu­dents cam­paign­ing against Frack­ing research

Today at 6am, as part of the Reclaim the Pow­er camp, con­cerned res­i­dents from Swansea, stu­dents and grad­u­ates, dressed as mad sci­en­tists, shut down con­struc­tion of Swansea University’s Bay Cam­pus.

There are two pro­tes­tors locked on, one up a tri­pod and a num­ber of the group are inside the site and have dropped a ban­ner which says ‘No Frack­ing’. Out­side the site the ban­ner reads ‘Dim Ffra­cio’. The pro­test­ers were angered by tens of mil­lions of pub­lic mon­ey being fun­nelled into research on frack­ing via Swansea University’s new Ener­gy Safe­ty Research Insti­tute.

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Frack­ing pro­test­ers occu­py DEFRA

Cam­paign­ers from the Reclaim the Pow­er camp at Black­pool are this morn­ing occu­py­ing the Depart­ment of Envi­ron­ment, Food and Rur­al Affairs (DEFRA) in Lon­don, fol­low­ing the release of a gov­ern­ment report released last week con­tain­ing 63 redac­tions on the poten­tial impacts of shale gas explo­ration on rur­al com­mu­ni­ties. The Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police are already onsite at DEFRA.

 At 8am three activists super­glued them­selves to the doors of DEFRA’s main entrance and deployed rein­forced arm tubes to pre­vent access. Two activists each insert an arm into oppo­site ends of the same pipe, “lock­ing on” to each other’s hands in var­i­ous ways. Anoth­er activist climbed the build­ing and unfurled a ban­ner read­ing: ‘WHAT’S TO HIDE DEFRA? – DON’T FRACK WITH OUR FUTURE’.  Some of the activists wore black tape across their mouths, high­light­ing the vital infor­ma­tion which blacked out in the report.

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Fam­i­lies’ Radioac­tive response to frack­ing

At 6.45am this morn­ing, a num­ber of fam­i­lies and their chil­dren placed 88 ‘atoms’ of Radi­um around Lytham as a tem­po­rary art instal­la­tion to high­light con­cerns about neg­a­tive impacts of frack­ing on pub­lic health and the envi­ron­ment from radioac­tive dis­charge.

Radi­um is just one of the radioac­tive mate­ri­als released from the earth when it is frac­tured in the frack­ing process. The “atoms” will be placed around Lytham and each one will have a mes­sage attached with the web­site www.frack-off.org.uk guid­ing the pub­lic to all the lat­est research. The atoms are made entire­ly from biodegrad­able mate­ri­als.

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Frack­stons are out in Pre­ston, offer­ing once in a frack-time deals on home sales & insur­ance

Video

 

 

More pho­tos from round the coun­try

Week of Action against the NATO Summit in Newport

The world’s lead­ing war­mon­gers will meet this sum­mer in Wales.  A week of action is planned to oppose and stop them, from August 30th to Sep­tem­ber the 5th.

The world’s lead­ing war­mon­gers will meet this sum­mer in Wales.  A week of action is planned to oppose and stop them, from August 30th to Sep­tem­ber the 5th.

Two organ­i­sa­tions are plan­ning actions against the sum­mit, inclus­ing mass demon­stra­tions and days of action on dif­fer­ent aspects of mil­i­tarism.  This promis­es to be a mas­sive focal point for the move­ment against mil­iarism this sum­mer. Details of can be found here:

https://network23.org/stopnatocymru/

http://www.nonatonewport.org/

Please get involved and spread the word!  Help raise our pro­file by link­ing to stop­NA­TO­Cym­ru on blogs etc., and more impor­tant­ly, come along to the events and show your sup­port.

Reclaim the Power to come to North West England anti-fracking site

Reclaim the Pow­er, the action camp that shut down Cuadrilla’s oper­a­tions in Bal­combe for a week last year, will take place near Black­pool between 14 – 20 August. The pre­cise loca­tion of the camp will be revealed on the start­ing day.

Reclaim the Pow­er, the action camp that shut down Cuadrilla’s oper­a­tions in Bal­combe for a week last year, will take place near Black­pool between 14 – 20 August. The pre­cise loca­tion of the camp will be revealed on the start­ing day. An esti­mat­ed 1000 par­tic­i­pants from across the UK and local res­i­dents will take part in 6 days of direct action, train­ing, and work­shops as they join the dots between social, cli­mate and eco­nom­ic jus­tice.

More info in press releasePro­gramme

Earth First! Summer Gathering 2014 — exact location & other practicalities added

Updates: Exact loca­tion has been releas­es — see here

Trav­el - book your trav­el to Cas­tle Cary or Bru­ton train sta­tion, then it’s a bus jour­ney and 20 minute walk.

Updates: Exact loca­tion has been releas­es — see here

Trav­el - book your trav­el to Cas­tle Cary or Bru­ton train sta­tion, then it’s a bus jour­ney and 20 minute walk.

Bus times are : 8.14am — 9.44am — 11.44am — 12.33pm — 2.14pm — 4.33pm (last bus).  There’s no Sun­day ser­vice so we will timetable a shut­tle bus to return.

Cycling: Bru­ton is bet­ter if you are cycling as it is a mile short­er, and there is also a bus from there too. The last bus from here leaves lat­er.  (Bus times from Bru­ton are: 9:09am — 10:39am — 12:12pm — 1:39pm — 3:54pm — 5:39pm)

We will post the exact address three weeks before the gath­er­ing.

Refresh­ments — ‘This year there is no bar on site. Peo­ple are wel­come to bring their own but we ask that there’s no drink­ing before dinner/7pm. Any­one caus­ing a nui­sance or break­ing our Safer Spaces pol­i­cy will be asked to stop and/or leave. There will be a cafe & snack bar on site.’

Dogs — ‘This year dogs are wel­come, but please get in touch in advance, and keep them on a lead at all times on the site.’  Fur­ther info

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28th-31st August 2014, in the South West.…

A place for peo­ple involved in rad­i­cal green direct action to come togeth­er.…
to talk.…share skills.…learn.…listen.…play.…rant.… find out whats going on.…
scheme.…live outdoors.…hang out.…laugh.…
expe­ri­ence non hier­ar­chi­cal, low impact, fam­i­ly friend­ly liv­ing.

An activist camp that spans 5 days and con­sists of a pro­gramme of work­shops through­out each day facil­i­tat­ed by peo­ple like you and me who think they have a skill or a lev­el of knowl­edge in a sub­ject that is valu­able to share with oth­ers to improve their activism.

Is this camp for you?  Whether you’re just start­ing out in the world of direct action or you’re an old (glued and paint-stained) hand at it, you’re wel­come here.

More info here