Icelandic road protest — elves and lava fields, Gálgahraun

Lögreglumenn fjarlægja mótmælendur í Gálgahrauni
21.10.2013
 
A group of pro­test­ers, hop­ing to stop planned road con­struc­tion through a pro­tect­ed lava field, were arrest­ed by police today. A law pro­fes­sor believes that arrest was pre­ma­ture.

As report­ed last month, the con­tro­ver­sy sur­rounds the lava fields of Gál­gahraun, which is locat­ed on the Álf­tanes penin­su­la. Although the fields were offi­cial­ly pro­tect­ed in 2009, con­struc­tion of a new road — Álf­tanesve­g­ar — was green-lit ear­li­er this month, and will in part go through Gál­gahraun.

This has sparked protests that have tak­en the form of direct action, as pro­test­ers put them­selves between the lava fields and con­struc­tion equip­ment, stop­ping devel­op­ment before it could begin.

Today, Vísir reports, police offi­cers moved in on the pro­test­ers, arrest­ing them, car­ry­ing some of them phys­i­cal­ly away from the site of con­struc­tion.

Among those arrest­ed was not­ed jour­nal­ist and envi­ron­men­tal­ist Ómar Rag­nars­son, as can be seen in this video.

Law pro­fes­sor Sig­urður Lín­dal told Vísir that he believes no arrests should have hap­pened before a court of law has decid­ed whether or not build­ing a road through a pro­tect­ed lava field is even legal.

“It is com­plete­ly nat­ur­al that [author­i­ties] wait for a court deci­sion first,” dis­trict court lawyer Katrín Odd­s­dót­tir said. “I admire peo­ple who stand up for this. Peo­ple should be able to sub­mit such mat­ters before a court of law to have con­firmed whether oper­a­tions that threat­en nature are legal.”