Call from the Wilderness Forest of Dean Wilderness Centre

State­ment from the Wilder­ness Cen­tre : On the day of Glouces­ter­shire Coun­ty Coun­cil meet­ing that will deter­mine the coun­cils next course of action.

State­ment from the Wilder­ness Cen­tre : On the day of Glouces­ter­shire Coun­ty Coun­cil meet­ing that will deter­mine the coun­cils next course of action.

Two activists jedi’d their way into the meet­ing, and hand­ing out our “state­ment of intent” (link below) to the offi­cious types sat around with mem­bers of the police, var­i­ous coun­cil offi­cers and advi­sors in Shire Hall, Glouces­ter, before being ask­ing to leave ‑all was very polite, civ­il and in good humour.

We await their deci­sion, which will dic­tate our next move.

Call from the Wilder­ness

Here in the wilder­ness we are try­ing to find our way home. How did we come to dwell here in the wilder­ness? For over 40 years the wilder­ness has been a pio­neer­ing envi­ron­men­tal edu­ca­tion cen­tre. Then last year Glouces­ter­shire coun­ty coun­cil decid­ed that it was no longer in the pub­lic inter­est to sus­tain the cen­tre. Bet­ter val­ue for the tax­pay­er to sell it to the high­est bid­der? We dis­agree. We believe that edu­ca­tion is the great­est source of wealth in our com­mu­ni­ties. Sure­ly the exploita­tion of our envi­ron­ment can only be dri­ven by igno­rance. Edu­ca­tion is our great­est tool in the strug­gle against exploita­tion.
The coun­cil seem to think oth­er­wise. The coun­ty coun­cil, or in their words “the pow­ers that be” think we are home­less. Trav­ellers, squat­ters they tell us to… move on. They want us out of here. We don’t belong here. They tell us we have no right to be here. They’ve set their wolves to prowl around the grounds lock­ing things down. They want our names and pre­vi­ous address­es. They don’t trust us. They are con­cerned about health and safe­ty. The pub­lic are a lia­bil­i­ty. We tried to talk about respon­si­bil­i­ty. We tried to assure them that we ful­ly com­pre­hend the impli­ca­tions of a com­post toi­let. But they are doubt­ful.

Exact­ly who is bewil­dered?

We came here on the first full moon of the year with the inten­tion of cre­at­ing an envi­ron­men­tal edu­ca­tion cen­tre to dis­close a process of learn­ing the skills and tech­niques required to move towards a home found­ed upon the prin­ci­ples of eco­nom­ic self-suf­fi­cien­cy and eco­log­i­cal sus­tain­abil­i­ty.
To be a force of res­o­lu­tion we need peo­ple to join us. Deci­sive peo­ple who under­stand the con­se­quences of there actions. Com­mit­ted, hard work­ing peo­ple. We need peo­ple with a respect for food. We need gar­den­ers and grow­ers who can cul­ti­vate the ideas that have been sown in our soil by the dif­fer­ing schools of per­ma­cul­ture and bio-dynam­ics. Who know how let these ideas grow organ­i­cal­ly. We need peo­ple with the deter­mi­na­tion to dig. Reflec­tive peo­ple who look for their reflec­tion in oth­ers. Peo­ple who can prac­tice the hos­pi­tal­i­ty of the guest. Peo­ple who do not wait for oth­ers to make nec­es­sary changes.
Here in the wilder­ness we make our­selves at home. You are wel­come.

State­ment of Intent : protectthewilderness.org.uk/protect.html
Web­site (still in progress) protectthewilderness.org.uk

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Pro­tect The Wilder­ness

Winter Warm-up round-up — Fuel Poverty Action protests

Fri­day update: an excit­ing start to the Fuel Pover­ty Action Week­end of Win­ter Warm-ups…Hundreds of peo­ple across the coun­try came out of their cold homes to get warm at the build­ings of insti­tu­tions that have a hand in cre­at­ing fuel pover­ty, to chal­lenge the Big Six’s monop­oly and the government’s com­plic­i­ty.  Lon­don — Leeds — Swin­don — Man­ches­ter:

Fri­day update: an excit­ing start to the Fuel Pover­ty Action Week­end of Win­ter Warm-ups…Hundreds of peo­ple across the coun­try came out of their cold homes to get warm at the build­ings of insti­tu­tions that have a hand in cre­at­ing fuel pover­ty, to chal­lenge the Big Six’s monop­oly and the government’s com­plic­i­ty.  Lon­don — Leeds — Swin­don — Man­ches­ter: read more

Sat­ur­day update: Cam­bridge

Mon­day update: six activists have bar­ri­cad­ed them­selves into meet­ing rooms on two floors of British Gas offices in Staines, Mid­dle­sex, as part of the ‘Win­ter Warm-Up’ week­end called by the cam­paign group Fuel Pover­ty Action. British Gas is being tar­get­ed as one of the Big Six ener­gy com­pa­nies mak­ing prof­its out of ris­ing ener­gy bills.  Read more

Updatefaced with a threat­en­ing police pres­ence, the occu­piers of the British Gas offices have now decid­ed to leave on their own terms.

Malaysia: Temiar Blockade and Indigenous Rights

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

29.1.12

Eight Temi­ar indige­nous peo­ple (also known as Orang Asli) in Malaysia were arrest­ed by the police for attempt­ing to set up a block­ade and pre­vent log­gers from enter­ing their vil­lage in Gua Musang, Kelan­tan.

The vil­lagers are against the agri­cul­tur­al project of the local gov­ern­ment which would require the cut­ting down of for­est trees in their ances­tral land. The block­ade, their sec­ond attempt at doing so, was made after attempts to nego­ti­ate with the state gov­ern­ment have failed.

The police also refused to nego­ti­ate who removed the bar­ri­cades and arrest­ed the com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dents and their lawyer, Siti Kasim. They were released lat­er that night.

More info and here

police solidarity blockade of shell petrol station

27.1.12

27.1.12

in many years of inde­pen­dent report­ing, i’ve often seen sit­u­a­tions where police have caused larg­er dis­rup­tion than a hand­full of pro­tes­tors, clos­ing roads, some­times clos­ing down busi­ness­es, and some­times mas­sive­ly ampli­fy­ing the pow­er of the pro­tes­tors alone (not that that’s their inten­tion). how­ev­er, this evening was, i think, the first time that they so com­plete­ly did the job of the activists for them, that the cam­paign­ers could sit in a nice warm pub and toast the met, instead of stand­ing around in the cold them­selves.

the protest this evening was called by the cli­mate-con­scious shell-bash­ing ‘lon­don ris­ing tide’ group, in co-ordi­na­tion with the leg­endary activist sam­ba band ‘rhythms of resis­tance’.

each jan­u­ary, the band com­mem­o­rate the life of activist, val jones, a woman who helped put the ross­port coun­ty mayo strug­gles on the polit­i­cal map, and who, as a design­er, pro­duced many bril­liant huge ban­ners for the move­ment. she was sad­ly struck down with motor neu­rone dis­ease and passed away two years ago. in mem­o­ry of val, the com­mem­o­ra­tion takes the form of a shell garage block­ade each year.

so, tonight, the call-out was for a block­ade at the shell sta­tion in old street, the scene of pre­vi­ous block­ades. around twen­ty peo­ple turned up to the meet­ing point, armed with drums, ban­ners, and leaflets. well, actu­al­ly some­one for­got the leaflets, but as it turned out they weren’t need­ed.

the usu­al time-line for these events is that the activists turn up at the garage, the band plays on the fore­court, the large ban­ners are used to close the entrance to the site, and leaflets are hand­ed out to staff, to motorists, and to passers-by. the staff then close the shop and call the police, who turn up after about half an hour. the police warn peo­ple that they might be com­mit­ting aggra­vat­ed tres­pass, and then they force­ful­ly facil­i­tate the con­tin­u­a­tion of the action on the pave­ment, so that the garage opens for busi­ness once more.

how­ev­er, tonight, some­thing was very dif­fer­ent. even before the demo began, the garage went dark, bol­lards block­ing its entrance, and small groups of police lurked on street cor­ners near­by.

so the activists were con­fused. what to do? was there any point attempt­ing a block­ade of a garage that was already closed for busi­ness? pre­vi­ous esti­mates from block­ades show that garages lose sev­er­al thou­sands of pounds of busi­ness when they close, and this is of course part of the point of the protests. also, some­one had for­got­ten the leaflets, so although there was a sug­ges­tion of mov­ing to a dif­fer­ent tar­get, there was the con­cern the protest would­n’t be so effec­tive with­out this ele­ment.

every now and then, some­one went out to check the site, and the garage remained total­ly closed for busi­ness, all lights off, staff locked in their shop, and non­cha­lant street-cor­ner polic­ing. so, anoth­er drink, a bit of food, plans afoot for future actions, and as the cold wind built up, and the wet driz­zle came down, the occa­sion­al check that the police were con­tin­u­ing to car­ry out the activists’ mis­sion.

an hour passed, anoth­er one, a third. wow, this was bet­ter than any pre­vi­ous small-scale block­ade. there was fond rem­i­nisc­ing of the upper street block­ade a few years ago, val and the band present, on a sat­ur­day. this had closed the upper street shell garage for five or six hours, and end­ed with loads of TSG arriv­ing , a cou­ple of arrests, and a lot of details tak­en. but it was a much larg­er scale event with lots of pri­or plan­ning. tonight was always meant to be a small, token, and com­mem­o­ra­tive action.

after three hours, the police scaled down and appeared to leave, but the garage stayed closed for a futher two hours, until final­ly near 11pm it opened for busi­ness once more.

this has to have been the most suc­cess­ful block­ade with­out a sin­gle activist present. maybe they should con­tact the gui­ness book of records. we have the pho­tos, the eye-wit­ness reports.

var­i­ous the­o­ries emerged as to why this hap­pened tonight, but none of us real­ly know, so in the mean­time, the met should be heart­ened that a glass or two was raised to them for their ster­ling work this evening in cost­ing shell five hours-worth of busi­ness at a nor­mal­ly very busy lon­don garage, and thanks to them that a cou­ple of dozen activists stayed warm, safe and con­spir­a­to­r­i­al. 

all involved hope that the met join in with even more sol­i­dar­i­ty for the big block­ade on the 8th feb­ru­ary (occu­py­oil).

Indonesia: Mining permit revoked after mob torches company’s office and frees prisoners

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

The Indone­sian gov­ern­ment has announced that it will revoke the per­mit for a con­tro­ver­sial gold mine after mas­sive riot­ing against the project. The protests were aimed at Sum­ber Min­er­al Nusan­tara a com­pa­ny hop­ing to open the mine on Sum­bawa island.

The crowd, which was thou­sands strong, ran­sacked and burned two gov­ern­ment offices to express their out­rage at the mine which would threat­en the com­mu­ni­ties land and drink­ing water. The mob con­tin­ued on to a near­by deten­tion cen­ter and forced the author­i­ties to release 35 of their com­rades who were arrest­ed at a protest against the mine last year.

Oppo­si­tion to the mine has been ongo­ing for over a year. A sim­i­lar protest last Decem­ber result­ed in two com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers being shot and killed by police.

Tibetan Villagers Halt Mining Project on Sacred Mountain

26th Jan 2012

26th Jan 2012

In Tibetan cul­ture, where peo­ple live in inti­mate rela­tion­ship with the nat­ur­al world around them, real­i­ty and mythol­o­gy have a way of blend­ing togeth­er. So it was per­haps no sur­prise to local vil­lagers when, after a Chi­nese min­ing com­pa­ny and local author­i­ties repeat­ed­ly repelled efforts stop a gold min­ing project on the slopes of holy Mount Kawage­bo, the moun­tain appeared to strike back.

Mount Kawage­bo, so sacred that climb­ing is banned, sits on the bor­der between Tibet and China’s Yun­nan Province; its east­ern side is part of the Three Par­al­lel Rivers of Yun­nan Pro­tect­ed Area UNESCO World Her­itage site. In Feb­ru­ary 2011, a small gold-min­ing oper­a­tion start­ed near the vil­lage of Abin, which is on the west­ern side of Kawage­bo, along the path of an 800-year-old pil­grim­age route that cir­cles the moun­tain, attract­ing tens of thou­sands of Tibetans annu­al­ly.

To the local peo­ple, who believe strong­ly in the sacred­ness of Mount Kawage­bo, direct destruc­tion of the moun­tain body, through activ­i­ties like min­ing, is unthink­able. Fur­ther, vil­lagers said the project was start­ed with­out per­mis­sion or pri­or con­sent. Thus began a com­mu­ni­ty effort to halt the project.

Vil­lagers said their attempts to deal direct­ly with the min­ing com­pa­ny result­ed in threats and vio­lence from agents hired by the com­pa­ny, and harass­ment and arrests by local police. On two occa­sions, men armed with wood­en sticks with nails attacked vil­lagers, injur­ing more than a dozen.

After efforts to nego­ti­ate with the local gov­ern­ment failed, vil­lagers pushed $300,000 worth of min­ing equip­ment into the Nu Riv­er. A leader of the group was arrest­ed, but lat­er released when 100 vil­lagers sur­round­ed the local police sta­tion where he was being held. A few months lat­er, how­ev­er, min­ing resumed and ten­sions grew. Harass­ment, death threats and attacks on vil­lagers increased, and some women and chil­dren fled to oth­er vil­lages to escape the vio­lence.

On Jan­u­ary 20, 2012, a vil­lage leader who had tried to con­front the min­ing com­pa­ny was ambushed by local police, tased and arrest­ed. Some 200 com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers sur­round­ed the police sta­tion, and an ensu­ing riot result­ed in vio­lence and injuries on both sides, with at least one vil­lager sent to the hos­pi­tal with seri­ous injuries. The leader was released, but protests con­tin­ued as vil­lagers demand­ed clo­sure of the mine, and hun­dreds more vil­lagers from the sur­round­ing area joined in.

This time, the local gov­ern­ment held nego­ti­a­tions with the com­mu­ni­ty, includ­ing the just-released leader, on behalf of the min­ing com­pa­ny, whose boss had report­ed­ly fled the area. Vil­lagers involved in nego­ti­a­tions said they were offered mon­ey in exchange for allow­ing the min­ing to con­tin­ue, but they refused. On Jan­u­ary 23, with ten­sions mount­ing, a vice-offi­cial from the pre­fec­ture gov­ern­ment ordered the mine closed and the equip­ment trucked out of the vil­lage.

While the per­sis­tence of the com­mu­ni­ty to pro­tect its holy moun­tain ulti­mate­ly paid off, some vil­lagers sug­gest­ed the moun­tain itself had a role to play. Dur­ing the nego­ti­a­tions, many report­ed hear­ing the sound of a trum­pet shell—used in Tibetan reli­gious rituals—coming from the moun­tain, while oth­ers report­ed unusu­al­ly windy weath­er, which stopped once the con­flict was resolved.

A Tibetan hired to pro­vide cater­ing to the mine work­ers described being struck by a phys­i­cal pres­sure that forced him to drop what he was car­ry­ing; only after he prayed did the sen­sa­tion dis­ap­pear. Sev­er­al months ear­li­er, accord­ing to anoth­er account, a vil­lage leader who had accept­ed bribes from the min­ing com­pa­ny died sud­den­ly, and a mem­ber of his fam­i­ly was seri­ous­ly injured in an acci­dent.

He Ran Gao, a researcher who works for the Chi­nese NGO Green Earth Vol­un­teers and has been close­ly involved with the com­mu­ni­ties of the area, described the con­text of these super­nat­ur­al accounts. “In a place like Tibet, peo­ple have an unusu­al sense of divin­i­ty in nature, based on a whole sys­tem of wor­ship and inter­ac­tion, which some­time seems super­sti­tious to mod­ern cit­i­zens,” she said. “But it is not nec­es­sar­i­ly irra­tional or unrea­son­able.”

This sense of nature wor­ship, Gao said, with its atten­dant con­ser­va­tion val­ues, is “bare­ly left due to past com­mu­nism and lat­er eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment.” But in the Himalayas and oth­er moun­tain areas, where non-Han eth­nic­i­ties reside and remain some­what pro­tect­ed, those tra­di­tion­al val­ues can still be found. She described Kawage­bo as a suc­cess sto­ry show­ing “how sacred nature can be” and how it can “still be respect­ed, pro­tect­ed and con­tin­ue to make an impact in people’s lives.”

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Abin is but one of many vil­lages threat­ened by min­ing activities—in most oth­er cas­es, mar­ble quarrying—and a greater over­ar­ch­ing threat to the region: hydro­elec­tric dam devel­op­ment.

Along the Nu (Sal­ween) Riv­er, the longest free-flow­ing riv­er in main­land South­east Asia, a pro­posed 13-dam cascade—including sev­er­al dams in or very close to the World Her­itage site—would wipe out por­tions of the pil­grim­age route around Mount Kawage­bo and dis­place the com­mu­ni­ties of the riv­er val­ley, like­ly deal­ing a blow to their tra­di­tion­al cul­ture as well. Although the project was put on hold in 2004 in the wake of wide­spread protest, it is cer­tain­ly not dead.

Last year, the World Her­itage Com­mit­tee issued a state­ment express­ing con­cern over reports of unap­proved con­struc­tion under way at one dam site on the Nu Riv­er, and sur­vey­ing work—including road-build­ing and drilling—at three oth­ers. It warned that “the many pro­posed dams could cumu­la­tive­ly con­sti­tute a poten­tial dan­ger to the property’s Out­stand­ing Uni­ver­sal Val­ue.”

The com­mit­tee asked Chi­na to sub­mit by Feb­ru­ary 1 of this year a detailed list of all pro­posed dams, as well as mines, that could affect the World Her­itage prop­er­ty, along with the envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ments of any pro­posed projects, pri­or to their approval. The com­mit­tee also request­ed, by the same dead­line, a report on the state of con­ser­va­tion of the prop­er­ty and on the progress made in com­plet­ing a strate­gic envi­ron­men­tal impact assess­ment on all of the pro­posed dams and relat­ed devel­op­ment that could impact the site’s World Her­itage val­ue.

Many thanks to He Ran Gao, who pro­vid­ed report­ing and oth­er source mate­r­i­al for this report. He Ran wish­es to thank vil­lagers who pro­vid­ed her with infor­ma­tion, but whose names have been with­eld.

Monsanto takes double hit in January — who’s next?

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

Monsanto Admits Defeat in France, Biotech Corn Contaminates

26/1/12

France has held firm in its oppo­si­tion to Monsanto’s genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied MON 810 maize – and the agri-chem­i­cal multi­na­tion­al has admit­ted defeat.

Mon­san­to had been putting legal pres­sure on the French gov­ern­ment to lift its 2008 cul­ti­va­tion ban on MON 810, first­ly with a suc­cess­ful appeal to the Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice, then with a fol­low-up case heard in France’s own high­est court, the Coun­cil of State.

But despite both these insti­tu­tions rul­ing that the ban was “insuf­fi­cient­ly jus­ti­fied in law”, the French Gov­ern­ment, backed by Pres­i­dent Sarkozy, has insist­ed that it will still not allow cul­ti­va­tion of the biotech maize.

Now Mon­san­to has announced that it would not be sell­ing seeds for MON810 in France this year.

France’s stand – and Monsanto’s capit­u­la­tion – has been warm­ly wel­comed by anti-GM lob­by­ists GM Freeze, whose cam­paign direc­tor Pete Riley said: “The deci­sion by Mon­san­to not to mar­ket MON810 seeds in France in 2012 is yet anoth­er sign that Mon­san­to has failed to con­vince the pub­lic or pol­i­cy mak­ers that there is any ben­e­fit to grow­ing to grow­ing GM crops.

“This needs to be acknowl­edged by indus­try and politi­cians and there should be a big shift to agri­cul­tur­al research and devel­op­ment which address­es the future sus­tain­abil­i­ty of farm­ing in Europe. EU pol­i­cy needs to for­get about the bot­tom line of biotech cor­po­ra­tions and focus on devel­op­ing agro-eco­log­i­cal farm­ing which pro­vides for the needs of farm­ers, con­sumers, the envi­ron­ment and future gen­er­a­tions.”

Five oth­er EU coun­tries – Ger­many, Greece, Aus­tria, Lux­em­bourg and Hun­gary – have cur­rent bans on MON810 cul­ti­va­tion in place, and the issue has recent­ly been com­pli­cat­ed by anoth­er Euro­pean Court of Jus­tice rul­ing requir­ing hon­ey con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed with GM pollen to be ful­ly autho­rised as a nov­el prod­uct and labelled as such before it can be sold.

— And from ear­li­er in the month: Mon­san­to attacked by Anony­mous hack­ers! In a thread of hack events from the Anony­mous group, the most recent tar­get has been Monsanto.com. Anony­mous, which briefly knocked the FBI and Jus­tice Depart­ment web­sites offline as well as Music Indus­try web­sites in retal­i­a­tion for the US shut­down of file-shar­ing site Megau­pload, is a shad­owy group of amaz­ing inter­na­tion­al hack­ers. Anony­mous Mes­sage To Mon­san­to: We fight for farm­ers! – Video Tran­script (Cross-Post­ed from Organ­ic Com­mon Sense): “To the free-think­ing cit­i­zens of the world: Anony­mous stands with the farm­ers and food orga­ni­za­tions denounc­ing the prac­tices of Mon­san­to We applaud the brav­ery of the orga­ni­za­tions and cit­i­zens who are stand­ing up to Mon­san­to, and we stand unit­ed with you against this oppres­sive cor­po­rate abuse. Mon­san­to is con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the world with chem­i­cals and genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied food crops for prof­it while claim­ing to feed the hun­gry and pro­tect the envi­ron­ment. Anony­mous is every­one, Any­one who can not stand for injus­tice and decides to do some­thing about it, We are all over the Earth and here to stay. To Mon­san­to, we demand you STOP the fol­low­ing: * Con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing the glob­al food chain with GMO’s. * Intim­i­dat­ing small farm­ers with bul­ly­ing and law­suits. * Prop­a­gat­ing the use of destruc­tive pes­ti­cides and her­bi­cides across the globe. * Using “Ter­mi­na­tor Tech­nol­o­gy”, which ren­ders plants ster­ile. * Attempt­ing to hijack UN cli­mate change nego­ti­a­tions for your own fis­cal ben­e­fit. * Reduc­ing farm­land to desert through mono­cul­ture and the use of syn­thet­ic fer­til­iz­ers. * Inspir­ing sui­cides of hun­dreds of thou­sands of Indi­an farm­ers. * Caus­ing birth defects by con­tin­u­ing to pro­duce the pes­ti­cide “Round-up” * Attempt­ing to bribe foriegn offi­cials * Infil­trat­ing anti-GMO groups Mon­san­to, these crimes will not go unpun­ished. Anony­mous will not spare you nor any­one in sup­port of your oppres­sive ille­gal busi­ness prac­tices. AGRA, a great exam­ple: In 2006, AGRA, Alliance for a Green Rev­o­lu­tion in Africa, was estab­lished with fund­ing from Bill Gates and The Rock­e­feller Foun­da­tion. Among the oth­er found­ing mem­bers of, AGRA, we find: Mon­san­to, Novar­tis, Sanofi-Aven­tis, Glax­o­SmithK­line, Proc­ter and Gam­ble, Mer­ck, Mosa­ic, Pfiz­er, Sum­it­o­mo Chem­i­cal and Yara. The fact that these cor­po­ra­tions are either chem­i­cal or phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ers is no coin­ci­dence. The peo­ple of the world see you, Mon­san­to. Anony­mous sees you. Seeds of Oppor­tunism, Cli­mate change offers these busi­ness­es a per­fect excuse to prey on the poor­est coun­tries by swoop­ing in to “res­cue” the farm­ers and peo­ple with their GMO crops and chem­i­cal pes­ti­cides. These cor­po­ra­tions erad­i­cate the tra­di­tion­al ways of the country’s agri­cul­ture for the sake of enor­mous prof­its. The intro­duc­tion of GMOs dras­ti­cal­ly affects a local farm­ers income, as the price of chem­i­cals required for GMOs and seeds from Mon­san­to crip­ples the farmer’s mea­ger prof­it mar­gins. There are even many cas­es of Mon­san­to suing small farm­ers after pollen from their GMO crops acci­den­tal­ly cross with the farmer’s crops. Because Mon­san­to has a patent on theri brand of seed, they claim the farmer is in vio­la­tion of patent laws. These dis­gust­ing and inhu­mane prac­tices will not be tol­er­at­ed. Anony­mous urges all con­cerned cit­i­zens to stand up for these farm­ers, stand up for the future of your own food. Protest, orga­nize, spread info to your friends! SAY NO TO POISONOUS CHEMICALS IN YOUR FOOD! SAY NO TO GMO! SAY NO TO MONSANTO! We are Anony­mous We are legion We do not for­give We do not for­get Expect us” Glob­al Jus­tice Ecol­o­gy Project, an anti-biotech group found­ed by Earth First! activists, also not­ed in a post on the attack that Mon­san­to was also one of the orig­i­nal founders of the GE tree com­pa­ny Arbor­Gen. The Pres­i­dent and CEO of Arbor­Gen, Bar­bara Wells, led Monsanto’s RoundUp Ready soy divi­sion in Brazil. GMO soy in Brazil and oth­er parts of Latin Amer­i­ca has tak­en over vast swaths of Ama­zon and oth­er for­est land, and has dis­placed or poi­soned many com­mu­ni­ties there. Find out more about their cam­paign against Arbor­Gen here. We fight for farm­ers video — http://youtu.be/Q1A-DYK4M4Q DOS attack on Mon­san­to — http://youtu.be/3XutsnEe4VY

Earth First! and Occupy protesters blockade bridge in front of GAIM conference

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

24th Jan­u­ary 2012

More arrests underway as conference is disrupted by activists inside the resort as well

Palm Beach Coun­ty, Flori­da—Pro­test­ers from the Occu­py move­ment and Ever­glades Earth First! block­ad­ed a Boca Raton bridge yes­ter­day, snarling rush hour traf­fic dur­ing a cock­tail par­ty of cor­po­rate investors at the GAIM USA 2012 con­fer­ence. Among them was Ana Rodriguez, an edi­tor of the Earth First! Jour­nal, which is also pub­lished in Palm Beach Coun­ty. 

Using col­or­ful lock­box­es, three activists, laid on the bridge effec­tive­ly stop­ping rush hour traf­fic from 5–6:30.  Spe­cial oper­a­tions police teams were called to the site to remove the lock­down devices that were link­ing the pro­test­ers togeth­er. The block­aders were cit­ed with three charges, includ­ing: resist­ing with­out vio­lence; obstruct­ing a high­way and vio­la­tion of a munic­i­pal ordi­nance ban­ning what the Boca police called “sleep­ing drag­ons.”

Two of the three arrest­ed, Kevin Young and Don Carter from Occu­py Mia­mi, were released on their own recog­ni­zance. Ana Rodriguez was released today on a $1,500 bond, with the state attor­ney alleg­ing that she was a flight risk to Venezuela, her coun­try of ori­gin.

“Every day we see cor­po­rate pow­er destroy­ing our com­mu­ni­ties.  From envi­ron­men­tal dis­as­ters to pri­vate pris­ons, cor­po­ra­tions are oper­at­ing with impuni­ty,” said Ana Rodriguez before being arrest­ed. “While the bank lead­ers drink cock­tails and toast to increased prof­its, peo­ple across the globe are being hurt by cor­po­rate greed.”

Anoth­er pro­test­er scaled a tree along­side the bridge and hung a large ban­ner that read: “What Would Robin Hood Do?” The ban­ner was tak­en down by a fire truck and con­fis­cat­ed by Boca police.

The protests against GAIM began on Sun­day, Jan­u­ary 22, with 100 peo­ple march­ing in front of the Boca Resort and a flotil­la of boats and canoes along the resort’s water­front.

More pro­test­ers returned this after­noon for day three of the GAIM con­fer­ence, announced as a nation­al day of action against pri­vate pris­ons and deten­tion cen­ters. At the time of this news post, there are reports of more arrests for immi­grant sol­i­dar­i­ty activists dis­rupt­ing the con­fer­ence from the inside.

Sea Shepherd Chases the Japanese Whalers into Yesterday

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

The Japan­ese whal­ing fleet are not where they should be this time of year.

Last year the fleet was oper­at­ing in the Ross Sea. This year their “sci­en­tif­ic sur­vey” was sup­posed to take place in the waters south and west of Tas­ma­nia, east and south of South Africa.

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

The Japan­ese whal­ing fleet are not where they should be this time of year.

Last year the fleet was oper­at­ing in the Ross Sea. This year their “sci­en­tif­ic sur­vey” was sup­posed to take place in the waters south and west of Tas­ma­nia, east and south of South Africa.

Every year they alter­nate. But not this year! Although the whalers attempt­ed to begin their killing oper­a­tions in the waters south­west of Aus­tralia, the Sea Shep­herd ships have chased the entire whal­ing fleet ever east­ward. At 1700 hours AEST, the Bob Bark­er encoun­tered the Yushin Maru No. 3 at 66 Degrees, 22 min­utes South and 179 Degrees, 05 min­utes West.

From being inter­cept­ed 500 miles west of Fre­man­tle, Aus­tralia, the Japan­ese fleet has run over 4,500 nau­ti­cal miles for the last 30 days, all the way into the Ross Sea, far to the East of Aus­tralia. This is an aver­age of 150 miles a day, leav­ing very lit­tle time to kill whales with only one har­poon ves­sel. The oth­er two har­poon ves­sels have either been tail­ing or search­ing for the Sea Shep­herd ships.

“You can say we chased the whale killers into yes­ter­day since we have crossed the Inter­na­tion­al Date Line,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son, of the Sea Shep­herd ship Steve Irwin. “This illus­trates that they real­ly have no sci­en­tif­ic agen­da at all since their so-called sur­vey requires them to “sam­ple” whales from the two dif­fer­ent areas alter­na­tive­ly each year. This is not about sci­ence and it nev­er has been. It’s not even about prof­it any­more because we have negat­ed their prof­its. It’s sim­ply about pride. Whal­ing in the South­ern Ocean has become a heav­i­ly sub­si­dized wel­fare project for an archa­ic indus­try that has no place in the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry.”

Sea Shepherd’s cam­paign, Oper­a­tion Divine Wind, has been chal­leng­ing this year due to the thir­ty mil­lion dol­lars allo­cat­ed to the whal­ing fleet for added secu­ri­ty. This mon­ey was tak­en from the tsuna­mi and earth­quake relief fund.

“They have ten mil­lion dol­lars for every one mil­lion dol­lars we have to finance our three ships,” said Cap­tain Alex Cor­nelis­sen of the Bob Bark­er. “They have the full sup­port of their gov­ern­ment and lit­er­al­ly have a license to kill because if any of us are injured or killed, their gov­ern­ment will back them and jus­ti­fy their actions. Our gov­ern­ments con­demn us just for toss­ing rot­ten but­ter on their decks.”

The chase across the bot­tom of the world involves five ships from the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet and two ships from Sea Shep­herd. The third Sea Shep­herd ship, the Brigitte Bar­dot, was dam­aged by heavy seas and had to return to Fre­man­tle, Aus­tralia for repairs.

Nev­er before has the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet aban­doned one des­ig­nat­ed whal­ing “sur­vey” area for anoth­er. Sea Shep­herd has appar­ent­ly seri­ous­ly dis­rupt­ed the Japan­ese whal­ing plan for this sea­son and has cost them a huge amount in fuel costs. In addi­tion, two of the three har­poon ves­sels have been tak­en away from killing whales in order to tail the Steve Irwin and the Bob Bark­er. The Yushin Maru No. 2 is tail­ing the Steve Irwin and the Yushin Maru No. 3 is tail­ing the Bob Bark­er. This has left only the Yushin Maru to hunt for whales.

Sea Shep­herd has been able to keep the whal­ing fleet on the move and con­tin­ues to track their move­ments by rely­ing on drone oper­a­tions and ten years of expe­ri­ence fol­low­ing the pre­dictable move­ments of the whalers.

Last sea­son the Bob Bark­er was able to chase the Nis­shin Maru all the way to the tip of South Amer­i­ca before they quit and returned to Japan in humil­i­a­tion after tak­ing only sev­en­teen per­cent of their kill quo­ta.

Protesters mount diggers in bid to save trees in Stuttgart

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

22nd Jan­u­ary 2012

Demon­stra­tors against the con­tro­ver­sial “Stuttgart 21” rail project tried to block work­ers from felling more than 30 trees ear­ly on Sun­day. Police removed pro­test­ers from trees and demo­li­tion equip­ment to allow teams to fin­ish the work.

On Sat­ur­day, ral­ly organ­is­ers said some 4,000 peo­ple gath­ered to protest the sta­tion’s con­struc­tion, while police esti­mat­ed the num­ber of demon­stra­tors at 1,200.

About 40 pro­test­ers tried to block teams from clear­ing the trees, but a police spokesman said offi­cers were able to dis­perse the crowd. The work was com­plet­ed by 6 a.m. on Sun­day but had to be stopped twice when two demon­stra­tors climbed on top of demo­li­tion equip­ment.

A spokesper­son for Parkschützer, an ini­tia­tive that aims to pre­serve the park, crit­i­cised the action, say­ing the trees should not have been tak­en down due to wind and poor vis­i­bil­i­ty.

Matthias von Her­rmann of Parkschützer took aim at the state gov­ern­ment in Baden-Würt­tem­berg.

“It is a trav­es­ty when (state) pre­mier Kretschmann con­tin­ues to preach about how the gov­ern­ment has to adhere to the law, but then police are out at a con­struc­tion site with­out a build­ing per­mit,” he said.

The mul­ti-bil­lion-euro project aims to trans­form the Baden-Würt­tem­berg cap­i­tal into a major Euro­pean trans­port hub. The sta­tion has sparked a wave of protests.

Deutsche Bahn wants to replace Stuttgart’s exist­ing train sta­tion with an under­ground one that it says would great­ly improve links between Paris, Vien­na and ulti­mate­ly Budapest.

http://www.thelocal.de/tag/Stuttgart_21