Glos Guerilla Gardening meet-up

I’ve been talk­ing to lots of peo­ple inter­est­ed in start­ing some form of gueril­la gar­den­ing group in glouces­ter­shire, and I’m sure there are many more of you out there…

So lets get gar­den­ing!

I’ve been talk­ing to lots of peo­ple inter­est­ed in start­ing some form of gueril­la gar­den­ing group in glouces­ter­shire, and I’m sure there are many more of you out there…

So lets get gar­den­ing!

This is a chance for activists, gar­den­ers, neo-dig­gers, allot­ment­less peas­ants, per­ma­cul­ture ini­ti­ates *chuck­les* and any­one inter­est­ed in the glouces­ter­shire eco-vil­lage project to meet each oth­er, to net­work and sow a lit­tle beau­ty into our oth­er­wise drea­ry world.

If you’re inter­est­ed in doing a lit­tle gueril­la gar­den­ing next Thurs­day [the 23rd] con­tact…

gueril­la­gar­den [at] hush [dot] com

Bring what­ev­er you think will be use­ful — seeds, cut­tings, seedlings, seeds bombs, gar­den­ing tools, coats, drinks’n’­munchies, hi-vis?!- for hid­ing in plane sight.

Don’t wor­ry if you don’t have any of these things, there’ll be plen­ty for you to do- come along and get stuck in!

It’ll be some­where near glouces­ter, maybe even near the town cen­ter, or we could do it in the more rur­al out­skirts- still open to sug­ges­tions for a loca­tion to gar­den- email me.

I have a cou­ple in mind, but I’m hop­ing some­one will know of the per­fect place. We’ll all decide on the day, maybe spread our gar­den­ing around a lit­tle.

I’ll be focus­ing main­ly on food plants- but bring any­thing you’d like to plant!

“..yet my mind was not at rest, because noth­ing was act­ed, and thoughts run in me that words and writ­ings were all noth­ing, and must die, for action is the life of all, and if thou dost not act, thou dost noth­ing,”

Ger­rard Win­stan­ley, A Watch-Word to the City of Lon­don and the Armie, August 1649

Rossport Direct Action Training Weekend — 25–26 June

Come up for a week­end of direct action train­ing, meet the com­mu­ni­ty and see this incred­i­ble place.

If you came up for the Par­ty Against the Pipe fes­ti­val, this is a great chance to get more involved in the cam­paign.

Come up for a week­end of direct action train­ing, meet the com­mu­ni­ty and see this incred­i­ble place.

If you came up for the Par­ty Against the Pipe fes­ti­val, this is a great chance to get more involved in the cam­paign.

If you have ever want­ed to take action and be part of the cam­paign, the time is now! All wel­come, open to com­plete begin­ners-no expe­ri­ence nec­es­sary. Please try to arrive by the evening of Fri­day 24th if pos­si­ble.

We are run­ning direct action train­ings here and around the coun­try for peo­ple who want to take part in safe and effec­tive protests. The train­ing is aimed at com­plete begin­ners, cov­er­ing your legal rights and dif­fer­ent meth­ods of protest­ing.

Get in touch if you would like us to give a direct action work­shop in your area.

Food will be cooked com­mu­nal­ly, dona­tions wel­come.

Accom­mo­da­tion is avail­able in the camp house or book in to the love­ly Kil­com­mon lodge hos­tel http://www.kilcommonlodge.ie

The Shell to Sea cam­paign has suc­cess­ful­ly used direct action for the last 11 years to frus­trate, delay and try to stop Shel­l’s destruc­tive project. We take direct action because the Gov­ern­ment has failed us and the author­i­ties that are sup­posed to pro­tect com­mu­ni­ties and the envi­ron­ment have refused to act. So we have no choice but to pro­tect it our­selves. We also take action to inspire oth­er com­mu­ni­ties to do the same. Whether it’s stop­ping Shell ille­gal­ly drilling in a Spe­cial Area of Con­ser­va­tion or block­ing the trucks car­ry­ing build­ing mate­ri­als for this exper­i­men­tal and dan­ger­ous project, using direct action works! So come along & get pre­pared…

Shel­l’s Cor­rib Gas Project is already decade late and 3 times over bud­get — impres­sive for a rur­al com­mu­ni­ty fight­ing one of the biggest multi­na­tion­als in the world!

There is a huge glob­al his­to­ry of direct action cam­paigns. Mar­tin Luther King and Gand­hi sym­bol­ise the most well known cam­paigns but there have been thou­sands of suc­cess­ful direct action cam­paigns in our his­to­ry. Direct action was used dur­ing the anti-war cam­paign at Shan­non air­port, in the civ­il rights march­es, dur­ing the amaz­ing anti-nuclear cam­paign at Can­sore Point and also to kick out dirty indus­tries such as Raytheon, Mer­rell Dow and Raybestos Man­hat­tan.

The Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp has guide­lines which state that all actions must be agreed by con­sen­sus at the camp. Direct action is used in par­al­lel with oth­er cam­paign­ing tools such as engag­ing in the plan­ning process, lob­by­ing, pub­lic meet­ings and tak­ing legal chal­lenges against Shell.

As Fred­er­ick Dou­glass, the US abo­li­tion­ist ora­tor said in 1857: “If there is no strug­gle there is no progress. Those who pro­fess to favor free­dom and yet depre­ci­ate agitation…want crops with­out plow­ing up the ground, they want rain with­out thun­der and light­en­ing. They want the ocean with­out the awful roar of its many waters…. Pow­er con­cedes noth­ing with­out a demand. It nev­er did and it nev­er will.”

http://www.rossportsolidaritycamp.org/content/direct-action-training-weekend-25–26th-june

The Spuds don’t work. *Norwich, noon, 23rd July 2011.*

British tri­als of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied blight resis­tant spuds have been fail­ing for the last ten years. But a con­ven­tion­al­ly bred vari­ety of blight resis­tant pota­toes has been avail­able for 3 years. So why are we still pay­ing for their dan­ger­ous exper­i­ment?

British tri­als of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied blight resis­tant spuds have been fail­ing for the last ten years. But a con­ven­tion­al­ly bred vari­ety of blight resis­tant pota­toes has been avail­able for 3 years. So why are we still pay­ing for their dan­ger­ous exper­i­ment?

Come ride with us on the back of a trail­er load of safe effec­tive spuds as we go to deliv­er them to the Sains­bury Lab­o­ra­to­ry out­side Nor­wich. It’s one of only two pos­si­ble open air tri­als for GM crops in Britain this year. Yet despite being pub­licly fund­ed, it’s so secre­tive no one will even say if it’s been plant­ed. Join us for tunes, chips and good cheer as we go and show them that we have already got the answers they say they’re look­ing for.

****************************************

*A tale of two spuds…*
For the last 10 years, researchers at the Sains­bury lab­o­ra­to­ry at the John Innes Cen­tre in Nor­wich have spent 1.7 mil­lion pounds of pub­lic mon­ey fail­ing to devel­op a genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied pota­to resis­tant to the fun­gal dis­ease blight. This project is so secre­tive and unac­count­able that the lab­o­ra­to­ry has refused to even con­firm if a tri­al has been plant­ed this sea­son, or if they’ve been forced to aban­don any hopes of mak­ing the tech­nol­o­gy work. Pub­lic rejec­tion of the risks asso­ci­at­ed with eat­ing genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied food means that even if the engi­neer­ing involved was suc­cess­ful, there would be no mar­ket for the crop. Mean­while, 3 years ago a small Welsh research char­i­ty ded­i­cat­ed to con­ven­tion­al breed­ing tech­niques devel­oped a spud that is spec­tac­u­lar­ly resis­tant to blight. Not only does the crop pose no threat to health, the envi­ron­ment, or neigh­bour­ing farm­ers; it works. Over 6 dif­fer­ent vari­eties are now avail­able, and being grown on a com­mer­cial scale.

*Deliv­er­ing the answer to GM crops- *

We think the Sains­bury’s lab­o­ra­to­ry and the gov­ern­ment should be told that we’ve found the pota­toes they’re look­ing for. So we’re going to deliv­er them to the doors of their research cen­tre. We’ll be form­ing a car­ni­val pro­ces­sion of fam­i­lies and farm­ers led by the next gen­er­a­tion on ped­al trac­tors, each tow­ing a mini trail­er of safe spuds. There’ll be ped­al pow­ered tunes, and a full sized trac­tor to jump on. There will almost cer­tain­ly be chips.

*The ratio­nale*
The cam­paign against GM crops ten years ago was so suc­cess­ful that GM almost com­plete­ly van­ished from our fields and super­mar­kets, and many peo­ple have for­got­ten the issues asso­ci­at­ed with the tech­nol­o­gy. But in many oth­er parts of the world peas­ant farm­ers have been des­per­ate­ly fight­ing its spread, and laws are chang­ing in Europe that would make it much eas­i­er for GM to be grown in Britain. Despite pre-elec­tion promis­es to the con­trary the coali­tion claims it intends to be ‘the most pro GM this coun­try has ever seen’.

Let’s call time on an out­mod­ed tech­nol­o­gy that con­tin­ues to waste mon­ey in fail­ing projects, while simul­ta­ne­ous­ly threat­en­ing the very sci­ence that’s actu­al­ly pro­duc­ing work­ing alter­na­tives quick­ly and cheap­ly. For too long the biotech com­pa­nies have gone unchal­lenged in their claims that GM can cre­ate gen­uine­ly use­ful crops when in fact all the sig­nif­i­cant advance­ments in the last decade have come through con­ven­tion­al breed­ing. With the renewed threat of GM on the hori­zon cam­paign­ers need to get togeth­er again to show the rest of the coun­try (and each oth­er) that we’re still here, and we’ve got an even bet­ter case than ever. This is a chance to take the ini­tia­tive with the media, to tell a sto­ry which explains clear­ly and prac­ti­cal­ly why the pro GM lob­by is wrong. That it’s us, and not the cor­po­ra­tions that have the answers to the food cri­sis. And we know how to turn them into an irre­sistible pho­to shoot.

*Our Key media mes­sages*
Genet­ic Mod­i­fi­ca­tion is unac­count­able, expen­sive, and it does­n’t work. We need to stop wast­ing pub­lic mon­ey on some­thing that no one wants and start cel­e­brat­ing the real advances in agri­cul­ture.

*What we need*

You, and the peo­ple you know, and any­one you think might be inter­est­ed.

This project is being worked on by Stop GM in con­junc­tion with the Genet­ic Engi­neer­ing Net­work. It’s a grass­roots ini­tia­tive that evolved after one nation­al gath­er­ing, sev­er­al months of pon­der­ing and an over excit­ed long week­end in Wales. Sev­er­al expe­ri­enced grass­roots cam­paign­ers will be work­ing on the project from now until the event, but we need help get­ting the word out. If you think you could help by dis­trib­ut­ing email infor­ma­tion about the event, drop­ping it about in any social media you may be involved in, let­ting your local grow­ing projects or social jus­tice groups know, dis­trib­ut­ing our soon to be pro­duced ‘Lit­tle Red Trac­tor and the Quest of the GM-free Spuds’ leaflet or even orga­niz­ing a coach to attend from your area, we’d love to hear from you.

For more infor­ma­tion please check brief­ing to help you object to pro­posed field tri­al of GM pota­toes (http://www.gmfreeze.org/uploads/63A_spud_briefing_jic_final.pdf), and how to get hold of the solu­tion www.sarvari-trust.org.

Please put it in your diary, for­ward this mes­sage on to any­one who might be inter­est­ed, and hope­ful­ly we’ll see you there.

All the best,

The Stop GM Crew.

http://stopgm.org.uk/

Khimki Forest update and list of contractor offices

Rus­si­a’s Khim­ki For­est is not the peace­ful place it used to be, back when it was a 200-year-old oak for­est known for its eco­log­i­cal impor­tance to the Moscow region.

Rus­si­a’s Khim­ki For­est is not the peace­ful place it used to be, back when it was a 200-year-old oak for­est known for its eco­log­i­cal impor­tance to the Moscow region.

Today, it is filled with the roar of bull­doz­ers, and the screams of activists at night. For the last week, the Khim­ki For­est defenders…have been tak­ing turns camp­ing out to defend the for­est from ille­gal cut­ting. Each night, they put their lives at risk and every day they have expe­ri­enced esca­lat­ing vio­lence, includ­ing vio­lent attacks by pri­vate secu­ri­ty forces and unknown thugs. There have been injuries too—broken noses, head traumas—but it is not for naught. They have been some­what suc­cess­ful in stop­ping the log­ging, at least tem­porar­i­ly.

“Dear all, as I sus­pect­ed, many bad events hap­pened. When it got dark, they turned on the har­vester. They moved fast into the dip of the clear­ing. We ran after them from the camp. The secu­ri­ties did not let us go, they caught us by clothes and pushed us. But we went fur­ther and fur­ther, though slow­er. Then the har­vester start­ed to fell down the trees. We rushed through the guards to it. On a nar­row place the guards stopped us again. We called Russ­ian media, the mem­bers of the Pres­i­dent Coun­cil, the deputies, and of course the police.…”

Read more.

Police deten­tions, evi­dence gath­er­ing, video and fur­ther aggres­sion and videos.

Back­ground.

How we can sup­port the defend­ers includ­ing links to offices of the French con­struc­tion com­pa­ny involved.

ELF ACTIONS IN SOLIDARITY WITH MARIE AND ERIC, RUSSIA

report­ed anony­mous­ly:

“ ‘For me sol­i­dar­i­ty is a con­stant pro­pos­al to strug­gle, is the con­tin­u­a­tion and the devel­op­ment of the rev­o­lu­tion­ary action for which the com­rade was cap­tured’ — Gerasi­mos Tsaka­los, Con­spir­a­cy Cells of Fire

Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Marie Mason and Eric McDavid — ELF actions in Moscow region of Rus­sia

report­ed anony­mous­ly:

“ ‘For me sol­i­dar­i­ty is a con­stant pro­pos­al to strug­gle, is the con­tin­u­a­tion and the devel­op­ment of the rev­o­lu­tion­ary action for which the com­rade was cap­tured’ — Gerasi­mos Tsaka­los, Con­spir­a­cy Cells of Fire

Sol­i­dar­i­ty with Marie Mason and Eric McDavid — ELF actions in Moscow region of Rus­sia

01.06 we torched elec­tri­cal mea­sur­ing and con­trol devices in 2 under­ground ser­vice booths of a water com­mu­ni­ca­tion sys­tem that brings hot water to a mil­i­tary intel­li­gence site in Butovskiy for­est. To add to the fact that this infra­struc­ture serves mil­i­tary per­son­nel, more than 800 trees were cut dur­ing earth­works for this water sup­ply line to even appear in the for­est. To ham­per ser­vice brigades fur­ther, we also spiked the road they use for main­tain­ing the sys­tem.

05.06 we torched an exca­va­tor at a high­way con­struc­tion site west of Moscow (Voloko­lam­sk direc­tion).

06.00 and 10.06 we expro­pri­at­ed some con­struc­tion equip­ment and destroyed geol­o­gists’ mea­sure­ment posts in the glades of Butovskiy for­est.

11.06 we broke into yet anoth­er under­ground ser­vice booth and put to fire all the dig­i­tal and ana­logue devices and tools inside.

We ded­i­cate these attacks to Marie Mason and Eric McDavid. We don’t have an hon­our of per­son­al acquain­tance with them, but their ded­i­ca­tion to pro­tect­ing our Plan­et and con­scious choic­es they’ve made not only to act, but also to stand their ground in the wake of state repres­sions, inspire us and help us to con­tin­ue on our path.

For Earth Lib­er­a­tion! For Human Lib­er­a­tion!

- ELF-Rus­sia, Infor­mal Anar­chist Federation/ Inter­na­tion­al Net­work of Action and Sol­i­dar­i­ty”

Indigenous groups lead blockade against gas hub in Australia

13.6.11
More than 70 pro­test­ers are still block­ing the main access road to the site of Woodside’s pro­posed LNG precinct at James Price Point, 60km north of Broome.

A con­voy of Wood­side con­trac­tors has returned to Broome and no work will be car­ried out today, The West Aus­tralian under­stands.

13.6.11
More than 70 pro­test­ers are still block­ing the main access road to the site of Woodside’s pro­posed LNG precinct at James Price Point, 60km north of Broome.

A con­voy of Wood­side con­trac­tors has returned to Broome and no work will be car­ried out today, The West Aus­tralian under­stands.

A new block­ade was set up on the cor­ner of the Man­ari Road, clos­er to the Broome town site, pre­vent­ing con­trac­tors’ access since 5am today.

The pro­test­ers have blocked the road, which leads to Broome’s icon­ic Willie Creek Pearl Farm, but are allow­ing vehi­cles not asso­ci­at­ed with land clear­ing at James Price Point through the block­ade.

Sev­er­al local indige­nous women have been lead­ing the block­ade and are refus­ing to allow vehi­cles down the road.

Janet and Rowe­na Puer­tol­lano said Wood­side and the WA Gov­ern­ment should be con­sult­ing the entire Broome and Kim­ber­ley com­mu­ni­ty about the gas precinct, and not just the Goolarabooloo/Jabbir Jab­bir tra­di­tion­al own­ers of the area.

Both women say they are descen­dants of Jab­bir Jab­bir peo­ple, but were not allowed to vote in the recent bal­lot which approved the devel­op­ment in exchange for $1.5 bil­lion in ben­e­fits over the life of the project.

Janet Puer­tol­lano said that if her fam­i­ly had been includ­ed in the group it would have changed the out­come.

Last week for­mer Kim­ber­ley Land Coun­cil exec­u­tive direc­tor Wayne Bergmann con­demned the pro­test­ers for their “hooli­gan tac­tics” dur­ing the week.

The Kim­ber­ley Land Coun­cil and Wood­side have been con­tact­ed for com­ment.

Shell compound occupied for 9 hours – third action in two days

10th June 2011

10th June 2011
Wednes­day and Thurs­day saw a seri­ous of occu­pa­tions and actions against the drilling com­pound at Aghoos in Mayo as part of the ongo­ing cam­paign against Shell. The events cul­mi­nat­ed in an eight-hour lock-on and a nine hour occu­pa­tion of machin­ery which stopped all work for the day. Over thir­ty peo­ple were involved in the events. UK and oth­er inter­na­tion­al cam­paign­ers joined Irish activist as part of the days of action.

Shell com­pound occu­pied for 9 hours – third action in two days

Yes­ter­day, thir­ty activists, includ­ing an inter­na­tion­al pres­ence, took the Shell com­pound at Augh­oose where they are doing prepa­ra­tion work for the con­tro­ver­sial pipeline that will run high pres­sure gas through com­mu­ni­ties in North West­ern Ire­land. Three indi­vid­u­als man­aged to make it onto machin­ery while oth­ers closed the main gain with a lock-on. The result was no work done for the entire day. Five peo­ple were arrest­ed, all of whom are now released though some have been charged.

The action was done from the Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp which cur­rent­ly occu­pies a field on the oth­er side of the road from where Shell are work­ing. Plan­ning start­ed the night before, peo­ple want­i­ng to build on the reg­u­lar actions that have been tak­ing place over the last few months since the camp has been in place.

On Wednes­day, there had been anoth­er, short­er occu­pa­tion of the site dur­ing the day. How­ev­er, in the won­der­ful way these things hap­pen, a sec­ond vis­it to the site to do recon­nais­sance for Thurs­day’s protest turned into an action in its own right…

So, Thurs­day, 7.30am – a large group of peo­ple move across the field to the road and begin breach­ing the com­pound at numer­ous places. They found a large, frankly scary look­ing lock-on dropped off in front of the main gates, despite the pres­ence of fif­teen secu­ri­ty guards from IRMS try­ing to secure the access. Two peo­ple, “Bread” & “Jam” prompt­ly made use of this gift to attach them­selves to it.

Peo­ple swarmed every­where, mak­ing good use of their access as secu­ri­ty locked them­selves down in their cen­tral com­pound behind lines of har­ris fenc­ing, though that was no obsta­cle. Indeed, the only work that Shell did today was build­ing a sor­ry pile of man­gled fences.

Numer­ous peo­ple made it through the lines of guards to occu­py var­i­ous machin­ery and struc­tures, includ­ing the roof of the por­tak­abins. Three clam­bered onto the drilling and dig­ging machin­ery that the days’ work would have depend­ed on. Of these, one was lied to about not being arrest­ed on com­ing down so oth­er two, who were on the sam­pling drill and the large dig­ger, remained there for the next nine hours. By that time vic­to­ry was clear­ly in the hand of the pro­test­ers and they came down of their own accord.

In all this exu­ber­ance, all bar one of the win­dows of the house Shell own down the road decid­ed to shat­ter in sol­i­dar­i­ty.

Mean­while, back at the main road, the campers pro­vid­ed sup­port to those locked-on. Police blocked off the road. The cut­ting team turned up at 10.15am and after a lot of head-scratch­ing start­ed cut­ting at 11am. The god of lock-on’s had pro­vid­ed them a fair headache and it took anoth­er four hours before they man­aged to extract Jam. By the time that Bread was cut-out the lock-on had been in place for eight hours.

All five peo­ple arrest­ed were tak­en to Bel­mul­let Gar­dai sta­tion. The two who were locked on were charged with not fol­low­ing police instruc­tions and for obstruc­tion. The oth­er three who were on the machin­ery were let go with­out charge for that, though one was sub­se­quent­ly re-arrest­ed for a pre­vi­ous action. Sup­port will con­tin­ue.

In all, a fan­tas­tic day out, espe­cial­ly with the rain hold­ing off until the action was over.

For more infor­ma­tion on the Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp and the cam­paign against Shell see
www.rossportsolidaritycamp.org

Kachin rebels oppose dams on Chinese border

10th June 2011
The pro-inde­pen­dence group denounces the pop­u­la­tion’s lack of involve­ment in the con­struc­tion of new hydro­elec­tric plants. They have blocked the work, but have with­drawn their mili­tias after the pay­ment of a “tax”. Envi­ron­men­tal­ists fear pos­si­ble dam­age to the ecosys­tem.
Update 15.6.11:

10th June 2011
The pro-inde­pen­dence group denounces the pop­u­la­tion’s lack of involve­ment in the con­struc­tion of new hydro­elec­tric plants. They have blocked the work, but have with­drawn their mili­tias after the pay­ment of a “tax”. Envi­ron­men­tal­ists fear pos­si­ble dam­age to the ecosys­tem.
Update 15.6.11:
Burmese rebels say they have destroyed sev­er­al bridges in the north of the coun­try to pre­vent attacks by the army.

The rebels, from Kachin state, said they had blown up two bridges in neigh­bour­ing Shan state.

The Thai­land-based Kachin News Group report­ed that the destroyed bridges were on a major trad­ing route into Chi­na.

The Kachin pro-inde­pen­dence move­ment is oppos­ing the con­struc­tion of a series of hydro­elec­tric dams along the north­ern bor­der between Myan­mar and Chi­na. This is revealed by sources close to the eth­nic rebel group which, despite sign­ing a peace agree­ment with the Burmese jun­ta in 1994, exer­cis­es sub­stan­tial con­trol over the area and fre­quent­ly engages in armed clash­es with gov­ern­ment troops.

The Kachin denounce their lack of involve­ment in the agree­ment, signed in 2007, between the rul­ing dic­ta­tor­ship and exec­u­tives of the multi­na­tion­al Chi­na Datang Cor­po­ra­tion; the agree­ment pro­vides for the con­struc­tion of nine hydro­elec­tric plants along the Chi­nese bor­der.

Ten­sion broke out two weeks ago over the refusal on the part of Chi­nese author­i­ties to pay a sort of “con­struc­tion tax” to the lead­ers of the eth­nic rebels; in response, the rebels sent mili­tia groups to the con­struc­tion sites to block work on the dams. Tarpein 1 and Tarpein 2 are the first two in a series of nine dams planned by the Burmese ener­gy min­istry, in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Chi­nese com­pa­nies. They take their name from the riv­er that runs through the north­ern city of Momauk, and once they begin func­tion­ing, they will pro­vide 240 and 168 megawatts respec­tive­ly.

Sources close to the pro-inde­pen­dence move­ment con­firm that the work resumed a week ago, after the pay­ment of 1.5 mil­lion yuan (a lit­tle more than 220,000 dol­lars) by exec­u­tives of the con­struc­tion com­pa­nies. The agree­ment was over­seen by the new com­man­der of the north­ern brigade, Gen­er­al Soe Win, who medi­at­ed between the par­ties, per­mit­ting work to resume.

In addi­tion to the eco­nom­ic inter­ests and con­trol of the ter­ri­to­ry involved, the Burmese-Chi­nese project has unleashed protests from envi­ron­men­tal­ists who are afraid of seri­ous reper­cus­sions for the envi­ron­ment. “The fear”, reveals envi­ron­men­tal expert Naw La in inter­view with the Irrawad­dy, “is that the local pop­u­la­tion is not being involved in the project, and must pay the con­se­quences. The ben­e­fits will go only to the Burmese gov­ern­ment and to the Chi­nese com­pa­nies, while the inhab­i­tants of the vil­lages will suf­fer seri­ous dam­age from defor­esta­tion and flood­ing”.

The most impor­tant of the nine hydro­elec­tric plants being built is the one in Myit­sone: it will be locat­ed 42 kilo­me­ters north of Myitky­i­na, cap­i­tal of the state of Kachin, and will pro­duce about 3,600 megawatts of elec­tric­i­ty.

A recruit­ing dri­ve in recent years by the Kachin rebels has increased their strength to about 7,000 men, accord­ing to Aung Kyaw Zaw. This would seem no match for Myanmar’s army which, with hun­dreds of thou­sands of sol­diers, is one of the largest forces in South­east Asia.

But the Kachin know the ter­rain well and have a rep­u­ta­tion as able jun­gle war­riors going back to World War II, when they allied them­selves with the Unit­ed States and Britain and ter­ri­fied Japan­ese sol­diers by cut­ting off their ears as tro­phies.

“Our strat­e­gy is gueril­la war­fare,” said Brang Lai, who is an aide to Gun Maw, one of the Kachin’s senior lead­ers. “We don’t have suf­fi­cient sup­plies but our spir­it is the most impor­tant thing.” The Kachin have laid land mines in the path of the gov­ern­ment army, he said.

He did not rule out mak­ing tar­gets of Chi­nese projects in the area, such as the gas pipeline, which is under con­struc­tion. “Until now we don’t have the inten­tion to dis­rupt the gas pipeline,” Brang Lai said. “We are wait­ing for the Chi­nese response.”

Chi­nese invest­ment in north­ern Myan­mar has increased man­i­fold in recent years, includ­ing plan­ta­tions, jade mines and infra­struc­ture projects. The fight­ing com­pli­cates Chi­nese efforts to fos­ter a peace­ful bal­ance between the cen­tral gov­ern­ment and the rebels.

The fight­ing in the Kachin areas is the most seri­ous out­break of vio­lence since clash­es in August 2009 when Burmese gov­ern­ment troops defeat­ed the Kokang, an eth­nic Chi­nese rebel group, send­ing thou­sands of refugees flee­ing into Chi­na.

Back­ground

Protestor stops coal train in Australia

9.6.11
A Green­peace activist had halt­ed a Hunter Val­ley coal train by bolt­ing a steel box to the lines and lock­ing him­self inside.

The bright yel­low met­al box which is paint­ed with “pol­lu­tion tax col­lec­tion point” con­tains Green­peace activist Erland How­den, the ABC reports.

9.6.11
A Green­peace activist had halt­ed a Hunter Val­ley coal train by bolt­ing a steel box to the lines and lock­ing him­self inside.

The bright yel­low met­al box which is paint­ed with “pol­lu­tion tax col­lec­tion point” con­tains Green­peace activist Erland How­den, the ABC reports.

The box stopped a coal train leav­ing BHP Billiton’s Mt Arthur coal mine, which man­aged to halt just 70 metres before it.

The box mea­sures 1.5 metres by 2.5 metres and is bolt­ed to rail line from the inside.

Accord­ing to the ABC, How­den said he is ready to stay inside the box for the next three days.

The move is part of a wider Green­peace protest against min­ing indus­try attempts to halt the car­bon tax. Pro­mo video

Do You Remember Fairmile?

Join the Silent Vic­to­ries Bike Ride.

Silent Vic­to­ries is a free 10 day long bike ride around the South West of Eng­land from the 1st ‑10th July that will vis­it places saved by direct action and analyse wider polit­i­cal ques­tions around what makes social change.

Join the Silent Vic­to­ries Bike Ride.

Silent Vic­to­ries is a free 10 day long bike ride around the South West of Eng­land from the 1st ‑10th July that will vis­it places saved by direct action and analyse wider polit­i­cal ques­tions around what makes social change.

The ride is pass­ing the site of the Fair­mile Road protest against the com­ple­tion of the A30. Were you there? We are par­tic­u­lar­ly look­ing for peo­ple with mem­o­ries of the A30 protests to join the ride and share mem­o­ries, reflec­tions and learn­ing.

On the ride we will:
— vis­it beau­ti­ful places in fine com­pa­ny,
— learn from com­mu­ni­ties that have suc­cess­ful­ly pro­tect­ed their area from destruc­tion
— sup­port ongo­ing cam­paigns
— inves­ti­gate alter­na­tives spaces
— dis­cuss issues and learn from each oth­er
— go swim­ming and eat lots of veg­an food

All wel­come, to learn, teach, share and take action.

To sign up to par­tic­i­pate please con­tact: silent.victories@gmail.com