Growing Resistance – trip to Cousland — Saturday 21st August 2010

Grow­ing Resis­tance is an event organ­ised by Coal Action Scot­land, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Com­mu­ni­ties Against Air­field Open Cast, tak­ing place dur­ing the Camp For Cli­mate Action, which this year is in Edin­burgh.

Grow­ing Resis­tance is an event organ­ised by Coal Action Scot­land, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Com­mu­ni­ties Against Air­field Open Cast, tak­ing place dur­ing the Camp For Cli­mate Action, which this year is in Edin­burgh.

For two years the com­mu­ni­ty sur­round­ing Air­field Farm have been object­ing to Scot­tish Coals plans to open cast the area in order to remove two mil­lion tons of coal. In an inde­pen­dent sur­vey 95% of local res­i­dents object to the planned mine. Despite this, Scot­tish Coal is push­ing ahead with the plans, and the very real fear is that Mid­loth­i­an Coun­cil will give them the go ahead. To show the local peo­ple that they are not alone in this strug­gle we are ask­ing peo­ple to join us on Sat­ur­day the 21st on the threat­ened land.

We will have infor­ma­tion from Coal Action Scot­land and the Coal Action Net­work, speak­ers from the local com­mu­ni­ty and oth­er com­mu­ni­ties in Scot­land plagued by the coal indus­try and a tour of the land under threat. There will be a bike car­a­van set­ting of from Cli­mate Camp, via Edin­burgh, arriv­ing about 3pm, and minibus shut­tles from Cli­mate Camp and the near­by town of Dalki­eth. For trav­el direc­tions see here.

If you want up to date infor­ma­tion about trav­el or get lost call our Trans­port Line num­ber: 07984706188 (only avail­able from Sat­ur­day morn­ing onwards)

If you have any ques­tions please email us at coalac­tion­scot­land [at] riseup.net

If you can’t make the event but still want to help the Cous­land com­mu­ni­ty then please send an objec­tion let­ter.

Climate Camp Have Occupied land near Gogarburn RBS HQ

Update, Thurs­day 19th:
The to-be-dra­mat­ic “Swoop” to occu­py the site of Cli­mate Camp in Edin­burgh was­n’t so dra­mat­ic. As the site, in RBS’s back gar­den, had been tak­en the night before, many peo­ple were already onsite and much (all?) risk tak­en out of the swoop process.So four sep­a­rate meet­ing places to avoid con­tain­ment were replaced with a sin­gle one, sun­ny St Andrews Square, where around 60 heav­i­ly-laden campers gath­ered, chat­ted and then left to go to the site. On the X48 bus, much to the relief of those with an Edin­burgh A‑Z.

RBS climate camp tripod entranceCamp for Climate Action set-up by RBS HQUpdate, Thurs­day 19th:
The to-be-dra­mat­ic “Swoop” to occu­py the site of Cli­mate Camp in Edin­burgh was­n’t so dra­mat­ic. As the site, in RBS’s back gar­den, had been tak­en the night before, many peo­ple were already onsite and much (all?) risk tak­en out of the swoop process.So four sep­a­rate meet­ing places to avoid con­tain­ment were replaced with a sin­gle one, sun­ny St Andrews Square, where around 60 heav­i­ly-laden campers gath­ered, chat­ted and then left to go to the site. On the X48 bus, much to the relief of those with an Edin­burgh A‑Z.

As of 4pm, campers were busy set­ting up. Mains water is being arranged with the co-oper­a­tion of the Coun­cil. Mar­quees are being erect­ed and kitchens tak­ing shape. The entrance to the Camp pro­vides a view over the back win­dows and lawn of RBS’s glob­al HQ, carved out of the green belt scant months before its hubris­tic col­lapse. There was­n’t too much activ­i­ty vis­i­ble there in the after­noon. Police and secu­ri­ty guards are post­ed at each entrance but there’s a marked lack of ten­sion com­pared with pre­vi­ous years.

Those with time are encour­aged to come along and help set-up for the Cam­p’s offi­cial start on Sat­ur­day.

18.8.10
At 9.15PM tonight Cli­mate Camp took the site on RBS HQ. Get on site as fast as you can! Defence help urgent­ly need­ed. Come to RBS Gog­a­r­burn Gar­dens, off Gog­ar Sta­tion Rd. x

Three cli­mate activists were arrest­ed by Scot­tish police as they took the site for the Camp for Cli­mate Action in Edin­burgh which set up very close to the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land Head­quar­ters at Gog­a­r­burn Gar­dens off Gog­ar Sta­tion Road just after 9pm yes­ter­day evening.
It is under­stood that the three who were arrest­ed have all been released with­out charge.

Loth­i­an Bus No. 48 can be tak­en there from Princess Street going North/West going towards West End of princes street.
Looks like the 10, 16 and 35 will all take you ten min­utes’ walk from where cli­mate camp is hap­pen­ing (get off at the ‘RBS HQ’ stop)!
RBS is a 30 minute walk from Edin­burgh park sta­tion

At night when Num­ber 48 not run­ning one can take the N22, goes a longer route but ends up near­by.

Beat The Boreholes Continues to Disrupt Shell’s Plans

18th August 2010
Yes­ter­day lunchtime, nine kayak­ers from Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp, with their team of vol­un­teers and local cam­paign­ers in sup­port roles on dry land, suc­cess­ful­ly inter­rupt­ed Shel­l’s bore­hole sur­vey drilling pro­gramme in Sruth Fha­da Conn for sev­er­al hours yes­ter­day.

18th August 2010
Yes­ter­day lunchtime, nine kayak­ers from Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp, with their team of vol­un­teers and local cam­paign­ers in sup­port roles on dry land, suc­cess­ful­ly inter­rupt­ed Shel­l’s bore­hole sur­vey drilling pro­gramme in Sruth Fha­da Conn for sev­er­al hours yes­ter­day.
Beat the Boreholes banner
Opposed by twelve assort­ed Gar­da and Shell secu­ri­ty boats car­ry­ing upwards of six­ty per­son­nel, the Shell to Sea kayak­ers sal­lied forth deter­mined to stop the progress of drilling in the estu­ary. In spite of the vast dis­par­i­ty of num­bers and dis­ad­van­tage in ves­sels, drilling was indeed stopped for some time, at no cost in arrests and with­out undue risk to the action team. After one of the kayak­ers had his ves­sel delib­er­ate­ly cap­sized by Shel­l’s IRMS secu­ri­ty oper­a­tives, he clev­er­ly turned the tables on them by swim­ming under the drilling plat­form and cling­ing on to the bore shaft. It took a com­bined Gar­da and Shell/IRMS effort quite a while to remove the intre­pid camper from the shaft, and all the time he was there halt­ed drilling in its tracks. The camper was removed from his posi­tion only when an IRMS secu­ri­ty man dived in to the water to seize him and restrain him in water out of his depth for sev­er­al min­utes before being hand­ed over to Gar­daí.

The water-based action con­tin­ued for over an hour after that, with the kayak­ers play­ing a game of ‘cat and mouse’ with the Gar­da and IRMS ribs, which con­tin­ued to dis­rupt the sched­ule of works on the drilling plat­forms. For all the time of the action was in progress, the kayak­ers were watched over from land by Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp vol­un­teers and local cam­paign­ers with cam­eras, video equip­ment and ban­ners. Also on land there was a cast of sup­port­ing vil­lains (alas!), with three Gar­da minibus­es, about ten uni­formed cops, Det. Hugh Egan (plus side­kick), and Jim Far­rell, oper­a­tions head of Inte­grat­ed Risk Man­age­ment Sys­tems (IRMS).

Sev­er­al par­ties of tourists both Irish and inter­na­tion­al, stopped to watch the action on the estu­ary waters, and after hav­ing the local strug­gle against Shell explained to them, cheered on the kayak­ers along­side the gath­ered local sup­port­ers and Sol­i­dar­i­ty Campers.

All kayak­ers returned to camp safe and well, with the only equip­ment loss that of a head-mount­ed cam­era stolen by an IRMS secu­ri­ty man from one of the kayak­ers. No arrests hap­pened, and the camper that was tak­en by the Gar­daí was released un-arrest­ed to the camp halfway dur­ing the action. All in all, anoth­er suc­cess for the Beat The Bore­holes cam­paign and a fit­ting way to mark Niall Har­net­t’s release from Shell-man­dat­ed cap­tiv­i­ty on Mon­day.

Climate Camp Cymru invades Nant Helen opencast site

17th August 2010
Activists from Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru invad­ed Nant Helen open cast coal mine in south Wales ear­li­er today.

Despite dis­pro­por­tion­ate polic­ing at the 2010 camp, groups of activists per­sist­ed in their objec­tives to wit­ness the destruc­tive oper­a­tions at Nant Helen open cast mine, owned by Celtic Ener­gy.

17th August 2010
Activists from Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru invad­ed Nant Helen open cast coal mine in south Wales ear­li­er today.

Despite dis­pro­por­tion­ate polic­ing at the 2010 camp, groups of activists per­sist­ed in their objec­tives to wit­ness the destruc­tive oper­a­tions at Nant Helen open cast mine, owned by Celtic Ener­gy.

The activists entered the coal hole at Nant Helen, where 450,000 tonnes of coal per year are dug out of aClimate Camp Cymru invades Nant Helen open cast coal mine hole approx­i­mate­ly 150m deep and 1.5 x 1 km wide. Celtic Ener­gy have applied for plan­ning per­mis­sion for the mine to expand.

This coal is most­ly des­tined for Aberthaw Pow­er Sta­tion, to be burnt for elec­tric­i­ty, which is one of the dirt­i­est and most car­bon
inten­sive indus­tri­al process­es.

Activist Ffion Dafys said “rip­ping up moun­tains to dig holes hun­dreds of meters deep destroys the land­scape and the local
envi­ron­ment. The coal removed and burnt will gen­er­ate mil­lions of
tonnes of CO2 over the next four years.”

“Coal seams in Glynn Neath will con­tin­ue to be exploit­ed and extend­ed by open cast min­ing cor­po­ra­tions like Celtic Ener­gy, caus­ing envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion until these oper­a­tions cease. Observ­ing from the bot­tom of the coal hole real­ly brought home the enor­mi­ty of the destruc­tion.”

Neutralisation of GM vines by the Faucheurs Volontaires

15th August 2010
False solu­tions for false prob­lems — GM vines scythed at INRA (Nation­al Insti­tute of the Agri­cul­tur­al Research), Col­mar, France by the Faucheurs Volon­taires (vol­un­teer GM scythers).

15th August 2010
False solu­tions for false prob­lems — GM vines scythed at INRA (Nation­al Insti­tute of the Agri­cul­tur­al Research), Col­mar, France by the Faucheurs Volon­taires (vol­un­teer GM scythers).

The neu­tral­i­sa­tion of this crop re-plant­ed in June of this year fol­lows last year’s decon­t­a­m­i­na­tion of the same tri­al in Sep­tem­ber. GM field tri­als are the first step towards com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion, and are use­less and unneed­ed. In 2009 the Stras­bourg admin­is­tra­tive court banned it.

64 Faucheurs dug up the 70 vines, after cut­ting their way through the 2m high barbed wire-topped fence, ignor­ing the motion detec­tors and CCTV. They then cut the GM plants into pieces with tools, at 5am on Sun­day morn­ing. They then held a press con­fer­ence and wait­ed for the police to arrive. 70 police and gen­darmes turned up and encir­cled them. Once bussed to the cop-shop, oth­er Alsa­t­ian farm­ers held a pic­nic by the police sta­tion in sup­port of those inside, who were released by noon. The police are talk­ing about 1 mil­lion Euros worth of dam­age.

80% of the French pub­lic are still opposed to GM, in the fields or on their plates.

http://www.monde-solidaire.org/spip/spip.php?article5389

Climate Camp Cymru is evicted long live Climate Camp Cymru

* * * IMPORTANT UPDATE * * *

15-08-2010 20:55 CLIMATE CAMP CYMRU UP AND RUNNING AGAIN. Hav­ing been evict­ed by South Wales police from a site near Glyn-Neath (see below), Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru is now estab­lished on a new site on the Gow­er Penin­su­la near Swansea.
If you fan­cy join­ing the camp, give site a call on 07040909147 and they’ll give you direc­tions and a warm wel­come.

* * * IMPORTANT UPDATE * * *

15-08-2010 20:55 CLIMATE CAMP CYMRU UP AND RUNNING AGAIN. Hav­ing been evict­ed by South Wales police from a site near Glyn-Neath (see below), Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru is now estab­lished on a new site on the Gow­er Penin­su­la near Swansea.
If you fan­cy join­ing the camp, give site a call on 07040909147 and they’ll give you direc­tions and a warm wel­come.
http://climatecampcymru.org/

CLIMATE CAMP CYMRU EVICTED

Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru, which was due to con­tin­ue until Tues­day 17th August at Glyn-Neath in South Wales, was evict­ed by the police on its sec­ond day (Sat­ur­day 14th) over alleged com­plaints about pos­si­ble dam­age to the site cho­sen by the campers, a Roman Hill Fort.

SPURIOUS GROUNDS FOR EVICTION

Hav­ing stood by use­less­ly for years while the beau­ti­ful land­scape of the Welsh Val­leys has been sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly trashed by open­cast min­ing com­pa­nies, South Wales Police seem to have sud­den­ly devel­oped a touch­ing con­cern for the envi­ron­ment, mov­ing in en masse with riot vans and on horse­back to evict the campers on these spu­ri­ous grounds. While Cli­mate Campers have a deserved rep­u­ta­tion for clear­ing up after them­selves and are unlike­ly to have done more dam­age than stick a few tent pegs in the sacred soil, open­cast min­ing com­pa­nies destroy whole moun­tains | 1 | 2 | and impor­tant wildlife habi­tats with­out the cops appear­ing to notice or care.

We are still await­ing first-hand reports from campers, but Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru has issued a press release which states that Cadw, the gov­ern­ment body respon­si­ble for the site and whose aims, inci­den­tal­ly, are ‘to pro­tect and sus­tain, encour­age com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment in and improve access to the his­toric envi­ron­ment of Wales’, had ‘vis­it­ed the site and accept­ed that the camp could go ahead with police mon­i­tor­ing.’ It seems like­ly that the cops inter­pret­ed this to mean they could stop the camp when­ev­er they want­ed. A spokesper­son for the camp said: ‘This just goes to show the pri­or­i­ties of the cur­rent gov­ern­ment, who are more inter­est­ed in pro­tect­ing cli­mate crim­i­nals like Celtic Ener­gy and in repress­ing those tak­ing action on cli­mate change, than on actu­al­ly tack­ling the cli­mate cri­sis them­selves.’

Bath Bomb #32 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!

Issue #32

free/donation

August 2010

“Fast, aggres­sive, and it wants your sand­wich!”

Armagge­don Out­ta Here

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!

Issue #32

free/donation

August 2010

“Fast, aggres­sive, and it wants your sand­wich!”

Armagge­don Out­ta Here

An unpalat­able mod­ern-day truth is that human life, far from being sacred, is deemed expend­able, almost an incon­ve­nience, when the col­li­sion of pol­i­tics, pow­er and eco­nom­ics pro­vokes con­flict. Then, the big­ger the con­flict, the greater the num­ber of lives wast­ed.

This month marks an espe­cial­ly poignant anniver­sary. In 1945, U.S. Pres­i­dent Har­ry S. Tru­man took the deci­sion to drop atom­ic bombs on Japan: ‘Lit­tle Boy’ was det­o­nat­ed over Hiroshi­ma on August 6th in that year ; on August 9th, ‘Fat Man’ was explod­ed over Nagasa­ki. Both cities were near-oblit­er­at­ed.

The tens of thou­sands who died instant­ly were most­ly civil­ians. The ‘ratio­nale’ for these acts of mass slaugh­ter, if it is even pos­si­ble to dig­ni­fy them with that term, was that Hiroshi­ma and Nagasa­ki had con­sid­er­able indus­tri­al and mil­i­tary sig­nif­i­cance, and that their anni­hi­la­tion would put an end to Japan­ese prospects of ter­ri­to­r­i­al aggran­dis­e­ment , ter­mi­nat­ing their involve­ment in World War II.

The body-count from both atroc­i­ties was a trag­ic coda to the tal­ly of the total lives squan­dered in the entire six-year con­flict. The Amer­i­can pro­pa­gan­da machine sought to spin what was in effect mass mur­der into a moral and mil­i­tary ‘suc­cess’, claim­ing that if the Japan­ese had­n’t sur­ren­dered after two of their cities had thus been blown to pieces, then a land inva­sion would have undoubt­ed­ly had to be car­ried out to achieve the same effect, cost­ing the lives of thou­sands of U.S. troops.

It shows just what a moral vac­u­um the U.S. high com­mand were liv­ing in when they had to skulk behind a hypoth­e­sis to avoid cop­ping the blame for what in any­one else’s lan­guage would be inter­pret­ed as a cold-blood­ed war crime.

The bomb­ing of Hiroshi­ma and Nagasa­ki was, and still is, inde­fen­si­ble. You can nev­er ‘save’ lives by tak­ing them. We all need to be remind­ed of the hor­rors which took place in Japan in ear­ly August 1945, because the nuclear mon­ster that was unleashed upon the world then is still with us. It lurks off the British coast in the form of the Tri­dent sub­ma­rine fleet.

To tout the pow­er-plant used by these weapons-in-wait­ing, as Cameron’s gov­ern­ment is now doing, as a domes­tic ener­gy source,  shows that politi­cians con­tin­ue to bam­boo­zle the pub­lic with smoke­screens while they har­bour fan­tasies of nuk­ing their way to world dom­i­na­tion. 

To blow bil­lions on an unnec­es­sary arma­ment upgrade at a time of swinge­ing pub­lic ser­vice cuts would be laugh­able were it not such an obscen­i­ty.

*

Join The Resis­tance!

Con­sid­er­ing the state’s mas­sive attack on ordi­nary peo­ple, with cuts to jobs, ser­vices, pen­sions and ben­e­fits, the time has come to fight back. We should not be expect­ed to pay for the crises caused by politi­cians and bankers. We are not all ‘in this togeth­er’ – the rich politi­cians in the Cab­i­net and the bankers with their bonus­es are not affect­ed. Mem­bers of B.A.N., along with oth­ers in the trade unions, are set­ting up an anti-cuts cam­paign in Bath, fight­ing to pro­tect every job and defend pen­sions, ser­vices and ben­e­fits from cuts. The cam­paign is open to all those affect­ed by gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy. We need to organ­ise and fight back togeth­er.

The cam­paign will be organ­is­ing a big pub­lic meet­ing at the end of Sep­tem­ber, and hopes to attract sup­port from all affect­ed groups. If you wish to get involved, con­tact johnbamphylde[at]yahoo.co.uk or phone 07908 355456.

More info is to fol­low in next mon­th’s issue, but here are some impor­tant dates for your diary: the next Bath Anti-Cuts Com­mit­tee meet­ing is at the Bell, Tues­day 24th August, 8pm; Sun­day 3rd Octo­ber will be a nation­al day of action out­side the Tory Par­ty Con­fer­ence in Birm­ing­ham; Wednes­day 20th Octo­ber will be the day of bud­get announce­ment; and Sat­ur­day 23rd Octo­ber will be a region­al day of action against the planned cuts.

And here are some web­sites to check out, too: http://www.righttowork.org.uk, and http://www.coalitionofresistance.wordpress.com.

*

Fight And Unite!

Some anar­chists argue that the main trade unions are bureau­crat­ic, their lead­ers have sold out and they have lit­tle rel­e­vance to work­ing class peo­ple. They argue that anar­chists should form their own unions. How­ev­er, many young peo­ple find unions bor­ing and do not real­ly under­stand what they are. Oth­ers argue back that unions are still work­ers’ organ­i­sa­tions, that they could still be the force to take on the cap­i­tal­ist state, and that work­ers should join and fight with­in unions to make them more demo­c­ra­t­ic and com­bat­ive.

At the Bath Social­ist Forum meet­ing on Mon­day 30th August, at 8pm, we will be dis­cussing the way for­ward for work­ers in trades unions, pre­sent­ed by John Bam­phylde of Bath Trades Coun­cil. The fol­low­ing meet­ing, on Mon­day 27th Sep­tem­ber, will be pre­sent­ed by film-mak­er Ken Loach. The meet­ings take place at St James Wine Vaults, and all are wel­come.

*

Killer Faces Unem­ploy­ment!

A dis­ci­pli­nary hear­ing is to be held against P.C. Simon Har­wood on the grounds of gross mis­con­duct with regards to an attack on Ian Tom­lin­son on April 1st 2009. It is con­sid­ered like­ly the out­come will be imme­di­ate dis­missal.

I pose this ques­tion, does­n’t it seem a bit extreme to take away this man’s occu­pa­tion sim­ply for a light shove? After all, to push from behind is all part and par­cel with polic­ing a large-scale protest. Cer­tain­ly, Tom­lin­son was­n’t dead imme­di­ate­ly after the inci­dent, so why then should Mr Har­wood be sub­ject­ed to mix with the doleys and scroungers?

A few indi­vid­u­als are claim­ing the P.C. to be guilty of manslaugh­ter and hence deserves to lose his liveli­hood. These peo­ple are clear­ly revenge-bent or deranged as it is well known that there has been a long (and nat­u­ral­ly there­fore thor­ough) inves­ti­ga­tion by the C.P.S., which decid­ed there was no case. Irrefutably trust­wor­thy patho­log­i­cal evi­dence has shown the man died of nat­ur­al caus­es. Fur­ther, the video footage does­n’t even show the man hit­ting the ground, let alone gain­ing injuries. Sure­ly only one con­clu­sion can be reached, that P.C. Simon Har­wood is unde­ni­ably inno­cent.

Clear­ly, it was a high­ly volatile sit­u­a­tion and a police offi­cer can­not be blamed for get­ting a bit touchy-feely. If peo­ple get so het up about this, then with the home office more and more con­cerned about P.R., in the end we’ll have a police force too scared to catch any crim­i­nals.

*

Agri-Cul­ture Shock

Tran­si­tion Bath are start­ing up a new scheme in Bathamp­ton, work­ing with the Hugh­es fam­i­ly to restore a six acre area of land to organ­ic pro­duc­tion, and hope to bring togeth­er locals to explore how this can be done. Tran­si­tion Bath are a local envi­ron­men­tal­ist group aim­ing to build a sus­tain­able future using the pow­er of com­mu­ni­ty, in the face of declin­ing nat­ur­al resources and increas­ing costs. They hope to make the tran­si­tion to a low car­bon, local econ­o­my, whilst cre­at­ing pos­i­tive, self-reliant com­mu­ni­ties. This project should turn out to be the first Com­mu­ni­ty Sup­port­ed Agri­cul­ture (C.S.A.) scheme in the city – a part­ner­ship between farm­ers and the sur­round­ing com­mu­ni­ty, pro­vid­ing mutu­al ben­e­fits for both, and recon­nect­ing peo­ple to the land. Whether you would like to grow your own, meet oth­er locals, or get involved in a project to help reduce food bills and food miles, why not come along to the end of Hol­combe Lane, near Hol­combe Farm, Bathamp­ton, at 1pm, on Sun­day the 15th August for a bar­be­cue and fruit pick. All dona­tions to Tran­si­tion Bath will be much appre­ci­at­ed. For more info, con­tact Jamie Col­ston at jamiecolston[at]gmail.com, or ring 01225 851377.

Anoth­er exam­ple of the link between eth­i­cal sus­tain­abil­i­ty, the com­mu­ni­ty and the food we eat, has been going on down at the River­side Youth Cen­tre on Lon­don Road since 2001. The Lon­don Road Food Co-op is a vol­un­teer-run, not-for-prof­it mem­bers’ co-oper­a­tive, open­ing Wednes­days from 4–7pm at the end of the lane behind the for­mer Porter Butt pub. Mem­ber­ship is afford­able and paid annu­al­ly on a slid­ing vol­un­tary scale between £3 and £10, and mem­bers get access to a whole host of organ­ic, fair­ly trad­ed and veg­an-friend­ly whole­foods and gro­ceries, with­out the price mark-up you will see in oth­er stores. In the past the co-op has also oper­at­ed a week­ly veg, fruit, egg and bread scheme, which it hopes to revive. In the mean­time, though, this is a great lit­tle friend­ly project, and is keen to attract mem­bers and vol­un­teers. If you do want to find out more, why not pop along, or give them a call on 07837 784715?

http://www.transitionbath.org

*

Food Fayre Thought

Lazi­ly aping our arti­cle from last month, in case you did­n’t catch it, Sat­ur­day the 4th Sep­tem­ber will mark the day of the sec­ond annu­al Bath Veg­an Fayre! Run­ning from 12 mid­day til 4pm down­stairs at Man­vers Street Bap­tist Church, free entry, expect hours of free veg­an savoury and sweet delights, as well as a sprin­kling of talks and con­ver­sa­tion, with a (non-dairy) creamy after-taste of nutri­tion­al and eth­i­cal info. In a deli­cious dash of déjà vu, there will also be a ben­e­fit gig at the Hob­gob­lin on Fri­day 27th August, from 8pm, fea­tur­ing bands and D.J.s, £3 entry. Helpers for both would be much appre­ci­at­ed! E‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk, or ring 07717 130954 for fur­ther info. And again, don’t for­get Bris­tol’s grass­roots veg­an fayre/fair, tak­ing place on Sat­ur­day 30th Octo­ber in a venue near you.

*

GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Con­tact us by e‑mailing bathbombpress[at]yahoo.co.uk. Large print e‑versions avail­able on request. And for more info on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

*

UPCOMING EVENTS

Lon­don Road Food Co-op, Wednes­days, 4–7pm, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Lon­don Road, http://www.londonroadfoodcoop.blogspot.com

Bathamp­ton Com­mu­ni­ty Grow­ers work­day, Thurs­days, 10am-dusk, Mill Lane, Bathamp­ton, e‑mail thelostplot[at]googlemail.com/ tel Chris 07792 444628

Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard

Brad­ford-On-Avon peace vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, by the peace stat­ue oppo­site West­bury Gar­dens by the Town Bridge, Brad­ford-On-Avon

Recy­cle Your Sun­days, Sun­days, 10.30am, starts Abbey Church­yard, the reg­u­lar series of socia­ble, easy-paced cycle rides, http://www.bathrys.org.uk/ tel Hazel 01225 469199

Bathamp­ton Com­mu­ni­ty Sup­port­ed Agri­cul­ture bar­be­cue & fruit pick, Sun­day 15th August, 1pm, Hol­combe Lane, Bathamp­ton, e‑mail jamiecolston[at]gmail.com/ tel Jamie 01225 851377 FFI

Region­al hunt sabo­teurs get togeth­er, Sun­day 15th August, 1pm, Bris­tol Downs

Bath Cycling Cam­paign meet­ing, Mon­day 16th August, 7.30pm, Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street, http://www.bathcyclingcampaign.org.uk

Cli­mate Camp Ire­land, Thurs­day 16th to Mon­day 20th August, Vic­to­ria Bridge, Coun­ty Tyrone, http://www.climatecamp.ie

Que­bec Cli­mate Action Camp, Wednes­day 18th August to Sun­day 22nd August, http://www,climateactionmontreal.wordpress.com/climatecam

Fam­i­ly Fun Day – Out­door Cook­ing work­shop, Thurs­day 19th August, 12–3pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, £15 per fam­i­ly (suit­able for over 7s), book­ing essen­tial: http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

Camp for Cli­mate Action UK, Thurs­day 19th August to Tues­day 24th August, Edin­burgh, http://www.climatecamp.org.uk/actions

talk: ‘The Venus Project’, Sat­ur­day 21st August, 1–5pm, Vic­to­ria Rooms — The Audi­to­ri­um Uni­ver­si­ty of Bris­tol, Queens Road, Clifton, Bris­tol, BS8 1SA, £16.02 entry; http://thevpinbristol.eventbrite.com

Cli­mate Camp Ger­many, Sat­ur­day 21st August to Sun­day 29th August, Erke­lenz- Borschemich, http://www.klimacamp2010.de

film: ‘The War Game’, Sun­day 22nd August, 2.30pm, the Arnolfi­ni, Bris­tol; http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/films/details/716

Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs meet­ing, Mon­day 23rd August, 8–9pm, The Bell, tel Justin 07854 062336

Bath Anti-Cuts Com­mit­tee meet­ing, Tues­day 24th August, 8pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street

Bath Stop the War meet­ing, Wednes­day 25th August, 7.30pm, Friends Meet­ing House, York Street, Bath, BA1 1NG; http://www.bathstopwar.org.uk

Fam­i­ly Fun Day – Build Your Own Pond work­shop, Thurs­day 26th August, 12–3pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, £15 per fam­i­ly (suit­able for over 7s), book­ing essen­tial: http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

Bath Veg­an Fayre ben­e­fit gig, Fri­day 27th August, 8–11pm, Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade; more details tbc

Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il: vote with your mon­ey against Tri­dent, Sat­ur­day 28th August, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard, oth­er Bath human rights/trade & development/ justice/trades union organ­i­sa­tions are invit­ed to sup­port Crit­i­cal Mass Bike Ride, Sat­ur­day 28th August, 1pm, Kingsmead Square, http://www.bathcyclingcampaign.org.uk

Cli­mate Jus­tice Action meet­ing at the Nether­lands Earth First! Gath­er­ing, Sat­ur­day 28th August to Sun­day 29th August, Utrecht, http://www.climate-justice-action.org

Bath Ani­mal Action info stall, Sun­day 29th August, 2–4pm, Stall Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Tran­si­tion Bath Social, Mon­day 30th August, 7.15pm, the Love Lounge/ back room of the Bell, Wal­cot Street; bring food to share; http://www.transitionbath.org

Bath Social­ist Forum meet­ing, Mon­day 30th August, 8pm, upstairs St James Wine Vaults, pre­sent­ed by John Bamphylde/Bath Trades Coun­cil

one year part-time ‘Prac­ti­cal Sus­tain­abil­i­ty’ course, starts Sep­tem­ber 2010, Bris­tol; explor­ing per­ma­cul­ture design, organ­ic hor­ti­cul­ture, wood­land man­age­ment, green build­ing, eco­log­i­cal inter­ac­tions, ener­gy, group dynam­ics, re-local­i­sa­tion, cre­at­ing change, com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment and more; http://www.shiftbristol.org.uk

Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 2nd Sep­tem­ber, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at The Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade, http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Thurs­day 2nd to Fri­day 3rd Sep­tem­ber, St Wer­burgh’s City Farm, Boil­ing Wells, Bris­tol, BS2 9YJ, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Bath Veg­an Fayre, Sat­ur­day 4th Sep­tem­ber, 12–4pm, Man­vers Street Bap­tist Church, free entry

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sat­ur­day 4th Sep­tem­ber, St Wer­burgh’s City Farm, Boil­ing Wells, Bris­tol, BS2 9YJ, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sun­day 5th Sep­tem­ber, St Wer­burgh’s City Farm, Boil­ing Wells, Bris­tol, BS2 9YJ, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 8th Sep­tem­ber, 8.30pm, the Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Thurs­day 9th to Fri­day 10th Sep­tem­ber, Hamp­ton Row Allot­ments, Bath­wick, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Bris­tol Anar­chist Book­fair, Sat­ur­day 11th Sep­tem­ber, 10.30–6pm, Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bris­tol; e‑mail bristolanarchistbookfair[at]riseup.net; http://www.bristolanarchistbookfair.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sat­ur­day 11th Sep­tem­ber, Hamp­ton Row Allot­ments, Bath­wick, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sun­day 12th Sep­tem­ber, Hamp­ton Row Allot­ments, Bath­wick, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Mon­day 13th Sep­tem­ber, 8–9pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street, e‑mail bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Thurs­day 16th to Fri­day 17th Sep­tem­ber, Pease­down St John Com­mu­ni­ty Farm, Dunker­ton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sat­ur­day 18th Sep­tem­ber, Pease­down St John Com­mu­ni­ty Farm, Dunker­ton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Region­al South West Ani­mal Rights Coali­tion meet­ing, Sun­day 19th Sep­tem­ber, 12–5pm, The Fac­to­ry, Cave Street, cen­tral Bris­tol

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues),

Sun­day 19th Sep­tem­ber, Pease­down St John Com­mu­ni­ty Farm, Dunker­ton Hill, BA2 8PJ, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Thurs­day 23rd to Fri­day 24th Sep­tem­ber, Bloom­field Allot­ments, Bear Flat, 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sat­ur­day 25th Sep­tem­ber, Bloom­field Allot­ments, Bear Flat, 2.30pm & 7.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Kil­ter the­atre : ‘Roots: Replant­ed’ (per­for­mance about food secu­ri­ty issues), Sun­day 26th Sep­tem­ber, Bloom­field Allot­ments, Bear Flat, 2.30pm, £9 (£7 con­ces­sions), tel 01225 386777 to book, http://www.kiltertheatre.org

Bath Social­ist Forum meet­ing, Mon­day 27th Sep­tem­ber, 8pm, upstairs St James Wine Vaults, pre­sent­ed by Ken Loach

No Bor­ders Camp Bel­gium, Wednes­day 29th Sep­tem­ber to Sun­day 3rd Octo­ber, Brus­sels, http://www.noborderbxl.eu.org/?lang=en

Nation­al March for Farmed Ani­mals, Sat­ur­day 2nd Octo­ber, 12pm start, Cavendish Square, Lon­don

anti-Tory demon­stra­tion, Sun­day 3rd Octo­ber, Tory Par­ty Con­fer­ence, Birm­ing­ham more details tbc

Legal fees ben­e­fit punk gig: ‘SUBVERT 2010 — A Fes­ti­val Of Resis­tance’, Fri­day 8th to Sun­day 10th Octo­ber, Bris­tol, feat Hel­lkrush­er, Rui­dosa Immu­ni­di­cia, War All The Time, Ignosy, The Wankys, The Extin­guish­ers & Bul­letrid­den, as well as veg­an cafés/ stalls/ films/ work­shops & pic­nic; more details tbc

Region­al day of action against the cuts, Sat­ur­day 23rd Octo­ber

Bris­tol Free Veg­an Food Fair, Sat­ur­day 30th Octo­ber, more details tbc

Camp for Cli­mate Action Aus­tralia, Wednes­day 1st to Sun­day 5th Decem­ber, Bayswa­ter Pow­er Sta­tion, http://www.climatecamp.org.au

Cli­mate Camp Aotearoa, Thurs­day 16th to Tues­day 21st Decem­ber, Welling­ton New Zealand, http://www.climatecamp.org.nz/node/51

*

The Only Good Boss Is A Dead Boss?

B&NES Coun­cil has man­aged to well and tru­ly shit on its work­ers once again through its recent adver­tise­ment of a new job role to fill. After cut­ting loose 70 staff in the last cou­ple months, and plan­ning at least anoth­er 300 job loss­es in the near future, the cre­ation of the new Head of Prop­er­ty post, with its wage pack­et of between £71,166 and £76,638 per year, tells those for­mer employ­ees exact­ly what the coun­cil thinks of them. The cre­ation of this man­age­r­i­al role could only hap­pen once the rank and file, who actu­al­ly do the work rather than just fan­ny around sack­ing peo­ple, had been let go. Set to man­age (i.e. leave them all board­ed up for years then flog) the coun­cil’s port­fo­lio of 1,000 build­ings, many in retail, worth more than £500 mil­lion, this has left union offi­cials furi­ous with the coun­cil chiefs. But here at the Bath Bomb, con­sid­er­ing the cal­i­bre of inhu­man slith­er­ings and evo­lu­tion­ary dead-ends infest­ing the rest of B&NES’s Prop­er­ty Ser­vices depart­ment, we won­der what sort of two-faced rep­til­ian abom­i­na­tion they’ll dredge up to fill that role, and which car­ni­val freak show will soon be miss­ing its star attrac­tion?

Bath Activist Net­work are a local umbrel­la group cam­paign­ing on issues as diverse as devel­op­ment, envi­ron­men­tal­ism, anti-war, ani­mal rights, work­ers’ rights and more. Help­ing to pro­duce the Bath Bomb, we are open to any­one, and our mem­bers range from trade union­ists to anar­chists, lib­er­als and greens, and peo­ple who just want to change Bath for the bet­ter. For details on meet­ings, demos, or just to get in touch, e‑mail bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk, or see our web­site: http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

*

Gull War Syn­drome

There’s an epi­dem­ic going on! You may or may not have heard about the killer seag­ulls roam­ing the streets of bath. Or, EVEN WORSE the mur­der­ous fox­es patrolling EVERY CITY IN THE UK!!! look­ing for pets and chil­dren to eat. The nation­al press have brave­ly sol­diered on to warn the gen­er­al pub­lic of these men­aces, one Bath pho­tog­ra­ph­er took his life in his hands to get a pic­ture of the gull men­ace close up.

Bath land­lords are feel­ing the need to join brave vig­i­lante groups to oil the eggs and stop the demon spawn escap­ing. Unfor­tu­nate­ly these brave souls have neglect­ed to think about why wild ani­mals would chose to move into urban areas.

The only rea­son that wildlife can sur­vive in cities is our atti­tude to waste. Pigeons, gulls and fox­es all sur­vive on the dis­gust­ing amount of food waste scat­tered all over. ‘Gull pre­ven­tion mea­sures’ in one part of Bath sim­ply move the prob­lem to the next street. If home­own­ers, land­lords and the coun­cil made a con­cert­ed effort to get rid of the birds they could do so eas­i­ly. All it takes is to clean up our waste.

The dis­pos­able cul­ture we live in means that a huge amount is thrown out, a lack of ade­quate recy­cling facil­i­ties (along with pure lazi­ness on many peo­ples part) means that waste is left on our streets for days before being col­lect­ed. Along with ani­mals being able to sur­vive on all of this, it also pos­es risks to them. The fact that food waste, when not com­post­ed, is mixed in with oth­er rub­bish means that ani­mals are at risk of chok­ing, poi­son­ing, and numer­ous oth­er hor­ri­ble deaths — lead­ing to the sight of rot­ting corpses on our streets. Sure­ly not good for the tourists?

In order to ensure humans are kept away from this dan­ger­ous wildlife entire­ly, we need to make our cities unin­hab­it­able to these men­aces. Clean­ing up after your­self – rather than toss­ing the blame at any old scape­goat – should do it.

*

From Our Unclothed Cor­re­spon­dent

“On Sun­day 13th June, I took part in the first prop­er ‘Bris­tol World Naked Bike Ride’, to protest against oil depen­den­cy, in favour of curb­ing car cul­ture and to have car- free Sun­days in the city and a cel­e­bra­tion of body free­dom. By rid­ing nude, pro­test­ers demon­strate the vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty of cyclists on the busy streets. It also feels good and lib­er­at­ing.

We met at the Full Moon pub, Stokes Croft, Bris­tol at 12 noon, and it was a love­ly hot sun­ny day so peo­ple start­ed strip­ping off before­hand in the beer gar­den, as you had to stay dressed inside the pub.

The ride head­ed off about 1pm, most of the cyclists were naked includ­ing myself, some were body-paint­ed, oth­ers had small cos­tumes on, it’s a clothes-option­al protest, but the more that are nude the bet­ter. There was no police pres­ence.

Spec­ta­tors lined  some of the route cheer­ing and enjoy­ing the event which went through Broad­mead, Cas­tle Green, the Cen­tre, Bald­win St, Old Mar­ket and Col­lege Green, where we stopped for a pho­to call before head­ing back to the Full Moon where many remained naked out­side until leav­ing late after­noon.

The protest was a great suc­cess, with good pho­tos on Bris­tol Indy­media, and the local press. The World Naked Bike Ride is an inter­na­tion­al event and this year there were rides in Lon­don, Brighton, Southamp­ton, York, Sheffield and­Man­ches­ter, it’s grow­ing. It’s also show­ing that there is noth­ing wrong with the human body and being a free spir­it.”

*

Hit­ting The Books

Con­tin­u­ing with the cur­rent plug­ging craze, the Bris­tol Anar­chist Book­fair fol­lows hot on the Bath Veg­an Fayre’s heels, on Sat­ur­day 11th Sep­tem­ber. There is a def­i­nite growth of anar­chist and alter­na­tive book­fairs hap­pen­ing through the U.K. and abroad, which shows both increased co-oper­a­tion between dif­fer­ent anar­chist trends, and a grow­ing inter­est in find­ing an alter­na­tive to the fail­ures of cap­i­tal – not too sur­pris­ing, con­sid­er­ing the state our econ­o­my and plan­et is in! The event will fea­ture two floors of stalls, work­shops, books, zines, mer­chan­dise, and talks, plus a rad­i­cal his­to­ry zone, film room, creche and veg­an café. Tak­ing place at Hamil­ton House, 80 Stokes Croft in Bris­tol, from 10.30am to 6pm, the fair (they obvi­ous­ly did­n’t quite have the gump­tion to go with ‘fayre’) is free and acces­si­ble to all, and is guar­an­teed to open both eyes and wal­lets.

http://www.bristolanarchistbookfair.org

*

Don’t Think We’re Alone Now

For our Bris­tol read­ers, ‘The Auton­o­mist’, Bris­tol’s new rad­i­cal news sheet and direc­to­ry, is out now: get it online at http://www.bristolautonomist.blogspot.com!

*

I Would Have Got Away With It Too, If It Was­n’t For You Hedd­lu Kids

The long-await­ed Welsh Cli­mate Camp/Climate Camp Cym­ru went into action on Fri­day 13th of this month, focus­ing once more on the pol­lut­ing evils of the coal extrac­tion indus­try, and set up near the Selar and Nant-Helen (due for expan­sion) open­cast coal mines, in Glyn-Neath in South Wales. Both mines are owned by Celtic Ener­gy. The Selar mine itself destroyed a Site of Spe­cial Sci­en­tif­ic Inter­est (SSSI) back in the 1990s, for added eco­cide – trash­ing vital marsh this­tles, and fail­ing to rehome the colony of rare marsh frit­il­lary but­ter­flies. For the camp itself, as with pre­vi­ous camps, a pos­i­tive agen­da of decen­tralised, renew­able pow­er sys­tems, com­mu­nal liv­ing, eco-action plan­ning and skill­share work­shops were all on the cards.

How­ev­er, the Welsh police put paid to all that the next day, pre­ma­ture­ly evict­ing the site and 30 or so activists present, draw­ing on a mas­sive out­lay of mount­ed police and at least 15 riot vans full. Maybe Fri­day the 13th was­n’t such a good day after all?

On relat­ed news, the 13 remain­ing defen­dants of April’s Ffos-y-fran coal train block­ade were con­di­tion­al­ly dis­charged at Merthyr Tyd­fil Crown Court on the Fri­day; the oth­er five had their charges dropped in July. A life­long restrain­ing order bar­ring them from the vicin­i­ty of Aberthaw Pow­er Sta­tion and the Ffos-y-fran mine hangs round their necks. They were greet­ed out­side court by more mount­ed police, two riot vans and the flash­es of BBC and ITV pho­tog­ra­phers. Ahh, the price of fame.

http://www.bristol.indymedia.org.uk/article/693181

*

And now, to the dis­claimer: as any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflec­tive of all con­trib­u­tors. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat upon. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this dis­claimer do not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflect the opin­ions of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor.

Ffos y fran coal train verdict + action snaps

13 of us were in court today (13.8.10) to be sen­tenced for blockad­ing the rail­way at Ffos y fran mine back in April, when sev­er­al peo­ple locked on to the tracks in order to stop a train car­ry­ing coal to Aberthaw, the dirt­i­est pow­er sta­tion in Wales.

13 of us were in court today (13.8.10) to be sen­tenced for blockad­ing the rail­way at Ffos y fran mine back in April, when sev­er­al peo­ple locked on to the tracks in order to stop a train car­ry­ing coal to Aberthaw, the dirt­i­est pow­er sta­tion in Wales.

Ffos y fran train 3

We received con­di­tion­al dis­charges and restrain­ing orders away from the mine and the pow­er sta­tion. Four peo­ple were ordered to pay com­pen­sa­tion costs to Miller Argent, the com­pa­ny who owns the mine, The judge acknowl­edged that the action had been car­ried out care­ful­ly to ensure there would be no dan­ger to any­one.

With their hands in the pock­ets of cor­po­ra­tions, it’s not sur­pris­ing that gov­ern­ments failed us at the Copen­hagen cli­mate sum­mit. We can’t rely on their false solu­tions any­more. It’s up to ordi­nary peo­ple tak­ing direct action to stop cli­mate chaos. Fos­sil fuel extrac­tion dev­as­tates com­mu­ni­ties and is being resist­ed around the world, from open­cast min­ing in Merthyr to tar sands oil in Alber­ta, Cana­da.

Mean­while, Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru set up camp today near Nant Helen and Sel­er open­cast mines, else­where in south Wales.

http://www.risingtide.org.uk

Ffos y fran train 2

Ffos y fran train 1

More cool pho­tos

Drill huggers stop Shell’s drilling work in Rossport, Ireland

13.8.10

13.8.10
Yes­ter­day peo­ple from the local com­mu­ni­ty of Pul­lath­omas and Ross­port and Sol­i­dar­i­ty campers lead by the rous­ing sound of a vis­it­ing bag­piper and drum­mer, returned to one of Shel­l’s drilling rigs, gain­ing access at low tide across the exposed sand bars of Sruwad­da­con bay. On arriv­ing at the rig a num­ber of peo­ple sur­round­ed the drill cas­ing and danced around it before form­ing a tight hud­dle to pre­vent any fur­ther work occur­ring. Mean­while oth­ers held a large ban­ner and occu­pied the area while chil­dren played in the sand.

I‑RMS secu­ri­ty guards asked the drill hug­gers to leave the area “for their own safe­ty”, an offer that was polite­ly refused. Around an hour lat­er Gar­di arrived and observed while super inten­dant Diskin had a pri­vate chat with I‑RMS chief Jim Far­rell.

Bizarrely after 30 min­utes or so all the Gards left leav­ing I‑RMS in charge of polic­ing the pro­test­ers, despite their shock­ing record of vio­lence towards the local com­mu­ni­ty.

Peo­ple spent the after­noon occu­py­ing the area while chat­ting, singing, play­ing music and foot­ball.

Around 5 o’clock in the evening when most peo­ple had left, with no warn­ing I‑RMS men jumped on pro­test­ers and force­ful­ly remov­ing them, them­selves sur­round­ing the drill. The pro­test­ers attempt­ed to reach the drill again but were repeat­ed­ly “repelled” by secu­ri­ty, at this point the drill start­ed to oper­ate again while pro­test­ers and secu­ri­ty were close to it. For the next 30 min­utes this bat­tle con­tin­ued in obvi­ous breach of safe­ty reg­u­la­tions putting both work­ers and pro­test­ers at risk.

The day demon­strat­ed yet again that Shell have total dis­re­gard not only for envi­ron­ment and local com­mu­ni­ty but also for their own employ­ees.

for more info

www.shelltosea.com, www.rossportsolidaritycamp.org

German anti coal activist goes to jail

A ger­man activist went to jail today for an action against the con­struc­tion of a coal fired pow­er plant. Two years ago, she took part on a block­ade at the con­struc­tion site of the Vat­ten­fall-coal plant in Ham­burg-Moor­burg. She refused to pay her penal­ty. On 13th August, she start­ed her penal­ty in the Jus­tizvol­lzugsanstalt Brühl near Karl­sruhe.

A ger­man activist went to jail today for an action against the con­struc­tion of a coal fired pow­er plant. Two years ago, she took part on a block­ade at the con­struc­tion site of the Vat­ten­fall-coal plant in Ham­burg-Moor­burg. She refused to pay her penal­ty. On 13th August, she start­ed her penal­ty in the Jus­tizvol­lzugsanstalt Brühl near Karl­sruhe.

The action was part of the first ger­man cli­mate camp 2008 in Ham­burg. The local gov­ern­ment in Ham­burg is a coali­tion between the green and the con­ser­v­a­tive par­ty. Before the elec­tion in 2008, the green par­ty promised to stop the con­struc­tion of the plant if they join the gov­er­ment. After their elec­tion into the gov­ern­ment, they accept­ed the coal plant.

http://knast.blogsport.de/