Kernow Action Now!: New EF! style group in Cornwall

Ker­now Action Now! (KAN!) is a new Corn­wall-based activist group. KAN! sup­ports, pro­motes and encour­ages all forms of direct action that aim to con­front, stop and even­tu­al­ly reverse the destruc­tion of our com­mu­ni­ties and our plan­et. We oppose all forms of oppres­sion includ­ing racism, sex­ism and homo­pho­bia.

Ker­now Action Now! (KAN!) is a new Corn­wall-based activist group. KAN! sup­ports, pro­motes and encour­ages all forms of direct action that aim to con­front, stop and even­tu­al­ly reverse the destruc­tion of our com­mu­ni­ties and our plan­et. We oppose all forms of oppres­sion includ­ing racism, sex­ism and homo­pho­bia.

The group was formed in mid 2009 by peo­ple that have been active in anti-cap­i­tal­ist, envi­ron­men­tal and social cam­paign­ing in the UK and around the world for many years. We felt it was time to bring these debates and strug­gles into our own com­mu­ni­ties, as well as con­tin­u­ing to work on the nation­al and inter­na­tion­al stage.

We wel­come any­one that sup­ports our aims. If you want to get involved or want to find out more come to our meet­ings. You can find out what we are doing by vis­it­ing our web­site (http://kernowaction.wordpress.com), fol­low­ing us on twit­ter (http://www.twitter.com/kernowaction) or just email kernowaction@gmail.com.

Rampart Eviction — The Priest and the Chainsaw

The ram­pART Social Cen­tre was evict­ed at 5:30am this morn­ing by 45 police, bailiffs and a priest.

The ram­pART Social Cen­tre was evict­ed at 5:30am this morn­ing by 45 police, bailiffs and a priest.

After over 5 years and many evic­tion scares it has final­ly hap­pened… 3 peo­ple and a dog were inside when police attempt­ed to cha­ni­saw the door. They also had climbers going up to the roof con­jur­ing up mem­o­ries of the raid dur­ing the G20 in April. Police are block­ing the entrance to all three roads lead­ing to the social cen­tre with vans and their bod­ies. They are hand­ing out a piece of paper with a tele­phone num­ber to call to get belong­ings out of the build­ing. If you are able to help move or store stuff please con­tact the ram­pART col­lec­tive — rampart@mutualaid.org.

BP recruitment event taken over by Oxford climate campaigners

16.10.2009
BP’s flag­ship annu­al recruit­ment event at Oxford’s Ran­dolph Hotel was dis­rupt­ed last night when mem­bers of the audi­ence jumped on the stage and took over the event. Around 20 cam­paign­ers tar­get­ed the 6.30pm event in protest at the com­pa­ny’s recent deci­sion to extract oil from Canada’s Tar Sands.

16.10.2009
BP’s flag­ship annu­al recruit­ment event at Oxford’s Ran­dolph Hotel was dis­rupt­ed last night when mem­bers of the audi­ence jumped on the stage and took over the event. Around 20 cam­paign­ers tar­get­ed the 6.30pm event in protest at the com­pa­ny’s recent deci­sion to extract oil from Canada’s Tar Sands.

The cam­paign­ers stole the stage from Peter Math­er, Head of BP UK, and gave a pre­sen­ta­tion of their own, which high­light­ed the fact that in recent months the oil giant has dropped the pre­tence of hav­ing moved ‘Beyond Petro­le­um’, slash­ing its renew­ables bud­get and clos­ing down its alter­na­tive ener­gy divi­sion. BP were accused of get­ting involved not just in ‘dirty oil’, but ‘bloody oil’ due to the dev­as­tat­ing effect Tar Sands oil extrac­tion is hav­ing on the envi­ron­ment and local indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties. [1]

The pre­sen­ta­tion revealed that:

“There is no clear­er demon­stra­tion of BP’s deter­mi­na­tion to ignore the risks of cli­mate change than their deci­sion to invest in Canada’s Tar Sands. Extract­ing oil from these sludgy deposits pro­duces three to five times as much green­house gas as con­ven­tion­al oil…The Tar Sands are the biggest indus­tri­al devel­op­ment in the world, are the fastest source of defor­esta­tion and have left a hole the size of Flori­da in the Cana­di­an wilder­ness. Every day, the extrac­tion process uses enough gas to heat 3.2 mil­lion Cana­di­an homes for an entire year. The lakes of tox­ic waste sludge it pro­duces are vis­i­ble from space, and are leach­ing into local water sup­plies, caus­ing high rates of rare can­cers in indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties near­by.” [2]

Fol­low­ing the pre­sen­ta­tion, the ques­tion and answer ses­sion was dom­i­nat­ed by the activists in the audi­ence, trans­form­ing BP’s cosy recruit­ment event into a major pub­lic grilling on cli­mate change and Tar Sands. For the final half hour of the event, the cam­paign­ers answered stu­dents’ ques­tions about BP’s envi­ron­men­tal record over wine and canapes pro­vid­ed by the com­pa­ny.

The cam­paign­ers, Oxford stu­dents sup­port­ed by local group Thames Val­ley Cli­mate Action [3], also unfurled a ban­ner that read “BP: Bloody Oil” out­side of the Ran­dolph Hotel, hand­ed out leaflets about the Tar Sands, and cor­nered senior BP staff for detailed one-on-one ques­tion­ing at the end of the event.

Chris­tine Ash­worth, 19, said “With 300,000 peo­ple a year dying from the effects of cli­mate change, I’m appalled that BP are not only mak­ing this prob­lem worse, but they’re tram­pling over the rights of indige­nous peo­ple as they do it. I encour­age stu­dents from all uni­ver­si­ties where BP are recruit­ing to take action to stop the com­pa­ny extract­ing oil from the Tar Sands.”

Lau­ra Doughty, a local stu­dent, said “We were there to impress upon stu­dents that there are only two pos­si­ble out­comes of tak­ing a job with BP. Either we suc­ceed in tack­ling cli­mate change by rapid­ly phas­ing out fos­sil fuels, which means your job will quick­ly become obso­lete, or else we fail to stop cli­mate dis­as­ter, in which case you will be part­ly respon­si­ble for the loss of hun­dreds of mil­lions of lives, homes and liveli­hoods. There are green jobs out there, but they aren’t at BP – 98% of their busi­ness is oil and gas!”

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITORS

[1] BP pur­chased a sig­nif­i­cant stake in the Tar Sands oper­a­tions in 2007. See:
http://www.ienearth.org/cits and http://dirtyoilsands.org
BP’s involve­ment in the Alber­ta Tar Sands was high­light­ed at the Camp for Cli­mate Action in Lon­don this sum­mer, which includ­ed a protest out­side the Lon­don head­quar­ters of BP.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8232522.stm
[2] The full text of the pre­sen­ta­tion is copied below
[3] http://tvca.ox4.org/

THE PRESENTATION

BP are here today to sell them­selves as a cut­ting edge com­pa­ny who have the right response to deal with our ener­gy needs in the face of cli­mate change. We’re from Thames Val­ley Cli­mate Action and we believe the poten­tial­ly dev­as­tat­ing con­se­quences of cli­mate change put a huge ques­tion mark over our future. Many of you will share our con­cerns and we hope you’ll make an informed choice about whether BP real­ly do have what it takes to take us into the future.

Cli­mate change is the biggest chal­lenge fac­ing human­i­ty today. A few years ago, BP appeared to acknowl­edge this with a 600 mil­lion dol­lar green rebrand­ing oper­a­tion. But despite this rebrand, 98% of their busi­ness remained in oil and gas. Then in June this year, the “Beyond Petroluem” pre­tence was final­ly dropped when they slashed their renew­ables bud­get by half a bil­lion pounds, closed down their alter­na­tive ener­gy divi­sion – prompt­ing its direc­tor to resign – and decid­ed to invest in the dirt­i­est fos­sil fuel source on Earth – the Cana­di­an Tar Sands. More about that in a moment.

Oxford University’s Envi­ron­men­tal Change Insti­tute reports that to keep atmos­pher­ic CO2 con­cen­tra­tion at a safe lev­el, we can only afford to burn 20% of the fos­sil fuels we know about, and we cer­tain­ly can’t afford to go look­ing for any more.

So if BP is ask­ing where they can find more oil or how to make extrac­tion tech­niques more viable and cost-effec­tive, then they are ask­ing the wrong ques­tion. The real ques­tion is: how can we
decar­bonise the ener­gy sec­tor in the next 20 years, in line with the rec­om­men­da­tions of the government’s inde­pen­dent Com­mit­tee on Cli­mate Change.
_________________________________________

Let’s just remind our­selves of what’s at stake here:

Accord­ing to the Kofi Annan’s Glob­al Human­i­tar­i­an Forum 300,000 peo­ple a year are already dying from the effects of cli­mate change. Advanc­ing deserts and flood­ing caused by sea lev­el ris­es could lead to the loss of a third of the world’s fer­tile land with­in your life­time, result­ing food riots, mass star­va­tion, drought and water short­age beyond any­thing we have seen so far.

It has the poten­tial to dwarf the death count of all the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry’s wars, and pro­duce 250 mil­lion cli­mate refugees by the mid­dle of the cen­tu­ry. And more wars can be expect­ed to result from the rush for resources like land and food in a deficit world. Mean­while, a third of all species could be com­mit­ted to extinc­tion.

Cli­mate change needs to be seen as the great­est moral issue of our age, and ener­gy com­pa­nies are major play­ers who have a seri­ous respon­si­bil­i­ty to address this — uncom­pro­mis­ing­ly and imme­di­ate­ly. As the burn­ing of fos­sil fuels results in CO2, there is a direct link between BP and the great­est prob­lem humankind has ever faced. Cli­mate change urgency has sparked a pro­lif­er­a­tion of eth­i­cal promis­es, but in BP’s case this has been lit­tle more than a PR tool to legit­imise their con­tin­ued prof­it from fos­sil fuels. Accord­ing to the UN, the UK is respon­si­ble for 2.6% of glob­al green­house gas emis­sions. BP is respon­si­ble for 5.6%.
_________________________________________

There is no clear­er demon­stra­tion of BP’s deter­mi­na­tion to ignore the risks of cli­mate change than their deci­sion to invest in Canada’s Tar Sands. As con­ven­tion­al oil starts to run dry, com­pa­nies like BP are scrap­ing the bot­tom of the bar­rel by pur­su­ing impure, hard-to-reach and even more pol­lut­ing sources like the Tar Sands. Extract­ing oil from these sludgy deposits in the heart of Canada’s ancient forests pro­duces three to five times as much green­house gas as con­ven­tion­al oil. Tar Sands devel­op­ment is turn­ing once pris­tine stretch­es of for­est into des­o­late, post-apoc­a­lyp­tic land­scapes and pro­duc­ing tox­ic pol­lu­tion that is harm­ing the health and qual­i­ty of life of the region’s indige­nous First Nation com­mu­ni­ties. The Tar Sands are the biggest indus­tri­al devel­op­ment in the world, are the fastest source of defor­esta­tion and have left a hole the size of Flori­da in the Cana­di­an wilder­ness. Every day, the extrac­tion process uses enough gas to heat 3.2 mil­lion Cana­di­an homes for an entire year. Yes, a year’s worth of gas for 3.2 mil­lion homes, every sin­gle day. The lakes of tox­ic waste sludge it pro­duces are vis­i­ble from space, and are leach­ing into local water sup­plies, caus­ing high rates of rare can­cers in indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties near­by. Let me read you a quote from George Poitras, the for­mer chief of the near­by Fort Chipewyan com­mu­ni­ty: “We are con­vinced that these can­cers are linked to the Tar Sands devel­op­ment on our doorstep. It is short­en­ing our lives. That’s why we no longer call it ‘dirty oil’ but ‘bloody oil’. The blood of Fort Chipewyan peo­ple is on these com­pa­nies’ hands.”

This is what BP mean when they say they are invest­ing in “alter­na­tive ener­gy”. I think it’s safe to say they’ve gone Back to Petro­le­um – in fact, they’ve gone fur­ther, into Bloody Petro­le­um.
_________________________________________

And it’s not just the Tar Sands: BP’s petro­le­um extrac­tion is asso­ci­at­ed with pover­ty, mil­i­ta­riza­tion and local envi­ron­men­tal degra­da­tion all around the world. Human Rights Watch details spe­cif­ic prob­lems around BP’s oper­a­tions in the Baku-Tbil­isi-Cey­han pipeline and in Indone­sia. In Alas­ka BP has been fined for fraud and envi­ron­men­tal crimes relat­ing to oil spills. BP has no com­punc­tion
about lend­ing legit­i­ma­cy to the Indone­sian occu­pa­tion in West Papua, where human rights groups esti­mate 100,000 have been killed by gov­ern­ment forces. A large body of evi­dence has linked BP to the mur­der of Colom­bian trade union­ists. How­ev­er much BP may claim to be a “good” oil com­pa­ny, their prof­its from oil extrac­tion are inevitably at the expense of local pop­u­la­tions. If you are think­ing about work­ing for BP, you’ll have to con­sid­er whether such human rights abus­es are some­thing you want to be asso­ci­at­ed with.
_________________________________________

Oil was piv­otal to our post-indus­tri­al devel­op­ment. It has shaped our his­to­ry. But oil has had its day. The sim­ple fact is that in the face of cur­rent prob­lems we can no longer keep burn­ing fos­sil fuels – and the world is wak­ing up to this.

As grad­u­ates with a top qual­i­ty edu­ca­tion, you have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to be at the fore­front of where we go next with our plan­et. If you want a career in ener­gy, that’s great. But is BP real­ly where you want to be? There are excit­ing up and com­ing com­pa­nies out there with the emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies that can real­ly build our future. A career in oil and gas is a dead end. BP have gone Back to Petro­le­um, which means that BP Belongs in the Past.

Thames Val­ley Cli­mate Action
oxford@climatecamp.org.uk
http://tvca.ox4.org

Northumberland Road Eviction, Sheffield

14th Octo­ber 2009
The sec­ond site of the Sheffield Social Cen­tre on Northum­ber­land Road was evict­ed today.

Today at 11:45 the NHS Trust had a pos­ses­sion order grant­ed, with per­mis­sion to pur­sue evic­tion through the High Court.

14th Octo­ber 2009
The sec­ond site of the Sheffield Social Cen­tre on Northum­ber­land Road was evict­ed today.

Today at 11:45 the NHS Trust had a pos­ses­sion order grant­ed, with per­mis­sion to pur­sue evic­tion through the High Court.

Two hours lat­er bailiffs were at the door demand­ing we leave, and gave us two hours to remove every­thing before they began seal­ing the build­ing. Sev­er­al oth­er build­ings on the road were also in the process of being sealed as we were pack­ing the stuff into vans, pre­sum­ably for fear that we may move to one of the oth­er emp­ty build­ings oppo­site us.

Those involved in occu­py­ing the social cen­tres at Pis­gah House and Northum­ber­land Road in the last two weeks came to the deci­sion that a break is need­ed, to recov­er and con­sol­i­date our thoughts on the expe­ri­ences we’ve had. We remain pos­i­tive and believe that an autonomous social cen­tre is still pos­si­ble in Sheffield, and will be recon­ven­ing again soon to con­sid­er the options for the future.

Watch this space.

http://www.sheffieldsocialcentre.org.uk

Work stopped again at Mainshill as loggers are blockaded out of the Wood

Ear­ly yes­ter­day res­i­dents of the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp in South Lanark­shire stopped log­ging for the day by putting their bod­ies and inge­nu­ity between machin­ery and the trees, rig­ging up a sky raft across a log­ging path used by heavy machin­ery to rip up unoc­cu­pied parts of the site.

Sky raft blocks access
No tree felling todayEar­ly yes­ter­day res­i­dents of the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp in South Lanark­shire stopped log­ging for the day by putting their bod­ies and inge­nu­ity between machin­ery and the trees, rig­ging up a sky raft across a log­ging path used by heavy machin­ery to rip up unoc­cu­pied parts of the site.

In the past week Scot­tish Wood­lands Ltd have been remov­ing trees from the site of the camp. The clear felling is facil­i­tat­ing the cre­ation of a new open cast coal mine on the site by Scot­tish Coal Ltd. Despite local out­rage at the devel­op­ment plan and over 700 let­ters of objec­tion sent to the coun­cil in protest, plans are going ahead to cre­ate what could become the 5th mine in this already heav­i­ly pol­lut­ed area of Scot­land.

But peo­ple from all over the world and all walks of life are deter­mined to stop them! Res­i­dents of the Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp sus­pend­ed a sky raft above the access road with one per­son in it, effec­tive­ly pre­vent­ing the tree har­vester from gain­ing access to part of the wood where felling was to resume. The block­ade last­ed for 8 hours, after which one arrest was made at 12:30pm.

Res­i­dents of the camp con­demn the behav­ior of Scot­tish Wood­lands Ltd in the last few weeks, who have endan­gered peo­ples’ lives by work­ing dan­ger­ous­ly close to tree hous­es and con­tin­u­ing work despite being with­in a dis­tance deemed inap­pro­pri­ate by health and safe­ty stan­dards.

Despite dan­ger­ous con­di­tions and wors­en­ing weath­er, campers remain deter­mined to con­tin­ue fight­ing against the injus­tice of this devel­op­ment and to stand in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the local res­i­dents of Dou­glas who have been ignored at every lev­el of the plan­ning sys­tem.

As one inhab­i­tant of Main­shill camp site stat­ed ”We will not allow work to con­tin­ue on the Main­shill site as long as we are here. Plans for this new open cast coal mine are a bla­tant case of putting prof­it before the health of Dou­glas Val­ley res­i­dents and envi­ron­men­tal con­cerns, in par­tic­u­lar cli­mate change.”

The camp needs YOUR sup­port today. Go to http://coalactionscotland.noflag.org.uk/ for infor­ma­tion on what help is need­ed, and how to get to the site.

No more mines in the Dou­glas val­ley! No New Coal!

http://coalactionscotland.noflag.org.uk/?p=814

New social centre in Bath — come and help out

Bath Activist Net­work are proud to announce the open­ing of a new, and yet unnamed occu­pied social cen­tre in the heart of Bath.
The build­ing is mas­sive, and in pret­ty good nick, but we need help before we open the doors, so come and get involved at the begin­ning of an exit­ing new social cen­tre with loads of poten­tial.

Bath Activist Net­work are proud to announce the open­ing of a new, and yet unnamed occu­pied social cen­tre in the heart of Bath.
The build­ing is mas­sive, and in pret­ty good nick, but we need help before we open the doors, so come and get involved at the begin­ning of an exit­ing new social cen­tre with loads of poten­tial.
In par­tic­u­lar, we need peo­ple who are up for com­ing along and help­ing get the place ready for open­ing, and to run activ­i­ties once the place is open – clean­ers, painters, elec­tri­cians, artists, minor hole in roof menders, artists, musi­cians, rad­i­cals, dream­ers, schemers, your mates and assort­ed mal­con­tents are all wel­come!
We already have sev­er­al ini­tia­tives in the pipeline, such as a freeshop, infos­hop, rad­i­cal library, sal­sa, café, work­shops, activist self defence ses­sions, squat games and more – and we are up for any­one with ideas or skills to share to come and con­tribute to the space.
The social cen­tre is being run as a counter-cap­i­tal­ist ini­tia­tive, run by con­sen­sus, and giv­ing a liv­ing exam­ple of how we can cre­ate a world based on sol­i­dar­i­ty, mutu­al aid and co-oper­a­tion, not greed and author­i­ty. To get involved in any way, big or small, con­tact us at bathsocialcentre@gmail.com
(we are not freely giv­ing out the address at the moment, so email us for direc­tions)
We are slow­ly gath­er­ing the stuff we need to com­plete the space, but our wish list includes (but is not lim­it­ed to) –
*Chairs
*Tables
*Sofas
*Kitchen stuff
*Paint
*ban­ners
*dec­o­ra­tions
*Any unwant­ed stuff for the freeshop
*Any books, pam­phlets or leaflets for the library

This is a real­ly great space, and an excit­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty to build some­thing bril­liant in Bath, so come down and get involved from the begin­ning.

Cheers

Bath Activist Mas­sive x (A)

Back up in the trees (Basque Country)

If we report­ed yes­ter­day that the attempt to remain in the trees of Bekea (Gal­dakao) had failed, today we have to report that activists are back to it!!

BekeaIf we report­ed yes­ter­day that the attempt to remain in the trees of Bekea (Gal­dakao) had failed, today we have to report that activists are back to it!! Some­how this shows the deter­mi­na­tion of the move­ment (hope it keeps this way!). More than twen­ty activists entered the build­ing site for the High Speed Train of Bekea (near Bil­bao) and some climbed up again to some trees with ban­ners and pans. The strug­gle con­tin­ues!!

Mean­while yes­ter­day 6 activists were tried in Tolosa for chain­ing them­selves to the bal­cony of the Ordizia coun­cil­house in june 2008. They have been fined.

Excavator set on fire in the Basque Country

yes­ter­day 12th Oct some­one phoned the basque paper Gara to claim the burn­ing of an exca­va­tor of a com­pa­ny which takes part in the build­ing of the High Speed Train. The com­pa­ny is UTE Ben­ta Aun­di.

Reivin­di­can la que­ma de una excavado­ra en denun­cia de las obras del TAV

http://www.gara.net/paperezkoa/20091013/161223/es/Reivindican/la/quema/de/una/excavadora/en/denuncia/de/las/obras/del/TAV/

yes­ter­day 12th Oct some­one phoned the basque paper Gara to claim the burn­ing of an exca­va­tor of a com­pa­ny which takes part in the build­ing of the High Speed Train. The com­pa­ny is UTE Ben­ta Aun­di.

Reivin­di­can la que­ma de una excavado­ra en denun­cia de las obras del TAV

http://www.gara.net/paperezkoa/20091013/161223/es/Reivindican/la/quema/de/una/excavadora/en/denuncia/de/las/obras/del/TAV/
GARA |
Un comu­ni­cante anón­i­mo infor­mó ayer a GARA de que el pasa­do 30 de setiem­bre lle­varon a cabo un sab­o­ta­je con­tra una máquina excavado­ra en Ibar­ra. Según detal­ló, prendieron fuego a la máquina, que resultó cal­ci­na­da, por lo que los tra­ba­jos que lle­van a cabo cer­ca del río se par­alizaron durante una sem­ana.
El comu­ni­cante anón­i­mo señaló que el ataque se real­izó con­tra una máquina excavado­ra de la empre­sa UTE Ben­ta Aun­di. Denun­ció que detrás de esa empre­sa se escon­den varias empre­sas que con­struyen el Tren de Alta Veloci­dad en Euskal Her­ria. Y ésa ha sido la razón que esgrim­ió para lle­var a cabo el ataque.

Silen­cio y ocultación
«A quienes están destruyen­do nues­tras tier­ras, a quienes se están enrique­cien­do a cos­ta del futuro de este pueblo y a todos aque­l­los que colab­o­rar con estos hemos queri­do trans­mi­tir un men­saje sen­cil­lo. Con los que pro­mueven la destruc­ción, es decir, con Amenabar, Fonorte, Adif, Uria… ¡no se puede colab­o­rar!».
Asimis­mo, el comu­ni­cante tam­bién denun­ció el silen­cio que se ha impuesto sobre todo lo rela­ciona­do con el TAV, «como este ataque», con obje­to, a su enten­der, de dar una ima­gen de que «no hay movimien­to, no hay oposi­ción, no hay respues­ta. Ocul­tan todo y así dibu­jan la sociedad que ellos emiten des­de los (des)informativos. Por des­gra­cia para ellos, nosotros no esta­mos de acuer­do».

land rover dealership attacked

14.10.2009
last night a land rover deal­er­ship in west hert­ford­shire was attacked. tires were slashed on a num­ber of these lux­u­ry cars.

for the lib­er­a­tion of the earth

14.10.2009
last night a land rover deal­er­ship in west hert­ford­shire was attacked. tires were slashed on a num­ber of these lux­u­ry cars.

for the lib­er­a­tion of the earth

Activists keep on against the High Speed Train & video

The cam­paign against the High Speed Train does­n’t rest over here in the Basque Coun­try. Fun­ny enough: in both sides of it (if you can con­sid­er there are such), in the French admin­is­trat­ed as ell as in the Span­ish one. Next Sat­ur­day 17th Octo­ber a demo has been called in Baiona, where peo­ple from ‘both sides’ will attend .

up the treesThe cam­paign against the High Speed Train does­n’t rest over here in the Basque Coun­try. Fun­ny enough: in both sides of it (if you can con­sid­er there are such), in the French admin­is­trat­ed as ell as in the Span­ish one. Next Sat­ur­day 17th Octo­ber a demo has been called in Baiona, where peo­ple from ‘both sides’ will attend . Mean­while the lat­est attempt to climb trees and defend the woods has failed today when activists were tak­en down by the Basque police (yes, there is one — brutal,fascist and feared as much as the Span­ish and French ones!!). This new attempt aimed to con­tin­ue the suc­cess of the last weeks when activists remained for two weeks up in cen­te­nary birch trees in woods fac­ing removal. This action, in some way the first one of its kind after camps, sit-ins, etc, trig­gered a series of actions all over the Basque Coun­try. Activists climb cen­tric trees of their own cities and towns to show sol­i­dar­i­ty and to take the mes­sage. With­out any doubts, the most medi­at­ic of such actions was the climb­ing of the Gerni­ka tree. This is the his­toric oak tree which ancient Basque chief­tains gath­ered around. The one tar­get­ed by the nazis, the Con­dor Legion, when the well known bomb­ing of this city. How­ev­er this seems to be the only tree that real­ly mat­ters to basque politi­cians.

(i will try to post some­thing else with more time — please dis­trib­ute this item as wide­ly as you can)

mantxo@yahoo.com

Video of activists climb­ing the Basque sacred oak­tree of Gerni­ka, the only tree these bunch of tech­nocrats care for. You can notice the police’s (Ertzantza) fail­ure to remove the activist and the sub­se­quent action of the fire brigade. The action had great media cov­er­age. Enjoy it!

http://www.sindominio.net/ahtez/?q=es/node/325