Cambridge Critical Mass Bike Ride

On Sat­ur­day 19 July more than twen­ty cyclists took to the streets of Cam­bridge in the evening, to regale in the joy of two-wheeled trans­porta­tion. From the meet­up point at the under­pass of the Newmarket/East Road round­about, the group cov­ered some ten kilo­me­tres in a lit­tle over an hour. On the way we man­aged to pick up some ran­dom cyclists who decid­ed to join forces with us.

On Sat­ur­day 19 July more than twen­ty cyclists took to the streets of Cam­bridge in the evening, to regale in the joy of two-wheeled trans­porta­tion. From the meet­up point at the under­pass of the Newmarket/East Road round­about, the group cov­ered some ten kilo­me­tres in a lit­tle over an hour. On the way we man­aged to pick up some ran­dom cyclists who decid­ed to join forces with us.

Besides the pre­dictable odd cheesed-off car dri­ver, the event went smooth­ly. The ride end­ed up in the Cafe on Jesus Street. Giv­en the suc­cess of this crit­i­cal mass event, the par­tic­i­pants decid­ed to make it a month­ly out­ing. So watch this space…

Saving Iceland Blockades Century Aluminum Smelter and Elkem Steel Factory

Sav­ing Ice­land, July 21st 2008
Press Release

Century blockade 1Sav­ing Ice­land, July 21st 2008
Press Release
GRUNDARTANGI – Today 20 activists from Sav­ing Ice­land block­ad­ed the sin­gle sup­ply road to Cen­tu­ry Aluminum’s smelter on Hvalfjor­dur and Elkem – Ice­landic Alloys steel fac­to­ry. They have chained them­selves to each oth­er using arm tubes to form a human block­ade as well as using tri­pod for the first time in Ice­landic his­to­ry.

The action went on for three hours and nobody was arrest­ed. “We protest the envi­ron­men­tal and human health haz­ards Century’s baux­ite min­ing and refin­ing activ­i­ties in Jamaica, their plans for a new smelter and refin­ery in West Con­go. Both Century’s and Elkem’s expan­sion plans will also mean destruc­tion of unique geot­her­mal areas in Ice­land and pro­duce large amounts of green­house gas emis­sions,” says Miri­am Rose of Sav­ing Ice­land (1).

Cen­tu­ry in West-Con­go: open­cast baux­ite min­ing
In 2007 Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum Com­pa­ny signed a mem­o­ran­dum of under­stand­ing (MOU) with the Repub­lic of the Con­go (ROC) for the exclu­sive right to devel­op an alu­mini­um smelter, alu­mi­na refin­ery and a baux­ite mine (2). It spec­i­fies a min­i­mum com­mit­ment of 500 megawatts of gas-gen­er­at­ed elec­tri­cal ener­gy. Cen­tu­ry is sur­vey­ing where to mine the baux­ite and will start build­ing the smelter as soon as pos­si­ble (3).

“We believe that the Repub­lic of the Con­go has all of the ingre­di­ents nec­es­sary to sus­tain a prof­itable alu­minum indus­try,” said Cen­tu­ry CEO Logan W. Kruger (2).
“Kruger is right,” says Snor­ri Páll Jóns­son Úlfhildar­son of Sav­ing Ice­land. “Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al rat­ed the ROC as one of the most cor­rupt regimes in the world. Exact­ly the kind of regimes alu­mini­um cor­po­ra­tions like to deal with…” (4)

“It’s very unlike­ly the poor will have any ben­e­fit from this devel­op­ment but they will pay the price of the envi­ron­men­tal impact. Oil rev­enue in the coun­try has nev­er reached them, why would it be dif­fer­ent for baux­ite?” Úlfhildar­son con­tin­ues.
“Con­sid­er­ing the baux­ite reserves in West Con­go, it is clear that Cen­tu­ry is plan­ning large scale open cast min­ing there, in the same way oth­er cor­po­ra­tions are attempt­ing in Oris­sa and what has also hap­pened in Jamaica, Guyana and Guinea,” says Indi­an alu­mini­um expert and author Samaren­dra Das who will be talk­ing on this top­ic at Reyk­javik Acad­e­mia on Wednes­day (see note a.).

“All over the world, where baux­ite is mined the envi­ron­ment is being destroyed and people’s liveli­hoods and health tak­en away from them. Peo­ple in Ice­land need to know where the baux­ite that is refined and then smelt­ed into alu­mini­um comes from,” says Das.
Cen­tu­ry in Jamaica: envi­ron­men­tal and health haz­ards
Cen­tu­ry-owned St Ann Baux­ite, it’s pre­de­ces­sor Kaiser as well as the ALCOA, RioT­in­to-Alcan and Rusal (which owns 1/3 of Cen­tu­ry), are also active in Jamaica, have been held respon­si­ble for rain­for­est being destroyed and tox­ic pol­lu­tion of drink­ing water (5,6,7). Cen­tu­ry want to open up a sec­ond mine and refin­ery in a joint ven­ture with Chi­nese Min­metals. That com­pa­ny is asso­ci­at­ed with prison labour fac­to­ries and gross human rights abus­es in Chi­na and else­where (see note b.).

Elkem – Ice­landic Alloys: pol­lu­tion acci­dents every week
Elkem — Ice­landic Alloys wants to expand its facil­i­ty at Grun­dar­tan­gi on Hvalfjor­dur for pro­duc­ing fer­rosil­i­con for the steel indus­try. It is already one of Iceland’s largest con­trib­u­tors to green­house gas­es and oth­er pol­lu­tants; expan­sion of the smelter would lead to a sig­nif­i­cant increase in Iceland’s car­bon emis­sions (1).
In July 2007 it was report­ed (8) that Elkem ‘acci­den­tal­ly’ released a huge cloud of pol­lu­tion from their plant. Appar­ent­ly the acci­dent was due to human error. Thor­dur Mag­nus­son, an Elkem spokesman, then said that this human error “recurs sev­er­al times a week.” Sig­ur­b­jorn Hjal­ta­son, chair­man of Kjosarhrep­pur parish, said that Elkem usu­al­ly pro­duced the emis­sions at night through­out the year.

About Sav­ing Ice­land
Last Fri­day, Sav­ing Ice­land stopped work at the con­struc­tion site of Cen­tu­ry Aluminum’s planned new smelter in Hel­gu­vík. This is part of their fourth sum­mer of direct action against heavy indus­try in Ice­land. In July 2007 activists also block­ad­ed the smelter and steel fac­to­ry.
Sav­ing Ice­land was start­ed by Ice­landic envi­ron­men­tal­ists ask­ing for help to protest the Ice­landic wilder­ness, the largest remain­ing in Europe, from heavy indus­try. As well as Cen­tu­ry, oth­er alu­mini­um cor­po­ra­tions ALCOA and Rio Tin­to-Alcan want to con­struct new smelters. This would require exploita­tion of all the geot­her­mal areas in the coun­try, as well as damming all major glacial rivers (see note c.).

This year, the fourth action camp to pro­tect Ice­landic nature has been set up near the Hell­ishei­di geot­her­mal plant east of Reyk­javik, which is cur­rent­ly being expand­ed to pro­duce elec­tric­i­ty for Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum.

More infor­ma­tion
http://www.savingiceland.org

with a movie of the action
saving­ice­land at riseup.net

Notes

A.) On Wednes­day July 23, 19.30 h. Sav­ing Ice­land and Future­land will hold a con­fer­ence with the Indi­an writer, sci­en­tist and alu­mini­um expert Samaren­dra Das and ‘Dream­land’ author Andri Snær Mag­nus­son, on the influ­ence of the alu­mini­um indus­try in the third world. Also, the con­cept of alu­mini­um as a ‘green’ prod­uct will be exam­ined. It will take place at Reyk­javik Acad­e­mia, Hring­braut 121. Mr Das is avail­able for inter­views; please con­tact one of the Sav­ing Ice­land con­tacts above.

B.) In 2004 Min­metals attempt­ed a takeover of Cana­di­an min­ing com­pa­ny Noran­da but were declined in 2005 due to seri­ous con­cerns over human rights abus­es by the Chi­nese com­pa­ny. This report details Minmetal’s asso­ci­a­tion to forced labour:
Dhir, Aaron A. (2006). ’Of Takeovers, For­eign Invest­ment and Human Rights: Unpack­ing the Noran­da-Min­metals Conun­drum’, Bank­ing and Finance Law Review, 22, 77–104.
C.) For more details and an overview of projects in Ice­land, see: http://www.savingiceland.org/sos
Ref­er­ences
(1) Ice­landic Min­istry of the Envi­ron­ment (2006). Iceland’s fourth nation­al com­mu­ni­ca­tion on cli­mate change, report to the UNFCCC. http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/natc/isl… [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(2) AZ Mate­ri­als News (2007). Cen­tu­ry Alu­mini­um to Build Alu­mini­um Smelter in Repub­lic of Con­go. http://www.azom.com/News.asp?NewsID=7734 [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(3) Afrique en Ligne (2008). Con­go to build alu­mini­um smelter in Pointe-Noire. http://www.afriquenligne.fr/news/africa-… [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(4) Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al (2006). Cor­rup­tion Per­cep­tions Index 2006. Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al, Berlin.
(5) Zadie Neufville, April 6, 2001, ’Baux­ite Min­ing Blamed for Defor­esta­tion’. See http://forests.org/archive/samerica/baux…. [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(6) Mines and Com­mu­ni­ties report,’Bauxite Mine Fight Looms in Jamaica’s Cock­pit Coun­try’, 24th Octo­ber 2006. http://www.minesandcommunities.org/artic…. [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(7) Al Jazeera (2008). Envi­ron­men­tal dam­age from min­ing in Jamaica, June 11, 2008 News. Avail­able through http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJa2ftQwf…. [Accessed 20–6‑08]
(8) MBL.is (2007). Reykur frá járn­blendi­verksmiðjun­ni Grun­dar­tan­ga. http://mbl.is/mm/frettir/innlent/2007/07… [Accessed 20–6‑08]

Camp for Climate Action: mass action promo video, Heathrow conference & newspaper

CLIMATE CAMP MASS ACTION PROMO VIDEO

How to take down the fences at Kingsnorth & have fun while you’re at it! Watch it & for­ward to your mates.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVaUYVF-Cfk

CLIMATE CAMP MASS ACTION PROMO VIDEO

How to take down the fences at Kingsnorth & have fun while you’re at it! Watch it & for­ward to your mates.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVaUYVF-Cfk

—-

Cli­mate Camp goes back to Heathrow
Heathrow Con­fer­ence
Sat­ur­day 26th July, 12 noon — 5pm,
Har­ling­ton Bap­tist Church,
High St, Har­ling­ton

All Wel­come

Last August thou­sands of peo­ple spent a week camp­ing in a field in the vil­lage of Sip­son, which would be destroyed if Heathrow expan­sion went ahead, to draw atten­tion to the threat of cli­mate change. The event trans­formed Heathrow expan­sion into a nation­al and even inter­na­tion­al debate on how we respond to cli­mate change.

While this year we are con­cen­trat­ing our efforts at Kingsnorth where ener­gy giant E.ON the Gov­ern­ment is propos­ing to build a new coal-fired pow­er sta­tion, we have not for­got­ten Heathrow. So, we decid­ed to organ­ise a con­fer­ence to dis­cuss with local res­i­dents and envi­ron­men­tal organ­i­sa­tions the next steps in the cam­paign to stop Heathrow expan­sion, titled:

“What do we do if the worst comes to the worst and the Gov­ern­ment says ‘yes’?

The con­fer­ence brings togeth­er the Camp for Cli­mate Action, local cam­paign groups HACAN and NoTRAG (No Third Run­way Action Group), and Green­peace to dis­cuss a broad strat­e­gy against expan­sion. This is the first time that local cam­paign groups and inter­na­tion­al envi­ron­men­tal orga­ni­za­tions have teamed up with the Camp for Cli­mate Action to stage an event. We see this cross-fer­til­i­sa­tion of ideas and expe­ri­ence as essen­tial parts of Cli­mate Camp strat­e­gy to devel­op a diverse social move­ment against cli­mate change and for social jus­tice.

The con­fer­ence will focus on fus­ing our dif­fer­ent ideas on how to stop expan­sion, from polit­i­cal lob­by­ing to mass direct action, so we can all sup­port each oth­ers efforts. More than that, we hope that we can learn from each oth­er and devel­op new ideas that can have broad appeal.

The day will begin at 12 noon with short intro­duc­to­ry talks on the lat­est state of play, on the impli­ca­tions of expan­sion for noise, cli­mate change and com­mu­ni­ty destruc­tion, and around ideas for effec­tive cam­paign­ing. After lunch, the bulk of the day will involve more struc­tured dis­cus­sions around mov­ing for­ward togeth­er, fol­lowed by a final ple­nary ses­sion.

We’ve had con­for­ma­tion that in addi­tion to many cli­mate campers and local res­i­dents, politi­cians and trade union­ists will be attend­ing, so it looks like being an excit­ing event!

The fol­low­ing day Camp for Cli­mate Action will set off in ‘a cli­mate car­a­van’ on their jour­ney to Kingsnorth in Kent where this year’s camp will be held.

Direc­tions to the Con­fer­ence are:

Heathrow Con­fer­ence
Har­ling­ton Bap­tist Church,
High St, Har­ling­ton

About 8 min­utes walk from Bath Road.
Take the 90 bus from Feltham, Hat­ton Cross or Hayes and Har­ling­ton Sta­tion;
Or take the 140 from Heathrow or Hayes and Har­ling­ton Sta­tion
Or the H98 from Houn­slow, Cran­ford or Hayes and Har­ling­ton Sta­tion.- all stop out­side the church.

NB there is only lim­it­ed park­ing avail­able.

The event is free but small dona­tions on the day towards lunch and venue hire will be wel­come!

Feel free to just turn up but it would be ide­al if you could let us know before if you will be com­ing. Email info@hacan.org.uk or call John Stew­art on 020 7737 6641

—-

Cli­mate camp news­pa­per [5.3MB] at http://climatecamp.org.uk/themes/ccamptheme/files/paper.pdf

Shell to Sea Update

Dear Friends,
Hope this email finds ye well. Here is a brief update on the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion:

Dear Friends,
Hope this email finds ye well. Here is a brief update on the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion:

1. Shell activ­i­ty in the area is ramp­ing up late­ly and if you are think­ing of vis­it­ing the area we would call on you to do it over the next few weeks as help in resist­ing the work that is list­ed below is need­ed. You are always more than wel­come to stay at the new camp house; email us (rossportsolidaritycamp@gmail.com) or phone 0851141170 to say when you can come. Check out our new web­site too: www.rossportsolidaritycamp.110mb.com

2. Shell plan to start off­shore pipeline lay­ing short­ly as the Soltaire (pipe lay­ing ship) is cur­rent­ly off the coast of Done­gal. Shell have also been vis­it­ing hous­es late­ly around Glen­gad where the pipeline is due to come ashore say­ing that there would be some dig­ging and noise dis­tur­bance in the area short­ly. How­ev­er they have hit a hitch with the Erris Fish­er­men as this week they had a protest to object to where Shell are plac­ing their waste out­flow pipe. Pat O Don­nell said “We’ve been fish­ing these waters for gen­er­a­tions and we all have licences to fish them. So let the Min­is­ter for Jus­tice and the Gov­ern­ment pro­tect our rights now the way they brought in the Gar­daí to pro­tect the work­ers on the gas refin­ery,”
He added that if Shell want­ed to remove his crab pots from the route of the pipeline, they would have to get a court order. “And I won’t heed the court order so they’ll have to send me and oth­er fish­er­men to jail”. Read a report of it here http://www.indymedia.ie/article/88366

2. Shell have begun work­ing on their com­pound in Glen­gad by start­ing to put in secu­ri­ty fences which are in order that work will be able to begin on some of the off­shore work. (See pic­tures here http://www.corribsos.com/index.php?id=1815). Most of this work occurs on a Spe­cial Area of Con­ser­va­tion with some of the fenc­ing only about 200m from where the camp was. This work is almost cer­tain­ly ille­gal as plan­ning per­mis­sion has still not been grant­ed for any of the onshore pipeline. But the pow­ers that be are ignor­ing all attempts to high­light the sit­u­a­tion and let­ting Shell oper­ate as they wish. Two peo­ple were arrest­ed in the last week on the site but were released with­out charge.

3. Shell secu­ri­ty: There is now a new secu­ri­ty firm oper­at­ing in the area on behalf of Shell. Over the last week Shell have got some seri­ous­ly bad press over the sur­veil­lance and inti­ma­tion of local res­i­dents which includ­ed the film­ing of fam­i­lies and chil­dren on glen­gad beach (see: http://www.corribsos.com/index.php?id=1820). Now any­one who vis­its the area and goes for a swim in the sea just beside where the camp used to be, the chances are you will be filmed. Today Shell were put under pres­sure on nation­al radio to iden­ti­fy the secu­ri­ty firm but refused to do so, mak­ing it obvi­ous that Shell have some­thing to hide as to who the firm is (it is rumoured local­ly that it is the Golan group). How­ev­er even these heav­ies need pro­tect­ing as evi­denced by how the gar­daí escort­ed them off when the full secu­ri­ty bus was stopped by locals for fail­ing to dis­play any tax or insur­ance but this infringe­ment was as usu­al ignored by the gar­daí.

4. Mayo Coun­ty Coun­cil build­ing a road for Shell. The local author­i­ty is build­ing a road through the area specif­i­cal­ly for Shell against the wish­es of the local peo­ple. It shows how invid­i­ous the Shell men­tal­i­ty is, as now you have coun­cil employ­ees going around brib­ing and threat­en­ing local res­i­dents to give per­mis­sion for the coun­cil to widen the road. So far these bribes and threats have only swayed one or 2 of the landown­ers and the local res­i­dent are fight­ing the road upgrade through legal chan­nels. (See http://www.indymedia.ie/article/88317).

There is also alot of oth­er stuff going on, such as Shell being stopped from access­ing Ross­port com­mon­age late­ly, loads of sub­mis­sions gone into the plan­ning appli­ca­tions and a Euro­pean Peti­tions Chal­lenge. As always we need help with every­thing from direct actions, to ban­ner mak­ing, to help­ing out on the camp gar­den so please vis­it if you have time to spare. Also big thanks to the peo­ple in Leeds for the recent camp fundrais­er.

Any­way see all the lat­est cam­paign news on http://www.shelltosea.com

Hope to see some of ye soon.

Best wish­es from the Ross­port Sol­i­dar­i­ty Campers x

www.rossportsolidaritycamp.110mb.com

Billboard liberation

Saw this on the way to work­place sab­o­tage the oth­er day! Seems like some of the ani­mals are refus­ing to per­form, going fer­al and get­ting tooled up to cause some trou­ble for the empire and it’s keep­ers. Cabot Cir­cus, Ha Ha Ha!

Cheeky mon­keys!!!

http://www.eco-action.org/dt/smashing.html

Saw this on the way to work­place sab­o­tage the oth­er day! Seems like some of the ani­mals are refus­ing to per­form, going fer­al and get­ting tooled up to cause some trou­ble for the empire and it’s keep­ers. Cabot Cir­cus, Ha Ha Ha!

Cheeky mon­keys!!!

http://www.eco-action.org/dt/smashing.html

Saving Iceland Camp 2008 has Begun and First Action

The 4th Sav­ing Ice­land action camp has now begun in a beau­ti­ful threat­ened geot­her­mal val­ley beside Hell­isheiðisvirkjun in the Hengill area, where it will tar­get the expan­sion of the geot­her­mal pow­er sta­tion for the Grun­dar­tan­gi plant and oth­er South­west­ern heavy indus­try projects.

The 4th Sav­ing Ice­land action camp has now begun in a beau­ti­ful threat­ened geot­her­mal val­ley beside Hell­isheiðisvirkjun in the Hengill area, where it will tar­get the expan­sion of the geot­her­mal pow­er sta­tion for the Grun­dar­tan­gi plant and oth­er South­west­ern heavy indus­try projects.

This year activists from Ice­land, Aus­tralia, Amer­i­ca, Den­mark, Ger­many, Britain, Hol­land, France, Bel­gium and Italy amongst oth­ers have joined the cam­paign as infor­ma­tion about the destruc­tion of Iceland’s wilder­ness has spread. This year the cam­paign will focus specif­i­cal­ly on the human­i­tar­i­an effects of alu­mini­um pro­duc­tion, from the geno­cides asso­ci­at­ed with min­ing in India, South Amer­i­ca, Jamaica and more, to the use of alu­mini­um for arms man­u­fac­ture and the defence indus­try.

A week of inter­na­tion­al Sav­ing Ice­land sol­i­dar­i­ty actions will take place from July 21st to 27th in dif­fer­ent Euro­pean coun­tries. A spe­cialised con­fer­ence with respect­ed Indi­an writer and alu­mini­um expert Samaren­dra Das and Andri Snær will exam­ine the idea of “green alu­mini­um” and the effects of the Alu­mini­um indus­try in the Third World, (July 23 at Reyk­javikur Akademia).
On Sun­day the 20th July Sav­ing Ice­land and mem­bers of Sól á Suður­lan­di and the Ice­landic Moun­tain Guides will team up to lead a pub­lic tour around areas of Þjórsá threat­ened by three planned dam projects. A coach will leave Reyk­javík at 12:00 noon and return by 18:00, cost­ing 500 kr for the whole tour. Of course, direct action can as well soon be expect­ed.

savingiceland@riseup.net
http://www.savingiceland.org

—–

Sav­ing Ice­land Stops Work at Cen­tu­ry Alu­mini­um Con­struc­tion Site

19.07.2008
HELGUVIK (ICELAND) – Ear­ly this morn­ing 40 activists from over 10 coun­tries occu­pied the con­struc­tion site where Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum are prepar­ing to build their Hel­gu­vík alu­mini­um smelter, and chained them­selves to machin­ery and cranes. The protest is aimed at dam­age to geot­her­mal areas in south­west Ice­land and Century’s envi­ron­men­tal and human rights abus­es in Jamaica and Africa.

The con­struc­tion of the Cen­tu­ry Hel­gu­vík plant depends on the expan­sion of geot­her­mal ener­gy in Hell­isheiði and Reyk­janes (1). Con­struc­tion began in June, with­out a valid Envi­ron­men­tal Impact Assess­ment, or a guar­an­tee of suf­fi­cient ener­gy (435 MW) for the smelter. (2)

’Just as with Alcoa Fjar­daal, the gov­ern­ment shows no inter­est in fol­low­ing the the legal process for these huge projects. Instead they act as if the smelter and pow­er projects are inevitable, cre­at­ing mass apa­thy. At the same time, Century’s human rights abuse record has large­ly gone unno­ticed.’, says Snor­ri Páll Jóns­son Ulfhildur­son from Sav­ing Ice­land.

Amer­i­can cor­po­ra­tion Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum is involved in a num­ber of projects in Africa and the Caribbean which are con­tend­ed by envi­ron­men­tal and human rights cam­paign­ers.

In Jamaica, Cen­tu­ry joint­ly owns a 4.8 mil­lion tonne baux­ite mine which is caus­ing large-scale defor­esta­tion of rain­for­est. (3,4,5) Cen­tu­ry are also involved in a joint ven­ture to open up a sec­ond mine and alu­mi­na refin­ery with Chi­nese com­pa­ny Min­metals, who are asso­ci­at­ed with prison labour fac­to­ries and gross human rights abus­es in Chi­na and else­where (6,7).

In Feb­ru­ary 2007 Cen­tu­ry Alu­mini­um signed a mem­o­ran­dum of under­stand­ing with the Repub­lic of Con­go for the exclu­sive right to devel­op a smelter, an alu­mi­na refin­ery and a baux­ite mine with a min­i­mum com­mit­ment of 500 megawatts of gas-gen­er­at­ed elec­tri­cal ener­gy in Pointe Noire.(8)

’Con­go is renowned for its hor­ren­dous human rights con­di­tions includ­ing ter­ri­ble mass rapes, unlaw­ful killings, tor­ture and cor­rup­tion. Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al has also rat­ed it one of the most cor­rupt regimes in the world. That’s usu­al­ly exact­ly the kind of regimes cor­po­ra­tions like Cen­tu­ry pre­fer to deal with…’, says Sav­ing Iceland’s Snor­ri. (9,10)

’The finan­cial scams orches­trat­ed by alu­mini­um com­pa­nies have cre­at­ed eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal ruin in many coun­tries, dra­mat­i­cal­ly affect­ing the lives of thou­sands of their cit­i­zens. In each case, a sus­tained and cost­ly PR cam­paign promis­ing a new age of pros­per­i­ty pre­ced­ed this con­struc­tion.’ Indi­an sci­en­tist, Alu­mini­um expert and writer Samaren­dra Dasexplains.(11) Das will be giv­ing a num­ber of talks in Ice­land in July, includ­ing a con­fer­ence with Andi Snær Mag­nus­son on the 23rd in Reyk­javikur Akademian.(12)

(1) Land­vernd report, Nóvem­ber 2007, ’Athugasemdir veg­na umhver­fisáhri­fa orkuöflu­nar fyrir álver í Hel­gu­vík, sbr. frum­matsskýrslur Orku­veitu Reyk­javíkur fyrir Bitru­virkjun og virkjun við Hver­ahlíð.’

(2) In the table below, the plan­ning agency details that the 435 MW required for the smelter will come from a num­ber of geot­her­mal sites in Reyk­janes and Hell­isheiði. With Bitravirkjun on hold and Reyk­janes not yet guar­an­teed, the ener­gy require­ments are far from filled. Land­vernd states that only 60% of required ener­gy had been found in 2007, before Bitravirkjun was sus­pend­ed. (see ref­er­ence 1)
For more infor­ma­tion on the lack of prop­er Envi­ron­men­tal Impact Assess­ment see The Ecol­o­gist, Octo­ber 2007,’ Alu­mini­um Tyrants’. Jaap Krater, Miri­am Rose and Mark Anslow.

(3) Cen­tu­ry Alu­mini­um web­site. http://www.centuryca.com/st_ann.html

(4) Zadie Neufville, April 6, 2001, ’Baux­ite Min­ing Blamed for Defor­esta­tion’. See http://forests.org/archive/samerica/baux….

(5) Mines and Com­mu­ni­ties report,’Bauxite Mine Fight Looms in Jamaica’s Cock­pit Coun­try’, 24th Octo­ber 2006 at http://www.minesandcommunities.org/artic….

(6) ’Cen­tu­ry Alu­minum in Jamaica min­ing deal’, Mon­day, May 15, 2006, Sil­i­con Val­ley / San Jose Busi­ness Jour­nal.

(7) In 2004 Min­metals attempt­ed a takeover of Cana­di­an min­ing com­pa­ny Noran­da but were declined in 2005 due to seri­ous con­cerns over human rights abus­es by the Chi­nese com­pa­ny. This report details Minmetal’s asso­ci­a­tion to forced labour.

Aaron A. Dhir, ’Of Takeovers, For­eign Invest­ment and Human Rights: Unpack­ing the Noran­da-Min­metals Conun­drum’, Bank­ing & Finance Law Review, Vol. 22, pp. 77–104, 2006.

(8) http://sec.edgar-online.com/2007/03/01/ … tion11.asp
and http://www.afriquenligne.fr/news/africa … 83302.html

(9) Amnesty Inter­na­tion­al Report 2007, http://www.amnesty.org/en/region/africa/….

(10) Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al (2006). Cor­rup­tion Per­cep­tions Index 2006. Trans­paren­cy Inter­na­tion­al, Berlin.

(11) Samaren­dra Das, ’Min­ing sacred moun­tains to fuel the war on ter­ror’. June 2008. See https://savingiceland.puscii.nl/wordpres…

(12) On Wednes­day July 23, 19.30 h. Sav­ing Ice­land will hold a con­fer­ence with the Indi­an writer, sci­en­tist and alu­mini­um expert Samaren­dra Das and ‘Dream­land’ author Andri Snær Mag­nus­son, on the influ­ence of the alu­mini­um indus­try in the third world. Also, the con­cept of alu­mini­um as a ‘green’ prod­uct will be exam­ined. The evening is organ­ised joint­ly with Future­land. It will take place at the Reyk­javiku­rakademi­an house on Hring­braut 121.

More infor­ma­tion and back­ground: www.savingiceland.org

Eviction gets go ahead — Bodge House

19th July 2008
Activists for­ti­fy Bodge House against UK Coal open cast mine and the evic­tion squad

The group of direct activists occu­py­ing Lodge House open­cast site since 18th June have declared that they are ready to resist evic­tion.

19th July 2008
Activists for­ti­fy Bodge House against UK Coal open cast mine and the evic­tion squad

The group of direct activists occu­py­ing Lodge House open­cast site since 18th June have declared that they are ready to resist evic­tion.

UK Coal plans to mine 1 mil­lion tonnes of coal over 5 years from the site near Smal­l­ey, der­byshire.

The com­pa­ny failed in its first attempt to evict the activists but suc­ceed­ed in obtain­ing an pos­ses­sion order at the crown court in Der­by today.

The activists are for­ti­fy­ing Prospect Farm and have built a num­ber of tree­hous­es and an under­ground tun­nel sys­tem.

Sophie from Not­ting­ham said ’ The deci­sion to mine this site was tak­en by cen­tral gov­ern­ment against the wish­es and best inter­ests of local peo­ple and in spite of the coun­cil refus­ing plan­ning per­mis­sion. Occu­py­ing the land is our last defence now that democ­ra­cy has failed. We are call­ing for peo­ple to join us in oppos­ing UK Coal’s greed and con­tempt for local opin­ion.’

‘Open­cast min­ing is par­tic­u­lar­ly pol­lut­ing and dev­as­tates large areas of coun­try­side. Min­ing more coal is not a solu­tion to our ener­gy prob­lems as it is a major cause of cli­mate change. We need to reduce ener­gy use and adapt to more sus­tain­able ways of liv­ing.

We need help in mak­ing finale prepa­ra­tions so get your ass­es here for the fun…

for more infor­ma­tion con­tact 07503 335870

or go to www.leaveitintheground.wordpress.com
http://www.leaveitintheground.org.uk

Squatters Illegally Evicted From Abandoned Pub in Cheltenham

On July 17th at 14.00 squat­ters were ille­gal­ly evict­ed from the Duke of York Inn, 315–317 Lon­don Road, Chel­tenham, GL52 6YY.

The squat­ters had gained entry on the 15th July through an open win­dow after being informed by local res­i­dents that the pub was acces­si­ble with­out caus­ing any dam­age.

On July 17th at 14.00 squat­ters were ille­gal­ly evict­ed from the Duke of York Inn, 315–317 Lon­don Road, Chel­tenham, GL52 6YY.

The squat­ters had gained entry on the 15th July through an open win­dow after being informed by local res­i­dents that the pub was acces­si­ble with­out caus­ing any dam­age.

They spent the next two days secur­ing the squat, clean­ing filth from the pub area, repair­ing fix­tures, fur­ni­ture and fit­tings and repair­ing dam­age caused by van­dals includ­ing clean­ing graf­fi­ti from the walls. The inten­tion of the squat­ters was to turn the pub into a com­mu­ni­ty arts cen­tre, pro­vid­ing space for local peo­ple to meet, con­verse and express them­selves freely.

How­ev­er, after assumed­ly being informed by the police that the pub was being occu­pied, local prop­er­ty devel­op­er James Dea­con decid­ed to send some of his work­ers in, armed with sledge­ham­mers and a chain­saw. They began to forcibly gain access to the prop­er­ty using the afore­men­tioned tools. Due to the noise the squat­ters became aware of what was hap­pen­ing and tried to vacate the prop­er­ty. Their escape was ham­pered by the work­ers then using the tools to threat­en the squat­ters, includ­ing a 19 year old girl who was backed into a cor­ner with the run­ning chain­saw, despite assur­ances that they were leav­ing.

After the squat­ters left the prop­er­ty they were then fol­lowed around the local area by Mr Deacon’s work­ers in vans, forc­ing them to beg for sanc­tu­ary in the homes of local res­i­dents, even­tu­al­ly escap­ing in the car of a local “good Samar­i­tan” who was chased by the work­ers in vans for four miles before final­ly los­ing their pur­suers.

Mr Dea­con wants to con­vert the prop­er­ty into three hous­es and sev­en new flats, adding to con­ges­tion and over­crowd­ing in the area, a project which has raised many objec­tion s from local res­i­dents. To reg­is­ter your objec­tions you can email Chel­tenham Bor­ough coun­cil at builtenvironment@cheltenham.gov.uk .

32 SUVs disabled across Oxford

18.07.2008
Up to 32 SUV own­ers awoke this morn­ing to dis­cov­er that their destruc­tive vehi­cles had been dis­abled.

18.07.2008
Up to 32 SUV own­ers awoke this morn­ing to dis­cov­er that their destruc­tive vehi­cles had been dis­abled.

Using the ‘mung bean trick’, where­by a mung bean is insert­ed into the valve of a tyre before the cap is screwed back on, tyres were let down in Marston, Head­ing­ton, and the high­ly afflu­ent area of Sum­mer­town. Mes­sages were left under wind­screen wipers warn­ing the own­ers not to attempt to dri­ve their 4x4s, and explain­ing why it was felt that direct action had to be tak­en to resist their assault on this plan­et.

They were informed that more than a quar­ter of the UK’s CO2 gen­er­a­tion is attrib­ut­able to the trans­port sec­tor, and that many Sports Util­i­ty Vehi­cles emit up to 300% more green­house gas­es than the aver­age car.

They were also told that dri­ving a car is not a ‘right’, and that dri­ving an SUV is an unac­cept­ably self­ish act in the face of what may become unstop­pable cli­mate change.

This is a sim­ple action that any­one can do, any­time or place.

Anti-Wembley Academy occupation comes to an end

18.07.2008
The Tent City Occu­pa­tion of Wem­b­ley Sports Ground was evict­ed this morn­ing at 7.30am (report to fol­low). Hank Roberts — Brent Sec­re­tary of the NUT and ATL — had to be removed from the roof of the Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre on the site, where he had d‑locked him­self to a flag­pole. Spe­cial­ist baliffs had to use an angle-grinder to seper­ate him from the pole. Sup­port­ers gath­ered in front of the gate to the carpark; as he was removed from the site, he was bestowed with rap­tur­ous applause for his brave stand.

18.07.2008
The Tent City Occu­pa­tion of Wem­b­ley Sports Ground was evict­ed this morn­ing at 7.30am (report to fol­low). Hank Roberts — Brent Sec­re­tary of the NUT and ATL — had to be removed from the roof of the Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre on the site, where he had d‑locked him­self to a flag­pole. Spe­cial­ist baliffs had to use an angle-grinder to seper­ate him from the pole. Sup­port­ers gath­ered in front of the gate to the carpark; as he was removed from the site, he was bestowed with rap­tur­ous applause for his brave stand.

Cam­paign­ers (& Hank him­self) were sur­prised to observe that he was not arrest­ed for breach of the injunc­tion — served on Tues­day. Hank Roberts still has to pay an otstand­ing fee of £3,500 to Willes­den Coun­ty Court.

The fight to stop the Acad­e­my get­ting plan­ning per­mis­sion con­tin­ues, even though plans to build the ‘pre-acad­e­my’ for an ini­tial 200 pri­ma­ry-school pupils in por­to­cab­ins on the site will now pro­ceed. The fight to guar­an­tee local afford­able access for the local kids to the recre­ation ground and foot­ball pitch­es con­tin­ues along­side this aim to stop the acad­e­my being built, whether the lat­ter goal will be acheived or not.

Oth­er info:

Gallery
http://www.tentcityoccupation.co.uk/gallery.html

ITV Lon­don Tonight Report:
http://www.itvlocal.com/london/news/?player=LON_News_15&void=204972

Save Our Schools 22-minute film avail­able on Reel News issue 13
Stop them Pri­vatis­ing Our Schools avail­able on Reel News issue 12
Wem­b­ley Occu­pa­tion avail­able on Reel News issue 10
http://www.reelnews.co.uk/

Some pre­vi­ous posts for fur­ther infor­ma­tion:

200 School Pupils In Huts On A Con­struc­tion Site:
http://jasonnparkinson.blogspot.com/2008/06/200-school-pupils-in-huts-on.html