London Critical Mass ride 30–5‑08

Quick report on the ride.

Video Short mp4 clip. — video/mp4 1.4M

Video Short wmv clip. — video/x‑ms-wmv 1.2M

London Critical Mass May 08Quick report on the ride.

Video Short mp4 clip. — video/mp4 1.4M

Video Short wmv clip. — video/x‑ms-wmv 1.2M

Sev­er­al hun­dred rid­ers, good weath­er, a very enjoy­able ride, apart from police slow­ing things down as usu­al by block­ing the front of the ride at inter­sec­tions. Lat­er they seemed to stop doing this and made a good job of cork­ing instead. This time a con­fronta­tion with police over sound sys­tems in the SOCPA zone was avoid­ed, by not going into the SOCPA zone. Instead a stop was made out­side Buck House, com­plete with full-on sounds.

CANCELLED — Survival Picket in Solidarity with the Dongria Kondh Tribe — Stop Vendanta Mining Orissa, India.

The Don­gria Kondh tribe of India and the land they live in is threat­ened with destruc­tion by the UK com­pa­ny Vedan­ta. Vedan­ta wants to cre­ate a giant open-cast mine on the Don­gria Kond­h’s sacred moun­tain, destroy­ing the lush forests that grow there and pol­lut­ing the rivers.

Dongria Khonds in the State CapitolThe Don­gria Kondh tribe of India and the land they live in is threat­ened with destruc­tion by the UK com­pa­ny Vedan­ta. Vedan­ta wants to cre­ate a giant open-cast mine on the Don­gria Kond­h’s sacred moun­tain, destroy­ing the lush forests that grow there and pol­lut­ing the rivers. The Don­gria Kond­h’s lives will be com­plete­ly dev­as­tat­ed.

The Sur­vival demon­stra­tion out­side Coutts Bank pre­vi­ous­ly adver­tised on this web­site planned for the 10th June has been can­celled. In reac­tion to the planned pick­et Coutts has just informed Sur­vival that they no longer hold shares in Vedan­ta, the British-based com­pa­ny whose planned baux­ite mine will dev­as­tate the lands of Indi­a’s Don­gria Kondh tribe. More info to fol­low.

—-

WHERE? Out­side Coutts Bank, 440 Strand, Lon­don
WHEN? Tues­day 10th June 2008, 18.45 — 20.00

WHAT IS THE EVENT?

Coutts Bank hold shares in Vedan­ta. When Vedan­ta makes mon­ey, Coutts make mon­ey, so they are prof­it­ing from the abuse of the Don­gria Kondh.

On 10th June Coutts are host­ing the open­ing par­ty of Lon­don Jew­ellery Week, which they are spon­sor­ing. Sur­vival will be there, urg­ing Coutts to with­draw its shares in Vedan­ta, and to recog­nise the rights of the Don­gria Kondh to live inde­pen­dent­ly on their own land.

For direc­tions, please see the fol­low­ing link:
http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=530188&y=180575&z

Back­ground info:

There are 8,000 Don­gria Kondh liv­ing in the Niyam­giri Hills in Oris­sa, India.

The Niyam­giri Hills are an area of out­stand­ing nat­ur­al beau­ty, rich in wildlife and dense forests. The Don­gria Kondh farm the hill slopes, grow­ing crops in among the for­est and gath­er­ing wild fruit, flow­ers and leaves for sale. Their lifestyle and reli­gion have pro­tect­ed the forests of Niyam­giri for cen­turies.

The top of the moun­tain, which is wor­shiped by the Don­gria Kondh as the seat of their god, has rich deposits of the alu­mini­um ore baux­ite.

The min­ing project would lead to dis­place­ment of thou­sands of trib­al peo­ple and destroy bio­di­ver­si­ty and water sources. Niyam­giri hills are the source of Vamshad­hara Riv­er and major trib­u­taries of Nagaveli rivers – sacred to the Khonds. A large num­ber of wildlife species includ­ing tiger, leop­ards, ele­phant and mouse deer also abode in Niyam­giri hills. Many of these species are endan­gered. In the past, efforts have been made by var­i­ous gov­ern­men­tal and non-gov­ern­men­tal bod­ies to declare Niyam­giri hills as sanc­tu­ary or reserve area to pro­tect its pris­tine nat­ur­al habi­tat.

The local resis­tance against the project start­ed with the land acqui­si­tion process but because of the poor eco­nom­ic and polit­i­cal clout of Don­gria Kondhs, their voic­es and con­cerns are ignored by local and state author­i­ties. This is hard­ly sur­pris­ing giv­en the Oris­sa gov­ern­men­t’s thrust on ‘accel­er­at­ing eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment’ by hand­ing over rich nat­ur­al resources to big pri­vate com­pa­nies, both domes­tic and for­eign, for a pit­tance. Pres­sure on the finan­cial back­ers of the scheme in Europe has already result­ed in sig­nif­i­cant dis­in­vest­ment is Nor­way and sim­i­lar action in the UK could real­ly stregth­en the tribes hand.

More Details can be found on the web­site of ‘Sur­vival — The Move­ment For Trib­al Peo­ple’:

http://www.survival-international.org/tribes/dongria

Noise demo against imminent open cast coal mine 9th June

A new open-cast coal mine site is about to get under­way in beau­ti­ful Der­byshire, unless we stop it now.

Derbyshire open-cast - beforeDerbyshire open-cast - after?A new open-cast coal mine site is about to get under­way in beau­ti­ful Der­byshire, unless we stop it now. Help us send the mes­sage loud and clear to UK Coal to leave it in the ground!

Noise Demo at UK Coal, nr Don­cast­er
Mon­day 9th June
Meet 12 noon at Don­cast­er train sta­tion.
There will be lifts to UK Coal’s HQ — but bring trans­port if you can.

UK COAL, Har­worth Park, Blyth Road, Har­worth, Don­cast­er DN11 8DB

Bring: ban­ners, things to make noise with, food, peo­ple, tents, room to give peo­ple a lift.

For more info phone 07852 460871 or email derby@earthfirst.org.uk

Down­load leaflet (includes map of pro­posed open-cast) – please print and cir­cu­late

What’s going on?
Lodge House site, which is east of the vil­lage of the Der­byshire vil­lage of Smal­l­ey, is one of sev­en
sites that UK Coal is to open-cast. The area is rich with wildlife and backs onto Ship­ley Coun­try Park. It is about to be dev­as­tat­ed, despite objec­tions from local coun­cils, res­i­dents and local envi­ron­men­tal groups. The Sec­re­tary of State grant­ed plan­ning per­mis­sion in 2007 and work is to com­mence any day now.

More destruc­tion to come?
The 122 hectare site will have one mil­lion tonnes of coal ripped out over five years and ‘returned back to its nat­ur­al state’ accord­ing to UK Coal. How­ev­er, they will not be able to replace ancient edges and mature trees, and they will be able to expand beyond the 122 hectares with­out need­ing fur­ther per­mis­sion. Res­i­dents were exclud­ed from parts of the plan­ning meet­ing on grounds of com­mer­cial con­fi­den­tial­i­ty, which sug­gests that the plans may be big­ger than UK Coal is let­ting on.

A dirty fuel, a chang­ing cli­mate
Coal is not clean ener­gy, and with the new onslaught of pro­posed pow­er sta­tions, UK Coal are look­ing to cash in on cli­mate dev­as­ta­tion and destruc­tion unless we stop them. Burn­ing coal to pro­duce elec­tric­i­ty is threat­en­ing the glob­al envi­ron­ment and all our futures..

To com­bat open-cast min­ing, a new action group “Leave it in the Ground” has formed, sup­port­ed by Earth First! and oth­er envi­ron­men­tal groups.

If you can’t make the demo then you could con­tact UK Coal direct­ly to let them know what you think: UK Coal Tel: 01302 751751 Fax: 01302 752420.

Links

Leave it in the Ground
Home­page: http://www.leaveitintheground.org.uk

Report on pre­vi­ous action http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20727

For a bit of his­to­ry on protests against open cast min­ing see:
http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no7/23–32.html

More info on coal…
http://thecoalhole.org/

03/06/08.…..TAKE ACTION ON FOOD AND CLIMATE CHANGE

With­in the past year, glob­al food prices have risen by 75%. Prices of wheat, soya, oilseeds, maize and rice are now at record lev­els. The World Bank has warned that 100 mil­lion more peo­ple are fac­ing hunger and mal­nu­tri­tion because of ris­ing food prices.

Food not Bombs for Food & Climate action dayWith­in the past year, glob­al food prices have risen by 75%. Prices of wheat, soya, oilseeds, maize and rice are now at record lev­els. The World Bank has warned that 100 mil­lion more peo­ple are fac­ing hunger and mal­nu­tri­tion because of ris­ing food prices.

The green­house gas emis­sions caused by live­stock and indus­tri­al fish­ing account for 18 per cent of glob­al warm­ing; more than the emis­sions from the world’s entire trans­port sys­tem, at 13.5 per cent. Tech­no fix­es such as GM crops and Bio­fu­els are not the answer to cli­mate chaos, we need to change our pat­terns of con­sump­tion and switch to a low impact, cru­el­ty free lifestyle!

With one week to go before the food and cli­mate change day of action; get cre­ative and get involved!

“Live­stock­’s con­tri­bu­tion to envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems is on a mas­sive scale. The impact is so sig­nif­i­cant that it needs to be addressed with urgency.”
— Unit­ed Nations Food and Agri­cul­ture Organ­i­sa­tion 2006

“The grain required to fill a 25-gal­lon SUV gas tank with ethanol will feed one per­son for a year.” (Lester Brown, Direc­tor of the Earth Pol­i­cy Insti­tute).

The UN Con­fer­ence on World Food Secu­ri­ty and Cli­mate Change runs from 3rd to 5th June 2008. The Net­work for Cli­mate Action is invit­ing you to take action on and around the 3rd of June 2008. There’s stuff hap­pen­ing all over the coun­try, and inter­na­tion­al­ly, on the day itself, and before and after it.

Cli­mate action starts on your din­ner plate, at the super­mar­ket, on your allot­ment and in your back yard, at the food pro­cess­ing and dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­tres, down on the farm, in your high street, at the air­port and at the lor­ry park. Use this day as a way to high­light the com­plex­i­ty of food relat­ed issues, and also to pro­mote spe­cif­ic cam­paigns..

It’s time to detox the plan­et and take action on food and cli­mate change! Groups all over the coun­try are plan­ning actions, demon­stra­tions, film nights, work­shops and free food events. For more ideas, and resources, vis­it the web­site: http://daysofclimateaction.org.uk; and let us know if you need any­thing else, or if you have resources that could be shared!

Remem­ber, the list below is only a list of pub­lic events, actions to fol­low when announced! If you want infor­ma­tion about whats going on in your area, please get in touch!

MANCHESTER 01/06 Veg­an pic­nic, demo and sur­prise activ­i­ty!
Free veg­an food
12–4, Pic­cadil­ly Gar­dens email: manchester@climatecamp.org.uk

BRISTOL 31/05–01/06 Bris­tol Veg­an Fayre
http://www.bristolveganfayre.co.uk/

SHEFFIELD 31/05 Free veg­an food stall
email:sheffieldanimalfriends@googlemail.com

LIVERPOOL 31/05 Free veg­an food event 12–4 Next to Nowhere, (this event kick starts the veg­an drop in which will hap­pen 1–5 every Sat­ur­day, Next to Nowhere). http://www.liverpoolsocialcentre.org/

LONDON
31/05 Protest against the pro­posed Com­bined Cycle Bio­fu­el Elec­tric­i­ty Gen­er­a­tion Plant. Stall on Myr­tle Road, East Ham from 10:30 to 6:30.
Ban­ner drop from 3:00 to 5:00pm out­side Newham Town Hall, East Ham. 04/06
Protest out­side the final con­sul­ta­tion meet­ing at Newham Town Hall 6:30 to 7:10pm , Bark­ing Road, East Ham.
http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/files/thames_gateway_biodiesel_project.pdf
As part of the nation­al day of action on food and cli­mate change called by the Net­work for Cli­mate Action, Food Not Bombs and Reclaim Your Food will be serv­ing *free veg­an food* at a *secret loca­tion* in South Lon­don!
* All the food will be skipped, reclaimed from the waste of an afflu­ent cap­i­tal­ist soci­ety.
* All the food will be veg­an, min­i­miz­ing the cli­mate-impact of the food. Meet on Tues­day the 3rd of June at Cam­ber­well Green (in the Green itself), 2PM sharp to move on to a *secret loca­tion*
Cam­ber­well Green — http://tinyurl.com/5h25yq
Lon­don Food Not Bombs — http://www.londonfnb.org

NOTTINGHAM 24/05–15/06 ‘Green­weeks’: allot­ment open days, organ­ic grow­ing cours­es and more!
http://www.greenweeks.org/

AMSTERDAM: Veg­an­ism and Cli­mate Change film night
http://www.aseed.net/

The food we eat con­tributes up to a third of the emis­sions that are poi­son­ing the plan­et. It’s time for a detox … Chang­ing our diet is one of the most effec­tive steps we can take!

Whether you’re work­ing on local organ­ic food, grow­ing your own, veg­an­ism, per­ma­cul­ture, food secu­ri­ty, human­i­tar­i­an issues, trans­port cam­paign­ing, agro­fu­els, anti — GM food … make the links on cli­mate change … take action on the 3rd of June toward a low-car­bon diet!

What­ev­er your tastes, there’s some­thing for every­one on this action menu! There are many pro­posed solu­tions — we think it’s time to start the debate. Get cre­ative and get involved!

Please let us know what you are plan­ning (if its appro­pri­ate!) or if not, tell us as soon as you’ve done it! Don’t for­get to send us your pho­tos too!

The media phone no for the day will be 07961917535; or you can email food@daysofclimateaction.org.uk.

This Day of Action on Cli­mate Change is called by the Net­work for Cli­mate Action in co-oper­a­tion with the Ris­ing Tide Net­work and the Camp for Cli­mate Action.

Film of anti-GM demo

This film shows the anti-GM demo at BASF. For the report on what hap­pened, and pho­tos, click here.

Video Film of anti-GM action — video/mp4 5.4M

This film shows the anti-GM demo at BASF. For the report on what hap­pened, and pho­tos, click here.

Video Film of anti-GM action — video/mp4 5.4M

On May 6th around 30 pro­test­ers shut down the BASF UK head­quar­ters at Chea­dle Hulme near Man­ches­ter. BASF is plan­ning to run the UK’s only tri­al of GM crops this year, a tri­al of blight resis­tant pota­toes.

Leave it in the Ground’s Picnic in the Park trespass report

Around 70 peo­ple had set of to trav­el on a bank hol­i­day Mon­day which is no easy task as pub­lic trans­port has a nat­ur­al ten­den­cy not to run or has a lim­it­ed ser­vice on bank hol­i­days, for a pic­nic in a remote part of Der­byshire. The weath­er reports had all pre­dict­ed thun­dery show­ers for the day, which seems to be nor­mal for a bank hol­i­day out­ing, but this did not seem to deter the peo­ple who had gath­ered at the vis­i­tors cen­tre at Ship­ley Coun­try Park, Heanor, Der­byshire

trespass1trespass2
Around 70 peo­ple had set of to trav­el on a bank hol­i­day Mon­day which is no easy task as pub­lic trans­port has a nat­ur­al ten­den­cy not to run or has a lim­it­ed ser­vice on bank hol­i­days, for a pic­nic in a remote part of Der­byshire. The weath­er reports had all pre­dict­ed thun­dery show­ers for the day, which seems to be nor­mal for a bank hol­i­day out­ing, but this did not seem to deter the peo­ple who had gath­ered at the vis­i­tors cen­tre at Ship­ley Coun­try Park, Heanor, Der­byshire

The event had been organ­ised by a new cam­paign group called Leave it in the Ground and Earth First! to oppose new and exist­ing open cast min­ing in the UK and sol­i­dar­i­ty to inter­na­tion­al groups who are hav­ing their lives and land trashed in places like Phul­bari, Bangladesh by British com­pa­ny GMC Resources PLC http://www.gcmplc.com

After every one had fin­ished social­is­ing at the vis­i­tors cen­tre with cups of tea, they head­ed of through the park to the area of plush green fields and ripped out hedgerows, which is to be the area of the new open cast mine called Lodge house owned by UK Coal as we were fol­lowed by an evi­dence gath­er­er and a few oth­er police offi­cers who were mak­ing notes on how friend­ly and socia­ble we were.

UK coal had erect­ed new fences with­in the bound­aries of the fields declar­ing the 122 hec­tor site of destruc­tion wait­ing to hap­pen and activists out for the day just walked through the gap that will even­tu­al­ly have huge earth mov­ing vehi­cles and plant machin­ery tear­ing up the fields. There was no attempt by the police to stop us or ask­ing us not to go in, it was already decid­ed we were going to tres­pass, and there was no way they could keep us out any­way.

After a short breach of the bound­ary we came across a farm, com­plete with tree house, dog ken­nel with its bed­ding still inside and the odd toy in the gar­den that looked as if it had been aban­doned in a hur­ry from some pend­ing dis­as­ter. We gath­ered in the gar­den of the farm to hear a local per­son explain what was hap­pen­ing in the area.

We heard how UK Coal owns the land and that the locals in the sur­round­ing vil­lages of Smal­l­ey, Map­per­ly and West Hallem had been fight­ing against the com­pa­ny for the last 5 years against the plan to turn the area into an open cast site. Despite it being against plan­ning reg­u­la­tions the sec­re­tary of state gave the plan the go ahead in 2007. The fields we had just walked across is going to have its soil stripped in July and August of this year and the field to the south of the farm is going to be stripped this July, so it was a last look to see it in its nat­ur­al state, even though UK Coal are tak­ing the unusu­al step of return­ing the site back to green fields, not that the grass grows well or the hedgerows are replant­ed and the fields lack the nat­ur­al diver­si­ty of species.

More alarm­ing is that this is not just unique to Der­byshire; open cast­ing or strip min­ing as it is some­times known is on the agen­da of the gov­ern­ment and a change in pol­i­cy 2 years ago forced by pow­er sta­tions and coal com­pa­nies through lob­by­ing has forced it as a legit­i­mate way for them to make mon­ey, despite the fact it is seri­ous­ly dam­ag­ing to the cli­mate and the UK is not going to be able to cut its agreed emis­sions by burn­ing coal and that the Lodge House site is going to have 1 mil­lion tonnes of car­bon removed which means when it is burnt that’s 3,666,666 tones of car­bon diox­ide.

There was also a bit of brief his­to­ry of open cast min­ing in Der­byshire and the resis­tance to it in 1997 at the Tib­shelf site near Alfre­ton and how 250 activists from Earth First! NUJ and min­ers sup­port group had bussed there way to the site and caused an esti­mat­ed £375,000 to £4 mil­lion of dam­age with vehi­cles need­ing to be repaired on site as they were inca­pac­i­tat­ed!

We all moved off back into the fields with the fence an omi­nous mark­er in the dis­tance to the size and scale of what is to be lost and sat down to enjoy some food. Veg­gies had gone mobile and sup­plied us with veg­an pasties and their famous cake, so we sat in the long grass, drank some excel­lent Elder­flower Cham­paign that was being passed around while the police hid at the farm with­out refresh­ment keep­ing an eye on our activ­i­ty and social refine­ment. A kite flew over head and the chil­dren played foot­ball with the adults, all the usu­al accom­pa­ni­ments for a pic­nic.

We head­ed off through the south field and saw a bun­ga­low with its win­dows and doors sheet­ed up in steel, anoth­er vic­tim of the site I thought. Both prop­er­ties are the place most peo­ple dream of own­ing with the scenic views.

After a stroll on this bot­tom field we head­ed on to Bell Lane which divides the Lodge House site and head­ed into Smal­l­ey with anoth­er tea stop at the local Vil­lage Hall and an oppor­tu­ni­ty to use the toi­lets and more of Veg­gies cake and pasties. Some local peo­ple were there wait­ing for us and the group broke out into a meet­ing, in which we assessed the sit­u­a­tion over open cast min­ing in the UK and what we could do about it. The ener­gy and enthu­si­asm of which was enor­mous and in a very short time action plans had been drawn up. Small­er meet­ings in regions ensued so they could organ­ise into affin­i­ty groups. Peo­ple had trav­elled from Oxford, Cam­bridge, Man­ches­ter, Leeds, Not­ting­ham, Lan­cast­er, Nor­wich, Crew, Sheffield and Der­by as well as oth­er areas that I prob­a­bly missed and showed how much con­cern there was over the mat­ter of open cast min­ing

After a quick tidy up in the hall some set of back the way we came for the long jour­ney home while oth­ers decid­ed to take a slight­ly longer route over the fields of the site, just to keep the tres­pass going. We went into the main entrance of the site still unop­posed by the police after a slight nav­i­ga­tion­al error this all changed.

The local farmer had object­ed about us to our yel­low jack­et­ed escorts and we were being told we had to go back or face being arrest­ed and after check­ing the map, or not being allowed to go to the few steps more to the near­est foot­path we went back the way we came to join the foot­path at the back of the farm, again to be blocked by the police, one of which had led the farmer around the back and out of sight. One of the group decid­ed to go and have a word with the farmer and next thing we were being shout­ed to come this way; the chat with the farmer was obvi­ous­ly a suc­cess and we head­ed for the foot­path with a hap­py farmer and some of his fam­i­ly wav­ing us on like we were cham­pi­ons. This how­ev­er made us ques­tion what the police had said to the farmer?

For the lat­est infor­ma­tion on the next actions check Leave it in the Grounds web­site http://leaveitintheground.org.uk or blog http://leaveitintheground.wordpress.com

Or to get involved go to the Cli­mate Camp 3rd — 11th August at Kingsnorth http://www.climatecamp.org.uk and the Earth First Gath­er­ing 27th August – 1st Sep­tem­ber in Nor­folk http://www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk or find your local Earth First! group http://earthfirst.org.uk

BBC report on the tres­pass http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/derbyshire/7420634.stm
Do or Die http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no7/23–32.html
Phul­bari Resis­tance, Bangladesh http://phulbariresistance.blogspot.com

Why not organ­ise a protest against one of these?
UK Coal http://www.ukcoal.com/home
GMC Resources PLC http://www.gcmplc.com

—–
BBC report:

Tres­passers oppose coal mine planDerbyshire open-cast coal trespass 126th May 2008
Peo­ple who do not want a new open­cast coal mine on land adjoin­ing a coun­try park in Der­byshire have held a protest.

UK Coal wants to extract a mil­lion tonnes over four years from Lodge Hill in Smal­l­ey, near Heanor.

But cam­paign­ers said this would have a dev­as­tat­ing impact on the envi­ron­ment. About 50 pro­test­ers marched on the land in a mass tres­pass on Mon­day.

UK Coal said the mat­ter had gone through a pub­lic inquiry, and been prop­er­ly approved by the gov­ern­ment.

It said Britain need­ed ener­gy, and it was bet­ter to get it local­ly than to import it.

Cli­mate cam­paign­ers from the groups, Leave it in the Ground and Earth First! joined local res­i­dents opposed the plans for the mine on land adjoin­ing Ship­ley Coun­try Park.

Oppo­nents of the plans claimed near­ly 70 acres of green­belt land would be destroyed if the plans went through and were also wor­ried about noise and pol­lu­tion in the area.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/derbyshire/7420634.stm (also go here for a bit of his­to­ry to the ini­tial refusal of plan­ning per­mis­sion, over­turned by the Sec­re­tary of State)

A report from peo­ple who went, plus pho­tos, to fol­low

Citex Squat Amsterdam Illegally Evicted

27.05.2008
The Citex squat in Ams­ter­dam has recent­ly been ille­gal­ly evict­ed.

27.05.2008
The Citex squat in Ams­ter­dam has recent­ly been ille­gal­ly evict­ed.

On fri­day night, there was a birth­day par­ty. The police claim that there was a noise com­plaint from a neigh­bour, and asked for the iden­ti­ty papers of a per­son in the squat. They have no legal right to ask for this since the space was not pub­lic space but a res­i­dence . After­wards, they tried to arrest this per­son. The per­son was de-arrest­ed and took inside by the squat­ters. From this point on, the police esca­lat­ed the sit­u­a­tion, lead­ing to the evic­tion of the entire block of 4 hous­es and the citex social spaces. 51 peo­ple were arrest­ed and rough­ly treat­ed. Cur­rent­ly , there are a few peo­ple still inside prison, but most peo­ple have been released. On Sun­day, there was a demon­stra­tion that first passed by the heav­i­ly guard­ed (with dogs) citex-block, where it was made clear that we were not hap­py. Lat­er, win­dows of the may­or’s house (Job Cohen) and of city hall were smashed. The pre­vi­ous night, the win­dows of the hous­ing com­pa­ny were also smashed. Because this was an unex­pect­ed evic­tion (citex is still in legal process­es and the court results are due on thurs­day), all peo­ple’s belong­ings were still inside. On Mon­day, the peo­ple could luck­i­ly get their stuff back through a mov­ing com­pa­ny who took it out. The peo­ple were not allowed inside, and there was secu­ri­ty, dogs and police all over the area. Riot police and under­cov­er police (civil­ian clothed arrest teams) arrived many times for no clear rea­son except to pro­voke.
For more updates and sto­ries look on www. indy­media. nl.
Most sto­ries are in dutch for now, eng­lish ver­sions will come soon.
An eng­lish per­son­al account of some­one http://leightoncookie. blogspot. com/ and a pol­ish account http://www. indy­media. nl/nl/2008/05/52573. shtml are avail­able.

Keep your­self updat­ed, the strug­gle con­tin­ues!!
You can’t evict ideas, squat­ting con­tin­ues!!!

Bike Lanes on Bloor — 1,200 take to their bikes in Toronto

On Sun­day May 25th 2008 more than one thou­sand cyclists of all ages joined in Toron­to’s biggest ever ped­al-pow­ered parade, ring­ing their bells all the way from High Park to Queen’s Park.

'I love my bike' bellOn Sun­day May 25th 2008 more than one thou­sand cyclists of all ages joined in Toron­to’s biggest ever ped­al-pow­ered parade, ring­ing their bells all the way from High Park to Queen’s Park.

The sun­ny Sun­day ride was in sup­port of mak­ing Toron­to a leader in bike safe­ty by adding more bike lanes — espe­cial­ly on Bloor Street. To see a video of the ride, see www.bellsonbloor.ca

Asheville Rising Tide builds green power plant in Duke CEO’s front yard (USA)

May 25, 2008 — Char­lotte, NC

Front-yard power stationMay 25, 2008 — Char­lotte, NC
Today, activists with Asheville Ris­ing Tide broke ground on a new 800 Mw clean ener­gy pow­er plant in Duke Ener­gy CEO Jim Rogers front yard. The pow­er plant will tap into a pre­vi­ous­ly unex­plored ener­gy source known as hot air which has been found in large con­cen­tra­tions at Roger’s res­i­dence, 330 Eas­t­over Rd, Char­lotte, NC. “The hot air emit­ting from Jim Rogers mouth has been around for quite some time, but the last cou­ple of years has seen an expo­nen­tial growth of this untapped ener­gy source as Rogers parades around the coun­try call­ing for green­house gas reduc­tions while build­ing the dirty Cliff­side coal plant. This was sim­ply an oppor­tu­ni­ty we couldn’t pass up,” said Jill Rock­ing­ham, chief engi­neer for the project.

Asheville Ris­ing Tide believes that the con­struc­tion of the pow­er plant is a win-win sit­u­a­tion for the econ­o­my and the envi­ron­ment. “We are tak­ing a very dan­ger­ous and volatile gas and turn­ing it into a source for clean, car­bon free elec­tric­i­ty. The great thing about tap­ping into Roger’s hot air is that it is a tru­ly renew­able resource. At this point there appears to be an end­less sup­ply,” said, Rock­ing­ham. “Why build anoth­er dirty, expen­sive coal plant, when there are mil­lions of BTU’s of clean, cheap, ener­gy seep­ing out of their CEO’s mouth every day,” said Jake Tiller­man, Asheville Ris­ing Tide’s invest­ment rela­tions man­ag­er.

The plant has come under fire from some envi­ron­men­tal groups over con­cern of a lit­tle stud­ied ele­ment known as BS, a byprod­uct of burn­ing hot air. The hot air at the Roger’s res­i­dence has an unusu­al­ly high con­cen­tra­tion of BS and envi­ron­men­tal­ist are con­cerned over poten­tial health effects to near­by res­i­dents. “We are cur­rent­ly look­ing into ways in which to cap­ture and sequester the BS but the tech­nol­o­gy just isn’t avail­able at this moment,” said Rock­ing­ham. “We assure the envi­ron­men­tal com­mu­ni­ty that this is the last plant we build that does not have the capa­bil­i­ty of seques­ter­ing Roger’s BS. Besides, we paint­ed the plant green. That seems to be all that cor­po­ra­tions like Duke have to do to call a project sus­tain­able.”

Mexico: campesinos occupy Chihuahua gold mine

On May 24, campesinos from Eji­do Huizopa, Madera munic­i­pal­i­ty, in the north­ern Mex­i­can state of Chi­huahua, launched a protest occu­pa­tion of the Min­era Dolores com­pa­ny’s giant open-pit gold mine, which they say has been ille­gal­ly estab­lished on their lands.

On May 24, campesinos from Eji­do Huizopa, Madera munic­i­pal­i­ty, in the north­ern Mex­i­can state of Chi­huahua, launched a protest occu­pa­tion of the Min­era Dolores com­pa­ny’s giant open-pit gold mine, which they say has been ille­gal­ly estab­lished on their lands. The deci­sion to launch the block­ade was tak­en after two eji­do lead­ers, Enrique Tor­res González and José Arman­do González, were arrest­ed by Fed­er­al Pre­ven­ta­tive Police, lat­er released with­out charge. The local com­pa­ny direc­tor Car­los Gar­cía Droguett said the occu­pa­tion places at risk a $200 mil­lion invest­ment in the zone. (Excel­siór, May 29) Min­era Dolores is owned by the Minefind­ers Cor­po­ra­tion of Van­cou­ver. (GeoMex.com)

A state­ment from Eji­do Huizopa says Min­era Dolores used “tricks” to gain title to the land from “cor­rupt lead­ers” of the ejido—but nonethe­less received a per­mit from the Mex­i­can envi­ron­men­tal sec­re­tari­at, SEMARNAT. The state­ment says anoth­er of their lead­ers, Sal­vador Gai­tan, was the tar­get of an assas­si­na­tion attempt ear­li­er this year. Gait­ian, a direc­tor of the eji­do, is a vet­er­an of the 1960s gueril­la insur­gency in Chi­huahua led by Arturo Gámiz. (Received via e‑mail, May 30)

See our last posts on Mex­i­co, Chi­huahua and the min­er­al car­tel in Latin Amer­i­ca.

Min­era Dolores block­ade lift­ed

From CNN Mon­ey, June 9. Note repeat­ed and gra­tu­itous use of the word “ille­gal” to refer to the blockade—contrasting lack of any men­tion of campesino claims that the mine itself is ille­gal.

Minefind­ers Cor­po­ra­tion Ltd. (the “Com­pa­ny”) (TSX: MFL)(AMEX: MFN) reports ini­tial pro­duc­tion esti­mates for its Dolores gold and sil­ver mine in Chi­huahua, Mex­i­co, where the first gold and sil­ver pour is now sched­uled for mid July, 2008.

Man­age­ment expects gold pro­duc­tion from Dolores will be approx­i­mate­ly 40,000 ounces in 2008, 128,000 ounces in 2009 and 129,000 ounces in 2010. Sil­ver pro­duc­tion is expect­ed to be 1.0 mil­lion ounces in 2008, 3.0 mil­lion ounces in 2009, and 4.0 mil­lion ounces in 2010… Min­ing at Dolores is approach­ing a sus­tained rate of approx­i­mate­ly 100,000 tonnes per day with over 7 mil­lion tonnes of ore and waste mate­r­i­al mined at Dolores to date…

In late May an ille­gal block­ade was estab­lished on an access road to the Dolores Mine site. The major­i­ty of the indi­vid­u­als involved are believed to be from out­side of the region and include only a small fringe group from with­in the local 221-mem­ber Eji­do com­mu­ni­ty.

While Minefind­ers was on tar­get to achieve the first gold and sil­ver pour from Dolores in late June 2008, for safe­ty rea­sons the Com­pa­ny decid­ed to sus­pend con­struc­tion activ­i­ties and oper­a­tions until Mex­i­can author­i­ties safe­ly removed the ille­gal block­ade. On June 5, in response to meet­ings held with gov­ern­ment offi­cials, the block­aders re-opened the road and min­ing and pro­cess­ing oper­a­tions have recom­menced. The Com­pa­ny is con­tin­u­ing dis­cus­sions with the state and fed­er­al gov­ern­ments and with the indi­vid­u­als respon­si­ble for the block­ade to come to a defin­i­tive long-term res­o­lu­tion. As a result of the tem­po­rary sus­pen­sion of oper­a­tions due to the ille­gal block­ade, the first gold and sil­ver pour is now expect­ed in mid-July.

“Despite the delay of the first gold and sil­ver pour due to the ille­gal block­ade, the com­mis­sion­ing at Dolores is pro­gress­ing well with con­struc­tion and oper­at­ing costs con­sis­tent with those report­ed in the Com­pa­ny’s Feb­ru­ary 14, 2008, eco­nom­ic fore­cast and reserve update,” said Mark Bai­ley, Minefind­ers’ Pres­i­dent and CEO. “We remain ful­ly fund­ed to com­plete devel­op­ment and com­mis­sion­ing of the Dolores Mine and con­tin­ue the Dolores mill pre­lim­i­nary fea­si­bil­i­ty study and 2008 explo­ration pro­grams at Dolores and else­where.”

CNN also seems not to know that “Eji­do com­mu­ni­ty” is redun­dant and does not tell the read­er the name of the com­mu­ni­ty, as “eji­do” means agri­cul­tur­al com­mu­ni­ty. The name of the eji­do in ques­tion is Huizopa.