Swedish anti-mining protest camp against Beowulf Mining

Right now there is a bat­tle to save Sáp­mi (occu­pied by Swe­den) from more mines. Sáp­mi has already been exploit­ed and col­o­nized by the Swedish state and cor­po­ra­tions for gen­er­a­tions. Now an entire­ly new area is under attack from the min­ing indus­try, the forests, moun­tains and lakes west of Jokkmokk are threat­ened.

Since a month there is a block­ade against british Beowulf Mining´s test min­ing project in Gál­lok (swe: #kallak) going on. Activists have joined togeth­er with indige­nous Sami peo­ple to save the place from a big iron mine. The 29th of July the swedish police came and tore down the first block­ade and arrest­ed 6 per­sons. The same night the block­ade was raised again, with improve­ments to the company´s great dis­ap­point­ment. The activists plan to stay for the win­ter when the rein­deer and herders come and legal­ly can stop the test min­ing.

Resis­tance against the planned mine is grow­ing while the swedish police have said they are doing what the min­ing cor­po­ra­tion orders them to. Beowulf is cur­rent­ly silent and prob­a­bly don’t want more bad expo­sure and might try to beat the activists in the wait­ing game. Mean­while more peo­ple join the protests in dif­fer­ent ways through art and music as well as sup­port­ing the grow­ing protest camp. The activists are now build­ing Pen­ta­gon, a house sup­posed to work to decol­o­nize the world.

Update: The sec­ond bar­ri­cade was also destroyed by the cops the 12th of August and a secu­ri­ty guard­ing com­pa­ny is hired to pro­tect the test­mines and the road from pro­test­ers. This only to do test min­ing.

More recent update: Yes­ter­day they start­ed blast­ing, with 4 peo­ple near by in trees not out­side the blast­ing safe­ty zone. pigs removed bar­ri­cades in the morn­ing. many peo­ple got pulled off the road and chased from the for­est. 8 peo­ple were arrest­ed. last night and again tonight the road is bar­ri­cad­ed to delay work. now 10 secu­ri­ty work­ers work 12hr shifts, day and night. our spir­its are high. the bat­tle con­tin­ues.

http://kolonierna.wordpress.com/ for more info, pic­tures and videos.

Peruvian Campesinos Tear Down Mining Gate

A gath­er­ing of campesin@s tore down a gate at the site of the con­tro­ver­sial Con­ga Cop­per Mine in Peru on August 20. The farm­ers claim that Yana­cocha, the com­pa­ny in charge of the mine, built the gate ille­gal­ly in the first place, so there’s real­ly no need to have it there.

A gath­er­ing of campesin@s tore down a gate at the site of the con­tro­ver­sial Con­ga Cop­per Mine in Peru on August 20. The farm­ers claim that Yana­cocha, the com­pa­ny in charge of the mine, built the gate ille­gal­ly in the first place, so there’s real­ly no need to have it there.

The gate would impede a tra­di­tion­al path used by locals to access the impor­tant Lagu­na Namo­co­ha, so campesin@s took up their farm imple­ments and dug it out. Nation­al Police did not inter­vene. If a meet­ing is not held with campesinos, they have promised to tear down two oth­er gates access­ing lagu­nas Azul and Cor­ta­da

The Yana­cocha min­ing com­pa­ny is actu­al­ly a front for the New­mont Min­ing Com­pa­ny based in Den­ver, and they have a ter­ri­ble rep­u­ta­tion in Peru. In 2011, their exist­ing gold mine was halt­ed by a block­ade, dur­ing which time eight machines were torched cost­ing 2 mil­lion dol­lars and kneecap­ping their stock for some time.

The start of the new Con­ga Cop­per Mine has been halt­ed for for over a year by local direct action, includ­ing large block­ades. As recent­ly as June, thou­sands of farm­ers and min­ers gath­ered at El Per­ol Lake to demon­strate against the oblit­er­a­tion of local fresh water.

This from Cli­mate Con­nec­tions:

“Over the course of the ongo­ing occu­pa­tion of the Con­ga site, police have some­times used vio­lence but most­ly sought to avoid con­fronta­tions that could win sym­pa­thy for the pro­test­ers. Qui­et harass­ment of project oppo­nents has con­tin­ued unabat­ed, how­ev­er. On July 28, jour­nal­ist César Estra­da, who has doc­u­ment­ed the occu­pa­tion for local media, was detained near the Con­ga site by agents of the Nation­al Police Spe­cial Oper­a­tions Diec­torate (DINOES) and men in orange safe­ty vests who appeared to be Yana­cocha workers—but, like the police agents, in ski masks. The men con­fis­cat­ed his cam­era, cell phone and wire­less modem before releas­ing him. (Celendin Libre, Aug. 3)

Mobi­liza­tions against oth­er min­er­al and ener­gy develpo­ment projects in Caja­mar­ca are gain­ing ground. Ear­li­er this month, hun­dreds of campesino res­i­dents of San Mar­cos and Cajabam­ba provinces held a five-day cross-coun­try march, dubbed the “March in Defense of the Con­de­bam­ba Val­ley,” to oppose the oper­a­tions of the Sul­li­den Shahuin­do min­ing com­pa­ny, as well as unli­censed “infor­mal” min­ing in the area, which they charge is con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing local waters. (Servin­di, Aug. 9 via Con­sul­ta Pre­via)

On Aug. 17, a pub­lic forum was held in the town of Celendín enti­tled “Hydro-elec­tic­i­ty in the Ama­zon: Rivers, Life and Extrac­tive Indus­tries,” ana­lyz­ing the dan­gers posed by 24 new dams planned for the water­shed of the Río Marañón, and espe­cial­ly the Chadín 2 project, intend­ed to spur fur­ther min­er­al devel­op­ment in Caja­mar­ca. Researcher Anto­nio Zam­bra­no Allende of Forum Sol­i­dari­dad Perú said the new thrust of hydro devel­op­ment would result in “thou­sands of forced dis­place­ments” in the regions of Caja­mar­ca and Ama­zonas. The high­land region of Caja­mar­ca strad­dles the con­ti­nen­tal divide that sep­a­rates waters bound for the Pacif­ic from those flow­ing into the Marañón, a major trib­u­tary of the Ama­zon. (Aler­ta­Pe­ru, Aug. 21 via Celendin Libre)

A new report by Peru Top Pub­li­ca­tions finds that min­ing invest­ment in Peru in 2013 has reached a record $9.9 bil­lion, a 15% increase over last year, with 54 major projects planned or already under­way. Peru now ranks eighth in glob­al min­ing invest­ment, and its rank­ing will like­ly advance in the next two years. How­ev­er, the report notes that the coun­try cur­rent­ly lacks the ener­gy capac­i­ty to meet the demands of the new min­ing projects, and a major expan­sion of the elec­tric­i­ty sec­tor will be nec­es­sary for the pro­ject­ed growth in the min­er­al sec­tor. (La Repub­li­ca, June 27)”

www.youtube.com/embed/0bxeWZPRQ7c

Coal company and police try to prohibit climat camp

Cli­mat Camp near Cologne, Ger­many start­ing tomorow got prob­lems with the camp site. 

Cli­mat Camp near Cologne, Ger­many start­ing tomorow got prob­lems with the camp site. 
The admin­is­tra­tion action of cli­mate-camp-orga­niz­ers at the admin­is­tra­tive court in cologne against the restric­tions against the cli­mate/rtf-camp by the dis­trict police got reject­ed. The dis­trict police had approved the legal reg­is­tra­tion of the camp, but for­bade “infra­struc­ture in terms of accom­mo­da­tion and food ser­vices” to be estab­lished. the dis­trict police had filed an appli­ca­tion for rejec­tion against our admin­is­tra­tive action with some out­ra­geous claims.

That these con­di­tions are now con­firmed by the admin­is­tra­tive court, is a blow against our basic right to free­dom of assem­bly. Pre­vi­ous­ly, the city of Ker­pen announced that in the event of reg­is­tra­tion as an event also high require­ments would be imposed, such as pro­fes­sion­al secu­ri­ty ser­vice, even though it had only been at Pen­te­cost that there was a Catholic youth camp with around 200 par­tic­i­pants in Man­heim, a with­out such require­ments. Sim­i­lar­ly, the city of Ker­pen for­bade the use of the san­i­tary facil­i­ties of a sports field to which the camp par­tic­i­pants had easy access in recent years.

Like that the cli­mate camp should be banned by the back door, so as to avoid unpleas­ant crit­i­cal pub­lic­i­ty at Ham­bach. “We believe that RWE has put pres­sure on the city and police because they do not like the camp,” says Clau­dia Hen­ry of the prepara­to­ry group, “but the stones that are placed in our way, just show how thick the sleaze between ener­gy com­pa­nys and local insti­tu­tions is. ”

At the moment, the peo­ple that are build­ing up the camp are put under mas­sive pres­sure to take the tents down again!

But the fight against cli­mate change and for our liveli­hood can’t be for­bid­den. The orga­niz­ers of the camps will not be intim­i­dat­ed by admin­is­tra­tive bar­ri­ers and police harass­ment and will do every­thing so that all the camps can take place. Spread the news, stay up to date, sol­i­darise your­self and come around.

http://www.ausgeco2hlt.de/klimacamp/en/camp-2013–2/

Activists Boat onto Sludge Pond; Confront politician on Dangers of Coal Sludge

21 August 2013 – This morn­ing at 7:30 a.m. two activists pad­dled out onto the 2.8 bil­lion gal­lon Shu­mate slur­ry impound­ment in Raleigh Coun­ty with ban­ners read­ing, “Slur­ry Poi­sons Appalachia” and “Gov.

21 August 2013 – This morn­ing at 7:30 a.m. two activists pad­dled out onto the 2.8 bil­lion gal­lon Shu­mate slur­ry impound­ment in Raleigh Coun­ty with ban­ners read­ing, “Slur­ry Poi­sons Appalachia” and “Gov. Tomblin, Put Health Over Prof­it.”  Lat­er this morn­ing, one activist locked him­self to a bar­rel of black water in front of Gov. Tomblin’s man­sion in a Tyvek suit read­ing “Locked to Dirty Water”.   Activists are call­ing atten­tion to the fail­ure of the state gov­ern­ment to pro­tect its cit­i­zens from the abus­es of the coal indus­try and the threats posed by coal slur­ry dis­pos­al.

 

“I grew up in Eunice drink­ing water poi­soned by coal slur­ry, went to Marsh Fork Ele­men­tary under that dam, breathed the dust from that prep plant, and I’ve suf­fered the life­long health con­se­quences of that.  These same abus­es are tak­ing place today across our great state, and the blame for that lies square­ly at the feet of Gov. Tomblin,” said Junior Walk of Rock Creek, W.Va. who attend­ed today’s protest at the Governor’s man­sion.

Coal slur­ry, the tox­ic byprod­uct of “wash­ing” impu­ri­ties out of coal before it is sold, has long been a mat­ter of deep con­cern for area res­i­dents.  Its com­mon dis­pos­al meth­ods have cre­at­ed trag­ic dis­as­ters such as poi­son­ing the pub­lic water sup­plies of Prenter and Eunice, W.Va., and slur­ry floods in Mar­tin Coun­ty, Ky., and Buf­fa­lo Creek, W.Va..  Despite this, evi­dence mounts that West Vir­ginia reg­u­la­tors con­tin­ue to fail at ade­quate­ly reg­u­lat­ing impound­ments.

Just this year, two Office of Sur­face Min­ing (OSM) inves­ti­ga­tions found seri­ous prob­lems with the WV Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Protection’s (DEP) over­sight, both in pre­vent­ing impound­ments from break­ing through into under­ground mines and ensur­ing prop­er com­paction, a key mea­sure of impounde­ment safe­ty.  The com­paction report revealed that over 75 per­cent of tests of coal slur­ry impound­ments in West Vir­ginia failed.  In Feb­ru­ary, the U.S. Depart­ment of Labor asked a fed­er­al judge to order the imme­di­ate shut­down of an impound­ment in Bar­bour Coun­ty that had not been cer­ti­fied by an engi­neer for two years, because mine oper­a­tors were “flout­ing fed­er­al law, ignor­ing vio­la­tions and fines, and putting the pub­lic at risk.” WVDEP had the abil­i­ty to shut down this impound­ment, but it didn’t until weeks after the Dept. of Labor took action.

DEP’s finances reveal its pri­or­i­ties.  Dur­ing its 2011 study of the water and health cri­sis in Prenter, W.Va., the DEP spent over 6 times as much mon­ey hir­ing a pri­vate law firm to sue EPA on behalf of the coal indus­try as it spent on that study.  Mean­while, Dr. Yorem Eck­stein of Kent State Uni­ver­si­ty con­firmed long held com­mu­ni­ty sus­pi­cions that the well water in Prenter had been con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed with coal slur­ry based on years of water qual­i­ty data.  Despite this evi­dence and exten­sive­ly doc­u­ment­ed health prob­lems includ­ing high inci­dence of brain tumors, DEP’s study on Prenter’s water released last year con­clud­ed that water was uncon­t­a­m­i­nat­ed.

Our politi­cians and reg­u­la­tors say that it’s safe to dump slur­ry in our com­mu­ni­ties, but they don’t want it on their doorstep.  Gov. Tomblin could order to coal indus­try to install fil­ter press­es that would elim­i­nate slur­ry while cre­at­ing jobs for less than a dol­lar a ton,” said Chuck Nel­son, retired UWMA coal min­er of Glen Daniel, W.Va.  “That’s the way it also goes.  Our Gov­er­nor puts the inter­ests of the coal indus­try above the health of our com­mu­ni­ties.”

There is mount­ing evi­dence that coal’s impacts on West Vir­ginia go far beyond coal slur­ry.  New stud­ies con­tin­ue to doc­u­ment the dam­age to com­mu­ni­ty health and water qual­i­ty from out of con­trol min­ing, but Gov. Tomblin con­tin­ues to blind­ly defend the indus­try.  Gov. Tomblin has not only ignored the evi­dence of the coal industry’s impacts on the health of West Vir­ginia com­mu­ni­ties, he has also reject­ed calls for alter­na­tive eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment in the face of a declin­ing coal indus­try.  Cen­tral Appalachia is in the midst of a steep decline as pre­dict­ed by many indus­try ana­lysts.

“I was scared on the impound­ment, but I am more ter­ri­fied of the coal industry’s con­tin­ued dis­re­gard for human life and land. After tak­ing all of the coal, Alpha will aban­don Appalachia in order to find oth­er resources and com­mu­ni­ties to extract,” said Ric­ki Drap­er, one of the two activists that boat­ed onto the sludge impound­ment.

NO TAV movement again under attack, Italy

For twen­ty years in moun­tains of North West Italy, not far from Tori­no, a pow­er­ful move­ment has grown that has resist­ed the Ital­ian government’s plan to build a high veloc­i­ty rail­road, which in addi­tion to being very cost­ly and eco­nom­i­cal­ly use­less would cer­tain­ly destroy the moun­tain envi­ron­ment.

For twen­ty years in moun­tains of North West Italy, not far from Tori­no, a pow­er­ful move­ment has grown that has resist­ed the Ital­ian government’s plan to build a high veloc­i­ty rail­road, which in addi­tion to being very cost­ly and eco­nom­i­cal­ly use­less would cer­tain­ly destroy the moun­tain envi­ron­ment. Over and over, the NO TAV move­ment, now well-known through­out Europe, has come under attack by the police and the army, besides being the object of a smear cam­paign by politi­cians of almost every polit­i­cal stripe. How­ev­er, so strong has been the deter­mi­na­tion of the peo­ple of Val di Susa and their many sup­port­ers to resist this assault on their land and their lives that so far no real con­struc­tion has tak­en place and all that the com­pa­nies in charge of the project have achieved has been to sur­round thou­sands of acres of land, belong­ing to the local pop­u­la­tion, with barbed wires and cops.

It is now gen­er­al­ly rec­og­nized, even at the EU lev­el, that the con­struc­tion of the high veloc­i­ty rail­road is unnec­es­sary, so that some par­tic­i­pant coun­tries have already with­drawn from the project. Nev­er­the­less, the Ital­ian gov­ern­ment has even fur­ther inten­si­fied its attack on the resis­tance to the TAV trains, with the full mil­i­ta­riza­tion of Val di Susa. As the vil­lagers of this beau­ti­ful his­toric val­ley, near the bor­der with France, the cen­ter of the par­ti­san resis­tance to Fas­cism and Nazism in the ‘40s, have repeat­ed­ly denounced, no effort has been spared to repress ide­o­log­i­cal­ly and phys­i­cal­ly the legit­i­mate protest of the res­i­dents of the val­ley who would bear every day the con­se­quences of the TAVS. Already the land of Val di Susa has been drenched with tear gas, and many have been arrest­ed, wound­ed, and some have even died because of the government’s out­ra­geous deter­mi­na­tion to com­plete this work regard­less of its dev­as­tat­ing con­se­quences for the peo­ple of the val­ley.

Now a new vio­lent assault on the No Tav move­ment is unfold­ing that demands a clear response by all those in and out of Italy who believe that the sys­tem­at­ic destruc­tion of our envi­ron­ment and the vio­la­tion of people’s most basic needs and demands are crimes that affect us all and we should not tol­er­ate.

On Mon­day morn­ing, July 29, the DIGOS – the polit­i­cal branch of the police – has raid­ed dozens of homes in Tori­no and in Val di Susa. Twelve com­rades have been forced to open their hous­es to its agents, who have then pro­ceed­ed to search for incrim­i­nat­ing mate­ri­als, pre­sum­ably relat­ed to their protest against the enclo­sure of the land of the val­ley with hedges of barbed wire. Instruct­ed to look for explo­sives and cut­ters, the police have failed in this goal, but they have con­fis­cat­ed all the audio-visu­al and telecom­mu­ni­ca­tion mate­ri­als they could find, clear­ly the real objec­tive of the search. As one of the activists raid­ed put it: “They came for weapons, they left with com­put­ers and phones”.

The raid has includ­ed the restau­rant La Cre­den­za – a name that in Ital­ian sig­nif­i­cant­ly means both ‘faith’ and ‘pantry’ – a pub­lic place of meet­ing and aggre­ga­tion for No TAVS in Val di Susa, where work­ers’ unions and polit­i­cal asso­ci­a­tions are also locat­ed. This is a place where every day peo­ple meet to dis­cuss cur­rent events, most­ly relat­ing to the strug­gle, as well as share some food and a glass of wine. Who­ev­er goes to Bus­soleno, the heart­land of the NO TAV strug­gle, pass­es through it, to have a chance to talk to local peo­ple, check on cur­rent events, and have a great din­ner. But the mag­is­trates paint it as a place of con­spir­a­cy, to sup­port the charge that moti­vates the raid: involve­ment in “attacks with ter­ror­ist and sub­ver­sive intent.”

Any­one who has been in Val di Susa, or has fol­lowed the long his­to­ry of the protest its peo­ple have mount­ed against the TAV knows this charge is false, out­ra­geous, and is a clas­sic exam­ple of blam­ing the vic­tims. Not sur­pris­ing­ly the “proofs” are man­u­fac­tured.

At one of the hous­es raid­ed, a map of the val­ley was found with mark­er-signs on it. The young woman liv­ing there is a mem­ber of the Legal Team for the move­ment, and the map is part of the mate­r­i­al that she was to sub­mit to the defense in tri­als that are already tak­ing place against some of its mem­bers. On it, the sites are marked where in 2011 sev­er­al peo­ple were bru­tal­ized by the police. But accord­ing to the inves­ti­ga­tors, the map proves the exis­tence of a mil­i­tar­i­ly orga­nized guer­ril­la move­ment.

Sim­i­lar­ly, beer bot­tles pre­sum­ably found on the con­struc­tion site are pre­sent­ed as evi­dence for the pres­ence of Molo­tov cock­tails, no proof giv­en that they ever con­tained any­thing but beer. Black T Shirts too were con­fis­cat­ed, though it is hard to imag­ine what they could prove. But the mean­ing of the police oper­a­tion comes forth most bla­tant­ly where the mag­is­trates state that those raid­ed are inves­ti­gat­ed as sus­pects of “attacks with ter­ror­ist intent.”

In sum, the goal of this new oper­a­tion is to esca­late the assault on the move­ment by rep­re­sent­ing it, legal­ly and through the media, as a ‘ter­ror­ist’ move­ment – a move obvi­ous­ly intend­ed to scare its sup­port­ers, turn pub­lic opin­ion against the peo­ple of Val di Susa, and legit­imize any vio­lence the state will deem fit to unleash against them.

We do not think this oper­a­tion will suc­ceed. The peo­ple of Val di Susa have fought the fas­cists, have fought the Nazis, and for twen­ty years they have been able to push back the attempt of the Ital­ian gov­ern­ment to destroy their moun­tains, already tra­versed by many rail­road lines and a recent­ly con­struct­ed high­way. How­ev­er, we should not under­es­ti­mate the will of the gov­ern­ment to crush this move­ment. This in fact appears to be the pri­ma­ry objec­tive of the present oper­a­tion, as reports indi­cate that, even from a cap­i­tal­ist view­point, the TAV project is turn­ing out to be eco­nom­i­cal­ly unfea­si­ble. Why to pur­sue it then with so much obsti­na­cy, to the point of stomp­ing over the lives of thou­sands of peo­ple? Is it because the Ital­ian gov­ern­ment can­not admit that when peo­ple strug­gle in a uni­fied way they can win? Or is it that the prof­its that pri­vate com­pa­nies would make would out­weigh the fail­ure of the project to bring any ben­e­fit to the coun­try as a whole and out­weigh as well the immense agony and loss inflict­ed on the peo­ple of Val di Susa?

Pol­i­tics these days has a sur­re­al char­ac­ter. Lies, dis­tor­tions, argu­ments moti­vat­ed sole­ly by the nar­row­est of pri­vate eco­nom­ic motives are the order of the day. But the fic­ti­tious char­ac­ter of the charges brought against the vic­tims of the raid should not deceive us about the dam­age they can inflict. At the very least these attacks are forc­ing a move­ment to re-chan­nel its ener­gies from the strug­gle against the TAV to the defense of those under attack.

This is why we need to sup­port the NO TAV activists under inves­ti­ga­tion, we need expand our sup­port for the NO TAV strug­gle, and send a clear mes­sage of protest to the Ital­ian gov­ern­ment, demand­ing it ends the per­se­cu­tion of the No TAV activists and put an end to the TAV project itself.

Please sign the fol­low­ing state­ment –affil­i­a­tion for iden­ti­fi­ca­tion pur­pose only:

We urge the Ital­ian gov­ern­ment and judi­cia­ry to:

*End its arbi­trary use of the law to per­se­cute No TAV activists;

*Cease the inves­ti­ga­tion against the twelve peo­ple whose homes have been raid­ed;

*Stop the mil­i­ta­riza­tion of Val de Susa;

*Lis­ten to the legit­i­mate protest of the peo­ple of Val de Susa and aban­don the TAV project, which has already caused so much suf­fer­ing to so many peo­ple

How we Reclaimed the Power! — summary report of actions and before

A short sto­ry of No Dash for Gas, Reclaim the Pow­er and how peo­ple from across the coun­try stood in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Bal­combe to oppose Cuadrilla and the dash for gas…

A short sto­ry of No Dash for Gas, Reclaim the Pow­er and how peo­ple from across the coun­try stood in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Bal­combe to oppose Cuadrilla and the dash for gas…

It all began last year, when 21 activists occu­pied and shut down EDF’s gas fired pow­er sta­tion in West Bur­ton for over a week. It was time to stop the ‘Dash for Gas’ which would smash our cli­mate tar­gets and push up ener­gy prices…

  1.  
    Huge num­bers of peo­ple signed up to our face­book event and told us they were com­ing. Even Rus­sell Brand was with us in spir­it!
     
    On Fri­day, we arrived in beau­ti­ful sun­ny Bal­combe, with mem­bers of a whole host of cam­paigns includ­ing UK Uncut, UK Tar Sands Net­work, Occu­py Lon­don, Dis­abled Peo­ple Against the Cuts and No Dash for Gas all join­ing the camp.
     
    Reclaim The Pow­er has arrived in Bal­combe | Come and join us!
     
    We joined the March for a Frack Free Future with two thou­sand pro­test­ers from across the coun­try…
     
  2. …and those from the local com­mu­ni­ty who’d been resist­ing Cuadrilla for weeks!
    August 19 2013: Bal­combe Sol­i­dar­i­ty Sun­day anti-frack­ing protest
     
    Local cam­paign­ers Vanes­sa Vine, Charles Met­calfe and Car­o­line Lucas MP were joined by speak­ers from No Dash For Gas and Occu­py Chevron in Poland to head­line a thun­der­ous ral­ly of oppo­si­tion.

 

The pro­test­ers then formed a human cir­cle around the site, join­ing hands, chant­i­ng and singing, while Cuadrilla’s work­ers looked on from inside their razor-wire fence.

  1. On Mon­day morn­ing, our Day of Action began!
     
  2. 6 activists block­ad­ed the entrance to Bell Pot­tinger’s offices in Lon­don, Cuadrilla’s “spin-doc­tors”. They are respon­si­ble for a whole host of pro-frack­ing lies and spin which we have thor­ough­ly debunked over the past 6 days.

    Cuadrilla’s PR com­pa­ny Bell Pot­tinger shut down by activists from Reclaim the Pow­er

    …then we heard from a group of 20 activists who occu­pied Cuadrilla’s HQ in Lich­field, just out­side Birm­ing­ham. They set up camp out­side the build­ing while three activists went inside, shut down 8 work sta­tions and took over a floor of the office!

  3.  
     
  4. Activists lock them­selves to fur­ni­ture inside Cuadrilla’s HQ
    …mean­while, a third action was tak­ing place at the con­stituen­cy office of pro-frack­ing min­is­ter, Fran­cis Maude MP. Tak­ing inspi­ra­tion from Lib­er­ate Tate, a wind tur­bine blade was deliv­ered to the roof of his office…
     
  5. Wind tur­bine out­side office of Fran­cis Maude MP
     
    …and with a rather love­ly mes­sage for Mr. Maude to read on his return!
     
  6. Note left out­side office of Fran­cis Maude MP
     
    Back at the drill site in Bal­combe, var­i­ous groups set up a range of orig­i­nal and cre­ative block­ades at the gate, involv­ing bikes, singers and dancers and lock­ing on to a wheel chair… 
     
  7. Block­ade out­side Cuadrilla frack­ing site in Bal­combe

    Sad­ly, the police decid­ed to be heavy-hand­ed in response to our peace­ful protest…

  8. Pro­test­ers block­ade Cuadrilla frack site in Bal­combe, West Sus­sex

     

    Else­where in Lon­don, 6 peo­ple had gone to Lord How­ell’s town house for our next action and set up a ‘For Shale’ sign there. George Osborne’s father-in-law is eager to spread frack­ing across the UK, par­tic­u­lar­ly to the ‘des­o­late north east’! Our activists from New­cas­tle might have oth­er ideas…

  9. Frack­ing lob­by­ist Lord How­ell’s house is for shale!
  10. Frack­ing lob­by­ist Lord How­ell’s house: for shale!

     

    Back in Bal­combe, the police decid­ed to start arrest­ing peace­ful pro­test­ers stag­ing a sit-in at the gate to the Cuadrillia site. Green MP, Car­o­line Lucas, was among those arrest­ed…

Back at the camp, the chil­dren at Reclaim the Pow­er (we were a gath­er­ing of all ages!) went on a bus ride to Bal­combe vil­lage to speak to local peo­ple about the dan­gers of frack­ing to every­one’s future. 
  1. Frack Free Future bus on tour!

     

    Word had spread to our friends and sup­port­ers world­wide about our day of action which had tak­en on Cuadrilla and the dash for gas from all sides!

    Then, only hours after being released, Car­o­line Lucas was field­ing inter­views, media work and back fight­ing frack­ing!

    And then, on Tuues­day, as we began mak­ing plans for the future…

    So as we pack down our camp today, it’s not the end! As Ewa from No Dash For Gas put it, ‘this is a marathon, not a sprint’ and we will win the fight against frack­ing…

Above from here

Good video

ELF fight to save Moscow park

August 20, 2013 — Rus­sia

anony­mous report, from From Rus­sia With Love:

August 20, 2013 — Rus­sia

anony­mous report, from From Rus­sia With Love:

“About two weeks ago we torched a tracked exca­va­tor at the place where work­ers were destroy­ing Ismailo­vo park. The vehi­cle was parked on the side of the high­way, where they were adding more lanes to the road. It took us 3–4 min­utes to do the job. We approached. We set up our load of rags, no rush (we tar­get­ed spots between the cock­pit, engine room and hydraulics in the arm). Added some gaso­line and set it on fire. Quick­ly ran to the oppo­site side of the street, took our bot­tles of beer from bags and head­ed towards the near­by sub­way sta­tion. After about 10 min­utes of walk­ing we saw a fire­fight­er brigade (all noisy and flashy) dri­ving to the place of recent eco­tage (they would be just in time to save the smok­ing remains).

Words of encour­age­ment to our Ukran­ian com­rades who for rea­sons unknown sus­pend­ed all activ­i­ty. We would also like to men­tion our rage at the sen­tence of Igor ‘Squash’ Kharchenko: http://grani.ru/Society/Law/m.217970.html [antifas­cist from Moscow, sen­tenced to prison after a con­tro­ver­sial tri­al despite all evi­dence prov­ing his inno­cence]

Have no doubt, we will avenge him.

- ELF-Moscow”

Tense Situation in Tibet After Crackdown on Mine Protests

Tibet-Mining-Dzatoe

Tibet-Mining-Dzatoe

20th August 2013

Emerg­ing reports from Tibet say over hun­dred Tibetans were injured and one man com­mit­ted sui­cide in Yul­shul Coun­ty, Kham region of east­ern Tibet, after a mas­sive crack­down car­ried out by armed Chi­nese mil­i­tary forces to dis­perse Tibetans peace­ful­ly protest­ing against dia­mond min­ing in the region.

“The pro­tes­tors were severe­ly beat­en by Chi­nese secu­ri­ty forces with gun butts and hurl­ing tear gas to dis­perse the peace­ful protest­ing against dia­mond min­ing in Yul­shul Coun­ty in east­ern Tibet. The sit­u­a­tion remains tense in the coun­ty, as there is a grow­ing anger over the severe crack­down,” sources said.

“Local Tibetans are con­cerned that the min­ing activ­i­ties are not sanc­tioned by the Cen­tral gov­ern­ment offi­cials and that they could trig­ger envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems, includ­ing pol­lu­tion. Pro­test­ers raised their hands and shout­ed slo­gans such as “stop the destruc­tion of the envi­ron­ment”, while putting up large ban­ners dis­play­ing Pres­i­dent Xi Jin­ping and his recent envi­ron­ment speech,” Ven Kon­chok told The Tibet Post Inter­na­tion­al (TPI), cit­ing sources in the region.

“Over hun­dred Tibetans were wound­ed in the Chi­nese crack­down, while at least eight Tibetans were arrest­ed and 15 oth­ers tak­en to a hos­pi­tal. The total num­bers of injured and arrest­ed still can­not be con­firmed, this hos­pi­tal alone treat­ing 15 pro­test­ers,” said Kon­chok Dhondup, Tibetan monk cur­rent­ly liv­ing in Dharamsha­la, cit­ing local con­tacts.

“Over 1,000 Tibetans gath­ered to protest against the min­ing activ­i­ties in each of the three sacred Bud­dhist sites in Yul­shul Coun­ty. The mas­sive crack­down fol­lowed a tense con­fronta­tion between local Tibetan pro­tes­tors and Chi­nese min­er work­ers at three sacred Bud­dhist sites hav­ing dia­mond reserves in Dza­toe in Yul­shul Coun­ty (Chi­nese: Yushu Pre­fec­ture in Qing­hai Province) since August 13.

“A Tibetan man iden­ti­fied as Sokpo Choedup was seri­ous­ly injured after what appears to be a self-inflict­ed knife wounds and was tak­en away by Chi­nese police,” Ven Kon­chok said.

China-Army-Tibet“Hun­dreds of armed mil­i­tary forces imme­di­ate­ly arrived at the holy sites,” said Kon­chok. “Over 500 armed police stormed holy sites in Atod Yult­so and Zachen Yult­so and fired tear­gas to dis­perse the pro­tes­tors. The pro­tes­tors were tor­tured, severe­ly beat­en with gun butts, threat­ened with being shot if they don’t end their protests,” he added.

“The local Tibetans how­ev­er com­plained that the min­ing work­ers increase envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion in the coun­ty, that against China’s envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion law and are car­ried out by the work­ers in coor­di­na­tion with cor­rupt state and local offi­cials, with­out sanc­tions from the cen­tral gov­ern­ment,” he fur­ther added.

Kon­chok stat­ed that the Chi­nese secu­ri­ty forces have planned a major crack­down on those sit­ting in protest at Chi-dza holy site on August 17.

“China’s large-scale exploita­tion of min­er­al resources in Tibet has led to sus­tained socio-eco­nom­ic and envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems. Mas­sive influx of Chi­nese migrant work­ers into Tibetan areas deprives Tibetans of employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties,” said the Cen­tral Tibetan Admin­is­tra­tion (CTA) baed in Dharam­sala-India after the inci­dent.

The CTA said it has “repeat­ed­ly called on Chi­na to ensure active par­tic­i­pa­tion of Tibetan peo­ple in all deci­sion mak­ing process and that social, envi­ron­men­tal and cul­tur­al impacts assess­ment are car­ried out.”

March for a Frack-Free Future

18th August 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

18th August 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peo­ple came from all over the UK to protest against frack­ing, and in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the vil­lagers of Bal­combe and the road-side protest camp who’ve been ‘Lock­ing the Gate’ for three weeks now.  Police have been increas­ing­ly harass­ing camp res­i­dents, arrest­ing seem­ing­ly at ran­dom times pick­ing peo­ple off as they come out of the toi­let or are eat­ing lunch, and putting severe pres­sure on the rig-side for­est camp.  Mean­while the Reclaim the Pow­er camp had land­ed in a field about a 30 minute walk away, and has been build­ing up to the action days this com­ing week. 

Well over a thou­sand peo­ple marched — the first wave left Reclaim the Pow­er, passed through the orig­i­nal protest camp and made it’s way up to the sta­tion.  No soon­er than a line of yel­low came into view ahead through the trees lin­ing the road, a cheer rose and peo­ple at the sta­tion came stream­ing down.  The police with­drew from between the crowds — fear­ing a Blake­lock Sand­wich — and took up posi­tion at what had been our rear, and now was the front.  We slow­ly marched down, to the beat of a band of drum­mers, a sam­ba band, and sound sys­tems, down to the gate, where along with the lines of police from var­i­ous forces, peo­ple lis­tened to speech­es by com­mu­ni­ties fight­ing the frack­ing threat and pub­lic fig­ures there in sol­i­dar­i­ty. 

Pic­tures

Local ‘democ­ra­cy’ (AKA cor­rup­tion) of Bal­combe parish coun­cil — Pri­vate Eye

Balcombe anti-fracking protests update days 21–24

Peo­ple slow­ing trucks down, police forc­ing them through, some arrests and over­ly restric­tive bail con­di­tions on those already nicked lift­ed…

Peo­ple slow­ing trucks down, police forc­ing them through, some arrests and over­ly restric­tive bail con­di­tions on those already nicked lift­ed…

Details with pho­tos: Day 21 | Day 22 | Day 23 | Day 24