Yearly Archives: 2010

Call for solidarity actions with the accused spokespersons for the Climate Justice movement

Stine Gry Jonassen was accredited by Global Justice Ecology Project to attend the 15th Conference of the UN Climate Convention in Copenhagen, Denmark.  Stine was one of the Danish organizers and spokespeople for the Reclaim Power action that occurred on the 16th of December in Copenhagen.  She spoke about the action the day prior to it during a press conference in the official UN venue.  She is now part of a group being persecuted for their role in organizing this non-violent event during which observers and delegates marched out of the UN climate talks to join a mass march on the outside for what was called “A Peoples’ Assembly.”  GJEP decries this unjust persecution of non-violent activists who were attacked and beaten by the Danish Police.
–GJEP Team
_______________________________________________________
Cross posted from Climate Justice Action

During the climate summit in Copenhagen, more than 2000 people were arrested preventively and held in custody while they were trying to have their voices heard. These people along with thousands of other people from around the world were trying to set a different and more just political agenda in the climate debate. Climate Justice Action, a global network of social movements and groups, was mobilizing and calling for a protest and people’s assembly to challenge the farcical political negotiations at the COP15. They demanded just solutions to the climate crisis, solutions that do not only favor the rich western world. On the 16th of December the CJA network organized the Reclaim Power – Push for Climate Justice action, to give a voice to those people marginalized by the negotiations and most affected by climate change.

This emerging climate justice movement was met with severe repression and an abuse of power from the Danish government. This was reflected in the form of massive detainment of protesters and targeting of alleged organizers of legal demonstrations. During 2009 the Danish government and the Danish police carried out an intense scare campaign in the media to demonize protesters and activists. Police were given extra legal powers and economic resources for the COP 15. This led to thousands of preventive arrests, month-long surveillance of telephones, raids of private homes and accommodations and grotesque and unnecessary detentions. Stine Gry and Tannie acted as spokespersons for CJA in the media during the whole COP period, arguing for the right to protest and against the massive police repression. They are now both being held personally responsible for the Reclaim Power – Push for Climate Justice action, and are facing charges including planning violence against police, gross vandalism, serious disturbance of public peace and order, and trespassing. Some of these charges are drawn from the Danish terror package and the penalties are strengthened by the new Danish anti-protester laws introduced just prior to the COP 15.

The main evidence against Stine Gry and Tannie is that they allegedly shouted “push” from the sound truck during the demonstration on the 16th, along with thousands of other protestors. The truth is, we all shouted “push!” on the 16th, and we all pushed together for climate justice on that day.

Solidarity Demonstration in Copenhagen

On the 29th of September there will be a solidarity demonstration in Copenhagen starting at 17:00 at Gammeltorv, in support of Stine Gry Jonassen and Tannie Nyboe, two spokespersons for the Climate Justice Action network (CJA) who will go on trial the 6th of October. They are accused of ‘organizing’ the Reclaim Power – Push for Climate Justice demonstration on the 16th of December in Copenhagen. We call out for everyone to act in solidarity on the 29th of September through demonstrations and statements of support and solidarity, including demonstrations and manifestations outside Danish embassies, demanding that the charges be dropped against Stine and Tannie. You can contribute with a picture on online solidarity at: www.climatecollective.org/push

Call for actions

Through this trial the Danish state is trying to make two individuals responsible for a whole movement’s collective decision-making and collective protests. This is clearly an attempt to scare people from protesting and organizing politically, killing off all critical voices. It is a violation of the freedom of speech and our right to assembly. The right to protest and everyone’s right to be heard is an essential element in a democracy, even if you are speaking against the existing capitalist system. We therefore call on everyone to show solidarity with the accused on the 29th of September and make criticism of this ongoing repression visible.

To highlight the absurdity in the charges, we encourage people to take actions using the slogan “we also shouted push!”. Post your photos www.climatecollective.org/push and send your videos of solidarity actions to the climate collective (cop15repression@climatecollective.org), and let us know any information of actions that happen.

In Solidarity – The Climate Collective

www.cop15repression.info

www.climatecollective.org

We also shouted push: www.climatecollective.org/push

email:  cop15repression@climatecollective.org

The trial dates of Stine Gry Jonassen and Tannie Nyboe are the 6th, 27th and 28th of October, but additional court days might be necessary.

Comments Off on Call for solidarity actions with the accused spokespersons for the Climate Justice movement

Filed under Actions / Protest, Copenhagen/COP-15

This week’s Earth Minute on KPFK Pacifica’s Sojourner Truth Radio Program

This week’s podcast discusses and celebrates the International Day Against Tree Monocultures.

Click here to listen to the Podcast

Comments Off on This week’s Earth Minute on KPFK Pacifica’s Sojourner Truth Radio Program

Filed under Earth Minute

Tasmanian Timber Giant Retreats from Old Growth Logging

In 1992 Global Justice Ecology Project’s Orin Langelle went to Tasmania to help start the Native Forest Network.  In 2000, both Langelle and GJEP’s Anne Petermann were in Tasmania with the Native Forest Network after meetings in Aotearoa (New Zealand).   While we of course support the end to old-growth logging, developing plantations is not a solution to the larger problem of overconsumption of wood products, especially in so-called “developed” countries.  In many regions of the world, plantation expansion has driven the destruction of native forests and the displacement of Indigenous and forest dependent communities.  Plantations are not forests.
–GJEP Team
________________________________________________________
Cross posted from Environmental News Service
MELBOURNE, Australia, September 10, 2010 (ENS) – Australian environmental groups are rejoicing as the new head of Tasmanian timber company Gunns Limited announced the company will move away from logging native forests and develop plantation-based products.At an industry conference in Melbourne Thursday, Gunns chief executive Greg L’Estrange acknowledged that most Australians support the environmental groups in their decades-long campaign to end logging in the old growth native forests of Tasmania.

Gunns CEO Greg L’Estrange (Photo courtesy Gunns)

“This may well mean transitioning to plantations but move we must, for the conflict must end,” said L’Estrange. “Through this inclusive approach we will find joint solutions to age-old conflicts and move beyond to a real, sustainable forest industry.”

Gunns is Australia’s largest producer of hardwood pulp wood, Australia’s largest hardwood sawmiller, Australasia’s largest producer of decorative hardwood veneer and also has a chain of retail stores.

“Over the past year we have made a clear, directional statement that our future will be in the development and use of plantation-based products because we must change in order to achieve broader community and investor support,” L’Estrange told delegates to the ForestWorks conference on Australia’s place in the changing global forest products market.

In court, on the streets and in the forests, environmental campaigners have battled for decades to keep Gunns from logging Tasmania’s old growth forests. They have worked to influence the company’s shareholders, banks and customers and successive state and national governments.

Today they are taking L’Estrange’s announcement as a white flag.

Wilderness Society spokesperson Paul Oosting said, “Community and environment groups working for decades for the protection of Tasmania’s irreplaceable native forests see Gunns announcement as a very welcome breakthrough. We look forward to protecting Tasmania’s forests and supporting new lasting jobs by continuing to work with the timber industry to pave a way forward.”

Environment Tasmania Director Dr. Phill Pullinger welcomed Gunns’ shift, saying, “We now have the best opportunity in decades to resolve the forest conflict in Tasmania.

In Tasmania’s Styx River valley grow the Eucalyptus regnans, the tallest of all flowering plants. There are also ancient tree ferns and 1,000 year old myrtles. (Photo by T. Taylor)

Environment Tasmania, The Wilderness Society and the Australian Conservation Foundation are engaged in talks with forestry industry representatives on options for the protection of native forests, the creation of a sustainable timber industry and the delivery of an end to the decades-long forest conflict.

If groups can reach an agreement over principles, then they say they would seek government support for a broad process to involve stakeholders and the broader community in the development and delivery of a solution.

“It is vitally important for Tasmania’s future that we protect our native forests, create a timber industry that Tasmanians can be proud of, and heal the deep divisions in our community,” said Pullinger. “We have to find a solution to the conflict over forestry that is durable, lasting and involves the whole Tasmanian community.”

“If Gunns moves out of native forest logging and concentrates on processing its plantations, it will protect jobs in the timber industry,” said Lindsay Hesketh, national forest campaigner for the Australian Conservation Foundation.

“It’s time to look at forests in Tasmania in a new way because the old way – a battle between jobs and forests – has protected neither,” said Hesketh. “It ruptured the community, failed to protect jobs and destroyed Tasmanian’s natural heritage. We encourage all players to continue dialogue to find common ground on these important issues.”

In 2009, Gunns lost a 7.8 million dollar court case it had launched against 20 defendents four years earlier in an attempt to prevent protests.

In Gunns Limited v Marr & Ors, Gunns filed a writ in the Supreme Court of Victoria against 20 individuals and organizations protesting against the company’s logging operations. Defendents included The Wilderness Society and Senator Bob Brown of Tasmania, who leads the Australian Greens.

Styx Valley landscape after clear-felling, showing old-growth to the right and in the distance, pine plantations (Photo by T. Taylor)

In 2006, Gunns dropped its case against Senator Brown.

In a March 2009 settlement Gunns dropped its case against The Wilderness Society and paid the group’s legal fees worth $350,000.

In return, The Wilderness Society agreed to pay Gunns $25,000 in damages for a November 2003 protest against logging in Tasmania’s Styx Valley where some of the world’s largest trees stand. At least 3,000 people showed up at a Styx Valley protest in July 2003, including Senator Brown.

Gunns still has plans to build the $2 billion Bell Bay Pulp Mill, also known as the Tamar Valley Pulp Mill, near Launceston, Tasmania’s second largest city.

The proposed mill would use the Kraft process, elementally chlorine free bleaching, and be fed with native eucalypt forest and plantation timber. The mill is supported by the state government which wants the economic opportunities and jobs it will create.

Opponents include environmental and political groups including The Wilderness Society, TAP into a better Tasmania, Rainforest Action Network, and the Tasmanian Greens.

One of Australia’s oldest companies, Gunns was founded in 1875 by brothers John and Thomas Gunn. It is Tasmania’s largest private landowner and owns more than 900 square kilometers of plantations, mainly eucalyptus trees.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2010. All rights reserved.

Comments Off on Tasmanian Timber Giant Retreats from Old Growth Logging

Filed under Uncategorized

Legendary American Folksinger And Backcountry Traveler James “Walkin’ Jim” Stoltz Returns to Earth

Walkin’ Jim walked thousands of miles through the backcountry of the United States, taking stunning photos and writing memorable songs which he sang in his deep baritone voice.  He toured the country with his slideshows and songs, doing innumerable benefit concerts for groups dedicated to saving the country’s wild places.  He did a benefit for us in the mid-90′s when we ran the Eastern North American office of Native Forest Network in Burlington, VT.

His was a generous soul and he will be missed.  If you have not heard his music, I encourage you to check it out by clicking here: http://www.walkinjim.com/index.php?pr=Wild_Wind_Music

–Anne Petermann, for the GJEP Crew

__________________________________________________________

Legendary American folksinger and backcountry traveler James “Walkin’ Jim” Stoltz passed late Friday night, September 3, 2010, at St. Peter’s Hospital in Helena, Montana.

Stoltz, age 57, a veteran performer for 35 years, earned his nickname “Walkin’ Jim,” by hiking more than 27,000 miles through wild country in North America.  Packing a guitar and penning extraordinary lyrics along the trails, Walkin’ Jim’s always-humble-yet-strikingly-powerful songs voiced enormous respect and appreciation for the Earth, its wild places, and the wild critters that he carefully studied and truly adored.

A one-of-a-kind performer known for his powerful baritone timbre, stunning photography, humorous and elucidative stories, inspirational poetry, literally awesome lyrics, and emotion-packed vocals, Walkin’ Jim Stoltz toured extensively throughout North America for more than 35 years.  His last public performance in Montana, where he lived, was on March 6, 2010, in Missoula, where he played a benefit concert and celebration for the Last, Best Place Wildlands Campaign and Wilderness Watch.

In addition to being a co-founder of the Last, Best Place Wildlands Campaign, Walkin’ Jim Stoltz co-founded Musicians United to Sustain the Environment (MUSE).  In 2006, he organized a 45-state outreach tour with other musicians and authors, and worked with hundreds of community organizations to support clean water and to protect all public roadless wildlands and their dependent wildlife species.  In tribute, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency honored Stoltz with its “Outstanding Achievement Award” for his advocacy for nature and Wilderness across America.

Walkin’ Jim Stoltz was featured on folk shows and syndicated programs throughout North America, including National Public Radio in the United States and CBC/Radio-Canada.

Wildlands advocates recently dedicated The Walkin’ Jim Hiking Trail, close to Arizona’s Hells Canyon Wilderness and the Center for Biological Diversity featured Walkin’ Jim on its Web site.

Visit Walkin’ Jim’s “Keeping it Wild” Web page in which Jim helps Americans take action to protect their endangered public roadless wildlands legacy.

Walkin’ Jim Stoltz was a co-author and dedicated proponent of the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act (NREPA) , the “wildest bill on Capitol Hill,” which, when enacted, will designate 24 million acres of our roadless public wildlands legacy in Montana, Idaho, northwestern Wyoming, eastern Washington, and eastern Oregon as Wilderness.

The Northern Rockies Ecosystem is the LAST remaining functioning ecosystem in the lower 49 states where all native species still reside!  The Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act (NREPA) will protect essential habitats for many at-risk species that characterize the Wild Nature of the northern Rockies, such as the gray wolf, bull trout, cutthroat trout (Montana’s official state fish), otter, mountain goat, mountain sheep, elk, arctic grayling, northern goshawk, boreal owl, pileated woodpecker, ferruginous hawk, Montana vole, sage thrasher, wild bison, peregrine falcon, bald eagle, pine marten, fisher, lynx, wolverine, and grizzly bear (Montana’s official state animal).

In the proud tradition of Montana’s famous conservationist and U.S. Senator, the late Lee Metcalf; NREPA will protect the public’s wildlands, wild animals, big game, pristine watersheds, and fisheries that make living in Montana and the Northern Rockies such a special and rare privilege.

Observations, Memorials, Tributes, Wakes, Celebrations, and Funeral Arrangements:

As of this writing (Sunday, September 5, 2010), Walkin’ Jim’s family has begun assembling in Helena, Montana.  Funeral arrangements will likely be decided by Tuesday morning, September 7, 2010.  Follow the latest news concerning all arrangements by clicking here.

If you need more information, call Mr. Chris Holt at Retz Funeral Home at:  406-442-1550; or e-mail Mr. Holt at:  retzfuneralhome@bresnan.netClick here for Retz Funeral Home’s Web site.

Click here to:  Send private condolences to Walkin’ Jim’s family; Sign Walkin’ Jim’s guest book; or Send flowers.

To converse and share stories with Walkin’ Jim Stoltz’s friends, family, and fans, go to:  http://www.facebook.com/pages/Walkin-Jim-Stoltz/113598525318345?v=desc or: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Walkin-Jim-Stoltz/113598525318345?v=stream.

Comments Off on Legendary American Folksinger And Backcountry Traveler James “Walkin’ Jim” Stoltz Returns to Earth

Filed under Actions / Protest

New Podcast: Yael Falicov, Executive Director of EcoViva on KPFK Los Angeles

On this week’s environmental segment on  “Sojourner Truth with Margaret Precod”, KPFK Los Angeles, Yael Falicov discusses the success of a democratic movement for peace, justice and environmental sustainability in the Lower Lempa River Estuary and the nearby Bay of Jiquilisco Biosphere Reserve of El Salvador.

Click here to listen to the Podcast

Comments Off on New Podcast: Yael Falicov, Executive Director of EcoViva on KPFK Los Angeles

Filed under Latin America-Caribbean, Media

Greenpeace Occupies Oil Rigs off Coast of Greenland

Greenpeace activists evaded a massive security operation and scaled Cairn Energy’s controversial oil rig (Stena Don) off Greenland. They have stopped Cairn’s drilling.

After dodging Danish Navy commandos in Greenpeace’s inflatable speedboats, activists from 4 countries climbed up the inside of the rig and are now occupying the rig in tents suspended from ropes.

CTV Canada’s AM Reports:   The people who made it aboard the Stena Don are expert climbers and have managed to set up hanging tents from the rig’s platform. Greenpeace said they have been equipped with enough supplies to stay there for several days.

American Sim McKenna, one of the four people aboard the Stena Don, said the climbers are hoping for continued success.

“We’ve got to keep the energy companies out of the Arctic and kick our addiction to oil, that’s why we’re going to stop this rig from drilling for as long as we can,” McKenna said in a statement released by Greenpeace Tuesday.

Deen said Greenpeace has sent climbers to the oil rig to draw attention to the risks that Cairn’s oil operations pose for the environment.

Yesterday’s Global Justice Ecology Project’s Earth Minute for KPFK’s (L.A. Pacifica) Sojourner Truth show warned:

“…The initiation of oil drilling in the icy Artic seas off Greenland is a modern warning of the potentially disastrous consequences of society’s obsession with oil.

Scottish based Cairn energy is drilling for oil in an area known as “iceberg alley.”  This pristine region is home to 80% of the world’s narwhals, as well as majestic blue whales, polar bears, seals, and numerous migratory birds.

An iceberg-drill rig collision here would be devastating.  The region’s extreme weather could allow a ruptured well to continue gushing oil for 2 years.  Oil would be trapped under thick sheets of ice, making cleanup almost impossible….”

To listen to the full Earth Minute click here!

Comments Off on Greenpeace Occupies Oil Rigs off Coast of Greenland

Filed under Actions / Protest

Listen to today’s Earth Minute on “Sojourner Truth with Margaret Prescod”

This week’s Earth Minute is about the consequences of the drilling for oil in the Arctic oceans.

Click here to listen to the Podcast

Comments Off on Listen to today’s Earth Minute on “Sojourner Truth with Margaret Prescod”

Filed under Earth Minute

Court Clears Two COP15 Activists

Australian Natacha Verco relieved after being cleared. - Photo: JENS DRESLING

Cross posted from the Politiken

An American and an Australian activist have been cleared of planning
violent demos at COP15.

Danish prosecutors have suffered a serious defeat in the wake of the
COP15 Climate Summit in Copenhagen last December after a court has
cleared an Australian and an American activist of planning violent
demonstrations during the summit.

The Copenhagen Municipal Court judge found that prosecution evidence was
not strong enough to warrant the accusations and set the two free to the
general applause of some 30 supporters.

The charges against the two, a 27-year-old American man and a
34-year-old Australian woman, included planning several violent
demonstrations against, among others, the Danish confederation of
industries DI, Dansk Energi, Shell, Maersk and Forum.

The two, who have previously been in custody for three weeks, have
consistently denied all charges.

According to the charges the two had planned their violent
demonstrations but were prevented from carrying them out when police
detained them in mid-December, before the COP15 summit reached its climax.

Comments Off on Court Clears Two COP15 Activists

Filed under Copenhagen/COP-15