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Archive for December, 2010

Freedom of information must be protected.

Friday, 10 December 2010 by Eagle Eyes

With the arrest of Julien Assange the imperial meglomaniacs intent on full global domination press forth in their supression of freedom of information and speech. We are not allowed to disent from their plan for the world, their unellected, unconsultative, imposed plan, designed by a few economists, to which the rest of us must become subjects to. They contol the laws, courts, police and armies… all blindly and stupidly carrying out the comand of the states/corporations/banks. They want to control what we are allowed to know. With peace, love and mass activism we fight back and organise to build a framework for an alternative system of global land/resource/economic management. They are not our masters like they think they are. Global resistance grows every day.

Melbourne 10/12/10
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/julian-assange-protest-in-melbourne-sparks-peak-hour-commuter-chaos/story-e6frf7kx-1225969132559

Easter Island, “the evictions will continue” as the state claims the land from the people on behalf of investors.

Friday, 10 December 2010 by Eagle Eyes

rapanui_jpgEven in one of the most remote places on earth there is growing resentment and conflict over land ownership and the extensions of it, namely resource ownership and economic ownership. The states of the world as we know them today, guided by the private capitalists (by essential nature competetive and agressive), are stepping up their efforts to “own” the earth and exhert their unellected, unrepresentative influence and economic plan on all people of the earth. British people had their land stolen from them with the Enclosure acts 300 years ago. The land of Rapa Nui is for the people of Rapa Nui to use as they wish and does not belong to corporate masters in Santiago. The global question of land ownership needs to be fundamentally addressed.

UCTP Taino News – On Friday, December 3, Chilean troops opened fire on unarmed Rapa Nui

(Easter Island) People who have been peacefully occupying tribal land taken over by the State. The attack has left 19 Rapanui wounded with 3 needing to be evacuated to mainland Chile to be treated for their serious wounds.
Roberto Mukaro Agueibana Borrero, a representative for the United Confederation of Taíno People (UCTP) stated that “As Indigenous Peoples we must condemn these acts of violence perpetuated on the Rapa Nui by the Chilean government. In solidarity with the Rapa Nuii, the UCTP calls on Chilean President Sebastian Pinera to be directly involved in seeking a peaceful and lasting resolution to this crisis.”
 Borrero continued stating that “As Chile adopted the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 2007 they have a moral obligation to halt the evicitons and work in harmony with the Rapa Nui.”
 In recent years, tourism and migration have increased pressure to control available land on the 10 mile by 15 mile island. The Rapa Nui have increasingly taken matters into their own hands, seizing a dozen properties they claim were illegally taken from their families generations ago.The latest media reports state additional reinforcements have landed on the island and the island’s top government authority, Valparaiso Gov. Raul Celis, says “the evictions will continue.”

  http://www.uctp.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=556&Itemid=2

DECC Youth Advisory Panel: Thoughts On Shared Planet

Monday, 6 December 2010 by Thomas Youngman

The Department for Energy and Climate Change’s Youth Advisory Panel is a group of around 16 young people from various environmental and youth organisations in the UK, aiming to ensure that the impact on young and future generations are at the heart of decision making by the department. View the original article on our blog.

n.b. the Youth Advisory Panel have now published their report on the future of Britain’s energy, view the article about on the main People & Planet news page.

shared-planet-logoNearly every member of the Youth Advisory Panel was aware  of People & Planet’s potent campaigns focusing on climate change and corporate power, translating into tangible success, so when the Youth Advisory Panel were invited to run a workshop at their ‘Shared Planet’ conference, we were  quick to take them up on the offer! We used the opportunity both to gain feedback on our work and to hear other points of view on the various topics covered in our then upcoming report.

The conference was opened by leader of the Green Party, Caroline Lucas MP, who delivered a powerful speech covering many issues of interest to the Youth Panel. Of particular interest was her use of the phrase ‘intergenerational fairness’ - which is very similar, if less binding, to the phrase we have considered key during when carrying out our activities, ‘intergenerational equity’. Her assertion that ‘you can’t have infinite economic growth on a finite planet’ was a key theme throughout the conference. Other notable speakers included Nick Dearden of the Jubilee Debt Campaign, Amanda Starbuck of the Rainforest Action Network and Aaron Porter, NUS chairman, who featured on the conference’s closing panel.

(more…)

West Papua, land of the morning star

Wednesday, 1 December 2010 by Eagle Eyes

On December 1st West Papuan people will celebrate their independence day. They will probably be brutally suppressed by the Indonesian police and military, acting on behalf of the Indonesian military elite and the multinational businesses who regard West Papua as theirs.

The tribes of West Papua have suffered horrendous human rights abuses and land approprition since 1963. Anyone who resists having their land taken from them is regarded as an enemy of the Indonesian military and the multinational corporations they work with.

The tribes of West Papua have suffered horrendous human rights abuses and land approprition since 1963. Anyone who resists having their land taken from them is regarded as an enemy of the Indonesian military and the multinational corporations they work with.

One of the last bastions of overt colonialism, supported by the covert colonialism of multinational imperialism, West Papuan people have been exposed to the rampant human rights abuses and willful environmental rape that are unchecked and lawless under the conditions created by military occupation. The Indonesian military controls West Papua not any civil administration. The military are in charge of the rampant logging, the mining, the flow of money from Jakarta, the unregulated heavily polluting mining and every thing else. The military are also there to make sure no Papuan people cause any problems for multinationals that want land and that people are cleared swiftly and effectively from their ancestral land. The polarized example of what is happening to West Papua is a profound microcosm of the whole world being under vicious attack from multinational business and their vanguard the state militaries of the world.

Protesters in Wamena last month.

Protesters in Wamena last month.

With the fall of Suharto in 1998 and the independence of East Timor, Papuan people were allowed by Jakarta to organise a conference in 1999. Much to Jakarta’s horror the delegates from all over Papua re-affirmed their status as in independent country under occupation, That their national flag first raised on Dec 1st 1961 was their national flag and that they stood by their official deceleration of independence on Dec 1st 1971. In Jakarta military uniforms had been swapped for suits but the same military elite families still ruled and an immediate crackdown was launched against Papuan people who refused to be subservient to Jakarta’s brand of military imperialism. 33850_443973048483_153680463483_5019010_6585471_n1The repression remains the same today as under Suharto 30 years ago. Political activists such as Buchtar Tabuni and Filep Karma sit in jail cells for peacefully protesting against what has happened to their people. Today  Papuan pro-independence groups have more support from grassroots level to the intellectual elite than ever before.
The more the Indonesian military continue to oppress and murder people and the more that the multinationals with impunity appropriate land from people the more resilient and strengthened the Papua people become in their demands for justice. A new generation of students has emerged armed with laptops and knowledge to continue their parents long fight for self determination and environmental justice and protection. They along with the other Papuan leadership are fighting an environmental battle against exploitative multinationals and a political battle against the mainstream western imperialist philosophy of land control and statehood.

5000 people on the streets of Manokwari on November 8th. When the Indonesian military report that those who want freedom are just a few people in the jungle they are either deliberatly lieing or5 they do not know what they are talking about. The desire for freedom is almost universal and found everywhere mostly concentrated in the cities.

5000 people on the streets of Manokwari on November 8th. When the Indonesian military report that those who want freedom are just a few people in the jungle they are either deliberately lying or they do not know what they are talking about. The desire for freedom is almost universal and found everywhere mostly concentrated in the cities.

The environmental battle is about their land. Like all people around the world who live close to their land their whole lives revolve around its careful management. The multinationals that commit murder and threaten the very existence of people who want to remain connected to their land see no value in protecting the health and productivity of land. All they see is dollar signs in the form of natural resource extraction and tribal people in the way. This pits the multinationals in a fundamental conflict with people who live their lives closely attached to their land, in West Papua and elsewhere. All over West Papua land is taken from tribes, the military is brought in to clean the area of indigenous people and the multinationals move in to take what they want, pollute without restraint and give Jakarta a wedge of money.

Peaceful demonstration in Wamena.

Peaceful demonstration in Wamena.

This Wednesday, Dec 1st, 1000s of people will take to the streets across West Papua and raise their Morning Star flag, (illegal under Indonesian law) to shout in the faces of multinationals and those who justify state military terrorism, land theft, denial of human rights and merciless natural resource exploitation. All of the Papuan traditional and indigenous movements and political groups will demand an end to colonialism, imperialism and land appropriation by multinationals and their state orchestrators. They will demand their own right of self determination of their lands and resources that are presently decided in distant business offices and will stand in solidarity with all oppressed people across the world who want to live in harmony with their land but are prevented from doing so by a small elite of unrepentant but powerful people who have the weapons to steal and oppress and the philosophy  to believe that they have a right to do so.  Papuans believe they cannot live without their land and don’t want to be disconnected and removed from it, that land is the peoples land, there for the benefit of everyone not just a few.

In solidarity with West Papuan people and their right of self determination a demonstration will be held outside the Indonesian embassy on Wednesday. Fore more information please contact the freewestpapua groups.

12.00- 14.30. Demo outside Indonesian Embassy, Grosvenor Square.
14.30- 15.30. March along the streets of London.
15.30- 16.00. Handing in of petition at downing street and foreign office.