Climate Camp Heathrow Action Pledge
'we'll be back' | 16.01.2009 15:39 | Climate Chaos | Ecology
Camp for Climate Action may shut down Heathrow to obstruct construction of third runway...
Following Gordon Brown's announcement, the next Camp for Climate Action national meeting will discuss a number of different proposals for future actions, including some which involve shutting the airport down completely.
"We will be the spanner in the works of 3rd runway construction" said one climate activist.
Following Gordon Brown's announcement, the next Camp for Climate Action national meeting will discuss a number of different proposals for future actions, including some which involve shutting the airport down completely.
"We will be the spanner in the works of 3rd runway construction" said one climate activist.
Some activists from the Camp for Climate Action, which in August 2007 occupied the site of the proposed third runway, today stated their intention to ramp up direct action to stop construction. At the 2007 camp, the 2000 people present decided not to shut the airport itself, but target BAA and blockade it for 24 hours. Today's Heathrow decision makes the option of shutting down the world's busiest airport a potential next step in the escalating campaign to stop the runway being built. The meeting to discuss this will take place on 31 January.
Sally Wintour, who took part in the Camp in 2007, said:
"Gordon Brown is prioritising the profit margins of BAA and the aviation industry over the climate and the local community of Sipson. We invite anyone in the UK who has lain awake and worried about climate change and their children's future to come down and join us in using direct action to prevent this ecological and social catastrophe from unfolding."
Harry Whittaker, an anti-aviation campaigner, said:
"Gordon, BAA and the construction companies had better start factoring in how many more millions it is going to cost to build this runway once they have to deal with the daily consequences of direct action. This decision flies in the face of popular opinion, and if the political channels to stop it have been unsuccessful, it's important that people use direct action to prevent this climate disaster."
At midday on Saturday 17th January, a Flashmob at Heathrow has been called by a range of anti-aviation expansion groups to reject the government's appalling decision. There will be more action to come...
For comment, please call:
07772 861 099 or 07932 096 677
Sally Wintour, who took part in the Camp in 2007, said:
"Gordon Brown is prioritising the profit margins of BAA and the aviation industry over the climate and the local community of Sipson. We invite anyone in the UK who has lain awake and worried about climate change and their children's future to come down and join us in using direct action to prevent this ecological and social catastrophe from unfolding."
Harry Whittaker, an anti-aviation campaigner, said:
"Gordon, BAA and the construction companies had better start factoring in how many more millions it is going to cost to build this runway once they have to deal with the daily consequences of direct action. This decision flies in the face of popular opinion, and if the political channels to stop it have been unsuccessful, it's important that people use direct action to prevent this climate disaster."
At midday on Saturday 17th January, a Flashmob at Heathrow has been called by a range of anti-aviation expansion groups to reject the government's appalling decision. There will be more action to come...
For comment, please call:
07772 861 099 or 07932 096 677
'we'll be back'
Comments
Hide the following 7 comments
direct action
16.01.2009 16:18
ONE OF MANY
Timing...
16.01.2009 17:25
Heathrow will still be there to flashmob in a few weeks whereas Gazans are dying right now and there are protests going on across the country tomorrow (Saturday). Unfortunately there seems to be a finite number of people who 'do' demos, actions etc and vital as Climate issues are, I hate the idea of numbers dropping away from the Gaza support at this moment. As it is, the mainstream media are allowing it to slip away from the headlines while Israel takes the opportunity to massacre as many young Palestinians as they can before running out of excuses for delaying a ceasefire.
Don't get me wrong - I know climate chaos is desperately important but please come and show support for Gazans tomorrow. The images of world protests that filter through to them give them hope and strength to bear it all.
anon
Not a clash - 12 noon and 2pm
16.01.2009 18:01
do something - do it all
Plan and prepare.
16.01.2009 20:44
Go for it with action that will work on a long term basis and stop the expansion of Heathrow.
Eco Vist
Could always do what I'm doing...
16.01.2009 21:10
Now employed by Heathrow
Not yet
16.01.2009 21:40
Climate Camp 2007 was spectacular lobbying and nuisancing. So is everything done by Plane Stupid and lots of other good stuff. Direct action, on the other hand, is putting our bodies in the way to stop the bulldozers / bailiffs / whatever and using our brains to bugger them up.
There may be the need for direct action in this struggle eventually, but it's a hell of a long way away yet. What they call the "optimistic" estimate of when construction can start is 2018. There's a hell of a lot of hoops to go through before that stage is reached, and the chances now look better than ever that it never will be.
So, if all else fails, direct action might be the biz by 2015 / 2016 to resist preparatory work, eviction of local residents etc., BUT NOT YET. Meantime, we need to let then know we're up for it, will resist to the last if we have to, and it'll cost them a lot more money. One way to do that and declare our intentions is the sort of excellent stunt campaigning which has gone on up to now.
But that's not direct action and nothing is more disempowering and dissipating of energy and anger than premature direct action by people with a cultivated disconnection from the timescale. To those talking of stuff like setting up camps on the runway line now I ask;
Are you still going to be here when the bulldozers come in 9 years' time? Or 10? Or 11?
How do you plan to keep a camp organised, buzzing and together until then?
Having thrown away the surprise spanner-in-the-works card, don't you think even the doziest scumbag lawyers and cops might just manage to get you evicted by 2018?
I certainly don't want to discourage anyone from direct action. If you want to get stuck in on the front line now, think about getting your arse to Rossport rather than Heathrow. I understand things may be hotting up there in the spring.
And in London? Keep the imaginative, campaigning stunts rolling. Let's keep them crapping themselves at the thought of what else we might do.
Stroppyoldgit
nice one stroppyoldgit
17.01.2009 00:12
Nice to see it called by it's proper name (note the Action element), not what it was changed to by someone without consent (to Climate Camp 08). But we didn't occupy that site - there was meant to be a 'stand and mark it out' kinda thing, though that was forced through by a small group who didn't give a fuck for the consensus process, but not enough people went.
"At the 2007 camp, the 2000 people present decided not to shut the airport "
No, that was a precondition from the land group agreed by previous organising gatherings, that the runways would not be invaded during the camp.
"To quote a friend, we need to understand the difference between direct action and spectacular lobbying."
Indeed.
However, you can take direct action years before the 'last ditch' stage - it depends partly on intent: are you trying to mount a rolling blockade of Kingsnorth, for example, to stop it being built, or is it to try and put pressure on someone else to decide something? The first is direct action, the second lobbying. I'd agree that the mass actions at the Camps for Climate Action of the recent 2 years have been lobbying using direct action tactics, rather than actual direct action.
whippersnapper