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SchNEWS - Battle of Bexhill update

Jo Makepeace | 17.12.2012 17:15 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | Social Struggles

Update! - Four days of direct action against Bexhill link road

.Anti-road protestors in Bexhill were ambushed by an early start to the tree-felling on the controversial Bexhill-Hastings link road this week, but they rallied and over foursuccessive days of direct action have put a spanner in the works.




Update - Monday 17th

Resistance continued along the route today with four arrests being made as bailiffs dragged local protesters out of the trees.

Combe Haven Defenders had this to say.

“We urgently need people to help defend the trees along the route of the Bexhill-Hastings Link Road. Things are very fluid, so please call us on 07926 423 033 to find out what’s happening. Stay calm and peaceful.

For more info – or if you see any signs of contractor activity along the route of the Road today – contact 07926 423 033.

The chainsaw gangs have reportedly already cleared 3 of the 20 sections between Bexhill and Crowhurst. So, if anyone knows of a team of climbing-savvy activists with the skills to come down and build a tree house, now’s the time to mobilise them!

If you’re not already on the Defender’s email / text list, please sign up here so that you can receive further updates and info.”



Original Story

Anti-road protestors in Bexhill were ambushed by an early start to the tree-felling on the controversial Bexhill-Hastings link road this week, but they rallied and over three successive days of direct action have put a spanner in the works.

Work wasn't expected to begin until early January but as soon as East Sussex County Council acquired the land (by compulsory purchase) the chainsaw gangs were set to work.

On Thursday evening information was received that tree felling in Combe Valley was to begin on the route of the Bexhill-Hasting link road early Friday morning. As contractors with machinery moved into woodland near Adams Farm, south of Crowhurst early on Friday morning they were greeted by tree bound activists and locals who had been occupying the area since dawn. Contractors and security soon realized there would be no felling, with a early lunch called shortly after activists got in the way of brush cutters attempting to clear access to trees.

Saturday saw a large number of trees felled in a the disused railway cutting in the suburbs of Bexhill before activists (reinforced by a landy full of stray hunt sabs) climbed over the bridge and forced contractors to stop cutting. The protesters refused to leave after warnings from High Court bailiffs and followed the contractors to their next target – a stand of trees to the east, which was already being occupied by a couple of enterprising locals who'd shinned up one tree with a ladder. Flummoxed, the chainsaw boys put their toys back in the van and called it a day.

With trees already falling, people once again gathered on Sunday in Bexhill and in Crowhurst at Adams Farm. Work was stopped in Bexhill with people once again entering the site. But large area of trees were able to be felled before contractors packed up and left for their compound. Contractors attempted to continue their reign of destruction, showing up at Adams Farm once again. This time activists were in waiting with one person quickly locking on under a pick-up truck with two pairs of hand cuffs, blocking the site's only access point and causing the other vehicles to reverse in fear of the same fate.

Tonight (Sunday) forty people turned up to a public meeting in the hamlet of Crowhurst about the plan for the bypass. One potential ray of light was the announcement of a new legal challenge by BLINKRR (Bexhill Link Road Resistance) – who claim that the new road is on the actual site of the Battle of Hastings and are aiming to get the whole area re-classified as a World Heritage Site.

At the moment there's no permanent protest site and activists are relying on a series of rolling blockades. The good news is that although the tree-felling has started at the moment the council don't have the money and still have to jump through a few environmental regulation hoops – so the road could still be stopped.

SchNEWS spoke to Combe Haven Defenders “We've been heartened by the reaction of local people – who've come out to resist the chainsaw gangs. We see this as not just a local issue but a national strategic one. We want people to come down and action”

To get up-to-date information of what is happening on the ground and where you might be needed visit the Combe Haven Defenders website  http://combehavendefenders.wordpress.com/

To get regular e-mail/text updates  http://combehavendefenders.wordpress.com/pledge/

Brighton supporters have called an emergency public meeting at 6p.m on Tuesday 18th December at the Cowley Club 12 London Rd, Brighton BN1 4JA.


Jo Makepeace
- e-mail: mail@schnews.org.uk
- Homepage: www.schnews.org.uk

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

defence

17.12.2012 21:52

is anyone thinking of getting any tree defences up, like livable benders and yurts, in the trees?

just wondering.

tree hugger


Take a look.

18.12.2012 07:42

Why not go down there and see for yourself - better still get down there and build something.

Jo Makepeace
mail e-mail: mail@schnews.org.uk
- Homepage: www.schnews.org.uk


@Jo Makepeace

18.12.2012 23:46

Rather than having to travel all that way to look in the trees to answer the question, wouldn't it just be easier to answer the question with a yes or a no instead of being disruptive?

Tree Hugger: Whats the weather like in Bexhill?
Jo Makepeace: Why don't you come down to see for yourself?
Tree Hugger: But i live in Newcastle, its a long way. Can't you just tell me?
Jo Makepeace No, come down to see for yourself.
Tree Hugger: I don't have time, just tell me if it is sunny or raining
Jo Makepeace: No. Either come down or live in ignorance.

painful


@treehugger

19.12.2012 15:39

I'm not JM, but I'm guessing what they were trying to say is:

a) The situation is changing all the time, so by now people may have put structures in the trees, but from the updates so far it doesn't sound like it.

b) More people are needed quickly to do exactly that, so if you can, DIY. If you can't, why do you need to know anyway?

x


No camps yet; if you want it, come make it happen

19.12.2012 20:51

After six days of cat and mouse with contractors and relatively small numbers of protestors, we are exhausted and slowly loosing defendable trees and options for sustaining the protest. Help is needed now!

Combe Haven Defenders
mail e-mail: combehavendefenders@gmail.com
- Homepage: http://combehavendefenders.wordpress.com/


pushing forward

19.12.2012 23:49

yes but who is the cat and who is the mouse?

Eventually you will lose.

you need a "game changer" - something like a dog to change the stakes.
get the trees to fight back, they are larger, stronger and more numerous than any amount of diggers

JMMA