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Cre8 Summit cre8ting

Cre8 Summit | 16.06.2005 18:03 | G8 2005

On Sunday the 12th of June the Cre8 Summit began. An inspiring local project set up in response both to the approved building of the new M74 northern extension and the G8 summit to be held in July 2005.

The project aims to transform an area on the route of the M74 left derelict by the planners into a community garden blossoming with flowers and activities, old folk relaxing and young people playing but most importantly our neighbourhoods building.

Between 11th June and Saturday 18th of June we are be creating a community garden on a piece of wasteland along the propsed route of the M74 motorway extension which will cut through 2 communites and cause massive congestion and contamination. (for more info see www.jam74.org ) There is a social space with workshops, with food provided and plenty of chances to get stuck in. Celebration with a party on 18th June. After that, there will be a family festival between 29th June and 3rd July. Your skills/help/plants/gas-parafin lamps/arts materials are more than welcome and needed.

Work has already begun amongst a plethra of interest from residents and media. The week long gardening project will culminate in a Festival on Saturday 18th of June however the community garden will continue well beyond the G8 summit next month.
The Cre8 summit site is situated at Eglington Toll- take the number 44/57/22/23 to get there
For more info and updates please call the Cre8 summit hotline on mobile on 07981 954132.


The project aims to transform an area on the route of the M74 left derelict by the planners into a community garden blossoming with flowers and activities, old folk relaxing and young people playing but most importantly our neighbourhoods building.

Between 11th June and Saturday 18th of June we are be creating a community garden on a piece of wasteland along the propsed route of the M74 motorway extension which will cut through 2 communites and cause massive congestion and contamination. (for more info see www.jam74.org ) There is a social space with workshops, with food provided and plenty of chances to get stuck in. Celebration with a party on 18th June. After that, there will be a family festival between 29th June and 3rd July. Your skills/help/plants/gas-parafin lamps/arts materials are more than welcome and needed.

Work has already begun amongst a plethra of interest from residents and media. Gardeners, diggers and dreamers have spent the last few days putting in medicinal herb beds, a sensory garden, ponds, wildlife garden. As well as that cob building, mosaicing and other workshops have been taking place.
The week long gardening project will culminate in a Festival on Saturday 18th of June however the community garden will continue well beyond the G8 summit next month.
The Cre8 summit site is situated at Eglington Toll- take the number 44/57/22/23 to get there
For more info and updates please call the Cre8 summit hotline on mobile on 07981 954132.

Cre8 Summit
- e-mail: cre8summit@riseup.net
- Homepage: http://www.dissent.org.uk


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Press Coverage of Cre8 Summit

17.06.2005 09:15

Giving peace a chance: G8 protest gets down to grass roots
June 17th The Herald
STEPHEN STEWART
 http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/41435.html

THEY were an incongruous crew of builders, gardeners, artists, DJs, soil engineers, musicians, skaters and landscapers hurriedly assembled in the south side of Scotland's largest city.
The colourful and idiosyncratic group attracted bemused looks from locals as they held their impromptu gathering on an insignificant looking plot of Glasgow scrubland.

But these environmental campaigners were on a mission: to transform the entire area by creating a peace camp and community haven in protest at the G8 summit in Perthshire and the M74 motorway extension through the city.

Despite the torrential rain, scores of protesters yesterday turned up to transform the derelict gap site in the shadow of the St Andrews Works building, into a bustling community garden and temporary local nerve centre of G8 opposition.

Starhawk, a veteran campaigner who cut her protesting teeth during the Vietnam war, had travelled from San Francisco to set up camp on the site, which lies in the path of the proposed motorway expansion between Eglinton Street and Pollokshaws Road.

The 54-year-old, who also protested at economic summits in Genoa and Seattle in recent years, said: "The M74 is a local example of the kind of policy pursued and promoted by the G8 leaders.
"The M74 presents the same issues locally that the G8 raises internationally in terms of small people being pushed aside for big business.

"We came here to get involved with the community and protest at what is happening. It is wonderful to see so many people getting excited about this project."

The self-styled Cre8 summit, effectively a community relations exercise in the run up to G8 meeting of world leaders, has started work on a community garden replete with "flowers, food, colour, youth engaging, old folk relaxing but most importantly our neighbourhoods building and owning".

Earlier this month, it was announced that construction of the M74 extension had been delayed for at least a year because of a legal challenge by environmental and community groups. The £500m project had been due to get under way next June. Glasgow City Council described the delay as "bitterly disappointing". The Scottish Executive approved the new six-lane road from Cambuslang to the M8 west of the Kingston Bridge in March.

This was despite a public inquiry concluding the road not should not go ahead because of its "potentially devastating" impact on people and the environment.

Friends of the Earth Scotland and a coalition of local action groups, JAM74, said they would challenge the executive's decision at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

Meanwhile, the south side's newest collection of tents and dilapidated vans is eerily reminiscent of the early Faslane Peace Camp, but will not last as long. Faslane is Britain's longest-standing peace camp and the world's only legally established one. Back in 1982 the Labour-dominated Strathclyde Regional Council issued the camp with a lease and a £1-a-month peppercorn rent.
With the addition of a brace of caravans, the camp was set for a mammoth sit-in at the Clyde naval base, now home of Britain's Trident nuclear submarines. At the Pollokshaws Road site, a series of events have been organised, including ceramics workshops and art classes, before organisers move off for the G8 summit.

Rachel Walker, an organiser at Cre8, said: "Climate change may be high on the agenda of the G8 summit yet G8 countries continue to invest massively in road building and fossil fuel exploration.
"New motorways like the M74 will increase traffic, cause further pollution, health problems, community breakdown and won't free up traffic or bring the jobs that are promised. We want to present an entirely different vision of the way in which we can organise our lives: based on community, co-operation and ecological sustainability."

Cre8's organisers have also urged bewildered locals to come forward with ideas and expertise for use on the nascent community space.

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was also mentioned on Ch4 TV 7pm News a couple of days ago with film footage of the site.

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TV news report transcript

20.06.2005 22:02

International political activists arrive in Scotland for G8
16 June 2005
 http://scotlandtoday.scottishtv.co.uk/content/default.asp?page=s1_1_1&newsid=8030

(see web link for streaming tv news report video)

Political activists from around the world who are planning to demonstrate against the G8 have started to arrive in Scotland. One of them is an American grandmother called Starhawk, who is going to teach her fellow protestors how to set up peaceful blockades during the summit.

A piece of wasteland in Glasgow on the proposed route of the M74 extension is being transformed into a community garden. The project's run by Dissent, a network of radical protestors who're hoping to disrupt the G8 at Gleneagles. Among them is Starhawk - a grandmother from San Franscisco and a political campaigner since the Vietnam War .

She said: "The protestors that people are so afraid of are the same people that are here building this garden. And that's why people can expect. There are people coming here to protest from all over the world, especially of course big contingents from England from Scotand from Ireland, some of the European countries. I have friends who are also coming from the United States."

Starhawk has considerable experience of non-violent direct action - peaceful protests such as road blockades. Next weekend she'll pass on her expertise in training sessions in Glasgow and Edinburgh.

She said: "We haven't actually started talking about specific plans. There's no central leadership that tells everyone go sit there, or go blockade there. Each individual groups decides what it wants to do and then we try to co-ordinate those decisions together."

Around 150 people demonstrated in Sheffield last night outside a gathering of G8 ministers - three were arrested after a minor disturbance. Thousands of protestors will soon be heading for Scotland.

Some of these people will be in the frontline next month. They say if there is trouble, the police will be to blame.

In three weeks time many of the people involved in creating the community garden will be heading to Gleneagles to protest against the G8 summit. Their message to the Scottish public - do not believe everything you read or hear about anarchists hellbent on causing trouble.


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