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Greenpeace teaches civil disobedience
by Staff Writers
Vancouver (AFP) Sept 18, 2011

Potential activists for Greenpeace learned Saturday how to place U-locks around their necks to attach themselves to objects, erect blockades of linked human bodies and go limp when arrested.

The workshop in civil disobedience was part of a Greenpeace festival held in the city where the global environmental group was launched 40 years ago.

Several hundred people braved cool wet weather for a day of live music, workshops and Zodiac boat rides, as Greenpeace wrapped up its 40th anniversary week.

It was from Vancouver that a boat named "Greenpeace" set off on September 15, 1971 for Amchitka Island, Alaska, to protest American nuclear testing.

The US Coast Guard blocked it, but the campaign helped end the tests in 1972, and marked the group's first act of civil disobedience.

More recently, said workshop trainer Jessie Schwarz, people have locked themselves to trucks in Alberta's oil sands, sneaked onto the roof of Canada's Parliament to unfurl a giant banner reading "Climate Inaction Costs Lives," and visited groceries stores worldwide slapping "Contaminated" labels on genetically-modified foods.

"You can't always wait for someone else to save the world," Schwarz told some two dozen participants in one of a series of civil disobedience workshops. "Direct action removes the middle man."

"It's extreme sport with a cause, so it's really fun," she joked.

Schwarz told participants to be clear on why they launched any action - and gave scenarios to have them consider how far they might go.

Almost everyone said they would paint a slogan on a billboard.

Most agreed to block a road to stop workers reaching environmentally destructive jobs. About half said they would join a candlelight vigil on the grounds of a corporate CEO's private home. Just a handful said they'd pour sugar into the gas tank of a heavy machine. Just one said he'd throw a police smoke grenade back at officers.

Non-violence is difficult to define, said Schwarz, but Greenpeace avoids "harming anything living."

Violence would be counterproductive because it would detract from a message and alienates supporters, she said.

In a one-hour summary of Greenpeace's three-day activist training sessions, Schwarz showed workshop participants how to link arms and legs in sturdy chains to foil arrest, and warned them if they put a U- Lock around their neck, to hide the key in their underwear.

Tzeporah Berman, co-director of climate and energy campaigns for Greenpeace International, said civil disobedience is "the only reason" that most governments and corporations consider the environment into decisions.

Greenpeace, which began with confrontation, today often meets with business and state leaders, she told AFP.

"But corporations only came to the table because of protests. Without the conflict, you would not have the collaboration."

Greenpeace International director Kumi Naidoo, visiting from Greenpeace's headquarters in Amsterdam, told the festival that around the world "Greenpeace activists are being thrown in prison, for longer and longer periods of time - but more and more young people are saying enough is enough," he said. "We are fighting here for the future of our children and grandchildren."

"It's easy to disagree with something, but it's much harder to do anything about it," said Mat Hargraves, a participant, at the end of the civil disobedience workshop. H

e told AFP he attended the workshop because he is seeking ways to change the "win-lose paradigm."

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Violent protests over China pollution: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Sept 18, 2011 - Hundreds of Chinese have mounted violent protests against a solar panel factory in eastern China over three days, accusing it of cancer-causing pollution, state media reported Sunday

Around 500 protestors gathered in Haining city, Zhejiang province, on Thursday, demanding an explanations for the death of large numbers of fish in a nearby river, the Xinhua news agency said.

Industrial contamination had caused at least 31 cases of cancer among residents of Hongxiao village, which is part of Haining, they said, including six of leukaemia.

The demonstrators broke into the Jinko Solar factory, ransacking offices and overturning vehicles before being forced back by police, Xinhua said, adding that the violence continued on Friday and Saturday evenings.

Since April industrial waste from the plant has exceeded legal limits on pollutants, Xinhua quoted Chen Hongming, deputy head of the Haining office of environmental affairs as saying.

Jinko Solar, which is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, has more than 10,000 employees in plants located in Jiangxi and Zhejiang provinces, according to its website.

There was no comment on the website Sunday about the protests or the demonstrators' allegations. Calls to the plant by AFP went unanswered.

Local authorities and police declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

The protests follow a number of a violent demonstrations in China, especially in the southern province of Guangdong, where tens of millions of migrant workers toil in the "workshop of the world"

Industrial pollution has caused unrest in China before. Authorities in the northeastern city of Dalian recently agreed to move a chemical plant after protests from local residents.





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Shanghai (AFP) Sept 16, 2011
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