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Audio report from actions today in Rossport

category mayo | environment | news report author Friday October 20, 2006 15:02author by Joe Black - WSM - personal capacity Report this post to the editors

Interview about National Day of Action in Rossport which saw repeated attempts to blockade the road to the refinery and Gardai (police) attacks on those doing the blockading.

Audio file is 3.5 minutes of Mp3 1.2 Mb (if anyone has the time to transcribe it that would be cool)

It is located at http://radio.indymedia.org/uploads/natdayaction20oct.mp3

Related Link: http://www.wsm.ie/community
author by Phuq Heddpublication date Fri Oct 20, 2006 15:59author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Interviewer: The struggle against Shell's attempt to impose a dangerous gas pipeline on a local community in Rossport (in the West of Ireland) continued today with a national mobilisation, called for by the locals, where people travelled from around the country to go down and support them. Every morning they (the locals) have been marching to the refinery and today people from elsewhere in Ireland joined them.

This report is from Davy, who is a WSM member living in the camp in Rossport and he reports on todays events.

Davy: Today was a national day of action called in Rossport for [?] people from all over the country came up to Rossport to support the local community in their ongoing fight against Shell who are trying to attempt to build an onshore gas-refinery in Erris. The morning started at about 10 o'clock when people gathered at a t-junction near the refinery site where shell ... on a road which Shell use to access the refinery site. There was a slow march up towards the refinery site which over time turned into a demi-blockade with, em the guards, with people walking very slowly in front of vehicles and then the guards having to pull people away. Effectively it was working pretty well as a blockade. When we reached the refinery site which was about a kilometer and a half away from our start point we stopped. People kind of re-grouped, we then marched back down the road and went further past the t-junction for about 2 kilometers, constantly blocking the trucks on the way out of the refinery site to do the pickup and the trucks coming back in. Then we turned around after going down those 2 kilometers and walked back up again and did this.

At this stage the police who had gotten very, very aggressive were throwing an awful lot of punches, punched a woman in the stomach, punched other people in the face, kicked people, quite violent, cornered us in. And then some of the local community led some of the people who had come down on a [??mission??] through the bog and back out onto the road again and they continued the blockade again. The blockade kind of dissipated around 12 o'clock.

Quite an enjoyable day was had by all and quite effective. Like, the blockade is I suppose, ... or I suppose more accurately the disruption continued to 12 o'clock today. Everyone was quite empowered by the whole process. People really felt empowered by the fact that all these people had come from all across the country: Dublin, Cork, Galway, Clare, Belfast, [noise of passing car] Donegal. It was a great show of solidarity today, there was about 300, 400 people on the demonstration.

Interviewer: Any people arrested?

Dave: Oh yes, sorry. One person was arrested over allegedly criminally damaging a Garda camera [noise of passing car] ... they were released 3 hours later without charge. The police as I said before were very, very aggressive. They really laid into people, punched people. I think a lot of people who came down from around the country had heard a lot about it on the internet or on the news and stuff were really shocked when they saw first hand exactly how the police were acting, that it was real, real aggression and ... you know, very vicious the whole attitude [noise of passing car] their whole demeanour. And so I think it's very useful in that ... like the technology for what's going on down here has spread further again.

Interviewer: How do people who are down there, the locals and people in the camp feel the actual day went? Are you pleased with the turn-out?

Dave: Oh, very pleased with the turn out, yeah. Probably, oh a good hundred, hundred and fity people come down for it and then there's a big turn-out from the local community as well. People were quite happy, obviously there's different reactions exactly ... exactly ... you know how different people saw the day, but I suppose it's very difficult to tell because with anything like this your talking necessarily about just how succesful today was but how it sort of effects future actions, and does it empower people here to go on doing more, which I think it will, or does it make people angry, a little more a little less, you know does it disempower people which I can't see how it could, so I suppose yeah, it was
quite a good day.

author by Justin Morahan - Peace People (personal capacity)publication date Fri Oct 20, 2006 20:26author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Thanks for the interview, Phuq Head.

This evening some of the violence described in the above was shown on RTE and TG4 news. One Garda was conducting an unresisting protestor forward and suddely flung him around with violence so that he fell to the ground without protection from his hands.

Another (or the same one maybe?) rushed with his hands against a protestor's front. with unnecessary speed and impact. Both victims reacted non-violently.

On the same RTE news Minister Michael McDowell praised the Commissioner for his actions in Bellanaboy and said the law must be upheld and the bully-boys stopped.

I hope he sees the news footage and removes the offending Gardaí forthwith.

author by Dublinerpublication date Sat Oct 21, 2006 15:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I was down for this national day of action and I had great fun..having said that I would say that I dident think the Gardaí would be as bad as they were.
When I stood on front of a $hell lorry I expected to be pushed aside by the guards,insted a Garda,dressed in black clothing with the word GARDA written on his front,punched me in the face,it was very painfull and I feel that garda should be brought to court for his actions.
I will return on the next day of action and I feel we can muster twice as meny protesters next time.
If we can,im confidant that we will be able to beat the guards back and stop shell doing its work,for one day at least.
Victory to the people of Mayo!