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Action Briefing |
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The Newsletter
of |
Dateline For
The Pipeline
Tuesday 25th March was an International
Day of Action as public consultation opened on the proposed Baku-Ceyhan pipeline
- an already notorious project of, amongst others, oil giant BP, receiving backing
from the World Bank.
I went down to London to join protesters from Friends of the Earth,
Platform, Cornerstone and Kurdish Human Rights Watch - as they paraded a 200m-long
pipeline, made by different groups up and down the country, from
the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank, Europe branch),
to BP's HQ.
11.00am I get
off the train in Euston, and to make a change decide to take a bus to Clifton
street, in the centre of Londons Square Mile, where the action
is to take place. Am pleasantly surprised to find that one-day bus tickets in
London are less expensive than they are in Birmingham, and that thanks to the
Congestion Charge, the buses run according to the timetable.
11.30am I find
the noisy crowd of FoE protesters already assembled and hastily making adjustments
to their cloth pipelines in preparation for the march. I get allocated
the back end of the brightly painted section made by Kurdish children from a
local community centre, which I carry with pride.
Midday Following
slight panic at the disappearance of a group of Kurdish dancers and rousing
speeches from Nick Rau, FoE's Climate and Energy Campaigner, and Nick Hildyard
of Platform, we set off - dancing down the street in the sunshine accompanied
by the Rhythms of Resistance samba band and a belly dancer, not to mention half
of the Metropolitan Police Force - to deliver our home-made pipeline to the
EBRD and BP.
12.30pm
We arrive noisily at the HQ of the EBRD, to the great amusement and entertainment
of the workers in Londons financial district, enjoying a sunny lunchbreak.
More speeches to passers by follow, and with cameras snapping from every direction,
the EBRD accepts a stretch of pipeline bearing the words No Public Money
for New Oil. After a performance from the Kurdish dancers who have managed
to find us after all, we move off towards BP offices, at Finsbury Circus.
1.15pm Fifty people,
a samba band, a belly dancer and a troupe of Kurdish dancers as well as 200m
of pipeline arrive outside the heavily guarded Britannia House, home of Beyond
Petroleum. The weather has brought everyone out of the surrounding offices
so the square is full of people to watch our meeting with the BP rep who is
waiting on the steps. Following a quick chat with campaigners, the man from
BP refuses to accept our painted piece of pipeline - a bit of a tactical error.
Huge cheers follow the cry through the megaphone: BP doesnt want
our pipeline - well guess what, we dont want theirs either!
2.00pm I make
a dash for my return train, having said a quick farewell to the London campaigners
and my new friend Surinder who has been carrying the other end of my bit of
pipeline, and make it in plenty of time thanks to the lack of traffic in central
London. A flying visit but well worth it. As Nick Hildyard pointed out, at the
moment the only place that the pipeline exists is within the computers and minds
of Londons financial district. I hope our action has gone some way to
ensure thats the only place it ever exists.
End Note A parallel
action was taking place in Tbilisi, Georgia at the same time as our demo - I
wonder if they got to dance around in the sunshine with the police taking no
more action than to give a good telling off to a cyclist who rode the wrong
way down a one way street.
For more information on the Baku-Ceyhan Pipeline campaign and
what you can do to help, please see the Feb/March
issue of Action Briefing, or at www.baku.org.uk.
Jenny Thatcher