'Trinidad & Tobago'
Tag Archive
Jan 29 2011
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ALCOA, Bauxite, Greenland, India, Mining, Miriam Rose, Orissa, Rio Tinto Alcan, Samarendra Das, Saving Iceland, Trinidad & Tobago, Vedanta
These news about Dongria Kondh’s victory against Vedanta are not recent, but from August 2010. Unfortunately we were not able to publish the story until now.
Miriam Rose
After 13 years of continuous battle, the people’s movements to save the Niyamgiri hills from bauxite mining have won their land and livelihood back from the jaws of extinction. Niyamgiri is one of a series of threatened bauxite capped mountains in Orissa. On August 21st 2010 a review of the Vedanta mining project carried out by the Ministry of the Environment exposed the company’s “total contempt for the law”, having violated a number of environmental regulations, and revealed “an appalling degree of collusion” by local government officials with Vedanta. A few days later Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh called a halt to the project. Read More
Sep 28 2009
India, Trinidad & Tobago
Reception and presentation by Samarendra Das in Centenary Hall, St. Mary’s College, Thursday Oct. 1st, from 18:30 to 21:00.
Mr. Samarendra Das is an Indian national, global activist and research scholar based in London and Orissa. He has been involved for the last sixteen years in grassroots activism with the ‘Dongria Kondh’ and ‘Mahji Kondh’, tribal communities who have lived sustainable and self-sufficient lives for centuries in the mountains of Orissa. Kondh values and their mountains are in risk from multinational companies seeking to capture iron ore and bauxite for the metal industries. Mr. Das has developed extensive knowledge of transnational corporations, NGO’s and the institutional architecture of the global elite who wield power over the earth’s resources. His academic backgrounds include a ‘first’ first class honors in mathematics and a master of computer science with distinction. Mr. Das has co-produced films with his brother Amarendra, published books and written over 200 papers in his mother tongue, Oriya. His work is both technical and artistic, covering culture, identity, conflict and political economy. His recent film with Amarendra, Sept. 2005, Wira Pdika (Earth Worm: Company Man) is feature-length campaign documentary on the resistance of the Orissa Kondhs.
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Aug 11 2008
ALCOA, Century Aluminum, Cultural, Hengill, Jaap Krater, Jökulsá á Fjöllum, Kárahnjúkar, Krafla and Þeistareykir, Landsvirkjun, Media bias, Saving Iceland, Skagafjörður, Skjálfandafljót, South Africa, Trinidad & Tobago
Jaap Krater, Iceland Review – As someone who has been active with Saving Iceland for a number of years, I read
James Weston’s column about media coverage on our campaign with much amusement. Many of his comments are not only funny but also have a ring of truth.
For me, they also illustrate something that is quite sad. People watch TV and see others chaining themselves to machines, according to polls most might even agree with them that they do not want more dams or smelters, and they get bored.
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Jan 14 2008
Cultural, Economics, Trinidad & Tobago
Gabrielle Jamela Hosein has written a thought provoking article that gathers together a feminist, racial and land based critique of Trinidad’s so called Vision 2020 development plan, which focuses on development through aluminium smelting and other heavy industries. Below is an extract, the full article can be found here Read More
Sep 03 2007
Actions, ALCOA, Amazon, Arms Industry, Century Aluminum, Cultural, Ecology, Greenwash, Icelandic Alloys/ELKEM, India, Jaap Krater, Landsvirkjun, Norsk Hydro, Pollution, Repression, Reykjavik Energy, Saving Iceland, South Africa, Trinidad & Tobago
Jaap Krater
Earth First Journal
3 August, 2007
Summer of Resistance in Iceland – an overview
This year, Iceland saw its third Summer of direct action against heavy industry and large dams. In a much-disputed master plan, all the glacial rivers and geothermal potential of Europe’s largest wilderness would be harnessed for aluminum production (see EF!J May-June 2006). Activists from around the world have gathered to protect Europe’s largest remaining wilderness and oppose aluminum corporations.
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Jan 01 2007
Actions, ALCOA, Century Aluminum, H.S. Orka, Landsvirkjun, Pollution, Reykjavik Energy, Rio Tinto Alcan, Saving Iceland, Trinidad & Tobago
Millennium Bridge
On New Years Day, campaigners from Saving Iceland climbed St.Pauls Cathedral and the Tate Modern in London as part of our campaign to challenge the destruction of the Icelandic hihghlands, Europe’s last remaining great wildernesses, and the destruction of communities in Trinidad, both at the hands of the aluminium industry and in particular ALCOA, ALCAN and Century Aluminum.
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Dec 29 2006
ALCOA, Ecology, Pollution, Trinidad & Tobago
Trinidad Express
29/12/2006
Errol McLeod yesterday bought fresh fish where he usually does-from a vendor at Otaheite Bay. But he feared it may not be long before he would not be able to do so. Read More
Dec 25 2006
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ALCOA, Bakki, Ecology, India, Kárahnjúkar, Repression, Saving Iceland, Trinidad & Tobago, Þjórsárver
In his Christmas year-end review, Trinidadian Prime Minister Patrick Manning announced that he is to scrap his plans to build an Alcoa Aluminium smelter by the towns of Chatam and Cap de Ville, where local residents have fiercely campaigned against the government’s smelter plan. Read More
Dec 08 2006
ALCOA, Greenwash, Pollution, Repression, Trinidad & Tobago
For Better or for Worse??
Poem by Marcel, a Cedros resident
So, Mister Man, you’re giving us a Plant
Against our wishes- not the kind we want
Approaching with incentives and bright smiles
To destroy our plants for three square miles.
The fauna too, are going to be dead
‘Cause money Madness gone to someone’s head. Read More
Oct 28 2006
Actions, ALCOA, India, Pollution, Saving Iceland, Trinidad & Tobago
The following is a report back from one of the people at the London protest against the heavy industrialisation of Iceland and Trinidad on the 27th of October 2006.
The demo was attended by about 40 people, not too bad for a weekday demo in inner city London (we chose to have the demo then so that we could get into the embassies.) Perhaps next time we will organize something on a weekend. About a quarter of the demo were Trinidadians. We started the event with an emotional funeral ceremony, with talks from an anti-dam activist who’se been involved in the anti-Narmada dam campaign (India) as well as the anti-Karahnjukar dam campaign (Iceland); Sue Doughty, former Liberal MP, talked about her attempts to get the UK parliament to ask the Icelandic state to reconsider its path of heavy industry; two Trinidadian speakers: talked about the neo-colonialist-liberal invasion by western corporations of the third world, and the beauty of the Cedros Peninsula and tragedy of the Aluminium development, respectively; then an Icelandic speaker who talked about the loss of the Icelandic Karahnjukar wilderness, and the future plans of heavy industry in Iceland. Read More