The Ganvié appealed the decision of the district court of Caen
The verdict in the trial of accused-7 are involved in blocking the process of nuclear waste November 5 last was given, the militants have been recognized-are guilty of the charges of obstructing traffic and damage to their image. The invalidity proceedings requested by the defense was rejected, the activists have been sentenced to a month-es suspended sentence and € 1,000 fine. One of them who refused fingerprinting in police custody was sentenced to 500 € extra. In civil cases, the activists were sentenced es € $ 1 in damages to Areva and € 20 500 to the station. € 1,000 in legal fees were awarded the two plaintiffs.
The sentences imposed by the court are wholly disproportionate and reflect the will of the state crack down on nonviolent activists in the General Ganvié. They are a continuation of police brutality inflicted on the five militants during their Unshackling, three of them were seriously wounded hands and keep lifelong consequences.
We do not accept this decision which trivializes the police violence and criminalization of nonviolent activists, and we're appealing the decision of the District Court of Caen. In parallel, we took the court administrative challenge the legality of the release by the authorities of the convoy Valognes - Gorleben 5 November 2011. The first elements of the survey show abnormalities that could give us reason afterwards. In addition, we take the senior judges and the NSDC (National Commission of Ethics of Security) so that light be shed on the police violence and that they do not remain unanswered. According
the nuclear lobby, the transport of radioactive material is completely secure, on November 5 last year, we demonstrated the contrary. Punishment as strong as it is, it either police or judicial, reinforces our determination to firmly oppose this nuclear partnership that has always been imposed by force.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Nca National Championship Jackets
Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - Verdict in trial of 8 December 2010. Back
On December 8, 2010 took place in Caen trial of seven people from Ganvié. This trial involved the blocking action of the train "Beaver" 2010 which took place in Caen November 5, 2010.
The hearing lasted six hours. We were, unsurprisingly, charged by the prosecution, by the SNCF and Areva. They advocated passive obedience. We have opposite disobedience active, self-conscious and radical.
It was difficult to prepare a one month trial of this magnitude (7 defendants, 4 adult witnesses, two civil parties with their 3 lawyers, 3 lawyers on our side, the attorney who takes Caen head on the record, 300 people in support at the trial ...).
But we managed, thanks to you, maintain our rage and this conflict with the system that defends nuclear. For some
and some of you, you have found the issues in this trial by living in the interior. We are found, we talked, we ate well, we laughed. In short, we managed to take advantage of this trial for us to mobilize, organize ourselves, we move forward and not deterred by what might seem like a terrible repression.
This does not include injuries or the work we must continue to strike nuclear power where it is weak. This
January 26, 2011, around 14h, we will know more about what the judge has chosen the debates of the hearing.
We do not call for a rally or a demonstration, however, those wishing to support the defendant-es during the deliberations are welcome. We will meet in court at 13:30.
Thank you for your past support and future!
On December 8, 2010 took place in Caen trial of seven people from Ganvié. This trial involved the blocking action of the train "Beaver" 2010 which took place in Caen November 5, 2010.
The hearing lasted six hours. We were, unsurprisingly, charged by the prosecution, by the SNCF and Areva. They advocated passive obedience. We have opposite disobedience active, self-conscious and radical.
It was difficult to prepare a one month trial of this magnitude (7 defendants, 4 adult witnesses, two civil parties with their 3 lawyers, 3 lawyers on our side, the attorney who takes Caen head on the record, 300 people in support at the trial ...).
But we managed, thanks to you, maintain our rage and this conflict with the system that defends nuclear. For some
and some of you, you have found the issues in this trial by living in the interior. We are found, we talked, we ate well, we laughed. In short, we managed to take advantage of this trial for us to mobilize, organize ourselves, we move forward and not deterred by what might seem like a terrible repression.
This does not include injuries or the work we must continue to strike nuclear power where it is weak. This
January 26, 2011, around 14h, we will know more about what the judge has chosen the debates of the hearing.
We do not call for a rally or a demonstration, however, those wishing to support the defendant-es during the deliberations are welcome. We will meet in court at 13:30.
Thank you for your past support and future!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Foods Not To Eat If You Have A Kidney Cyst
In Brussels, European heads of state listened to by the Mossad ...
For eight years, from 1995 to 2003, the Israeli secret service (Mossad) were able to listen, using sophisticated listening devices, everything that was said in the building "Justus Lipsius in Brussels between the Heads of State British, French, German, English and Austrian ministers and their advisers. The investigation into this case spying on a large scale is desperately slow and was completely botched by the Belgian State Security and the federal prosecutor. The authors are known but they remain unpunished.
Read more ...

For eight years, from 1995 to 2003, the Israeli secret service (Mossad) were able to listen, using sophisticated listening devices, everything that was said in the building "Justus Lipsius in Brussels between the Heads of State British, French, German, English and Austrian ministers and their advisers. The investigation into this case spying on a large scale is desperately slow and was completely botched by the Belgian State Security and the federal prosecutor. The authors are known but they remain unpunished.
Read more ...
Friday, January 21, 2011
High Resperation Rate
secret meeting between Hamas and Mossad ... The center plays
news agency PRA (Palestine Press Agency) reports that Saleh Bewildered, European head of Hamas, along with a group of leaders of his organization, would have secretly met in the Czech Republic , Israeli intelligence officials, on the initiative of the latter.
... Read more ...

news agency PRA (Palestine Press Agency) reports that Saleh Bewildered, European head of Hamas, along with a group of leaders of his organization, would have secretly met in the Czech Republic , Israeli intelligence officials, on the initiative of the latter.
... Read more ...
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Stroke Communication Cards
media trial Jan. 13 in Rennes Rennes
Over 4 hours of hearings, seven defendants, three witnesses, two lawyers and many people support us: a true case of nuclear power!
( see the verdict February 21, 2011 )
Thanks to everyone
The Ganvié
AFP:
Occupation tower against the Flamanville: 500 euros required
RENNES - Rennes The prosecution has requested 500 euros fine against six anti-nuclear activists who had participated in 2007 in the occupation of two towers in protest against the construction the EPR Flammanville (Channel), Thursday in a trial in magistrate.
About 120 sympathizers gathered outside the court in Rennes to show their solidarity with the defendants and to reiterate their opposition to the development of this nuclear project, noted AFP.
The six activists Ganvié (Group of nonviolent actions ANA) were occupied during four days a pylon to Romagna and another for a day in Saint-Germain-en-Coglès, Ille-et-Vilaine, in spring 2007.
At the hearing, their lawyers have cited an "act of civil disobedience" had caused "no damage" and had not disrupted the electricity supply. They advocated the release or, alternatively, an exemption from penalty.
Cited as a witness by the defendants, MEP Nicole Kiil-Nielsen (EELV) was considered "normal citizens seeking to draw attention to problems related to nuclear power."
Opponents denounce the health risks associated with the EPR and on line at very high voltage (EHV) that must pass through the departments of Manche, Ille-et-Vilaine and Mayenne and that "no epidemiological study independent of magnitude scale has yet been done. "
At the bar, the defendants raised a "denial of democracy" in the way was the decision to build these facilities. According to them, "two years behind schedule" taken by the current project and additional costs have confirmed their denunciation of "opaqueness" surrounding these projects.
Network of Transmission of Electricity (TEN), a subsidiary of EDF, the source of the complaint, claiming 830,000 euros in damages, citing the start "a precaution" of oil-fired plants to offset a possible power outage due in the event.
The ruling was reserved on 21 February.
In June 2009, in Cherbourg, four activists were sentenced to a fine of 300 euros each in a similar case. They were sentenced to pay jointly 1,500 euros in damages to RTE.
Over 4 hours of hearings, seven defendants, three witnesses, two lawyers and many people support us: a true case of nuclear power!
( see the verdict February 21, 2011 )
Thanks to everyone
The Ganvié
AFP:
Occupation tower against the Flamanville: 500 euros required
RENNES - Rennes The prosecution has requested 500 euros fine against six anti-nuclear activists who had participated in 2007 in the occupation of two towers in protest against the construction the EPR Flammanville (Channel), Thursday in a trial in magistrate.
About 120 sympathizers gathered outside the court in Rennes to show their solidarity with the defendants and to reiterate their opposition to the development of this nuclear project, noted AFP.
The six activists Ganvié (Group of nonviolent actions ANA) were occupied during four days a pylon to Romagna and another for a day in Saint-Germain-en-Coglès, Ille-et-Vilaine, in spring 2007.
At the hearing, their lawyers have cited an "act of civil disobedience" had caused "no damage" and had not disrupted the electricity supply. They advocated the release or, alternatively, an exemption from penalty.
Cited as a witness by the defendants, MEP Nicole Kiil-Nielsen (EELV) was considered "normal citizens seeking to draw attention to problems related to nuclear power."
Opponents denounce the health risks associated with the EPR and on line at very high voltage (EHV) that must pass through the departments of Manche, Ille-et-Vilaine and Mayenne and that "no epidemiological study independent of magnitude scale has yet been done. "
At the bar, the defendants raised a "denial of democracy" in the way was the decision to build these facilities. According to them, "two years behind schedule" taken by the current project and additional costs have confirmed their denunciation of "opaqueness" surrounding these projects.
Network of Transmission of Electricity (TEN), a subsidiary of EDF, the source of the complaint, claiming 830,000 euros in damages, citing the start "a precaution" of oil-fired plants to offset a possible power outage due in the event.
The ruling was reserved on 21 February.
In June 2009, in Cherbourg, four activists were sentenced to a fine of 300 euros each in a similar case. They were sentenced to pay jointly 1,500 euros in damages to RTE.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Where Can I Buy Belgian Chocolate Cups Locally
- Thursday, January 13, 2011, 15h - Minutes of 7 climbers Ganvié
On Thursday, January 13, 2011 will be held in Rennes, the trial of seven activists Ganvié (Group of Non-Violent Actions ANA). We collect from 15h to the city court.
We are called to us to justify the occupation of a line of pylons Very-High-Voltage (EHV) conducted in 2007 in the country of Ferns (35).
Indeed, during four days, between May 29 and June 1, 2007, had held a civil disobedience action to protest the nuclear revival in France with the construction of the EPR at Flamanville in the Channel. This revival useless and dangerous, accompanied by a new line project EHV Cotentin-Maine, 160 miles long. We asked then, the repeal of the decree allowing the construction of the EPR nuclear reactor and a study on the health effects of EHV lines. More broadly, the action has, through the media and activist networks, to recall the need to oppose the EPR project, useless, dangerous and expensive. Wishing
oppose both projects closely linked, EPR and THT, we installed a bivouac in a pylon Romagné, Ille-et-Vilaine. The facility, completed safely, had lasted 3 ½ days, and was followed by a second tenure, half a day on a tower of Saint-Germain-en-Coglès. Many friends and supporters had legitimately reclaimed the action by camping at the foot of the towers, by providing moral and material support the occupation.
Where are we with the EPR and THT?
Three and a half years after this action, the construction of the EPR combines already two years late and two billion euros of additional cost. Complemented by technical setbacks that threaten the safety, already challenged reactor. No epidemiological studies on the effect of high voltage power lines has been conducted, in flagrant disregard of the precautionary principle and the health of populations. As always, nuclear advances to the detriment of our health, environment and democracy.
What's wrong is there for climbers Ganvié?
is a complaint of TEN (transport of electricity) that is causing the trial. But one of the charges, "endangering the lives of others", was dropped by the judge after consulting an expert. Thus, the militants have never endangered their own persons, those at the feet of the pylon, or agents of TEN. However, it is TEN endangering the lives of people below the line. The attempt to move us TEN for unconscious and irresponsible failed. We therefore continued for a simple violation of a 1906 Act which, in short, not getting into a pylon. When all legal avenues have been exhausted and that the state persists in such absurd and irresponsible choice of resistance is needed. Quit breaking the law. How
we will defend us?
Simply by invoking the legitimacy of our action. How to interfere with a denial of democracy such as that which led to the construction of the EPR? How the voice of many opponents, but hardly audible because of the strength of nuclear and industrial lobbies? We did this as a last resort that can occupy a tower of EHV line, a symbol of nuclear power, its centralism, its nuisance ...
Although the EPR continues to build, this project is absurd. The facts we are justified in view of its enormous cost, while the dominant discourse insists that we must tighten our belts.
Draft EHV line Cotentin-Maine has suffered many months of delay due to a tenacious struggle and popular in the health issues of EHV lines. The work begins now, when no fewer than six legal action against the line waiting to be examined. This trial should encourage us all to continue the action, although it must still go through civil disobedience.
The THT is not yet built and the EPR is not ready to be put into service. Together by our commitment and determination through all the things that we do bend EDF and RTE.
Enrayons the nuclear machine, the struggle continues!
Visit Thursday, January 13, 2011 at 15h at the city court of Rennes, 7 Rue Pierre Abelard, to mark your support and solidarity.
Press Contact: 06 10 68 70 89
To receive news by e-mail:
https: / / lists.riseup.net / www / subscribe / support-Ganvié
Update January 14: see the report by France 3 and the AFP
Last Updated to 21 February: the verdict!
On Thursday, January 13, 2011 will be held in Rennes, the trial of seven activists Ganvié (Group of Non-Violent Actions ANA). We collect from 15h to the city court.
We are called to us to justify the occupation of a line of pylons Very-High-Voltage (EHV) conducted in 2007 in the country of Ferns (35).
Indeed, during four days, between May 29 and June 1, 2007, had held a civil disobedience action to protest the nuclear revival in France with the construction of the EPR at Flamanville in the Channel. This revival useless and dangerous, accompanied by a new line project EHV Cotentin-Maine, 160 miles long. We asked then, the repeal of the decree allowing the construction of the EPR nuclear reactor and a study on the health effects of EHV lines. More broadly, the action has, through the media and activist networks, to recall the need to oppose the EPR project, useless, dangerous and expensive. Wishing
oppose both projects closely linked, EPR and THT, we installed a bivouac in a pylon Romagné, Ille-et-Vilaine. The facility, completed safely, had lasted 3 ½ days, and was followed by a second tenure, half a day on a tower of Saint-Germain-en-Coglès. Many friends and supporters had legitimately reclaimed the action by camping at the foot of the towers, by providing moral and material support the occupation.
Where are we with the EPR and THT?
Three and a half years after this action, the construction of the EPR combines already two years late and two billion euros of additional cost. Complemented by technical setbacks that threaten the safety, already challenged reactor. No epidemiological studies on the effect of high voltage power lines has been conducted, in flagrant disregard of the precautionary principle and the health of populations. As always, nuclear advances to the detriment of our health, environment and democracy.
What's wrong is there for climbers Ganvié?
is a complaint of TEN (transport of electricity) that is causing the trial. But one of the charges, "endangering the lives of others", was dropped by the judge after consulting an expert. Thus, the militants have never endangered their own persons, those at the feet of the pylon, or agents of TEN. However, it is TEN endangering the lives of people below the line. The attempt to move us TEN for unconscious and irresponsible failed. We therefore continued for a simple violation of a 1906 Act which, in short, not getting into a pylon. When all legal avenues have been exhausted and that the state persists in such absurd and irresponsible choice of resistance is needed. Quit breaking the law. How
we will defend us?
Simply by invoking the legitimacy of our action. How to interfere with a denial of democracy such as that which led to the construction of the EPR? How the voice of many opponents, but hardly audible because of the strength of nuclear and industrial lobbies? We did this as a last resort that can occupy a tower of EHV line, a symbol of nuclear power, its centralism, its nuisance ...
Although the EPR continues to build, this project is absurd. The facts we are justified in view of its enormous cost, while the dominant discourse insists that we must tighten our belts.
Draft EHV line Cotentin-Maine has suffered many months of delay due to a tenacious struggle and popular in the health issues of EHV lines. The work begins now, when no fewer than six legal action against the line waiting to be examined. This trial should encourage us all to continue the action, although it must still go through civil disobedience.
The THT is not yet built and the EPR is not ready to be put into service. Together by our commitment and determination through all the things that we do bend EDF and RTE.
Enrayons the nuclear machine, the struggle continues!
Visit Thursday, January 13, 2011 at 15h at the city court of Rennes, 7 Rue Pierre Abelard, to mark your support and solidarity.
Press Contact: 06 10 68 70 89
To receive news by e-mail:
https: / / lists.riseup.net / www / subscribe / support-Ganvié
Update January 14: see the report by France 3 and the AFP
Last Updated to 21 February: the verdict!
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
What Is The Proper Way To Masterbat
Projections Discussions "The MAT ¿A donde lleva el our progresso?"
Wednesday, January 12, 2010 from 18h to 20h (projection to 18.30)
at IEP (Sciences-Po) Rennes, amphi Erasmus
104 bd de la Duchesse Anne
Documentary: , "The MAT ¿A donde lleva el our progresso?"
THT, which leads us progress?
This 28-minute documentary gives voice to the fight against the Catalan line project Very-High-Voltage (EHV MAT in Catalan), since the legal action until more direct action, like the first occupation of a forest in Catalonia. All these actions are against the new 400 kV power line must cross the Iberian Peninsula by 2013.
Projection pretext for debate on anti-nuclear, anti-industrial ... here and there
Come is free!
Wednesday, January 12, 2010 from 18h to 20h (projection to 18.30)
at IEP (Sciences-Po) Rennes, amphi Erasmus
104 bd de la Duchesse Anne
Documentary: , "The MAT ¿A donde lleva el our progresso?"
THT, which leads us progress?
This 28-minute documentary gives voice to the fight against the Catalan line project Very-High-Voltage (EHV MAT in Catalan), since the legal action until more direct action, like the first occupation of a forest in Catalonia. All these actions are against the new 400 kV power line must cross the Iberian Peninsula by 2013.
Projection pretext for debate on anti-nuclear, anti-industrial ... here and there
Come is free!
Quotations Of Deborah Sampson
Trainstopping, analysis by Graeme Hayes, Open Trial of democracy
From: opendemocracy.net
French anti-nuclear activists explores whether Targeted Direct Action, Including The Deliberate Use of the system to launch short politique challenges, can open up a space for democratic participation is
5 November last, has now left Carrying vitrified nuclear waste Valognes, in northern France, heading for Gorleben in Germany. A little after half past three in the afternoon, as the train drew into Caen station, a young woman alerted the driver to the presence of half a dozen people on the line. As the engine drew to a halt, five of the six – all belonging to a small affinity group named GANVA, or non-violent anti-nuclear activist group – chained themselves to the track and to each other. This was the first blockage in a journey constantly disrupted by anti-nuclear activists, especially in Germany. In Caen, it took the police three and half hours to remove the activists from the track, and enable the shipment to continue a journey that eventually took 91 hours, mobilised 20,000 police, and cost a reported 50 million euros. These actions clearly caused great embarrassment to the French and German governments, and attracted global media attention. But is that all they achieved? Do actions such as this simply testify to the impotence of citizens when faced with the nuclear prerogatives of states, or is there a possibility here for something more positive, more democratic to emerge?
The costs of action
Four weeks ago, on December 8, the action reached court in Caen, as all seven activists were tried for obstructing the railways under a law dating back to 1845. Outside the court building, about three hundred activists occupied the road, with stalls, musicians, banners, speeches, and television crews. Numerous organisations – environmental, rights, anti-nuclear, far left, libertarian, syndicalist – came to demonstrate their support. Inside, the wood-panelled courtroom was packed with supporters, including a small group from Germany. The Ganva is used to this type of action, having already stopped a nuclear waste train in Normandy in July 2008, and carrying out a series of occupations of electricity pylons the previous spring, again protesting against nuclear policy. The group has adopted a structure without formal organisation, both to make it more flexible and to protect it from the possible seizure of funds by court decision. This time, not only has the state prosecutor called for significant fines to be imposed (of 2000 or 3000 euros per activist), but the SNCF has demanded upwards of 40,000 euros in compensation, and the activists were obliged to post a guarantee of 16,500 euros against their liberty ahead of the court hearing. There are other costs. The police’s approach to releasing the activists’ arms from their steel tubes left two with serious burns to their hands and a third with two sliced tendons on his left wrist. The state prosecutor has demanded suspended prison sentences for all seven activists, six of whom have no previous offences, and one of whom has only a trivial fine on his record. The prosecutor also demanded that one of the activists, C., have the offence placed on her criminal record – effectively ensuring that she would lose her job as a supply teacher in the state education system. All of the activists are young, and all of them are unemployed, studying, or in low-paid jobs.
If being prosecuted is to make sense as political action, then the prospect of being maimed by power saws, taken to court, being fined, losing one’s job, and undergoing considerable emotional stress, also has to offer collective benefits. This could be located in the direct effects of the action itself – but there is a sense in which, taken narrowly, stopping a nuclear waste train leaving La Hague is an idiosyncratic gesture. La Hague treats nuclear waste so as to remove plutonium, to be recycled for potential use in nuclear weapons; it would make more sense to stop waste trains arriving rather than leaving. Most environmental organisations, including Greenpeace, accept the principle that nuclear waste should be stored in the country of production, in this case Germany (though Gorleben is not a storage facility either).
Building political capacity
So why undertake this sort of action? Prosecution for this sort of offence provides two sorts of opportunity for activists. The first is to build solidarities: trials are chances to display collective identity, to reinforce existing and create new ties – particularly, perhaps, where state responses are considered to be disproportionate, creating what social movement scholars call ‘backfire’, where the severity of repression generates public sympathy. The second opportunity is to create arenas for democratic challenge. ‘Have mass mobilisation, and public information, advanced the debate on nuclear power? Of course not’, asked the defence rhetorically during the hearing. Throughout the trial, prosecution and defence were constantly engaged in a contest to define the process underway: for the prosecution, to restrict debate to the bare facts of the action (themselves uncontested by the defendants), and thus to consider its motivation in strict legal terms; for the defence, to generalise, to draw the debate into political terms, establishing motivation as democratic dysfunction, as the opposition between a nuclearised society and participative citizenship:
The use of the courts to make political arguments and launch challenges to public policy has been a feature of a number of recent campaigns in France, from anti-advertising to anti-GMO groups. The Ganva is at least partly inspired by the latter, whose persistent direct action has rendered the cultivation of genetically modified crops in France practically impossible. It is unlikely the Ganva will win their case when the decision is handed down on 26 January; it is also unlikely that the heavy sentences demanded by the state prosecutor will be acceded to, for activists with clean records acting non-violently, openly and publically for political reasons. Beyond the detail of the judgment, what is interesting is the attempt of activists to think of ways to open up a viable democratic space, to create the conditions for citizens, through public action, to become subjective actors in the determination of social choices. In the face of the closure of debate over nuclear policy, direct action attempts to create an arena to ‘speak truth to power’, or at the very least to confront it, within existing institutional arrangements, with a different vision of process and politics.
Direct action and mass mobilisation
The Ganva’s action thus offers a potentially important way of thinking about strategies for expressing citizenship where public choices are taken remotely. But this type of action also has clear limits. The anti-GMO campaign has been successful because it enjoys mass support, charismatic leadership, and institutional access. It is unlikely the Ganva can replicate this type of success: the group does not have the capacity or opportunity to commit widespread actions; for the moment has little appetite to adopt a repeat offender strategy which worked so well for the anti-GM movement by forcing the courts to imprison activists; and nuclear policy, strategically central to energy and diplomacy in France, is less likely to be the subject of tactical government concessions. Most crucially, despite the defence’s rhetoric, it is difficult to see direct action working effectively as an alternative, rather than a complement, to mass mobilisation. And though mass mobilisation has produced successful results against nuclear power in the French north-west, this was against new plant-siting decisions, a generation ago. These conditions are currently lacking.
But the recent movement against pension reform in France, though in the end unsuccessful, was also noticeable for the greater role played by direct action than has recently been the case in waves of strikes and demonstrations – through the blockages of oil refineries, bus depots, major road routes. In the absence of governmental responses to mass mobilisation on Its Own, It May Be More Fully Realised In The integration of mass mobilization and this type of Targeted Direct Action, Including The Deliberate Use of the system to launch short-Political Challenges, Effective Strategies for Creating That Democratic participation is binding.
About the author
Graeme Hayes Is A Marie Curie research fellow at the Crap Research Centre, Institute of Political Studies, Rennes, France.
From: opendemocracy.net
French anti-nuclear activists explores whether Targeted Direct Action, Including The Deliberate Use of the system to launch short politique challenges, can open up a space for democratic participation is
5 November last, has now left Carrying vitrified nuclear waste Valognes, in northern France, heading for Gorleben in Germany. A little after half past three in the afternoon, as the train drew into Caen station, a young woman alerted the driver to the presence of half a dozen people on the line. As the engine drew to a halt, five of the six – all belonging to a small affinity group named GANVA, or non-violent anti-nuclear activist group – chained themselves to the track and to each other. This was the first blockage in a journey constantly disrupted by anti-nuclear activists, especially in Germany. In Caen, it took the police three and half hours to remove the activists from the track, and enable the shipment to continue a journey that eventually took 91 hours, mobilised 20,000 police, and cost a reported 50 million euros. These actions clearly caused great embarrassment to the French and German governments, and attracted global media attention. But is that all they achieved? Do actions such as this simply testify to the impotence of citizens when faced with the nuclear prerogatives of states, or is there a possibility here for something more positive, more democratic to emerge?
The costs of action
Four weeks ago, on December 8, the action reached court in Caen, as all seven activists were tried for obstructing the railways under a law dating back to 1845. Outside the court building, about three hundred activists occupied the road, with stalls, musicians, banners, speeches, and television crews. Numerous organisations – environmental, rights, anti-nuclear, far left, libertarian, syndicalist – came to demonstrate their support. Inside, the wood-panelled courtroom was packed with supporters, including a small group from Germany. The Ganva is used to this type of action, having already stopped a nuclear waste train in Normandy in July 2008, and carrying out a series of occupations of electricity pylons the previous spring, again protesting against nuclear policy. The group has adopted a structure without formal organisation, both to make it more flexible and to protect it from the possible seizure of funds by court decision. This time, not only has the state prosecutor called for significant fines to be imposed (of 2000 or 3000 euros per activist), but the SNCF has demanded upwards of 40,000 euros in compensation, and the activists were obliged to post a guarantee of 16,500 euros against their liberty ahead of the court hearing. There are other costs. The police’s approach to releasing the activists’ arms from their steel tubes left two with serious burns to their hands and a third with two sliced tendons on his left wrist. The state prosecutor has demanded suspended prison sentences for all seven activists, six of whom have no previous offences, and one of whom has only a trivial fine on his record. The prosecutor also demanded that one of the activists, C., have the offence placed on her criminal record – effectively ensuring that she would lose her job as a supply teacher in the state education system. All of the activists are young, and all of them are unemployed, studying, or in low-paid jobs.
If being prosecuted is to make sense as political action, then the prospect of being maimed by power saws, taken to court, being fined, losing one’s job, and undergoing considerable emotional stress, also has to offer collective benefits. This could be located in the direct effects of the action itself – but there is a sense in which, taken narrowly, stopping a nuclear waste train leaving La Hague is an idiosyncratic gesture. La Hague treats nuclear waste so as to remove plutonium, to be recycled for potential use in nuclear weapons; it would make more sense to stop waste trains arriving rather than leaving. Most environmental organisations, including Greenpeace, accept the principle that nuclear waste should be stored in the country of production, in this case Germany (though Gorleben is not a storage facility either).
Building political capacity
So why undertake this sort of action? Prosecution for this sort of offence provides two sorts of opportunity for activists. The first is to build solidarities: trials are chances to display collective identity, to reinforce existing and create new ties – particularly, perhaps, where state responses are considered to be disproportionate, creating what social movement scholars call ‘backfire’, where the severity of repression generates public sympathy. The second opportunity is to create arenas for democratic challenge. ‘Have mass mobilisation, and public information, advanced the debate on nuclear power? Of course not’, asked the defence rhetorically during the hearing. Throughout the trial, prosecution and defence were constantly engaged in a contest to define the process underway: for the prosecution, to restrict debate to the bare facts of the action (themselves uncontested by the defendants), and thus to consider its motivation in strict legal terms; for the defence, to generalise, to draw the debate into political terms, establishing motivation as democratic dysfunction, as the opposition between a nuclearised society and participative citizenship:
C.: Our goal is to create a real debate about nuclear power, the public has never been consulted.
State prosecutor: It’s not in court that that type of debate can take place, but within the democratic organs of society. You are here to be judged for your actions, not to make the world anew.
C.: That’s exactly why I am here.
The use of the courts to make political arguments and launch challenges to public policy has been a feature of a number of recent campaigns in France, from anti-advertising to anti-GMO groups. The Ganva is at least partly inspired by the latter, whose persistent direct action has rendered the cultivation of genetically modified crops in France practically impossible. It is unlikely the Ganva will win their case when the decision is handed down on 26 January; it is also unlikely that the heavy sentences demanded by the state prosecutor will be acceded to, for activists with clean records acting non-violently, openly and publically for political reasons. Beyond the detail of the judgment, what is interesting is the attempt of activists to think of ways to open up a viable democratic space, to create the conditions for citizens, through public action, to become subjective actors in the determination of social choices. In the face of the closure of debate over nuclear policy, direct action attempts to create an arena to ‘speak truth to power’, or at the very least to confront it, within existing institutional arrangements, with a different vision of process and politics.
Direct action and mass mobilisation
The Ganva’s action thus offers a potentially important way of thinking about strategies for expressing citizenship where public choices are taken remotely. But this type of action also has clear limits. The anti-GMO campaign has been successful because it enjoys mass support, charismatic leadership, and institutional access. It is unlikely the Ganva can replicate this type of success: the group does not have the capacity or opportunity to commit widespread actions; for the moment has little appetite to adopt a repeat offender strategy which worked so well for the anti-GM movement by forcing the courts to imprison activists; and nuclear policy, strategically central to energy and diplomacy in France, is less likely to be the subject of tactical government concessions. Most crucially, despite the defence’s rhetoric, it is difficult to see direct action working effectively as an alternative, rather than a complement, to mass mobilisation. And though mass mobilisation has produced successful results against nuclear power in the French north-west, this was against new plant-siting decisions, a generation ago. These conditions are currently lacking.
But the recent movement against pension reform in France, though in the end unsuccessful, was also noticeable for the greater role played by direct action than has recently been the case in waves of strikes and demonstrations – through the blockages of oil refineries, bus depots, major road routes. In the absence of governmental responses to mass mobilisation on Its Own, It May Be More Fully Realised In The integration of mass mobilization and this type of Targeted Direct Action, Including The Deliberate Use of the system to launch short-Political Challenges, Effective Strategies for Creating That Democratic participation is binding.
About the author
Graeme Hayes Is A Marie Curie research fellow at the Crap Research Centre, Institute of Political Studies, Rennes, France.
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