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Packed prison puts crims in containers (update April 08)

The Federal Intervention is manifestly oppressive to Aboriginal people

Berrimah prison is full - (I was in there earlier this year ('07) for an anti-racism protest in '02) - The NT State's preferred option is more black prisons

These prisons are used as POW camps in the ongoing war of invasion against Aboriginal people

Two PARIAH members were also imprisoned in Berrimah in 2001 for their part in a protest to support the people of East Timor in 1999

Mick Lambe- August 07

Nationalism + Militarism + Racism = Fascism*

- Image depicts Australian Federal Parliament flagpole atop Uluru *(Source: history)

Australian militarism

"Australians were on hand even for the Boer war and the Boxer Rebellion. They were involved in more of the 20th century's major wars than either the British or the Americans"

 

The Federal intervention into Northern Territory Aboriginal homelands - is partly military

Mining (uranium) pastoral and military interests - all benefit from this increased control

 

The arms race in SE Asia and Australia's tacit approval of Indonesian 'terrorism' in West Papua - are indicative of our flawed militarist mindset

 

 

Militarism in the Northern Territory


Aboriginal homelands in the Northern Territory are now under Federal control
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Native Leader Serving Six Months for Opposing Mine PDF Print E-mail
Written by Chris Arsenault   
Mar 09, 2008 at 09:32 AM

Native Leader Serving Six Months for Opposing Mine
By Chris Arsenault
 
 
Sign_demonstration_Napanee_sm
 
 
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, Mar 5 (IPS) - Algonquin community leader Robert Lovelace had never been charged with an offence, but when a uranium company began prospecting for radioactive ore on unceded native land without engaging in consultation, he decided to take action, organising a non-violent blockade.
 
 
 bob_lovelace
Bob Lovelace, a father of seven and long-time activist on native rights issues.
Credit:Ardoch Algonquin First Nation
 



HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, Mar 5 (IPS) - Algonquin community leader Robert Lovelace had never been charged with an offence, but when a uranium company began prospecting for radioactive ore on unceded native land without engaging in consultation, he decided to take action, organising a non-violent blockade.
 
NO-Nuclear_racism_sm

On Feb. 15, Judge Cunningham of Ontario's Superior Court sentenced Lovelace to six months in jail for contempt of court and fined him 50,000 dollars for his involvement in the peaceful protest.
 
 

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Chief Paula Sherman, elected leader of the Ardoch Algonquin First Nation, a small 
community about 110 kilometres southwest of Ottawa, where the controversial 
uranium prospecting is taking place, calls Robert Lovelace "a political prisoner".

"It seems like a very heavy sentence," said Jamie Kneen of Mining Watch Canada, 
a non-governmental watchdog. "If the court had issued a trespassing charge, there 
could have been an argument about who was really trespassing," Kneen told IPS.

The territory in question involves mainly Crown land -- owned by the government of 
Canada -- that is subject to ongoing land claims negotiations between First Nations 
and governments at both the federal and provincial level.

In September 2007, an Ontario provincial court issued Frontenac Ventures, the 
mining company, an interlocutory injunction ordering protestors from two First 
Nations, Ardoch and Sharbot Lake, along with their non-native allies, to vacate the 
Robertsville camp, the only feasible entry point to a 30,000-acre wilderness tract in 
Frontenac County where the company has its prospecting license. Lovelace and 
other activists violated that order.

"The source of this conflict is the Ontario Mining Act, which allows companies to 
stake land and prospect without consultation with private land owners or other users 
including First Nations," said Kneen. Lovelace and other activists argue their 
constitutional rights were violated by the lack of consultation.

People living on or near the exploration site discovered their land was being taken 
almost two years ago. There were no community meetings or information sessions 
about the uranium exploration. "It started on private land when a cottager saw trees 
being cut and started protesting the development," said Kneen. A few months later it 
became clear that some of the land being staked was disputed territory.

"Uranium mining has no record other than environmental destruction and negative 
health issues," Doreen Davis, chief of the Shabot Lake First Nation told IPS. 
"Uranium can't be stored safely," said Chief Davis, who will be sentenced on Mar. 18 
for participating in the blockade. She is under court order not to talk about the 
dispute with Frontenac.

"I do know that we have communities from Kingston to Ottawa on our side against 
uranium mining in this district," said Chief Davis. "A huge group of settlers, that's 
what they call themselves, have been working with us, pounding the pavement and 
educating people about this. I think it is unique to have aboriginal and non-aboriginal 
people standing shoulder to shoulder like this," said the chief in a phone interview.

The federal government has yet to get involved in this case and Ontario's provincial 
government has only been reluctantly and peripherally involved, according to mining 
researcher Jamie Kneen.

Not much is known about the company at the centre of the dispute. "Frontenac is a 
private company, so they don't have to file any disclosure," said Kneen. "Aside from 
the president and their lawyer, no one knows who they are or where they get their 
money."

The company's website has only one page and a press release. Frontenac's 
President George White didn't return calls from IPS. Its website says Frontenac, "is 
committed to participating in any efforts of Ontario and the First Nations' to consult 
in good faith", but Ardoch Chief Paula Sherman isn't convinced.

"No consideration was given to the circumstances leading to our actions," said Chief 
Sherman in a statement after Lovelace's sentencing. "The testimony given under 
oath by Robert Lovelace outlined Algonquin Law and the corresponding 
responsibilities of Algonquin people with respect to human activity in our territory," 
wrote Chief Sherman, who was herself fined 15,000 dollars during the court case for 
breaking the injunction which prohibited protests on land Frontenac was exploring.

Because the company obtained a court order against protestors, rather than filing 
trespassing charges, the judge didn't have to listen to arguments about historical 
precedent or Algonquin legal codes. "It's a way of avoiding the core issues," said 
Kneen.

After a decade of low prices, the spot price of uranium has shot through the roof in 
recent years, increasing from 43 dollars per pound in 2006 to 75 dollars today.

As oil prices rise, countries have re-started old nuclear reactors and developing 
countries, including South Africa, India and China, have ambitious nuclear power 
plans on the horizon. UBS, a financial services company, predicts uranium will hit 
110 dollars per pound by 2010.

These developments don't sit well with Dr. Mark Winfield, a Canadian nuclear 
expert. "Existing [uranium] mines in northern Saskatchewan have caused severe 
contamination through heavy metals like arsenic, and long-lived radionuclides, along 
with conventional pollutants," said Winfield.

In 2004, Health Canada concluded that effluent from uranium mines meets the 
definition of a toxic substance under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.

Canada is the world's largest supplier of uranium and Conservative Prime Minister 
Stephen Harper wants to increase exports in his bid to transform the country into an 
"energy superpower".

"The Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change was very clear that nuclear 
[energy] can't compete economically," Winfield told IPS. "The potential health and 
environmental impacts of uranium mining are not worth the risks."

 
 
 
Image set 

http://flickr.com/photos/chasdobie/sets/72157603974502075/

 

 

YouTube - Free Bob Lovelace

______________________________________________

 


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Friends from the Belyuen Aboriginal Community at my Bush home (1999) on what is now Aboriginal land after a very long struggle

Our refusal to accept the land's status as belonging to the "Crown" and use of the courts in exposing local racism was never appreciated by the invasive interests protected and supported by the former Country Liberal Party.
The family that won the right to the Kenbi claim adopted me as family, due to the State's attempts to remove me from my (then) home of seven years

Many of the Belyuen people are related to the people at One Mile Dam Aboriginal Community where I spent 10 months living with the people and publicising their concerns in 2005 (Mick Lambe)


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