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FEBRUARY 4TH - INTERNATIONAL DAY OF
ACTION AGAINST THE WAR FOR OIL
MORE INFORMATION
ON THE DAY OF ACTION AGAINST WAR FOR OIL......
ARTICLES
ON THE CONNECTION BETWEEN OIL AND THE WAR IN IRAQ......
February 4th was an international day
of action to protest the oil economy and its role in the coming
Iraq war. Thousands of citizens in both the US & UK, many who had
never before participated in anti-war activities, educated their
neighbors at the point where the conflict is "fueled" every day.
Hundreds of gas stations in both the U.S. and the U.K. saw street
theater, leafleting, pageantry, and displays of alternatively fueled
vehicles.
30 PEOPLE OCCUPY THE ESSO HEADQUARTERS
IN LONDON.
The protesters wrote:
Around 30 students from the London School
of Economics (LSE) concerned about the war against Iraq met up at
1pm to develop strategies of how to enter the Exxon Office building.
The Exxon Office Building is directly neighbouring to LSE campus.
One student managed to slip into the building through a side-entrance
took the lift down to the reception area and then opened the door
from inside for all other students to follow.
Once inside the group took the lift up
to the eleventh floor and staged a sit-in. Police arrived at the
scene within 15 minutes and started to evict people about an hour
after the occupation had started. At that point there were about
40 police officers present. Fellow students supported the action
by displaying a huge "Boycott Esso" banner in front of the entrance
chanting "Exxon, Exxon, BP, Shell - take your war and go to hell!",
"No blood for oil" etc.. Shortly after the eviction police forcefully
removed all students away from the entrance area, pushing people
rather violently. This happened despite the fact, that this area
is actually part of the LSE campus.
The group of about 50 LSE Students (30
occupants and 20 supporters) then took the Boycott Esso banner across
campus and staged a protest in front of the main Exxon building
on Aldwych. They were there for about one hour, until police suddenly
arrested one LSE student and took her to Charing X Police station,
after all attempts failed to stop the police van. About 20 poeple
went down the road to Charing X to stage a 2 hour protest in front
of the police station, until police agreed that the arrested student
could call a friend's mobile and let her know that she was alright.
She was released around 7pm the same day and will have a preliminary
hearing at 10:00 am in Bow Street Magistrate Court on charges of
"wilfully obstructing the highway".

PETROL STATION 'BLOCKADE': OIL/WAR
ACTION AT LONDON BP PETROL STATION: TUESDAY 4 FEBRUARY.
A group of protesters from London Rising
Tide gathered at a BP petrol station in Hammersmith, West London,
as part of the International Day of Action involving protests at
petrol stations (300 across the USA). BP petrol station 'blockade'
Protesters gathered at a BP petrol station in West London as part
of the International Day of Action against oil dependence and its
links to war: As the banners put it 'OIL FUELS WAR' and 'NO WAR
FOR OIL'
The BP station was selected for the protest
as a prime example of BP's attempts at 'greenwash' - the pumps are
driven by solar panels on the roof (shame about the pollutants being
pumped out of them). BP were also rewarded with the company of protesters
because of their involvement in the proposed Baku-Ceyhan pipeline.
They are also one of many oil companies with their eyes on Iraq's
oil reserves.
The protest drew many beeps of support
from passing motorists (and only one or two heckles from crazy nutters
bawling for WAR!). Complimentary coffees from the shop helped protesters
brave the icy winds and blizzard. As the banners put it: 'OIL FUELS
WAR', 'NO WAR FOR OIL' and 'END OIL DIGGING/END OIL USE'.
BARCELONA- 25 activists OCCUPY a BP petrol
station. 12 people lock themselves to petrol pumps.
The action was to link personal consupmtion
of oil with the slaughter in iraq and the oil spill in Galicia.
"Attendents" were offering blood or oil slick to the few motorist
that came into the station during the action. Soilders armed with
"petrol pump guns" were on stand by to protect the peace. The backdrop
to this theater was twelve people locked down with arm tubs around
the pumps.
Around 20 activists from many European
counties and USA held a Rising Tide solidarity action on the local
BP garage, highlighting the link between big oil, the coming war.
The added 'flavour' here in Barcelona, Spain was the terrible oil
slick or 'chapapote' off the coast of nearby Galicia. Whilst three
people blocked the BP garage with a banner showing missiles firing
from petrol pumps, ten of us locked on with plastic tubes through
our arms around half the pumps. Whilst others handed out leaflets
to passers by in Catalonian, a couple of activists dressed as troops
used the pumps as guns, whilst cars that entered the forecourt were
'cleaned' from behind by activists dressed in white overalls with
nets and brooms in solidarity with the Galicians.
Others simulated blood coming from the
pumps by taping plastic bottles to them, filled with watered down
ketchup and squirting them around the forecourt With circus cyclists
riding around the forecourt, and a large group of media including
TV radio, the action was photogenic enough for a anti-war-hungry
regional media. was a great success. There was no problems with
the police either they came, they saw, then left, the action lasted
for around an hour, thus was thought to be a great success.
OTHER LONDON ACTIONS
Hackney Stop-the-War coalition picketed the BP station
on Stoke Newington High Street. Banners included an image of Bush
on an oil "transfusion". In the evening Campaign against Climate
Change organised leafleting outside the Exxon/Mobil offices in the
Aldwych.
NEWCASTLE
Newcastle Rising Tide and assorted individuals staged
two pickets as part of the Feb 4th targetoil day outside Esso petrol
stations, one at 8am, one at 6pm, to catch the rushingabout hours.
Messages on banners read 'oil is not worth killing for' and, less
catchily, 'globalisation of the oil economy = globalisation of terror'.
They emphasised how oil dependency creates insecurity and suffering
in the human as well as the global environmental context.
OXFORD
Oxford Rising Tide picketed a BP and an Esso petrol
station during lunch time. The leaflet included the line: "Just
ask yourself: would we declare war on Iraq if its main export was
broccoli?"
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