


(picture via Greenpeace site updates)
From the Canadian Press
RCMP arrest activists who scaled smokestacks at Alberta oilsands site
(CP)
-
56 minutes ago
FORT SASKATCHEWAN, Alberta -- Shell Canada vowed to ramp up security
to keep protesters out of its properties after Greenpeace activists
scaled smokestacks and a construction crane to unfurl banners at an
oilsands upgrader expansion project northeast of Edmonton.
After
spending 24 hours roped high up on the structures near Fort
Saskatchewan, Alta., the Greenpeace activists were arrested by members
of a special police climbing team just after 5 a.m. Sunday at Shell's
Scottford project.
"It was a peaceful resolution to what could have been a very dangerous situation," said RCMP spokesman Cpl. Darren Anderson.
In
Calgary, Shell spokesman Phil Vircoe expressed concern about
"Greenpeace's unsafe and confrontational tactics. This placed their own
safety at risk and also the safety of others who were on site at that
time and throughout this process."
Four protesters had agreed to an RCMP request to climb down from their perches Saturday evening after hours of negotiations.
But
nine others refused to budge, and members of an RCMP and Edmonton
Police Service climbing team donned ropes and harnesses and scaled the
towering structures to arrest them, said Anderson, the RCMP spokesman.
"These
police officers are specially trained in rappelling and use of ropes
and have some background in mountaineering training as well," he said.
Many
of the protesters agreed to climb down using their own equipment,
Anderson said. But two of them refused to descend on their own and had
to be brought down by the police team.
A total of 16 Greenpeace protesters were arrested during the incident.
Charges,
including mischief and breaking and entering, were expected to be laid
against all of them and they were expected to appear in court at a
later date, Anderson said.
Mike Hudema, a Greenpeace activist who
remained outside the plant, said the people who took part in the
protest are passionate about trying to draw attention to an industry
his group blames for dramatically increasing greenhouse gases.
"Every
activist that was in there was prepared to be arrested and was willing
to face the repercussions of that to hopefully push our world leaders
to turn away from toxic developments like the tarsands," Hudema said.
The
protest began early Saturday morning. Streaming video on a Greenpeace
website from climbers dangling above massive storage tanks and a
network of large metal pipes showed protesters unfurling banners that
read "Climate Crime" and "Climate S.O.S."
After mounting several
such protests in recent weeks at Alberta oilsands facilities, Hudema
said he hoped that interrupting the industry's activities helped
Greenpeace make its point about the oilsands industry.
"We've
been able to stop at least a portion of the damage that the tarsands
are doing to our planet. I think that's one thing that we've
accomplished," he said.
Shell officials said the latest protest
did not affect the neighbouring petrochemical refinery in Fort
Saskatchewan and was confined to an area under construction, where few
employees were working at the time.
Last month, protesters
chained themselves to heavy earth-moving equipment at a Shell oilsands
mine near Fort McMurray, Alta., bringing work at one pit to a halt.
They were not charged in that incident.
Nearly a week ago, 10
protesters were arrested trying to block shipments of thick tar-like
bitumen to a Suncor plant near Fort McMurray.
Hudema said the
latest action was aimed at nudging negotiators to look for greener
options at a climate-change conference in Bangkok. Officials there are
paving the way to a new pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which
expires in 2012.
Vircoe said Shell has launched a full-scale
audit to determine how security at the Fort Saskatchewan site was
breached and to fix any problems.
The number of security staff
there has been increased and protocols tightened, including increased
patrolling of the perimeter of the fenced-in site, he said.
The latest incident has also highlighted the need for the industry as a whole to be more vigilant about security, Vircoe said.
"The
incident serves as a reminder, a stern reminder, that our industry must
work even harder to strengthen our approach to security across the
province here in Alberta and right across the country," he said.
Premier
Ed Stelmach has expressed frustration at the number of protesters
who've been able to gain access to such sites in recent weeks, and has
said they are being coddled while breaking the law.
"We
understand his frustration and we share his concerns around security at
all of the various energy sites across the province," Vircoe said.
As
to whether company officials are coddling the protesters in allowing
their actions to go on for several hours at a time, Vircoe said the
company's main goal is to ensure the safety of everyone involved.
"Our
concern, right from the very beginning, is for the safety of the
activists, to make sure nobody gets hurt, the safety of our employees
on the site and any of the public who are in the area around the
facilities," Vircoe said.
-By Lisa Arrowsmith in Edmonton.
Copyright © 2009 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.