Posted on 07/30/2015 7:17:53 AM PDT by Inspectorette
PORTLAND, Ore. Protesters against Arctic drilling rappelled from the St. Johns Bridge early Wednesday morning to set up an aerial blockade of a Shell oil icebreaker in the port for repairs.
"They are creating a human barricade so that the Shell icebreaker cannot get through," said Annie Leonard, the executive director of Greenpeace U.S. "They are prepared to stay up there for days because that's what it is going to take to save the arctic."
The 13 Greenpeace protesters suspended themselves from the bridge around 3 a.m. Wednesday. One of them is from Portland.
I think direct action is really powerful and also really inspiring because it shows people speak truth to power and what that looks like. And people who arent afraid to take more extreme messages and arent afraid to stand toe to toe, said Georgia Hirsty via a Facetime interview as she swayed in the breeze suspended from the bridge. Hopefully it doesnt take a week for Shell to get the message.
Hirsty came up from California to join the protest
Shell's icebreaker ship, called the Fennica, was set to depart at dawn after a gash in the hull was repaired in the Swan Island port. The Fennica was still dry docked Wednesday evening. According to Columbia River Bar Pilots, Wednesdays departure was canceled. It could not say when or why the departure was canceled nor could it say when it will depart.
Shell spokesman Curtis Smith said in an email the Fennica will return to Alaska once final preparations are complete.
"As for the activities of the day, we respect the choice that anyone might make to protest based on Shell's Arctic aspirations; we just ask that they do so safely and within the boundaries of the law," Smith wrote.
Leonard said the 13 protesters have enough food and supplies to last a week, and they don't expect the boat to leave on Wednesday.
A flotilla of kayaktivists paddled into the Willamette just below the bridge. They were back on land by 7 a.m. and plan to redeploy this evening.
What were doing is holding space on the water," said Maya Jarrad of the Climate Action Coalition. "Were saying, We were here first. This is our space. Please do not enter that space and create a dangerous situation for us.
It's unknown whether law enforcement agencies in the area plan on pressing charges against the protesters.
Its a complex and difficult situation," Oregon Department of Transportation's Don Hamilton said. "We are looking for the best way to resolve this. That may or may not end up involving criminal charges.
The icebreaker is a vital part of Shell's exploration and spill-response plan off Alaska's northwest coast. It protects Shell's fleet from ice and carries equipment that can stop gushing oil.
Opponents of Arctic drilling worry that the area's remoteness and rough conditions will hamper cleanup efforts should a spill occur. "These climbers hanging on the bridge really are at this point the last thing standing between Shell's plan to drill in the Arctic and the Arctic," Leonard said. She said the protest has been handled extremely safely, and the suspended activists have support team members on the bridge deck. "So far we've had a very cooperative and polite relationship with the police," said Steve Nichols, one of the protesters acting as anchor support for a suspended activist. "We're doing it very safely. They've recognized that, and at the moment they are letting us proceed with our activities."
No arrests have been made, and Portland Police will continue to monitor the protest through the day, Sergeant Pete Simpson said. Traffic is moving across smoothly, however, pedestrians are barred from crossing the bridge. The activists started protesting Sunday when the Fennica first arrived in Portland for repairs.
"Drilling in the Arctic is probably the most crazy thing I've ever heard of in my life. I am a big fan of our president, and I am absolutely appalled he let this go through," Chris Fountain, a kayaktivist, told KATU News on Tuesday.
They are causing reckless endangerment to everyone. Arrest them for sure.
Or maybe they could cut the ropes.
Why haul them away?
Just cut the ropes they are hanging from.
They are trying to be human shields.
Everyone remember Rachel Corrie played cat and mouse games with a bulldozer, trying to be a human shield??
Run ‘em over.
Or cutting them loose...
Run ‘em over. Act of piracy, resist.
Did she walk or bicycle?
Surely she didn't use any means that burned fossil fuels!
Or cut them down. Arrest the “support crew” on the bridge because they are keeping others from using the bridge.
As for the ship, I suggest ramming speed.
Target practice for our military. OH, I forgot they don’t have ammunition!
Oh, well.
Creating a hazard to navigation and criminal trespass.
Arrest them.
ONE of my tasks was to use a long pole to push up power lines when a larger than average piece of machinery is driven through a residential neighborhood.
I'd be on the boats, pushing the assholes up, walking to the stern and dropping their asses as hard as I could after passing through
They never REALLY endanger themselves ...
Uh, doesn’t anyone in Portland have a friggin’ knife?
What’s really infuriating is the local media, who are interviewing the protesters, treating them with kid gloves.
Pull them down into the ship and take them thence to the Arctic where they can continue their efforts on a suitable ice floe.
Let them hang there for as long as it takes. Then the cops prevent anyone else from replacing them on the ropes. Seal the area and let them come up with their tails between their legs.
Workers had to be bussed in, and the protestors (Mothers for Peace) would lay down on the road so the busses couldn't pass. At one point, they had to be flown in on a chopper.
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