Thursday, May 24, 2007
ATREE Research Seminar 2007 is on 30-31st May 2007
Session 1: Policies and Institutions - 30. 5. 07 (Wednesday)
Moderator : Ganesh
Rapporteurs : Vivek and Chetan
9.40-9.45 am - Welcome and introduction - Ravi Chellam
9.45-10.00 am - Conservation governance and policy at ATREE - Seema P
10.00-10.30 am - National Capacity Self Assessment in Biodiversity - Ravi Chellam
10.30-11.00 am - Biodiversity Act 2002 - Priyadarsanan
11.00-11.15 am - Break
11.15-11.45 am - Defining Forests - Arpana B
11.45-12.15 am - Coastal Regulations - Aarthi Sridhar
12.15-12.45 am - Conservation and livelihoods in protected and other forests - Siddharth Krishnan
12.45-1.15 am - Socio ecological and institutional issues in forested landscapes - Nitin Rai
1.15–2.00 - Break
Moderator : Ankila Hiremath
Rapporteurs : Bharat Sundaram and Aravind
2.00-2.30 pm : Adaptive management for conservation and sustainable use - Sushmita Mandal
2.30-3.00 pm : BCRLIP – summary of social and institutional assessment across landscapes Nitin Rai
3.00-3.30 pm : Citizenry in green space management - Savitha Swamy
3.30-4.00 pm : Land tenure and coffee plantations - Prakruthi P
4.00-4.15 pm : Break
4.15-4. 45 pm : Ecotourism: institutions, indicators and incentives - Sheetal Patil
4.45–5.00 pm : Strengths and gaps in policy related work - Gopal Kadekodi & Sharad Lele
5.00-5.15 pm : Open discussion
Session 2: Natural Resource Management and Livelihoods - 31. 5.2007(Thursday)
Moderator: Jagdish Krishnaswamy
Rapporteurs: Kiran MC and Nikhil Lele
9.45-10.00 am : Designing forest based livelihood programs - Bhaskar Sinha
10.00-0.30 am : Community based conservation in Darjeeling Himalaya - Nishat Ali
10.30-11.00 am : Insights for conservation from the protected areas of Darjeeling - Sunita Pradhan
11.00-11.15 am : Break11.15-11.45 am : Sand dune ecosystems in tsunami-affected mainland India - Kartik Shankar
11.45-12.15 pm : Impacts of the Sethusamudram Ship Canal Project - Sudarshan Rodriguez
12.15-12.45 pm : Strengthening Communities and Institutions for Sustainable Management of Vembanad Backwaters - Deepak Dayanandan and Jojo TD
12.45-1.15 pm : Building people friendly buffer around parks and sanctuaries - T Ganesh 1.15–
2.00 : Break
Moderator: Soubadra Devy Rapporteurs: Savitha and Aditya
2.00-2.30 pm : Integration of fire in the toolbox of forest managers - Ankila Hiremath
2.30-3.00 pm : Lantana camara: an invasive or a livelihood source - Ramesh Kannan
3.00-3.30 pm : Trends in landuse drivers in Karnataka - Sham Kashyap
3.30-4.00 pm : Drivers of reforestation - Harini Nagendra
4.00-4.15 pm : Break
4.15-4.45 pm : Strengths and gaps in NRM and livelihood related work - Gopal Kadekodi and Sharad Lele
4.45-5.15 pm : Open discussion
source : email communication from Dr Seema Purushottam, Associate Director, ATREE.
Controversy: The Bikram Yoga Patent Soup
The regular practice of yoga by people in good health can work as a powerful, nearly cost free and simple way to stay fit and healthy for life.
Bikram Choudhary's efforts to patent yoga is shocking!
Equally alarming, till date, the US Patent and Trademark office has issued 150 yoga-related copyrights, 134 trademarks on yoga accessories and 2,315 yoga trademarks.
Do take a look at this!
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/US_patent_on_yoga_Indian_gurus_fume
/articleshow/2058285.cms
Here's another question
What is the best policy for the Indian government to follow to ensure that traditional systems of knowledge and healing like yoga stay protected as a people's low cost knowledge and healing system?
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
An interesting link
http://my.execpc.com/~helberg/statistics.html#books
http://davidmlane.com/hyperstat/
ICIMOD Books to be on-line by June 5th
We are pleased to inform you about the soft-opening of ICIMOD Books On-line. By soft opening, we mean that the site can now be accessed by outside users, but that we are not yet making any official announcement.
The site will be officially 'launched' on World Environment Day (June 5), we will use the time until then to identify and iron out any problems, if any. The resource is available at http://www.books.icimod.org , which is hosted along with the ICIMOD website in the USA, or can be accessed via the ICIMOD website.
Users accessing this site from ICIMOD will be automatically directed to an internal host, which is a copy of the above site but makes the resources accessible more quickly. ICIMOD Books On-line is a repository of downloadable electronic versions of ICIMOD technical /scientific publications in pdf files. It contains full-text and chapter-wise download options for all technical /scientific publications issued after year 2000 plus a few selected earlier publications, especially popular out-of-print manuals.
The title and table of contents will be posted for all other earlier publications, with an option to request the pdf file or photocopy (scan on demand). All books can also be ordered in hard copy.
The catalogue is searchable using full-text contents, title, year of publication, keywords, language, author and broad subjects. There are 140 ICIMOD publications (with 1300 pdfs) already added to the database, 103 documents of which are in complete full-text form and an additional 37 have the title page and contents page.
The e-library working team IKM-IMCO
Source: email correspondence from Tek Jung Mahat at tmahat@icimod.org to ATREE
Invitation to e-Conference on Climate Change and the Himalayan Glaciers
EAN is a member driven professional organisation of Environment Science, Environment Management and Environmental Engineering university graduates and professionals having long experience in the field of environment and development with special focus in Nepal.
Established in 2003, EAN aims to strengthen cooperation among the concerned professionals and build a network of like minded people and organisations in Nepal and abroad to ensure environmental sustainability in Nepal
We are pleased to inform you that the Environmentalists' Association of Nepal (EAN) in association with the Ministry of Environment, Science and Technology (MoEST), Government of Nepal, is organising an e-conference on "Climate Change and the Himalayan Glaciers" form 7th May 2007 to 28th May 2007, to celebrate the World Environment Day in Nepal and the Himalaya. The event is supported by many international, regional, national organisations based in Nepal and abroad.
The objective of this e-conference is to facilitate a series of dialogues on the e-conference theme between different stakeholders. Synthesis of the first event in this series will be released on 5 June 2007, to mark the World Environment Day 2007. The e-conference is being organised to realise a need to promote knowledge sharing mechanism on the e-conference theme.
It's our great pleasure to invite you all to the e-conference and we hope your participation will be very useful in exploring and documenting various issues related to climate change and its impacts in particular to the youngest and most fragile mountain range of the world and also to promote information sharing mechanism in the region.
More information is available online at http://www.freewebs.com/climatehimalaya/index.htm .
You may also subscribe to the e-conference by sending your preferred email ID, full name and affiliation, if applicable.
Please don't hesitate to contact us if you need more information or any clarification regarding the e-conference. You are also requested to forward the invitation to any individual or institutions, who you think would be interested to join and contribute.
We look forward to seeing your active participation in the e-conference.
Once again, welcome one and all, and thank you for joining us: We look forward to getting to know you!
With best regards,
Dr. Madan Koirala and Mr. Tek Jung Mahat
On behalf of the E-conference team
URL: http://www.freewebs.com/climatehimalaya/index.htm
Email: climatehimalaya@gmail.com
C/o Environmentalists' Association of Nepal
Kathmandu, Nepal
E-mail: eannepal@gmail.com
Web: http://www.ean.org.np/
Tel: 977 1 4410565, 4421071
Fax: 977 1 4411730--
"The day we see the truth and cease to speak is the day we begin to die." - Martin Luther King
Source: email correspondence to Mr Samuel Thomas, ATREE's Communications Officer from Tek Jung Mahat at tmahat@icimod.
1500 tribals in Gateha, MP attacked and forced to leave the land
The tribal communities were not issued any notices under Sections 26, 32 and 80 A of the Indian Forest Act.
You can read the full article here at http://www.indiatogether.org/2007/may/soc-ghateha.htm
Two Appeals
Dear Readers,
Many of you might be aware of a Hydro-Electric Project that is scheduled to come up in the Athirappilly region. The Athirappilly - Vazhachal area in the southern Western Ghats of Kerala hosts a unique ecosystem of evergreen, riverine forests intermingled with Myristica swamps.
This ecosystem supports a large number of endemic, rare, threatened and endangered species of plants and animals. As science is still discovering many new species from the area, a hydro-electric project threatens to wipe out these forests.
The Chalakudy Puzha Samrakshana Samithi (CPSS) has been at the forefront of much of the protests and activities against the dam with limited resources. The Sálim Ali Foundation has recently joined hands with them to help the cause.
We have recently made a website www.salimalifoundation.org, where we have attempted to collate information on the dam, the loss foreseen, the procedural flaws in the proposal, and activities scheduled with the help of CPSS.
We are planning a meeting of researchers who have worked in this region to collate all information available to make a strong case against the dam.
While many individuals and groups in the affected region have been campaigning against this dam, including organizing a 90 day satyagraha by the local people, the problem seems to be little known to people outside this region.
We are hence planning a series of meetings to increase public awareness regarding the same.
We are also hoping to raise some funds for such activities.
Support the Salim Ali Foundation
Wear a Salim Ali Foundation T shirt today!
The wildlife of Athirappilly - Vazhachal region will be grateful to you!
We are currently selling two t-shirts. The money you spend on buying a T shirt will go to save the wildlife of the Athirappilly - Vazhachal region.
The t-shirts showcase some wonderful art work done by leading wildlife artist Maya Ramaswamy. The diversity of birds and animals depicted in the art panels reflects their varied roles in the landscape, and typifies the complex and fragile ecosystem that is under threat by this dam today.
The 'Spectacular Birds' T-shirt
This is a mosaic of special birds- Malabar Pied Hornbill, Ceylon Frogmouth, Stork-billed Kingfisher, Black Baza, Crimson-backed Sunbird and Malabar Trogon that are found in the forests surrounding the proposed dam site.
The 'Cryptic Creatures' T-shirt
This is a lovely mosaic of some beautiful animals that live in this habitat.
The Malabar civet, Travancore flying squirrel, Nilgiri marten, slender loris, and the endangered cane turtle were once found in large numbers in the Athirappilly - Vazhachal area.
Today, their habitats are threatened and many of these animals are now on the list of critically endangered animals.
Please do visit our site today at www.salimalifoundation.org/to be done.html
There's loads of work to be done.
We would be very grateful to you for your support.
Sincerely
Dr V.S. Vijayan
Chairman,
Salim Ali Foundation
source: email communication from Bharath Sundaram, bharath@atree.org
Help Save Millions of Animals!
Millions of Animals to be Used to for Chemical Testing in Europe
A new European Chemical Testing Policy called REACH has now been finalised by the European Union.Under these proposals chemicals of every imaginable kind -from those used in industrial processes to the ingredients of consumer products - will be tested on millions of animals from mice to fish to dogs, causing untold suffering. Still worse, because of this reliance on outdated animal techniques, reliable and relevant information will not beprovided and our safety will not be assured.
If you believe that REACH should make more use of Alternative Testing to test 100,000 Chemicals that have been in general use since 1985 then please take action now. If you are a European citizen please contact your local papers and own MP asking them to promote the development of humane non-animal test methods under the REACH legislation,which is the best hope we have for sparing animals the misery of a testing laboratory.
A sample letter can be found at the BUAV (British Union forthe Abolition of Vivisection) website http://www.buav.org%20(select/ Campaigns and Chemical Testing and then get active by writing to the local press).
For all Non-European members, you can still help.
Please tell all your colleagues and friends in the UK and Europe about REACH. Write to your own local papers to try and inform others about what is going on in Europe.
More information on REACH can be obtained from
http://www.europarl.europa.eu. (search on REACH)http://www.euractiv.com/en/environment/chemicals-policy-review-reach/article-117452
Everyone can help and you can make a difference.
Thank You
Tony Gallett
Monday, May 21, 2007
EIC EcoWatch Star : Willie Corduff
The Rossport Community led by Willie Corduff and his four friends are fighting Shell and the Irish Govt to protect the environment and the health of the community in Rossport, Mayo County in Ireland.
In 1996, the Corrib gas fields were discovered on the northwest coast of Ireland in Mayo County. A partnership between Shell Oil, Irish government owned Statoil Exploration and Marathon International Petroleum was formed to develop the gas field and meet upto 60% of Ireland’s demand for natural gas.
The problem was that Shell decided on an action plan that would involve building a high pressure gas pipeline that would go criss-crossing the fields and houses of the farmers in Rossport. In fact, in some places, the pipeline would be just 200 metres from the houses. In other places, the pipeline would be running parallel to the road, just 90 metres away.
The high pressure gas pipeline posed a serious risk to the lives of the people living in the surrounding areas. It could burst anytime. The pressure inside the pipeline was going to be four times more than similar pipelines that Shell had installed in Ireland and other parts of the world. Worse, the pipeline was going to be built on slippery, boggy land that was vulnerable to landslides. Shell was planning to stabilize the marshy bog using methods that had not been tried out before. Plus, emissions from the refinery would pollute the Carrowmore Lake which was a major of drinking water for the Rossport community.
Willie Corduff was awarded the Goldman prize this year for his efforts to protect Rossport and the community.

Beautiful, beautiful, I always say it was a simple easy going place, lovely place to live in, everything clean, clean water, clean air, a place where everyone would want their kids to be brought up. The neighbours were close to each other, eve

Look at this estuary! Isn't it lovely? The proposed pipeline was to cut across this place.
It’d be a shame to destroy it. It’s about one of the only places left that isn’t destroyed. It’s got a low population density. Everybody knew each other and every one was related if not through birth through marriage. Rossport was that, that type of a place.
When Shell announced that they were setting up a high pressure gas pipeline that would run right through your farmland, what was your first reaction?
Oh! Well I mean, just stunned. Really! How could they think about doing something like that in a small little community like ours. That too, a high pressure gas pipeline running beside the houses! Well, I thought this just cannot happen.
When did you first hear the pipelines would be going through your land?
In 2000.
When did they plan to actually put the pipeline through?
Well, the whole thing was supposed to be up and running by 2003. So, I mean it dawned on me straight away that it had to be a disaster like that, you couldn’t you know, install something so high pressured. Even though they didn’t tell the people at the time that it was such a high pressure, they just said, “a gas pipe”, so they didn’t really tell the pressure that was going to be in it.
So, that’s really how the people got conned, you know the people that did except they figured that, well maybe it was the same as what was in Dublin or Cork. They went as far as telling them that, some of them took it to be nearly the same as a water pipe. So I mean that’s the kind of awareness that was there about it.
Well, I suppose looking back on it I suppose I handled it good, when I didn’t kill some of them. I mean when someone comes onto your land and doesn’t even ask you like, just goes in, tells you they are going in, I mean you don’t do something like that to people, we’re living in a different world maybe a hundred years ago, that you might think about doing somethin

But then again I’d say they nearly had more of a chance now than then because the old people really adored the land and you didn’t abuse their land because it was all they had got to live off, so they really took good care of it and they wouldn’t like to see anybody destroying it.
The first officials came to show me where they where going digging trial holes. So he didn’t ask, he almost figured it was his land and not mine. That’s what really made me aware, if I wanted to go on somebody’s land or get into somebody’s land, the first thing I’d do is ask them, " Could I do it? ". I mean he didn’t even ask, he just told me he was going to do it.
Why was Shell so stubbornly refusing to go in for a safer and environment friendly offshore system? It would have been so much cheaper for the company in the long run and saved them a lot of adverse publicity?
Well, that we’re still wondering about, that I still wonder about, like why when they saw the opposition at the beginning and I told them at the beginning myself, that they would never do it the way they were planning on doing it. Whatever I’d have to do, I told them at the beginning, I would do to stop them.
I suppose they figured a bit of money was going to solve the problem. It did with some but they couldn’t figure out how small people wouldn’t take the money in a community that was starved for money.
Some people thought this would do no harm and they’d get a few quid out of it, and Shell probably thought that thi

And I have told them so often that they’d never do it the way they are planning on doing it. You’d wonder why they didn’t go to sea and when they had the expertise of doing it at sea, which they have, why they didn’t do it that way, it’d be up and running now.
What about the possibility of future expansion?
Well it’s looking that way, there has to be something, something we don’t know that Shell knew. They have 600 acres up there. You don’t go getting 600 acres if you only need 100, so. I’d say there will be refinery after refinery up there, or they thought there would, there will be nothing there hopefully, because they are not going to get away with doing it like that…
Despite facing severe harassment, your strategy all the time has been peaceful, non violent protests? Has Mahatma Gandhi been a big influence in your life?
Well that’s what we wanted, to have it peaceful. We just tried to get the message across peacefully to Shell. I don’t know, it’s not really working. We are 7 years peaceful and we’re still trying to get the message across. They are still not listening so I don’t know if it’s as if they are waiting for a war to erupt here, you know I think it is.
We have been peaceful for 7 years now, which is a long time. We are getting abused by Shell and by Guards (the state police are called the Guardai) and by everyone. We still haven’t retaliated, as you could say. We’re still peaceful but how long that peace is going to last is just as you know, it's to be told.
You cannot be peaceful forever if there is somebody walking over you, trampling over you. You have to draw the line somewhere, so I think that day is coming close, the peaceful end to it is coming close to an end as far as I’d be concerned.
We’ve kept it peaceful for a long, long time which is more reason why Shell should listen to us now. They are not going to get away with it the way they are going on, it’d be time they listened to us.
Note from Aron: About the Gandhian influence : One of the Rossport 5 men has a son-in-law who often quotes Gandhi. The Rossport Solidarity Camp is based along non-violent direct action principles.
The Rossport Five's struggle and the Shell to Sea Campaign will now be cited as a useful case study for students of environmental studies? What advice do you have for young people?
The advice I have for young people is let them not be walked on. Just don’t give up. You don’t give up when you are put in a corner. The most time when you think you have to give up don’t give up. Because it has come to that stage in our lives that we cannot give up, when our government nor anybody are not protecting us so at the end of the day you have nobody to protect you, only yourself.
So the advice I give the young people is don’t be put aside by these big boys. I tell young people to go ahead and just make their own statement and do what they think themselves is right, in their own mind. If they think it’s right and they are doing what’s right, let them keep doing it.
Don’t just be told that you are stopping progress or you are this, that or the other. Because these big boys will all tell you that to get the better of you. That’s the advice I’d have for students or anybody that's fighting anything like this. Keep it peaceful as long as they can but don't let them be walked over.
You and your four friends were forced to spend 94 days in prison? Would you like to share your experience? At that time, did you feel that it would be possible to fight Shell and the Irish Govt at all?
Well there were days that we thought No! There were days we figured Yeah! You know, I mean it was a terrible experience for us, for people that were never before in a court house. I know I wasn’t and I don’t think the other four were either.
I mean to be brought to court and to be sent to jail for protecting your home and your family, it’ll never leave your mind. So, that’s why I say, you can never be walked on because the government didn’t protect us. We thought they would, we went as far and we thought the government was going to step in and protect us but it’s how they stepped out and let us be put to prison.
Even we have heard since, that Dempsey (a government minister) said the biggest mistake that he had made was not to have separated them and put them into separate prisons. Well he was supposed to have said that, that they would have broke us faster but No! That wouldn’t have broke us. It wouldn’t have broke me, anyway, because if I was to be in there still I’d have been in there.
They tried to scare us, they tried to do everything to us, and it didn’t work. Prison is a comical place. Lots of things come to your mind in there, will you give up or what will you do? But at the same time when you have people backing you on the outside it makes a huge difference and that’s where we really got the backing of the people, when we were put to prison. That’s when the people came out behind us, which was very, very good for us to have so much support. That's because we got an indefinite sentence so without the people's support we could have been still in there. We could be in there for
So you just don’t give up after a few days in there. It's not a nice place to be but we had the support of the prisoners so it was a different thing to being in there for doing something else, it might not be as nice, but when all the prisoners were supporting us it made it that much easier for us to wait in there.
If someone said to me 10 years ago you’ll go to jail I’d have been laughing at them
Aron's note: The Rossport 5 could have pledged not to interfere or prevent Shell from placing the pipe through their land and they would have been released from jail but they refused.
During your struggle did you get any help from all the world famous environment protection organizations and eminent people?

Community support for the Rossport 5

We have big, big support all over the world not just in Mayo and other counties. We had great support from other counties when we were in jail, we had brilliant support which made it easier for us, I mean when you see people from Cork and Clare and Limerick and you name it…writing in.
The people of Ireland supported you strongly. Do you feel there is space for environmental campaigners in mainstream Irish politics?
Well there probably is, that would be up to the green party. They are supporting us at the moment, we have received a recognition from them in the last few days, that they are supporting us, which they should be.
They were quite quiet in the past with a few notable exceptions, but Trevor Sergeant now (the leader of the Green Party) has come out, he supported us to a certain extent but you'd feel that he wasn't going putting his neck out there for us.
There were days you'd ask what is he at? Is he just wanting to get into government but he has come out now, whatever it’s worth.
If he's using us for himself we don't know but we make use of it anyway so hopefully, if he did get into government that he would come out and help the people, and help the environment and keep it as it is here in Mayo, clean and healthy.
Fighting Shell, at the moment and for the last 7 years. Them are my hobbies.
Do you get time for your wife and children? What do your children do?
Willie Corduff greets his family at the airport, medal in hand.

Well, my children are grown up now and they are all working. The last one has gone to work in the last fortnight, the baby as we call her, she's 17 and she's working in the hotel in Belmullet.
So, they are all working. There's five of them working, in Ireland, in Mayo in fact. So let people not be saying there's no employment in Mayo. There's five of them working and none of them are working for Shell. So, I mean there's loads of employment out there for the youth in Mayo at the moment, with hotels, tourism etc.
So let them not be saying the only employment we have is Shell’s employment. There was a fair amount of employment here even before Shell came. All my children are working so I try to spend any time with them that I can which has been very little in the last 7 years.
There's 7 years of our lives destroyed by
Well winning the Goldman prize, for me, it’s not for me really, as I have said from the beginning. I didn't look for the Goldman prize, I was happened to be picked, so I didn't even know I was picked. It’s for the whole community maybe even for the people that didn't join us, they had some hand or act or part in it.
There's people on the fence which I have discovered since I got the Goldman prize they have come down on our side. I have got cards from people I thought was against me, and we have got phone calls from people that I thought were against us. It has brought out a different view in our minds of the people. I think there's nobody now in this area that wants Shell or wants the gas in the current manner proposed.

I just feel happy about the recognition from all the people that have congratulated me that I thought wouldn't congratulate me. It has brought that out, and that to us is one great thing that I found out, there's nobody turned their back on me. At the moment, they're coming forward and they are congratulating me. That gives us a great hope for the future, so it does.
As for the money, I never went in it for money, I didn't think I was going to get a prize. If I got a plaque it would have done me grand. Nobody can ever say I was there for money because from day one money has never come into it with me.
So, as for how I'm going to spend it, I'm going to spend it in the community, I'm going to try and get more people on our side, if there's anything useful I can do with the money, I'll do it. It'll be a help, it'll help the campaign. Hopefully.
Thank you, Mr Willie Corduff for sparing your valuable time to attend to this interview and sharing your thoughts and your experiences honestly with the Eco-Informatics Centre.
The Eco-Informatics Centre also thanks Shell to Sea Campaigner, Mr Aron Baker for coordinating this interview with Mr Willie Corduff.
Aron Baker is 29 years old and has been involved in the campaign full time since August 2005.
Here's a note from Aron about his involvement with the Shell to Sea campaign and life at the camp.
In June 2005, the Five men were jailed. That’s when the issue became national news and many people became aware of it. Through social and environmental contacts the issue started getting more community support and public participation.

As part of my involvement I live at the Rossport Solidarity Camp which was established to allow activists who wish to help and work on the campaign to have somewhere to stay. It is a temporary camp but has all the basics to be called home, running water, and some electricity.
We have tried to make it, as far as reasonably possible, an example of sustainability and low impact. We have a grey water system for treating our water. All the waste generated is recycled or composted.

We are aware that here in Ireland as part of the Western world that we consume far more than our fair share of the world’s resources so we on camp try to live a more frugal life style.
We are here to support the local communities struggle against Shell but in turn the local community helps to support us through donations including turf, food and materials.
There is a link on the Shell to Sea website, http://www.shelltosea.com/ to the camp website, which has more information about the camp.
The photo I have attached is from the day the picket was broken on 3rd Oct 2006, and shows me being carried away by the Guardai (The Irish Police), as about 150 of us were. At that stage the Guardai were reasonably careful but since then have become increasing heavy handed.
Well to be sure the Guardai have hurt plently of people who have been protesting including Philip. I'm not sure about Wille. I had my thumb bent back by Guardai and it was useless for nearly 2 months. Philip had a thumb wrenched also and it was injured for a period of time. One person has been on crutches for 6 months after he was thrown down a steep bank into a drain and over half a dozen people have needed hospital attention after injuries recieved from the Guardai. People have even been struck by Guardai vehicles.
- The Great Corrib Gas Controversy
- The Proposed Corrib Onshore System - An Independent Analysis