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#1
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From
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hs2-protesters-dig-secret-100ft-tunnel-under-london-park-spcxnw65j Protesters secretly constructed two tunnels supported by an elaborate “ant nest” of passages without detection near the site of HS2, embarrassing the security operation surrounding Britain’s biggest infrastructure project. Climate campaigners protesting against the construction of the multibillion-pound railway line spent months digging 100ft of passages and chambers 15ft below Euston Square Gardens in north London. They moved dirt from the two main tunnels, codenamed Crystal and Kelvin, to the surface with buckets and hid it in the walls of their makeshift wooden fort. The entrance is concealed from public view by the planks and tarpaulin that form the main structure of the camp. HS2 officials learnt about the tunnels early this morning after securing temporary legal possession of the site from the landowners and sending in about 100 bailiffs to evict dozens of activists living in treetops, tunnels and the main compound. A large number of activists were removed around 4.30am, prompting about eight people to retreat underground with food, sleeping mats, battery packs and juggling balls. The group sealed the entrance and vowed to continue digging in an attempt to delay development as much as possible. The group was led by the veteran activist Swampy, real name Daniel Hooper, who was described by campaigners as a “master digger”. Others fled to four tree houses, which they move between using zip lines. However, most had been removed by bailiffs by about 2pm. Some who were caught on the ground were dragged off the site. Camden council, the former landowner, initially suggested it was not responsible for failing to spot the tunnels, saying that ownership of the site had been taken over by Network Rail. However, after Network Rail said it was not responsible for managing the site, the council admitted it had not noticed the digging during assessments of the camp. A Camden Council spokesman said: “We were not aware these tunnels were being built. Clearly the protesters have a responsibility themselves not to act in ways which could endanger their lives.” An HS2 spokeswoman said: “To ensure HS2 is able to deliver its major benefits to the UK on time, certain works must take place at designated times. HS2 has taken legal temporary possession of Euston Square Gardens East in order to progress with works necessary for the construction of the new Euston station. “These protests are a danger to the safety of the protestors, our staff and the general public, and put unnecessary strain on the emergency services during a pandemic. The protesters are currently trespassing on land that is legally possessed by HS2.” A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said: “We have only been involved today in order to prevent breach of peace. Any questions regarding the tunnels would need to be directed to the landowner and security firm. “Six arrests have been made at the site of a protest in Euston Square Gardens. One man was arrested for breach of the peace and a short time later was de-arrested and released. “A woman was arrested under the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act. One man was arrested under the Public Order Act, while a further three men were arrested under the Health Protection (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020. A police presence remains at the site to prevent further potential breaches of the peace and to uphold Covid legislation.” HS2 Rebellion, an alliance of activists who made the camp, spent months burrowing “in secret” under the park. “It’s not just one straight shaft down there, it’s like an ant nest with lots of different routes,” one activist who dug 20ft of the tunnel said. “The aim is to make it very complicated to delay the development as much as possible. They are still digging now.” The activists set up a Tree Protection Camp in the park in September after warning that Euston Square Gardens would be replaced with a temporary taxi rank before being sold off to developers. “It will take them a week to get people down and out of the tunnels. The guys in the trees are supplied with ‘squirrel food’ – canned food and nuts – so they can stay up there for ages.” The alliance of climate campaigners said that the tunnellers had worked “around the clock” to create the tunnel network, which is codenamed Calvin, and were prepared to occupy it “for as long as it takes to stop HS2”. A spokesman said: “They believe they can hold out in the tunnel for several weeks and hope in this time that a court will rule against HS2 for breaking the law by attempting an eviction without a court order and during the national coronavirus lockdown.” … continues |
#2
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Recliner wrote:
From https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hs2-protesters-dig-secret-100ft-tunnel-under-london-park-spcxnw65j Protesters secretly constructed two tunnels supported by an elaborate “ant nest” of passages without detection near the site of HS2, embarrassing the security operation surrounding Britain’s biggest infrastructure project. Climate campaigners protesting against the construction of the multibillion-pound railway line spent months digging 100ft of passages and chambers 15ft below Euston Square Gardens in north London. They moved dirt from the two main tunnels, codenamed Crystal and Kelvin, to the surface with buckets and hid it in the walls of their makeshift wooden fort. The entrance is concealed from public view by the planks and tarpaulin that form the main structure of the camp. HS2 officials learnt about the tunnels early this morning after securing temporary legal possession of the site from the landowners and sending in about 100 bailiffs to evict dozens of activists living in treetops, tunnels and the main compound. A large number of activists were removed around 4.30am, prompting about eight people to retreat underground with food, sleeping mats, battery packs and juggling balls. The group sealed the entrance and vowed to continue digging in an attempt to delay development as much as possible. The group was led by the veteran activist Swampy, real name Daniel Hooper, who was described by campaigners as a “master digger”. Others fled to four tree houses, which they move between using zip lines. However, most had been removed by bailiffs by about 2pm. Some who were caught on the ground were dragged off the site. Camden council, the former landowner, initially suggested it was not responsible for failing to spot the tunnels, saying that ownership of the site had been taken over by Network Rail. However, after Network Rail said it was not responsible for managing the site, the council admitted it had not noticed the digging during assessments of the camp. A Camden Council spokesman said: “We were not aware these tunnels were being built. Clearly the protesters have a responsibility themselves not to act in ways which could endanger their lives.” An HS2 spokeswoman said: “To ensure HS2 is able to deliver its major benefits to the UK on time, certain works must take place at designated times. HS2 has taken legal temporary possession of Euston Square Gardens East in order to progress with works necessary for the construction of the new Euston station. “These protests are a danger to the safety of the protestors, our staff and the general public, and put unnecessary strain on the emergency services during a pandemic. The protesters are currently trespassing on land that is legally possessed by HS2.” A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said: “We have only been involved today in order to prevent breach of peace. Any questions regarding the tunnels would need to be directed to the landowner and security firm. “Six arrests have been made at the site of a protest in Euston Square Gardens. One man was arrested for breach of the peace and a short time later was de-arrested and released. “A woman was arrested under the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act. One man was arrested under the Public Order Act, while a further three men were arrested under the Health Protection (Coronavirus) Regulations 2020. A police presence remains at the site to prevent further potential breaches of the peace and to uphold Covid legislation.” HS2 Rebellion, an alliance of activists who made the camp, spent months burrowing “in secret” under the park. “It’s not just one straight shaft down there, it’s like an ant nest with lots of different routes,” one activist who dug 20ft of the tunnel said. “The aim is to make it very complicated to delay the development as much as possible. They are still digging now.” The activists set up a Tree Protection Camp in the park in September after warning that Euston Square Gardens would be replaced with a temporary taxi rank before being sold off to developers. “It will take them a week to get people down and out of the tunnels. The guys in the trees are supplied with ‘squirrel food’ – canned food and nuts – so they can stay up there for ages.” The alliance of climate campaigners said that the tunnellers had worked “around the clock” to create the tunnel network, which is codenamed Calvin, and were prepared to occupy it “for as long as it takes to stop HS2”. A spokesman said: “They believe they can hold out in the tunnel for several weeks and hope in this time that a court will rule against HS2 for breaking the law by attempting an eviction without a court order and during the national coronavirus lockdown.” … continues One of these may be useful. http://rodenator.eu GH |
#3
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On Wed, 27 Jan 2021 22:36:54 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote: From https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/h...ft-tunnel-unde r-london-park-spcxnw65j Protesters secretly constructed two tunnels supported by an elaborate “ant nest” of passages without detection near the site of HS2, embarrassing the security operation surrounding Britain’s biggest infrastructure project. Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. |
#5
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On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 11:11:45 +0000
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:49:46 on Thu, 28 Jan 2021, remarked: Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think you'll find that these people mistakenly believe that their attempts to sabotage the OOC-Euston part of HS2 will result in the entire project being cancelled. They're not stupid and know that won't happen so I don't understand what they're doing. If you're protesting in some woodland or about some trees there's a reasonable chance you might have some effect and the route is diverted slightly, its happened in the past with various road projects. But nothing is going to stop construction at Euston so ... wtf? |
#6
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wrote:
On Wed, 27 Jan 2021 22:36:54 -0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: From https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/h...ft-tunnel-unde r-london-park-spcxnw65j Protesters secretly constructed two tunnels supported by an elaborate “ant nest” of passages without detection near the site of HS2, embarrassing the security operation surrounding Britain’s biggest infrastructure project. Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think they just did it to attract attention. They won't have any effect on HS2 construction, but they figured that they'd attract more journalists and spectators to a site in central London than to a treehouse deep in the countryside. |
#7
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On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 11:35:04 -0000 (UTC)
Recliner wrote: wrote: On Wed, 27 Jan 2021 22:36:54 -0000 (UTC) Recliner wrote: From https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/h...ft-tunnel-unde r-london-park-spcxnw65j Protesters secretly constructed two tunnels supported by an elaborate “ant nest” of passages without detection near the site of HS2, embarrassing the security operation surrounding Britain’s biggest infrastructure project. Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think they just did it to attract attention. They won't have any effect on HS2 construction, but they figured that they'd attract more journalists and spectators to a site in central London than to a treehouse deep in the countryside. Yes, you're probably right. |
#8
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On 28/01/2021 11:26, wrote:
On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 11:11:45 +0000 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:49:46 on Thu, 28 Jan 2021, remarked: Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think you'll find that these people mistakenly believe that their attempts to sabotage the OOC-Euston part of HS2 will result in the entire project being cancelled. They're not stupid and know that won't happen so I don't understand what they're doing. If you're protesting in some woodland or about some trees there's a reasonable chance you might have some effect and the route is diverted slightly, its happened in the past with various road projects. But nothing is going to stop construction at Euston so ... wtf? It's all about self-publicity. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#9
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Graeme Wall wrote:
On 28/01/2021 11:26, wrote: On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 11:11:45 +0000 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:49:46 on Thu, 28 Jan 2021, remarked: Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think you'll find that these people mistakenly believe that their attempts to sabotage the OOC-Euston part of HS2 will result in the entire project being cancelled. They're not stupid and know that won't happen so I don't understand what they're doing. If you're protesting in some woodland or about some trees there's a reasonable chance you might have some effect and the route is diverted slightly, its happened in the past with various road projects. But nothing is going to stop construction at Euston so ... wtf? It's all about self-publicity. They interviewed a protester on the radio and he made some fairly valid points about woodland and reducing travel requirements but blew it all by saying we already had a railway between London and Birmingham so we didn’t need another one. Sam -- The entity formerly known as Spit the dummy to reply |
#10
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On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 17:17:11 +0000
Graeme Wall wrote: On 28/01/2021 11:26, wrote: On Thu, 28 Jan 2021 11:11:45 +0000 Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 10:49:46 on Thu, 28 Jan 2021, remarked: Of all the places to prevent HS2 construction happening, Euston would be right at the bottom of my list. Ancient woodland I can understand but Euston hasn't been a pleasent cityscape since the 1970s. I think you'll find that these people mistakenly believe that their attempts to sabotage the OOC-Euston part of HS2 will result in the entire project being cancelled. They're not stupid and know that won't happen so I don't understand what they're doing. If you're protesting in some woodland or about some trees there's a reasonable chance you might have some effect and the route is diverted slightly, its happened in the past with various road projects. But nothing is going to stop construction at Euston so ... wtf? It's all about self-publicity. Possibly, but if that was the case why was it all hush hush until they were rumbled? Unless they planned a big Ta-da! reveal at some point. To me it seems they've expended all that effort digging tunnels for no gain whatsoever - they'd have got far more publicity just blocking euston road holding some placards for a morning. |
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