Climate change protesters hijack coal train in UK

Source Guardian (UK)

Climate change campaigners have hijacked a train carrying coal to Britain's biggest power station, swarming on to the roof of its 20 huge trucks. The 40 protesters stopped the regular delivery service to Drax in Yorkshire disguised as railway workers in yellow warning jackets and waving red flags, having read up on standard railway safety rules. The ambush took place at an iron girder bridge over the river Aire between the villages of Gowdall and Hirst Courteney on June 13. One group then used the bridge girders and climbing equipment to scale the 12ft high trucks. They hoisted a huge banner reading "Leave it in the ground"–referring to the coal destined for the power station's furnaces. The protesters carried food, water and even a portable lavatory with the intention of being able to remain on board for several days. As the driver of the EWS train radioed for advice, a second group of protesters used shovels which they had also brought with them to start emptying the gravel-like power station coal onto the track. Police arrived half-an-hour later and sealed off the area, after calls from motorists stuck at a level crossing which was closed as a safety precaution. "We are ready to stay here for as long as [British Prime Minister] Gordon Brown and the government keep burning polluting fuel in these power stations," said one of the protesters before clipping climbing ropes to the train's wheels and the bridge girders. Although flimsy, the web would risk damage to the train or bridge if any attempt was made to drive off. The raiders initially lay concealed on the edge of track as two earlier trains took supplies into Drax, whose eight vast cooling towers are guarded by coils of barbed wire. The power station was the scene of a spectacular but unsuccessful siege two years ago by Climate Camp, the group behind this action. The rooftop group included one woman protester dressed as a canary–the traditional warning of dangerous pollution down a coal mine. She said: "The government and the country needs a warning," before fixing on an orange cardboard beak to go with her bright yellow feather coat. The protesters were still shoveling off coal late in the afternoon, as a large force of police began planning how to remove them. Police boats have been brought in case anyone falls in the river. The campaigners have emphasized non-violence throughout the action and say they would only resist eviction passively. The campaigners promised more protests later this summer, when another power station will face an attempt to close it down, similar to the Drax Climate Camp in 2006. One of the coal-shovelers on top of a freight wagon said: "Last year was Heathrow, this year it'll be a coal-fired power station because those are the two big things, aviation fuel and burning coal."