By RFI – French police moved to clear a protest camp at the site of a controversial dam project on Friday afternoon following a decision by the regional council to replace the original planned reservoir with a smaller one. Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the authorities would be “extremely firm” with anyone who does not “respect the rule of law”.The 300 gendarmes posted at the site in Sivens in the south of France moved into the camp after the regional council accepted Environment Minister Ségolène Royal’s to scrap the original dam project, adding a call for the immediate evacuation of the protesters.
A breaking image shows the eviction underway.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve ordered the police to act following the vote, according to Le Mondenewspaper. A call for a demonstration on went out on the 2nd calling for people to gather on March 7th, the day following the decision, yet it seems the eviction has already begun. Some demonstrators had already moved out in the morning, on condition that the police protect them from a counter-demonstration by farmers, and negotiations with the rest were reported to be taking place on Friday afternoon.
Royal put forward two solutions – either a reservoir that would be half as big and situated 330 metres upriver or four smaller ones. The regional council did not vote on those proposals but its chairman, Socialist Thierry Carcenac, has declared that the second option too expensive. After the vote he said that further studies would take place to establish whether the new dam would be built “300 metres, 200 metres or 50 metres away from the present site”. Frence’s Green party, EELV, gave a chilly response to the council’s decision, declaring that it does not solve the fundamental problem that caused the protest.
Post a Comment