MEDIA STATEMENT
NSW and Victoria collude to limit forest protests
Conservationists have accused the NSW and Victorian
Governments of colluding to limit forest protests in south
east NSW and East Gippsland.
"The two states have timed highly controversial logging
operations to start at exactly the same time," according to
the convener of the forest activist group, Chipstop, Ms
Harriett Swift.
"We learned on Friday that the long awaited logging of
Bermagui State Forest will start on Monday within hours of
hearing that bulldozers were moving onto Brown Mountain in
East Gippsland.
The Bermagui logging has been the subject of pro-active
preparations by the NSW Police who have threatened a zero
tolerance approach to protesters.
Brown Mountain is part of the Snowy catchment and much
prized by conservationists for its 'valley of giants'.
"Forestry agencies clearly intend that the simultaneous
logging operations will ensure that skilled activists from
one state may not be available to assist colleagues in the
other," Ms Swift said.
"It may be no coincidence that these logging operations come
hard on the heels of widely reported attacks on
conservationists attempting to save Tasmanian forests last
week. NSW and Victorian forestry agencies may also expect
these attacks to have drawn some activists away from this
region," she said.
Ms Swift said that it is a pity that NSW and Victoria can"t
manage this level of co-operation on useful activities such
as saving the Murray River.
26 October 2008