[R-G] Protesters disrupt Stelmach's fundraising dinner
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Thu Apr 24 23:40:39 MDT 2008
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080424/Greenpeace_Stelmach_080424/20080424?hub=Canada
Protesters disrupt Stelmach's fundraising dinner
Updated Thu. Apr. 24 2008 11:37 PM ET
The Canadian Press
EDMONTON -- As protests go, the timing couldn't have been better.
Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach was just about to deliver an anti-
Greenpeace message to a Tory fundraising dinner Thursday, when two
Greenpeace activists dropped from the ceiling with a large anti-
Stelmach banner.
"Stelmach, the best premier oil money can buy,'' read the large banner
with a prominent Greenpeace logo. "Stop the tarsands!''
The punchline of the premier's speech was how he was planning trips to
southern California and central Europe later this year to dispel the
Greenpeace message that rapid oilsands development is creating an
environmental disaster.
"We cannot sit back and let others damage our reputation and give the
world a false picture of Alberta,'' Stelmach told the annual premier's
dinner. "It's my responsibility as premier to protect Alberta's
reputation.''
Alberta politicians are worried about other countries refusing to buy
oil and gasoline refined from the tar-like bitumen that's scraped from
huge pits in northern Alberta's oilsands region.
So the province is preparing to spend $5 million developing a public
relations campaign to show that the oilsands are becoming an
environmental success story.
The government is calling it a branding process and millions more will
be spent on advertising around the world.
But Greenpeace punched the air out of the PR campaign as reporters and
TV cameras converged on the protesters, who were arrested, charged
with trespassing and released.
"The public has repeatedly told this government that they want to
brakes put on oilsands development,'' said Greenpeace spokesman Mike
Hudema, who was in the crowd wearing a suit.
"We're here to send the government a very clear message that it's time
they started listening to Albertans.''
Hudema was quickly spotted by security after the protest banner was
unravelled at the back of the hall by a man and woman who dropped from
a catwalk on ropes.
Hudema, 31, Steven Anderson, 27, of Grande Prairie, Alta., and Denise
Ogonoski, 26, each received a $287 ticket for trespassing.
The three were escorted from the building, but not before Hudema spoke
with reporters.
The premier later dismissed the protest as a stunt and insisted that
he didn't even notice the banner as he was speaking.
But Stelmach says he's not surprised that the protesters interrupted
his speech, especially after banner-waving Greenpeace activists dogged
him throughout the recent Alberta election campaign.
"You've got to be prepared for that kind of behaviour,'' he later told
reporters. "And that's why in my speech, I talked about getting the
message to other jurisdictions around the world.''
"We're certainly not going to leave it to Greenpeace or the Sierra
Club, because at the end of the day they're not accountable to
anybody.''
Stelmach will travel to San Diego in June and central Europe,
including Germany, in the fall to talk about how the province is
reducing the huge level of emissions from rapidly expanding oilsands
projects.
During a speech in Washington a few months ago, the premier said it's
a myth that oilsands projects had been developed with a heavy toll on
the environment.
More information about the Rad-Green
mailing list