Anti-oilsands protest unfurled on Calgary Tower - Action News
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Calgary

Anti-oilsands protest unfurled on Calgary Tower

Several Greenpeace members are in police custody after three protesters rapelled off the Calgary Tower to hang a banner attacking the influence of the oilsands industry on government.
Greenpeace activists unfurled a banner reading "Separate Oil and State" on the Calgary Tower on Tuesday morning. ((Courtesy Troy Gould))

Several Greenpeaceactivists are in police custody after threeof themrapelled off the Calgary Tower to hang a banner attackingthe relationshipbetween the oilsands industry and government.

The group was able to get outside the tower through a window on the observation deck of the tourist attraction on Tuesday morning, Calgary police said. Once outside, the activistschained the window shut behind them.

They then hung nearly 160 metres from the ground to unfurl the banner which read "Separate Oil and State" on the north side of the tower in the city's downtown, where many oil and gas companies are based.

Members of the group wearing hard hatsalso blocked the base of the tower by putting up construction tape at the entrance.

The environmental group criticized what it called a "cozy relationship" between the oilsands industry and the federal and Alberta governments.

"While oil may run your car, it shouldn't run your government," Greenpeace activist Melina Laboucan-Massimo said in a news release. "Canada is not a petro-state and Big Oil should not be calling the shots and governments should not be ignoring the environmental destruction of the toxic tarsands."

Because ofsafety concerns, police negotiated with the protesters who had set up a complex rigging system instead of trying to physically remove them. The banner wastaken awayafter about 30 minutes.

Calgary police take Greenpeace activists into custody on Tuesday. ((Jennifer Lee/CBC))

Police also cordoned off the area around the tower for more than two hours, opening the street to traffic again just after noon MT.

"This is costing the taxpayers," saidconstruction worker Terry Pillipow. "Iunderstand that they have to make their point but I believe it could be done in another manner, where it should be done, in legislation and stuff like that with the politicians not stopping people from working and holding up traffic."

Mark Gray, who works at energy company Encana, wasnot impressedwith the amount of publicity Greenpeace was getting.

"Why am I upset? Because these guys get away with their stunts and they're never called onto the carpet," he said.

Charges pending

Three people who rappelled down the tower, as well as three others who remained at the topto assist in the protest, were arrested. Twopeople on the ground, alleged to have been accessories to the incident, were also taken into custody.

The banner was removed after being up for about half an hour. ((CBC))

Criminal chargesare pending againstthe activists, who are from Alberta, B.C. and Europe.

In a statement, Greenpeaceallegedthere'sa "cozy relationship that the oil industry enjoys and exploits through lax regulations that allow companies to self-monitor in the tarsands." The group pointed to industry executives who work, or used to work, in the Alberta government.

The group saidittimed the protest to coincide with the eve of a premiers meeting in Winnipeg that begins Wednesday.

Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach said Tuesday that he will use the meeting to reinforce the importance of the province's oilsands.

"The benefits of Albertas oilsands extend well beyond our provincial borders," Stelmach saidin a news release. "I will ensure my colleagues across Canada understand that Alberta's oilsands contribute to Canada's [gross domestic product], create jobs in other provinces and provide a secure source of energy for North America."

With files from the CBC's Brooks Decillia