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<h2><b>Vía Verde opponents arrested in White House
protest</b></h2><font size=2>Sept 4, 2011<br>
Inter News Service<br>
<a href="http://www.prdailysun.com/index.php?page=news.article&id=1315147788" eudora="autourl">
http://www.prdailysun.com/index.php?page=news.article&id=1315147788<br>
<br>
</a>Puerto Rican environmental activists were arrested Saturday afternoon
after taking their protest against the Fortuño administration’s
controversial Vía Verde gas pipeline to the White House.<br><br>
Among the protesters arrested by city police were Casa Pueblo founder
Alexis Massol González and his son, Arturo Massol Deyá, who participated
in the demonstration on White House grounds, organized by the group New
York Against The Gas Pipeline, which includes Puerto Ricans from that
state as well as from Virginia and Connecticut.<br><br>
“We still don’t know the whereabouts of Alexis and Arturo Massol, as well
as that of the other [protesters] who were arrested there [and were]
identified as Carlos de León and David Galarza”, professor Vivien Mattei,
a spokeswoman for the Adjuntas-based Casa Pueblo, said in a press
release. The environmental and community organization has spearheaded the
fight against the proposed 92-mile gas pipeline that would cut across
Puerto Rico.<br><br>
Before he was arrested, Massol González recalled his last visit to the
U.S. capital in 2002 to receive the Goldman Prize, given to outstanding
environmental leaders throughout the world.<br><br>
“In 2002 I came to receive the Goldman [Prize] and elevate to
international prominence the situation that Vieques was going through due
to the U.S. Navy [bombing] practices there,” he said. “Today I come here
in solidarity with the indigenous peoples of this nation who face the
threat of an oil pipeline and to demand that President Obama keep the
pledge he made during his last visit to Puerto Rico.”<br><br>
The threat Massol González made reference to is the construction of a
pipeline to transport crude oil from Canada that would cross the northern
and central United States and reach the southern coast. The energy
megaproject is known as Keystone XL.<br><br>
“In Obama’s visit [to Puerto Rico], and through an interagency report, he
pledged to develop our economy through an immediate transition to
renewable energy [sources] and an emphasis on ecological tourism,” Massol
González said. “It’s now a contradiction for his government, through the
U.S. Corps of Engineers, to even consider evaluating a gas pipeline for
Puerto Rico.<br>
“The president must keep his word,” he added.<br><br>
Massol González called on fellow Goldman Prize recipients to show their
solidarity with Puerto Rico and urged islanders to save their
patrimony.<br><br>
“It’s time for the heroes and heroines of Puerto Rico to save our waters,
our forests and our people,” he said. “Now is the moment to develop
actions and make sacrifices that, with creativity, define the defense of
our geographical fatherland,” said the environmental leader, who in the
1970s and 1980s led the struggle against plans for strip mining in the
roughly 873-acre Adjuntas forest that is today managed by Casa
Pueblo.<br><br>
“What’s going on here is the same struggle that’s going on in our island
and it’s the same one being waged in all corners of the Earth in
rejection of fossil fuels,” he said. “The world is clamoring for a
change. We, the majority, are proposing renewable alternatives that allow
us, as humanity, to a just and sustainable development.”<br><br>
David Galarza, spokesman for New York Against The Gas Pipeline, said that
the Keystone and Vía Verde pipelines represent “death and destruction for
North america, Puerto Rico and the whole planet.” He said that people
must be willing to stand up and assume risks, including being arrested,
to “defend the only Mother Earth we have.”<br><br>
“I’m doing this in the nation’s capital and I would do it in Puerto Rico
at any moment,” he said, calling on “all to do the same.”<br>
At the same time this protest occurred in the federal capital, the Casa
Pueblo Technical and Scientific Commission met with scientists and
experts in environmental law to evaluate the inconsistencies in the
biological opinion issued by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife, Mattei said in a
press release. <br><br>
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