Thursday, October 31, 2019

‘Cattenom Nine’: Activists face jail for sounding the alarm bell on nuclear safety

by Daniel Simons
 In the early hours of 12 October 2017, eight people sneaked inside
the grounds of the Cattenom nuclear plant in northern France. Without much difficulty, they reached the foot of a spent fuel pool – where the still highly radioactive fuel rods are stored after use.
Fireworks to Highlight Vulnerability of Cattenom Nuclear Plant in France. © Vivien Fossez / Greenpeace
Greenpeace France activists enter the perimeter of the nuclear power plant in Cattenom, Moselle, and set off a fireworks display, close to the spent fuel storage pool. © Vivien Fossez / Greenpeace
It was a scenario Greenpeace France had been warning about since 2001 through numerous reports, letters and speeches. France’s aging fleet of reactors is poorly protected, and not designed to withstand big impacts, such as an explosion set off by terrorists. A loss of water from the spent fuel pools – protected by walls only 30cm thick – could lead to a massive release of radioactivity.
Fortunately, the eight intruders turned out to be peaceful activists from Greenpeace France; they set off some fireworks to demonstrate their presence and then allowed themselves to be led away. The ease with which they had penetrated alarmed the government
of Luxembourg, which lies just north of Cattenom. It also finally spurred the French authorities into action; a parliamentary investigation into nuclear safety was announced the following month.
Fireworks to Highlight Vulnerability of Cattenom Nuclear Plant in France. © Nicolas Chauveau / Greenpeace
Greenpeace France activists enter the perimeter of the nuclear power plant in Cattenom, Moselle, and set off a fireworks display, close to the spent fuel storage pool. © Nicolas Chauveau / Greenpeace
It’s a textbook example of the role of non-violent direct action (NVDA) in a democracy, much like the recent climate strikes. When the authorities are sleeping at the wheel, and not responding to polite arguments, citizen action is needed to wake them up. In this case, it did.
A happy end? Unfortunately not. In a classic case of shooting the messenger, prosecutors have pressed for stiff penalties. In February 2018, a court in Thionville sentenced the ‘Cattenom nine’ – the eight activists and a Greenpeace France employee. It imposed a 2-month jail sentence on two of the individuals, and suspended sentences on the rest. It also ordered Greenpeace France to pay €50,000 to the power company, EDF as ‘moral damages’. 
Send a message of support for the Cattenom activists now.
 
Mobilization of support in Thionville
Mobilization of support in Thionville ©Greenpeace
These are almost unprecedented sanctions for Greenpeace activists. In 2013, 30 Greenpeace activists spent 2 months in pre-trial detention for a protest against Arctic oil drilling; Russia was later ordered to pay compensation by an international tribunal for detaining them unlawfully. We have to go all the way back to 1987 to find another example that comes close; in that year, Hans Guyt and Willem Beekman were sentenced
to three months in jail by an English judge, for protesting the discharge of waste from the Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant into the Irish Sea. They were released after 6.5 weeks, however. 
An Australian court took a very different approach
to a very similar action back in 2002. The trespass charges against 46 activists who entered a nuclear facility were dismissed. The judge agreed that protesting outside the front gate wouldn’t have been as effective to demonstrate the inadequate security measures. She added that the “right to protest and the right to express publicly one’s political views, albeit in the form of direct action, is one which is to be valued and protected in the context of a modern democracy.”
On 30 October, the Court of Appeals in Metz will have a chance to set the record straight and show that France indeed values and protects this right. The ‘Cattenom 9’ will be presenting their appeal, arguing the action was justified by a ‘state of necessity’ – a present or imminent danger threatening lives or livelihoods. 
de Cattenom lors d'une action non-violente. Leur procès en appel aura lieu à Metz le 30 octobre. Ils et elles l'ont fait pour nous : soutenons les #9deCattenom https://t.co/h2fZ6AhNMc pic.twitter.com/qyTrvABMJn — Greenpeace France (@greenpeacefr) October 12, 2019

The activists will need all the backing they can get. You can add your voice of support at https://cartesoutien.greenpeace.fr
, or tweet a message using #9deCattenom.

Daniel Simons is a Senior Legal Counsel Strategic Defence with Greenpeace International

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