SMIRCLE LINE

HS2 eco-activists laugh after piling into underground tunnel and boast ‘we’re not coming out any time soon’

ECO Warriors trying to stop HS2 have piled into a tunnel they dug under Euston station.

Video shows a small group laughing as they packed into the tunnel while other protesters boasted they would "not be coming out any time soon”.

Advertisement
A brightly dressed man waves his fist as he is lead awayCredit: Rex Features
Laughing protesters in the tunnel under the stationCredit: Twitter
A protester tussling with an enforcement agentCredit: AFP or licensors
A protester is seen being taken from the scene this morningCredit: PA:Press Association
A police officer stands by as a colleague speaks to a protester outside Euston stationCredit: Reuters
Police officers watch a woman standing on top of a lorry blocking the trafficCredit: PA:Press Association
Eco warriors have dug a tunnel near Euston Station to stop being evictedCredit: BBC
The anti-HS2 group say the tunnel, nicknamed Calvin, will stop them being booted out of their campCredit: BBC

The activists dug a network of 100ft tunnels below Euston Square Gardens in protest against HS2.

Dramatic scenes unfolded yesterday morning as activists were dragged from their central London camp by bailiffs, with one heard yelling as he was led away.

Yesterday evening the protesters were preparing to bed in for the night.

Activist Larch Maxey, 48, who has been living in the park since August last year, said those in the tunnels had no immediate plans to leave.

Advertisement

"We will last as long as we can down here, but we can't put a date on that. Our resolve is clear because we are telling the truth about the climate."

He said the group would "absolutely be spending the night underground", adding: "We will not be coming out any time soon.

 

Officers can be seen preparing to take down the tree housesCredit: Aaron Chown/PA
Police enforcement officers move in to the encampment in Euston Square GardensCredit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement

Protesters scurried into their tunnel and up trees to avoid being evicted - but five people, four men and one woman, were arrested by Met Police as cops monitored potential breaches of the peace and Covid legislation.

Cherry pickers were also called in to remove protesters from trees while officers were seen putting on harnesses as they moved to clear demonstrators from makeshift treehouses.

One masked man was even seen ziplining between the trees in an apparent attempt to avoid eviction.

Bailiffs also started to cut ropes stringing the makeshift camp together as activists desperately try to avoid being sent packing.

Advertisement

Many are still at the site with at least four - possibly including veteran protester Swampy - believed to be underground.

Swampy, real name Daniel Hooper, is believed to have holed himself up in the tunnels yesterday.

Last November he appeared in court under his real name to deny a charge of aggravated trespass in connection with a treetop protest against the HS2 rail link.

'NOT GOING TO GIVE UP'

Swampy first hit the headlines in 1996 when he spent seven days and seven nights living in a tunnel dug by campaigners to stop the £50million A30 dual carriageway link road in Devon, and has since joined numerous protests.

Advertisement

Activists claim their tunnel - nicknamed Calvin, near busy Euston Road - took two months to dig and is their "best defence" to thwart eviction from their camp.

It has since been claimed there is a second tunnel named Crystal that connects to the network.

Eco-warriors say the group have "stocks of food" plus bedding and even toilet facilities in the underground tunnel that they have been working on in secret.

Protester Martin Andryjankczyk, 20, told The Sun he had been at the site for four months - saying: "This is a HS2 rebellion protest camp, we are trying to protect those trees from HS2 and stop them from being cut down.

Advertisement

“They aren’t going to give up that easily. This camp will take at least a week or two to evict.”

A campaigner pictured in the tunnel netwrokCredit: PA:Press Association
Veteran protester Swampy has joined the group as the protesters claimed it has taken two months to create the tunnel networkCredit: BBC
Advertisement
Eco-activist Swampy photographed in 1997Credit: Apex News & Pictures
A protester dances as he leaves the siteCredit: NEWS UK LTD
A protester makes their way along a ziplineCredit: EPA
Lawyers for the eco-protesters last week insisted the site was being 'legally squatted'Credit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement
Another activist is led away by the eviction teamCredit: Reuters
A man is searched by police at the campsiteCredit: SWNS:South West News Service
The tree houses where the activists have been holed upCredit: Aaron Chown/PA
An activist is seen speaking to men on a cherry pickerCredit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement

Protesters previously admitted the tunnel suffered a "big collapse" after heavy rain while under construction, raising fears the shaft could fall in on itself while activists are inside it.

Lawyers for the eco-protesters last week insisted the site was being "legally squatted" and that evictions were illegal under Covid regulations until February 21.

But a HS2 spokesperson said the current ban on evictions due to the Covid-19 pandemic is not applicable, adding: "The protests are a danger to the safety of the protesters, our staff and the general public."

The activists have claimed that the section of Euston Square Gardens they are occupying will be turned into a taxi rank before being sold off to developers.

Advertisement

And they have vowed not to move, with one 18-year-old activist called Blue admitting to the BBC: "It is all very dangerous and life-threatening, but it is all worth it.

"This is the only way I can effect change, I would sacrifice everything for the climate ecological emergency to not be happening.

"We want to be as safe as possible. It is not about us martyring ourselves, it is about delaying and stopping HS2."

A HS2 Rebellion spokesman said members "worked around the clock", using pickaxes, shovels, buckets, on shifts of 2-12 people at a time to dig the tunnel.

Advertisement

Al, 18 of Hendon, told The Sun that the tunnel dropped down 10 feet before extending 100 ft in length.

He said: "We’re using direct action and making sacrifices because this is the most effective means of change. We shouldn’t be spending billions and billions of pounds on a project which is only there to serve the interests of the wealthy.”

A man is seen on a zipwire above the campCredit: PA:Press Association
The campsite is being dismantledCredit: Reuters
Advertisement
Bailiffs cut through the rope strung up at the siteCredit: AFP or licensors
A cup is thrown to one of the protesters Credit: AFP or licensors
The demonstrator could be heard shouting as he was carried out from the makeshift campCredit: AFP or licensors
A man is led away after being evictedCredit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement
One of the people involved in removing the protests stands at the siteCredit: AFP or licensors
The eviction process began this morningCredit: Reuters
One protester is seen clinging to a treeCredit: Reuters
Work is now being undertaken to remove the protestersCredit: Reuters
Advertisement
A protester raises their fist while sitting on a craneCredit: Reuters
Protesters sing in the treesCredit: PA:Press Association
The makeshift camp was set up in protest to the HS2Credit: Getty Images - Getty
Tents are seen setting up at Euston Station Credit: Aaron Chown/PA
Advertisement
A makeshift treehouse was madeCredit: PA:Press Association
Rebellion, an alliance of groups and individuals campaigning against the planned high-speed railway, has descended on the siteCredit: Aaron Chown/PA
Police could be seen walking through the siteCredit: PA:Press Association
Flimsy wooden posts are seen propping up tonnes of earth in the subterranean lair, right in the heart of central LondonCredit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement
They admit that the tunnel needs shoring up to keep them safeCredit: BBC
The tunnel is being used to avoid evictionCredit: Hyde News & Pictures Ltd

Footage released overnight showed activists going underground via a wooden ladder with flimsy wooden posts seen propping up tonnes of earth.

One protester then boasted the tunnel goes off "in all sorts of directions".

Advertisement

Meanwhile a young activist was seen squeezing through a tiny gap in the makeshift shoring - admitting "it's quite tight to get through".

A spokesman for the protesters claimed local people "pitched in to help", with fortified barricades erected around the tunnel's complex entrance.

A "pallet fortress" gave the tunnel diggers a warm place to sleep between shifts.

Activists have been living in a main chamber, with supplies tins of beans, packets of pasta and vegetables and water stashed throughout the tunnel network.

Advertisement

Homeless people have also flocked to the group's campsite since it was set up.

In a video filmed below ground, one campaigner admits the tunnel caved in while under construction.

She said: "It all came in through the side and collapsed.

"Luckily, no one was in here and everyone was fine and we just cleared all the dirt away and put up some better shoring along the walls so it wouldn't happen again.

Advertisement

"It kind of reminds you how dangerous it is. I am putting my life at risk, and I wish I didn't have to."

Can the protesters be evicted by law?

Lawyers for the eco-protesters have argued any eviction from the Euston site would be illegal under Covid laws.

It is true that there is a ban on evictions due to the pandemic, which will remain in place until February.

However, HS2 served notices on the legal owners and occupiers of the land (London Borough of Camden, Network Rail and Transport for London ) in mid-December 2020 stating their intention to take the site under the powers of Temporary Possession as granted by Schedule 16 of the HS2 Act 2017.

They say they need to take legal temporary possession of Euston Square Gardens East to prepare for the works of the new station.

After serving the notice in December, they say the notice period is over and HS2 Limited is now entitled to take possession of the land, and any occupants on the land are now trespassing.

HS2 has argued the current ban on evictions due to the Covid-19 pandemic is not applicable and the police, landowners and those with legal possession of the land have the power to remove trespassers using minimum force.

Activists at the Euston Square Gardens tree camp had expected authorities to evict them before Christmas, but vowed to "stand our ground".

The group claims HS2 is the "most expensive, wasteful and destructive project in UK history".

They say the project will "destroy or irreparably damage 108 ancient woodlands and 693 wildlife sites".

Advertisement

And they claim HS2's plan to build an aquifier in Colne Valley, West London, risks contaminating almost a quarter of the capital's water supply.

One man sang as he was brought down from the treesCredit: Reuters
One protester can be seen refusing to move at the campsiteCredit: Alamy Live News
They claim HS2 will 'destroy or irreparably damage' ancient woodlandCredit: PA:Press Association
Advertisement
The activists claim they are squatting legally and should not be evictedCredit: AP:Associated Press

But HS2 bosses insist seven million trees will be planted during phase one of the project and most ancient woodland will "remain intact".

A spokesman for HS2 said the tunnel protests were “costly to the taxpayer”.

An HS2 Ltd spokesperson said: “To ensure HS2 is able to deliver its major benefits to the UK on time, certain works must take place at designated times. HS2 has taken legal temporary possession of Euston Square Gardens East in order to progress with works necessary for the construction of the new Euston station.

Advertisement

“These protests are a danger to the safety of the protesters, our staff and the general public, and put unnecessary strain on the emergency services during a pandemic. The protesters are currently trespassing on land that is legally possessed by HS2.”

The Met Police said it was the responsibility of the landowners to evict trespassers but they could be on hand to keep the peace.

Most read in News

MISTY BUSINESS
Brits warned NOT to travel due to 'dense fog' covering huge swathes of UK
KNIFE 'MURDER'
Dad arrested as two women 'including partner' killed in 'stabbing rampage'
BLAZE TRAGEDY
Woman dies in massive house fire in early morning Boxing Day inferno
SCREW SHAME
Female prison officer nicked after 'being filmed having sex with inmate'

HS2 is set to link London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds with the hope the 20-year project will result reduce rail passenger overcrowding and boost the UK’s economy.

Advertisement
machibet777.com