Saturday, September 6, 2008

UC Berkeley begins felling disputed trees

The University of California, Berkeley has begun cutting down trees at the center of a dispute over its plans to clear the area to make way for a new sports center.

Protesters sitting in a nearby redwood tree on Friday refused to move.

University spokesman Dan Mogulof says school officials want to make it difficult for the tree protesters to remain, although they do not want anyone to get hurt or to get into a confrontation.

The last thing we want to do is to get to that forcible extraction, he said.

The tree felling will continue over the next few days, Mogulof said.

He added that university officials have not decided what they will do if the protesters do not come down peacefully.

Protesters swatted at the workers in cherry pickers with sticks. Officials say a worker was hit on the head by a bottle from the tree-sitters' perch but was able to keep trimming.

It's surreal to see the grove finally be cut down, after so much energy and effort and spirit was put into protecting it, Daria Garina, a UC Berkeley junior and supporter of the tree-sitters, told the San Francisco Chronicle. It's tragic and awful. .

The cutting began after the California Court of Appeal on Thursday denied a request from two citizens groups for an injunction barring construction of the athletic training facility. The groups say they plan to take the case to the state Supreme Court.

Popular Posts