Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Salmon decline key issue as US
Natives protest against Scottish Power
13 July, 2005 - A DELEGATION representing four native American Indian tribes from California and Oregon, will come to Scotland 18th to 23rd of July as part of their campaign against utility giant Scottish Power. Staging media events such as a traditional salmon ‘bake’ ceremony and a documentary film screening, the group will also hold a colourful demonstration at Scottish Power’s AGM in Glasgow. The tribes are demanding the restoration of the River Klamath, which they claim has been severely damaged by a complex of dams operated by Scottish Power’s US subsidiary, PacifiCorp. The dams block over 350 miles of historic salmon spawning grounds and have played a major part in a huge decline in salmon numbers in what was once America’s third greatest Salmon river. This return visit follows last summers visit, during which they embarrassed Scottish Power into action by confronting its shareholders, working in partnership with Scottish NGO’s and politicians, and through gaining widespread media coverage, eventually receiving a “personal commitment to find the right solution” from the chief executive of Scottish Power. However, the company in May announced the surprise sale of PacifiCorp and the tribes are now accusing Scottish Power of ‘stringing them along’ by engaging them in negotiations while all the time planning to sell the US subsidiary and its dams. The tribes have traditionally relied on the return of the salmon each year for food, for their good health and for goods to trade, and the salmon plays an important part in their culture, including being the basis for traditional ceremonies, many of which have not been performed for decades because of the lack of fish in the upper Klamath basin. www.fishupdate.com is published by Special Publications. Special Publications also publish European Fish Trader, Fishing Monthly, Fish Farming Today, Fish Farmer, the Fish Industry Yearbook, the Scottish Seafood Processors Federation Diary, the Fish Farmer Handbook and a range of wallplanners.
|
Home
Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:14 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2005, All Rights Reserved