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Simon Bolivar Orchestra of Venezuela concert at RFH reaps what Shell sows, 23.6.12

By: 
Art Not Oil

Hot on the heels of their appearance at the
Shell vs. Bodo case at the High Court,
(http://bit.ly/LgLiw0)
activists from London Rising Tide, staged a
protest inside and outside the Royal
Festival Hall on Saturday 23rd June,
highlighting the greenwashing of Shell's tarnished 
image through cultural sponsorship in their 'Shell Classic 
International' festival at the Southbank Centre.

At dusk, prior to the hotly-anticipated
Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela concert, activists gathered 
near their Southbank target and prepared their 'Shell Hell' face 
masks and grim reaper costumes. Shortly before seven, they 
formed a procession and swiftly made their
way to the entrance of the Royal Festival Hall.

As the demonic figures processed with
"Shell - No More Greenwash" banners, handing out 
hundreds of leaflets, two insurgent clandestine reapers 
made their way onto each balcony in the auditorium. The 
leaflets reminded people how once, cultural
sponsorship by 'big tobacco' was acceptable. 
Campaigners wish to make 'big oil' sponsorship unacceptable 
in the way that tobacco now is.

'Big oil' is an ecocidal industry wreaking
climate change havoc, as well as destroying lives (literally in the 
case of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other activists),
in Nigeria, Ireland, and Canada (where tar
sands extraction covering the size of
England is destroying the environment and
indigenous lives and futures).

In order to 'greenwash' its image, Shell
only have to channel the tiniest crumbs of
its £35,000 per minute profits (2011) in
order to cynically protect its image
through cultural sponsorship.

Outside the Royal Festival Hall, the
security men and women soon began to appear,
drawn out by a second visit from Shell's
Hell Reapers, leaving those inside a
clearer passage. After asking the costumed
protesters to leave, despite some gentle
passive resistance, the burly security men
eventually dragged everyone away from the doors. 
So, as a mixture of genuine music lovers, and 
corporate f**kwits entered hall, they saw the costumes, 
and most people readily accepted the leaflets, often
with very positive reaction. Meanwhile
inside, "Shell - No More Greenwash" unfurled from opposite
balconies, and the insurgent clandestine reapers began a 
dialogue across the auditorium.

‘Why are we here?’
‘To protest against Shell's sponsorship of
this lovely event!’
‘Why shouldn't Shell sponsor music?’
'Because it serves to cover up their
climate crimes?’
‘What climate crimes?’
‘Oil spills and military bribes in Nigeria,
bringing in toxic gas to Ireland, extracting toxic tar sands in 
Canada, causing exceptionally high rates of cancer!’
‘What do we want people here to do? Enjoy the concert and 
afterwards think about what we said and rip the Shell 
logos out of the programmes!’

A handful of the audience began booing but
were drowned out by the remainder
applauding them out in appreciation of
said insurgent clandestine reapers.

 After the intervention security was
overhead reporting that activists had performed
an 'eloquent speech about music's place in
society and environmental crimes'.

Shell's greenwash is looking dirtier by the
minute.

London Rising Tide,
c/o 62 Fieldgate Street, London E1 1ES;
tel: 07708 794665
www.londonrisingtide.org.uk
On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Rising-Tide-UK/515246801
http://www.twitter.com/RisingTide_UK
Posted Date: 
2 July 2012