Court told forest protester kicked in the face

An anti-logging protester has told the Hobart Magistrates Court how a forest contractor dragged him out of a car and kicked him in the face during a blockade in the Florentine Valley.

Forest workers Rodney Howells, Terrence Pearce and Jeremey Eiszelle have pleaded not guilty to assaulting two protesters in the Florentine Valley in October 2008.

One of the protesters, 23-year-old Nishant Datt, told the court he locked himself onto a disused car blocking a forestry road to prevent trees from being logged.

He said forest contractors started smashing the car’s windows with a sledgehammer because they could not start work.

Mr Datt said he was trying to get out of the car when a contractor dragged him out of a shattered window and then kicked him in the head several times.

The contractors’ lawyer Craig Rainbird has suggested the protesters knew the loggers were “not shrinking violets” and they stayed in the car accepting the risk of violence.

Under cross examination, Mr Datt conceded that but said he did not think the violence would escalate to such an extent.

Forestry Tasmania supervisor Scott Marriott told the court that he urged the protesters to get out of the car when he saw Howells approach it with a sledgehammer, saying they had three seconds.

Mr Marriott said considerable force was used in the blow with the sledgehammer and afterwards Howells appeared “quite upset.”

The hearing’s been adjourned until May.

The hearing has been adjourned until May.

Forest protestor tells court he was dragged and kicked by contractor

An anti-logging protestor has told the Hobart Magistrates Court how a forest contractor dragged him out of a car and kicked him in the face during a blockade in the Florentine Valley.

Forest workers Rodney Howells, Terrence Pearce and Jeremey Eiszelle have pleaded not guilty to assaulting two protesters in the Florentine Valley in October 2008.

One of the protesters, 23-year-old Nishant Datt, told the court he locked himself onto a disused car blocking a forestry road to prevent trees from being logged.

He said forest contractors started smashing the car’s windows with a sledgehammer because they could not start work.

Mr Datt told the court he was trying to get out of the car when a contractor dragged him out of a shattered window and then kicked him in the head several times.

The hearing continues.

Forest protest exclusion zones raised in court

Protesters have argued in Court that Forestry Tasmania has abused legal process in pursuing trespass charges against them.

The group of 18 activists were arrested in May last year during a week of anti-logging protests in Tasmania’s Upper Florentine Valley, but surveyors maps submitted as part of one activist’s defence showed that most protestors were not inside an exclusion zone when arrested.

Forestry Tasmania has since produced two more maps showing protestors were inside the zone.

The defence has argued the new maps can not be used to prosecute the protestors as they were not disclosed to the public until after the arrests.

But the prosecution says the activists chose to cross police lines despite being told they could be arrested.

Quoll survey in planned logging coupes

A conservation group wants Regional Forest Agreements (RFA) scrapped to protect endangered animals.

Still Wild Still Threatened is surveying spotted quolls and Tasmanian devils in areas of the Upper Florentine Valley marked for logging.

The group’s spokesman, Ed Hill, says the logging of old growth forests destroys the habitats of devils and quolls.

“We want the RFA to be torn up. The RFA has had devastating consequences for threatened and endangered species,” he said.

“The Government has listed the spotted tail quoll and the Tasmanian devil as rare and endangered, however, at the same time they are systematically destroying the habitat of the same creatures.

“We are asking the Labor and Liberal parties to rethink their commitment to extending the RFA.

“We’re also asking Tasmanian voters to consider the threatened and endangered species like the spotted tail quoll and the Tasmanian devil when they head to the polls on Saturday.”