| About Smoke Signals | In the Lausitz region of eastern Germany machines are digging their way trough the landscape in search of lignite, the dirtiest combustible on the planet in terms of emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. These immense open cast mines are rapidly expanding and forces villagers to leave their homes. But the destruction of landscape and extrusion of villagers has a long history. Thousands of Brandenburg residents have lost their homes since mining began in 1924. A total of 136 villages have been destroyed to make way for the mines, displacing at least 30,000 people. Since the beginning of the 21:th century the mining in Lausitz is operated by the Swedish state-owned power company Vattenfall AB. Under the direction of Vattenfall two villages, Horno and Haidemühl, has been demolished. In 2005 the villagers of Horno were resettled in Neu Horno, a newly built community outside the town of Forst, 10 kilometers away. In the same year the inhabitants of Haidemuhl were resettled in Neu Haidemuhl outside the town of Spremberg. The people of Horno, with a majority of Sorbs, fought hard, taking their case to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg in 1998, but was rejected. The Lausitz region is home to the Sorbs, a 60,000-strong Slavic minority with a language related to Polish and Czech. During the period betwen 1945 and 1989 over 70 Sorbian villages were erased from the map because of lignite mining. Now, despite past promises by Brandenburg politicians that the resettlement would end with Horno, eight more villages have been slated for demolition to make way for lignite mines over the next two decades. Three of these villages, Atterwash, Kerkwitz and Grabko, are situated north of the lignite mine Jänschwalde. Here the villagers and environmental group Gruene Liga have joined forces and started a petition to submit a draft law banning new mines to Brandenburg’s regional parliament. In 2008 they collected more than the 20 000 signatures required to submit the draft, but the initiative was rejected. Now their hope stands to collecting 80 000 signatures and thereby forcing a regional popular vote. |