s|a|m_kupa_piti on Tue, 6 Jun 2000 22:20:55 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Media + Stuff from Kupa Pidi |
Kupa Piti (also known 'officially' as Coober Pedy) is essentially a dusty opal mining town with a permanent residence of over 40 ethnic nationalities. It is located approximately 800km north of Adelaide, 700km south of Alice springs, in Australia's remote outback. It is also currently the base to an eclectic group of protestors, technoist musicians, performers and media makers. The Earthdream2000 tour is a mobile convoy of people from various backgrounds and interests. But it does have a focus of addressing uranium, land rights and sustainable energy issues, and delivers its messages through parties and carnivals. Earthdream2000 and its associates are camped about 10km's out of town. In Kupa Pity, a media centre is being established to increase the awareness of the issues relating to indigenous people and culture, the nuclear waste dump and uranium mining. IratiWanti is the name of the campaign for the mediacentre - and this name translates to 'Poison - Leave it'. The driving force behind the campaign and the centre are the Kungka Tjuta - the women elders of the area. But the group is heavily under-resourced. It has a tiny office, a basic laptop and is seeking funds to get itself internet enabled. Until then, the genorosity of a local internet cafe provides a few free hours per week. Kupa Piti is a small adhoc town, and some of its surrounding lands including the Breakaways is visually spectacular and spiritually special. Aboriginal people called the area 'umoona' which means 'long life' but when Europeans came to search for opals, they began calling it 'kupaku piti' - which means 'white man's hole'. Right now, there are about 300 people from all parts of the world. Many are part of the Earthdream tour, but there are some who are independent protestors and media activists, providing support and collaborating in actions in the region. In the local cafe, where there is ready access to electricity, DV cameras are communicating via firewire, dubbing, compiling. Others are making short radio shows for city stations. There is plenty of mobile media technology around. A few weeks ago - some of the media crew videoing police violence towards peaceful protestors. Visit http://www.indymedia.org/display.php3?article_id=1414 for more on that. One of the big events for Australia will be 'Walking the Land - For our ancient right' - a journey for peace, freedom and healing the land and it's peoples. The Walk begin from the shores of Lake Eyre on the 10th June 2000, walking to the Sydney Olympic Games, arriving September 2000. The Walk will feature a ceremonial firestick - far more symbolic and meaningful than the gas lit torch which will lead the way to the corporate games. A number of people will be documenting the whole walk - but one of the challenges is the lack of communications in the outback. Unless one has a satellite phone, communications are only possible in the big towns - especially those which attract tourists and provide facilities like internet cafes. If you can help / assist the IratiWanti campaign and especially are interested in networking with women opposing the nuclear waste dump - please contact lucybrown2000@yahoo.com ... This email from sam@media.com.au Some URL refs: Lake Eyre Walk : www.come.to/lakeeyre Reports from Lake Eyre : http://www.active.org.au/adelaide/news/display.php3?article_id=21 Images from Beverley Protests : www.isnt.com.au/beverley/ Earthdream2000 : www.angelfire.com/mt/earthdream2000 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net