Zone to Defend


Zone to Defend or ZAD is a French neologism used to refer to a militant occupation that is intended to physically blockade a development project. The ZADs are organized particularly in areas with an ecological or agricultural dimension, notably in the permanent blockade village which helped to defeat the Aéroport du Grand Ouest, a proposed airport in Notre-Dame-des-Landes, north of Nantes. However the name has also been used by occupations in urban areas, for example in Rouen, and in Décines-Charpieu. One of the movement's first slogans was 'ZAD everywhere' and though there are no official figures, in early 2016 there were estimated to have been between 10 and 15 ZADs across France.

Etymology

The acronym "ZAD" is a détournement of "deferred development area". In 2015, the French term "zadiste" entered the 2016 edition of Le Petit Robert dictionary as "a militant occupying a ZAD to oppose a proposed development that would damage the environment."

History

Appearing in France in the early 2010s, the term was first popularized during the opposition to the airport construction project in Notre-Dame-des-Landes. The ZAD movement has its origins in challenging large infrastructure projects in defense of the environment, local people's right to decide the future of their territories and the rejection of the capitalist economy. In France, the most famous antecedents of the ZAD movement are the Larzac struggle, the protests against the proposed nuclear power plant at Creys-Malville, in Isère, and at Plogoff in the 1970s and 1980s.
The ZADs have multiplied in France after the failed eviction of the Notre-Dame-des-Landes commune in the autumn of 2012. One of the first to be set up after the failure of the eviction of the ZAD was the ZAD Bouillons farm, near Rouen, occupied against a real estate project by Auchan beginning in the winter of 2012. In addition to Notre-Dame-des-Landes ZAD, the best-known cases are those of the opposition to the Sivens dam project in Tarn where the activist Rémi Fraisse was killed by the French police, at the proposed Center Parcs project in the forest of Chambaran in Isère and more recently against a nuclear waste storage project called Cigéo in Bure.
In other countries there are projects similar to the ZAD concept, such as the occupation of the Hambach Forest in Germany, the No TAV movement in the Susa Valley in Italy and the Grow Heathrow squat protesting against the expansion of Heathrow Airport in London.

Notable projects

SiteDepartmentOpposed toStatus
ZAD L'AmassadaAveyronConstruction of electricity substation2014-2019
ZAD BureMeuseExpansion of existing nuclear waste storage facility2015-2018
ZAD MoulinBas-RhinProposed motorway in Strasbourg2017-2018
ZAD Notre-Dames-des-LandesLoire-AtlantiqueProposed airport 2009-
ZAD RoybonIsèreProposed Center Parcs development2014-
ZAD TestetTarnProposed Sivens dam 2011-2015

L’Amassada

The ZAD de l'Amassada at Saint-Victor-et-Melvieu, in the Aveyron department, was set up in December 2014 to oppose the construction of an electricity substation required by RTE to distribute the electricity generated by renewable sources, mainly wind turbines. 'Amassada' means 'assembly' in the Occitan language.
There was a 'windy week' in 2016, in which more cabins were built on the terrain of 7 hectares, with people coming to help out from other ZADs such as Bure, Roybon and the Susa Valley. As a way to slow down the progress of the project, 136 people have become individual owners of plots over 3,300m² of land and thus would have to be bought out individually by RTE, a subsidiary of EDF.
RTE obtained a declaration of public utility for the project in June 2018, which meant they could evict the site. Then in January 2019, the squatters were given an eviction order and warned that they would be fined 2000 euros for every day that they stayed. A police raid in February resulted in the arrest of the five people on the site, with other people remaining to ensure it was not evicted. Before their trial in July, two of the five were forbidden from entering the ZAD and three from entering Aveyron.
In October 2019, the ZAD was evicted. A protest march in November brought 300 people bearing flowers to the site. The police used tear gas to disperse the crowd and arrested several people.

Bure

The ZAD at Bure, in the Meuse department, protests the expansion of a nuclear waste storage facility known as the Meuse/Haute Marne Underground Research Laboratory. Every year, the French nuclear energy industry produces around 13,000 cubic metres of toxic radioactive waste. Subject to state approval, all this waste would be stored underground at Bure from 2025 onwards.
Since 2004, there has been an anti-nuclear Maison de la Résistance in the centre of Bure acting as headquarters for the protests. Some land in the forest of Mandres-en-Barrois, which would be destroyed by the building plans, was occupied in 2015.
At a demonstration in 2017, the police used a water cannon and fired tear gas canisters and stun grenades. There were 30 wounded demonstrators, of which three were hospitalised. One of them, a 27-year-old man, was struck by an exploding GLI-4 grenade on his foot. It made a hole 13 centimetres long and up to 3 centimetres deep.
In 2018, the occupation at Mandres-en-Barrois was evicted. Thirty people had been living there and they retreated to the Maison de la Résistance. The Minister of the Interior at the time, Gerard Collomb, said
"We do not want there to be places of lawlessness in France."
After the eviction, there were calls to resquat the site and a large police presence remained on site to counter this threat.

Moulin

The ZAD du Moulin was established in 2017 to resist the building of the A355 motorway also known as GCO near Strasbourg in the Bas-Rhin department. Eight huts were built along the proposed 24 kilometres of the motorway, which was intended as a bypass to reduce congestion on the A35 which dissects Strasbourg. The costs were slated to be over 500 million euros.
The ZAD was evicted by 500 police in September 2018. Members of the European Parliament Karima Delli and José Bové had joined the protestors in solidarity with their struggle to stop the road. Delli was sprayed with tear gas in her face and mouth by the police and fell unconscious. Bové stated "This violence is unacceptable."

Notre-Dame-des-Landes

ZAD Notre-Dame-des-Landes is the most well-known 'Zone to Defend' in France. Located in the Loire-Atlantique department near to Nantes, it is a very large mostly agricultural terrain of 1,650 hectares which became nationally famous and has resisted several concerted attempts by the French state to evict it.
The squatters joined the long struggle against an airport, the Aéroport du Grand Ouest. It was announced in 2018 that the plans for the airport were cancelled and also that the squatters would have until spring to leave. In April 2018, a largescale eviction operation began as the French state tried to regain control of the autonomous zone. After 10 days, the police had fired 11,000 projectiles.
The eviction was halted on April 26 and said it would be frozen until at least May 14. The truce came about as representatives of the ZAD negotiated for legal recognition for 28 projects. Some projects agreed to file individual claims, whereas other refused to participate in the process. On Thursday, May 17, the eviction operations resumed.

Roybon

The ZAD at Roybon, Isère, between Lyon and Grenoble, was created to oppose the proposed construction of a Center Parcs on the Chambarand plateau. Environmentalists had opposed the project since 2007, represented by the group 'For Chambaran without Center Parcs' or PCSCP.
The project would have built almost 1000 cottages in the forest. Plans were halted in December 2016, when the Court of Appeal in Lyon stated that two of the three orders permitting construction were illegal.
The court agreed with environmentalist concerns regarding wastewater processing from a site with a maximum capacity of 5,600 people and also how the water table would be affected, with 76 hectares of wetland under threat. The court did not agree that the potential loss of protected species outweighed the potential creation of 600 jobs. The owner of Center Parcs, Pierre & Vacances, announced that they would appeal the decision.
In 2018, the ZAD had several buildings including the Marquise and Barricade Sud. The thirty inhabitants were planning to construct a strawbale house and were growing vegetables and farming animals.

Testet

The demonstrations to protect the biodiversity of the wetlands in the area threatened by the proposed Sivens Dam resulted in the ZAD du Testet, which existed from 2011 until 2015. It was evicted several times and resquatted. In 2014, botanist Rémi Fraisse was killed by a stun grenade fired by police and the following year the dam was cancelled.

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