Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Telescope protest inspires wind turbine fight

Native Hawaiians on Oahu feel emboldened

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher

KAHUKU, Hawaii — Flapping Hawaiian flags adorn a large canopy on the easement of a highway that winds along Oahu’s famed North Shore.

Under the tent, protesters come and go. Some of them keep guard overnight, and some stop by to wave at cars honking in support or to drop off supplies in a makeshift kitchen area stocked with bottled water, instant noodles and canned meat. On cots and on beach chairs, they are discussing strategies and reminding supporters to maintain a philosophy of peace and nonviolenc­e known in Hawaiian as kapu aloha.

They are at the site trying to prevent the constructi­on of eight wind turbines, each taller than downtown Honolulu’s tallest skyscraper.

The ongoing protest by mostly Native Hawaiians stalling constructi­on of a $1.4 billion telescope on the Big Island of Hawaii has inspired protests on Oahu — the state’s most populous island — to block the turbines and the redevelopm­ent of a beach park.

Since July, protesters who call themselves kiai, or guardians in Hawaiian, have gathered on Mauna

Kea, Hawaii’s tallest mountain, to keep telescope constructi­on crews away. Dozens have been arrested.

Borrowing the civil disobedien­ce methods of the protesters against the telescope, opponents of the turbines are try to block convoys delivering parts to the Kahuku wind farm site. Police have made more than 160 arrests since October.

Hundreds gathered at a storage yard where an equipment convoy began late Thursday, leading to the arrests of 26 people.

Protesters were rowdier than usual Thursday, and their actions — including throwing rocks and punching an officer on the side of his head — weren’t in line with kapu aloha, said Honolulu Police Deputy Chief John McCarthy.

Kamalani Keli’ikuli, a spokeswoma­n for an anti-turbine group, disputed McCarthy’s characteri­zation and said it was police who behaved aggressive­ly. Police asked anyone with evidence of misconduct to file a report.

On Oahu’s eastern shore, 28 protesters were arrested for blocking access to Waimanalo Beach Park.

“Mauna Kea has emboldened our people to rise up in ways that we have never seen before,” said Hinaleimoa­na Wong, a Native Hawaiian community leader who has been active in the fight against the telescope. “This is an indication that there will be much more greater vigilance in the community when there’s a potential project on the horizon.”

Native Hawaiians have a long tradition of protest that dates back to demonstrat­ions against the annexation of Hawaii to the United States in the late 1800s, said Noelani Goodyear-Ka’ōpua, a political science professor at the University of Hawaii.

Telescope opponents say the project will desecrate land held sacred by Native Hawaiians. Wind farm opponents cite health and noise concerns and threats to a native bat, among other issues.

AES Corp., the Virginia-based energy company building the turbines, said there’s no proof of negative health effects and that the noise is similar to light traffic. The company said it has a habitat conservati­on plan developed with state and federal agencies to protect the endangered bat.

 ?? Jennifer Sinco Kelleher The Associated Press ?? Sunny Unga and her daughters Joanne, from left, Alana and Ina protest the constructi­on of eight wind turbines in Kahuku, Hawaii, on Oct. 30.
Jennifer Sinco Kelleher The Associated Press Sunny Unga and her daughters Joanne, from left, Alana and Ina protest the constructi­on of eight wind turbines in Kahuku, Hawaii, on Oct. 30.

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