Police removal of anti-mining signs at Deux Branches points to cover-up, suppression of right to protest, says Jerry Brisbane

Environmental campaigner Jerry Brisbane has leveled serious accusations against Dominican authorities, claiming systematic suppression of protests against alleged clandestine mining operations in the Deaux Branches region. In a revealing interview with Matt Peltier, Brisbane detailed what he describes as a coordinated campaign to silence environmental advocates through police intimidation and destruction of protest materials.

The controversy centers on disputed quarrying activities that Brisbane maintains serve as camouflage for illegal copper extraction. According to the activist, the pattern of interference began when police initially responded to protest sign installations but took no action. Subsequently, upon returning to their protest site approximately one hour later, Brisbane’s team witnessed three individuals—including an Asian woman documented filming through a vehicle window—methodically removing their signage.

Brisbane reported this surveillance and interference pattern repeated each time activists attempted to replace approximately six damaged signs. Most alarmingly, he claims to possess footage showing officers from Wesley Police Station subsequently arriving with a van and ladder to complete the removal operation themselves—actions he characterizes as environmentally destructive since signs were allegedly discarded into nearby rivers.

The activist questioned both the jurisdictional appropriateness of Wesley police operating outside their constituency and the prioritization of sign removal over addressing environmental crimes. He highlighted the irony of police having ‘idle time’ for such operations after 6 PM while allegedly ignoring substantial environmental violations.

Brisbane emphasized his movement opposes not development itself but environmentally destructive practices driven by hidden agendas. He warned unchecked extraction could cause catastrophic, irreversible damage to the region’s ecosystem.

Despite acknowledging intimidation attempts, Brisbane reaffirmed his commitment to exposing these issues, framing his activism as patriotic defense of Dominica’s natural heritage. He expressed particular concern about public distraction during Carnival celebrations, noting ironically that ‘while Dominicans are sewo-ing, their rights have been stolen.’

The activist concluded with a defiant statement regarding potential arrest, declaring it would be ‘the greatest honor’ to be detained for defending his country’s environment against illegal destruction.