thieving parasitic squat leeches trash rampART social centre

Over the weekend one of the rampART collective caught friends of the neighboring squatters stealing the lead of the roof.

Over the weekend one of the rampART collective caught friends of the neighboring squatters stealing the lead of the roof. Confronted, they justified their action by saying that the place was going to be evicted in a week anyway. Of course that’s not actually true, there is no date yet for an eviction and who’s is to say that an eviction attempt would succeed. It could have been months before the rampART was finally closed.

Now there is water pissing through the rampART bringing the ceiling down. Not just in the social centre but also the houses in the block as well, including the building used by a local accountant as his office. People personal possessions have been trashed and the buildings made almost uninhabitable for the sake of under one hundred pounds worths of lead.

The scum who did it might try to justify it by saying that it’s the developers that pay but that’s not really the case. The building are currently occupied and even when evicted they weren’t going to be demolished. Now that water is pouring in the building would quickly fall into total disrepair and allow the owners to justify demolition which is what they’d really prefer to do.

So, for the sake of a quick buck, these parasites have basically hastened the end of the social centre and forced those living in the houses to move out ahead of threats from bailiffs. This incredibly anti-social behavior is sadly not untypical.

The St Bart’s squat near All Saints DLR was originally squatted as a convergence centre for the Disarm DSEi mobilisation and then was used as a residential squat. Before the place was evicted almost two years later, all the copper and lead was removed and weighed in. The building, which was a council owned adult education centre, was left exposed to the weather and made total unsuitable for reuse when it was considered for the next DSEi convergence. Repairs would cost a fortune so the council will now never put it back into social use, they’ll no doubt just let it rot for a few years and then sell it on as land for redevelopment.

thanks a bunch you thieving scum

Climate Case

Court fined activists… who pledged to shut down coal and stop climate chaos

Court fined activists… who pledged to shut down coal and stop climate chaos

On the last week of Winter exams, I donned a media badge and reporter’s notebook to observe the trial of eleven normal people as they faced Nottingham Bridewell Magistrates Court.

Some say it is beautiful. Just across the M1 from Sutton-Bonnington research farmAxeman attacks polluting chimney lies the 40-year-old power station. The coal plant is the worst source of carbon dioxide pollution in the East Midlands. To me, its cooling towers are a symbol of waste.
Did you know that the wasted steam released from Ratcliffe could be piped to provide free hot water for the entire borough of Rushcliffe?

I agree with those determined to down that machine. Whilst the so-called “Ratcliffe 11” admitted they went into the power station, they lodged a special defence of necessity. One of the activists said “I believe this (attempted) action was a reasonable and proportionate response to the threat of catastrophic climate change and that this action was to prevent a greater crime occurring.” – According to an anonymous report online.

Dating back to the Luddite movement, so-called “non-violent direct action” (NVDA) is a slightly anarchist set of solutions, clashing with the politics of public order. Inspired by an international convergence of thousands of people to the first climate camp in Gigawatt Valley, the Nottingham neighbourhood continued to cook hot curries, skill-share and develop practical solutions. An educational “Spring into Action” week culminated on 10th April 2007, with a crammed mini-bus to the power station.
The power company are responsible for the safety of those on site, who stopped an estimated 5,000 tonnes of coal from getting to the bunkers. From there, the coal is burned to boil water from the river Trent to turn turbines to generate electricity for the National Grid. Of the 12, one escaped, one remained silent and used only body-language, and the remaining ten were found guilty of trespass.

Meet the climate criminals.
The eleven activists used their grandparents to illustrate “duties of care, as they give care to you.” One stopped working in offices, a cog in the capitalist system, felt so much better after taking action.
“I realised I was living in denial.” Testified Sam, an ecology graduate. “Drastic action needs to be taken, yesterday! In the next ten years… Otherwise it’s too late.”
Tim, 23, testified that their action was directly aimed at disrupting coal-burning, but nervously expressed thanks to other more public protesters. At the gates more people covered the corporate sign with “STOP! DON’T BE A FOSSIL FOOL”. To the make the “reclaim power” agenda clear, props included a giant thermometer and gas-masks. Beware of government-controlled TV News rushing into millions of homes! Defending economic growth may lead to media statements being economical with the truth. For the entire day of action, the power company inaccurately claimed that police were on site keeping things “fully operational”. “Head of Security” Nicholas was on holiday when 12 people walked inside. Using ordinary household equipment, they locked on to a range of railings, fire protection pipes, and “trash screens”. Christopher, shift-team-leader, went down to help explain the dangers of coal falling on to the latter position, so they produced the keys and moved to a safer location, from which they were arrested. One then ran up the coal chute and stayed a while in the rafters, covered in coal dust.

We suspect there are corporate sensitivities around energy traders and carbon emissions. The Plant Manager Roy “forgot to bring” any data. The contingency plan for “keeping the lights on” has not been published. The E.ON employee refused to confirm future plans for nuclear.

Guilty?
It was ruled that the defence of necessity may be used on a case by case basis. District Judge Cooper decided that catastrophic climate change should be tackled by democratic government, not autonomous individuals. The defence lawyer Mr Thomlinson researched case law and explained that if Anne Frank had escaped the holocaust on a stolen bicycle, she wouldn’t have to wait for the Gestapo to knock at her door, under English law. But is climate change comparable? Alan Simpson MP explains that you have to get a lot of people to break bad laws in order to repeal them. A spokesperson from e.on said the ten … had acted irresponsibly by breaking the law.

“This is not justice!” I declared. I read the judgment fully. The legal and historical importance of this trial in terms of environmental issues highlights what is a step too far. I’m not saying the guilty verdict was wrong, but if I were the judge, I would have found the activists innocent.

Science was central to their case.
Scarier than “Gore’s Law” as I call it, that CO2 warms the planet, is what I like to call “Climate Chaos”. Previously regarded as a stable atmosphere, the biosphere modeled by the “Gaia theory” could be thrown into a state of catastrophic climate change.
The defendants called an expert witness, Dr Simon Lewis, Royal Society Research Fellow at the Earth & Biosphere Institute of the University of Leeds. He is the author of many peer-reviewed technical papers in the world’s leading journals, several of which are cited by the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He is a member of the Royal Society’s Climate Change Advisory Network and the United Nations ad hoc Expert Working Group on Biodiversity and Climate Change. He advised the Government of the United Kingdom during preparations for the G8 and UN meetings discussing climate change.
“I solemnly, sincerely, and truly swear and affirm that the evidence I shall give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”.
Dr Lewis used the term nonlinearities: points at which global warming feeds back to generate more global warming. Actually ecosystems like the Amazon or oceans could have separate thresholds. Every climate scientist with an academic position agreed that the government’s 2-degree target is already 50% likely to tip the system over the edge.
In other words, it is not like gradually polluting a lake and it gets gradually muddier and muddier, it is more like pushing a car over the top of a hill.
A grimly funny question about the environmental problems of palm plantations, certainly raised a few laughs amongst the audience. “Why are you asking me about illegal logging in Indonesia? Of course by definition, loss of trees…”
How many deaths can be attributed to climate change? The court heard Dr Lewis state in a low tone that in 2005, in Mumbai a record-breaking 1 metre of rain fell on a single day. 1000 people died. There are extensive studies on every continent, which can be compared with climate models. Climate change threatens to affect us all. And the UK? “We live in an increasingly globalised world.” An article in the Guardian called for more research attributing deaths to climate change “It’s time for a body-count”.

A defendant from Nottingham has degrees in biology and epidemiology. Her calculations, not peer-reviewed but based on George Marshall of coinet.org, estimate the amount to kill a person is in the region of 200,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions. (nice science reviews the current eco-situation on page 49)

Did you know that the University of Nottingham’s growing rate of carbon emissions could fill three hot-air balloons for every student?!

Ideas for Eco-worriers
– Dig up the dirt on energy and carbon markets.
– D.I.Y offsetting by providing consumers with contraception, solving the population problem too.
– End the bloodshed for oil.
– Take “direct action” to fix your bike!
– Choose your own career path.
– Fancy dress as an endangered polar bear.
– Do you know anyone who died from climate change? Report it to the Environment Agency.
– Get the facts
– Reprint this article!
http://sen.blog-city.com/finally_the_judgement.htm

What Better Time? Issue Three out now!

The third edition of Scottish Climate Activists newsheet, What Better Time?, is out now. Read online at whatbettertime.livejournal.com

This months edition looks at biofuels, the M74 and more.

The third edition of Scottish Climate Activists newsheet, What Better Time?, is out now. Read online at whatbettertime.livejournal.com

This months edition looks at biofuels, the M74 and more.

Aldermaston – camp is NOT closing & surround the base, 24th March

In a frontpage (and inside) article today the Indy have got it into their heads that the women’s peace camp is cl

AldermastonIn a frontpage (and inside) article today the Indy have got it into their heads that the women’s peace camp is closing. You can read the article here: http://tinyurl.com/2h7jrf

Camp is not closing. In fact camp is very much there, today, outside Aldermaston.

Letters of support for camp are already coming in and we hope that the “wrong end of the stick” article will only highlight both the repressive byelaws situation (see http://www.aldermaston.net/news/212 for background) and the fact that Aldermaston is busy building new facilities for new nuclear weapons.

Come and join us!

And if you can’t join us today, then come to the women’s gate on Easter Monday(24 March) – part of a mass “surround the base” event against a new generation of Trident and a celebration of 50 years of anti-nuclear protest.

See http://www.cnduk.org/aldermaston
info@aldermaston.net
http://www.aldermaston.net

Aldermaston – camp is NOT closing & surround the base, 24th March

In a frontpage (and inside) article today the Indy have got it into their heads that the women’s peace camp is closing. You can read the article here: http://tinyurl.com/2h7jrf

Camp is not closing. In fact camp is very much there, today, outside Aldermaston.

AldermastonIn a frontpage (and inside) article today the Indy have got it into their heads that the women’s peace camp is closing. You can read the article here: http://tinyurl.com/2h7jrf

Camp is not closing. In fact camp is very much there, today, outside Aldermaston.

Letters of support for camp are already coming in and we hope that the “wrong end of the stick” article will only highlight both the repressive byelaws situation (see http://www.aldermaston.net/news/212 for background) and the fact that Aldermaston is busy building new facilities for new nuclear weapons.

Come and join us!

And if you can’t join us today, then come to the women’s gate on Easter Monday(24 March) – part of a mass “surround the base” event against a new generation of Trident and a celebration of 50 years of anti-nuclear protest.

See http://www.cnduk.org/aldermaston
info@aldermaston.net
http://www.aldermaston.net

Invitation to the Camp for Climate Action at Kingsnorth Power Station: August 3-11 2008

***Please forward and post widely***

Invitation to the Camp for Climate Action at Kingsnorth Power Station

Day of Mass Action at Kingsnorth: Saturday August 9th, 2008

www.climatecamp.org.uk

***Please forward and post widely***

Invitation to the Camp for Climate Action at Kingsnorth Power Station

Day of Mass Action at Kingsnorth: Saturday August 9th, 2008

www.climatecamp.org.uk
Low-impact living // education // high-impact direct action

This summer the Camp for Climate Action will pitch its tents outside
Kingsnorth coal-fired power station in Kent for a week of education,
sustainable living and direct action. Everyone is invited to the camp,
which is now part of an international movement, with eight climate camps
on four continents planned for this summer. Together, we will show that
the blind pursuit of economic growth at any cost is simply insane, and
is to blame for the CO2 emissions and ecosystem destruction that are
causing catastrophic climate change.

Get out the diary, here’s the plan:

In late July this year’s camp will begin with a one-day event at
Heathrow, which will continue the fight against airport expansion and
support the people who welcomed us into their communities last year.

Next, everyone is invited to travel together over a number of days
across London to Kingsnorth in Kent (around 50 miles in total).
Marching through London highlights the political links between aviation,
coal and agrofuels: Central London’s investors, industry lobbyists and
PR companies all determine what gets built and what gets passed off as
‘solutions’.

The camp will converge on Kingsnorth power station where owners E.ON
plan to build the UK’s first coal-fired plant in 30 years. The science
shows that expanding the fossil fuel economy must stop. Yet, without a
forceful campaign against this madness, government and business are set to
build a power station that will burn the dirtiest of all fossil fuels.

The camp will bring together thousands of people for a week of
workshops, discussion and direct action. Run without leaders by everyone
who comes along, the camp will be a working ecological village using
renewable energy, composting waste and sourcing food locally.

Climate campers will not only highlight positive solutions, but will
also take direct action against two drivers of climate change:

Wednesday August 6th: Day of Action against Agrofuels. Agrofuels are
fast replacing rainforests and agriculture for food production, meaning
more hunger, CO2 emissions, and biodiversity loss. They must be stopped.
Join us on this day of action, details to follow.

Saturday August 9th: Day of Mass Action against Kingsnorth coal-fired
power station. The power station must not and will not be built! This
promises to be an epic moment in the battle against climate change. If
you can only make it for the day, not to worry: trains run from Central
London to Kingsnorth, every few minutes and take less than an hour.

Too much to manage? They said that last year, and look what we pulled
off. We say – we must be audacious; the Camp for Climate Action is just
warming up! We are the last generation that can avert catastrophic
climate change, so come and play your part!

For more information, visit www.climatecamp.org.uk and join our email
list at http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/climatecamp

***Important dates***

Late July: Heathrow event and travel to Kingsnorth. Details soon…
Sunday August 3th: Camp set up. We’ll all make the camp happen together.
Monday August 4th-10th: Workshops, networking and action training.
Wednesday August 6th: Day of Action against Agrofuels
Saturday August 9th: Day of Mass Action against Kingsnorth coal-fired
power station
Monday August 11th: Help return the camping field back to nature.

Notes from the UK Squatters’ Meeting 9/10 February 2008

This, the first attempt to coordinate a national meeting for some time, was held in a beautiful old nursing home with extensive grounds at Headingley in Leeds.

This, the first attempt to coordinate a national meeting for some time, was held in a beautiful old nursing home with extensive grounds at Headingley in Leeds. There was a good mixed turn out with squatters represented from many of the major towns in the uk, some protest sites and some travellers attending. All in all perhaps 30-40 people.

Overall the meeting was constructive and positive with a lot of things discussed with a good party on Sunday night, of which the local residents were very accomodating once we explained it was a one off. It was a different matter with the local constabulary who were miffed to say the least, but unable to act because of a secure building and the number of people present. (apart, that is, from a bit of harrassment, including an isolated piece of brutality/assault). They finally got their vindictive revenge by confiscating the van taking the rig away on monday by claiming that the driver was not allowed to use a german driving license in this country!! We managed to save the rig though: Ha!

What follows is the basic agenda, followed by rough notes from each meeting highlighting points raised, ideas and criticisms put forward and general information concerning the different aspects of squatting around the uk.

BASIC AGENDA (of general topics)

1. Builing a stronger network between squats/autonomous spaces (aut. spaces) in the uk.

2. Initial planning for days of action.

3. How can we make better use of squats/aut. spaces in terms of connecting them to wider issues such as increased surveillance, housing problems, gentrification, ghettoisation and the fundamental issues of who controls our land , spaces and ultimately lives.

4. The impact of non-squatted autonomous spaces (ie rented/bought/legal social centres) on the squatting movement.

5. Breaking out of the ‘squatting scene’.

6. The impact of drugs on the movement.

7. Repression facing autonomous spaces in the uk and how we can resist effectively.

Saturday: first meeting

Introductions

What is happening in places in the uk?

BRISTOL: A new squatted social centre is in the process of opening. There is Magpie, a long term squat/autonomous space. The local social centre is Kebele, which has now been there nearly eleven years. It was originally squatted, the eviction was resisted and then the building was rented with a housing co-op in it to cover the rent. The building is now owned, but the housing co-op have moved out as they found it difficult to co-exist with activities taking place. The building now accomodates free space for workshops, a cafe, a library, internet and other amenities. Kebele has also, slowly, become recognised as part of the local community.

NORTH EAST LONDON: A squatters’ network has been started in the area around hackney consisting of approx. 11 squats resulting in better solidarity and response to eviction threats. There has been some more social centre organising, with one currently by Lower Clapton Roundabout (info: 07506095491). Ramparts have possibly 2 more months, but have opened a new building.

LEEDS: A few residential squats round Chapeltown, no organised network, no squatted social centres, there is also a partially working ‘Common Place’ legal social centre

NOTTINGHAM: Sumac social centre (not squatted), a few squats, not many activists. City has lots of potential but needs injection of energy.

EXETER: Not much happening, trying to set up a place for temporary autonomous arts (TAA) and skill share. Big regeneration at moment, lots of empty spaces but not much action.

SCOTLAND: There are squats but they tend to be evicted quickly and legally. ESRA- Edinburgh Squatters’ Rights Association.

BRADFORD: There has been a squat on Westgate for 3 years and a block of flats has been squatted down Manchester Rd.

MANCHESTER: Not much squatting happening. There are legal social centres, the ‘Basement’ recently closed down due to a fire/water damage but there is a gay/lesbian/transgender one and a mainstream/straight one which is a bit of a problem.

BRIGHTON: Very difficult to squat. squats last on average 6 weeks, sometimes can be moved on 3-4 times a week. IPOs (Interim Possession Orders) used more and more (gives cops instant eviction power). Illegal evictions with bailliffs, police or both commonplace. Police have gone on record in local paper saying that ‘squatting will not be tolerated in Brighton’. There is a legal social centre, the Cowley Club, bought with a mortgage through Radical Routes, with a housing co-op to pay off the mortgage. Club has cafe, bar, gigs, free English lessons, library, bookshop and internet access as well other activities. Luckily there are two long term squats at the moment.

PROTEST SITES

Tara- Nr Dublin, Ireland: been there over a year, about 15 people on 2 sites. Historical sites threatened, strong local campaign, need more people to help build stockades and fences.

Faslane, Scotland. Punx picnic on 2-4 May.

Rossport, county Mayo, Ireland. Need support. Have good local support. Action camp from where direct action is done.

9 Ladies, Derbyshire- have technically won campaign, waiting on papers. Some of site tatted down.

Bilston Glen- against a road funded by biotech corporations, need more people, council haven’t got money to evict.

Camp Bling- near Southend, anti-road campaign, been there 2 years.

Titnore Woods, nr Worthing- against supermarket and urban sprawl, strong local support, 2 camps

GENDER AND SEXISM

Machismo- there is often a competition of male vs male over dominance, sometimes between female. Is this Alpha male/female complex a purely biological effect or is it reinforced by societal conditions?

Is homophobic/queer/transgender ‘abuse’ a problem?

Does creating ‘queer fiendly’ nights encourage segregation? Maybe we should focus on anti-homophobic issues instead? However queer fiendly nights allow an expression of their culture not always tolerated by mainstream society. Or, in other words, there is a temptation to ghettoize yourself in order to feel comfortable and fit in with like minded people around you.

Maybe there is not such a problem within the alternative/squatting scene itself, but at free parties when people from outside the scene come there can be problems. How can we educate them and break down these discriminatory barriers?

Ghettoisation occurs on many levels, not just with queers, eg anarchists, travellers. Plus in wider society ghettoisation is occuring more and more, asian, black, white working class and middle class gated communities- we need to bear this in mind.

Is it less about gender and more about role playing? Do certain people take on certain roles in squats- someone does electricity, someone does locks, plumbing, security etc.

But do certain people just take on roles or fall into them- ie does a certain dynamic grow, where people are doing the same jobs because only they have the skills?

To counter this perhaps skill sharing workshops could be an option, or an apprentice approach where people watch and learn locks being changed, plumbing being fixed etc.

Do gender stereotypes take over? Males change locks, fix plumbing, electricity/ females cooking, cleaning etc? How can we address this?

In order to challenge gender/role stereotypes people should not follow the easiest efficient path-i.e. someone does the locks, someone does the plumbing as this perpetuates role entrenchment/division of labour.

THE IMPACT OF DRUGS ON THE MOVEMENT

Both Bristol and Brighton split between drugs squats/creative squats. However, is this true or can a positive squat happen when the squat is filled with munters (drug taking idiots smashed out of their face talking shit)?

Some squats are just party squats and attract bad press.

It can be difficult for families/children to squat because of the presence of drugs.Squatting could be made more attractive to families.

Drugs have divided the squatting scene, or is it that they have invaded all of it?

A lot of people get into squatting through the free party scene and then continue to squat just to party, especially those who have just left home and wish to express themselves and not take responsibility. Is it possible to politicise this element without being patronising?

If squats have a short shelf life, like in Brighton, then there is not so much motive to maintain it by some people and a hedonistic attitude can take over.

There is the problem that some people will come to visit a squat and think, ‘oh, it’s just a squat’ and will get pissed or off their head. This can be a problem inside the squat but more so outside in the public eye.

It is down to individual squatters what they want to do with their space and how they want to live.

Not all squats should be seen as places to go and be entertained.

How do drugs effect autonomous spaces policy wise? How do you, or should you, draw a line on ‘acceptable’ behaviour, to say ‘wait a minute, everyone is getting battered’ and yet maintain the ability for people to be autonomous and express themselves individually?

Should drugs be seen as a societal symptom and not just concerned with the squatting movement?

Is there sometimes a difference between the type and quantity of drugs used by the people who break the squats and then those who move in later, or is this a false dichotomy?

NETWORKING AMONGST SQUATS

What is networking? An e-mail list? More meetings?

It should be more than this, it should be active solidarity.

The network in London was created by having meetings once a month. They also have a phone with everybodys’ numbers on it, but no names, so that if there is an emergency a text can be sent to everyone.

Having Squatters’ dinners, rotating around each squat in an area.

N

ational network- how can we make it happen?

Create a riseup list in conjunction with an e-mail account which sends no mail but info is placed in a draft folder.

Have 2 national meetings a year.

Make a newsheet of ongoing news from the draft folder in the e-mailm account and distribute as printed or PDF.

News about squatting actions can also be sent to 325collective(at)hush.com and will be compiled on the web site.

What do we want out of the network?

People could work out local/specific skills and network them nationally.

People should be responsible for contacting people/ finding out what’s going on, not waiting for news to be sent to them.

There can be problems with communication when living on site.

What is the point of the network?

To be a social movement which threatens the status quo, yet without diluting our fundamental political beliefs.

‘Recruitment’, getting people on board- facilitating our skills to demonstrate a more valid image of squatting than is currently represented.

Not all squatters represented at the meeting, we need to remember that not all people squat for ideological purposes. How can we get over our political meaning without alienating people?

We should reach out to immigrants/refugees/vulnerable people, but handing out info isn’t enough- there must be a support network in place.

Perhaps a local meeting/info point for people to come and get help.

Possibly visit local housing offices and hand out info?

SOCIAL CENTRES

Practical aspects of occupying/setting up a centre were discussed.

What is the effect of legal social centres on the movement? Do they detract from the squatting aspect or are they a good half way house?

It can take a long time to set up relationships with people in the local are, so long term legal centres can be good for this. It means that the centre can be for the local community rather than being moved on all the time and centred on the scene.

There is a danger of cliques/closed groups occurring.

There can be problems with security with squatted social centres, in case the owner turns up.

It is possible to file an injunction against the owner, but only with reasonable grounds- i.e. he has tried to breach section 6. If done file it using someone on benefit so that it is covered by legal aid.

There can be problems if the fire brigade come and check safety. Do a personal public liability assessment covering health and safety aspects.

New social centre london- hackneysocialcentre.blogspot.com

If industrial buildings are left empty for 3 months or more then the owners can lose money on a tax break, so it is in their interrests for them to be occupied. For a commercial property to be lived in it must be partly residential-ie have a shower, toilet and kitchen.

Different ways of occupying social centres are: squatting, squat and then get in touch with owner and get permission, get permission first, rent, or mortgage

It is perhaps better to engage with people on a practical level in the local community and not just on an idealogical level.

Outreach/word of mouth with local community. Ask local community, ‘what do you want?’. Make it clear that they have just as much say in the running of things as everyone else.

DAYS OF ACTION

Dijon, France- the days of action concept was thought of and it was decided that people should do things relevant to their own country.

Should groups concentrate on their own area or do a centralised action?

Perhaps lots of decentralised actions as well as a big squat to make a statement, as just one big action on its own would maybe detract from the idea that squatting happens everywhere.

Some kind of manifesto/press release explaining international character of actions, showing that our strength lies in our network/diversity.

Maybe don’t concentrate on the press too much so our actions aren’t twisted into a publicity stunt.

Is the fact that we have to rely on the press a sign of our weakness? Should we therefore rely on our own alternative press, or is it possible that we can manipulate the mainstream press?

Put any ideas into the e-mail account draft folder.

There is a London wide co-ordination meeting on the 23rd Feb.

Press release will focus on national/international nature and then local groups can add their own relevant details.

People could decide to stay in their own town or a few towns close to each other could co-ordinate.

Possibly a solidarity action around what is happening in Berlin?

Perhaps clandestine direct actions with/without a press release.

SQUATTING AND RESISTANCE.

what successful ways work to resist evictions?

Does it depend on individual situation?

Why should we resist? This depends on personal reasons and this meeting is not about ideology.

Are there times that we shouldn’t resist? When it is too difficult to secure the building. If electricity is abstracted and can’t be covered up.

There should be less focus on resisting evictions that have been to court and more focus on automatic all round defence in case of illegal evictions. We should defend our space without relying on the legal process.

It is relatively rare that evictions are resisted when due process has been carried through the courts.

As soon as we become illegal in a space, ie after a possession order is granted we move on, when really this is the point where we should be attacking. We should resist because for some of us the point of squatting is to attack the system.

Bigger squats rather than lots of smaller ones may be better option. But what about internal politics? Division destroys our cohesion

If we generally believe that we are doing the right thing and these are our homes then we should be prepared to defend them.

Local support- If the community saw something positive in a squat/social centre and then we defended it, it would look good in terms of encouraging pro-active action and not relying on authority.

It should not be about images though, we should not become just another spectacle.

Is it the building that matters or is it the community that matters?

We shouldn’t have an image of the local population being totally apathetic and passive. They may be open to pro-active participation.

We shouldn’t be so wary/scared of authority, we should refuse to let the police in. Or does this give them an excuse to use Section 17 of PACE (suspicion that an offence is taking place) to kick down the door.

Supportive acts at the time of eviction in the surrounding area?

Once bailiffs get in should you fight back or declare non-violence?

Police tactics- Psychological: react to the police/bailiffs on their own terms. If they shout, shout back, if they start to be violent and attack the door then proactively defend it.

Have an action plan ready in case of surprise eviction attempt.

Knowledge of the law is not a defence on its own, ie- just because you know the law don’t expect the police to respect it. But it is very useful to know your basic rights, like not having to give your name.

However a knowledge of the law is crucial in any form of resistance as it facilitates an area of conflict where tactical advantage may be gained.

We should concentrate on actually defending squats and not fall into the legal game, yet it is important to know some.

If you resist an eviction the first time and the bailiffs leave, then you can’t be sure when the bailiffs/police will come back and you will have to stay in the building.

If people actually resist and confront authority they will be more aware of why they squat.

Moving on all the time just perpetuates a transient situation where no connection can be made with the local community. This also causes ‘the scene’.

When you have a situation where heavies want you out but have been unable to get in to evict you it can make it dangerous to go out.

In terms of illegal evictions you do have the right to defend the building using ‘reasonable’ force, but not with a legal eviction where you only have the right to defend yourself.

Resisting squats in UK will give a boost to the European network.

Tactics: Mattresses behind the door frame to counteract kinetic/pneumatic battering rams; braces across doors/windows; trapdoor on stairs with weights (eg- hardcore/rubble) on top; ring in false witness sightings/crime reports to misdirect police to false incidents; use paint bombs;create confusing conditions on the ground for the police/bailiffs.

Use a video camera and get in the cops/bailiffs face with it.

If police confiscate/destroy video evidence go to court to retrieve it. Not sure if entitled to legal aid for this.

Have more than one film/memory card for camera and swap them over frequently so that if the police get one you will still have some evidence.

Turn it from a private situation into a public situation by creating noise/ a spectacle outside. Fireworks?

Press coverage can be beneficial (if represented properly).

Use injunctions against owners if they have used threatening language outside (get a recording).

Shell Shuts Up in Nottingham

7.03.2008

7.03.2008
Student activists raised issues such as corporate corruption and climate change at a Shell-run event. Shell employees only commented “I do not have an opinion on this subject” when asked how they respond to these polemical matters.

Leaflet used on the night

A hugely successful disruption/complete domination of the Shell “Recruitment Event” took place last night.

A group of seven Nottingham student activists utilised the event’s exercise of identifying “risks” Shell might face when drilling for oil of the coast of a West African island to raise awareness amongst potential Shell graduate employees and send a message to Shell that they are not welcome in Nottingham. The activists employed varying tactics with some preferring to employ a highly effective “Yes Men” style, some sporting anti-shell clothing, others distributing leaflets about the corporation and others still opting for outright, heated debates with (rather disheartened and dispirited) Shell employees. Despite the fact that students tackled Shell differently, an impressive sense of unity was achieved as four out of the five groups’ presentations ended with harsh criticism of the corporation. Such criticism included a condemnation of Shell’s previous brutal, corrupt, murderous and polluting history in West Africa, the corporation’s implication in peak oil, climate change and the necessity of the rejection of the global economic system which has led to climate change and absolute poverty in the first place. During the question and answer section at the end of the presentations the need for real solutions to the climate change challenges was raised – not “green wash”, not “Corporate Responsibility” and not bio fuels. Despite there being a bio-fuels “expert” from Shell present, whilst all of these issues were being raised by the students the corporation’s employees remained strangely quiet.

Along with the environmental discussions, the student activists highlighted the fact that corporations like Shell are content to fund violent dictatorships and private armies (e.g MoPol in the case of Nigeria) to repress local opposition to their exploitation of natural resources. The response from the majority of students attending the corporate event was one of interest, as they did not know of Shell’s sinister past, whilst Shell employees almost universally denied knowledge of the corporation’s links to the hanging of innocent environmental activists in the Niger Delta.

Before leaving, the activists made it clear that a better world is possible citing the environmentalist/anti-globalisation, non-hierarchical, grass-roots movements springing up all around the world that “will continue to grow until corporations like Shell do not exist”.

Numerous other harsh threats to the corporation’s multi-billion pound existence were met with silence from the corporate employees. Surprising as it may seem, Shell consistently rejected the opportunity to put a corporate spin on the charges made against them – even when directly asked to do so.

International Women’s Day: anti-GM occupation & trashing, Brazil

On March 7th – International Women’s Day – dozens of Brazilian women occupied a research site of the U.S.-based agricultural biotechnology giant Monsanto in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, destroying the greenhouse and experimental plots of genetically-modified (GM) corn.

On March 7th – International Women’s Day – dozens of Brazilian women occupied a research site of the U.S.-based agricultural biotechnology giant Monsanto in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, destroying the greenhouse and experimental plots of genetically-modified (GM) corn. Participants, members of the international farmers’ organization La Vi­a Campesina, stated in a note that the act was to protest the “Brazilian government’s decision in February to legalize Monsanto’s GM Guardian® corn, which came just weeks after the French government prohibited the corn due to environment and human health risks.”

La Via Campesina also held passive protests in several Brazilian cities against the Swiss corporation Syngenta Seeds for its ongoing impunity for the murder of Valmir Mota de Oliveira. Mota was a member of the Movement of the Landless Rural Workers (MST) — the largest of the seven Brazilian movements in La Via Campesina — who was assassinated last October in the state of Paran during these organizations’ third occupation of the company’s illegal experimental site for GM soybeans. While Brazil already has a high number of land activist murders, “Mota’s was significant because it was the first to occur during an occupation organized by La Vi­a Campesina, and the first assassination in Brazil to occur on the property of a multinational agribusiness.”

The expansion of agricultural biotechnology into Brazil is increasing agrarian conflicts and exacerbating historic tensions over land. The movements in La Vía Campesina reject seed patenting, claiming the practice traps poor farmers in a cycle of debt to corporations that own the seed patents, and undermines small farmers’ autonomy to save and share seeds. They claim that “GM technology threatens biodiversity and native seed varieties, and violates the rights of consumers and small farmers by contaminating conventional and organic crops.”

Japanese Open Fire on Sea Shepherd Crew: Three Injured

07/03/2008
At 1545 hours (0445 GMT), a clash between the crew of the Sea Shepherd vessel Steve Irwin and the Japanese whaling ship Nisshin Maru turned violent when the Japanese Coast Guard began to throw flash grenades at the crew of the Steve Irwin.

Paul Watson with bullet & bent badgeJapanese coast guards with flash grenades07/03/2008
At 1545 hours (0445 GMT), a clash between the crew of the Sea Shepherd vessel Steve Irwin and the Japanese whaling ship Nisshin Maru turned violent when the Japanese Coast Guard began to throw flash grenades at the crew of the Steve Irwin.

Captain Paul Watson was struck by a bullet in the chest. Fortunately, the bullet was stopped by his Kevlar vest. The bullet struck just above the heart and mangled Captain Watson’s anti-poaching badge, which was worn on his sweater underneath the Kevlar vest.

Dr. David Page was videotaped prying the bullet from Captain Watson’s Kevlar vest. “You have been hit by a bullet,” he said.

The Kevlar vest and anti-poaching badge effectively saved Captain Watson’s life.

Additional injuries were sustained by crewmembers Ashley Dunn and Ralph Lowe. Dunn, 35, from Launceston, Australia suffered a hip injury when he tried to get out of the way of the exploding grenades. Lowe, 33, from Melbourne, Australia received bruises to his back when one of the flash grenades exploded behind him.

The Japanese Coast Guard was retaliating against Sea Shepherd crewmembers for tossing rotten butter onto the decks to discourage their illegal whaling activities. The clash came after a week long pursuit by the Steve Irwin of the Nisshin Maru, in an effort to stop illegal whaling activities in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

Earlier in the day at 0800 hours (1900 GMT), the Steve Irwin had ordered the Nisshin Maru to leave French territorial waters. The Japanese whaler complied and turned around, heading back west into Australian waters.

The confrontation occurred inside the Australian Territorial Zone at the position of 63 Degrees, 41 Minutes South and 133 Degrees, 27 Minutes East.

Video of the incident

Japanese Scramble to Spin Shooting Story

In the aftermath of a confrontation between the crew of the whaling ship Nisshin Maru and the crew of the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin, the Japanese public relations flacks are working overtime to get the spin right.

First, they admitted that warning shots were fired, then they corrected themselves and said that only flash grenades were fired at the crew of the Steve Irwin. Then they changed the story again and described the flash grenades as “warning balls.” By tomorrow morning, they may have it spun it again and may be describing them as “marshmallows.”

The Japanese Coast Guard and the Japanese Fisheries Agency have stated to the media that the devices were flash grenades and that warning shots were fired. Only the Institute for Cetacean Research is denying that warning shots were fired and describing the flash grenades as “warning balls.”

“I think the video tells the story,” said Sea Shepherd volunteer Laurens De Groot, a former police officer from Rotterdam. “I’m familiar with the devices thrown. They are the type of flash grenade that specially trained SWAT teams used to combat armed and dangerous criminals.”

The Japanese claim that Captain Paul Watson is lying about being shot was expected. When Giles Lane and Benjamin Potts were tied to the mast of the Yusshin Maru No. 2, the Institute for Cetacean Research claimed it was a lie until the video images were released.

Dr. David Page, the ship’s medical officer, has examined and verified that there were three injuries sustained, all severe bruises. Ralph Lowe from Melbourne was bruised on the back by an exploding flash grenade, and Animal Planet cameraman Ashley Dunn from Launceston, Tasmania injured his hip while trying to avoid a flash grenade. Captain Watson has a large bruise and a cut on the upper left side of his chest.

Dr. Page pried a bullet from Captain Watson’s Kevlar vest and examined the bruise where the bullet impacted. Watson’s Sea Shepherd anti-poaching badge took up some of the force of the impact, but it also cut the skin beneath after it was mangled by the bullet.

Japan claims there were only two Coast Guard officers on the Nisshin Maru, but Sea Shepherd photos and videos clearly show at least four uniformed Coast Guardsmen.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura was quoted as saying to the media, “Is it all right to hurt humans in order to protect whales? I think whales are cute and important creatures, but even so, hurting humans is unforgivable.”

That is quite the spin–accusing Sea Shepherd crew, who did not injure anyone, of hurting humans after Japanese whalers and the Coast Guard deliberately injured human beings to protect an illegal whaling operation.

The Japanese Coast Guard admitted to the media only a few days ago that its officers were armed with rifles and sidearms. Now they are denying they have rifles.

The Japanese keep changing their story.
The most important fact remains that the Japanese whaling fleet is illegally killing endangered whales in a whale sanctuary in violation of international law and an Australian Federal Court order.