Kelsterbach protest against airport extension, camp news & upcoming events, frankfurt / germany

On Sun­day, 14.12. about 150 peo­ple demon­strat­ed in the for­est of Kel­ster­bach (near Frank­furt / Main) against the con­struc­tion of the new run­way north of the cur­rent air­port site.

No Night Flights (German)On Sun­day, 14.12. about 150 peo­ple demon­strat­ed in the for­est of Kel­ster­bach (near Frank­furt / Main) against the con­struc­tion of the new run­way north of the cur­rent air­port site.

To famil­iar­ize with the sur­round­ing of the for­est, which fra­port (the com­pa­ny which runs the air­port) wants to destroy and in view of the area which prob­a­bly will be cleared first, the demon­stra­tion moved trough the for­est towards the air­port grounds, along the cur­rent path to where the road Okriftel­er crossed the motor­way 3 and the fast-train tracks. Through­out the Kel­ster­bach­er for­est are the prepara­to­ry mea­sures (removal of muni­tions, sub-wood and ani­mals) large­ly com­plet­ed. Among the prepara­to­ry mea­sures include mark­ing work on the trees. These were from the demon­stra­tors numer­ous and var­ied with paint and spray cans sup­ple­ment­ed, so that the ori­en­ta­tion for forestry work­ers in the for­est in the future will be more dif­fi­cult.

At the bridge on the ICE route had already post­ed the cops and blocked the tran­si­tion towards sound­proof­ing wall of the air­port. Under the obser­va­tion of a police heli­copter there was a short ral­ly, while on the road Okriftel­er many new slo­gans against the expan­sion were paint­ed.

The for­est walk was a good step from the activist lethar­gy of the past few months!

Upcom­ing events:

4th Jan­u­ary 2009: The first colour­ful walk in the forests in the new year will again explore the area and make the extent of for­est destruc­tion clear. Meet­ing: 14 clock For­est Camp

From the 12th Jan­u­ary 2009: pos­si­ble grub­bing begin­ning, Day X
Day X is the day on which the site is fenced and / or with the clear­ing work is begun. Get on the alarm lists (soon under www.waldbesetzung.blogsport.de or in the for­est camp)!

14th Jan­u­ary 2009: demon­stra­tion togeth­er with pupils, stu­dents and oth­ers against the Hes­s­ian con­di­tions in Frank­furt. Check: www.14januar.de

Even between the years, there will be activ­i­ties around the camp and against the expan­sion type. Keep you updat­ed on www.waldbesetzung.blogsport.de or www.flughafen-bi.de

Pre­vi­ous sto­ries about the camp: 1 | 2

Titnore Woods battle goes on! Upcoming events & update

DETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

Trees drawingDETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

The freez­ing tem­per­a­tures and stormy con­di­tions mean life is cur­rent­ly no pic­nic for the hardy pro­test­ers camped out in Tit­nore Woods, West Dur­ring­ton, in a last-ditch bid to try and stop a new hous­ing estate and Tesco mega­s­tore from being built over green fields and ancient wood­land.

And grate­ful local sup­port­ers are organ­is­ing a pre-Christ­mas stall in the town cen­tre to bring fes­tive cheer to the tree-house dwellers, who moved onto the site back in May 2006.

They will be col­lect­ing pro­vi­sions for the pro­test­ers under the title “A Ham­per for a Camper” at Hold­er’s Cor­ner, Mon­tague Street, Wor­thing, on Sat­ur­day Decem­ber 20, from 11am.

It wasn’t an easy option when the team of eco-heroes sneaked onto the threat­ened ancient wood­land off Tit­nore Lane at the crack of dawn on a May bank hol­i­day and start­ed build­ing their tree homes before any­one knew what was hap­pen­ing.

Most peo­ple assumed they’d be kicked off again straight away, but the days turned to weeks turned to months turned to years and they’re still there!

The final plan­ning appli­ca­tion isn’t even through yet — they had to rethink part of it — and you can still object, writ­ing to the Wor­thing Bor­ough Coun­cil plan­ning depart­ment at Port­land House, Rich­mond Road, Wor­thing and quot­ing WB/04/00040/OUT.

But, sad­ly, Wor­thing cam­paign­ers against the devel­op­ment have already dis­cov­ered through years of cam­paign­ing, let­ter-writ­ing, peti­tion-rais­ing and large, peace­ful, demon­stra­tions that mon­ey and pow­er don’t lis­ten to the lit­tle peo­ple who know the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong.

We live in a world where even if police com­mit mur­der or theft they can get com­plete­ly off the hook.

We live in a world where politi­cians can lie through their teeth, start wars that kill hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple, and get away with it. We live in a world that is being choked to death by the blind greed of cap­i­tal­ism and yet we are told there is no oth­er option.

The Tit­nore campers are part of that big­ger pic­ture — they have the guts to phys­i­cal­ly put them­selves on the line and say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

Please sup­port them in any way you can — food, sup­plies, a friend­ly vis­it.

There are tough times ahead and we all need to be there for each oth­er.

* 1990s road pro­test­er Jim Hin­dle will be giv­ing a talk at 8pm on Thurs­day Jan­u­ary 29 upstairs at The Rest in Bath Place, Wor­thing. All wel­come.

URGENT Tree Protest Weymouth ‑Aroooga — updated

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

—–

Sun­day, 14.12.2008:

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

—–

Sun­day, 14.12.2008:
One pro­tes­tor still in trees, with the oth­ers com­ing down on Fri­day and Sat­ur­day — chop­ping down of trees clear­ance work con­tin­u­ing all week­end. “They’re already over half way through cut­ting them and they’re work­ing today and have been work­ing over the week­end.”
—–

11.12.2008
Action in the trees now get there.

Urgent many trees being cut down some over 400 years old. For anoth­er unneed­ed road. There was a camp at the site 12 years ago with some of the Fair­mile posse there. Which won and camp dis­man­tled ..now road­builders , the coun­cil and home­grown Tim­ber com­pa­ny are at it again.
The site is …Two Mile Cop­pice next to the rail­way line Wey­mouth..
3 activists cur­rent­ly in trees with secu­ri­ty around.… any old tree pro­test­ers dust off your har­ness­es and get there. Or any new recruits next gen­er­a­tion wel­come.
On site mobiles ( bat­ter­ies get­ting low) 07792717821 / 07807952822
Just get in da van and get there now.

—–

Ancient tree sit-in against road

12th Decem­ber 2008
Two pro­test­ers are sit­ting in trees in ancient Dorset wood­land to try to stop clear­ance work tak­ing place ahead of the build­ing of a new £84m relief road.

Work to clear part of Two Mile Cop­pice restart­ed on Thurs­day after a legal bid by the Wood­land Trust tem­porar­i­ly sus­pend­ed work on Tues­day.

The Wey­mouth relief road aims to ease traf­fic around Wey­mouth and Port­land, which are host­ing the Olympic sail­ing.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil said work would con­tin­ue despite the pro­test­ers.

A spokesman said trees would be cut down around the demon­stra­tors and that the coun­cil hoped to com­plete the work by Christ­mas.

“The coun­cil is now dis­cussing how the pro­test­ers can be safe­ly and legal­ly removed,” he added.

One pro­test­er, 35-year-old Nicky Baines, came down from the trees on Fri­day.

He told the BBC the two remain­ing men, Nick Pep­per, 41, and a man known as Nod­dy, had both lived in Wey­mouth in the past.

He said they did not rep­re­sent any par­tic­u­lar group but the idea was to “stick it out as long as pos­si­ble”.

“We’ve been hav­ing a bit of trou­ble with the amount of equip­ment — food, water and stay­ing warm.

“But at least one per­son has got a lot of stuff they can keep going with.”

Work restart­ed

Trees and oth­er veg­e­ta­tion were being removed from 1.5 acres of wood­land on the west­ern edge of Two Mile Cop­pice, when Tues­day’s legal chal­lenge halt­ed work.

The Wood­land Trust, which owns the land, said the coun­ty coun­cil had failed to pro­vide a Notice to Enter doc­u­ment.

The cop­pice is among land in an Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty (AONB) that Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil was giv­en per­mis­sion to buy, using com­pul­so­ry pur­chase orders, in Sep­tem­ber.

But until the orders are processed, the land still belongs to the trust. The cor­rect doc­u­men­ta­tion was lat­er pro­vid­ed and work was allowed to restart.

Steve Marsh, of the Wood­land Trust, said the legal chal­lenge was start­ed to make sure the coun­cil was fol­low­ing the cor­rect pro­ce­dures.

“We did­n’t think we’d ever be able to stop the work in the long term,” he said, adding that the trust was against the road.

“This is the last remain­ing ancient wood­land in the Wey­mouth and Port­land area. It’s a very much-used wood and a much-loved wood.

“Once it’s gone, it’s gone for­ev­er, it can’t be recre­at­ed because the cli­mate was dif­fer­ent 400 years ago.

“Ancient wood­land is the rich­est habi­tat we’ve got in Britain — it’s our equiv­a­lent of the rain­for­est.

“We feel the road is a near act of van­dal­ism on the envi­ron­ment, all to help cut peo­ple’s jour­ney times by five min­utes.”

Envi­ron­men­tal groups, includ­ing the Cam­paign to Pro­tect Rur­al Eng­land (CPRE), lost a High Court legal bid to stop the road in 2007.

A pub­lic inquiry fol­lowed, which end­ed in March 2008, but many res­i­dents and busi­ness­es said they sup­port­ed the plan for the road.

Work is due to start in spring 2009, if the Depart­ment for Trans­port (DfT) gives the fund­ing.

Work”>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/dorset/7772693.stm”>Work restarts back­ground

Just to let those wish­ing to help know that there is a local cam­paign group — Bypass the Bypass and they have a web­site: http://www.bypassthebypass.org/

Also, the Wood­land Trust have been fight­ing this road for years (they own Two Mile Cop­pice) and have held it up for years through var­i­ous means. You can view info on the Wey­mouth Road on their web­site here

Pre­vi­ous protest camp back­ground

NEW SOCIAL JUSTICE CENTRE IN BIRMINGHAM

24.11.2008
A new social cen­tre is devel­op­ing near Birm­ing­ham City Cen­tre. Please come and get involved.

JUSTICE NOT CRISIS have moved on from their squat­ted Cllr John Lines home­less vil­lage, http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/21744
into the Fire­bird pub, on the local Ben­more estate.

24.11.2008
A new social cen­tre is devel­op­ing near Birm­ing­ham City Cen­tre. Please come and get involved.

JUSTICE NOT CRISIS have moved on from their squat­ted Cllr John Lines home­less vil­lage, http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/21744
into the Fire­bird pub, on the local Ben­more estate.

The protest has become much more than a hous­ing demon­stra­tion. “Its a response to the lack of youth pro­vi­sion, com­mu­ni­ty pro­vi­sion and the lack of com­mu­nal spaces for peo­ple to meet with­out the need to spend mon­ey.”

Since enter­ing the pub the group has been clean­ing up, inside and out, mak­ing it safe and secure. There is a cosy com­mu­ni­ty space and the young peo­ple from the local area have been giv­en their own space to do their own thing. They’ve brought in their own pool table and a sofa. They have also dec­o­rat­ed the entrance dur­ing a grafit­ti work­shop.

Free advice on debt, ben­e­fits and hous­ing is being offered to local res­i­dents, a fire­place has been built from recy­cled mate­ri­als found on-site and a library has been start­ed.

The begin­nings of a Social Cen­tre are emerg­ing from the ini­tial Jus­tice Not Cri­sis protest and the col­lab­o­ra­tion between the dif­fer­ent groups involved. For more infor­ma­tion on Social Cen­tres go to; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_centre

We are still in the process of fix­ing up the space and any­one is wel­come to come down and get involved.

Some of us will be at the film screen­ing this Thurs­day at The Spot­ted Dog in Dig­beth at 7.30pm, show­ing and talk­ing about we’ve been up to.

For more info;
http://www.justicenotcrisis.wordpress.com

——-

Pre­vi­ous updates (since last report):

THE JOHN LINES HOMELESS VILLAGE FINDS NEW LOCATION

Novem­ber 9, 2008
Fol­low­ing the grant­i­ng of an evic­tion by Birmingham’s coun­ty court The Coun­cil­lor john Lines Home­less Vil­lage has moved to a new site.

Fol­low­ing our live inter­view on BBC1’s The Pol­i­tics Show cam­paign­ers form JUSTICE NOT CRISIS moved tents and belong­ings to a new site just 50m away. The old site has been cleaned up and the remain­ing few things will be removed tomor­row (Mon­day) before the bailiffs turn up SO NO BIG CLEAN UP EXPENSE coun­cil­lor Lines.

The site is at the start for the Per­shore Road (city end). Park­ing is avail­able in Bal­sall Heath Road. Click here for a map.

——-

HOUSING DEMO MOVES TO A THIRD SITE

Post­ed on Novem­ber 12, 2008
Hav­ing moves to a new site just yards from the orig­i­nal site we have now been told to move again. We didn’t want to cost the coun­cil any mon­ey be refus­ing and mak­ing the coun­cil pay for a bailiff so we have left the site.
Our new loca­tion is at the old Fire­bird Pub in Belle­vue. We have cho­sen this site as the build­ing has been emp­ty for years, is van­dalised dai­ly and is an eye­sore. The land could be used for social hous­ing, com­mu­ni­ty facil­i­ties, a busi­ness that could pro­vide jobs, etc but the own­ers have left it emp­ty and falling down.

Belle­vue is almost oppo­site the old camps and can be reached by bus­es: 61,62, & 63 Bris­tol Road, 45 &47 Per­hore Road or the 8A & 8C.

Click here for a map.

See top of sto­ry for more info.

——-

JNC CAMPAIGNER STABBED IN THROAT

2 weeks of Rooftop Occupation. Public Meeting Called with P4P

ROOFTOP OCCUPIERS CALL FOR PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS THE FUTURE OF 87 ASHLEY ROAD, ST PAUL’S, BRISTOL

10.00am today (Wednes­day) marked 2 weeks of the rooftop occu­pa­tion — WE’RE STILL HERE!

Ashley Road bannerROOFTOP OCCUPIERS CALL FOR PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS THE FUTURE OF 87 ASHLEY ROAD, ST PAUL’S, BRISTOL

10.00am today (Wednes­day) marked 2 weeks of the rooftop occu­pa­tion — WE’RE STILL HERE!

On Thurs­day 27th of Novem­ber an open pub­lic meet­ing is being held in The St Pauls Learn­ing Cen­tre at 6.30pm to dis­cuss this sit­u­a­tion. Sup­port­ers of the rooftop pro­test­ers will be in atten­dance to answer ques­tions, respond to local con­cerns and open a dia­logue with PfP.

Places for Peo­ple are pub­licly invit­ed to state and open­ly dis­cuss what their inten­tions for 87 Ash­ley Road are. This will help assure every­one that they are in fact going to rehouse peo­ple on the hous­ing wait­ing list.

We hope you can attend.
For fur­ther infor­ma­tion con­tact:
Email: 87AshleyRoad@gmail.com
Phone:07722 786 379

Back­ground:

On Novem­ber 12th 2008 Places for Peo­ple (PfP) exe­cut­ed an evic­tion order on 87 Ash­ley Road, a squat­ted build­ing occu­pied by 20 peo­ple who have been made home­less by this action. This build­ing was unused by PfP for four years and left emp­ty until May 2008 when squat­ters work­ing to house as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble moved in.
PfP have refused all attempts to nego­ti­ate a mutu­al­ly benif­i­cal agree­ment, repeat­ed­ly sub­mit­ted incor­rect pos­ses­sion claims to Bris­tol Mag­is­trates courts and threat­ened ille­gal evic­tion. At one stage the sit­ting mag­is­trate called PfPs rep­re­sen­ta­tion “a right dog’s break­fast.”

As bailif­f’s and builders work­ing on behalf of Places for Peo­ple entered the prop­er­ty sev­er­al squat­ters moved onto the roof to resist evic­tion and have been there ever since.
As far as the courts are con­cerned the evic­tion has been served despite pro­test­ers being on the roof.

This press release is being writ­ten on the 14th day of con­tin­u­al rooftop occu­pa­tion and is being sent to com­mu­ni­ty groups and indi­vid­u­als in the St. Pauls area, and Places for Peo­ple.

Builders have board­ed up all nor­mal exit points from the roof, leav­ing the roof pro­test­ers no safe, imme­di­ate access. PfP have instruct­ed builders to ren­der the prop­er­ty unin­hab­it­able by remov­ing ALL fix­tures and fit­tings.

There are no plan­ning appli­ca­tions cur­rent­ly under con­sid­er­a­tion by Bris­tol City Coun­cil for 87 Ash­ley Road. PfP have been vague about their inten­tions for the prop­er­ty, how­ev­er they have men­tioned plans that would not ben­e­fit any­one on the hous­ing list.

The protest is part of a con­tin­u­ing con­cern over Places for Peo­ple’s treat­ment of emp­ty prop­er­ties and it’s sell­ing off of rental stock on the open mar­ket. PfP are sell­ing prop­er­ties via the “shared own­er­ship” scheme while not replac­ing rental prop­er­ties for those most in need. This will lead to an even­tu­al return to the unaf­ford­able rental mar­ket and a worse deal for low-income fam­i­lies seek­ing decent acco­mo­da­tion.

1 week: rooftop Occu­pa­tion of Ash­ley Road update

Update: Dai­ly sol­i­dar­i­ty demon­stra­tions will take place from 4–6pm out­side the house. All are wel­come —-
Sat­ur­day Novem­ber 15, 2008
The rooftop occu­pa­tion has now been going for 81 hours. Morale is high, sup­port has been con­stant and much appre­ci­at­ed. Thank you. There are health and safe­ty ques­tions about Places for Peo­ple bar­ri­cad­ing them up there. Any sup­port, noise or pro­vi­sions is very wel­come! Come and say hel­lo to the 87 crew, still going!

Res­i­dents and squat­ters togeth­er against cor­rupt land­lords!

KELSTERBACH FOREST OCCUPATION CAMP AGAINST AIRPORT EXPANSION CALLS FOR SOLIDARITY & UNRÄUMBAR FESTIVAL 28–30TH NOVEMBER

Waldbe­set­zung Kel­ster­bach (Kel­ster­bach For­est Occu­pa­tion Camp)

Big parts of the beau­ti­ful for­est of Kel­ster­bach near the air­port of Frankfurt/Main (Ger­many) are in dan­ger of being destroyed.

Kelsterbach tripodsWaldbe­set­zung Kel­ster­bach (Kel­ster­bach For­est Occu­pa­tion Camp)

Big parts of the beau­ti­ful for­est of Kel­ster­bach near the air­port of Frankfurt/Main (Ger­many) are in dan­ger of being destroyed.

It has been well known for about 10 years that Fra­port (the cor­po­ra­tion run­ning Frank­furt Air­port) plan to build a new run­way on this place by the end of 2011, cut­ting down every tree on 300 hectares of land (about 100,000 trees), dou­bling the air­ports flight move­ments per year to a lev­el of at least one every 45 sec­onds. About 50 ini­tia­tives and near­ly all com­mu­ni­ties around the air­port are against the expan­sion because of the expect­ed rise of fly-over noise.

Fra­port plan to fin­ish the run­way by the end of 2011 and is already tak­ing so-called “prepar­ing mea­sures” in the for­est, cut­ting brush­woods to make way for their machines to cut the trees and cap­tur­ing sev­er­al ani­mal species includ­ing frogs and bats to relo­cate.

Almost all forms of protest have not suc­ceed­ed to stop the prepa­ra­tions of the build­ing of a new run­way. Activists have occu­pied a small area of the for­est since May 2008 to stop the exten­sion plans and a tent and hut vil­lage has emerged. About 30–50 peo­ple now reg­u­lar­ly live in the for­est vil­lage and wel­come every help, may it be dona­tions, new inhab­i­tants or just peo­ple pass­ing by and show­ing their sol­i­dar­i­ty.

The may­or of Kel­ster­bach has threat­ened to evict the camp as of 30th Novem­ber 2008, claim­ing he can­not accept the huts in the for­est for legal rea­sons, although it seems unlike­ly the evic­tion will actu­al­ly be attempt­ed then or any time soon.

Unräum­bar Fes­ti­val

The Waldbe­set­zung Kel­ster­bach (Kel­ster­bach For­est Occu­pa­tion Camp) invite you to the Unräum­bar Fes­ti­val, a week­end of live music, art, danc­ing, cin­e­ma, work­shops, playshops, info meet­ings, cre­ative actions, good food, and much more, on 28–30th Novem­ber. The whole fes­ti­val will be non com­mer­cial, every­thing runs on dona­tion basis. Bring a tent, sleep­ing bag and mat. Bring musi­cal instru­ments, toys, good ener­gy and food to share.

Oth­er Ways to Sup­port the Kel­ster­bach For­est Occu­pa­tion

Spread the news about what is hap­pen­ing in Kel­ster­bach For­est. Tell peo­ple, jour­nal­ists and politi­cians.

Dona­tions are very wel­come. Use­ful things include veg­an and veg­e­tar­i­an food, build­ing mate­ri­als (a lot of con­struc­tion wood, nails), old bed­sheets (for ban­ners), writ­ing mate­ri­als, polypropy­lene rope (10 or 14 mm), bicy­cles, tools (saws and ham­mers), wood stoves and oth­er stuff for the win­ter, a cheap way to make fly­ers.
Vis­it or join Kel­ster­bach For­est Occu­pa­tion. Bring a tent, sleep­ing bag and mat, warm clothes, a flash­light. Musi­cal instru­ments and toys are nice! Dish­es, fork, knives and spoons are already here.

Direc­tions

from Kel­ster­bach cen­tre:

By train (S‑Bahn) from Frank­furt or Wies­baden to sta­tion Kel­ster­bach.
Out­side the sta­tion to the left (in the direc­tion of Wies­baden (south-west) at the right side from the track). Then with the track left from you, you fol­low Rüs­selsheimer Straße for about 1,5 km. After you’ve seen an exit-way, you’ll see a traf­fic light. There you turn in the Okriftel­er Strasse (not indi­cat­ed) in the direc­tion of Wall­dorf. You under­pass a train track, ignore the first street (right) and take the sec­ond pos­si­bil­i­ty, a park­ing bay. Walk into the for­est.

by car:
From Köln to Frank­furt A3/E35, exit Raun­heim #48, then to the north, direc­tion of Kel­ster­bach (Rüs­sel­heimer Straße / 43). Right at the traf­fic lights (not indi­cat­ed: Okriftel­er Straße, K152), under by a viaduct. Ignore the first street at the right and take the sec­ond pos­si­bil­i­ty (150 meters fur­ther), a park­ing bay (see pic­ture) and park your car there.
Behind the bar­ri­er you walk straight on, fol­low­ing the way and peace-signs. You’ll come by a lake (on your right) and find the camp a lit­tle fur­ther (after a cross­road) on your left.

Hitch­hik­ing direc­tions:
A3, from Köln direc­tion Frank­furt, exit 48 — Raun­heim, ask the dri­ver to go north direc­tion Kel­ster­bach to let you out after sev­er­al 100 meters ‑where its pos­si­ble to turn… go on till you find the first hard way (ignore the 1. earthy path) to the right… fol­low the signs of lib­er­a­tion.
or go under the train, turn left, go right under the tube, over the street and straight… along a lake after it turn right.

Con­tact

Address:
Baumbe­set­zung neben dem Pflanz­garten
Gelbe Grund­schneise
65451 Kel­ster­bach
GERMANY
Phone: (+49)0175 833 59 58 (German/English)
e‑mail: waldbesetzung@riseup.net
Web­site: http://www.waldbesetzung.blogsport.de
Coor­di­nates: 50.038999, 8.504019

Bath Bomb #16 out now

The Bath Bomb
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #16
free/donation
Nov 08

Because now it’s okay to love Amer­i­ca

We Won’t Pay For Their Cri­sis

The Bath Bomb
@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #16
free/donation
Nov 08

Because now it’s okay to love Amer­i­ca

We Won’t Pay For Their Cri­sis

Sat­ur­day the 22nd of Novem­ber sees a new cam­paign tak­ing to the streets of Bath. Going under the slo­gans ‘Can’t pay, Won’t pay’ and ‘We won’t pay for their cri­sis!’, the cam­paign will be tak­ing the fight to the greedy politi­cians, bankers and boss­es who are behind this finan­cial cri­sis. The cam­paign will also focus on pro­tect­ing the rights of aver­age peo­ple and will cen­tre around five key demands – 1) decent coun­cil sub­si­dies on gas and elec­tric bills, 2) afford­able food and hous­ing, 3) bailiffs and repos­ses­sion men out of our com­mu­ni­ties, 4) pro­tec­tion of jobs and ben­e­fits, and 5) full con­trol over the banks that our mon­ey has bailed out. These demands, and the cam­paign itself, are time­ly. Already, in the ear­ly stages of the cri­sis, unem­ploy­ment is up 20%, gas and elec­tric bill prices are up over 40% and home repos­ses­sions are up 70% on last year’s fig­ures. Now more than ever, we need to group togeth­er to pro­tect our­selves against the cal­lous greed of the wealthy. We need to be ready to fight against bailiffs who for too many years have strode unop­posed into our homes. We need to be ready to fight against the ener­gy com­pa­nies who increase our bills, leav­ing thou­sands to freeze while con­tin­u­ing to rake in prof­its. We need to be ready to fight against the gov­ern­ment who cut our ben­e­fits and use our mon­ey to bail out their big busi­ness bud­dies and we need to be ready to fight against the boss­es, who think noth­ing of mak­ing ded­i­cat­ed work­ers redun­dant to keep their own wal­lets fat. We have not caused this cri­sis, nei­ther have we asked for it. It has been caused by greedy politi­cians, bankers and boss­es, chas­ing after the big bucks, not wor­ry­ing about who they crush to get there. Yet who is expect­ed to pay when their shit hits the fan? Us. We are expect­ed to pay with our tax­es, with our jobs and with soar­ing food, rent and gas and elec­tric­i­ty costs. Well no more! This cam­paign is not just about wav­ing plac­ards or ‘mak­ing a point’, it is about win­ning. It is about tak­ing back what is ours from the greedy and wealthy who work so hard to take it from us, and it is a cam­paign that we can win togeth­er. If we are unit­ed in a belief that ‘enough is enough’, and a deter­mi­na­tion not to let them get rich from our labour while we strug­gle to make ends meet, we can and will win this cam­paign. So, to get involved, and wrench con­trol of our lives back from the greedy bas­tards at the top, meet at 12.30pm in the Abbey court­yard on Sat­ur­day the 22nd of Novem­ber.

Nude Girls Do It Togeth­er…

…Union­iz­ing to improve their work­ing con­di­tions, that is. Screen­ing on Sun­day Novem­ber the 30th as part of the month­ly Bub­bling Under rad­i­cal cin­e­ma, from 1 til 4pm, get an eye­ful of ‘Live Nude Girls Unite’, a doc­u­men­tary about the for­ma­tion of the first union of strip­pers in the US. This rau­cous film is to be pre­sent­ed by Bris­tol Indy­media, who are sure to come back with future offer­ings. Entry is free, and the Porter veg­gie lunch is high­ly rec­om­mend­ed. Get your plac­ards out for the lads!

Mini­bar — 0 Mega­BAN — 1

In the lat­est of a long line of foie gras vic­to­ries, Mini­bar have pulled the del­i­ca­cy from their menu after just two demos. At the end of the sec­ond 14 strong-protest, mem­bers of Bath Ani­mal Action and Bath Activist Net­work reached an ami­ca­ble agree­ment with the own­er that foie gras would be removed from the restau­rant with imme­di­ate effect. After this demo, activists paid a short and sharp vis­it to an emi­nent­ly less sen­si­ble foie gras pur­vey­or, Christophe LeCroix, own­er of The Pinch in St Margaret’s build­ings. Start­ing at 9pm, the demo last­ed only 10 min­utes, dur­ing which time the let­ter­box was flood­ed with leaflets, din­ers’ con­ver­sa­tions were drowned out with a bar­rage of noise, leaflets lit­tered the out­side of the build­ing and Christophe, seen cow­er­ing at the back of the restau­rant, brave­ly sent a wait­ress to lock the doors and draw the blinds. Christophe has twice removed and replaced foie gras from his menu, and is now sell­ing again, and despite his macho image, and a his­to­ry of punch­ing and sex­u­al­ly assault­ing both male and female activists, has twice been seen beg­ging pro­test­ers to leave him alone. Well, not any­more. BAA and BAN are back out­side The Pinch until foie gras comes off the menu for good. The protests could come at any time, but for now, we will leave Christophe to pon­der the fact that Hallowe’en is not the only time of year when things go ‘smash’ in the night! All foie gras-relat­ed com­plaints to:

Christophe LeCroix

The Pinch
11 St Margaret’s Build­ings
Bath, BA1 2LP
01225 421251
info@thepinch.biz

Tofu Sal­ad­fest Ahoy!

Sat­ur­day the 22nd Novem­ber is promis­ing to be a busy day for Batho­ni­ans, as we also have the Bath Veg­an Fayre! Run­ning at the Per­cy Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre on New King Street from 12 til 3.30pm, all are wel­come to come along and sam­ple the deli­cious food, and find out how those pale and sick­ly lentil-eaters can still scrape up pro­tein enough to draw breath with­out a nice slab of steak or ched­dar. As well as infor­ma­tion on veg­gie health, nutri­tion, envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits, com­pas­sion­ate liv­ing, and veg­an-cater­ing eater­ies in the city, GeneWatch will also be there to talk about genet­ic mod­i­fi­ca­tion of ani­mals in sci­en­tif­ic research, just like the franken-doc­tors do up at Bath Uni­ver­si­ty – such as poten­tial­ly high-risk tam­per­ing with the genes of insects to con­trol food sup­plies. Con­tro­ver­sial? Con­tact eatoutveganbath@yahoo.co.uk for more infor­ma­tion.

www.vegansociety.com/
www.genewatch.org/

EVENTS

Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs meet­ings, 2nd and 4th Mon­day of the month, 8pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street

Lon­don Road Food Co-op, Wednes­days, 4–7pm, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Lon­don Road

Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard

‘Baked Alas­ka’ film screen­ing, Mon­day 17th Novem­ber, 7.30pm, upstairs at the Rum­mer, Grand Parade

‘We Won’t Pay For Their Cri­sis’ march, Sat­ur­day 22nd Novem­ber, meet­ing 12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard

Bath Veg­an Fayre, Sat­ur­day 22nd Novem­ber, 12–3.30pm, Per­cy Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, New King Street

Green Light lec­ture: the Sev­ern Bar­rage, Tues­day 25th Novem­ber, 7.30pm, BRLSI, Queen Square

Anti-foie gras demo, Fri­day 28th Novem­ber, meet­ing 7pm, the Cir­cus

‘Open­ing the doors to auton­o­my’: a day of work­shops, activ­i­ties and art­work on urban sur­vival – cred­it crunch­ing strate­gies for get­ting through hard times; from the legal­i­ties and prac­ti­cal­i­ties of squat­ting and resist­ing repossession/eviction & gen­tri­fi­ca­tion to urban for­ag­ing, a bike work­shop, tai chi & self-defence, screen­print­ing and DIY wire­less inter­net – this will be a day of shar­ing skills and build­ing the net­works to not only sur­vive the eco­nom­ic cri­sis but to begin to col­lec­tive­ly shape what may replace it; Sat­ur­day 29th Novem­ber, 11–6pm, the Red Fac­to­ry, Cave Street, St Pauls, Bris­tol

Bub­bling Under, Sun­day 30th Novem­ber, 1–4pm, Porter Cel­lar bar, George Street

Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Wednes­day 3rd Decem­ber, 7.30–8.30pm, back room of The Bell

Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 4th Decem­ber, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs Hob­gob­lin

Bath Green­peace meet­ing, Mon­day 8th Decem­ber, 7.30–9pm, Still­point, Broad Street Place

Tran­si­tion Bath Forum, Tues­day 9th Decem­ber, 7pm, Wid­combe Social Club

Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 10th Decem­ber, 8.30pm, the Rum­mer, Grand Parade

Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 13th Decem­ber, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Tal­ly Ho-peless

Well, it’s Novem­ber again, so that means hunt­ing season’s back on, and anoth­er 3 or 4 months of pompous red-coat­ed throw­backs and legal grey areas. Although hunt­ing was offi­cial­ly banned in Feb­ru­ary 2005, it turned out to be the one law police chose not to enforce, and a law fraught with so many loop­holes that most hunts could car­ry on just like as they like – pre­tend­ing to fol­low a trail set by a scent­ed rag rather than a fox, when they’re being watched. And so the fine tra­di­tion of hunt sab­o­tage can’t hang up its mud-crust­ed wellies, just yet. On Sat­ur­day the 1st Novem­ber, a small group from Bath, Bris­tol, Pewsey and New­port kept an eye on the Mon­mouthshire Hunt, fol­low­ing leaked info about their meet­ing point. Using cit­ronel­la spray to mask fox scent, cam­eras to mon­i­tor activ­i­ty, and a com­bi­na­tion of hunt­ing horns, voice calls and whips (crack­ing the air, not phys­i­cal­ly strik­ing) to call off or con­fuse the hounds, a crisp autumn day out in the Welsh coun­try­side was enjoyed by all, espe­cial­ly the two pur­sued fox­es that we helped escape. If you want to help save inno­cent lives and reclaim rur­al space from arro­gant thugs, then become an Anti: ring Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs on 07854 062336.

http://hsa.enviroweb.org/hsa.shtml

Green Space: Going, Going, Gone?

Res­i­dents and greens held a protest in Bath on Sat­ur­day the 8th Novem­ber out­side the Guild­hall, hop­ing to save Bathamp­ton Mead­ows from unnec­es­sary devel­op­ment. Poten­tial­ly a vic­tim of yet anoth­er B&NES Coun­cil jobsworth’s twist­ed log­ic, the idea is we can save nature by killing it; in this case, the ancient mead­ow will make way for a 1,400 space Park and Ride con­crete job to abate traf­fic con­ges­tion and pol­lu­tion in the city cen­tre. The prob­lem here is that the main cause of con­ges­tion in Bath is the flow of east to west and west to east through traf­fic, rather than that of dri­vers com­ing into the city, so the Park & Ride will be bare­ly used and what­ev­er slack is saved will just be tak­en up by sup­pressed demand. The con­sul­ta­tion ends after the 14th Novem­ber and the con­sul­ta­tion form can be down­loaded from the Save Bathamp­ton Mead­ows’ site: http://www.savebathamptonmeadows.org.uk. Why not sign up today? It can’t hurt.

Alder-Nasty Antics

One activist from BAN joined 300 oth­ers from around the UK to block­ade the Alder­mas­ton Atom­ic Weapons Estab­lish­ment on Mon­day the 27th Octo­ber, part of the ongo­ing cam­paign to kick weapons of mass destruc­tion out of the UK. AWE Alder­mas­ton is the site where exper­i­ments for the next gen­er­a­tion of unpop­u­lar ‘Tri­dent’ nuclear sub­ma­rine arma­ments will be designed. A major part in this cost­ly scheme is expect­ed to be the ‘Ori­on’ laser facil­i­ty, cur­rent­ly being built. The MoD has also recent­ly applied for plan­ning per­mis­sion to car­ry out ura­ni­um enrich­ment there, too. Pro­test­ers from as far afield as Scot­land, Lon­don, Nor­folk, Ply­mouth and Yeovil took part, meet­ing to plan actions the day before. At 5.30am, activists locked on to bar­rels of con­crete and blocked the first gate, caus­ing police to prompt­ly close the road. Anoth­er group of Green­ham women (Green­ham Com­mon being a famous and long-lived peace camp, run­ning 1981–2000) took a sec­ond, while sev­er­al oth­er groups locked and super­glued them­selves to Tadley gate, the main entrance for fac­tor work­ers. The main gate itself was also held for a short time. Both the Rinky Dink ped­al-pow­ered sound sys­tem and band Seize The Day also showed up. Work at the fac­to­ry was shut down most of the morn­ing, and 33 were charged with Obstruc­tion of the High­way. As usu­al, the state refus­es to heed pub­lic oppo­si­tion to Tri­dent: the cam­paign to shut them down con­tin­ues!

www.tridentploughshares.org

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When You Threat­en One, You Threat­en All!

So read the ban­ner flut­ter­ing from the win­dow of the 89 Ash­ley Road squat in Bris­tol as bailiffs last week clam­oured at the door to evict the 20 res­i­dents who call the long dis­used build­ing ‘home’. This came as a sur­prise to res­i­dents who had not been served the manda­to­ry 7‑day notice of evic­tion a land­lord is required to pro­vide. What hap­pened next, and what of the sen­ti­men­tal mes­sage adorn­ing the front of the build­ing? Before we find out, a lit­tle look into the his­to­ry, and intend­ed future of the build­ing, those inside, and those who hope to get rich off it. Owned by prop­er­ty devel­op­ers ‘Places for Peo­ple’, the build­ing has been ear­marked for ‘regen­er­a­tion’ (read — gen­tri­fi­ca­tion) along with the sur­round­ing area. Despite the group’s claims that they are pri­mar­i­ly con­vert­ing homes into assist­ed accom­mo­da­tion for the home­less and elder­ly, Ash­ley Road is ear­marked to be turned into lucra­tive pri­vate flats, while the ‘char­i­ta­ble’ group is hap­py to allow oth­er­wise home­less peo­ple to be turfed out into the street at the begin­ning of win­ter. After res­i­dents saw the bailiffs, a call for sup­port was put out, and with­in an hour, around 50 activists, some from Bath, had descend­ed on Ash­ley Road, mak­ing the ille­gal evic­tion a logis­ti­cal impos­si­bil­i­ty. After a tense stand­off, the bailiffs and their police mates left, deject­ed. A vic­to­ry for sol­i­dar­i­ty, and a reprieve for the inhab­i­tants of Ash­ley Road. While the bailiffs will cer­tain­ly return soon, and may in the future be suc­cess­ful in their evic­tion attempts, the response of peo­ple to the fate of the squat demon­strates the pow­er of sol­i­dar­i­ty and col­lec­tive action over the often over­whelm­ing seem­ing forces of author­i­ty and pow­er.

Uncle Bul­gar­ia Weeps

Regret­tably, the Bath Bomb has just learnt about the demise of yet anoth­er of Bath’s great­est insti­tu­tions: Envolve. Who? Under the mot­to ‘Part­ner­ships in Sus­tain­abil­i­ty’, the for­mer envi­ron­men­tal char­i­ty start­ed out 14 years ago as the Bath Envi­ron­ment Cen­tre on Mil­som Street, and did exact­ly what it said on the recy­cled and biodegrad­able tin. Orig­i­nal­ly a resource for green activists and curi­ous passers­by, the cen­tre got too big for its boots, and moved to larg­er premis­es in the sub­ter­ranean tun­nel com­plex beneath Green Park Sta­tion – now depen­dent not just on its bene­fac­tors but also on state fund­ing. But such pay­outs rarely come with­out strings, and that proved the centre’s down­fall. Becom­ing more and more cor­po­rate, Envolve began a cam­paign of ostracism towards its more prag­mat­ic sup­port­ers, who recog­nise that ‘green cap­i­tal­ism’ is a con­tra­dic­tion in terms – they let go of staff and vol­un­teers deemed too rad­i­cal; arbi­trar­i­ly chose between which local cam­paigns have a right to be adver­tised or not; and then, one-by-one, kicked out use­ful but unprof­itable ini­tia­tives, like the green library, farm­ers’ mar­ket offices, meet­ing spaces for local greens, alter­na­tive trans­port offices, car-free schemes and food co-ops – after all, it doesn’t pay to be green. All that remained in the end was busi­ness con­sul­tants, edu­ca­tion offi­cers and a string of com­mu­ni­ty schemes they didn’t quite have the heart to grind out: a text­book exam­ple of state co-option. Hav­ing com­man­deered and neutered yet anoth­er group of poten­tial world-chang­ers, they then cut the fund­ing alto­geth­er – and that was that. The irony is that Envolve was held up entire­ly by com­pas­sion­ate peo­ple ham­strung by the restric­tive con­di­tions of their fund­ing, danc­ing to the master’s tune… but the road to hell is paved with good inten­tions. We here at the Bath Bomb hate to say I told you so, but… Let’s hope their suc­ces­sors, the Eth­i­cal Prop­er­ty Com­pa­ny, don’t go the same way.

Bath Activist Net­work are a local umbrel­la group cam­paign­ing on issues as diverse as devel­op­ment, envi­ron­men­tal­ism, anti-war, ani­mal rights, work­ers’ rights and more. Help­ing to pro­duce The Bath Bomb, we are open to any­one, and our mem­bers range from trade union­ists to anar­chists, lib­er­als to greens, and peo­ple who just want to change Bath for the bet­ter. For details on meet­ings, demos, or just to get in touch, ring us on 07949 611912, email bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk, or see our web­site: www.myspace.com/bathactivistnetwork

Danc­ing On The Grave Of Cap­i­tal­ism

It is not just in Bath that peo­ple are get­ting angry about hav­ing to pay for a cri­sis caused by politi­cians and big busi­ness. Cardiff, Bris­tol, Edin­burgh and Lon­don have also already seen mass action against the finan­cial cri­sis. In Lon­don, the finan­cial dis­trict has twice been invad­ed by hun­dreds of angry peo­ple demand­ing that the gov­ern­ment stops using our mon­ey to bail out fail­ing big busi­ness. The first Lon­don demo saw the police tak­en by sur­prise as hun­dreds showed their anger in the finan­cial dis­trict, attempt­ing, and only nar­row­ly fail­ing, to occu­py the Bank of Eng­land. The sec­ond demo, called on Hallowe’en and billed as a chance to ‘dance on the grave of cap­i­tal­ism’ saw a larg­er turnout of both police and pro­test­ers and end­ed in clash­es as peo­ple tried to make their way to the offices of recent­ly bank­rupt­ed firm Lehman Broth­ers. Up and down the coun­try, peo­ple are show­ing their dis­gust about a sys­tem that has failed us, and leaves us poor­er and poor­er while the rich con­tin­ue to get rich­er. At both Lon­don demos, stock­bro­kers promised to vio­lent­ly con­front pro­test­ers who dared to speak out about the sys­tem that keeps them rich and us poor, but, on both occa­sions, failed to mate­ri­alise. We can only imag­ine they are flick­ing the last of the white pow­der from their nos­trils, wip­ing a tear from their eyes, push­ing the ‘top floor’ but­ton on the lift and won­der­ing how their lit­tle game has gone so bad­ly wrong.

And now, to the dis­claimer: As any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflec­tive of each con­trib­u­tor. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat on. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this dis­claimer does not nec­es­sar­i­ly rep­re­sent the views of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor…

For fur­ther info on any of our sto­ries see www.myspace.com/bathbomb

87 Ashley Road Eviction Happening NOW!! and Kebele’s 13th Birthday Party 28th November — invite

Novem­ber 12, 2008
The inhab­i­tants of 87 Ash­ley Road woke up this morn­ing to a gar­den full of cops and bail­liffs here to evict them from the house that is a home to around 15 peo­ple, and make them home­less.

Bristol squat rooftop occupationNovem­ber 12, 2008
The inhab­i­tants of 87 Ash­ley Road woke up this morn­ing to a gar­den full of cops and bail­liffs here to evict them from the house that is a home to around 15 peo­ple, and make them home­less.

As I arrived on the scene(around 10.30 am), Ash­ley Rd was cor­doned off both sides of the house, and there was also police pres­ence behind the house. The bailiffs were already in the build­ing at this point, and all inhab­i­tants had left, apart from 2 that man­aged to get onto the roof. They even called a heli­copter in to ‘check that there were 2 peo­ple on the roof’ (I thought that’s what eyes were for!) As I was leav­ing to come and write this (12.30pm), 3 more heads popped up over the roof! Hope­ful­ly, by the time i’m back, that roof will see a num­ber more occu­py­ing it. A bailiff appar­ent­ly told one squat­ter, that there are plans to turn the build­ing into offices — so not social hous­ing for those in need at all!!

If you would like to come and sup­port, or just know more about what is going on, please come along to 87 Ash­ley Rd. We won’t leave qui­et­ly while they’re mak­ing peo­ple home­less and turn­ing our com­mu­ni­ty into a busi­ness park!!

—-

23:36 — 5 peo­ple still on roof

not much else to say, except they seem to be in good spir­its, have plen­ty of peo­ple giv­ing them sup­port on the ground . we have our own mobile inci­dent sup­port unit on the scene. no police at the moment, but secu­ri­ty with a cou­ple of dogs inside the house.

be good if peo­ple could be their as ear­ly as they can tomor­row morn­ing.

============

On Fri­day 28h of Novem­ber Kebele Sound brings you:

The Destroy­ers — 15 strong East­ern Euro­pean Folk Riot (http://www.thedestroyers.co.uk)

The Glitzy BagHags — Kitchen sink skif­fle (http://www.myspace.com/glitzybaghags)

Cir­cus of Inven­tion — Jelly­bean Punk-Hop (http://www.myspace.com/circusofinvention)

DJs: Nat­ty Bear­face — Jungle/Dubstep
Black Rain­bow — Global/Bass
B.O.C. — ska

plus late Anar­coustic Lounge with: Clay­ton Bliz­zard, Cos­mo, Anar­co Folko, and Bones at the Bot­tom of the Bar­rel

@ The Trin­i­ty Cen­tre, 9pm-3am

Tick­ets £7 Avail­able in advance for Kebele Infos­hop, Sat­ur­days 11am till 2pm

All pro­ceeds to Kebele. Need some back­ground?

For 13 years Kebele has pro­vid­ed a wide range of ser­vices, events and activ­i­ties, and a place for peo­ple to meet, share ideas and organ­ise for a bet­ter world. From squat­ted begin­nings and resist­ed evic­tion to hous­ing co-op, through to com­mu­ni­ty co-op and vol­un­teer-run anar­chist social cen­tre, it’s a long sto­ry with plen­ty of ups and downs along the way.

Most recent­ly, there’s been rev­o­lu­tion­ary reor­gan­is­ing and ren­o­va­tions and we’re not fin­ished yet…! There’s so much to learn from col­lec­tive­ly organ­is­ing and sus­tain­ing a street lev­el com­mu­ni­ty project with­out lead­ers or prof­it motives.

Our prin­ci­ples of equal­i­ty, inclu­sion, shared respon­si­bil­i­ty, co-oper­a­tion, sol­i­dar­i­ty, not for prof­it, and direct action remain at the heart of this autonomous space and we hope Kebele con­tin­ues to help keep Bris­tol’s thriv­ing counter cul­ture alive and kick­ing.

Part of a wider, expand­ing net­work of social cen­tres, Kebele aims to be a reflec­tion of the world we want to see in our every­day actions and organ­is­ing; a liv­ing, work­ing exam­ple of what we’re told is unre­al­is­tic and impos­si­ble…

Do you have ideas for Kebele events or activ­i­ties?
There’s lots of ways to get stuck in! Drop in and say hel­lo!
For more info and a cal­en­dar of events see http://www.kebelecoop.org
Con­tact Kebele on 0117 9399469 or kebelesocialcentre@riseup.net
Kebele is at 14 Robert­son Road, Eas­t­on. BS5 6JY.
http://www.kebelecoop.org

Councillor John Lines’ Homeless Village in Birmingham + update

5.11.2008
A protest camp named after Coun­cil­lor John Lines who’s respon­si­ble for the city’s hous­ing, was estab­lished last Thurs­day on derelict land owned by Birm­ing­ham City Coun­cil. Cllr. Lines has denied there is a home­less prob­lem in Birm­ing­ham and also denies there is mon­ey avail­able to build new ‘social hous­ing’. The occu­pied land has been unused for around sev­en years whilst there are over 30,000 peo­ple in the city wait­ing for hous­ing.

Birmingham homeless land squat 1Birmingham homeless land squat 25.11.2008
A protest camp named after Coun­cil­lor John Lines who’s respon­si­ble for the city’s hous­ing, was estab­lished last Thurs­day on derelict land owned by Birm­ing­ham City Coun­cil. Cllr. Lines has denied there is a home­less prob­lem in Birm­ing­ham and also denies there is mon­ey avail­able to build new ‘social hous­ing’. The occu­pied land has been unused for around sev­en years whilst there are over 30,000 peo­ple in the city wait­ing for hous­ing.

The protest is against the Coun­cil hold­ing on to land that could be sold at a ‘friend­ly’ price to Hous­ing asso­ci­a­tions there­by allow­ing Hous­ing Asso­ci­a­tions to draw up to £100m of grants to pro­vide ‘social hous­ing’. “At a cost of £50,000 per unit, the £100m could pro­vide around 2,000 homes” said one of the pro­test­ers. They claim the Council’s approach is spec­u­la­tive — by hold­ing onto unused land and build­ings with a view to sell­ing them off to the high­est com­mer­cial bid­der.

‘The John Lines’ Home­less Vil­lage’ con­sists of tents, a fire, cook­ing facil­i­ties and is locat­ed on the Per­shore Road in Bal­sall Heath. Orig­i­nal­ly the camp was intend­ed to last a week, but now pro­test­ers are try­ing to stay there as long as they can. Up until now the Coun­cil have made no plans to meet or talk with the pro­test­ers. They have been served with a notice to quit by Birm­ing­ham City Coun­cil and are due in court this Fri­day.

A group of around 30 peo­ple from dif­fer­ent parts of the city reg­u­lar­ly sleep over at the camp, some of whom are on wait­ing lists for social hous­ing and some home­less peo­ple have also joined the camp. The pro­test­ers have also attend­ed and dis­rupt­ed a coun­cil meet­ing yes­ter­day where accord­ing to the local press, they threat­ened to occu­py the roof of the home of Coun­cil­lor Lines, and Lines in return has ‘threat­ened to set his dogs on them’.

Pro­test­ers at the camp are keen on meet­ing vis­i­tors who want to express some sol­i­dar­i­ty. They are also in need of food, blan­kets and dona­tions.

——

Update:

The coun­cil was grant­ed the evic­tion order at Birm­ing­ham Coun­ty Court on Fri­day to evict the cam­paign­ers who are on land off Per­shore Road in Birm­ing­ham.

When you threaten One you threaten All: Eviction Succesfully Resisted in Bristol

An attempt­ed ille­gal evic­tion occurred this after­noon at Uni­ty Home, num­ber 87 Ash­ley Road, St Pauls, Bris­tol. IT WAS RESISTED

Unity Home eviction resistance 1Unity Home eviction resistance 2Unity Home eviction resistance 3An attempt­ed ille­gal evic­tion occurred this after­noon at Uni­ty Home, num­ber 87 Ash­ley Road, St Pauls, Bris­tol. IT WAS RESISTED

Own­er­ship of the house is claimed by Places for Peo­ple, Britain’s largest hous­ing asso­ci­a­tion. Its chief exec­u­tive, David Cow­ans, topped the list of rich­est “social” hous­ing providers with a salary of £257,928 in 2007 (Every sin­gle pen­ny on the backs of the poor). Instead of pro­vid­ing ade­quate social hous­ing they work for cor­po­rate gain and through spec­u­la­tion with our mon­ey are feel­ing the pinch of the prop­er­ty mar­ket crash. This is a social hous­ing provider play­ing with pub­lic mon­ey.

Num­ber 87 is actu­al­ly owned by Places for People’s char­i­ta­ble arm (Places for Peo­ple Indi­vid­ual Sup­port), which is sup­posed to pro­vide hous­ing for home­less and the elder­ly. They plan to turn the major­i­ty of the house into pri­vate owned apart­ments. It cur­rent­ly is hous­ing 20+ peo­ple.

It has been emp­ty for over 3 years and squat­ted by a large num­ber of oth­er­wise home­less peo­ple since April 2008.

At 12.00pm today (28 Oct 2008), bailiffs act­ing for Places for Peo­ple arrived – short­ly to be accom­pa­nied by the police – demand­ing that the res­i­dents be out by 12.30pm. They claimed paper­work had been sent through to the occu­pants, but in fact no notice of evic­tion had come through. This was an ille­gal attempt at mak­ing peo­ple home­less and was answered with sol­i­dar­i­ty.

A crit­i­cal mass of peo­ple began to build in response to those resist­ing the ille­gal evic­tion and by about 1.30pm there were between 30–50 peo­ple out­side the gates on Ash­ley Road, with many many more inside, ready to resist what the bailiffs and police were prepar­ing.

Peo­ple took to the roof, occu­pied spaces in win­dows, defend­ed the doors – for­ti­fy­ing the build­ing. A ban­ner was dropped explain­ing: WHEN YOU THREATEN ONE YOU THREATEN ALL – for the defence of squats and autonomous spaces. Against com­pa­nies like Places for Peo­ple – Britain’s most com­mer­cialised, cor­rupt land­lord.

A stand off ensued and even­tu­al­ly by around 2.00pm the bailiffs and police depart­ed the scene. A beau­ti­ful vic­to­ry for sol­i­dar­i­ty in resist­ing the cor­po­rate takeover of our city.

This evic­tion threat is immi­nent and all sup­port is need­ed.

The res­i­dents of the build­ing have made repeat­ed attempts to nego­ti­ate a set­tle­ment with P4P but com­mer­cial gain seems their only aim. The res­i­dents ask all those who believe in hous­ing for all and the stand against gen­tri­fi­ca­tion to join them.

Squat­ters and res­i­dents togeth­er against cor­rupt land­lords!