Leave it in the Ground’s Picnic in the Park trespass report

Around 70 peo­ple had set of to trav­el on a bank hol­i­day Mon­day which is no easy task as pub­lic trans­port has a nat­ur­al ten­den­cy not to run or has a lim­it­ed ser­vice on bank hol­i­days, for a pic­nic in a remote part of Der­byshire. The weath­er reports had all pre­dict­ed thun­dery show­ers for the day, which seems to be nor­mal for a bank hol­i­day out­ing, but this did not seem to deter the peo­ple who had gath­ered at the vis­i­tors cen­tre at Ship­ley Coun­try Park, Heanor, Der­byshire

trespass1trespass2
Around 70 peo­ple had set of to trav­el on a bank hol­i­day Mon­day which is no easy task as pub­lic trans­port has a nat­ur­al ten­den­cy not to run or has a lim­it­ed ser­vice on bank hol­i­days, for a pic­nic in a remote part of Der­byshire. The weath­er reports had all pre­dict­ed thun­dery show­ers for the day, which seems to be nor­mal for a bank hol­i­day out­ing, but this did not seem to deter the peo­ple who had gath­ered at the vis­i­tors cen­tre at Ship­ley Coun­try Park, Heanor, Der­byshire

The event had been organ­ised by a new cam­paign group called Leave it in the Ground and Earth First! to oppose new and exist­ing open cast min­ing in the UK and sol­i­dar­i­ty to inter­na­tion­al groups who are hav­ing their lives and land trashed in places like Phul­bari, Bangladesh by British com­pa­ny GMC Resources PLC http://www.gcmplc.com

After every one had fin­ished social­is­ing at the vis­i­tors cen­tre with cups of tea, they head­ed of through the park to the area of plush green fields and ripped out hedgerows, which is to be the area of the new open cast mine called Lodge house owned by UK Coal as we were fol­lowed by an evi­dence gath­er­er and a few oth­er police offi­cers who were mak­ing notes on how friend­ly and socia­ble we were.

UK coal had erect­ed new fences with­in the bound­aries of the fields declar­ing the 122 hec­tor site of destruc­tion wait­ing to hap­pen and activists out for the day just walked through the gap that will even­tu­al­ly have huge earth mov­ing vehi­cles and plant machin­ery tear­ing up the fields. There was no attempt by the police to stop us or ask­ing us not to go in, it was already decid­ed we were going to tres­pass, and there was no way they could keep us out any­way.

After a short breach of the bound­ary we came across a farm, com­plete with tree house, dog ken­nel with its bed­ding still inside and the odd toy in the gar­den that looked as if it had been aban­doned in a hur­ry from some pend­ing dis­as­ter. We gath­ered in the gar­den of the farm to hear a local per­son explain what was hap­pen­ing in the area.

We heard how UK Coal owns the land and that the locals in the sur­round­ing vil­lages of Smal­l­ey, Map­per­ly and West Hallem had been fight­ing against the com­pa­ny for the last 5 years against the plan to turn the area into an open cast site. Despite it being against plan­ning reg­u­la­tions the sec­re­tary of state gave the plan the go ahead in 2007. The fields we had just walked across is going to have its soil stripped in July and August of this year and the field to the south of the farm is going to be stripped this July, so it was a last look to see it in its nat­ur­al state, even though UK Coal are tak­ing the unusu­al step of return­ing the site back to green fields, not that the grass grows well or the hedgerows are replant­ed and the fields lack the nat­ur­al diver­si­ty of species.

More alarm­ing is that this is not just unique to Der­byshire; open cast­ing or strip min­ing as it is some­times known is on the agen­da of the gov­ern­ment and a change in pol­i­cy 2 years ago forced by pow­er sta­tions and coal com­pa­nies through lob­by­ing has forced it as a legit­i­mate way for them to make mon­ey, despite the fact it is seri­ous­ly dam­ag­ing to the cli­mate and the UK is not going to be able to cut its agreed emis­sions by burn­ing coal and that the Lodge House site is going to have 1 mil­lion tonnes of car­bon removed which means when it is burnt that’s 3,666,666 tones of car­bon diox­ide.

There was also a bit of brief his­to­ry of open cast min­ing in Der­byshire and the resis­tance to it in 1997 at the Tib­shelf site near Alfre­ton and how 250 activists from Earth First! NUJ and min­ers sup­port group had bussed there way to the site and caused an esti­mat­ed £375,000 to £4 mil­lion of dam­age with vehi­cles need­ing to be repaired on site as they were inca­pac­i­tat­ed!

We all moved off back into the fields with the fence an omi­nous mark­er in the dis­tance to the size and scale of what is to be lost and sat down to enjoy some food. Veg­gies had gone mobile and sup­plied us with veg­an pasties and their famous cake, so we sat in the long grass, drank some excel­lent Elder­flower Cham­paign that was being passed around while the police hid at the farm with­out refresh­ment keep­ing an eye on our activ­i­ty and social refine­ment. A kite flew over head and the chil­dren played foot­ball with the adults, all the usu­al accom­pa­ni­ments for a pic­nic.

We head­ed off through the south field and saw a bun­ga­low with its win­dows and doors sheet­ed up in steel, anoth­er vic­tim of the site I thought. Both prop­er­ties are the place most peo­ple dream of own­ing with the scenic views.

After a stroll on this bot­tom field we head­ed on to Bell Lane which divides the Lodge House site and head­ed into Smal­l­ey with anoth­er tea stop at the local Vil­lage Hall and an oppor­tu­ni­ty to use the toi­lets and more of Veg­gies cake and pasties. Some local peo­ple were there wait­ing for us and the group broke out into a meet­ing, in which we assessed the sit­u­a­tion over open cast min­ing in the UK and what we could do about it. The ener­gy and enthu­si­asm of which was enor­mous and in a very short time action plans had been drawn up. Small­er meet­ings in regions ensued so they could organ­ise into affin­i­ty groups. Peo­ple had trav­elled from Oxford, Cam­bridge, Man­ches­ter, Leeds, Not­ting­ham, Lan­cast­er, Nor­wich, Crew, Sheffield and Der­by as well as oth­er areas that I prob­a­bly missed and showed how much con­cern there was over the mat­ter of open cast min­ing

After a quick tidy up in the hall some set of back the way we came for the long jour­ney home while oth­ers decid­ed to take a slight­ly longer route over the fields of the site, just to keep the tres­pass going. We went into the main entrance of the site still unop­posed by the police after a slight nav­i­ga­tion­al error this all changed.

The local farmer had object­ed about us to our yel­low jack­et­ed escorts and we were being told we had to go back or face being arrest­ed and after check­ing the map, or not being allowed to go to the few steps more to the near­est foot­path we went back the way we came to join the foot­path at the back of the farm, again to be blocked by the police, one of which had led the farmer around the back and out of sight. One of the group decid­ed to go and have a word with the farmer and next thing we were being shout­ed to come this way; the chat with the farmer was obvi­ous­ly a suc­cess and we head­ed for the foot­path with a hap­py farmer and some of his fam­i­ly wav­ing us on like we were cham­pi­ons. This how­ev­er made us ques­tion what the police had said to the farmer?

For the lat­est infor­ma­tion on the next actions check Leave it in the Grounds web­site http://leaveitintheground.org.uk or blog http://leaveitintheground.wordpress.com

Or to get involved go to the Cli­mate Camp 3rd — 11th August at Kingsnorth http://www.climatecamp.org.uk and the Earth First Gath­er­ing 27th August – 1st Sep­tem­ber in Nor­folk http://www.earthfirstgathering.org.uk or find your local Earth First! group http://earthfirst.org.uk

BBC report on the tres­pass http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/derbyshire/7420634.stm
Do or Die http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no7/23–32.html
Phul­bari Resis­tance, Bangladesh http://phulbariresistance.blogspot.com

Why not organ­ise a protest against one of these?
UK Coal http://www.ukcoal.com/home
GMC Resources PLC http://www.gcmplc.com

—–
BBC report:

Tres­passers oppose coal mine planDerbyshire open-cast coal trespass 126th May 2008
Peo­ple who do not want a new open­cast coal mine on land adjoin­ing a coun­try park in Der­byshire have held a protest.

UK Coal wants to extract a mil­lion tonnes over four years from Lodge Hill in Smal­l­ey, near Heanor.

But cam­paign­ers said this would have a dev­as­tat­ing impact on the envi­ron­ment. About 50 pro­test­ers marched on the land in a mass tres­pass on Mon­day.

UK Coal said the mat­ter had gone through a pub­lic inquiry, and been prop­er­ly approved by the gov­ern­ment.

It said Britain need­ed ener­gy, and it was bet­ter to get it local­ly than to import it.

Cli­mate cam­paign­ers from the groups, Leave it in the Ground and Earth First! joined local res­i­dents opposed the plans for the mine on land adjoin­ing Ship­ley Coun­try Park.

Oppo­nents of the plans claimed near­ly 70 acres of green­belt land would be destroyed if the plans went through and were also wor­ried about noise and pol­lu­tion in the area.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/derbyshire/7420634.stm (also go here for a bit of his­to­ry to the ini­tial refusal of plan­ning per­mis­sion, over­turned by the Sec­re­tary of State)

A report from peo­ple who went, plus pho­tos, to fol­low

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All of the fol­low­ing are avail­able from here:

http://www.natterjackpress.co.uk/menu/downloads.php

Get down to your local rad­i­cal social cen­tre or book­shop for these newslet­ters — if they aren’t there then print them out / pho­to­copy and take down there. If your near­est social cen­tre isn’t that local, then you now know where you can get all the lat­est pub­li­ca­tions with­out hav­ing to trawl the net for them.

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* SchNews Week­ly — from their web site

* Rough Music — Issue 18 — May/June 2008 — Local Brighton ‘trou­ble mak­ing, dirt dig­ging’ newslet­ter

* Work­ers Sol­i­dar­i­ty — Issue 103 — May/June 2008 — Irish Anar­chist News

* No Pasaran — Issue 1 — May 2008 — New Antifa UK Anti Fas­cist newslet­ter

* Infos­hop News — Issue 1 — May 2008 — New 40 page roundup of news from the Infos­hop anar­chist news site

* Earth First! Action Update — May 2008 — anoth­er great new issue — a quar­ter­ly roundup of eco­log­i­cal and oth­er direct action from Britain and beyond

* Mesho — April 2008 — spoof news­pa­per made for the inter­na­tion­al days of action for squats and autonomous spaces

* Cor­po­rate Watch — Issue 40 — April/May 2008 — Iraq Inc., Euro­pean Invest­ment Bank, Arab-British cham­ber of Com­merce, West Papua, Review of Klein’s ‘Shock Doc­trine’, Diary + More

* Gagged — Issue 23 — April/May 2008 — South Wales Anar­chist Newslet­ter

* Resis­tance — Issue 102 — April/May 2008 — month­ly newslet­ter of the Anar­chist Fed­er­a­tion UK

* No Bor­ders — Issue 3 — Feb­ru­ary / March 2008 — No Bor­ders UK net­work newslet­ter

* Rup­ture — Feb­ru­ary 2008 — a great zine for and about free par­ties, squats and social cen­tres

* 325 — Issue 5 — Feb­ru­ary 2008 — an insur­gent mag­a­zine of social war and anar­chy

* Class War — Issue 93 — Win­ter 2007 — “Save the Plan­et — Get Rid of the Rich” get­ting straight to the point as always

* Organ­ise! — Issue 69 — Wnter 2007 — mag­a­zine of the Anar­chist Fed­er­a­tion

* Fire to the Pris­ons — Issue 2 — Decem­ber 2007 — Excel­lent new newsletter/magazine 30 pages of insur­rec­tionary anti-pris­on/­dom­i­na­tion news and analy­sis and pris­on­er sup­port infor­ma­tion

* Cross­ing Bor­ders — Issue 4 — Novem­ber 2007 — a newslet­ter on move­ments and strug­gles of migra­tion (this issue focus­ing on the No Bor­ders camp in the Ukraine)

* Front­line — Issue 6 — June/August 2007 — Colom­bia Sol­i­dar­i­ty Cam­paign quar­ter­ly mag­a­zine

* Direct Action — Issue 39 — Sum­mer 2007 — mag of UK anar­cho-syn­da­cal­ist Sol­i­dar­i­ty Fed­er­a­tion

* War­rior Wind — Issue 3 — May 2007 — a newslet­ter in sup­port of polit­i­cal pris­on­ers

* Incen­dio — Issue 1 — Spring 2006 — a bilin­gual (english/spanish) mag­a­zine on Latin Amer­i­can strug­gles and sol­i­dar­i­ty

* Rolling Thun­der — Issue 1 — Sum­mer 2005 — ‘an anar­chist jour­nal of dan­ger­ous liv­ing’

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Spirit of Freedom (May 2008)

Pro­duced by EARTH LIBERATION PRISONERS SUPPORT NETWORK

“The whole expe­ri­ence has been tough, but all the kind and strength­en­ing words and wise thoughts from strangers made it much eas­i­er!” (For­mer Swedish Ani­mal Rights Pris­on­er)

Prisoner Solidarity 11Pro­duced by EARTH LIBERATION PRISONERS SUPPORT NETWORK

“The whole expe­ri­ence has been tough, but all the kind and strength­en­ing words and wise thoughts from strangers made it much eas­i­er!” (For­mer Swedish Ani­mal Rights Pris­on­er)

Wel­come to the May 2008 edi­tion of Spir­it of Free­dom. As we go to print we await the sen­tenc­ing of Amer­i­can veg­an eco-activist, Eric McDavid, who has been con­vict­ed of thought crimes (he has been con­vict­ed of con­spir­ing to car­ry out ELF actions, although at the time of his arrest no crimes had actu­al­ly been com­mit­ted). Eric’s sen­tenc­ing has been put back on numer­ous occa­sions, so we would­n’t like to say when the sen­tenc­ing might actu­al­ly take place. But as soon as Eric has been sen­tenced we will be cir­cu­lat­ing his details and encour­ag­ing every­one to sup­port him. [for update on his sen­tence, see very bot­tom of post]

ELP is also watch­ing, with con­cern, the devel­op­ments in the case of Amer­i­can veg­an eco-activist Marie Mason. Her co-defen­dant, Frank Ambrose, is a police infor­mant and it is believed that Ambrose has giv­en the FBI the names of fif­teen oth­er peo­ple who Ambrose claims have been involved with both ALF and ELF activ­i­ty over a num­ber of years. ELP will of course bring you all the news as we receive it. In the mean time we ask that every­one sup­port Marie and the oth­er tar­gets to Ambrose’s lies.

But as well as these high pro­file activists, we ask you not to for­get all the oth­er pris­on­ers, some of whom are less well known. Regard­less of how long a pris­on­er serves, or how well known they are, its impor­tant we sup­port all the eco-pris­on­ers equal­ly. So please, no mat­ter where you are in the world, sup­port the eco-pris­on­ers and no com­pro­mise in defence of Moth­er Earth!

ECO-DEFENCE PRISONERS

Tre Arrow, SWIS #640393, Mult­nom­ah Coun­ty Deten­tion Cen­ter, 1120 S.W. 3rd Avenue, Port­land, Ore­gon 97206, USA. On remand accused of involve­ment with an arson on log­ging trucks and an arson on vehi­cles owned by a sand & grav­el com­pa­ny. (Tre is a raw ener­gy veg­an — He has asked that his let­ters of sup­port are writ­ten on scrap paper or tree-free paper).

Grant Barnes #137563, San Car­los Cor­rec­tion­al Facil­i­ty, PO Box 3, Pueblo, CO 81002, USA. Serv­ing 12 years for set­ting fire to a num­ber of SUV vehi­cles. The let­ters ELF were spray paint­ed onto all of the vehi­cles. (Grant is a veg­an).

Nathan Block, #36359–086, FCI Lom­poc, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, 3600 Guard Road, Lom­poc, CA 93436, USA. Serv­ing 7 years & 8 months for an ELF arson against a Poplar Tree Farm and an ELF arson against an SUV deal­er­ship. Also admit­ted his role in an ELF/ALF con­spir­a­cy. (Diet unknown).

Mar­co Camenisch, Post­fach 3143, CH-8105 Regens­dorf, Switzer­land. Serv­ing 18 years. 1) Ten years for using explo­sives to destroy elec­tric­i­ty pylons lead­ing from nuclear pow­er sta­tions. 2) Eight years for the mur­der of a Swiss Board­er Guard whilst on the run. In ’02 Mar­co com­plet­ed a 12-year sen­tence in Italy for destroy­ing elec­tric­i­ty pylons in Italy. (Mar­co is a meat eater who encour­ages organ­ic liv­ing).

Daniele Casali­ni, Casa Cir­con­dar­i­ale, Via Burla 59, 43100 Par­ma, Italy. Il Sil­vestre activist await­ing tri­al accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon in protest at nuclear ener­gy. (Daniele is a veg­an).

Rod Coro­n­a­do — See details in Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Pris­on­ers List.

Francesco Gioia, C.C. Sol­lic­ciano, Via Giro­lamo Min­ervi­ni 2/R, 50142 Firen­ze Sol­lic­ciano (FI), Italy. Il Sil­vestre activist await­ing tri­al accused of using explo­sives to dam­age an elec­tric­i­ty pylon in protest at nuclear ener­gy. (Francesco is a veg­e­tar­i­an and Straight Edge).

Jef­frey Luers, # 13797671, CRCI, 9111 NE Sun­der­land Ave, Port­land, OR 97211–1708, USA. Serv­ing 10 years for arson on a SUV deal­er­ship & the attempt­ed arson of an oil truck. The orig­i­nal sen­tence was 22 years & 8 months, but was reduced on appeal. (Diet unknown).

Eric McDavid X‑2972521 7E128, Sacra­men­to Coun­ty Main Jail, 651 “I” Street, Sacra­men­to, CA 95814, USA. Await­ing sen­tenc­ing hav­ing been found guilty of plan­ning to destroy the prop­er­ty of the U.S. Forestry Ser­vice, mobile phone masts and pow­er plants. (Eric is a veg­an).

Daniel McGowan #63794–053, Unit I, FCI Sand­stone, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, PO Box 1000, Sand­stone, MN 55072, USA. Serv­ing 7 years for an ELF arson against a Poplar Tree Farm and an ELF arson against an old growth log­ging cor­po­ra­tion. Also admit­ted his role in an ELF/ALF con­spir­a­cy. (Daniel is a veg­e­tar­i­an).

Jonathan Paul — See details in Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Pris­on­ers List.

Bri­ana Waters, 36432–086, FDC — Seat­ac, Fed­er­al Deten­tion Cen­ter, P.O. Box 13900, Seat­tle, WA 98198, USA. Await­ing sen­tenc­ing hav­ing been found guilty of involve­ment in an ELF arson on a Uni­ver­si­ty. (Diet unknown).

Joy­an­na Zach­er, #36360–086, FCI Dublin, 5700 8th St.- Camp Parks- Unit F, Dublin, CA 94568, USA. Serv­ing 7 years & 8 months for an ELF arson against a Poplar Tree Farm and an ELF arson against an SUV deal­er­ship. Also admit­ted her role in an ELF/ALF con­spir­a­cy. (Diet unknown).

ANIMAL LIBERATION PRISONERS
(All Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Pris­on­ers fol­low a min­i­mum veg­e­tar­i­an diet and most are veg­an).

Jon Able­white TB4885, HMP Lowd­ham Grange, Lowd­ham, Not­ting­ham, NG14 7DA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion. (Jon is a veg­an).

Gregg Avery TA7450, HMP Win­ches­ter, Rom­sey Road, Win­ches­ter, SO22 5DF, Eng­land. On remand accused of con­spir­a­cy to black­mail, in rela­tion to his involve­ment with the SHAC cam­paign. (Gregg is a veg­an).

Natasha Avery NR8987, HMP Bronze­field, Woodthor­pe Road, Ash­ford, Mid­dx. TW15 3JZ, Eng­land. Jailed for breach­ing her parole con­di­tions imposed on her for telling a fox hunt­ing mur­der­ing scum what she thought of them. Also await­ing tri­al accused of con­spir­a­cy to black­mail, in rela­tion to her involve­ment with the SHAC cam­paign. (Nat is a veg­an).

Mel Broughton TN9138, HMP Wood­hill, Tat­ten­hoe Street, Mil­ton Keynes, Bucks MK4 4DA, Eng­land. On remand accused of involve­ment with an arson and black­mail cam­paign against an Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty vivi­sec­tion estab­lish­ment. (Mel is a veg­an).

Jacob Con­roy #93501–011, FCI Vic­torville Medi­um I Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, P.O. Box 5300, Ade­lan­to, CA 92301, USA. Serv­ing 48 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign. (Jake is a veg­an).

Rod Coro­n­a­do, Voice of the Earth, PO Box 732, Tuc­son, AZ 85702, USA. Due to be sen­tenced to one-year impris­on­ment after Rod informed peo­ple how to make an incen­di­ary device dur­ing a speech at an ani­mal rights gath­er­ing. (Rod is a veg­e­tar­i­an).

Don­ald Cur­rie A3660AA, HMP Parkhurst, New­port, Isle of Wight, PO30 5NX, Eng­land. Serv­ing an Inde­ter­mi­nate Sen­tence, of not less than six actu­al years, for car­ry­ing out arsons against tar­gets asso­ci­at­ed the vivi­sec­tion indus­try includ­ing HLS. (Don is a veg­an).

Lau­ren Gaz­zo­la #93497–011, FCI Dan­bury, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, Route #37Danbury, CT 06811, USA. Serv­ing 54 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign. (Lau­ren is a veg­an).

Sarah Gis­borne, LT5393, HMP Down­view, Sut­ton Lane, Sut­ton, Sur­rey, SM2 5PD, Eng­land. Serv­ing 5½ years for con­spir­a­cy to cause crim­i­nal dam­age fol­low­ing the dam­ag­ing of 8 vehi­cles owned by peo­ple linked to Hunt­ing­don Life Sci­ence. (Sarah is a veg­an).

Joshua Harp­er #29429–086, FCI Sheri­dan Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, P.O. Box 5000, Sheri­dan, OR 97378 USA. Serv­ing 36 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign. (Josh is a veg­an).

Kevin Kjon­aas #93502–011, FCI Sand­stone, PO Box 1000, Sand­stone, MN 55072 USA. Serv­ing 72 months impris­on­ment for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign. (Kevin is a veg­an).

Daniel McGowan — See details in Eco Defence Pris­on­ers List.

Heather Nichol­son VM4859, HMP Bronze­field, Woodthor­pe Road, Ash­ford, Mid­dx. TW15 3JZ, Eng­land. On remand accused of con­spir­a­cy to black­mail, in rela­tion to her involve­ment with the SHAC cam­paign. (Heather is a veg­an).

Jonathan Paul, #07167–085, FCI Phoenix, Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, 37910 N 45th Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85086, USA. Sen­tenced to 51 months for an ALF arson on a horse meat plant. Also admit­ted his role in an ELF/ALF con­spir­a­cy. (Jonathan is a veg­an).

Andrew Stepan­ian #26399–050, FCI But­ner Medi­um II Fed­er­al Cor­rec­tion­al Insti­tu­tion, PO Box 1500, But­ner, NC 27509 USA. Serv­ing 36 months for help­ing organ­ise the SHAC-USA cam­paign. (Andrew is a veg­an).

Ker­ry Whit­burn TB4886, HMP Lowd­ham Grange, Lowd­ham, Not­ting­ham, NG14 7DA, Eng­land. Serv­ing 12 years for attempt­ing to black­mail a farmer who sup­plied guinea pigs for vivi­sec­tion. (Ker­ry is a veg­an).

PLOUGHSHARES PRISONERS

Helen Wood­son, 03231–045, FMC Car­swell — Admin. Max. Unit, POB 27137, Ft. Worth, TX 76127, USA. Serv­ing 8 years 10 months for actions that focused on the inter­re­la­tion­ship of war & the destruc­tion of the nat­ur­al world. The actions includ­ed pour­ing red paint over the secu­ri­ty desk of a fed­er­al court and mak­ing threat­en­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tions. Pre­vi­ous­ly Helen had served 20½ years for: 1) Using a ham­mer to dis­arm a nuclear mis­sile silo. 2) Burn­ing $25,000 on the floor of a bank whilst denounc­ing war, envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion & eco­nom­ic injus­tice. 3) Mail­ing warn­ing let­ters with bul­lets attached to Gov­ern­ment & cor­po­rate offi­cials. (Diet unknown).

THE LECCE FIVE
The Lec­ce Five have been charged with “sub­ver­sive asso­ci­a­tion” accused of dam­ag­ing Esso petrol pumps to oppose the War on Iraq; sab­o­tag­ing the cash machines of a bank which funds an immi­gra­tion cen­tre; and tar­get­ing the multi­na­tion­al com­pa­ny Benet­ton in sup­port of Mapuche land rights activists in Chile. All of the defen­dants are cur­rent­ly either under house arrest or released on bail.

ANTIFA PRISONERS

Vah­tang Devitlidze, ul. Libbedo­va 42, UO 68/2, otryad 14, briga­da 142, g.
Hagyshen­sk, Krasnodarskiy Kray, 352680 Rus­sia. Serv­ing 2½ years for stab­bing a neo-nazi in the leg whilst defend­ing him­self from attack. (Diet unknown).

Augustin Kraus, Vazeb­ni veznice, PP‑1, Lit­o­merice, 41 201, Czech Repub­lic.
Serv­ing 14 months for his par­tic­i­pa­tion in attacks against local neo-nazis. His charge was “bod­i­ly harm”. He speaks Czech, Slo­vak and Pol­ish. You can also write him short post­cards in Eng­lish. (Diet unknown).

Fabio Milan, C.C. via Pianez­za 300, 10151 Tori­no, Italy. On remand accused of fight­ing with the police after an anti-fas­cist protest. (Diet unknown).

Andrea Neff, Bnr: 746/07/2, Jus­tizvol­lzugsanstalt fur Frauen in Berlin, Arkonas­trasse 56, 13189 Berlin, Ger­many. Serv­ing 14 months for anti-fas­cist activ­i­ty. (Diet unknown).

Chris­t­ian Süm­mer­mann, Bnr: 441/08/5, JVA Plötzensee, Lehrter­str. 61, 10557 Berlin, Ger­many. Serv­ing 40 months for breach­ing the peace whilst serv­ing a
sus­pend­ed sen­tence issued for anti-fas­cist activ­i­ties. (Diet unknown).

Tomasz Wiloszews­ki, Zak­lad Karny, Orze­chowa 5, 98–200 Sier­adz, Poland.
Serv­ing 15 years for acci­den­tal­ly killing a neo-nazi whilst defend­ing him­self. (Diet unknown).

OTHER PRISONERS

Olga Alek­san­drov­na Nevskaya, UU163/5, 7 Otryad, pos. Dzerzhin­skiy, Mozhaysk 140090 Moskovskaya oblast, Rus­sia. Eco-activist serv­ing 6 years for arson, crim­i­nal dam­age and caus­ing explo­sions in protest at the war in Chech­nya. Due for release in 2009. (Diet unknown).

Vagge­lis Botzatzis, Komo­ti­ni Juridi­cal Prison (“Dikastikes Fylakes Komo­ti­nis”), T.K. 69100, Greece. On remand accused of set­ting fire to two com­pa­ny cars owned by a energy/power com­pa­ny. It is believed that the per­son or per­sons unknown who car­ried out the arson did so in protest at the destruc­tion of the nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment and in sup­port of two work­ers who died at the pow­er plant. Vagge­lis is also accused of set­ting fire to a bank and start­ing a fire inside a car yard. (Meat Eater).

Michael W. Sykes, 100 East 2nd St, Mon­roe, Michi­gan 48161, USA. Youth held on remand accused of anti-sprawl arsons, crim­i­nal dam­age, spray-paint­ing an anar­chist sign and burn­ing the Amer­i­can flag. (Diet unknown)

Fran Thomp­son, #1090915 HU 1C, WERDCC, PO Box 300, Van­dalia, MO 63382, USA.
Serv­ing Life for killing, in self-defence, a stalk­er who had bro­ken into her home. Before her impris­on­ment Fran was an eco, ani­mal & anti-nuke cam­paign­er. (Fran is a veg­an).

MOVE
MOVE is an eco-rev­o­lu­tion­ary group who car­ried out protests in defence of all life. All move pris­on­ers describe them­selves as veg­e­tar­i­ans. There are cur­rent­ly eight MOVE activists in prison each serv­ing 100 years after been framed for the mur­der of a cop in 1979. 9th defen­dant, Mer­le Africa, died in prison in 1998.

Deb­bie Simms Africa (006307), Janet Hol­loway Africa (006308) and Janine Philips Africa (006309) all at: SCI Cam­bridge Springs, 451 Fuller­ton Ave, Cam­bridge Springs, PA 16403–1238, USA.

Michael Davis Africa (AM4973) and Charles Simms Africa (AM4975) both at SCI Grater­ford, PO Box 244, Grater­ford, PA 19426–0244, USA.

Edward Good­man Africa (AM4974), SCI Mahanoy, 301 Morea Rd, Frackville, PA 17932, USA.

William Philips Africa (AM4984) and Del­bert Orr Africa (AM4985) both at SCI Dal­las Draw­er K, Dal­las, PA 18612, USA.

Mumia Abu Jamal, (AM8335), SCI Greene, 175 Progress Dri­ve, Way­nes­burg PA 15370, USA. In 1981 Mumia, for­mer Black Pan­ther and vocal sup­port­er of MOVE, was framed for the mur­der of a cop. He was orig­i­nal­ly sen­tenced to death but is cur­rent­ly await­ing re-sen­tenc­ing fol­low­ing a court hear­ing in 2001.

STATEMENT ON VIOLENCE
Some peo­ple list­ed in this newslet­ter have car­ried out vio­lent actions. ‘Spir­it of Free­dom’ does not con­done vio­lence. But we are also against cen­sor­ship & believe peo­ple can decide for them­selves who they wish to sup­port.

ABOUT E.L.P. SUPPORT NETWORK
ELP is an inter­na­tion­al eco-pris­on­er sup­port net­work found­ed, in Britain, in 1993 to sup­port jailed eco-activists. We sup­port the pris­on­ers by pro­duc­ing var­i­ous reg­u­lar pris­on­er lists:

Spir­it of Free­dom is ELP’s inter­na­tion­al month­ly pris­on­er list­ing which is cir­cu­lat­ed by e‑mail.

Urgent ELP! Bul­letin is an e‑mail ser­vice that dis­trib­utes the names of any new eco-pris­on­er as soon as ELP gets their details. For more info e‑mail ELP4321@hotmail.com

On-Line Newslet­ters — ELP has a num­ber of web­sites that pro­vide news, pris­on­er lists and addi­tion­al info about ELP & the pris­on­ers.

Eng­lish lan­guage ELP Web­site
www.spiritoffreedom.org.uk

Greek lan­guage ELP Web­site
http://greekelp.blogspot.com

North Amer­i­can ELP Web­site
www.ecoprisoners.org

Turk­ish lan­guage ELP Web­site
www.geocities.com/yesilanarsi/elp.htm

ELP Extra is an e‑mail group that cir­cu­lates the details of polit­i­cal pris­on­ers, ELP learns about, who do not fall with­in the remit for sup­port by ELP. To sub­scribe to the list e‑mail ELP4321@Hotmail.com

Aus­tralian ELP.SN is our Aus­tralian con­tact. For more info e‑mail elp4321@hotmail.com

Bel­gium ELP.SN is our Bel­gium con­tact. For more info e‑mail elp_bel@hotmail.com

Ger­man ELP.SN is a pris­on­er led ini­tia­tive run by eco-pris­on­er Mar­co Camenisch. For more info con­tact Mar­co Camenisch, Post­fach 3143, CH-8105 Regens­dorf, Switzer­land.

Greek ELP.SN is our Greek con­tact. For more info e‑mail greekelp@yahoo.gr

North Amer­i­can ELP is our North Amer­i­can con­tact. For more infor­ma­tion e‑mail naelpsn@mutualaid.org

——-

Urgent ELP! Bul­letin (9th of May 2008)

Dear friends

Today the Amer­i­can veg­an eco-defence activist, Eric McDavid, was sen­tenced to an out­ra­geous 19 years and 7 months impris­on­ment hav­ing been found guilty of con­spir­ing to destroy the prop­er­ty of the forestry ser­vice, mobile phone masts and pow­er plants. At the point of his arrest he had­n’t actu­al­ly dam­aged any­thing and was mere­ly, alleged­ly, think­ing about car­ry­ing out these actions.

Sen­tenc­ing a man to just under 20 years impris­on­ment for a thought crime is a total out­rage and we encour­age every­one to sup­port Eric by send­ing him urgent let­ters of sup­port.

McDavid, Eric x‑2972521 7E128
Sacra­men­to Coun­ty Main Jail
651 “I” St.
Sacra­men­to, CA 95814
USA

For more infor­ma­tion on Eric check out his web­site http://www.supporteric.org/

Turkey ELP.SN is our Turk­ish con­tact. For more info e‑mail
yesilanarsi@yahoo.com

Stuck for something to do!? Uninspired & lacklustre..? The all new singing dancing EF!AU is here to lift your spirits

As if putting the boot into the genet­ics indus­try, fill­ing emp­ty spaces with joy & cre­ativ­i­ty, and fool­ing the fos­sil-heads was­n’t enough, peo­ple have been busy wash­ing lumps of coal and cov­er­ing them­selves with paint…we kid you not…all in aid of halt­ing the trash­ing of the plan­et!

Par­lia­ments have been climbed, air­port ter­mi­nals flash(mobb)ed, fields & var­i­ous oth­er sites occu­pied, build­ing stormed & block­ad­ed, pipelines block­ad­ed & destroyed…

EF! crossed tools 1As if putting the boot into the genet­ics indus­try, fill­ing emp­ty spaces with joy & cre­ativ­i­ty, and fool­ing the fos­sil-heads was­n’t enough, peo­ple have been busy wash­ing lumps of coal and cov­er­ing them­selves with paint…we kid you not…all in aid of halt­ing the trash­ing of the plan­et!

Par­lia­ments have been climbed, air­port ter­mi­nals flash(mobb)ed, fields & var­i­ous oth­er sites occu­pied, build­ing stormed & block­ad­ed, pipelines block­ad­ed & destroyed…

Throw into the mix ye oldie Reclaim the Streets, the tried and test­ed eeeeevil Mr/Ms Sab­o­tage, the launch of a new cam­paign ‘Leave it in the Ground’, plus a sum­mer-full of dates, new con­tacts list, it’s a won­der we’ve fit­ted in a brand new sexy EF! sum­mer gath­er­ing poster (front & back). Down­load the lat­est EF!AU to share with oth­ers, sub­scribe or check out some past issues. The next issue will come out at the begin­ning of August.

And of course, this year’s EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing (or fol­low the link to the left) is from Wednes­day 27th August to Mon­day 1st Sep­tem­ber 2008, if you want to plot & plan, and laugh & chat with old friends & new.

Phew, what a scorcher!

Leave it in the Ground: open-cast coal mass trespass, 26th May — poster to download added

A new open-cast coal mine site is about to get under­way in beau­ti­ful Der­byshire, unless we stop it now.

Lodge House site, which is east of the vil­lage of Smal­l­ey and spans either side of Bell Lane, is one of sev­en that UK Coal is to open-cast.

open CastA new open-cast coal mine site is about to get under­way in beau­ti­ful Der­byshire, unless we stop it now.

Lodge House site, which is east of the vil­lage of Smal­l­ey and spans either side of Bell Lane, is one of sev­en that UK Coal is to open-cast.

The area is about to be dev­as­tat­ed, despite objec­tions from local coun­cils, res­i­dents and local envi­ron­men­tal groups, but the Sec­re­tary of State grant­ed plan­ning per­mis­sion in 2007.

The 122 hectare site will have one mil­lion tonnes of coal ripped out over five years and ‘returned back to its nat­ur­al state’ accord­ing to UK Coal, how­ev­er res­i­dents fear there may be more to the plot, as they were exclud­ed from parts of the plan­ning meet­ing on grounds of com­mer­cial con­fi­den­tial­i­ty.

UK Coal are one of those com­pa­nies that looks to max­imise their prof­its by rap­ing the land and prof­it­ing from it any way they can — after coal extrac­tion, they return the area to busi­ness parks, hous­ing and indus­tri­al estates. In some cas­es they return it to farm­land and charge the farm­ers rent, or on low-grade land grow ener­gy crops accord­ing to their web­site. They are even into wind­pow­er, but as yet have still not erect­ed a tur­bine.

Coal is not clean ener­gy, and with the new onslaught of pro­posed pow­er sta­tions, UK Coal are look­ing to cash in on cli­mate dev­as­ta­tion and destruc­tion unless we stop them.

The area is rich with wildlife and backs onto Ship­ley Coun­try Park; some hous­es, (the sort of place you dream of liv­ing in) have been shut­tered up and items like toys, dog ken­nels and oth­er per­son­al bits remain, look­ing like some­thing from a hur­ried evac­u­a­tion from a war zone. UK Coal has stat­ed that the site will be returned to farm land, but they are able to expand beyond the 122 hectares with­out need­ing fur­ther per­mis­sion.

To com­bat open-cast min­ing, a new action group “Leave it in the Ground” has formed, sup­port­ed by Earth First! with an invite to a Pic­nic in the Park on 26th May for a mass tres­pass to see it before the destruc­tion starts, meet the locals and have fun. So come and Dis­cov­er Der­byshire!

Meet at the Vis­i­tors Cen­tre, Ship­ley Coun­try Park, Slack Lane, Heanor DE75 7GX at 12 noon on the 26th May.

For more info phone 07852 460871 or email derby@earthfirst.org.uk

Blog http://leaveitintheground.wordpress.com
Web­site http://leaveitintheground.org.uk/

Down­load the poster to put up on notice­boards & bring your friends

CLIMATE ACTION NEWS SHEET 79, MAY 2008

CONTENTS:

———————————————-
UPCOMING ACTIONS AND EVENTS:
———————————————-
1) CLIMATE CAMP NATIONAL GATHERING — LONDON, 10–11.5.08
2) SAVING ICELAND IN WALES AND SCOTLAND — 7th & 9th MAY ‘08
3) TURNING UP THE HEAT — LONDON, CARDIFF, MANCHESTER & ONLINE, 8/10/13.5.08
4) BIG BLETHER 6 — GLASGOW, 9–11.5.08

CONTENTS:

———————————————-
UPCOMING ACTIONS AND EVENTS:
———————————————-
1) CLIMATE CAMP NATIONAL GATHERING — LONDON, 10–11.5.08
2) SAVING ICELAND IN WALES AND SCOTLAND — 7th & 9th MAY ‘08
3) TURNING UP THE HEAT — LONDON, CARDIFF, MANCHESTER & ONLINE, 8/10/13.5.08
4) BIG BLETHER 6 — GLASGOW, 9–11.5.08
5) CLIMATE CAMP SPEAKERS’ TRAINING — MANCHESTER, 17.5.08
6) MAKE A NOISE! — LONDON, 31.5.08
7) CLIMATE ACTION WITH A BITE! — NATIONAL, 3.6.08

———————————————-
RECENT HAPPENINGS:
———————————————-
1) ‘MAYDAY! MAYDAY! INVASION OF THE CLIMATE SNATCHERS’ — INTERNATIONAL, 1.5.08
2) M1 PUBLIC NUISANCE CASE DISMISSED — SHEFFIELD, 1.5.08
3) BANK OF AMERICA, DIRTY COAL PROTEST – CHARLOTTE (USA), 23.4.08
4) GREENWASH GUERILLAS PIE FRIEDMAN — NEW YORK, 21.4.08
5) ECO-RELATED ARSON IN GREECE — 21.4.08
6) KOORAGANG COMMUNITY WALK-IN — AUSTRALIA, 19.4.08
7) BELGIAN AGRO-GIANT BLOCKADE — 17.4.08
8) TARA UPDATES — IRELAND, APRIL 08
9) BIOFOOLS DAY — NATIONWIDE, 15.4.08
10) PLANE STUPID TAKE TO THE ROOF — EDINBURGH, 14.4.08
11) BURN THE MIDNIGHT OIL! — TASMANIA, 14.4.08
12) COLLEGE GROVE UPDATES — AUSTRALIA, APRIL ‘08
13) CHEVRON TOXICO GOLDMAN AWARD — SAN FRANCISCO, 13.4.08
14) SUBVERTISING — NEW GROUP, APRIL ‘08
15) CARBON DETOX — NEW BOOK, APRIL ‘08
16) BRING CLIMATE CRIMINALS TO JUSTICE — WEBSITE, APRIL ‘08
17) PROTEST WATCH — WEBSITE, APRIL ‘08
18) AIRPORTWATCH BULLETIN — APRIL ‘08
19) THE BATH BOMB — APRIL ‘08
20) LONDON CRITICAL MASS, 14TH ANNIVERSARY — APRIL 08

———————————————-
UPCOMING ACTIONS AND EVENTS:
———————————————-
1) CLIMATE CAMP NATIONAL GATHERING — LONDON, 10–11.5.08
Green­peace HQ, Canon­bury Vil­las, Lon­don, N1 2PN. 10am-6pm.
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. Come to the gath­er­ing and get involved!
www.climatecamp.org.uk

2) SAVING ICELAND IN WALES AND SCOTLAND — 7th & 9th MAY 08
Alu­mini­um smelt­ing, even when pow­ered by geot­her­mal ener­gy, emits so much green­house gas emis­sions that Ice­land now pro­duces 18 tons of CO2 equiv­a­lent per capi­ta, com­pared to the Euro­pean aver­age of 11. May 7th at 8pm — Sav­ing Ice­land will give a pre­sen­ta­tion of these issues at The Tree­house, Bak­er St. Aberys­t­wyth, and will describe the inter­na­tion­al direct action cam­paign and plans for this sum­mer’s camp in July. (There will be a num­ber of vehi­cles going from the UK to the camp.) Come and see some of the most stun­ning places of beau­ty on earth, and help pro­tect them with direct action!
May 9th — Veg­an ban­quet with live music, bar and raf­fle! The Ban­quet starts at 7pm at Old St Pauls Hall, Edin­burgh. £5 (unwaged / low income) and £7 (waged). All prof­it will go to fund­ing the Scot­tish Sav­ing Ice­land Col­lec­tive.
Email; savingicelandscotland@riseup.net to reserve your tick­ets!
More info; http://www.savingiceland.org.

3) TURNING UP THE HEAT — LONDON, CARDIFF, MANCHESTER and ONLINE, 8/10/13.5.08
Can big busi­ness save the plan­et? A series of inter­ac­tive debates on cli­mate change and cor­po­rate pow­er. Attend the live events or watch online!
Thurs­day 8 May — Can the free mar­ket stop cli­mate change? 7:30–9:30pm at Amnesty Inter­na­tion­al Human Rights Action Cen­tre 17–25 New Inn Yard Lon­don EC2A 3EA.
10.5.08 – ‘Will bio­fu­els help com­bat cli­mate change?’ 2:30–4:30pm Cardiff Uni­ver­si­ty, Main Build­ing, Shan­don The­atre, Park Place CF10 3AT.
13.5.08 – ‘Does cli­mate change mean we should restrict avi­a­tion & tourism?’ 7:30–9:30pm, Man­ches­ter Con­ven­tion Cen­tre, Cock­croft The­atre, Sackville Street M1 3BB.
To book your free place and to reg­is­ter to watch online please go to http://www.wdm.org.uk/heat or call 020 7820 4900 for more infor­ma­tion.

4) BIG BLETHER 6 — GLASGOW, 9–11.5.08
Talamh Life Cen­tre, Near Glas­gow.
BB is a meet­ing place for activists to bring and share ideas, infor­ma­tion and enthu­si­asm and to cre­ate action out of inspi­ra­tion. Every­one is wel­come to par­tic­i­pate and con­tribute — big or small. There will be work­shops on Sat­ur­day and Sun­day, includ­ing every­thing from cli­mate change issues, cre­ative cam­paign­ing and tran­si­tion towns to nuclear resis­tance, yoga and wood­land crafts. BB is a non-prof­it organ­i­sa­tion and entrance will be by dona­tion. www.bigblether.org.uk

5) CLIMATE CAMP SPEAKERS’ TRAINING — MANCHESTER, 17.5.08
If you would like to talk to peo­ple about the Cli­mate Camp and help inspire hun­dreds of peo­ple to come this year, then this train­ing is for you. The net­work­ing team in con­junc­tion with COIN (http://coinet.org.uk/) and TRAPESE (http://trapese.clearerchannel.org/) have designed a short presentation/ work­shop that any­one can give to groups inter­est­ed in com­ing to the camp.
10:30 till 5:30pm.
Con­tact; speakers@climatecamp.org.uk to book your place.

6) MAKE A NOISE! — LONDON, 31.5.08
An agen­da for colos­sal air­port expan­sion and colos­sal cli­mate change demands a colos­sal response. You’re invit­ed to a car­ni­val on Sat­ur­day 31st May, which will make its way from Hat­ton Cross Tube Sta­tion (Pic­cadil­ly Line, 12pm) to Sip­son, the vil­lage that will be wiped out if Heathrow expan­sion goes ahead. At the end, you’ll have the chance to help form a great big NO! spelt out by human bod­ies. Organ­is­ers hope to set a new world record for the biggest and loud­est NO! in the world.
http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/blog/climate/make-a-noise-20080408

7) CLIMATE ACTION WITH A BITE! — NATIONAL, 3.6.08
The food we eat con­tributes up to a third of the emis­sions poi­son­ing the plan­et. It’s time for a detox! Cli­mate action starts on your din­ner plate, at the super­mar­ket, on your allot­ment and in your back yard, at the food dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­tres, down on the farm, in your high street, at the air­port and the lor­ry park. What­ev­er your tastes, there’s some­thing for every­one on this action menu! Local food mar­kets, free food stalls, work­shops and film show­ings, street the­atre, info stalls, protests and direct action, cook­ing demon­stra­tions, allot­ment shows. Get cre­ative and get involved!
This Day of Action on Cli­mate Change has been called by the Net­work for Cli­mate Action in co-oper­a­tion with the Ris­ing Tide Net­work and the Camp for Cli­mate Action. It has been planned to coin­cide with The UN Con­fer­ence on World Food Secu­ri­ty and Cli­mate Change, which runs from 3rd to 5th June.
Please email; foodNO@SPAMdaysofclimateaction.org.uk for fur­ther info.

———————————————-
RECENT HAPPENINGS:
———————————————-
1) ‘MAYDAY! MAYDAY! INVASION OF THE CLIMATE SNATCHERS’ — INTERNATIONAL,
1.5.08
This day of action tar­get­ed false cap­i­tal­ist solu­tions to cli­mate chaos.
There were actions in Europe and Cana­da:
Leam­ing­ton Ris­ing Tide vis­it­ed the E.on head­quar­ters in Coven­try to expose the truth behind its green­wash and show that car­bon cap­ture is a false solu­tion to the prob­lem of cli­mate change. Peo­ple arrived at 8am to hand fliers to the work­ers, while one pro­test­er occu­pied the roof of the build­ing. The day was a great suc­cess with a fes­tive vibe and no arrests. Nor­wich Ris­ing Tide got togeth­er with Earth First for a Crit­i­cal Mass to Sizewell nuclear pow­er sta­tion to high­light that nuclear is not a solu­tion to cli­mate change. In Lon­don, The Coal Clean­ing Com­pa­ny launched their enter­prise with E.on; accord­ing to the chat­ty clean­ers, “There’s no mess too big! We make coal Fos­sil Fuel Fresh!” In York peo­ple from groups across the city and both Uni­ver­si­ties took part in a ban­ner protest out­side Roy­al Bank of Scot­land’s cen­tral branch in the city. Leaflets were hand­ed out sum­maris­ing RBS’s cli­mate crimes. Mean­while, mem­bers of the Earth Lib­er­a­tion Front and Ani­mal Lib­er­a­tion Front joined forces to car­ry out an action against unnec­es­sary urban devel­op­ment in the south-west. A JCB and oth­er vehi­cles were dam­aged on a road con­struc­tion site.
Green­wash fly­ers were hand­ed out at the Green Liv­ing Show in Toron­to Cana­da, while in Paris “Biofuel=Danger” was chalked on the side of the French Agri­cul­tur­al Research insti­tute.
http://www.daysofclimateaction.org.uk/
http://risingtide.org.uk/node/276

2) M1 PUBLIC NUISANCE CASE DISMISSED — SHEFFIELD, 1.5.08
Sev­en cli­mate camp activists opposed to the widen­ing of the M1 had the case against them dis­missed from Sheffield Crown Court. The Judge resound­ing­ly reject­ed the pros­e­cu­tion’s argu­ment that the hang­ing of ban­ners over the motor­way could con­sti­tute a pub­lic nui­sance.
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20611

3) BANK OF AMERICA, DIRTY COAL PROTEST – CHARLOTTE (USA), 23.4.08
Activists with Asheville Ris­ing Tide, Rain­for­est Action Net­work, and Croatan Earth First! hit the streets of Char­lotte to protest at Bank of America’s annu­al share­hold­ers meet­ing. Bank of Amer­i­ca has seen an esca­lat­ing lev­el of protest in the past year for its fund­ing of the coal indus­try.
http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org/wordpress/2008/04/23/asheville-rising-tide-confronts-bank-of-america-shareholders/

4) GREENWASH GUERILLAS PIE FRIEDMAN — NEW YORK, 21.4.08
Thomas Fried­man, the author and NY Times colum­nist, was invit­ed to Brown Uni­ver­si­ty to give a keynote speech on Earth Day, before a packed audi­to­ri­um. His talk about how cor­po­rate envi­ron­men­tal­ism can restore Amer­i­ca to its “nat­ur­al place in the glob­al order” was inter­rupt­ed with a sur­prise vis­it from the Green­wash Guer­ril­las. After splat­ter­ing him with two green cream pies they threw leaflets to the crowd explain­ing their action.
http://greenwashguerrillas.wordpress.com/
http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org/wordpress/2008/04/22/greenwash-guerrillas-pie-thomas-friedman-on-earth-day/

5) ECO-RELATED ARSON IN GREECE — 21.4.08
Eco-relat­ed arson against the min­istry of devel­op­ment offices in Athens was car­ried out in protest against the plans to build new pow­er plants using coal. “When cap­i­tal­ism is self-declared envi­ron­ment friend­ly, it is only to mea­sure and man­age the symp­toms of the cri­sis it pro­duced itself.”
http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/

6) KOORAGANG COMMUNITY WALK-IN — AUSTRALIA, 19.4.08
A crowd of around 50 pro­test­ers walked onto the con­struc­tion site for a new coal ter­mi­nal on Koor­a­gang Island in New­cas­tle. They stopped work at the site in protest against the expan­sion of the coal indus­try and its con­tri­bu­tion to cli­mate change. Georgina Woods, spokesper­son for Ris­ing Tide New­cas­tle said, “His­tor­i­cal­ly, ordi­nary peo­ple have achieved extra­or­di­nary things by tak­ing direct action to pre­vent immoral or
unsup­port­able actions…Many of us here today have nev­er done any­thing like this before, but we are doing it now, because we may not get anoth­er chance.” 16 of the pro­test­ers were arrest­ed and charged with tres­pass. More com­mu­ni­ty direct action against coal exports will take place in July this year.
http://www.risingtide.org.au/communitywalkin

7) BELGIAN AGRO-GIANT BLOCKADE — 17.4.08
In Bel­guim thir­ty activists blocked the gates of the Cargill fac­to­ry in Ghent.
This action was tak­en to high­light the agro-giant’s involve­ment in every­thing from bio­fu­els to soy mono­cul­ture, GMO to pesticides…The action began at around 6h30 in the morn­ing and last­ed until after 5 p.m. Dur­ing all that time, not one truck with soy could enter or leave the firm.
http://www.aseed.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=552&Itemid=211

8) TARA UPDATES — IRELAND, APRIL 08
On Thurs­day 17th April there was a peace­ful evic­tion of the Rath Lugh Camp. Four Pro­tec­tors who were on site were told by Gar­dai that they had to gath­er up their belong­ings and leave. This was not done in an aggres­sive man­ner and was com­plied with by the Pro­tec­tors.
http://www.tarapixie.net/
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20557
Tara trip report — A group from Brighton went over to Ire­land recent­ly to sup­port the Irish pro­test­ers attempts to halt the work on the M3 Motor­way.
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20502

9) BIOFOOLS DAY — NATIONWIDE, 15.4.08
From April 15th, all petrol fore­courts will be required by law to sell only fuel which is blend­ed with 2.5% agro­fu­el. Cor­po­ra­tions like Tesco are already jump­ing on the new “green” band­wag­on, speak­ing lit­tle of the greater emis­sions, dis­place­ment, pover­ty and hunger that will be left in its path. The only answer to the ener­gy cri­sis is a big shift in the way in which we live, trav­el and eat.
Nation­wide protest includ­ed; Aberdeen, Bolton, Chel­tenham, Leeds, Man­ches­ter, Not­ting­ham, Nor­wich and hun­dreds out­side Down­ing Street in Lon­don.
Bris­tol Ris­ing Tide and Espa­cio Bris­tol-Colom­bia were joined by oth­ers to inform the pub­lic about this issue at Tesco in East­ville, Bris­tol. A group of bio­fu­el activists made a colour­ful ban­ner and fly­er tour of Brighton city cen­tre and Sus­sex Uni­ver­si­ty. Agro-fuels pro­test­ers dis­abled the fuel pumps of two BP fill­ing sta­tions in Edin­burgh. Also in Scot­land, five mem­bers of the Edin­burgh Clown Army were detained for ques­tion­ing at a peace­ful and enter­tain­ing bio­fu­els protest in Brunts­field, and in Glas­gow a bio­fool ban­ner was hung.
http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20546

10) PLANE STUPID TAKES TO THE ROOF — EDINBURGH, 14.4.08
Two envi­ron­men­tal activists from the cli­mate action group, Plane Stu­pid Scot­land, climbed onto the roof of the Scot­tish Par­lia­ment in Edin­burgh to protest against plans for expan­sion of Scot­tish air­ports. They unfurled a large ban­ner which car­ried a par­o­dy of the Trainspot­ting design, “Choose Life.” The ban­ner read, “Plane Stop­ping: Choose the future. Say no to air­port expan­sion.”
http://www.planestupid.com/?q=content/plane-stupid-scotland-occupy-roof-scottish-parliament

11) BURN THE MIDNIGHT OIL! — TASMANIA, 14.4.08
Activists from Still Wild Still Threat­ened have wel­comed a 6 metre tall Peter Gar­rett (MP and singer from Mid­night Oil) to the Upper Flo­ren­tine Val­ley. Activists took the ‘giant Gar­rett’ on a tour of coupe FO42F which is due to be burnt in the imme­di­ate future to high­light their con­cerns about the con­tin­ued log­ging and burn­ing of some of Tasmania’s most car­bon dense forests.
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20536

12) COLLEGE GROVE UPDATES — AUSTRALIA, APRIL 08
29 April 2008 — Activists have set up a new camp in the Col­lege Grove for­est area that is due to be destroyed in the next stage of devel­op­ment.
http://www.globalwarmingfg.com/
14 April 2008 — Col­lege Grove pro­test­ers stop machines for the day:
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20535
10 April — Police Vio­lence at treesit action in Col­lege Grove, Bun­bury, Aus­tralia. Two activists were arrest­ed with one tak­en to hos­pi­tal after a force­ful and vio­lent push by WA Police. A spokes for the Com­mu­ni­ty Inde­pen­dent Activists (CIA) group says it was the “most vio­lent dis­play by police in 15 years of for­est activism.”
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20531

13) CHEVRON TOXICO GOLDMAN AWARD — SAN FRANCISCO, 13.4.08
Two cam­paign­ers who have spear­head­ed a land­mark class-action law­suit against Chevron in Ecuador have been award­ed the Gold­man Prize, the world’s most pres­ti­gious envi­ron­men­tal hon­or, for their efforts to make the com­pa­ny clean up what experts believe is the world’s worst oil-relat­ed dis­as­ter. The Gold­man Prize Comes two weeks after these dam­ages were esti­mat­ed at up to $16 Bil­lion. Chevron Tox­i­co is the inter­na­tion­al cam­paign to hold Chevron­Tex­a­co account­able for its tox­ic con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of the Ecuado­ri­an Ama­zon.
http://www.amazonwatch.org/

14) SUBVERTISING — NEW GROUP, APRIL ‘08
A new group want to set up a cli­mate-focused nation­al sub­ver­tis­ing net­work where every­one has a role and where peo­ple are well sup­port­ed. If you would like to get involved, see http://www.myspace.com/subvertising

15) CARBON DETOX — NEW BOOK, APRIL ‘08
A new book by George Mar­shall of COIN. Mark Lynas,author of Six Degrees, says:
“Buy this book and thrust it into the hands of some­one who still does­n’t believe in the cli­mate cri­sis. No oth­er book goes fur­ther in address­ing peo­ple’s denial and their resis­tance to change.”
http://www.carbondetox.org/

16) BRING CLIMATE CRIMINALS TO JUSTICE — WEBSITE, APRIL ‘08
A cam­paign to estab­lish a legal process in the UK and abroad to facil­i­tate the crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tion of Gov­ern­ment Min­is­ters and key busi­ness lead­ers whose poli­cies and activ­i­ties con­tribute to the mass loss of life which cli­mate change is cer­tain to now cause.
www.climatecriminals.co.uk

17) PROTEST WATCH — WEBSITE, APRIL ‘08
A new site which aims to become a com­pre­hen­sive resource for any­body inter­est­ed in active­ly protest­ing in the UK.
http://www.protestwatch.org.uk/

18) AIRPORTWATCH BULLETIN — APRIL ‘08
Air­port­Watch updates for April. See;
http://www.aef.org.uk/downloads//AirportWatch_bulletin_April2008.pdf

19) ‘THE BATH BOMB’ — APRIL 08
Anti-copy­right: copy and dis­trib­ute! Issue #9 free/donation. See;
http://www.myspace.com/bathbomb

20) LONDON CRITICAL MASS, 14TH ANNIVERSARY — APRIL ‘08
For ride reports/info. see;
http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20584
http://www.criticalmasslondon.org.uk/main.html

———-

Please send any­thing you’d like includ­ed in this news sheet to:
newssheet@risingtide.org.uk

To view pre­vi­ous edi­tions of the Ris­ing Tide News Sheet, vis­it the News Sheet Archive at http://risingtide.org.uk/newssheet

This News Sheet was brought to you by Ris­ing Tide, a grass­roots net­work of groups and indi­vid­u­als com­mit­ted to tak­ing action and build­ing a move­ment against cli­mate change.

For more infor­ma­tion…
email: info@risingtide.org.uk
Phone: +44 (0)845 458 8923 / +44 (0)7708 794665
Address: 62 Fieldgate St, Lon­don, E1 1ES
Web site: http://risingtide.org.uk

PLEASE FORWARD THIS TO A FRIEND AND INVITE THEM TO JOIN THE LIST

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1 May Day of Climate Action ‑only one week to go!

1 MAY: DAY OF CLIMATE ACTION
Inva­sion of the cli­mate snatch­ers!

Only one week to go!
We’ll keep it short: con­tacts, resources and ideas for action, and pub­lic actions.

If you need any info or sup­port email us!
E: mayday@daysofclimateaction.org.uk
W: http://www.daysofclimateaction.org.uk/mayday.html

Bacton FFD 11 MAY: DAY OF CLIMATE ACTION
Inva­sion of the cli­mate snatch­ers!

Only one week to go!
We’ll keep it short: con­tacts, resources and ideas for action, and pub­lic actions.

If you need any info or sup­port email us!
E: mayday@daysofclimateaction.org.uk
W: http://www.daysofclimateaction.org.uk/mayday.html

For more info and back­ground about the day of action please see the bot­tom of the post­ing.

TELL US WHAT YOU GET UP TO — email us or phone us on the day (07880 937511) as soon as your action is under­way so we can list it on the web­site include it in the nation­al press release about the day, and the actions round-up the next day. Our actions are so much more pow­er­ful when they are seen on masse!

RESOURCES
Lots of infor­ma­tion for action/explaining the issues has gone up on our web­site in the last few days. Check it out and pick your favourite cli­mate red her­ring: from agro­fu­els to nuclear pow­er, car­bon-trad­ing to hydro­gen fuel cells, car­bon cap­ture and stor­age, genet­ic engi­neer­ing to nan­otech­nol­o­gy. Uncov­er these tech­no-fix­es for what they are: a dis­trac­tion from the root cause of cli­mate change and a means to car­ry on the sta­tus quo of end­less eco­nom­ic growth and the exploita­tion of peo­ple and plan­et.
http://daysofclimateaction.org.uk/mayday.html

There’s also a local press release that you can adapt
http://daysofclimateaction.org.uk/mayday_actionresources.html

15 ideas for action for last-minute action plan­ners! At
http://www.risingtide.org.uk/fossilfoolsday/resources

IDEAS FOR ACTION

There are many pos­si­bil­i­ties, from direct action, pub­lic­i­ty stunts, talks and work­shops to stalls. Whether you’re in a group or whether there’s just one or two of you, there are lots of things you can do to raise the vital issues.

Some ideas to get you start­ed!

TAKE DIRECT ACTION. Occu­py the offices of you local car­bon off­set­ting com­pa­ny; Block­ade your local bio­fu­els refin­ery; Vis­it your local nuclear pow­er sta­tion or take your cows and veg to a car­bon trad­er and set up a real mar­ket ; Protest at your local Uni­ver­si­ty’s GM and Nano-tech depart­ments; Protest at your local Tesco petrol sta­tion against bio­fu­els

SPREAD THE WORD. Hang ban­ners in pub­lic places; Hold talks, work­shops and film nights about the issues; Leaflet town on your cho­sen issue; Free Give­away stalls; Pro­duce and dis­trib­ute local-based guide on alter­na­tives to cap­i­tal­ism, co-ops, alter­na­tive economies, free shops etc. Co-organ­ise events with union mem­bers to dis­cuss the issues around employ­ment and cli­mate change; Write arti­cles and let­ters for papers and web­sites.

For inspi­ra­tion check out the write-up of the actions on Fos­sil Fools Day
— Tru­ly amaz­ing!
http://www.fossilfoolsdayofaction.org/category/front-page/

PUBLIC ACTIONS
Although lots of peo­ple are keep­ing their plans under wraps, this pub­lic demos have been announced (If you know of a pub­licly announced action, let us know and we’ll list it on the web­site):

Crit­i­cal Mass and Demo at Sizewell Nuclear Pow­er Sta­tion
Sat­ur­day 3rd May, meet at 12 noon at Sax­mund­ham train sta­tion for a Crit­i­cal Mass bike ride to Sizewell nuclear pow­er sta­tion.
If you don’t have a bike, get to Sax­mund­ham sta­tion any­way and we’ll get you to the pow­er sta­tion.
Why Sizewell on this day?

See also the Camp for Cli­mate Action (www.climatecamp.org.uk), Net­work for
Cli­mate Action (www.networkforclimateaction.org.uk) and Cli­mate Indy­media
(www.climateimc.org)

http://www.daysofclimateaction.org.uk/mayday.html

Why take action on 1 May?

May 1st, inter­na­tion­al work­ers day, has tra­di­tion­al­ly been a day to chal­lenge the cap­i­tal­ist sys­tem and a cel­e­bra­tion of sol­i­dar­i­ty and work­ers’ strug­gle for a more just social sys­tem.

On this day we are call­ing on peo­ple to make the link between cap­i­tal­ism, eco­nom­ic growth, cli­mate change and social strug­gle.

As cli­mate change is start­ing to hit peo­ple around the world, a huge num­ber of tech­no-fix­es are form­ing a new eco­nom­ic sec­tor: from bio­fu­els to nuclear pow­er, car­bon-trad­ing to hydro­gen fuel cells, car­bon cap­ture and stor­age. Every­where cor­po­ra­tions are seek­ing the elu­sive elixir which allows us to con­tin­ue busi­ness as usu­al. All this whilst our plan­et is burn­ing and peo­ple are loos­ing their homes, their live­ly­hoods and their lives to cli­mate chaos.

All of these tech­nolo­gies are a dis­trac­tion from the root cause of cli­mate change: an eco­nom­ic sys­tem based on end­less eco­nom­ic growth not only at the cost of the envi­ron­ment we live in but also based on an exploita­tive social sys­tem.

Many of these tech­nofix­es are also direct­ly coun­ter­pro­duc­tive to stop­ping cli­mate chaos and pose new threats to peo­ple’s live­ly­hoods and the sur­vival of the plan­et.

Agro­fu­els expan­sion is dire­cly respon­si­ble for sub­sis­tence farm­ers being cleared of their land, food short­ages and enor­mous price ris­es, whilst doing noth­ing to reduce green­house gas emis­sions.

Nuclear pow­er is her­ald­ed as a green fuel, but the envi­ron­men­tal haz­ards of ura­ni­um extrac­tion, radi­a­tion leaks dur­ing use and stor­age, the dan­ger of melt-down and fatal appli­ca­tions in war­fare are as dan­ger­ous as they have always been.

Sci­en­tists promise genet­i­cal­ly engi­neered won­der plants to cope with cli­mate changes, but peo­ple in third world coun­tries have yet to see any ben­e­fits and fight against the patent­ing of the genes of tra­di­tion­al­ly used plants, whilst multi­na­tion­als are lin­ing their pock­ets.

The real solu­tion to cli­mate change must be a mas­sive reduc­tion in our con­sump­tion, the end to eco­nom­ic growth and a soci­ety based on equal­i­ty and mutu­al aid.

Tech­nofix­es are not the answer to cli­mate change — what we need is far reach­ing social and eco­nom­ic change!

Fitwatch — Tactics Sharing Gathering — 26th April 2008 — 12:30

Room H216
Lon­don School of Eco­nom­ics
Con­naught House,
Ald­wych

What is Fit­watch?
We are tack­ling the use of police For­ward Intel­li­gence Teams on protests. We get in the way of cam­eras, take pho­tos and gath­er infor­ma­tion on offi­cers, and are start­ing to reclaim our demon­stra­tions from the police.

Do you want to Fit­watch?

Room H216
Lon­don School of Eco­nom­ics
Con­naught House,
Ald­wych

What is Fit­watch?
We are tack­ling the use of police For­ward Intel­li­gence Teams on protests. We get in the way of cam­eras, take pho­tos and gath­er infor­ma­tion on offi­cers, and are start­ing to reclaim our demon­stra­tions from the police.

Do you want to Fit­watch?
Fit­watch is a tac­tic, not an organ­i­sa­tion. Any­one can fit­watch and it can be as con­fronta­tion­al or as pacif­ic as you want. The more peo­ple who start tak­ing respon­si­bil­i­ty for deal­ing with FIT, the more chances we have for effec­tive protest.

Got some ideas? Want to know more?
Come to the Tac­tics Shar­ing Gath­er­ing and let’s work out togeth­er how we can kick FIT off our protests.

Whilst sup­port and advice will be avail­able, this is not a train­ing day. It is an open forum for both new­com­ers and expe­ri­enced activists to share ideas and expe­ri­ences.

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion on FIT and what we’ve done so far, see www.fitwatch.blogspot.com

defycops(at)yahoo.co.uk

New squatted spaces & reports from autonomous spaces weekend/‘what next?’ meetings — updated

Squat­ters Estate Agents Opens In Lon­don

As part of the Space Is The Place — Side Step­ping The Prop­er­ty Lad­der series of events tak­ing place in var­i­ous Lon­don autonomous spaces over the week­end of the 11th and 12th April, a squat­ters estate agents has been set up.

Squatters' Estate Agent 'window'Squat­ters Estate Agents Opens In Lon­don

As part of the Space Is The Place — Side Step­ping The Prop­er­ty Lad­der series of events tak­ing place in var­i­ous Lon­don autonomous spaces over the week­end of the 11th and 12th April, a squat­ters estate agents has been set up.

The squat­ters estate agents is based at a new squat­ted venue in Bowl Court, Shored­itch and opens Sat­ur­day at 10am. A dis­play shows a num­ber of emp­ty prop­er­ties around Lon­don along with details about their loca­tion, his­to­ry and suit­abil­i­ty for squat­ting. The prop­er­ties range for aban­doned hous­es and flats, to pubs, shops and even gov­ern­ment build­ings. Some would suit small res­i­den­tial squats and oth­ers grand large scale hous­ing com­mu­ni­ties, squat cafes, freeshops or social cen­tres.

Dur­ing the week­end you’ll have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to meet up with oth­ers in need of hous­ing and go out as a group to put the emp­ties of Lon­don back into good use. Before the end of the week­end you could have your­self and your friends a new home.

The dis­play boards will also be made avail­able at oth­er autonomous spaces over the week­end and beyond.

It’s not to late to con­tribute to the project. Please sub­mit your own emp­ties lists ASAP to the.rampart AT gmail DOT com

———-
Shoreditch squat
Over the last three weeks peo­ple have been prepar­ing an aban­doned ware­house in Shored­itch (Lon­don) to host events over the week­end of the days of action for squats and autonomous spaces. This week, artists have been trans­form­ing the place for an exhi­bi­tion themed around land use, gen­tri­fi­ca­tion, hous­ing and reclaim­ing space. The build­ing opens on Sat­ur­day at 10am with a pro­gram of films, dis­cus­sion and skill shar­ing till 7pm and again on Sun­day. The space will also be host­ing a freeshop and squat­ters estate agency.

The four storey build­ing had been delib­er­ate­ly left emp­ty for years even though the plan­ning author­i­ties won’t allow it to be demol­ished. Instead of using using/renting or sell­ing the build­ing, the own­ers have instead total­ly gut­ted the inside to deter squat­ters, stairs removed, floor­boards pulled up, pipework yanked out and toi­lets smashed. As if that was­n’t bad enough they have left the build­ing open to the ele­ments with smashed win­dows and a bloody great hole torn out of the roof. It does­n’t take a genius to fig­ure out that the devel­op­ers are wait­ing for the build­ing to fall into dis­re­pair enough to jus­ti­fy its demo­li­tion.

Despite all the dam­age it was con­sid­ered worth squat­ting any­way, part­ly due to the sym­bol­ic val­ue of occu­py­ing and ren­o­vat­ing a build­ing that the own­ers are leav­ing emp­ty while they wait for it to fall apart, but also because it has most of the attrib­ut­es we want­ed and is very con­ve­nient­ly locat­ed.

Right on the edge of the city of Lon­don, the squat is over­shad­owed by a mas­sive new 700 mil­lion pound devel­op­ment site push­ing out into Shored­itch. A huge glis­ten­ing glass tow­er block is the first of many that will be built here, trans­form­ing the area com­plete­ly. The ware­house stands alone with earth movers parked in the open area between it and the con­struc­tion trains and tow­er blocks, an almost exact real life repli­ca of the image used on the April2008 web­site.

The squat is locat­ed in Bowl Court which is up Plough Court next to the junc­tion of Great East­ern Street and Shored­itch High Street.

What next in Lon­don?

After this last week­ends decen­tralised actions for squats and autonomous spaces we’ll be hav­ing a fol­lowup event at the new Bowl Court social cen­tre. It will be a chance to hear about what went on in oth­er cities in the UK and else­where in the world. There will be videos and slide shows of actions and exhi­bi­tions of pho­tos and art­work. The squat­ter estate agents will also have been updat­ed and open for busi­ness again.

More impor­tant­ly it will be a chance for peo­ple from dif­fer­ent spaces to get togeth­er (every­one was too busy dur­ing the days of action them­selves) and dis­cuss some of the issues raised. Part of the aim of the days of action was to bring autonomous spaces togeth­er and cre­ate inter­con­nec­tions for bet­ter col­lab­o­ra­tion and mutu­al sup­port in the future. Of the var­i­ous social cen­tres in Lon­don, three are close to evic­tion with­in the com­ing weeks (the womin­space is due to be evict­ed this wednes­day 16th). How do we move for­ward togeth­er in defend­ing the auton­o­my we cre­ate? How do we extend the links between exist­ing social strug­gles and our autonomous spaces? What roles can and should these spaces be play­ing in pro­duc­ing rad­i­cal social change?

Please invite your friends.

Lon­don wide autonomous spaces net­work meet­ing and a meal.
Sat­ur­day 19th April from 2pm at the Bowl Court Squat off Plough Yard, off Shored­itch High Street

News from Lon­dons autonomous spaces…

New squats; more meet­ings; evic­tion alert; Brad Will revis­it­ed; days of action fol­lowup; the film they tried to ban; 56a Infos­hop and more… With the days of action for autonomous spaces now behind us it’s time to look for­ward. Tak­en from the ram­pART mail­ing list, this is a round up of news and events relat­ing to Lon­don’s social cen­tres. Get involved.

» Bowl Court Squat

Three weeks since we entered the aban­doned ware­house on Bowl Court, we opened on Sat­ur­day with not only the esen­tials like floor­boards, stairs, run­ning water and flush­ing toi­lets but also an art exhi­bi­tion, cin­e­ma, squat­ters estate agents and a ping pong table. If you did­n’t get down there you can find pho­tos on indy­media or come down next sat­ur­day to see for your­self and hear more about the days of action (see below).

» Meet­ings meet­ings meet­ings

With the new Bowl Court space open in Shored­itch we’ve decid­ed to alter­nate ram­pART mon­day organ­is­ing meet­ings between the venues. Next mon­day, (21st April), the meet­ing will be at Ram­part Street. Events pro­pos­als for either space should be made at a Mon­day meet­ing. How­ev­er it seems we just can’t get enough of meet­ings and we’re hav­ing a house
meet­ing at Bowl Court tonight (Tues 15th, 7pm) to dis­cuss and decide prac­ti­cal issues relat­ing to the use of the space.

We’re also organ­is­ing a Lon­don wide autonomous spaces net­work meet­ing for next sat­ur­day, see below for details.

» Evic­tion Alert

The Womin­space (womynspace.blogspot.com) has been turned down an appeal and bailiffs are due to evict tom­morow at 10.20am (Wed 16th). They are request­ing peo­ple come down for break­fast at 9:30am to offer sup­port.

The squat is by the canal at 4a Cor­bridge Cres­cent, E2 near Mare Street. Near­est tube, Beth­nal Green.

» Pop­u­lar Upris­ing in Oax­a­ca, Mex­i­co, 2006.

April 18 at 8pm

Please join us at the Bowl Court Squat on Fri­day, for a screen­ing of the film “Brad, One More Night at the Bar­ri­cades” (55 min). Brazil­ian film­mak­er and media activist Miguel will be on hand to dis­cuss his doc­u­men­tary trib­ute to a fall­en friend and will also show anoth­er one of his films.

When Mex­i­can para­mil­i­tary forces shot Brad Will (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brad_Will) in the chest, killing him, his cam­era fell from his hands. But it did­n’t stop record­ing. It con­tin­ued mov­ing from hand to hand, telling Brad’s sto­ry, as well as the sto­ry of the move­ment of move­ments that he was a part of. From the squats of New York to the forests of Ore­gon, from the anti-glob­al­iza­tion protests in Seat­tle, Prague, Que­bec to the pop­u­lar upris­ing in Oax­a­ca, Brad’s cam­era paints us a pic­ture of what his life was about, and what so many of his friends con­tin­ue to strug­gle for.

Dona­tions will go to help Miguel con­tin­ue his tour. DVDs will also be on sale.

Venue: Bowl Court off Plough Yard, off Shored­itch High Street

» Days of Action Fol­lowup

Sat­ur­day 19th from 2pm

After this last week­ends decen­tralised actions for squats and autonomous spaces we’ll be hav­ing a fol­lowup event at the new Bowl Court social cen­tre. It will be a chance to hear about what went on in oth­er cities in the UK and else­where in the world. There will be videos and slide shows of actions and exhi­bi­tions of pho­tos and art­work. The squat­ter estate agents will also have been updat­ed and open for busi­ness again. Addi­tion­al­ly there will be a lon­don wide autonomous spaces net­work meet­ing and a meal. Doors open 2pm . More details on indy­media.

Venue: Bowl Court off Plough Yard, off Shored­itch High Street

» The Film They Tried to Ban — On the Verge

Mon­day 21st at 7pm

Police have inter­vened across the coun­try to cen­sor ‘On the Verge’ an inde­pen­dent doc­u­men­tary about the Smash EDO cam­paign to shut down the Brighton’s weapons man­u­fac­tur­er EDO MBM. So far estab­lish­ments in Southamp­ton, Chich­ester, Bath and Oxford as well as Brighton have come under police pres­sure to can­cel film show­ings. In Brighton police inter­vened to pre­vent a show­ing at the Duke of York’s Cin­e­ma, just one
hour pri­or to the sched­uled pre­miere.

Cos lots of folk missed it’s first Lon­don screen­ing at House­mans (could­n’t fit any more in) there’s anoth­er chance to see this impor­tant movie at LARC next Mon­day.

Venue is 62 Fieldgate Street, near­est tubes Aldgate East and Whitechapel

» Keep Informed

Those of you south of the riv­er may be espe­cial­ly inter­est­ed to know that the 56a Infos­hop (www.56a.org.uk) have start­ed doing an irreg­u­lar email newslet­ter to let you know what’s been hap­pen­ing and what’s going to hap­pen at the Infos­hop as well as bits and pieces from else­where. If you would like to recieve their newslet­ter then send an
email to : 56ainfoshop-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

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Build­ing now in hand for the week­end of events in Birm­ing­ham — for timetable see http://earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/20387

We have now occu­pied the build­ing for this week­end’s events — so peo­ple are need­ed down there tonight and tomor­row morn­ing to pre­pare for the demo and week­end work­shops…

The build­ing is the for­mer King­field Heath sta­tion­er’s offices and ware­house, between Brad­ford Street and War­wick Street in Dig­beth (on the 50 bus route and very near the Spot­ted Dog pub). It’s an absolute­ly enor­mous build­ing, we are only using a small frac­tion of the space with­in it. The “main entrance” is on Brad­ford St, but the entrance that we are using is the one on War­wick St — about 50 yards up from the Spot­ted Dog, on the right side of the road. Hope­ful­ly by tomor­row morn­ing we will have the “Free Space Brum” ban­ner to adver­tise it from the out­side.

No elec­tric­i­ty or water as yet but hope­ful­ly these will be sort­ed tomor­row (and the land­lord of the Spot­ted Dog, has kind­ly offered us the use of his pub kitchen for water, and pos­si­bly also cook­ing).

Bring down any­thing you want to make the place look nice — posters, can­dles, coloured fab­ric, cush­ions, mat­tress­es, etc. We already have chairs and tables which were already in the build­ing.

The space will be open to the pub­lic tomor­row morn­ing to pre­pare for the demo out­side the Coun­cil House at 2pm.

For any more info, direc­tions from the city cen­tre, or if you are there and no one seems to be there to let you in, please call the social cen­tre phone on 07527580190…

freespacebrum@riseup.net
http://www.seedwiki.com/wiki/birmingham_social_centre


Birmingham autonomous spaces weekend banner
Last week­end a tem­po­rary autonomous space was opened up in the cen­tre of Birm­ing­ham in response to a Europe-wide call out for actions to defend squats and free space (see http://april2008.squat.net/).

An aban­doned ware­house on War­wick St. in Dig­beth was the venue of three days of work­shops, talks and dis­cus­sion on diverse themes: from the strug­gles of the indige­nous peo­ples of Mex­i­co, to the Dis­abil­i­ty Rights Move­ment in the UK; from 12v pow­er work­shops, to ‘seed bombs’ and gueril­la gar­den­ing; from pub­lic sec­tor work­place organ­is­ing, to bicy­cle repair. Hot food was served each day with music in the evening and spon­taeous sculp­ture and paint­ing pop­ping up around the build­ing through­out.

The impe­tus for this event hap­pen­ing was not from any sin­gle group, agen­da or cam­paign, but a col­lab­o­ra­tion between dif­fer­ent groups and indi­vid­u­als. The empha­sis through­out was to encour­age such col­lab­o­ra­tion and to pro­mote a gen­er­al ‘lets do it our­selves’ ethos. In ret­ro­spect it was a unique­ly sup­port­ive syn­the­sis of dif­fer­ent needs, issues, tra­di­tions and inno­va­tions.

Whilst the space was timed to co-incide with the Europe-wide call out, the week­end high­light­ed a num­ber of spe­cif­ic issues in Birm­ing­ham over acces­si­ble social hous­ing, privi­ti­sa­tion of pub­lic space and the gen­tri­fi­ca­tion of Dig­beth.

For exam­ple, one group active in cre­at­ing the space, the Dis­abled Activist Net­work, are cur­rent­ly cam­paign­ing in Brum on the issues of acces­si­ble social hous­ing and the planned clo­sure of day cen­tres across the city, to be replaced by pri­va­tised ‘ser­vices’. Mem­bers of that net­work felt strong­ly that they should not be cam­paign­ing to ‘save’ day cen­tres giv­en their reliance on the med­ical, ‘pater­nal­is­tic’ mod­el of dis/ability. Rather, the argu­ment went, we should be cam­paign­ing for their replace­ment by some­thing more along the social cen­tres mod­el. In syn­the­sis­ing these views, the free­space col­lec­tive decid­ed that while cam­paign­ing and work­ing in the long term for an acces­si­ble and inclu­sive social cen­tre, we could also respond to the call out and put on a tem­po­rary social cen­tre for the week­end as a project to focus on.

We con­sid­ered many build­ings and open sites across the city of Birm­ing­ham, with var­i­ous cri­te­ria in mind. We want­ed easy pub­lic trans­port links, acces­si­bil­i­ty and a fair­ly cen­tral loca­tion. The groundswell of oppo­si­tion to the Coun­cil’s gen­tri­fi­ca­tion of Dig­beth meant we quick­ly grav­i­tat­ed to Dig­beth, despite the issues that might give us in terms of ful­fill­ing some of our cri­te­ria, in par­tic­u­lar find­ing a build­ing in good nick. Giv­en the prob­lems gen­tri­fi­ca­tion is already caus­ing the area, with music venues being intim­i­dat­ed by a very few of the inhab­i­tants — abet­ted by Birm­ing­ham City Coun­cil — of the jer­ry-built yup­py flats they erect next door, we felt a respon­si­bil­i­ty to the area to try and add weight and tex­ture to the exisit­ing cam­paign to ‘Keep Dig­beth Vibrant’. Coun­cil plans might be con­strued as insult­ing to the peo­ple of Dig­beth, as they give the impres­sion Dig­beth is a run down, emp­ty black hole of post-indus­tri­al mis­ery, in dire need of res­cu­ing by our ever so uncor­rupt coun­cil and their friends in the con­struc­tion indus­try. Dig­beth, while not with­out an ele­ment of post-indus­tri­al mis­ery is a vibrant com­mu­ni­ty, and sure­ly under no illu­sions about ‘devel­op­ment’. The word means that which caus­es some­thing to unfold; growth, and so let us be under no illu­sions that what is going on is ‘devel­op­ment’. It is gen­tri­fi­ca­tion, the process of replac­ing the poor work­ing com­mu­ni­ty, replaced by exclu­sive ‘lux­u­ry’ flats that turn out to be crap build any­way. Social cleans­ing. Not just a ques­tion of com­pet­ing ‘lifestyles’, this process is inher­ent­ly polit­i­cal.

Links were made with the Keep Dig­beth Vibrant/Noisy com­mu­ni­ty and their sup­port for the tem­po­rary autonomous zone can­not be over-val­ued. A web­site on the issue is http://www.keepdigbethvibrant.co.uk/

Of the week­end, one par­tic­i­pant com­ment­ed:

“It was a fan­tas­tic expe­ri­ence. It felt like a gen­uine, unmedi­at­ed gath­er­ing of human beings — some­thing which is quite alien in a cul­ture where most, if not all, of our dai­ly inter­ac­tions with fel­low sen­tient beings are via state or com­mer­cial mech­a­nisms. It was a time and place where skills were learned and taught, ideas were exchanged, faces mas­saged, friends made, and much fun had.

“The sup­port of the pub just down the road was invalu­able — giv­ing us access to toi­lets and clean water — and demon­strat­ed that what we were doing was not about hav­ing a loud par­ty or con­grat­u­lat­ing our­selves on how ultra-rad­i­cal we are, but about sup­port­ing a cause that means some­thing to the local com­mu­ni­ty, as well as par­tic­i­pat­ing in a move­ment that spans the con­ti­nent.

“It showed that we, the ordi­nary peo­ple of the world, have the pow­er to cre­ate some­thing worth­while just by work­ing togeth­er, even as our cap­i­tal­ist rulers try so hard to con­vince us that we don’t.

“In our own small way, we have proved them wrong.

“Now we have to do it again. Again and again, except big­ger, bet­ter and with more involve­ment from a wider range of peo­ple. The pow­ers that rule our lives can do so only as long as enough of the pop­u­la­tion believes that they are indis­pens­able. By tak­ing direct action such as this, by let­ting it grow and let­ting it be seen — espe­cial­ly by peo­ple who would not cur­rent­ly con­sid­er them­selves ‘rad­i­cal’ — we can show that this is not so.

“No snowflake ever feels it is respon­si­ble for the avalanche, but get enough of them togeth­er and they are lit­er­al­ly unstop­pable.”

There was no short­age of imag­i­na­tion and enter­prise for auton­o­my. Plans were dis­cussed to cre­ate an eco-friendy com­post toi­let in the build­ing, to decrease our reliance on our friend­ly local pub. Unfor­tu­nate­ly we did not have time to sort out all of the prac­ti­cal­i­ties but we will be plan­ning towards hav­ing com­post toi­lets in our next space.

Events began on the Fri­day morn­ing with a ban­ner mak­ing work­shop, with pre­pared ban­ners dis­played. Peo­ple were also still focussed on clear­ing up the space and try­ing to work out if there was any pos­si­bil­i­ty of mains elec­tric­i­ty or run­ning water. On dis­cov­er­ing the exist­ing mains sup­ply was unwork­able, the planned 12 volt lights and a sound sys­tem were set up run­ning from leisure bat­ter­ies ( which are sim­i­lar to car bat­ter­ies but far bet­ter suit­ed to pow­er domes­tic appliances).The bat­ter­ies can be charged by solar pan­els or wind tur­bine, show­ing that you don’t need mains elec­tric­i­ty, being an unsus­tain­able and waste­ful source. This time around we cheat­ed by charg­ing the bat­ter­ies down at the pub! But we will try and get hold of some solar pan­els for next time.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly the anti-gen­tri­fi­ca­tion demo called for 2pm out­side the Coun­cil House was some­thing of a wash out, with a low turnout, per­haps a les­son in tak­ing on too much. While the ‘Stop sell­ing Off Our City’ ban­ner was hung on the social cen­tre’s exte­ri­or, more ban­ners were put up inside throught the course of the day.

Fri­day night’s open mic ses­sion includ­ed a vari­ety of songs about class, Birm­ing­ham, war and neo-colo­nial­ism from dif­fer­ent singers, inter­spersed with poet­ry and musi­cal impro­vi­sa­tion The fun con­tin­ued well into the night. Urban explo­ration occured, guid­ed tours of the enor­mous build­ing we found our­selves in being offered, and there were some frankly aston­ish­ing moments of phys­i­cal com­e­dy avail­able which I won’t go into too much detail, but imag­ine Buster Keaton in that Chap­lin film where he gets caught up in the machine and you get the idea. It real­ly was that good.

Sat­ur­day dawned, and after fur­ther work on the build­ing and a break­fast, work­shops began at 11am with a dis­cus­sion of social cen­tres, and num­bers con­tin­ued swelling. Bicy­col­o­gy arrived with their won­der­ful bike main­tainance work­shop, com­plete with info­s­tand, par­tic­i­pants shar­ing and learn­ing thi­er main­tainance skills. The Birm­ing­ham man who was involved in bike main­tainance work­shops in the run up to the West Mid­lands Cli­mate Camp Neigh­bor­hood was par­tic­u­lar­ly impressed with the skills, knowl­edge and teach­ing abil­i­ty of the women from bicy­col­o­gy. Thanks to them for com­ing along.

After a very well recieved lunch — com­pli­ments to the chef — there was an exit­ing and engag­ing talk on the Zap­atista move­ment by an artist and activist of Mex­i­co, now res­i­dent in the UK. The talk cov­ered amongst oth­er things the his­to­ry of the Zap­atista rebel­lion, out­lin­ing the key goals of their resis­tance: con­trol over land, direct polit­i­cal rep­re­sen­ta­tion and the right to pro­tect their lan­guage and cul­ture. Broad­er themes were touched upon too, such as glob­al­i­sa­tion. After this there was an intro­duc­tion to the Local Exchange Trad­ing Scheme, or LETS as it oper­ates in Birm­ing­ham, giv­en by one of their key admin­is­tra­tive work­ers.

The sec­ond after­noon ses­sion was tak­en up by two work­shops. 12volt elec­tric­i­ty, co-facil­i­tat­ed by three dif­fer­ent peo­ple, began with a the­o­ret­i­cal dis­cus­sion, look­ing at the basics of elec­tric­i­ty in non-tech­ni­cal lan­guage employ­ing metaphor to get across the key con­cepts, as well as the engi­neer­ing involved in set­ting up 12volt sys­tems. This was fol­lowed by a hands-on prac­ti­cal ses­sion, get­ting peo­ple used to mea­sur­ing volt­ages, wiring up lights and a look at the 12volt sound sys­tem. Work­shop two was a talk on dis/ability rights; the con­cepts and the move­ment were cov­ered in a way which par­tic­i­pants report­ed opened their eyes to new ideas about the pol­i­tics of ‘dis­abil­i­ty’.

After din­ner, the poi/fire spin­ning workshop/demonstration took place, which cer­tain­ly looked good from where I was stand­ing. Made the place come alive and was a wel­come ‘spec­ta­cle’ to those not direct­ly par­tic­i­pat­ing.

On Sun­day the high­ly antic­i­pat­ed permaculture/transition towns work­shop proved to be an engag­ing, rad­i­cal and politi­cised dis­cus­sion of the issues. Key points were about the nature of per­ma­cul­ture, it’s his­to­ry and rel­e­vance today, how it has changed as a con­cept and how we prac­tice it every­day. There was a vision excer­cise in imag­in­ing what a per­ma­cul­tured post-tran­si­tion world might be expe­ri­en­tial­ly from the moment we wake up. What will our homes look like, our break­fasts, the world out­side our homes? On tran­si­tion towns, after the basics were into­duced, key ques­tions were how do we ensure the tran­si­tion move­ment remains out of the hands of local busi­ness elites, and is non-hier­ar­chi­cal?

Sun­day after­noon was tak­en up with two prac­ti­cal work­shops and one dis­cus­sion. While the sten­cil mak­ing con­rt­ibuted to the ongo­ing spon­ta­neous arts occur­ing througout the event, dec­o­rat­ing the build­ing, gueril­la gar­den­ing con­sist­ed of mak­ing ‘seed­bombs’, a rad­i­cal ‘no dig’ approach to the prac­tice. This labour inten­sive work­shop was inter­rupt­ed for around an hour by the talk on the forth­com­ing pub­lic sec­tor strikes, and the state of indus­tri­al activism in the pub­lic sec­tor in the city, which was a pro­duc­tive and cer­tain­ly infor­ma­tive dis­cus­sion. For those inter­st­ed in fol­low­ing up, there is a union organ­ised ral­ly in Vic­to­ria Square, Brum City Cen­tre on Thurs­day 24th April, 12noon to coin­cide with a strike over pay cuts.

The ‘What next?’ dis­cus­sion round­ed off the event, dis­cussing the next steps for brum­free­space, on Sun­day evening after din­ner. Anky, one par­tic­i­pant said “The food was won­der­ful, thanx to “Food not Bombs”…really inspired my cook­ing, we got the water & light­ing and sounds sort­ed real­ly well I thought, we have so much ener­gy and cre­ativ­i­ty amongst us!”

And a final per­spec­tive:

“One of the great­est strengths of the week­end was the diver­si­ty of peo­ple that it wel­comed. This was the first time I had ever been involved in occu­py­ing a space, and it gave me the oppor­tu­ni­ty to get togeth­er with so many dif­fer­ent peo­ple — to meet new peo­ple that I had­n’t met before, and to cel­e­brate the new friends that I had made since becom­ing involved in Free­space Brum in Jan­u­ary. It’s fair to say that each per­son who vis­it­ed had par­tic­u­lar inter­ests, and the oppor­tu­ni­ty to lis­ten, learn and dis­cuss the var­i­ous inter­ests in a free social space that was­n’t just inter­est­ed in tak­ing your mon­ey was real­ly valu­able. And it was fun too! We took an emp­ty build­ing and for a few days we gave it colour, life, music and com­mu­ni­ty. In return, it gave us fun, cel­e­bra­tion, edu­ca­tion and the deter­mi­na­tion to bring some­thing more per­ma­nent to Birm­ing­ham. Well done to every­body involved in set­ting it up and thanks to every­body who vis­it­ed, pro­mot­ed it and helped out. Par­tic­u­lar thanks must to go to the amaz­ing peo­ple from the Spot­ted Dog pub, all the speak­ers who gave their time to hold work­shops (I man­aged to get to the LETS and Zap­atista talks, both fan­tas­tic) and every­body who trav­elled from out of town to help us. Love to all, and here’s to the future.”

More pho­tos

The next meet­ing of Free­space Brum will be at 7pm this Wednes­day 23rd April, at the Spot­ted Dog Alces­ter St.

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Announc­ing The New Squat: Loca­tion (Not­ting­ham)

The new squat, which has been occu­pied as part of the week­end of action for free cul­ture and autonomous spaces has so far been suc­cess­ful­ly tak­en. Please come along, we real­ly need peo­ple to help clear the space and make it one of our own! So where is it? The build­ing is known as the Old Coun­ty Hall, 23 High Pave­ment, Not­ting­ham City, NG1. It is the build­ing straight oppo­site the Gal­leries of Jus­tice. For gen­er­al info or direc­tions, please ring us on 075 3449 6679. For a map see: http://tinyurl.com/5wld5k

We hope to see you there soon!

For more pho­tos see http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/04/396162.html
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Bris­tolians take part in Inter­na­tion­al homelessness/squatters action day

A vacant city cen­tre build­ing, the Lit­tle The­atre in Col­ston Street, was occu­pied this morn­ing by home­less Bris­to­lians as part of a co-ordi­nat­ed day of action round the world.

Hun­dreds of thou­sands of square feet of vacant prop­er­ty stands idle in the city whilst Bristol’s hous­ing reg­is­ter list­ed over 20,000 peo­ple and ris­ing when it was scrapped last year. Whilst most peo­ple don’t want to live in prop­er­ty not orig­i­nal­ly built as hous­ing any roof over your head is bet­ter than none. The absur­di­ty of fast ris­ing home­less­ness fig­ures whilst large build­ings lie emp­ty, some­times for years, has not escaped the notice of Bristol’s home­less peo­ple.

The gov­ern­ment has also decid­ed to drop pro­pos­als in the last bud­get to scrap busi­ness rate relief for vacant prop­er­ties. Many own­ers of the largest vacant prop­er­ties in the city will con­tin­ue to pay lit­tle or no tax on their emp­ty build­ings and have no incen­tive to let them. Police and Fire Brigade both recog­nise these increas­ing num­bers of ‘voids’ cre­ate fire haz­ards, ‘crack hous­es’ and attract oth­er crime.

Last year’s North­ern Rock cri­sis and increas­ing bank­ing jit­ters should only serve to remind peo­ple how, by hand­ing respon­si­bil­i­ty for eco­nom­ic deci­sions over to the pri­vate sec­tor, Gor­don Brown has left one of the most impor­tant respon­si­bil­i­ties of gov­ern­ment to a fail­ing mar­ket. The council’s appalling new ‘choice based let­tings’ scheme, intro­duced this year, which relies on the dis­abled, poor, men­tal­ly ill and elder­ly to ‘house them­selves’ has effec­tive­ly scrapped their statu­to­ry respon­si­bil­i­ty over the last 60 years to house the most vul­ner­a­ble in soci­ety.

The occu­pa­tion will con­tin­ue over the next few days with pub­lic events and will con­tin­ue beyond to remind the coun­cil, pub­lic, Shel­ter and oth­er agen­cies that home­less peo­ple will con­tin­ue to assert their right to house them­selves where the gov­ern­ment has failed. Bris­tol squat­ters believe the coun­cil and home­less char­i­ties have shrugged off the des­per­ate plight of tens of thou­sands of home­less peo­ple in the city because they have lit­tle eco­nom­ic clout.

Con­tacts

For more info call: Sven on 07786 166477, Miri­am on 07964 292775, Jake on 07910 077111 or oth­ers on 07528 953230 or 07591 631230.

Links

With the Broad­mead Expan­sion and its spillover into St Pauls and Old Mar­ket that is dis­plac­ing our local com­mu­ni­ties, the time is now to take mat­ters into our own hands and reclaim our pub­lic spaces.
REPAIR NOT REDEVELOP — Yup­pie flats are not part of a sus­tain­able future and are push­ing social hous­ing out of the city cen­tre. Resist the dis­place­ment of local peo­ple and join the parade!
http://www.bristol.indymedia.org/article/688145
http://april2008.squat.net/index.php/category/english/l…ef/en

http://www.squatbristol.org.uk

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Audacious Space outside
Audacious Space reception
Audacious Space kids' area
Audacious Space free-shop
Audacious Space displays 1
Audacious Space displays 2

AUDACIOUS SPACE CINEMA
@ oppo­site Pri­mark on the Head­row (21–27) in the city cen­tre at the old hous­ing advice cen­tre, Leeds
07526 261061

Presents… a week­end of rad­i­cal doc­u­men­taries

Occu­py, resist, squat!

Fri­day 11TH APRIL 2008

7 — 8pm Euro­pean autonomous Spaces Part I

Direct Action against Apa­thy shorts on ‘autonomous spaces’. DAAA made some doc­u­men­taries back in 2005 about Euro­pean autonomous spaces. Here we fea­ture three of them: Barcelona, our very own A‑spire from Leeds and a secret loca­tion!

8–9pm – Rob New­man
Live from the 2007 Camp for Cli­mate Action, we have Rob Newman’s hilar­i­ous and polit­i­cal sharp stand up on oil, war and direct action.

Sat­ur­day 12TH APRIL 2008

2 — 3pm Euro­pean autonomous Spaces Part II
Back with 3 more shorts from Direct Action against Apa­thy: Not­ting­ham (Sumac Cen­tre), Chris­tia­nia and Ams­ter­dam

3 — 4 pm Boom — the sound of evic­tion
Sto­ry of gen­tri­fi­ca­tion and resis­tance from down­town san Fran­cis­co

4 — 5 pm Those who dance
Inspir­ing sto­ry of resis­tance from Ross­port in Ire­land where a com­mu­ni­ty is tak­ing on the mas­sive multi­na­tion­al Shell to stop them build­ing an oil pipeline.

5 – 5.30pm The sto­ry of Joe Hill
Sto­ry of leg­endary itin­er­ant, folk hero Joe Hill — a key agi­ta­tor and wob­bly (IWW) organ­is­er

5.30 – 6pm Hands of our homes
Short doc­u­men­taries abot com­mu­ni­ties resist­ing pri­vati­sa­tion and PFIs from around the UK

6 – 7.30pm The Take
Sto­ry of work­ers in Argenti­na who occu­py their fac­to­ry after the 2001 eco­nom­ic crash.

7.30 – 9pm Dock­ers
Sto­ry of amaz­ing 1994 Liv­er­pool dock­ers strike whose strug­gle spread around the world.

AUDACIOUS SPACE COLLECTIVE
leedssquat@googlemail.com

The space was tak­en with­out too much fuss last night, and opened its doors to the pub­lic about 3pm today. On going in, it was obvi­ous that a lot of effort had gone into prepar­ing the infos­hop and beau­ti­fy­ing the inside. There was free cof­fee and snacks, some peo­ple were watch­ing a film and some were hand­ing out lit­er­a­ture on the pave­ment out­side.

For any­one who does­n’t know the area, The Head­row is right in the very cen­tre of town. The coun­cil vacat­ed this build­ing (it used to be the hous­ing advice cen­tre) so they could sell it on to be anoth­er exclu­sive bou­tique; the hous­ing office was moved to some­where fur­ther out of town and hard­er for peo­ple to access.

Per­haps they were pre­scient when they chose to write in their dis­play, “The Hous­ing Advice Cen­tre Is Chang­ing.” It cer­tain­ly has. If you go in now, you’ll learn all about how to squat and take con­trol of your own hous­ing prob­lems!

Come and pop in if you have a chance.

The Auda­cious Space cafe is now shut as of ear­ly Sun­day evening, but every­one is anx­ious to main­tain the momen­tum of this week­end, so there will be a meet­ing for peo­ple inter­est­ed in what to do next on Wednes­day this week at 7pm to dis­cuss ideas, and have a bit of an Auda­cious Debrief.

Call the usu­al num­ber (07526261061) or email leedssquat@googlemail.com for loca­tion. It will be par­tic­u­lar­ly good if peo­ple who did­n’t help in putting on the space, but came down and liked what they saw, came along to see how to get more involved.

And a MASSIVE MASSIVE WELL DONE to every­one who put on and came down to and par­tic­i­pat­ed in this amaz­ing event! Let’s keep the momen­tum going!

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Day of Action for Squat­ting and Autonomous Spaces, Brighton, 12/04/08.

A video of pix­ies reclaim­ing the pub­lic space of Brighton with some ban­ner drop­ping. To our sur­prise the pigs did­n’t show up. The weath­er was great. The day went well.

Video Squat Lev­el — video/mpeg 13M
a href=“http://www.indymedia.org.uk/media/2008/04//396394.mpg”>Video Squat Lev­el — video/mpeg 13M

The day had start­ed with some tree climb­ing. After few hours the first ban­ner was dropped. The ben­der was then erect­ed on the Lev­el and the food acquired from skips was dis­played on the table to be eat­en for free by the mem­bers of pub­lic. The sec­ond ban­ner was dropped an hour lat­er. The crowd gath­ered and there was some gui­tar play­ing to fol­low by the after-par­ty. The day went well.

I went home before the start of the par­ty… please add your own accounts of the day/night.

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MESHO, The 16-page tabloid spoof paper about squat­ting, home­less­ness and autonomous spaces is out!

Ape­ing the METRO mast­head, watch out if you see what looks like a METRO on a tube train or bus — it might be a MESHO

Look out for MESHO in all the squatted/autonomous spaces opened up this week­end in cities across Britain.

Alleged­ly the paper near­ly didn’t hap­pen because three sep­a­rate print­ers pulled out at the last minute fear­ing a legal come­back – or claim­ing they did­n’t have insur­ance. One excused them­selves because they print METRO, before anoth­er final­ly oblig­ed at the last minute.

What does MESHO mean? Well it looks like METRO but is an ana­gram of HOMES. So there.

Down­load MESHO on pdf (16 page, tabloid size, 4.7mb) at www.schnews.org.uk/satire/pdf/mesho.pdf

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On the night of Fri­day 11th April offices of Angel Group [Leeds] came under attack. This was part of the days of action in sup­port of squats and autonomous spaces.

Angel group make their mon­ey by pro­vid­ing poor qual­i­ty hous­ing for asy­lum seek­ers, prof­itting from vul­ner­a­ble peo­ple and racist asy­lum laws.

This com­pa­ny were tar­get­ted as part of the days of action in sup­port of squats and autonomous spaces because hous­ing is a right, not a means to make prof­it. This com­pa­ny are known to exploit their posi­tion of pro­vid­ing hous­ing to vul­ner­a­ble peo­ple who are not in a posi­tion to com­plain, get­ting away with pro­vid­ing sub­stan­dard acco­mo­da­tion.

The front of the Angel group offices were redec­o­rat­ed, slo­gans paint­ed, and locks glued. 12 com­pa­ny vehi­cles were attacked with paint strip­per, spray paint, and had their tyres slashed.

This should send a mes­sage to Angel that their racist busi­ness will not be tol­er­at­ed.

———-

SPACE INVADED!

Man­ches­ter Space Invaders land­ed on Thurs­day night.… Dodgy TV kicked off the week­end with films about squat­ting (includ­ing the OK cafe) and a trib­ute to Free par­ty stal­ward Char­lie.. This was fol­lowed by a late night open­ing at the new social cen­tre. Intre­pid Invaders then took to the skies for a night of auda­cious ban­ner hang­ing around the city to pro­mote the week­end and No Bor­ders.…

Fri­day night was the open­ing bands night at the squat, with every­thing from punk to folk, via elec­tro ran­dom­ness. This was a fundrais­er for the Base­ment Social Cen­tre; which lives on through the col­lec­tive despite being tem­porar­i­ly shut down.

On Sat­ur­day the Man­ches­ter space invaders took to the streets to reclaim some ‘pub­lic’ spaces…The fam­i­ly fun­day was a suc­cess despite being some­what over­shad­owed by the cor­po­rate pres­ence of the Man­ches­ter swimath­on in Cathe­dral Gar­dens. The space invaders sup­port­ed the teenagers who are con­stant­ly moved on and tar­get­ed by police for assem­bling in ‘pub­lic’ spaces. With a range of music, from bike soundsys­tems to a folk and sam­ba band, we hung out in the sun­shine with the I bike MCR art parade. We made ban­ners, paint­ed faces, did tai qi..and were enter­tained by a magi­cian!

In the evening, up to 200 squat­ters and No Bor­ders activists held an unau­tho­rised demon­stra­tion in the city cen­tre. Accom­pa­nied by a sam­ba band and two soundsys­tems mount­ed on bike trail­ers, they marched from Vic­to­ria Sta­tion into the North­ern Quar­ter, along Mar­ket Street and Kings Street, through Spin­ning­fields into Castle­field.

The event, called by the group Man­ches­ter No Bor­ders, called for the defence of squat­ted spaces and the free­dom of move­ment for all. Squats and autonomous spaces face a hard time from the author­i­ties. Yet, for many peo­ple, espe­cial­ly some migrant com­mu­ni­ties, they are the only alter­na­tive to home­less­ness.

The demon­stra­tion high­light­ed the ridicu­lous­ness of hun­dreds of hous­es stand­ing emp­ty, while many of us face extor­tion­ate rents, mort­gage repay­ments or evic­tion threats.

At the end of the march in Castle­field, the pro­test­ers suc­ceed­ed in tak­ing sym­bol­ic action against the rede­vel­op­ment of the area, occu­py­ing an old pub and hav­ing a cel­e­bra­tion of autonomous spaces. The rede­vel­op­ment of Jackson’s Wharf into a block of flats was recent­ly fought off by local oppo­si­tion; but in many parts of the city the bat­tle has been less suc­cess­ful.

After the demon­stra­tion some space invaders took off to a par­ty in an old fur­ni­ture ware­house in Ard­wick, but this was sad­ly bust­ed by the police and shut down after a cou­ple of hours..


Manchester autonomous demo
Pic­tures and report by Man­ches­ter No Bor­ders of the FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT and DEFEND AUTONOMOUS SPACES demon­stra­tion on Sat­ur­day, April 12th (see www.april-12.blogspot.com).

Last Sat­ur­day evening, up to 200 squat­ters and sup­port­ers fol­lowed our call for an unau­tho­rised demon­stra­tion in the city cen­tre. We were accom­pa­nied by a sam­ba band (Rhythms of Resis­tance) and two soundsys­tems mount­ed on bike trail­ers. With the cops not both­er­ing to show up, we marched undis­turbed from Vic­to­ria Sta­tion into the North­ern Quar­ter, along Mar­ket Street and Kings Street , through Spin­ning­fields into Castle­field.

The demo in itself was already a great suc­cess! We car­ried three big ban­ners read­ing ‘Free­dom of Move­ment for all – defend autonomous spaces’, ‘No Bor­ders, No Nations – against migra­tion man­age­ment’, and ‘Occu­py – Resist’. There was a ban­ner drop along the route, hun­dreds of spoof ‘Mesho’ news­pa­pers were giv­en out, and it was great to see a hun­dred peo­ple sprint down Kings Street past all the posh shops.

But as some­one said, this was not just a demon­stra­tion. In Castle­fields, we suc­ceed­ed in col­lec­tive­ly occu­py­ing Jack­son ‘s Wharf, an old pub that was the focus of a suc­cess­ful local cam­paign against rede­vel­op­ment. Up to a hun­dred squat­ters entered the aban­doned build­ing, hang­ing ban­ners from its bal­cony and open­ing bot­tles of cava that No Bor­ders had pro­vid­ed! Even the cops seemed hap­py to see an old pub being brought back to life for a cou­ple of hours.

And let’s not for­get that the events in Man­ches­ter coin­cid­ed with dozens of build­ing occu­pa­tions, protests and street par­ties across Europe, in cities as diverse as Lon­don, Ams­ter­dam, Vien­na and Prague. World­wide, tens of thou­sands attend­ed.

Our actions have clear­ly shown the ridicu­lous­ness of hav­ing hun­dreds of hous­es stand emp­ty, while social and com­mu­ni­ty cen­tres are being shut down and indi­vid­u­als face extor­tion­ate rents, mort­gage repay­ments or evic­tion threats. With sky-high rents forc­ing the poor to the mar­gins, the creep­ing pri­vati­sa­tion of pub­lic space, and a coun­cil will­ing to close down vital com­mu­ni­ty ser­vices and simul­ta­ne­ous­ly sell off swathes of the city cen­tre to lux­u­ry prop­er­ty devel­op­ers and retail­ers, there has sel­dom been a time when fight­ing for autonomous spaces in Man­ches­ter has been more impor­tant.

We need to recog­nise bor­ders where they appear. The restric­tions cre­at­ed by cap­i­tal­ist social rela­tions and the prop­er­ty sys­tem abol­ish­es com­mon ground, seg­re­gates accord­ing to wealth and own­er­ship, and in doing so throws up bor­ders all around us. Con­trol of the move­ment and asso­ci­a­tion of peo­ple — whether at the micro-lev­el of our inner cities or the macro lev­el of inter­na­tion­al migra­tion is a glob­al issue that must be chal­lenged.

We should fight to cre­ate spaces in Man­ches­ter not sim­ply as bases of resis­tance or cel­e­bra­tion (though we hope they can pro­vide this), but to encour­age a depar­ture from the sys­tems that con­trol us. For cen­turies, peo­ple have migrat­ed across bor­ders and have occu­pied spaces to live in as a way to take con­trol of their own lives. They choose to leave their own pasts, in an effort to claim auton­o­my over their future lives.

The demon­stra­tion on Sat­ur­day was a cel­e­bra­tion of this.…Thank you to every­one who par­tic­i­pat­ed!

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Common Ground 1
Common Ground 2
Squat­ted Com­mu­ni­ty Gar­den Reopened in Read­ing as Part of Days of Action!

On Sat 12th April, actions took place across the world in defence of squats and free spaces. In Read­ing, anti-cap­i­tal­ists man­aged to re-open Com­mon Ground squat­ted com­mu­ni­ty gar­den for the day, with a com­mu­ni­ty BBQ and music show, despite a year of strug­gle with the author­i­ties for con­trol of the space.

Over the last two weeks local activists have been busy qui­et­ly tidy­ing up the gar­den, build­ing new fur­ni­ture and fix­ing a new lock on the gate ready for re-open­ing. How­ev­er, a few days ago, RBC changed the locks and re-secured the gate with bar­ri­cades. No wor­ries though…

For starters, pub­lic­i­ty has been cir­cu­lat­ing for the last month, not only detail­ing the planned re-open­ing, but also explain­ing a ‘Plan B’ for if the author­i­ties sucess­ful­ly stopped the open­ing. RGA declared that, if stopped, the entire event would relo­cate to space right out­side the Coun­cil build­ing, police sta­tion and courts, reclaim­ing it from their author­i­ty (and their pri­vati­sa­tion plans…)

Hap­pi­ly though, this proved unnec­es­sary. On Sat­ur­day, activists from RGA were at Com­mon Ground at 7am, doing work to pre­pare for open­ing time. Come 1pm, as peo­ple began to arrive, the fence came down and moved aside to cre­ate a large (unblock­able!) entrance to the gar­den!

Over the course of the day, many peo­ple came through the gar­den, from local neigh­bours express­ing their sup­port to anar­chist com­rades from oth­er parts of the coun­try. Local down­pours were dealt with (ok, gazee­bos had to be bought) and as the day went on to get brighter and dri­er, more and more peo­ple arrived. Every­body relaxed and enjoyed a free BBQ untill evening fell and musi­cians began to arrive. From 6pm onwards, a diverse crowd of fam­i­ly and friends, neigh­bours and punks, gath­ered around for a drink (or two in a few cas­es!) and showed their appre­ci­a­tion for the acoustic tunes and pos­i­tive mes­sages plied by PJ & Gaby, Neil Suther­land, Kel­ly Kemp, Clay­ton Bliz­zard and Sam Rus­so. Final­ly, a few sober com­rades tidied the whole place up and the crowd drift­ed off into the night, before the fence was re-attached, secur­ing the gar­den, and sev­er­al tired but chuffed anar­chists went off the bed.

Just to men­tion, this is only one per­sons opin­ion but in many ways this was the most suc­cess­ful event held in Com­mon Ground yet. Ok, a few neigh­bours com­plained when a cou­ple of vis­it­ing hip­pies start­ed their drum­ming, but this was quick­ly dealt with and at least one of those neigh­bours was lat­er seen danc­ing on her bal­cony to PJ & Gaby. Aside from that, this was the first event held at the gar­den which was com­plete­ly left alone by the author­ites. Pre­vi­ous events have hap­pened despite inter­fer­ence (such as injunc­tions, evic­tions attempts and hired secu­ri­ty guards) but this was the first time they sim­ply stayed away. Over the last year the activists involved have proved to the coun­cil that they wont be stopped and that attempts at crim­i­nal­is­ing the project achieve noth­ing except wast­ing a lot of mon­ey. Clear­ly, Sat­ur­day was a major vic­to­ry, with the coun­cil giv­ing up.

Keep­ing the gar­den open every­day may prove impos­si­ble due to the size of the organ­is­ing col­lec­tive and the lack of per­ma­nent occu­pa­tion mak­ing it easy for RBC to sim­ply re-secure the gate each time it is opened. How­ev­er, the prob­a­bil­i­ty of a com­mu­ni­ty gar­den being cre­at­ed legal­ly near­by as a result of this project means RGA have proved direct-action gets the goods and a fair few neigh­bours have expressed an inter­est in get­ting involved in this local anti-cap­i­tal­ist organ­i­sa­tion for fur­ther projects.

Cheers to all involved for a good day and sol­i­dar­i­ty to all the oth­ers around the world who par­tic­i­pat­ed in the days of action!

Notes for the edi­tor or the ‘real­ly real­ly inter­est­ed’.…

*The gar­den, orig­i­nal­ly cre­at­ed by local squat­ter, neigh­bours and anti-cap­i­tal­ists ‘RGA’ (Read­ing Grass­roots Action), sits on Read­ing Bor­ough Coun­cil (RBC) owned land which had been left a derelict junk­yard for at least five years pre­vi­ous­ly. Through dona­tions and recy­cling, the gar­den was cre­at­ed almost for free and organ­ised through reg­u­lar direct­ly-demo­c­ra­t­ic meet­ings. Despite RBC gain­ing an evic­tion order for the squat­ters and an injunc­tion ban­ning the gar­den being opened, it was opened in May 2007 with over 200 peo­ple pass­ing through over the day and was then opened every­day and enjoyed by many diverse mem­bers of the com­mu­ni­ty over the sum­mer. The gar­den was final­ly closed down and the squat­ters evict­ed (after two pre­vi­ous evic­tions were seen off by local protest) in Octo­ber. Short­ly after, three activists were arrest­ed attempt­ing to reopen the gar­den and the gar­den has again been left derelict by RBC for five months.

katesgrovegarden(AT)yahoo.co.uk
http://www.rgacollective.org.uk

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Amsterdam autonomous weekend RTS 1Amsterdam autonomous weekend RTS 2Ams­ter­dam RTS pho­tos — more info about what hap­pened over the seas at links below
==========

Announce­ments about oth­er events tak­ing place over the days of action in Lon­don & else­where, here

Inter­na­tion­al round-up on Indy­media and most up-to-date, the main web­page for the week­end.

Be inspired — take action — get involved

“What [the peo­ple in pow­er] can’t live with is sus­tained pres­sure that keeps build­ing, organ­i­sa­tions that keep doing things, peo­ple that keep learn­ing lessons from the last time and doing it bet­ter the next time.” — Noam Chom­sky

Be inspired by the sto­ries on these pages of peo­ple tak­ing rad­i­cal direct action to stop the trash­ing of the earth. There’s the upcom­ing food & cli­mate day of action, on 3rd June, plus a Mass Tres­pass at an open-cast coal mine site, in Der­byshire, on 26th May.

But that’s not all — peo­ple have been tak­ing eco­log­i­cal direct action on a whole load of issues here in the UK and fur­ther afield. Check them out here, by region or issue.

This year’s EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing (or fol­low the link to the left) is from Wednes­day 27th August to Mon­day 1st Sep­tem­ber 2008, if you want to plot & plan, and laugh & chat with old friends & new.

EF! fist on green & black star“What [the peo­ple in pow­er] can’t live with is sus­tained pres­sure that keeps build­ing, organ­i­sa­tions that keep doing things, peo­ple that keep learn­ing lessons from the last time and doing it bet­ter the next time.” — Noam Chom­sky

Be inspired by the sto­ries on these pages of peo­ple tak­ing rad­i­cal direct action to stop the trash­ing of the earth. There’s the upcom­ing food & cli­mate day of action, on 3rd June, plus a Mass Tres­pass at an open-cast coal mine site, in Der­byshire, on 26th May.

But that’s not all — peo­ple have been tak­ing eco­log­i­cal direct action on a whole load of issues here in the UK and fur­ther afield. Check them out here, by region or issue.

This year’s EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing (or fol­low the link to the left) is from Wednes­day 27th August to Mon­day 1st Sep­tem­ber 2008, if you want to plot & plan, and laugh & chat with old friends & new.

“You see, in life, lots of peo­ple know what to do, but few peo­ple actu­al­ly do what they know. Know­ing is not enough! You must take action.” — Antho­ny Rob­bins

At the win­ter moot in Not­ting­ham, peo­ple got togeth­er and inspired each oth­er to take action. Some peo­ple got togeth­er with oth­ers in their areas and formed new groups — con­tact them if they’re near­by, or get your own eco­log­i­cal direct action group togeth­er. Give us a shout if you need a hand.

“The time for net­work­ing is over, the time for evi­dence is over. There is only time for action. No more spec­ta­tors, only play­ers.” — Bill Mol­li­son