NORTHUMBERLANDIA SPEAKS OUT AGAINST COAL MINE

A con­tentious land sculp­ture was brought to life today as it joined grow­ing oppo­si­tion to a new open­cast coal mine.

A con­tentious land sculp­ture was brought to life today as it joined grow­ing oppo­si­tion to a new open­cast coal mine.

To mark the start of a pub­lic inquiry into the con­tro­ver­sial Druridge Bay coal mine, a group call­ing them­selves “Northum­ber­lan­dia Speaks” used the pow­er of art to give voice to Northum­ber­lan­dia, a pub­lic sculp­ture in rur­al Northum­ber­land. The struc­ture, also known as Slag Alice, was con­struct­ed by the Banks Group to com­pen­sate for the envi­ron­men­tal dam­age caused by the adjoin­ing Shot­ton Sur­face Mine.

The min­ing com­pa­ny’s plans to mine coal near local beau­ty spot Druridge Bay have attract­ed wide­spread oppo­si­tion, and today’s action vocalised that oppo­si­tion. Much of this oppo­si­tion has cen­tred around the Save Druridge cam­paign, who have fund­ed legal oppo­si­tion to the mine.

The cam­paign­ers used a ban­ner read­ing “end coal now” to sug­gest the views of the reclin­ing woman depict­ed in the sculp­ture. They also con­struct­ed an image of a wind tur­bine in her clenched right hand.

Rob Noyes, a spokesper­son for the group, explained:

“Northum­ber­lan­dia is sold as ‘a land­scape for the com­mu­ni­ty to enjoy’ and yet the Banks Group want to deprive the Druridge Bay com­mu­ni­ty of the land­scape they already enjoy. I’m sure that if the land­scape could, it would speak out. And it would say ‘End Coal Now’.”

As well as the dan­ger­ous envi­ron­men­tal impacts of a coal mine near Druridge Bay, cam­paign­ers and local res­i­dents are con­cerned about the threat to wildlife and the local tourism indus­try, which relies on Druridge Bay’s sta­tus as a nat­ur­al beau­ty spot.

Although the Banks Group claims the new mine could cre­ate 50 jobs, it is unclear what would hap­pen to these after the mine’s five-year lifes­pan, or whether this could com­pen­sate for the job loss­es that would result from a decline in tourism.

Jack Mar­ley, a local res­i­dent who par­tic­i­pat­ed in the protest, said:

“I did­n’t actu­al­ly even know there was a new coal mine planned until recent­ly. I don’t under­stand why any­one would want to open a new coal mine when it’s so obvi­ous­ly a declin­ing indus­try. The North East has had a great coal-min­ing past, but it’s not an indus­try that can bring the growth to our area that we need so much. It makes much more sense to cre­ate local jobs in the renew­able sec­tor.”

Noyes added: “A new mine at Druridge Bay will cre­ate less than 50 short term jobs and bring a dai­ly traf­fic of 300 HGV vehi­cles to a calm oasis. While we await the results of the inquiry, we can only reflect on what a beau­ti­ful place Northum­ber­land is, at sites like this. Any­one who comes to the area can see how a new mine would com­plete­ly destroy the bay, and why? So a dying indus­try can wreck our cli­mate.”

The inquiry starts tomor­row, and a final deci­sion will be reached in the autumn.

Call out to get involved in a research project on sexual violence in activist communities

Was your sex­u­al abuser a high-pro­file activist? Have you felt unable to speak out about it?

Was your sex­u­al abuser a high-pro­file activist? Have you felt unable to speak out about it? Or have you spo­ken out about it only to be accused of mak­ing it up and/or divid­ing the move­ment? Did your anti-state activism and/or expe­ri­ence of police bru­tal­i­ty rule out going to the police? Were you able to kick out your abuser using oth­er meth­ods? Did the account­abil­i­ty process back­fire? Did your abuser just move on to a dif­fer­ent group and do the same thing to some­one else? Was the trans com­mu­ni­ty so small that you didn’t want your part­ner to lose it? Do you want to be involved in tak­ing action and chal­leng­ing sex­u­al vio­lence in activist com­mu­ni­ties?

We want to hear from sur­vivors who iden­ti­fy as women, gen­der-queer or trans who are ready to talk about their expe­ri­ences of sex­u­al vio­lence with­in cur­rent or past organ­is­ing in rad­i­cal social jus­tice move­ments in the UK. This may have hap­pened once or mul­ti­ple times, we are inter­est­ed in hear­ing from folks with a vari­ety of expe­ri­ences of sex­u­al vio­lence includ­ing unwant­ed touch­ing, flash­ing, harass­ment, stalk­ing, sex­u­al assault and rape.

Sal­vage is a col­lec­tive of aca­d­e­m­ic-activists, sur­vivors and activists. We got togeth­er through a work­shop on sur­vivor-led approach­es to gen­dered vio­lence and abuse at AFem 2014. This is our first research project. We aim to devel­op resources, infor­ma­tion and prac­ti­cal rec­om­men­da­tions to work towards cre­at­ing effec­tive chal­lenges to gen­dered vio­lence, abuse and harms with­in social jus­tice move­ments and com­mu­ni­ties.

If you are inter­est­ed in get­ting involved and/or want more infor­ma­tion about this research project:

Web: https://projectsalvage.wordpress.com/research

Twit­ter: @Project_Salvage

Wrong Decision — Bradley Mine Approved by Inspector

On Wednes­day (3/6/15) it was announced that UK Coal’s appli­ca­tion to mine 520,561 tonnes of coal from a site called Bradley, was approved. The site is cur­rent­ly agri­cul­tur­al land in Leadgate, Durham, UK. This is a high­ly con­test­ed site with real­ly strong and well orches­trat­ed oppo­si­tion from local peo­ple. Why is this a bad deci­sion? … Con­tin­ue read­ing “Wrong Deci­sion — Bradley Mine Approved by Inspec­tor”

On Wednesday (3/6/15) it was announced that UK Coal's application to mine
520,561 tonnes of coal from a site called Bradley, was approved. The site
is currently agricultural land in Leadgate, Durham, UK. This is a highly
contested site with really strong and well orchestrated opposition from
local people.

Why is this a bad decision?

* The community were so very clear that there was NO COMMUNITY CONSENT * One woman (the planning inspector) thinks she can decide whether a mine would offer 'national, local or community benefits which would clearly outweigh the remaining adverse impacts.' How can she possibly say yes when the community SAYS NO. * We are moving away from a reliance on coal (but not quickly enough) with two coal fired power stations announcing closures next year * The company pursuing the application will not directly operate the site as they have serious financial difficulties and had to be helped by the government in closing their last remaining deep mines and were order to sell off their remaining opencast mines

As the following history of the application shows, the coal company refused to take no for an answer being determined to sell on the mine with planning permission. This is not the end of the battle. We need you to think about what you are going to do to ensure that this piece of rural Britain is never dug up. We need to stand together to protect the livelihoods, families, local history, quality of life, homes, air quality, tranquillity, health, wildlife and ecosystems in this area. Even if the legal battle is over the fight is not. Get in touch with your suggestions info@coalaction.org.uk

History of the application.

UK Coal’s first application was rejected by planners in 1986. In 2001 a second application was rejected.

In February 2011 the planning hearing of Durham Council unanimously rejected the application, councillors called UK Coal "thugs," "vandals" and said they were trying to bribe them.

In Autumn 2011 there was a three week appeal which UK Coal lost.

The coal company took this to the High Court in London who said that the decision was perverse and ordered another appeal.

The second appeal happened in Autumn 2014 and lasted three weeks. It was well attended by local people, tens of whom spoke out against the mine with incredible passion, dedication and knowledge. From the team at The Coal Action Network

For more info on sim­i­lar issues check out 

http://www.coalaction.org.uk 
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Coal-Action-Network/429163990497895

Reclaim the Power — Didcot and beyond!

 

Five days to go — here we come Didcot!

Programme’s up and packed full of treats.

In less than a week’s time Did­cot Mass Action Camp 2015 will be in full swing and we’re count­ing down the days and rar­ing up for a wicked week­end.

Set-up and start: Fri­day 29th May
Fin­ish: Tues­day 2nd June 2015
Face­book event here

We’ve got a packed sched­ule this year includ­ing the ‘Min­istry of Dis­sent’ — a one-stop shop for skilling up and tak­ing action with train­ers on board all day.  There’ll be the good peo­ple of Bar­ton Moss speak­ing about how to set up an ener­gy co-op and activist friends from Roja­va will be talk­ing about how to set up an entire autonomous region!

A range of train­ings are sched­uled from organ­i­sa­tions work­ing on the front­line of social change in the UK right now, includ­ing Lon­don Black Revs and UK Uncut, with Fuel Pover­ty Action tak­ing on the ‘Big 6’  and com­mu­ni­ty mobil­is­ing with DPAC (Dis­abled Peo­ple Against Cuts), and we’ll hear news about what’s com­ing up with the Paris cli­mate talks in Decem­ber, and from friends in the Rhineland about hold­ing off Big Coal there in August. Clos­er to home, we’ll also be hear­ing from Frack Free Lan­cashire about the immi­nent deci­sion in June, and how we can come togeth­er to say no to frack­ing — not now, not ever.

There’s also a com­e­dy dou­ble bill and music in the evening and time for us to dance and play, and get ener­gised and ready for our big day of action on Mon­day.

Check out the full pro­gramme here.

The site will be announced on Fri­day the 29th — keep your eyes on our web­site Face­book and Twit­ter

Vol­un­teers want­ed!

Every­one’s invit­ed to get involved in mak­ing this camp awe­some, and there’s a wide range of vol­un­teer roles avail­able that we’re look­ing to fill.  Specif­i­cal­ly this includes:

  • kitchen crew
  • expe­ri­enced child-min­ders
  • qual­i­fied first-aiders
  • expe­ri­enced tran­quil­li­ty/well-being crew
  • media savvy peo­ple to help out in the media tent
  • gate and comms
  • wel­come tent crew
  • water and plumb­ing
  • a ded­i­cat­ed crew of TAT-down on Tues­day (tak­ing down camp)

If you’re up for help­ing with any of these roles then please let us know via our Face­book page or drop us a line at info@nodashforgas.org.uk   — thanks!

 

BarnCamp in June — subverting tech, computers & media activism


Barn­Camp is a low-cost rur­al DIY skill-shar­ing event open to every­one, includ­ing UK activists, cam­paign­ers, peo­ple involved in social and com­mu­ni­ty groups, and any­body else with an inter­est in tech­nol­o­gy and how to sub­vert it to put it to good use. This year it’s run­ning from 19th to 21st June.

Brought to you by Hack­tion­Lab, Bris­tol Wire­less and FLOSS Man­u­als, Barn­Camp 2015 will be the sixth edi­tion of our sum­mer camp at High­bury Farm in the beau­ti­ful Wye val­ley. Barn­Camp is three days of work­shops, dis­cus­sions, demos and prac­ti­cal how-to ses­sions look­ing at how tech­nol­o­gy can be use­ful (and dan­ger­ous) for cam­paign­ers, com­mu­ni­ty activists and gen­er­al trou­ble mak­ers.

The week­end includes:

* Three days of work­shops and open space ses­sions.
* Four nights camp­ing in the beau­ti­ful Wye Val­ley.
* Food from Fri­day through to Sun­day (9 meals).
* Indoor and camp­fire­side enter­tain­ment.

We have lim­it­ed places so please book your place on-line today at  https://barncamp.org.uk
 barncamp2015@hacktionlab.org

Earth First! Summer Gathering, August 2015

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspir­ing and excit­ing pro­gramme and more.

Excit­ing plans are tak­ing shape.  Get involved by com­ing along to the EF! Win­ter Moot in Bris­tol.

Email: sum­mer­gath­er­ing AT earthfirst.org.uk

Update: see earthfirstgathering.org for an inspir­ing and excit­ing pro­gramme and more.

Excit­ing plans are tak­ing shape.  Get involved by com­ing along to the EF! Win­ter Moot in Bris­tol.

Email: sum­mer­gath­er­ing AT earthfirst.org.uk

Earth First! Winter Moot (Bristol): 20th-22nd February 2015 /full programme

A week­end gath­er­ing for peo­ple involved or want­i­ng to know more about eco­log­i­cal direct action around the UK includ­ing fight­ing open­cast coal, frack­ing, GM, nuclear pow­er, new road build­ing and quar­ries with dis­cus­sions and cam­paign plan­ning — empha­sis on the tac­tics and strate­gies, com­mu­ni­ty sol­i­dar­i­ty and sus­tain­able activism.

Shar­ing sto­ries, skills, tac­tics, updates & analy­ses of the rad­i­cal eco­log­i­cal move­ment

Cost scale £20 to £30 . This includes full veg­an meals and accom­mo­da­tion. Arrive Fri­day evening (pro­gramme starts at 7pm), leave Sun­day (ends by 4pm). It will be an indoor floor sleep­ing space so bring a warm sleep­ing bag and mat to

Kebele Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre 14 Robert­son Road Eas­t­on Bris­tol BS5 6JY
TrainTo Sta­ple­ton rd , two stops from Bris­tol TM then 7min walk —

Earth First! is a net­work of peo­ple and cam­paigns who fight eco­log­i­cal destruc­tion and the forces dri­ving it. We believe in non-hier­ar­chi­cal organ­is­ing of Direct Action, to con­front, stop and even­tu­al­ly reverse the forces that are respon­si­ble for the destruc­tion of the Earth and its inhab­i­tants. EF! is not a cohe­sive group or cam­paign, but a con­ve­nient ban­ner for peo­ple who share sim­i­lar philoso­phies to work under and doing it our­selves rather than rely­ing on gov­ern­ments or indus­try.

For info or offers southwest.earthfirst@riseup.net www.earth­first.org.uk

Down­load the (ready-to-print) fly­er

 

Pro­gramme sub­ject to change:

Starts 7pm Fri­day with din­ner, fol­lowed by films & an intro to EF!

On Sat­ur­day, break­fast is before the 9:30am start with cam­paigns round-ups and legal & secu­ri­ty work­shops.  After lunch we’ll be look­ing at strate­gic think­ing (see below) and at 5 explor­ing the rela­tion­ship between Reclaim the Pow­er and EF!

On Sun­day we’ll con­tin­ue those explo­rations from 10am.  After lunch, there’ll be a work­shop on sus­tain­able activism, and a chance to get involved in organ­is­ing the EF! Sum­mer Gath­er­ing.  Please stay for that if you can and get involved. 

 

Work­shops include:

Intel­li­gent Resis­tance: strat­e­gy and its imple­men­ta­tion in the mod­ern world

Sum­ma­ry: Strong strat­e­gy has always been a key ele­ment of suc­cess­ful resis­tance move­ments. Whether it be the anar­chist move­ments of rev­o­lu­tion­ary Spain, or the con­tem­po­rary fight against frack­ing, a sol­id strat­e­gy is proven to be indis­pens­able.‘Intel­li­gent Resis­tance’ is a basic intro­duc­tion to strate­gic thought and action and looks to pro­vide those in atten­dance with a prac­ti­cal set of the­o­ret­i­cal tools to take away and apply to their own move­ments and prac­tice.

Sus­tain­ing Resis­tance: avoid­ing ‘Burn out”

This is a taster work­shop from a much longer ten day work­shop and offers a range of tools, col­lec­tive and per­son­al, which can make our activism more effec­tive and help us avoid burn out stay­ing in for the long haul.

Reclaim the Pow­er meets Earth First!”

How can Earth First! and Reclaim the pow­er coex­ist in the future strug­gles and is there a need for col­lab­o­ra­tion between oth­er camps or a con­sol­i­da­tion of resources?

Legal Defence Mon­i­tor­ing:

A taster ses­sion in how to be an effec­tive LDM on actions and demos.

Cam­paigns go-round:

Dates for your diary and what resis­tance is going on around the world and your back yard..

Live Streamers Make Great Informants

from We Cop Watch

There are many ways to effec­tive­ly doc­u­ment the move­ment while pro­tect­ing the space, its move­ments and people’s pri­va­cy. Live Stream­ing is gen­er­al­ly NOT one of them.

from We Cop Watch

There are many ways to effec­tive­ly doc­u­ment the move­ment while pro­tect­ing the space, its move­ments and people’s pri­va­cy. Live Stream­ing is gen­er­al­ly NOT one of them.

A com­mon issue with Stream­ers is their dis­play of enti­tle­ment, often cit­ing the val­ue of bring­ing the move­ment to the peo­ple. But Stream­ers have a hard time admit­ting that the police find their work more valu­able then demon­stra­tors.

In a world of voyeurism and exhi­bi­tion­ists, Stream­ers often get car­ried away, inter­pret­ing their role as being a nar­ra­tor for the move­ment. They often film peo­ple with­out their con­sent, plac­ing more val­ue in pre­sent­ing to their view­er­ship, then pro­tect­ing the group that is already tak­ing risks by just get­ting out into the street to protest.

 

live-streamers-make-great-informants_1-800x428

One of the biggest prob­lems with stream­ing is that it gives real time infor­ma­tion to the police as far as what peo­ple are present, the group’s inten­tions, as well as its loca­tion and routes. Embed­ded Stream­ers give police a tac­ti­cal advan­tage when try­ing to con­duct mass arrests.

An even more trag­ic con­tract Stream­ers impose on demon­stra­tors is the raw, unedit­ed, archived video that is often made pub­lic and avail­able online for law enforce­ment to use lat­er to help iden­ti­fy and tar­get peo­ple.

Before we move to “Stream­er Solu­tions” lets review some “Stream­er tac­tics” that are favor­able to law enforce­ment, and almost always at the expense of the peo­ple.

Very Poor Stream­er Eti­quette:
Call­ing Peo­ple out by Name on Streams.

Peo­ple don’t go to protests for oth­er peo­ple to call them out on streams that are put up per­ma­nent­ly online for law enforce­ment to review.

Film­ing Peo­ples’ Iden­ti­ties on Streams

Law enforce­ment use streams to tar­get and iden­ti­fy peo­ple for repres­sion and arrest

Nar­rat­ing your Inter­pre­ta­tion of what Kind of Action is Tak­ing Place

Stream­ers often divulge per­son­al opin­ions rather than facts when nar­rat­ing about actions. Are you pre­pared to be a wit­ness for law enforce­ment in the future?

Film­ing Direct Actions

Every­thing you film, can and will be used against pro­test­ers if law enforce­ment has any­thing to do with it.

Nar­rat­ing Logis­tics and Tac­tics

At the height of Occu­py Oak­land, Under­cov­ers were being called into cer­tain FTP protests because of the “no Live Stream­ing” / “no Twit­ter­ing” tac­tic.

live-streamers-make-great-informants_2
FTP march­es are ongo­ing Fuck the Police march­es that take place in Oak­land and across the Bay.

Nar­rat­ing Group Routes

Police have a much eas­i­er time arrest­ing peo­ple in the streets when they have Stream­ers nar­rat­ing the group’s routes. You don’t need Under­cov­ers and heli­copters when you have a front-row seat.

If you want to be help­ful to the move­ment, be hon­est about your inten­tions. Is your view­er­ship more impor­tant than the peo­ple you are stand­ing with? Do you want to be doing some­thing that ben­e­fits the police over the peo­ple? Every action, every mass mobi­liza­tion, has a sto­ry that can be told. But folks need to either start hold­ing “non stream­ing” actions again, or stream­ers should stop oper­at­ing as infor­mants for the police.

If any of these issues are con­cern­ing to you, maybe con­sid­er NOT “Live Stream­ing” your next protest. Pick up a still cam­era, con­duct some audio inter­views, heck shoot some video. There’s no rea­son why you can’t go home after a protest and pro­duce some con­tent that is use­ful and not harm­ful. But in case it’s not in your blood to con­sid­er oth­er peo­ple on that lev­el, here are some good Live Stream tac­tics.

“Good” Livestream Tac­tics

  • Stand hun­dreds of feet away from the group so the low qual­i­ty record­ing doesn’t pick up con­ver­sa­tions or peo­ples’ iden­ti­ty.
  • Don’t film peo­ples’ iden­ti­ty with­out their con­sent.
  • Don’t nar­rate inten­tions, tac­tics, loca­tions, or des­ti­na­tions.
  • Wear a bright shirt that says “Live Stream­er” or “Infor­mant.”

More “Real Good” Livestream Tac­tics

  • Live Stream an event, pan­el, or dis­cus­sion where all par­ties con­sent.
  • Live Stream a demo or action where all par­ties involved con­sent.
  • Live Stream your inter­ac­tions when being stopped, ques­tioned, or harassed by law enforce­ment. (maybe put your chan­nel on pri­vate!)

Be safe out there, and make it safer for the mass­es by con­sid­er­ing them when you point a cam­era at them!

ZAD Calls Out for International Day Against Police on November 22nd

ZADremiNovem­ber 22nd: an inter­na­tion­al day against police vio­lence and repres­sion

ZADremiNovem­ber 22nd: an inter­na­tion­al day against police vio­lence and repres­sion

The repres­sion that falls on those who oppose the mafia-like projects of politi­cians is ever more vio­lent.

The Social­ist par­ty com­ing to pow­er hasn’t changed any­thing.

The police, the gen­darmes and the army injure and muti­late as much as ever, maybe even more, surf­ing on the wave of fas­cism that is ris­ing up under the guise of a world eco­nom­ic cri­sis, and thanks to their weapons, becom­ing always more effi­cient with the empha­sis on mil­i­tary tech­nol­o­gy.

Even more wor­ri­some than con­stant­ly increas­ing war bud­gets is the unwill­ing­ness of cops, gen­darmes, sol­diers and their politi­cian boss­es to take respon­si­bil­i­ty for their vio­lence. The omnipres­ence and unre­strained usage of flash­balls, defen­sive ball launch­ers, and explo­sive grenades are some con­crete exam­ples.

The dis­course is also sim­pli­fied, glossed over, and the vio­lence made to seem mun­dane. When we ask the cops in front of us if they are proud to have killed, they smile or threat­en us. One of the police author­i­ties in the Tarn recent­ly affirmed that those who oppose the “forces of order” should expect vio­lence and even­tu­al injury.

And, some days ago, the police killed. Again.

We, who were gath­ered togeth­er in Testet to fight against this death­ly project of the Sivens dam, we lost a friend. In the ear­ly hours of Sun­day, Octo­ber 26th, a few meters from sol­diers of the State, armed and pro­tect­ed by their weapons and shields, Rémi Fraisse was mur­dered by the armed branch of the State.

By the lev­el shot of a mercenary’s grenade, most like­ly aimed at his head, the explo­sive hit between the base of his neck and his shoul­der. This despite that even the inter­nal laws of the armed branch­es of the State for­bid lev­el shots at a cer­tain dis­tance and also for­bid aim­ing at the head, or with some weapons, aim­ing at all.

This was not an acci­dent. It’s even sur­pris­ing that such a dra­ma hasn’t hap­pened ear­li­er. The attack­ing police, gen­darmes, and sol­diers brake their own laws every day (of the evic­tions). We’ve lost track of the knees, hands, stom­achs and heads that have been tar­get­ed. Their extra­or­di­nary and ille­gal vio­lence leaves its trace on all of us, whether phys­i­cal or emo­tion­al. This time it took some­one with it: Rémi Fraisse.

But even if Rémi’s mur­der is head­lin­ing the night­ly news and embar­rass­ing the gov­ern­ment, don’t believe that it’s an excep­tion.

At the end of August, an “ille­gal” migrant died in a car with the BAC (a noto­ri­ous­ly vio­lent under­cov­er police force) while being brought to the air­port. It was almost ten years ago that the teenagers Zyed Ben­na and Bouna Tra­oré died hid­ing in an elec­tric trans­former after being chased there by the police. We’re not even men­tion­ing deaths in war for eco­nom­ic inter­ests, in Mali or else­where…

We’ve stopped count­ing on the charges pressed by those close to the ones mur­dered by an armed branch of the State. None of these tri­als have result­ed in prison sen­tences.

We want rapid and implaca­ble jus­tice for the mur­der­ers in the armed branch­es of the State.

We demand that start­ing now, there is a legal amnesty for all those arrest­ed for their oppo­si­tion to the Sivens dam, who we con­sid­er to be almost polit­i­cal pris­on­ers.

We also demand the total dis­ar­ma­ment of the mul­ti­ple armed branch­es of the State, to end the mur­ders, the “mis­takes” and the vio­lence of police, gen­darmes, and mil­i­tary.

Thus we join the call of the ZAD of Notre Dame des Lan­des to demon­strate every­where against police repres­sion on Sat­ur­day, Novem­ber 22nd, 2014.

We call upon every per­son and every group that feels con­cerned by the dan­ger rep­re­sent­ed by the State’s police forces to make actions and protest from wher­ev­er they are.

Let’s make Novem­ber 22nd a nation­al and inter­na­tion­al day against the vio­lence of armed branch­es of the State, but let’s not for­get that every day, before and after the 22nd, is a good day to make an insur­gency against the exis­tence of an insti­tu­tion which muti­lates and mur­ders for a “law-based” state and their prof­itable, mafia-like, and dev­as­tat­ing projects.

Indignons-nous !

pro­pos­al–

Where did it come from, the grenade that killed Rémi? Strate­gic pro­pos­al for what comes next.
Rémi was killed by a police con­cus­sion grenade, Sun­day Octo­ber 26th. What hap­pened to him could have hap­pened to any one of us, any­where. Some days lat­er, Thurs­day the 30th, in a north­ern neigh­bor­hood in Blois, a young man lost an eye to a state rub­ber bul­let. Sat­ur­day in Nantes, a demon­sta­tor took a rub­ber bul­let to the face and lost his nose. How many times must his­to­ry repeat itself?

We are not mak­ing demands to State pow­er, for the con­vic­tion of the cop who shot him, or the res­ig­na­tion of a high­er police offi­cial, or even the Min­is­ter of the Inte­ri­or. For the death of Rémi to res­onate every­where and pro­voke a real move­ment, we pro­pose to orga­nize our­selves local­ly and nation­al­ly against the infra­struc­tures that main­tain order.

These are the infra­struc­tures which make pos­si­ble the ter­ror­ism of the State, which we are con­front­ed with in the “ghet­tos” as well as in our social move­ments. These are the infra­struc­tures which orga­nize the police occu­pa­tion of our ter­ri­to­ries and our exis­tences. It is also them who are deployed as soon as a move­ment of oppo­si­tion or con­tes­ta­tion adven­tures out­side of tra­di­tion­al paths cor­doned off by pow­er­less­ness.

France is an expert in main­tain­ing order, by neu­tral­iz­ing all efforts of peo­ple to rise up/bring them­selves up. It exports glob­al­ly it’s knowl­edge, weapons, and forms to many for­eign police forces. It has also par­tic­i­pat­ed in crush­ing move­ments across the world, as in the insur­rec­tions of the Arab Spring in 2011. Didn’t Michèle Alliot-Marie brag to have pro­vid­ed French exper­tise in counter-insur­rec­tion to the Ben Ali regime? Par­a­lyz­ing the infra­struc­ture of the police is an act which, out­side of the nation­al con­text, sup­ports all those who orga­nize to strug­gle in oth­er places and have to dodge French bul­lets.

The fac­to­ries that make grenades, uni­forms, and equip­ment for the police, their vehi­cles and their tele­vised pro­pa­gan­da, the logis­ti­cal plat­forms that orga­nize food sup­plies for the troops; for us they are all tar­gets. Out­side of occa­sion­al con­fronta­tions or deploy­ments, the con­tin­ued exis­tence of the armed group known as the nation­al police depends on these resources.
The announce­ment that a cer­tain type of offen­sive grenade has been sus­pend­ed will not bring about a “return to calm”. What’s at stake in this move­ment, born on Octo­ber 25th, is dis­arm­ing the police. Flash­balls, tasers, con­cus­sion grenades, have suf­fi­cient­ly muti­lat­ed, injured, or killed in these past cou­ple of years.

We are no longer in the era of Malik Oussekine or Vit­tal Michalon*. Not a sin­gle union, not a sin­gle left­ist orga­ni­za­tion called out for peo­ple to take the streets after Rémi’s death. They are in fact so afraid of the streets, they are reduced to orga­niz­ing vir­tu­al protests like those pro­posed by the Green Par­ty (#occu­py­sivens).

What can we expect from the “Occu­piers” who “con­demn the vio­lence of both sides” by care­ful­ly omit­ting which camp is equipped for war and which has a few cob­ble­stones? That one side kills peo­ple and the oth­er express­es their rage by break­ing win­dows? At a time when the left is decom­pos­ing, when the far right are on the upswing, why is there not a sin­gle reac­tion from left­ist polit­i­cal par­ties, NGO’s, or unions, after this police mur­der?

This week, 90 protests were orga­nized in around 60 cities. We address our call-out to this autonomous pow­er in the mak­ing. The col­lec­tive emo­tion expressed in rage and con­tem­pla­tion is legit­i­mate, but won’t be enough to change the sit­u­a­tion.

We call for a long term strat­e­gy, con­sist­ing of harass­ing and col­lect­ing infor­ma­tion on all those who sup­port repres­sion, to dis­rupt all the tech­ni­cal ways which per­mit it to be armed, to move, to feed itself, and more. These objec­tives encom­pass a diver­si­ty of tac­tics that cor­re­spond to the resources and lim­i­ta­tions of groups and indi­vid­u­als. Noise demos out­side police sta­tions and bar­racks, ver­bal harass­ment of patrols, suing the police for injuries, sab­o­tage, street demos; it’s the simul­ta­ne­ous usage of all these tac­tics that will help us to estab­lish a favor­able “rap­port de force” against the police, in our neigh­bor­hoods and in our strug­gles.

A call-out is com­ing soon to orga­nize demos in front of police weapons man­u­fac­tur­ers. A list of strate­gic places will also appear soon. This is a strate­gic propo­si­tion that we are address­ing to all those that are assem­bling, agi­tat­ing, and orga­niz­ing so that the back­lash against this lat­est police mur­der spreads and grows.

*Malik Oussekine was killed by police in the stu­dent strikes of 1986, and Vit­tal Michalon in an anti-nuclear demon­stra­tion in 1977

from Anar­chist News

Reclaim the Power to come to North West England anti-fracking site

Reclaim the Pow­er, the action camp that shut down Cuadrilla’s oper­a­tions in Bal­combe for a week last year, will take place near Black­pool between 14 – 20 August. The pre­cise loca­tion of the camp will be revealed on the start­ing day.

Reclaim the Pow­er, the action camp that shut down Cuadrilla’s oper­a­tions in Bal­combe for a week last year, will take place near Black­pool between 14 – 20 August. The pre­cise loca­tion of the camp will be revealed on the start­ing day. An esti­mat­ed 1000 par­tic­i­pants from across the UK and local res­i­dents will take part in 6 days of direct action, train­ing, and work­shops as they join the dots between social, cli­mate and eco­nom­ic jus­tice.

More info in press releasePro­gramme