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!

Arson against ministry of development offices because of new coal power stations (Athens, 21/4/2008)

A trans­la­tion of the parts of a com­mu­nique sent to “Eleft­herotip­ia” news­pa­per and pub­lished on 25/04/2008, not men­tion­ing any group’s name:

A trans­la­tion of the parts of a com­mu­nique sent to “Eleft­herotip­ia” news­pa­per and pub­lished on 25/04/2008, not men­tion­ing any group’s name:

“Kavala, Almy­ros at Volos, Man­tou­di at Evia, Astakos at Etoloakar­na­nia, Elef­si­na: Res­i­dents mobi­liza­tions are realised against the plans of build­ing new pow­er plants using coal. Pub­lic Pow­er Com­pa­ny (PPC) in coop­er­a­tion with nation­al or inter­na­tion­al part­ners pro­motes its invest­ment plans, with­in the coun­try as well as in the Balka­ns, respond­ing to the sys­tem’s increas­ing needs for pow­er con­sump­tion, some­thing that sig­ni­fies the con­stant ampli­fi­ca­tion of econ­o­my and the wider sub­or­di­na­tion of our exis­tance to it.”

“When cap­i­tal­ism is self-declared envi­ron­ment friend­ly, it is only to mea­sure and man­age the symp­toms of the cri­sis it pro­duced itself.”

“We don’t share any envi­ron­men­tal­ist com­pa­sion. It is impos­si­ble to fit with­in any green slo­gans that belit­tle any per­spec­tive of rup­ture in their par­tial­i­ty. The con­cern raised by the envi­ron­men­tal destruc­tion is dis­armed through the par­tic­i­pa­tion of active cit­i­zens in iron­ic pro­gramms of beach clean­ing or the ridicu­lous con­sumers prefer­ance for “eco-friend­ly” enter­pris­es.”

“The impacts of the use of coal are only a part of the symp­toms of the devel­op­ment this world promis­es: cli­mate change, species extinc­tion, deser­ta­tions, for­est destruc­tion. This is why, the way we talk and act against every­thing that turns our lives to a total dis­as­ter, aims at the con­stant sub­ver­sion of the cap­i­tal­ist struc­tures, the total over­throw of the author­i­tar­i­an rela­tion­ships.”

Rath Lugh Direct Action Camp Evicted

thurs­day 17th April
Eye­wit­ness account of todays events at Rath Lugh

Rath Lugh security guard in balaclavathurs­day 17th April
Eye­wit­ness account of todays events at Rath Lugh

Short­ly before 1 o clock today there was a peace­ful evic­tion of the Rath Lugh Camp. Four Pro­tec­tors who were on site were told by Gar­dai that they had to be out by 1 o clock and to gath­er up their belong­ings and leave. This was not done in an aggres­sive man­ner and was com­plied with by the Pro­tec­tors.

Once they had left the woods no one was allowed back in. There were 20 Gar­dai, 3 Gar­da Cars plus 2 Vans as well as about a dozen Con­struc­tion Work­ers at the entrance to the woods as this was hap­pen­ing. A steel fence has now been erect­ed sep­a­rat­ing the Rath from the pub­lic road. A mini dig­ger is busy cre­at­ing a path and a low loader is in situ.

In a sin­is­ter twist after the evic­tion, a female Pro­tec­tor was tak­ing pho­tographs from her car when she was approached by a man with an MD SECURITY yel­low vest on and wear­ing a Bal­a­cla­va! This was about 200mt from Gar­dai. He was harass­ing her about tak­ing pho­tographs even though she was per­fect­ly enti­tled to do so and parked on a pub­lic road. Amaz­ing­ly when she made a com­plaint to a Gar­da he denied that there were any men in bal­a­clavas in the vicin­i­ty. Just as he said that, 2 Secu­ri­ty men ran past them, both wear­ing bal­a­clavas! The Gar­da refused to do any­thing about this and threat­ened to arrest her under the Hous­ing and Mis­cel­la­neous Act!!!

Mark Cleary has just appeared with his cam­era.

There will be a video of this inci­dent and the evic­tion issued short­ly.

http://www.tarapixie.net

6:30pm — anoth­er update — the pro­tec­tor is still in the tree house and they are try­ing to knock him down.
The camp has been com­plete­ly thrashed and when some peo­ple tried to retrieve their belong­ings they were told that they would be arrest­ed if they entered the woods.
The mood of con­struc­tion work­ers and oper­a­tors is very threat­en­ing, bags of belong­ings being cut with stan­ley knives etc.
There is no one to doc­u­ment what is going on.
There is a dig­ger destroy­ing the round house appar­ent­ly …
They were told that no one is allowed into the wood any more.
They are not allowed to clean up — which was the inten­tion over the next num­ber of days.
What is real­ly wor­ry­ing is that one well known oper­a­tor flashed some doc­u­ments at the pro­tes­tors and said that SIAC had just bought the whole wood from Coillte.

Biofools: pumps disabled/clowns nicked, Edinburgh; banner drop, Glasgow; demos in Brighton/Bristol/London; Belgian blockade

April 15, 2008

Bristol Tesco Agrofuel demoApril 15, 2008
From today, all petrol fore­courts will be required by law to sell only fuel which is blend­ed with 2.5% agro­fu­el. The answer to cli­mate chaos you ask? Hard­ly. 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.

Peo­ple from Bris­tol Ris­ing Tide and Espa­cio Bris­tol-Colom­bia were joined by oth­ers to inform the pub­lic about this issue at Tesco in East­ville this after­noon. There was some inter­est in the issue from a num­ber of passers­by who were sur­prised that such a big change had been vir­tu­al­ly unspo­ken about, but there’s lit­tle that con­sumers can do to avoid buy­ing the prod­uct. The only answer to the ener­gy cri­sis is a big shift in the way in which we live, trav­el and eat.

http://www.risingtide.org.uk

—————-

Bio­fu­els pro­test­ers dis­able fuel pumps

Agro-fuels pro­test­ers dis­abled the fuel pumps of two BP fill­ing sta­tions ear­ly this morn­ing in oppo­si­tion to manda­to­ry blend­ing of bio­fu­els into petrol and diesel. Pro­test­ers argue that bio­fu­els will wors­en cli­mate change, and cause food short­ages.
Pro­test­ers have tak­en this action in Edin­burgh as part of a nation­al day of action against bio­fu­els — April Bio­fools day — coin­cid­ing with the Renew­able Trans­port Fuel Oblig­a­tion’s (RTFO) com­ing into force, mak­ing it a legal require­ment to mix 2.5% bio­fu­els into all petrol and diesel.

BP was tar­get­ed since it is a major investor in bio­fu­els.

Bio­fu­els are more appro­pri­ate­ly called agro­fu­els, as far from being con­nect­ed to nat­ur­al, sus­tain­able life they are made from crops grown on unsus­tain­able mono­cul­ture plan­ta­tions.

Far from being a green solu­tion to green­house gas emis­sions, agro­fu­els dri­ve cli­mate change. Increased use of agro­fu­els has been pro­mot­ed by gov­ern­ments as a pos­si­ble way of decreas­ing green­house gas emis­sions from trans­port. How­ev­er, there is evi­dence that the process of pro­duc­ing agro­fu­els huge­ly increas­es green­house gas emis­sions when defor­esta­tion, peat­land destruc­tion and nitro­gen fer­tilis­er-use are tak­en into account.

The pro­duc­tion of agro­fu­els is caus­ing large-scale defor­esta­tion which is like­ly to lead to a tip­ping point of irre­versible rapid destruc­tion of forests, which could mean the release of as much as 120 bil­lion tonnes of CO2. Sim­i­lar­ly, the expan­sion of palm oil pro­duc­tion for agro­fu­els is lead­ing to an accel­er­a­tion of peat drain­ing, which is like­ly over­all to mean the release of 40 mil­lion tonnes of CO2. In addi­tion, increased large-scale agri­cul­ture means increased use of fer­tilz­ers which mean the release of large amounts of nitrous oxide, a green­house gas near­ly 300 times more potent than car­bon diox­ide.

Agro­fu­els are also a major threat to food sup­plies and food sov­er­eign­ty. Increased demand for agro­fu­el crops is putting pres­sure on food prices, push­ing more and more peo­ple below the bread­line.

Agro­fu­el crops are being grown on mono­cul­ture plan­ta­tions. The land for these is often vio­lent­ly seized by gov­ern­ments and cor­po­ra­tions from the peo­ple who live and work on it. Peo­ple dis­placed are forced to either go to join the grow­ing num­bers of peo­ple liv­ing in pover­ty on urban periph­eries or, as hap­pened in the 1970s, set­tle in a pre­vi­ous­ly unin­hab­it­ed area of rain­for­est, caus­ing fur­ther eco­log­i­cal dev­as­ta­tion to add to that already caused by the plan­ta­tions them­selves.

Agro­fu­els are being pur­sued by West­ern gov­ern­ments because they offer a non-Mid­dle East­ern fuel source. This is unre­lat­ed to the need to com­bat cli­mate change, and is instead based on main­tain­ing neo-impe­ri­al­ist pow­er.

—————-

Loth­i­an and Bor­ders Police Harass a Peace­ful Protest

Five mem­bers of the Edin­burgh Clown Army (1) were detained for ques­tion­ing this after­noon at a peace­ful and enter­tain­ing bio­fu­els protest in Bruntsfield(2). They have since been arrest­ed and charged with a breach of the peace, despite main­tain­ing a friend­ly atmos­phere.

Eye-wit­ness­es state that the bio­fu­els demon­stra­tion was peace­ful, friend­ly and par­ty-like atmos­phere.

Wit­ness­es also state that the Clowns were friend­ly and enter­tain­ing, cre­at­ing a com­i­cal and amus­ing ambiance for the protest.

Wit­ness­es say that the Clowns gave no grounds for the police to charge them with a breach of the peace.

Police moved in in large num­bers, sur­round­ing the Clowns, filmed them, and took them one by one into the back of a police van.

They were tak­en to St Leonards Police Sta­tion for ques­tion­ing, at which point they were charged with a breach of the peace.

The protest was part of the bio­fu­els day of action, and took place at the BP garage in the Brunts­field area of Edin­burgh.

Peo­ple who attend­ed the demon­stra­tion are shocked and angered by the treat­ment the Clowns have received from the police.

This lat­est move from the police is part of an ongo­ing cam­paign of harass­ing peace­ful demon­stra­tors over the last six months. Three envi­ron­men­tal cam­paign­ers were detained for ques­tion­ing at 7.30 in the morn­ing last month, includ­ing one of the Clowns who were tar­get­ed by the police on Tues­day.

They are due in court tomor­row, and the friends and rel­a­tives of those arrest­ed will be turn­ing up to sup­port them.

Friends and rel­a­tives of those Clowns who were arrest­ed urge the media to pro­vide the pic­tures and videos that will help prove that they have been wrong­ful­ly arrest­ed.

Notes:

(1) A com­i­cal and enter­tain­ing activist group that use humour and ridicule to chal­lenge the sta­tus quo. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clandestine_Insurgent_Rebel_Clown_Army
(2) The protest was called by Bio­fu­els Watch to raise aware­ness about the neg­a­tive impacts this fuel source has: call­ing for a an EU mora­to­ri­um on agro­fu­els from large-scale mono­cul­tures. Agroen­er­gy mono­cul­tures are linked to accel­er­at­ed cli­mate change, defor­esta­tion, the impov­er­ish­ment and dis­pos­ses­sion of local com­mu­ni­ties, bio-diver­si­ty loss­es, human rights abus­es, water and soil degra­da­tion, loss of food sov­er­eign­ty and food secu­ri­ty. www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/

Press Con­tact: Alex Cabb
Tele­phone: 07858723742

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Glasgow agrofuel banner drop
Bio­fu­el ban­ner­drop in Glas­gow

Pro­test­ers against bio­fu­els dropped a ban­ner at Char­ing Cross today, to draw atten­tion to the use of food to make petrol.

Bio­fu­els are respon­si­ble for con­tribut­ing to CO2 emis­sions, clear­ing rain­for­est and dis­plac­ing sub­sis­tence farm­ers, and lead to high­er food prices, caus­ing riots in Haiti and many oth­er parts of the world.

Turn­ing food into fuel for cars is burn­ing food which the world needs to feed its pop­u­la­tion, yet today a new law came into force that petrol must con­tain 2.5% bio­fu­el, with this per­cent­age ris­ing over years. Hun­gry peo­ple are being sac­ri­ficed on the altar of the holy auto­mo­bile.

www.biofuelwatch.org.uk

—————-

Brighton Bio­fools Day Protest

A group of bio­fu­el activists made a colour­ful ban­ner and fly­er tour of Brighton city cen­tre and Sus­sex Uni­ver­si­ty on Tues­day rais­ing aware­ness around a new law which came into affect as of yes­ter­day. The RTFO or “Renew­able Trans­port Fuel Oblig­a­tion” has man­dat­ed 2.5% bio­fu­els at British fuel pumps from April 15th, and there­by huge­ly increased UK con­sump­tion of bio­fu­els.

Demon­stra­tion against the RTFO, April 15th

Amongst such head­lines over the last fort­night as “Food short­ages threat­en to become the biggest cri­sis of the 21st cen­tu­ry” the U.K. gov­ern­ment has nev­er­the­less con­ced­ed to EU plans to man­date mas­sive amounts of bio­fu­els into petrol and diesel across Europe. Envi­ron­men­tal­ists have warned for years that these EU tar­gets will wreak hav­oc on the cli­mate and food sup­plies, and eco-sys­tems and peo­ple in the glob­al South. These con­cerns are now echoed by senior sci­en­tists and pol­i­cy mak­ers. EU tar­gets are set to increase to 10% by 2020.

Ali­son Free­man chair of the Envi­ron­men­tal Soci­ety at Sus­sex Uni­ver­si­ty stat­ed, “Our pri­ma­ry con­cern is to break the illu­sion the gov­ern­ment and cor­po­rate sec­tor is prop­a­gat­ing of these fuels as “renew­able”, “green” and “bio” which delib­er­ate­ly obfus­cates the issue for the gen­er­al pub­lic. Our mes­sage is sim­ple: bio­fu­els kill. The cur­rent system’s unyield­ing hunger to burn nature and human­i­tar­i­an recours­es in the engine of the cap­i­tal­ist machine will pull us all over the edge! We must stop West­ern economies inter­nal­is­ing these fuels before it is too late”.

The Brighton bio­fu­el protest was part of nation­al reac­tion, with groups protest­ing across the coun­try includ­ing Aberdeen, Bris­tol, Chel­tenham, Edin­burgh, Leeds, Man­ches­ter, Not­ting­ham, Nor­which and hun­dreds out­side Down­ing Street in Lon­don. On the 6th of August a mass nation­al action against agro­fu­els will take place as part of this year Cli­mate Camp- see http://climatecamp.org.uk/agrofuels.php to get up date infor­ma­tion.

—————-
Biofuels London
Protests to UK Prime Min­is­ter — Scrap Bio­fu­el Tar­gets / Scrap RTFO

Hun­dreds of peo­ple in Lon­don and groups across the UK held protests against the intro­duc­tion of manda­to­ry bio­fu­el blend­ing on April Bio­fools Day. A protest was held lat­er out­side Down­ing Street, with speak­ers from Colom­bia, Cam­paign against Cli­mate Change, Friends of the Earth, Glob­al For­est Coali­tion, GM Freeze and Bio­fu­el­watch con­demn­ing the government’s deci­sion to go ahead with their bio­fu­el pol­i­cy against over­whelm­ing evi­dence of cat­a­stroph­ic impacts on cli­mate, com­mu­ni­ties, bio­di­ver­si­ty and food secu­ri­ty.

Phil Thorn­hill of Cam­paign against Cli­mate Change and Andrew Boswell of Bio­fu­el­watch, in a joint state­ment, said “The RTFO or “Renew­able Trans­port Fuel Oblig­a­tion” will man­date 2.5% bio­fu­els at British fuel pumps from April 15th, and there­by huge­ly increase UK con­sump­tion of bio­fu­els. The gov­ern­ment is demon­strat­ing a per­verse obsti­na­cy in plough­ing ahead with this despite the over­whelm­ing sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that far from help­ing in the strug­gle to con­trol cli­mate change, bio­fu­els will accel­er­ate cli­mate change, and are a major cause of an emerg­ing glob­al food cri­sis that is cre­at­ing star­va­tion and food riots in sev­er­al coun­tries.”

Play the Bio­fu­el song on Glob­al Food Cri­sis at: http://www.biofuelsong.com/music

A lunchtime protest was held out­side the Depart­ment for Trans­port, Tues­day April 15th, April Bio­fools Day. Oth­er protests were held out­side the con­stituen­cy offices of Ruth Kel­ly, Sec­re­tary of State for Trans­port, and Hilary Benn, Sec­re­tary of State for the Envi­ron­ment, and at BP and Tesco fuel sta­tions. BP and Tesco are two of the com­pa­nies with sig­nif­i­cant invest­ment in bio­fu­els from large-scale mono­cul­tures, and which have been strong­ly lob­by­ing for manda­to­ry bio­fu­el blend­ing.

“The UK has cho­sen to ignore a vast moun­tain of evi­dence that bio­fu­els are con­tribut­ing to hunger, cli­mate change, defor­esta­tion and human rights abus­es,” said Dr. Rachel Smolk­er, main author of “The Real Cost of Agro­fu­els.” She con­tin­ued, “Per­haps they are count­ing on new tech­nolo­gies using cel­lu­lose from wood and grass­es, but these won’t side­step the prob­lems either. What­ev­er feed­stocks are used will result in fur­ther expan­sion of indus­tri­al mono­cul­tures, pos­si­bly includ­ing Genet­i­cal­ly Engi­neered trees. The bot­tom line is that there is a lim­it­ed amount of land avail­able, a large pop­u­la­tion to feed and a des­per­ate need to pre­serve remain­ing bio­di­verse ecosys­tems. Instead of focus­ing on improv­ing effi­cien­cy and reduc­ing con­sump­tion, the UK is man­dat­ing fur­ther destruc­tion.”

Almuth Ern­st­ing from Bio­fu­el­watch adds: “Protests against the agro­fu­el indus­try and this government’s bio­fu­el poli­cies will not end today. The gov­ern­ment is talk­ing about vague ‘sus­tain­abil­i­ty stan­dards’, whilst agro­fu­els are caus­ing ever greater harm to the cli­mate, to forests and oth­er ecosys­tems, to com­mu­ni­ties in the glob­al South, to bio­di­ver­si­ty world­wide, and to food sov­er­eign­ty and food secu­ri­ty. We need a mora­to­ri­um on all agro­fu­el incen­tives and tar­gets to pre­vent those cat­a­stroph­ic impacts.”

On 8th April, 29 UK and inter­na­tion­al groups wrote to the UK gov­ern­ment, call­ing for an agro­fu­el mora­to­ri­um and demand­ing a sus­pen­sion of the Renew­able Trans­port Fuel Oblig­a­tion, and oppo­si­tion to new EU bio­fu­el tar­gets – both the pro­posed 10% bio­fu­el tar­get in the Renew­able Ener­gy Direc­tive, and the inclu­sion of bio­fu­els in the draft new Fuel Qual­i­ty Direc­tive. Around 200 organ­i­sa­tions from North and South have signed a call for an EU mora­to­ri­um on agro­fu­els from large-scale mono­cul­tures, and there are sep­a­rate calls for a US agro­fu­el mora­to­ri­um and for an African agro­fu­el mora­to­ri­um, as well as grow­ing num­ber of dec­la­ra­tions from the South­ern groups that are deeply con­cerned about the impacts which bio­fu­el poli­cies in Europe, includ­ing in the UK, are hav­ing on their com­mu­ni­ties, food sov­er­eign­ty and envi­ron­ment.

Notes:

1. For a copy of the joint NGO let­ter to the UK gov­ern­ment, see: http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/files/rtfo_letter.pdf

2. For copies of the mora­to­ri­um calls and the oth­er dec­la­ra­tions, see
http://www.econexus.info/biofuels.html
http://www.grain.org/agrofuels/?moratoriumen
http://ga3.org/campaign/agrofuelsmoratorium
http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/declarations.php

3. Some oth­er protests

Bolton (video):
http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid1213934526/bctid1504464364

Edin­burgh:
http://scotland.indymedia.org/newswire/display/5536/index.php
http://rinf.com/alt-news/activism/police-harass-a-peaceful-protest/2969/
http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/edinburgh/Protest-clowns-arrested-after-Capital.3985990.jp
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/04/396710.html

Brighton:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/04/396734.html

Bris­tol:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/04/396663.html

—————-
Cargill Ghent blockade
Carkill banner
Carkill lock-on
Bio­fools day: Cargill fac­to­ry blocked in Ghent (Bel­gium)

17.04.2008
This morn­ing thir­ty activist of “agro­cri­sis” blocked the gates of the Cargill fac­to­ry in Ghent (Bel­gium). Sev­er­al activist are chained to the main gate block­ing entrance to trucks.

Accord­ing to An Maeyens, agro­cri­sis spokesper­son, this actions means a one day block from tran­sit. but above all a sup­port to the strug­gle of thou­sands of small scale farm­ers, who are depraved of land and income and forced to migrate to slums near big cities, liv­ing in pover­ty, all because of the activ­i­ties of big com­pa­nies such as Cargill in their coun­try,

UPDATE: cargill in the port of Ghent is com­plete­ly blocked, police agreed not to inter­vene.

first pic­tures on

ovl.indymedia.org

More info & pho­tos at http://www.aseed.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=552&Itemid=1

Video:

We’ve put the vide­o­re­port in FIVE lan­guages on two sites. The choice is yours. This is a must see…

Poli­tube:

Fran­cais: http://www.politube.org/show/647
Ned­er­lands: http://www.politube.org/show/645
Eng­lish: http://www.politube.org/show/642
Espag­nol: http://www.politube.org/show/648
Deutsch: http://www.politube.org/show/663

Youtube:

Fran­cais: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=vyMMfjFQOeY
Ned­er­lands: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=yFyA2H-8S5s
Eng­lish: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=XYq8J2N2JaA
Espag­nol: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=0bfDBb10IiI
Deutsch: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=qt4eC3x0Q5o

Saving Iceland in Aberystwyth, May 7th

8pm, The Tree­house, Bak­er St — Talk & Film
A num­ber of heavy indus­try cor­po­ra­tions includ­ing RioT­in­to and ALCOA are invad­ing vast areas of unin­hab­it­ed wilder­ness in Ice­land for new smelters, refiner­ies and pow­er plants. Come and vis­it some of the most stun­ning places of beau­ty on earth, and help pro­tect them with direct action.
Despite of its green image, Ice­land is plan­ning a large num­ber of heavy indus­try projects, includ­ing a num­ber of alu­mini­um smelters and an oil refin­ery. If they con­tin­ue, every glacial riv­er in the coun­try will be dammed, vast areas will be destroyed by flood­ing and large scale geot­her­mal drilling. The sub­arc­tic tun­dra har­bours some of the most valu­able wet­lands and bird breed­ing areas in Europe, unique ecosys­tems with geo­log­i­cal phe­nom­e­na and land­scapes that can not be seen any­where in the world.

8pm, The Tree­house, Bak­er St — Talk & Film
A num­ber of heavy indus­try cor­po­ra­tions includ­ing RioT­in­to and ALCOA are invad­ing vast areas of unin­hab­it­ed wilder­ness in Ice­land for new smelters, refiner­ies and pow­er plants. Come and vis­it some of the most stun­ning places of beau­ty on earth, and help pro­tect them with direct action.
Despite of its green image, Ice­land is plan­ning a large num­ber of heavy indus­try projects, includ­ing a num­ber of alu­mini­um smelters and an oil refin­ery. If they con­tin­ue, every glacial riv­er in the coun­try will be dammed, vast areas will be destroyed by flood­ing and large scale geot­her­mal drilling. The sub­arc­tic tun­dra har­bours some of the most valu­able wet­lands and bird breed­ing areas in Europe, unique ecosys­tems with geo­log­i­cal phe­nom­e­na and land­scapes that can not be seen any­where in the world.

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. If all the plans con­tin­ues, emis­sions will increase by at least 63% over 1990 lev­els.

May 7th, Sav­ing Ice­land will give a pre­sen­ta­tion of these issues in the Tree­house in Aberys­t­wyth, and we will tell you about the inter­na­tion­al direct action cam­paign that has tak­en place, and the plans for this sum­mer’s camp start­ing in July, includ­ing prac­ti­cal­i­ties. We will have a num­ber of vehi­cles going from the UK (incl. Wales) and Europe to the camp. We will also show some videos of recent actions and a slideshow of some of the threat­ened areas.

More info: http://www.savingiceland.org.

Actions against urban sprawl (Athens, 13/4/2008)

Drapet­sona: After a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by the “Ini­tia­tive for a uni­fied for­est” (http://eniaioalsos.gr) pro­test­ers invad­ed the local city hall in the mid­dle of a con­gress on the urban “recon­struc­tion” with the pres­ence of con­struc­tions agents and local author­i­ties.

Tree planting in Greece against urban sprawlDrapet­sona: After a demon­stra­tion orga­nized by the “Ini­tia­tive for a uni­fied for­est” (http://eniaioalsos.gr) pro­test­ers invad­ed the local city hall in the mid­dle of a con­gress on the urban “recon­struc­tion” with the pres­ence of con­struc­tions agents and local author­i­ties. Some pro­tes­tors even turned off the pow­er switch­es of the city hall. Lat­er on, they marched towards the work fields, on the seafront.

Reports in greek: http://athens.indymedia.org/front.php3?lang=el&article_id=856064

Eleonas: More than 500 res­i­dents par­tic­i­pat­ed in a tree plant­i­ng action inside the “under recon­struc­tion” area of Eleonas, against the cement­ing of the largest free space in Athens, after a call by the “Res­i­dents Com­mit­tee for the res­cue of Eleonas” (http://elaionas.wordpress.com). More pho­tos at: http://indy.gr/newswire/o‑elainas-apektise-60-elies-akoma.

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

———-

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.

———-

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
———-
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

———-
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!

———-

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.

———-

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

———-

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!

———-
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

———-
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.

GM fields squatted in Germany (& Portuguese update)

Two GM fields squat­ted in Ger­many
The past cou­ple of weeks saw two suc­cess­ful field squats in Ger­many pre­vent­ing the sow­ing of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied crops.

German tripod against GM fieldTwo GM fields squat­ted in Ger­many
The past cou­ple of weeks saw two suc­cess­ful field squats in Ger­many pre­vent­ing the sow­ing of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied crops.
On 31 March a pro­posed gm bar­ley field tri­al by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Gießen was squat­ted.. Activists squat­ted the field before the sow­ing of the crop. They erect­ed a tri­pod made out of three lengths of wood plus a con­crete lock-on dug into the ground and set up a tent camp. To date the field is still squat­ted with num­bers grow­ing all the time. There is grow­ing local sup­port for the action, espe­cial­ly amongst farm­ers. This action has fol­lowed sev­er­al suc­cess­ful „field lib­er­a­tions“ over the past years, where anti-GM cam­paign­ers destroyed the GM crops plant­ed by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Gießen. Sat­ur­day the 5th April saw hun­dreds of peo­ple and three trac­tors demon­strate in the city of Gießen for the can­cel­la­tion of the tri­al.
On 4 April a sec­ond field was squat­ted in Ober­boi­hin­gen in South Ger­many, des­ig­nat­ed for a tri­al of GM maize by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Nürtin­gen. Here anoth­er 30 feet tri­pod was erect­ed and activists pre­pared to sit it out for sev­er­al weeks.The tri­pod was soon joined by a cir­cus tent, and a peo­ple’s kitchen. Farm­ers brought straw for the mud­dy field and local sup­port­ers swamped the kitchen with food. Con­certs and talks were run­ning in the cir­cus tent. The first day start­ed with 20 peo­ple on the field, by the end of the first day there were already 50 peo­ple. Just five days lat­er the Uni­ver­si­ty saw sense and can­celled the tri­al! Ober­boi­hin­gen was also the tar­get of field lib­er­a­tions in the past years, in 2006 a bee­keep­er open­ly destroyed 3 plants in a pub­lic act of resis­tance.

These actions are part of the vibrant resis­tance against GM crops in Ger­many. Over the past few years Ger­many has seen a mas­sive growth in GM crop tri­als and com­mer­cial Gm grow­ing, par­tic­u­lar­ly Mon­san­to maize. This has kicked off a huge pub­lic out­cry with many peo­ple resort­ing to direct action includ­ing the large scale decon­t­a­m­i­na­tion of GM fields by day and night. Direct action group Gen-dreck Weg! (GM filth – away with it!) has already announced anoth­er large scale open field lib­er­a­tion for this sum­mer, where hun­dreds of peo­ple are plan­ning to rip up GM maize.

http://www.gendreck-weg.de/

—–

Por­tuguese Judi­cial Police clas­si­fies action against genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied corn as a “ter­ror­ist” act in Europol report

In the last “EU ter­ror­ism sit­u­a­tion and trend report” of Europol, the par­tial mow­ing of a field in Silves (Por­tu­gal), last sum­mer, is clas­si­fied as a ter­ror­ist act. In France, Ger­many and the UK, sim­i­lar actions are often far more rad­i­cal and hap­pen reg­u­lar­ly. Yet, they are not clas­si­fied as ter­ror­ist acts in the report. Cur­rent­ly, in Ger­many an occu­pa­tion of exper­i­men­tal GM fields is tak­ing place.

The Por­tuguese radio sta­tion ‘Radio Clube’ was the first to report on the Europol doc­u­ment. But even the lawyer of the accus­ing par­ty declared that he could not see any ele­ments that would jus­ti­fy to label the destruc­tion of the GM field of his client as ‘ter­ror­ist’. A spe­cial­ist in penal law also declared he could not estab­lish any rela­tion between the action in Silves and ter­ror­ist acts.

It is becom­ing obvi­ous that the Por­tuguese gov­ern­ment is grab­bing all oppor­tu­ni­ties to crush oppo­si­tion against GM crops, by clas­si­fy­ing a non-vio­lent polit­i­cal action as an act of ter­ror­ism. They had this oppor­tu­ni­ty here because the Europol report is writ­ten based on the con­tri­bu­tions of the rel­e­vant author­i­ties of each EU mem­ber state. When a democ­ra­cy is weak, police, in this case judi­cial police can afford to spread this kind of non­sense in an offi­cial report. And it does not only affect the ones involved in this par­tic­u­lar case, but it oppress­es every­one strug­gling for a bet­ter world, with­out GMOs.

Arson series and communique (Athens Thessaloniki, Greece, 9/4/2008)

“Arson series against four car agen­cies and a car expo with most­ly Ital­ian brands, as well as at the Gre­co-Ital­ian School, from around 12:50 to 1:15 the mid­night, dam­ag­ing or total­ly destroy­ing 35 cars by impro­vised incen­di­ary devices set by unknown per­sons”

Greek cars“Arson series against four car agen­cies and a car expo with most­ly Ital­ian brands, as well as at the Gre­co-Ital­ian School, from around 12:50 to 1:15 the mid­night, dam­ag­ing or total­ly destroy­ing 35 cars by impro­vised incen­di­ary devices set by unknown per­sons”

“…A gas can­is­ter device blast­ed around 1:05 after mid­night, at a clothes agency on Vas. Irak­leiou 18, in the cen­ter of Thes­sa­loni­ki…”

Source: www.naftemporiki.gr/photos/photo.asp?id=8190

The “Con­spir­a­cy of Cells of Fire” claimed respon­si­bil­i­ty for the actions via e‑mail to directactiongr@yahoo.gr. This is a trans­la­tion of the com­mu­nique:

On Wednes­day April 9 we spot­ted and torched agen­cies of Ital­ian inter­ests (Car agen­cies, Gre­co-Iralian school bus). By this move­ment, we send to the impris­oned Ital­ian com­rades accused for mem­ber­ship in F.A.I. (Infor­mal Anar­chist Fed­er­a­tion) our salu­ta­tion with fire. This is how we re-acti­vate vig­or­ous­ly the inter­na­tion­al­ist rev­o­lu­tion­ary sol­i­dar­i­ty.

The Ital­ian com­rades of F.A.I. form a fed­er­a­tion that through its offen­sive actions, as the one of 21/12/2003 set­ting of explo­sive devices out­side the house of ‑the pres­i­dent of E.U. at the time- Romano Pro­di, or of the 3/3/2005, with their triple bomb attack out­side cara­binieri bar­racks, at Gen­o­va and Milano, claim­ing: “…We con­sid­er essen­tial that every per­son that isn’t tamed by the fake pros­per­i­ty that democ­ra­cy pro­vides, must express his/her rage with his/her action and by every means, we will keep on intrud­ing your dreams, your eco­nom­ic inter­ests and your peace. It won’t take you much time to under­stand the con­se­quences of your indif­fer­ence (abstract of a F.A.I. com­mu­nique).

In this tough route they select­ed, there were also loss­es. Arrest war­rants, impris­on­ments, juridi­cal farces. The last years, the Ital­ian state attacks bru­tal­ly the insur­rec­tion­al part among the Ital­ian anar­chists. Apart from peren­ni­al cap­tiv­i­ties, cer­tain oth­er com­rades as Mas­sari, Rosa, Fan­tazz­i­ni, are n’t accom­pa­ny­ing us any­more in this dan­ger­ous route to the wild rebel­lion, since they were mur­dered by the Ital­ian state. But nei­ther death is able to erase the rage from the eyes of the insur­gents.

The cells of F.A.I. and not only them, strike back and attempt to cre­ate a con­di­tion of omnipresent con­flict, where there is no place for com­pro­mise.

In its dec­la­ra­tion, F.A.I. men­tions: “Strike and destroy the respon­si­ble for the repres­sion and exploita­tion. Strike and destroy the pris­ons, the banks, the court-hous­es, the bar­racks…”

Accom­plices in the crime of direct rev­o­lu­tion­ary action, we seek, through our attacks, to form a range of dis­lo­ca­tion of the unevent­ful social peace. To com­mit the crime of end­ing the silence, to over­come the post­pone­ments and the hes­i­ta­tions, to live beyond the laws that enslave and the con­ven­tions that shoot in the back. And the only pre­cise way to achieve this, is to par­tic­i­pate in the rev­o­lu­tion­ary war, declared since the begin­ning.

This is our way to spread the fire of con­science, in this com­bat­ant con­di­tion that we select­ed for our­selves.

We don’t aban­don any impris­oned com­rade, nei­ther in Greece, nor in Italy, nor any­where.

Rev­o­lu­tion­ary salu­ta­tions to the impris­oned Ital­ian com­rades, accused for mem­ber­ship in F.A.I.

Free­dom for all impris­oned Ital­ian com­rades accused for sub­ver­sive prac­tices.

It all con­tin­ues, we’ll be back soon.

Con­spir­a­cy of Cells of Fire

Note: Pre­vi­ous actions of the Con­spir­a­cy of Cells of Fire:

Three day fes­ti­val of fire:
http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/2008/03/three-days-of-fire-athens-thessaloniki.html

In sol­i­dar­i­ty to Gior­gos Vout­sis-Vogiatzis:
http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/2008/02/series-of-arson-attacks-athens.html

In sol­i­dar­i­ty to Vagge­lis Botzatzis:
http://directactiongr.blogspot.com/2008/01/series-of-incendiary-attacks-athens.html

Update 12/4: The fol­low­ing note appeared in the guest­book:

“With­in the con­text of actions of offen­sive sol­i­dar­i­ty to the Ital­ian com­rades of FAI, we also attacked (same day and same hour with the com­rades in Athens) 2 tar­gets of Ital­ian inter­est: An Ital­ian brand com­mer­cial store in the cen­ter of Thes­sa­loni­ki and a Benet­ton sub­sidiary in Kala­maria.”

Sol­i­dar­i­ty to the pros­e­cut­ed for the FAI.

Con­spir­a­cy of Cells of Fire (Thes­sa­loni­ki Cell)”

Solidarity with Tara in Ireland — trip reportback

A group of us from Brighton went over to Ire­land recent­ly to sup­port the Irish pro­test­ers attempt, to halt the work on the M3 Motor­way.

A group of us from Brighton went over to Ire­land recent­ly to sup­port the Irish pro­test­ers attempt, to halt the work on the M3 Motor­way.

The 50km, four lane stretch includes a huge, 53 acre inter­change, with two mas­sive orbits and 10 fly­over bridges, the con­struc­tion has already divert­ed gabhra rivers his­tor­i­cal water­ways, and heavy machin­ery have bull­dozed ancient tombs and graves with­in the sacred val­ley.

Whilst the mon­ey spin­ning, toll roads are being built by Dick Cheyneys’ Hal­libur­ton com­pa­ny, SIAC and Fer­rovial are the real crim­i­nal com­pa­nies respon­si­ble for most of the car­nage.

If the motor­way is not stopped or re-rout­ed it will destroy one the most impor­tant archae­o­log­i­cal land­scapes in Europe, and wipe out a huge amount of Ire­lands cul­ture, his­to­ry, iden­ti­ty and her­itage.

On the 15th of march we arrived at the direct action camp, which is sit­u­at­ed on top of the ancient mon­u­ment of Rath Lugh. This is one of 150 sacred sites with­in the Tara Com­plex, and one of the 43 that has been wiped out along the route of the motor­way.

The pro­test­ers have built a num­ber of walk­ways link­ing tree hous­es togeth­er, and built var­i­ous lock on’s, the secu­ri­ty have been heavy hand­ed in remov­ing the pro­test­ers from the Rath Lugh Site but oth­er camps are being set up along the route to con­tin­ue the bat­tle to save the Tara.

Equip­ment and peo­ple are urgent­ly need­ed!!

One of the first things I noticed when I got there was the intim­i­da­tion and the threats of vio­lence from the secu­ri­ty, they had met­al bars and lumps of wood and they were ready to lash out at any­one who tried to phys­i­cal­ly stop the con­struc­tion.
I still went dig­ger div­ing every­day, but because I had a cam­corder with me this act­ed as a deter­rent against their assault.

When we arrived Lisa Feeney AKA “Squeek” had just come out of a 20ft deep tun­nel, after being down there for 60hrs. Her father and uncle were guilt trip­ping her say­ing she was self­ish and she was going to die. So Lisa agreed to come out of the tun­nel but only if a 12 point agree­ment was signed between her-self and the Nation­al Roads Author­i­ty, the N.R.A rep­re­sen­ta­tive Kevin O’Rourke signed the agree­ment which stat­ed that all work would be stopped for one month, after Lisa came out the tun­nel the agree­ment was breached by the NRA with­in 24hrs, they lied and claimed no agree­ment made.

The pro­test­ers will now make an appli­ca­tion for an emer­gency injunc­tion at the supreme high court, because of the dis­crep­an­cies over the Com­pul­so­ry Pur­chase Order on Rath Lugh, which is cur­rent­ly break­ing the nation­al mon­u­ments act of 2004.

The N.RA. have admit­ted that they have been work­ing off inac­cu­rate maps since the plan­ning process, but still con­tin­ue to claim that they are not dam­ag­ing the 2000 yr old fort.

Archae­ol­o­gists have con­tra­dict­ed this by stat­ing that the motor­way will cut open the hill­side leav­ing it entire­ly unsta­ble, as it is built on an esker — this is a ridge made of small rocks left behind by the glac­i­er that formed the local hills and val­leys since the last age. It’s pret­ty obvi­ous that if you dam­age the foun­da­tion or the esker you will also dam­age the mon­u­ment.

Dur­ing the vis­it I went to anoth­er oth­er sol­i­dar­i­ty camp, which is on the foot of the hill of Tara. This is where a sacred fire has been burn­ing since sum­mer sol­stice 2006, peo­ple have come from all over the world to keep the fire burn­ing, although no-one lives there offi­cial­ly. Peo­ple take part in a rota-sys­tem, but recent­ly the O.P.W (office for pub­lic works) which is the gov’t body respon­si­ble for look­ing after Irish her­itage and the pub­lic land have giv­en a notice for the peo­ple to leave the area with­in sev­en days.

The peo­ple who real­ly care for the land are refus­ing to leave, they are a diverse group of local artists, musi­cians, and mem­bers of the pub­lic, that are tak­ing the respon­si­bil­i­ty to cre­ate a world her­itage park, their aim is to pro­mote the poten­tial of the area for edu­ca­tion, sus­tain­abil­i­ty and her­itage. The group cur­rent­ly holds talks lec­tures, and work­shops on crafts and his­to­ry.

An offi­cial pro­pos­al for the world her­itage park is being cre­at­ed, but unfor­tu­nate­ly it has to be your gov’t that nom­i­nates mon­u­ments for world her­itage sta­tus. The Irish peo­ple can not count on their gov’t to do that, so the peo­ple want to illus­trate this them­selves. In hope that peo­ple pow­er will demand that Tara gets the respect it deserves.

To Chk out up-dates on this cam­paign go to www.savetara.com or www.tarapixie.net
The pro­test­ers at Tara have asked me to call out for climbers and tun­nel­ers which are urgent­ly need­ed to share skills etc…

If you can’t get over to Ire­land to pro­tect Tara then you can tar­get the SIAC con­struc­tion companies,UK part­ners based in Glouces­ter­shire and Sus­sex.

Lanc­ing Busi­ness Park
Lanc­ing
West Sus­sex
BN15 8TY
Tel: 00 44 (0) 1903 755991
Fax: 00 44 (0)1903 755384
E‑mail: r.thomson@grahamwoodstructural.co.uk
Web­site : www.grahamwoodstructural.co.uk

To see films www.schnews.co.uk/schmovies
click on: “Tara tara tara” and “skul­dug­gery”