cover of Resistance Bulletin 142 June 2012

Resistance bulletin issue 142 June 2012

Download RESISTANCE bulletin issue #142 June 2012 [PDF]: http://www.afed.org.uk/res/resist142.pdf

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Also available: Organise! magazine no. 77 – Winter 2011

The Anarchist Federation: http://www.afed.org.uk

Full contents of RESISTANCE bulletin issue #142 June 2012

  • Olympic Fortress Looms Over London

  • News From the Czech Republic – Demonstration of Discontent

  • Prisoners Resist

  • May Day in Manchester

  • Updates From Portugal

  • Student Strike Continues in Quebec

  • Turkish Police Arrest 60 in Night Raids

  • Land Occupations in Honduras

  • The Student Movement in Chile

  • Fighting Back Against Austerity – Around the World, We Say No!

  • Carving Up Carpenters Estate – Social Cleansing in the East End

  • Women to pro-life groups: SPUC off!

 

Olympic Fortress Looms Over London

Residents on in Tower Hamlets were horrified when they learnt that surface to air missiles were to be positioned on a tower on their site, the old Bryant and May match factory buildings. As a result a campaign has been set up to oppose the missile installations, formed by local residents and supporters (for more information visit http://stoptheolympicmissiles.wordpress.com/).

But the positioning of missiles here and elsewhere is only part of the story. As many as 48,000 security forces will be deployed in London, in addition to 13,500 troops – more soldiers than the British Army have stationed in Afghanistan. A sonic weapon designed to disperse crowds by administering “head splitting pain” is in readiness. Unmanned drones will be patrolling the skies over London. An aircraft carrier will be anchored nearby on the Thames in addition to other warships. A “safe zone” will be put in place surrounded by eleven miles of electrified fence, and patrolled by 55 security teams with attack dogs. This is not North Korea or the Soviet Union but London today – during the Olympics in Peking, not even the Chinese government put up such a fence or drone planes.

The 2006 Olympic Games Act means that not only the police and armed forces, but also private security forces, can use physical force to “protect the Olympics”. This covers anything from demonstrations and strikes, to the sale of bootleg Olympic products on the street that are not officially approved. “Brand protection teams” will patrol inside the Games to make sure that only clothes or accessories with officially approved commercial messages can be worn.

In addition people congregating on the street, a normal occurrence particularly in summer months, will be harassed, in particular local working class youth. This is already happening, with increased surveillance and harassment in the boroughs bordering the Olympics. Rough sleepers are to be removed; in fact the police can remove anyone “deemed in any way to be causing a nuisance”.

What’s more, there is no sign that this will disappear with the end of the Olympics. The police will end up more tooled-up and arrogant than before, whole neighbourhoods will be socially cleansed and gentrified, taxes will be jacked up to pay for it all, and all the security devices and cameras installed will stay in place.

The Games are not about sport. They are about commercialised patriotism, brand placement, and profiteering for estate agents and landlords. They are there to boost the push towards neo-liberalism, to destroy our working class neighbourhoods, to boost the power of a state that is increasingly a police state. Who is the enemy in this New Britain? It’s us, the majority of the population!

 

News from the Czech Republic – Demonstration of discontent

At least 100 000 people came on Saturday 21st of April to Prague to join the demonstration called “Stop the Government”, convened a coalition of labour unions and several civic initiatives. The demonstration was undoubtedly the largest public display of discontent in the last 20 years.

The event started at ten o’clock in the morning with gathering of participants around the House of Unions in Zizkov (an area of Prague). Before noon , the head of the parade was formed by individual unions. The march itself seemed endless. Protesters filled more than half of Wenceslas Square. The event was clear demonstration of popular discontent with the current government, its work and reforms.

The protest was also joined by the Czechoslovak Anarchist Federation, which issued a call to anarchists to participate : “We join this the protest but we also want to add our own protest… We want to talk about the principles of the capitalist system… We want to show that our vision does not end by changing the government, but goes further, towards human emancipation and the emancipation of society, to realising common power.”

Before the event itself, anarchists participated in information campaigns in their respective regions. During these days of protest they were promoting the “Stop the government” demonstration but also the forthcoming May Day action days.

On the march the anarchists either joined the informal anarchist bloc or marched within block of unions together with their colleagues. A thousand issues of the anarchist magazine ZDOLA (From Below), hundreds of A-Kontra journals as well as new and old issues of the anarchist revue Existence, were distributed even before the march. There were also a large number of promoting the May Day action days or leaflets of anarchist group Anarchocommunist alternative and Collectively against capital.

Ideas of anarchism are not generally known or widespread, as it showed during the demonstration at times when some unionists or discontented citizens found themselves near the anti-authoritarian bloc. These participants seemed to be surprised by some of the anarchist slogans. Apparently they believe that representative democracy is the only fair social system. However, they showed interest in the anti-authoritarian printed materials and even expressed their sympathy to the anarchist bloc on a few occasions. Our participation in the demonstration contributed among other things to the spreading of anarchist ideas among people who understand the need of change of the current system, but have not been actively seeking any alternatives yet.

The reaction of government officials was predictable. Finance Minister Kalousek, in response to the anger of a hundred thousand ordinary people in the streets of Prague, smugly said that if it was up to him, reforms and cuts would be much harder. It is clear that union demonstration once in a while, no matter how big, will not hit the government and so there is no reason for them to fear such a thing, because the government is in fact in no danger.

This is a fact which anarchists have pointed out for a long time. Hopefully, it will be understood by many people, who will cross the boundary of their passivity and begin to think about more effective forms of protest and resistance. Resistance, which will be noticeable and which the elites can no longer ignore. Resistance, which also opens the door for finding and realising alternatives from below.

 

Prisoners Resist.

Open resistance broke out in three UK prisons at the end of April. On the evening of Thursday 19th of April there was a revolt at Guys Marsh young offenders institute near Shaftesbury, Dorset.

Thirty prisoners mutinied and were able to smash cells during the seven-hour uprising. The Category C prisoners succeeded in putting 83 cells out of use. They lit fires, smashed windows and wrecked cell

fittings. At least one screw was injured. On Tuesday 24th at Lindholme in South Yorkshire, 25 prisoners barricaded themselves into their cells lighting fires and smashing windows. During their eight-hour rebellion they succeeded in wrecking 26 cells.

At 4.30am on Friday 27th 48 prisoners surrendered after six hours of resistance at Ranby jail in Nottinghamshire. Police and the fire brigade turned up at the prison as three squads of screws in riot gear had to be used to suppress the prisoners after 51 cells were wrecked. Prisoners caused flood damage by opening up water taps.

The Home Office said: ‘There are likely to be different reasons for all three of these disturbances, but they are also probably tied in to the overcrowding problem.’

For news, analysis, history and links to Anarchist Black Cross groups check The Campaign Against Prison Slavery (CAPS) http://www.againstprisonslavery.org/

 

May Day in Manchester

This year’s May Day demonstration was more enjoyable than usual, with a relatively large turn out of around 200 people and pleasant weather for a majority of the day. A ‘carnival bloc’ had been arranged by local autonomists, and included a sound system playing traditional workers anthems such as Bella Ciao as well as more modern tunes. A large samba band and a couple of demonstrators on stilts kept our spirits high as we marched from the site of the large unemployed workers’ demonstration of 1931 that was ambushed by police, towards the modern Urbis development.

Speeches were made by trade unionists but as the rain began to pour members of the Anarchist Federation took to the stage. Frank Ellis, secretary of Manchester TUC, tried to physically prevent them but was unable to. The AF speaker spoke of the history of the Haymarket Massacre and of the need to organise beyond trade unions and one-day token actions. As Ellis told the AF member that they had ‘no right’ to speak, a member of the audience shouted that they had more right than Salford’s new Labour Party Mayor Ian Stewart, an ex-MP who had voted for war

For a full report including photos and videos, go to: http://tinyurl.com/6ok9ubz

 

Updates From Portugal

Portuguese political parties are pushing forward their austerity plan, despite mass opposition. In response to this, twenty organisations have created The Platform of October 15th to organise a demonstration on the same date.

Whilst the rank and file are looking to organise strikes at a European level, the unions’ leadership looks to divide the movement: the principal union body The CGTP has 800,000 members, and its leadership has attempted to block any serious fight back against austerity, hindering any mass mobilisation.

As a result support for the recent general strike was not as solid as it could have been. However, several thousand workers mobilised at Lisbon and Porto, including groups of workers on short term and temporary contracts and groups of the unemployed. Police attacked several demonstrations with batons, injuring several people.

The organisations of “precarious” workers (on temporary and short-term contracts) seem to be the most dynamic groups in the struggle against austerity. Their capacity for self-organisation allows them to have a presence on demonstrations but also to mobilise very quickly for local actions.

These movements are now looking towards self-organisation in communities where they have set up social centres, either rented or occupied. The disused school La Escola in Porto, which had become a self-managed collective space, became a symbol of the struggle when it was evicted on April 19th. There was strong support from the population of the Fontinha neighbourhood at a demonstration outside the town hall in response to the eviction.

 

Student Strike Continues in Quebec

After 10 weeks of strikes, more than 170,000 students are still out in the Canadian province of Quebec.

Large demonstrations have been mounted in response to the Quebecois Government’s austerity programme, including Premier Jean Charest’s plan to add $1,625 to the annual cost of higher and further education by 2016. On 22nd March more than 250,00 demonstrated in the streets of Quebec City in one of the biggest such events in the history of the province. There were blockades and occupations of the port of Montreal, of the bridges linking the south bank to the Island of Montreal, of banks, government buildings, and the administrative buildings of universities and colleges.

The police and university administrations have responded with lawsuits and repression. There have been more than 600 arrests since February 13th. Injunctions have been served in different colleges and universities banning strike pickets, and even meetings.

In response the student movement has tried to spread the struggle by supporting various strikes happening at the same time (AVeos, Rio Tinto). The unions’ leadership, whilst giving formal support to the struggle, have actually worked to prevent the spreading of the strike movement.

On 17th April the government invited the most moderate of the student organisations, the Federation des Etudiants Universitaires (FEUQ) to hold talks over fees. They blocked the presence of the Coalition Large de l’Association Syndicale pour une Solidarite Syndical (Broad Coalition of Union Association for Union Solidarity (Classe), which organises 50% of the students, because it refused to condemn students taking direct action – blockades and occupations have been carried out since the beginning of the strike.

The struggle is spreading and intensifying. In response the greatest police repression in the history of Quebec has been unleashed with attacks on demonstrations and meetings by police armed with batons and rubber bullets. One student lost an eye as a result of being hit in the face with a rubber bullet whilst another was hit in the head at close range.

Students are realising that the strike is not just about tuition fees, but about the state of society in general, not least massive government corruption at regional and federal level. The unrest is now being referred to in some quarters as the Maple Spring, in reference to both the Arab Spring of 2011 and the maple tree of Canada.

 

Turkish Police Arrest 60 in Night Raids

On the night of the 13th of May, the Turkish state organized a raid on a number of houses and anarchist social centres in the wake of this year’s May Day protests. At least 60 people have been arrested, though it is not yet certain whether all of those arrested were anarchists, or just their friends or relatives. Those arrested included members of the social anarchist organisation Toprak Ve Ozgurluk (“Land and Freedom”), and Devrimci Anarsist Faaliyet (“Revolutionary Anarchist Action”).

Till now nothing has been heard from the imprisoned anarchists. They have not been allowed access to lawyers. The Turkish state have long used the tactic of mass raids against leftist, radical and anarchist currents. Thousands of Kurdish Party members and hundreds of leftists have been imprisoned for years without trial or clear criminal charges. However, this is the first such massive operation against anarchists.

 

Land Occupations in Honduras

Thousands of rural workers in Honduras have occupied land as part of a dispute with large landowners and the government.

The coordinated invasions took place at several locations across the country. Farmers’ groups say the areas taken over are public lands where poor farmers have the right to grow food under Honduran law. The government said the seizures were illegal and that the occupations were politically motivated and aimed at destabilising the government of President Porfirio Lobo.

Dozens of rural workers have been killed in recent years over these land disputes. Organisations representing rural workers say successive governments have failed to fulfil promises to distribute farmland using agrarian reform legislation, instead acting in the interests of large landowners.

 

The Student Movement in Chile

From April 2011 and for several months afterwards, Chilean students turned out in the strike to mobilise against the privatisation of education. This system was put into place by the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, a man admired by former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. In addition to demanding an education system accessible to everyone, they want the end of the neoliberal system and the institutions created by Pinochet.

Pinochet oversaw the privatisation of the health service and education, and the deregulation of employment law. Up until the coup of 1973 the public education system in Chile was noted for its high quality of education, and was free to students. Now tuition fees are among the highest in the world. The same pattern has been repeated in health, pensions, transport, the media, etc.

From May 2011 students have organised demonstrations, cultural activities, cacerolazos (where people turned out in the street banging saucepans) and hunger strikes. In response there was the usual violent repression, with thousands of arrests. The rebellion of university students and high school students revealed the nature of the government led by the “new right” party of Sebastian Pinera. As well as the arrests, hundreds were injured, and one 14 year old was shot dead by the police.

The spirit of the Pinochet regime has resurfaced with the mayor of Santiago called for the intervention of the armed forces to stop demonstrations to commemorate the coup on 11th September 1973. Meanwhile, the mayor of Providencia (an ex-member of the DINA, the Pinochet regime’s dreaded secret police) announced that he would close down the occupied high schools; whilst at the same time paying tribute to General Krasnoff, who was imprisoned for 100 years for attacks on civil liberties, kidnappings and murders carried out under the dictatorship. One of the closest advisers of Pinera has spoken out in support of the mayor, causing a scandal.

The two biggest student organisations in the country launched a movement that lasted 7 months but failed to gain any concessions from the government. However, opinion polls of 29th December 2011 show that 80% of the population support the student movement.

The Libertarian Students Front (FEL), which coordinates anarchist students, has returned to the student organisation the Federation of Chilean Students (FECH) 80 years after leaving the organisation due to a takeover by the Communist Party. The new general secretary of FECH is an anarchist, and he and others represent a current that wants to develop the student movement and meet up with other social movements in Chile. The FEL defines itself as libertarian communist and is linked to other anarchist organisations and autonomous workers unions.

New struggles seem to be on the horizon in Chile, and these may well be intense and bitter.

 

Fighting Back Against Austerity: Around the World, We Say No!

In this month’s Resistance we report on the movements that are developing around the world in reply to the delightful austerity measures that our masters and bosses are pushing through.

Chile pioneered the world that we are now facing, with its deregulation of work laws, its privatisation of health and education and transport. It coupled this with a murderous regime that murdered thousands. It was no coincidence that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a great fan and defender of the bloody dictator Augusto Pinochet. Now her heirs, in both the Labour Party and in the Conservative-Liberal Democrat alliance are pushing through the same measures in the UK.

Yet there is widespread rejection of and resistance to these austerity measures, not just here but around the world. In Quebec a massive movement has emerged rejecting the privatisation of education and in the process starting to question the whole system. The recent elections in Greece and France show the distaste for austerity in those countries as does the widespread protests there and in Portugal and Spain. Let’s be clear: the elections were just a thermometer that measured the temperature of social anger in those countries. We cannot rely on the likes of French President-Elect Francois Hollande, a millionaire himself with ideas similar to those of former British PM Tony Blair; nor on the leftist SYRIZA alliance in Greece. We have to rely on ourselves to fight our own struggles. That means self-organisation in our neighbourhoods, in our workplaces, and on the streets.

We must also be aware of the recent gains made by the Front National in France and Golden Dawn in Greece; the first a fascist party hiding behind the cloak of respectability, the second an openly neo-Nazi organisation. If a strong workers movement develops on an international scale, the boss class may well use these fascist groups to attack such a movement, and we have to be prepared to fight the rise of the far right.

Whilst new mass movements are emerging in places like the United States, Quebec and the laboratory of neo-liberalism, Chile, some people might wonder why such movements and events of such importance receive little or no coverage in the British media, whether it be the newspapers or the BBC. But it’s not surprising. They want to keep the truth from us because they know that resistance is contagious. That’s why we hope you continue to read and support papers like Resistance, which are dedicated to bringing you the latest news of the struggles that are now emerging in the UK and across the world.

 

Carving-up Carpenters Estate: Social Cleansing in the East End

The Carpenters Estate is a sustainable and friendly community of over 500 dwellings made up of houses, flats and maisonettes, some in the three tower blocks right next door to the Olympics site in Stratford, East London. The estate is home to some 201 tenants, 67 leaseholders and 93 freeholders. Newham Council, aim to raze the estate to the ground and replace it with new housing, most of which will be owner-occupied. The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson is an enthusiastic supporter of the plan, as is the Mayor of Newham, Sir Robin Wales, with his idea for a “third city” in Newham.

The Carpenters Tenant Management Organisation (TMO), a tool of the Council, barred freeholders from its Annual General Meeting on 25th November 2011, “lost” five out of six leaseholder nominations, and posted security guards on the door who refused entry to many residents. Local community action group Carpenters Estate Against Regeneration Plan (CARP) demanded an independent scrutineer for the votes, which was denied.

Following the AGM, Carpenters TMO and Newham Council then reformed the Residents’ Steering Group, re-engineering the current Terms of Reference meaning that effectively the consultation is now in the hands of council officials. The TMO have refused to act on leaseholders’ concerns about the independent valuation service commissioned by the TMO as they push ahead with Compulsory Purchase to clear the estate for redevelopment. One adviser was sacked for backing residents’ interests.

Meanwhile the Council are moving tenants out of the tower blocks into flats owned by the housing association Genesis. Their secure tenancy rights will be lost and replaced by inferior Assured Tenancies. CARP are fighting back. They have had several public meetings, are challenging the unconstitutional decisions and are looking for a truly independent adviser to make this happen. If you are a resident in Carpenters or would like to know more, contact Carpenters Against Regeneration Plan (details below):

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/carpvoice

Tel: 07838383141

 

Women to pro-life groups: SPUC off!

On Saturday 28th April, the pro-life group Society for the Protection of Unborn Children held a series of kerbside “vigils” throughout the country, in order to wave placards showing out of context pictures of foetuses and false claims about abortion. Happily, they faced strong opposition from feminist groups and allies in Bath, Brighton, Bristol, Cardiff, Chester, Edinburgh, Lincoln, Newcastle, Sheffield, Stevenage and Liverpool.

SPUC’s stance is not only anti-abortion but anti-morning after pill and, though they’re not too clear on what it has to do with protecting “unborn children”, anti-gay marriage.  Still, if they were bothered about making sense, or reducing abortions, they’d be campaigning for universal free childcare, financial and community support for families, free contraception for all and better sex education, rather than trying to remove reproductive choices and use guilt and false information to coerce women into going through with unwanted pregnancies.

SPUC’s public statements had proposed a silent vigil, but they broke their silence on many occasions, some to tell counter-protesters they would pray for them, others to call them “child-killers” and, more entertainingly, “scarlet women”. SPUC’s claim that their calls for restrictions on women’s bodies and lives are to do with protecting women and children ring a little false when they throw sexual insults at mothers.  It couldn’t be clearer that SPUC’s agenda is about control, not welfare.

Despite their respectable image, it is as important to oppose SPUC as the BNP or EDL.  Lobbies much like these are responsible for the total ban on abortion and inaccessibility of the morning after pill in Ireland, as well as increasingly draconian abortion laws in the US: laws that cause untold suffering to millions of women, as well as their families and their existing children.  If these people gain the influence they’re seeking, they pose a very real threat to women’s lives, health and freedom.

 

Resistance bulletin no. 142, June 2012

The Anarchist Federation: http://www.afed.org.uk