Showing posts with label europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label europe. Show all posts

24 January 2010

[Italy] Homefulness

re-posted from Save Feral Human Habitat

Off the Streets and Onto the Farm, 01/22/10
By Chris Johnson, Victoria Independent Media Collective

A dream is taking shape on the Saanich Peninsula. Inspired by the work of the San Patrignano Farm in Italy, Richard LeBlanc and a team of dedicated volunteers are converting a piece of farmland in Central Saanich into a therapeutic community that will become a refuge for people experiencing homelessness.

LeBlanc and the Creating Homefulness Society took possession of the198 acre property in June of 2009. Woodwynn Farm, which has recently been used for mostly for hay crops, was developed by the Woodward family, formers owners of a department store chain.

Woodwynn Farms has already faced it’s share of challenges even before taking possession of the farm. When LeBlanc and supporters set about to purchase the property, some of the nearby residents formed the Farmlands Trust, and with support of the Land Conservancy, set out to buy the farm to keep the homeless people out.

Central Saanich council has also put up it’s share of obstacles to the idea, refusing to allow any of the homeless people to actually live on the farm.

LeBlanc and everyone else involved with Woodwynn are optimistic however. They’ve already seen changes with some of the people who have come to visit and pitch in on the farm, and are committed to convincing the community of the great benefits this project can provide.

Below is a selection of media articles to help you learn more about the project.

Also visit the Woodwynn Farms website at www.creatinghomefulness.org

——————–

Woodwynn Shows the Way, Times Colonist – March 20, 2009 (scroll down on that page)

Advocates for the homeless raise funds to purchase Woodwynn Farm in Central Saanich – Times Colonist, March 19, 2009

Woodwynn Farm sold for homeless solution, Peninsula News – March 18, 2009

Homeless Farm Plan Sparks $6 Million Race, Times Colonist – May 22, 2008

Native Band Sues Crown Over Title to Woodwynn Farm, Times Colonist – September 20, 2008

Woodwynn Neighbours Close to Raising Down Payment, Times Colonist – September 17, 2008

Central Saanich Nixes Proposal for Homeless Working on Farm, Times Colonist, February 12, 2008

New Role Sought for Famed Farm, Times Colonist, January 13, 2008


[Germany] Bans Monsanto GMO Corn

Been a long time... And this news is a pretty old now. I'm catching up on old emails. But still good news. --ianna.

re-posted from Action Spark

Germany Bans Monsanto GMO Corn, posted by Kyra, 04/14/09

Germany just recently joined a number of other European countries who have banned Monsanto GMO (Genetically Modified) corn from being grown in the country.

Monsanto corn has until now been the only GMO crop grown somewhat widely in Europe, the EU having been wary of GMO crops overall since their introduction to the global food market. This is definitely a win for the the movement against spreading GMO crops.

GMO’s are problematic for many reasons. First off, many people have psychological barriers to the idea of eating a tomato with genes from an elephant. There’s just something a bit strange about the idea. For some people this is a religious matter based on humans meddling with God’s work. However there are also major health concerns regarding GMO’s, and huge political battles being waged over the way companies handle and patent them. It is the case that we do not know how GMO crops will affect the environments they are introduced to on any kind of long term basis, nor how fiddling with our foods genetic makeup could affect the health of humans consuming it. While hybrid species are often capable of growing back into natural or heritage varieties, it is unlikely that GMO plants be able to rid themselves of genes not related in anyway to their species. Is there any research suggesting that GMO plants could be reintroduced into the environment and returned to their original strain over time?

The main argument against GMO’s is that there isnt enough conclusive evidence to show they are not harmful. It is also the case that many companies have taken advantage of genetic modification to patent and charge exorbitant prices for different disease resistant strains of GMO crops, such as Monsanto’s corn. It is possible for these companies to sue farmers living next door to GMO crop sowing neighbours if some of the seed blows over into their field and takes root.

Companies also often make these seeds so that they cannot reproduce on their own.Thus farmers are obliged to buy and rebuy seeds each year, making more money for the companies, but strangling the workers of the agricultural sector across the globe.

To read a brief BBC article on the recent banning of Monsanto corn, go here.



19 July 2009

[London] 30 pianos scattered across city to encourage impromptu singalongs

suggested by Jeffrey, re-posted from Huffingtonpost

30 Pianos Scattered Across London to Encourage Impromptu Singalongs, 07/12/09

One project aims to make London a more cheery place through the use of song. A group has scattered 30 pianos throughout the city in order to encourage impromptu singalongs. Despite the mountain of paperwork it required to get the project up and running, the group succeeded and more music has begun to fill the air of the city.

See video here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/12/30-pianos-scattered-acros_n_230189.html


05 May 2009

[Wales] Teen Rescues 6 from Fire

re-posted from BBC Wales

Teenager helps save six from fire, 05/04/09

A teenage boy has been praised for helping to save six children aged from five to 15 from their burning house.

Leighton Griffiths, 15, from Cwmbran, heard the youngsters screaming for help after the fire broke out in the Greenmeadow area early on Saturday.

The mother of five of the children rescued from the fire said her young neighbour had saved their lives.

South Wales Fire Service praised the "swift actions of the public", firefighters and fire control staff.

Fire crews were called to The Twinings at 0220 BST on Saturday, with the fire at an end-of-terrace house.

Leighton said he used a hosepipe to try to douse the flames while his stepfather Alan Probert and a neighbour put a ladder up to a window and got out three of the youngsters.

Meanwhile, unbeknown to Mr Probert, Leighton said he had gone into the property and rescued the three other children trapped in the burning house.

He collapsed and had to be taken to hospital afterwards with minor burns and a suspected broken rib.

Leighton said: "No matter how scared you might be, you've got to be brave enough to go in and get them. They could have died and I could not have lived my life knowing I could have done something.

"I class everyone who gave a hand at the time a hero because we all played a part in it."

The fire is believed to have started in the electrical fuse box at the house.

They are the third family to have survived a blaze in the property in recent years.

Tracy Evans and her husband had been on their first evening out in 18 months when the fire started.

Mrs Evans said: "He's absolutely fantastic. He saved my children's lives. If it wasn't for him, my kids wouldn't be here now, and there's nothing I can ever do (for) that boy or repay him for what he's done."

The children have also made a thank you card for Leighton who celebrates his 16th birthday on Tuesday.

South Wales Fire Service said the blaze was being treated as accidental. Further investigations are being carried out with the police.

Richie Prendergast, the officer in charge of the incident, said due to the swift actions of the public, the fire crews at the scene and fire control staff, a great tragedy had been avoided.


02 May 2009

[Cornwall] Youtube Helps Man Deliver Baby

suggested by Lewis, re-posted from BBC News

Youtube Helps Man Deliver Baby, 05/01/09

An engineer in Cornwall delivered his baby son after watching a instructional video on YouTube.

Marc Stephens watched the videos as a precaution when his wife Jo started to feel some discomfort.

Four hours later, his wife went into labour and started giving birth before an ambulance could arrive at their home in Redruth.

"I Googled how to deliver a baby, watched a few videos and basically swotted up," Mr Stephens told the BBC.

Jo Stephens said they had planned a home birth, but not quite in this manner.

"I woke up and realised I was having contractions every five minutes," Mrs Stephens said.

"I woke Marc up and we phoned the midwife, but they were all so busy they couldn't come round to our house and told us to call an ambulance. But before it arrived, it all started."

A few hours earlier, Mr Stephens has been reading up on home births and how to cope with anything unexpected.

"The videos gave me peace of mind. I think I would have coped, but watching videos made things much easier."

Mr Stephens said his wife was on all fours when he saw the head starting to come out.

"This is our fourth child now and while for our first I spent most of the time at my wife's head, now I'm not afraid to go down to the business end.

"I was still on the phone to the midwife and told her that 'this is it'," he said.

Mr Stephens said he felt no panic, putting his ability to stay calm down to his Royal Navy training.

After delivering the 5lbs 5oz boy, Gabriel, the Stephens went to the Royal Cornwall Hospital at Treliske, where both mother and baby got a clean bill of health.


20 April 2009

[Wales] Protests Against Closing of Community Pools

re-posted from BBC.co.uk

Two Protests at Threatened Pools, 04/19/09

Protests have taken place at two community swimming pools in north and south Wales.

Harlech pool in Gwynedd and one at Treherbert in Rhonda Cynon Taf are both set to close over the next few months.

Gwynedd Council said the Harlech pool had reached the end of its life, while Rhondda Cynon Taf council said funding was behind Treherbert's closure.

However, campaigners say both pools are vital for educational, sport, community leisure, health and tourism needs.

Up to 150 people joined the protest march in Harlech on Sunday afternoon, including EastEnders actress Charlie Brooks, who was brought up in nearby Barmouth and who learnt to swim at the pool.

The protest at Treherbert was due to start at 1630 BST.

The south Wales facility, which last month saw protests by local school children, is scheduled to close its doors to the public on Monday.

The action group which has been campaigning to keep it open says it is only a matter of time before the building becomes a target for vandals.

"If significant damage was caused the pool will never reopen," a spokesman for the group said.

"It seems the RCT council are determined not to assist the action group in refusing to defer the closure of the pool and keep staff at the site to prevent possible intrusion and damage."

The Harlech pool is due to close in June and campaigners say the final decision on its future is imminent.

Gwynedd council said it could not justify spending the £400,000 it needed to bring the building up to standard.

The council wants users to travel to Porthmadog and use the pool there but protestors say it is too far especially for school children who receive lessons as part of school curriculum.

The council has given those interested until the end of June to come up with their own proposals to save the pool.

The Friends of Harlech Swimming Pool issued a statement saying a new report highlights the cost to the local community of closing such a "vital facility."

The report is due to be presented to Gwynedd council board on 28 April.

But the Friends' statement said they had been told by the council that unless a business plan to save the pool was in place by 15 May, the pool will close in June.


[Wales] Daffodils to Help Make Alzheimer's Treatment Affordable

Daffodils grown in the Welsh mountains help to make Alzheimer's treatments affordable, follow this link for a video: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8008445.stm

re-posted from BBC.co.uk

Daffodil crops, which are rich in a chemical that is thought to slow the progress of Alzheimer's Disease, are being grown in the Welsh mountains.

Producing the drug from daffodils may make the treatment cheaper.

Jeremy Cooke reports.


01 April 2009

[Britain] Happy Financial Fool's Day

re-posted from NPR.org

G-20 Protesters Jam London, Target Banks
by The Associated Press, April 1, 2009

Thousands of G-20 protesters jammed downtown London on Wednesday and some tried to storm the Bank of England, pelting police with eggs and fruit and rocking the barricades designed to control them.

Demonstrators shouted "Abolish Money!" and clogged streets in the financial district known as "The City" even as Prime Minister Gordon Brown and President Barack Obama held a news conference elsewhere in the British capital.

Protesters had branded the day "Financial Fool's Day" ahead of Thursday's summit of world leaders who are gathering in hopes of resolving the global financial crisis that has lashed nations and workers worldwide.

"Every job I apply for there's already 150 people who have also applied," said protester Nathan Dean, 35, who lost his information technology job three weeks ago. "I have had to sign on to the dole (welfare) for the first time in my life. You end up having to pay your mortgage on your credit card and you fall into debt twice over."

Demonstrators hoisted effigies of the "four horsemen of the apocalypse," representing war, climate chaos, financial crimes and homelessness.

"The greed that is driving people is tearing us apart," said Steve Lamont, 45, flanked by his family and protesters who were banging on bells, playing drums and blowing whistles.

At least eight people were reportedly arrested for having police uniforms. One police officer lost his helmet and demonstrators tossed it around like a trophy and chanted slogans.

Helicopters hovered above the protests and some buildings were boarded up in case the protests turned ugly. Many banks had extra security and hundreds of police officers lined the streets.

Fearing they would be targeted by protesters, some bankers swapped their pinstripe suits for casual wear and others stayed home. Bolder financial workers leaned out their office windows Wednesday, taunting demonstrators and waving 10 pound notes at them.

Especially in Britain, bankers have been lambasted as being greedy and blamed for the recession that is making jobless ranks soar.

"It seems like everything is in a mess," said protester Steve Johnson, 49, an unemployed construction worker. "You get bankers getting massive bonuses, and the MPs (British lawmakers) are lining their own pockets."

Musician and political activist Billy Bragg said the time was now to make a difference.

"It's better than sitting down shouting at the television at these bankers," he said. "We cannot go back to the way things were before to the million-dollar bonus culture."

19 March 2009

[France] Workers Protest Across France

suggested by Dan, re-posted from NYT

WORKERS PROTEST ACROSS FRANCE
By MATTHEW SALTMARSH and DAVID JOLLY

March 19, 2009

PARIS — Rail service, airports, utilities and the public sector were hit Thursday by work stoppages, the second major strike in two months, as French unions mobilized against the government’s response to the global economic crisis.

Two-thirds of the country’s high-speed TGV trains were canceled. Air France said most of its flights were operating normally from Roissy Charles de Gaulle International Airport, while about one-third of its flights from Orly Airport had been canceled. Traffic on the Paris Métro and bus networks were close to normal, according to transit officials, but suburban rail line service was disrupted.

In a joint statement, the country’s largest unions said that President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government “had categorically refused to increase the statutory minimum wage, to alter his policies in the field of public service employment,” and that the official response to the crisis was wholly inadequate.

They called on the government to safeguard jobs, to fight against labor insecurity and to protect workers’ purchasing power.

More than 200 demonstrations were expected across France, according to unions. There was no initial comment from the government about the extent of the action.

The country faces mounting dissatisfaction amid job cuts. Mirroring trends in other European countries, the number of job seekers in France rose in January by 90,200, the highest increase on record, and the fourth-quarter unemployment rate rose to 8.2 percent.

The tire maker Continental is closing a plant in the Oise region which employs 1,120 people. Total, the largest French energy company, announced last week that it planned to shed some 250 jobs in the French refining sector as it cuts capacity at Gonfreville in the northwest of the country.

Faced with expectations that the French economy will contract by nearly 2 percent this year, Mr. Sarkozy announced a $35 billion stimulus plan in December.

But he has held back from announcing further measures, apart from support packages for the auto industry and banks. He recently criticized Britain for seeking to bolster consumption by cutting the value added tax.

Unions want more tax breaks and the opposition Socialist Party has called for a consumption-driven approach to restarting growth.

A poll conducted this week for the magazine Paris Match by IFOP found that 78 percent of the French support the strikers, the highest rate in a decade.

But among passengers waiting for a train to Paris at a station about 15 miles west of the capital, it was hard to find such support. “France is a bit like a sinking boat, and these strikers are just adding more holes,” said Maurice Bataille, 34.

Unsurprisingly, French business leaders expressed frustration at the strike. “It’s a big sign that people don’t know where they are; they don’t know what they want,” Christophe de Margerie, the chief executive of Total, said Wednesday. “They are lost.”

He defended the decision to cut refining jobs as something that “should have been done one or two years ago” and said that the company would keep investing and adding jobs in other areas. Union officials said production had stopped Thursday at six Total refineries, but the company said the impact on production was “limited,” according to Reuters.

Two major demonstrations were planned for central Paris later Thursday in fine spring weather. On Jan. 29, more than a million marched in cities across the country, and the following day, Mr. Sarkozy made some concessions to worker demands.

16 January 2009

[LSE] London School of Economics Occupation for Gaza

suggested by Hanan, re-posted from a Facebook note

P.S. School of Oriental and African Studies in London also had a 24hr occupation, and got all of their demands met.

--------------------------


*The Old Theatre is now under Occupation*

PRESS RELEASE - FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Over forty pro Palestine students have occupied a lecture theatre at the London School of Economics to demand that the university releases a statement condemning the attack on Gaza and divests from arms companies that supply the Israeli military.

Students entered the Old Theatre and sat down on the stage after the Students' Union passed a motion in support of their demands. A lecture continued as scheduled with the students on the stage.

The group want LSE Director to issue a statement condemning the Israeli violence on Gaza.

"LSE is an institution founded on the Fabian values that were the precursor of the human rights agenda of modern politics. LSE must restate those values and condemn state criminality. It is not a matter of politics, it is a matter of humanity," a spokesperson said.

The group are also demanding that LSE divests from arms firm BAE Systems, an arms company who supply the Israeli military.

"The fact that LSE invests in BAE Systems means that it is directly profiting from the collective punishment of the Gazan people. Our University will remain tainted for as long as it is funded by unlawful military aggression. The LSE must divest from BAE and other arms companeis immeditately.

The LSE also invests in arms companies Boeing, Rolls Royce and BHP Billiton, a firm the School says supplies nuclear material for warheads.

They have also issued several demands related to providing material support for Palestinian students including providing 5 fully paid scholarships for Palestinian students, books and computers for Palestinian universities and facilitation for fund raising activities.

The LSE has said "disowned" the protest and said that it will hold the Students' Union responsible for any damage. It has however said that it will not remove the occupiers and have agreed not to prevent free movement in and out of the occupied theatre.

Over 250 students and academics wrote to Director Howard Davies at the beginning of the year to demand a statement and other demands similar to those being demanded by the occupation. Davies agreed to waiver application fees for students affected by the crisis but refused to issue a condemnatory statement, pledge further material assistance or support divestment from arms firms.

Davies claimed that the School does not take positions on "political issues". This is in stark contrast to an overtly political statement issued by the Davies in May 2007 condemning a UCU (University and College Union) resolution concerning the Israeli Occupation, and previous condemnations by LSE of South African Apartheid and the Tiananmen Square massacre in the 1980's.

* DEMANDS IN FULL *

1) *Statement*
The LSE should release a statement condemning the Israeli attack on Gaza and demanding a ceasefire. LSE is an institution founded on the Fabian values that were the precursor of the human rights agenda of modern politics. LSE must restate those values and condemn state criminality. It is not a matter of politics, it is a matter of humanity. A statement condemning Israeli violence is fully in keeping with the founding principles of our university.

2) *Divestment *
The LSE currently holds investments in BAE Systems, a firm that the Campaign Against the Arms Trade (caat.org.uk) states provides weapons and ammunition for the Israeli military. This means that our university is being directly funded by the Israeli war on Gaza. The LSE must divest from BAE immediately.

3) *5 fully paid scholarships for Palestinian students*
At a University as diverse and international as LSE, Palestinian students are grossly underrepresented in the student body when compared to other groups.

4) *Fundraising day*
The LSE administration should facilitate a 'fundraising day' where buckets will be in every lecture and seminar to collect money for the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians

5) *Books and Computers*
The LSE has a £26 million surplus and is lucky enough to be able to regularly invest in new equipment. Any computers or books due to be got rid of at the end of Lent and Summer terms should be donated to the University and to schools that have been bombed in Gaza.

6) *Amnesty*
LSE has a proud history of student activism. Students united to campaign against apartheid, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and more recently around divestment from the arms trade. All students have a democratic right to peaceful protest and students should not be prevented from expressing their opinions by fear of reprisals.

ENDS

NOTES TO EDITORS
1. Updates will be available at *http://lseoccupation.blogspot.com/
2. It is the official policy of the LSE Students' Union to demand a statement from LSE and demand divestment from arms companies
3. Contact Estelle Cooch; *s.e.cooch@lse.ac.uk* ; 07748874987

---

The motion "Defend Gaza: Condemn Israeli Massacre" *passed in todays UGM*. The Students Union supports the creation of an emergency fund to waive tuition/application fees for Palestinians students affected; support links between LSE faculty and Palestinians universities ; the call to recall our Ambassador, end preferential trade.

With over 1,000 Palestinians killed - 300 of them children - and over 5,000 injured, the Students' Union condemns the Israeli massacre in Gaza. Understanding the sanctity of human beings, students have voted in support of the Palestine Society's declaration that we will not sit by as Israel continues its persecution of 1.5 million Palestinian.

---
* Latest Bombings *

Even by the Israeli Forces' depraved standards, today's bombings reached new lows for the grotesque. Three acts in the last 24 hours show their total lack of humanity and total disregard for the dignity of the dead.

Late yesterday, news reports reached the world of how the Israeli Army had shelled the holy burial grounds at the main Gaza cemetery in northern Gaza City's Sheik Radwan neighbourhood. Even the dead are denied peace.
*http://english.sina.com/world/2009/0114/211603.html*<https://exchange.lse.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://english.sina.com/world/2009/0114/211603.html>

Then the Israeli Air force attacked yet another UN building sheltering 700 refugees. The air strike injured three UN workers and from eyewitness accounts, they used illegal phosphorus bombs. The building hit by the Israeli Air Force also contained tonnes of much needed medical supplies, which now as a direct result of their attack has destroyed these vital supplies.
*
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/15/israel-gaza-offensive-truce-talks
*<https://exchange.lse.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/15/israel-gaza-offensive-truce-talks>

And finally, if the Israeli army doesn't kill you the first time, and you manage to make your way to one of the few remaining medical centres, you'll still not be safe. Today Israeli forces shelled Al Quds hospital making the medical treatment of the innocent victims of Israel's slaughter even tougher. According to the head of emergency services at the hospital, Dr. Bashar Murad, two of the Israeli missiles used also included white phosphorus.

---

*Please come join the occupation of the Old Theatre!*

In solidarity

LSESU Palestine Society
(from the Old Theatre)


07 January 2009

[UK] Petition Against Proposed Student Visa Changes

re-posted from Activist Scholarship listserv

Universities Without Borders: http://universitieswithoutborders.blogspot.com/

PETITION TO OPPOSE PROPOSED CHANGES TO STUDENT VISAS IN UK

There is now a UK-wide campaign underway to oppose the proposed changes to student visas, which will require academics to monitor and report overseas students to the UK Border Agency. As part the campaign, a petition to the Prime Minister's Office has been launched. There are currently 2260 signatures, but we'd like to get more, so please take a minute to add your name and forward to contacts.

http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/Overseasstudent/

“We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to withdraw the oppressive new immigration rules on overseas students and staff”

Background: The new rules for overseas students and staff threaten university autonomy and breach human rights legislation. These rules would require Universities to report to the Border Agency any absences from lectures and seminars or any failure to submit any assessment on time. In other words the University is being asked to act as an Immigration Officer to the students. These requirements go far beyond the present monitoring of student progress systems in Universities which has as its purpose assisting students to reach their full potential. It is hard to justify such detailed monitoring of overseas students. Surely the Border Agency just needs to know students have registered and are at the University. This police-like surveillance is not the function of universities and alters the educational relationship between students and their teachers in a very harmful manner. University staff are there to help the students develop intellectually and not to be a means of sanctioning them. Trust between students and staff is essential to the relationship. They represent a potential breach of Articles 8 and Article 3of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act 1998. – Ian Grigg-Spall:

FURTHER BACKGROUND ON KEY CHANGES TO STUDENT VISA RULES

1) Onerous financial requirements for international students

Under the new points-based system, starting in Spring 2009, student visas will be subject to "mandatory maintenance requirements" which means the visa won't approved unless the student can provided evidence of enough funds in their bank account to cover full first year tuition + £9600(amount they consider necessary for living expenses at £800 per month). For spouses/children they will need to show they have a further £535 per month for each dependent.) This requirement will apply to everyone, regardless of what country you are coming from. Students applying for the Post Study Worker Scheme or Highly Skilled Migrant Program scheme from within the UK, will need to have £800 held in their bank account for three months in a row to be eligible. Students applying from outside the UK, will need £2800 held over the last three months, plus £1600 per dependent.

2) Universities forced to report info about international students to the Home Office & UK Border Agency

Starting from Spring 2009, any educational institution recruiting overseas students will need to register with the Home Office. All sponsors, including the university, will be required to report on international students who(a) fail to enrol on their course;(b) have any unauthorized absences;(c) discontinue their studies (including deferrals)(d) any significant changes in students circumstances (eg if duration of study shortens) Institutions will be expected to cooperate with the UK Border Agency and "Account Managers" will routinely conduct "spot checks" to ensure institutions are complying with requirements. Apparently the Home Office is also cracking down on students who work more than the 20 permitted hours during term time.

3) Monitoring students activities re: "anti-terrorism"

Since 2007, non-UK/EU postgrad students studying certain science/technologysubjects (mostly biology, chemistry, technology) are required to go through the "Academic Technology Approval Scheme - as a counter-terrorism measure-- apparently "to stop the spread of knowledge and skills that could be used in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their means of delivery."

4) ID controls

As of November 25th, the government will begin issuing biometric ID cards to all non-EU students and spouses and this will extend to students applying for loans in 2010. Existing student visas will not be renewed without providing biometric data and obtaining the ID card.

Coverage in the Guardian:

Letter: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/nov/10/immigration-policy-immigration-and-public-services

Article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2008/nov/10/international-students-migrant-scams-crackdown


24 December 2008

[Modesto, CA] Solidarity With Greece

re-posted from Anarchistnews.org from Indybay - By crudo

Modesto: Anarchists Take to the Streets in Support of Greek Insurrection

“Bring it. We right here. We ain’t going anywhere. We right here.” - DMX

For nearly two years anarchists have stayed off the streets of Modesto as an organized presence. That is until last night. After a gathering of about 30 people at a local coffee shop, where comrades discussed the situation in Greece and read aloud a text from a prepared flyer on the revolt and how it relates to what is happening in the Central Valley of California, about 20-25 people took to the streets of downtown Modesto. Many of those in attendance that night had never engaged with others or organized themselves for such an activity as taking over a street for a march, so for many of the working class hooligan youths who marched for about 10 minutes to the downtown area of 10th and J Street, last night was a learning experience. Marchers held a large banner in front reading, “Solidarity With Greece! For Global Resistance!,” carried signs such as, “No Justice, No Peace! From Modesto to Greece,” and several youths carried anarchist black flags. The group chanted, “Who’s Streets? Our Streets,” and variations of, “From Modesto to Greece: Fight the Police!”

Right as the group approach it’s desired endpoint, the police showed up. The group did not stop and marched into the downtown blocked off street of 10th and J Street. There, youths engaged with the public and passed out several hundred flyers on car windows and to passersby. Although it was cold and not many people were about, we still accomplished our goal of taking the street, holding it, marching to our destination, and then engaging with people.

Members of Modesto Anarcho Crew (MAC - wat wat) also made it clear that the conditions in the Central Valley are just as ripe for insurrection and revolution as Greece. Several people pointed out that a young man of color was just shot to death by pigs in Stockton (about 20 minutes north of Modesto) when he came out of his house in a high crime neighborhood with a licensed firearm during the arrest of another man. The Greeks should not have all the fun. We have buildings to occupy, police to fight, and resources to appropriate as well.

Being that this demonstration was organized in less than three days mainly through social networking websites and friend networks - I would say last night was a success and hopefully only the start of things to come. Until I can light my cigarette on my on burning barricade, keep bringin da soc war, here, there, and everywhere.


13 December 2008

[Greece] Interesting commentaries on "the coming insurrection"

re-posted from Independent.co.uk

Dec 13, 2008

Are the Greek Riots a Taste of Things To Come?

After firing 4,600 tear-gas canisters in the past week, the Greek police have nearly exhausted their stock. As they seek emergency supplies from Israel and Germany, still the petrol bombs and stones of the protesters rain down, with clashes again outside parliament yesterday.

Bringing together youths in their early twenties struggling to survive amid mass youth unemployment and schoolchildren swotting for highly competitive university exams that may not ultimately help them in a treacherous jobs market, the events of the past week could be called the first credit-crunch riots. There have been smaller-scale sympathy attacks from Moscow to Copenhagen, and economists say countries with similarly high youth unemployment problems such as Spain and Italy should prepare for unrest.

Ostensibly, the trigger for the Greek violence was the police shooting of a 15-year-old boy, Alexis Grigoropoulos. A forensic report leaked to Greek newspapers indicated he was killed by a direct shot, not a ricochet as the policeman's lawyer had claimed. The first protesters were on the streets of Athens within 90 minutes of Alexis's death, the start of the most traumatic week Greece has endured for decades. The destructiveness of the daily protests, which left many stores in Athens's smartest shopping area in ruins and caused an estimated €2bn (£1.79bn) in damage, has stunned Greece and baffled the world. And there was no let-up yesterday, as angry youths shrugged off torrential rain to pelt police with firebombs and stones, block major roads and occupy a private radio station.

Their parents grope for explanations. Tonia Katerini, whose 17-year-old son Michalis was out on the streets the day after the killing, emphasised the normality of the protesters. "It's not just 20 or 30 people, we're talking about 1,000 young people. These are not people who live in the dark, they are the sort you see in the cafes. The criminals and drug addicts turned up later, to loot the stores. The children were very angry that one of them had been killed; and they wanted the whole society not to sleep quietly about this, they wanted everyone to feel the same fear they felt. And they were also expressing anger towards society, towards the religion of consumerism, the polarisation of society between the few haves and the many have-nots."

Protest has long been a rite of passage for urban Greek youth. The downfall of the military dictatorship in 1974 is popularly ascribed to a student uprising; the truth was more complicated, but that is the version that has entered student mythology, giving them an enduring sense of their potential. So no one was surprised that Alexis's death a week ago today brought his fellow teenagers on to the streets. But why were the protests so impassioned and long-lasting? "The death of this young boy was a catalyst that brought out all the problems of society and of youth that have been piling up all these years and left to one side with no solutions," said Nikos Mouzelis, emeritus professor of sociology at LSE. "Every day, the youth of this country experiences further marginalisation."

Although Greece's headline unemployment of 7.4 per cent is just below the eurozone average, the OECD estimates that unemployment among those aged 15 to 24 is 22 per cent, although some economists put the real figure at more like 30 per cent.

"Because of unemployment, a quarter of those under 25 are below the poverty line," said Petros Rylmon, an economist at Linardos, the Labour Institute of the Greek trade unions. "That percentage has been increasing for the past 10 years. There is a diffused, widespread feeling that there are no prospects. This is a period when everyone is afraid of the future because of the economic crisis. There is a general feeling that things are going to get worse. And there is no real initiative from the government."

For Greek youngsters such as Michalis Katerini, job prospects are not rosy, but without a university degree they would be far worse, so he and his mother are making serious sacrifices to get him into further education. So inadequate is the teaching in his state high school that he, like tens of thousands of others across the country, must study three hours per night, five nights a week at cramming school after regular school, to have a hope of attaining the high grades required to get the university course of his choice. His mother, whose work as an architect is down 20 per cent on last year, must pay €800 a month to the crammer for the last, crucial year of high school.

She believes the government of Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis faces more turbulence if it fails to grasp the reality of the past week, and pass it off as a spontaneous over-reaction. "The government has tried hard not to connect what is happening with the problems of young people. The government says one boy died, his friends are angry, they over-reacted then anarchists came to join in the game. But this is not the reality."

Vicky Stamatiadou, a kindergarten teacher in the rich northern suburbs with two teenage sons, agrees. "Until now, our society was full of dirty but calm water; nothing was moving, nothing improving, all the problems of our society remained unsolved for years. People pretended that everything was going well. But now this false picture has been broken and we are facing reality."

Greece's official youth unemployment statistics are not far removed from the rates in other European countries with a history of mass protest, such as France, Italy and Spain. With the graffiti "The Coming Insurrection" plastered near the Greek consulate in Bordeaux this week, the warning signs to the rest of the continent's leaders are clear.



suggested by: Gaurav, re-posted from Hurriyet.com

Hurriyet Daily News, 12-12-08

Greek riots could bode more unrest in Europe


ISTANBUL - As the street protests over the death of a teen in a police shooting rage in Greece, governments are concerned the violence could spread accross Europe. Hundreds of people were detained in Spain, France and Denmark over copycat incidents and politicians are wary of a more revolt.

As economic crisis tightens its grip on Europe, politicians and analysts fear the street battle raging in Greece could herald a violent winter of discontent elsewhere on the continent.

The Greek riots were triggered by a specific police shooting and sustained by broad opposition to a weak right-wing government, and as such are unlikely to spread directly to other territories. But as of yesterday, hundreds of people were detained across the Europe, including Spain, France and Denmark, as protestors attacked banks, shops, police stations and cars in an apparent show of support for rioting Greeks.

"A violent reaction comparable to what has happened in Greece is possible, if there's some kind of spark to light the fire, such as a youth's death," Roberto d'Alimonte, professor of political science at Florence University told Agence France-Presse. "We can't ignore the phenomenon of imitation, which is very significant right now," Alimonte said. "At the moment, Italian youth is frustrated and worried for its future. The crisis is only going to make this worse."

Greece in far worse situation
In Spain, however, sociologist Andreu Lopez, insisted that the situation in Greece -- where an unstable government is confronted by youth with shrinking prospects -- was far worse than elsewhere. "It would be impossible for what is happening in Greece to happen in Spain," insisted Lopez, co-author of a recent report on young people in Spain. "Young Spaniards have many more opportunities and responses to the situation, even in a time of crisis, whether it be grants for studies, state aid or support from families," AFP quoted the sociologist as saying.

The violence Wednesday night in Madrid and Barcelona was the first in Spain in apparent solidarity with Greek protesters. In the Spanish capital, some 200 people targeted a police station, stores and banks, and officers detained nine people, a police official told the Associated Press.

Arsonists torched two cars outside a Greek consulate in southwestern France yesterday, scrawling slogans in support of the youth riots gripping Athens, according to an account by the Associated Press. Police found graffiti on a wall opposite the consulate, and on a nearby garage door, reading "Support for the fires in Greece," "Insurrection Everywhere" and "The Coming Insurrection."

'Beware of revolt'
Against this background, official in Prime Minister Francois Fillon's office said he was "following the situation carefully," and President Nicolas Sarkozy told ruling party deputies to beware a revolt against falling living standards. According to a lawmaker who dined with the president and his supporters on Wednesday, Sarkozy warned that the crisis could provoke widespread protests. "Just look at what is happening in Greece," he reportedly said.

Meanwhile, Greek offices in Moscow and Rome were hit by firebombs and in Denmark 63 protesters were detained. Police spokesman Michael Paulsen in Copenhagen said some of the 150 people who were demonstrating late Wednesday hurled bottles and paint at riot police.

Just as in Greece, students in France, Italy and Spain have been angered by underfunding in universities. Last month, thousands of young Italians took to the streets to protest youth unemployment of more than 23 percent. France is no stranger to university unrest, and politicians fear protests by middle-class students could re-ignite rioting by the young immigrants.



11 December 2008

[Greece] Letter correcting Greek media lies

re-posted from anarchist.academics

Wed, December 10, 2008 7:04 am

Dear comrades,

Today is the general strike and the fifth day of riots. There were again attacks from both sides and police used a lot of tear gases in Athens and in Thessaloniki were I live. Right now the situation seems quiet, though there is assembly in a few hours and we will see…

It is true that the situation in universities is rely on government and family connections, as Mitzi pointed, but it is totally false that the protesters set fire to the National Library. In fact on of the libraries of the Law School in Athens get fired and I don’t know if it was an intended action. This was one more lie of Greek medias in order to turn the citizens against the protesters.

I also believe that people from low and middle classes participate to those demonstrations. It is also true that some stole products from the broken shops.

Yesterday night in Zefiri, Athens, a place that they mostly live gypsies, there was an organized attack against the police department. They set fire to a track and then pushed it to the door of the department. After that, they started to shoot with air guns against the policemen. Also, last light immigrants were starting to participate to the riots in Victoria square in Athens. So, it is obvious that people from all the oppressed social groups, who face the racism every day from the state and the police they needed just a causation (the murder of Alexis) to react to this situation.

Also, I saw people from various ages to throw stones and clap when teenagers were breaking and burning banks. Of course they were. These are the banks that sell their houses after an auction. Yesterday the Greek media referring that anger citizens were fighting with the police against the demonstrations. This was also a lie. They were neo-nazis. They always did this, since there is a strong connection between them and the Greek police.

Comrades, if you want to help write a declaration sign it and send it to the Greek embassy of your region and to the media. There is already a declaration from Italian comrades.

stavros

[UK] Activist's Sabotage Reduces Britain's Carbon Output By 2%

re-posted from guardian.co.uk

No new coal - the calling card of the 'green Banksy' who breached fortress Kingsnorth

by John Vidal

The £12m defences of the most heavily guarded power station in Britain have been breached by a single person who, under the eyes of CCTV cameras, climbed two three-metre (10ft) razor-wired, electrified security fences, walked into the station and crashed a giant 500MW turbine before leaving a calling card reading "no new coal". He walked out the same way and hopped back over the fence.

All power from the coal and oil-powered Kingsnorth station in Kent was halted for four hours, in which time it is thought the mystery saboteur's actions reduced UK climate change emissions by 2%. Enough electricity to power a city the size of Bristol was lost.

Yesterday the hunt was on for the man dubbed "climate man" or the "green Banksy". Climate activists responsible for hijacking coal trains and breaking on to runways said they knew nothing about the incident.

Even veterans of some of the most audacious direct actions, such as the scaling of the Kingsnorth chimney, are mystified. The station operator E.On professed astonishment that a lone activist would be daring enough to try to do something so potentially dangerous. Medway police said they had no suspects but were still investigating the incident, which took place on November 28.

"It was extremely odd indeed, quite creepy. We have never known anything like this at all, but it shows that if people want to do something badly enough they will find a way," said Emily Highmore, a spokeswoman for E.On.

Should "climate man" ever show up, he will be feted for what activists say was the most daring individual action of the year. "We have no idea who he is - but we really want to know. Everybody's asking 'where were you on Friday November 28'," said Ben Stewart of Greenpeace, one of six people arrested for climbing the 76 metre (250ft) chimney of the Kingsnorth station early last year but found not guilty of criminal damage in November. "We would never act anonymously," he added.

Yesterday the full story emerged of what happened. "It was about 10pm, very dark indeed," said Highmore. "It looks from the CCTV like he came in via a very remote part of the site by the sea wall and got over the double layer of fences."

The intruder then crossed a car park and walked to an unlocked door. But instead of going to the power station's main control room, where about eight people would have been working, he headed for its main turbine hall, where no one would have been working at that time.

Within minutes, says E.On, "he had tampered with some equipment" - believed to be a computer at a control panel - "and tripped unit 2, one of the station's giant 500MW turbines".

"This caused the unit to go offline," she added. "It was running at full 500MW load and the noise it would have made as it shut itself down is just incredible. CCTV shows that he then just walked out, and went back over the fence.

"It could be that no one has taken responsibility because they were so frightened by the noise it would have made. It's probably taken them a week just to get over the shock."

E.On, which wants to demolish the station and replace it with Britain's first new coal-fired power station in 34 years, said it was reviewing security, but doubted it was an inside job or the work of a big environment group. The intruder may have had some experience at one of Britain's other major power stations, insiders say.

"He left a banner but it was a real DIY job. It was really scrappy. This was an old bedsheet with writing done out of gaffer tape. It was very crude," said Highmore

"People at the station are gobsmacked," she added. "This is a different league to protesters chaining themselves to equipment. It's someone treating a power station as an adventure playground. You have to be trained to work here. People do not just wander about on their own. He could have killed himself. We do not have a problem with public protest but this was reckless. Whoever it was has crossed a line they should not have gone over. Power stations are dangerous places."

Kingsnorth was the site of a week-long activist camp in August which saw about 1,000 climate change activists try but fail to get into the station.

Notorious, but nameless

The Kingsnorth intruder joins a select group of "caped crusaders" who do their work without their names becoming widely known

Banksy: The graffiti artist whose work has attracted worldwide attention has taken his subversive style from urban Britain to the West Bank. He was recently unmasked by a Sunday paper, but after years of arresting images he has almost been elevated to status of national treasure.

Captain Gatso: The controversial leader of protest group Mad (Motorists Against Detection) has stoned, superglued, sprayed and ringed with burning tyres more than 1,000 roadside speed cameras in an eight-year campaign.

Superbarrio: Billed by his supporters as "faster than a speeding turtle and able to leap small speed bumps in a single bound", the flabby caped crusader in cherry red tights traverses the streets of Mexico City, defending the working class, the poor and the homeless. "I can't stop a plane or a train single-handed, but I can keep a family from being evicted," he said.

The Biotic Baking Brigade: A loosely connected group of leftwing activists, famous for throwing pies in the faces of such figures as the Microsoft's Bill Gates, the San Francisco mayors Willie Brown and Gavin Newsom and the Swedish King Carl Gustaf. The group's members have been active on animal rights and ecology issues as well as in feminist movements.


08 December 2008

[Greece] Footage of ongoing riots in response to youth's murder

Continuing coverage of the youth riots in Greece in response to the murder of a 15 year old anarchist. Follow the link below for raw video footage. Thanks to Gaurav for sending this to Good News.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHa-PLwBgkI


07 December 2008

[Greece] Half of prison population to be released

This news came to my attention a little late but is DEFINITELY worth celebrating again.

re-posted from: WorkerFreedom

Hunger strike ends as Greek government caves
Thursday, November 20 2008 @ 11:36 PM CST

After 18 days 7,000 prisoners in greece stop their hunger strike after the ministry of justice concedes to a series of their demands, promising to release half the country's prison population by April 2009.

On Thursday the 20th of November more than 7,000 hunger strikers in Greek prisons demanding a comprehensive 45-point program of prison reform have decided to stop their hunger strike, already on its 18th day, after the Ministry of Justice responded to their struggle and to the widening solidarity movement which in the last weeks has held several mass protest marches in the greek cities by declaring that by next April the number of prisoners in Greek jails will be reduced to 6.815 from the present 12.315, thus effectively releasing half of the country's prison population.

The Ministry's declaration in detail states that:

1) All persons convicted to a sentence up to five years for any offense including drug related crimes can transform their sentence into a monetary penalty. This will not be allowed in the case the jury decides that the payment is not enough to deter the convict from committing punishable acts in the future.
2) The minimum sum for transforming one day of prison sentence to monetary penalty is reduced from 10 euros to 3, with the provision of being reduced to 1 euro by decision of the jury.
3) All people who have served 1/5 of their prison sentence for 2 year sentences and 1/3 for sentences longer than 2 years are to be released, with no exceptions.
4) The minimum limit of served sentence is reduced to 3/5 for conditional release and for convicts for drug related crimes. Those condemned under conditions of law Ν. 3459/2006 (articles 23 και 23Α) are exempted.
5) The maximum limit of pre-trial imprisonment is reduced from 18 to 12 months, with the exemption of crimes punished by life or 20 year sentence.
6) The annual time of days-off prison is increased by one day. Tougher conditions for days-off are limited for those convicted for drug related crimes under Ν. 3459/2006.
7) Disciplinary penalties are to be integrated.
8) Integration after 4 years into national law of the European Council decision of drug trafficking (2004/757).
9) Expansion of implementation of conditional release of convicts suffering from AIDS, kidney failure, persistent TB, and tetraplegics.

What the Ministry failed to answer with regard to the prisoners' demands include:

1) Monetary exchange of prison sentences longer than 5 years, especially for 6.700 prisoners presently convicted for non-criminal offenses.
2) Abolition of juvenile prisons
3) Abolition of accumulative disciplinary penalties
4) Abolition of 18 months pre-trial imprisonment for a large number of offenses.
5) Satisfactory expansion of days off, despite the fact that the application of present liberties has been tested as successful during the last 18 years.
6) Immediate improvement of relocation conditions of convicts
7) Holding a meeting between the minister of justice and the prisoners' committee

Thus in a press release, the Prisoners' Committee announced that:

"The amendment submitted to the Parliament by the Ministry of Justice tackles but a few of our demands. The minister ought to materialize his promises for the immediate release of the suggested number of prisoners announced, and at the same time implement concrete measures regarding the totality of our demands. We the prisoners treat this amendment as a first step, a result of our struggle and of the solidarity shown by society. Yet it fails to covers us, it fails to solve our problems. With our struggle, we have first of all fought for our dignity. And this dignity we cannot offer as a present to no minister, to no screw. We shall tolerate no arbitrary acts, no vengeful relocation, no terrorizing disciplinary act. We are standing and we shall stay standing. We demand form the Parliament to move towards a complete abolition of the limit of 4/5 of served sentence, the abolition of accumulated time for disciplinary penalties, and the expansion of beneficial arrangements regarding days-off, and conditional releases for all categories of prisoners. Moreover, we demand the immediate legislation on the presently vague promises of the minister of justice regarding the improvement of prison conditions (abolition of juvenile prisons, foundation of therapeutic centers for drug dependents, implementation of social labour in exchange for prison sentence, upgrading of hospital care of prisoners, incorporation of European legislation favorable to the prisoners in the greek law etc.). Finally, we offer our thanks to the solidarity movement, to every component, party, medium, and militant who stood by us with all and any means of his or her choice, and we declare that our struggle against these human refuse dumps and for the victory of all our demands continues".

Prisoners' Committee 20/11/08.

[Greece] Anarchists take the streets in response to youth murder

re-posted from anarchistnews.org


On the evening of Saturday Dec. 6th a police patrol in the area of Exarhia (an area known for its strong anarchist presence in the centre of Athens) was verbally confronted by a few people in the area. Immediately a police officer pulled out his gun and shot a 16-year old (some accounts say he was 15) in the chest in cold blood. The 16-year old was transported to Evaggelismos, a major hospital in Athens, where he was dead on arrival.

The centre of Athens was immediately swamped by police, while people gathered at Evaggelismos. The crowd there twice repelled police who attempted to enter the hospital. There have been numerous reports of confrontations between people and police riot units at Tsamadou, Polytechnio, Acropoli, Panteios and Ermou (different locations and schools in Athens). There are massive gatherings at Polytechneio while the Law School and ASOEE have been taken over by students.

Spontaneous demonstrations, marches and confrontations are being reported all over Greece, including Thessaloniki, Mytilini, Giannena, Komotini, Iraklio, Xanthi, Serres, Hania, Alexandroupoli, Sparta, and Volos .

Major marches have been scheduled for 13:00 Athens time
Sunday December 7th in Athens, Thessaloniki, Xania and Patra.


re-posted from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7770086.stm

(go to the link above for pictures and video)


Thousands of protesters have attacked banks and shops in Athens and the northern city of Thessaloniki, angered by the police's killing of a teenager.

Demonstrators threw firebombs, rocks and other objects at the buildings and at police, who responded with tear gas.

Earlier, Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos appealed for restraint.

The streets of the capital were already strewn with glass and rubble after a night of rioting sparked by Saturday's shooting, in the Exarchia district.

During the overnight violence, protesters hurled rocks and petrol bombs at the police and damaged dozens of buildings.

In a statement, the police said that Saturday's riots had left 24 police officers injured, one seriously, and 31 shops, nine banks and 25 cars damaged or burned.

Six people were arrested, one of them for carrying a weapon.

Alex Hadjisavvas, the owner of a shop on Patission Avenue, told the BBC that many nearby businesses had also been looted.

"The window was smashed, the shop front damaged and a large quantity of stock taken from inside has been used by the rioters as material to start street fires," he said.

The unrest, the worst in the country in several years, later spread to Thessaloniki and the southern island of Crete.

Police 'powerless'



The BBC's Malcolm Brabant says that after a lull in the fighting on Sunday morning, youths left the Polytechnic college and joined hundreds of others on a march towards the police headquarters on Alexandras avenue.

They passed close to where the teenager, who has been named as 15-year-old Andreas Grigoropoulos, was shot dead on Saturday. One banner they were carrying called the police "murderers".

One protester outside the National Museum told the BBC he had been greatly angered by the actions of the police.

"It's not the first time. They always kill people - immigrants, innocent people - and without any excuse," he said. "They murdered him in cold blood."

"I think [the violence] is justified. Peaceful demonstrations cannot get a solution to the problem... They can feel the pressure from the people and not do it again."

As many expected, the march soon turned violent, with protesters throwing firebombs at riot police after tear gas was fired in an effort to disperse them.

Several banks and shops were attacked, while a supermarket and at least one car dealership were set alight, police and witnesses said. Clashes also broke out near the parliament.

In Thessaloniki, a march by more than 1,000 people on two police stations also descended into violence when protesters threw firebombs at police and attacked nearby shops and banks.

They also damaged vehicles belonging to Greek TV channels.

There have meanwhile been unconfirmed reports that a policeman was injured and banks and cars set on fire during protests in the western city of Patras.

Public anger

Earlier, the country's interior minister called for restraint and expressed sadness over Andreas Grigoropoulos's death.

"It is everyone's right to demonstrate and to advocate for their rights," Mr Pavlopoulos said. "But I stress, not by destroying the property of others, not turning against people who are not to blame for anything."

Both he and Deputy Interior Minister Panagiotis Chinofotis have submitted their resignations, but they were not accepted by Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis.

Mr Karamanlis has publicly apologised to the father of the dead boy.

"I know nothing can relieve your pain, but I assure you... the state will act, as it ought to, so that yesterday's tragedy won't be repeated," he said.

The two police officers involved in the shooting of the teenager have been arrested, and an inquiry is under way.

In a statement, the police said their patrol car had been attacked by about 30 youths throwing stones. They were attacked again and responded, with one firing a stun grenade and the other shooting and fatally wounding the boy.

However, our correspondent says that nothing the politicians or authorities can say or do will reduce the anger that is building.

A similar shooting incident in 1985 led to a lengthy vendetta between the youth and police, with violence continuing for years.

Citizens in major towns and cities across the country are therefore bracing themselves for the worst, he adds.

Violence often breaks out during demonstrations in Greece, but people are rarely injured. Last week, a small group of people clashed with police at a protest against the government's education policy.


re-posted from CNN.com because of their mention of communication tactics


reported by Anthee Carassava

ATHENS, Greece (CNN) -- Hundreds of young self-styled anarchists rioted in the streets Sunday and attacked police in several Greek cities in a fury over the shooting death of a teenager by a member of an elite police corps.

The shooting on Saturday night triggered demonstrations and violence across the country late Saturday, and showed no sign of abating Sunday.

"It at first seemed like it was calming down today, but then at 5 p.m. Athens time it kicked off again," said Joel Brown, a CNN senior press officer visiting Athens. "There are lots of burning bins and debris in the street and a huge amount of tear gas in the air, which we got choked with on the way back to our hotel."

Tourists holed up in downtown Athens hotels were told by hotel staff not to leave their rooms as police fanned out across the city.

The police officer who fired the fatal shot has been charged with "manslaughter with intent" and suspended from duty, police said, adding that a second police officer was arrested Saturday on criminal accessory charges.

Demonstrators barricaded city streets Sunday in Athens and Thessaloniki and hurled petrol bombs as they battled with police, who fought back with tear gas in the second day of rioting.

Rampaging youths smashed storefronts and burned businesses, leaving shattered glass and burnt debris scattered across both cities.

Residents of an apartment building in central Athens were evacuated on Sunday after angry demonstrators torched a car dealership on the basement floor.

A police statement about the boy's death said the incident started when six young protesters pelted a police patrol car with stones. The 16-year-old boy was shot as he tried to throw a fuel-filled bomb at the officers, police said.

Other youths converged on the site almost immediately.

These young people -- often referred to in Greece as " the known-unknowns" -- use texting and Web sites to organize and communicate.

Fighting between youths and police quickly erupted in other parts of Greece, including Thessaloniki, the country's second largest city. Hundreds of youths took to the streets of the sprawling port city, and finally barricaded themselves behind the gates of a state university, where police are barred from entering.

No deaths were reported, though police say several police officers have been injured.

Police say some protesters have been rounded up for questioning.

Government officials, fearing more violence, swiftly condemned the shooting.

"An investigation is under way and those found responsible with be punished," said Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos. "Measures will also be taken to avoid such incidents again in the future."


re-posted from Anarchist Academics listserv


WHAT YOU CAN DO

Dear all,

There have been spontaneous call-outs for actions across Greek embassies and consulates across the world. We already have reports for actions that happened, or are about to happen in London, Amsterdam, Berlin, Zagreb and Hamburg. There is definitely much more being organised at this very moment.

It is absolutely crucial for people to do just this at this point - find your local embassy/consulate and respond to the death of the 15 year old in the manner you think most appropriate

http://www.embassiesabroad.com/embassies-of/Greece

From what I can gather (as I am not in Greece at the moment, IMC is flooded with visits and keeps crashing since everyone, mainstream media included, rely on it for their information) there were demonstrations all across the country today (in at least 15 cities it seems). The police and government try to downplay the incident and calm things down, promising that the two police officers will be punished &the two ministers directly responsible (of Interior of Public Order) have offered their resignations, which were, unsurprisingly, rejected.

The next big date, for both sides, is the 10th of December, when an already planned general strike is to take place.

More info soon.

Solidarity,
a member of anarchist.academics