Hackney Council taken by local people
publica | 20.05.2001 14:07
A group of about 50 local residents briefly occupied Hackney Town Hall, around 2am Sunday morning and turned it into a temporary autonomous zone. They were supported by up to 300 people and various drummers on the square. The action was directed against Hackney Council’s corrupt business practices that led to its bankruptcy, the selling off of public space and the ongoing gentrification of the borough. It coincided with the closure of the legendary scene pub The Samuel Pepys next door, which is to reopen as a trendy wine bar inside the Hackney Empire within 14 months.
The police appeared on the scene within five to ten minutes after the occupation, using 20 riot police, dogs and pepper spray to push people out of the front entrance. Several people were arrested. The crowd refused to disperse until a protester trapped sitting outside a first floor window agreed to come down.
The action followed a long day of drinking that started at the London Fields Festival.
It was in support of Hackney’s vibrant alternative and squatting culture. The police called the action a waste of taxpayer’s money, which is ironic considering Hackney Council’s own record of wasting millions in tax receipts.
The police appeared on the scene within five to ten minutes after the occupation, using 20 riot police, dogs and pepper spray to push people out of the front entrance. Several people were arrested. The crowd refused to disperse until a protester trapped sitting outside a first floor window agreed to come down.
The action followed a long day of drinking that started at the London Fields Festival.
It was in support of Hackney’s vibrant alternative and squatting culture. The police called the action a waste of taxpayer’s money, which is ironic considering Hackney Council’s own record of wasting millions in tax receipts.
publica
e-mail:
publica@tarakan.demon.co.uk
Comments
Hide the following 17 comments
wasting tax payers money
20.05.2001 18:57
Mr S
sort the time out etc
20.05.2001 19:00
It's completely wrong. It says 12.00 and yet actually
it's 20.01
Also, can someone sort out the software so that
we can click on http://www. links...
MR S
party atmosphere rather than protest
20.05.2001 19:55
Then 4 yellow jacketed Met Police arrived and attempted to move people away and seemed to grab one individual. The crowd weren't having much of this, but there was no violence.
5 mins later, police vans started arriving and officers with vests on and long batons ran into the square and up the steps. With no warning to the crowd they delt people blows and threw some people down the steps and they entered the building.
The violence was shocking and the crowd reacted by jeering. No damage was caused to the exterior of the Town Hall or the gardens.
More and more police vans arrived with fully kitted out riot police to the extent that they eventually outnumbered the crowd. At no point did they announce instructions to the crowd, instead they proceeded to spend an hour and a half clearing the area miltary style.
At one point a man was restrained and pinned to the floor, surrounded by a wall of 30 officers who were doing a good job of moving their legs to block the view of people who were crouching on the floor with cameras or just to see what was happening to the guy. He was held down for 5 minutes before being led handcuffed into a police van and taken away.
At bo point were the people who had enetred the building lead out the front door, one can only assume they were still inside until the main square was cleared.
At the end of the fiasco at around 4am, there was some commotion around a bus on Graham road, where a young guy had been stabbed and beaten by muggers. They ran into Mare Street to be confronted by riot police and they quickly turned heel and dispersed. The injured young man approached the poilice line thinking that they would help him but he was met with a frosty response. An ambulance man flagged down a police van and the office responded to the injured guy by saying "yeah? So, what do you want me to do about it?" and promptly spead off!
So it seems that the police weren't interested in fighting crime more in playing soldiers and intimidating people by getting all of their toys out at once.
I caught a lot of the events on DV.
loop
Hackney Council
21.05.2001 00:52
Bobbo
e-mail:
bileybill@cyberdude.com
What's the problem?
21.05.2001 09:04
Paul Edwards
Re: What's the problem
21.05.2001 10:07
Haven't you read the press. Hackney Council is a hung council with only a majority of one held by Labour. Two local councillers were jailed two-three weeks ago for vote-fixing. See Guardian about two weeks ago for how they and others party's are still stealing votes.
Mr.Dragonfly
e-mail:
Mr.Dragonfly@another.com
Re:Re: What's the problem
21.05.2001 11:43
Paul Edwards
Re. Gentrification
21.05.2001 13:31
If gentrification meant that local council-house and sheltered accomadation residents had the exterior of their properties 'done up', then that would be great. Similarly, if the area itself was repaired, re-painted and generally tidied up, that would also be good news for all, businesses included.
The problem comes when we understand that this is not what is happening. 'Gentirification' is now a happy-faced euphamism for a directional shift that targets people with higher disposable incomes. This is achieved by turning local pubs into wine bars, community centres into boutiques and parks into shopping malls.
The net effect of this is that people with very little disposable income are effectively barred from much of civic life. How so? Because there is now an 'entrance price' to all 'communal' activities. No money, no point in going to a boutique or expensive wine bar (where they probably wouldn't be welcome anyway). All contact points for community life have now been turned into retail-led, fast turnover outlets, where human interaction is minimised. The local people without disposable income are marginalised, and even those with money - including incomers - are 'atomised': that is, they experience far less contact with other local people. Their circle of friends is likely to be restricted to those they know through work, already know, or at best are of a similar age, income bracket and outlook.
Finally, those who have been marginalised feel bitter and resentful, civic pride is lost, and the young now no longer have anything to do. Leading to crime and delinquency.
Do you see the problem with gentrification now?
Electrification
to paul edwards re gentrification
21.05.2001 14:41
I personally find packard more and more relevant and exciting. the kind of thing he observed there then with Kennedy, now seems to be emerging here with Blair.
Naomi Klein has merely revived his general thesis, but she fails to give Vance a full credit for his pioneering work, so dont take her faint praise as definitive.
p. Layton
The ambulance never came
21.05.2001 18:41
People were thrown down the front stairs of the hall, police seemed to be hurting people just for the sake of it.
I could see three people badly injured, certainly bleeding. I dialled 999 on my mobile in the hope to provide an ambulance for those injured. The operator kept me 5 (five) minutes with an answering machine... when I could speak to some one, she kept me another 5 minutes asking questions like, tell me exactly what is happening, are the police attending injured people, who are the injured people, or asking for the address of the events 3 times. Eventually she said an ambulance would turn up in about 10 minutes. 20 minutes later another friend (please don't call us protestors, we were not protesting, we were celebrating and reclaiming a public space), called 999 again. Same story. And the ambulance never came.
a witness
Re: Gentrification
22.05.2001 09:12
Paul Edwards
Re. 'far-right' - the opposite in fact.
22.05.2001 12:02
"Finally, those who have been marginalised feel bitter and resentful, civic pride is lost, and the young now no longer have anything to do. Leading to crime and delinquency."
This does sound a little 'Widdecombe-ish' you might think. Where my analysis is diametrically different to a far-right one is in the cause. People like Widdecombe et al blame the poor, refugees (whom they call 'asylum-seekers') and minorities for crime and social tension. They look no further, simply implying that these are 'bad people'.
My point is that 'bad people' are not born, but made. We are all, in the end, the same whatever the colour of our skin. Remember the film, 'Trading Places'? A twee piece of sentimental Hollywood tosh, but it had a kernel of truth. It all depends on your environment.
When people have their area taken away from them, when they are priced out of their own communtities, when they are denied the chance to live a normal life; what then? Do we seriously expect them not to feel resentful? How would you or I feel? Is it any wonder that kids on a run down estate commit more 'crime' than those in better off areas with parents who have a job, and money to buy things to entertain them? No, of course not.
This is the sickness of the Tory or far-right diatribe. Their economic and social policies sideline, exclude, and pauperise people, and then those same people are blamed for all of societies ills. The victim is also the perpatrator. It is Luciferian in its evil brilliance. I'm not suggesting an overarching conspiracy here, simply a mindset that counts everything in monetary terms, not human.
Oh no, now i probably sound like a far-left fanatic. Oh well, better that than a facist!
peace & love,
Electrification.
Electrification
Autonomous zone
23.05.2001 13:01
Bert Dawson
e-mail:
bert@thedawsons.org.uk
Homepage:
http://www.thedawsons.org.uk
nice to see a revival of interest in vance
23.05.2001 14:50
however, naomi klein has somewhat 'inverted' his thesis: vance thought that governments were starting to imitate the techniques of consumer mega- companies , whereas klein seems to think that these companies are taking over the function of government. but it is true that she doesnt really give him full acknowlegement for his work. He was far more than a critique of advertising: look at chapter "Persuading us as citizens" in "The Hidden Persudaers", 1957.
bill bore
Filth
28.05.2001 00:47
p
To P. Layton
06.06.2001 13:31
N. Makhno
e-mail:
bbomberorigin
note
06.06.2001 14:26
N. Makhno
e-mail:
bbomberorigin@hotmail.com