DEMO Against Police Repression in Solidarity with Greek revolt 14/12/08
London | 12.12.2008 05:44 | Repression | Workers' Movements
DeMO Against Police Repression in Solidarity with Greek revolt
On Saturday 6th December Greek police killed a 15 year-old boy on the streets of Athens. Since then thousands have taken to the streets, hundreds of police stations, banks and government buildings have been burnt across the country. School and university students have often been leading demonstrations and clashes while widening the social debate through occupying campuses.
Solidarity actions have spread across Europe, Australia and the United States. Embassies have been occupied or burnt and protesters have clashed with police in several cities. Many protesters have been arrested and imprisoned and subjected to police brutality in a systematic and coordinated attack against solidarity movements.
This revolt was a response to the murdering of young Alexandros, releasing the social need to revolt against the police state, and the increasing social and financial repression and exclusion.
Everywhere police repression, harassment, evictions, beatings and killings are the everyday terror of state control. The movement against repression and control is gaining momentum. We call to take this movement to the streets.
On the 14th of December we call for a demonstration at 14:30 at Dalston (Dalston Lane) Peace Mural, Hackney, London.
Ways to get there: From Liverpool Street Station bus 149
By train to Dalston Kingsland Station.
From Central London Buses: 38, 73, 30, 67, 243.
On Saturday 6th December Greek police killed a 15 year-old boy on the streets of Athens. Since then thousands have taken to the streets, hundreds of police stations, banks and government buildings have been burnt across the country. School and university students have often been leading demonstrations and clashes while widening the social debate through occupying campuses.
Solidarity actions have spread across Europe, Australia and the United States. Embassies have been occupied or burnt and protesters have clashed with police in several cities. Many protesters have been arrested and imprisoned and subjected to police brutality in a systematic and coordinated attack against solidarity movements.
This revolt was a response to the murdering of young Alexandros, releasing the social need to revolt against the police state, and the increasing social and financial repression and exclusion.
Everywhere police repression, harassment, evictions, beatings and killings are the everyday terror of state control. The movement against repression and control is gaining momentum. We call to take this movement to the streets.
On the 14th of December we call for a demonstration at 14:30 at Dalston (Dalston Lane) Peace Mural, Hackney, London.
Ways to get there: From Liverpool Street Station bus 149
By train to Dalston Kingsland Station.
From Central London Buses: 38, 73, 30, 67, 243.
London
Additions
Change of Meeting Point
12.12.2008 18:04
Change of Meeting Point
The meeting point point for Sunday's demo in solidarity to the struggle in Greece has changed. We're meeting at outside Dalston Kingsland Station. Sorry for the confusion
Solidarity
The meeting point point for Sunday's demo in solidarity to the struggle in Greece has changed. We're meeting at outside Dalston Kingsland Station. Sorry for the confusion
Solidarity
Solidarity
English anarchists
12.12.2008 18:37
English anarchists may well be 'a bunch of pussies' however they know a thing or two about how the police operate here. Sorry two people were nicked with paint and stuff but if you go to an embassy of a country in flames as a small number esp after a one demo already, its likely hanging around in small groups will get you nicked/ stopped.
Pussies? I don't know.
Trying to figure out how to get round this. Maybe?
Experienced all this before. Yes
Hopefully, Sunday will be better in turn out.
Happy that you went though! Solidarity!
Pussies? I don't know.
Trying to figure out how to get round this. Maybe?
Experienced all this before. Yes
Hopefully, Sunday will be better in turn out.
Happy that you went though! Solidarity!
@
Comments
Hide the following 14 comments
In Greek
12.12.2008 05:55
Πανβρεττανική πορεία ενάντια στην αστυνομοκρατία, σε αλληλεγγύη στούς εξεγερμένους/ες και στους/στις συλληφθέντες/ είσσες στην Ελλάδα και στο εξωτερικό.
Ο θάνατος του Αλέξη ήταν η απόλυτη αφορμή για την απάντηση στη σαπίλα του κράτους, του βολέματος και της μιζέριας, της αποκατάστασης και της ρουφιανιάς, της μπατσοκρατίας και της σιωπής.
Πορεία στο Λονδίνο στη λαική γειτονιά του Hackney 14 Δεκέμβρη 14:30, Dalston Mural στο Λονδίνο.
Τρόποι να πάτε: απο Liverpool Street Station, bus 149
Με τρένο στο Dalston Kingsland
ΥΓ Ξηγιόμαστε accomodation για οσους/ες θελήσουν να έρθουν από Βρεττανία.
Solidarity
No solidarity with hooligans and rioters!
12.12.2008 09:10
Disgusted
Demo at Dalstan peace murel.. I don't get it!?
12.12.2008 09:33
@narchist
alert
12.12.2008 09:37
@ people from imc: police and not only, will try to intimidate ppl and spread confusion even posting stupid things here, so pls be careful.
gusted
Solidarity with the revolt in Greece
12.12.2008 09:46
I hate these apologists for state murder - you are too happy to condemn those that take action in such circumstances. In the UK, the cops can shoot dead an innocent man and expect NO Public anger or social rage. The immigration police can beat mothers, children and men without a single window or car being burnt.
Inaction is complicit in the repression of the state!
Solidarity to the "Hooligans" and the "Ten hooded"!
Anarchist Solidarity from London
London Anarchists
What turns a person into a rioter?
12.12.2008 10:15
I don't think it's just testasteron, otherwise we would have riots in the streets every day and everywhere. I think it is a society that restricts and controls ordinary peoples everyday lives down to the last thin capillaries. And if a riot is the only way to make your voice heard, then you have to riot.
The assumption that someone just "is" a rioter and hooligan is just short-sighted.
ol
Hope through Greek youth
12.12.2008 10:42
Winston Smith
Alert to organisers
12.12.2008 14:16
Yesterday news
response to alert organizers
12.12.2008 14:30
anon
I do apologise
12.12.2008 19:03
We might not have other chances as big as this. So every1 down to the demos and no need to be afraid of cop's tactics to scare us. The fact that they are so many is the scary bit n brits must do something as soon as possible.
Yesterday news
FTP ACAB
12.12.2008 19:04
This is for Menezes
This is for Aleandros
This is for all our fallen comrades!
@
from the persons who did the demo thursday
13.12.2008 13:56
anon
to the english anarchists
13.12.2008 14:01
anon
Freedom to the prisoners! Freedom to us all!
04.01.2009 16:13
At this stage (December 25th), around 246 people face trial and 66 have been detained. At least 50 immigrants are to be deported and more than 50 are school students of which 17 "arrested under the terrorist act" (Larisa city) [2].
Myrto's case is a common and plain example of abuse, which shows clearly that what’s going on is not only a tit for tat game between political groups [3]. Since the above is a remarkably convenient explanation, and has been extensively used in order to distort facts (or by accident) [4], it is important to be cautious of how we name things and stick to the facts.
I can understand the enthusiasm of antiauthoritarian minds, the vindication and pride that people who have been fighting for freedom and human rights feel while keeping up with the Greek resistance, but we should not be carried away by our identification with the arrested people (and all those who have been abused but not face trial) and naming them according to what they represent to us. Even though, for instance, the new Greek generation may inflame our hopes for a word-wide awaking and boost faith in our power against the brain-washing, fear-promoting establishments, it is misleading to politically define a revolt that has not been self-defined yet. Subjective views like “anarchists lead the way to a new era” or even “hundreds of schools occupied by groups of political-minded youngsters” (coming mainly by supporters in other countries) may give more grounds to those (like the representatives of the neo-Nazis in the Greek parliament or plenty of misinformed TV viewers across Europe) who insist that the mass uprising has been instigated by a minority with specific political views.
Myrto’s case (among hundreds) is an attack on fundamental freedom.
It is important not to deform this.
“Free the prisoners! Freedom to us all!…” [5]
Get independent doctors to monitor the policemen’s mental health!
Fuck the police! (They desperately need it.)
[1]
A disgraceful case of police brutality, witnessed by dozens of people: Young man (during his Xmas leave from serving in the army) goes out with his girlfriend , gets smashed by a group of armed riot police in the middle of the street (where there was not even a protest going on), brought to the hospital and then to the police headquarters to be charged for throwing fire-bombs:
Police VS citizens (subtitles):
Attack on random pedestrian, video taken from a flat:
Outrage of people while and after witnessing arrest of teenager by police:
Another arbitrary arrest. People shout: He did not do anything! Leave the kid alone!
A moderate use of chemicals:
BBC news:
The “flower stand” case, named after the defence by the police who argued that the student hit himself. The trial of the terrorists (if you have got a more precise definition of the policemen in this case, please let me know) took place on December 16th 2008. They have not been detained, have not lost their jobs, they paid money and went home:
People trying to stop unreasonable arrests before a demonstration:
[2] Petition online:
[3] “Think of the bright side. We took you for 10 years younger; this is why we brought you here in the first place!”
(by the way, it is irrelevant, don’t take me wrong, but does anyone have an idea about what the new detention centres in USA are for?)
[4] E.g. Media rarely presented the riots and the murder in chronological order, the killed boy was defined as “young activist” (implying a political and potentially violent confrontation between him and his killer), there was a preference in showing specific colours, flags and symbols among demonstrators, and the continuous (>18 days) upheaval made equal to the damages and looting that took place within the first 3 days, or to just the riots around the occupied polytechnic school of Athens (ongoing). Meanwhile, both the far-right and the Stalinist parties have explicitly blamed intellectuals and the left-greens for promoting violence.
[5] “… Stop watching! get out there!”: written on the banners raised by young protesters while being live broadcasted on December 16th after taking over the controls. This is what people watched on their TVs (nation-wide free reception):
ficus