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Asturias-Leon (Spanish State)... New Clashes Between Miners And Riot Police.

Mohawk | 05.07.2012 21:06

As the so-called "Black March", organised by miners and supporters from the main Iberian mining areas (Asturias, Leon and Aragon) approaches the capital Madrid, new clashes are taking place in the Asturian mining pits of Lieres and Soton...

The miners' march is expected to arrive in Madrid by July the 11th...

The Spanish state seems determined to hold to its guns and afford no concession whatsoever to the striking workers.

Neighbours and miners in the Leonese village of Cinhera (close to the southern border of the neighbouring region of Asturias) forced to fight one day after the other the almost military occupation of the fascistic and pretty much hated Guardia Civil in riot gear.

Brutality is on the rampage, arrests, beatings, neighbours terrorised... Franco's dictatorship never went away, it just changed form. Now they call it democracy but the portion of the Iberian population who's beginning to realise this is bullshit increases by the day. The Spanish state and capitalists have all the reasons to fret about it.

Leon's delegate of government has had the fucking nerve of accusing the miners of Cinhera of using their own families, wives, children and non miner neighbours as "human shields", when what it is being seen in this brave and small locality is nothing but a moving example of solidarity and unity at its highest. Sheer mutual aid in practice in face of the bad times looming on the horizon.

However the long tradition among the Guardia Civil and other Spanish repressive forces of living in "Casas cuartel" (big compounds where them and their families are provided with free-rent or at least cheap flats) could not be also considered also a way of keeping hostages...

As it is customary for politicians and the media everything depends on who is calling the shots... and who's actually taking them.

Videos and photos here:

 http://mas.lne.es/huelga-minera/videos-huelga-minera.html

Mohawk

Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

amazing videos...

06.07.2012 00:30

those miners have got balls, look at them firing fireworks at the police on the hillside, it looks like PIRA or ETA back in the 80s!

hahaha.

stan marsh


and

07.07.2012 14:07

the Spanish state is actually subsidising the coal industry to a HUGE extent, otherwise the miners would already be out of work (& a fossil industry put to sleep).

I'm not doubting the value of resistance and community solidarity, and I understand the concept of Just Transition, but we mustn't forget the huge human costs (for current and future generations) of such polluting industries. Romanticism's easy.

rose


Green bullshit

09.07.2012 09:33

Rose, you're talking nonsense and nobodies romanticising anything. This is a class war, the capitalist state versus the people. To quote the old song (search 4 it on You TUbe) "Whose Side are you on"?

Arthur Scargill


speaking nonsense-to-nonsense

09.07.2012 17:21

Arthur, is that the capitalist state that is subsidising the miners that you are talking about, or the one beating them up?!

And you may call what I said green bullshit, but what I'm talking about is a future for all, including the miners.

So who's side are you on!!

rose


WHOSE SIDE ARE YOU ON?

10.07.2012 11:10

Rose, you step outside of the motor of history by imposing your utopian romantic position in a completely innappropriate way on the class war. Unless you choose sides and clearly identify with the oppressed your position allies itself with the bosses and you become the class enemy. These are the facts of the matter.

The class war is ongoing and there is no 'nice future for all' till the political & boss classes are dumped into the dustbin of history (in case you missed it they own and rule the world and have fucked it up, they will not give it up without a fight).

no more romantic utopian green bullshite please.

Arthur Scargill


Rose has got a point

10.07.2012 13:34

Hi, I am the guy who is actually posting all the updates about the conflict.

I do agree in the fact that under the current circumstances our support must be on the side of the miners BUT, that does not imply that we should not be critical with the many flaws this conflict indeed bears. The environmental one is very real. Being not a miner myself but coming from a family of peasants it always struck me as very sad to see the river in my village literally dark with shit because of the mining pits washing the coal on it. In central Asturias many rivers, including the two major ones along which the main mining pits are located (Rivers Caudal and Nalon) has suffered the destructive impact of mining activities and other industries for over a century.

In other order of things the conflict indeed has a lot of flaws that must be criticised in the most dialectical way. For example, the fact that the main trade unions still control the workers and remained unchallenged (although this is also changing lately). Mainstream unions in Spain have been nefarious for the working people. Nearly everybody hates them and recognise in them more the structure of some sort of bureaucratic mafia than a proper Union. They are among the main responsibles of the poor conditions the Spanish workers find themselves now a days after having sign one "labour reform" with the bosses after the other for the last 30 years... now they are afraid of becoming useless as a n instrument of the state and capitalism and so stage a massive spectacle aimed at recovering at least a minimal degree of credibility. THIS IS ALSO TRUE.

However there is no doubt the miners are figthing with their best intentions, an increading number of them trying to challenge UGT and CCOO as much as they can, and displaying a level of tactical prowess unseen in any part of the country (and big chunks of Europe with the exception of Greece I'm afraid) for a long time. They are showing us that if we organise well and overcome fear, the sky is the limit. It is doable, the state and capitalism can be overthrwon.

I do not doubt the side Rose is in and I totally understand her concern.

Good luck to everyone...

AND FUCK THE OLYMPICS!!

Mohawk


There is no such thing as neutral

10.07.2012 15:13

Rose does not have a point. There IS a worldwide environmental crisis, but this struggle is a veryveryveryvery small part of it <.0001%. Trying to tie in utopian Green issues into the political economic battle between workers and bosses is nonsense.

Where the miners have lost before the worldwide struggles for liberation are not better off as a result, and therefore the answer is not handwringing nonsense about how 'we should save the world man'. It is in the real direct struggles for better futures that the future can be at all influenced, and anything else, is batting for the other side.

Arthur Scargill


not everything is black and white

11.07.2012 15:17

Thanks Mohawk, for your comment and also for posting news on UK Indymedia.

It's exciting to read about militant resistance against the way things are - we need more of that.


Arthur - it's not utopian to wish a sustainable work future for miners, and us all, which doesn't contribute to the 300,000 a year who directly die from climate change. Yes, I said DIE, a fact you seem to be happy with ignoring. That's far worse than neutral!

I'm not hand-wringing, nor saying "save the world, man". That's just in your head.

> It is in the real direct struggles for better futures that the future can be at all influenced, and anything
> else, is batting for the other side.

So you're saying people struggling for a continued 301 million euro subsidy (which the Spanish state wants to cut to 111m) to the coal industry (no such subsidy is available for renewables) which will kill their children, and is today killing people on the other side of the planet, is the side you're on?!

It's actually more complex, isn't it. Sigh. I give up.

rose