The G8 public Infoshop opened today to satisfy local curiousity and welcome autonomous groups and individual anti-G8 protesters.
The Infoshop is located 10 Albert Place, Leith Walk, in Edinburgh, EH7 5HN. It is about 10 minutes away from the bus and train station.
From now on, the access point will be opened 24 hours a day, the infoshop is also contactable under telephone number (0044)/(0)131-5611356 .
Collective meetings are held at 6 pm daily to update newcomers and to facilitate the running of the Infoshop.
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Shopfront; to be painted tomorrow
banner and Zapatista coffee collective machine
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
Well Done!!
20.06.2005 22:55
Well Done all involved.
The infoshop sounds like it'll be a really useful resource and it looks slick/inviting to all.
cool
Ronny Chip-twist
I thought squatting was illegal in Scotland
21.06.2005 08:43
Tom
Tom...troll
21.06.2005 10:18
anarchoteapot
It's not squatted
21.06.2005 18:45
Ever since the little episode with the accounts Dissent has been quick to try and spend as much as they can before the final examination. this is one of those
worker
Please ignore the trolls
21.06.2005 20:34
active lens
press coverage
22.06.2005 08:44
21 June 2005 17:58
http://scotlandtoday.scottishtv.co.uk/content/default.asp?page=s1_1_1&newsid=8083
(see website for tv news video)
A radical protest group which is hoping to shut down the G8 summit at Gleneagles has set up an information shop in Edinburgh. The Dissent network says it wants to address public concern over what will happen during its demonstrations next month. With just over two weeks to go, security measures in the capital are being stepped up.
Edinburgh cabbie Eddie Cairney is a worried man. His taxi advertises McDonald's, one of the world's biggest corporations.
He said: "I picked up a few people and they said that I was a potential target during the G8. They were on the protest march and there were going to be targets and I was one of them because I was a McDonald advert taxi."
The Dissent network says those kind of fears are misplaced. It's an alliance of 25 groups, some of which involve anarchists. It's hoping to close down the summit by blockading roads round Gleneagles. It's also planning protests in the capital itself - hence the shop on Leith Walk.
Jane Hill, a campaigner from the Twinford Dissent! group said: "It's a space where people from Edinburgh can come and get the information they need. I'm very conscious that people have concerns about the protests so we're setting up an open space, an open shop where people are welcome to have a cup of coffee and find out what's going on."
Dissent activists will join the Make Poverty History march advertised today on Glasgow's Finniston Crane, but its websites say they will do so under another slogan - Make Capitalism History. Edinburgh is facing a massive security operation. The parliament and Holyrood Palace are being encircled with a steel fence - a precaution, say the police.
Protesters from all over Europe and further afield are now heading to Scotland. But this is kind of unprecedented security really necessary? The simple answer is at the moment, no one can say for sure.
stv