AUTONOMOUS SPACE FOR MIGRANTS AND ACTIVISTS OPENS IN CALAIS

Press Release 28 January, 2010, London NoBorders

Activists from the transnational No Borders network and the French
organisation, SôS Soutien aux Sans Papiers, have opened a large warehouse for migrants in Calais[1].

The building is to be an autonomous space for migrants and activists
struggling for the right to freedom of movement. It will be host to
information-sharing, debate and practical solidarity. The Kronstadt
building is located in the town that has become the symbol of Fortress
Europe, a place where police arrests and beatings of migrants are a
daily occurrence, and where night-time pursuits are relentless[2].

By this act, they stand in solidarity with those for whom border and immigration control is a discriminatory, oppressive and unjust reality.
In a real democracy, every person enriches society in myriad ways, and
no-one is surplus to requirements; neither the unemployed, the young,
the old, or the foreign.

Full Spectrum Resistance!

Events and protest against the 13th European Police Congress

In 2010 the European Police Congress, a meeting of international police functionaries, politicians and various actors of the security industry, is again going to take place in Berlin. It is the 13th convention and just like the Congress on European Security & Defence, it is being organised by the publishing group "Behörden Spiegel". According to the organisers, last years convention was visited by 1800 participants from 70 countries.

Double Networking

As officially stated, the convention aims at "reinforcing existent relationships and developing new practices". The focal point is the expansion and consolidation of the cooperation of European repressive institutions, whose agenda is concerned with an "EU Internal Security Strategy". On the schedule is the "Stockholm Programme", a "multi-annual" programme on the future of European home affairs. This five year programme again calls for a "war on terrorism, organised crime and illegal migration", at the same time demanding the expansion of police, military and intelligence service cooperation. This encompasses the adoption of new technological standards for surveillance and control, for which the security industry will exhibit various products in the congress lounge.

The police congress wants to be "trendsetting" for the embedding of intelligence service methods into police procedures. Surveillance and repression increasingly operates "proactive", an in the police forces jargon common synonym for an "anticipatory approach", which has also been adopted by the NATO. During the police congress there will be diverse forums in which strategies are being put together to "fuse inner and outer security". Accordingly one panel poses itself the question "What can we learn from the armed forces?” Representatives of the NATO meet with police officials and intelligence agents, interior ministers and state secretaries go for coffee with security industry CEO’s at their stalls. Last year a podium talk on civil-military cooperation was given by Kai Vittrup, the chief of the EU police mission in Afghanistan. Vittrup has been chief of the UN police forces in the Kosovo as well as before being involved in leading policing positions in Sudan, Iraq and East-Timor. For years he has been chief of the police in Copenhagen, which only recently at the climate summit demonstrated how the policing of protest and resistance shall take place in the future to come.

Life is too short to be controlled

No borders, no nations!

A day out of control in London
Saturday 23rd January 2010
2pm St. Pancras International -> 4.30pm Piccadilly Circus

While the migration regime is fortifying itself and setting up rings of
defence around European wealth, inner control is tightening to keep public order, at a time where the nation state already seems to be a dead corpse. And with an economy which exploits the most virtual
property, the need to control even the remotest parts of people’s lives is increasing.

Responses of Social Movements to the Spanish Presidency of the EU

To mark the Spanish Presidency of the European Union, dozens of Spanish organisations have decided to unite to express their condemnation, once again, of the capitalist and neoliberal project which the EU represents. These organisations are coordinated with others in the rest of the European Union and Latin America.

The EU has shown itself to be an antidemocratic institutional framework serving the interests of multinationals and member state elite organisations. We can use as an example of this the economic guidance which goes against the basic social rights of the Lisbon Treaty, passed without consulting the European citizens (except in Ireland, since it is required by law).

To serve the aforementioned interests, the EU has not hesitated in lowering working conditions and facilitating layoffs and the destruction of employment, as the “flexicurity” doctrine demonstrates. It also defends, using all its diplomatic machinery, the abusive commercial and business strategies of European companies in Southern Hemisphere countries. The signatory organisations reject the pressures to which the EU is submitting third party countries so they sign the commercial treaties, the wrongly labelled “Association Agreements”. They are a form of “neocolonialism” and plundering, both of the natural resources and the inhabitants in the Southern Hemisphere.

CALLOUT TO UNITE AGAINST REPRESSION AND THE POLICE STATE. TOGETHER WE ARE POWERFUL!

Meeting in Paris for a transantional call against repression

Callout to unite against repression and the police state, 16. January 2010.
 
Anti-fascists!
Sans papiers strikers!
Unions!
Squatters!
Anarchists!
Socialists!
Anti-prison activists!
Anti-capitalists!

You are all invited to the first meeting to organise a mass mobilisation in Paris. This would be the first large-scale action against the systematic attacks against migrants since the destruction of the ‘Jungles’ in Calais.

Following the destruction of the squats and Jungles in Calais in a great PR stunt, Besson publicly committed to making Calais a migrant-free zone.

Since then, the several hundred migrants who returned to Calais have been systematically flushed out anywhere they seek to shelter, day and night.

Activists from the No Borders network have maintained a presence in Calais since June 2009. They bear witness to continual the police repression; beatings, gassings, and night-time chases.