Skip to content or view mobile version

Home | Mobile | Editorial | Mission | Privacy | About | Contact | Help | Security | Support

A network of individuals, independent and alternative media activists and organisations, offering grassroots, non-corporate, non-commercial coverage of important social and political issues.

UK UK Newswire Archive

Full article

15 dead as Kazakh rebel workers fight cops - video link

19-12-2011 07:39

AT LEAST 15 people have been killed and 70 injured as Kazakh police opened on unarmed rebel oil workers and their supporters in the west of the country.

Full article

Wishing you a Better Elephant in 2012!

19-12-2011 00:55

Audio from the walk around "regeneration" cites in Elephant & Castle, organised by the Southwark Notes Archives Group. More info and fleshed out article to come.

Article to come soon...

Full article

Prisoner Solidarity: Send Letters to anti-fascists in jail this xmas

19-12-2011 00:55

Below are the details of five imprisoned anti-fascists. Can you take a moment to write to them showing your solidarity? Also see http://www.brightonabc.org.uk/prisoners.html for further prisoner lists.

And keep your eyes peeled for Edinburgh ABC who'll be meeting to do letter-writing in the new year.

read more

Full article

Take Action: Northern Foie Gras Peddlers

18-12-2011 22:42

Force Fed 'til Dead - No Excuse!
Foie gras is shunned by many and is even illegal to produce in the UK. Ducks and geese have pipes forced down their throats daily and grain pumped in, with ruptured throats being a common occurance. This method of farming creates an artificially diseased and swollen liver, causing birds to become imobile. When slaughtered, the liver is removed and sold as foie gras.

Full article

Brixton Riots 2011: A Detailed Itinerary

18-12-2011 20:55

This is something I've been meaning to finish for quite a while, but haven't got round to. It seems good to get it done with before the end of the year. It's a fairly detailed eye witness account of the civil disturbances which took place in Brixton on the night of 7-8 August 2011. It can be considered a companion article to these two:

  • http://london.indymedia.org/articles/9828
  • http://london.indymedia.org/articles/9713

I realize it's out of date, but I wanted to get it all down before the memories faded.

It started getting mildly interesting on Stockwell Road. There was a young black kid, maybe 15, cruising down the other side of the street, clutching his cramped side. It looked as if he had been running towards Brixton for quite a long time and couldn't run any more, but didn't want to slow down.

As we walked past Brixton Academy, a grinning teenaged girl walked quickly toward us, carrying several stacked boxes of clothing. The look on her face was one of triumph, as she carried her boxes happily past the police station.

Everything was quiet until we walked under the rail overpass and made it into Brixton proper. Suddenly there was a confusing flurry of impressions.

On one side of the street, by the M&S, was a group of 30-50 neighourhood young people, ranging in age from mid-teens to mid-20s. On the other side was a pathetic string of maybe a dozen riot police. The police were uselessly ringed in a semi-circle on the east side of the street, guarding the shopfront of an already-smashed-in Footlocker shoe store. A tiny trickle of smoke could be seen coming out of it.

The kids would drift onto the street now and then, and the cops weren't eager to try and push them off it - this was done by passing motorists. Drivers coming up Brixton road were freaking out, probably with a thought process like:

"Police in riot gear on the right."
"Brixton youth on left."
"Time to flee."

Cars were tearing past, accelerating through 60-odd miles an hour in a desperate bid to get the hell out of a neighbourhood with a global rep for riots. Ironically, despite all the media talk of lawlessness, criminality, and street-kids out of control, it was the panicked car-owning classes that put us at most risk of serious physical injury during the night. Standing on the road looking at the line of cops, watching to see if they were going to attack, we were nearly blindsided by half a dozen cars accelerating up Brixton Road towards us. They missed us by inches. We stepped back onto the sidewalk, taking a quick look around. M&S had its windows smashed in, as did all the other chain stores on the west side of the street. We took a couple photos of the cops and surveyed the scene further south.

Looking past the tube station, there were a few groups of people milling around on Brixton Road further down, at the corner near the Ritzy Cinema. We decided to move down toward them and see what was going on. 

More groups of people were showing up, coming together in a larger crowd. In the space of five minutes, there were perhaps 150 people on the scene. They started bashing in the front of the H&M clothing store. The police, meanwhile, redeployed into a widely-spaced line across Brixton Road, and stood looking on from maybe 100 meters away - they were roughly level with the Brixton Tube. By this time, despite the heavy rain which had started, the Footlocker behind had burst into quite impressive flames.

Not wanting to get our heads justifiably kicked in by people engaged in some seriously arrestable activity, we turned our cameras towards the line of riot cops in front of the burning shop, and got a few nice shots of them. Then we sheltered in a doorway, waiting for the rain to let up a bit. The cops moved up to Electric Avenue, to better keep watch as H&M was looted. People were heading into the pitch-black shop, coming out laden with clothes. While we waited, a guy who was huddling with us in the doorway let us know that there was a bigger group heading down Effra Road.

The H&M had been mostly cleaned out by this point, and the crowd of people coming out of it had obviously heard about the group on Effra Road, because they moved off in a mass, heading south. As soon as the group which had been looting H&M made it past Windrush Square, the cops made a lot of paramilitary sounds and moved rapidly up to guard the now-empty shell of the shop.

I couldn't help but laugh at this - all the shouted orders, precision marching, and tactical formations in the world couldn't make up for the fact that tooled-up riot police had watched people steal stuff without intervening for over 15 minutes. The cops were scared. As they moved up to the H&M, all the disciplinarian noises rang hollow on the now-deserted road. It seemed as though they were trying to prove to themselves that they were, really, still the police, and not just a bunch of badly-dressed guys with sticks.

Meanwhile, the action had moved further south. We decided to go check it out.

In the distance, we could see quite a large crowd of people spilling across Effra Road from the estate on the west side of the road. Three riot vans full of cops suddenly pulled to a halt at the junction of St. Matthews Road and Effra Road, and a few dozen riot police got out, hurriedly strapping on their shields, putting down faceplates, and readying their batons. At this point, one of the most surprising moments of the entire night took place. More vans were coming from behind us.

As the cops pulled up, two of the young black kids near us looked forward at the cops as they deployed into line, and back at the flashing lights on the approaching vans. One looked at the other, and said, in a perfectly commonplace South London accent, "Shit. They're gonna fucking kettle us. Let's go!" 

A few things about this seemingly innocuous exchange caught my attention. First, until the serious student demonstrations started on 30 November 2010, the use of the word "kettling" was not commonplace in London except among activist types. Second, he said it with real urgency; only people who have been forcibly detained inside a kettle for hours have that tone of voice, or run so quickly to escape one. By their dress and accents, these young men were from Brixton, and from the local estates. They had also been in the political anti-cuts demonstrations and student riots, and knew about police tactics.

They didn't have to think much about their own tactical response: move quickly. The two of them ran around the riot cops, toward the waiting crowd up ahead.

We followed behind, and got behind a bus shelter while we evaluated the opposing forces. A few masked-up, white middle-class student-protestor types also used the bus shelter as a staging point, then ran ahead to join the fray.

On one side were several dozen cops moving south down Effra Road and steaming across the parking lot to save the Currys electronics megastore.  On the opposite side was a crowd of large but indeterminate size, since we could only see the front of it. They were maybe 50 meters from the police.

At this point, with five vans stopped and emptied, the police weren't getting any reinforcements. But minute by minute, the crowd of people on Effra Road was being swelled by more and more locals.

On one side of Effra Road are two huge chain-stores: Halfords, which sells hardware and building supplies, and Currys, which sells TVs, stereo equipment, computers, and other portable, high-value stuff. On the other side of Effra Road is a huge public housing estate, where people who can't afford any of that stuff sit on the their balconies and ponder the allure of consumer goods, so close and yet so far away.

That night, the estate made a collective decision. In twos and threes, with groups of friends, people were trickling between the buildings of the estate and out onto the road, some carrying crowbars. Others stood between buildings, armed with long metal poles which looked as though they'd been ripped off some scaffolding, waiting for the cops to come onto the estate. A few people were visible on third or fifth-storey balconies. Whatever happened next, the estate was clearly a death-trap for the cops, and a safe zone for the people milling around in front of Currys.

Not wanting to get caught between the cop reinforcements coming up from behind us and the crowd in front, we decided to play safe. We turned around, walked back up to St. Matthews Road, and did a detour around the whole estate, so that we could join up with the crowd and approach things from a somewhat safer angle. We walked up Brixton Hill, and down Brixton Water Lane. As we came back to Effra Road, we walked into a strange scene.

Amazingly, the cops could barely be seen. When we'd last seen them, they were in a wedge formation, batons at the ready, heading across the Currys parking lot to save the beleagured megastore. Now they were in the far distance, back by St. Matthews Road, where they'd started out. They had clearly made no headway against the locals.

People were coming down from the massive Tulse Hill housing estates in a steady stream. Cars were lined up for 200 metres on both sides of Effra Road, starting at the Currys and extending to Brixton Water Lane. Hundreds of people were methodically stripping Currys of all available goods. Some people were coming out of the shop and stuffing the loot into the waiting cars. Lines of boys in their mid-teens carried 60-inch televisions off into the estate across the road, ripping the packaging off as they went. The road was paved with TV boxes. People were calling friends. Contrary to sensational media reports about Twitter and Blackberry Messaging being used for organising, almost nobody was bothering to text anything - voice communication is simply a lot quicker in a riot situation.

The atmosphere was a strange mixture of friendliness, tension, and businesslike efficiency. The friendliness came from the common danger and the feeling that tonight, it was everyone against the cops. The tension came from the several thousand years of jail time that would ensue if everyone got busted for everything they were stealing. And the efficiency: it was very different from an "activist" crowd in England. I remember that it struck me quite hard that not a single person was drinking, despite the triumphant, near-carnival feeling that was in the air. People knew the trouble that they'd be in if they screwed up. 

A group of young girls, running headlong down Tulse Hill towards Currys, smacked into us in their excitement, stopped short, and said politely, "Oh. Excuse me!", then they kept going, off to score the consumer electronics of their dreams. One guy stood around with us for a while, watching the crowd, then came to some decision deep within himself, smiled, looked me in the eye, and announced: "I'm going to go get me a lappy." We grinned back. And off he went, through the rain. I hope he got something good, maybe a MacBook Pro.

Cars doors were slamming, tires were squealing down Morval Road as tail-lights faded into the distance. We decided to head back to Brixton and see what was up. Re-tracing our steps up Brixton Water Lane and down Brixton Hill again, we crunched our way over more electronics packaging, a few Playstations and TV boxes among them. Kids were trickling through the estate with their new stuff, heading out west up Hayter Road.

Brixton Road was still closed by the same sad-looking line of riot police that had been guarding the empty street when we'd left an hour before. To get back to Stockwell Road, and homewards, we would need to go the back way. We walked up Acre Lane, and stopped for a smoke, looking at a small band of police guarding the entrace to the big Tesco's there. As we stood there, a guy walked towards us up the street, looked us up and down, looked at the cops in front of Tescos, and then flashed a huge grin. My grin was a mirror image of his.

We made our way back past Brixton through the back streets, heading down Ferndale Road, and getting back onto Stockwell Road in front of Brixton Academy. Looking to our right, we noticed a strange light. We had to blink a few times to figure out what was going on, but then the scene resolved itself: inside the Nandos, a six-foot high jet of flame was coming off the stove. Somebody had clearly set the stove to its highest setting on their way out of the smashed restaurant (located across the street from the infamous Brixton Police Station).

It was an interesting photo, so we decided to stop and snap a shot of it. As the phone screens lit up, a voice from twenty feet away rang out: "Hey. You. Time to fuck off."  Looking back up Bellefields Road, a huge guy was standing there, holding the Nandos cash register in his hands. It made me realize that quite a lot of the burning throughout London was probably an attempt to destroy physical and CCTV evidence.

We put the cameras away. It was time to leave.

Stockwell Road was relatively peaceful. One group of kids was smashing in the William Hill betting shop, leaving the two locally-owned convenience stores alone. Eventually, we made it past Stockwell Tube and headed northwards, on our way home.

Full article | 11 comments

Bradley Manning, Wikileaks, and Judicial Farce

18-12-2011 20:38

After 19 long months of detention, including solitary confinement, Private Bradley Manning has been brought before the court – sort of. His pre-trial proceedings which began on Friday 16th December will be heard by a military ‘investigating official’, the equivalent of a civilian court judge.The hearings are supposed to continue through this weekend. The proceedings are being held in Fort Meade, in the north-eastern state of Maryland, also home to the National Security Agency.

Full article

Three more jailed for Facebook comments on UK summer riots

18-12-2011 18:55

Original post: http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/12/490315.html

Two teenagers from Dundee, Scotland, and a 22-year-old man from Kidderminster, Worcestershire, in England, were imprisoned for years for statements posted on the social media site Facebook at the time of riots in English cities last summer.

read more

Full article

Criminalisation of protest in Notts

18-12-2011 16:55

On Saturday 17th December, two protesters were arrested during a demonstration held by Notts Uncut. A supporter was arrested at Bridewell Police Station later that evening.

Almost as soon as demonstrators arrived at the meeting point outside Boots, police were confrontational, asking people for their names, addresses and dates of birth (which they are not obliged to give).

The police then sought to impose conditions on the protest under Section 14 of the Public Order Act 1986. Protesters were told that they could not go within 20 yards of specified stores. When one demonstrator, unfamiliar with imperial measurements asked what this was in metric she was arrested for refusing to comply with the s.14 directions.

Her husband then tried to remonstrate with the police and was arrested under Section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986. He was then manhandled into the back of a police van.

A call-out was made for supporters to go to Bridewell Police Station where they were taken. A local vicar and the 11 year old son of the arrestees were denied entry to enquire about their wellbeing.

Some supporters stayed at the police station to wait for the arrestees, while others went back to continue protesting. Additional supporters turned up throughout the afternoon and early-evening response to the call-out.

The first arrestee was released shortly after 4pm, but there was an extended delay before the second was let out. The group went into the reception (which they were no longer prevented from doing) to warm up while they waited.

After some time Inspector D. Sharp appeared with a number of other officers and demanded that people leave. He alleged that they were "intimidating" people going about their lawful business (presumably implying that waiting in a reception does not constitute "lawful business").

Sharp was asked by a number of people present what the legal basis of his demands was, however he refused to give one and arrested one of the supporters.

All of the protesters had been released by about 9pm. The two arrested at the protest have been bailed to return in the new year, but not charged. Their bail conditions include legally dubious restrictions on their right to protest.

This is a major escalation of Nottinghamshire Police's handling of protesters. Notts Uncut demonstrations have become a semi-regular occurence in Nottingham. Traditionally police locally have had a very hands-off approach to the protest.

The attempt to criminalise solidarity, arresting those waiting for their friends, is a particularly worrying development.

The protest was coordinated nationally with others, as part of the UK Uncut "Christmas Special" timed to coincide with the busiest shopping day of the year. There were also six arrests in London, where Topshop was protected by riot police.

Regular Uncut participants noted that the police officers assigned to the protest did not include any of the familiar faces from previous demonstrations.

It is possible, that this ridiculously heavy-handed response was a one-off, driven centrally. However, yesterday's policing should viewed in the context of the arrest of the 'Atos Two', which catalysed the formation of the Nottingham Defence Campaign. In that case, one of the arresting officers admitted, "There's been too much of this sort of thing going on and we've been told to crackdown."

We should not be surprised by any of this. We live in a class society in which the police's primary function is, and always has been, to protect the interests of the bosses. As the imposition of "austerity" heightens class conflict, we can only expect this bias to become more explicit.

In short, we should assume yesterday's policing is typical of what we can expect from Nottinghamshire Police in the future and plan accordingly. To this end Nottingham Defence Campaign, along with others, will be organising a meeting early in the new year to plan a coordinated response.

Full article | 1 comment

German MP: Investigation needed re: Int. Undercover operations

18-12-2011 14:43

Today,
Samstag, den 17. Dezember 2011, German MP Andrej Hunkoissued a press release after the Guardian release a story about UK women suing police regarding undercover operations. Hunko states that the German parliament must look into the relevant operations that took place in Germany.

Full article

Basic daily rights under threat for 20,000+ UK citizens!

18-12-2011 14:28

How would you feel if it was the case that you, or your loved ones, had the most fundamental aspects of your lives constrained and controlled? Do you take for granted the minutiae of freedom in your life? Over 21, 000 people are confronting the terrifying reality of losing such freedoms. Including myself. We have to call on our allies to support the campaign to make the coalition government rethink their attack on us. If this funding is stopped we risk living in worse conditions and with less freedoms than convicted criminals.

Full article

Why are the police protecting Phillip Green? - A thought from jail....

18-12-2011 14:02

Yesterday I was arrested inside Topshop on Oxford Street after just two minutes of protesting.

For chanting “pay your tax”, two snarling beefcake thugs hired by Topshop bent my arms behind my back, shoved me in front of two coppers, who then frog marched me out to the back of the store, and onto the police station, where I remained for seven hours.

Police station cells are barren concrete holes where the only signs of life come from the immortal carvings etched into the wooden bench by some previous guests of the State.

Yesterday’s police cell promoted two things things: 1)Walking in a circle 2)Thinking………

Why on earth are the police protecting the likes of Topshop, Vodafone, Boots, and Barclays bank!! The bosses of these companies take an active interest in reducing their contributions to public funds.

Full article | 5 comments

The Nasty Party versus the people - latest Porkbolter from Worthing now out!

18-12-2011 13:13

THE LATEST issue of Worthing's anarchic newsletter The Porkbolter has hit the streets of the West Sussex seaside town - and is also online. Here is the main article.

Full article

“ATOS Kills!” Proclaim Demonstrators at Atos Edinburgh Benefits Testing Centre

18-12-2011 00:55

“ATOS KILLS!” Pronounce Demonstrators at Atos Edinburgh Benefits Testing Centre

 

read more

Full article

SOS bus arrives for Labour

18-12-2011 00:55

read more

Full article | 2 comments

Kristallnacht in Palestine

17-12-2011 23:43

Virtually daily, Israeli security forces attack, kill, or injure Palestinian civilians with impunity. They also destroy their property by bombing, shelling, bulldozing and uprooting it. At the same time, Israeli authorities wink and nod, occasionally decry, yet do nothing to deter extremist settler crimes against Palestinian civilians. Most often, they're given license to terrorize, vandalize and commit physical violence with impunity. Rarely ever is anyone held accountable. The same holds for its own security forces, no matter how outrageous their crimes.

Full article

Notts Uncut Arrests

17-12-2011 22:55

Statement of Defiance

Three people were arrested today whilst taking part in Notts Uncut action outside Topshop. The first arrest was for "refusing to comply with section 14". The woman concerned had been asked to move 20 yards away from the front of the shop. She asked the officer how far that was in metres or where he wanted her to move to (being of a generation which was taught metric) and was promptly arrested. Her disabled husband was arrested shortly afterwards for the same offence and manhandled violently into the back of a police van.

Another protester was arrested in the police station reception later that day for the heinous crime of asking when one of the protesters arrested previously was going to be released.

Notts Uncut believes this to be yet another example of the political policing increasingly being used to stifle peaceful protest. We can only be encouraged by this behaviour as the over-reaction of the "powers that be" only goes to show that we are making an impact.

We will not be intimidated into silence.

We will not be bullied into submission.

To quote a valued member of Notts Uncut "We're here; we're Notts Uncut; and we're still not going shopping"

Full article | 1 addition | 3 comments

Three more jailed for Facebook comments on UK summer riots

17-12-2011 21:36

Two teenagers from Dundee, Scotland, and a 22-year-old man from Kidderminster, Worcestershire, in England, were imprisoned for years for statements posted on the social media site Facebook at the time of riots in English cities last summer.

Full article

Free Food! Free Bradley Manning! Cardiff action

17-12-2011 20:36

Cardiff Anarchist Black Cross and WISE Up for Bradley Manning organised a Free food! Free Bradley Manning! stall in Cardiff city centre this afternoon. The banners were also hung over a busy road into Cardiff this morning.
Upcoming Coverage
View and post events
Upcoming Events UK
24th October, London: 2015 London Anarchist Bookfair
2nd - 8th November: Wrexham, Wales, UK & Everywhere: Week of Action Against the North Wales Prison & the Prison Industrial Complex. Cymraeg: Wythnos o Weithredu yn Erbyn Carchar Gogledd Cymru

Ongoing UK
Every Tuesday 6pm-8pm, Yorkshire: Demo/vigil at NSA/NRO Menwith Hill US Spy Base More info: CAAB.

Every Tuesday, UK & worldwide: Counter Terror Tuesdays. Call the US Embassy nearest to you to protest Obama's Terror Tuesdays. More info here

Every day, London: Vigil for Julian Assange outside Ecuadorian Embassy

Parliament Sq Protest: see topic page
Ongoing Global
Rossport, Ireland: see topic page
Israel-Palestine: Israel Indymedia | Palestine Indymedia
Oaxaca: Chiapas Indymedia
Regions
All Regions
Birmingham
Cambridge
Liverpool
London
Oxford
Sheffield
South Coast
Wales
World
Other Local IMCs
Bristol/South West
Nottingham
Scotland
Social Media
You can follow @ukindymedia on indy.im and Twitter. We are working on a Twitter policy. We do not use Facebook, and advise you not to either.
Support Us
We need help paying the bills for hosting this site, please consider supporting us financially.
Other Media Projects
Schnews
Dissident Island Radio
Corporate Watch
Media Lens
VisionOnTV
Earth First! Action Update
Earth First! Action Reports
Topics
All Topics
Afghanistan
Analysis
Animal Liberation
Anti-Nuclear
Anti-militarism
Anti-racism
Bio-technology
Climate Chaos
Culture
Ecology
Education
Energy Crisis
Fracking
Free Spaces
Gender
Globalisation
Health
History
Indymedia
Iraq
Migration
Ocean Defence
Other Press
Palestine
Policing
Public sector cuts
Repression
Social Struggles
Technology
Terror War
Workers' Movements
Zapatista
Major Reports
NATO 2014
G8 2013
Workfare
2011 Census Resistance
Occupy Everywhere
August Riots
Dale Farm
J30 Strike
Flotilla to Gaza
Mayday 2010
Tar Sands
G20 London Summit
University Occupations for Gaza
Guantanamo
Indymedia Server Seizure
COP15 Climate Summit 2009
Carmel Agrexco
G8 Japan 2008
SHAC
Stop Sequani
Stop RWB
Climate Camp 2008
Oaxaca Uprising
Rossport Solidarity
Smash EDO
SOCPA
Past Major Reports
Encrypted Page
You are viewing this page using an encrypted connection. If you bookmark this page or send its address in an email you might want to use the un-encrypted address of this page.
If you recieved a warning about an untrusted root certificate please install the CAcert root certificate, for more information see the security page.