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August 20, 1999
ANARCHY IN THE UK
SchNEWS
Published in Brighton by Justice? - Brighton's Direct Action collective
Issue 224, Friday 20th August 1999
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ANARCHY IN THE UK
"A picture is developing of a cabal of anarchist ringleaders who ally themselves
to protest movements and subvert them for their own ends."
- Evening Standard, August 11
What is it about anarchists that makes everyone love them so much?
While the solar eclipse has been looming, their image has been stock
fare for news editors and police who have kept them paramount upon
the nation's consciousness, with word of their suspected activities
on everyone's lips.
‘Anarchist violence erupted at an eclipse site yesterday as police
fought to close down an illegal rave' barked the Express
on August 11. What has so stirred the blood of this particular tabloid?
Apparently, ‘Officers believe members of the anarchist group Reclaim
the Streets - who played a key role in the riots in London in June
- are on the site'. June 18's memorable day of action against London's
financial centre, is still playing on some people's minds. And the
trouble seems to be spreading, with:
‘Anarchists ‘hijacking' GM food protest groups' , as proclaims
the Evening Standard (Aug 11), identifying ‘links between organisers
of the GM food protests and those responsible for the 18 June action'.
No shit, Sherlock. But the career of those anarchists seems not
only to have broadened; now, they're mobile:
‘Some of the most ancient stones in Penwith could be desecrated
and vandalised by travelling anarchists prior to next week's total
eclipse' we read in The Cornishman (Aug 5). Again, it is ‘The same
groups of anarchists who have recently rioted in central London
[who] are on their way to target the Men an Tol stones near Morvah.'
Might they not be tired after infiltrating anti-GM groups and raving
all night? Apparently not; as, reports the paper, those wacky anarchists
are getting a bit arty: ‘We believe that they intend to disrupt
the eclipse celebrations at the stones....by painting the holed
stone white to make it look like a Polo-Mint'.
Phew! You can see why, in the words of one Cornwall resident reported
in The West Briton: ‘People are scared to go out of their doors.
People will protect their property in any way they can. The police
seem to have no conception of how scared everyone is out here.'
On the other hand, the mass action and street carnival that London
saw on June 18 was aimed at hurting some of the major financial
institutions based in the banking district – hardly a threat to
yer average Jo(e), who stands to gain as much ‘trickledown' from
the selling of futures as did Bob Crachitt.
So: from whence such terror? If, as the Evening Standard
claims, ‘A picture is developing of a cabal of anarchist ringleaders'
- just who is painting it? The police have recently released to
the press a number of stills from CCTV footage of the riot, which,
apparently, a crack team of City of London and Metropolitan officers
have been busily scrutinising since the day. Their analysis, claim
the police in a recent report, points to a number of individuals
orchestrating the rioting.
Police ‘have pinpointed six smartly-dressed men as the ringleaders'
babbles the Sun of August 10. The Mail lets on that ‘The
ringleaders carried mobile phones and could be seen huddled in corners
apparently communicating with each other' , before offering the
predictable revelation that ‘a number of rioters drank huge quantities
of alcohol and took drugs.' The Evening Standard of the day before
adds, darkly: ‘One even carried a copy of the Financial Times.'
If anyone who wore a suit must have been in charge of the riot,
you'd better not make too much effort dressing up for Hallowe'en
this year, lest you're held responsible for the entire festival.
By dint of similar reasoning, the police note that some funds went
into hiring the vans and soundsystem for the event, and that someone
involved in Reclaim the Streets has a pot of wedge from his rich
folks. Ergo: he funded the do.
The police seem to be just the kind of people whose salacious minds
lap up tabloid sensationalism – and take it literally. You can imagine
their team, huddled wide-eyed over monitor screens, whispering to
one another like children telling ghost stories around a campfire.
Look - there's that ‘man in a suit with a mobile phone who called
the shots in the City riot' (The Independent). Well, someone at
SchNEWS knows someone, whose sister's boyfriend's cousin's
uncle plays darts with the person in that photo; and he never actually
carried a mobile. These kids seem to convince themselves of more-or-less
what they want to believe, before passing down the hot gossip to
the public.
For theirs is the same kind of Playschool logic as makes for damn
good copy, as amply proven by the quantity of press coverage generated
by the police report. The police are by no means innocent of this,
when that same report of theirs announces their intent ‘to achieve
long-term attrition' against direct action groups. It's an informal
conspiracy which is convenient for all sides; the media get some
great stories, the police and government to engineer a climate favourable
to their ends.
The promise of a new police campaign against grassroots activists
chimes strangely well with a recent Home Office consultation paper,
seeking to increase police powers to target ‘animal rights, and,
to a lesser extent environmental rights activists' . The key shift
here is semantic; at once redefining ‘violence' to include ‘serious
disruption' , while loosening the category of ‘terrorism' from one
purely denoting certain types of violence against people, to the
US definition of ‘serious violence against persons or property,
or the threat to use such violence'. The meaning of words is as
much a site of struggle as the fields or the streets, as well anyone
might remember, who next gets nicked with banner in hand, and labelled
‘terrorist'.
Meanwhile, who reports on all the other groups around the world
who took action on June 18; the unemployed, the unions, the landless
and indigenous groups, who stand to get at least as surely screwed
by the free trade policies of the G8 summit which then took place?
In fact, there was one dissenting press article, which spoke of
June 18 in terms of IMF policy and the ‘social and environmental
breakdown [which] is occurring across the world' (The Guardian
Aug 14). But, you see, we know the author; glance at the name and
you'll see an aging ex-superstar comedian from north London. (And
the article all, presumably, inspired by literature he gleaned from
the info-stalls we did at a benefit gig he put on for us last year).
One other paper, at least, puts forward a calm voice of reason
. ‘Anarchist fears groundless', says the Cornish Guardian
on August 12, assuring us: ‘Fears that troublemakers would descend
on Penzance on Monday for an “anarchist jamboree” proved unfounded.'
* An Italian national is currently being held after being arrested
on June 18. He has limited English, but would appreciate support.
Write to: Onofrio Lo Verso, TC3014, HMP Rochester, 1 Ford Road,
Rochester, Kent ME1 3SQ
last updated: December 31, 2005
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