Infoshop News

Brisbane has a new anarchist infoshop, launched just a few weeks ago, and Jura Books in Sydney, one of two in town (the other being a newly relocated Black Rose), is in financial trouble. Well, according to the Sydney Morning Herald‘s Business section anyway…

Black and Green

Corner of Hardgrave and Spring Streets, West End, Brisbane
Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday 11am–7pm
Email : brisbaneanarchy[at]riseup[dot]net / davek[at]brisbaneanarchy[dot]net

“Bastard Books and Beating Hearts Press have combined forces to bring a new radical infoshop to Brisbane’s streets. Now you can come to a friendly and exciting place to read, discuss, plan and enjoy anarchism and radical thinking. We have stock from AK Press, Black Rose, Freedom Press, Microcosm and over one hundred anarchist and radical zines and pamphlets going at poverty-friendly prices.”

Jura

440 Parramatta Road, Petersham, Sydney
Open Thursday, Friday 2–7pm; Saturday, Sunday 12–5pm
Phone : (02) 9550 9931
Email : jura[at]jura[dot]org[dot]au

Anarchists with capitalist habits
Scott Rochfort
Sydney Morning Herald
June 23, 2007

There is some good news for business leaders, tyrants and dictators attending the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Sydney this September. The “only anarchist organisation in Sydney that owns a property”, the Jura Collective, has conceded it is having financial problems. This could mean it will be too preoccupied with its broken hot water heater and the hole in its roof to protest against the Imperialistic Capitalist swine set to attend the APEC forum. In addition to having to fork out $500 to fix the awning and sign that fell down outside its Parramatta Road headquarters, Jura is having a hard time knocking down the mortgage on its property. “For the last five years we have only managed to pay the interest on the mortgage,” said Jura in a call to arms to its supporters this week. “Even though there is only $20,000 left to pay, we only ever pay the compulsory minimum interest – which is about $2,000 per year (paid monthly). That’s $2000 per year waste[d] on the bank.” All this left Reflux wondering. Anarchists paying interest? They may have lost their principles.

Posted in Anarchism | 1 Comment

APEC and political ontology

Ahead of the APEC Summit in Sydney in September, police are being given extraordinary powers so that they may legally quash public protest. Members of the public, on the other hand, are being expected to exercise supernatural powers in order to discover if they’ve been banned from engaging in such manifestations.

Those on APEC black list ‘know who they are’
Edmund Tadros
Sydney Morning Herald
June 19, 2007

INDIVIDUALS do not need to be told they are on a list of “excludable persons” from this year’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference in Sydney – they should just know, says the office of the NSW Police Minister…

And on the whole, this is just as well, for it appears that state authorities are still not absolutely sure who’s who in the zoo when it comes to those who may transform themselves from mild mannered nerd to mad, bad and dangerous to know.

Spy for us and we’ll drop charge
Edmund Tadros
Sydney Morning Herald
June 18, 2007

AS DANIEL JONES walked through Circular Quay and towards the ferry terminal 12 nights ago, someone called his name. Mr Jones, an outspoken 20-year-old student activist, turned to face a man he had never met. Smiling and wearing a blue bomber jacket, the man introduced himself simply as Ahmed.

Ahmed, with a beard and receding dark hair, said he was from intelligence at NSW Police and had an offer to make. He wanted the student to spy on his fellow activists before the APEC meeting in September. In return Ahmed implied he could help “make arrangements” about charges Mr Jones faces over his part in last year’s G20 protests in Melbourne…

See also : APEC Meeting (Police Powers) Bill 2007

Posted in State / Politics | Leave a comment

ISD Memorial / Ian Stuart is Dead Celebration, 2007 // Working class punks support The Birmy

Blood & Honour Australia and the Southern Cross Hammerskins have announced a date and line-up for their annual Road Safety Awareness concert. The date is Saturday, October 13 (two weeks after Collingwood wins the AFL Grand Final) and the line-up is Bail Up!, Fortress, Quick & the Dead and — we are promised — at least one other band or performer from one of them bloody foreign countries what’s full of all them bloody foreigners.

Speaking of bloody foreigners, while the Australian franchise of the B&H brand was the first to be established outside of the UK, following recent splits (2004/5) in the international movement, it is currently only recognised by one of the two main tendencies to emerge from the splits — a faction aligned with the Hammerskins. And the Hammerskins, too, especially in the network’s US heartland, are being increasingly forced to compete with other bonehead organisations for the short attention spans and loyalties of even shorter-haired racists, with large numbers of independent and unaligned boneheads apparently growing tired of the Hammerskins’ elitist attitudes and behaviours.

Bloodshed and Retaliation

The ongoing devolution of the bonehead scene began with what will live in infamy in bonehead lore as “the pool cue and blowtorch incident.” It happened in mid-1999, when Hammerskin Nation’s power was peaking, with about 600 Hammerskins distributed across five regional divisions. To become a Hammerskin, a bonehead who wanted to join had to be a “prospect” for one year, then a “probate” for six months. All this time, and forever after, they were required to pay $10 a month in dues to their local chapter, and $10 a month to Hammerskin national leaders in Dallas, who asserted dominion over boneheads nationwide, portrayed Hammerskin Nation as elite, and enforced strict codes of conduct.

Early that summer, these leaders issued a direct order to the members and two probates of the Indiana chapter of the Northern Hammerskins that set in motion a cycle of bloodshed, retaliation, and dissent that continues to shape the level and nature of bonehead criminal activity in this country and abroad.

The order was simple: Hammerskin leaders had determined that a certain Hammerskin was no longer worthy of membership due to his persistent sexual propositioning of a fellow member’s wife. They directed the Indiana Hammerskins to seek out this offender, inform him of their decision, and then “remove” his Hammerskin “colors,” meaning any patches, pins or other markers indicating his affiliation.

Looking back, the Dallas shot callers may wish they’d been more specific on the meaning of “remove.” When a pack of five Indiana Hammerskins tracked down the offender, they not only roughed him up and tore off his colors, they held him down, burned off his Hammerskin tattoos with a blowtorch, and then shoved a pool cue up his rectum.

The Hammerskin leaders were outraged and banished the attackers for exceeding their orders. Basically, the five Indiana boneheads were punished for being too violent. Eight of the other Indiana Hammerskins turned in their patches in protest of the punishment and together, the 13 former Hammerskins formed a new, rogue crew they called Outlaw Hammerskins, which represented the first serious challenge to Hammerskin Nation authority…

But back to road safety.

Formed way back in 1981, Quick & the Dead is an old-school racist oi! band from Perth. In fact, Quick & the Dead is probably the first mob of string-plucking, tub-thumping boneheads to come from Down Under. The band is led by the almost 50 year-old bass player Murray Holmes, who has the dubious distinction of actually having shared a stage, alongside another Aussie, Adam Douglas, with the Skrewydriver himself, Ian Stuart. Holmes and Douglas joined the dead loser’s band in 1984, and left the following year, but not before taking part in the recording of Hail the New Dawn, widely regarded as being among the top one hundred albums ever to have been recorded by a middle class bloke from Blackpool with a Grammar school education who then died in a car accident in 1993.

Hail, incidentally, has an absolutely smashing cover by another dead bonehead, Nicky Crane, one which features a large group of muscular Vikings (wearing skirts and brandishing swords) disembarking from their longship and obviously about to penetrate deep into the English heartland. While all Stuart’s lyrics are batshit, the title track (Chorus: “Hail the new dawn! Hail the new dawn! Hail the new dawn! Hail the new dawn!”) is especially loopy for its claim that Ian and his pinheaded followers “will never submit to a six point master plan”; this being a reference, of course, to The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

    Within Australia, those wishing to purchase the world’s leading exponents of neo-Nazi muzak may do so through Sydney “hardcore” label Snapshot (Hail Victory and After the Fall are both available for $20) or through local neo-Nazi distro Scythian Services. And remember that, as Jay Snapshot says: “judge me all you want from what records i sell, but like the word you used before champ… its economics…”

Murray himself is convinced of the legitimacy of this text, as he is of the fact that the population of the town in which he lives all share his hatred and contempt for blacks and Asians. And — lemme *hic* tell you *hic* something — the problem with Australia, according to Murray, is the fact that ZOG has been letting in “so called refugees from all these sand nigger countries now for years” and “slowly but surely” their “numbers have increased” to “epidemic proportions”.

Quick Murray, behind you!

How much of a gutless wonder was Ian Stuart…?

Dave: Stuart was a coward who couldn’t fight to save his life. The fascists might regard him as some kind of nationalist super-hero, but he was just another bully who didn’t like it when the odds weren’t heavily in his favour. He was ambushed several times by AFA activists in London, and eventually fled to Derbyshire in order to escape the constant attacks. Hardly the actions of a brave street-fighter. A couple of friends of mine jumped him before a Blood and Honour gig at Swiss Cottage, and managed to hit him a couple of times before he ran away. At the gig afterwards, he deliberately left the blood to dry on his forehead, so that he could appear more heroic, and then went on stage and claimed that he had fought off a whole mob of “reds” single-handedly.

Did you ever go toe-to-toe with Nicky Crane?

Dave: No, and I’m glad I never had to. He was one of the few genuine hard men on the bonehead scene. I came across him twice. The first time was at the Main Event in Hyde Park, where he disembarked from a mini-bus with a dozen members of Skrewdriver Security. He immediately jumped back onto the bus when he saw the posse of anti-fascists charging out the park at him. The other occasion was when he was heading home from the West End one evening with a number of rent-boys in tow. We followed him for a while, but lost him at Charing Cross station. The interesting thing about Crane was that he was openly gay, but was never challenged about it by his bonehead mates until he was physically weakened by AIDS. He apparently renounced his fascist past during his dying days.

Obviously, it’s unknown at this stage where the gig will be held, but it’s unlikely to be held at The Birmy… although you never know. In any event, while the boneheads may have deserted The Birmy, local working class punks are only too happy to fill their boots, the next opportunity for them to congratulate the proprietor Gary on being such a Top Bloke being July 7, when Distorted Truth, Sewer Cider, The Boots, The Worst and Wot Rot will be holding a gig to celebrate The Worst’s five year anniversary and to launch their new EP. Coincidentally, on the same date in 1942, Heinrich Himmler granted permission for sterilization experiments at Auschwitz:

Sterilization of women was carried out by the pumping of a thick white test fluid, consisting of contrast medium and some unknown chemical agents, into the uterus and tubes. Also sterilizing operations were performed, the uterus, tubes and even sometimes breasts being removed. Women experienced great suffering during test fluid experiments and after them. Usually salpingitis or peritonitis followed which often proved fatal.

These experiments were performed on young and healthy Jewish women of 20-30 years of age, who had regular periods, a not too narrow cervix and who had borne at least one child. After the experiments they often lost their periods. Experiments were repeated from two to six times at intervals of from three to four weeks. In their course an X-ray control was carried on by screening and an X-ray was taken afterwards. The experiments aimed at the obliteration of the tubes. This was to be achieved through the inflammation of the mucous membrane of the uterus and of the tubes. This, in conjunction with the inflammation of the internal genital organs and often of the peritoneum caused widespread adhesions and fibrothic changes. Men were also sterilized through suture of the vas deferense.

The total number of sterilization experiments was estimated by witnesses at about 3,000 and of the test fluid experiments at about 1,000…

Enjoy the gig.

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism, Collingwood, History, Music | 13 Comments

Fascists and the Russian nanny state

From the International Herald Tribune‘s Russian press review, June 20, 2007:

ROSSIISKAYA GAZETA

FOUR CONVICTED OF RACIAL MURDER: A St. Petersburg court sentenced four people, convicted of the racially-motivated killing of a Congolese student, to long prison terms on Wednesday. [The South African-based Independent Online reports that ‘long’ is equivalent to “between seven and 14 years” and that “two of the youths received nine-year terms with hard labour, one was sentenced to seven years and the fourth received the stiffest punishment of 14-years in jail” (Youths sentenced for killing African student, June 20, 2007]. Rolland Epossak was savagely beaten and stabbed several times in September 2005. A year ago, a different court threw out the charges against the four, but the Supreme Court ordered they be retried last march. A lawyer for the defendants maintained his clients’ innocence and called the outcome politically-motivated. The newspaper failed to mention that courts in Russia rarely convict defendants on hate crime charges, though attacks against foreigners, particularly non-white ones, are relatively high.

NOVYE IZVESTIA

VERDICT OF ‘HOOLIGANISM’ IN MURDER OF ANTI-FASCIST ACTIVIST: A Moscow court convicted three men on charges of hooliganism and assault in the murder of an anti-fascist activist last year. Alexander Shitov, Andrei Antsiferov and Vasily Reutsky – members of a neo-Nazi group – received sentences ranging from four to six and a half years for the stabbing death of Alexander Rukhin in April 2006. The lawyer representing the victim had hoped the three would be tried for murder, which would have carried longer prison terms. “The prosecution is ignoring this new type of crime in Russia,” he told the paper, speaking of hate-based attacks.

In other neo-Nazi news, Pair help break up Slovak brawl (The Vancouver Sun, June 20, 2007):

Minnesota Wild forward Branko Radivojevic and New York Rangers forward Marcel Hossa reportedly helped break up a fight involving neo-Nazis in Trencin, Slovakia, over the weekend in which one man was stabbed. Slovakia’s Pravda Daily reported Monday that a man was being attacked by more than 10 neo-Nazi supporters when Radivojevic, Hossa and another man came to the victim’s defence. The attackers then fled. Radivojevic and Hossa reportedly took the man to a hospital, where he underwent surgery and was recovering.

And finally, local neo-Nazi groups Blood & Honour Australia and the Southern Cross Hammerskins have announced the partial line-up for this year’s Ian Stuart Donaldson memorial gig, to take place on October 13 at an undisclosed location somewhere in Melbourne: Bail Up!, Fortress, Quick & the Dead and special international guests. Anyone interested in sampling Fortress may purchase a copy of The Bell Tolls, a 3 track CD-EP from Snapshot Records for only $10. It includes a cover version of “Hate Session” by White Noise; White Noise being one of the pioneering neo-Nazi oi! bands to come out of the UK whose The Final Solution LP contains the classic “Sieg Heil We’re Back Again”. You can also purchase Return to Asgard, the very best in Viking rock ‘n’ roll performed by Newcastle-based Blood Red Eagle — who most recently played a gig in Wellington to celebrate Adolf Hitler’s birthday and, of course, also played last year’s ISD gig at The Birmy — for just $15; and rest assured that at least some of that money will have helped B&H organise in Australia.

Posted in Anti-fascism, Music, State / Politics, War on Terror | Leave a comment

FCUK the G8! (Again)

For an account of the last year’s meeting in St. Petersburg, see FCUK the G8! | For an example of the kind of shit our global rulers speak, see “The Aristocrats!” | For an example of the kind of shit our local would-be rulers write, see Mick Armstrong, Is there anything radical about anarchism?, Socialist Alternative, No.117, June 2007 | See also Stefan Steinberg, Germany: Police use massive force against G8 demonstrators in Rostock, wsws, June 4, 2007; “As was the case in the Italian city of Genoa in the anti-G8 protest in 2002 [sic], the so-called “black bloc” of anarchists played a thoroughly dubious role in the skirmishes and fighting in Rostock…” | Remember too, that the whole thing was organised by Globalise Resistance, as Mick Armstrong’s British comrade Guy Taylor reliably informs the world: “For protests such as the EU and G8 summits, there is an umbrella organization that is established to coordinate such mobilizations… More often than not, it is Globalise Resistance that takes that role.”

Barricading the G8 in Germany : A WSM members reports from the front line and the cells…

June 2, 2007

…A pretty impressive black bloc had formed at the rear-centre composed of AntiFa, anarchist groups and of course the autonomous movement people. Black-clad protesters are an… eclectic bunch politically, [which] is worth remembering.

As the march weaved its way through the elegant city of Rostock, the black bloc seemed to swell considerably as it followed the sounds of the AntiFa sound system. My estimation is approximate, but I would guess it comprised of at least 6-7,000 people. After an hour of marching and chanting, news filtered through that the other rally (which we were to meet at the harbour) had been attacked by police using pepper spray, tear gas and of course the ever-useful baton. Plumes of tear gas could be seen from afar and our march became agitated as it seemed the police had halted its progress at the front to prevent us reaching the harbour and our fellow protesters. There were shouts to get into line among the black bloc as it seemed that we would have to fight our way through to the others. We were a tad anxious as the situation appeared to be deteriorating fast, but were bolstered by the apparent confidence and steely-eyed determination that surrounded us.

Soon, however, the march proceeded and the threat appeared to have abated. We made it to the harbour where the rumours of police violence were substantiated with injured demonstrators being attended to. The police then attempted to arrest people for covering their faces (this is an offence in Germany) and the crowd scattered somewhat into side streets as people fought back against the police repression. The scene escalated quickly as police snatch squads moved in at the sides of the black bloc with some force. However they were met with fearsome resistance, the likes of which I have never before witnessed. Stones, bottles and other projectiles were used to give them a hostile welcome and hold them off as other protesters escaped to safety. It seemed as if police efforts to attack the march and arrest hundreds of anarchists and AntiFa had backfired as they were peppered from all sides by angry demonstrators and they had to beat a hasty retreat after a few minutes…

Posted in Anarchism, State / Politics | 4 Comments

Joe Blog(g)s (versus) Jim Saleam

RRTAA!

There’s a ding-dong battle going on at Stormfront at the moment, wherein Dr James Saleam has been called upon to defend his honour, currently under assault by a crazy cat lady named Lilith and — peeking out from behind her skirt — a fiercesome Aryan Warrior named David. This dynamic duo are the leading propagandists for Don Black’s Internet business ‘Down Under’, while Saleam is currently fuehrer of the Australia First Party (AF). (For more on the squabbling factions, see 2007 Sydney Forum : Phantasy vs. Reality.)

The person responsible for creating the Battlefield Thread is from Newcastle AF, has a fascination with exotic currencies, an unhealthy addiction, and a determination to allow Herr Doktor one “final” opportunity to clear his good name; a name besmirched by his being relegated to that segment of Stormfront reserved for non-whites silly enough to bother arguing with the dimwits who congregate there. Among other matters of concern to beleaguered whiteys, apparently, is Jim’s past, “weather criminal or not”, and its effects upon public perceptions of the otherwise sound political institution that is the AF; his ethnic derivation (or as David puts it: “If you are European in decent, how do you explain your Arabic surname?”); Darrin Hodge’s unceremonious dumping from the Party — after declaring his intention to contest Jim’s position; and finally, Jim’s relationship with Ross May (“Why do you keep letting ‘The Skull’ hang around when it causes more harm than good?”).

Duh.

In reply, Herr Doktor, being a scholar if not a gentleman, decides to baffle them all with bullshit. He even quotes Georges Sorel:

Are my views “misunderstood”? In general, I remember the quote of Georges Sorel: that nothing gives greater pleasure in being understood by intelligent people than by being misunderstood by blunderheads.

Present company excepted, of course.

A picture is worth a thousand words

In response to Lilith’s republication of a grim-faced mugshot of Jim, he claims it’s a forgery (which would appear to be pointless), predictably reiterates his innocence, and claims instead that he was framed by the political police for the crime of which he was convicted in 1991 and for which he was sentenced to four and-a-half years jail as punishment. “I was framed” is a line decided upon many years ago and proclaimed from the moment Jim stepped out of prison in 1994, thirteen years ago. So too, his line (or should that be ‘script’?) concerning his attempts to clear his name, the fruits of which are surely bound to ripen at any moment now: “I am currently preparing an application to the Supreme Court to overturn the conviction won against me by the corrupt Special Branch in 1991.” ~ June 18, 2007.

Yawn.

A Tempe man who spent four years in jail over the 1989 shotgun attack on the home of African National Congress representative Eddie Funde has embarked on a campaign to clear his name.

Jim Saleam, 39, a former state and national chairman of the right wing political group National Action, claims he was framed by police. Released from jail in May, he is now in the process of gathering evidence to support his claim and plans to lodge an application for judicial review in the NSW Supreme Court… ~ Scott Tucker, ‘Jim fights to clear his name’, The Glebe, July 12, 1994

Of the second photograph of Jim wearing Nazi insignia, he claims that this photo “of itself could be any number of things. It is a matter of context.” So… it could be a pink elephant riding a unicycle; it’s really all a matter of ‘context’.

In reality:

Channel 0-28 had planned to run a story on the Progressive Nationalist Party [one of the myriad of short-lived, far right groups of the late ’70s/early ’80s], which they began to film before National Action had been formed. Pretty soon we realised that the producers had done their homework, and they claimed to have an article Jim had written for the West Australian Hungarian Nazi journal Perseverance from the mid-seventies.*

However much I disliked Jim, I didn’t want one of his indiscretions to rebound on the party [National Action], and so organised a cover-up. I told Jim to have the original faxed to him from the National Library in Canberra. I rewrote it, toned it down, had it printed up as a leaflet, carried it around in my back pocket for a few days to age it, rang up Mum in Melbourne to send me one of my files as a cover, then took the leaflet to the TV station with a perfectly sound explanation — Jim had written a thoroughly respectable student nationalist leaflet that had been picked up somehow by the Nazis and then rewritten to make it more acceptable for their readership.

Which was fine, except that the journalists then produced photographs of Jim wearing a swastika armband, taken at an anti-Pinochet demo in 1975. Jim was not happy when they opened the photo album. I was appalled. He had always insisted that he had never been photographed in uniform. These things were important…

[Some weeks or months later] As Dave [Merrett] and I chatted outside Woolworths, a sheet of newspaper blew across our path. It was from the Australasian Spartacist, one of those queer coincidences that provide a little amusement, but our amusement was squashed flat when we turned the sheet over and saw the photo of Jim in Nazi uniform, along with a recent picture of him at the bookstall at the University of New South Wales…

When I got home, Jim was moping around. He became distraught when I showed him the photos. That was it. He was going to sue the Spartacists for libel. After he had quietened down, I told him I felt that in the best interests of the party he should step down from his positions for good. He wouldn’t hear of it. I’d obviously supplied the photo to the Sparts, he said. I hadn’t, but he was unconvinced. In his typical fashion, he was searching everywhere to attribute blame rather than face up to the fact that he was the one stupid enough to pose in a Nazi uniform alongside Ross May. ~ David Greason, I was a teenage fascist, McPhee Gribble, 1994, pp.283–284, 289

Once again, readers on Stormfront are being scammed!

No, this is not a reference to the manner in which Mr. Black milks the fascist cows at Stormfront for donations in order to finance his next failed coup d’état, nor is it a reference to Lilith and David’s pleas for money to finance their journey to the Sydney Forum. Instead, curiously enough, and in response to Darrin ‘The Sleeping Dragon’ Hodge’s dismissal from AF, Saleam has chosen to refer to a comment on my blog made by someone claiming to be Mr. Hodges:

Let us go back to a piece that appeared on FightDemBack! on or about Tuesday, March 13. [To be precise, Monday, March 12: A Discussion Of Difficulties Encountered When Attempting To Effect Change Within Neo-Fascist Organisations in Australia.] Graeme Campbell spoke in Sydney on March 10. This article [to be precise, comment] referred to the meeting as a “failure”, part of a long line of failures and so on under my leadership in the campaign in Cronulla and so forth, with Mr. May being there causing disunion in Australia First etc. The article was signed “Darrin Hodges”.

To cut a too-long story short — Saleam does enjoy his waffles — I’ve got absolutely no idea what Herr Doktor’s diagnosis is, nor do I understand his treatment. Well, apart from intimating, in some vague fashion, that there are dark forces at work behind the scenes which seek to undermine AF — and that Hodges, in some, typically unspecified manner, is somehow embroiled in these nefarious activities. Or: “It seems to me that the issue of Mr. May was raised as another part of a long running campaign against Australia First.”

It’s a conspiracy!

Oh, and Herr Doktor notes that May will, as usual, be attending the Forum.

Finally, in a rather comic note, Lilith Peterson, for some bizarre reason best known to herself, imagines that she’s a man, “sick of what is happening to [t]his country… an average bloke [who] works hard [and] has a couple of kids”; one who, like her, is full of complaints, and really “[d]oesn’t like what is going on around him”. Our imaginary Mr. Average then encounters some AF propaganda and, intrigued, googles the name “Jim Saleam”. What does he find? According to Lilith, ‘The Tale of Jack and Jim’, some of Jim’s writings, and an article from the Green Left Weekly.

Well… not quite. Try it yourself and see!

    *Perseverance is printed in Australia, but largely aimed at a Canadian and US readership. Perseverance is a vehicle for the Arrow Cross, the Hungarian fascist and Nazi-collaborationist party of the 1940s. It is edited by elderly members of that group and a second generation of followers. In the pages of 1990s issues of the periodical, can be found an article by the [Canadian League of Rights] (entitled Canadian News), and in another issue, the CLR’s book catalog, sharing the pages with articles by Ernst Zundel, Louis Beam of the Aryan Nations, Robert Miles of the KKK and Identity, as well as articles by the original leadership of the Arrow Cross, and by German Nazi leader Joseph Goebbels…” ~ ‘Jew-haters and red-baiters: The Canadian League of Rights’, David Lethbridge, AntiFa Info-Bulletin, February 2, 1999
Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism | 5 Comments

Do Not Disturb

Ssshhh. Bübi‘s sleeping

Lest We Forget : June 18, 1999 [Melbourne] “An international day of action, protest and carnival aimed at the heart of the global economy.” Four and-a-half months later, the world discovers ‘anti-globalisation’…

Posted in Cats | 3 Comments

‘Home Sweet Squat’

Source : The Melbourne Times, May 9, 2007, pp.8–9

    The number of squatters in Melbourne may be growing, and new groups are forming to help them and fight for their rights. Brigid Enis discovers what it’s like to live without electricity or heat.

The dinner party is held in a room lit entirely by candles and filled with the scent of incense. Food is taken from a portable Esky and cooked on a camping stove. Guests sit on three op shop armchairs, and the decor consists of scattered environmental and political posters on the floor and walls. Music is limited to what the host and guests can sing and play, and conversation will doubtless touch on politics, social justice and the environment. This, according to Karen (not her real name), is life as a squatter.

Karen, 29, began squatting in January this year after the lease on her rental property expired and the owner decided to sell. Karen, a part-time PhD student and part-time union employee, has been renting in the inner suburbs of Melbourne since she was 18 years old. But after her lease expired she found she could not afford a new place in Melbourne’s very competitive rental market. “I just kept hitting brick walls when trying to find new rental properties or trying to find share houses,” Karen says. “It was totally insane. I went to rental property inspections and witnessed the rent auctions that are so infamous now and just decided that I would start squatting.”

Karen is one of a number of people who found squatting to be their only option, and evidence suggests that number is growing. The reinstatement of the Melbourne Squatters’ Union earlier this year may indicate squatting is on the rise. The group aims to support people affected by massive rent increases, low vacancy rates, a short supply of crisis housing and growing public-housing waiting lists.

The latest Office of Housing quarterly rent report released last month showed a median rent increase of 6.4 per cent, a fact that grates on Australians for Affordable Housing spokesman David Imber. “We are obviously very concerned that the housing crisis is so severe that some people feel that they have got no other option but to squat,” Mr Imber says. “People are really being forced out of legitimate rentals, but even rooming houses are becoming too expensive for some groups.”

People shut out of the rental market and public housing can find support in the re-established squatters’ union, which has a dotted history dating back to the Depression. Helping guide this new wave of squatters is the No Frills Melbourne Squatters’ Guide — a web-based tool that helps squatters find a squat — and a community radio show. Community radio station 3CR has broadcast the Squatters and Unwaged Workers’ Airwaves [SUWA] show for about 15 years. The show aims to support and promote squatters and acts as a hub for the union.

In 2001, the show distributed the [No Frills] Melbourne Squatter’s Handbook [February 2002], a predecessor to the squatters’ guide, which came out in the 1990s. The guide states that squatting is not illegal. “Legally, squatting could be a civil dispute between you and the owner. The police should not be involved unless there is the threat of violence or a breach of the peace.” The guide encourages squatters to fight challenges “because housing is a basic human right and sometimes you have to take action to assert your rights”.

Less than two months ago squatters’ rights were put to the test. For two months, a house of squatters existed peacefully in Baker Street, Richmond, just off Church Street. But one Sunday afternoon in March the house was filled with youths dressed in black playing what sounded like a death metal concert. The music was so loud the neighbours called the police. Police in seven squad cars attempted to evict the squatters, but the squatters were obviously prepared for them. They knew their rights, had a lawyer on call, managed to fend off the police and remain, but not for long. Less than a week after the party the squatters, who had managed to hook up the electricity, were evicted.

Carlton resident Finlo White had his own squatter experience after he lived for two years next door to about eight of them. Mr White said the squatters changed the locks on the house, constantly demanded money and used the backyard as a toilet. His most memorable interaction with them was when a squatter armed with a table leg full of nails knocked on his front door and demanded electricity earlier this year. Mr White, filled with Christmas cheer, had extended them a lead from his rental property a few weeks before and now the squatters wanted electricity all the time. Two months ago the house burnt down.

Mr Imber says squatters’ living conditions are often dangerous. “There are all sorts of arrangements and things that go on,” he said. “The reason why places are so often vacant is because they are derelict; they’ve got exposed wiring around and unsecured structures. “We are obviously incredibly concerned that those people are putting themselves at risk.”

Melbourne West Police Inspector Stephen Mutton said the police were also concerned about squatters’ safety, and set up the Inner City Squats Committee after a young girl died in a squat in 2004. Inspector Mutton said the purpose of the committee was to close down or secure potential squats before squatters found them. “We can get these places closed up before someone is exposed to danger,” Inspector Mutton said. “City of Melbourne engineers identify the squats and go around to see if they are unsafe and then get the authorities to fix them.” If squatters do manage to get into squats in the city the committee has a long list of referral services to help them relocate. “Kicking people out on the street creates a bigger problem, which is why we try and refer them to homeless services.”

Some squatters say squatting is a lifestyle choice and a community, rather than a problem to be solved. Four months ago Karen, and two of her mates, who were also fed up with renting, set up a squat in an inner suburb of Melbourne. They found furniture, cutlery and crockery on the street and at the back of op shops and quickly learnt to live without electricity or hot water. Some of Karen’s squatter friends don’t even have running water and rely on bucket flushing to use the toilet. Others camp in run-down properties using solar showers and camping stoves, and one even has his own garden planted in a shopping trolley in case of eviction.

Karen says not having a constant home does not bother her and the advantages of her lifestyle outweigh the disadvantages. “One of the challenges has been learning to think about security in a different way, and also learning to think about the idea of home in a different way,” Karen says. “Friendships would be the sense of home, not so much the roof over your head. “It’s not so much a materialist thing as it is about relationships and I think once you make that shift it’s fine.” She says she can’t imagine living any other way and feels that even when she gets her university qualifications she will continue to squat. “It’s something that I will get more skilled at and more comfortable doing,” she says. “There is certainly something different that shifts your mind.”

COMMENTS, CORRECTIONS, CLARIFICATIONS AND C*CKUPS

To follow…

Squatters invade city buildings
Fiona Hudson
Herald Sun
November 4, 2003

SQUATTERS are invading hundreds of suburban homes and city buildings to live rent-free. The organised rent cheats have published a guerilla guide on the internet offering takeover tips and tactics, and broadcast a weekly radio program. They told the Herald Sun more than 100 long-term squatters, including some families with young children, were living undetected in homes across the city. Many more homeless itinerants were squatting short-term in vacant commercial properties, often leaving a trail of damage behind. Police, the fire brigade and the Melbourne, Port Phillip and Yarra councils have banded together to deal with the growing squatting trend.

The No Frills Melbourne Squatters Guide includes chapters on finding empty properties, breaking in and securing the squat, and connecting essential services. “Once you are inside your new home, you will firstly need to change all the locks so that you can feel secure and safe and keep out anyone you don’t want coming in,” it says. It offers advice on avoiding eviction if police come, and sweet-talking the real owners if they turn up. It also gives specific details for secretly lodging a caveat on the title to prevent the owners selling or mortgaging the property.

KPMG partner and property law expert Genevieve Overell described the guide and advice network as appalling. Ms Overell said she’d seen properties where squatters had barbecues on the living room carpet, and pulled timber off the building to burn for warmth. Others set up a neat home and treated it as their own, “like a tenant, except they don’t pay rent,” she said. Ms Overell said in the worst cases she’d sought court orders on behalf of owners to remove the trespassers. “You have to go there with a team of security guards and a locksmith . . . and retake the property,” she said. The process was costly and upsetting for the rightful owners, she said.

Real estate agents said empty investment properties, holiday homes, deceased estates and houses awaiting development were at highest risk of invasion. Dixon Kestles property manager Justine Ashby has recently helped owners eject squatters from a St Kilda home left vacant after it was auctioned. The Melbourne Squatters Guide is published on the internet by an unidentified group called the No Frills Collective.

The Herald Sun was alerted to the guide by a spokesman for the Squatters and Unwaged Airwaves radio show broadcast weekly on 3CR. It broadcasts the location of sites ripe for occupation by squatters and interviews with “success stories”. One man interviewed recently boasted he’d lived in the same Footscray squat for nine months, and had only paid rent once in four years. The man told the station he’d chosen a council-owned building in a commercial zone to avoid eviction. “The neighbours know what’s going on, but it doesn’t seem to bother anybody too much,” he said.

A radio show spokesman, who called himself Chummy Fleming, said possibly thousands of houses and buildings across Melbourne were occupied by squatters. “I know some families who have been in the same place for five years,” he said. “Their kids go to school in the area and they end up paying rates and phone and electricity bills on the property . . . even though they don’t own it.” The full extent of the squatters’ invasion is difficult to detect because absent owners are usually unaware their property has been taken over. Social worker Les Twentyman said high rents were forcing people to squat.

Posted in Media, State / Politics, Student movement | 4 Comments

The Birmy: now six times less hardcore

The hardcore show scheduled for this Friday @ The Birmy has been cancelled according to Choppaz from Tenth Dan, one of the six bands scheduled to play. Tenth Dan will, however, be playing in Melbourne on Sunday, June 24th @ The Arty, along with Crosscheck, Flame the Fire, No Love Lost, Speartackle and Violent Abuse.

Kudos to the bands for making the right decision and displaying anti-fascist solidarity.

Fuck fascism.

Fuck The Birmy
.

    You’re not hardcore
    (No you’re not hardcore)
    Unless you live hardcore
    (Unless you live hardcore)
Posted in Anti-fascism, Collingwood, Music | 9 Comments

A lesson in economics

Sheesh.

Closet pro-Situ and former ALP student political hack Darren Ray seems to lurch from one corrupt business to another. After overseeing the collapse of the Melbourne University Student Union in 2002 and 2003, Ray has most recently emerged in a new but possibly temporary role as a slumlord. According to Simon Kidd in the June 13 edition of The Melbourne Times (‘VCAT imposes fine for students’ filthy house’):

The appeals tribunal has ordered the former head of the failed [MUSU] to pay $6700 to landlords because clients of his rental service left a Hawthorn East house in a “disgustingly dirty” state.

[VCAT] member Ian Proctor ordered Darren Ray, trading as Victorian Student Housing (VSH), to compensate the property’s landlord for damage to the house’s kitchen and bathroom…

Previously, Chris Johnston referred to VSH in an article on living and working conditions for Melbourne’s population of approximately 18,000 Indian tertiary students (‘City’s new underclass forced to suffer in silence’, May 19, 2007):

The tenants’ union campaigned last year against a company called [VSH], run by former heads of the failed [MUSU], Benjamin Cass and Darren Ray. The tenants’ union claimed they were renting inferior properties to Indian students. The company is no longer operating.

It appears that the business plan for VSH was fairly simple, and aimed at taking commercial advantage of Indian student’s difficulties in finding rental accommodation. As VSH itself puts it:

For a newly arrived student, obtaining a rental property can be a very difficult task. Finding the right property that is within your budget, close to public transport and your campus is only a small part of the problem. The real issue is how do you get your application approved?

Real estate agents will always look for two things; good rental history and employment. Newly arrived students can provide neither which is why they find it so difficult to secure a property.

Consequently, keen-eyed entrepreneurs Cass and Ray, with “the support of key student organisations, education agents and community groups”, all of which remain unknown, signed leases on nine properties around town, and simply sub-let these to students (40 in total, according to VSH). Well… kinda. According to Deborah Gough (‘Ex-uni leaders accused of bullying students’, The Age, July 9, 2006) the leases were actually transferred to debt collectors:

Students claim, and documents show, that intimidatory tactics were used against them over visas, credit rating and debt collectors who sublease properties from VSH. Mr Ray denies the claims, and says VSH complies with the Residential Tenancy Act.

The promotional video on the VSH site claims that lowest prices are “guaranteed”, and even includes a list of names of current, presumably satisfied, VSH clients: Manoj Dharmaraj, Amit Timbrewal, Aseem Nangia, Gagan Gogia, Aman Bhandari, Karanuir Sadhra and 28 others.

In the short-term, such business schemes, competently-handled, would appear to be potentially quite lucrative, especially when focused on attracting customers from the lower end of the student market. (That is, students from India. Students from China and other Asian countries tend to be from wealthier backgrounds, and are quite capable of paying the high prices inner-city flats, a preferred form of accomodation, typically lease for.) On the other hand, exploitation of this kind, as well as that experienced by students in the workplace and at tertiary institutions, places longer-term strain on the viability of the foreign student market as a whole. Interestingly, evidence of student resistance to this exploitation is also beginning to surface, as a report from March this year indicates:

Student hunger strike over treatment as ‘cash cows’
Adam Morton
The Age
March 15, 2007

MORE than 60 overseas students went on hunger strike yesterday amid claims they would be forced to pay thousands of dollars extra to finish their degrees after being examined on material they were not taught.

It is the second time in a year that international students have protested about their treatment at the Lonsdale Street “shopfront” campus of Central Queensland University.

The students, mostly from India, started protesting last Friday and held an all night sit-in on Tuesday after learning they would have to sit a supplementary exam in June to pass their masters degree…

Students last year said the university was treating them as “cash cows” and was providing inadequate facilities.

Note that “About half of CQU’s 24,000 students are international, full-fee paying students — the biggest proportion of international students of any Australian university.” And in the sector as a whole, according to one ABC report (‘Foreign students inject $1.9b into universities’, January 6, 2006):

New Education Department figures show Australian universities collected more than $1.9 billion in fees from overseas students in 2004. The statistics show revenue from international students has increased by more than 140 per cent since 1999…

In a context of government deregulation, and subsequently loose oversight of educational standards, living and working conditions for foreign students, ‘over-exploitation’ emerges as a real issue. And to the extent that the education industry is dependent on foreign earnings, such over-exploitation places the future of the industry in real question, as rival markets emerge and students exercise their much-vaunted ‘choice’ to study elsewhere. The consequences this has for local students — and the financing of the tertiary education sector as a whole — is obvious… unlike, say, the reasons Benjamin Cass and Darren Ray can continue to engage in highly questionable business practices — with apparent impunity.

    See also : The State of the Union, “The State of the Union is a documentary capturing the bloodiest [sic] election in the history of student unionism [that is, Melbourne University Student Union, 2003]. The film provides an illuminating and often humorous insight into the microcosm that is university politics.”

PS. Cass and Ray appear to have laid the groundwork for their business in 2004 (‘Towards a chequered career abroad’, The Hindu, August 12, 2004): “The Career Guidance Cell of the Yadava College organised a programme on August 9 on ‘student progression to higher education in Australia’ for undergraduate and postgraduate students. Students were enlightened on an overview of study life in Australia by Benjamin Cass, Director of Students Services Inter-National, Australia, and Darren Ray, Chief Operations Officer. Mr. Cass said Indian students were being given freedom to live and lead in Australia without any compromise on their likes, culture and customs. They also had the freedom of selecting their own subject modules and the country offered good courses on information technology and management at affordable cost…”

Posted in !nataS, State / Politics, Student movement | 10 Comments