Archive for June, 2010

UPR Students Brutalized at the Capitol

30 June 2010

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – A 1,000 students from the University of Puerto Rico and others demonstrated in front of the legislative building at the capitol on Wednesday, June 30th, in the midst of a controversy around an $800 tuition increase expected to begin in January. The week before, a 62-day long student strike ended after a student negotiating committee and the university administrators and trustees negotiated an agreement. It now appears that the agreement has been violated with this new round of tuition increases, the appointment of 4 new trustees interested in increased privatization measures, and attempts to punish students involved in the strike. Students are demanding to be heard as they see irreparable damage being caused on the 11 campus university system.

Early in the afternoon, demonstrators and members of independent media attempted to gain entry into the building, but were pushed away by police forces. Protesters were attempting to use peaceful civil disobedience to relay a message to the legislature. However, police were prepared to face down the students on the steps of the building. As some demonstrators sat down and chanted in front of the officers, the police used batons and pepper spray to push them back.

Protesters were continually pushed back as physical confrontations continued; police continued to use pepper spray and hit protesters with batons and some protesters threw police barricades at officers who were pushing them down the stairs. Some managed to gain entry into the lobby, but were beaten back outside.

At least one student was repeatedly beaten with batons and pepper sprayed by police as she sat peacefully in front of police officers (recorded on video). She was unconscious when an ambulance arrived and took her to a hospital. At least 5 other protesters were later admitted to emergency care. One member of the press was also hit in her arm, breaking skin and knocking her down. Police continued to blockade the front entrance of the building, but were drawn out into the street.

UPR-Mayagüez student unconscious

Frustrated protesters flanked the sides of the legislative building. Police shot teargas at protesters from the roof and from the ground, and in response some protesters threw eggs at the police and smashed the windows of police cars and cars parked next to the building (owned by members of the legislature).

By late afternoon protesters began to disperse. Those that stayed behind were later chased away by mounted police. The police continued to search the vicinity around the capitol, only accosting youth who could possibly be identified as a student.

In the video below, a family drives their car past some of the police hunting for students. The father curses the police for their excessive brutality that day, and the last officer in the line marching past them smashes the rear window with his baton and strikes the young daughter.

The following is a mainstream news report.

A protest against Police Brutality has been called to take place on Friday, at 5:00pm in front of the police headquarters. Radio Huelga, which formed at the beginning of the strike, has denounced the repression of protest and journalism seen at the capitol in this press release (in Spanish). More information available in Spanish on Indymedia PR.

Arnieville

29 June 2010

BERKELEY, California – A tent city formed on June 22nd in response to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s budget cuts to In-Home Support Services (IHSS), a program that provides services to those who might otherwise be institutionalized. Read more at indybay.

Sit-in at SF Human Services Agency

29 June 2010

from indybay

SAN FRANCISCO, California – On Monday, June 28th, Members of Direct Action to Stop the Cuts held a sit-in at the SF Human Services Agency on 170 Otis Street. A nearby shelter is being converted into permanent housing for homeless veterans, but in the process is displacing five dozen people. The demonstrators welcome the conversion, but not at the expense of the people currently in the shelter. 8 demonstrators were arrested. More at indybay.

Syndicalists Occupy Power Station HQ

29 June 2010

GREECE – The headquarters of DEI (PPC, the Public Power Corporation) have been occupied by syndicalists working for the corporation. The building is now covered in banners and the workers are organising discussions on the crisis inside. The building will keep occupied until [Tuesday], the day of the general strike, when a demonstration toward the finance ministry is planned. (via From the Greek Streets)

Chronicle of a Riot Foretold

29 June 2010

from counterpunch:

by George Ciccariello-Maher

As the trial of former transit cop Johannes Mehserle for the murder of Oscar Grant rushes at breakneck speed toward its conclusion, spurred by the insistence of Judge Robert Perry and political imperative, ominous clouds of injustice begin to crowd the political horizon in anticipation of a verdict, which could come as soon as this week. But while it is this injustice that we should most fear, too many are focusing their fear and the fear of others on the possibility of a repeat of last year’s street rebellions should Mehserle be acquitted or convicted of a lesser charge.

What this view neglects is one basic fact, indeed the most basic fact regarding the Oakland rebellions: that it was only as a result of those rebellions of January 2009 and the fear that they might be repeated that Mehserle was even arrested and put on trial in the first place. Those rebellions were, in fact, the basic precondition for this limited form of “justice” to even be possible. Possible, yes, but far from guaranteed. And yet those who opposed the rebellions from the very beginning, denouncing them with delusions of “outside agitators” as irrational and desperate outbursts–in short, as “riots”–are busily trotting out the same discredited lines as always. (more…)

UPR Student Strike Ends – New Chapter in the Struggle Begins

28 June 2010

from la más mínima diferencia { the slightest difference:

On June 21, 62 days into what was initially a 48-hour occupation of the flagship campus at Río Piedras, the University of Puerto Rico’s first-ever National Student Assembly put an end to what had now become the first-ever system-wide strike in the institution’s history. The nearly 3,000 students from all 11 campuses of the UPR, assembled in the city of Ponce, unanimously ratified the agreements reached on June 16 by the students’ National Negotiating Committee (NNC) and the UPR Board of Trustees, thereby ending the strike on condition that the administration upheld the agreements. The Assembly also approved a “preventive” strike vote, in case the administration attempts to impose any increase in academic costs starting in January of next year.

The agreements between the NNC and the Trustees stipulate, among other things: that tuition waivers for athletes, artists, honor students, and employees and their families will not be adversely modified in any way; that no campus of the UPR system will be privatized in part or in whole, nor will they be subjected to the so-called Law of Public-Private Alliances approved earlier this year by the administration of neoliberal governor Luis Fortuño; that the $1,000-plus “special fee” proposed by the administration (and discovered in the course of negotiations, as a direct result of the strike) will not enter into effect in August; and that no member of the university community will be subject to summary sanctions for any incident occurred during the course of the strike. The agreements also make clear the positions of each part concerning the possibility of implementing the special fee in January of next year: the administration considers it necessary, while the NNC will not accept any increase on academic costs.

Despite many attempts, especially in the corporate media, to distance this “good” strike from all previous (“bad”) student strikes, continuities are evident. For many student leaders, this victory is a personal and political vindication of the notorious 29-day student strike over tuition hikes of 2005, which, unlike the strike of 2010, was almost universally derided in public forums, and even among some members of the UPR faculty who supported the students in 2010 (even though the demands, tactics, and many of the actors were essentially the same). In turn, many of the professors and parents who stood firm in support of the strike this time around (not all of whom did so as firmly, or at all, in 2005) are veterans of the legendary three-month strike of 1981 (and even of earlier strikes), which resulted in hundreds of expulsions. That was the first major student conflict at the UPR motivated by economic demands. Previous student strikes had orbited around the themes of colonialism and nationalism (1948), selective service (1960s), and ROTC presence on campus (1970s).

Neither the 2005 nor the 1981 strike, although both had a lasting impact on subsequent university policy, achieved their main objectives (namely, to stop tuition hikes). Thus, the 2010 Student Strike is the most complete victory, if not necessarily the first (as some have claimed), in 107 years of the UPR’s institutional history. It leaves in its wake a quarry of hundreds of new student militants formed in struggle, experienced in vigorous political debate, and with a clear(er) understanding of what it means to build and defend a strike. That is perhaps the most important achievement of the student strike of 2010, the value of which on its own would be incalculable even is fewer tangible results had been achieved. The results achieved further strengthen the idea, among students and working people in general, that victory can be obtained through struggle and pressure in the streets, which represents a subjective break with the dominant legalistic ideology.

Among the factors that made the 2010 student trike successful, in contrast to the 2005 strike, are the economic crisis, the unpopularity of the current government, and the change of ruling party (as in the U.S., it’s no secret that many who protest against the “right-wing” pro-statehood party openly collaborate with the allegedly more moderate pro-status quo party). One factor that stands out is the participative character of a process that allowed practice to determine the course to follow, without ruling out any method beforehand, so that the two main “lines” of the strike movement remained mutually engaged, avoided the thousand divisive traps laid by the enemy, and closed ranks in crucial moments. The solidarity of the people, of course, should also be noted. This solidarity sprang from the broad sympathies the process generated, almost automatically (thanks to the dishonesty, clumsiness, and pettiness displayed by administrators), and managed to break the cuasi-military police stranglehold placed on the occupied campuses, gaining precious time for the strikers.

Nonetheless, perhaps the single most important factor that distinguishes the 2010 strike from that of 2005 is the political preparation of the students to enter the strike process. Nothing gained in the 2010 process would have been possible without the dedicated and conscious work of politically organized students, following the defeat of 2005. Back then, the unexpected approval of the strike by an angry but rudderless student body caught everyone off guard, practically forcing a handful of organized radical students to carry the burden of a highly unfavorable and diffuse process. In 2010, on the contrary, the strike was the culmination of a wave of mobilizations and informative and deliberative processes that lasted at least two years, during which thousands of leaflets were distributed and numerous pickets, stoppages, and college occupations were held (at least in Río Piedras), and the grassroots participative organisms that served as backbone to the strike were built.

None of the above should be construed to imply there were not serious differences between different sectors of the striking students. There were, there are, and they should be aired and vigorously debated, particularly during this brief respite before the new semester arrives and the hard tasks of building an even broader and stronger movement to stop the special fee in January (among other dirty tricks up the administration’s sleeve) are at hand. In any case, although the war is far from over, the historic battle that was the 2010 UPR Student Strike should be a beacon to students, workers, and oppressed people everywhere: it is possible to fight, and to win!

Non-Profits Defend the State

27 June 2010

from Advance the Struggle:

On June 23rd, 2010, in the midst of Oscar Grant’s murder trial, one of the leaders of the nonprofit organization, Urban Peace Movement, wrote in an email (in full below):

“We need to begin ‘inoculating’ our bases and the community at-large so that when the verdict comes down, people are prepared for it, and so that the ‘outside agitators’ who were active during the initial Oscar Grant protests are not able to incite the crowd so easily.”

The paternalist and racist assumption made by non-profit sector activists portrays those who participated in property destruction as child-like noble savages easily corrupted by superior beings from afar (read: “outside agitators”). This should come as no surprise to anyone, seeing as how the non-profit organization is historically rooted in colonial assumptions that the oppressed are mindless brutes that require, for better or for worse, intellectual guidance (read: “inoculation”) from above.  The non-profiteers see their role as missionaries, saviors, and saints that carry the burden of pity for the downtrodden.

Who is really the outside agitator? And what does the state and the politically interventionist non-profit sector object to most, the outside part, or the agitator part?

During this past week’s phase of the trial, leading Bay Area journalist JR Valerie observed:

“. . . 4 out of 6 black males under the age of 40 were kicked out of the courtroom in the 2nd day of Mehserle testifying . . . .” (rough transcription from Hard Knock Radio archive, June 25th, 2010, min. 32:20-32:48, http://kpfa.org/archive/id/62141)

As Mehserle ran through a rehearsed emotional display, one black male courtroom observer from Oakland stood up and called out “save those tears.”  He was promptly jumped by Deputies, removed from the courtroom and now faces charges. Did any “outside agitators” incite this black male to speak out against the false cries of a murdering agent of the state? Would the Urban Peace Movement give this man credit for calling out the courtroom process, which is structured against the “biases” of the people’s sense of justice? Or for them, is the bourgeois white supremacist legal apparatus the legitimate carrier of justice?

To many, the courtroom setting and the whole legal apparatus of the state delivers the opposite of justice.  For centuries it has been coming in from the outside, committing genocide, and conquering to imposing itself as the center of economic, political, and social life. Who is on the outside and who is on the inside of this?  Unfortunately this isn’t the first time that folks claiming to represent the community have behaved as insiders to the system they claim to be against. (more…)

Bay Area Police Prepare to Ambush

24 June 2010

OAKLAND, California – On New Year’s day in 2009, BART police officer Johannes Mehserle shot Oscar Grant in the back while Grant was face down on a BART station platform. This high profile case came to the public’s attention after numerous videos of the execution-style murder was released over the internet. Now Mehserle is on trial, but the case has been riddled with controversy and bias in his favor. The trial is expected to conclude in the next few weeks, and many concerned community members have low expectations for justice. In the midst of the economic collapse, the systemic racism manifested by both the murder and the lack of accountability only continue to aggravate a community struggling to survive. Community organizers have called for action on the day of the verdict.

Police, apprehensive of the community’s outrage, have begun to prepare for suppression. A general police strategy was leaked to indybay and has been reproduced here:

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT WHAT THE COPS ARE PLANNING WHEN THE MEHSERLE VERDICT IS ANNOUNCED.

As a worker in Alameda County Emergency Medical Services I have been briefed about what the Oakland Police Department, Alameda County Sheriff’s Office, California Highway Patrol, BART Police, and other municipal law enforcement departments are anticipating for when the verdict is announced in the Mehserle murder trial.

The verdict is expected to be announced within two hours of the jury’s decision. Any verdict less than Premeditated Murder is anticipated to provoke “civil disturbance” in Oakland, Hayward, and Los Angeles. BART will shut down the Fruitvale Station and probably the downtown Oakland stations.

OPD has stated that they will not use Tasers or rubber rubber bullets for crowd control (this doesn’t mean that other cops won’t use them); only tear gas, pepper spray and batons will be deployed. Extra personnel will be on duty, with mobile Strike Forces for riot suppression and mobile command centers, most likely operating from close to the 7th/Maritime, 14th/Broadway, and the Fruitvale areas. All personnel will be issued with gas masks and soft body armor.

Law enforcement anticipate disturbances to last for up to a week after a verdict is announced, and a further round when sentencing is announced.

Ambulance crews have been specifically instructed not to ignore civilian injured. Please remember that ambulance crews are not involved in law enforcement or crowd control, so don’t attack us even though our uniforms are the same color as OPD. Thanks, and you didn’t hear any of this from me.

ALL INFORMATION IS PROVISIONAL AS OF JUNE 24, HAS ONLY BEEN VERBALLY TRANSMITTED, AND IS SUBJECT TO ALTERATION BASED ON CHANGING CONDITIONS.

VIVA LA REVOLUCION!

UPR Strike: Negotiated Agreement Ratified

22 June 2010

PUERTO RICO – In the past four days, student bodies from the 11 campus University of Puerto Rico system ratified the negotiated agreement concluded by the student negotiating committee and the UPR administration, thus ending the 60-day long strike. Classes on several of the campuses are to resume shortly, while others will not return until August. At least at the Carolina campus, administrators will not allow students to help in the post-strike clean up process.

In the midst of the celebrations, students are also concerned that due to some of the ambiguity in the language of the negotiated agreement, that tuition increases may be reintroduced in January of 2011. So, several campuses have ratified the agreement conditionally—that tuition doesn’t increase in January. Some consider the fall moratorium on tuition increases as an opportunity for alternatives to be presented. However, students seem to be prepared to go on strike again if necessary.

More of about the UPR Strike: (more…)

Israeli Cargo Blocked

21 June 2010

OAKLAND, California – In response to the Israeli attack on the flotilla carrying supplies to Gaza that resulted in the death of 10 human rights activists, organizers called for the boycott of Israeli goods.

from indybay:

In a historic action and unprecedented action today, over 800 labor and community activists blocked the gates of the Oakland docks in the early morning hours, prompting longshore workers to refuse to cross the picketlines where they were scheduled to unload an Israeli ship.

From 5:30 am to 9:30 am, a militant and spirited protest was held in front of four gates of the Stevedore Services of America, with people chanting non-stop, “Free, Free Palestine, Don’t Cross the Picket Line,” and “An injury to one is an injury to all, bring down the apartheid wall.”
Citing the health and safety provisions of their contract, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union workers refused to cross the picketline to report for duty.

Between 8:30 and 9:00 am, an emergency arbitration was conducted at the Maersk parking lot nearby, with an “instant” arbitrator called to the site to rule on whether the workers could refuse to cross the picketline without disciplinary measure.

At 9:15 a.m, after again reviewing the protests of hundreds at each gate, the arbitrator ruled in favor of the union that it was indeed unsafe for the workers to enter the docks.

To loud cheers of “Long Live Palestine!” Jess Ghannam of Free Palestine Alliance and Richard Becker of the ANSWER Coalition announced the victory. Ghannam said, “This is truly historic, never before has an Israeli ship been blocked in the United States!”

The news that a container ship from the Zim Israeli shipping line was scheduled to arrive in the Bay Area today has sparked a tremendous outpouring of solidarity for Palestine, especially in the aftermath of the Israeli massacre of volunteers bringing humanitarian aid to Gaza on May 31.

With 10 days advance notice of the ship’s arrival, the emergency “Labor/Community Committee in Solidarity with the Palestinian People” was set up. On Wednesday, some 110 people from unions and community came to help organize logistics, outreach and community support. Initiating organizations included the Al-Awda Palestine Right to Return Coalition, the ANSWER Coalition, the Bay Area Labor Chapter of USLAW and the Bay Area Labor Committee for Peace & Justice.

This week the San Francisco Labor Council and Alameda Labor Council passed resounding resolutions denouncing Israel’s blockade of Gaza. Both councils sent out public notices of the dock action.

The ILWU has a proud history of extending its solidarity to struggling peoples the world over. In 1984, as the Black masses of South Africa were engaged in an intense struggle against South African apartheid, the ILWU refused for a record-setting 10 days to unload cargo from the South African “Ned Lloyd” ship. Despite million-dollar fines imposed on the union, the longshore workers held strong, providing a tremendous boost to the anti-apartheid movement.

Today’s Oakland action, in the sixth largest port in the United States, is the first of several protests and work stoppages planned around the world, including Norway, Sweden and South Africa. It is sure to inspire others to do the same.

At 4pm hundreds of supporters of Palestine once again began forming again in front of the entrances of the port to insure that the Zim ship that had arrived would not be unloaded. Today’s victory sends a tremendous message to the rest of the world to stand up together against US – Israeli aggression.

General Strike in Greece on June 29

21 June 2010

ATHENS, Greece – The two main trade unions in Greece (GSEE and ADEDY) have announced a general strike for June 29th. The strike will come six days late, as it is so far confirmed that the government will bring the new law for public insurance and labour issues to parliament on June 23d (!) The new law more than doubles the number of employee firings a company is allowed per month, while cutting to less than half the minimum legal compensation, which will now be paid in installments. (via From The Greek Streets)

Cop on Trial for the Murder of Oscar Grant

18 June 2010

On January 1st, 2009, Oscar Grant was murdered by Bay Area Rapid Transit Police officer Johannes Mehserle in Oakland, Calfornia. Now Mehserle is on trial for reportedly the first ever on-duty police murder case in the state of California. The judge is pushing for the case to be finished by the 4th of July. Community members are already criticizing the trial as unfair as serious issues of bias in favor of Mehserle have sprung up including a jury without any black jurors.  Activists from the bay area have called for action on the day of the verdict in Oakland on 14th and Broadway at 6pm, regardless of the outcome. Actions have also been planned in Los Angeles where the trial is being held. More on indybay and OaklandForJustice.

RSVP on facebook for more updates.

UPR Strike: Negotiations End in Agreement

16 June 2010

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – The student strike at the University of Puerto Rico which began on April 21st, 57 days ago, may soon come to an end. The student negotiating committee, CNN, has reached an agreement with the UPR administration and will be relaying the agreement to the student body for a final vote. The students have 5 days to give a response. Demands won:

1. There will not be any special fee, nor an increase in tuition in August.
2. There will be no charges filed against students.
3. Certification 98 will be amended, allowing that the student recipient of the scholarship can be recognized for his/her academic excellence or talent.
4. They compromise not to use the APP in the UPR system.

More on the UPR Strike: (more…)

June 16 Day of Action

16 June 2010

People from around the world are participating today in a global day of action for education. In Dresden, Germany, some 10,000 people are protesting outside the parliament building. In Puerto Rico, as UPR students enter the 57th day of the strike, a coalition of humanities and arts students at the Rio Piedras campus are occupying a building and transforming it.

UPR Graduation

15 June 2010

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – Students, teachers, and a committee of parents supportive of the strike held a symbolic graduation on Sunday, June 13th. While the student negotiating committee (or CNN) and administration began their court mediated negotiations, other students began cleaning up the front gates of UPR Rio Piedras campus in preparation of the ceremony, including mowing lawns and setting up the stage. On a side note, negotiations are expected to conclude soon.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 110 other followers