Entwicklungen in Griechenland

Anarchist 04.12.2009 12:23 Themen: Soziale Kämpfe Weltweit
-Demo gegen parastaatlichen Bombenangriff in Thessaloniki
-7,5 Jahre Knast für Ilias Nikolaou
-ein Jahr nach der Ermordung von Alexandros - 45 Hochschulen besetzt
-über 1000 Leute auf Solidemo für Dimitriadis in Athen ...
-Schließung der ASOEE nach Auseinandersetzungen mit den Bullen verhindert
Ein Jahr ist seit der Ermordung des 15 jährigen Aléxandros Grigorópoulos in Athen vergangen. Für Sonntag, den 6.12. sind in ganz Griechenland Demonstrationen angekündigt. Schon im Vorfeld sind überall Aktivitäten im Gange. Auch die staatlichen Repressionsorgane und parastaatliche Gruppen sind überaus aktiv. Immer wieder kommt es zu Auseinandersetzungen mit Bullen (vor allem im Stadtteil Exárchia in Athen) oder zu faschistischen Angriffen auf MigrantInnen und anarchistische Zentren und besetzte Häuser.
Schon am 30.11. demonstrierten über 1000 Menschen in Thessaloniki gegen einen parastaatlichen Bombenanschlag auf den anarchistischen Infoladen Buenaventura. Bei dem nächtlichen Anschlag wurden der Eingangsbereich und das Schaufenster zerstört, verletzt wurde niemand.
Ebenfalls in Thessaloniki wurde am 3.12. der Anarchist Ilías Nikoláou zu 7,5 Jahren Knast verurteilt. Angeklagt war er auf Grund eines Brandanschlags auf eine Bullenwache im Januar 2009, den er bestreitet. Seine Anwälte haben Widerspruch angekündigt.
Zur Mobilisierung für die in ganz Griechenland stattfindenden Demonstrationen zum Jahrestag der Ermordung von Aléxandros sind momentan 45 Hochschulen im ganzen Land besetzt. Die Schließung der zentral gelegenen ASOEE in Athen durch den Rektor konnte nach Auseinandersetzungen mit den Bullen gestern verhindert werden. Heute findet dort um 13 Uhr eine Vollversammlung statt, die über eine Besetzung entscheiden wird.
In Ioánina wurde gestern für eine Stunde der lokale Radiosender besetzt und ein eigenes Programm ausgestrahlt.
In Athen gingen über 1200 Menschen aus Solidarität für den seit drei Jahren im Knast sitzenden G. Dimitriádis auf die Straße. Dimitriádis wurde nach einem Schusswechsel in Folge eines Banküberfalls schwer verwundet und sitzt seitdem im Knast. Während des Verfahrens hatte er das Mittel des Banküberfalls als revolutionäre Enteignungsaktion gerechtfertigt. Seine drei "Mitarbeiter" waren unerkannt entkommen und er schweigt sich über ihre Identität aus.
Auf den Wagen der unabhängigen Syndikalistin Venetía Monalopoúlou wurde in Thessaloniki ein Säureanschlag verübt. Monalopoúlou ist als Reinigungskraft im Flughafen von Thessaloniki tätig. Der Anschlag wird allgemein als Warnung für die kämpferische Aktivistin aufgefasst und erinnert fatal an den Mordanschlag auf Konstantína Koúneva (siehe auch www.fau.org) Anfang des Jahres. Koúneva war von beauftragten Schlägern mit Schwefelsäure überschüttet und gezwungen worden diese auch zu schlucken. Monatelang schwebte sie in Lebensgefahr, auf ei9nem Auge ist sie erblindet und noch immer werden im Krankenhaus ihre inneren Verätzungen behandelt. Durch die kämpferische Haltung und die physische und psychische Stärke der alleinerziehenden Mutter, ist es in der Folge des Mordanschlags zu verstärkten Arbeitskämpfen im prekären Bereich in ganz Griechenland gekommen. Vor allem der Kampf der (meist migrantischen) Putzfrauen erfährt hierbei viel Solidarität der anarchistischen Bewegung und breiterer Teile der arbeitenden Bevölkerung. So kam es immer wieder im letzten Jahr zu Anschlägen auf Leiharbeitsfirmen.

Eine Demonstration zum Gedenken an Aléxandros findet am 6.12. in Düsseldorf um 15 Uhr statt.
Ein guter Artikel über Hintergründe der aktuellen Lage und die Entwicklungen in Griechenland findet ihr in der neuen Graswurzelrevolution (Dez.2009, Nr.344)
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Ergänzungen

auch Schulen besetzt

Anarcho 04.12.2009 - 18:02
laut einem Artikel der linksliberalen Tageszeitung Eleftherotypia von heute sind auch 400 Mittelstufen- und Oberstufengymnasien als Vorbereitung auf den 6.12. besetzt.

Anschlag auf Kouneva

Anarchist 04.12.2009 - 19:36
Der Mordanschlag auf Konstantina Kouneva war nicht Anfang des Jahres sondern in der Nacht vom 22. auf den 23.12.2008, sorry für den Fehler.

Thessaloniki

Antibia 05.12.2009 - 01:11
Occupied Theatre School Salonica
Sunday 6/12 Manifestation

The only way to find out if we can swim, is to dive in the water...


If we have one thing to keep from last December, this is that the silence has finally been broken. Together with the social outbreak a great need for discussion broke through. We saw in the most barbaric way that the fairy tale we are being told, about “no dead ends in democracy” is nothing but a cheap lie of the authorities. There are plenty of dead ends. We see them in our dozens of everyday problems.


So how do we, as a society, react to that? We accept the “fairy tale”?


There is an exit from this system that destroys out lives and does nothing more than recreating and dealing with the corruptness created by its own self.

This exit exists in each one and all of us together. We just have to keep listening the message that came out from last year's insurrection.


Which message?


That the only way to liberate ourselves from the horrible reality we are living in is to start deciding for ourselves by ourselves. We have to realize that the logic “vote every four years and I' ll do the best for you” is the logic that maintains this rotten system.


Everybody is responsible for their lives and the society they are living in.


We have to recognize this responsibility and start making steps in order to cut the umbilical cord that still connects us with all kinds of authority. Steadily we have to start changing our surroundings, in order to manage to abolish calamitous institutions like the representative democracy, and to create other institutions based on the equal participation of everybody. These are the paths last December opened. And we need to continue walking on these paths without fear. In every neighborhood, every school, every university, in working spaces, for the immigrants, for the environment...without fear in everything concerning out lives.


It's better to decide for ourselves by ourselves, even if we make mistakes.


If so, the mistakes will be ours as well. We will learn, we will keep on, we will stand on our own feet.


Away from political parties and hierarchies. Face to face, with direct democracy, with direct actions.


Open assembly at the occupation of the Theatre School, 122 Egnatias str, Thessaloniki Saturday 5/12 19:00


Manifestation Sunday 6/12, 12:30, Kamara.



Occupied Theatre School katalipsisxolistheatrou.blogspot.com


Last stand!

Antibia 05.12.2009 - 01:48


Attacks against the police marked Friday 4/12 despite the Prime Minister's public plea for calm. The tension in the capital city of greece is high with more than 400 high-schools and 30 universities occupied across the country.

The greek Prime Minister's public plea for calm in the light of the first anniversary of Alexandros Grigoropoulos murder and the subsequent uprising last year was nullified today as the police was attacked three times in a few hours in the city of Athens.

Minutes after 12:00 at noon two police patrols were attacked simultaneously in Exarcheia, the radical enclave of the greek capital. Radicals attacked the police with sticks and caused serious injuries to the officers, two of which have been hospitalised, one in bad condition. Following the attack strong riot police forces surrounded the area and several people have been detained but are being currently released.

Two hours later high-school pupils formed a march in the northern suburb of Chalandri to commemorate the assassination of 15 year old Alexandros by cops last year, the first of its kind two days before the actual anniversary. The pupils marched to the local police station and attacked it with rocks and oranges. During the melee two banks were also attacked. There have been no arrests or detentions.

The anti-police attacks come to add to the electrified climate in greece where at the moment 400 high-schools and more than 30 universities are under occupation. The government has announced a zero tolerance plan, claiming that although the assassination has "scarred the collective memory" of the people, it will not allow Athens to be destroyed again. Friday's session in parliament devolved into a brawl between parties concerning the measures taken and last December's uprising, amidst scaremongering by the extreme-right that "thousands of foreign anarchists" are flooding the country with sinister intentions. On a more calm note, the President of the Republic has declared the state "guilty towards the youth", urging once again for peace and reconciliation.

Forgot to mention that the previous night 50 radicals occupied the TV station of the local channel of Ioannina city during its main news broadcast. The radicals left after the channel broadcasted a 20 minute video on the December Uprising.

Exarchia

Antibia 05.12.2009 - 16:11

Testimony of Eyewitness of the Assasination of Alexis Grigoropolous

Public testimony of an eyewitness of the assassination of 15 year's old boy Alexis Grigoropoulos from Greek Police that lead to December riots and general social revolt that still going on in Greece. The girl that she speaks in this text videotaped from her balcony above the spot of the assassination of Alexis the short-video that became world famous. She will be witness against the cop Ep. Korkoneas in his trial. This witness is a fragment from a bigger text and is included in the book "WE ARE AN IMAGE FROM THE FUTURE / The Greek Uprising of December 2009” that will be released in U.S.A. in February 2010 in U.S.A. from AK Press and is edited by A.G.Scwartz and comrades from Void Network.


Testimony of Eyewitness of the Assasination of Alexis Grigoropolous

I am an Exarchia resident whose balcony overlooks the spot where Alexis Grigoropoulos was murdered

I’m not so involved in any political activities. I’m not an activist. I can only speak about the killing. I can’t take a position on all the other things that happened because all these other things are very complicated and I don’t have clear thoughts on them.

Exarchia has always been an alternative, counterculture neighborhood. For many years it was a frequent occurrence that something would happen on a street corner in Exarchia and suddenly everyone from the cafes and the bars and the sidewalks would pour out into the streets and run to see what was happening. Usually it was incidents between people and police, some fights, confrontations, insults, shouting matches. In the old times it happened very often. Then there was a period when this didn’t happen so much, but in the last years it has started becoming more common again.

The reason that I found myself with a camera on the balcony that night was because I had always wanted to film one of these confrontations that are always taking place below my window. But every time I would come to my balcony to see what was happening, I got delayed. By the time I went back inside to get my camera it was too late, it was already over. This happened to me many times. And the last time that it happened, I said to myself, the next time, first I’ll grab the camera and then I’ll go to the balcony.

And in the end the next time turned out to be an incident that I never expected could happen. Two years earlier a friend visited me from Germany and he mentioned to me that the police here seem very provocative and dangerous. Even though he was a tourist, the way they behaved made him feel less safe, they made him feel endangered. And when this friend heard about what happened on the 6th of December, he wrote that he wasn’t at all surprised. But I was.

All the previous times, I never got scared observing these fights between people and the police. It was part of my everyday life in Exarchia. It was something commonplace. Because the Exarchia locals express their negation of authority firmly, and they believe in it, whenever something was happening I didn’t need to take a position or make a stand because it was just a part of life in this area. Of course in the ten years that I’ve lived in this flat, I’ve observed year after year a gradual increase in the police presence, an intensification. Policemen began to appear on every corner in the neighborhood, in groups, and also they were armored. The feeling of observing armored police in full riot gear carrying pistols, tear gas guns, and machine guns—it was getting more and more intense. In this period the slogan started to appear on the walls: “on every street corner there are police, the junta didn’t end in ’73.”

On 6 December I was here in the apartment with my German friend. He was cooking in the kitchen and I was in the living room. Suddenly I heard a bang. I hadn’t heard any noises before that. Nothing was happening in the streets, no shouts, nothing. Without warning there was just a bang. It seemed to me that it came from down the street, on the lefthand side. Despite the surprise this time I remembered to grab my camera first. I was not in a panic, I didn’t feel anything unusual, I just calmly got the camera and went to the balcony. I didn’t think anything extraordinary had happened. I looked outside, but I didn’t turn the camera on in the beginning because nothing was happening. I saw a few youths down to the left, sitting like they always do. The young anarchists are always hanging out down there, although this night there were fewer than normal. And on the righthand side, up the street, I saw a police car parked at the corner. One moment after the police car drove off, I saw two cops coming back on foot, and this was very strange to me. I asked myself, what are they going to do? They arrived at the spot where the car had been before, and started provoking the kids, saying come on you pussies! When I heard this I shouted to the German guy, come look! The police came and they’re starting a fight. He would get a chance to see this phenomenon of the Greek cops provoking a fight by insulting people. It’s normal that the police speak bad to people, but this was too much. It was provocative because they parked the police car and they came walking back and shouting challenges. That’s how normal people start a fight. It was like a personal fight, not the usual provocation by police.

Immediately after that they both took out their guns, both the cops. This was never mentioned by the media. And I got one surprise after another. First they came back on foot, then they started a fight by insulting the kids, then they took out their guns, and then they took aim, in a moment when there was no challenge and no threat, there was no fight or confrontation going on. And they shot. I heard two shots but I can’t say if both of them shot or if one shot twice. It’s possible that one of them shot twice. And they turned around and just left, simple as that, as though nothing had happened. Me, until that moment, it didn’t occur to me to look to the left, to the group of kids, because it was all so incredibly strange, the behavior of these two policemen. There was no need to look to the other side because nothing was happening there. And then I heard the people in the street shout that a kid had been shot. And then I felt panic. I ran inside, grabbed the telephone and called an ambulance, and I went down to the street. I saw just one kid lying there, and I was shocked. Everybody was shouting and many people were fainting. The kid wasn’t dead yet, and a doctor had appeared and was trying to administer first aid. Then the ambulance arrived and he died inside in the ambulance, I think.

I found out from other people that the first bang had been a concussion grenade. Apparently someone had thrown a plastic bottle at the police car and yelled an insult as it was passing and the police responded by throwing the grenade from the car. That’s not so unusual here. It’s normal to shout, everyone in Greece is shouting at each other. So I’m sure the policemen hadn’t been threatened, they weren’t defending themselves. Really, if a policeman feels a serious threat, he doesn’t drive down to the next corner then walk back to clean up the situation. Usually when the police feel a threat or feel like they’re under attack, they drive off, they get out of there. The police were not on the defensive at that moment.

I went back up and tried to watch the video on my computer, but I couldn’t because I was missing some program. So I knocked on my neighbor’s door and said I recorded something but I don’t know what it is. Can we put it in your computer so I can see what it is? And we saw the video, and the way I felt, I had never felt that way in my entire life. We called down all the people from the entire neighborhood, everyone, we all came down onto the streets, and the energy, the atmosphere, was one of rage. It was overflowing all the streets, everywhere people were pouring out of their houses onto the streets. Everybody.

The riot police had the gall to come here, back to this corner where the first cop car had stopped, and where the shots were fired. And of course everybody started shouting at them, young people, old people, normal people, everyone was shouting at them to go the hell away.


About two hours after the shooting, it’s impossible to say exactly how long but it was about two hours. The secret police came. I was back in my house listening to the radio and the TV, which were saying there were riots in Exarchia, that the police had been attacked and fired in self-defense, but this wasn’t true. And the riots hadn’t even started yet. And from my window I saw men without uniforms looking at the walls of the buildings around the shooting. The secret police had come to search for the shell casings and the bullets, to investigate the area. I was with my neighbor, and I told him I was going down. I wanted to react somehow to what they were saying on the news. So I went down and I said that what they’re reporting on the television wasn’t true. One tall old guy came up to me with a greasy smile, and said, yes, and who are you? And I felt an amazing fear. Because I’m very naïve, I just felt the obligation to go down and say the truth. But this guy, he terrified me. So I backed off and said, no, who are you? And he told me his name and his position. He was the chief of the secret police agency, and he was in charge of the autopsy and investigation. They took my name and telephone, and they asked me if I was going to come to the central police station to testify, and I said yes.

He asked me what happened. I brought him to the exact point where the policemen were standing when they opened fire. And exactly at that point was where they found the shell casings. And they asked me if I had a vehicle, if I could drive myself to the station. And I said no and they told me I would come with them. I said I hoped the people wouldn’t bomb the police car on the way, and the chief laughed and said have no fear. He directed me to where a large group of riot police were gathered, and I found myself in the middle of a MAT squad. It was right at that moment that the people attacked. The chief disappeared immediately, he ran away and they left me while the people were attacking, and I saw all the guns that the police had and I flipped out. I couldn’t focus on anything, I felt how powerful theHe asked me what happened. I brought him to the exact point where the policemen were standing when they opened fire. And exactly at that point was where they found the shell casings. And they asked me if I had a vehicle, if I could drive myself to the station. And I said no and they told me I would come with them. I said I hoped the people wouldn’t bomb the police car on the way, and the chief laughed and said have no fear. He directed me to where a large group of riot police were gathered, and I found myself in the middle of a MAT squad. It was right at that moment that the people attacked. The chief disappeared immediately, he ran away and they left me while the people were attacking, and I saw all the guns that the police had and I flipped out. I couldn’t focus on anything, I felt how powerful people were, they were full of rage. I can’t remember if they were attacking with stones or molotovs or clubs, only that they were overpowering and I had to get out of there. I ran away by myself and came back to my house.

Of course I was expecting that they would call me for an interview as a witness. But they never did. I spoke with a lawyer of the movement, Yianna Kurtovick, she’s one of the members of the Network for the Defense of Political Prisoners and Immigrants. And she brought me to the examining magistrate. I had to go to find the judge because the police never called me to testify. And after I testified, some days later, they closed the whole area to make the official report to prove whether the bullet hit the kid directly or if it richocheted off the ground. That was the official story, that the one cop had fired at the ground and the bullet bounced up and hit him.

The magistrate, the photographer, and the secretary came up to my balcony to take photographs. The chief of the secret police was down in the street. I called out to him, Oh hello, you left me alone last time in the middle of a riot. And he answered, I didn’t abandon you, it was you who was afraid that the rioters would burn us alive. And I said to him, Don’t tell lies in front of all these people.

I remember telling myself some years ago that I lived in a military camp, with all the police around Exarchia. Now I say that I live in a warzone. What happened in December, I never believed that it could ever happen. Despite all the feelings of military occupation provoked by the police. For me, there was always a limit, always a final line, and when the police crossed this line, it was a qualitative change. Everything changed. Everyone understood that there was a certain horizon to the situation and beyond it everything was different. We have passed this horizon. And now I say that it is not a conflict anymore, now it is war.

In comparison with before December, everything is more powerful. The assassination of Alexis was like the cherry on top, the last straw. Now there is no more tolerance for the police. The killing was so outrageous, so far beyond the limits, that the people reacted and still they continue to react. They are getting empowered from the rage that was expressed at the moment of the killing. There were many other problems too besides police brutality, and these problems continue, but the people don’t tolerate these other problems either, not anymore.

So I’ll be in the trial of the policeman who killed Alexis. I was worrying about how I’ll feel towards the defense lawyer, because he’s defending a very bad person. Then I started to worry about the outcome of the trial, because if this cop ends up with only two or three years in jail, I don’t know how I would react. How do you react to the decision of a trial like this? Because many terrifying things are happening, and we hear about them and see them on the news, but it is very different when you saw it with your own eyes. It is not just words, it is a clear truth for you, there is no doubt about this, there is no distance from it. It is such an absolute truth, the assassination, it is like if you steal something from me in front of my eyes and then tell me it never existed. It is not something you just heard about from somewhere else. And I fear very much that if they find this cop not guilty, maybe my reaction will get me thrown in jail. I think about this all the time, as I prepare to testify.

Void Network
[Theory,Utopia,Empathy,Ephemeral Arts]
 http://voidnetwork.blogspot.com

Welche Hochschulen sind besetzt?

Bolle 05.12.2009 - 17:12
Habt ihr eine Liste?!

Hochschulen

Antibia 05.12.2009 - 23:25
Genaue zahlen gibt es momentan nicht..
Die als wichtigste besetzung in Athen ist die des Polytechnikums ASOEE.
In Thessaloniki gibt es momentan 2 Besetzungen im Zentrum der Stadt:
Das gebäude der Theater Fakultät und das Olympion.Auch wenn das Olympion nicht zur Uni gehört wird die Besetzung toleriert.

Momentan kann man generell nur die Parole aus Athen Indymedia übernehmen die ein gutes bild gibt über die momentane Situation:
Militärdiktatur gab es 1973,Militärdiktatur gab es 2008,Militärdiktatur gibt es 2009.

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