Updated: Finsbury Square eviction, Pilgrimage for Justice today, Folk the Banks album release,Carnival of Dirt

**** Update 7 June – The Finsbury Square occupation has been granted a stay of execution until Friday 15 June to lodge an appeal. Pop down, show support, bring supplies (food, bedding, cleaning stuff etc) ***

Finsbury Square eviction

The potential forceful eviction of the Occupy London Finsbury Square camp is expected to happen in the early hours in the next few days, with residents choosing to mark the eviction with peaceful resistance. The potential eviction follows Justice Hickinbottom ruling on Friday at the High Court that Islington Borough Council has the right to repossess the public space post Jubilee Bank Holiday.

Tom McCarthy, a resident at Finsbury Square said: “This camp makes a political statement about our society. Since Occupy opened the camp on 21 October, it has become a home and community for many homeless people, for whom the system has failed. In evicting this community, Islington Council – who have helped to re-home some people that have ticked certain boxes – are potentially leaving some people in a much worse position than they are already in. “We ask Islington Council to not go down the same route at the City of London Corporation – cleansing the City of homeless people is not the way forward. Helping to find real solutions is.”

Whatever happens in terms of the eviction, residents plan to continue occupying.

Pilgrimage for Justice starts Thursday 7 June – London to Canterbury

Starting, Thursday 7 June Occupy Faith, supported by Occupy London, faith groups and the Archbishop of Wales, will be undertaking a Pilgrimage for Justice. Walking from St Paul’s Cathedral to Canterbury Cathedral, arriving on 19 June, with a diversity of people taking part sharing a clear concern for the common good, all are welcome to join them along the way, as they walk and camp. The Pilgrimage ends with a conference in Canterbury looking at the concerns raised along the way.

The group will meet at 12.30pm outside St Paul’s where a blessing will be given to the pilgrims before they set off. Events en route include dinner at a Sikh Gurdwara, a debate with local business leaders, a discussion with the Bishop of Rochester, and an interfaith service at Canterbury Cathedral. More details and route are available at the Occupy Faith website (http://www.occupyfaith.org.uk).

Tanya Paton from Occupy Faith commented: “While Occupy London may have been removed from certain spaces, the economic crisis remains; and the Pilgrimage for Justice illustrates that occupiers will find new ways of challenging and addressing inequalities.”

Occupy benefit album Folk the Banks album out now – Pay what you can afford

Emerging out of Occupy London, Occupation Records – a record label set up to benefit the Occupy movement – has released its first album - Folk the Banks - featuring Occupy supporting artists including Tom Morello, Ani DiFranco, Billy Bragg, Martha Wainwright, Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly, Chumbawumba, Peggy Seeger, with iconic artwork by Jamie Reid – famed for the Sex Pistols’ ‘God Save the Queen album artwork. The Occupation Records label is an attempt to bring the ethos of Occupy into the music industry in a very practical way, to raise awareness of social and economic inequality as well as explore alternative ways of doing business ethically. As such, Folk the Banks is available from quality record stores in UK and online, with ‘Pay what you can afford’ digital downloads now available from the Occupation Records website (http://occupationrecords.com), plus CDs, vinyls, limited artwork prints and ethical T-shirts. [1] [2]

Carnival of Dirt to hit London – 15 June

As a response to 21 occupiers being arrested for a banner drop highlighting corporate greed at the offices of the FTSE’s highest paid CEO in November 2011 – Xstrata’s Mick Davis – members of Occupy London have joined up with an unprecedented coalition of activist groups across the world to address the criminal behaviour of mining and extraction corporations. [3] [4] This coalition vows to challenge the complicity of western countries in corporate abuses in the majority world and on 15 June, are planning the first ever Carnival of Dirt in London.

A carnival like no other, the day promises to be a spectacular day of remembrance, learning and celebration and an example of how the Global Spring is seeing activists from the minority and majority world joining together.

In the morning, people will gather at 11am by St Paul’s to sombrely mark the countless activists who have died in the majority world, while standing up to mining and extraction corporations. In the afternoon, a teach out and picnic will be held where individuals will be able to provide their own accounts of how destructive these industries are and experts in the industry will be able to give their views too. Speakers include majority world human rights activists, journalists, scientists and legal experts. The evening, meeting at Embankment at 6pm, will see a return to the 90s with a spectacular party organised by Reclaim The Streets veterans, where people will celebrate the fact that there is a rapidly growing global movement that is challenging the unjust, undemocratic, unsustainable corporatocracy that the world is currently held in the grips of.

Notes

[1] Folk the Banks album available on a Pay What You Can Afford basis a thttp://www.occupationrecords.com/. Folk the Banks flyer -http://www.occupationrecords.com/shop/flyer_folkthebanks-A4.jpg. Occupation Records on facebook - https://www.facebook.com/occupationrecords / twitter -https://twitter.com/#!/OccuRecords

[2] Occupation Records is a benefit record label raising funds for, and spreading the messages of the Occupy and related movements through the release of benefit albums, alongside merchandise and live events. The label is an attempt to bring the ethos of Occupy into the music industry in a very practical way. It is run under the ethos of Occupy. All the profits from the album are distributed to the global Occupy movement and related and allied movements. Decisions are made by consensus, all members are represented by a union, finances transparent and open, with distribution and manufacture being ethical and transparent. The label has also initiated community engagement projects such as most recently “School of Rockupy” were young people are joined with music artists to write, produce, record and distribute a track in one day getting their message out utilising the processes of Occupy. The next School  of Rockupy will be taking place in June 2012 – details of the first edition with Kate Nash can be found at http://schoolofrockupy.wordpress.com/. Members of the collective behind the label are also actively involved in Occupy London.

[3] N30, corporate greed, Xstrata and the right to protest http://occupylsx.org/?p=1755

[4] Website - http://www.carnivalofdirt.org; facebook -http://www.facebook.com/events/340301169371483/; twitter -https://twitter.com/#!/CarnivalofDirt. contributing to the day include members of Climate Justice Network, Congo United for Freedom, Congolese Youth Action Platform, Earth Angels, Free West Papua Campaign, Philippine Indigenous Peoples Links, No Tar Sands, Hands Off Somalia, Lumumba Coalition, Latin American Mining Monitoring Programme, Government of the Dead, London Mining Network, UK Uncut, Occupy London, Reclaim the Streets and more.  

UPDATED with video. A promise from Occupy London: this is only the beginning

Gallery

Video by Inka Stafrace of Polly Tikkle Productions, an occupier who resided at the Occupy London Stock Exchange occupation for 3 of the 4.5 month occupation. Featured song is “Why we build the wall” by Anais Mitchell, one of the artists featured on … Continue reading

Occupy London vows to symbolically and peacefully mark eviction

Gallery

Following the Court of Appeal ruling yesterday that none of the applications presented by Occupy London would be heard and that there could be an iminent eviction by bailiffs on behalf of the City of London Corporation, the Occupy London General Assembly yesterday decided by consensus to support the … Continue reading

Open letter regarding potential eviction of OccupyLSX to City of London Corporation & St Paul’s Cathedral

Gallery

Below is an open letter from Occupy London to the City of London Corporation, the Bishop of London and the Chapter of St Paul’s Cathedral regarding the upcoming potential eviction of the OccupyLSX occupation. If you would like to add … Continue reading

Bank of Ideas eviction, Occupy London protestors and media assaulted by bailiffs, Police fail to act and uphold duty of care

Gallery

This gallery contains 3 photos.

Early this morning a number of concerning incidents happened affecting Occupy London supporters and media which raise questions about the police’s duty of care and failure to act on it, as well as the actions of the bailiffs – Rossendales … Continue reading

Deadline 3pm 9/12 – Legal Calls for Online Witness Statements

***** Final deadline 3pm 9 December *****

The Legal work group at the Occupy LSX camp at St. Paul’s has put out a call for Witness Statements from the online community to help in the upcoming eviction case that is due to start on Monday 19th December.

Legal spokesperson, Matthew Varnham, explains “A Witness Statement allows a person to share their experiences, views, and details of their involvement with the Occupy LSX camp with the court, allowing them to have a say in the case, without having to worry about any of the repercussions of being an independent defendant. We understand that many of the online members of the community have also had a significant involvement with the camp, and by opening up the opportunity to provide Witness Statements online, we are allowing this often neglected aspect of the Occupy movement to share their experiences and provide vital evidence for the court case.”

For more details on how to provide a Witness Statement, either online or in the camp, please follow this link.

Occupy London expresses solidarity with Occupy Wall Street at the US embassy

Occupy London held a solidarity demonstration outside the US Embassy today (Tuesday) following the eviction of Occupy Wall Street protestors from Zucotti Park in the early hours of this morning. Occupiers unfurled a banner reading, “They cannot evict an idea” as police blocked access to the embassy.

Six American citizens from Occupy London wanted to speak to consular officials at the US embassy, to ask why the violent eviction had been able to take place in a country where the rights to free speech and assembly are guaranteed under the Constitution. Despite the initial attempts of police to refuse the five who had their US passports with them access to the embassy, they were eventually granted an audience with a member of the consular team and a representative from the embassy’s press office. They were not, however, granted entry to the embassy itself.

The embassy representatives explained that the evictions of peaceful protesters in New York, Oakland and elsewhere were decisions taken at city level and not by the US federal government. The five asked how it was that the US Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton, could call for countries in the Middle East to respect citizens’ right to peaceful protest while that was seemingly not respected at home. In response, the embassy officials agreed to send a request to the Department of Justice asking them make a statement on the evictions in light of the concerns expressed by Americans abroad.

Adam Fitzmaurice, one of those who visited the US embassy today said: “I want to know why Secretary of State Clinton feels comfortable demanding dictators such as Mubarak and Assad respect and allow peaceful protest while the NYPD, Oakland PD, Denver PD, and others across the US brutally gas, pepper-spray and beat peaceful protesters to suppress dissent.”

Coincidentally, the City of London announced today that they would be restarting legal proceedings against Occupy London under the terms of the Highways Act.