210 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
210 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Stay Radikal!
|
|
|
|
"It was never about illegality as such, rather the promotion of
|
|
free communication and the conveyance of radical political
|
|
content."
|
|
- Interview With A Radikal Group, 1989
|
|
|
|
Statement From Radikal
|
|
|
|
On June 13, 1995, federal police in Germany carried out a
|
|
major coup against left-radical structures. At six in the
|
|
morning, around 50 homes and leftist projects all across Germany
|
|
were stormed. The mainstream media praised the action as a "blow
|
|
to terrorist groups", spewing forth the cops' line that the raids
|
|
were directed against the Anti-Imperialist Cell (AIZ), the group
|
|
K.O.M.I.T.E.E., and the illegal magazine 'Radikal'. The usual
|
|
stigma of "terrorist group" was attached, justified with
|
|
Paragraphs 129 and 129a. Standard pig procedure. It's a part of
|
|
German reality to have homes being stormed, children rousted from
|
|
their beds by masked cops with guns, weapons pointed at the heads
|
|
of individuals whose "only" crime was their work on a
|
|
left-radical newspaper. Even on the suspicion of simply
|
|
distributing Radikal, people were terrorized all over the
|
|
country, from Berlin to Hamburg to Cologne. This was the biggest
|
|
raid on the German left in years - the Kurds, of course, have
|
|
been subjected to such treatment on several occasions recently.
|
|
That night on the TV, there was little mention any more
|
|
about the AIZ or the K.O.M.I.T.E.E. Hell, we haven't enjoyed so
|
|
much publicity in a long time, as images were flashed of the
|
|
cops' Radikal archives, followed by a report of the arrest of 4
|
|
people for "membership in a criminal organization", Radikal.
|
|
Investigations are continuing against 21 other individuals on the
|
|
same charge. So we felt this was reason enough for people to hear
|
|
from us between issues. Sorry it took so long for this to happen,
|
|
but these things take time, as anyone familiar with
|
|
inter-regional structures knows.
|
|
We won't try to make the intensity of this repression or our
|
|
status in the left-radical scene seem any greater than it really
|
|
is. We always knew such a raid would happen at some point. But it
|
|
is surprising that such a hard action against a publishing
|
|
project could be carried out without so much as a peep from the
|
|
"left- liberal public". It's characteristic of the continuity of
|
|
the repression against leftist structures, even in times when the
|
|
radical-left is weak. The BAW [federal prosecutor's office] had
|
|
just finished in their failed attempt to criminalize Gottingen's
|
|
Autonome Antifa (M) under Paragraph 129, and let's not forget the
|
|
cop raids and the banning of the Kurdistan Information Bureau in
|
|
Cologne because it published "pro-PKK" paper 'Kurdistan
|
|
Rundbrief', so now they decided to go against other organized
|
|
structures of the radical-left in Germany - on the same day as a
|
|
Nazi letterbomb terror attack on an SPD politician in Lubeck.
|
|
It's clear that these raids weren't just aimed at us. We
|
|
were just a convenient excuse. "The action was an aimed
|
|
preventive measure designed to deter the left-radical scene",
|
|
said interior minister and deportation specialist Kanther that
|
|
same evening. While right-wing terror grows worse and the
|
|
consensus of social democrats/greens/conservatives in Great
|
|
Germany is ready to send the Bundeswehr on its first foreign
|
|
mission, it seems clear that the real threat is still the left.
|
|
The message being sent is clear, and by lumping together the AIZ,
|
|
K.O.M.I.T.E.E., and Radikal, it is that much easier to
|
|
criminalize the entire left.
|
|
|
|
Who We Are
|
|
|
|
We produce and distribute a magazine. A magazine which, in a
|
|
time of state control and self-censorship, is a forum for a
|
|
discussion of street militancy and armed struggle. Of course, we
|
|
aren't "neutral" in this discussion. We fundamentally reject the
|
|
notion that the state has a monopoly on the legitimate use of
|
|
force. The existing social conditions can only be changed if
|
|
left-radical groups and associations build up their abilities and
|
|
structures so as to be able to counter some of these effects even
|
|
today. This, of course, includes militant and armed intervention,
|
|
but these would be empty gestures if there wasn't also some sort
|
|
of linkage or means of conveying their message. Of course, we are
|
|
very happy when militant anti-fascist initiatives disrupt Nazi
|
|
meetings. So we also see one of our functions as exposing fascist
|
|
structures so as to make both old and new Nazis attackable, and
|
|
we think this is one very important aspect of anti-fascist work.
|
|
Of course, it would have been awesome if the cover of our
|
|
next issue had had a big picture of the new deportation prison in
|
|
Berlin-Grunau reduced to rubble. All people who seek to intervene
|
|
and oppose Germany's refugee policies would have been overjoyed
|
|
at this disruption of the state's deportation machinery. A
|
|
radical-left which takes the past 25 years of its history
|
|
seriously must discuss the successes and failures of the various
|
|
armed and militant groups, such as the RAF, the 2nd of June
|
|
Movement, the Revolutionary Cells, and militant autonomist
|
|
groups, and it must draw consequences for the future from this
|
|
discussion.
|
|
In order that we don't just keep looking back at our
|
|
history, but rather so that we keep up to date with actual
|
|
developments, it's important that we be active in current
|
|
anti-fascist initiatives or, for example, discuss the politics of
|
|
the AIZ, of whom we are very critical. We must continually fight
|
|
for the necessary space to carry out such discussions and defend
|
|
ourselves from state attacks. Radikal tries to do jut that, no
|
|
more, no less. We try to make it possible for various structures
|
|
to have a means of being heard on a regular basis. It's seem like
|
|
we're stating the obvious when we say that the cop attacks on
|
|
Radikal are, at the same time, a criminalization of other leftist
|
|
structures which provide this necessary space, like infoshops and
|
|
other magazines for example.
|
|
The present attacks on us, however, are qualitatively
|
|
different than past repressive campaigns for two fundamental
|
|
reasons. Firstly, we have now been declared a "criminal
|
|
organization", and secondly, it has now been stated that Radikal
|
|
has "entirely criminal content". A look back at the last few
|
|
issues, therefore, will reveal what criminal means: new
|
|
anti-racist street names in Braunschweig, articles on nationalism
|
|
and the liberation struggle in Kurdistan, an analysis of the
|
|
history of patriarchal gender divisions, an appeal from
|
|
non-commercial radio stations, debates about leftist campaigns
|
|
surrounding the May 8th commemorations...that's criminal content?
|
|
Before, the authorities used to point out specific articles which
|
|
"supported a terrorist organization" so as to criminalize them,.
|
|
Now the cops don't want to go through all that trouble so they
|
|
have just called the entire project a "criminal organization",
|
|
therefore the content must be criminal, too. But it's the mixture
|
|
of theory and actual attacks, discussion and practical tips,
|
|
which makes Radikal so interesting to read for so many people.
|
|
And we value this mixture. Radikal aims to mobilize people to
|
|
oppose Nazis and to stop the Castor nuclear waste shipments,
|
|
while at the same time giving information about debates on
|
|
anti-nationalism or the background of the origins of capitalist
|
|
and patriarchal social structures. What's more, it should offer
|
|
space for people from even the most remote corners of Germany to
|
|
discuss their actions or their difficulties, things which have
|
|
been ignored for far too long by a jaded left fixated on the
|
|
metropoles. The federal police have called this mixture criminal.
|
|
If you listen to what the cops say about all of this, it
|
|
sounds like some sort of cheesy novel. We are supposedly
|
|
organized in a "highly conspiratorial manner" with "fixed
|
|
organizational structures". It seems that really banal things are
|
|
actually dangerous. Anyone who produces a magazine needs "fixed
|
|
organizational structures", they need to sit down together and
|
|
talk about what should go into the next issue and how to
|
|
distribute the magazine, mail out subscriptions, write articles,
|
|
answer letters from readers, and so on and so forth. The only
|
|
difference between us and normal, legal magazines is the fact
|
|
that we have removed ourselves from state control, out of the
|
|
reach of the censorship authorities. Over the years, we have
|
|
built up an organizational structure which allows us to
|
|
distribute a relatively high number of magazines nation-wide, by
|
|
radical-left standards that is. As with other groups who seek to
|
|
build up open or hidden structures, we are subject to state
|
|
repression. From their point of view, the BAW had good reason to
|
|
act now, since all their previous actions against us had been
|
|
fruitless. Radikal kept being published, and there was nothing
|
|
they could do about it.
|
|
In 1982, about 20 homes, bookstores, and printing shops were
|
|
raided in an attempt to prosecute Radikal for "supporting a
|
|
terrorist organization". In 1984, 2 supposed editors of the paper
|
|
were sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison, but they avoided going
|
|
to the slammer by getting elected to the European Parliament for
|
|
the Greens. In 1991, the federal prosecutor exchanged the jail
|
|
terms for a fine. The next step came in 1986, when Radikal was
|
|
already organized underground. Now, 100 homes and shops were
|
|
raided by the cops. Nearly 200 court cases were opened, and in
|
|
the end 5 people were given suspended sentences of 4-10 months.
|
|
The wave of repression in 1986 - in addition to the obvious aims
|
|
of scaring people and just being repressive - had one major aim,
|
|
namely to drive Radikal out of the public realm and to lessen its
|
|
effectiveness. But that didn't succeed. Despite the fact that
|
|
several book stores, most of which dated back to Radikal's legal
|
|
days, backed out on us and left us with heavy debts, work on
|
|
Radikal and its distribution became much more decentralized. A
|
|
network of groups and individuals took up responsibility for the
|
|
magazine, based on their conditions. In 1989, the state
|
|
authorities went into action one more time after ID-Verlag in
|
|
Amsterdam published an interview with us as a brochure.
|
|
The latest moves by the BAW have again made it clear that
|
|
claims by the mainstream media and left-liberals concerning armed
|
|
groups - "Your attacks make it possible for the state to turn the
|
|
screws of repression even tighter!" - are total crap. Even the
|
|
cease-fire from the guerrilla did not open up any "new levels of
|
|
social debate". The defenders of law and order are continuing to
|
|
act against left-radical groups, who are all equally defined as
|
|
dangerous, and these are attacked at the same high level.
|
|
4 people are now in prison! We can't just forget that fact.
|
|
In any case, that's why we'd like to call for exchange and
|
|
communication with the solidarity groups. The charges against the
|
|
4 are as follows: They produced and distributed Radikal. But who
|
|
actually "produces" Radikal? Those people who send in reports of
|
|
antifa actions, or is it those people that take 10 copies and
|
|
give them to their friends to read, or maybe it's those people
|
|
that write a few articles and do some lay-out, or maybe it's the
|
|
people that see to it that a few copies get into the prisons? Or
|
|
maybe the BAW thinks it's those people that discuss for weeks on
|
|
end which articles should go in the next issue of Radikal? Or is
|
|
the ones who stand for long hours behind the printing presses?
|
|
We're not really sure who exactly the cops are referring to
|
|
when they talk about Radikal, but we know they really mean all of
|
|
us! All people who see the continued need for radical-left
|
|
structures for discussion and communication, away from state
|
|
control and the apparatus of repression. And all people who
|
|
recognize the need for women and men to become organized to avoid
|
|
being swallowed up by capitalist and patriarchal reality. That's
|
|
why it's the task for all of us to not accept this attack nor to
|
|
let it go unanswered.
|
|
|
|
We need an uncontrollable resistance media!
|
|
Read, use, distribute, and stay Radikal!
|
|
Powerful greetings to Rainer, Ralf, Werner, and Andreas!
|
|
Free the prisoners!
|
|
The teeth will show whose mouth is open!
|
|
|
|
some Radikal groups - Summer 1995
|