486 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
486 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
NEWS&VIEWS FROM (THE FORMER) SOVIETSKY SOYUZNo.2, Sept.1993
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ANARCHIST CHRONICLE
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SOLIDARITY WORKS! MOLDAVIAN ANARCHISTS WON THE TRIAL BECAUSE
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OF INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY CAMPAIGN
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Two Moldavian anarchists, Tamara Burdenko and Igor Hergenreoder,
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recently won their trial against the administration of the
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magazine "Kodry" where Tamara worked. Tamara was fired soon after
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her husband's articles criticizing the Moldavian
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national-authoritarian regime appeared in some papers. But for
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about a year (since May 7, 1992) the authorities denied the
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political character of that act. Because of the international
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solidarity campaign with Tamara and Igor it was possible to force
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the judges to make a just verdict. Numerous protests were send by
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anarchists and human right activists to the Moldavian authorities
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and in January 1993 the Moldavian prosecutor general had to make
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an appeal to the court himself asking for another trial. Tamara
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and Igor insisted that all the articles that started their
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repression be put into their file and refused to go to court until
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this was done. On May 11, 1993 the court handed down its verdict -
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the firing was judged illegal and they ordered that Tamara be
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paid. Ironically, the sum is ridiculous - 18,500 roubles for
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almost a year of lost work (about US$18). However, the
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administration refused to pay even this and told Tamara that she
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will be taken to court again. Still, the decision of the court is
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certainly a victory and now it's much easier for Tamara Burdenko
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and Igor Hergenreoder to resist the attacks of the Moldavian
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authorities. Tamara and Igor are very grateful to all the comrades
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who have helped them to fight the injustice.
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MAY DAY IN THE EX-USSR
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On May 1st anarchists in Moscow didn't hold their own
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demonstrations. Members of the Initiative of Revolutionary
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Anarchists (IREAN) and Group of Radical Anarcho-syndicalists
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(GRAS) (about ten people in total) joined the trade union
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demonstration. Since they denounced the unions as "nomenklatura
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unions" the organizers tried to kick them out of the demonstration
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and even appealed to police. The incident didn't end badly and the
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radicals continued their rally near the union one. In Donetsk
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(Ukraine) the local anarcho-syndicalist group joined the
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demonstration of the ex-CPSU groups, but was asked to leave it
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because of their black banners. In spite of all reservations some
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groups tend to look at the communist organizations as potential
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allies - this is rather sad. In Tomsk activists from the Tomsk
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and Seversk (Tomsk-7) local anarcho-syndicalist groups held a May
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Day rally.Communists which held their rally nearby called on the
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anarchists to join it and even to join the Russian Communist
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Workers Party, but surely get a refusal. (Also see the story
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about May Day riot in Moscow.)
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BYELORUSSIAN ANARCHISTS AGAINST UNEMPLOYMENT
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GOMEL (BYELORUSSIA). On May 25th, the Gomel organization of the
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Byelorussian Anarchist Federation, the Union of the Unemployed and
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a local of the Byelorussian Confederation of Labour from the Gomel
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AgriculturaL Machinery Factory, held a demonstration outside of
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the factory, where many people had recently lost their jobs.
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Several hundred workers from the factory attended the demo. The
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workers who spoke criticised the management of the factory who are
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actively involved in speculation using the factory's products and
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demanded that salaries be raised.(In the foundry workers earn just
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9,000 roubles a month - less than 9 US dollars.) There were also
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demands for worker control. The organizers of the action hope that
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the 880 workers at the factory who may be fired will stand up and
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join the Byelorussian Confederation of Labour's independent union
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which is capable of protecting them from getting fired.
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WHAT'S SO ANARCHIST ABOUT LIBERALISM?
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MOSCOW. On June 19-20 the founding congress of the Libertarian
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Workers Union (SVT) was held in Moscow. The name, however, is very
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misleading as the Union is composed of anarcho-capitalists, many
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of whom are entrepreneurs. Currently the Union has member groups
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in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Tula and Kazan. The Union stands for
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the limitation of state interference into economy, reduction of
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taxes and liquidation of state economy. All very anarchist. As a
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result of discussion at the congress the decision was made that
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SVT will have a strong structure with central coordination
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committee and will be registered as a political party. The social
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base of the new organization will be the middle class. A
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theoretical magazine called "The Black Line" will be published by
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Saint Petersburg group, which already publishes "information
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bulletin of the anarchist movement An-Press". The bulletin will
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also be sponsored by the SVT. The founders of the American state
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who wrote the Declaration of Independence would have been very
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surprised to know that there is somebody to the right of them, who
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calls himself an anarchist.
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KAS MEETING IN MOSCOW
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MOSCOW. On June 26-27 an impromptu meeting since activists from
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Tomsk, Omsk and Khabarovsk simultaneously arrived to Moscow.
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Current political and social situation was discussed, there were
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reports about the Information Bureauof KAS (run by KAS activists
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in Tomsk), publishing anarcho- syndicalist magazine "Obschina"
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(Moscow). Also a proposal was made to organize the next convention
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of KAS in Moscow in the end of May 1994. Proposed topics for
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discussion were the problems of building independent unions (it is
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possible that it will be a joint seminar together with Swedish
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syndicalists and Labour Information Centre KAS-KOR) and
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anarcho-syndicalist press. One day of the congress will probably
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be devoted to the 180th anniversary of Mikhail Bakunin. These
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proposals are to be discussed through KAS information bulletin.
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ARE THERE ANY EAST EUROPEANS IN EASTERN EUROPE?
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ZAPOROZHYE (UKRAINE). On July 16-20 "the second conference of East
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European anarchists" was held in Zaporozhye. Strange as it may
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seem none of the ex-Soviet anarchists were invited. In spite of
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that people from Donetsk, Moscow (IREAN) and Byelorussia came to
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the conference. None of the East European participants came, there
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were only some people from Germany, England, Holland and Belgium
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(obviously invited by the organizers to "strengthen international
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contacts" and probably get some money). Some discussions on the
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current situation in the ex-USSR took place, foreign participants
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spoke about their activities. The participants of the
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anarcho-syndicalist meeting in Moscow (see the info above) send
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greetings to the organizers of the conference stating that since
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they were not invited to the East European conference, they
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consider themselves to be Northern Eurasians and are very grateful
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to the organizers of the conference for the help in their
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self-identification.
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AGAINST NOMENKLATURA PRIVATIZATION
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SEVERSK (TOMSK-7). We already informed the readers about the
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activities of local anarcho-syndicalist group and their struggles
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against bureaucratic privatization. (See News&Views No.1.) On
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March 19 and 20 late in the evening two activists of KAS were
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attacked and severely beaten. This happened soon after the
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information about the maneuvres of the administration aimed at
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privatization of the factory behind the backs of the workers was
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published in the newssheet "Worker" published by
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anarcho-syndicalists. Vladimir Yefimov and Piotr Melnyk, the
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victims of these two attacks, had to spend about a week at home
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recovering from the wounds. After Vladimir Yefimov appeared at the
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factory he was told by the administration that it would be better
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if he quits his job. On April 15 the workers collective discussed
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whether the establishment of the small business by administration
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of the factory was legal or not. The bosses had to retreat saying
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that the business was already liquidated and the money invested
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illegaly from the factory fund were returned.Nevertheless, as a
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result of these events Vladimir Yefimov quited from the factory,
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but anarcho-syndicalists from Seversk don't regret about the work
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done to fight back against bureaucratic privatization.
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POLICE/PRISONS
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COPWATCH IN KALININGRAD (KONIGSBERG)
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On April 20 an activist from the libertarian socialist group
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"Solidarity" and a deputy of the city Soviet Alexander Zhidenkov
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was attacked by policemen. After he got several blows with a
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rubber baton, he was taken to the police department, where his
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deputy mandate was confiscated and he was held there for about an
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hour. Later on when he was released local authorities refused to
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open a case against policemen. Solidarity together with other
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groups (Ecodefence and anarchists) decided to organize an
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information centre and launch a campaign called "People Against
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Police Terror". They will be gathering information about all the
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cases of police abuse, spreading them through mass media and
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assisting in taking the police to courts. You can contact the
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organizers of campaign at: Press centre "People Against Police
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Terror", 30-8 Ulitsa Nevskogo, Kaliningrad/Konigsberg 236041,
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Russia/CIS
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PRISON RIOT BRUTALLY SUPPRESSED
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5 people were killed and 40 injured (including 20 policemen) while
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supressing a riot in a correctional institution in the city
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Vladimir, north-east of Moscow. The riot started early in the
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morning July 7. About 1000 people made barricades on a small
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territory and demanded that representatives from the Ministry of
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the Interlnal Affairs come to speak to them. The demands included
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the liquidation of local zones, the introduction of permanent
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waiters in the canteen, the possibility to have meals whenever one
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needs, smoke whereever one wants and wear slippers instead of
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heavy boots. The negotiations which lasted until the evening
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didn't bring any results and the riot was crushed with 400
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policemen and soldiers supported by two armoured cars. 70 people
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were taken to the special cells until the end of the
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investigation. The riot in Vladimir was the biggest one this
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year.
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STRUGGLES AGAINST PRIVATIZATION IN RUSSIA
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THE BARBERS HAVE TO TAKE THE PATH OF WAR
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NOVOSIBIRSK. The Labour Collective of Barber's No.5 has occupied
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the premises in the centre of the city and have been protecting
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them round the clock for almost two months. The barbers are
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struggling for their existence. Thedesperate struggle of the
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barber's No.5 collective stands out against the quiet background
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of the Novosibirsk workers' movement like something
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extraordinary. The Novosibirsk public, however, takes the events
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cooly, the more so, as the action is presented as an ordinary
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strike. But this is not the case. The collective of 16 does not
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leave the premises of the barber's day-and-night, does not let in
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the managers and takes other precautions. Round-the- clock
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protection is the only means to prevent the planned lock-out, the
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barbers believe. "We are put up for sale and we don't know about
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it!" says one of the placards in the barber's window. The thing is
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that the management of the lease association "Diana" determined,
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against the will of the labour collective, to reconstruct the
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premises of the barber's and open a commercial shop. They do not
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admit to this decision publicly and the director promises that
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after the reconstruction there will be a hairdressing saloon of an
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international category instead of the barber's and accompanying
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goods traded by it. But the labour collective doesn't believe him,
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and not without reason. A case like that has already taken place
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at barber's No.7. Last year after the summer leave the employees
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found a commercial shop in the building of their barber's and in
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the former auxiliary room there were two seats for work. Thus
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eight out of ten barbers became unemployed. The labour collective
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of barber's No.5 applied to the city federation of trade unions
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but with no result. Then the employees left this union and set up
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a cell of the Sotsprof regional association. The collective of the
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barber's No.7 has declared that they will proceed with their
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action until the mayor cancelles the lease with "Diana"'s director
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and concludes an agreement directly with the labour collective.
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On June 1st the head of local adminisrtation signed the new
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statutes of the lease association "Diana" according to which all
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the workers are the owners of the association and have the right
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to participate in decision-making. On June 2nd the barber's No.5
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opened to the customers. The workers collective forced the former
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director to resign and elected their union leader to that
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position.
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PETROPAVLOVSK-KAMCHATSKI. In the last few days of May, the
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residents of the microregion of "Dachny" have spoken out against
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the transference of their local food store to a private company
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called "Yaroslavl". The store was privatized at a closed auction.
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This is against privtization laws which state that businesses in
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the regions of the Far North can be privatized only in agreement
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with residents of the area and its workers. A crowd of
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demonstrators blocked traffic in a number of city streets. The
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privatization of the store was put off. Soon a resolution signed
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by Boris Yeltsin was recieved which said that the store should be
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given to the workers collective. But the present situation is
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still troublesome,because according to the plans of privatization
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the store should be privitized by the end of this year and it is
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quite probable that at the next auction the price of the store
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K8will be much higher and the workers won't be able to buy it.
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Currently the store is closed for repairs and all the sales are
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taking place out in the street. The struggle of the workers of the
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store against nomenklatura privatization was supported by dozens
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of protests sent by fishermen, who are the main dwellers in the
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region. Workers of some enterprises thretaened the authorities
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with holding mass hunger-strikes if the store will be turned into
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a commercial enterprise. Now the prices in the store are lower
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compared to the other commercial stores and thus the workers can
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afford themselves to shop there.
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ONE MORE VICTORY FOR "DEFENCE"
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MOSCOW. On March 29 the labour collective of store No. 53 set up a
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cell of the trade union "Defence." This action was undertaken in
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order to prevent the director of the store from privatizing the
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store on her own - thus evading the law and ignoring the labour
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collective's opinions. The store is a lease enterprise and cannot
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be put up for sale at auction. However just that was done and all
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the employees were dismissed. The labour collective
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representatives applied for help to the prefect and the public
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prosecutor, but in vain. Then the labour collective voted against
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the director at a general meeting and elected a new director.
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After that, in the presence of the prefecture's representatives
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and municipal militiamen, the seals were removed from the doors
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and the labour collective went back to their routine work.
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OMSK. For a week since July 8 workers from the "Rakurs"
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photostudio held an occupation strike protesting against a deal
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made between the city administration and a Chinese- Russian joint
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venture (the Russian side of that enterprise is being represented
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by only one person) allowing the joint venture to occupy the
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premises of the studio. On July 7 twenty five workers from the
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photo studio were told to move the equipment out of the premises
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and take it to another building in the suburbs of the city. In
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response the workers locked the doors and refused to leave the
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building. The court refused to take their appeal about
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privatization of the studio by the labour collective. The mayor of
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the city refused to make any negotiations with the strikers untill
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they are all arrested (!). On July 14 police troops surrounded the
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building threatening to break the blocked doors with a truck. The
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strikers surrendered to the police and left the premises, but they
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continue their struggle. Some public organizations from Omsk,
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including the Workers' Movement Support Committee, ecological
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groups and even Cossacks. You can support the labour collective of
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the studio by sending protests to: the Committee of CityProperty,
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Ulitsa Lenina 13, Omsk 644001, Russia/CIS.
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TRADE UNIONS
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People continue to leave formerly official trade unions in Russia.
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>From Jan. 1 , 1992 - Jan. 1, 1993, membership in the ex-communist
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Russian Federation of Independent Trade Unions (FNPR) decreased
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from 72.6 million people to 64.3. But according to the leadership
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of the FNPR, this decline in membership is related to the number
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of people who have left their permanent place of residence for
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other countries, to the number of businesses that have closed down
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and to the transference of workers to commercial enterprises.
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Still it was announced that only 1.6 million members had left the
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FNPR voluntarily. Unions affiliated to FNPR are the only unions
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at the majority of workplaces. Currently they unite not only wage
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labourers but administration too. Membership fees are taken from
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the workers automatically
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ECOLOGY
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There have been a number of ecological actions this summer
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organized by anarchists and radical ecologists. One of them is an
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ecological camp in the city of Cherpovetz which started on July
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1st. In Cherepovetz there is a giant metallurgical factory which
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has caused great environmental damage to the area. The factory,
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which was built in the 50's uses outdated technology; the factory
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emits a gas which is similar in composition to the poisonous gases
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used by the military. Cherepovetz is one of the top 5 polluted
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sites in Russia; the population suffer from certain diseases at
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least twice as much as the general public and more than half of
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the children born die within the first year of life. For this
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reason they decided to hold a camp at this site. Participants
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from Russia, the Ukraine and Tartarstan came to hold pickets and
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to talk to the inhabitants of the city and workers at the plant.
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They did not demand that the plant be shut down as it is the main
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source of employment in the city (2/3 of the population is in some
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way connected with the enterprise). Instead they propose that
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money be invested to build a new, ecologically safer plant using
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Japanese technology. On July 16 a rock-concert to support the
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camp was organized by local bands. On July 19 participants of the
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camp went to the office of the director of the plant and demanded
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to negotiate with him. He refused saying that the ecologists were
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"criminals" and are not competent enough in ecological issues.
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After that protesters locked the doors of his cabinet and forced
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him to negotiate. In half an hour policemen arrived and detained
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the troublemakers. Soon they were all released. The incident was
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covered by the local TV and newspapers and has been favourably
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greeted.Unfortunately the participants of the camp were few and
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although they received verbal support from the inhabitants of the
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city they didn't get active assistance. Besides that there were
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some unpleasant incidents in the camp caused by some people who
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were using alchohol and drugs. Some people (including those who
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were the initiators of the camp) decided to leave and finally did
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so, but others didn't. They understood that if the camp will
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achieve no concrete results it will be impossible in the future to
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get the people in Cherepovetz to hold any ecological campaigns -
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they will think it's absolutely useless. So two of the protesters
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decided to hold a hunger strike on the chimneys of the
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metallurgical plant (five people were on a hunger strike before
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but they quit). On the second day they were taken down by police
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force but public opinion was on their side. The local television
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program made a favourable report. As a result the municipal
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ecological committee decided that the administration of the plant
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should make a program to reconstruct the plant. Of course, the
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protesters understand that this really means nothing, but the
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official decision can serve as a ground for further campaigns. The
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numbers of the protesters at that time were already very low, so
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the camp stopped on August 8
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* * *
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Another action took place at Samarskaya Luka state park where they
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have set up a quarry. They are continously blasting holes in the
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side of the mountain. Activists from the group "Rainbow Keepers"
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decided to set up camp there and demand that the area not be
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exploited for commercial purposes. The action began on July 5 and
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people from the Russia, Ukraine, Byelorussia and America went
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there (about 20 people in total). They set up camp close to where
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the explosions go off and so on July 6-7 they didn't set off any
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explosions. The camp is supported by the collective of the
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national park. The most severe opposition to the camp is from the
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side of the workers who work in the quarry. They several times had
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fights with the protesters and destroyed the camp. No further
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information at this time. You can contact the camp at the
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following address: Yuri Roshevsky, ulitsa Tkacheva, d. 109-A,
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Zhigulevsk, Samarskaya oblast, 446350, Russia/CIS.
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MAY DAY RIOT IN MOSCOW
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On May 1st the first big clash with the police took place in
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Moscow during the May Day demo organized by the communists. The
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demonstration was banned by Moscow authorities and when the people
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who gathered on Oktyabrskaya Square went down along Leninsky
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Prospekt, they faced the barricades of trucks and police lines.
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The demo was going away from the centre of the city and thus posed
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no danger to "public safety". Thestreet was blocked in the
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narrowest place; that shows that the authorities were looking
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forward to provocation. If the crowd would have been let 100
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metres further it could have been easily dispersed on the big
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square. Demonstrators attacked the police lines trying to break
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through. Fire fighting cars and special police troops were used
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against them. A few moments after heaps of stones flew into the
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police; some demonstrators took over the police batons and
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shields. The active fighting went on for about about 40 minutes.
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579 people were injured, 250 of them are reported to be policemen
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(of course "Moscow News" exaggerated this figure to 400). One
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policemen hit by a truck died several days after in the hospital.
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Several trucks were burned, but the expensive Western foodstores
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and commercial kiosks remained unlooted. This was the first such
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big urban fight in Moscow and surely it became the subject of a
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hysterical media campaign against the national-communist
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opposition. At the same time it helped communists and nationalists
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to hold the biggest ever demonstration on May 9, commemorating the
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victory of the USSR over Nazi Germany. Though the authorities
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tried to pressure the of National Salvation Front to make this a
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"non-political" demonstration it turned out to be strictly
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anti-Yeltsin. Russian chauvinist and anti-semitic slogans were
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very popular among the demonstrators. Various groups ranging from
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the fascist Front of National-Revolutionary Action to some members
|
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of the Party of Labour participated in the demo. They even managed
|
|
to break through to the Red Square. Police didn't interfere as the
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number of the demonstrators was considerable, maybe even
|
|
approaching 100 thousand people. Authoritarian tendencies on both
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the side of the government and the national-communist opposition
|
|
are growing. Though a considerable part of the population abstains
|
|
from politics, those who don't are moving to the extremes
|
|
following the campaign in the media for the restoration of order
|
|
and shit like that. Yeltsin's drift to the right is rather
|
|
considerable as during the referendum he appealed to the most
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|
nationalist and authoritarian forces (Cossacks, for example) using
|
|
the same "Great Russia" ideology as his rivals. You can imagine
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how bright the future might be.
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PUBLICATIONS
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OBSCHINA. This is the second issue of this ananrcho- syndicalist
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|
magazine since it was re-launched at the end of last year. But
|
|
today the chances that it will appear more regularly are much
|
|
greater. This issue features articles about the future of "Russian
|
|
statehood" (the sooner it dies, the better, Obschina collective
|
|
thinks), debates on Constituent Assembly, etc. The special
|
|
supplement carries a collection of articles devoted to 1968 world
|
|
revolution. Obschina collective can be contacted at the same
|
|
address asNews&Views or at P.O.Box 16, 129642 Moscow, Russia.
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MOTHER ANARCHY. The fourth issue of this Moscow-based multi-
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|
lingual magazine (it has sections in English, Russian and
|
|
Esperanto) is devoted to the problems of nationalism. Contents
|
|
include "The Fantastic World of Russian Nationalists" and "The
|
|
Fear of Poverty: Immigration Policies and Nationalism" by Laure
|
|
Akai (in English), "The Macedonian Question and the Recent War in
|
|
Former Yugoslavia in Historical Perspective" by Lacenaire (in
|
|
English). The Russian section includes the article on Macedonia by
|
|
Lacenaire and the first part of Fredy Perlman's "The Continuing
|
|
Appeal of Nationalism". Mother Anarchy can be reached at P.O.Box
|
|
500, Moscow, Russia/CIS.
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ASPIRIN WON'T HELP is a new magazine which strives to deal with
|
|
the ideological hunger from which Russian radical circles suffer a
|
|
lot. The first issue features George Bradford's "Triumph of
|
|
Capital" (from American @ magazine Fifth Estate) and a brief
|
|
review of the ideas and activities of the Situationist
|
|
International. The second issue contains a lengthy analysis of the
|
|
fall of Soviet totalitarianism and the problems it failed to
|
|
resolve, as well as the story about Los Angeles riot (from
|
|
American Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed) and the May Day riot
|
|
in Moscow. Those who read in Russian can get a copy of the
|
|
magazine from the same address as News&Views.
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|
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|
RUSSIAN LABOUR REVIEW. The second issue of this English- language
|
|
quarterly is being published KAS-KOR Labour Information Centre. It
|
|
features a story about the recent miners' strike in the Donbass,
|
|
an account of privatization in Lithuania (see this issue of
|
|
News&Views) as well as numerous other articles carrying
|
|
information about the workers' movement and trade unions in the
|
|
former USSR. Political section overviews spring government crisis
|
|
and the processes taking place in various communist and socialist
|
|
parties, including a critical article on the Russian Party of
|
|
Labour (see this issue of News&Views). Of great interest will be
|
|
the story about the workers uprising in Novocherkassk in 1962 and
|
|
an article about Piotr Siuda, a veteran of the workers movement,
|
|
an anarcho-syndicalist, and one of the participants in the
|
|
Novocherkassk uprising. For more information you can contact
|
|
News&Views.
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News & Views From (the former) Sovietsky Soyuz Mikhail Tsovma
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|
21-62 Volzhsky blvd. Moscow 109462 Russia/CIS e-mail:
|
|
cube@glas.apc.org, krazchenko@glas.apc.org (This file contains
|
|
only chronicle of events, bigger pieces are sent separately or you
|
|
can request them from the address above. The other materials
|
|
include a review of privatization in Lithuania, stories about
|
|
strikes in Donbass and Lithuania in summer 1993 and a critique of
|
|
the Russian Party of Labour (PT). These articles appeared also in
|
|
the "Russian Labour Review", No.2.)
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