Bristol Anarchist Bookfair & Bookfair Afterparty!

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poster_colourWEBWe’re less than a month away from Bristol Anarchist Bookfair 2013! This year’s event will be taking place on Saturday 20th April at the Trinity Centre, Trinity Road, BS2 0NW from 11AM-6PM.

Bristol ABC and Bristol Defendant Solidarity will both have stalls at this year’s Bookfair so be on the look out for us while you’re shopping for your Kropotkin or Goldman!

Bristol ABC will also be hosting a workshop at 1PM in the outside Marquee titled “Why Prison Abolition?” so make sure to get down for that.

afterparty_WEBAfter the main event there will be a afterparty at The Croft, 117-119 Stokes Croft, BS1 3RW from 8PM-2AM featuring loads of great live bands and DJs! As well as being a chance to wind down after the Bookfair it will be a split fundraiser for Bristol Anarchist Bookfair Collective and Bristol Defendant Solidarity so get your dancing shoes on and help us raise some much needed cash for prisoners and defendants!

Bristol Anarchist Bookfair & Bookfair Afterparty!

admin Uncategorized

poster_colourWEBWe’re less than a month away from Bristol Anarchist Bookfair 2013! This year’s event will be taking place on Saturday 20th April at the Trinity Centre, Trinity Road, BS2 0NW from 11AM-6PM.

Bristol ABC and Bristol Defendant Solidarity will both have stalls at this year’s Bookfair so be on the look out for us while you’re shopping for your Kropotkin or Goldman!

Bristol ABC will also be hosting a workshop at 1PM in the outside Marquee titled “Why Prison Abolition?” so make sure to get down for that.

afterparty_WEBAfter the main event there will be a afterparty at The Croft, 117-119 Stokes Croft, BS1 3RW from 8PM-2AM featuring loads of great live bands and DJs! As well as being a chance to wind down after the Bookfair it will be a split fundraiser for Bristol Anarchist Bookfair Collective and Bristol Defendant Solidarity so get your dancing shoes on and help us raise some much needed cash for prisoners and defendants!

New Prisoner Letter Writing Evenings: Last Sunday of Every Month @ Kebele

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NEWabcletterwritingWEBAfter much discussion we have decided to rearrange our monthly prisoner letter writing evenings from the first Thursday of every month to the last Sunday of every month.

This will be a scaled down version of our previous letter writing evenings. We will no longer be serving food or showing films (though Kebele Cafe will be open from 6:30PM serving delcious donation-based vegan food with the occassional film, see Kebele website for more detail). We hope by doing this that we can create a quiet, peaceful environment in which people can write letters to political prisoners.

We will be starting from 6:30PM until 8:30PM in the Kebele Library. As usual we will have everything you need to start writing to prisoners; including copies of our International Prisoner List, information on writing to prisoners & writing materials. A member of Bristol ABC will be on hand to answer any questions  you might have!

The first of these new evenings will be on Sunday 28th April, we hope to see you there!

Germany: Freedom For Thomas Meyer-Falk?

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Since October 1996 I’ve been kept in the dungeons of the German state. I
was sentenced to eleven and a half years in prison for one bank-robbery to fund raise money for left-wing projects. Later I was sentenced to a further five years and three months for “insulting” prosecutors, judges and politicians.

I have been a Red and Anarchist Skinhead (RASH) for many years, and the
government kept me in isolation (solitary confinement) from 1996 until May 2007. I have been in the general prison population for the past six years and will finish my sentences in July 2013.

But in 1997 the criminal court added the so-called “preventive detention” (PD) to my sentence, based on a Nazi-Law from November 1933 which allows the state to keep a prisoner in custody over and above the end of their regular sentence, if they want to for the rest of the inmate’s life.

Recently the courts opened my files to decide if I will go to PD in July 2013.
In the end there is not much real chance that the judges will set me free, but it would still be helpful and I would appreciate the solidarity, if people could write some letters and e-mails to the court and support my struggle for freedom.

Send letters of support to:

Landgericht
Strafvollstrekcungskammer
Hans-Thoma-Str. 7
D-76133
Karlsruhe
Germany

Or
e-mail: poststelle@lgkarlsruhe.justiz.bw1.de

The file number is 15 AR 1/13

Every kind of support is welcome!

Thanks a lot.

Thomas Meyer-Falk
c/o JVA Schoenbornstr.32
76646
Bruchsal
Germany
www.freedom-for-thomas.de
freedomforthomas.wordpress.com

In The Belly of The Beast (John Bowden)

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Fyoder Dostoevsky, the Russian novelist and sometimes political dissident, once wisely observed that a good barometer of the level and quality of a society’s civilisation is the way it treats it’s prisoners, the
most dis-empowered of all social groups.

There has of course always existed a sort of socially organic and dynamic
relationship between prison society and the wider ordinary society beyond it’s walls, and the treatment of prisoners is usually an accurate reflection of the relationship of power that prevails between the state and ordinary working class people in the broader society. It is how political power is shaped and negotiated between the state and the poorer social groups on the outside that essentially determines the treatment of prisoners on the inside.

Prisons are concentrated microcosms of the wider society, reflecting it’s
social and political climate and the balance of social forces that characterise it’s political culture. The more authoritarian and politically oppressive the society, the more brutal it’s treatment of prisoners is. The treatment and sometimes the very lives of prisoners is therefore critically dependent on the balance and alignment of power in society generally. For example, changes in state penal policy always tends to reflect shifts and changes in that relationship of power between the poor and powerless and the elites who constitute a ruling class, and it is always the more marginalised and demonised groups such as prisoners who feel and experience the repression more nakedly when society begins to shift even further to the right.

During the 1960s, 1970s and part of the early 1980s structures of
established power in society were seriously challenged and the atmosphere and movement of radical social change became manifested
within the prison system itself in prisoner protests, strikes and uprisings, and an organised movement of prisoner resistance that was recognised and supported on the outside by political activists, radical criminologists and prison abolitionists. The struggle of long-term prisoners was recognised by such groups as a legitimate political struggle against an institution originally and purposely created to punish the rebellious poor and as an integral part of an entire state apparatus of repressive social control, along with the police and judiciary. Just as the heightened social struggle of groups like the organised working class in the broader society caused a shift and change in the balance of power, within the long-term
prison system itself prisoners used the weapon of solidarity and self-organised to collectively empower themselves as a group. This climate of increased struggle and freedom that permeated society generally at that time found expression within long-term prisons and even found limited reflection in the thinking of those administering them with the adoption on policy of the one relatively liberal recommendation of the 1968 Mountbatten report concerning prison security: whilst Maximum-Security jails should make physical security as impregnable as possible the regimes operating in such institutions should also be made as relaxed as possible.

But just as changes in the balance of power can be to the advantage of
progressive forces in society so it can shift the other way, and that is what happened in Britain during the 1980s and 1990s with the defeat of the organised working class movement and the apparently finale triumph of Neo-Liberal Capitalism (deregulation, free trade, unfettered profits and minimal state benefits – in short, capitalism at it’s most savage) and a Thatcherite ideology of greed is good and “there is no such thing as society”. This found expression in the treatment of prisoners with the seizing back of the long-term prison regimes and their re-moulding into instruments of “Dynamic Security” and naked repression. The control and absolute disempowerment of long-term prisoners was conflated with the
necessity of physical security now. And of course the economic principles of Neo-Liberal Capitalism also found expression in the prison system with “Market Reforms” and the flogging off of increasingly greater parts of it to multi-national private prison entrepreneurs. Prisoners would now be bought and sold as commodities and also as a source of forced cheap labour. They would also be taught and conditioned to know their true place in a massively unequal society, and prisons would revert to their original purpose of re-moulding working class “offenders” into obedient slaves of capital and those who own it. Towards this end the huge proliferation and empowerment of behavioural psychologists in the prison system over the last decade is a symptom; the breaking and re-creating of
prisoners psychologically in the image of a defeated and compliant working class on the outside has become once again the purpose and
function of prisons. Rebellion and defiance in prisoners is now labelled “psychopathic” and “social risk-factors”, which depending on how they are “addressed” will determine the length of time one spends behind bars, especially for the growing number of “recidivist offenders” serving indeterminate sentences for “public protection”.

As what were once tight-knit working class communities on the outside
fractured and were destroyed following the last high point of organised working class struggle during the 1984 miners strike, so the solidarity and unity of long-term prisoners was broken and withered away. The flooding of heroin and crack cocaine into now marginalised and poor communities created an almost alternative economy and was reflected in the changing nature of the prison population. What had been a generation of prisoners from strong working class communities imbued with a culture of solidarity, mutual support and a readiness to confront and challenge official authority, was increasingly replaced by prisoners with no memory of a time before the victory of Thatcherism and the dog eat dog culture it bred and encouraged. The increasing prevalence of drug-orientated crime
found expression in the “Millennium convict”, lacking in principle and with an acquiescent, submissive attitude towards their captors and a focused determination to do whatever it takes to achieve an early release from prison.

The uprising at Strangeways prison in 1990 was the last significant expression of collective defiance and protest in a British jail and is unlikely ever to be repeated in such a form.

The current Justice Secretary, Chris Grayling, with his Tory “Attack Dog” reputation and contempt for the human rights of prisoners, blended of course with his determination to sell-off virtually the whole of the criminal justice system to multi-national capitalism, is a perfect representation of the social and political climate outside prison. Deep economic crisis generates social fear and insecurity, and the scapegoating of marginalised and demonised groups who are used as a focus for public anger. Folk devils and moral panics are stock in trade for the tabloids, Tory politicians and far right groups when social climate is at its most receptive for easy, powerless targets. Grayling is pandering to what he imagines is the masses appetite for revenge, as long as its not focused on those actually responsible for the economic and social destruction of
people’s lives.

If, as Dostoevsky believed, the treatment of prisoners is an indicator of
a society’s level of civilisation then we seem to be entering another Dark Age, and of course history provides us with some chilling examples of what can happen when an apparently modern and developed society enters such a phase.

John
Bowden, March 2013
HMP
Shots

Judge James Brady overturns Albert’s conviction

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From the International Coalition to free the Angola 3

Yesterday, February 26, District Court Judge Brady released a 34-page ruling that granted habeas to Albert on the issue of racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson for his 1998 retrial. This decision now overturns Albert’s conviction for a third time. In the 34-page ruling, Judge Brady reviews the arguments of both sides and concludes that Albert’s team used the correct baseline for comparison, and that using that baseline, the discrimination is statistically significant no matter which tests are used. It was the State’s burden in these proceedings to prove that there was a race neutral procedure in place for selecting forepersons. Judge Brady agreed  with Albert that the State failed to do this. Just as when Judge Brady overturned Albert’s conviction in 2008, the State is now expected to appeal today’s ruling to the 5th Circuit. Therefore, nothing is certain except that the legal team and A3 supporters will not stop fighting until this ruling is affirmed by the 5th Circuit and Albert is finally a free man.

This is an important victory, thanks in no small part to the efforts of our supporters!

—View/Download a PDF of Judge Brady’s ruling here
r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001ngohqqnTzsIqzcG-Wiwa-3iIv8zJnyNfGjtHCDWK6IUVqIcpCdrsA9jhsD76ZFx81-cTPQ9rYSfeuB3WQUrt4bFF_LK5izs1kBwMqfma4WS6VEZjhmzuD4R26IUv6pa1HGdOhdmNUsZcgI8jBV9irSJxAixzo98GXnFtoJIWa8k=.

—As we learn more, we will post updates here, so please check angola3.org
r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001ngohqqnTzsIH5AFiE9LnRuhIX70mFUQilBjpbDodsdxYGhkvP33Tm7dN-WiSbcBxrPqwX8vS16q-uXpTFgwdKYyGtyiGuIXPipRnw-2TzlU=
for more information about Albert’s case. For more background, this is our report
r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001ngohqqnTzsKecBl8FEJ4EzQyPqk1V4tFuR64pAfhUdgCk5XY47DYB6KFLBRwhfJYRKs17fOt927TUGiR3rVp3nKnU37aM-unNAjTTtqM5R-wkKE9NoIXVvaPF54taP-yJj1QXk5qB7OQG2P7qmuTax6o8JmXqhoT-Hvj4YkIh4RGgAo6tRUB35aiWuHnOD3kr12hfgMQVv4=
from the evidentiary hearing that preceded today’s ruling. Also, to help us with
outreach at this critical time, you can download an updated A3 flyer here
r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001ngohqqnTzsL8YTsEB3-3z8wuEYgUOg73n6X5WSS24bKSQwAoN7MTjQvSvSZp27skjCYUuJUblSUH85EdyNyj9jLbyOIhgN8wB2eTbP2sWVw6ifVaA_ACLvtLKk81UehkQTOhYn5DlX9Z7xFVvRtjgj6ohcMwadTIk1Dgp6b9gs8=.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Keep in Touch with Herman and Albert
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

H&A
r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001ngohqqnTzsIg0YudiiGb28PCazQTXmiyIxz5_1Zc4U83SGjdfgPUfSvk3gdJpdsxoAR3Wm7fhnKn5rOBM2Cpsuqv2HEbzw-mjJZU8lFJJ0x1BDIo7GlWavwZwnv_awOF

Albert Woodfox #72148 Herman Wallace #76759

David Wade Correctional Center Elayn Hunt Correctional Center
N1 A3 CCR D #2
670 Bell Hill Road PO Box 174
Homer, LA 71040 St. Gabriel, LA 70776

Statement of Support for Joel Bitar (from Peterborough ABC, KKKanada)

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prison sol heart

Feb 27th, 2013
from The Anarchist Black Cross of Peterborough

On Februrary 14th, 2013 Joel Bitar was arrested in his home in New York,
NY, occupied Haudenosaunee territory – as a result of an extradition
request sent behalf of the KKKanadian government, as the state seeks to
continue its repression in the wake of the resistance in the streets seen
during the G20 Summit held in Toronto in 2010.

Please see supportjoel.com for more information on the particulars
of Joel’s case and to get in touch to help support them through this time.

The implications of the collaboration between these two
colonial-capitalist States – illegitimate empires occupying stolen
Indigenous territories – is immense for our movements. We have understood
for centuries that oppression does not cease at a border, in fact it is
exacerbated, highlighted and enforced as they are used as an apparatus of
the State to dominate, exploit, steal, harass and oppress. The border
seeks to establish who is legitimate, who is legal and who is in charge.
The political cooperation of the AmeriKKKan and KKKanadian states is
unsurprising but has immense implications for targeted communities across
Turtle Island. The scramble on behalf of the KKKlanadian state to pursue
further persecution of international folks speaks to the level of fascism
in the political atmosphere north of the border. It is because no where is
safe, no where is neutral that we must be resilient through these times
increased and ongoing repression. We must work together to dissolve the
colonial border and ensure that our movements do more than overlap but
that we work together to build a world without borders, a world without
the prisons. It is for this reason that The Anarchist Black Cross of
Peterborough stands in solidarity with Joel Bitar and anyone else who may
be extradited – please know that we will support you, and that you have
friends here. We stand in solidarity with all persons who have been or are
currently incarcerated as a result of the G20 in Toronto – we stand in
solidarity with those who will not cooperate the with State and defy the
Grand Jury in the North West – and we stand in solidarity with all those
whose hearts, minds and bodies are antithetical to the current social
order of cis-hetero patriarchy, white supremacy and colonial capitalism.
To exist is to resist – their fear is why they seek to cage us, but
together we can break free from the chains that hold us back.

Anti-fascist Prisoner Jock Palfreeman Ends His Hunger Strike – But Still Needs Your Support

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Australian Anti-fascist prisoner Jock Palfreeman, serving 20 years in Sofia/Bulgaria for defending two Roma boys from a racist mob, was on hunger strike from the 13th January 2013. The Director of the Central Sofia Prison had ordered another punishment measure because of Jock´s activist work as chairman of the Bulgarian Prisoner´s Association. Due to this punishment Jock is now not allowed to finish his studies which is very important to him.

After 30 days Jock ended his hunger strike because he got an answer from the Bulgarian authorities. The prison administration responsible for his case answered that he can only study in a Bulgarian University, and not in a foreign one. But, if he wants to study in a Bulgarian Unviersity he cannot do this from prison, so he is not permitted to continue his studies. This ‘official’ answer means that he can now apply in the courts against the decision. After losing 20 kilos in weight he ended his hunger strike and will continue his protest by legal ways.

Jock is very thankful for the support he received. But the issue of being able to continue his studies is not resolved, so it is still useful for friends and supporters to write letters to the Ministery of Justice in Bulgaria.


The fight continues! Please keep writing letters of complaint to:

Ministry of Justice
Diana Kovacheva
No. 1, Slavanska Street
Sofia 104, Bulgaria

Write letters of support to:
Jock Palfreeman
Sofia Central Prison
21 General Stoletov Boulevard
Sofia 1309
Bulgaria

Check out these websites for more information about his case:
Join the ‘Freedom For Jock Palfreeman’ page on Facebook for regular news and updates:
Sign this petition to the Bulgarian Ministry of Justice: To Approve Jock Palfreeman’s Prison Transfer to Australia