[Gipfelsoli Newsletter] May 14th 2007 Heiligendamm

International Newsletter gipfelsoli-int at lists.nadir.org
Mon May 14 21:05:58 CEST 2007


May 14th 2007 Heiligendamm

- NOW MORE THAN EVER: Smash G8 !
- Declaration of the Rote Flora about police raids at the 9th of may 2007 in
Hamburg
- A Taste of the Coming Showdown
- news about the last dissent meeting in berlin

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NOW MORE THAN EVER: Smash G8 !

Information about the International Demonstration at 2nd of June in the city
Rostock in Germany and about the mobilisation to the Leftradical, Antifascist
and Revolutionary Blocs in the center of Rostock.

INTRODUCTION

The razzias in germany against 40 projects and living places of opposers of the
G8 by the german police did lead to a enormous mobilisation-effect. Over 10.000
people and all different spectras of the leftwing movement came together in
manifestations against the criminalisation of the anti-G8-movement and also in
other countries all over europe there are protest-actions at german embassys.
The central preperation-commitee of the manifestation at 2nd of june meanwhile
recognized more subscribers from different groups and organizations to the
central call for the manifestation at 2nd of June.

Infos at Indymedia: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/05/370112.html
INTERNATIONAL DEMONSTRATION AT 2nd OF JUNE IN ROSTOCK/NORTH-GERMANY

At 2nd of June there are TWO different demonstrations staring at different
places - these two manifestations with different marching-route will end at the
same end-point at the harbour in Rostock for a commen end-manifestation. The two
initial manifestations at the different starting-places with speeches and music
starts at 12 o'clock, at 01:00 P.M. the manifestations will start.
The Demonstration at "Auftakt 1" (see map:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/images/Demoroute_Rostock2.jpg ) which starts at
Schutower Kreuz / Hamburger Strass will lead through industrial area where
almost nobody lives.

The second Manifestation at "Auftakt 2" (see map:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/images/Demoroute_Rostock2.jpg ) starts directly
at the Central Railwaystation at the Place "Platz der Freundschaft". This
Demonstration directly leads through the Center of the City and inhabited
areas.

The Common End-/Final-Manifestation ("Abschluss-Kundgebung" / see map) with
different speeches and concert will be at the harbour from Rostock near the Old
Center of the City. Some City-Railwaystations away there will be the
Rostock-Camp with place for thousands of people.

The Camp and Program is starting at Friday the 1st of June and the Camp will be
organized until the end of the protests against G8. Also the leftradical and
internationalist groups will organize there own barrios in this camp with
information-, film-, discussion- and culture-events. The Convergence and Media
Center in Rostock already opened.

- Demonstration routes at the city-map:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/images/Demoroute_Rostock2.jpg
- city map Rostock: http://www.rostock-stadtplan.de/r6.htm
- Concert at 2nd and 3rd of june in Rostock:
http://www.move-against-g8.de/pages/programm/samstag.php
- Convergence Center Rostock: http://wiki.dissentnetwork.org/wiki/English

LEFTRADICAL, ANTIFASCIST, ANTICAPITALIST AND REVOLUTIONARY BLOC AT THE
DEMONSTRATION AT 2nd OF JUNE

The Blocs of the radical and revolutionary left, the International Antifascist,
the Anticapitalist and the Internationalist and Revolutionary Blocs are part of
the Demonstration with starting point at the Central Railway Station at the
place "Platz der Freundschaft" ("Auftakt 2" - see map of the demonstration
routes) in the Center of the Rostock-City.
These different leftradical blocs will march together one behind the other.
There are international calls for the blocs by the different anti-g8-alliances,
like by the Interventionist Left, many Antifa-Groups and anticapitalist Groups,
the Anti-G8-Alliance for a revolutionary Perspective, parts from the
Dissent-Spectrum, many Antifa-Groups from many european contries, many parts of
the antirassist movement, groups of the latinamerica-solidarity movement,
autonomous groups from different countries, the antiimperialist
anti-g8-alliance, revolutionary anti-g8-alliances from switzerland,
organisations and groups from greece, italy, england, spain, basque country,
catalunya, france, danmark, sweden and many other countries as well as
trotzkyst or internationalist organisations. The Start of the Demonstration
will be 01:00 P.M.
At 11 o'clock starts the pre-manifestation with music and speeches, at 12
o'clock will be the initial manifestation with speeches from Ibrahim Coulyband
from Via Campesina, Piero Benocchi from the leftwing italian syndicate COBAS,
from Tobias Pflüger from the left party from the european parlament and by
Nancy Cardoso from Brasil/Porto Alegre.

- Demonstration Routes at the city-map:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/images/Demoroute_Rostock2.jpg
- more informations: http://www.antig8.tk/home_en.php |
http://www.come.to/heiligendamm | http://www.resistance2003.gr/en/ |
http://www.gipfelblockade.net | http://www.aufbau.org |
http://www.londonclasswar.org/ | http://www.cobas.it/ |
http://www.nodo50.org/antifa/ |
http://www.nuevacolombia.de/cute_ru/index_en.php | http://www.g8versenken.de/ |
http://www.aamd.de.md/ | http://ru.dk/ | http://www.antifa.se/

TRAVEL INFORMATION BY AUTOBUS, TRAIN AND CARS

All over Germany and also from some european countries there are published in
the internet many travel opportunities by bus where activists can check in for
a small price. And Attac for example organizes Special Anti-G8 Trains to
Rostock. When you are coming from other countries you have to be aware that
there will be border-controls, like the german Minister of the Interior already
announced.
Before reaching Rostock and all around Rostock at the streets and autopistes
leading in there will be massive police controls. Also the police could say to
you when you're coming by autbus that you only could go the the parking place
in the industrial area near the first starting point of the manifestation which
starts outside the city - even if you want to travel to the second manifestation
at the central railwaystation in the inner city ("Auftakt 2"). But also near the
Central Railway Station there is a big parking place for autobusses and in the
south from the City of Rostock there are more parking-places.

- Anti-Repression information "What to do if its burning" and "Red Help G8Xtra"
by the Red Help Association with tipps and information against repression also
for our comrades from foreign countries in different languages:
http://www.rote-hilfe.de/topnews/g8_other_languages
- Travel Opportunities by bus and train:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/Demo_Anreise.html
- Demonstration routes at the city-map:
http://www.heiligendamm2007.de/images/Demoroute_Rostock2.jpg

Camp, Barrios and Sleeping-Places in Rostock

In Rostock some City-Train-Stations ("S-Bahn") away from the Center of the City
will be a Camp with Thousands of sleeping places. There are different tends for
Reunuions, meetings, information-events and a n Indymedia-tend with internet
connections.
How to reach the camp: from the Rostock central railway station you go by
City-Train (its a fast train in the city, all city-train-stations are marked
with a sign with a green arrow as) in direction to "Warnemünde" (see routes of
the trains at the maps at the train-stations). You go by the train to
Train-Station "S-Bhf. R-Bramow" or to "S-Bhzf. Marienehe" where you go out.
>From "S-Bhf. Marienehe" you go over the rails than you go right, you cross the
emty parking place and than you have to go along the streets "Fischerreihafen"
and "Schlachthofstrasse" until you see signs which will lead you the way to the
camp. From "S-Bhf. R. Bramow" you go along the street "Schwarzer Weg" in
direction to the harbour, than you go left to the "Schlachtstrasse" and there
you will see signs which will lead you to the Camp.
At the Camp there will be different "Barrios" organized by different spectras
and movements from the different countries. In these areas at the camp - the
"Barrios" - there will be informations events and discussion reunions and film
and cultural programms. Drinking and meals (food not bombs) will be organized
by the camp organization together will the structures from the different
"Barrios". Because there is not so much money its asked to spend a little money
for the camp structure if you can afford for sleeping in the camp. sanitary
installations as toiletts and shower are prepared.

As known until now there are the following areas/barrios in the Rostock-Camp,
more Barrios are planned, so watch out for more informations:

++ Barrio Junirevolte (Socialist Youth Organization from the PDS |
http://www.smash-g8.de/ )
++ Barrio Rojo ("Internationalist und Revolutionary Barrio" |
http://www.antig8.tk/home_en.php )
++ Yellow Barrio (Student activists | http://block-g8ucation.org/ )
++ Hedonist International Barrio ( http://www.hedonist-international.org/
?q=en/node/156 )

- Map of the Camps: http://www.antig8.tk/aktivitaeten_2007_camps.jpg

ANTIREPRESSION

During the action days against G8 there will be "Legal Teams" (german:
"ErmittlungsAusschuss"/"EA") who can be reached by telefon all around the
clock. The Legal Teams are in contact with many lawyers who will go to help the
arrested/prisoners. The telefon number will be published the following days at
the homepage of the Legal Teams/"ErmittlungsAusschuss".
The telefon number of the legal teams also will be announced during the
manifestation, at the convergence centers and at the camps. please write down
this number (at paper or your skin of your arms). if you or your comrades get
arrested (also if your just in the way travelling to Rostock) call this number
and say the names and birthday of the arrested persons. This will give the
laywers the opportunity to ask for the people at the police prisons. if
somebody gets released he or she should call again immediately the number of
the Legal Teams/"Ermittlungsausschuss" to tell them that you our your comrade
with that and that name and birthday did get released. This will help the
lawyers to reduce needless work.

- Legal Teams/"Ermittlungsausschuss":
http://www.ermittlungsausschuss.antifa.net/

Many informations about the german laws concerning the protest against g8 and
how to act at manifestations you can find at the homepage of the Red Help
Association or will be distributed at the different convergence centers in
different languages.

The Red Help Association exists in nearly all cities in germany and is a anti
repression organisation where people from all different spectras of the
leftwing movement from germany work together and which supports people from all
different leftwing spectras if they are under repression by the german state.
The Red Help for example helps by financial support of 40% of the bills of
lawyers and fines. The money almost comes from the membership-fees from over
4.500 people. But the Red Help Association this year reckons that there will be
a need of a lot of more money because of the estimation of perhaps heavy
repression and many prisoners of the upcoming anti-G8-protests to support all
people. For that there exists a donation acount of the Red Help Association.

Donations within Germany:
Rote Hilfe e.V. Konto 191 100 462 BLZ 440 100 46 Postbank Dortmund Stichwort:
"G8 Gipfel" Donations outside of Germany:
Rote Hilfe e.V. IBAN: DE75 4401 0046 0191 1004 62 SWIFT-BIC: PBNKDEFF Postbank
Dortmund Purpose: "G-8 Summit" If you are sending donations from outside of the
EU please make group or joint contributions of at least 50 euros. Otherwise only
the banks will receive anything as the fees are very high.

- Donation Account Informations:
http://www.rote-hilfe.de/ueber_uns/spenden/donations
- Antirepression-Information and texts "what to do if its burning" and "red help
g8xtra" in different languages:
http://www.rote-hilfe.de/topnews/g8_other_languages
- Homepage Red Help/Rote Hilfe e.V.: http://www.rote-hilfe.de


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Declaration of the Rote Flora about police raids at the 9th of may 2007 in
Hamburg

60 political projects, private flats and workingplaces all together were raided
by the police by order of the Federal Prosecutors Office not only in Hamburg
but also other countries of germany today in the morning. The official reason
for that act was §129a StGB, which means "creation of a terrorist group" in
context with the planned protests against the G8 summit in Heiligendamm at the
beginning of june this year. We declare this act as a try of the ones in states
power to discriminate and criminalize the wide organised campaign against the
unhuman policies of the G8, which includes the energy-, GMO- and
migrationpolicies of the G8. The convergence center Hamburg, which will take
place in the end of may / beginning of june in the Rote Flora, should be a
frame for protests as a place to go and platform for activist from all around
the world. Topics will be networking, workshops and background-information
about the protests and actions in Hamburg and Heiligendamm. The Rote Floras
self definition is a noncommercial, autonomous quarter-center, in which more
than 15 years diverse political and cultural projects and groups find their
place. We interprete the massive activities of the police against our rooms as
an attack against the movement as a whole and as a try to frighten all
activists, who speak in public actively against the G8 and beyond. As we saw
recently in the debate about the amnesty of Christian Klar (a former RAF member
and political prisoner in germany) it is shown again how systematical criticism
is been seen as a crime. What kind of repression from the police to expect for
the next weeks could be seen already today, as the violent end of the spontan
demonstration "for more free spaces" in hamburg caused several injured
protesters and arrests. The unacceptable violations will not stop the
mobilisation. We call all of you to take active part in the protests in the
streets!

Rote Flora, 09.05.2007


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A Taste of the Coming Showdown

Chancellor Angela Merkel wants nothing to disturb the seaside harmony at the G-8
summit in northern Germany next month. But nationwide raids last week have upset
leftist protesters of every stripe -- and set the stage for an unwanted showdown
on the Baltic Sea.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks about Heiligendamm in warm, affectionate
terms. The coastline is "wonderful," and so is the locals' hospitality. Merkel
picked the idyllic Baltic Sea resort as a setting for this year's Group of
Eight (G-8) summit of the world's leading industrialized nations from June 6-8
because it was the perfect place to convey an image of harmony to the "wider
public around the globe."

But pictures broadcast in Germany last week weren't so pleasant. On Wednesday,
around 900 police officers -- many of them masked members of special operations
units -- stormed 40 apartments and offices belonging to leftists across the
country. They looked for anti-globalization militants in book stores, video
production studios and other left-wing centers in Hamburg, Berlin, and
elsewhere. Even a theater office was raided. The main internet server of one
anti-G-8 movement was also shut down.
The images were grim, and the rhetoric was downright martial: German Interior
Minister Wolfgang Schäuble warned of vague attacks while German federal
prosecutors spoke darkly of a "terrorist network."
Across the German left-wing scene, though, the raids were a wakeup call. Around
4,000 protestors marched through Berlin's Kreuzberg neighborhood within hours;
in Hamburg's Schanzen quarter demonstrators threw bottles and rocks.
Globalization opponents in Amsterdam, Vienna and London called upon those
sympathetic to their cause to head to Heiligendamm next month.
>From the protesters' point of view, it's hard to imagine better publicity. The
nationwide raid has sparked memories in Germany of brutal crackdowns on
anti-nuclear demonstrators two decades ago. Now both police and leftists are
preparing for a showdown near the Baltic: Just as the cops once had to fence
off nuclear construction sites in West Germany to keep out protesters, a
12-kilometer high-tech steel fence has sealed off the summit grounds. It's
already a symbol for the government's attempt to shut out public dissent.

Not postcard-pretty
This is hardly what Merkel wanted. The seaside resort near her East-German
childhood home was meant to be a scenic backdrop for her shining moment among
the world's elite. Merkel seems to enjoy foreign policy -- it's less
frustrating than German domestic politics; it's one area where she can excel.
She clearly enjoyed hosting US President George W. Bush last summer at a
barbecue in the tiny village of Trinwillershagen not far from the Baltic coast,
where he flattered her by saying he wanted to "look inside her soul."
But in June she also wants to avoid images like those at the 2001 summit in
Genoa, Italy, where barricades burned and the police killed one young
demonstrator. The federal court's justification for the raids last week showed
just how high the pressure is to avoid violent protests. The concern, wrote the
court, was a flareup "which could particularly damage the position of Germany as
a dependable partner amid the eight most important industrial nations."

Ideally the summit will project an image as positive as the one in Gleneagles,
Scotland, two years ago. Tony Blair managed to push through partial debt relief
for the Third World and even garnered praise from critics like rock
star-turned-poverty-campaigner Bob Geldof. But that summit was also marred --
as Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble has pointed out -- by the terrorist
bombings in London.

The most secure event in German history
On the agenda for this year's summit are topics like climate change, copyright
protection, aid for Africa and greater transparency for international financial
markets. The eight leaders, including US President George W. Bush and new French
President Nicolas Sarkozy -- accompanied by 2,000 members of various government
delegations -- will be tucked away on this pretty stretch of shoreline behind
razorwire-topped fence. They'll be observed by 4,000 journalists, protected by
16,000 police and surrounded by up to 100,000 angry demonstrators. German
organizers, in the end, will have spent almost €100 million and two years
organizing the meeting.
Critics accuse G-8 leaders of pursing policies that reinforce poverty and
inequality. They also claim the summit lacks democratic legitimacy. The
highlight of one organized protest will be a concert by German rock musician
Herbert Grönemeyer, who has taken up the efforts of U2 lead singer Bono to
pressure G-8 leaders for more African aid. Lorenz Caffier, interior minister of
the German state Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania -- where Heiligendamm is located
-- has said "all peaceful opponents of the summit are welcome." The closer the
dreaded date comes, though, the more nervous local authorities seem to be.

The summit may well go down as the most secure event in German history. Defense
Minister Franz Josef Jung will deploy nine navy ships and 1,100 soldiers. And
surveillance of G-8 opponents has, at least temporarily, overshadowed efforts
to combat Islamic terrorists.
At the start of 2007, Germany's domestic intelligence agency labelled
globalization opponents an "operative focal point." Organizational meetings for
protests at the summit were infiltrated by government informants, and in March
authorities agreed to take preventative measures with other EU governments to
keep a hard core of anarchists from Spain, Italy and Greece under control.
Germany will temporarily suspend the Schengen Agreement -- which allows
passport-free travel among most European nations -- to set up border checks.
Schäuble has also warned that police could hold potentially violent protesters
in preventive custody. New mass-detention centers will be built. "Our guests
have a right to demand that Germany does all it can to ensure their safety,"
says Wolfgang Bosbach, a conservative member of parliament and expert on
security issues.

The Usual Suspects
Around this time of year, normally, the German Baltic coast begins to brim with
summer tourism. But the atmosphere this May is different, at least for anyone
belonging to an anti-G-8 group. Dissenters can count on being watched for hours
at a time -- as one female activist from the anti-globalization group Attac
recently learned. Several men in leather jackets tailed her for more than an
hour until she took refuge in a police station in Rostock, the largest city
near Heiligendamm. The police checked out the men and learned they belonged to
Germany's domestic intelligence service.

Two other young leftists, known in Rostock as globalization critics, were
stopped by police on the autobahn for two hours -- for a thorough but fruitless
search of their car.
Still, last Wednesday's nationwide crackdown was less hard on young militant
activists than it was on the scene's usual suspects from the past twenty years,
including leftists like 68-year-old Fritz S. from Hamburg, 56-year-old Hauke B.
from Berlin and the 65-year-old Armin M. from Brandenburg.
They're veterans of Germany's radical left. Fritz S., a physicist who taught
regularly at a college in the northern city of Bremen, spent a year in jail in
1989 for supporting a terrorist group. All three men have been investigated
over the years in several cases involving militants.
But proof that any of them have committed acts of violence is lacking. Germany's
equivalent of the FBI, the Bundeskriminalamt, had to close a recent major
investigation for lack of evidence. Fritz S. stood accused with 11 other
suspects of sabotaging a number of German trains with metal hooks to protest
the transport of nuclear waste from a processing center in France back to a
depot in Germany. After phone taps, video surveillance and a number of
apartment searches, federal prosecutors quietly dropped the case in 2003.
Still, prosecutors consider the three men masterminds of a clandestine network
in northern Germany that has waged a militant campaign against the Heiligendamm
summit since August 2005. Not even Germany's top federal prosecutor, Monika
Harms, believes they were personally involved in certain nightly activities --
firebombing a Foreign Ministry guesthouse in October 2005, or torching a deputy
finance minister's car in December 2006 -- but Harms does believe the old men
might "at least have been involved in writing the self-incriminating messages"
left at the scenes, or in recruiting young activists to commit the attacks.

Armin M., who lives in a small Brandenburg village and works against genetically
modified crops, rejects the accusations. "It's all a propaganda show," he says,
"that you just can't go on taking seriously."
A total of 21 suspects have been charged in the prelude to the G-8 summit. The
most important piece of evidence against the three old men is a book published
in 2004 called "Leftists in Motion." Its authors -- using the pseudonym
"Graywacke INC" -- detail arson attacks against meetings of the International
Monetary Fund in Berlin in 1988. The old leftists have now supposedly started a
campaign against the G-8 summit "following this example." But Andreas Beuth,
attorney for Fritz S., rejects his client's involvement in both the book and
all the other charges.
In spite of such thinly-substantiated accusations, Konrad Freiberg, chairman of
Germany's police union, justifies last Wednesday's raids as a pre-emptive
attempt "to prevent future violence." But he admits federal prosecutors must
"quickly put their evidence on the table," especially since the authorities
have made several mistakes in the course of their investigations.

Consolidating the left
In 2003, a man named Jonas F. learned that federal investigators suspected him
of belonging to a "militant group" after a billing mistake by his mobile
provider O2 showed that his phone was being tapped. Awhile later, his name and
the names of three other suspects appeared in the newspaper -- a warning the
authorities tried to prevent. Another suspected G-8 opponent received an
inadvertent letter from his local registry office that said federal police were
investigating him for being part of a terrorist group.
These cock-ups have hurt the government's "zero tolerance for extremists"
strategy -- at least politically. No sooner had federal prosecutors admitted
their raids last week were aimed at "clearing up the structures" of various
outfits than mainstream groups, like Attac -- which tries to distance itself
from the extreme left -- showed solidarity with those being investigated. "The
authorities are trying to divide the movement," says Attac co-founder Sven
Giegold. "But the first indications are that they've done just the opposite."

Volker Ratzmann, an attorney and Green Party member in Berlin's city assembly,
is incensed by "the thinnest search warrant I've ever seen." He says the
authorities "are apparently trying to intimidate and collect more information."
Even Berlin's interior minister, Erhart Körting, warns against "putting
democratic protesters in the same category as a handful of criminals. That
would be disastrous."
But the main result of last week's raids has been to push various factions of
the left closer together. Claudia Roth, a Green Party leader who refused to
back a general call to protest the summit because she couldn't support
"one-sided blame" of the G-8, vehemently defended the protesters last week. She
said it was "really shocking to put opponents of the G-8 summit and people
critical of globalization in the same corner as terrorists" -- and marched in a
protest on Wednesday in Berlin.
For her part, Merkel has tried to talk to critics. She met with Bono last week
and will meet trade unionists and NGO groups on Monday. And for the last day of
the summit Germany has invited the leaders of Egypt, Algeria, Nigeria, Senegal
and Ghana to discuss the future of Africa. Representatives from China, India,
Brazil, Mexico and South Africa will also come for talks about new rules for
the global economy. Merkel's G-8 coordinator Bernd Pfaffenbach had hoped these
events would soothe the anti-globalization crowd. The program in Heiligendamm,
he said, is "not an agenda of topics that would fit the image of a club for the
rich. Opponents of the summit just don't have an issue."
Maybe they didn't. Until last week.

[http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,482855,00.html]


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news about the last dissent meeting in berlin

some news about the dissent meeting held at the weekend 5th/6th of may in
berlin:

plan A will be as before with one exception:
* 1. there is one important move , because the deligates and the presidents will
arrive on wednesday (6th of june) and not as expected on tuesday (5th of june),
so that means the blockade of Rostock laage (military airport, where the
delegates will arrive) will move from tuesday to wednesday, on tuesday will be
still the global action day of antimilitaristic around Rostock and there will
be planed other actions
* 2. other modules which are planing big and mass blockades (like block G8) we
dont know yet if they will decide to call for massblockades around heiligendamm
on wednesday(6th of june)
* 3. at the meeting was the consensus that decentral blockades should start
already before wednesday, because there will be already a lot of deligates and
people for summit-infrastructure around and for the day of antimilitaristic
there have to be actions planed as well and also after blocking the airport
laage... it will go on with decentral blockades...
* 4. the camps there was no favorised camp to go, but one idea was first to be
around rostock (cos most of the actions are taking place there in the first
days) and then maybe wednesday to move direction heiligendamm to the camp in
reddelich at the countryside....
* 5. Demonstrations - 2nd of june
at the meeting people agreed, we will still mobilize to both demonstration, for
the big demonstration in rostock and also against the nazi-demonstration in
schwerin at the 2. of june

here a little surview about plan a:

friday 1. of june:
squatting the bombodrom, ex bombingrange which wants the nato activate again/
meeting point of byciclecaravanes coming from eastern europe, westerneurope,
berlin, etc.

saturday 2. of june:
big demonstration in rostock + anti nazi demonstration in schwerin

sunday 3. of june:
global action day of agriculture in rostock / international networking meeting
of migrants in rostock rally with stops on supermarkets, laboratories for
genetical modified animals and crops on bikes, skaters, cars - east of Rostock

monday 4. of june:
global action day of migrants: freedom of movement is everybodys right morning:
blockade of the foreigner Office in Rostock near City Harbour 18 h:
demonstration in rostock

tuesday 5. of june:
decentral blockades and antimilitaristic action in Rostock

wednesday 6. of june:
blockade of rostock laage airport (blockg8 might organise big massblockades
around heiligendamm

thursday 7.of june:
starmarch to the fence, decentral blockades or plan b

friday 8. of june:
decentral blockades of departure and action day on climate change or plan b

aftermeeting end of july in france

[http://dissentnetzwerk.org/node/2569]



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