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"CLAIM BACK OUR PRODUCTS, OUR
LABOUR, OUR TIME & OUR RIGHTS" :: Mayday 2005
Coupon
Sunday
1st of May saw the first EuroMayday action happen in London. Organised
by the precarity network, our aim was to bring together people in
London who have precarious working and living situations. In the
UK, 30% of people of working age, are in temp, casual, part-time,
freelance work or unemployed. Many of us are not represented by
the traditional hierarchical, bureaucratic structure of trade unions,
and we felt Mayday, international workers day, should be a day for
us too – to come together, to reclaim our public space and
take back our free time from the tyranny of 24/7 constantly on-call,
work regimes.
We chose Tesco supermarket as the location for
our Mayday action because as the UK’s largest supermarket,
with over £2 billion profits in the last year, Tesco is at
the forefront of exploitative work practices on a global scale,
paying new supermarket employees below minimum wage (rising to only
just above minimum wage after several months), cutting Sunday pay
(so Sunday becomes a normal working day), and stopping employees
sick pay. Not only this, but those packing Tesco’s own brand
salads in Sussex were recently revealed to be migrants working for
a temping agency controlled by gangmasters, who are paid far below
min. wage (sometimes not at all); and women casual workers on Tesco-accredited
farms in South Africa work in appalling conditions with no protection
from pesticides & are paid poverty wages to meet ‘flexible’
just-in-time production schedules, and keep profits at a maximum.
However, we don’t just work for global chains like Tesco,
but we are consumers too – if we want food to eat there is
a decreasing amount of choice besides big supermarket chains, as
their ‘metro’s & ‘express’ stores swallow
up our inner cities, their hypermarkets expand the edges of our
towns, until huge chains dominate our lives, landscapes and public
space entirely, mirroring the way capitalism now encroaches into
every part of our lives. Our idea was to make a communication action
with people both working and shopping in Tesco, and to do this in
Hackney, away from the sterile commercial centre of London and outside
of the controlled & ritualistic atmosphere of an A to B march.
The location for action was kept secret until the last minute,
and in the weeks leading up to Mayday, we collected over 750 mobile
phone numbers for a mass text out on the morning of the action.
Such secrecy was necessary because of police tactics on previous
Maydays, but we wanted the action to be as public and open as possible,
hence the attempts to collect as many numbers as possible through
posters & the distribution of over 10,000 leaflets & special
‘London for free’ vouchers. Unfortunately, on the morning
of the action our SMS email account was frozen (not sure if this
was bureaucracy, crap technology or something more sinister!), but
we still eventually managed to send texts to over 500 people (sorry
to anyone who got it too late or not at all, we worked really hard
to try and communicate with as many of you as we could – &
we learnt how to do it better next time).
By midday people were starting to make their way to the 2 meet-up
points of Highbury & Bethnal Green where small but aggressive
contingents of cops where met by those who were determined to make
their way to the action in Hackney central. At Highbury particularly,
the level of trust, co-ordination and solidarity between people
who were previously strangers was pretty amazing, as the 60 or so
people assembled managed to break though police lines and barriers
and free-ride the train down to Hackney, and weather the punches
and kicks from police to get off the train and run in unison down
the road to the supermarket.
The action in Tesco began at around 1.15pm when a group of activists
already in the area made their way into the supermarket accompanied
by a samba band. The band began playing and dancing round the aisles
while hundreds of ‘the story about Tesco’ leaflets and
Mayday ‘London for Free’ vouchers were given out to
staff and shoppers, and speeches were made over a megaphone. A huge
banner reading ‘all we have to lose is our chainstores…’
was unfurled, spanning the 20 or so checkouts. Shoppers danced and
checkout staff stood up & took photos with their mobile phones.
The initial cops on the scene were only a couple of community cops,
who stood around not knowing what to do. Several of the staff expressed
support for the action, and were aware that the action was in solidarity
with them, although the manager initially panicked and tried to
close the store.
After about 15 minutes the Highbury contingent arrived, running
into Tesco blowing whistles, closely followed by loads of cops who
were ready to get heavy. The cops initially made a futile attempt
to cordon people in an aisle, then resorted to dragging, punching
and kicking people (particularly women) out of the store & trying
to smash up the sound system. However, we were helped by at least
one Tesco security guard trying to pull police off people, and many
shoppers and staff expressed shock and disbelief at the violence
of police actions.
Out in the car park, we were met by the Bethnal Green group (who
walked all the way after police stopped the bus) and loads more
latecomers, and some members of the public managed to take full
advantage of the disruption to normal shopping, and liberate goods
from the store (helped by police not letting them back in to pay
for stuff!). Holding the banner across the car park, our plan was
to all parade down Mare street towards London Fields and have a
party in the park. However, the police had other ideas. As we took
the street next to the supermarket, police violently began to assault
a samba dancer and others; and as we went to their rescue, they
made a cordon around some people, later dragging others into the
cordon. We were there for over an hour, but our spirits were high
due to the continued solidarity of those on the outside shouting
support and throwing us water and food, and by passers by shouting
at the cops and cars hooting in support of us.
We eventually (still surrounded by police and vans) managed our
march down Mare street to London Fields and into the park. But even
inside the park, the cops still wanted trouble and some scuffles
broke out with several people arrested. But we remained together
and with support from people in the park (including a cricket team),
we gathered to chant ‘go home scum’ & ‘get
out of our park’ to the cops until they left; and we ended
the afternoon as we’d hoped, all together, the band playing,
a bit bruised but enjoying the sunshine and our Mayday celebrations.
The police will always attempt to stop Mayday and any other action
we do, and continually attempt to destroy the movements we try to
create. What is important is how we react and resist their repression,
and to never give up. Mayday this year was a great example of people
acting together in solidarity in the face of police aggression,
and of our continued determination to take our struggle to the streets
and communicate with people. As ever, the struggle continues…

*Pictures: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2005/05/310480.html
*9 people were arrested & several people intend to make
complaints of assault against the police. If you witnessed any arrests,
or police assaults on people, please contact Legal Defense &
Monitoring Group: ldmgmail@yahoo.co.uk
*Keep posted for future flexmob actions.
*To find out what happened on EuroMayday in other cities, see: www.globalproject.info
:: www.euromayday.org
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