December 12 @ LARC, London HOIO Day of Action planning meeting

from London HOIO, 28 November 2007:

Wednesday December 12th, 7pm
London Action Resource Centre (LARC)
62 Fieldgate Street
Whitechapel E1 1ES (Nearest tubes Whitechapel and Aldgate East)

Calling all... corporate pirates, clowns, and suited and booted satirists... direct action monekywrenchers, and the stealthy un-wealthy.... anti-privatisation organisers, community-work-place agitators, corporate muck rakers and peace warriors...we need collective UK-wide action to expose and resist the corporate take-over of Iraq......

Saturday February 23rd 2008 is the National day of action against the theft of Iraqi oil and economic occupation.

Called by the Hands Off Iraqi Oil coalition, the day aims to highlight the economic as well as military occupation of Iraq and show solidarity with Iraqi movements resisting the rip off of their resources.

London Hands Off Iraqi Oil

London is home to institutions and organisations which are profiting from war and occupation and which have been complicit in the deaths of thousands, the displacement of millions and the destruction of lands, homes and communities.

These organisations and their agendas have largely gone unchallenged. But they should be exposed and opposed; their roles in the story of the rip of Iraq’s resources told and remembered.

Local anti war and direct action groups around the country have already committed to taking action at Shell and BP petrol stations on the day.

Yet we in the capital have an even wider scope of targets to choose from...

This meeting is geared towards identifying these organisations, discussing their roles, and formulating ideas and tactics for collective action in the run up to and around February 23rd

The meeting also aims to catalyse a London HOIO network/collective

So come on down to LARC for a session of Maps, Facts, Strategy and Audacity!................

Background

This economic occupation has been hidden from view by the daily brutalities and coercion of a military occupation. It has been blown off the agenda by depleted uranium bomb attacks, phosphorous explosions, occupation stoked sectarian strife, the bulldozing of homes, and the slamming up of walls.

The imposition of political and economic systems by states and corporate interests looking to remap lands and peoples, represents an escalating continuum of militarised free market expansion and resource appropriation which is systematically ruining the lives and livelihoods of millions, and the ecology of our world.

In the case of Iraq, the imposition of the free market agenda has not been realised. Those who planned to control and profit from Iraq’s resources have not got what they came for. Iraq’s oil is still un-privatised, despite the threats, coercion, and political and military pressures on the parliament to pass an oil law crafted under occupation.

The defiance of the Iraqi people, particularly workers organising in the oil industry have succeeded in pushing the corporate occupation agenda further and further back.

We need to back them up. In the anti-war and social justice and climate action movements, we need to bring the economics back into the politics of war and occupation and expose the interests which contunuously seek political and economic re-armament and re-empowerment, disempowering millions in Iraq and beyond from even attempting an alternative, non-profit driven and exploitative way of life.

See http://www.handsoffiraqioil.org


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