(en) Anarkismo.net: The Europe of repression strikes a blow at social protest in Ireland by José Antonio Gutiérrez D. (ca)

Hundreds of thousands of people in this small country have been protesting against this 
policy and the government has encountered a campaign of civil disobedience without 
precedent, in which the majority of the population refuse to pay. ---- After years of 
shamelessly plundering the country, the rich have turned their private debts into public 
ones and have imposed a program of austerity on its people so that the poorest have the 
burden of keeping the ship afloat. Not content with this, the foreign partners of this 
oligarchy, the same ones that permitted them to indebt themselves at astronomical levels 
and finance their extravagances, are using the crisis to guarantee success for their 
businesses: that debts are paid with its interest due and that the economy is opened up to 
them for new investment opportunities.

This has begun with the privatisation of basic services, with the domestic oligarchy 
becoming the commercial agency that administers the pillaging. When the people began to 
protest against this scandal, raids took place before dawn that hauled political activists 
from their homes to interrogate them, intimidate them and hand out draconian sentences 
against some of them. The judicial system prohibits social protest and the authorities 
threaten that they won’t accept interruptions to “order”.

We are not describing a small third-world republic of the late '70s, however this is what 
has been happening in recent weeks in the civilised and progressive European Union (EU). 
More particularly, in the banana republic of Ireland. Since 2008 the public has endured, 
with the stoicism bordering on stupidity, all of the conditions imposed by the troika 
(ECB, IMF, EU) in the midst of the crisis, the austerity programme, the lies of a 
government elected to do the exact opposite of what it has done, the taunts of some of the 
rich who have continued to be rich by looting the pockets of the working class. The 
legendary combative spirit of the Irish has evaporated without leaving a trace, to the 
point that the Greeks carry banners in their own protests stating “We are not Ireland”.

But it has reached a point that even more than the most compliant Irish people have 
reached their limit. The privatisation of water was the drop that literally made the glass 
overflow. Even though they treat the privatisation of water with the argument that it is a 
necessary action due to the crisis, the truth is that for some time the EU has been 
pushing the privatisation of this said service in Ireland: in fact, there have been 
successive and successful campaigns against the conversion of this public right into a 
business since the late 1990s. Hundreds of thousands of people in this small country have 
been protesting against this policy and the government has encountered a campaign of civil 
disobedience without precedent, in which the majority of the population refuse to pay. 
Horror of horrors, GMC Sierra, the company charged with the installation of water-meters 
of German and North American origin, has met acrimonious opposition from communities that 
don’t allow them to install the meters, obstruct and block them from working. Direct 
action, ladies and gentlemen! This is what we are witnessing after decades of 
domestication of popular movements through the social pact.

The ruling class is scared and you can see it. They fear anarchy, that the disobedient 
population refuses to recognise the authority of those who govern. They have reacted 
clumsily, ordering in one week the detention of 17 people who participated in a protest in 
November last year in the district of Jobstown. On this occasion the car of the Deputy 
Prime Minister, Labour’s Joan Burton, was blocked by the protesters, who were then 
shamelessly accused of “false imprisonement”. Included among the first group of detainees 
(February 9) was Socialist Party deputy Paul Murphy, left-wing councillors and republican 
activists. In the days that followed, those detained, who are all protestors in the 
campaign against the privatisation of water, including minors and pensioners, making this 
an even more grotesque production. Even though all were released provisionally yesterday 
the courts condemned five activists - Bernie Hughes, Damien O’Neill, Paul Moore, Derek 
Byrne and Michael Batty, all from the working-class districts of the capital - to between 
28 and 56 days in prison. The sentence openly criminalises civil disobedience, one of the 
classic forms of protest that is deliberately confused with violence, in open violation of 
the most fundamental human rights.

The use of police in response to protest in the peaceful Republic of Ireland is not new - 
those living in Rossport on the west coast of Ireland are well versed in it; for years 
they have been battling the presence of the petrol company Shell in their area and have 
been placed under a political siege. They have been subjected to more than one blow for 
speaking out. Curiously, on the same day that they handed out the first arrests against 
the protesters, Prime Minister Enda Kenny announced that there will be stricter 
anti-terrorism laws with the goal of combating the Islamic threat. We’ve already seen what 
will be done with these laws - the criminalisation of social movements. The popular 
response is to be seen: while Rossport is a rural area isolated from the rest of the 
country, political persecution in the heart of Dublin has awakened multiple spontaneous 
protests at police stations, and on Saturday they have called for a massive demonstration 
against this repression, at which attendance is expected from thousands of people from 
working-class communities, which have endured the worst of the transfer of the 
consequences of the crisis from the rich to the poor, and whose residents continue to 
suffer the worst of this bullying against the right to protest, . The time has arrived for 
the Irish people to show, to the Greeks, the world and to themselves, that here too 
dignity remains.

José Antonio Gutiérrez D.
20th February, 2015

Translation by John Catalinotto
http://www.anarkismo.net/article/27951