Victoria Independent Media Center

Police Crack Down on Activists as Olympics Continue

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Last Updated (Wednesday, 17 March 2010 17:19) Written by Administrator Tuesday, 16 February 2010 22:28

Police have been targeting activists by seizing property, issuing tickets and making arrests using the flimsiest of excuses.

Ed Durgen, a student at UBC and one of the organizers behinds the student anti-torch action, was taken away in cuffs from East Hastings. His belongings were searched and some possessions seized, including a working copy of his dissertation.

Local police assisted by the ISU and Canadian Border Services made a series of repressive arrests starting Friday, when a march from the Vancouver Art Gallery saw three people arrested, and one charged with assault from this completely peaceful protest. The next day, 13 were arrested during a demonstration, three held overnight, and another US citizen may face deportation. As usual, mainstream media made a big story about the "violent nature" of the protest where a few windows were smashed, and mentioned nothing of the destruction to the environment caused by the games.

Read more: Police Crack Down on Activists as Olympics Continue

 

Report From Two Days of the Anti Olympic Convergence

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Last Updated (Wednesday, 17 February 2010 00:44) Written by Administrator Friday, 12 February 2010 22:47

Radical demonstrators filled the streets to hit back directly at the institutions of systemic injustice. Streets were blocked by activists, and several businesses, including Olympic sponsor HBC were attacked.

 
The action illustrated the fact that people are not just opposed to the olympic games, but that the games are part of a propaganda mechanism for larger destructive forces such as the tar sand financier Royal Bank, or Canadas oldest colonial company Hundson's Bay Company that was responsible for brings small pox infected blankets to indigenous communities. 
 

 

The Olympic torch was completely re-routed as demonstrators shut down the streets in East Van.  
 

Vancouver Peoples Summit

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Last Updated (Friday, 12 February 2010 22:47) Written by ORN Thursday, 11 February 2010 23:58

Building a Movement 

 

The 2010 Peoples Summit wrapped up today after two days of workshops and presentations, building up to the Vancouver Anti-Olympic Convergence. Presenters spoke on an array of topics including legal rights, street medic training, movement building and Native land issues. First Nations people from Cree territory spoke about the total environmental devastation of the Alberta tar-sands, the disruption of migratory routs and the effects that these mega-progects have on local water tables. There were also speakers from the Six Nations land reclamation movement, who spoke of worrier land defenders that are organizing using traditional pre-european customs. Years of negotiation between the federation of chiefs and the provincial government in the Canadian court system have resolved few land disputes because they fail to recognizes the values of indigenous people and in fact are built to undermine the sovereignty of first nations communities.  

ORN organizers say that the anti-olympic movement has already been successful at raising awareness of poverty and other issues especially native land rights, as well as bringing people together. There are multiple groups participating in the coming convergence over the next couple of days, the ORN respects diversity of tactics, and warns VANOC that the resistance is coming, it's united, and it's going to be very difficult to ignore. 

   

Report From The Poverty Olympics

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Last Updated (Friday, 12 February 2010 00:12) Written by ORN Monday, 08 February 2010 05:45

The third annual Poverty Olympic Torch arrived in vancouver today six days ahead of the opening of the winter games. The torch bearers were accompanied by the three poverty olympic mascots itchy, creepy and chewy, a marching band and a group of hundreds of concerned citizens and community groups who oppose the 2010 Winter Games. Organizers say that public dollars could be more justly spent on ending poverty and homelessness, and the annual event is meant to highlight this. 

Canada is one of the wealthiest countries in the world. And the province of British Columbia (BC) is among its most prosperous regions. But some people are being left behind.

Read more: Report From The Poverty Olympics

 

Street Art Up, Traffic Flow Down.

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Last Updated (Monday, 08 February 2010 21:59) Written by IMC Sunday, 07 February 2010 17:49

Olympic Organizers Can Expect Resistance 

The streets of downtown victoria were filled with dissent saturday as protesters carrying banners and noisemakers clogged the streets paralysing traffic.

 evict vanoc

The Victoria Coalition Against Poverty (VCAP) and No2010 Victoria called for the event, stating that years of unaffordable housing, abysmal welfare/disability rates, and a lack of accessible health care have created a dire situation in Greater Victoria. Throughout BC, people are outraged at the spending of public funds on the Olympic Games while necessary social services suffer. On it's own, the Olympic Torch Relay in Victoria, a one-day extravaganza for corporate sponsors coke and RBC, had a price tag of nearly $500,000, and the Olympics themselves have a budget totaling over $6 billion dollars. Meanwhile 1000's of people across the province continue to exist in substandard conditions and struggle to stay alive.

Read more: Street Art Up, Traffic Flow Down.

   

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