LOCALS DEMAND REFURBISHED COUNCIL HOUSING INSTEAD OF DEMOLITIONS AND SELL-OFFS
~ Blade Runner ~
Another demonstration against gentrification gathered in Peckham Square on
Saturday (1 March) and moved down through Camberwell Green and Elephant &
Castle, ultimately arriving at Mercato Metropolitano. The march was organised by
the Southwark Housing and Planning Emergency (SHAPE) coalition of fourteen
housing justice and community action groups, and joined along the lengthy route
by activists from Housing Action Southward Lambeth (HASL). The number of
participants was noticeably larger than the previous demo last month, and again
received positive reactions from bystanders and drivers.
The groups aim to intensify pressure on the planning authorities to prevent
overdevelopment and the displacement of local traders. Amidst the ongoing
affordability crisis and the thousands on waiting lists for council housing,
aggressive gentrification plans are being submitted. One such plan is being
proposed by Berkeley Homes for the Aylesham Centre on Peckham High Street. This
proposal includes a high-rise complex with limited green space, reflecting
investor priorities over community needs.
The groups’ demands include ensuring genuine community involvement in planning,
halting unsafe or poorly constructed developments, and prioritising the
refurbishment of existing council housing rather than demolition and
sell-offs. There is also a call to requisition or acquire empty homes, protect
and improve estates and community facilities, and empower workers through direct
labour. Additionally, the demands stress the importance of addressing the
climate emergency by preventing unsustainable building and preserving green
spaces, as well as preventing the displacement of local traders due to
unaffordable housing projects.
The next action is planned for Wednesday, 19 March.
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Tag - gentrification
A DAILY PROGRAM TURNED THE SQUARE INTO A SPACE FOR COMMUNITY LIFE, POLITICAL
ACTION, TRAINING AND MEETING
~ Ainhoa Lleida, Directa ~
The rain does not prevent the fourth night of the protest camp for housing and
against tourism in Valencia from going ahead. The evening before our phone
starts to ring. Waiting on the other side of the line is Natxo, a student of
political science, who in a few seconds greets us from a place where he had
managed to take refuge from the rain. He talks about the open appeal and
appreciates the solidarity on the part of the people who have brought material
to take refuge from the water that was planned to stay for a while. They have
been camping since the demonstration that took place on Saturday, October 19th,
and which gathered around 50,000 people according to the organisation.
“Luckily, it started to rain while it was still daylight,” recounts one of the
people present. This allowed five new tents to be set up in a short time, the
ones that were already there would be covered with plastic, and the night would
be weathered. The centre of the square can be seen from Carrer Correus, where
there are some police vans. The officers go from one place to another in the
square, monitoring it throughout the day.
The police cars do not obstruct the view. Before arriving at the square, you can
see a large, colourful sign that reads: “We have no shelter. For the right to
housing”. It is a white canvas that rests on two tents. As you move towards the
centre of the square, more banners begin to appear in several rows of shops
grouped in circles: “Valencia is not for sale”, “More neighbourhood, less
tourism” or “The city for those who live in it”.
It’s been five years since the motto “if we don’t have a house, we’ll occupy the
square” became a reality that goes beyond a symbolic statement. “The town hall
square is historically the place where we are represented by all the residents
of the city, where we can continue to defend the demands we had at the
demonstration”, remarks Natxo. Bru is another of the people who has been
participating in the camping. For her it is important that “the struggle
continues with other types of actions, such as occupying public space”. The
reasons for continuing camping remain: for the right to housing and against
tourism. “In the end we are fighting for a decent home, which is a universal
basic right, many people are being harmed and it is an issue that crosses us in
an intergenerational way”, says Bru.
ACCESS TO DECENT HOUSING
Bru is a non-binary trans person. They have been living independently for ten
years and during this time they has only been able to reside under occupation.
When they have shared a flat, it has always been very precarious due to the high
price of rent. As they explain, “it seems that you can only find decent housing
if you occupy, are a rich person or your family owns property”, which they
consider unfair.
Demonstrators fill the Serrans bridge upon their arrival at the demonstration
As a trans person, they have had to face a whole series of prejudices that have
to do with their way of dressing or their physical appearance, and which have
been conditioning at the same time whether or not they were interviewed to rent
an apartment. “There are trans people who have a very bad time in terms of
housing, who don’t have a house to live in and that access to one is often
complicated, and it needs to be made visible”, they conclude.
Karina, another of the attendees at the camp, also denounces the real estate
racism she has to face in order to access housing. “My skin colour, my accent,
limit my access”, he regrets. In addition, she has not always been able to meet
the requirements they ask her to rent, such as more than two payslips or a fixed
work contract. In this sense, she says that “the majority of migrants have very
precarious and unstable jobs, or jobs in the underground economy”.
THE SQUARE, CENTRE OF POLITICAL ACTIVITY
A daily program constitutes the flow of the days and turns the square into a
space for community life, political action, training and meeting. All of the
city’s political activity has been moved to the square: neighbourhood
assemblies, group rehearsals, climate conferences, and even a small library has
been set up on loan from the bookstore Arribada Llibres.
Antònia gathered on the first day of camping and from that day she is in charge,
together with Benji, of preparing with all the ingredients left by the people
who come, what the people who want to eat there will eat. At 2.00 p.m. every day
is marked for the popular lunch. The menu is varied, almost always vegan, and
the table is an internal assembly to discuss the points that will be discussed
hours later in the open.
The camped people look with some suspicion on the political representatives.
They have very specific demands in terms of housing, territory or tourism. For
example, the regulation of the price of rent, the halting of all evictions, the
creation of a decent public housing stock, the halting of the expansion of the
port and of all urban planning projects in the city. A ban on granting more
tourist licenses for apartments and hotels or declaring Valencia a tense area is
also demanded.
So far, the institutional response to the demands has been practically
non-existant. The mayor of Valencia, Maria José Català, has only announced that
she will not evict the camper as long as “it does not cause any problems”.
Likewise, she called for a “great agreement between the administrations” and
pointed out that “the best recipe for people to have a home is to build
housing”. But, from the movement in defence of housing, they do not consider
that more houses should be built, “the protection of the territory is very
important and it cannot be that there are thousands of empty flats and so many
people on the streets”, they express in a statement.
Assembly in the town hall square
The camping continued until Sunday 27th of October. But, even though the protest
in the square has ended, this will not mean the end of the movement for housing:
“we have been working for years and we are going beyond this encampment”, they
say. That is why there has been a call to follow the mobilisation in every
neighbourhood of the city and to set up assemblies where they are not yet
organised.
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Photos: Raquel Fontanal
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