SQUATTERS ACCUSE MAYOR OF RETREATING FROM COLLABORATION AGREEMENT FOLLOWING GAZA
PROTESTS
~ Cristina Sykes ~
The Askatasuna social centre in Turin, Italy was evicted early this morning,
bringing to an end nearly 30 years of occupation. The operation involved the
DIGOS political police and armoured vehicles, with several streets sealed off.
Police entered the four-storey former municipal building building early in the
morning to carry out searches and then sealed the premises. According to
activists, six people were inside the building at the time of the raid. The
homes of around ten activists linked to the centre and to student collectives
were raided at the same time, in connection with recent Palestine solidarity
protests including an action at the headquarters of arms manufacturer Leonardo.
During the day police used a water cannon to disperse a growing crowd of
supporters who had gathered outside the building, while traffic in the area was
blocked and at least one nearby tram line suspended. Two schools in the
surrounding area were reportedly closed on the orders of the prefecture.
The mayor of Turin, Stefano Lo Russo, said the city had withdrawn from a
“collaboration pact” with Askatasuna that had been in place since early 2024,
when the municipal council formally recognised the occupied building as a
“common good” and began a process towards shared management. The mayor’s office
stated that inspections by public security authorities had found violations of
the conditions of the agreement.
Activists and solidarity groups dispute this account, arguing that the police
operation and the withdrawal of the pact unfolded on parallel tracks and that
pressure from the national government played a decisive role — similarly to the
eviction of Milan’s Leoncavallo social centre earlier this year. Several
statements described the eviction as a politically motivated act aimed at
weakening social movements, in particular those involved in organising protests
against the war in Gaza and Italy’s role in international military alliances.
Askatasuna, whose name means “freedom” in Basque, has been a central reference
point for the city’s autonomous and radical left since 1996. Over the years it
hosted political assemblies, cultural events, concerts and community services,
including housing advice, children’s activities and mutual aid projects. The
centre was also closely involved in major protest cycles in Turin, from the No
TAV movement in the Susa Valley to anti-war and anti-fascist mobilisations.
Within hours of the eviction, dozens of organisations across Italy issued
statements of solidarity, including trade unions, student groups and networks of
social centres. Many framed the operation as part of a broader tightening of
public order policies under the far-right-led government of Giorgia Meloni. A
joint statement from social centres in north-eastern Italy described the Turin
operation as an “exemplary act” designed to intimidate and warned that
autonomous spaces were increasingly being treated as targets of repression.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machine-assisted edit. Photos: GlobalProject, Radio Onda d’Urto
The post Turin: Askatasuna social centre evicted appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - Eviction
THE SERIES OF RAIDS, WHICH TOOK PLACE OVER THE COURSE OF A SINGLE WEEK, HAVE
BEEN LABELLED A DESPERATE RESPONSE AS STATE FORCES STRUGGLE TO CONTAIN PUBLIC
ANGER OVER PERCIEVED CORRUPTION AND INCOMPETENCE.
~Kit Dimou~
On the morning of April 22nd, the historic Evangelismos squat in Heraklion,
Crete, was evicted once again having been reoccupied on 1 December 2023.
The brief announcement of the squat stated: “AS IT HAPPENED THEN, SO IT HAPPENS
NOW, NOTHING WITHOUT A FIGHT. NOT ONE STEP BACK”. Six people who were inside the
building have been held on charges of breaching the peace and possession of
weapons (flags and makeshift shields), while the police refused them
communication with their lawyers.
Evangelismos was an abandoned hospital when leftists and anarchists first took
the initiative to open it for the community in Heraklion in 2002. Since then, it
has been at the forefront of anti-authoritarian struggle in Crete, particularly
in recent solidarity actions with the Palestinian people.
On the same morning, April 22nd, police in Thessaloniki evicted a space at the
Physics School of Aristotle University which had been squatted by students for a
year, the ‘Steki Fysikou’. Upon the completion of the operation, university
management provocatively announced that this space was “liberated from a group
of anti-authoritarians and delivered to the university community for the use of
the sensitive group of people with special needs”. Local comrades have denounced
the hypocrisy and disableist language of this statement, especially given the
general inaccessibility of the Aristotle University: “in the university,
education, liberated spaces and accessibility only come through struggle”.
Finally, on the morning of April 15th, cops raided and evicted the newly-founded
‘Rasprava’ squat in the centre of Exarcheia. Despite the hopes of the state,
there were zero comrades inside, while the only ‘evidence’ found was some rubble
and anarchist graffiti. ‘Rasprava’ was an abandoned orphanage, squatted by
anarchists on March 28th following a public event about revolutionary memory
where imprisoned anarchist Marianna M. spoke via the phone. The ‘Rasprava’ squat
explicitly intended to promote a culture of revolutionary and insurrectionary
direct action in Exarcheia: ‘to turn words into action, to move from defense to
attack’ in the struggle to protect the collective memory of the neighbourhood
from touristification and integration.
The squatters argued that the eviction was a desperate response of the State to
the recent bombing attack on Hellenic Train, as well as clashes with the police
at a Palestine solidarity concert in Exarcheia on Saturday 12 April. The
collective noted:
“The governing circus […] incorrectly believes that the ideas and practices that
Rasprava represents are limited to the walls of a building, and that with its
eviction, they will disappear as if by magic. A tear runs down one cheek, but
one of laughter. The revolutionary culture we promote and want to return to its
predominance in the anarchist space, direct action, will haunt your dreams, as
well as your subordinated reality.“
The post Three squat evictions in a week as Greek state ramps up attack on
anarchist movement appeared first on Freedom News.