IT WAS “BY NO MEANS OUR INTENTION” TO CUT POWER TO HOUSEHOLDS, SAYS COMMUNIQUÉ,
BUT TO “TURN OFF THE JUICE TO THE MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX”
~ Juju Alerta ~
Anarchists have taken responsibility for a major power outage in southeast
Berlin early Tuesday, after two high-voltage pylons were set on fire in
Johannisthal, Treptow-Köpenick.
The attack, which began around 3.30am according to police, cut electricity to
some 43,000 households and 3,000 businesses. Entire areas were left without
power, public transport was paralysed, traffic lights went dark, and mobile
police units with loudspeaker vans were deployed to inform residents.
The state security division of the Berlin criminal police has taken over the
investigation. A police spokesperson said arson was suspected and that a
political motive “could not be ruled out”.
Later, a lengthy statement appeared on Indymedia in which a group of anarchists
claimed the action, which they say targeted Adlershof technology park. The
authors apologised to local residents for the blackout in private homes, saying
this was “by no means our intention”, but described the collateral damage as
“acceptable compared with the destruction of nature and the often deadly
subjugation of people” caused by the targeted industries.
The group singled out several companies, including Atos, Jenoptik, Siemens, and
the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), accusing them of supplying militaries,
enabling border surveillance and fuelling environmental destruction. “Their
well-sounding slogans of innovation, sustainability and progress are nothing
more than a manoeuvre on the battlefield of discourse, to cover up that they are
actually building instruments that bring death and destruction”, the statement
declared.
Tuesday’s fire is the most significant infrastructure sabotage in Berlin since a
2024 pylon attack cut power to Tesla’s Gigafactory in Grünheide.
In recent weeks there have also been attacks on vehicles and businesses linked
to the landlord of Rigaer 94, a left-radical housing project which faces
multiple court cases and eviction proceedings this month.
The post Berlin blackout: Anarchists claim attack on industrial park appeared
first on Freedom News.
Tag - sabotage
THE TRIAL AND SENTENCING OF RUSLAN SIDIKI HAS EXPOSED BOTH THE TERROR OF AN
AUTHORITARIAN STATE AND THE POWER OF CLANDESTINE DIRECT ACTION
~ Josie Ó Súileabháin ~
At the Ryazan garrison military court, Judge Oleg Shishov on 23 May sentenced
Ruslan Sidiki to 29 years of imprisonment for bombing railway tracks leading to
the front and a drone attack on a military base. Sidiki will have to spend the
first 7 in a high-security prison and after that in a high-security penal
colony. He would also have to pay about 58 million roubles in fines and damages
(about 640,000 Euros).
Russian Railways reported damages of more than 17 million Rubles and the
disruption to 61 trains using the same line. Petrochemical outfit Apatit said
that 700 tonnes of concrete crumbled and mixed with the soil, causing damage of
38 million Rubles. Bogdan Fedak, a representative of the Ministry of Defence,
confirmed the drone at Dyagilyevo airfield caused minimal damage, but it did
threaten “the combat readiness of the military unit” although when pressed, he
could not say what the threat was.
“Of course, any loud bang and news of an explosion can scare someone”, Sidiki
said in his final statement to the court. “Just as missiles flying over houses
and the start of military operations carry with them intimidation of the
population of the country against which these actions are being carried out”.
Sabotage of the railways carrying military equipment through Russia into Ukraine
rose sharply after the announcement of the full-scale war in 2022. The violent
suppression of street protests and anti-war demonstrations has left no avenue
but clandestine direct action.
“Early in the morning of February 24th” Sidiki wrote, “I was riding in the train
Ryazan-Moscow… I began to monitor the news and saw that a large-scale invasion
had begun. It was a very unpleasant feeling (knowing) that you couldn’t do
anything. I saw how trains with military equipment are going, out of desperation
I wanted to overshadow the gun trucks”.
By early March, Sidiki had written to a comrade in Ukraine to ask if they would
fight in the armed forces. The comrade replied: “We burn their equipment in the
hundreds, and they wipe our cities from the face of the earth”.
‘BEWARE, MOSCOW’
63 trains had de-railed in Russia in the first four months of full-scale war,
according to media reports seen by The Insider. Several underground groups were
claiming responsibility, uploading reports to social media and sharing recipes
for explosives. Russian Railways has claimed that half of these derailments were
due to technical problems rather than political sabotage—preferring to be
accused of criminal negligence than admit to the scale of actions.
Already in 2020, the Rail Guerrillas in Belarus were active in sabotaging state
infrastructure as part of the uprising against dictatorship in the country. In
2022 the focus mainly changed to sabotaging the Russian war machine in Belarus.
The same year the Belarussian regime passed legislation that would allow the
death penalty for attempted acts of sabotage, and violently crushed the movement
in the country.
In April 2022, the Russian security service (FSB) announced it they had detained
two Russians who were “supporters of Ukrainian Nazism” and were being charged
with sabotage. A video was released as ‘evidence’ for their crimes, with one
blurred-faced man talking to camera and wearing a shirt with Union Jacks on it.
Their names were not released, but even after an investigation by The Insider,
no data could be found on charges being brought in the region reported.
The announcement by the FSB did fit the public narrative of the “de-Nazification
of Ukraine” as propagated by Russian leadership a little too well. Behind the
scenes, the FSB was looking for the anarchists and other political activists. In
the public chat ‘Beware, Moscow’ a message warned that the security service was
after a “militant organisation of anarcho-communists”.
According to investigators, the group responsible for several acts of sabotage
were not supporters of Ukrainian fascism but their political counterforce; the
Combat Organisation of Anarcho-Communists (BOAK). The underground militant
direct action group had managed to delay military freight trains by unscrewing 8
nuts, splitting a rail joint and partially dislodging the tracks. “As anarchists
and revolutionaries”, a member of BOAK wrote in February 2025, “it was obvious
that we needed to stand in defence of society when it faced fascist imperial
aggression”.
“The defeat of Ukraine will bring about the triumph of the most reactionary
forces in Russia”, another statement from BOAK reads, “finalizing its
transformation into a neo-Stalinist concentration camp, with unlimited power
concentrated in the FSB and totalitarian Orthodox imperialist ideology”.
Several BOAK comrades went to fight in the resistance in Ukraine, including one
of the founders of the combat organisation Dmitry Petrov. From the first day of
the invasion of Ukraine, Petrov worked to establish anti-authoritarian and
autonomous military units, including the Anti-Authoritarian Platoon that fought
until the summer of 2022.
“Right now we are going through a turning point in the history of eastern
Europe”, Petrov wrote in ‘To be an independent force’. “In the abyss of events,
the small black sail of the anarchist movement is clearly visible”.
In the following year, Dmitry Petrov was killed alongside Finbar Cafferly and
Cooper Andrews as they were fighting close to Bakhmut in Ukraine.
TERROR STATE
As Sidiki reflected in court, he was forced underground when “all opportunities
to influence the situation peacefully” were cut off. “Whoever opposes war is
declared a traitor and subject to repression… it is not surprising that someone
would prefer to leave the country and someone will take up the explosives”.
Sidiki’s defence lawyer had argued that the charge of terrorist training should
be dropped, referring both to the defendant’s prior knowledge of explosives and
drone operations, and the court’s recognition of the defendant as a prisoner of
war. Destruction of the property of the military is known as sabotage, Sidiki
argued, whereas it is the Russian military targeting of Ukraine’s energy
infrastructure that fits the legal definition of terrorism — “committing an
explosion or other actions that frighten the population in order to influence
decision-making by the authorities”. Access to water, electricity and gas were
severely restricted in order to put pressure on Ukraine’s leadership.
As reported by Mediazona, Sidiki previously reflected from prison, “did I feel
like a guerrilla? I think I could be called that. If during the Second World
War, people opposing the Third Reich on its territory were called partisans,
then I can be attributed to them…”
“Torturing with electricity and beating up a tied up person is an extremely low
act” Sidiki said at his last hearing. “Here, responsibility falls not only on
the one who used these methods, but also the one who knows, and the one who does
not react and helps hide it”.
Standing in a cage, his final words to the court were from a fragment of a poem
by Nestor Makhno:
Let them bury us now,
but our essence will not
sink into oblivion
It will rise at the right time
and win. I believe in it
The post Russia: Anarchist partisans sabotage the war machine appeared first on
Freedom News.
COMMUNIQUÉ DESCRIBES CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AS AN “OBSCENE CEREMONY HELD AT THE
EDGE OF A SEA THAT HAS BECOME A CEMETERY FOR REFUGEES”
~ Cristina Sykes ~
Two anarchist groups have claimed responsibility for a series of power outages
that struck southeastern France over the weekend, affecting over 200,000
households in Cannes and Nice.
In a communiqué published yesterday (May 27) under the slogan “ET… COUPEZ!”
(“and… cut!”), the unnamed groups stated: “On the eve of the Cannes Film
Festival awards ceremony, we sabotaged the main electrical substation supplying
the Cannes area and severed the 225 kV line coming from Nice”.
The first blackout occurred on Saturday, May 24, coinciding with the final day
of the prestigious Cannes Film Festival, affecting approximately 160,000 homes.
The outage was caused by a fire at an electrical substation in Tanneron and
damage to an electricity pylon, prompting local officials to suspect coordinated
acts of arson. Despite the disruption, the festival managed to continue using
backup generators.
Shortly after midnight Sunday, a second blackout hit Nice, leaving around 45,000
households without power. This outage was linked to the arson of an electrical
transformer, as confirmed by the city’s mayor, Christian Estrosi. Power was
restored by 5.30AM
While mainstream media reported condemnations of the attack, the groups
elaborated on their motivations in their statement, declaring, “This unexpected
blackout in a bad horror movie drags on. The same scenario is played and
replayed ad nauseam. The backdrop remains the same: a world that continues to
bomb, exploit, extract, seize, violate, ravage, starve, shoot, pollute, and
exterminate, as long as everything is under its control”. They emphasised their
desire to “turn off this deadly system”, stating, “We want to cut the current to
what destroys us!”
The groups condemned the Cannes Film Festival as a “spectacle that serves as a
showcase for a grandiloquent French Republic, defender of Progress values on the
international stage, but also the second-largest arms exporter in the world …
Your obscene ceremony is held at the edge of a sea that has become a cemetery
for refugees, and an industrial dump for a society that loves to portray
rebellion on screen but represses and imprisons anyone who rises against its
domination”, said the communiqué.
The declaration concluded ironically with a ‘movie listing’ titled Sabotage 2:
Nocturne à Cannes. “Set in a world on the brink of apocalypse, the film
chronicles the adventures of a libertarian commando unit tasked with sabotaging
technological factories of great military importance”. The listing came complete
with mock reviews, including “If you love women who short-circuit aluminium
production, students who burn factories, or commandos who take on the oil
industry, you won’t be disappointed with this latest production” and “The
special effects sometimes leave something to be desired, which is not surprising
given the limited resources available to this production, but the script and
strategic cunning more than compensate for this shortcoming”.
The post France: Anarchists claim mass power outages in Cannes, Nice appeared
first on Freedom News.