💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › antti-rautiainen-my-belgrade-experience.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 07:31:30. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: My Belgrade experience
Author: Antti Rautiainen
Date: December 3, 2006
Language: en
Topics: anti-globalization, conferences, Serbia
Source: Retrieved on 3rd November 2021 from https://anttirautiainen.livejournal.com/20090.html][anttirautiainen.livejournal.com]] and [[https://anttirautiainen.livejournal.com/19743.html

Antti Rautiainen

My Belgrade experience

To cut long story short, PGA is a network founded 1998 in Geneva, which

is united according to the following 5 hallmarks:

trade agreements, institutions and governments that promote destructive

globalization.

including, but not limited to, patriarchy, racism and religious

fundamentalism of all creeds. We embrace the full dignity of all human

beings.

have a major impact in such biased and undemocratic organizations, in

which transnational capital is the only real policy-maker.

movements’ struggles, advocating forms of resistance which maximize

respect for life and oppressed peoples’ rights, as well as the

construction of local alternatives to global capitalism.

Currently PGA networks mostly in continental and inter-continental

levels, conference in Belgrade last July was that of European

continental network. PGA has several webpages. AGP is for the

inter-continental network, PGA Conference has some documents and links

relatedto the continental European organizing.

Best of the discussions and workshops I attended in conference last July

have already had their minutes published. More than report of “work

done”, attempt of this text is to give some general picture, reflect on

off-program business (such as corridor intrigue), and continue the

discussion I began two years ago (this far with myself only) about

purposefulness of such events in general, in article I wrote about

2^(nd) European conference of PGA in Leiden.

My main interests relating to conference were

convergence of interests which goes beyond superficial “one struggle”

rhetoric.

some day.

Eastern Europe in the first place, could give any concrete benefits to

Eastern European movements I am networked with or participate to.

than PGA model of international organizing in Eastern Europe.

attempts to be as little organization as possible.

Nobody ever commented my article about Leiden, but indirectly I

understood that some people interpreted me putting down the whole thing.

This would be a rude simplification. But definitely there were moments I

was sort of lost there, and I have learned some lessons since then.

Conference is useful if you know how to use it

First lesson is to make ones own program. Framework of the event may be

organized normally or disastrously, but it may never make a success

alone — it is the content which matters in the end. And since people

have so diverge interests these days, you should ever count someone else

to organize according to your interests. Good ideas for workshops are

the best way to contribute, since organizers will be so much burdened

with logistical questions that you should not count on them. More cooks,

better the soup will be. So together with a couple of friends we

announced a number of discussions and workshops on the spot, which had

us busy about half of the time we were there. Some of them gained wide

interest from others as well, few themes flopped since they were of

interest for us alone.

Some other groups which have applied this approach in the past have been

accused for an attempt to hijack the whole event — one example people

from European Social Consulta in Leiden. Although I was not too much

into ESC project which apparently got a flat landing soon after Leiden

(now they seem to only exist in Spain), I think it is PGA which should

serve movements, not movements that should serve PGA. In Belgrade, this

approach was taken to its extreme by Venezuelan Chavists, who had their

recruiting events every day from morning to evening, all the area

plastered with their placates and announcements. I have a lot to learn

from them what comes to promotion. They gave about zero contribution to

the process, except a resolution project to support “Global Day of

Action in defence of the Bolivarian Revolution of Venezuela and the

Pachamerican struggles” 12^(th) of October for the final spokescouncil.

After bitter disappointments with all 3^(rd) world “national liberation”

and “anti-imperialist” movements during last four decades, it is little

surprise than in the final spokescouncil this Chavist resolution raised

some uneasiness. At first, initiator was unwilling to amend the call

since it was already distributed independently from the PGA, but having

an instinct of a skilled politician, he soon realized that there was no

any other way around. Eventually they rewrote the text with one person

from Wombles who originally demanded to make it completely anti-state,

against US intervention without any support for Chavez. In the end I did

not saw any big difference between the original text and the new one,

but I decided not to block it. For sure there was not anything that an

anarchist would oppose in principle, just the ambiguousity which

cleverly hid how much the initiative was just typical leftist

cheerleading of authoritarian regimes.

This is one of the reasons I am pretty critical about consensus — if it

was vote, I would have had a fair opportunity to make my point and lost

a vote. But now I had to shut down, since it was about principal

disagreements which could not be mitigated. Since much time was spent

for the issue, and there was nothing directly contradicting PGA

hallmarks, it was clear that accepting some lame statement by consensus

was much lesser evil than major disappointments caused by a block.

With all the setbacks of the anti-imperialist movement in the North, in

its heyday it was a true mass movement, something which cannot be said

about anarchist movement during the last 60 years. I suppose much of the

PGA has been founded on networks which date back to those years, so if

one decides to participate, one should not complain about a couple of

fruits with old best before — dates in the basket.

Perhaps more than half of the people hanging around in events like PGA

conference do not have any coherent political ideology, so little

surprise that I met typical “you have not been there...” arguments in

discussions. For sure, as happens with any shifts to “left” in the power

structures everywhere, Chavism in Venezuela has also given impetus to

tendencies which want to push processes further from the old school

latino populism, but this does not change the fact that weakest link of

the “Bolivarian revolution” is Chavez himself. I am sure that the party

will be over the day when CIA finally gets the guy — this is why all

real change must come from below. For sure I have not been there, but I

do not have to spend all my time and money for travelling to places like

North Korea, Cuba, USA or Venezuela to have an opinion about their

regimes. Anarchists are few, but strength of the movement is that we are

almost everywhere, and Venezuelan anarchists around El Libertario —

journal are particularly symphatic and well-argued, so I will buy

anything they state unless serious reasons to do otherwise appear.

Some bad excuses for a parasitic behavior

Talking about ethics of participation, I do agree than one should try to

give something for the logistical side (security, food, cleaning,

technology...) as well. This time I ended up giving nothing, and for my

only defense I may say that I really tried to contribute to the content

side and in the end I ended up sleeping in average 6 hours every night

anyway, getting totally exhausted in the end even without doing any

shitwork.

When I understood that Belgrade organizers were attempting to repeat

Leiden spectacle, I was very critical at the beginning. And not only

because I would probably find more effective ways to spend thousands of

euros in Eastern Europe, but also because I supposed that lack of the

local activist infrastructure, and infrastructure in general would lead

to a total logistical disaster. But this disaster did not happened. I

bet many people from Western Europe found everything totally chaotic,

but really there was much less chaos than I expected, and even this

chaos was partially due to reasons extraordinary, such as a very bad

weather during 4 days of the 6 day conference.

I really liked the food in the conference. Food supply was outsourced to

a local collective kitchen suffering from serious financial problems,

and they fulfilled the order better than one could have expected, given

that traditional Balkan kitchen is not too vegan. But since

participators were in advanced level what comes to conference kitchen

philosophy, they were also aware of possible shortcomings of the

outsourcing — so there was also autonomous kitchen for those who wanted

their food more according to _______ (add your favourite -ist here),

self-organized ideals. I am all for that, but there was too little time

anyway, so I just paid for the food and ate what was served. Most of the

people did the same, so autonomous kitchen faced frustration and

co-existence of collectivism (autonomous kitchen) and mutuellism

(monetary exchange between collectives) was not so smooth all the time.

I hope this was not a final argument for mutuellism in longstanding

debate between these two, but an important and interesting experiment at

least.

What comes to payment for food, there was an ugly incident, where guests

from probably most impoverished country of Europe (Bosnia) were accused

of being parasites for not paying for the food. Or more exactly, their

company, a dedicated parasite, was accused and they took complaints as

being directed for them as well. Originally they came to perform in an

event closed down by coppers in Resnik, and after this food incident

they got such a bad taste from PGA that they did not showed up in

conference site another time.

For sure, they could have gone to register, given a fair price according

to ecorates, and paid for the food a price they could have afforded. But

since they had little experience about such events, there was no clear

call to do that anywhere (even more experienced people got confused) and

they were not that much for the PGA conference anyway, that just did not

happen. But I do not think that is necessary a reason to insult anybody.

This incident inspired Parasites Global Action webpage, which I think is

meant to be more a satire than an attack against PGA.

I think organizers of such events should just take into account, that

some people (a minority of participators) just do not register in

principle. It is not for rational, but for emotional reasons. Or even

more likely, they are just chaotic. To count amount of food needed, one

may add a certain percentage of chaotic people to number of registered,

or just estimate the need according to portions served in the previous

meal. It was nice that there was enough trust and no control tickets

were gathered in meals, but there could have been a pot for those who

would like to pay for the meals without being registered.

As for myself, I like registration and I always do it. I got a nice

yellow card to stick to my chest, where I may write my name and

organization. Nobody besides me was going around with such a card after

the first day of the conference. Such a card makes me feel important,

and people come and say “oh, you are the guy who writes those too long

reports we have read in the internet”. Small yellow card is my pledge of

allegiance to PGA, so it is an excellent way to annoy Rata as well!

No beef but activist beef

First program I participated was supposed to be a training for

facilitation of consensus decisionmaking in Saturday morning, but it

ended up being mostly yelling and accusations. This was a pretty

confusing situation, since I had missed the scenario day before where

PGA hallmarks (or exactly speaking it was the conference reader) were

used to wipe ones ass — this had pissed some people off quite a bit.

Conflict dates back to the preparation process of the conference, which

had plenty of frictions. One debate which escalated in a needless manner

in e-mail was about men only spaces — a group called West Essex

Zapatista was suggesting these were intended to exclude women from

important decisions. Another major disagreement had been should the

conference be organized in Belgrade suburb of Resnik, or suburb of

Jajinci. Arguments for Resnik were that it is an impoverished working

class area where many local activists were living and had contact with

local community, in another hand school and kindergarten in Jajinci,

where conference was eventually organized, had superior capacities.

None of the sides (Resnik vs. Jajinci) were willing to give up, so given

the consensus paradigm of the PGA, I think the resolution to split the

conference to two parts was the only possible solution. Workshops were

to be held in Jajinci, and evening parties in Resnik. For sure this was

pretty inconvenient, although both suburbs were in South side of

Belgrade it was pretty big distances and bad traffic between them.

Personally I did not visited Resnik at once during the conference.

I may not comment whether this split decision was made with a good

process, since I did not participated to preparation meetings. Resnik

people and West Essex Zapatista supporting them claim it was not.

Originally, evening program was planned to be organized in Resnik every

day — however after second evening party local activists got harassed by

the cops, and they had to cancel rest of the program. A pretty serious

complaint raised — Resnik activists claimed that they were not given

funds to organize program and support against repression by the

conference organization. As far as I know, this claim was not handled

proper manner at any moment in the conference, and obviously the issue

must be taken up in any possible coming up evaluation meeting, if

European PGA seriously claims it is living up to its hallmarks.

Although I may not comment the preceding process, sorry show I saw

Saturday morning inspired me to raise some new concerns about the

so-called “consensus processes”. I have a feeling, that always so

volatile consensus process gives extraordinarily strong demands on which

kind of behavior could be considered as correct, and which not. People,

who do not fit the narrow “well-argumenting, polite peace hippie” model

of behavior may quickly get ignored, excluded or even attacked.

Actually, West Essex Zapatista people were labeled as crazies already

before beginning of the conference. I do know, that after Leiden

conference all European PGA shitwork has fallen to very few shoulders,

and when pretty aggressive comments are flying around in e-mail one may

easily get pissed. Making whole PGA responsible for shortcomings of the

process by such a provocative manner as wiping ones as with the

hallmarks may as well be the last drop.

But although I like PGA hallmarks, I am fine with wiping ones ass with

them — that is a pretty cool punk thing to do in case you want to

underline your message that something is wrong with the process. In

another hand, I may forgive lack of humor for people totally dedicated

for the PGA process, since I respect people who take their shit

seriously. In Saturday morning, things did not got too violent, actually

attempts to move someone out from a workshop physically in a non-violent

manner, when this person is resisting non-violently, may look pretty

funny. In the end, people who were most pissed with the West Essex

Zapatista questioning consensus processes inside PGA left the room to

have workshop in another place. At this point I was confused and did not

followed the workshop any further — my only connection to West Essex

Zapatista was from a number of angry e-mails, and I could not really

figure out what these conflicts were about. In another hand what I had

just sawn was indeed pretty far from the hippie consensus ideal. Later

on, I learned that off-line West Essex Zapatista are much nicer people

than I had judged from their e-mails, and some of their criticism are

indeed well-founded. However I must admit that in this conflict I am

partial, since anyone giving me Black Mask & Up Against the Wall

Motherfucker anthology for free gets my loyalty!

I suppose most of the humanity will not fit the scheme how consensus is

currently expected to work in the PGA/related scene. Many people may

react too emotionally, or without enough emotions, or aggressive manner

— in the end, wiping ones ass with PGA hallmarks is no way the most

radical way to express ones emotions. It makes me wonder if consensus

culture of West-European activists is like the Culture of science

fiction books of Iain Banks — something which destroys everything except

itself with its all-encompassing love. I know all too well that there is

no way to replace consensus in the PGA process, and often it is best of

the worst alternatives in other frameworks as well. And main input the

whole consensus school has given to radical theory is anyway putting

emphasis on the process instead of the result — so my critics should be

seen more as guidelines for the future.

Besides ignoring people who do not really fit into the hippie consensus

culture, labeling them as “crazies”, “aggressive” or “paranoids”,

another problem is labeling all conflicts as personal ones. Actually, I

think real political differences are more often put down as personal

problems, than personal rows are claimed to be political. Also, problems

which are concern of everybody were claimed to be minor local

skirmishes. For example Andrej Grubacic, a key figure of Drugaciji Svet

je Moguc! (DSM!, Another World is Possible! — current European PGA

conveyors who put the 3^(rd) conference together) put West Essex

Zapatista criticisms as internal London Action Resource Centre (LARC)

rows, and conflict between Resnik and Jajinci as an internal DSM! issue.

I do not accept this — although some of the distrust I originally found

difficult to justify in West Essex Zapatista e-mails may have its roots

in frictions inside LARC, most of the concerns they raised were about

the process in general, and thus an issue of everybody.

Where I found concerns raised by West Essex Zapatista dealing with the

Resnik vs. Jajinci issue relevant, it is not necessarily the same with

the gender reader and questionnaire issue. Concerns raised by Fabian

from WEZ in April in regards to gender questionnaire seemed to me minor

issues relating to language of the document. Personally I try my best to

use politically correct wordings in my texts, although sometimes it is

very difficult due to all inconsistent sex-distinctions which

Indo-European invaders have imposed in Europe. For example, I do not

really understand what is racist in the use of word “ghetto” when

referring to close-knit activist communities. I think often stress to

language issues is just a way to escape problems more difficult to deal

with. It is also not a big deal for me if European map in PGA page or in

the conference poster has a big part of Eastern Europe missing, I do not

think that is a real issue. Plus I do not think there was a burning

necessity to translate all materials to Russian — that would have been

good, but availability of materials requires lots of work and is not a

guarantee of getting some PGA presence in Russia.

I also find West Essex Zapatista argument that all these issues are

rooted to institutional racism inside PGA very problematic. Call me

behaviorist, but if someone is ignorant how may I know is she/he

ignorant because she/he is a racist, or just ignorant? Accusation of

racism is a demonizing accusation, which leaves little room for

mediation. How may one negotiate with a racist?

In other hand, even if I perhaps do not find these concerns relevant, it

is not reason to dismiss them without discussion. I do not know what was

happening inside LARC, but it must be said that West Essex Zapatista was

presenting their concerns in e-mail list in an open manner, and they

were ready for discussion. I have no reason to oppose them having their

way in issues of gender questionnaire, reader or whatever. If people

just had not time to discuss these issues a proper manner when there was

so much work to do for the conference as they claimed, logical solution

would have been to remove that fraction of the gender working group

which could deal with each other from the “inspired by PGA” framework

altogether, to a completely autonomous entity. It seems to me that

eventually no questionnaire, nor reader was published — apparently

because of this conflict, at least I did not saw one. Maybe people

should have had their thing published without the “inspired by PGA”

label. Maybe people should not be too much sticked to their “inspired by

PGA” label, since this seem to a source of much of the controversy, and

problematic issue in general as one could conclude during the final

spokescouncil. To be honest, I do not really have ideas how conflict

around gender reader could have been resolved, the whole discourse is

just way too alien for me.

There was men’s meeting in the conference, I only attended unsuccessful

attempt to have a second part in lunchtime of Wednesday. No women tried

to join us, but I suppose there would not have been any attempts to

exclude them if some wanted to join.

Another WEZ concern worth of mentioning is that of transparency of

finances. Up till now, I still have not seen a report about spending and

financial sources of the PGA conference in the process list — “thousands

of euros” mentioned above is just my estimation. Among long list of WEZ

concerns, Asim from WEZ also claims to be excluded from Asian PGA

convergence just because he is from Pakistani Diaspora in England and

thus not living in Asia — personally I find centralizing

inter-continental communications inside PGA unacceptable.

I did not recognized any attempt to clear these concerns during the

conference. Originally I understood that one purpose of the Emma team

would have been to mediate these issues, but it seems they were dealing

with “external” threats instead.

There are many reasons why authoritarian forms of organization have

defeated anti-authoritarian ones during last 3000 years, but one small

aspect might be that in authoritarian organization someone usually bears

a final responsibility for failures. Authoritarian organization may

always escape revolving its organizational paradigm by discarding this

person. But when anti-authoritarian organization fails, as European PGA

conference failed to mediate these conflicts, responsible is just the

abstract “whole”. Everyone was either busy with other issues, wanted to

keep the caravan going or just did not bother to figure out what was all

that fuss about. This is something what anti-authoritarian organizations

should definitely deal with to justify their superiority in the first

place — PGA Wintermeeting would be a good place to start, and I think

discussions about Resnik issue and all other West Essex Zapatista

criticisms should be in the program.

Although my attempts to understand these processes may seem to be clumsy

at least and waste of words, for my self-respect it is important to make

a better try than for example that of Richard from Oxford Indymedia —

ignorance of his account about Belgrade is absolutely stunning! He even

claims that West Essex Zapatista wiped their asses with hallmarks

because they were disagreeing with them in the first place. Some people

seem to be positive and upbeat so hard, that reality must be ignored

altogether! In general text of Richard is interesting also because he

seems to represent not only totally antagonist to me tendency inside PGA

in regards to general mood (in axis of positive vs. negative), but in

regards to his interests and activities in general. I do not see much

point in travelling 3000 kilometers to see some videos, I do not even

have a fucking television at my home! I get my news from A-infos,

Indymedia and Infoshop.org only, that is why I hear about all the

important events in the world only one week afterwards, or not at all.

Unpredictability makes it more interesting

Next program I participated was presentation of the Tusovka-newsletter,

however nobody came to make a presentation. So we were a group of most

various people, some of whom knew little about this project and rest

knew nothing. I seemed to know the most (although not too much) of this

idea of Olga S. and Alain to publish about globalization-related themes

in Eastern European in English and Russia, but as far as I knew, this

project hibernated 4 years ago already.

Program projection was one of the more chaotic sides of the conference,

obviously hand program given the first day had to be taken with a grain

of salt. It was based on forms people filled about workshops they could

make when booking for the conference, but it was not adjusted according

to time preferences of presentators, and database was outdated anyway.

So if an event happened to be in the program, it was most likely

announced in wrong time and place. Fortunately, cartoon and markers have

been invented. Although some people did not figured this out during the

whole conference period, all program could be found in form of hanged

announcements in one wall (except the day when all of it was spoiled due

to rain). This system could have worked out an excellent way. Since it

is obvious that there will be plenty of cancellations and ad-hoc chances

anyway, I hope that in the future hand programs are banned as waste of

forests.

Still I am pissed that someone took my program and did not give it back,

since until this day I have not seen any attempt in internet to list all

workshops which took place during those days in Belgrade — this person

is to be blamed for me writing only about part of the program I

personally participated. Shame on you! (Perhaps he stole it in order to

make this report a bit more brief).

Rest of the Saturday we had meeting of correspondents of the Abolishing

the Borders from Below with editorial collective. I wrote minutes about

parts of these discussions, so I will not refer it there. In prior

conference organizers were really delighted for us having our embedded

meeting, with condition of it being open to everybody. In the end, it

was not open and attempt to organize open presentation Tuesday evening

did not really worked out, but nobody criticized us for this.

Saturday evening our loose affinity group set up our program schedule,

which included second part of the Abolishing the Borders from Below —

meeting, a couple of discussions to be organized in Athenaeum of

Belgrade anarcho-syndicalists, planning meeting of an anarchist bus tour

around Eastern Europe, and foundation of a new anarchist international.

Most of these ideas popped up in Alternative Eastern-Europe mailinglist

in prior to conference. In course of the conference, many other people

also decided to add something, so in last days there were much many

workshops organized than during Saturday, when it was at most two

parallel workshops. Good lesson for next such event is to have ones own

stuff in the very beginning, in order to attract more people and to have

a chance to participate to most interesting stuff which is concentrated

towards the last days.

Sunny Sunday

Sunday morning I visited presentation of students from Sumy of Ukraine,

in hand program this was marked for another day, so presentation lacked

participators. I was surprised to learn, that same people actually put

up a quite decent anarchist samizdat (Anarh Akbar) I was familiar with

before, and actually we had accepted their group to our federation

(Autonomous Action) year before, although since then contact had

withered — seemingly their interests had developed to another direction.

Students of Sumy struggle against unification of three local

universities to one for various reasons, for example it is expected to

boost already flourishing corruption. Struggle has a mass character, and

has faced pretty harsh repression (a tent camp was attacked with an

unknown chemical poison, march to Kiev was stopped with heavy-handed

arrests). 3 months later, it seems that this conflict may be seen with

intensification of oppositional currents in Ukraine in general —

something which seems to be happening in Belarussia as well, although to

a lesser extent. Especially in Ukraine repeat of Serbian and Georgian

scenario is possible, not that it would necessary change things to much

better direction from anarchist perspective, but any unrest gives some

opportunities. In Belgrade I had much good intentions to organize some

support for Sumy efforts, but now it seems there just will not be any

time — sorry!

Sunday was my distro day. I attempt to bring to such events as much

Russian underground press and literature as I may carry, since it is

seldom accessible to interested people outside of Russia. This is

actually quite a pain, since after carrying that 10 kg one way your main

concern will be avoiding carrying it back — not to talk about groupies

who insist on having free copies since they contributed years ago. And

since nobody may read it anyway, I ended up distributing most to

Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian and Bulgarian speakers for free since they

maybe could learn one day. And of course, almost all Western materials

had very Western prices and no trade with Avtonom — with notable

exception of Anti-systemic Library posse (the notorious West Essex

Zapatista), who gave all their shit for free. Big respect! Organizers of

such events should always remember us poor distroers, and to give one

program slot for book fair only.

Sunday afternoon we discussed anarchy bus tour project. Idea is to have

a couple of tours in different Eastern European countries with a bus

during 2005, mainly visiting countries and cities with “emerging

anarchist scenes”, small groups which would benefit from such a visit

which could encompass street actions, video screenings, discussions and

lectures. Of course, everything should be preferably connected to some

local struggles. Idea is pretty clear and ready as it stands — thus this

workshop was mainly presentation of the idea. Perhaps there was a small

collision of concepts as well, when a more ngoist point of view met with

the anarchist one (in questions of grants, public image and so on). No

doubt that certain common, coherent political concept should be worked

out, but I hope nobody felt excluded in the starting line. Also, some

people we perhaps would like to cooperate with maybe do not align to

“Anarchy” label, but what can you do — for example “Councilist bus” or

“Horizontal bus” sounds way less cool.

Sectarian Monday

Monday was to be our day in Athenaeum of anarcho-syndicalists. It was

unfortunate that it was to be Monday — gender day had some of the most

interesting discussions coming up. I got brief taste of the “dealing

with violence inside the movement” workshop by Sydney people, until I

had to leave for the city, and I really liked what I heard.

We wanted to organize something in Athenaeum anyway, in order to have

contact with local anarcho-syndicalists from Anarcho-Syndicalist

Initiative (ASI) as well. (Note that their website asks a password if

you are a lifestylist. Try names of pioneers of Serbian anarchism!)

Moreover, in Tuesday it was to be strike of electrical workers and in

Monday they came to anarcho-syndicalist place to present their cause to

“anti-globalists” as we were presented to them by anarcho-syndicalists

from ASI, and to ask for our support. Since I had some business in the

city, I missed this presentation and did not really got what was their

cause. However, I suspect that workers were right and bosses were wrong.

Besides activists, a number of inter-activist conflicts were also

converging to Belgrade — I already referred conflict between West Essex

Zapatista and rest of LARC/PGA conference organizers and inside-DSM!

conflict between Resnik activists and those who preferred Jajinci for

the conference location. Third, and most longstanding conflict is

between Anarcho-syndicalists (ASI) and the section of DSM! who

eventually ended up organizing the conference in Jajinci. To this third

conflict I give least attention, since there is no place for mitigation.

I do not even find it necessary to go into details to political

differences between these groups (although I indeed find them political,

not personal as some claim). Long time before the conference,

anarcho-syndicalists had made their conclusion that PGA is a hopeless

structure not to be debated with. I may understand people who get

annoyed for some bullshit getting hanged to their Wiki, but when you get

to know Rata off-line, you learn that he is the most funniest sectarian

there is — so I will forgive him a lot. But thinking back now, I am

sorry that I did not took effort in the spot to sit down with certain

DSM! figures, asking detailed answers to certain accusations of

anarcho-syndicalists — it might take several years until I have the next

opportunity, since e-mail is simply too worksome means of

communications.

No matter their small size, both ASI and DSM! had contacts to trade

unions organizing protests and direct actions around Serbia, and there

seemed to be a sort of rivalry which of them has more such class

struggle credentials. I doubt political differences between ASI and DSM!

are reflected to these contacts, actually I think it is more or less

haphazard whether some group gets hooked up with ASI or DSM!. One

meeting of workers’ collectives linked to DSM! was organized during PGA

conference, but for non Serbo-Croatian speakers it was not really

possible to follow its dynamics, and I heard that short time reserved

for questions of internationals did not helped a lot to clarify the real

situation in the country.

In some sense such a rivalry is understandable, I am not friend of false

unity and I want to respect peoples’ right to organize according to

their own principles. At some point this rivalry however got a big

ridiculous, when some people were clearly disappointed when we were

inviting people inside PGA conference to support action of striking

workers linked to anti-PGA ASI.

I was a bit worried that people in general would be annoyed us

announcing inside PGA conference events to be organized in premises of

the ASI. It is still a mystery, who added to our announcement that these

discussions were to be “anti-PGA” — for sure none of us did that, West

Essex Zapatista were suspected by someone from, but they denied the

charge. We erased this line from the announcement.

In the end, people were interested about our event, and especially many

indymedia activists wanted to join our sectarian hit discussion topic

“Indy- or anti-media? Against ANY journalism...” which was first in

program. I wrote a summary of this discussion as well as about less

witty “‘Terror”&“human rights’ as bourgoise concepts”, so I will not

refer them here.

Monday evening after dinner in the PGA conference area, there was a

spontaneous discussion in the tent outside about strike which was coming

up next day. None of the people discussing were local, so there was a

big confusion in front of the coming up action and all these local

conflicts. In course of this discussion I got to a rather stupid

argument with a long-time PGA activist from London. I hope that he has

changed his mind since, but then he was arguing that by inviting people

to demonstration of the strikers next day, I was breaking PGA hallmarks,

because action was organized by authoritarian trade unionists where

according to hallmarks, PGA is for horizontal organizing. I hope

shortcomings of this argument are obvious to everybody, but perhaps at

the next conference some discussion on what hallmarks really mean would

be at place.

Another, more legitimate concern was about respect to organizers of the

conference. Since they registered us as temporarily residing in Serbia

and Montenegro with their own names, they could get some personal

problems in case we got arrested. In another hand, people were not told

about this setback when they were asked to be registered, and probably

many would have preferred not to register if that would require

refraining from a solidarity action. Sure, demonstration came without a

warning in prior and organizers could not warn people about it,

especially when it had not connection with the PGA conference. Many

people did not registered and they did not had any problems when leaving

Serbia — in another hand, one participator from Ukraine had spent 10

days in Yugoslavian jail 5 years ago when attempting to leave country

without a registration.

This was a more complicated matter, but in the end I think support to

strikers was more important than concern about uneasiness for individual

people organizing the conference. Although local organizers did not

endorsed the action, at no point they asked us not to participate. It

must be noted that this was not just some marginal lefty cheerleading,

but strikers had personally come to ask for our support. And I doubt

that they saw a big difference between ASI and PGA — for them it was all

just a bunch of anti-globalist freaks, so does not really make

difference if they did asked help from ASI or PGA. And in the end, the

very person who had registered people in her own name was in Tuesday’s

demonstration and liked it, so I hope nobody had hard feelings in the

end.

Shtrajk!

No matter bad weather prospects and all these arguments and confusion, I

counted 60 of us leaving for the strike from the conference site 7 AM in

Tuesday. And on our way, a cold rain started pouring down, and almost

nobody had a decent gear. But when we connected with the strikers 8 AM,

mood made a total turnaround — TOTALLY AWESOME! Sound system was

boasting only best possible revolutionary Serbian pop music straight

from the charts, including pro-syndicalist hip-hop, even occasional

“commandante Che Guevara” could not spoil the mood. Whistleblowers and

dancing people gave a drive one could never imagine to see in a trade

union demonstration in Northern part of the Europe. We got a great

welcome, and strikers cheered at our huge banner with text

“International workers’ solidarity”, written in Bulgarian, English,

Serbian, Greek and Spanish languages. It was really unfortunate that

Rhytms of Resistance samba band ever made it to the demo, since that was

a place to be for them.

We were partying for a long time in front of the building apparently

most guilty for pissing on the workers, after which we went on

blockading main road of the city center, surrounded by buildings bombed

by NATO back in 1999, for hours. Coppers were did not made any

provocations. Perhaps they all had joined SAC29. Groups of strikers kept

arriving from other parts of the country, and around midday there were

some 800 electricians in the street party, joined by maybe 150

supporting miners. After four hours in cold pouring rain and my shoes

soaking wet, I had to shamefully retreat — only most hard-line sectarian

anarcho-syndicalists could support strikers until evening, when it was

announced that bosses had fulfilled all demands.

Some of us paid attention that a number of strikers greeted each other

with chetnik (Serbian nationalist) three-finger greets, also one of the

hit songs played was told to have a homophobic line “..these days

faggots have rights, but workers have none...”. There is no excuses, but

in the big picture it all makes sense — unlike liberals claim, there is

no continuum other end of which is “civilized humanist western values”,

and other “barbarians”, which include Arabs, Balkans and whatever. In

reality, when legitimization of the system collapses, there always

happens a polarization where both anti-authoritarian and extreme

reactionary alternatives attract people. You always see the same

dynamics — in Germany of the 20’s, in Spain of the 30’s, even in Italy

of today. What matters is who finally wins — us or them. My visit to

Croatia after Serbia and talks with local anarchists there proved to me

once again that national revolution is a graveyard of any revolutionary

workers’ resistance.

We all had been skeptical of Rata’s boasting that Serbia is in the verge

of a social revolution until we saw it in our own eyes. And even if Rata

failed to deliver us the revolution he has promised, it may well be that

Serbia could become another Italy, where radical workers’ resistance is

light years ahead rest of the Europe. It is something very special, that

trade unions in Serbia, with all their inefficiencies, are open to

groups such as ASI and DSM!, and actively seeking cooperation with them.

And no matter the one homophobic line, even kinkiest of us were well

received in the demonstration (although this might have been because

they confused us with members of Prodigy).

It took about 3 days for my shoes to dry, and I do not know why I did

not get sick. After one hour or so at the camp, I went to fight with

hostile Linux operating system in order to print materials for the

workshop about repression in Eastern Europe we had called two days

before. Free software community defeated me this time, and workshop had

to start without these papers. Workshop was not too popular, it

attracted 3 persons and one family. But it is not always about the

quantity, and this way we had more chances for interaction. I told

mostly about harrassing of our editorial collective of Avtonom in

Krasnodar, and people had some ideas about NGO’s to contact for appeals.

I should have told also about Tomek Wilkoszevski jailed in Poland for 15

years for self-defense, but maybe I forgot.

Around 5 PM, we had our second Abolishing the Borders from Below

session. We were late from the schedule, so few people who came to

presentation we had planned to start after meeting dropped in one by one

during the discussion. I thought presentation would have been

interesting for more people, but this was the rainy day when all the

workshop calls in the wall got destroyed, perhaps people had also

problems in finding classroom number 5. It was well hidden in the

basement, and I guess no-one else called workshops to be organized there

besides me.

Contaminating from the basement

Party we had planned was about to begin. Evil Rata dared to come to

conference drinking Coca-cola with no remorse, and he was rightfully

assaulted for this — there was some loud yelling and coke was splashing

all around. This was the revenge he deserved for all the spam e-mails he

sent against the PGA. There is a speculation however, that really he was

assaulted by a Pepsi salesperson, who had infiltrated the conference.

This salesperson was singled out by watchful conference security, and

she was forced to scrub floors.

Eventually party evolved to anti-PGA conference with header “What is

wrong with the PGA — class struggle anarchist perspective”. There was a

strict face-control, only stalinists (with moustaches), trotskists (with

eye-glasses) and sexists from Resnik were allowed. They know how to

shake it in Gdansk, but headspin on the table has to be practiced some

more.

This all made establishment anxious, and entrance to our conference was

barricaded. Or perhaps it was because groundfloor was pacified for

sleeping. So there was a conflict, fortunately we could agree to

investigate the noise concern, and really most of the noise in the gym

where people were sleeping came from groundfloor through windows, and

not from our autonomous anti-PGA space. So we could have continued the

party, but some of the key people had to leave for the city already.

Much of the rest of the party people were in a lengthy Balkans meeting,

which was commented afterwards to have been excellent, with exception of

the decision to have Balkans PGA meeting to be organized by some

neo-Bolsheviks in Thessaloniki, which is very hardly reachable for all

non-EU people anyway.

Since people remaining in the counter-summit were Resnik drunks

listening Turbonegro, I made a tactical switch to side of the PGA

establishment, I dissolved anti-PGA conference and locked up the

classroom number 5. Room had to be cleaned up a lot early in the next

morning, so I wanted to have some sleep after toughest day of the

conference. But wild rumors about the anti-PGA conference had been

circulating in the camp already, and I heard that some Danish people

came half past midnight, about one hour after end of the counter-summit

to search “where that good party is?”.

Wednesday 10 AM it was time for the “Anarchist Mystery Organization”,

again in Classroom number 5, scrubbed clean from beer, chips and other

icky things. We had decided to found a new anarchist international with

Laure, since we are not content with any of the existing ones. We had

drafted a program in train from Warsaw to Belgrade. But it was not only

about sucking best PGA blood to our coming up international, but also to

discuss difficulties which appear in international cooperation in

general and in Eastern-European coordination in particular — we hoped

also to have a discussion with people who do not like founding new

formal organizations as much as I do, and people who do not see demand

for such organizations in the first place. Call for the working group we

had drafted 3 days before was the following:

“Anarchist Mystery Organization”

”-How should anarchist cooperation be organized in Eastern Europe?

-Is there a middle way between creating organizational fetishism/micro

bureaucracies, and informal networks lacking solidarity and ridden with

untransparent informal hierarchies?

-International activist meetings — practical help or identity building?

-Come and have your own international!”

Already 2 years ago in Leiden I had made an analysis, that such

organization as PGA which just networks vastly different projects

without setting any common priorities and with minimal political

coherence lack solidarity, since foundation of the solidarity is in

sharing — sharing of common ideas and projects. For sure, PGA

conferences also serve a certain purpose as they are now. There are few

possibilities to meet so many different and interesting people involved

in grassroots movements. Since change of the millenium, social forums

and the like have practically taken over the so called “anti-globalist”

movement, and PGA is a sort of relic from the times when things were

better. Probably it would be impossible to found something as wide as

PGA right now in case it collapsed — so it is worth of support. Of

course it is important to visit any events like European Social Forums

where one may meet thousands of critical people, but personally I hate

even the idea of going there and hope I never have to. I do not want to

put down efforts of comrades who have worked hard to get alternatives

visible inside Social Forums, I am sure that they have had good

intentions, but there is no way our movement may develop in being just a

small tumor in the disgusting social democrat whole, all talk about

“contaminating” the event is just way off the ground. It is just very

harmful to have any illusions about such a possibility. Our movement

lives and dies depending on its existence as something on its own. I

remember the enthusiasm when PGA was founded in Geneva 1998, it inspired

movements all around the world. Just lately I heard that for example

Indymedia charter is founded on PGA hallmarks, and I am sure there are

many other examples. Nothing alike has been left from all those

alternative events inside social forums.

In practice, necessity of PGA got proven pretty concretely, since I was

the only person in the Anarchist Mystery Organization workshop. 50% of

our projected international got lost with the transport. If there were

other people with concerns in regards to PGA within the conference, they

had other concerns than we had. Right now, it there is no way to have

more coherent common denominator than PGA concept is.

On Eastern Europeans and “lack” of them

Next workshop I participated was “Breaking the activist ghetto”. This

was one of the few which were properly prepared in prior, and discussion

paper had been released already one month before the conference. A

person from Glocal group of Hanau which had called the workshop also

made excellent notes, so there is no need to go to detail with the

discussion.

I only attended the first part of the working group. I had wrote a reply

to paper of the organizers, but it got lost to the cyberspace. So I made

my point orally — I think the whole “activist ghetto” — discussion is a

West-European one, since at least in Russia we do not have such a

ghetto. Any activity immediately collides with the mainstream society,

which makes things difficult but is an interesting challenge in the same

time.

“Activist ghettoes” make sense, just as any ethnical and cultural

ghettoes (for example Roma, gays) which different communities have

founded around them for the sake of protection. Existence of such

ghettoes is to big extent the reason that anarchism still exists in the

first place, and has not withered away as countless once widespread

libertarian movements before it (such as narodniks and council

communists). In practice, projects which attract most people in Russia

seem to be those which aim to building of such ghettoes. It seems like

ghetto must be built first in order to be destroyed later on.

Small support for my thesis was the fact that there were almost no

East-Europeans in this discussion, so it seems like being in a ghetto is

definitely not a concern for East-Europeans. A couple of times during

the conference I heard concerns about small number of East Europeans,

after conference I heard that somebody from UK had even asked “but do

you really think that people from Eastern Europe are actually here?” —

this had provoked some Polish to propose all East-Europeans to paint

their faces green during one conference day in order to gain

“visibility”. Really this concern was unfounded, since actually there

were quite a lot of East-Europeans around, perhaps one fifth of the

participators, maybe even more. Compared to size of the movements,

East-Europeans were just as well represented as West-Europeans. Of

course there were also failures, such as neighboring Romania —

Yugoslavia had lately issued very costly visas for Romanians, and an

extra effort should have been made to have any Romanians in the

conference. I also did not meet any Czech people, scene seems to have a

crisis there. Or perhaps they just save all their pennies in order to

obtain nukes. But most of the other countries of East-Europe with any

“horizontal” activism were present.

Of course, in ideal situation, PGA should not network only small

activist groups but also mass movements. But we should be realists, in

past there have been some Eastern-European NGO-like structures hooked

with PGA, but they did not gave anything for the process. It is better

to have small, horizontal groups than big ones for whom hallmarks mean

nothing.

However, East-Europeans were often attracted to very different program

than West-Europeans — this is one of the reasons why some West-European

complained about lack of them. There was a sort of division, where

West-Europeans were for example media-activists or “pink & silver”, and

East Europeans came from small revolutionary anarchist groups (with many

exceptions for sure). This difference is also reflected to activist

culture in general, Laure wrote a good rant about difficulties of

East-Europeans to access Western European jargon and discourse, which I

do not feel necessary to repeat here — I try to make this text available

online with this one. In some discussions, lack of East-Europeans was

about total, whereas in others they were a majority.

After lunch in Wednesday I joined PGA process discussion for a while and

I just could not resist temptation of counting share of East-Europeans

present. From more than twenty people in the room, only three raised

hands — among them, one person living in the West with East-European

origins, one person from West living in the East (myself), and only one

“genuinely East-European”. Obviously, bringing the PGA conference to

Eastern Europe had not made a big change what comes to involvement of

East-Europeans in the process. Even local organizers from DSM! were so

busy with all the shitwork that it seems like none of them actually

participated to the process. One has to do even much more to have

East-Europeans involved to PGA — to form personal contacts, support

East-European initiatives.

One of the many criticisms by West Essex Zapatista towards Belgrade

organization was for lack of the East-Europeans in the process of

preparing the conference. Of course, more of $$ and scarce time could

have been invested for this, but I think this concern was not really

just, all the information was there all the time for any East-European

to hook with it. For sure call got translated to Russian a way too late,

but that was because some Minsk people halted the translation without

bothering to tell anybody, and eventually Sumy people translated the

text on their own initiative.

Even if one day we had an unlimited amount of cash, many people do not

like begging for it — actually, those who like begging are often least

useful types from point of view of the international activist

networking. And visa procedures are humiliating. When I told about these

problems to a person from Eurodusnie, he was immediately ready to pass

me a pile of cash to get Russians to the next European PGA event with

the least required begging — that was nice, but I do not necessarily

want to be the money man. These are really complicated questions, in the

end totally transparent and egalitarian application procedure might be

an oxymoron.

Some credit for lack of Eastern European involvement is also due to some

(former ?) Rainbow Keeper activists, who machinated an intrigue in

Geneva 1998 against some trotskists from Voronezh in order to gain

“Eastern European conveyor” — label, but eventually did very little to

justify such a title.

West Essex Zapatista have also attacked the whole global PGA process for

lack of African involvement. But in general I think network should not

be judged according to its “might” and “width” only. Actually I think it

is pretty much authoritarian leftie idea to have branches everywhere, no

matter what the local priorities really are. Such a thinking plagues

even libertarian circles, for example a while ago I was approached by a

member of a legendary revolutionary syndicalist organization from USA

about perspectives to have their branch in Russia. When I told my honest

opinion about applicability of their concept of organization in Russia,

correspondence was finished. No further interest for exchange of ideas.

When someone else from the same organization will contact me another

time after a couple of years, the same history will probably repeat

itself (to be honest, I am personally also not very interest about

bilateral exchanges which some groups propose since it takes lots of

time... I rather have such exchanges in multilateral way, for example in

Alter-EE e-mail list).

I think Africans are able enough decide on their own if PGA concept is

necessary for them or not. Of course if the problem is lack of

information there, there is something we should do. In East Europe, one

of the reasons of lack of the networking is that groups and

organizations are just not yet ripe of being able to really benefit from

international exchanges. Local shit must hold together first. When

Andrej Grubacic from DSM! asked me if I knew any groups in Eastern

Europe which could be the next conveyors, only one Polish one came to my

mind — but even they have little awareness about PGA and actually are

pretty notorious for monopolizing such international communications, so

perhaps I would not even like to see them as conveyors. I could have

founded PGA infopoint in Russia right after Leiden, but I did not wanted

because I would have been the only person doing the work. Fortunately,

Epicenter infoshop from Sankt-Petersburg announced their willingness to

become a PGA infopoint in the final spokescouncil, thus saving us from

embarrassment of still not having a single infopoint in the whole Russia

(in whole Eastern Europe, only other infopoints are in Sumy of Ukraine

and Lyublyana of Slovenia).

I think one should be just as concerned about discrepancies of

Western-European involvement than about lack of East-Europeans or

Africans. For example during whole conference, I met only one person

from Italy. There were 4 from Ukraine, so

Italian radical left was perhaps 1000 times less represented than

Ukrainian, since Italy has the biggest movement in the world (both

relatively and absolutely). Perhaps involvement of authoritarians from

Leoncavallo in PGA for a while discredited network in eyes of rest of

the Italian scene, and when Leoncavallo for some reason made conclusion

that they may not use PGA in their search for hegemonies and lost their

interest, nobody else hooked up in their place.

From Western Europe, UK was best represented, probably due to

longstanding Reclaim the Streets — involvement in the PGA. Big UK

involvement is very good, since although British “anti-globalization”

scene has been much smaller than continental one, it has been much more

free from all the kinds of authoritarian institutions. Besides former

and current RTS activists, there were many people for example from

Dissent! and Wombles, latter group is particularly symphatic to me.

There were also many Germans, but few of theme were interested about the

process. There were even some anti-German morons tearing down exhibition

of photographs of Palestinian children. It would be nice if next

European conference was in Germany — that would be a good opportunity to

settle some scores with those types. Some French groups have been much

involved in the process during last years, but besides them few people

came from France. It seems like French scene is more fractionalized, and

it is pretty hard to form alliances — this is perhaps why some French

seemed to be particularly sensitive to criticisms which could discredit

PGA as a whole. Spanish were around, but they could have been more,

taking into account size of the movement there. Dutch involvement was

not unsurprising, taken that as previous conveyor Eurodusnie had spend a

lot of effort to help DSM! to put the 3^(rd) conference up. Austria is

perhaps not the easiest place to be radical left, but Austrians were

around and they were among the coolest people in the conference. Danish

and Finnish were relatively well presented, but at least latter without

involvement in the process. Besides Italians, Swedish were particularly

badly represented — I only met 3 persons although Sweden has a

relatively big anti-authoritarian scene. Traditionally Swedish have been

pretty autonomous though, without big effort to network internationally.

Busy Wednesday

PGA process discussions continue most of the time during European

conferences, and they draft proposals for the final

plenary/spokescouncil. In Belgrade, I was only participating to one

session, this splitted to different groups — I chose one which discussed

about relations of PGA to European Social Forum, Socialist Workers’

Party and other such vertical organizations. There were not too many

people in this group, and they were almost exclusively British — little

surprising given where the then next ESF was about to take place. PGA

has a pretty strict policy of non-representation — only final

plenary/spokescouncil of European conferences may make decisions in the

name of European PGA, and there is for example no way for somebody to

“negotiate” with ESF or whatever in the name of the PGA. Already in

Leiden it was clear that this raises a problem with visibility,

“promoting” PGA is pretty difficult and this is why it is often not

accessible to people that could be interested. But changing existing

policies is not really possible, since they lie very deep in the concept

of the organization in general — so in some sense discussions in our

working group were a sort of waste of time. Everyone was pretty much

aware anyway that ESF and SWP suck, although there were perhaps

different levels of optimism how much some sort of involvement in the

former may make change.

This was only time in the conference I was in a group mostly crowded

with people speaking English as their motherlangue, and it made a big

difference. Person which speaks better English immediately sounds more

clever and well-argued, even if she/he was talking about most trivial

things. This may have much more deeper influence to power structures

than we even imagine. In this conference, I attended no workshop with

any translations, they were just not asked — it might be a pretty bad

sign if everyone without proper English skills have already now been in

practice excluded from PGA events. In Leiden there were still a number

of non-English speakers, in Belgrade just a handful.

After process discussions, I joined anti-repression workshop. It was

initiated by people doing Aubonne bridge solidarity work for person who

got almost killed when police made him drop from a bridge during latest

Geneva protests. This was interesting, because initiative is from

completely different networks than European Anarchist Black Cross, to

which I am connected. I think one of the biggest problems of our

movement is lack of anti-repression work with a long-time perspective.

There is very much work to do, but it is not very spectacular and of

little interest to society in general — this is why “spectacle activism”

has been pretty averse towards anti-repression issues beyond setting up

temporary legal teams during the summit protests. Incapability of the

“spontaneous movement” to organize anti-repression work is one of the

main reasons I have argued for a more coherent, formal way of

organization. Not that our “less spontaneous” efforts in Russia have

been much more successful either.

However, this workshop was a bit of disappointment. Apparently, people

who originally wanted to present Aubonne bridge project did not came, so

presentation had to be made by another person who seemingly had other

concerns and was not too much in the mood. Maybe half of the people had

not any previous experience with anti-repression work, they just came to

listen. As for people already active, there were a couple of very local

German initiatives, Wombles who had worked with cases of British

repressed after Gothenburg and Thessaloniki protests, and people from

Thessaloniki group of Antiauthoritarian movement of Greece. Little doubt

that solidarity work in Greece is at completely another level —

solidarity movement for Thessaloniki 7 surpassed anything what could

have been imagined in rest of the Europe. Greek people also proposed

questions that could be discussed, but facilitator hurried to finish

working group according to the schedule. I do not think maintaining the

schedule was a good idea — we could have discussed the issues such as

who should be concretely supported and how on our own even if she had to

do her business elsewhere. After Thessaloniki, there were 3 separate

anarchist supporting campaigns in Greece, totally conflicting around

these questions and without any coordination of activities, so Greek

people certainly had some insight to relevance of these questions,

although British could just shake their heads and say “Greece is

Greece”. I still have not had time to join the e-mail list of Aubonne

bridge network, so I do not know how much it is currently active. Mostly

this network attempts to be a sort of information clearinghouse and to

do fundraising, fine tuning of politics is up for each involved group to

do on their own.

My 6^(th) working group of Wednesday (counting the men’s network meeting

in lunch which ended up just changing e-mails), and last of the whole

conference, was the Dungeons and Dragons one. Although board game

variant is pretty primitive, it still took about one hour to learn the

rules. I found it surprisingly gender-correct, 2 of the four characters

are female. Their sexual orientation was not defined though. 8 year old

dungeon master preferred a ready scenario to improvising, so we slained

all the goblins pretty easily since it was the first level. Non-violent

conflict resolution was not an alternative. However we were denied

opportunity to loot the treasury in a somewhat unfair manner, perhaps

there was an anti-consumerist message dungeon master wanted to deliver

us.

Security issues

In the evening, some pretty serious security concerns raised. Some

Polish girls were sexually harassed by local kids, locals also

recognized Croatian accent of one participator and she was threaten

because of her nationality. Stuff was also stolen from the tents.

Earlier in the day someone claiming to be from Serbian Blood & Honor

section had also promised to bring his crew in the evening and storm the

conference.

Things looked bad. Most of the people had left for squat party, and we

could not find anybody doing security from the so-called Emma team. For

sure it was very good that local kids were let to drink beer in the

conference area every day (unfortunately but almost unavoidable

consequence of which was that some genderqueer people felt pretty

uncomfortable — outreach from the ghetto comes with a price), but about

all of the local kids were having gopnik/derzy/jogging suit wear and it

would not have been any trouble for any nazis or thieves to infiltrate

among them. There was an idea to do some patrolling in the camp area to

discourage thieves, but I did not found anything to be used as a weapon,

nor a single person organized enough, so I went for another business.

Actually I understood that in previous evenings Emma team had done

pretty good job in de-escalating drunken arguments with local kids that

were unavoidable. Hippie approach for security for sure works better to

a certain limit, even if we managed to have some 10 person black-block

macho crew to “defend” the conference site in Wednesday evening, things

could have pretty easily escalated and I do not think we would have been

much of a physical contest for local kids in case they decided that we

are a nuisance altogether. And really I guess the biggest problem of the

Emma team was lack of people.

In another hand, there are things to be criticized as well. Good for the

PGA, that even fluffiest types were not happy with the moronic punk who

called the cops, they fortunately left soon without causing trouble.

There is no excuses for ignoring concerns of harassed Polish girls (I

did not saw this myself, just heard about it) — Laure pointed out

correctly that stiff reaction would have been much more likely if these

girls had been from some more “important” scene. Also, since things were

indeed stolen, announcement that “nothing happened — people just are

paranoid” cannot be seen as anything else as primitive, manipulative and

authoritarian crowd control tactics. I found it also outrageous that

there was no reaction whatsoever to threat of an all-out nazi attack.

That would hardly be just a promise in Russia. Of course a likely result

of distributing information would be a useless panic, but at least some

minimal precautions should have been made — for example tents from

surroundings of the school could have been moved to football field,

which could have been easier to defend.

Actually somebody in fact saw cars around site loaded with nazis —

perhaps a raid was planned, but plans changed since they realized that

it would not be a fair fight. At least in Russia nazis usually prefer to

attack white people only if they are offered a proper resistance.

I do not know in detail about the situation in Serbia, but at least in

Russia we may not give 100% security guarantee for any activist event —

although big attacks are seldom seen. And shame on somebody from abroad

who would demand such a guarantee — you either adapt to local realities

or stay home. Personal security is one of the many privileges you must

compromise in order to maintain revolutionary politics.

But of course things are very much different, if you are responsible for

more than your personal security only. I would not recommend taking your

children to any such events (big and open, which attract public

attention) in Russia, and Serbian PGA conference organizers should have

also considered in prior, whether they may really fully guarantee

security of children or not. BTW, I wonder what happened to crèche-pool

— such a thing was planned and even volunteers were asked in the

website, but seemingly it never got realized.

Among local kids, especially Roma seemed to like us. However they came

only in the evenings, so I suppose they understood us being a big party

only. Talking about accessibility of activist cultures, “consensus

hippie” seemed to be specially accessible to Roma, they even had a

common jam with Rhytms of Resistance. I was not participating to this

Roma outreach part, so I may only comment what was told to me.

Final spokescouncil — PGA campaigns

Thursday morning it was time of the final spokescouncil. This form

turned out to work very, very good — a positive surprise compared to

hellish final plenary in Leiden. There were perhaps a dozen or so

affinity groups, 10–20 persons in each of them. Each of them had a

spokesperson, only one accepted to speak in the central ring (a couple

of times reasonable exceptions were made to this rule to clarify fine

details of opinions inside the group).

Almost all the time when serious concerns raised, they were similar

between a number of different groups. This helped to economize time even

more, since some groups did not had to voice their concerns at all.

Preliminary discussion inside affinity group is pretty much required to

formulate concern so that it was understandable and relevant for

everybody — this is the main benefit of a spokescouncil.

Our affinity group ended up being a rag-bag of various outcast elements

— West Essex Zapatista, East-Europeans and some weird Austrian types.

Many of us however went to support miners’ strike to Kostolac 80

kilometers north from Belgrade, and much of the rest could not bear

discussion to the end of the spokescouncil, so in the end our affinity

group was perhaps two persons. I heard miners’ strike was great, besides

bosses, miners were also fighting their own union. Miners were totally

excited for “anti-globalists” coming to support them, and those who went

were really sorry that they were only one mini-bus. I however preferred

spokescouncil, since for me it was a very interesting laboratory example

of direct democracy.

Actually, contents the final spokescouncil were perhaps less interesting

than the form. Main proposal for PGA campaigns was “Global Estafette”

(relay), born from discussions about going beyond summit protests and

global action days. Idea is that instead of one day actions, actions

would spread from country and city to another as a relay.

But hold on, what is this? What is the analysis on the global action

days it is founded on, in which sense it is going beyond? Is the point

just have the next days thing, next cool way to have your face to telly?

Is the only problem with global action days that it is “yesterday’s

thing”, and people are already “bored” with it? Is our movement some

kind of entertainment factory? This is how I sometimes feel like, when

trying to have apathetic kids to move their asses to some action, or

what seems to be all too much asked, to do something themselves.

Although at times we will have to play with the rules of the system,

ultimately PR, advertisement and selling things are in a fundamental

controversy with what we are. I like paki.tv more than indymedia

especially because it is totally primitive, rough, true and it does not

play games. It gives a fuck about rules of the design!

Action days (used to?) show how small groups in many different cities

may together sum up to a much bigger than one may ever see in a protest

in some particular place. They were our weakness turned to a strength.

They were not just a nice trademark some activist copywriter released

one day, but a result of objective condition of class (and other)

conflict in world of today.

Most of the texts criticizing “summit hopping” scream for their lack of

content. Especially for Americans, “community organizing” is buzzword of

the day, although it may mean anything up to all-out reformism — usually

content does not has to be defined at all in the context. Yes, Black

Panther Party members were killed for campaigning for issues like zebra

crossings and breakfasts for the children of their communities, but that

does not mean that those issues are revolutionary today. Yes, we should

work with issues which are relevant to society at large, but often it is

not all too clear what is the possible input our movement could give to

such issues, how do those issues relate to global change, are our means

really those which people involved see relevant, and are means those

people would like to use our means. We need more honest attempts of

analysis, less concept-dropping. So “community organizing” is in the

list of words banned in 2005!

I am afraid media and spectacle value of “Global Estafette” would be

much less than that of global action days, but shortcomings (spectacle

much for the sake of itself) are more or less the same. And most of the

people do not figure out what estafette means anyway (when writing this,

name of the action has been changed to Global Chain Refl-Action — not

too clear either).

But whatever, we will see which kind of concrete propositions come out

from this project, and after that we will consider participation in

Moscow. Theme “Taking it back” is still a way too abstract, and may mean

almost anything. Let us take Yo Mango for example — a friend of my

friend spent a couple of years ago 3 months in a Sankt-Petersburg jail

when cops tried to squeeze some money for her after an unsuccessful

attempt to steal a packet of coffee. For sure people shoplift in Russia

as well, but that has more to do with extreme sports than carnival,

youth culture or popular resistance.

I think beautiful words and abstractions are the least scarce resource

of our movement. Currently Abolishing the Borders from Below — journal

is attempting to launch a special number on “reappropriation” in Eastern

Europe, collecting various phenomena which one could interpret as

appearances of this one abstract concept. If it happens to be on the

ground, perhaps “taking it back” may work in Russia as well. It is both

shortcoming and benefit of the PGA format that there is no moral

imperative for all participators to execute common actions.

Only global action days proposed in the draft were around 8^(th) of

March (international women’s day), 12^(th) of October (for “Bolivarian

revolution”), and around G8 6^(th)-8^(th) of July. First was not too

clear — how this would be different from what Women’s day is now

already? There was not any answer for this unclarity, but eventually

(according to minutes) all propositions got endorsed in a chaotic

manner, with exception of the Bolivarian action day, revised version of

which got passed in the end of the spokescouncil.

Together with another delegate from Russia, we proposed PGA endorsement

for international action day against the war in Chechnya 23^(rd) of

February, which is both day of “defender of the fatherland” (sort of

macho equivalent of women’s day which is unpolitical in Russia), and

anniversary of Chechen deportation to steppes in 1944. There were also

some other proposals — 20^(th) of April (beginning of the invasion to

Iraq, 1^(st) of May (international day against flexibility),

Palestinians asked solidarity in general — but for some reason these

four were just noted as proposals in the minutes, and eventually there

was no discussion should European PGA endorse these calls as a whole.

Understandable given the time restrictions, but really also a mistake of

the facilitators.

Final spokescouncil — cooperation, access and all the rest

Second session of the spokescouncil was about “PGA relations with other

political/activist organisations and structures such as NGO’s, trade

unions, social fora, political parties”. Day before I had shortly

visited group which had later on drafted this proposal, which was a

total mess of “proposals”, “ideas for discussion” and “announcements of

upcoming events”, without a clear distinction between these. There was

for example a proposal to call interested groups and individuals to

compile a manual or reader on how to deal with these organisations. This

was pretty shady, given the “non-representation” policy of the PGA. So

it was agreed that this reader will have a subtitle “inspired by the

PGA”. Logical next question was if anything may be published as

“inspired by the PGA” — answer was YES. You bet that organisations as

informal as PGA will hold together only as long as some seriously rotten

eggs do not jump to the board.

Eventually, the following a concrete proposal was extracted from all

that mess —

“PGA should not allow people to become isolated or excluded in the PGA

process because they belong to certain organisations that may be less

situated within PGA hallmarks, but put the emphasis on people’s behavior

within the network and at conferences. However, people from such

organizations can only participate as individuals, will not be allowed

to promote their organization through PGA, and must respect the PGA

hallmarks when participating in PGA. Leaders and representatives of such

organizations are not welcome in PGA, and PGA process meetings are only

open to people who agree with the hallmarks.”

(in above resolution “PGA” means “European PGA”).

Another logical question was asked — could any nazi could show up,

participating as an individual respecting hallmarks by self-definition?

But really this was nitpicking — I would do my best to attack physically

any fascist scum showing up in the conference, whether my action was

endorsed by some spokescouncil or not — so no point in blocking the

proposal. And it is really impossible to draft universal “one size fits

all” guidelines for dealing with authoritarians, for example our

organization (Autonomous Action) had to make recently such a strict

resolution against any cooperation with authoritarians that it might be

difficult to follow it in practice in popular local struggles.

In this conference there was a leading figure for German PDS party, she

was exposed in the daily newspaper and soon after that she left the

conference. I think this was absolutely correct way to deal with the

issue, since it was obvious that she was not presenting herself in an

open manner, and thus could not have any “honest intentions” in

participating to the conference. I do not understand how some people

could be disappointed with this. I would also like to note that outright

naivete among (Western) European PGA participators the resolution above

reflects is due to their local situation — for example in Russia

fascists from National Bolshevik Party would show up in any event

participation conditions according to this criteria. For West-European

PGA participators a scenario of nazis showing up is a fantasy, whereas

in Russia it would not only be possible but likely as well.

Next section of the spokescouncil was “Suggested steps to take in cases

of physical/psychological violence”. This sounds pretty abstract, but

obviously drafters of the document had sexual harassment in their minds.

Perhaps they should have been more specific, for example psychological

violence may be about everything, up to wiping ones ass with PGA

hallmarks.

When I saw this text, originally written by Stockholm Anti-Fascist

Action, first time in the process list, it must be said that I did not

liked it. This was because of certain ambiguousity, which could have

been interpreted that it supported presumption of guiltiness of the

suspected offender. However in the process it became clear that this was

not the case, a number of other affinity groups raised concerns similar

to ours and eventually it was agreed that the text would be rewritten

for the following event in order to eliminate this ambiguousity. Really

I think that with voiced amendments, text was pretty good and deserved

to be applied outside European PGA as well, and to be translated to

different languages.

Fourth section of the spokescouncil was structure proposals for European

PGA. Although many points were marked to be concrete proposals about

which decision had to be taken, really they were sort of ideas for

people to do, without anything what could basically be disagreed about,

such as “The next PGA conference in Europe will be organized through a

process of open preparation meetings, by the next conveyor and an open

international preparation group”. What could one possibly disagree with?

In Leiden, there was an ambitious program to reform PGA structure which

was left halfway due to time constraints, but this was not continued in

Belgrade. It seems to me that European PGA has now a stable structure,

and no radical changes are to be expected during next years.

Last section of the spokescouncil was “Global process proposals”.

Biggest section was about endorsing 4^(th) Global PGA Conference to be

organized in Nepal 2005. There were only few concrete proposals, such as

about contacting disappeared South African conveyors, and creating a

global list of conveyors which would be easily available in the web, and

about making an informal “inspired by PGA” newsletter about European

Conference 2004. All of these were pretty common sense, for sure no any

controversial issues and conflicts.

So what remained was the clean up and “outreaching event” in the

evening. A famous anarchist once said that “If I cannot dance for it, it

is not my revolution”, but I think it is too much asked if one has to

dance after 5 days of totally exhausting conference program. Maybe I was

just dead tired, or maybe the final evening party really was as boring

as I found it. Talks were boring, videos were stereotypical, music was

crap and I had already got an overdose of hippies during the week. Only

nice thing was the inflatable yellow plastic PGA on the stage which we

could punch.

Issue of activist subculture is pretty delicate and I will not get too

deeply to it here. I have referred loosely to “consensus hippies” in

this document, but really West-European activist culture is something

which goes beyond “hippie” and has also many other roots than 60’s

protest movements. Any community of people always, more or less

unconsciously founds norms and discussion paradigms which separate it

from all other communities. Paradoxically, it seems like commonness is

always founded on exclusion of the others. If one demands that activists

should give up their culture, for most of the activists it would not

make any sense to be an activist anymore. Such a thing as “normal

people” just does not exist, and all groups arguing against

“life-stylism” have just as exclusive subcultural habits as the others.

For example, I do not like samba so I feel alienated from all this samba

stuff. However if Rhytms of Resistance played breakbeat or bhangra beat,

things would be totally different. So in the end, it is too much asked

to always have the party your way.

So how about a final judgement, how I managed to satisfy my 5 interests

in regards to PGA conference? As for convergence if ideas beyond “one

struggle” rhetorics — well, I am not impressed. But to be honest, I did

not expected too much. As for finding people to help us in case of some

problems with authorities — not too many, but at least something

concrete. As for benefits to Eastern European organizing — I suppose all

of those East-Europeans who participated should judge themselves. One of

the local organizers was at least very upbeat right after the

conference. At least we launched one new international project — the

Anarchy Bus. To find about general interest to organize with similar but

more strict principles than PGA, we at least got a very clear answer —

there is no demand. As for the decisionmaking — not bad, although more

attention should have been given to rising concerns in prior to final

spokescouncil.

As for the European PGA in general, way is clear to forward, and I will

stay involved according to my personal possibilities. Next step is to

find new European conveyor, and to make evaluation what really went

wrong with Resnik issue and other problems. 6 years is a respectable age

for a grassroots network in this hectic video age, and although Global

PGA has been in stagnation since 2001, European and Asian processes are

all but dead. PGA does not attract anymore such attention as it used to,

but this may be a benefit as well since it allows going beyond

brandmaking — more introspection and better focus on what is actually

done.