Morning Star Article 12/03/16 – Alexey Markov Interview

The ghost battalion are proving they are much more than just soldiers in the war-torn districts of Lugansk and Donetsk as they strive to bring aid and hope to the local area through a variety of social projects designed to aid in the rebuilding of the community. 

Despite the Minsk II ceasefire declared on February 15 2015 the situation in Ukraine remains unstable. Human Rights Watch claim that as of Autumn 2015 five million people in Eastern Ukraine are in need of humanitarian aid, with three million classed as “most vulnerable.” 

A United Nations report on the Ukraine conflict dated February 2016 reported that just 57,300 of those in need were assisted this winter, with UNICEF also claiming that up to 1.3 million people have little or no access to clean water. 

Commander Alexey Markov, a volunteer of Prizrak (ghost) brigade, has been based in Lugansk, the Russian-speaking industrial region of Eastern Ukraine since September 2014. 

“I had never been to Ukraine before 2014. After seeing the terrible scenes in Odessa of crowds cheering behind piles of charred bodies, I realised that fascism had been revived. As a Communist, I could not accept the fact that Nazis were again slaughtering innocent people, so I left my home and job in Moscow and went to fight in the Donbass.”

“When I first arrived, the city was dead. There was no electricity, no people on the streets and no traffic. All the shops were closed and there was no public transport. People were living in fear for their lives, under constant attack from the Ukrainian side. The destruction was clearly visible on all the main streets of the city.”

“Over the past year the situation has improved, and although many people’s homes, schools and hospitals were destroyed, life in the city is getting better. The city looks almost peaceful. Almost.”

The brigade which has its headquarters in Alchevsk has a strong social dimension, and has from its inception organised free meals through canteens sustained by the volunteers for large families and those on low income in the area. 

They have also provided products for schools and hospitals, as well as ensuring that the children of Alchevsk received gifts from the brigade at Christmas.

Although the work done by the brigade in the local community is invaluable, Markov is under no illusions as to the importance of international solidarity. 
“It’s very important that the local people understand that they are not alone in the struggle against fascism. Help from abroad may not be materially significant, but it is very important in terms of morale. 

Citizens are, however, in immediate need of medical supplies and equipment for the restoration of hospitals. It is also important that the reality of the war in Donbass is reported accurately in the West. It is imperative that European governments are encouraged to reassess their support for the Kiev regime.” 
 

Despite the volatile situation in Eastern Ukraine, which has seen in the past year ceasefire violations from both sides, Markov still holds hope for the future.
“Unfortunately, it is impossible to reach an agreement short of a military victory. I hate war, but the alternative is even worse.”

“I hope the children of Lugansk will soon live in a free, independent and socialist republic where nobody will ever again dare to kill or harm them, or compare them to ‘beetle larvae’ as the Ukrainian nationalists do. They will have a chance to become full-fledged citizens, and not ‘occupiers’ in their own land.” 

A spokesperson for the Solidarity with the Antifascist Resistance in Ukraine (SARU) said: 

“We are a labour movement campaign organised to pressure the government to withdraw diplomatic, financial and military support for the Kiev regime, and to help bring about an end to the civil war which has seen the death of over 10,000 civilians and the displacement of over a million people.”

“Since the Kiev government has also frozen all social security payments to the east, including those to pensioners, the unemployed and  the disabled, it is vitally important that we confront this humanitarian crisis.”

Those wishing to show solidarity to the people of Lugansk can do so by contacting Solidarity with the Antifascist Resistance in Ukraine (SARU) via sarucampaign@gmail.com.

Free2You

Three days they’ve been coming and going – you’d think I had the messiah in a manger upstairs, they’re queuing round the block. Never met a single one of them in my life, but im hugging them and crying and they just keep coming and coming.

“Im really embarrassed to ask” I had said, my toes curled at the thought of what I was doing, “we are in such a difficult place right now. We dont have a freezer, and im not really eating.”

I had lost my job through stress and depression some months before, during a particularly difficult period surrounding my son. I was trying so hard to get back into work, and I still am – Im not afraid of graft, I embrace it. I am so proud of my working class, I feel ashamed to be unemployed. I feel ashamed that whilst everyone else is desperately selling their labour to the greediest bastards they can find just to put food on the table, Im sat at home all day looking for work. How can I be so indignant at the exploitation and degradation of my class, when Im at the job centre once a fortnight?

I understand that this is not something that is legitimately shameful. I know that unemployment is often an inevitability at some point in every workers life, but that shame has been branded on our backs – if you’re not working you’re of no use to anybody. You’re a sponge, a scrounger, a waste of oxygen. They put us in the paper and rip apart our personal lives, they ask us how we dare to have children or smoke a fag. If you’re not working you’re scum, who fucking cares how long your backs been broken under that burning sun, you’re no fucking use to us now.

It doesnt matter that I spend hours and hours each day trawling the internet, visiting businesses, often literally begging for a shift. It doesnt matter that for every application I send out there are 150 in competition. It doesnt matter how much I want to work, all that matters is that I’m not. Those taxes I paid for the last eight years, the welfare system that was built on the backs of my brothers and sisters, it doesnt matter what I paid or for how long. Its been ripped from me, its not mine and I dont deserve it, and they’ll be fucked if they’re going to give it to me without a fight.

They wont pay my housing because my tenancy is out of date, the landlord wont give me a new one because hes more concerned about getting this dole scrounger out of his property. Ive paid him on time every time for the last year, but it doesnt matter now. Hes got a business to run, he hasnt got time for scum like me. Im sat here now in a house with no electricity, hes been ignoring me since I came clean about my situation. Cunt. Karl Marx said “Landlords, like all men, like to reap where they never sowed.” Never truer words were spoken.

£213 a month, thats what they’ve decided I need to survive. My rent is £400, so Im fucked before I start. Id been buying nappies, milk, food for my little comrade and hoping for the best when it came to everything else. The worst thing was having no freezer – which meant buying more expensive food and more often, it was crippling us. None of my clothes fit, I put on a pair of size 6 shorts and watched in horror as they slid back down my legs. Desperate times called for desperate measures, and though the shame weighed so heavy on my back that I could barely crawl, I finally opened my mouth and asked for help.

Id been on this free site for months, I tried to give what I could to people, I liked the idea of it, but Id never have dreamed of asking for something for nothing. The thought made me cringe and though I understood perfectly how necessary these groups were, I never wanted to be pitied, I never wanted anyone to know that I wasnt coping as well as I thought I should be. More than anything I was scared that being so hungry and so desperate, somebody would accuse me of lying and scrounging. The shame thats beaten into us from birth had me in a vice – work or die, dont ask for help, you’re a burden from the cradle to the grave.

But eventually the thought of starving in front of my son, of him having these memories of the poverty I felt responsible for, pushed me to it. The cupboards were bare, I was on my last legs and fading fast. I reached out, I threw myself on the mercy of the people of Liverpool, and the response overwhelmed me. Within an hour I had people dropping off shopping, furniture, nappies – everything from tampons to tea lights. People wanted to help, they hated the idea that one of us was suffering. I had thought all this time that I was on my own, that community was dead, and yet here they were – twenty to thirty people with their own crippling debt and harrowing tales desperate to help. I cried my eyes out, the shame and the guilt washed over me but the gratitude was enormous. The people of Liverpool saw me struggling, and they picked me up. They dusted me off and spurred me on. Hope for this battered broken city burst from my chest, the people united.

If this experience has taught me anything, it is this. No matter what David Cameron does to us, no matter how many people they sanction and starve and push onto the streets, no matter how they demonise us and berate us, no matter how they flog us publically with our own pride, no matter how they humiliate us and degrade us – we will not bend, and we will not break. There is power in the working class, there is solidarity and there is love. These people might not be in unions, theyre not organised or politically motivated, but they are strong. We stand together, we look after our own. We protect our children, we stare defiantly into the faces of these monsters and we show them, in no uncertain terms that we will not be scattered. We will not be bullied and abused, we will not be driven from our homes and we will not tolerate their persecution.

Charity starts at home. There is a community in Liverpool, the backbone of our society – the working class. We will not be divided, we will not bow to these slave masters, these animals, these tyrants. You can take our homes, you can starve us out – but you will never take that spirit, you will never kill what we are. When the day comes that these people open their eyes to the hatred that suffocates them, when these people stand together strong and determined and say “this is OUR city, that we built with blood sweat and tears and you WILL NOT take it,” when the red flag flies on every corner of this beautiful city and freedom is known to us all. On that day, they will tremble, they will flee, and they will be pursued. Power to the working class. Power to the people.

**A HUGE THANKYOU** to all of the amazing huge-hearted people of Free-To-You Liverpool, you are a credit to your class, your children, and to this great city of ours. You should be immensely proud of the sacrifice you have made to ensure the wellbeing of one of your own. I am eternally grateful, you have saved my life, and I will stand in solidarity with you forever. Love love love to you all.

If They’re Black

As I trot up the thirty concrete steps from the platform at Bank Hall I feel it looming toward me. The sun is beating down on the railroad and the heat rises up in waves to the road above as the giants roll under the bridge, the day is absolutely beautiful, but I know its there.

I pass over the bridge to look out on Kirkdale station, I dont know why but I’m walking towards it on purpose. Its grotesque, and I hate seeing it, it ruins my day – but I have to look. Articulated lorries cough and stutter at the lights, the air is suffocating and the fires from the dockland could make you believe the world was ending. Who wants to build a fire in this heat?

Ive looked away as long as I can. I look at the pavement, willing myself to look up, and eventually snap my head bacl at the last second. And there it is. Its on the other side of the drop, over the bridge on the opposite wall. The wall is coal black, as if the air round here had once had chance to settle and that was the result. Six rough patches of sickly magnolia paint, on which is daubed

“IF THEIR BLACK SEND THEM BACK”

I stare at it, as I always do, and feel the now familiar prickle up my spine. First of all that fucking spelling mistake. The irritation that anybody thought for a single second that this was ok to do, and worst of all the absolute shame.

At least with the summer leaves on the trees its partly obscured, but it doesnt matter. I know what it says. Every groundsman on the railway that lifts his hand to wipe his brow has seen that scar on the landscape, the endless stream of lorries that pass cant miss it. The dog walkers hang their heads and pretend not to see it, and the kids who pedal bikes from corner to corner have known it all their lives.

Its not in an easy place to cover up, its hundreds of feet up on the railway bridge, and unless I had the hulk dangle me over the side id have no chance of removing it myself, and the council dont seem to think its a priority – that graffiti looks older than me. 

Its been there all that time. Decades of people walking and working above and around it, and nobody bats an eye. It makes me ashamed, that I live on this street, that people will judge my area based on things like this, that kids in these streets are so accustomed to hate in the world around them, that it is allowed to exist in the midst of this city of migrants and industry.

Racism in America is the biggest scourge on that country, it is the one tool used most effectively to divide and conquer the people. People who have been conditioned for generations to ignore and excuse racism in order to preserve the exploitative system it aids.

I walk down my street and I cannot understand how such a disturbing image is absorbed into the every day. This city is famous for the historic slave trade that built it, there are streets named after slavers all over it from corner to corner. This city was ripped apart by race riots in toxteth and has seen some of the most awful hate crimes paint its streets.

And for all of our progression, our industry, our solidarity through tragedies such as Hillsborough and James Bulger, our famous working class actions, trade unionists and even cries for independence – for all the good in Liverpool, this evil still lurks. In the heart of each of us in kirkdale who walk past that monstrosity and say nothing, do nothing, we perpetuate this culture, this idea that it is ok. 

We show the world each and every day that we dont mind it here, and I am utterly ashamed.

Bankrupt

I thought I would never squat again. Leaving the smoke, the tube, the grit and determination behind, I had happily slipped back behind the veil of complacency and bowed my head, immersed in the daily grind and transfixed with the everyday. Stressed out with bills, family issues and frustration with the absolute futility of it all, those were secret memories I cherished, memories nobody here in this life could understand. Held close to my heart, they slipped out softly in my quiet moments and enveloped me slowly in their warmth, like a midsummer dawn. Or a big fart.

I remember the sheer insanity of squatting in London’s East End, the infamous Tower Hamlets, the feeling of freedom so sweet the smog of London tasted like the sweetest fresh air. The sun beamed hotter every day and the long nights stretched out forever. The acid, the parties, the music, the food – but the purpose. Most of all, the purpose. That feeling that what you did mattered. That security of knowing you were ALIVE. And not just alive, but one of many who understood. Who were also free. All on the same page, in the same boat, striving for the same end, fuelled by that same desperate desire to show others – LOOK! Life is here! Its this! Its community, its love and sharing and understanding and teamwork. Its not EastEnders and Council Tax and childcare and take-out fucking coffee. 

I remember it, I remember it so well. And yet here I am – well and truly buried in exactly that life. I take my two year old on walks to the park where we feed the ducks cheerios and I carry a Styrofoam cup with ‘Bev’ scrawled on it because apparently being a barista requires fuck all listening skills whatsoever. I push a pram and obsess over how far my next lot of money will get me and whether to prioritise food or electricity if it really comes down to it. I remember so much, and I’ve forgotten everything.

Yesterday I saw an article about a group calling themselves the Love Activists who had squatted the Old Bank of England on Castle Street in Liverpool, right on the steps of the town hall. They were housing homeless people, feeding them and helping them wash clothes. The more I read the more that little spark was fed until burning with curiosity, I arrived on their doorstep. It was a beautiful old Grade A listed building with huge pillars and ornate balconies. Activists and residents smiled and waved from the open windows, as bemused businessmen and women peered up from the streets below. The sunshine was glorious, and the omen felt good. Huge banners swayed gently in the warm breeze; “WE NEED SANCTUARY.”

As I rounded the building I wondered who I might meet at the door, and what it would take for me to get inside. It had been a long time since I knocked on the door of a squat, but as it happened it opened as I got to it, and the familiar Vendetta mask peered out from behind the door. I was beckoned inside and as the bolts and bars slid into place behind me, I felt that old familiar itch to explore. Instinctively I threw my hood over my head and ventured up the spiralling stairs to the kitchen where I was beckoned in for coffee. Most of the people milling around turned out to be local people who had been sleeping on the streets and had come for the offer of a warm place to stay.

I was shown around the building by one guy who had just come out of prison two weeks before. He was staying in a hostel and had to report there as part of his license conditions, but he had thrown his heart and soul into the project and was a huge inspiration to me. He had been clean of heroin for sixteen months and was determined to keep fighting. I shared with him the tragic story of my amazing friend Gray who fought the same demons, but sadly lost his struggle.

I had been told the utilities had been registered so with running water the building was rolling along smoothly enough considering it had only been open for four days. It was an amazing accomplishment in such a short time. The building itself was a maze of rooms and corridors that seemed to stretch out endlessly, and round every corner was another face with another story to offer.
The people in this building were amazing, diverse and full of life. All had different stories and experiences, every one of them determined for something better. I felt ashamed of the apathy I had come to accept. I felt I had betrayed myself, and these people, for taking a step back from activism. 

I left about 3pm and came back around 8pm after eating and getting together some clothes and shoes to donate. A meeting was called just as I arrived and a good half an hour later the combination of fifty activists and residents filled the room. With a lot of patience the old hand-up-to-speak routine was more or less implemented and a wide range of voices were heard.

There was discussion on what the space should be used for, what could be done about the graffiti inside and outside, a fire safety register, cleaning and key-holding rotas. Not a stone was left unturned, it appeared. The most interesting contribution was from a man named Peter, who looked very out of place in an expensive suit. Especially considering he couldn’t sit down in it.

Peter explained he was a lawyer who worked for a firm in the next street over. He had walked past the building and sympathised with the cause. Peter was an activist himself since the age of thirteen and had been involved in the Occupy Movement. He explained to us that there were homeless people who slept in the doorway of his office, and that he had spent the day debating with almost everyone who worked there the good we were doing for these people and the difference it was making. Peter told us that although he was initially met with a lot of resistance, and still got some, the majority had softened to his argument and his company now wanted to represent our case in court, for free, as a show of support.

Peters enthusiasm was undeniable, and it was exciting to be taken seriously by somebody who knew the legal system and the challenges we faced, but was still prepared to put his time and effort into the struggle. It made him one of us, and I loved him for it. Shortly after the larger meeting we held another, smaller, upstairs with just Peter, his friend Anna and the activists. We discussed a press release, witness statements and the importance of health and safety in the building as the three biggest immediate factors for the court hearing in five days time. Roles were assigned, though I didn’t volunteer, as I wasn’t yet sure what sort of time I would be able to commit with the baby and a new job, but I was looking forward to being involved and hoped there was a way I could really make myself useful.

—-

It ended as soon as it began. I was working over the next three nights, and had the baby for the three after that and by the time I had chance to go down and make myself useful they had been to court and had been served a 24hr eviction notice. All of the homeless people had left the building, some hung around outside where a soup kitchen soldiered on for a few nights before being roughly dismantled by the good old boys in fluorescent yellow. 

Obviously they’d got bored of being stood round a bank in the freezing cold and had decided to give themselves something to do. A reporter from the Echo scurried round, popping under and over the raucous like a ferret snapping shots as he went, cheered on for one particularly good angle of a poor woman who was arrested seemingly for dropping some books. 

The Echo had loved the activists at the start. They were there almost every day, in and out. They had plugged them to the masses, but as the order came and the activists didn’t go they became disillusioned and began what has materialised today as some sort of smear campaign. I thought back to that meeting with the activists and Peter, our saving grace. What had happened? I read in the paper that the activists had requested an adjournment in order to give them time to find legal representation. They had had a lawyer sat there in the room, offering his services, what had happened?

To tell the truth I don’t know exactly what happened to Peter, all I remember is that meeting. He explained that the heart of Liverpool was there to be won, as it always had been. 

He gave us some home truths about what we needed to do:

– We had to paint over all the graffiti. How or why this was ever allowed to happen I do not know, but the two main defences I got were ‘don’t you decorate your home when you move into it?’ and ‘it was one bad egg who was asked to leave.’ You have to understand that this place was being sold as a refuge for the homeless, a safe haven for those is need. The people there did a good job of looking after these people, there is no doubt about that, so much more could have been done if only someone had thought of a plan. My answers to those arguments are 1, yes I do decorate my house, I tend not to scrawl expletives in three foot letters in my living room though, fucks up my feng shui, and 2, that is simply bullshit.

– We had to make every attempt to make the building fit to pass fire safety regulations. The scale of this task surely should have alerted even the dimmest members that this building was not fit for purpose. This is a Grade A listed building. They are heavily protected – this is the very reason it was chosen, as two fingers to austerity and the Tories and it was great and it made us feel better. But any political ideology was lost, because they had told people it was a homeless shelter, and it was very obviously unfit to be one.

– We had to make a press release, which was to focus on the good we were doing for the people there, collecting witness statements etc. Members of the group refuted this, with suggestions ranging from ‘lets all go to court in pig masks’ to ‘lets stick it to the bankers.’ Everybody was missing the point. They were there for the people.

And so the notice came through. 10-20 officers surrounded the bank and the siege began. I don’t use that word lightly because there did come a point when a concerted effort was made to starve them out by refusing them access to fresh water or food. Every now and then a flurry of activity, the call would go out for a show of support in the face of an imminent eviction. I would do my best to reassure people that with no High Court warrant the police wouldn’t be entering the building and it was highly unlikely to happen there and then. But it pissed me off that when I first arrived I had said to people, I have done this before – I can help you, and had been shrugged off. I had spoken to people about the Advisory Service for Squatters and they assured me it was still running – why STILL had nobody contacted them for advice? 

It ended finally, as they all do, with more of a fizzle than a bang. The black flag waved from the balcony, the banners now limp and weathered, the Love Activists flag atop the mast looked tired and weak. The eviction went ahead with police forcing the door, and the activists were unconditionally bailed until August. There was not much news was made of it at the time, it just seemed to tail off. One or two of the homeless people I believe were found new accommodation, but out of the sixty that once slept there most were back on the streets. They had great stories and loved the adventure, but in the end it was just something else that promised help and failed them, because they were not equipped or prepared for the task. 

A few weeks later they moved to the docks where those grandiose cruise ships, The Three Queens were set to attract a lot of tourism. They set up camp with tents and again, fed the hungry and provided community. A few weeks later they moved again to a bar called Mello Mello, which had previously been run by activists, and I did chuckle when I read about it, wondering if they ever needed to change the locks getting in. Either way, it again seemed opportunistic and badly planned.

I walked home, recognising the same sting of years ago – the bubble pops, reality comes crashing into view. The world has not been changed by your brief burst of anger. I walked down Stanley road, looked out past the tobacco warehouses and recycling plants down onto the bleak Mersey, where smoke stacks, strewn through the industrial maze, belched out the sour smell of factory waste and huge wind turbines lumbered slowly around as the sun sank low on the horizon. The sun bounced off the railway, the whole track glowed bronze in the soft dying of it.
I walked past rows and rows of disused shops and empty houses, I walked past closed community centres and care homes. I thought to myself, why aren’t they squatting here? Why are they taking those people to the town hall, where they are most vulnerable? 

They are us, they should be brought into our communities and sheltered on our turf. We know the banks are theirs, we’ve always known, its never been a secret. But the schools, the hospitals, the clinics, the community centres, the football clubs, the trains, the buses, the cafes and libraries they are OURS. They have always been ours, and we should be taking them and using them for their purpose. We should be saying NO – we need this, it is ours and we are taking it. You cannot have it, we can prove so easily that it MAKES sense for us to be here.

The activists left, went back to their own cities or on to pastures new. They left a new small group behind giving the old rinse and repeat, but the bulk moved on, and I believe the reason is excitement. It is exciting to fight for what you believe is right, it makes you feel that something, that sense of meaning that I remember so well. But when you just jump from fix to fix, what sort of trail are you leaving behind?

It is time to be realistic. I would say to every activist I meet, go home. Go home and knock on your neighbours doors. Find what you need together, go out into your streets and take it, because it is yours. You don’t have to have a flare and a face mask, you work hard day in and day out for the right to life and so many in this country are starving and dying under this corrupt agenda. Help yourself, help each other. 

One day I will walk down my street and the place will feel alive again, instead of this haunting spectre of poverty and deprivation. We have nothing to lose, my neighbours and me, nothing they can take from us now – they have our future in a vice. 

We must save ourselves, and each other. That wont happen in the Bank of England on the steps of City Hall. It will happen at home, in our communities – because that’s what we should be strengthening and protecting.