Gangsters employed by the state to assist slum landlords

In Ireland, as in Britain, the housing crisis is deepening while the government backs up the vultures feeding off the misery of poor.

Proletarian writers

Subscribe to our channel

Masked gardai pose for photographs after assaulting housing campaigners in Dublin.

Proletarian writers

Subscribe to our channel

The following article is reproduced in slightly abbreviated form from Republican News, with thanks.

Over a thousand people marched in the Irish capital Dublin on 12 September 2018 after the new garda [police] commissioner colluded with hired thugs in an attempt to suppress opposition to the government’s housing policy.

On behalf of an absentee landlord, a garda ‘public order unit’ was sent out on 11 September on North Frederick Street in Dublin city centre to support a masked gang of some 15 to 20 men wearing balaclavas.

Operating out of a second-hand British police van, the gang, who are believed to be based in the north [the six counties under British rule], forced their way into an abandoned premises after it had been occupied by housing activists.

They illegally gained entry to the building using an angle grinder and a sledgehammer, and then proceeded with a forced eviction.

Outside, masked gardai used batons, pepper spray and direct assault to break up campaigners, before posing for media photographs.

There were several injuries requiring hospital treatment, according to ‘Take Back the City’, the network of 18 grassroots activist groups who are taking direct action against Ireland’s housing crisis.

One young man suffered a head injury and concussion after he was dragged to the ground by masked men. Another was kicked in the head.

Trinity [College Dublin] student Conor Reddy, who suffered an injured neck and concussion, said he was attempting a peaceful sit-down protest on the road outside the property when he was attacked.

The operation has exposed the reactionary agenda of the minister for justice Charlie Flanagan, and his new appointee Drew Harris, a notorious British collusion figure [he previously served as deputy chief constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) from 2014 to 2018], who Flanagan made head of the 26-county police earlier in September.

While in the RUC [Royal Ulster Constabulary, the former northern Irish police force, prior to the formation of the PSNI], Harris directed a ‘dirty war’ of oppression against Irish nationalists … Within eight days of his inauguration on 3 September, he sent out a masked police gang to engage in a violent show of strength that bears the hallmarks of fascism.

The images sent shock waves through Irish social media. They evoked memories of the brutality of British establishment landlords, who were supported by the RIC [Royal Irish Constabulary], the predecessor of the RUC [prior to partition when the whole of Ireland was under British colonial rule].

The following day, with little notice, a thousand people, young and old, male and female, marched through the streets in a rally of empowerment and defiance. The Take Back The City campaign had called on people to join them and march through Dublin to show that they will not be intimidated, but even they were surprised by the numbers who turned out.

Public transport and traffic came to a standstill in the city centre as protesters sat down on the intersection of O’Connell Street and Parnell Street. Pictures of the gang wearing balaclavas were held aloft by protesters as they shouted chants of: “Shame, shame, shame.” People travelled from all over Dublin and beyond to take part in the protest, chanting: “We will not be moved.”

A woman in her 60s drove up from Kilkenny for the protest. “I think it’s just disgraceful and I agree with what these people are doing. Ireland is screwed and we need action now.”

They marched towards a second vacant premises on Belvedere Place, where activists are again facing eviction by a ‘heavy gang’.

The British-registered van used on Tuesday was previously owned by Greater Manchester Police. It is thought the same untaxed British vehicle – with no front number plate and no record of vehicle testing, but using blue lights to convey a police function — was involved in a previous eviction on behalf of KBC bank in Balbriggan last February. On that occasion, anti-eviction activists said they believed loyalist paramilitaries and former British army soldiers had been involved.

The Take Back the City campaign said it will continue to take over vacant buildings to highlight property hoarding and other tactics used by slum landlords and vulture funds. The umbrella group includes activists from Dublin Central Housing Action, Dublin West Housing Action, student group Take Back Trinity, and Dublin Renters’ Union.

In a statement following the eviction, a spokesperson for the group said their campaign had received huge support and was stronger than ever.

They denounced the actions of the supposed ‘security firm’ who carried out the forceful eviction on a building they said had been left idle for more than three years. Ordinary tenants are being illegally and unjustly ousted from their homes, they said, thanks to the physical support of the state for evictions.

They also “utterly condemned” the actions of gardai, who they said had “facilitated these illegal activities, arrested activists fighting against the ongoing and unprecedented homelessness crisis in Ireland, and used physical force in the process” …

Sinn Féin justice spokesman Donnchadh O Laoghaire said the scenes were “very concerning” and called for an investigation by the garda ombudsman.

“It is important that it is clarified whether the security firm who the gardai were facilitating had the appropriate documentation of identification, and under what legal basis they were there,” he said.

“Families up and down the country will look on at this with concern, particularly those who are potentially facing eviction in the short term, if this is the heavy-handed approach that is to be taken to facilitate private security in enforcing the will of landlords.

“The approach taken to the victims of the housing crisis, and those who are campaigning for change, is markedly different to that taken against slum landlords.”