| THE REVOLT OF THE VILLAGES VARVARA AND OLYMPIADA AGAINST THE MODERNIZATION OF DEATH | 
Anarchist Circle, November 1996
Not  a long time after the elections that confirmed the centre-left  administration of the modernizing barbarity, the first signs of social  explosions that this administration brings about are already visible.
The  restructuring of economic, social and even cultural structures that is  prescribed by the “ecumenical” logic, causes intense vibrations and  faces strong resistance, as it imposes not only the economical  miserization and social expulsion for wide parts of the society, but  also the shattering of every local special particularity, the strangling  of any local autonomy -however elementary it may be- the destructuring  of any bonds of social solidarity which continue to exist in local  societies, as much as they consist an obstruction to the imperative  plans of the state and the bosses.
To the wild  resistances of local societies during the last years (Kalamas,  Aravissos, Chania, Pouri), now we can also add the resistance of the  residents of Varvara and Olympiada and of all the other villages of  Strymonikos bay (in North-Eastern Halkidiki), against the installation  of gold metallurgy in the land of Olympiada. It is a struggle that has  started in 1989 and on October 17th led to wild clashes with the riot  police, who were saved from being lynched at the last moment, thanks to  the appeasing intervention of the community authorities. A struggle  which, despite the compromising attitude and the recoils of the  coordinating committee (which is formed by representatives of the local  authorities), goes on until today.
But let’s take  things from the beginning. The region of NE Halkidiki is an area  especially polluted by Madem Lakko’s and Olympiada’s mines, which for  decades now have been producing sulfide lead, zinc and ironpyrite, whose  separation is carried out with the use of dangerous chemical substances  (cyanogen, blue vitriol etc.), releasing quantities of arsenic which  are included in the ore. Of course all these substances are  concentrated, after the ore dressing, in huge waste basins (until now, 3  million tons of solid toxic waste have been deposited), polluting the  air and water just like it happens with the acid waters from Madem  Lakko’s underground galleries, which often overflow during their  transport from the galleries to the factory, destroying the land and  polluting the water horizon to end up in the sea. At the late 80’s, the  state, through the Mining Company of Industrial Development, plans the  installation of gold metallurgy (the gold is contained in the  arsenopyrite of Olympiada), but after the reactions of the residents of  the village the investment is canceled.
In 1992,  these mines (in the galleries of which many miners were buried and many  others ended up suffering from pneumonokoniasis, resulting to become one  of the most important breeding-grounds of worker’s revolts at the  post-dictatorial period in Greece) are undertaken by the state because  they are considered “problematic” (not able to survive financially) and  come into a liquidation status, as their function stops being profitable  for the capital. In December of ’95 the state sells the mines to the  canadian multinational TVX Gold, assigning to it the mining legal titles  for an area of 314 Km2 , with the purpose to develop the  mining workings, to install gold metallurgy in Olympiada and to  construct unknown number of quarries and factories producing limestone  in the mountains of Varvara, that will definitely transform the area  into a desert. The reaction of the people was immediate. In the  beginning of February residents of Varvara and Olympiada and from the  rest of villages in Strymonikos bay gather and block the national road  Thessaloniki-Kavala for two days. They also pitch guardhouses that  all-day long check the entrance to the mine of Olympiada, obstructing  the transport of the machinery. This situation goes on for nine whole  months, including a lot of unsuccessful efforts of the company to pass  the machinery in the mine. The residents are determined not to allow the  installation of gold metallurgy in their region. At the elections,  Olympiada and Varvara decide to cast a blank ballot -since the selling  agreement of the mines and the installation of gold metallurgy was  ratified by the overwhelming majority of the parties in the Parliament-,  expressing this way their rage and mistrust towards a political system  hostile to the interests of local society.
“On October 17th was our own Polytechnic”*
[*This  phrase as all the rest which are in quotation marks, belong to the  residents and are indicative of the climate in the area.]
Right  after the elections the government states determined to immediately  proceed to the assignment of permission for the installation of the gold  metallurgy. The residents are on the alert. In the beginning of October  two trucks of the company carrying drills succeed to enter secretly  through a forest road. When the people find this out, they gather at the  mine. After small conflicts and in front of the residents’ wild mood  the trucks leave. In the meanwhile time passes by and the margins for  “consensual” solutions shrink. The Canadians give an ultimatum to the  government till the 23d of October: if the road won’t open till then,  the mines will shut down sine die, firing hundreds of workers. The  moment of the conflict is close.
17th  of October: It’s early in the morning and at the guardhouse there are  only about thirty people, mostly women and pensioners. Suddenly, riot  police vans and a truck of the company appear in the street. In  Olympiada the churches’ bells don’t stop ringing, informing the people  about the cops arrival. Immediately, about ten men from Varvara come to  reinforce the guardhouse. The riot police commander “warns” the people  to open up the street. They refuse, women scream. The riot police are  drawn up and the clashes begin. Seven people are arrested and, after  being brutally beaten up, are taken to the police vans. The women lie on  the street so that the truck cannot pass. The cops drag them by pulling  their hair. The men, understanding that they are not in position to  keep the street, go to the fields nearby and start throwing stones, in  the beginning against the company truck that succeeds to enter the mines  with its windows broken, and then against the riot police who moves  back to the vans. Someone climbs up the telephone company post and cuts  the wire. After the riot police retreated the people barricade the  street with rocks and sticks.
In the meanwhile the  news have arrived to the nearby villages and more people start  gathering. The riot police find themselves surrounded by an enraged  crowd, armed with sticks and stones, determined for everything. The  people attack the police, smashing windows and windscreens. About 30  young people rush at a police van and lift it in the two wheels, ready  to overturn it along with the driver inside. The latter is finally saved  thanks to the soothing intervention of the community presidents who  arrive gasping in order to begin negotiations with the cops. Invisible  peasants, hidden behind the trees and armed with shooting guns start  firing in the air... The cops, terrified hide inside their vans. The  coordination committee gives a time limit of 15 minutes to the riot  police commander: if till then the arrested ones, who in the meanwhile  were led to Polygyros village, won’t be released, then the conflicts  will culminate. In the same time, the shooting behind the trees  increase, the people still hit the vans with crowbars. Finally, the  seven people arrested -some of them seriously wounded- are set free  (after they pressed charges on them) and the situation begins to calm  down.
The negotiations start, as well as  telephone-calls between the community presidents and the ministry who  “promises” that the issue will be “reconsidered”.
In  the meanwhile the hours go by, it’s getting dark... The people are not  leaving but remain gathered demanding that the truck of the company  comes out of the mines. Facing the refusal of the cops the crowd gets  enraged, the shootings start again. The people move towards the entrance  of the mine. Under the threat of extended damages the company is forced  to let them take the truck out.
The people begin  to disperse but still remain on the alert. The shifts at the guardhouses  are supported and in the next days everyone is ready for war, waiting  for a new riot police operation.
In front of the  danger of new and wilder clashes, a governmental group arrives in the  area. They start repeated negotiations in order to calm down the  situation, in other words to make fade and undermine the struggle in  such a way that will not leave the community presidents completely  exposed to the people. And the “magic solution” is found. The government  binds itself to start research for alternative areas to install the  gold metallurgy and promises that in the final decision areas outside  the borders of Varvara and Olympiada
will be  preferred. The community presidents are also bound to unblock the  street. In the general assemblies that take place in the villages, they  don’t stop saying how dangerous and threatening could be the  consequences of an eventual bloody conflict, in order to justify their  attitude. In front of the mistrust, the rage and disappointment of the  residents, it is decided to continue keeping guard at the guardhouses,  although the road will be open, and as soon as they notice any move of  the company trying to enter machinery for mining research or for the  construction of the gold factory, they will stop it, informing again the  residents of the nearby villages.
The  compromising tactics of the local authorities is one of the problems  that always appear in social resistances with local characteristics, but  in this specific case it is not the only one. The division that the  installation of gold metallurgy causes in the wider region is also a  serious problem, as a number of mountainous villages in NE Halkidiki  (known as Mademohoria) and Stratoni (coastal village in Ierissos bay),  where the mines of Madem Lakko are settled, are directly depended on the  continuation of the mine’s function. The same goes for a small number  of residents in Varvara and Olympiada who work there. The company  pressure for suspension of mining workings find a convenient ground as  it exploits the fear of hundreds of workers whose fate was one way or an  other doubtful and uncertain since the mines have passed, due to debts,  under control of the National Bank; and it still is doubtful and  uncertain, as long as the new company “guarantees” the maintain of the  existing employment only for the next three years.
The  lasting submission of the wider region to one of the most cruel and  inhuman kinds of exploitation by the capital (Madem Lakko’s mine work  since 1927) -as the mountainous and barren land don’t offer many other  alternatives for the survival of the people- creates dividing situations  not only between the villages but in many cases inside each person  himself, as the identity of the resident who fights against the  destruction of his village is in conflict with that of the worker who  fights for his “right” to salaried slavery as the only way of survival.
In  a social reality ruled by the state and the capital, the revolt of the  residents in Varvara and Olympiada certainly cannot give solution to  these contradictions, what it may do is to accentuate them; but it can  also be an example for all those who will probably be tomorrow, from a  different position, confronting the modernization attack of the capital  in the area.
“The television lies”
In  the times of media dictatorship every social resistance that threatens  the fragile balances of the power is condemned to face either the  silence or the distortion and the castration, if it goes beyond the  limits of established legality. It is mostly through the image that an  acute ideological war with many receivers is carried out.
The  image that the residents of Olympiada and Varvara receive through the  television about the events they lived, is completely different from  what has really happened; and if for many of us this conclusion is a  common place, for them it’s not the same.
The  camera, despite the fact that it was there, does not show the brutal  beating up at the beginning, it doesn’t show how massive the arrival of  the people was afterwards, nor the defeat of the riot police. There is  no particular reference to the dangerous results of a gold metallurgy in  the area; on the contrary there is an extensive reference to the  “harmless” methods of gold finishing that are going to be used and also  to the “suspicious interests” of those who “instigate the disturbances”;  all means are mobilized to calm down the irrational fears of the  residents, who as “primitives” and “rude” do not comprehend the  beneficial consequences of progress and modernization, which obviously  are understood by the rest of “society” in the form of the silent  television majority. The purpose is obvious: physical violence is not  alone capable to discourage, to create a sense of isolation and  weakness, in contrast with ideological violence of the power that is  more noiseless and effective to the shrinkage of freedom limits, in  which the local society was used to live until now.
Nevertheless,  given the continuous accentuation of social contradictions, the  effectiveness of ideological violence is doubtful, as far as it concerns  not only the residents of this specific area, but also all these parts  of the society that are obliged -due to their position- to resist  against the modernization attack of the power.
The dialectics of resistance and repression
The 17th  of October was a culminating point of the struggle, a moment of freedom  emerging from the temporary rupture with the constraints that are  created by the role of citizen-state’s servant; it was the violent  awakening of the local society that felt the elementary confines of its  -till then- given freedom of movement being suppressed, and reacted with  the fierceness that the sense of dignity imposes in such cases; it was a  revolt beyond and out of every institutional framework, and at the same  time the probable limit of re-confinement and submission of the social  resistance to the logic of legality, as it is expressed by its local  representatives.
It was a moment of attack that  took by surprise not only the state and the repression forces, but also  the local society itself which didn’t expect to be found confronting the  brutal violence of the state, although the latter didn’t stop declaring  long before and with every means its determination to proceed to the  realization of its plans. In the existing conditions of isolation and  fragmentation of social resistances, this surprise seems to express also  the objective limits of each local society that resists, as this latter  cannot -by definition-consider the repression it suffers in the  framework of the wider repressive policy of the state, exactly because  it cannot place automatically itself in the framework of similar  resistances that either have happened in the past, or will burst out in  the future. Besides, given the social and class structure of any local  society, there are parts of it that no way would want something like  that.
If for the residents of Varvara and  Olympiada, the critical point of their struggle (even more than the  environmental destruction itself) is their collective possibility to  decide for themselves and for the place they live in -no matter how  alienated and distorted this possibility is inside the borders of the  ruling social reality-, for the state and the capital the critical point  is not only the realization of an investment, but the total investing  credibility of the country, that will also define the terms of its  integration in the international system, as long as such a wild  resistance, even if locally restricted, cannot but constitute a  harbinger for other -maybe wilder- future resistances in points  sensitive for the restructuring.
It is in these  times of fluidity and of accentuation of the struggle, where a  subversive political discourse and practice can be attempted through the  contact with the more anxious parts of the local society and the mutual  influence that this contact can breed, in order to encourage any  revolting dynamics existing inside the local society and to actually  promote self-organization in every moment of the struggle and especially  in the moments that it faces the danger to be enclosed in the limits of  institutional legality.
“What we live in is a dictatorship”
The  acquired consciousness of the fact that “what we live in is a  dictatorship” can finally lead, according to the situation, either to  the final recall to “reason”, to the “inevitable realism” of the rulers,  or to the radicalization of parts of the local society through the  realization of the inevitable counter-institutional characteristics of  the struggle that is carried out, as the last illusions for negotiating  solutions collapse and will more and more collapse.
On  the other hand, the close personal bonds of the local society, which at  the moments of rupture, consist the base of social solidarity -by the  real meaning of the term-, consist also a source of weakness up to the  point that not only they suggest the limits of the local authorities  maneuvering, but also consist the safety valve that absorbs the  inevitable vibrations that this maneuvering creates inside the society,  so that the distrust, disagreement and rage usually follow underground  courses.
Nevertheless, the dynamics of resistance  are neither linear nor can be measured beforehand. In the explosive  conditions of the situation, given the absence of any ground of  negotiation, the instinct of freedom and dignity finds uncountable  individual or collective ways of expression. From this point of view the  social “tranquillity” that was succeeded by the cooperation of the  state and local authorities is extremely fragile and doubtful. The  social war against the restructuring plans of the state and the capital  goes on...
Anarchist Circle, Athens, November 1996
This  small chronicle of the struggle was based on exact descriptions given  by the residents that participated actively in the events.
The following texts distributed one year after
| ONE YEAR AFTER... Today, after the last defeat of the riot police by hundreds of residents of the area in the 9th  of November of ’97, after the massive assault at the mines of Olympiada  where drills and vehicles of TVX and of the police were destroyed,  after the culmination of repression up to the point to blockade and put  in a state of siege Varvara and Olympiada villages, this struggle that  was going on for 20 months within the ignorance and indifference of the  wider society, now, occupying the media front pages, it effected and  inspired many environmental and democratic sensitivities... This  phenomenon is expected and maybe useful to the struggle up to a point,  but it does not escape a critical view concerning the quality and  sincerity of some disposals of that kind, as they are reflectively  depended on each time’s media current actuality. Though  it’s not weird at al that finally some of the recent supporters of the  struggle in NE Halkidiki are tired out in a rather insipid denunciation  of the “dictatorial deviation” of the democratic state, passing at the  same time in silence the essential point of the struggle itself, a point  to which it owes its actuality and brightness as well as its  dangerousity: the fact of the revolt, of massive social violence and  sabotage. Events that even though they consist component elements and  messages of this struggle, with a use of a distorting logic, -where  “friends” and enemies of this struggle seem to meet-, are either  silenced or hypocritically separated from the struggle and are charged  to irresponsible “hot-headed” persons or provocateurs!! It’s the well  known logic of manipulation, that after the enraged and unpredictable  burst outs of resistance, follows the state’s repression, causing  self-restriction, defeatism, discouragement and enervation of the  struggle.Support  the social resistances everywhere and with every means, develop social  solidarity against the attacks of the state and the capital and  counter-attack! | 
A CHRONICLE OF THE RECENT EVENTS
On Sunday the 9th  of October at 11 in the morning, there is a public meeting of thousands  of residents from the villages of Strymonikos and from Olympiada. It is  decided to start immediately a demonstration to the mine. The  demonstration, with participation of men, women and children is hindered  and provocably stopped by police forces in the road Olympiada-Varvara.  The police forces are being subverted and the residents get to the  entrance of the mine, where they start skirmishes with the cops. The  people unretreated and unrestrained by anyone are confronted with globs  and tear-gas to be dispersed and then two-hours clashes follow, where  many are hurt, among them 9 policemen. For the third time within two  years the police forces are crashing defeated by the locals who occupy  the mine by assault. They burn and destroy two drills which belong to  TVX and police vehicles. TVX Gold estimates the damages to be 800.000$.  As the residents leave there are shots in the air.
The  same night, at four o’ clock at dawn, secret police invades the houses  of community presidents of five villages and arrest them (the sixth was  not found). In the morning the residents block the national road  Thesaloniki-Kavala until the community presidents are set free. Their  trial was settled to be on the 11th of December. This way the  state, unable to subject the locals and to eliminate the most “active”  among them, keeps in a state of hostage, as “instigators”, the community  presidents, who are members of the Residents Coordinating Committee, so  that they themselves will be responsible to control and restrict the  disobedient residents. After the events on the 9th of  December, police forces surrounded the area. Hundreds of cops,  helicopters and armored vehicles. In the 23d of November the police  office of Halkidiki announces that the region is in a state of  emergency, it forbids public gatherings and demonstrations (in the next  days this prohibition was taken back). Special police forces occupy the  streets that lead to TVX installations and obstruct any communication  between the villages Varvara and Olympiada. It is an intense situation.  Against the occupation of the region and the terrorism by the repression  forces, part of the residents answer back attacking police cars and  with sabotage at the installations of TVX.
In the 15th of December the five community presidents were finally convicted from 2 to 16 months of imprisonment with a 3-year suspension.
 
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