A novel way to use the blockchain: Ke…

A novel way to use the blockchain: Keybase now hashes its announcements into it. #bitcoin #blockchain #encryption #keybase #pgp

Summer time in Brussels

Piknik Elektronik

piknik

The PiKniK events wish to Kreate a relaxed atmosphere, positive and Kommunicative vibes as well to offer great musiK. For the young or the young at heart, for Kouples and singles, for bankers and artists -PiKniK is an event for everybody. We invite you to Kome together and to spend a joyful day with respeKt for each other.

Unfortunately, our lovely Brussels is influenced by the whims of nature. Please show understanding for that our events depend Kompletely on weather Konditions.

Therefore, please note that each PiKniK will be confirmed the Thursday preceding the event! While it is not so much the rain that frightens us, it is the risk to ruin eleKtroniK devices etc. that forces us to Kancel in case of bad weather Konditions.
However, we do hope to be able to Konfirm a maximum of events!

Here are our 5 PiKniK rules. We kindly ask you to Komply with them:

  • Join us at the bar, where an even more varied menu of drinks is waiting for you
  • Pick up your litter
  • Do not bring any glass bottles. They will be confisKated by our security staff
  • RespeKt nature and use ashtrays for your cigarette stubs
  • Stay KoolThank you very much for your inKredible energy and for your precious support!

www.pikniks.be/events

PleinOPENair

Stubborn annual urban event on the city’s sites of pain, taking place for four weekends every summer since 1997.

PleinOPENair’s brief is to explore the city’s ‘terra incognita’, liven them up by organizing an open-air cinema on site, and raise awareness about broader urban issues. Like a flag PleinOPENair plants its screen and claims the site for urban cultural and artistic activity. But cinema is only the opportunity, a wide variety of activities ranging from theatre over installation, performance, architecture, radio to new media and well beyond, have meanwhile joined the urban caravan.

A lot has changed since the first edition of PleinOPENair in 1997. The crowd of between 100 and 200 it pulled then, has now easily six folded. The themes have covered an area from “privatisation of public space” to “urban renewal.” And the sites have varied from adjacent to the Grand Place to the outer limits of the 19th century city, but it still free entrance and is still a project of urban buccaneers.

pleinopenair.nova-cinema.org
www.nova-cinema.com

Recyclart Summer

Recyclart is a non profit organisation founded in 1997 and located in the abandoned train station Brussel-Kapellekerk/Bruxelles-Chapelle, downtown Brussels. The organisation has a double, unique identity: on the one hand it’s a small multidisciplinary arts centre and on the other hand, it hosts a training centre for wood and metal construction (Fabrik) and catering (Bar Recyclart).

Recyclart develops projects in the city’s public space and in the neighbourhood thereby linking people, various media and artistic disciplines. The centre organises parties, concerts, photo exhibitions and debates and lectures on architecture, public space and design. Besides, there are 4 work and exhibition spaces that are temporarily offered to visual artists who can apply for a residency of max. 6 months.

The different spaces of the train station have been converted into a bar/restaurant, technical and artistic work spaces, a concert venue (capacity of 450 people) and offices. The nearby railway bridges function as an urban open-air gallery. The square in front of the station is home to both loungers and skateboarders, a summer terrace and open-air events.

Recyclart is inspired by the capital’s fascinating daily reality which is fed by the city’s varied cultures and communities. Being a true Belgian project, with fundings from the city and the different governments, both Dutch and French are used as official languages, among collegues and in public communication.

www.recyclart.be/nl/agenda
www.last.fm/venue/8779540+Recyclart

Cape Town best of the best

So you are in Cape Town and you’ve done everything on my Cape Town bucket list? Or you only have a few days to spare (maybe before or after AfrikaBurn) and want to spend them wisely? Cape Town is a wonderful city, I cannot disagree with those saying it’s the most beautiful city in the world, and you want the best of the best, right? Well here’s a little list for you.

  • Best pizza: Ferdinando’s pizza (84 Kloof Street)
    The restaurant named after the dog, but definitely no dog food here, delicious pizza’s in a very nice atmosphere. Before or after your dinner you might be able to catch a concert at Blah Blah Bar, at the same address.
  • Best fish&chips: Fish Hoek Fisheries (64 – 74 Main Rd, Fish Hoek)
    According to spear-fisher and free-diver Trevor Hutton the best in Town and who am I to disagree with him?
  • Best Greek restaurant: Maria’s (31 Barnet Street)
    At Dunkley Square (also home of Roxy’s) since forever, run by an AfrikaBurner for the last 20 years, lovely mezes and other Greek favourites.
  • Best Obz bar: Tagore’s (42 Trill Road, Observatory)
    Named after Rabindranath Tagore, a very soulful bar, usually packed with soulful people and soulful music, either live or DJ, just down the road from Café Ganesh, Obz’ second best bar.
  • Best silent disco: Octopus’ Garden (Main Road, St James)
    Right next to St James’ train station (between Muizenberg and Kalk Bay), except for silent disco (about once a month), also has concerts, very nice pizza, children’s play park and an AfrikaBurn vibe.
  • Best dive bar: Lefty’s (105 Harrington Street)
    Beers, ribs, in the cooler East side of town, nuff said.
  • Best yard food: The Dogs Bollocks (6 Roodehek Street)
    Lovely food, have their own craft beer, same yard as Deluxe Coffeeworks base and their Roastin’ Records shop.
  • Best drive: Kommetjie to Scarborough
    Even more beautiful than Chapman’s Peak drive if you can believe it, passing very aptly named Misty Cliffs (have only seen it sans mist a few times), drive both directions since they each have unique and breathtaking views.

KEELBEEK aLIVE! 17, 18 & 19 avril…

KEELBEEK aLIVE!

17, 18 & 19 avril 2015

Weekend de fête et d’actions sur la ZAD*

*Zone A Défendre contre la construction d’une mégaprison sur 18 ha de terres fertiles, au Keelbeek à Haren (Bruxelles) . Enquêtes publiques en cours, commission de concertation le 13 mai, début des travaux prévu pour le 15 mai 2015.

Venez vivre et lutter au Keelbeek !

Non au bétonnage des terres !

Non à la construction de nouvelles prisons !

Vive le Keelbeek libre et vivant !

Au programme :

plantations – constructions – ateliers et animations pour tous les âges – jeux – concerts – projections – débats et discussions – assemblée – repas – camping – surprises …

(programme complet ci-dessous)

Infos pratiques :

  • Possibilité de dormir sur place (amène ta tente et ton sac de couchage)
  • Pour les repas partagés, prévois assiettes, couverts et gobelets
  • Ramène tes outils pour les plantations et pour les constructions (n’oublie pas de les personnaliser pour pouvoir les récupérer facilement)

Plan d’accès: http://haren.luttespaysannes.be/pratiquement/article/se-rendre-sur-le-terrain-du

Plus d’infos : http://haren.luttespaysannes.be

#zad #patazad #keelbeek #haren #Brussels #Bruxelles #Brussel #occupy

Rhodes Must Fall and Khayelitsha riot

In the news today yesterday in Cape Town.

Disclaimer: I’ve only spent about 8 months in total in South Africa, so I cannot say I know South Africa or its history or culture or anything really, so this is an ignorant European’s view on the headlines today. I’ve been told it’s very European to be so politically correct. So maybe it’s a sign that I haven’t really integrated into South Africa that I start of with this disclaimer.

There had been some scuffle about Rhodes statue at the UCT (University of Cape Town) campus. Rhodes is seen as a symbol of European imperialism and keeping on honouring him with a statue isn’t right in post Apartheid South Africa, according to protesters. They are supported in this by
Julius Malema and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), who became the third largest political party in South Africa at the elections last year, after the ANC, which has held an absolute majority since the first free elections and the DA, who has the majority in Cape Town.

The UCT decided to remove the statue, although this will take some time, since it’s national heritage. It will probably go to a museum. Also today some Afrikaner organisations like Front National (which I hope doesn’t have a link to the French racist party with the same name) called for respect of Afrikaner culture and heritage and against the removal of other statues like of Jan Van Riebeek. They call for respect of their culture and as a minority.

I don’t think I’ll ever be able to understand all the cultural sensitivities of apartheid, but my impression, in comparing with the Belgian/Flemish/European context I grew up in and know well, is that while in Belgium and throughout Europe, the right and nationalist politicians ask minorities such as Muslims to integrate into Europe, and as such give up (part of) their culture, in the South African context, the white minority ask for the opposite: the right to be different, which in my very limited understanding is what Apartheid (literally apartness) stood for.

The other headline was riots after an eviction of an informal settlement in Khayelitsha. Khayelitsha is the biggest and best known township in Cape Town. Townships come in different forms, from officially allowed buildings, built of stone and with connections to electricity, water and sanitation, to shacks, built on government or privately owned land without consent. These last are regularly evicted by the police and the so called “red ants”. Here in Cape Town this is done by the DA, who has the majority and the ANC opposes it, while in other parts of the country they do exactly the same.

Here to the EFF plays a role as they stand with the squatters in saying that they have right to build houses there because there isn’t any space any more in the legal parts of Khayelitsha. Police used stun grenades and rubber bullets, the residents who only started building a few days ago and who’s unfinished buildings got torn down, threw stones at police and vehicles on the nearby highway and looted.

This is unfortunately nothing new, these confrontations between government/police who want to enforce law and discourage and remove illegal settlements and people living in shacks and trying to find a place for themselves are a recurring news item. From mu Western/European perspective it is the most visible result of the huge economic divide between almost European wealth of a (mostly, but definitely not only white) minority and the African economic conditions of a black (not just South) African majority.

What both stories show to me are the difficulties of a country where there are so many divides, in race, in culture (where Afrikaners and whites of English decent over a century after the last Anglo)Boer war still seem divided in some ways) and economic terms. Can the Rainbow Nation that Mandela put forward really work? Last year, when Madiba as South Africans lovingly call him died, radical voices pointed out that he sold out his militant ideals when he became president and made deals which opened the way for neo-liberalism.

Can all the different cultures which make up South Africa live gracefully apart? Or is that just a lighter version of apartheid and imperialism? What is the future of South Africa? Can large conflicts be avoided in a country where there is such a huge divide between a rich minority and a poor majority? Is there really a Rainbow Nation? And if not, what is the alternative? South Africa has a lot of questions,

Stop Répression | Campagne contre la …

Stop Répression | Campagne contre la répression policièrehttp://www.stop-repression.be/

4 ème manifestation contre les violences policières
Rendez vous le 15 mars – 15h – Simonis – Bruxelles
à l’occasion de la journée internationale contre les violences policières.

#police #stoprespression #Bruxelles

No Border Process: judge condemns Brussels’ police

On Wednesday, September 29th, 2010, I was with some 30 demonstrators in the metro station Ribaucourt, most of them dressed as clowns, when police prevented us from entering the subway train, pushed us against the wall, handcuffed us and eventually took to the police barracks of Etterbeek. It was not the first time I was arrested while attempting to demonstrate and it would not be the last. What I did not know then and could not possibly predict was that the police would be condemned by a judge for what they did that day.

We are now four and a half years later and what few had thought possible happened: Judge C. Lepaffe awarded me and four others who were arrested that day compensation for damages, payable by the Brussels’ police. The amounts are symbolic, what price can you put on the unlawful deprivation of your freedom? The fact that the preventive arrests of demonstrators, not removing handcuffs when they were no longer needed and taking photographs without permission or reason were sentenced by a judge, is priceless.

The judge elaborates his judgement: there was no evidence of disturbance of public order or attempt to do so by the people arrested in the subway station Ribaucourt, nor did they carry any “suspicious objects”. The statements of applicants are detailed and unified enough to conclude that the conditions of transportation and detention were far from optimal and there were slippages by the police.

For the court it is clear that we were targeted because we participated in the No Border Camp. The concern of the police towards the No Border Camp (according to the threat analysis of OCAD, the Belgian anti-terror body, anarchists from Belgium and abroad would use the No Border Camp to take violent action)1 was no sufficient reason to proceed to preventive arrests, solely on the basis of the alleged participation in the camp according to the judge.

The argument by the lawyer for the police that some had their faces painted (which is police regulations according to him) the court saw as a justification of the arrest after the fact (a posteriori). The officers did not ask the clowns to remove their makeup and they weren’t masked or unidentifiable. Moreover, it is not uncommon for protesters to use original ways to attract the attention of the public or the media or to give a playful character to the rally, according to the court. “People should, in principle, unless there is a profile of certain danger, be arrested for what they do, not for what they are.” 2

There was no objective evidence to justify an arrest. The statement by police commissioner Vandersmissen that he had given the order to do systematic monitoring of risk groups but respect their right to expression and only to proceed to arrests if there was evidence which indicated a disturbance of public order, was rejected by the court as there were no such evidence in this case.

“It is understandable that the police feared to be ridiculed by protesters dressed up as clowns. This fear, however, was no reason for arrests in connection with an event, unless it was the intention [of the police] to strictly regulate the content and the terms [of the demonstration].” 3

“The administrative detention exercised in the subway station of Ribaucourt, even taking into account the special needs of an event of great magnitude, are contrary to both Article 31 of the Law on Police Services and the European Convention on Human Rights Article 5 regarding the restriction of the freedom and security, and by implication, the right to demonstrate.” 4 There was no disturbance of public order, neither current, nor potential and there was no actual or potential violation of the law.

The words used by the judge are clear: the police were at fault, it does not have the right to arrest demonstrators under the pretext that they are planning to disrupt public order. Not even clowns “[who have] the habit of mocking and disrupting the work of the police” according to police commissioner Vandersmissen and who generate a “negative solidarity” towards the police.5

Although the sums (between 50 and 150 Euro for each of the five plaintiffs) are small, the moral debt of the police as the judge explains it is very large. Hopefully it gets them thinking and they realize that by arresting and maltreating protesters they too may get their day in court.

  1. “Optreden tegen No Border-activisten noodzakelijk en efficiënt” (DWM 5/10/2010)
  2. “On doit en principe, sauf profil affirmé d’une dangerosité certaine, arrêter les gens pour ce qu’ils font, non pour ce qu’ils sont.” (JUG-JG N° 246)
  3. “On peut comprendre que les policiers aient craint d’être tournés en dérision par des manifestants grimés en clown. Cette crainte ne constitue pas autant un motif valable d’arrestation dans le cadre d’une manifestation, sauf à vouloir en encadrer strictement le contenu et les modalités.” (idem)
  4. “L’arrestation administrative pratiquée au métro Ribaucourt entre dès lors, même en tenant compte des nécessités très spéciales d’une manifestation de très grande ampleur, en contradiction, tant avec l’article 31 de la loi sur la function de police qu’avec le CEDH en son article 5, en ce qui concerne l’entrave à la liberté et à la sûreté et par répercussion, au droit de manifester.” (idem)
  5. “De plus, les clowns, s’ils sont d’un abord sympathique, ont pour habitude de singer et de perturber le travail des forces de police. En outre, lorsque ces dernières interviennent, les clowns suscitent alors une solidarité que je qualifie de négative faisant que les autres passants ou manifestant réagissent contre les forces de l’ordre même si celles-ci interviennent opportunément et correctement.” (p. 3 du PV d’audition du Commissaire Divisonnaire Vandersmissen du 10 février 2011)

 

Love for Vimeo

I’ve loved Vimeo ever since I discovered it, a few years ago. I couldn’t put my finger on it, but it just looks and feels much nicer than YouTube. Also, it doesn’t have adds, although that doesn’t bother me on YouTube since Adblock Plus does an excellent job blocking those.

At FOSDEM this year I learned that Vimeo not only uses free/libre and open source software (FLOSS) throughout, but also tries to give as much as possible back to the open source community: Vimeo and the open source community.

So I just wanted to show some love for Vimeo here in the hope that even more people start to use it and put their videos on Vimeo instead of on evil Google’s Tube.

My Likes on Vimeo

Le projet de maxi-prison emprisonne le Keelbeek

Le projet de maxi-prison emprisonne le Keelbeek
Jeudi 19 février, la Régie des bâtiments a commencé à aménager le terrain du Keelbeek destiné à accueillir le projet de maxi-prison. Une partie du terrain a été grillagé détruisant la moitié de la ZAD du Keelbeek. Les habitants et les occupants médusés sont stupéfaits des dégâts occasionnés : chemin défoncé par les engins et transformé en ornières, arbres arrachés, nature saccagée et déjà un sentiment d’enfermement. Ils s’étonnent de cette démarche intempestive alors que la délivrance des permis d’urbanisme et d’environnement n’a pas encore eu lieu. Ils se mobilisent chaque jour pour valoriser cet espace encore libre, le préserver et sauvegarder ce qui peut l’être encore. Et lancent un appel à venir les visiter pour continuer ensemble à résister contre la maxi-prison !
Infos : http://haren.luttespaysannes.be.
Contactez Isabelle Hochart et Claire Scohier.