Stop the City
Stop the City demonstrations of 1983 and 1984 were billed as a 'Carnival Against War, Oppression and Destruction',
Activities that formed part of the biggest of these events were separate day-long street blockades of the financial district (the
Inspirations
There were several inspirations for the protest. At the time there was a growing
1983 demonstration in London
On 29 September 1983, 1500 people demonstrated in order to disrupt the financial activities of the City of London. Buildings were blockaded and leaflets handed out.[3]
The protest was unusual for the time since it had not met with the police to discuss a route or stewarding, it was not organised by a political party or trade union and the plan was not to march from one point to another.[2]
Afterwards, Penny Rimbaud of Crass declared it “a massive success, the best gig of the year."[4] Rimbaud listed the following actions: work stopped at the Royal Exchange, shops selling fur attacked, restaurants stink-bombed, building locks glued, telephone lines jammed.[2]
Around 200 arrestees faced charges, with the court dates set for November 1983. Solidarity days were organised with the theme 'Actions against Banks.'[2]
1984 demonstrations in London
The second demonstration was planned by anarchists meeting at the Ambulance Station squat on Old Kent Road in south London. The squat also organised a benefit gig which raised £300 and featured Flux of Pink Indians, Kukl and Flowers in the Dustbin.[3] The rough plan for the day was as follows:
- 08:00 Start
- 10:00 Roadblock of Threadneedle Street
- 11:00, 13:00, 14:00 Noise protests
- 12:00 A “die-in” lasting two minutes.
- 16:00 Demonstration at the Royal Exchange
- 18:00 Support for any arrestees at Guildhall court[3]
The demonstration happened on 29 March 1984. In addition to the events stated above there were
At an evaluation conference attended by around 65 people on 14–15 April it was decided to do another Stop the City in September 1984 and also to do a short-notice event in May. The 31 May Stop the City was swamped by police and viewed by organisers as a failure. It was acknowledged that more publicity was needed.[2]
The fourth Stop the City took place on 27 September 1984, with benefit gigs happening at the Dickie Dirts squat in Coldharbour Lane in Brixton, south London.
Penny Rimbaud wrote that "Aware that we had been out-manoeuvred, no further Stop the City actions took place in London."[2]
1984 demonstrations around UK
Before the second Stop the City in London in 1984, there were also smaller demonstrations attacking banks in Bristol and Glasgow one week earlier.[2]
Following the fourth Stop the City event in London, there were other demonstrations across the UK, including Birmingham. In Leeds, on 9 August 1984, activists including members of Chumbawamba chained up the doors of a porn cinema, threw Monopoly money onto shoppers, gave out leaflets and ran a pirate radio station which blocked wavelengths used by BBC radio stations.[2]
Reflections
Stop the City was criticised by the Anarchist Workers Group for creating an anarchist ghetto politics.[5]
Whilst seen as initially successful, the demonstrations also provoked questions for anarcho-punk activists about how to make alliances with other groups and what aims to strive for in future. It was clear that the numbers of people on Stop the City protests were nothing like the 400,000 people attending the
An hour-long documentary was made about the second Stop the City event by members of Crass Mick Duffield (camera), Joy de Vivre (sound) and Andy Palmer (interviewer).[2]
See also
References
- ^ "Stop The City Carnival". London Museum. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
- ^ ISBN 978-1-57027-318-6.
- ^ a b c "Stop the City". Kate Sharpley Library. Poison Pen. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
- .
- ISBN 9781904859406.