guardian.co.uk,
Adam Gabbatt and Ryan Devereux, Tuesday 6 December 2011
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| As police crackdowns on Occupy sites continue, protesters enter 'new frontier.' Photograph: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images |
Thousands
of Occupy protesters across the US will occupy foreclosed homes today, in what
organisers are describing as a "new frontier" for the movement.
In New
York, Occupy Wall Street has teamed up with local activist groups to secretly
occupy an empty home, and plan to hand the property over to a homeless family.
Similar action is scheduled in more than 20 other cities.
Over the
last month many occupations have been evicted from their encampments, as cities
cracked down on demonstrations that had lasted for several weeks.
In New York
occupiers plan to march to the closely-guarded location of their pre-selected
foreclosed home, which organisers told the Guardian had been occupied
overnight.
After
meeting with a family that was evicted from their own home, protesters will
journey through a Brooklyn neighbourhood which they say is "on the front lines
of the economic crisis".
"This
action is part of a national kick-off for a new frontier for the occupy movement: the liberation of vacant bank-owned homes for those in need, and the
defense of families under threat of foreclosure and eviction," Occupy Wall
Street said in a statement.
Occupy Wall
Street said the march will end with "a housewarming block party" for
the family, while protesters begin work on renovating the foreclosed property.
"The
NYC foreclosure tour and home re-occupation is part of a big national day of
action on December 6 that will focus on the foreclosure crisis and protest
fraudulent lending practices, corrupt securitisation, and illegal evictions by
banks."
Organizing
for Occupation, or o4o, a New York-based activist group which enters abandoned
properties and makes them available for homeless familes, is one of a number of
organisations which have joined Occupy Wall Street in the action. The others
include Picture the Homeless and New York City Communities for Change.
Activists
from o4o have already occupied the Brooklyn house which protesters will march
to, and were responsible for matching a family to the property.
Co-founded
by prominent radical Episcopal priest Frank Morales – a proponent of squatting
since the late 1970s – o4o normally moves destitute families into homes
"covertly", with the intention of establishing a long-term residences
for them.
A sub-group
known simply as "crack" enters and secures vacant properties, before
"a lot of people with skills" take over and renovate, Morales said.
Set up in
response to the housing crisis, o4o has infiltrated roughly a dozen buildings
in the city since June.
Ed Needham,
who acts as a media liaison for Occupy Wall Street, said the Occupy Our Homes
demonstration represented a new phase for the Occupy movement.
"Across
the coutry we're expecting thousands," he added. "We expect over
1,000 protesters to take part in events in New York tomorrow, and hundreds to
be at the house."
Needham
said he was unsure "how long the family will be able to stay" at the
property, given that the action has been widely publicised, however activists
are keen for the follow-up to the 6 December march and occupation to be just as
important as the event itself, with one o4o activist telling the Guardian he
hoped the demonstration would kick off a "mass occupation" of
foreclosed homes and vacant properties nationwide.

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