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Unlock NAMA occupy 66-67 Great Strand Street, Dublin 1.

category dublin | crime and justice | feature author Saturday January 28, 2012 14:05author by Indyjourno Report this post to the editors

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Unlock NAMA

Today's occupation is happening at 66-67 Great Strand Street, Dublin 1. Come down and support the occupation - get involved in the debate during the day.
You might be thinking: has the notoriously secretive agency finally read the part of the NAMA legislation that says NAMA should contribute to the social development of the State? Or wondering if perhaps the Labour party is coming good on its pre-election promise to use NAMA buildings for culture and the arts? Maybe the accountants and property hacks that sit on NAMA’s board have recognised that the N and the A stand for national assets?

What’s really happening is the launch of new campaign group Unlock NAMA.


Whereas NAMA is all about giving public money to private banks, Unlock NAMA want to make public buildings available to the public. Rather than socialising commercial losses, we say socialise resources.
The problem is that NAMA is designed to make this as difficult as possible. The lack of transparency or of any mechanism for engagement with the public makes it hard to know where NAMA’s properties are, and even harder to gain access to them.

To challenge this Unlock NAMA will be combining research, education and direct action, and this Saturday’s launch will be an example of all three. We have identified a NAMA building in Dublin and will hold talks and discussions there from 12 till 6pm. Conor McCabe, author of Sins of the Father, will discuss the ins and outs of NAMA and the role of property speculation more broadly. Economist Michael Taft and researcher Andy Storey will introduce the Anglo: Not Our Debt campaign and talk about the social and political questions around debt. And Unlock NAMA will host a workshop dealing with exactly what kind of ‘assets’ NAMA has and how we can identify them.

And all of the above will take place in a temporarily occupied NAMA building, showing that through collective action we can develop real alternatives.

Full Programme

12 noon: Conor McCabe (author of Sins of the Father) on NAMA and Property Speculation in Ireland

2.30pm: Andy Storey (lecturer in politics and international relations) and Michael Taft (research officer, UNITE) on the Anglo: Not Our Debt campaign

4pm: Unlock NAMA: What buildings does NAMA have and how can we identify and gain access to them?

About Unlock NAMA

Unlock NAMA is a campaign to access NAMA properties for social and community use and to hold NAMA to account. While NAMA is all about giving public money to private banks, we want to make public buildings available to the public.

NAMA’s bank bailout has been a complete failure: the banks have needed more hand outs and even nationalisation, yet they still are not lending.

Meanwhile NAMA is squandering the property it has acquired and providing massive debt forgiveness to developers.

To challenge this we will:

• Pull back the veil of secrecy NAMA hides behind by identifying the assets it holds and what is being done with them. We will be the watchdog NAMA does not want.

• Work with anyone who wants to put existing NAMA assets to social or cultural uses by helping to identify the NAMA buildings in their local area and by supporting them in gaining access to those buildings. While NAMA wants to socialize commercial losses, we want to socialize resources.

• Challenge debt. From the national debt generated by NAMA to family mortgages, debt is robbing us of our individual and collective future.

Our Demands:

1 )Make NAMA properties available for social and community use

2) Publish full addresses and details on all properties under NAMA

3) Publish full details on all sales of NAMA assets

The cycle of austerity and debt offers us no future. Unlock NAMA is about building a future beyond bank bailouts and property speculation.

Related Link: http://maps.google.ie/maps?q=google+maps+66+Great+strand+street+dublin&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&hq&hnear=0x48670e82951dec1d%3A0x1...ie&ei

nama_wasting_this_building.jpg

Signs of neglect of building by NAMA even though they are supposed to make these buildings available for social development of the state
Signs of neglect of building by NAMA even though they are supposed to make these buildings available for social development of the state

author by Indyjournopublication date Sat Jan 28, 2012 14:41author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Gardaí arrived at around 2 o'clock and demanded that Unlock NAMA vacate the property. They have decided to stay and continue with the schedule. The building entrance is currently surrounded by Gardaí

author by Indyjournopublication date Sat Jan 28, 2012 14:54author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Some images from Pollytix http://instagr.am/p/ldChB/

author by Indyjournopublication date Sat Jan 28, 2012 15:07author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Video filmed by soundmigration

Caption: Video Id: C4-hC6g20KM Type: Youtube Video
UnlockNAMA


author by cropbeye@yahoo.compublication date Wed Feb 01, 2012 13:19author address author phone Report this post to the editors



I hope you guys have a sympathetic

solicitor and thay you can get your injunction in first/

author by Chestnut - Urban Abandonments & derelictionpublication date Wed Jan 02, 2013 14:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

They say you may not be able to change the person but what you can personally do is change your attitude.

For years now NAMA stands tall as a monlith dictating what is to happen to our financially stressed and often vacant properties. This site is addressing the issue. People like Michael Taft are prepared to choose the Namatised properties and inform people just exactly what Nama is about. I wonder will this make its way into main stream media. It often fascinates me why NAMA which basically is a holding company for distressed assets (buildings, land, properties et al) are not even on twitter. Twitter surely is the global marketing tool needed to encourage people from far and wide to invest in this country and particularly in its property. NAMA is not unlike that omerta Opus Dei culture which needs to be made transparent.

Check out urban abandonments & dereliction at http://www.indymedia.ie/article/91869 This is what we don't want to happen to the Ireland of Ireland. The plain people of Ireland can change their attitudes and we can monitor the monolith of NAMA and overly burdened bureaucracy to ensure limited cases of dereliction. We have the laws, we don't necessarily need new law, we need action, marketing and enforcement of existing regulations so that people can have access to proper accommodation.

NAMA must be accountable to the plain people of Ireland. It is no different in structure to the Land Commission of 1950's. Check out the breaches then and learn from them and keep NAMA on the straight and narrow.

Good luck today.

Chestnut