European Action Coalition for the Right to Housing and to the City Calls for Action

Call for International Action

Amsterdam, 28–30 May

Join the international action and confront the meeting of
the 23 EU housing ministers.

Don`t let them talk behind closed doors about the future
of our cities!

On the last weekend of May, the housing ministers of all
EU countries are meeting in Amsterdam to sign the first EU Urban Agenda, linked to
the UN Habitat 3 mega-conference. This agenda will be led by the neo-liberal
politics of those who create it, and proposes to techno-fix our cities for
their benefit, with `Smart Infrastructure`, and `better data monitoring`. These
false solutions do nothing to curb the wholesale privatisation of our cities
and our housing that is taking place across the continent.

In the European Action Coalition for the Right to Housing
and to the City
, we have decided to begin denouncing and organising
against the EU`s role in developing the housing crisis. As a grassroots
coalition across the continent, we will be supporting our Dutch members, the
Bond Precaire Woonvormen, in taking action, as well as joining an action with
other allies in Amsterdam. Come and join us over the last weekend in May to
help build a European housing movement. Get in contact with housing@riseup.net to discuss logistics – our resources are
limited but we want to support participation as far as possible.

In targeting an international institution, we are building
true internationalism from below, while disavowing any nationalistic and
xenophobic critiques of the EU. But what has the EU got to do with housing?

– The EU has had a direct impact on housing conditions, as
it promotes privatization and the deregulation of finance, housing and all kind
of public services. This market competition paradigm undermines all EU
regulations. The EU openly forced the liberalization of rental market in
Southern Europe and the broadening of the mortgage market in both southern and
eastern European countries, and forced the sale of public housing in other
member states, while austerity reduces the money available for social services
and housing through national and local budgets. At the same time, urban
regeneration programs in southern and eastern European cities, enabled through
EU structural funds, are meant to raise property prices and so expel the
working classes from urban centres to the fringes. The liberal solution to a
lack of housing is Public Private Partnerships – the continuation of
profit-driven intervention which denies people`s right to the city and to good
affordable housing. And who are these solutions for, with the EU responsible
for the permanent violation of the right to housing of migrants and refugees?

– The EU Urban Agenda itself plans to remove unnecessary
regulation and create more workable financial instruments through private
investment. But the agenda is not fully set, and our presence will be a
reminder of the alternative possibilities for the future of our cities.

– Movements from the Netherlands are organising a protest
that denounces this politics and links it with the problems faced since the privatisation
of Dutch housing corporations in 1993. For twenty years these corporations have
operated as profit-motivated companies; then in 2010 the EU demanded that the
Dutch government restrict access to social housing to households with incomes
below 33,000 euros, in order to stimulate the creation of an investors` market.
As a result, from the early 90’s until now, public housing and security of
tenure have both decreased. Housing corporations are mainstreaming the use of
temporary contracts, which allow landlords to evict people with one month`s
notice, and without any obligation to relocate them. These tactics are being
used all over Europe to prevent the potential for building long-term community
power, and while we still hold some of this power, we must fight to defend it!

Our target will be announced on May 23rd on www.housingnotprofit.org.
Local and national organisations from many countries are going to join the
protest and denounce the politics that tries to deny the right to housing and
to the city across Europe.

There are limited accommodation spaces available from
Friday 27th-Monday 30th. The ideal is for people to travel on the evening of
Friday 27th ready for a demonstration on
Saturday at 1pm. Sunday May 29th will be both an alternative conference at Paradiso, a
discussion about the impact the EU has on our national housing policies, and
action planning for Monday. On Monday 30th we will be occupying a key target
with responsibility for mass evictions and the weakening of tenants` rights,
and denouncing the doublespeak of the EU Urban Agenda.

JOIN US!

housing@riseup.net

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