In Solidarity with the Prairieland Nine: BAP Statement

(We must add a disclaimer. One of the prisoners, Meagan Morris, cooperated extensively against her co-defendants and is still being supported as a political prisoner. This should be highlighted regularly.)

The Black Alliance for Peace stands in solidarity with the Prairieland Nine following their convictions in federal court in Fort Worth, Texas, and we condemn this ruling as lawfare against people’s movements. These verdicts must be understood as part of a broader escalation in the U.S. state’s war against the people and popular organization.

The prosecution of the Prairieland Nine demonstrates how the architecture of the so-called War on Terror is increasingly being turned inward. By applying terrorism frameworks to a protest connected to the Prairieland ICE detention center, the federal government is advancing a precedent meant to criminalize political dissent and suppress movements challenging the violence of the U.S. national security state.

This is the domestic byproduct of imperial decline. As the United States wages aggressive wars abroad and seeks to maintain full-spectrum dominance, repression intensifies domestically. ICE raids, expanded surveillance, political prosecutions, and the militarization of policing all function together as mechanisms to discipline the population and fracture collective resistance. Working-class tax dollars are diverted into the military-industrial complex while communities are subjected to detention, deportation, and incarceration.

The Prairieland case is an attempt to normalize the use of extreme federal charges, including “material support to terrorism,” against individuals engaged in protest activity. The objective is clear: isolate movements, intimidate communities, and establish a legal framework that can be deployed against organizers across the country.

The prosecution’s narrative rested on the weaponization of the word “Antifa,” which describes anti-fascist movements, but is now a term that has been weaponized by the far right and the national security state to manufacture a domestic enemy. By framing protest activity and even attire (such as wearing all-black clothing) through a counterterrorism lens, the state seeks to normalize extreme charges, lengthy sentences, and sweeping prosecutions that can be replicated against movements in the future, without the burden of material evidence.

Equally troubling are the irregularities surrounding the trial itself: restricted public access, heavy judicial control over jury selection, and barriers to independent observation. These conditions reinforce the reality that the outcome of this case was shaped within a broader political context designed to secure convictions and establish precedent.

But repression of this kind is not simply about punishing nine individuals. It is about sending a message to all who resist the violence of the U.S. system of detention, deportation, and border militarization. It is about intimidating movements and attempting to isolate those who challenge the legitimacy of the state’s institutions. It is about reinforcing the legal architecture that will strengthen repression and surveillance toward the aims of ‘full spectrum dominance’ on the domestic front, as well as globally.

The Black Alliance for Peace rejects this strategy of intimidation. We recognize that the expansion of repression inside the United States is inseparable from the broader crisis of the imperialist system. As the U.S. ruling class struggles to maintain global dominance, it increasingly turns to coercion at home to discipline the population and suppress opposition.

Yet history teaches us that repression also reveals weakness. When the state must rely on political prosecutions and terrorism frameworks to silence dissent, it is acknowledging the growing legitimacy of resistance, and its inability to contain it by other measures.

We extend our solidarity to the Prairieland Nine, to their families and communities, and to the networks organizing in their defense. Their case underscores the urgency of building stronger, more disciplined, and more unified movements capable of confronting the expanding national security state.

In support of the Prairieland Defendants, we share the demands put forward by Dare to Struggle:

  • Drop all federal and state charges against the Prairieland Defendants

  • Release all Prairieland Defendants from pre-trial detention

  • End ICE terror against the people of Texas and around the country

  • Donate to the collective defense and support for the Prairieland Defendants. They need more money for lawyers. GiveSendGo | Support DFW Anti-ICE Protesters

  • No Compromise, No Retreat!

    source: Black Alliance for Peace

    https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=30352 #anarchism #blackAllianceForPeace #northAmerica #PoliticalPrisoners #prairielandDefense #repression
    🧵 Thread:

    🇻🇪 #HumanRights violations in #Venezuela do not seem to be at the top of the #US Embassy's priorities list. However, they could exert some leverage on the current Venezuelan Regime in order to speed up the release of all #PoliticalPrisoners 1/3

    Saturday, March 21, 2026

    Russia's Saratov, Samara oblasts attacked by drones overnight -- Ukraine heads to US with drone proposal Trump dismissed before war with Iran -- China, Iran help Russia prop up economy in occupied Ukrainian territories -- Crimea: The War Before the War ... and more

    https://activitypub.writeworks.uk/2026/03/saturday-march-21-2026/

    18. März: Freiheit für alle politischen Gefangenen!

    Der 18. März als internationaler Kampftag für die Freilassung aller politischen Gefangenen knüpft an eine lange Tradition der revolutionären #ArbeiterInnenbewegung an.

    Am 18.3.1848 stand das sich gerade entwickelnde Proletariat auf den Barrikaden, 23 Jahre später, am 18.3.1871, kam es zum ersten Mal zu einer breit in der verarmten Bevölkerung verankerten Zerschlagung parlamentarisch-monarchistischer #Machtstrukturen durch die proletarische Klasse. An diesem Tag griffen die Pariser #Arbeiterinnen und #Arbeiter zu den Waffen und schufen für einen kurzen Zeitraum eine selbstverwaltete Gesellschaft ohne Ausbeutung und Unterdrückung, die als Pariser #Commune bekannt wurde. Nach nur 71 Tagen wurde der Versuch, sich von den Fesseln der Herrschaft zu befreien, brutal niedergeschlagen.

    Die militärisch hochgerüstete Reaktion übte nach ihrem Sieg über die Kommunard_innen blutige Rache. Mehr als 20.000 Männer und Frauen wurden getötet, über 13.000 Menschen zu meist lebenslänglichen Haftstrafen verurteilt. Doch im kollektiven Gedächtnis der sozialistischen, kommunistischen und anarchistischen Bewegungen blieb die Commune nicht in erster Linie als Niederlage haften, sondern als die Geschichte eines gemeinsamen Aufbruchs. Bis in die zwanziger Jahre des 20. Jahrhunderts hinein galt der 18. März als „Tag der Commune“.

    1923 erklärte die ein Jahr zuvor gegründete Internationale Rote Hilfe (RHI) den Tag zum „Internationalen Tag der Hilfe für die politischen Gefangenen“. Der Faschismus jedoch sollte dieser Tradition ein Ende setzen.

    1996 initiierte der „Förderverein Libertad! für internationale Kommunikation und Solidarität“ zusammen mit der Roten Hilfe e.V. zum ersten Mal wieder einen Aktionstag für die Freiheit der politischen Gefangenen. Seitdem werden an diesem Tag vielfältige Aktionen und Veranstaltungen durchgeführt; die Rote Hilfe versucht mit der jährlichen Sonderausgabe zum 18. März, den politischen #Gefangene​n eine Stimme zu verleihen sowie den verschiedenen Solidaritäts- und Antirepressionsinitiativen eine Plattform zu bieten, um die Themen „Staatliche Repression“ und „Politische Gefangene“ ins Bewusstsein zu rufen.

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    Quelle

    #PoliticalPrisoners #FreeThemAll

    Spain: María José Baños Secures Release Thanks to Mobilization

    María José Baños Andújar, the anti-fascist prisoner held by GRAPO, has been granted a suspended sentence, in accordance with Article 104.4 of the Spanish prison regulations. This paves the way for her imminent release to receive urgent hospital care due to her critical health condition. Aged 61, her health has severely deteriorated, notably due to HIV at stage C3 and a 69% disability.

    This decision follows a solidarity and mobilization campaign led by various groups and political prisoners across Spain. In particular, fellow prisoner Marcos Martín ended a 16-day hunger strike, while other political prisoners continue their protests until their release. Supporters of María José Baños Andújar emphasize that this decision is a victory for collective mobilization, but also for the determination of the political prisoner who refused to be blackmailed into recanting. They call for the struggle to continue until her effective release and that of all other political prisoners still incarcerated.

    Source: https://secoursrouge.org/espagne-maria-jose-banos-obient-sa-liberation-grace-a-la-mobilisation/

    https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=29737 #antiFascist #europe #GRAPO #MariaJoseBaños #PoliticalPrisoners #spain

    Spain: Two New Political Prisoners Mobilize for María José Baños

    Several political prisoners in the Spanish state have launched weekly solidarity fasts to support and demand the release of María José Baños Andújar, a seriously ill anti-fascist prisoner of the GRAPO. The prisoners come from diverse traditions and political affiliations: Victoria Gómez (prisoner of the GRAPO – Anti-Fascist Resistance Groups of the First of October), Juan García (prisoner of the PCE(r) – Reconstituted Communist Party of Spain), Israel Torralba (prisoner of the GRAPO), Nacho Varela (prisoner of the GRAPO), Daniel Pastor (Basque communist prisoner), Patxi Ruiz (Basque prisoner), Israel Clemente (prisoner of the GRAPO), and Fernando García Jodra (Basque prisoner).

    Recently, imprisoned rapper and activist Pablo Hasél and Basque prisoner Andoni Goikoetxea Gabirondo announced they were joining the movement. Meanwhile, activist Marcos Martín Ponce began an indefinite hunger strike on February 23, demanding, among other things, that María José Baños be transferred to the hospital by ambulance, while supporters are calling for amplified international mobilization for her release.

    Source: https://secoursrouge.org/espagne-deux-nouveaux-prisonniers-politiques-soutiennent-maria-jose-banos/

    https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=29447 #antiFascist #europe #GRAPO #hungerStrike #MariaJoseBaños #PoliticalPrisoners #spain
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    Spain: Basque Prisoner Patxi Ruiz Joins Fast in Support of María José Baños Andújar

    On February 25, 2026, Basque political prisoner Patxi Ruiz joined the solidarity action initiated by prisoners at the A Lama prison by observing a day of fasting in support of María José Baños Andújar, a seriously ill political prisoner of the GRAPO (Republican Action Groups). This mobilization is part of a broader movement that includes weekly hunger strikes by several other prisoners, as well as an indefinite hunger strike begun by Marcos Martín Ponce to demand the emergency hospital transfer of María José, whose health is considered critical.

    Source: https://secoursrouge.org/espagne-le-prisonnier-basque-patxi-ruiz-rejoint-le-jeune-de-soutien-a-maria-jose-banos-andujar/

    https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=28991 #Basque #europe #GRAPO #hungerStrike #MariaJoseBaños #PatxiRuiz #PoliticalPrisoners #spain