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“Getting them acquitted is not just about winning in court, but about what this direct action was aimed at”

Interview with Nina Onèr, lawyer for Zo from the Ulm 5


24/04/2026

Hi Nina. Thanks for talking to us. Could you start by introducing yourself? Who are you and what is your relationship to the Ulm 5?

Hi, my name is Nina Onèr, and I’m a criminal defense lawyer here in Berlin. I specialize in political cases, and I’m defending Zo, one of the Ulm 5 in the case before the Landgericht Stuttgart.

I spoke to Mimi, Daniel’s mother, a couple of weeks ago, and she said that it’s very difficult getting information about how they are. Are you able to say something about what morale is like?

Of course, I can mostly speak about my client. It’s very obvious that the tension is rising now with the court date approaching, but generally they remain steadfast in spirit, and glad that it’s finally about to start. It’s been such a long time, and they’re hopeful that not only the court, but – more importantly – history and public opinion will acquit them for this direct action against an arms manufacturer

What are the conditions like in pre-holding prison?

It differs amongst the five, depending on the detention facility. Every jail has its own discretion on what it thinks are appropriate measures in order to sustain what they deem “public safety and order” within the facility. Some are being held in solitary. Others are in joint cells – although that is also not necessarily a pleasant experience at all times. Some of them work, which gives you a lot more time outside of your cell, and allows you to shower daily, which is not something that others have the privilege of doing.

The restrictive measures that they face, because of what they’re accused of, makes them a lot more isolated. Everything is observed by the state police. I’m extremely worried that this isolation over such a prolonged period of time is going to have long-lasting psychological effects.

It’s outrageous that in pre-trial detention, the conditions they’re held under are a lot stricter than in jail, after an actual conviction, although here the presumption of innocence should be in effect. In prison there are so-called rehabilitation measures, therapeutic options and group activities.  

But the measures in pre-trial detention are a lot stricter, although they haven’t been proven guilty. That’s something that a lot of human rights organizations have been criticizing all over the world. However, Germany sticks to doing that.

The Ulm 5 have been denied bail. Is this usual?

Well, let’s say it’s not completely unusual – the court has upheld the pre-trial detention up to now on the grounds that there was a risk of absconding – so fleeing and not attending the trial, which I think is unreasonable in this case. 

In addition to the “actual” charges of trespass and damage of property, the prosecution then came up with the outrages charge under Section 129 of the German Criminal Code (StGB), which I am sure we will still go into – which massively increases the expected sentence. This allowed them to further strengthen their argument regarding the risk of absconding, saying the expected sentence means the risk of absconding cannot be ruled out even if bail was granted – not least because no one knows where it comes from, so the argument. 

This perpetuates the absurd image of highly criminal, professional structures that the prosecuting authorities are trying to paint regarding the 5. 

Whatever the intention, the effect is that the Five are going to spend nearly a year in prison before they’ve been convicted of anything.

In Germany, bail is just one of the many measures that can replace pre-trial detention. These are five young people who’ve never been convicted of anything prior to this, who filmed themselves during the action, were not masked, and then waited for police to arrive and let themselves be arrested – peacefully and without resisting. 

I don’t think there were probable grounds for pre-trial detention in the first place, so I don’t think bail should have been necessary.

But prosecution has made such a point of demonizing the Five – it started back at the arrest when they were being transported from the court in Ulm to the respective jails. Masked policemen were surrounding the building as if we were facing a group of very dangerous criminals. And now they are doing everything in their power to uphold this narrative. 

But they haven’t committed any violent attacks at all.

Exactly.

The Ulm 5 targeted an Elbit factory. Could you quickly say something about the role of Elbit?

That specific plant in Ulm is Elbit Systems Germany, which is a direct daughter of Elbit Systems, an Israeli Arms Company supplying the vast majority of arms used in the war in Gaza – mostly drones of all different types and technology for them. That’s why this direct action was aimed at them. 

You mentioned Section 129, which was in the news again a week or 2 ago when it was used to justify the raids of 15 community centres in Berlin. What is Section 129, and how is it being used?

The tricky thing about Section 129 is that it has such a broad definition – such a wide range of acts may fall within the scope of the acts required by the definition of the offence which  makes it so easy for prosecution to charge people under this Section. Even more so if you look beyond “membership of a criminal organisation ” towards what the alternative element of the offence “aiding a criminal organization” can entail. 

Basically, prosecution has and is using this specific section specifically in order to suppress and punish unpopular political opinion.

It’s broadly used in political cases, and is aimed at specific political opinions, views, or actions that are deemed undesirable in the current political climate. It’s also an extremely useful tool, because in criminal proceedings, it allows an extremely wide range of observational measures.This makes it possible to implement extremely far-reaching and intrusive surveillance measures,like telecommunications surveillance and that’s probably how those raids were made possible. 

The charge against the Ulm 5 is that they were members of an illegal group. What does that even mean?

Section 129 is about membership of a kriminelle Vereinigung, in English: a criminal organisation. An organisation in this sense is a long-term, organised group of more than two people, formed to pursue an overarching common interest and which pursues this interest by committing criminal offences of some gravity. 

The Ulm 5 are charged with membership but as mentioned before, there is an alternative – the supporting of a criminal organisation. This could be anything from distributing flyers to collecting donations. 

So once a certain “group” has been classified as a criminal organisation it creates so much uncertainty as to how they can still be supported, even by friends and family, because It has such wide reaching effects – in effect this scares away support, making it extremely hard for these people to be supported by outside groups without the supporters risking persecution themselves.

Is there a parallel here with the criminalization of Palestine Action in Britain?

The criminalisation of PA UK and this classification of the Ulm 5 as a criminal organization politically follows the exact same line of reasoning in my opinion, and the prosecution has adopted the UK’s assessment without question; they must now, of course, reconsider this in light of the ruling by the High Court, revoking PA UK’s classification, but I’m not even sure they are aware of that. 

At the press conference a couple of weeks ago, you said it was significant that the trials are being held in Stammheim. Can you expand a bit on this?

I think this fits in very well within the narrative that prosecution is trying to paint from the very beginning. As I said, they’re trying to demonize those five. I expected from pretty early on that we will end up in this high security courthouse. 

There was no court house there before. The location is JVA Stammheim – a prison and the initial court house was built in the Seventies – specifically for one of the earliest trials in connection with the Red Army Fraction. 

It’s an outer branch of the Oberlandgericht Stuttgart –  the higher Regional Court of Stuttgart and usually only so-called terrorism trials are held there. 

The extreme security measures will complicate everything: access from the public, support from friends and family, media coverage and  – most gravely – defence. We are meant to speak to our clients, who are supposed to be seated behind a two meter high bulletproof safety glass, via radio using a microphone or through a small slit in said security glass. All the while, court officers stand guard nearby. 

The interested public are  going to be searched, have their IDs copied, and will not be allowed to bring food, drink or even pens in. The number of places is limited. 

Do you think there’s a deliberate attempt to associate the Ulm five with the Baader- Meinhof group?

Well, maybe not the Baader-Meinhof group specifically, but all this is definitely trying to put them in a terrorist corner.

As a lawyer inside the court, what support do you need from people outside?

Showing up is important. I think that the best anyone can do is just be there, to show that they are not alone, that there are plenty of good people who support them. It’s such a long trial, the individual hearing dates have been so spread out which is just another way of making support really hard. I would urge anyone who wants to support to organize accordingly so that there aren’t 100 people wanting to join on the first day – who then also won’t be able to find a space and instead make sure there’s always some support throughout the planned three months period.

The court knows that these five people have all been living in Berlin, and that family and friends will want to come from Berlin and beyond to attend. 

Also, four of the five families aren’t even in Germany, so they’ve got even further to travel

Yes

Is there anything that people who can’t attend the court case can do?

Media coverage is extremely important. This specific case has been covered very little, and only by a small and specific number of media houses in Germany. This is unfortunate and does not do justice to the background. In my opinion it would be appropriate for major news agencies to take up this story, given the motives and background involved. 

Sending letters has also been appreciated dearly, because this whole process is aimed at isolating them. It’s been over seven months and we cannot underestimate the power of emotional support.

I notice that while everybody in Britain knows of Palestine Action, even many German activists don’t know about the Ulm 5. Why is this and how can we turn this round?

What we’ve seen ever since October 2023 is that Germany is trying to silence any criticism of the Israeli government in the name of the so called Staatsräson, pleading complete loyalty to Israel no matter what, and trying to put everyone and everything who legitimately criticizes the state of Israel and this illegal war in the antisemitic corner.

This has had such a huge effect on the public that a lot of people have just become completely insecure if and how any legitimate criticism of Israel can be voiced. After two and a half years of witnessing a genocide, we have the obligation, especially as Germans, to universal human rights and to never again look away when they are violated, no matter by whom.

Even the Ulm 5 are being accused of antisemitism

Correct. The prosecution somehow has twisted the action to fit into its way of arguing why this action is antisemitic. I do not want to give away our defence strategy prematurely, but the defence will go to show why this is completely unfounded – and just another way of avoiding looking at the actual motives – during the trial hearing. 

How is the defense being financed?

We are court ordered lawyers. The state is advancing the money, but if convicted, the Ulm 5 will have to pay. If acquitted, then the state will end up paying.

How likely do you think that the Ulm 5 will win?

This might come as a surprise to you, but I’m actually convinced that we have a very good shot at proving that this action was justified under either section 32 or 34 of the German Criminal Code. Instead of Notwehr (self-defence), this is called Nothilfe, which is defense of someone else.

By showing that there is an ongoing present attack against the people of Palestine, and that no other measures were sufficient to stop Germany from exporting arms despite wide knowledge that this is against international law, the action was justified.

Once damage of property and entering are justified, this whole accusation of criminal organization just falls apart, because according to the definition a criminal organization is an organization whose purpose it is to commit criminal offences of some gravity – no criminal offences, no criminal organization. So, I’m hopeful.

Some people have been worried because Germany tends not to have jury trials. Does this mean that it’s weighted on the side of the prosecution?

At the end of the day, it’s the court who makes the decision, not the prosecution. And we do actually have two lay judges here, alongside the three other judges. This has its advantages and disadvantages. 

Usually prosecution and the court outnumbers the defence. In this specific case we are also many. We are five defendants with at least two defence lawyers each, so we are also strong in numbers.

But the real power imbalance usually doesn’t lie in the number of people in court, but in the resources that prosecution has. Prosecution can, at a whim, send out 50 policemen to investigate. Unlike us, they can call on 100 experts to give opinions without having to worry about how to finance it. But we’re not sparing any resources in our power in order to get across our point.

One of our important resources is public opinion. What can people do to support you?

Given the broad scope of 129 I don’t want to encourage people too much. Everyone needs to look out for themselves. But in terms of support for the legal aspects of the trial itself, we are working on everything we can. We’re in a good position. And if there’s still something we might need, we will ask specifically,

Is there anything we haven’t covered yet that you’d like to say

We talked about how there hasn’t been much coverage of the Ulm Five. Many of us wonder what has become of the anti-war movement from our parents’ generation. We had expected a much wider public to rally behind this kind of action. 

This was a direct action aimed at a weapons manufacturer – with the resurgence of the idea of mandatory military conscription and remilitarisation here in Germany, perhaps this presents an opportunity for the anti-war movement to get back on its feet, return to its core values, show up and show support.

As I said, getting the Five acquitted is not just about winning in court, but about winning the public opinion on what this direct action was aimed at.

Maybe there’s some hope in the school strikes.

Yeah, exactly

What can I do to support the Ulm 5?

The trial starts next Monday. Here’s what you can do to help

The Ulm 5

Five activists with various nationalities have spent the last 7 months in different prisons around South Germany. Their crime? Taking non-violent direct action against Elbit Systems. Elbit Systems is Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer (famous for their killer drones), and is deeply complicit in the Gaza genocide. 

Crow, Daniel, Leandra, Vi, and Zo are facing harsh pre-trial conditions, ranging from long hours spent in isolation to being deprived of ways to keep themselves entertained and even being stripped of their clothing for an unnecessary amount of time.

Their court hearings are set to begin on Monday, 27th April. 16 hearings have been planned over 3 months. Although all that they did was damage property, the German state is collectively charging the defendants with being part of a “criminal organisation.” This carries a possible jail sentence of 5 years for each of them.

In a crucial time of escalating Zionist and imperialist aggression, it is imperative to stand by activists who have taken courageous action while the state has refused to give up its support for Israel, and corporations are not held accountable for their material support. This article will detail some ways in which you can support them.

Go to the court cases

The Ulm 5 have been held for 8 months in de facto solitary confinement. The best way of showing how much we care about them is by showing up to their court hearings. We encourage everyone to self-organize and visit one or more of their trials. Bring your friends and comrades! For the first court hearing on the 27th of April, Berliners can make use of collectively organized transport and accommodation.

The trials will be held in the Stammheim Court in Stuttgart, Asperger Straße 47. Court hearings are planned for 27th April, 4th, 6th, 11th 20th 22nd, and 29th May, 15th, 19th and 29th June, and 1st, 3rd, 22nd, 24th, 27th, and 29th July. All court hearings will start at 9am. It is possible that some hearings will be canceled or rescheduled on short notice, so please stay informed here.

Filling the court with supporters helps strengthen the morale of the 5 and their lawyers, but please be aware that there is a limited number of seats available inside the court. 68 places are available in the court, of which 30 have been reserved for the press, leaving only 38 places free for family and supporters. 

Even if you cannot enter the court, the Five would like there to be as large a presence as possible. A rally will be held in front of the court from 8am onwards. Sometimes, judges are influenced positively by hearing the people outside. If the defendants are to enter the court before 8am, a rally may be organised earlier to greet them.

Get your solibus tickets at L5 Spati (Lenaustr. 5 daily 12-24 o’ clock) or by emailing common_journey_court_watch@systemli.org. The solibus will depart on Sunday April 26th at 10am from Südkreuz. That same bus will bring us to the court early in the morning on the 27th and back to Berlin after the court hearing ends.

Accommodation is arranged in Karlsruhe – just bring your sleeping mat and bag. The trial could last until 4 or 5pm. After that, people may stay for 30-60 minutes to wait for the defendants to leave the court. 

If you want to be in court, make sure you bring an ID or passport. It is likely that you will have to leave mobile phones, laptops, and other personal belongings in security lockers outside the court. Do not bring any items which could be interpreted as weapons (this includes metal water bottles), or any sensitive documents which could be confiscated by security.

Become a Trial Observer

German court cases are not recorded, and no transcript is made. This is why Trial Observers write down everything that is said in court and how it is said. Watch out for sarcasm and demeaning language. Written reports can help defence lawyers. They are particularly useful in the case of the defendants being convicted, as evidence based on the reports can be used to appeal the sentence. 

Try and write down everything you hear and see. If you get tired, note the time from which you are unable to pay full attention.

After the day is over, trial observers compare notes to produce a written report. You will only be allowed to take handwritten notes – transfer these to a computer as soon as you can. Try to distinguish between facts and subjective impressions. It is important that you do not publish your notes until checking with others, as this could jeopardize the case.

It is quite possible that the judge and security will try to deny entry to the court to some of us, so if you intend to take notes, do not wear clothes with slogans which may get you excluded. At present, it also appears possible that court observers might not be permitted to bring any writing materials into the court.

If you are interested in becoming a trial observer, there will be people on the buses to Stuttgart who you can talk to. Alternatively, send a message to us at team@theleftberlin.com, and we will help you make contact.

Support funding campaigns for parents to travel

Four of the Ulm 5 are not from Germany, which means that their families face exorbitant costs if they are to attend the trial. On top of this, the court cases have been staggered, so that 16 days in court will take place over 3 months. Attending each court case requires 16 potential journeys to their countries and back.

To help the families cover these costs, a number of crowdfunding campaigns have been set up. Please give generously:

Send letters to the prisoners

Many of the prisoners are being held in prison 23 hours a day. Letter writing is therefore a huge boost to their morale and helps keep them connected with the outside world and the campaign that supports them. At present, it takes 2 to 4 weeks for letters to arrive. Some letters have taken 5 months, and 2 that arrived only recently were sent in October.

When writing letters to prisoners, there are a few important things to consider.

  • Write a date on the letter so the prisoner will know when you sent it. 
  • Take a photo of the letter before you send it for your own records. 
  • Include a return address on the letter itself.
  • If you include anything in the envelope, write that you did so that the prisoner will know if any items were confiscated.
  • Letters with only a picture or drawing are not allowed, but you can send pictures as long as the envelope also contains a written letter.
  • It is forbidden for you to write about the Ulm 5’s action, the case, or related matters.

Please note that letters will be surveilled, and their contents might be used against the prisoners or even yourself. Do not write about the actions that the prisoner is detained for, the prisoner’s relation to the action, or how you feel about them, as this could put both them and you at risk. 

You can send an online letter to any or all of the prisoners here.

You can also write to Leandra in English or Spanish at the following address:
Leandra Daniela Rollo Valenzuela
JVA Memmingen
Gaswerkstr. 23
87700 Memmingen
Germany 

You can write to Vi at:
Vivien Sonja Kovarbasic
701 561/2025
JVA Schwäbisch Gmünd
Herlikofer Str. 19
73527 Schwäbisch Gmünd 
NOTE: Vi is only allowed to receive letters which are written in German.

You can write to Daniel at:
Daniel Tatlow-Devally
JVA Ulm
Frauengraben 4
89072 Ulm

Zo and Crow’s addresses are not public, but you can send them an online letter (see link above). You can also send letters to any prisoner (including Zo and Crow) via this post box:
C/O <prisoner name>
Postfach 91 01 07
12413 Berlin
Germany

You can find more tips about sending letters here.

Let people know

One of the biggest problems facing the Ulm 5 is that, despite the severity of their potential sentences, very few people know about their case. In contrast, say, to Palestine Action in the UK, where thousands of pensioners have let themselves be arrested in solidarity, very few people in Germany, including many activists, know about the Ulm 5. This makes it easier for the German state to isolate them and prevent a mass campaign from developing.

One of the simplest ways of showing solidarity is to ensure that as many people as possible know who the Ulm 5 are, what they did, and what they are being threatened with. We have the potential to build a campaign which is both broad and international.

Here are a few ways you could do this.

Inform yourself

The German state will benefit if the public at large is not paying attention to the court hearings. Public scrutiny matters. It is becoming increasingly clear that the state aims to threaten, repress and ultimately end anti-Zionist activism. The Ulm 5 could easily become a precedent for future repression. 

What further exacerbates their situation is that mainstream German media are not reporting about the Ulm 5. This is a problem for democracy. Staying informed and informing people you know about what happens to the Ulm 5 during their court hearings is a good place to start.

People in solidarity with the Ulm 5 have created this website and Instagram page to keep people informed and rally support. The Left Berlin website will also continue to keep the spotlight on the Ulm 5 during their trials.

Tell your friends and workmates

We can fight state oppression, media silence and the escalating criminalization of Palestine solidarity by building a shared consciousness with people we spend time with in our daily life. If we do not converse about the unfolding events, we miss the opportunity to see the current political climate for what it is. Let’s build educated networks that can meaningfully resist. 

No one wants to or should be made to live in a world where “might is right”, nor should we be forced to remain sidelined when the bombs drop on innocent people in Gaza, Lebanon, and Iran. Take this opportunity to stand by the people who risked so much to put a cog in the wheel of our genocidal economy, a risk not many are willing to take. Risk is only ever reduced by carrying it collectively. We can learn from British society’s remarkable solidarity with imprisoned Palestine Action activists.

Contact the media

If you are a journalist, write about what is happening to the Ulm 5. If you are not a journalist, you can still use social media to share stories and write your own opinions. Remember that this is not just a German story. The more coverage we get in the international media, the better.

Leaflets and petitions

We encourage every activist group or individuals to print out and distribute flyers and posters to promote the cause of the Ulm 5. 

  • The Gaza Komitee has weekly information stalls at various locations in Berlin where flyers about the Ulm 5 are distributed. Their stories will keep you posted on the time, location and whereabouts.
  • Download a leaflet about the Ulm 5 here available in English or Arabic and German.
  • Download a poster of the Ulm 5 here – print and hang in spaces of solidarity.

Organise local actions

There will be a rally Free the Ulm 5 at Oranienplatz on Thursday, April 23rd at 6.30pm. As the trial will last several months, there will be further opportunities for actions in Berlin – for example at Universities, or at embassies (between them, the Ulm 5 have nationalities of Irish, British, German, and Spanish-Argentinian). If you want to organise something, please let us know and The Left Berlin will help to publicise. 

Send a video message in your language

One way of keeping the story in the public eye, and to build international attention, is to share videos in social media. Make your own short message explaining what is happening to the Ulm 5 and why you support them. If you release the video on Instagram, tag the Ulm 5 and Left Berlin accounts and we will help share it.

Further Information

Court sentences student to over 2.5 years in prison without probation

Repression in Berlin – report #8

On Monday, April 13th, the Berlin Regional Court ruled on the attack on Lahav Shapia – a student known for his staunch support of Israel and campaigns against pro-Palestinian activists. No antisemitic motive could be established in the assault Shapira had suffered by a fellow student on the campus of the Free University. This ruling overruled an earlier decision by the local court.

Notwithstanding this decision, the Regional Court again sentenced A. to a prison term for aggravated assault. The sentence of two years and six months is more lenient than the original sentence of three years, but it rejected the accused’ lawyers appeal for probation.

In February 2024, a few months into Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, Shapira and A. happened to meet in a bar in Berlin-Mitte. Both were studying to become teachers at the Freie Universität (FU) Berlin. The initial conflict between the students became physical and A., with a background in martial arts, happened to injure Shapira. In court A. state that he was not seeking to cause severe or even lasting damage.

The attack had been preceded by a dispute at FU Berlin. Shapira had removed posters against the Israeli genocide at the FU, which had been hung as part of a pro-Palestinian occupation of a lecture hall. The two men did not know each other personally, but were active in the same chat groups, where students had debated the genocide and anti-Palestinian climate at the university. In these groups, Shapira and others advocated a pro-Israeli stance.

At the court in April, the question of the actual physical attack was never put up for debate. A. confessed early on that he had beaten Shapira. According to the public prosecutor, the “detective work” in the first trial tried to prove a specifically antisemitic motive for A. While the local court last year had spoken of an “antisemitic outburst of violence,” the appeal chamber of the Regional Court now saw things differently.

According to the presiding judge, there was no evidence that the defendant had an antisemitic attitude. Since the exact content of the act could not be reliably reconstructed, the court did not consider the motive proven beyond doubt. A., who lost his place at the FU and suffered from month of racist campaigning against him, had always denied an antisemitic motivation.

His defense lawyer emphasized, for example, that the exchange between the two men in the chats had been respectful for a long time, even though they argued over Israel-critical positions. A. had merely argued that it was wrong of Shapira to tear down the posters. Even in the first instance, no antisemitic statements by A. had been found during the taking of evidence.

The Berlin Regional Court’s decision to sentence A. to two and a half years in prison for aggravated assault, despite explicitly rejecting any antisemitic motive, exposes a deeply troubling logic.

The court admits that there is no evidence of antisemitic intent, no hate-driven ideology, no proven link between the defendant’s political views and the attack. Yet he is sent to prison. Meanwhile, Lahav Shapira — a person who actively removes pro-Palestinian posters, participates in creating a hostile online environment, and has now taken legal action to suppress campus solidarity with Palestine — is framed as a pure victim. His own political stance in support of a state that commits a life-streamed genocide is rendered invisible.

This case is not an outlier. It is a textbook example of how Germany’s judiciary systematically criminalises Palestinians and their supporters, in particular People of Colour, while sanitizing those who defend and advocate the inconceivable violence of the Israeli state.

25 April 1974: Carnation Revolution

This week in working class history

April 1974 marks the end of Portugal’s 42-year fascist dictatorship. On that day, after months of clandestine organising since September 1973, the Armed Forces Movement (Movimento das Forças Armadas, MFA) launched a military coup that overthrew the Estado Novo (“New State”) regime. 

Many of the military involved had grown disillusioned with the colonial wars in Guinea-Bissau, Angola and Mozambique, which they saw as unjust and unwinnable. In previous years, the country’s isolated position grew as the regime’s military spending rose in response to the independence movements in the “ultramarine territories”. Internally, many people were either resisting despite the repression, or fleeing the country to France and the United States. 

On 25 April, within hours, the MFA seized control of the national radio broadcaster and of key military centres across the country, forcing Prime Minister Marcelo Caetano (successor to António de Oliveira Salazar) to surrender. Despite the MFA’s warnings to stay home, the people took to the streets in support of the coup, and, in a whimsical act, flowers were distributed amongst the soldiers’ gun barrels – baptising it as the Carnation Revolution. 

The regime’s political police, PIDE, infamous for imprisonment, torture, and killings of dissidents, was dismantled shortly after. However, the revolution was not a day; but rather a process that lasted 19 months: 25 April kickstarted PREC – Ongoing Revolutionary Process, a period of intense political transformation, marked by popular mobilisation through strikes and demonstrations, the occupation and takeover of workplaces by the workers for weeks or sometimes months, especially in the southern and central parts of Portugal; initiatives for popular education, and the nationalisation of banking and other sectors. After months of political tension between the liberal and leftist-communist forces, the revolutionary wave came to an end in November 1975, with a right-wing, liberal, US-backed counter-coup. 

25 April is both a history of resistance and of working class consciousness; As Sérgio Godinho sang in 1974 – and the Portuguese people, to this day: “There is only true freedom when there is peace, bread, housing, health, education; there is only true freedom when what the people produce belongs to the people”. Read more here.

“The mainstream narrative is broken”

An interview with the editors of HEIST, a new worker-owned magazine in Berlin


21/04/2026

Could you introduce yourselves?

Ruthie Weissmann: My name is Ruthie, I was an editor at The Berliner and now I’m a founding editor at HEIST.

Peter Matthews: I’m Peter Matthews, I’m also a founding editor at HEIST.

What is the story behind founding HEIST?

PM: Both Ruthie and I were editors at The Berliner for many years and had for a long time wanted to start something of our own, for a few different reasons. We thought that there were conversations happening in the English-speaking world that weren’t really being reflected in its media, for one. And then more explicitly because for a few years we had felt a kind of censorship coming down on the sort of stories we were allowed to report. So at the beginning of this year we decided that enough was enough and that we would break free and put together this new project.

Did the scandal about the Nova Festival exhibition ads in The Berliner have anything to do with it?

RW: It didn’t have anything directly to do with our desire to found HEIST. But it definitely was a final straw for how we had been feeling and a moment when we realized that this was not going to materially get any better without changing something.

PM: That was the last straw, as Ruthie said, but we had been feeling censorship for more than a year at The Berliner. There had been an explicit order: don’t write about Palestine. That applied in one area of the magazine, specifically the daily news reporting. And then it seemed to spread more and more across the different areas, to culture, to interviews, to books you could review, to editors’ columns, to almost everywhere. It spread more and more, with the justification behind this being that they wanted to be neutral on the issue of Israel-Palestine.

RW: And just generally politically neutral.

PM: And generally apolitical, I would say. Impossible to do and be. And so when the Nova Festival ads were taken out, we saw that as a clear breach of this supposed neutrality that they had been maintaining for a long time. We were very upset about it. The freelance staff all went on strike over it. We were very sympathetic, and that ultimately led us to leave our jobs and start HEIST.

From your perspectives as journalists, how has the issue of Palestine affected the media landscape in Berlin since October 7?

RW: If you are familiar with the German news, you know that there are certain things they don’t cover. The ways that they write are already coming from what I would consider a biased place. I think there are a lot of people who don’t feel spoken to by that angle, which is coming from ownership a lot of the time. I have friends who work in German media who are frustrated by the tone of the outlets that they work for, and that’s part of why we wanted to make this thing. What independent media means and what worker ownership means is that this outlet is going to reflect the views of the people who work on it, and not just the views of rich people who happen to own media platforms.

PM: We don’t want journalism just to be the mouthpiece for the money behind it. I was talking to someone yesterday who was saying that German media on the whole often see their role as to reinforce the state line, even in investigative reporting. For example, you do a big investigation into Russian meddling or something. Of course there is Russian meddling and it should be investigated. But a lot of the ways that journalism is organized here is to agree with the state narrative and reinforce its theories and projects, rather than think a bit about the ways that our own system might be meddled, tampered with and distorted.

So it’s not only a matter of censorship, but also of funding, of who owns the press. The fact that HEIST is worker-owned is very important to you. Could you say more about what that means in practice? How do you function as a worker-owned outlet?

PM: Very simply, there are four of us in the team and we’re all owners of the thing. Our goal is to be overwhelmingly subscriber-funded and support the project by and large like that. But we also drafted our articles of association when we founded the business to say that any donations we get are completely separate from the editorial line.

RW: If people come on as larger donors, or investors, or shareholders, or just anyone who comes into the business, they have a legal duty to support the independent mission of the media. Their aim cannot be only to extract profit. This protects us from bad-faith investment. 

PM: Not to mention that whenever we bring on staff, we want to make sure that they have a stake in the project.

Let’s talk more about the project’s mission. On your website, you speak about the duty of the media to serve the community. A natural worry that one might have is that HEIST is an English-language magazine. What kind of Berliner community do you have in mind? Do you feel like HEIST represents and addresses a particular type of migrant?

PM: I think that we just want to speak to everybody who doesn’t have German as their first language. Now, that isn’t to say that Germans don’t read the magazine either. At The Berliner, I think, the largest audience was in fact Germans reading English. What we really have seen in the last years is that there are just different conversations happening in this city in English than there are happening in German. Perhaps it’s because of ownership and media consensus and so on. We want to be reflective of those conversations and make sure that there is a place where you can find all of that.

At the same time, we are keen to commission people from all different types of backgrounds and represent those experiences too. We ran a piece recently from Hebh Jamal, a Palestinian-American writer, about how that community was affected by October 7th, or from Ben Miller about the AfD weaponising LGBT identity for its own ends. We definitely want to make sure that there is a broad consensus of different types of communities and people having a platform on our site.

RW: That’s something that we’re always having to think about and wanting to think about. Especially as we’re starting out, we want to make sure that we are reflective of the conversations happening in as many Berlin communities as possible, and not just in our own communities. It’s an ongoing challenge, which is fun.

Do you see HEIST as having a political line?

PM: We don’t see politics as something that’s separate from culture or from the city. We definitely come out in reaction to the idea that was famously expressed by Wim Wenders at the Berlinale, in an embarrassing speech where he said that art has nothing to do with politics, it’s the opposite of politics. We are the opposite of that. We see the two things as completely in dialogue. We want to look at politics in the ways that it affects culture and the ways that it interacts with the city. We have our own politics, but it’s not like we adhere to a specific line, or we follow a party, or we’re a mouthpiece for a position.

RW: We would never write something and come out and say, “this person has bad politics.” Unless maybe someone’s writing an opinion column. It’s more about which stories we choose to cover and the evidence that we choose to include, which maybe German media wouldn’t choose. And about who we’re willing to give a voice to.

Another statement on your website refers to the “struggle” for the “future of the city.” What role do you see yourselves, and independent media in general, as having in shaping the future of Berlin?

RW: It’s a bit of an abstract concept, I guess. We want more people to be given information that allows them to think about how they live in Berlinand what’s really going on here. A lot of the time when people resonate with a story, it’s because it’s something that they’ve already been thinking about but kind of didn’t know the context or didn’t have the data or evidence to really talk about it from an informed place. So I see our role as being able to give context and narrative to stuff that people may already be thinking or worrying about. Hopefully, over time, this pushes the direction of the city toward more people being engaged and figuring out how they want to actively interact with the issues going on here rather than worrying about them in the background.

PM: Not just in Berlin, but in lots of different cities across the world, you can see that the problem of a bought-up media and a completely privileged and interested media class has meant that people are going more to work on their own models. There’s Hell Gate in New York, Defector, Equator in London, which are explicitly positioned in reaction to the fact that the mainstream narrative is so broken. As everything gets bought up and closed off, the space emerges for people to find worker-owned, authentic outlets that are able to say things as they really see them rather than relying on those old structures. And I think that that does make a difference in the future of the city, if you have a place for those kinds of projects.

What do you think are the chances that worker-owned, small outlets have of surviving? The Berliner started as independent and local until it was bought out. What is your plan to survive without giving in to the same pressures?

PM: Well, Exberliner made it 20 years before it was bought out. It was a great shame that it was sold off, but, when we worked there, we saw how things could be done better, not just from an editorial stance, but in various ways. We were hands-on building a lot of the structures that made it grow and expand. But we weren’t able to access some things, like speaking directly to subscribers, or using new media in different ways and building different channels. I think that we really want to try and develop as many ways as possible to ensure that this platform exists for the future. Obviously, we really need support for that, but we are hoping to be in it for the long haul.

What can readers expect from HEIST in the near future?

RW: We’ve been doing daily news, so you can get a good news hit every day from us. Then we have a newsletter once a week that has one big, really strong story from the city, and usually it expands on something that’s going on right now or gives a wider perspective. We’re going to be ramping up food and culture content pretty soon, and shortly after that there will be a weekly podcast.

Broadly, they can expect perspective and on-the-ground reporting, which I think isn’t offered enough in English media here. They can expect writing from people who are going out into the city, talking to people and bringing that back.

PM: We’ve been paying attention quite closely to Berlin for a long time, and there are lots of areas that we have on our list to investigate and explore. We have stories that we’re interested in doing and writers that we’re looking forward to commissioning. There’s a lot coming up that we’re really eager to share with everyone.

RW: Also we’re just hoping to have some fun with it. To bring people both serious, political stories, but also just some silly stuff and some fun stuff, things that are going unnoticed in the city.

How can people support you?

PM: Definitely sign up for our newsletter. Come and put in your email, it doesn’t cost anything. If you want to donate, that’s great, we welcome reader support.

RW: And tell us what you want to hear. Tell us what stories you want covered, what conversations you’re hearing in the city. Anything that you’re not seeing in other media, you can write to us at hello@heistberlin.com.