Monday, March 25, 2013

No to sanctions! No to war!




By New Worker correspondent

NEW COMMUNIST PARTY members joined other supporters of Democratic Korea outside the American embassy in Grosvenor Square in London on Tuesday to condemn the latest US war-games in south Korea that threaten the peace of the whole region. The two-hour protest picket, organised by the Korean Friendship Association, leafleted passers-by while a number of speakers took the microphone to denounce the “Foal Eagle” and “Key Resolve” exercises now taking place in the occupied south of the Korean peninsula.
Dermot Hudson of the KFA led the demand for an end to sanctions and for all American troops to leave south Korea while NCP leader Andy Brooks called for the release of Ro Su Hui, the south Korean peace activist jailed for four years for visiting the north last year.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

No Platform! Non paseran!





By New Worker
Correspondent

ANTI-FASCISTS and anti-racists in Britain are doing a good job and this is shown by the poor state of the main fascist and racist organisations in Britain – the British National Party and the English Defence League, which have both seen major setbacks in the last two or three years and struggle to mobilise more than a handful of supporters at public events.
 “But the EDL didn’t just melt away; we melted it,” Weyman Bennett, joint secretary of Unite Against Fascism told a packed auditorium at the UAF’s national conference at the TUC’s Congress House in London last Saturday.
The room was packed with activists from all around Britain, from dozens of towns – Brighton, Bristol, Cambridge, Walthamstow, Aldgate, Barking and many other places – where the UAF and local anti-fascists have come out on to the streets and simply peacefully but forcefully blocked roads to prevent the EDL marching through their home towns.
There was one exception – there was no delegation from Manchester because in that city comrades were out on the streets that very day, barring the way to the EDL. The EDL thugs had deliberately timed their march to coincide with the UAF conference in the vain hope it would mean the UAF could not run a national conference and still have enough people to block them.
There were some high profile speakers including Labour MP Diane Abbott, former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, NUT general secretary Christine Blower and Claude Moraes, a Labour member of the European Parliament.
 Diane Abbott, like many of the speakers, cited the recession and the austerity programme of the Con-Dem Coalition as fostering racism and fascism. “In the middle of a recession, where ordinary people are afraid for their jobs and their houses and their living standards, inevitable this fosters racism as the ruling class seeks to scapegoat ‘the others’ – the Irish, the Jewish, the Black and now the Muslims.”
 She said she hoped the main political parties, in particular the Labour Party, would “not learn the wrong lessons” from the UKIP surge at the Eastleigh by-election last Thursday and lurch to the right to appease anti-immigration scaremongers.
 “The white and black working class is suffering low wages, unemployment and austerity because of the deregulation of the labour market, it is this that holds wages down, not immigration,” she said.
 Abbott called for a campaign to refute the lies that immigration is “putting the welfare state under pressure”. “If it wasn’t for immigrants we would not have an NHS,” she said.
 Ken Livingstone spoke of the “assault on multiculturalism”, especially in the Daily Mail, citing its scaremongering campaigns against the Irish, Jews, West Indians, Asians and now Romanians and Bulgarians.
The conference included eight workshops on many aspects of the struggle, including one on the necessity to sustain the policy of no platform for fascists, which was addressed by Gerry Gable, editor of the anti-fascist magazine Searchlight.
But this was a theme taken up time and time again by many speakers. Sabby Dhalu, joint UAF secretary, said this policy was vital and was the reason why fascist and neo-Nazi groups in Britain were kept to the fringes while in other European countries the lack of the no-platform policy allowed them to get a toehold in the mainstream political arena and portray themselves as respectable.
But the most important speakers were those who came from the floor to tell of their experiences in fighting racism and fascism in their home towns, workplaces and unions. And they included a Holocaust survivor from France who spoke of the continuing fight against fascism in France.

Millwall FC bans racist fan



 A MAN claiming to be a Millwall supporter who shouted racist abuse at Leeds United striker El-Hadji Diouf has been fined £425 and banned for life by Millwall Football Club.
Gerrard Scanlon, 53, from Enfield, North London, pleaded guilty to a racially aggravated public order offence at Bromley Magistrates' Court.
He was fined £425 and ordered to pay £85 costs plus a £15 victim surcharge, and was banned from football matches for five years by the court.
Millwall have however banned Scanlon from the Den for life. He may not enter the London boroughs of Lewisham or Southwark when Millwall are playing at home for the next two years, nor go to any city where Millwall are playing away that day.
Scanlon launched his abusive rant during the Championship clash at the Den on 18th November.
In a statement Millwall said: "The club had already decided to ban Scanlon for life from all matches at The Den. "We are pleased that the behaviour of this individual came to notice, and that the police and the courts have now taken action against him.
"Millwall Football Club will continue to operate a zero tolerance policy to target and ban any fan guilty of displaying racist behaviour and we look forward to developing even closer links with other agencies, including those in the media who share our determination to eradicate racism from our game."

Government retreat on NHS privatisation



by New Worker correspondent

A CROWD of NHS campaigners outside the Houses of Parliament last Tuesday cheered at the news of a small Government retreat on new NHS regulations that would have compelled the new NHS commissioning bodies to put virtually all treatments they want done up for competitive bidding.
The House of Lords was debating secondary legislation under Section 75 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 that would have been due to pass into law without debate in the House of Commons as an automatic update of  Act. But the change was spotted by campaigners and massive opposition built within a few days.
The Government now admits the wording of the new regulations was “confusing” and will redraft the relevant section. This does not mean the battle is won, it means the defenders of the NHS have won a little more time.
 This was the message of the speakers at the rally on College Green last Tuesday, who included MPs Steve Pound, Caroline Lucas, Andy Slaughter and Virenda Sharma. The protest was organised by Save Our Hospitals.