DISABLED campaigners in wheelchairs last Saturday blocked
Oxford Circus – one of central London’s
busiest junctions – for two hours to protest at Con-Dem Coalition cuts to
welfare and disability benefits.
The group Disabled
People Against Cuts (DPAC) was backed by the
activist group UK Uncut, which aims to pressure wealthy businesses into paying
their fair share of taxes. The UK Uncut activists met at Holborn Tube – closely
monitored by police, and set off for a roundabout trip on the underground,
followed by the police.
This gave the
wheelchair users the opportunity to get to Oxford Circus and block it across
the northern end of Regent Street
with a line of wheelchairs chained together and chained to railings at either
end before the police could stop them.
Within about 20
minutes, with traffic stationary and congestion spilling over into other
streets, around 300 people were standing at the junction, chanting, playing
drums and waving placards against the welfare reform bill, which was last week
given a mauling in the House of Lords where even Tory peers could not stomach
some of the savage cuts to the most vulnerable people in the country.
This week the Bill
goes back to the House of Commons where Prime Minister David Cameron said he
would undo all the amendments the Lords had made.
After the road had
been blocked for just over an hour, police asked over a loudhailer that the
protesters move, which they refused to do. Eventually, at around 2pm, they unchained themselves and left
voluntarily.
Planned cuts to the
Disability Living Allowance under the bill could see 500,000 disabled people
losing money, according to the charity Mencap.
Many of the disabled
people taking part said they had never before joined a demonstration but felt
angry at both the proposed cuts and the associated rhetoric from both ministers
and the media.
"The tabloids
have created this idea that we're scroungers or fakers," said Steven
Sumpter, a 33-year-old who travelled from Evesham, Worcestershire, starting at 6.30am to join the line of chained-up
wheelchair users. "This has allowed the Government to do this – I think
disabled people are seen as a good scapegoat."
Merry Cross, from Reading,
Berkshire, said disabled people needed to work together
to get their voices heard. She said: "We're seen as quite an easy target.
We're not a natural community – we don't necessarily live in the same places,
and we can find it hard to get together. That makes it easy for the Government
to think they can target us."
Changes to the
disability living allowance were likely mean her losing care assistance at
home, Cross said, adding: "I've had it continuously for 20 years and now,
when I'm 61, apparently I can cope fine without it. It doesn't make any sense."
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