Category: london

  • Extinction Rebellion protestors have ‘occupied parliament’ after a group of nine demonstrators staged a sit-down protest in the middle of the Palace of Westminster’s central lobby, unfurling a banner which read: “”G7 pay your climate debt”.

    Extinction Rebellion, often shortened to XR, have staged a number of high profile and disruptive protests across London in the past few years, including blocking Tower Bridge and key roads in the centre of the city in a bid to make lawmakers take more drastic action to address global warming and avert a climate crisis.

    The post Updates as Extinction Rebellion protestors occupy Parliament over ‘climate debt’ appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Recently, police told Palestine Action activists who were under arrest, that Elbit was abandoning its London Headquarters at 77 Kingsway. Security at the company’s entrance told Samantha Asumadu, a freelance journalist, working for the Big Issue, that Elbit was not at the site and they had never heard of them. The front desk also confirmed that the Israeli arms firm were not there and even denied the company ever was, despite it being well known that Elbit was leasing the sixth floor for many years. A separate security guard confirmed to another source that Elbit had indeed left the building.

    This makes 77 Kingsway the second Elbit site permanently shut down by Palestine Action, in less than 2 years of sustained direct action. Behind closed doors, war criminals have been facilitating Elbit’s British-based operations — no more!

    The post Palestine Action Permanently Shut Down Israeli Arms Firm’s London HQ appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • A man whose uncle died in the Grenfell Tower fire has described the lack of justice in the five years since the tragedy as “torture” and said it has prevented him being able to grieve.

    Karim Mussilhy said he has not been able to sit down and come to terms with what happened to his uncle, Hesham Rahman, on the night of June 14 2017.

    The 36-year-old said he never would have imagined being in this situation, five years on from the tower-block blaze, and said he feels the fight “gets harder and harder the longer it goes on”.

    Another Grenfell could happen tomorrow

    In an interview with the PA news agency to mark the fifth anniversary of the tragedy in west London, he said:

    This is torture, we are being tortured. We can’t move on. We can’t grieve.

    We can’t rebuild, as much as we’re trying to.

    Mussilhy, a father-of-two who is part of the Grenfell United campaign group, warned that “Grenfell Two” will happen if things stay the same.

    He continued:

    It’s been incredibly frustrating that we’re still having to do the things that we’re doing today in order to get some changes.

    And if you really look at it, if you look at sort of the big picture and the grand scheme of things, what has actually changed in five years

    He said:

    Can another Grenfell happen tomorrow? Yes, it can.

    And if it does, are people safe? No, they’re not.

    Do our firefighters have the right equipment and training to save people? No, they don’t.

    What have we done? What have we learned since Grenfell?

    Despite the frustration, Mussilhy said survivors, the bereaved, and members of the community are determined not to allow their campaign to “just be kicked into the long grass”.

    He added:

    We’re quite resilient and we’re quite relentless, so we will keep going, we will keep pushing, we will keep fighting until some element of positivity comes out of this and there’s some accountability.

    “We don’t have justice”

    Other members of the community said they feel dehumanised and cannot fully heal until there is justice.

    Samia Badani, 47, who lives in Bramley House near the tower, said:

    Five years on, we don’t want to wish what happened in this community to any community in any part of this country or the world.

    That was sheer devastation and how do you grow out of devastation? We don’t have closure, we don’t have justice and we don’t have change.

    And we are not asking for much – we’re just asking to be treated as human beings.

    Badani said the community needs to “make sense of what happened” to be able to heal and recover.

    But she added:

    It is hard to make sense of something so horrible unless you hold people accountable.

    Government grovelling

    Speaking in the House of Commons on Thursday, Communities Secretary Michael Gove apologised for the Government’s response over the last five years.

    He said:

    Again, I want to apologise to the bereaved, to relatives and survivors for the fact that the Government over the last five years has sometimes been too slow in acting… sometimes we have behaved in a way which has been insensitive.

    A spokesman for the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities said the tragedy must “never be allowed to happen again” and its thoughts are with the bereaved, survivors and the community.

    He said:

    So far 45 of the UK’s biggest housebuilders have signed our developer pledge and will contribute £5 billion to fix their unsafe buildings.

    We expect them to work swiftly so people feel safe in their homes, and we will be carefully scrutinising their progress.

    The Building Safety Act brings forward the biggest improvements in building safety for a generation, giving more rights and protections for residents than ever before.

    “It is shameful”

    London Fire Commissioner Andy Roe said:

    Five years on, it is shameful that we are still seeing designs for buildings that we do not think are safe.

    We have repeatedly called for urgent culture change in the building and construction industry when it comes to fire safety in residential buildings and the lack of change so far is unacceptable.

    We all owe it to the bereaved families, the survivors and the residents – whose lives have been torn apart by what happened that night – to continue to learn, change and improve.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The Metropolitan Police tasered a Black man several times on Chelsea Bridge Road in London. As they advanced on him, the man fled and jumped into the river Thames. He was rescued from the river by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. The man is as yet unnamed. As usual, people have to rely on civilian recordings of the incident to see what actually happened.

    Operation Withdraw Consent shared the footage a bystander recorded:

    The police have said they received reports that the man was holding a screwdriver. As the video shows, he is clearly in some distress.

    As the police taser him, he falls to the ground screaming in pain. He yells something at the two officers advancing on him. They then tase him again and the man rolls on the ground, twitching. This happens yet another time. The man then runs over a barrier at the side. As the officers pursue him, he jumps over the railing and into the Thames.

    Reporting

    We can trust neither the mainstream media nor the police to accurately report what happened.

    The police said that after their officers tasered the man he:

    subsequently entered the river.

    A number of outlets also used similar euphemisms. The Independent said the man “fell”:

     

    The BBC also said the man fell:

     

    Sky News made it sound as though the man simply fell into the Thames and was then pulled out:

     

    By saying that the man “fell” into the river, the media are neatly following the narrative the police set out. There’s a huge difference between saying that the man was involved in an incident with tasers and “entered” the river, and saying that he jumped into the river after being repeatedly tasered.

    Outrage

    Many people on social media discussed these awful policing tactics. Others also noticed the terrible reporting:

    Commentator Michael Morgan said:

    Meanwhile Deborah Coles, director of charity INQUEST which monitors state-related deaths, said:

    And outgoing Goldsmiths student union president Sara Bafo said we must withdraw power from the police:

    Moreover, journalist Lorraine King explained how Black people are more likely to be tasered for longer than white people:

    Anti-Blackness

    Figures from the Home Office a year ago show:

    Black people were four times more likely to have force used against them by Met police officers than white people, and five times more likely to have Taser-like devices used against them by the force.

    As King said above, Black people are also more likely to be tased for longer. A report from the Independent Office for Police Conduct found that Black people are more likely to have a taser fired at them for longer than 5 seconds. They also said:

    In the majority of cases involving either allegations of discrimination or common stereotypes and assumptions, there was evidence that the individual concerned had mental health concerns or a learning disability. This supports findings by others that the intersectionality of race and mental health can increase the risk of higher levels of use of force.

    If the media reports the police’s actions in a passive or sanitised way, it only enables them to continue to be violent towards Black people. This man did not “fall” into the river. He died trying to escape police violence.

    Just last month, Operation Withdraw Consent said:

    We want our communities to be given the power to respond to the 80 per cent of non-criminal incidents that the police respond to – as we believe that a community response, rooted in resolution and meeting individual needs, would have better outcomes.

    We must withdraw our consent from aggressive policing. And in order to do that, we need to be able to understand and call out journalism that’s in service to the police and not the public.

    Featured image via Twitter/screenshot – Operation Withdraw Consent

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • This morning, three activists have shut down the London headquarters of Israeli weapons company Elbit Systems. Activists have locked on at the site entrance, preventing access to the site – 77 Kingsway. The trio have left the site dripping in red paint, representing Palestinian blood spilt by Elbit’s trade – the company produces drones and ammunitions. Elbit supply the Israeli occupation military with 85% of its drone fleet. Elbit’s British sites are directly involved in the manufacturing of Hermes 450/900 and Watchkeeper drones.

    The post Palestine Action Return To Shut Down Israeli Arms Firm HQ In London appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • A mother-of-four has described how she “broke down in tears” having to pick between food and gas, as the cost-of-living crisis continues to pile pressure on families.

    Phoenix, who chose not to disclose her surname, from Crystal Palace in south-east London, said her children are being denied simple things like sweets due to the cost.

    The 33-year-old told the PA news agency:

    There’s been so many times where I’ve just broken down in tears because of having to choose between gas or food.

    My children are being denied the small things in life, like having a sweet from the shop. It’s not nice having to say no to your children.

    It has affected my emotional wellbeing… it’s enough to make you not want to be here anymore.

    Government “not helping”

    She relies on benefits and said the rising cost of living has affected everything, including her children’s education:

    I’ve gone without gas for three or four days because I’ve gone from putting on £10-£15 a week, to having to put on £30-£40 every four days

    That is a lot of money to be putting on, the rising costs just affect everything in your life, whether you’re on benefits or not.

    Even with petrol, £20 used to get me around 100 miles but these days I get around 70-80 miles maximum and then it’s gone.

    She also said:

    I have a lot of health problems at the moment and I’ve had days where I have to walk my kids to school which has made them late, or they’ve had to miss whole days.

    Households are facing soaring energy bills, inflation is forecast to hit 10% and welfare payments and wages are falling far behind the increase in prices.

    On Tuesday, the Prime Minister came under fire over a lack of short-term measures in the Queen’s Speech to help people facing soaring costs.

    In response, he warned the Government cannot “completely shield” people from the rising cost of living.

    Phoenix said the lack of support has left her feeling “helpless” and she criticised the Government.

    She said:

    I feel like (the Government) is not helping and I feel like they are playing games with us.

    I think if they had kept to their promises up until now, we probably wouldn’t even be in this situation, but they always give us false hope.

    I’ll be so honest, if I had known everything I know now back then, I probably would have chosen not to have children.

    I feel helpless and I wouldn’t want them to live this life.

    By The Canary

  • Peace is not just the absence of war; it is real security, writes Jeremy Corbyn.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • A large number of people on Friday staged a mass protest in front of the Israeli Embassy in London, condemning the continuous Israeli aggression on Palestinian worshippers at Al-Aqsa Mosque.

    The protesters also called for an immediate end to Israeli occupation forces and settler attacks on Palestinian residents of the holy city and worshippers at Al-Aqsa Mosque.

    The Palestinian Forum in Britain, the Muslim League in Britain and the Palestine Solidarity Campaign jointly organized the event.

    The post Mass protest in front of London Israel embassy appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Train fares are a terrible rip off in the UK. No news there. But just how much of a racket they have become may surprise you. Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has dug up some comparisons which really bring home how bad things have got.

    Burnham decided to compare ticket fees to international flights. And what he found was off the scale:

    That’s right. An advanced ticket to various locations on literally the other side of planet Earth will set you back less than a visit to see your mate or your nan or go sightseeing in London.

    In a piece for the Evening Standard, Burnham said this was wrong on many metrics:

    For as long as train tickets cost more than plane tickets, the economics of transport in the UK will be in entirely the wrong place when it comes to facing up the climate crisis. But the truth is it unlikely to change any time soon.

    Outrage

    For doubters, Burnham screen-grabbed the results of a ticket search and tweeted that too:

    Incredibly unfair, you might say. And you’d be right. While some people attacked Burnham’s claims, many other social media users seemed to agree:

    Indeed, some people were all-caps level shocked at some of the responses:

    European comparisons

    But you don’t even have to travel the entire globe to find out how badly scammed UK train users are. Right next door in mainland Europe, comparative fares are a fraction of the price:

    London to Manchester is a 164-mile trip that costs £369.40, according to Burnham’s estimate. According to the Trainline website, a return trip from Paris to Nantes would set you back just over £115. That is for a 212-mile journey.

    A comparable trip from Barcelona to Valencia, taking in the fabulous Spanish coastline (as opposed to the delights of Crewe and Birmingham New Street), would cost you £85.59.

    Travelling from Rome to Naples, and coming back tomorrow, would cost you £81.64.

    Stitched up

    Whether you compare it to the cost of travelling internationally, or the price our neighbours pay for a European train trip, transport in the UK is an absolute mess. People are being priced out of opportunities by money-grabbing firms and a government which refuses to even make fares affordable, let alone consider renationalising public transport.

    It’s time for a serious campaign to make public transport affordable again for everyone.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Fsheng666, cropped to 770 x 403, licenced under CC BY-SA 4.0

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Concern about a placename’s associations with slavery – unlike cosying up to oligarchs – doesn’t put anyone on Russia’s side

    Beware the journalistic use of the word “we”. It’s a slippery pronoun that can slide from meaning “we, the whole of humanity” to “we, the author and some like-minded friends” to “we, an ill-defined mass who uphold an imaginary consensus that the author wishes bravely to oppose”.

    It’s out in force in the persistent and evidence-free claims that “woke wars”, as the Daily Telegraph’s Sherelle Jacobs put it last week, have gravely undermined “our” ability to confront the evils of Vladimir Putin. In the cold war, she claims, conflict with the Soviet Union was “confidently framed” as one between “the enlightened forces of liberty and the darkness of communism”. Now, “we” are tearing ourselves apart with “squabbles over statues and gender pronouns”.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Reclaim These Streets welcomes judges’ decision as ‘a victory for women’ and calls for Met reform

    The Metropolitan police breached the rights of the organisers of a planned vigil for Sarah Everard in the way they handled the planned event, high court judges have ruled, in a decision hailed as a “victory for women”.

    Reclaim These Streets (RTS) proposed a socially distanced vigil for the 33-year-old, who was murdered by a serving Met officer, Wayne Couzens, near to where she went missing in Clapham, south London, in March last year.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Charlie Kimber asked the Socialist Tendency of the Russian Federation for the latest news from the anti-war frontline.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • It is more than a century since Edward Bernays, the father of spin, invented “public relations” as a cover for war propaganda, writes John Pilger. What is new is the virtual elimination of dissent in the mainstream.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Activists in London gathered at Captain Cook’s statue in solidarity with mass rallies and dawn services held to mark Invasion Day in Australian cities on January 26, reports Kerry Smith.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Award made to Kate Wilson after tribunal rules police grossly violated her human rights

    An environmental activist who was deceived into a two-year intimate relationship by an undercover police officer has been awarded £229,000 in compensation after winning a landmark legal case.

    Kate Wilson won the compensation after a tribunal ruled in a scathing judgment that police had grossly violated her human rights in five ways.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • A roundup of the coverage of the struggle for human rights and freedoms, from Cambodia to Costa Rica

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Three Extinction Rebellion activists who disrupted a London train during rush hour were acquitted by a jury Friday.

    The three defendants, who said they were motivated by their Christian faith, did not deny their actions. Instead, they argued that their protest was lawful under the Human Rights Act.

    The post London Jury Acquits 3 Extinction Rebellion Activists appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • London’s Night Tube service will not resume on the evening of 27 November because of industrial action. The situation has sparked debate – especially around Sadiq Khan’s criticism of striking workers.

    Strike

    Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union will walk out at 8.30pm on the Victoria and Central lines in a dispute over drivers’ rosters. Tube services were disrupted on 26 November after drivers launched a 24-hour strike, which led to criticism from Khan. The strike will be followed by more weekend stoppages in the run up to Christmas.

    The 27 November strike will last for eight hours, altering plans to restart the Night Tube this weekend. It was due to resume after being suspended last year because of the pandemic.

    On 26 November, Khan said:

    But his intervention drew criticism:

    Khan was also criticised by Conservatives who noted he once said “strikes are ultimately a sign of failure”:

    Union response

    RMT says Transport for London (TfL) has “ripped up “ an agreement on Night Tube driving by changing rosters. Meanwhile TfL says no jobs are being lost and the changes mean drivers would work around four Night Tube weekends a year.

    RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said:

    The widespread impact on services is solely down to management failure to recognise and address the anger of their staff at the imposition of damaging and unacceptable working practices.

    This action was wholly avoidable if LU (London Underground) bosses hadn’t attempted to bulldoze through arrangements that abolished the Night Tube driver grade, lumping everyone into a central pool where they can be shunted about at will in a drive to cut costs.

    Our members have spoken and it’s time for London Underground to start listening.

    The Mayor and his officials need to recognise our determination to defend progressive and family-friendly working practices. We remain available for talks.

    Andy Lord, London Underground’s managing director, said:

    I am very sorry for the inconvenience that this strike action is causing. We understand that our customers will be frustrated by the RMT’s strike action, which is timed to cause maximum disruption to London…

    We are expecting to operate a reduced service overnight tonight on the Central and Victoria lines and on 3-5 December, 10-12 December and 17-18 December. Customers are advised to check before they travel and use buses to complete their journeys where required.

    Nick Dent, director of London Underground customer operations said:

    At such a pivotal time for the capital’s recovery, we are hugely disappointed that the RMT is threatening London with this unnecessary action.

    By making changes to Tube driver rosters we have provided greater flexibility for drivers as well as permanent work and job security, something welcomed by all other unions

    Meanwhile, Tribune editor Ronan Burtenshaw drew attention to what could potentially be another scandal of dishonesty in politics:

    Khan has previously spoken out about ‘lies’ told by former London mayor Boris Johnson:

    Featured image via YouTube

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • On Friday 29 October, climate activists set up a ‘climate memorial ahead of the COP26 climate summit, which is being held in Glasgow this week.

    According to the campaigners’ press release:

    on the eve of COP26 climate talks, Coal Action Network were joined by Youth Strikers from across the world and the Pacific Climate Warriors, to set up a climate justice memorial at Lloyd’s of London HQ (1 Lyme Street). The climate memorial was created to remember communities on the front lines of climate breakdown, who are being directly impacted by harmful projects and climate impacts. 

    The campaigners explained why they chose to set up the memorial at Lloyds of London insurance market:

    Lloyd’s of London is an insurance market, composed of many underwriters and insurance companies. Lloyd’s is known for insuring projects that no one else will, which increasingly includes climate-destroying fossil fuel projects, making it a major global energy insurer. 

    Lloyds must rule out “insuring all fossil fuels”

    Lloyds of London won’t rule out insuring the projects that are contributing to climate catastrophe. According to the campaigners:

    Staff were asked to speak to senior management in Lloyd’s about ruling out insuring all fossil fuels, as well as, various fossil fuel projects including the Adani Coal mine [in Australia], tar sands, TransMountain pipeline [both in Canada], West Cumbria coal mine, and the Cambo oilfields [in the Shetland Islands].

    The group also called on Lloyd’s to rule out any possible involvement with the Silvertown Tunnel [in Newham], and for Lloyd’s to pay compensation for climate impacts. 

    Stop ignoring the “communities being affected by climate breakdown

    Elara from Coal Action Network said:

    the memorial brought to life the memories of every person harmed by the injustices of the climate crisis. We’ve laid wreaths naming climate wrecking projects we want Lloyd’s of London to rule out underwriting today, and help to prevent billions of lives being destroyed by climate impacts. Lloyd’s needs to stop ignoring the climate science and communities being affected by climate breakdown.

    Groups representing the people most affected by climate change joined the memorial outside Lloyds of London:

    Protesters were joined by 20 Friday for Future MAPA (Most Affected People and Areas) youth strikers from some communities most affected by climate change globally (including Bangladesh, Philippines, Argentina, Nigeria). Members of the Pacific Climate Warriors who have been calling on Lloyd’s to stop insuring the Adani Carmichael coal mine, brought flowers native to the Pacific Islands to add to the memorial. Representatives gave testimonies from their communities, which included those on the front lines of fossil fuel projects and climate impacts. 

    Joseph Sikulu from Pacific Climate Warriors said:

    Our communities grapple with climate impacts everyday. As sea levels rise we risk losing everything. The insurance industry should also understand the business risks of climate change. Climate fueled disasters like hurricanes and wildfires are costing the industry billions. It is in our shared interests to act by stopping the major driver of global warming: coal. Lloyd’s of London must show leadership now and act on the climate crisis by refusing insurance for climate wrecking coal projects like Adani’s Carmichael mine in Australia.

    Banks need to “decolonise their business”

    Farzana Faruk Jhumu from Bangladesh stated:

    I am in the UK to ask the banks and companies to decolonise their business. UK companies like Lloyds of London are supporting fossil fuels and we want them to shift this to renewable energy. Lloyds of London needs to sort out their act.

    Patience Nabakalu from Uganda joined the protest because of having to live with climate breakdown: 

    We live a life of floods every day, and I am traumatised by it. I couldn’t go to school because of flooding. I learned that this all happens because of climate change. I had no option but to wake up and act.

    Lindsay Keenan, of international campaign, Insure our Future, has been trying to engage Lloyds of London about its policies. She said:

    We tried for at least 6 months to engage Lloyds in negotiations about its climate policy. Lloyds approach to the climate and its ongoing insurance of the world’s worst fossil fuel projects is greenwash, delay, and business as usual. Frankly Lloyds is a disgrace and needs much more public and regulatory attention to make its senior managers start to take climate science and its responsibilities seriously.

    This is not the first such action to target Lloyds of London, and it forms part of a global campaign to bring the reality of the climate crisis to the doorsteps of global financial and insurance institutions.

    Featured image via Coal Action Network (with permission)

    By Tom Anderson

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Just after the bombshell revelations about the CIA plot to kidnap and assassinate WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange while he sought political asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, the Progressive International comes to London with the first physical Belmarsh Tribunal. The intervention comes ahead of Assange’s extradition proceedings, which are set to continue in London’s High Court from 27 to 28 October 2021.

    The post Free Julian Assange: The Belmarsh Tribunal Comes To London appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • London’s Tube map has been reimagined to celebrate the contribution Black people have made to British life throughout history.

    Black history

    The 272 station names have been replaced by notable Black figures from pre-Tudor times to the present day. They include the first Black woman to serve in the Royal Navy, who disguised herself as a man called William Brown.

    Other people featured are Victorian circus owner Pablo Fanque; composer and poet Cecile Nobrega, who led a 15-year campaign to establish England’s first permanent public monument to Black women in Stockwell, south London; and Jamaican-born settler to Edinburgh John Edmonstone, who taught naturalist Charles Darwin taxidermy.

    The map was produced by Transport for London in partnership with Black Cultural Archives, a cultural centre in Brixton, south London.

    London mayor Sadiq Khan said:

    Black history is London’s history and this reimagination of the iconic Tube map celebrates the enormous contribution black people have made, and continue to make, to the success of our city. I’m determined to create a more equal city where black lives truly matter.

    This starts with education and that’s why this new black history Tube map is so important.

    It gives us all the chance to acknowledge, celebrate and learn about some of the incredible black trailblazers, artists, physicians, journalists and civil rights campaigners who have made such significant contributions to life in the capital, as well as our country as a whole.

    Black Cultural Archives managing director Arike Oke said:

    London’s black history is deeply embedded in its streets and neighbourhoods. We’re delighted, as part of our 40th anniversary celebrations, to use this opportunity to share new and old stories about black history with Londoners and visitors to London.

    We hope that the map will be an invitation to find out more and to explore.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Tribunal rules in favour of Kate Wilson over breach of human rights, citing ‘lamentable failings’

    Police have been been severely criticised by judges who ruled that they grossly violated the human rights of a woman who was deceived into a long-term intimate relationship by an undercover officer.

    The judges ruled overwhelmingly in favour of Kate Wilson, an environmental and social justice activist, who has pursued a decade-long campaign to uncover the truth.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • This weekend sees action across the country to protest against the presence of arms dealers and despots in our cities. In London and Liverpool, action is already underway to resist major arms fairs.

    DSEI in London and the AOC event in Liverpool will see death merchants, military leaders, and authoritarian regimes gather to peruse new weaponry and equipment. On sale will be the latest cutting-edge tools of oppression, as used in places like Yemen and occupied Palestine.

    Citizens and activists have already been busy trying to stop these activities in London. As armoured vehicles were being brought into the east London venue, one brave activist clambered aboard:

    Protests will be held outside the ExCel Centre until 17 September. And organisers urged people to join at the gates of the event or online.

    Stop the arms fair

    Declassified UK has released a short explainer video on the event:

    Meanwhile, as part of the resistance, artist Darren Cullen produced a poster branding the fair the “world’s biggest bomb sale”:

    AOC Liverpool

    In Liverpool preparations are underway to oppose the AOC electronics arms fair. As The Canary reported recently, the event will have a range of electronic warfare and surveillance equipment on sale. And it will also be available to authoritarian regimes.

    Scouse activists have organised a demo for 11 September which will feature speakers like Jeremy Corbyn, actor Maxine Peake, and political hip hop artist Lowkey.

    Liverpool Against the Arms Trade published details of its rally on Twitter:

    Despite activists lobbying to have the event cancelled, the ACC venue, located on Liverpool’s waterfront, has refused. As a result, the band Massive Attack has cancelled its long-planned gig in solidarity.

    So whether you’re in the North or the South, you can help stop arms firms invading our cities with their deadly wares this weekend. You can visit the Campaign Against The Arms Trade website for more information on the DSEI protest or the AOC action.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Gray Robson-Parker

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • The Metropolitan Police response to a freedom of information (FOI) request has, once again, left us wanting. As part of the #ResistBigBrother series, we’ve been monitoring potential ways that police forces have been sidestepping public scrutiny.

    Whilst the FOI Act exists to open up public access to authorities, many journalists have been having trouble with it. As The Canary previously reported, the Home Office has had to remind its press officers of a duty to impartiality after we uncovered their inconsistent responses to us. We also reported on an Open Democracy investigation which uncovered a possible ‘Orwellian’ unit that blacklists certain journalists:

    the idea of a unit being designed and set up to screen journalists is incredibly troubling. By suppressing the freedom of the press, authorities run the risk of destabilising democracy and violating the public’s right to freedom of information.

    What happened this time?

    We got in touch with the Met Police and asked it if it could show us any correspondence that mentioned either The Canary, Network for Police Monitoring (Netpol),or CAGEThe latter two organisations both work to challenge excessive policing in a number of contexts. The Canary has worked with Netpol and CAGE a number of times, often on police monitoring.

    We asked for any information it may be able to provide via the correspondence of the Specialist Operations Assistant Commissioner, the Head of Security and Protection, the official in charge of Counter Terrorism Command, and the Chief Digital and Technology Officer. We also asked for information from certain databases that may mention any of these three organisations.

    The response came that it refused to confirm or deny if it held information on any of the above counts on the grounds of:

    Section 24(2) – National Security

    Section 31(3) – Law Enforcement

    Section 40(5) – Personal Information

    This isn’t the first time we’ve either had, or seen, a FOI request denied on the grounds of national security. Indeed, when we showed the National Union of Journalists the full FOI response we received, it shared some of our concerns. An NUJ spokesperson said:

    The NUJ remains concerned that some FOI requests have been blocked on the grounds of national security. Freedom of Information legislation was brought into law to make public authorities more transparent and accountable, yet what we are seeing in practice is the use of the legislation to block, deter or prevent access to information that should be in the public domain.

    When The Canary showed the full response to Netpol, it had a similar reaction. Campaigns coordinator Kevin Blowe told us:

    Considering the police’s long history of retaining data on a huge number of campaigners without justification, you’d think the Metropolitan Police would be eager to show they now act proportionately, by confirming that they do not hold records on groups like Netpol or CAGE and especially a media organisation like the Canary.

    Is this information a threat to national security?

    That remains to be seen. But, the point made by the NUJ and Netpol is an important one. If national security concerns are being used to block the release of information that should be available to access, this has terrible implications for freedom of information.

    The Met Police explain its decision further in its response:

    Modern-day policing is intelligence led and which is particularly pertinent with regard to law enforcement. The public expect police forces to use all powers and tactics available to them to prevent and detect crime or disorder and maintain public safety. Any information identifying the focus of policing activity could be used to the advantage of extremist or criminal organisations.

    The Canary is a media organisation. It is difficult to see how a news outlet that specialises in monitoring egregious police activity could have information about itself restricted because of these type of security concerns.

    What information could the Met Police hold on The Canary that, if disclosed in a FOI request, would compromise national security?

    ‘Fixated individuals’

    It’s standard practice for FOI responses to show how they reached their decision. They’ll show the arguments for releasing the information, and then discuss if this is overtaken by other grounds. In this instance, the decision to neither confirm nor deny involves balancing a test of public interest against national security.

    When explaining this, the Met Police says:

    By confirming or denying whether or not the MPS had an interest in CAGE, The Canary and Netpol would mean that law enforcement tactics would be compromised which would hinder the prevention and detection of crime. Police tactics and methodology are re-used and are known to have been monitored by criminal groups, fixated individuals and terrorists.

    What jumps out here is the term “fixated individuals.” The Canary asked the Met Police’s information manager to explain, and they told us:

    A fixated individual refers to a person who has an intense or obsessive interest in another individual, place or cause.

    In regards to its use in your response, the fixation relates to an interest in police tactics, methodology etc.

    What’s wrong with that?

    Given the nature of both CAGE and Netpol’s work, using this definition, they could well be classed as fixated.

    That itself is the problem with the apparent stonewalling of information happening here. If individuals show an interest in police tactics and methodology, it is perfectly conceivable they do so because they’re concerned about excessive police tactics, the targeting by police of minority communities, and overall harm the police may be perpetuating. Does that necessarily make them ‘fixated’, ‘intense’ or ‘obsessive’?

    We’d go further and argue that such a characterisation – particularly one that groups ‘fixated individuals’ with criminal groups and terrorists – is deeply troubling for the function of freedom of information. Of course, excessive requests and abuse of the FOI system would be a concern for authorities. But, that’s plainly not what’s happening here.

    Blowe also made it clear that the lack of access to information through legitimate channels makes a mockery of the FOI system:

    Britain’s freedom of information laws are so weak and police transparency so absent that the Met might as well tell everyone, upfront, never to ask about any aspect of its intelligence capacity – even though this is a legitimate and widely reported issue of public concern – because the answer is always “not now, not ever.”

    The bottom line is that individuals who pay attention to police tactics with a view to combating historical and well-documented police abuses should not be seen as fixated. We’re not wrong to be suspicious as to why these FOI requests are being blocked.

    Featured image via Unsplash/ Tadas Petrokas

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Wednesday 8 September was the third day of direct action against the DSEI arms fair in East London.

    DSEI – which is due to take place next week at the ExCeL centre in London’s docklands – is one of the world’s largest arms fairs. People have set up a protest camp outside the main Gate of ExCeL to try to obstruct those setting up the arms fair.

    On 7 September, Shabbir Lakkha gave this speech calling out the DSEI arms fairs complicity in the two decade long war in Afghanistan.

    Coming almost 20 years on from East London’s first DSEI arms fair – which kept on going despite the 9/11 attacks – we thought it was worth publishing his speech here:

    [The current situation is the] product of 20 years of the brutal and catastrophic war, that the US, that our country, that NATO has engaged in. And that is why we’re here today, really, to oppose this disgusting display of inhumanity at the ExCeL centre.

    Because in the last 20 years, the United States dropped over 300,000 bombs on Afghanistan, including the so-called crudely named mother of all bombs. And these were dropped on schools, on funerals on weddings or marketplaces, at least 70,000 civilians were killed. And this number is likely to be far higher, because during Obama’s presidency, they were describing any male between 18 and 65 in a combat zone, in a strike zone, as a ‘combatant’, thereby not counting them as civilians. So the toll has been really, really high. And this is the reality of what Western war does, how little it achieves apart from killing scores of people, destroying huge swathes of the country. And in the end, what they’ve done is made the Taliban stronger than they were in 2001. And they’ve allowed groups like ISIS to take hold in the country.

    “every bomb dropped on an Afghan village was money in their pockets”

    This Western imperialist project that’s caused so much death and destruction is what the DSEI arms fair has been an integral part of. In these last 20 years, companies like BAE Systems, Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, and others have seen their profits soar. Every bomb dropped on an Afghan village was money in their pockets. These are the murderers who will be in the ExCeL centre, selling their death machines. And places like Afghanistan, like the Gaza Strip, like Somalia, are used by these arms dealers for testing and promoting their weapons.

    Inside the arms fair, they proudly boast about the weapons that have been so-called battle tested. And these same arms companies are also supplying the technology that is being used to fortify borders to stop refugees from getting to Europe. So, they profit from creating the refugees and then they profit from stopping them reaching safety. And even now, our politicians – the neo-conservative establishment of which the arms industry is entirely intertwined with – are trying to manipulate the truth and claim that the war was the right decision, that it was moral. That it’s only the withdrawal that has been catastrophic. These people continue to believe or at least want to make us believe that the only way to help people is to bomb them.

    “They want to pretend like the war had anything to do with protecting women or their rights”

    They want to pretend like the war had anything to do with protecting women or their rights. You know, because the way to safeguard women is to bomb them! We have to say categorically ‘no’ to these backwards measures [that have] already cost so many lives and caused untold destruction and devastation in Afghanistan, in Libya and Syria, in Iraq and Palestine and Somalia. Their bombs don’t keep anyone safe… And if these people really cared about Afghan people, they wouldn’t deport 30,000 Afghan refugees in the last 10 years. The British government has spent millions on charter flights to send Afghan children back to Afghanistan.

    “create safe routes for refugees”

    Theresa May when she was Home Secretary, she went to court to fight the blanket ban on sending Afghan refugees back, and she won. And she claimed Afghanistan was a safe country to send Afghan refugees to, and it was her that spent £4 million on building a – so-called – reintegration Centre in Kabul to make it easier particularly to send children back. If this government wants to help the people who are now scared for their lives with the Taliban back in power – and we have to insist that they do whether they want to or not – what they need to do is create safe routes for refugees.

    The number of 5000 is not enough, the number of 20,000 over five years is not enough, they must open the borders and let them in now.

    I just want to make a couple of other quick points about the war in Afghanistan and the arms industry. Because we’ve spent the last 10 years being told that we needed austerity because there was no money. At least 120,000 people were killed directly because of the cuts made to public services and welfare. Our NHS was decimated and left wholly unprepared for the pandemic, which cost another 150,000 lives. But – all the while – their magic money tree never saw very fruitful war. The UK spends at least 40 billion pounds on Afghanistan alone. The US spends $2.2 trillion and the vast majority of this money was spent on military spending. A huge bulk of which went directly into the coffers of the crooks behind there [in the ExCeL centre]. And this is exactly what is still happening.

    The Tories will be increasing national insurance that will be used to affect the poorest workers the hardest, will be ending the Universal Credit uplift, they aren’t giving nurses a fair pay rise, they’re ending the furlough scheme. And meanwhile they increase defence spending by 16.5 billion pounds, they committed more money to the already £200 billion price tag of renewing the Trident nuclear missile system. And they’re spending millions on sending the Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier with its flotillas in the South China Sea to ratchet up tensions with China. And all of this while our planet is literally on fire from climate breakdown, of which these weapons are a massive contributor. The US military is the single biggest polluter in the world. And the skills of 1000s of workers that could be used for green jobs – to produce renewable technology – are instead being wasted on producing instruments of death. So all these things are connected. And the war economy, the role of the arms dealers, and Western imperialism is at the heart of it.

    We need united movements

    We need a concerted, united movement that bring together all these different strands of opposition against this bankrupt system. And let’s not forget, that it is Priti Patel who is causing this suffering, [who is] stopping Afghan refugees from coming to this country and – at the same time – also spearheading the [Policing Bill]… to limit our ability to protest.

    What all that means for us is that we need to keep protesting because from here on out, every protest that we have, is a direct defiance of this authoritarian legislation.

    I just want to say big up to all of you for being out here solidarity, to your solidarity to our brothers and sisters in Afghanistan. Let’s keep protesting. Let’s keep building this movement.

    Featured image via Flickr/Resolute Support Media

    By Tom Anderson

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • London mayor Sadiq Khan said recent flooding in the capital shows “the dangers of climate change are now moving closer to home”.

    London’s flooding

    The capital saw nearly a month’s worth of rainfall on 25 July with homes, roads, and Tube stations flooded, while a flooded hospital cancelled all surgery and outpatient appointments on 26 July due to the heavy rain. Khan is holding a meeting with councils, Transport for London, the London Fire Brigade, and the Environment Agency on 27 July to see how flooding can be prevented and its impact reduced.

    It comes as the Met Office has a yellow weather warning for thunderstorms covering vast swathes of the UK as forecasters expect more heavy rain and potential disruption. It said up to 60mm of rain could fall inside three hours in some places as showers and thunderstorms develop into Wales and northern and central England.

    The thunderstorm warning runs until 6am on 28 July, while a separate warning for rain in Scotland is in place from 28 July until 6am on 29 July, forecasters saying “heavy and persistent periods of rain (will lead) to accumulations of 100-120mm in some locations”.

    Weather warnings for thunderstorms
    Weather warnings for thunderstorms (PA Graphics)

    Alerts

    Ten flood alerts are still in place in England, six of them inside the M25. Khan said the emergency services and local councils had hundreds of calls regarding the weather on 25 July.

    He added:

    The serious flash flooding in London over the last two weekends will have caused major concern and anxiety for many Londoners and it shows that the dangers of climate change are now moving closer to home.

    Despite having limited powers in the area, it remains a key priority for myself and London’s council leaders that more is done to urgently tackle flooding and the other impacts of climate change.

    This is why I have brought together all of the key partners to see what more can be done, including the water companies who have to address the localised issues with infrastructure that may exacerbate the impact of flooding.

    The wettest part of the country on 25 July was St James’s Park in London, where 41.8mm of rain fell. The average rainfall for July in London is 45mm, meaning nearly a month’s worth of rain fell in one 24-hour period.

    The daily rainfall value of 41.8mm recorded at St James’s Park is that weather station’s second-wettest July day on record.

    Khan added:

    I continue to lobby the Government to devolve more funding and powers to local leaders to enable us to deal with both flooding and the wider impacts of climate change.

    COP26 this year provides an opportunity for the Government to show global leadership and give us the powers and resources we need to take even bolder action on climate change.

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • A demonstration was held on 28 June outside the headquarters of the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) over the organisation’s support for the UK’s Close Supervision Centre (CSC) System.

    The protest – called by a coalition of groups – was joined by ex-prisoners and the families of current prisoners.

    A press release from the coalition of groups reads:

    Former prisoners [joined] a gathering called by a coalition of groups outside the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) to protest its endorsement of Close Supervision Centres.

    The UK’s CSCs are prisons within prisons, where people are kept isolated for years with very little human contact. CSC prisoners face the “most restrictive conditions” seen in the UK prison system.

    RCPsych is a professional medical body representing psychiatrists in the UK. However, prisoners and their supporters argue that the CSC system it endorses causes damage to mental health. A UN representative has said the system may amount to torture.

    Solitary confinement is in breach of international human rights standards

    According to the campaigners’ statement:

    CSCs are prisons within UK prisons — segregation units where prisoners are locked in their cell 22 or more hours per day for months or years with no independent right of appeal. This level of confinement and deprivation of contact with other human beings is comparable to “solitary confinement”.

    Long-term solitary confinement is a breach of United Nations (UN) rules:

    Being held in solitary confinement for more than [15] days is a breach of the UN Mandela Rules on the treatment of prisoners.

    The UK’s CSC system has been criticised by international human rights organisations:

    Amnesty International condemned CSCs (formerly SSUs) as far back as 1997 as “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment”.

    However, the RCPsych has rubber stamped this brutal prison regime as ‘positive’. According to campaigners:

    Shamefully the RCPsych, whose primary duty should be the welfare of patients, instead endorses CSCs as “Enabling Environments“, that is places where there is a focus on creating a “positive and effective social environment”.

    Brutality inflicted on prisoners

    Kevan Thakrar, a prisoner who has spent 11 years inside the CSC system, wrote in Inside Times:

    The cost of each place is over five times a place in a maximum security main location, the brutality inflicted upon the prisoners within them exceeds all other prison environments in the UK, and they cause the majority of its residents to develop major mental illness requiring treatment within the secure hospitals of Broadmoor, Rampton or Ashworth under the Mental Health Act.

    Kevan is currently struggling to be moved out of the CSC. He was placed in the system after defending himself against a racist attack by a prison guard in 2010. He was cleared of assaulting the guards, on the grounds of self-defence. But he remains stuck in the CSC system.

    It’s not surprising that Kevan has found it hard to get out of the CSC, as a 2015 HM Inspectorate of Prisons report found that there was no independent scrutiny of decision making within the CSC system.

    The UN special rapporteur wrote in March this year:

    we express our grave concern at the indefinite and prolonged detention of Mr. Thakrar in what appears to be conditions of solitary confinement. Both in this individual case and in terms of general policy, we are particularly concerned at the reported use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement in Close Supervision Centers, thus predictably inflicting severe pain or suffering amounting to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment, or even torture.

    “Fed through a hatch and isolated from family and outside support”

    The campaigners’ press release continues:

    Other prisoners describe being fed through a hatch and isolated from family and outside support. They speak of attacks from guards that remain unpunished and complain that there is no transparent process to decide who is placed in the CSC and therefore “no way out”.

    “Institutional racism” and “colonial mentality”

    Campaigners accuse RCPsych of institutional racism:

    Approximately 50% of prisoners held in CSCs are Muslim which indicates that these units are institutionally racist. This is not the only time that the RCPsych has been called out for racism. Last year more than 160 psychiatrists wrote to the RCPsych urging it to “root out all examples of institutional racism and colonial mentality”.

    The campaign calling on RCPscych to drop its endorsement of CSCs has broad support:

    The campaign demanding that the RCPsych withdraw its endorsement of CSCs is backed by more than 60 organizations and hundreds of individuals, including Prof. Angela Davis, author and anti-racist campaigner Selma James, former Chief Inspector of Prisons Lord Ramsbotham, miscarriage of justice victim Winston Silcott, Prof. Benjamin Zephaniah and a number of practicing psychiatrists.

    The Canary contacted RCPscych for a comment, but we’d received no reply by the time of publication.

    “CSCs and solitary must end!”

    Sara Callaway from Women of Colour Global Women’s Strike – one of the groups who called the protest –  said:

    We are part of this campaign because CSCs are racist and women end up picking up the pieces when men are abused within them. We will be making our voices heard until the RCPsych stops covering up for cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. This campaign was initiated by prisoners and is growing in size – CSCs and solitary must end!

    Tom Anderson is part of the Shoal Collective, a cooperative producing writing for social justice and a world beyond capitalism. 

    Featured Image provided to The Canary with permission

    By Tom Anderson

    This post was originally published on The Canary.

  • Report launched in aftermath of George Floyd murder cites example of 2018 death of Kevin Clarke in UK

    A UN report that analysed racial justice in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd has called on member states including the UK to end the “impunity” enjoyed by police officers who violate the human rights of black people.

    The UN human rights office analysis of 190 deaths across the world led to the report’s damning conclusion that law enforcement officers are rarely held accountable for killing black people due in part to deficient investigations and an unwillingness to acknowledge the impact of structural racism.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Patsy Stevenson is preparing to initiate legal proceedings unless Met withdraw fixed penalty notice

    A woman who was arrested at a London vigil for Sarah Everard has said she is preparing to initiate legal proceedings against the Metropolitan police unless they withdraw the fixed penalty notice they imposed on her.

    The image of 28-year-old physics student Patsy Stevenson being pinned to the floor by two male police officers, hands held behind her back, on 13 March was one of the defining images in criticism of how the vigil on Clapham Common was policed.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • On 1 June, the BBC shared a video of swimmers enjoying London’s new ‘Sky Pool’, which is “believed to be the world’s first transparent pool built between two skyscrapers”. People soon took to Twitter to highlight the entrenched inequalities that the opulent architectural feature represents. Indeed, it’s situated at the heart of a city in which an estimated 170,068 people are homeless and over 600,000 children live in poverty.

    London’s widening class divide

    The Sky Pool is situated in Embassy Gardens, a housing development near the new US Embassy. The development is part of the £3bn Nine Elms regeneration zone, a riverside development which covers large areas of land from Vauxhall to Battersea in the south-west London boroughs of Lambeth and Wandsworth. Highlighting the inequality that persists in what has been dubbed an “opportunity area”, Labour councillor Maurice McIeod tweeted:

    Sharing the realities of life in the area for most residents, Jason Okundaye said:

    Deploring the Tories’ prioritisation of private developments over social housing in the face of an entrenched housing crisis, Labour councillor Aydin Dikerdem said:

    Segregating the residents

    In February, journalist Oliver Wainright highlighted the fact that shared-ownership residents living in Embassy Gardens aren’t allowed access to the Sky Pool, the front door, or other features in the building. They must use “poor doors”, while private owners make the most of the amenities:

    In a thread setting out the inequalities inherent in the housing market, Nick Perry said:

    Others, meanwhile, questioned the BBC‘s tone:

    Adding that “affordable” apartments in Embassy Gardens come with staggering £750k price tags, Dr Eleanor Janega stated:

    Britain’s cladding scandal

    14 June will mark the 4th anniversary of the Grenfell Tower tragedy, which killed 72 residents. On 7 May, petrified residents called firefighters to New Providence Wharf, a tower block covered in “Grenfell-style” cladding. Although the cladding was not found to be a “significant factor” in this case, the London Fire Brigade found numerous failings in the building that should have been addressed by the building’s owner.

    According to Anoosh Chakelian, the Sky Pool’s developer Ballymore is also responsible for New Providence Wharf, but made residents wait nearly four years to have the flammable cladding removed. Olympic Park Homes Action reflected on this injustice:

    Nathaniel Baker added:

    Another Twitter user simply said:

    London’s Sky Pool serves as a stark reminder of everything that’s wrong with Britain’s unjust housing system.

    Featured image via @BBCNews/Twitter

    By Sophia Purdy-Moore

    This post was originally published on The Canary.