Category: Protest

  • Black athletes have not only changed how the game of soccer is played; around the world, they’ve also harnessed their positions to fight for justice and political change through the sport of soccer itself. In the latest “Ask a Sports Scholar” segment, Edge of Sports host Dave Zirin speaks with Dr. Jermaine Scott about his forthcoming book Black Soccer: Football and Politics in the African Diaspora, and about the reality of teaching about race, culture, and politics at a public university in Ron DeSantis’s Florida.

    Dr. Jermaine Scott teaches courses on African American and African Diaspora History and Sports History at Florida Atlantic University. He is currently working on a forthcoming book called Black Soccer: Football and Politics in the African Diaspora.

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Taylor Hebden
    Audio Post-Production: David Hebden
    Opening Sequence: Cameron Granadino
    Music by: Eze Jackson & Carlos Guillen


    Transcript

    Dave Zirin:  Welcome to Edge of Sports, only on The Real News Network. I’m Dave Zirin.

    It’s time to Ask a Sports Scholar, one of the most popular things we do on Edge of Sports. Today we are going to talk to Jermaine Scott, who teaches African-American and sports history at Florida Atlantic University. He’s currently working on a book called Black Soccer: Football and Politics in the African Diaspora. Let’s bring him on. 

    Professor Scott, thank you so much for joining us here on Edge of Sports.

    Jermaine Scott:  Hey, thank you so much for the invitation. I’m really excited to be here.

    Dave Zirin:  I love the background. I feel like I’m in a David Lynch movie with all that red, it’s awesome.

    Jermaine Scott:  Yeah, we try to keep the colors a little fresh throughout the house, so.

    Dave Zirin:  It’s very cool. Very cool.

    I want to ask you so much about Black soccer, what it is, what it means, how you got into that as an area of study. But I can’t talk to somebody from Florida Atlantic University without first asking them about teaching at the university level, particularly at a public university in Florida at this day and time in 2023. What is that experience like for you?

    Jermaine Scott:  That’s a fascinating question, Dave, and it’s a question that I think about often these days, obviously. It’s a lot of anxiety if I’m being completely honest. You walk into the classroom and you don’t know what a student might say. You don’t know how a student might interpret what you’re saying. So there’s a lot of anxiety about how you’re teaching and how you’re expected to relay historical facts.

    And I teach African-American history, I teach African diaspora history, and sports history. And all three of those courses — I teach other courses, but the core of my courses has to do with issues of race, with inequality, with histories of colonialism and slavery. And so these are all topics that are heavily contested right now in the state of Florida.

    So yeah, there’s a lot of anxiety but there’s also a lot of support within my department, other colleagues throughout the department, but also throughout the university, and throughout the university system in Florida. There seems to be a strong cohort of professors that are there for each other, and are essentially trying to build community.

    Dave Zirin:  But as somebody who’s been teaching in Florida for a few years, you can tell our audience the vibe is different now than perhaps it was a few years ago.

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely. I first got to FAU in the middle of COVID, 2020. So my first year was all virtual. The second year was okay. We started hearing things in the background. And then in the middle of my second year, third year, things started to come in really quickly.

    And yeah, again, my first and second year felt pretty free. I felt able to express myself the way I wanted to in class. And I still do, but I have this haunting sensation in the back of my head. If I start to get riled up a little bit, I have to reel it back in and make sure I don’t go off the rails too much. But yeah, so I think there’s ways of navigating it, and I think I’m doing okay doing that, but you just never know. Each semester is a new group of students, and you just never know in this political climate how they’re going to receive what you’re saying.

    Dave Zirin:  Absolutely. So let’s get to the fun stuff here. Black soccer, what does that mean, Black soccer? How do you define it? And I’m sure you define it more than “Black people playing soccer.”

    Jermaine Scott:  And that’s exactly how I wanted to start it. When we think of ideas like Black music or the Black church — And this is how I walk through it with my class, it’s like, are we just talking about Black people playing music? Are we just talking about Black people going to church? And that’s part of it, but there’s also something more substantial about it.

    And so what I’m trying to do is conceptualize this idea called Black soccer, and it’s to look at the ways in which Black footballers, Black soccer players, have used the game as a site of political articulation, have turned the game into a space to articulate their politics.

    And at the root of all of these chapters, which at the time seemed very all over the place, they’re in DC, they’re in São Paulo, they’re in Amsterdam, at the root of all the chapters is an effort for these Black footballers to reimagine or renegotiate their relationship to the nation as international footballers, as footballers that are in highly nationalized politicized spaces, national narratives shape a lot of their careers or shape the political context of the game in these different spaces.

    In São Paulo, for example, in the 1980s, Brazil is still under a military dictatorship, and that shapes the way in which clubs operate. While in Corinthians, in São Paulo, a club called Corinthians, about the midfielder Socrates, they had what they called a Corinthians democracy, which is where they democratize the entire club, where every player of the club, every staff member of the club, every coach had an equal vote on all the decisions of the club. This is in the context of a national narrative of the military dictatorship.

    Or in the Netherlands during the 1990s, the national narrative is multiculturalism. We have all these different races, and we can all live together.

    You have Black players on the Dutch national team who are of Surinamese descent. And they are asking questions about their treatment on the team, about how they are being portrayed in the media, and it starts to add wrinkles to these smooth, progressive, national narratives of cohesion.

    And so in each chapter, I’m looking at how Black footballers are using the game to kind of critique — Or how I like to put it, play within and against the nation.

    Dave Zirin:  Interesting to speak about it relative to the nation. We interviewed another sports scholar, Theresa Runstedtler, who wrote a book called Black Ball, and it was about the way Black people affected the very style of the game in the 1970s in a way that goes often quite uncredited.

    Jermaine Scott:  Yes.

    Dave Zirin:  Can we talk about that? Does that exist? Because soccer is a game of so much more structure than, say, basketball. Do you see a difference historically in how the style of the sport changed by the infusion of the Black athlete?

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely. And we can find this most noticeably in places in Latin America, in places like Brazil, places like Colombia, even in places like Argentina — Not necessarily the integration of Black players, but the integration of the working class, the working poor in Argentina. They all had a massive effect on the style of the game.

    So when the game is originated, it’s coming out of Europe, it’s coming out of England. The institutionalization of the sport happens at the end of the 19th century, and it’s a very rigid game. You have your defense, you have your midfielder, and you have your attack. And in the European game, it was a lot of running. You kick the ball and you chase the ball. It was very physical, man-to-man, pushing people out the way.

    In Latin America, when it was adopted by Black players, when it was adopted by the working classes, it became a much more free sport. So here we have the focus on the individual, where the players are not necessarily interested in these long passes, but they’re interested in expressing themselves individually with the ball. That might look like what we call in Brazil, the [inaudible]. The movement of Capoeira, of the capoeiristas. We see the same movement within Brazilian football.

    Peter Alegi talks about the Africanization of football, of course, in the continent of Africa, and how working class Black players, particularly in places like South Africa, adopted the game and made it their own. Not only their style of play, but also their participation, let’s say, in the stands. So how the supporters are also participating in the match is different in the ways in which the Eurocentric, European ways in which the game was created.

    Dave Zirin:  Wow, this is fascinating stuff. What attracted you to this area of study?

    Jermaine Scott:  So I was born in Florida, born in West Palm Beach, Florida, and I was born to Jamaican parents. And so football in Jamaica is the number one sport, probably next to cricket. But probably football is the number one sport. So I always grew up playing soccer, I always grew up playing football. I played it through high school. I didn’t play in college, but soccer was always central in the household.

    And it was also the first space that I began to ask questions about race. A lot of my team, I was one of two, maybe one of three Black players on the team, and I always wondered why that was. Why aren’t there more Black players on these teams? But then I would watch the World Cup and I would see the Colombian National team, and it was all Black players. The first World Cup I remember is the 1998 World Cup, and I remember watching the Dutch National team, and it just had a number of Black players. And in my young mind, I wasn’t associating Blackness with the Netherlands. I wasn’t associating Blackness with Colombia or Venezuela or even Brazil.

    And so seeing that, I had this tension. Why am I the only Black player on my team in the States but then when I look throughout the world, I see Black people playing the game all over? And so it became a space where I started to ask these questions about race, about identity. And I had the opportunity to study it as a critical practice, as a critical exercise to think about the political implications of the game. Obviously, joining this long tradition of scholarship that looks at how, of course, sports is deeply, deeply politicized.

    Dave Zirin:  Interesting. So it captured you intellectually through playing and through asking questions about playing.

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely, yeah.

    Dave Zirin:  And did you know going in as an undergrad that this was something you wanted to explore? Or was it that you started to look at sports and society and then thought, hey, when I was in high school, I used to think about this stuff a lot?

    Jermaine Scott:  Yeah, more the latter. I went into undergrad just doing African-American history. That was my focus. And then I actually went to grad school. Actually my first year in grad school, I was looking at a completely different topic. I was actually looking at Black labor movements in New York during the interwar period. But for some reason, sports and politics was just always at the forefront of my mind.

    And I remember my cousin, actually, who’s from Trinidad, gave me Beyond a Boundary by C.L.R. James. And this is when I was in middle school. I didn’t know who C.L.R. James was. I didn’t know what Beyond a Boundary was. But I read it and it intrigued me. But again, in middle school, I didn’t really understand the significance of what I was reading. And then of course, in grad school, Beyond a Boundary is the seminal text when thinking about this relationship between sports and politics and culture and society.

    Dave Zirin:  I don’t know. Not a lot of middle schoolers are given gifts that are books by Black Trotskyists. It’s very…

    Jermaine Scott:  It’s fascinating. And I had no idea at the time. I’m like, okay, C.L.R James, whatever.

    Dave Zirin:  That’s a special gift at that age. Much credit and love.

    Jermaine Scott:  Yeah, shout out to my cousin Robbie.

    Dave Zirin:  Yeah, shout out indeed. Okay.

    So other than Pelé, who is completely obvious, who are the Black soccer players in your mind who truly change the game? Who should people be aware of?

    Jermaine Scott:  Wow. I definitely think people that have changed the game, we definitely have to think about, of course, Pelé. There’s also a Portuguese player by the name of Eusébio who really showed his true quality in the 1966 World Cup in England. That’s a player that’s of incredible import.

    But also players from the African continent. Players like Didier Drogba, who played for Chelsea, from the Ivory Coast, who changed the way we watch attacking players. Not only his strength, but his grace. He’s one of those players that finds a really special balance between power but also grace, graceful movements on the pitch. So Didier Drogba is one. Wow, there’s so many. There’s a number from Brazil: Ronaldo, Ronaldinho. And I’m saying all these players, and they all have controversial political backgrounds, but I guess that’s the nature of the work. So there’s a number of players. Wow.

    Some of the players that I look at in my own work from the Netherlands, we can think of players like Clarence Seedorf, Edgar Davids. These are players from the 1990s that added a new dimension to the Dutch style of game. At times, they were criticized for it. At times they were criticized for playing too hard, which is kind of nuts to think about it at the time. You criticizing me for playing too hard? So there’s all these different ways. But in the Netherlands, there are a number of different players that had instrumental impacts on the game and how they shaped this instrumental style of Dutch football, which is called Total Football. And so I try to argue in the book that these players added a specific wrinkle to the game, to the style of the game.

    Dave Zirin:  I’m just going to name a player and you tell me their importance. Or maybe you think, yeah, that’s not somebody I’m looking at. Does this player matter, and why do they matter? I just have two on my head, two that you just named a lot of the people that I wanted to ask you about. But let me ask you: Mario Balotelli.

    Jermaine Scott:  Yeah, I love Mario Balotelli.

    Dave Zirin:  He matters, though. I know you love him as a player, but he matters to your area of study? He’s part of that continuum?

    Jermaine Scott:  Well, yes. I don’t talk about him specifically within the chapters but he’s definitely a part of that tradition. When thinking about critiquing particularly the media and their portrayal of him. The classic visual I have of Mario Balotelli is when he’s playing for Manchester City, he scores the goal and he lifts up his shirt and it says, why always me? Why is he always the center of these attacks? When the team is doing bad, why is it always Mario Balotelli’s fault? And so Mario Balotelli has a fascinating career. He’s also one of a few, few Black players on the Italian national team. We rarely see Black players on the Italian national team. And that added to his contentious relationship with the nation.

    Dave Zirin:  Okay. Mbappé.

    Jermaine Scott:  The Wonderkid, the Wonderkid.

    Dave Zirin:  Does he matter to this continuum?

    Jermaine Scott:  He does. He does. A lot of people praise Mbappé, of course, for his quality on the pitch, his goal scoring ability. But he also has a political side. I believe it was the 2018 World Cup where feminist protesters invaded the pitch. And he’s like, cool. He’s like, let’s take pictures. And he’s expressed his independence as a player. And as Black athletes, when you articulate your independence as a player, the media is going to lash out at you. And so he has the courage to do that as a Black footballer in Europe. And of course, his quality allows him to do the things that he’s able to do. I think his quality also protects him in a lot of ways as well.

    Dave Zirin:  And last one: Marcus Rashford.

    Jermaine Scott:  Marcus Rashford, just brilliant player on the pitch. His community work in England is unmatched. Again, just a top-notch player. There’s certain players that I sometimes grapple with. I think we can do this with all athletes. Sometimes there’s a desire to want more radical politics. That’s not to say he doesn’t have a radical politics. I’m not necessarily sure how radical his politics are. But from the work that he’s done within the community, it shows that he obviously sees his importance outside of the pitch. And that’s critical for Black players.

    Dave Zirin:  Yeah, and his work on child hunger during COVID.

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely.

    Dave Zirin:  It’s one of the most impactful moments an athlete can have.

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely.

    Dave Zirin:  I don’t even think he realized the impact he was going to have. Forcing Boris Johnson to do a massive, massive change in terms of feeding kids during the desperate time. Incredible.

    Jermaine Scott:  Absolutely, yeah. And it’s just a testament to how footballers are able to use the game or use their platform to make these kinds of national changes.

    Dave Zirin:  Well, you’ve been so generous with your time, Professor Scott. Is there anything we’re missing about your area of study and work that you’d like to share with our audience?

    Jermaine Scott:  No, I think we covered it. I think the main argument that I’m really trying to drive home is that soccer allows players, allows Black footballers, allows Black soccer supporters, allows Black people to renegotiate their relationship to the nation.

    I’m writing in this tradition of a political theorist named Richard [inaudible] who critiques the nation state as an anti-Black formation. And so what does that mean for Black citizenship? What does that mean for Black nationality? And he tries to wrestle with that. He tries to say, well, what if it’s okay to question nationality? What if it’s okay to not have a nationality or to live in this in-between space? And I think soccer provides a good vehicle to do that.

    Dave Zirin:  Definitely. Definitely. The book is called Black Soccer: Football and Politics in the African Diaspora. I cannot wait to read it. I’m sure our audience feels the same way. Professor Scott, thank you so much for joining us here on Edge of Sports.

    Jermaine Scott:  Dave, thank you so much for having me. Appreciate it.

    This post was originally published on The Real News Network.

  • On Saturday 16 December, a March for Palestine in Bristol will demand an immediate ceasefire, that Israel ends the blockade, and ends its occupation. However, the march will also call on Bristolian Wael Arafat to end his six-week long hunger strike for the Palestinian people.

    Israel: relentless bombardment while the world watches

    As the UK hopes for white snow to fall on Christmas Day, Palestinians will be hoping that white phosphorus doesn’t rain down on them. The weapon burns through human flesh to the bone. It’s continued illegal use in Gaza by the IDF is one of many war crimes that the world has turned a blind eye to.

    Last week, the US blocked a UN Security Council resolution calling for an “immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza”. 13 of the council’s 15 members voted in favour, leaving 2 nations isolated; the US (resorting to using its veto) and the UK (abstained). The US has consistently vetoed international calls for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire.

    UN chief Antonio Guterres had earlier stated that it is time to act as “the eyes of the world and the eyes of history are watching”.

    In 67 days, Israel killed more than 17,177 innocent people, including 7,112 children and 4,911 women. The number of women and children murdered so far is 70% of the total killed by Israel using weapons supplied by the US and UK.

    So, Bristol will not remain silent.

    Bristol protest on 16 December

    Bristol Palestine Alliance is an urgent and organic response to the horrific events happening in Gaza. Acting as an umbrella group, it brings members from organisations and groups and communities in Bristol together to respond collectively to organise marches and other events to call for a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to Israel’s brutal occupation of Palestine. It is based on the network of solidarity that has been successfully built in this city over many years.

    In response to the ongoing crisis in Palestine, concerned Bristolians, activists, and community leaders will gather for a peaceful protest march on 16 December. The demonstration will demand an immediate ceasefire, an end to the blockade, the release of all illegally held prisoners, and an end to the occupation in Palestine – advocating for justice and peace in the region.

    Amidst the grave humanitarian crises, the march will assemble at Castle Park at 12pm, bringing together voices from diverse backgrounds to call for an end to the violence that has afflicted the region for far too long. At 12.30pm, people will then march along Broad Weir, down Union Street, through Broadmead, back up along Broad Weir, across Baldwin Street, and culminate in a gathering at College Green.

    At College Green, there will be a number of speakers including the adoptive mother of Wael Arafat. Wael Arafat, who is originally from Gaza, arrived in Bristol when he was a teenager. He was brought up by his grandmother in Gaza, when he lost both parents at age five. On October 22 he stopped eating when he learnt that Israeli bombs had killed his family and friends.

    ‘I don’t want to die’

    The 28-year-old is calling for a ceasefire and has only been living off two tablespoons of apple juice and very small quantities of water for weeks. He is currently in hospital. As Middle East Eye reported:

    “I know I might die. I know something could happen to my health,” Arafat told Middle East Eye from a hospital in Bath, southwest England, where he is being treated.

    “I don’t want to die. I’m doing this for my own people who are suffering. Every person in Gaza is my brother and sister,” he said…

    He stopped eating and drinking on 22 October, after learning that his sister and her four children had been killed by an Israeli air strike on their home in Gaza City…

    “[My family] were telling me they’re at home and they’re safe,” he said. “They told me they might have to evacuate. I asked them, where will you go? They said we don’t know.”

    Two weeks into the war, Arafat spoke to his sister for the last time.

    “My sister called me to tell me they’d stayed at home and they might die. That was the last call I had with her,” he said. “I never got to meet her.”

    Immediate action is needed for Palestine, Bristol will demand

    Bristol Palestine Alliance said in a statement:

    We will all raise his voice. And it will be loud enough for all the local MPs to hear. Loud enough to echo in Westminster. And we will call on Wael to end his hunger strike.

    The situation in Palestine demands urgent attention and action. The continued occupation and violence have inflicted immeasurable suffering on the Palestinian people, disrupting lives and undermining peace efforts. This march stands as a symbol of solidarity with those affected and a plea for immediate action toward a sustainable and just resolution.

    Organisers emphasise that the protest – as all the previous protests – will be conducted in a peaceful and respectful manner, aiming to raise awareness and encourage dialogue around the critical issues affecting the region.

    The objectives of the march include:

    • Urging an immediate ceasefire to halt the violence and prevent further loss of life.
    • Calling for an end to the occupation and the implementation of measures leading to a just and lasting peace in the region.
    • Raising awareness about the humanitarian crisis and advocating for the rights and dignity of the Palestinian people.

    All participants are encouraged to join in a spirit of peace and unity, fostering an atmosphere of solidarity and understanding.

    Featured image via Middle East Eye

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Over 1,000 artists have announced their refusal to work with Bristol’s Arnolfini international arts centre after its censorship of Palestinian film and poetry

    Arnolfini faces boycott over Palestinian censorship

    Portishead’s Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley, Massive Attack’s Robert del Naja, writers Alice Oswald, Nikesh Shukla, Shon Faye, Travis Alabanza, and Rachel Holmes are among many of Bristol’s artists who have written an open letter accusing the iconic Arnolfini International Centre for Contemporary Arts of “censorship of Palestinian culture”.

    The letter comes in response to Arnolfini’s cancellation of scheduled film and poetry events programmed by Bristol Palestine Film Festival. Leading Bristol artists, including Lawrence Hoo, Batu, Giant Swan, Tom Marshman and Verity Standen point to:

    an alarming pattern of censorship and repression within the arts sector

    citing a series of recent cancellations and threats to artists advocating for Palestinian rights in Britain and beyond.

    Ukraine = good, Palestine = bad

    The publicly funded arts centre claimed it cancelled the film and poetry events because it “could not be confident that the events would not stray into political activity”. But the centre’s statement was widely derided when it appeared on Arnolfini’s Instagram account.

    Arnolfini has organised numerous events with overtly political themes. Last year Arnolfini hosted an event that opposed Russia’s war crimes in Ukraine, with part of the ticket sales going to the Disasters Emergency Committee Ukraine.

    Hundreds of British & international artists including Brian Eno, writers Raymond Antrobus, Isabel Waidner, Lola Olufemi, and Huw Lemmey, performance artist Colin Self, and actor Juliet Stevenson joined Bristol artists in signing, stating that after the killing of more than 17,000 Palestinians in Gaza and the destruction of more than 100 heritage sites in a matter of weeks:

    to silence Palestinian voices and narratives at this exact moment is not merely a betrayal of the fundamental principles of pluralism and freedom in the arts, it is also inhumane.

    Visual artists Jasleen Kaur, Ben Rivers, Paul Purgas, Tai Shani, Jumana Manna and Erica Scourti agree that Britain’s hard-won legacy of freedom in the arts:

    cannot be allowed to fall prey to authoritarianism, racism and censorship… Anyone who cares about the democratic functioning of our cultural institutions should be deeply concerned.

    Blames bosses, not the workers

    The artists vow to take collective action and urge other artists and audiences to join them, saying:

    we must, reluctantly, refuse cooperation with the arts centre and will not participate in any of its events

    until Arnolfini:

    publicly commits to consistently uphold freedom of expression, with no exception for Palestine, and genuinely engages with Bristol’s arts community to rectify the harm it has caused.

    Bristol artist and composer Nik Rawlings, who was in talks with the gallery to undertake a residency at Arnolfini, announced that they are no longer willing to do so. They added:

    We want to make it clear that we stand fully behind workers at Arnolfini who’ve had no say in this. Our message is addressed to those in the management who made this damaging decision; the signatories of this letter expect better integrity, transparency and cultural leadership from Arnolfini.

    Featured image via the BBC – screengrab

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Two Just Stop Oil supporters visited Scotland Yard to deliver a letter inviting Met Police boss Mark Rowley to a formal meeting. The letter was in response to the cops pushing the story in the corporate media that the group’s protests cost £20m. It comes as the Met also received a letter of complaint from several human rights groups over its policing of pro-Palestine marches.

    The Met and Just Stop Oil: a battle of words

    The group’s action came after the Met Police launched a media campaign against it – pushing the line that it has cost the public £20m to police the protests. Predictably, the corporate media widely ran with the story:

    So, Just Stop Oil responded. However, when two activists tried to deliver it in person, it was refused by the staff at Scotland Yard:

    However, Just Stop Oil are also in touch with the Metropolitan Police by email and social media. The group hopes to arrange a meeting with the commissioner as soon as possible.

    The letter from Just Stop Oil also came in response to a request from commander Kyle Gordon that “Just Stop Oil come forward and speak with us, so we can actually work with them”.

    It reads:

    Dear Sir Mark Rowley,

    Recent statements from the Met Police indicate that policing Just Stop Oil actions has cost the police nearly £20 million. What a waste, and as you point out, arresting non-violent grandmothers, teenagers, vicars, medics, engineers is not the best use of your resources. We have previously reached out to you, and various police federations earlier this year. Just Stop Oil representatives would be able to meet with you, at your Scotland Yard office, in the week commencing 11th December 2023. If this is not convenient please provide us with an alternative date.

    Previously, Just Stop Oil has repeatedly attempted to open dialogue with the Metropolitan Police, but have received no response. In October 2023, a Just Stop Oil supporter delivered an open letter to Rowley, which can be read here.

    ‘Just following orders’

    A Just Stop Oil spokesperson said:

    We understand that the vast majority of officers serving in the Metropolitan Police have stepped into their role out of a profound sense of duty and a desire to protect and serve their communities. Despite our obvious differences, that desire to protect our communities is something that we all share. However, objectively, at the present time, the leadership of this country are making decisions that threaten our homes, our families, our communities and our entire way of life.

    Continued expansion of oil and gas, against the advice of the entire scientific consensus, is leading to crop failure, food shortages and will eventually lead to mass civil unrest, social collapse and an end to the rule of law. I would ask those serving in the police force to consider the actions that they take at this time very seriously.

    How will you answer your children in the years to come, when they ask you ‘what did you do’ to stop this crisis unfolding? Did you follow the orders of the people directly profiting from the industries ravaging our shared home? Did you facilitate the actions of people that future generations will come to regard as criminals of the highest order? Or did you make another choice? Did you follow through on your commitment to protect and serve your community and to protect the interests of your children and of generations to come?

    One of those who delivered the letter was Pippa Cowtan, a recent politics graduate from London. She said:

    I have been arrested numerous times by the Metropolitan police for nonviolent acts of civil resistance. I have had friends as young as 18 imprisoned, without trial, for trying to demand the government protect them instead of only serving the interests of corporations and billionaires.

    Meanwhile, the powerful men profiting off the destruction of my home and my future are walking free. I just graduated, and in my lifetime scientists are predicting major ecological and social collapse. How can I plan for a future that is in such jeopardy? The police must act and hold the real criminals to account.

    Not just Just Stop Oil complaining about the Met

    Just Stop Oil’s intervention follows twelve British human rights and media organisations also writing to Rowley, to protest about the force’s handling of pro-Palestine demonstrations in the capital.

    They accuse the Metropolitan Police, which has been beset recently with allegations of racism, of bias in the way they have policed the almost weekly demonstrations that have been held all over London since the Israeli assault on Gaza began in early October.

    The letter says that the Met has allowed itself to be influenced by the highly inflammatory and politicised representation of these demonstrations by their detractors in the media, government, and “Zionist lobby”. This has led to the implementation of a biased policing strategy which is heavy handed and excessive for pro-Palestinian demonstrators but overly indulgent towards pro-Zionists who appear to be breaking the law.

    Featured image via Just Stop Oil

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Activists from Fossil Free London protested in front of the Uganda High Commission in Trafalgar Square in solidarity with seven Ugandan student activists facing trial on Friday 8 December. The students’ arrests came after they protested against the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP).

    EACOP: huge environmental and human rights impacts

    As the Canary‘s Hannah Sharland previously reported, TotalEnergies and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation are joint venture partners on the $10-billion EACOP project to develop oilfields in Uganda.

    The project involves fossil fuel companies drilling around 400 oil wells in Murchison Falls National Park. Notably, this is the largest protected area in Uganda. The companies will then transport the crude along the 1,445-kilometre (900-mile) EACOP to the Tanzanian port of Tanga.

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has hailed the project as an economic boon. However, environmental and human rights organisations and activists have been fiercely opposing the project.

    Groups have called out EACOP’s shocking environmental and human rights impacts. As the Canary‘s Tracy Keeling has detailed, the project threatens nearly 2,000km² of biodiverse protected wildlife habitats.

    Moreover, the Parliament of the European Union has estimated that the project could displace over 100,000 people.

    To make matters worse, the Canary highlighted a Business and Human Rights Resource Centre report which singled out TotalEnergies for the impacts of EACOP on environmental defenders. In particular, attacks on rights defenders associated with the project placed TotalEnergies within the top five worst companies for these types of human rights violations. Now, this includes seven students who protested the project.

    So, people in the UK have shown solidarity with them.

    Fossil Fuel London: out in solidarity

    Twenty activists from Fossil Fuel London protested in front of the High Commission shouting “Stop EACOP”, “Free the students” while holding banners:

    Protesters with a banner that reads 'solidarity with East Africa' EACOP

    They showed photos of the seven Ugandan protesters:

    Two weeks ago, authorities arrested the seven students for peacefully petitioning the Ugandan Parliament against EACOP. The students were held in police custody for four days before being remanded to the Luzira Maximum Prison. They were held at the prison until 8 of December, 2023 – where they now face trial. Authorities are still keeping them locked up:

    Joanna Warrington from Fossil Free London said:

    Building the world’s longest heated crude oil pipeline across Africa’s largest lake in the midst of climate breakdown is violent, reckless and unjust.

    Total and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation are displacing people who are already suffering on the frontlines of the climate crisis, from their homes and livelihoods; profiting from this destruction.

    And whilst these corporations and banks make billions on the back of people’s torn apart lives, Ugandan authorities arrest peaceful protesters who speak out against this injustice. We stand in solidarity with them and demand all charges to be dropped.

    Featured image and additional images via

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Twelve British human rights and media organisations have written to the head of the Met Police, sir Mark Rowley, to protest about the force’s handling of pro-Palestine demonstrations in the capital.

    Pro-Palestine demos: bias in the Met’s policing?

    They accuse the Metropolitan Police, which has been beset recently with allegations of racism, of bias in the way they have policed the almost weekly demonstrations that have been held all over London since the Israeli assault on Gaza began in early October.

    The letter says that the Met has allowed itself to be influenced by the highly inflammatory and politicised representation of these demonstrations by their detractors in the media, government, and “Zionist lobby”. This has led to the implementation of a biased policing strategy which is heavy handed and excessive for pro-Palestinian demonstrators but overly indulgent towards pro-Zionists who appear to be breaking the law.

    The Met has made dozens of highly questionable arrests, many of them of people holding banners that express strong political views. These include:

    • Yael Kahn, a Jewish demonstrator, for carrying a sign that likened Israel to Nazi Germany and the bombardment of Gaza to the Holocaust.
    • The arrests on 25 November 2023 of two Muslim females outside the Egyptian embassy for carrying placards in the Arabic language. By their own admission, the police didn’t know what these signs read but they arrested the women anyway. Both were later released without charge.
    • A Muslim female at a demonstration in Lewisham on Sunday 26 November 2023 under the Public Order Act for carrying a sign that said “Zionists are Nazis”.

    The letter’s signatories contrast this overzealous approach with the kid-glove treatment given by police to pro-Israel marchers who directed Nazi slurs at anti-Zionist Jews during the national March for anti-Semitism on 26 November 2023. Video footage of this demonstration shows pro-Israel protestors shouting “Judenrat” at their anti-Israeli co-religionists. Judenrat is a slur used by Jews to describe Nazi collaborators.

    It states:

    There is an evident inconsistency in your policing when pro-Palestinian demonstrators are being harassed and arrested for comparing Zionism with Nazism but Zionists who accuse Jews of Nazi-esque behaviour are allowed to do so with impunity. It would appear that your force is operating a double standard whereby it is subjecting pro-Palestinian marchers to a lower criminal threshold than their political rivals.

    The signatories also draw attention to the unprecedented presence of the Home Secretary’s Special Lead Advisors for Hate Crime and Media and Communications in the Met’s Special Operations Room.

    20 years and nothing has changed

    These Special Advisors have had weekly access to the Special Operations Room, where senior members of the Metropolitan Police’s leadership monitor pro-Palestine protests and issue commands to officers on the ground, share intelligence and make decisions over whether to proceed to arrest. The Metropolitan Police have also provided senior prosecution lawyers from the Crown Prosecution Service their own operational desk inside the Special Operations Building to work from during these protests.

    The front-loading of the charging and prosecution process gives rise to serious concerns about political influence in the Met’s operational decision-making, as does the presence of CPS lawyers in the building. According to the signatories, this is the first-time measures such as these have been put in place by the Metropolitan Police.

    Policing the demonstrations through a hate-crime lens also reinforces the false image being created by politicians and pundits of the demonstrations as inherently hateful and problematic whereas in reality they have been extremely law-abiding and peaceful.

    It would appear that some 20 years since the Islamic Human Rights Commission highlighted two-tier policing of pro-Palestine protests in its report “Muslim Profiling“, the Met is still profiling these protests as Muslim, thereby racialising them and discriminating against those who participate in them.

    Read the letter in full

    The full letter is available to read here.

    The signatories to the letter are:

    • Islamic Human Rights Commission
    • Jewish Network for Palestine
    • Convivencia Alliance
    • Ahlulbayt Islamic Mission
    • 5 Pillars
    • CAGE
    • Muslim Public Affairs Committee
    • Scotland Against Criminalising Communities
    • InMinds Human Rights Group
    • Fight Racism, Fight Imperialism
    • No2NATO
    • Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign

    Featured image via Palestine Solidarity Campaign

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On Wednesday 6 December, dozens of activists from Fossil Free London assembled outside BP’s London headquarters to protest Israel’s approval of 12 new licences for natural gas exploration off the west coast of Gaza to six companies, including BP:

    London, UK. 6 December 2023. Fossil Free London protest outside BP's London office, against Israel's awarding of licences to explore for gas off the coast of Gaza to BP, one of six companies awarded licences to explore there. Credit: Andrea Domeniconi/Fossil Free London

    London, UK. 6 December 2023. Fossil Free London protest outside BP's London office, against Israel's awarding of licences to explore for gas off the coast of Gaza to BP, one of six companies awarded licences to explore there. Credit: Andrea Domeniconi/Fossil Free London

    BP: dirty deals with Israel for Gaza’s gas

    BP not only received this licence but is also set to acquire 50% of the Israeli Delek Group-owned NewMed, who have also been granted a licence. NewMed owns 45% of Leviathan, the largest gas field in the Mediterranean, situated off the coast of Israel.

    Israel’s occupation of the Gaza Strip denies the besieged population access to natural resources within its waters, in violation of international law.

    Activists held signs linking the oil and gas company to Israel’s continued bombardment of Gaza and shouted “stop fuelling genocide” as well as “profits from oil but none from aid, Gazan genocide is British made.”

    Some activists shouted “shame on you” as BP staff left their office buildings after work, while others spoke to the passing public:

    London, UK. 6 December 2023. Fossil Free London protest outside BP's London office, against Israel's awarding of licences to explore for gas off the coast of Gaza to BP, one of six companies awarded licences to explore there. Credit: Andrea Domeniconi/Fossil Free London

    London, UK. 6 December 2023. Fossil Free London protest outside BP's London office, against Israel's awarding of licences to explore for gas off the coast of Gaza to BP, one of six companies awarded licences to explore there. Credit: Andrea Domeniconi/Fossil Free London

    The protest is part of a series of actions by Fossil Free London that seek to highlight the link between the climate crisis, fossil fuel companies, and the occupation of Palestine.

    The grassroots group have protested Ithaca Energy, owned by Israeli petroleum conglomerate Delek Group, which is part of a UN blacklist of companies complicit in illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, as well as previously protesting BP at the end of November, by blocking the doors to office workers at the start of the day.

    Big oil sweeping in upon the wreckage of Palestine

    Joanna Warrington from Fossil Free London said:

    The chant ‘in our thousands, in our millions we are all Palestinians’, rings truer in a climate crisis than ever before. People in Gaza are right now being denied their land, safe water, and secure homes.

    This is what is happening to all of us worldwide due to the climate crisis.

    It comes as no surprise that big oil is now sweeping in, upon the wreckage, using this humanitarian crisis to dredge out profits from more oil and gas, just as they are doing in this global humanitarian crisis of climate collapse.

    We all deserve safety, security and clean air. This is the fight for climate justice. Free Palestine!

    Previously, Fossil Free London also blockaded BP’s London HQ on 20 November.

    Featured image and additional images via Andrea Domeniconi

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Amnesty International report details ‘harrowing’ testimonies of survivors at hands of security forces following nationwide protests

    Iranian security forces used rape and sexual violence to torture, punish and inflict lasting physical and psychological damage on protesters as young as 12 during the country’s nationwide protests last year, a report says.

    The report by Amnesty International is based on the testimonies of 12 women, 26 men, one girl and six boys who survived rape or other forms of sexual violence. Six survivors of rape were subjected to gang rapes by up to 10 male state agents, according to Amnesty.

    Continue reading…

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

  • The so-called ‘humanitarian pause’ is over and Israel is renewing its onslaught on Gaza. Although the pause may have offered a brief glimpse of a potential peace, in reality Israel was still carrying out unspeakable crimes in Gaza, as well as in the West Bank – shooting dead at least 9 children since Friday 1 December. So, Stop The War Coalition (STWC) and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) have organised a day of UK action in solidarity with Palestinian people.

    They’re holding an organising meeting as well on Tuesday 5 December at 6:30pm. You can register for that here.

    Israel: creating a “hellish scenario” in Gaza

    As of Tuesday 5 December, Israel was expanding its assault on Gaza into the southern part of the besieged region. However, international aid organisations have warned that civilians in the densely populated territory are running out of places to flee to. Lynn Hastings, UN humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, told Agence France-Presse (AFP):

    Nowhere is safe in Gaza and there is nowhere left to go… If possible, an even more hellish scenario is about to unfold, one in which humanitarian operations may not be able to respond.

    Israel has killed nearly 15,900 people in Gaza, around 70% of them women and children. The Occupied West Bank has also seen a surge in violence, with Israeli settlers and security forces killing more than 250 Palestinians since 7 October.

    In the Gazan city of Rafah near the Egyptian border, resident Abu Jahar al-Hajj said an air strike near his home felt “like an earthquake”. “Pieces of concrete started falling on us,” he said. In Deir al-Balah further to the north, Walaa Abu Libda found shelter at a hospital, but said her four-year-old daughter remained trapped under rubble.

    “I don’t know if she is dead or alive”

    “I don’t know if she is dead or alive,” said Libda, one of an estimated 1.8 million people Israel has displaced in Gaza; roughly three-quarters of the population, according to UN figures.

    Meanwhile, World Health Organisation (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that his organisation had received a notification from the Israeli military:

    that we should remove our supplies from our medical warehouse in southern Gaza within 24 hours.

    Predictably, Israel denied this – once again accusing another world-leading humanitarian organisation of lying.

    In the UK, marches in support of Palestinian people have been ongoing for weeks. But now, STWC and CND have organised a day of workplace action – to highlight Israel’s ongoing atrocities, and show solidarity with the Palestinian people.

    Stand with Gaza in your workplace

    On Thursday 7 December, STWC and CND are calling on all those in work, college or university to ‘Stand With Gaza’ by organising a walkout, lunchtime or early morning protest (or other collective action) calling for our government to call for a permanent ceasefire. You can find out more about the day of action here.

    Previously on Wednesday 29 November people took workplace action calling for a permanent ceasefire:

    Every collective act, big or small, sends a message to those who are suffering in Gaza that we are with them and puts pressure on our government to call on the Israeli government to stop bombing Gaza.

    As Stop the War founder and vice president Andrew Murray wrote in November:
    In the last few weeks the massive movement to bring an end to the Gaza war has given Keir Starmer the biggest jolt of his miserable leadership, forced the Liberal Democrats to back a ceasefire and, most significantly, brought down a semi-fascist Home Secretary. Be in no doubt, none of this would have happened without hundreds of thousands taking to the streets, in London and across the country, to demand that British politicians support a ceasefire and work to end the calamity unfolding in Gaza. Mobilising millions delivers what misery and massacres alone could not — forcing open the political cracks.

    There will be an online meeting on Tuesday 5 December at 6.30pm to build the Stand With Gaza Day of Action as well as the National Demonstration on Saturday 9 December. You can register for the 5 December meeting here.

    Additional reporting via Agence France-Presse

    Featured image via STWC

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Campaign groups Fuel Poverty Action, Unite Community, and their allies held nationwide protests this weekend, carrying out ‘Warm Ups’ to demand action on fuel poverty. People occupied British Gas offices, protested outside Scottish Power, and engaged their local communities.

    However, not everyone was receptive to the groups’ demands. Security at a South London shopping centre removed activists, simply for ‘warming up’ – albeit with a rather large banner reading ‘Cold Homes Kill’.

    Fuel Poverty Action: we need ‘energy for all’

    Fuel Poverty Action has carried out Warm Ups for over a decade. Activists enter buildings or public spaces in order to warm up as a group. They do this on the grounds of being unable to do so at home due to unaffordable energy prices and the poor conditions of housing. Of course, Fuel Poverty Action and others are also making points about the cost of energy and how it leaves countless poor people struggling.

    The actions are in support of the Energy For All campaign. Launched by Fuel Poverty Action in 2022, it demands that every household is guaranteed enough energy for safe and adequate levels of heating, lighting, cooking as well as protecting additional needs like medical and mobility aids. It would be paid for by ending fossil fuel subsidies, redistributing energy company profits, and higher tariffs on household energy use beyond necessities.

    Unite Community launched the Unite 4 Energy For All campaign in November to support the demand, in collaboration with Unite the Union’s campaign to nationalise energy.

    So, between Friday 1 and Sunday 3 December groups organised over 30 events as far afield as Southend-on-Sea, Portsmouth, Gateshead, and the Isle of Arran – raising awareness of the scourge of fuel poverty and the government and energy companies’ willful inaction.

    Warming Up energy companies

    On 1 December a Warm Up took place at Scottish Power HQ in Glasgow for the second winter running. Participants condemned warrants granted to the energy giant a month ago to forcibly enter the homes of families with newborn babies and install prepayment meters:

    People lined up with their fists in the air outside Scottish Power's head office

    Meanwhile, protestors entered and occupied a British Gas office in Cardiff for 30 minutes, the amount of time they say it takes the company to make half a million pounds in profit:

    People inside a British Gas office with banners that read "cost of living crisis, energy crisis, climate crisis, same crisis" and "warm homes for all"

    Then, on 2 December Fuel Poverty Action ‘Warmed Up’ at OVO Energy’s HQ in Bristol. They bedded down with blankets, sleeping bags, and hot water bottles to symbolise millions of people struggling to keep warm this winter:

    People sat on the floor outside OVO Energy's head office. They are wrapped in blankets and sleeping bags and have signs that read "energy for all"

    Further Warm Ups took place including at the Arndale Centre in Manchester and Kirkgate Market in Leeds:

    Protesters outside the Arndale Shopping Centre in Manchester with a banner that reads "Unite 4 Energy For All"

    Stuart Bretherton from Fuel Poverty Action’s Energy For All campaign said:

    The energy system, with its high standing charges, forced imposition of prepayment meters and other inequities, literally punishes people for being poor. Energy starvation this winter means that lives will be lost if we don’t see concrete action from this Government. People are ‘warming up’ to demand our human right to energy is respected and delivered. There’s plenty of money in energy company profits to ensure access to clean and affordable energy for all.

    However, one Warm Up in South London on 2 December was too much for a shopping centre’s security team.

    Bromley: warming up in the freezing cold

    In the Glades shopping centre in Bromley, members of Bromley and Croydon Unite Community, South East London People’s Assembly, and campaign group the Chronic Collaboration staged a protest and community engagement session. As well as occupying a space in the ground floor, they dropped a large banner off the first floor which read “Cold Homes Kill” – attracting a lot of attention from shoppers:

    However, around 10 minutes into the group’s action, and security were immediately getting involved – telling activists that the Glades was private property, and they couldn’t protest or speak to shoppers about fuel poverty there:

    Undeterred, and somewhat ironically, Unite Community, South East London People’s Assembly, and the Chronic Collaboration took their Warm Up protest outside into the cold. So, instead of a shopping centre they commandeered Bromley’s Christmas tree:

    A banner reading "unite 4 energy for all" attached to the bottom of a Christmas tree

    The groups engaged with shoppers over the Energy For All campaign – with hundreds of people taking leaflets, and dozens signing letters to the government calling for it to act over fuel poverty:

    A street scene with a woman on the left handing a couple a banner while someone films them all

    ‘We will be back’

    Paula Peters is chair of Bromley and Croydon Unite Community. She told the Canary:

    During the occupation of the Glades, security came along and told us it was private property and we were to leave. The action was peaceful and we were speaking to shoppers who were taking leaflets and signing Unite fuel poverty petition cards.

    We were also warming up – as many of us activists included disabled people on pre-payment meters who simply can’t afford to heat their homes.

    Security didn’t care about that, they chucked us into the freezing conditions outside.

    The resolve of the activists yesterday was determined. We will be back for a future protest action very soon to highlight fuel poverty. While people are dying, suffering as a result of corporate greed we will keep campaigning.

    Paula Peters being interviewed in front of a camera

    ‘Stand up and fight’

    Nicola Jeffery is the founder of the Chronic Collaboration – a chronically ill and disabled peoples’ rights group. She told the Canary:

    Fuel poverty is a growing problem in the UK. Yes that’s right, the UK – which is also one of the richest nations in the world. Over the last 13 years Tory governments have forced on its most vulnerable people continuous cuts under a policy of austerity. This has had a serious impact on chronically ill and disabled people, including affecting their health.

    As a result of rising bills and forced pre-payment meters, many are unable to properly heat their homes causing them to be in fuel poverty.

    Many people who struggle to heat their homes look for support locally. In some areas there are ‘warm banks’ available for people to use. Unfortunately, they are very few and far between and if you are chronically ill or disabled this isn’t always accessible or an option, leaving many struggling alone.

    We have ourselves experienced fuel poverty. As a undiagnosed chronically ill and disabled single mother, I was forced to live for nearly two years in receipt of just child benefit. This meant that I literally had £20 a week to live on during that time, £10 on gas and £10 on electric. I was lucky that I could rely on my friends and family for food and support. Others are not so lucky and need so much more support then they are getting.

    We at the Chronic Collaboration fully support Fuel Poverty Action and Unite Community’s collective effort. The government should act on fuel poverty – but it won’t. So, it’s up to all of us to stand up and fight.

    Nicola Jeffery being interviewed in front of a camera

    ‘Fuel poverty is costing human lives’

    As Peters summed up:

    The Warm Up action in Bromley and the banner drop in the Glades shopping centre were of vital importance to stress two things.

    Firstly, the tragic impact of skyrocketing energy bills in a cost of living crisis, meaning millions of people are not able to switch the heating on, which is impacting on people’s health. Tragically, every winter fuel poverty is costing human lives.

    Cold homes are killing people, and while people were Christmas Shopping in Bromley we wanted them to see that – hence the banner drop in the Glades.

    Secondly, the leader of Bromley Council and Tory councillors in 2022 flatly refused to provide the funding for charities and social enterprises to have warm hubs in council wards in Bromley; the council leader said he wouldn’t waste the money on gas and electric, and told residents to warm up in Bromley libraries instead.

    For many residents the nearest library is 1.5 miles away and only open 2-3 days a week due to Tory cuts. Their callous attitude shows what they think of residents – they simply do not care if people are cold and hungry.

    This attitude from Bromley council is also entrenched across much of the political class in the rest of the UK. So, governments and councils will continue to abandon people. However, groups like Fuel Poverty Action, Unite Community, and the Chronic Collaboration will not stand idly by. More actions are expected throughout the rest of the winter.

    Featured image via the Canary, and additional images via the Canary, Bromley and Croydon Unite Community, and Fuel Poverty Action, and video via the Chronic Collaboration

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Just Stop Oil students and other supporters marched from New Scotland Yard in solidarity with political prisoners remanded for slow marching in recent weeks. They are calling for political prisoners being held for nonviolent climate protest to be freed, and for the climate criminals responsible for new oil and gas to be charged with genocide.

    Just Stop Oil: marching on New Scotland Yard

    At 12pm on Saturday 2 December, a crowd of around 80 Just Stop Oil supporters gathered at New Scotland Yard, where they heard testimonies from young political prisoners who have been imprisoned for demanding that the government take basic steps to protect the population by ending new oil and gas:

    Just Stop Oil marching with parliament in the background

    There are six Just Stop Oil supporters under the age of 25 currently imprisoned for marching, without having even been convicted.

    Before the march even started, the Metropolitan Police arrested two people. At least 63 police officers and 18 police vans are accompanying the march. The march stopped at the Supreme Court, before going on to the Crown Prosecution Service headquarters where the marchers staged a sit-down outside the entrance:

    A sit in outside the CPS

    One of those arrested before the march could even start today was Daniel Knorr, a biochemistry student from Oxford who said:

    I feel an intense amount of responsibility at this time, I have confronted the reality of my future head on. This leaves me with no choice but to try and stop this from happening by any means necessary. The British government is advised by some of the best scientific minds in the world, which have unequivocally told them that they have a matter of years left to avert total catastrophe.

    Continuing to licence oil and gas with this knowledge is nothing less than the intentional murder of hundreds of millions at a minimum. The correct response to what is happening is to stop it no matter what, placing your body and freedom in the way if necessary.

    “Our weird, fascist government is indifferent”

    There are currently eight Just Stop Oil supporters in prison, six of whom have been imprisoned, without trial, for peacefully marching in the road. They are Cressie Gethin (21), Noah Crane (18), Ella Ward (20), Ruby Hamill (19), Chiara Sarti (24), and Phoebe Plummer (22).

    Before she was imprisoned, 19 year old Ruby Hamill said:

    We are on course to lose all we know and love. Elsewhere, young people my age face torture for their peaceful resistance to a much more present threat. Our weird, fascist government is indifferent. Our demand is a no-brainer.

    They join Morgan Trowland and Marcus Decker, who have been imprisoned for over a year and were sentenced to three years and two years seven months respectively, in the longest sentences ever awarded for peaceful direct action.

    Thirteen Just Stop Oil supporters are currently under electronic tag surveillance. There have been 667 arrests of Just Stop Oil supporters since 30 October.

    “Alarm bells are ringing”

    Just Stop Oil’s fundraiser has currently raised £56,000 in the last 48 hours, and until 10am on 3 December donations to the fund were doubled by a group of generous donors, including Chris Packham.

    He said:

    Alarm bells are ringing! Good! – the world’s leaders are sleep-walking to oblivion, it’s time they woke up to their responsibilities and found the sense and courage to actually lead us towards environmental stability and recovery.

    The group said:

    Continued expansion of new oil and gas will bring about the wholesale destruction of ordered society and an end to the rule of law. We are not prepared to watch while the government continues to serve the interests of a few, at the expense of everyone else. It’s up to all of us to come together and resist. It is the will of the overwhelming majority of people that we take the actions necessary to ensure our survival and together we can make it happen.

    You can donate to Just Stop Oil’s fundraiser here.

    Featured image and additional images via Just Stop Oil

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Direct action group Palestine Action has successfully managed to get a company to drop its association with one of Israel‘s largest arms manufacturers – directly complicit in its ongoing genocide in Gaza. It shows that, with perseverance, protest and direct action can bring about change.

    Palestine Action: holding iO Associates to account

    Palestine Action is a direct-action network of groups and individuals formed with the mandate of taking action against the sites of Elbit Systems and other companies complicit in Israeli apartheid, calling for all such sites to be shut down. When it launched in 2020, the network explained that:

    We have come together to promote civil disobedience and take direct action against the companies and institutions that Israel uses to violently enforce apartheid, occupation and colonisation on the people of Palestine.

    Now, after weeks of action the sole recruiters for the British operations of Israel’s largest weapons company, Elbit Systems, have confirmed via email to Palestine Action that they ended their association with Elbit on the evening of 29 November. For two months, activists in the Palestine Action network had disrupted iO Associates at their premises across the country, to impede their ability to recruit roles for Israel’s war machine.

    iO Associates recruited the likes of engineers, software developers, and finance staff for positions across the sites of the British branch of Israel’s largest weapons company, Elbit Systems.

    Elbit are the largest supplier to the occupation military, providing the vast majorities of its drones, munitions, surveillance gear, and parts for its tanks, jets, and precision missiles. From Britain specifically, they manufacture parts for Israel’s killer drones, along with weapons sights, tank parts, and more, exporting these technologies to Israel in great volume yearly. This is the nature of the business that iO was Associates with, and were IO Associates biggest client.

    Direct action working

    In response to their facilitation of Elbit’s criminal activities, iO’s offices were stormed and occupied in Manchester on 1 September, and again on 7 October. Activists painted iO offices red on 9 October in London, Reading, and Manchester:

    Palestine Action iO Associates

    They were forced to vacate their Manchester offices from 11 October, after the premises were also stormed by the Youth Front For Palestine, and then finally targeted in Edinburgh twice, on 11 and 17 October. After being forced to vacate their offices, having their online presence tarnished, and (as confirmed to us by former employees) losing their staff who resigned in opposition to their arms trade partnership, iO Associates have finally cut ties with Israel’s weapons trade.

    This is not the first success Palestine Action has had. As the Canary reported in December 2022:

    The minister of defence procurement Alex Chalk has confirmed that the government has ejected Elbit Systems from a £160m contract. The news follows significant third quarter losses for the Israeli weapons company, putting its future in the UK in doubt.

    All this is part of an expansive strategy by Palestine Action, by disrupting the suppliers and facilitators of Elbit’s presence in Britain. It has seen Elbit’s accountants (Edwards), haulage providers (Kuehne + Nagel), landlords (JLL) and many other complicit companies targeted, alongside the hundreds of actions at Elbit sites themselves, continuing to resist the presence of Elbit warmongers in Britain, and constantly reminding those associated with them that they have blood on their hands.

    As a result of iO Associates dropping Elbit Systems, the recruiters have been removed as a target of Palestine Action’s campaign. All targets who still facilitate Israel’s weapons trade are listed on elbitsites.uk

    Featured image and additional images via Palestine Action

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Four Just Stop Oil supporters were acquitted of obstruction of the highway on Monday 27 November, after a judge declared they had a lawful excuse for their actions. Yet somehow, the corporate media has failed to report the story.

    Just Stop Oil: blocking Central London

    The four Just Stop Oil supporters had taken part in a roadblock at Piccadilly on 26 October 2022 to demand that the government halt all licensing and consents for the development of any new fossil fuel projects in the UK. As Just Stop Oil previously wrote:

    16 Just Stop Oil supporters walked onto Piccadilly near Green Park Tube station and disrupted traffic by sitting in the road with banners. Some supporters have glued onto the tarmac.

    Linda Ahtiainen, a recent graduate from Ruokolahti, Finland said:

    “I am taking action with Just Stop Oil because the government’s plan to approve over a 100 new oil and gas projects is completely irresponsible in the face of the climate crisis. I hope that people will understand the severity of the situation we are facing. New oil and gas projects are not just unnecessary, but will destroy everything we depend upon and all we hold dear. This campaign of civil resistance is not about any individual or groups of people but about ensuring the survival of humanity.”

    Clara O’Callahan, Ella-Rose Paez, Julia Redman, and Bethon Roberts appeared before Judge Bone at Stratford Magistrates Court on 27 November, accused of willful obstruction of the highway in relation to peacefully blocking Piccadilly near Green Park Tube station last October.

    Not guilty

    Finding no evidence of ‘significant disruption’ Judge Bone delivered a not-guilty verdict. Addressing the defendants, the judge commented that the ‘issues’ being protested about were of high importance to the public.

    O’Callaghan said:

    I took action with Just Stop Oil a year ago to peacefully protest the government’s genocidal actions in granting more licences. Regardless of the outcome of this trial, the truth is clear – new oil and gas is genocide. In the last year, thousands have died in climate-related extreme weather events. How many more people will be forced to suffer in the next year, and the next? When politics is broken, I believe it is a moral obligation to continue in civil resistance against a genocidal government.

    Also acquitted, Redman commented:

    I am 72 and have 7 grandchildren. I have never had to face threats to life, but as the climate catastrophe unfolds I am haunted knowing they shall face droughts, wildfires, floods, famine, storms, war and may be forced to flee their homes as the climate catastrophe unfolds. I want to be able to tell my grandchildren that I did everything I could to prevent this catastrophe.

    This not guilty verdict follows the acquittal earlier in November of nine other Just Stop Oil supporters in relation to the same roadblock. On 22 November, Adrian Johnson, Sarah Ath, Rosie Bowyers, and Daniell Cole were also acquitted by Judge Bone at Stratford Magistrates court on the basis that a conviction would be disproportionate.

    However, none of the corporate media has reported on any of the Just Stop Oil acquittals. It seems hellbent on demonising the group – most recently with its peaceful sit-in outside prime minister Rishi Sunak’s house on Wednesday 29 November:

    Just Stop Oil Sunak house protest

    The real criminals are in government

    In a defence statement, Johnson previously said:

    I have been brought to court today, but it is the real criminals who should be in the dock who are licensing and promoting new oil and gas. The Met police have been given overwhelming evidence of government crimes against humanity and of genocide yet still refuse to investigate them, while prosecuting ordinary people like myself.

    The not guilty verdicts come as the UN has intervened over the case of Just Stop Oil protestors, Morgan Trowland and Marcus Dekker, currently serving the highest sentences seen in this country for nonviolent protest in modern times.

    On Tuesday 21 November, a letter was made public from the UN to the UK government criticising the ‘severe’ sentences and warned that the new Public Order Act which came into force in July was inconsistent with international human rights law and is therefore undermining the civil society response to the climate crisis we desperately need, calling it a “direct attack on the right to the freedom of peaceful assembly”.

    Featured image via Just Stop Oil

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Activists have staged a ‘silent protest’ outside Barclay’s HQ in London. It was over the bank £1.3bn of shares in companies that supply arms and tech to Israel.

    Barclays: complicit in Israel’s genocide

    On Thursday 30 November, activists from Fossil Free London held a silent demonstration outside the headquarters of Barclays, to stand in solidarity with Palestine and in protest of Barclays investments in Israeli arms companies:

    Barclays protest Fossil Free London

    The protest comes as the humanitarian situation in Palestine worsens, as displaced Palestinians call for a permanent ceasefire.

    Signs read ‘Barclays profits from genocide’ and ‘Barclays profits from apartheid’, as protestors stood silently outside the offices dressed in black as staff walked in:

    An activist holding a sign
    Last year, whilst remaining the number one European bank financing fossil fuels since the Paris Agreement, Barclays also owned £1.3bn worth of shares in companies supplying Israel with weapons and military technology:

    Barclays protest Palestine

    The protest is part of a series of actions by Fossil Free London that attempt to demonstrate the interlinkages between the climate crisis and the situation in Palestine. Last week, they protested outside BP after Israel granted twelve gas exploration licences off the coast of Gaza to six companies, including BP, at the end of October.

    As the Canary previously reported:

    Amidst Israel’s ongoing bombing of Gaza, Israel granted twelve gas exploration licences off the coast of Gaza to six companies, including BP, at the end of October.

    BP not only received this licence but is also set to acquire 50% of the Israeli Delek Group-owned NewMed, who have also been granted a licence. NewMed owns 45% of Leviathan, the largest gas field in the Mediterranean, situated off the coast of Israel.

    Billions invested to kill Palestinians

    Joanna Warrington, a spokeswoman for Fossil Free London, said:

    As Israel continues its genocide on the people of Gaza, all the bosses of Barclays see is a business opportunity. Just as they continue to finance new fossil fuel expansion projects, banks like Barclays prop up violent arms and fossil fuel corporations with their investments.

    All the time that banks like Barclays profit from human suffering as they invest in violent and environmentally destructive practices we will be here to hold them to account. The climate movement stands in solidarity with Palestinians, and against fossil fuel banks operating with impunity to fund the arms and oil that kill en masse.

    Fossil Free London’s protest came after research released by Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT), and War on Want last year uncovered that Barclays holds over £1bn in shares and provides over £3bn in loans and underwriting to nine companies whose weapons, components, and military technology have been used in Israel’s armed violence against Palestinians.

    The companies identified include Elbit Systems, which produces military technology, surveillance systems and drones used in Israel’s attacks on Palestinians, including its bombing campaigns of the besieged Gaza Strip. A range of financial institutions have divested from Elbit Systems due to its role in producing weapons used in violation of international law, including internationally banned cluster munitions.

    Featured image and additional images via Fossil Free London

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Young people and other activists have taken action across the UK against property management company Fisher German, which is complicit in Israel‘s genocidal assault on Gaza and the Occupied Territories.

    Shut down Fisher German

    On Thursday 29 November, as part of an international call to stand with Palestine and take action against the arms industry supplying Israel, people across five cities in England rallied outside the respective offices of Fisher German to urge the property managers to evict Israeli-owned Elbit Systems and all its subsidiaries from Fisher German properties.

    This was London:

    The offices in London, Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, and Newcastle were protested by groups comprised of ordinary people, trade unionists, healthcare workers, activists, and students. In Newcastle, demonstrators were able to get inside and crash the Fisher German offices:

    In all other cities the respective offices were shut down for the day, with employees told to stay home.

    This was Birmingham:

    Profiting from genocide in Palestine

    Fisher German are the landlords of UAV Engines, a subsidiary of Elbit Systems in Shenstone, Staffordshire. Elbit is Israel’s largest arms company, producing 85% of the Israeli military’s drones and 85% of its land-based military equipment. UAV Engines is responsible for producing the engines for Elbit’s Hermes 450 drone which is said to be the ‘backbone’ of Israel’s military drone fleet, used extensively in past wars on Gaza and is undoubtedly in use in the current Israeli assault.

    Elbit markets the Hermes 450 as ‘battle tested’ on the captive people of Gaza, a population of mainly children.

    Over 14,800 people have been killed by the Israeli military since 7 October, including 6,150 children, in what a former senior UN official has described as a “textbook case of genocide”.

    The Israeli assault on Gaza has targeted schools, hospitals, churches, mosques, and homes, with 60% of the housing stock in the Gaza Strip now destroyed and 1.8 million people displaced [3]. The Fisher German protests today are among many that have taken place over the country in recent weeks as activists draw links between British companies’ profits and the ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.

    Erin, one of the campaigners who took part in the action in Manchester, said:

    Over 14,000 people have been killed in Gaza in the last several weeks, with many more also being killed and driven from their homes in the West Bank. British companies such as Fisher German might be based thousands of miles away from Palestine but they play a very real role in supporting Israel’s genocide of Palestinians. Whilst Fisher German continue making profit out of genocide, we will not stop.

    Featured image via Youth Front for Palestine

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A protest over fuel poverty is set to take place in one of south London’s highest-profile shopping centres, the Glades. It’s of little wonder activists are organising it, though – given Tory-run Bromley borough council has refused point blank to help people this winter.

    Warm Ups: taking direct action against fuel poverty

    There’s going to be a protest at Bromley’s The Glades shopping centre on Saturday 2 December:

    Fuel Poverty Action and its allies will be holding ‘Warm Up’ protests across the country on Friday 1 and 2 December, working with trade unions, tenants groups, and the climate movement. The actions are in support of the campaign group’s ‘Energy For All’ campaign. It’s demanding that every UK household is guaranteed the essential energy needed for life and dignity – with the hope of eradicating fuel poverty in the process.

    Warm Ups involve entering and occupying spaces to keep warm together due to unaffordable bills at home. Last winter, the group coordinated two-days of national warm ups in December and January. These helped to win the temporary ban on forced prepayment meters.

    Past warm ups have been carried out in Westminster, Holyrood, energy company HQs, banks, libraries, and department stores. Training and guides to organising warm ups can be found on the group’s website.

    However, in one London borough activists will be warming up against a Tory-run council that is refusing to support people.

    Bromley: Tories letting people freeze

    In Bromley, opposition councillors tried to get the Tory-led council to give support to people this winter. as My London reported:

    A motion was raised to create a £400,000 fund to support charities operating “warm banks” in the borough at a Bromley Council meeting on Monday (October 10). If approved, 100 warm centres could have applied for heating bill grants of up to £2,500 each under the plans.

    The plans would have seen charities and social enterprises being able to set up four to five warm banks in each of Bromley’s wards. However, the Tories on the council effectively poured scorn on the idea. As My London reported:

    Councillor Colin Smith, leader of Bromley Council, said five centres per ward would be a “waste of electricity” and “waste of gas” and one to two hubs would be more preferable…

    It was suggested that residents could keep warm in libraries which are within a mile and a half of 95per cent of residents. Cllr Smith said: “The council’s 15-strong fleet of libraries will be acting as warm places over the course of the winter,” before adding that they would be a “good place to start”.

    The Tories’ claimed the council didn’t have enough money to fund warm banks, either. However, the £400,000 costs for the warm banks represents just 0.16% of Bromley council’s entire net budget for 2023/24. Moreover, the idea that poor people should go and sit in a library all day to keep warm is insulting. Plus, with libraries specifically staff may be going on strike – because the Tories outsourced the running of them to a separate company that is not paying staff properly.

    So, activists will be holding Bromley council to account – as well as the UK government and energy companies, both of whom have overseen spiralling costs to consumers while the corporations rake in huge profits:

    ‘Cold homes are killing people’

    Paula Peters is a disability rights activist and member of both Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) and Bromley and Croydon Unite Community. She told the Canary:

    Ofgem are rising energy prices by 5.1% in January 2024, with millions unable to heat or eat this is corporate greed causing further misery. Older people are using their bus passes to ride the buses all day and keep warm as unable to heat their homes.

    48% of disabled people in the UK are in energy debt. Rationing powering of equipment, turning off peg feeding, ventilators and turning off the fridge to keep insulin cold putting their lives at risk.

    Our message on Saturday is this cold homes are killing people.

    As part of the fuel poverty day of actions on 1 and 2 December 2023 across the UK, Bromley and Croydon Unite Community Branch supported by South East London People’s Assembly and allies are having a public warm up in the Glades shopping centre Bromley from 11am to 1pm on 2 December 2023, to highlight fuel poverty and that millions of people are having to use shopping Centres, libraries, town halls, and public transport to warm up.

    Please join us on Saturday in Bromley.

    If you live in Bromley, get yourself down to the Glades at 11am on 2 December – and send a message to the Tories in both the council and Westminster.

    Featured image via Paula Peters

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • With four years passing since the Tishreen Uprising in Iraq, the echoes of the protests for justice, accountability, and a better future still resound within the nation. However, these demands have remained largely unmet, overshadowed by a grim reality of enforced disappearances and a lack of accountability for the brutal crackdown on peaceful demonstrators.

    The anti-government protests, which began in October 2019, were met with excessive force by Iraqi security forces, leading to numerous deaths, injuries, and the disappearance of activists, lawyers, and ordinary citizens. Organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have highlighted the grim aftermath, shedding light on the tragic stories of those forcibly disappeared.

    Successive Iraqi governments have promised justice, but these pledges have largely remained unfulfilled. Investigations into the atrocities have been meager and far from meeting international standards. The families of the disappeared, courageously seeking answers, have been met with threats and intimidation, preventing them from pursuing justice. Tragically, in some cases, family members advocating for their missing loved ones have themselves become victims of violence.

    Despite assurances and promised investigations, the lack of transparency has further compounded the issue. Committees formed to investigate these violations have failed to deliver the much-needed truth or justice. While reparations have been provided to some families, it falls short of addressing the core issue of accountability for the crimes committed.

    The plight of the disappeared persists. Names and faces of those missing continue to haunt their families and communities. Many have been abducted without a trace, their loved ones left in anguish, seeking answers from authorities who have yet to provide any substantial information.

    The United Nations Committee on Enforced Disappearances has raised concerns and urged the Iraqi government to take urgent steps. Incorporating enforced disappearance as a distinct crime in domestic law and implementing recommendations for addressing disappearances are imperative. Civil society organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), among others, have urged the Iraqi government to take immediate action and address the devastating issue of enforced disappearances.

    Iraq stands at a critical juncture, where justice for the disappeared remains a pressing concern. The voices of those who sought change through peaceful protests continue to resonate. Yet, their absence underscores the urgency of the situation. The Iraqi government must heed the calls for justice, uphold human rights, and ensure accountability for the disappeared protesters, bringing closure to their families and the nation.

    The post Seeking Justice for Iraq’s Disappeared Protesters: A Continuing Struggle appeared first on Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain.

    This post was originally published on Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain.

  • By Apenisa Waqairadovu in Suva

    The Association of the University of the South Pacific Staff (AUSPS) will now make necessary submissions to go on a strike.

    This comes after AUSPS president Elizabeth Read Fong confirmed that the USP Council had denied staff papers to be presented in this week’s USP Council meeting.

    Fong said this meant there would be no pay adjustments, among other things they had asked for.

    She said that the next step would be to take industrial action, and they will give 21 days’ notice prior to the planned action.

    She added that they would decide on the date of the protest for maximum impact.

    AUSPS president Elizabeth Read Fong
    AUSPS president Elizabeth Read Fong . . . date to be chosen for a strike with maximum impact. Image: FBC News

    The staff braved the wet conditions today to carry out a second day of peaceful protest outside the meeting venue of the USP Council.

    Pal Ahluwalia ABC 060221
    USP vice-chancellor Professor Pal Ahluwalia . . . staff want him to step aside or be removed. Image: USP screenshot

    Fong said staff still wanted vice-chancellor Professor Pal Ahluwalia to step down or be removed from his role.

    The meeting will conclude later today.

    Apenisa Waqairadovu is a FBC News multimedia journalist.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • On Monday 27 November, members of community union ACORN took simultaneous action against three companies across England, blockading their entrances to protest against their involvement in Israel’s ongoing assault in Gaza.

    ACORN: taking action against three arms companies

    ACORN is a community union with branches in 25 towns and cities across England and Wales. Known for mobilising people to resist evictions, fighting for rental reform, and with campaigns spanning public transport to community services to the cost of living crisis, ACORN brings people together to win on the issues affecting their communities. Read more about ACORN here. Now, it has turned its attention to Israel’s onslaught in Gaza and the Occupied Territories.

    In Birmingham, people linked arms and held banners to block the entrance of Meggitt. In Bristol, workers turned away as people blocked the entrance to Leonardo, as did workers at the offices of BAE Systems in Leeds. All of these companies manufacture or provide components and systems for military aircraft being used in the bombardment of Gaza:

    From housing to public transport to the cost of living crisis, ACORN brings people together to take action on the issues affecting our members and our communities. Nurses, shop workers, delivery drivers, carers, and parents come together and organise our communities to fight for what ACORN calls “a better quality of life; a dignified and comfortable life for all”.

    For that reason, it said it cannot stand by while the UK government that claims to act in people’s names, and companies in cities, in communities, encourage and profit from the widespread destruction of the lives of nurses, shop workers, delivery drivers, carers, parents, and children elsewhere in the world.

    Enough is enough

    More than 14,000 Palestinian people, up to half of them children, have been killed by the Israeli state since this war began. Nearly two million people have been displaced and more than 50% homes in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed.

    That’s why ACORN came together, it said, to stand with the people of Gaza, community to community, to say:

    Enough is enough! No to companies in our communities profiteering from the death of children! Ceasefire now!

    Criminal companies complicit in misery

    Chelsea Phillips, ACORN Chair, said:

    ACORN will not stand by while entire communities are obliterated, while ordinary people just like us are murdered in their tens of thousands by the Israeli government, with the support of our government and using horrific weapons of war built by British companies.

    The people running these companies are criminals, profiteers who grow rich from the death and misery of people who, but for an accident of birth could be our neighbours, our friends, our parents, our children.

    All ordinary people want and deserve the same things, no matter where we are in the world – safe, happy communities, where we can live with dignity and with hope for the future. These fundamental rights have been denied to the Palestinian people for too long.

    We believe that solidarity and the desire for justice are fundamental to being human. We stand with our brothers and sisters suffering in Gaza and beyond.

    We demand an immediate and lasting ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli military forces from Gaza and an end to the occupation of the Palestinian territories. We call on our government to proactively work towards a ceasefire and that all arms sales from British companies to Israel are halted.

    Speaking of the action, Workers in Palestine, a collective of 18 Palestinian Trade Unions, said:

    Decisive action against the arms trade with Israel such as that taken by ACORN are critical to ending Israeli impunity. In this difficult time, our hope is in international solidarity from trade and community unions. Keep on taking action and speaking up against injustice – together we can build a better world for all.

    Featured image via ACORN

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Staff at Barclays branches across the UK encountered a sticky situation when they arrived at work on Monday 27 November, after climate activists from Extinction Rebellion, sister organisation Money Rebellion, and allied groups glued the doors shut at almost 50 branches.

    Barclays: glued shut by Extinction Rebellion

    At dead of night and armed only with tubes of superglue, activists held the number one funder of fossil fuels in Europe to account for its continued climate-wrecking criminal damage which endangers the future of all life on the planet.

    Since the Paris Agreement Barclays has supported fossil fuels with $190.58bn of investments. New fossil fuels are incompatible with the Paris Agreement goal of keeping temperatures below 1.5C.

    Around fifty Barclays branches in city centres across the UK, including Kilmarnock Road in Glasgow, Albion Street in Leeds, the High Street in Lincoln and London’s Tottenham Court Road, were super glued shut overnight to protest Barclays’ continuing investment in oil and gas projects and to alert customers to the banks appalling impact on the climate and to urge them to switch to ethical banks using websites such as switchit.green:

    Extinction Rebellion has consistently held Barclays to account, as has Greenpeace which took similar action in 2020. Barclays has not taken heed so the group demands that when Barclays updates its annual climate strategy for 2024 it commits to end the funding of fossil fuel projects and companies expanding fossil fuel extraction.

    This is part of a significant new wave of Extinction Rebellion property-focused climate action. Superglued locks shutting down a branch may impact its business in the short term, but the longer term damage is to Barclays’ reputation as customers discover how its outdated business model destroys the environment, and take their money elsewhere.

    The ‘perpetrators of climate breakdown’

    A Money Rebellion activist who took part in the action said:

    Barclays are pumping billions into the fossil fuel industry, completely at odds with advice from the International Energy Agency, United Nations and IPCC. Barclays are choosing short term profits over a liveable future and a lot of us are sick of the measly progress they’re making, as they hide behind their lies and greenwash.

    An Extinction Rebellion activist added:

    We’re responding to public attitudes and targeting the perpetrators of climate breakdown, not ordinary people and we apologise for any inconvenience caused to staff and customers. The inconvenience we’ve caused this morning is small in comparison to the catastrophic events already happening due to Barclays’ financing of fossil fuels.

    Climate change is real and happening now. Extinction Rebellion urges Barclays customers to use their power by moving their account to a bank more aligned with a liveable future for the planet. Websites like switchit.green make it easy and explain clearly the huge impact an individual can make.

    Feature image via Extinction Rebellion

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Pro-Palestinian protesters targeted famous corporate capitalist extravaganza the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday 23 November, to show solidarity with the people in Gaza and the Occupied Territories.

    Macy’s Parade: exposing the system as the problem

    Seven Circles Alliance is a coalition of diverse groups that employ direct action to bring class consciousness to the climate movement and force political and economic system change through a decolonial lens.

    Its objective is to unite labor unions, climate scientists, student bodies, and socialist organisations with the general public to instigate an international general strike to confront the elephant in the room, capitalism. To evolve past the market-based limitations we are facing, it says we must decentralise private capital and its henchmen, the corporations. Without the de-commodification of the ecological means of survival, conditions will continue to deteriorate exponentially.

    Seven Circles Alliance says:

    Through confronting the individualisation of systemic problems, and shifting the responsibility away from the individual and back to the system we will be able to unite all divided factions to rise up for system change and fight against decades of narrative engineering. It is not the fossil fuel companies, the banks, or the media, IT IS THE SYSTEM. They all work together. We do not have a climate problem, the climate is behaving exactly as the laws of physics said it would. We have an economic system problem.

    So, in an urgent call to action, Seven Circles Alliance, a coalition of climate, social justice and political activists, disrupted the Macy’s Parade to bring attention to the ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide of Palestinians:

    Seven Circles says it demands that the US ceases its support for Israel’s occupation of Palestine and calls for both the US and Israel to recognize the ICC (International Criminal Court):

    Palestine and the climate crisis

    In August, Seven Circles disrupted Burning Man to draw attention to capitalism as the root cause of climate and ecological breakdown, and its inability to address the poly-crisis we are currently facing.

    The group said in a statement:

    A free Palestine and the liberation and decolonization of all people, everywhere is deeply linked with the climate movement. If the powers of the West are unabashedly supporting genocide and ethnic cleansing, it is crystal clear that they will not budge an inch in addressing climate breakdown and preventing societal collapse. Climate is a human rights issue, and what we are witnessing right now in Palestine is one of the greatest human rights issues of our time.

    As expressed by human rights activist Ajamu Baraka, we believe that “The fight for climate and environmental justice is in fact a revolutionary project, requiring mass-global resistance and the expropriation of economic and political power of finance and corporate capital.” Confronting the issues of capitalism, along with colonialism and imperialism, head-on is urgently required by environmental and social justice groups, as well as everything in between.

    Featured image via Oliya Scootercaster – screengrab

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Campaign group Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) has organised an emergency protest outside parliament. It happening today (Friday 24 November) at 6pm. The protest is broadly over the Tories’ benefit changes and the Autumn Statement – but specifically one minister’s comments. Chronically ill and disabled people and their allies are urged to get involved.

    DWP: stick your changes up your fucking arse

    As the Canary recently reported, chancellor Jeremy Hunt has pushed through punitive measures for the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) via his Autumn Statement. These include:

    • Work Capability Assessment (WCA) to be tightened, under the guise of ‘reflecting home working’. Hundreds of thousands of people could lose their benefits.
    • Claimants in England and Wales deemed able to work who refuse to seek employment to lose access to their benefits and extras like free prescriptions.

    Chronically ill and disabled people have been horrified. As one person told the Canary:

    The ‘Back to Work Plan’ will lead to more people… dying and our conditions deteriorating through forcing disabled people into job search activity, looking for jobs that we cannot do and cannot cope with due to our medical conditions

    However, some Tory ministers’ comments have been equally disgusting. Hunt for example recently said:

    Anyone choosing to coast on the hard work of taxpayers will lose their benefits.

    But it was Laura Trott who took things to another, even more despicable, level. As the Guardian reported, Trott – who is chief secretary to the Treasury – told Sky News:

    Of course there should be support for people to help them into work but ultimately there is a duty on citizens if they are able to go out to work they should. Those who can work and contribute should contribute.

    So, DPAC is fighting back with a protest called “You can stick your fucking duty up your arse”:

    “You can stick your duty up your fucking arse”

    The group said said in a statement:

    Laura Trott’s recent comments about the conservative party’s latest welfare plans have are just downright bloody insulting.

    Telling disabled people they have a “duty as citizens” to work, after what they have put us through in the last 13 years is an insult to everyone of us who have survived since they came to power.

    Trott was happy to dismiss our valid fears about the Government’s latest attack and the harm it will cause.

    Where was the conservative party’s sense of duty when they imposed austerity-cuts to vital public services including:

    • Social Care
    • The NHS
    • Local Councils
    • The Independent Living Fund
    • Disability Benefits
    • Disabled Students Grant
    • The Access to Work Fund
    • And many many other vital services?

    And at the same time cut benefit level and introduced the Bedroom Tax, capped benefit payments and brought in the two child limit.

    All of which created isolation and destitution for the lucky – and cold dark graves for too many unlucky victims of Tory cruelty.

    Where was their sense of duty when millions were living in fear of the dreaded brown envelope coming through the door because of the Work Capability Assessment and the dehumanising, degrading process that meant for them?

    Where was their sense of duty when they left 100s of 1000s of disabled people to die during Covid, while they stepped over the corpses on their way to their parties?

    There was no sense of duty, only self interest and greed.

    Well, don’t tell us what our duty is – when you so flagrantly failed in yours.

    We didn’t go to the country and ask for their vote, their trust and then let everyone down.

    It was your duty to respect and empower us as equal citizens with a stake in our society.

    Not to take every opportunity to attack, demean and other us.

    You failed in that duty.

    Don’t dare to tell us what ours is.

    You can stick your fucking duty up your arse.

    If you are able to support DPAC’s protest in person, get to parliament at 6pm on 24 November. Or, you can join in online using #ToryCutsKill.

    Featured image via

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) has been behind multiple marches in support of the people of the Occupied Territories and Gaza. However, the group has taken its activism one step further – because it occupied the centre of so-called democracy in the UK right in the middle of the biggest parliamentary event of the week.

    Palestine Solidarity Campaign: taking protest to the next level

    25 activists staged a noisy sit in in Central Hall, Westminster on Wednesday 22 November – timed to coincide with Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs).

    Wearing “Ceasefire” t-shirts and shouting “Ceasefire now!” and “Free Palestine!”, the activists sought to draw attention to the need for a permanent ceasefire to bring an end to Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of civilians in Gaza and to create the conditions to begin to address the root causes of the current crisis including action to end the siege of Gaza:

    PSC earlier released a statement that welcomed the temporary truce announced today but noted that:

    a 4-day respite will not end the killing of civilians, nor will it be long enough to address the humanitarian catastrophe in the Gaza Strip caused by 46 days of relentless bombing and ground attacks, which have killed over 14,000 Palestinians, over 40% of whom were children. Without a permanent ceasefire, the cessation of hostilities announced today could prove to be little more than a stay of execution for thousands of Palestinian men, women, and children.

    PSC said it will redouble its efforts to ensure that there is no return to the violence, that Israel is not allowed to continue the mass slaughter of civilians and that the root causes of the crisis can be addressed, which means action to end the UK’s support for ongoing military occupation and Israel’s enforcement of a system of apartheid

    Today’s action reinforced those demands with activists occupying central lobby chanting “Full Ceasefire Now“, “End the Siege” and “Free, Free Palestine”

    The temporary truce: just a ‘stay of execution’

    Ben Jamal PSC Director said:

    The temporary truce announced today is welcome but without a permanent ceasefire it could prove to be little more than a stay of execution for thousands more Palestinians including children. Now more than ever we need to raise our voices to demand that this truce.

    Meanwhile, the group is preparing for its next march through Central London. On Saturday 25 November, PSC and allies will be holding a rally starting at Park Lane:

    As of 12pm on Thursday 23 November, PSC was still looking for stewards for the march. If you can support the group, you can fill out a form here.

    Featured image via PSC – screengrab

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Sentences risk silencing public concerns about the environment, climate change rapporteur Ian Fry says

    Long sentences handed to two Just Stop Oil protesters for scaling the M25 bridge over the Thames are a potential breach of international law and risk silencing public concerns about the environment, a UN expert has said.

    In a strongly worded intervention, Ian Fry, the UN’s rapporteur for climate change and human rights, said he was “particularly concerned” about the sentences, which were “significantly more severe than previous sentences imposed for this type of offending in the past”.

    Continue reading…

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

  • For the sixth Saturday in a row since Israel launched its bombardment of Gaza, tens of thousands of British people are expected to show their opposition to the indiscriminate attacks on civilians which have claimed the lives of more than 11,000 Palestinians, two thirds of them women and children.

    Actions across the UK for a ceasefire in Gaza

    Last Saturday more than 800 000 people marched in London, one of the largest political demonstrations in British history. On Wednesday 15 November, as MPs prepared to vote on a ceasefire in an amendment brought by the SNP, they received more than 130 000 emails in three days from supporters of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC). The demand for a ceasefire continues to grow, not lessen.

    This Saturday 18 November sees a second National Day of Action to allow people in cities, towns and villages across the UK to show that 76% of the UK (as evidenced by a YouGov opinion poll) are in favour of an immediate ceasefire to halt the war crimes we are witnessing on a daily basis. So:

    • More than 100 actions are expected to take place across the UK in 6th weekend of protests.
    • The demand is for an immediate ceasefire and lifting of Israel’s illegal siege to allow in desperately needed supplies of humanitarian aid.
    • UK political leaders are urged to stop their complicity in Israeli war crimes.

    There are actions from Abergavenny to Stoke, involving vigils, protests, petitions, fundraising and marches. Several protests will highlight the complicity of corporations like Barclays Bank, which holds over £1 billion in shares, and provides over £3 billion in loans and underwriting to 9 companies whose weapons, components, and military technology have been used in Israel’s armed violence against Palestinians.

    Ordinary people in their thousands will demonstrate that the scenes from Gaza have hit home to a wide cross section of the British public. The demand continues for a ceasefire and for our politicians to halt their support for Israel’s war crimes.

    ‘Appalling collective punishment’ by Israel

    Ben Jamal, PSC director, said :

    Israel’s appalling decision to collectively punish and destroy Gaza has killed one Palestinian every four minutes and a Palestinian child every 10 minutes.

    It is cruel, relentless, and illegal under international law.

    The support given to Israel by UK political leaders is shameful and unjustifiable. This Saturday, ordinary people across the UK will come out again to show the vast majority of them support a ceasefire. They will show their solidarity with Palestinians who are suffering unimaginable harm. They will also demand the root causes are not forgotten – Israel’s decades-long military occupation of Palestinian territories and its system of apartheid against Palestinians.

    We demand justice for the Palestinian people – their right to self-determination and to live in freedom, safety, and with full human rights.

    You can read the full list of PSC and other groups’ protests and events on 18 November, and find one near you, here.

    Featured image via PSC

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Downing Street says legislation will make clear ‘Rwanda is safe’ and will address court’s concerns after policy ruled unlawful. This live blog is closed

    At his Institute for Government Q&A Sir Mark Rowley, commissioner of the Metropolitan police, refused to say what he felt about Lee Anderson, the Conservative party deputy chair, declaring yesterday that ministers should just ignore the supreme court judgment saying the Rwanda police was unlawful. Asked to respond, Rowley just said:

    Politicians hold me to account, I don’t hold them to account.

    Starmer travelled north of the border just hours after a revolt within his party over a ceasefire in Gaza resulted in the resignation of eight of his frontbenchers.

    The Labour leader highlighted what he described as the “failure” of the UK government to negotiate a trade deal with India, a key exporter for Scotch whisky.

    Continue reading…

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

  • More than 125 000 people have contacted their MP in the last three days to demand they vote for a ceasefire in Gaza.

    Ceasefire now in Gaza

    The figure comes from a tally of people taking a Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) e-action to support our call for a ceasefire. The number reflects the scale and depth of public opinion in response to Israel’s indiscriminate bombing and ground offensive which has so far killed more than 11,000 Palestinians, including 5,000 children, in 39 days. A Palestinian has been killed every four minutes and a Palestinian child every 10 minutes since Israel’s bombing campaign began.

    MPs are poised to vote this evening on a Scottish National Party amendment to the Kings Speech which calls for an immediate ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza. MPs of all are parties are being inundated with emails calling on them to support the amendment. A demonstration outside Parliament at 5pm today is expected to draw several thousand people in support.

    ‘Examine your conscience’

    Ben Jamal, director of PSC says,

    We urge all MPs to examine their consciences.

    This is a basic moral test. Do they vote to stop the killing of thousands of civilians, including thousands more children, or not?

    Not voting for a ceasefire and voting for a humanitarian pause delivers a message to Palestinians that we seek a pause in the bombing so you can be fed and receive medical supplies before the bombing resumes. Any humanitarian improvements achieved during a pause will be reversed once the bombing starts again.

    With opinion polls showing a large majority of the British public in favour of a ceasefire, no MP should fail to act in accordance with what the public demand and what is morally correct in response to the indiscriminate killing in Gaza.

    The rally outside Parliament today begins at 5pm, with a stage and speakers including MPs:

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) has branded Suella Braverman “unfit for office” amid her “disgraceful” comments on the group’s upcoming march.

    Horror in Gaza and Palestine

    For the fifth consecutive Saturday since Israel launched its deadly war on Gaza, hundreds of thousands of people will protest in support of besieged Palestinians and for an immediate ceasefire. Following a Day of Action in cities and towns across the UK last week, this Saturday sees the fourth National March for Palestine, when more than 500 000 people are expected to converge in London, making it one of the largest political marches in British history:

    The Palestinian death toll in Israel’s merciless assault stands at 10 818 killed, including 4412 children. Thousands more are missing, presumed dead, under the rubble of buildings that have been destroyed. 1.5 million people have been forcibly displaced. Israel has cut off electricity, food, water and fuel from a population of 2 million people, half of whom are children.

    Oxfam have stated that starvation is being used as a weapon of war. Vital services, including health and sanitation are being pushed towards collapse. There is a huge humanitarian crisis unfolding in front of the world’s eyes.

    PSC on Braverman: “disgraceful remarks”

    PSC reasserts its concerns at the disgraceful remarks by Home Secretary Suella Braverman. She has sought to delegitimise the call for a ceasefire, which is supported by the vast majority of the British public, smear those marching for peace and stir up public unrest. The decision to avoid the centre of London and Whitehall on this weekend was made by the organisers many weeks ago and agreed with the Police.

    Suella Braverman was fully aware of this fact, as was Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, when they issued statements suggesting that the march was intended to disrupt preparations for Remembrance Sunday. As a result, they have caused, we believe intentionally, public concern and greenlit far right activists who have declared their intention to come to London “to protect the Cenotaph”.

    This has created additional unnecessary challenges to the Police and the march organisers to ensure public safety in stewarding many hundreds of thousands of people throughout the march.

    The uncertainty earlier this week as to whether the march might be banned also created delays in the normal process of communication with the Police to plan out the details of the march, including getting agreement to our request to have more than one stage area at the end, so that crowds can be dispersed and managed more easily.

    ‘Unfit for office’

    We reject the attempts by political leaders, opposed to the call for a ceasefire, to defame those marching as hateful, antisemitic and intent on causing disorder. On Saturday we will be marching for peace, for an immediate ceasefire to end the mass killing of civilians in Gaza, and for action to address the root causes of the current violence, which are Israel’s ongoing military occupation, and imposition of a system of apartheid upon all Palestinians.

    Ben Jamal, PSC Director, said:

    Contrary to the disgraceful rhetoric of Suella Braverman and other political leaders, hundreds of thousands of people from all walks of life, will come to London to march for peace, for a ceasefire, and for the rights of the Palestinian people to be respected. They reject a narrative that seeks to dehumanise Palestinians and their legitimate struggle for freedom. They are appalled by the mass killing of Palestinians including 4500 children, and they want an end to British complicity in supporting Israel’s decades long violations of international law. They reject all forms of racism and believe that a consistent antiracism means opposing in word and deed the imposition upon the Palestinian people of a system of apartheid. They march as well to affirm the right to protest, now under its most severe attack by a Home Secretary who has shown herself to be wholly unfit for office.

    Featured image via Wikimedia and Wikimedia

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On Monday, nine activists were arrested by the Cambridge Police Department during a rally organized by Palestine Action US at the Cambridge office of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest arms company. The protesters face a litany of charges, including assault and battery on a police officer, possession of an incendiary device, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. The arrestees have pleaded not…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Palestine Action has targeted the Foreign Office in an early morning display of solidarity with the Palestinian people. The group sprayed the department’s office red to highlight the blood it has on its hands over Israel’s war crimes in Gaza. However, Palestine Action was also drawing attention to the Foreign Office’s complicity in the entire situation in the Occupied Territories, which stretches back 106 years.

    Palestine Action: hitting the Foreign Office

    Palestine Action has been at the forefront of direct action and resistance in the UK over Israel’s colonialism. It often focuses on arms company Elbit, which has factories in the UK and supplies the Israeli army. However, on Thursday 2 November it had the Foreign Office in its sights.

    The group said in a statement:

    Today, on the 106th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, activists from Palestine Action targeted Britain’s foreign office… [It] was sprayed in messages including ‘Britain Guilty’ and ‘Fuck Balfour’.

    "Blood" spraypainted onto the foreign office

    Security at the Foreign Office could do little more than look on, as Palestine Action continued its targeting:

    The group sprayed “fuck Balfour” across the building:

    Palestine Action explained:

    Written in 1917 by then UK foreign secretary, Lord Arthur Balfour, the Declaration signed away the land of Palestine to the Zionist colonial project – a land Britain never had the right to give away. After the declaration, until 1948, the British burnt down indigenous villages to prepare the way for the Nakba; with this came arbitrary killings, arrests, torture, sexual violence including rape against women and men, the use of human shields and the introduction of home demolitions as collective punishment to repress Palestinian resistance.

    The Nakba (‘Great Catastrophe’) saw British armed and trained Zionist militia forcibly displace over 750,000 Palestinians, destroy over 500 Palestinian villages, and massacre many families. The genocide underway right now in Gaza, which has already claimed the lives of over 8,500 Palestinians, injured tens of thousands more, while the 2.1 million in Gaza are starved, thirsted, and displaced, would not be happening if not for Balfour and Britain’s ongoing political and military support for the Zionist project.

    Showing solidarity with Palestinians

    The group also targeted the offices of arms firm Leonardo in London:

    It is an Italian company that has offices worldwide. Palestine Action said in a press release:

    Israel’s F-35 fighter jets, are being used in its ongoing bombardment and massacre of Palestinians in Gaza [4], using ‘high-energy military laser’ targeting systems produced by Leonardo UK [5]. Leonardo furthermore supplies Israel with Aermacchi M-346 aircraft and components for its Apache attack helicopters [6], which have also been deployed in the violent ethnic cleansing of Gaza [7].

    It briefly occupied Leonardo’s office:

    Overall, as the group summed up:

    The deep military-industrial ties between Britain and Israel show that the Balfour Declaration is not a historic document: instead, the declaration is the first proof of Britain’s commitment to the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians. This is a commitment they continue to act on, arming the Israeli regime with the means to commit its genocide via Leonardo not least of all.

    As of 2 November, Israel had killed nearly 9,000 people in Gaza – including over 3,600 children. These atrocities cannot continue – and the more groups like Palestine Action highlight Britain’s complicity in Israeli war crimes, the better.

    Featured image and additional images via Palestine Action

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.