Category: Protest

  • Mahsa Yazdani convicted of blasphemy and ‘insulting supreme leader’ as Iran regime targets families of those killed in protests

    A mother in Iran, whose son was reportedly killed after being shot repeatedly at close range by security forces, has been sentenced to 13 years in prison by an Iranian court after she demanded justice for her child on social media.

    Mahsa Yazdani, whose 20-year-old son Mohammad Javad Zahedi was killed at an anti-regime protest in September 2022, was convicted on charges of blasphemy, incitement, insulting the supreme leader, and spreading anti-regime propaganda, according to human rights groups and family members. They say she will serve the first five years with no chance of parole.

    Continue reading…

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

  • As of Wednesday 1 November, Israel had killed nearly 8,800 people in Gaza in less than a month – including over 3,600 children. While UK politicians are failing to condemn Israel’s war crimes, campaign groups and the public have been taking action themselves. There have been national marches and spontaneous protests happening week-in, week-out in support of Palestine. However, this weekend’s upcoming action looks somewhat different to its predecessors.

    Sits ins and national marches for Gaza

    In the UK, there have been ongoing protests against Israel’s slaughter in Gaza, and occupying forces and settler violence in the Occupied Territories. For example, on Tuesday 31 October campaign groups Jews Against Genocide and Sisters Uncut rallied commuters at Liverpool Street Station in London to perform a sit in – bringing the concourse to a standstill:

    However, the focal point of UK resistance to Israel has been the national marches in London, which have taken place three Saturdays in a row. Organisers claimed the march on 28 October saw around half a million people attend:

    However, this weekend the groups are changing tactics.

    On Saturday 4 November, campaign groups are asking people to focus on their local marches:

    The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) said on its website:

    For the past three weeks we’ve marched through London in our hundreds of thousands to demand a ceasefire. We’re rising up in solidarity with Palestine, and we can’t stop now.

    On Saturday 4 November, we will take action in towns and cities the length and breadth of Britain to demand a ceasefire NOW to end Israel’s assaults.

    The list of local protests is already large, and PSC said it will hopefully have more to add. Locations include:

    • Bristol.
    • Carlisle.
    • Dorchester.
    • Dumfries.
    • Durham.
    • Eastbourne.
    • Exeter.
    • Hastings.
    • Hitchin.
    • Kirkwall.
    • Leamington Spa.
    • Liverpool.
    • Newcastle.
    • Northampton.
    • Nottingham.
    • Plymouth.
    • Portsmouth.
    • Sheffield.
    • Southend.
    • Tunbridge Wells.
    • Wolverhampton.
    • Worthing.
    • York.

    In London, there are also local actions in numerous boroughs. Then, these will be joining together with the London rally in Trafalgar Square at 2:30pm.

    On Sunday 5 November, there will be further actions in Birmingham and Chester.

    Politicians are fomenting a ‘climate of intolerance’

    Of course, home secretary Suella Braverman has made a point of labelling the Palestine protests as being “hate marches” against Jewish people. She also claimed that:

    We’ve seen now tens of thousands of people take to the streets after the massacre of Jewish people, the single largest loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust, chanting for the erasure of Israel from the map.

    This is demonstrable nonsense. PSC said in a press release that:

    For Home Secretary Suella Braverman to characterise those making this call for an end to the commission of war crimes, as “hateful” is grotesque, irresponsible and further evidence of her unfitness for public office…

    She has falsely asserted the chant “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” is a call for the eradication of Jewish Israelis, when it is actually a call for the dismantling of the system of apartheid that affects all Palestinians, whether in Gaza, the West Bank or Israel.

    By so doing she is contributing to a climate of intolerance, a dehumanising of Palestinians, including British Palestinians, and is further threatening the right to protest in this country

    Meanwhile, support from the Labour Party is slim pickings. After Israel bombed the Jabalia refugee camp, killing and injuring at least 400 civilians, Labour’s shadow foreign secretary David Lammy defended Israel’s actions. He told BBC Radio 4 Today on Wednesday 1 November:

    it’s clear to me it’s wrong to bomb a refugee camp – but clearly, if there is a military objective it can be legally justifiable. It’s for Israel to explain its actions.

    On X, people reacted furiously:

    So, with both the Tories and Labour unquestioningly supporting Israel, it’s vital for the rest of us to stand up for the Palestine and its people. So, get yourself to a protest on 4 November, and send a clear message to politicians that you do not consent to complicity in Israel’s war crimes – and that you stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people.

    Featured image via Friends of Al Aqsa – screengrab

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya condemns the sentencing of Tor Band’s three members

    Musicians from a group that became a symbol of protest in Belarus have been sentenced to prison terms of up to nine years in the country’s relentless crackdown on dissent.

    Tor Band became widely known in Belarus during a wave of protests that arose in August 2020 after a disputed presidential election in which Alexander Lukashenko was declared the winner, giving him a sixth term in office.

    Continue reading…

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

  • On Monday 30 October, chronically ill and disabled people protested outside the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) over the department’s planned changes to the Work Capability Assessment (WCA). The demo served as a stark reminder of how chronically ill and disabled people have had to fight the DWP for years – and, clearly, how they’re still going to have to.

    The DWP’s latest changes to the WCA

    As the Canary previously reported, the DWP is planning to change the WCA. Specifically, the following factors – currently considered in the assessment – are being removed:

    • People’s mobility.
    • Bladder or bowel incontinence.
    • The inability to cope in social situations.
    • People’s ability to leave their homes.
    • Work being a risk to claimants or others – a clause which means that an individual is “treated as having limited capability for work and work related activity”.

    That is, the DWP thinks anyone who would currently be exempt due to those descriptors should instead have to work from home. Reading between the lines, the DWP is trying to reduce the benefits bill by forcing more chronically ill and disabled people into work. As the charity Disability Rights told Disability News Service (DNS):

    The government’s proposed changes to the work capability assessment are less to do with helping disabled people into work than a cynical attempt to impose conditionality and to reduce benefit payments.

    In reality, these changes could be terrible for the people affected. They could mean that more people would lose the health-related elements of benefits like Universal Credit. In turn, this means the DWP could subject them to sanctions.

    So, chronically ill and disabled people have begun fighting back – firstly, by going directly to the DWP’s head office.

    DPAC: fighting back against the DWP

    On Monday 30 October, Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) organised a protest outside the DWP’s Caxton House offices in Central London:

    Members of DPAC protesting outside the DWP's head office

    Some people’s placards summed up the issues well:

    a placard that reads 'death, worry, persecution, oppose tightening of the WCA' to represent the DWP

    Other groups were out supporting DPAC in person – including branches of Unite the Union’s community wing, and campaign group WinVisible:

    Campaign group WinVisible holding a banner at the DPAC DWP protest which reads 'winvisible women with visible and invisible disabilities'

    Prominent DPAC and disability rights activist Paula Peters lead the protest. She has been one of the most visible faces in the ongoing fight against successive governments and the DWP. Online, campaign group the Chronic Collaboration also got involved:

    However, one of the most pertinent statements came from John McArdle, a campaigner with Scottish disability rights group Black Triangle. He told the protest that campaign groups like his and DPAC had been taking direct action for “13 years, and things are still getting worse”.

    Protesters then blocked the entrance into the road the DWP offices are located on:

    members of dpac and other groups blocking a road as part of their WCA protest

    DPAC used the chant “no more deaths from benefit cuts” – a slogan the group has used for years:

    Cops, surprisingly, did nothing –  but one driver was aggressive towards DPAC members:

    Overall, DPAC’s WCA protest marked a return to the activism the group has become well-known for, after the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic stopped a lot of the group’s activity. However, the demo was also a moment for reflection, too.

    A lost decade

    Campaigners formed both DPAC and Black Triangle in the wake of the 2010 election of the coalition government. This came at a time where the Tories and Lib Dems were pushing harsh reforms to the social security system. Both groups were a response to this – and both have been campaigning ever since. During this time, some members of DPAC have passed away – like co-founder Debbie Jolly:

    DPAC co-founder Debbie Jolly

    The Canary has been covering DPAC’s actions since 2016, when the group and its supporters blocked Westminster Bridge in a high-profile piece of direct action. As we wrote at the time:

    For disabled people, this is one of the most worrying times in decades. With support being cut, relentless attacks from the government, and hate crime rapidly rising, it’s little wonder that they feel they need to act. And in the 21st century, the fact that they still have to fight for their rights in such a public way should be a concern to us all.

    Seven years later, the DWP’s persecution of chronically ill and disabled people has barely changed – as McArdle alluded to at the WCA demo. This is despite countless protests, political pressure, and even the UN getting involved. The international body found in a 2016 investigation that successive governments and the DWP had committed “grave” and “systematic” violations of disabled people’s human rights.

    Nothing changes, and disabled people have no choice but to fight

    The demo felt like an eerie moment of déjà vu: hearing the same chants and seeing disabled people blocking roads felt like we’d been here before. DPAC, of course, very much has been here before. The fact that the group is once again having to protest over threats to disabled people – which is ultimately what the issue with the DWP’s WCA changes is – is a damning indictment of the department.

    Moreover, though, it’s a damning indictment of society – there was little support for DPAC’s protest outside of the chronically ill and disabled communities.

    In 2016, opposing the DWP cutting disabled people’s benefits was ‘all the rage’ among some sections of the political and media class, and non-disabled activists. Many people jumped on the bandwagon, lending their supposed solidarity. However, that support has clearly waned, and non-disabled activists, politicians, and journalists have moved on to the next issue they think will further their own aims or careers.

    For chronically ill and disabled people, there is no moving on. This is their lives – and it was frustrating to see so little solidarity from non-disabled people. However, DPAC and other groups will continue to fight the DWP regardless of whether non-disabled people stand with them or not – not because they want to, but because they have no choice. 

    Featured image and additional images via the Canary and DPAC

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Dakar, October 26, 2023—Guinean authorities must identify and hold accountable those officers responsible for arresting and assaulting journalists during an October 16 demonstration calling for authorities to lift restrictions on the privately owned news website Guinée Matin, and drop all legal proceedings against the journalists, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.

    On October 16, Guinean police and gendarmerie officers insulted, beat with batons, kicked, and shot tear gas at reporters Mariam Sall, with privately owned broadcaster Espace TV; Mariama Bhoye Barry, with privately owned broadcaster Cavi TV; and Amadou Lama Diallo, with Guinée Matin, as they covered a demonstration in the capital, Conakry, according to the three journalists who spoke with CPJ and a video filmed by Barry and published by Guinée Matin.

    The demonstration was organized by the Syndicate of Press Professionals of Guinea (SPPG) to voice concern over the blocking of access to the Guinée Matin website in Guinea since August 15. The website has remained available outside the country.

    Police arrested Sall, Barry, Diallo, and 10 journalists participating in the protest and detained them at Conakry’s Kaloum central police station before transferring them to a local court where they were charged with “criminal participation in a prohibited gathering on the public highway” and were released, according to Barry and news reports. Their next court date has not been set.

    “Guinean authorities should allow journalists to stand up for their rights and against censorship, and ensure reporting on public demonstrations does not carry the risk of attack and arrest,” said Angela Quintal, CPJ’s Africa program coordinator, in New York. “Authorities should drop the legal proceedings against journalists covering the October 16 demonstration by their colleagues calling for the unblocking of the Guinée Matin news website.”

    Ibrahima Foulamory Bah, a reporter for the online media outlet Le Courrier de Conakry, who was participating in the demonstration, told CPJ that he stepped in to protect Barry from the officers and was also hit in the neck by their batons, cracking a bone in his neck.

    Diallo accompanied Bah, Sall, and Barry to a private clinic in Conakry, where Barry was treated for wounds to his hand and Sall for injuries to the neck. Bah was ordered to refrain from work for a month due to his neck injury.

    The 10 journalists who participated in the protest and were briefly detained and charged were:

    • Bah
    • Sékou Jamal Pendessa, secretary general of the SPPG. 
    • Thierno Baïlo Diallo, a reporter with privately owned website Le Mondemédias
    • Nyima Aïssata Kébé, a reporter with privately owned website Infochrono
    • Aminata Sylla, a reporter with privately owned online broadcaster Unique 360 TV
    • Mamady Bérété, a Unique 360 TV reporter
    • Abdoulaye Cissé, a reporter with privately owned website Le Renifleur 
    • Lamine Kaba, an Espace TV reporter
    • Fodé Camara, a reporter with privately owned online broadcaster Ouestvision TV
    • Djibril Camara, a reporter with privately owned radio station Nostalgie Guinée

    Guinée Matin remained inaccessible within the country as of October 26, Nouhou Baldé, the outlet’s director, told CPJ.

    Azoka Bah, a spokesperson for the Guinean Ministry of Communication, told CPJ that the government was not responsible for the blocking of Guinée Matin’s website. CPJ’s calls to a number for Guinea’s Ministry of Post, Telecommunications, and Digital Economy and to Bachir Diallo, Minister of Public Security and Civil Protection, rang unanswered.

    Separately, Inquisiteur, another local news website that had been inaccessible since September 1, was brought back online on October 11 after the resolution of an ownership dispute, according to its administrator Mamadou Babila Keita and media reports.

    A transitional military government took control of Guinea in a coup that overthrew elected President Alpha Condé on September 5, 2021.


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Dozens of residents from a fishing area in north-central Vietnam this week have protested the building of a port project, despite police launching a criminal investigation of them for disturbing public order, demonstrators said.

    On Wednesday, Thanh Hoa provincial authorities mobilized dozens of police officers to force protesting fisherfolk — mostly women — to leave the construction site where a dock is being built, one of the sources said. Though they stayed, police did not take any measures against them and left the area at noon.

    About 300 residents of Hai Ha commune first took to the streets on the morning of Oct. 23 with banners and placards to show their opposition to the Long Son Container Port project, which they say will adversely affect their livelihoods and living environment. 

    “We don’t want the Long Son Container Port project because it is located in the coastal area we inherited from our ancestors, and it has been passed down from generation to generation,” said a villager on Wednesday who declined to be named out of fear of reprisal by authorities.

    Fishing provides the only income to cover her family’s expenditures, including her children’s education expenses, she said. 

    “If the port is built, residents like us will be adversely affected by pollution, and there will be no places for our boats to anchor and no places for us to trade seafood,” she said.

    Generating income

    Long Son Ltd. Co. is investing more than US$30 million to build the 15-hectare (37-acre) project, which will have a 250-meter (820-foot) dock. It is expected to be operational in 2025. 

    The project will play a crucial role in the development of the first dedicated container port area at Nghi Son Port, according to state-run Vietnam News Agency. Once Dock No. 3 is built, it will serve as a dike against waves and winds and create a 10-hectare (33-foot) water area for local fishermen to safely anchor their boats.

    The port is expected to generate revenue and jobs in Thanh Hoa province, including Hai Ha commune. 

    State media reported that Thanh Hoa provincial authorities conducted thorough studies and environmental assessments as well as consulted local people on the project.  But the woman said representatives of the authorities only went around to people’s homes to try to persuade them not to oppose the project and its implementation. 

    The protest on Oct. 23 prompted Nghi Son town police to file charges against them for obstructing traffic and causing a kilometer-long (0.6 mile) vehicle backup.

    Police at the scene took photos of the protesters, recorded videos and collected other information, some villagers involved in the demonstration said. 

    Police also issued an order requiring Hai Ha residents to adhere to the law and not to gather in groups to disrupt public order, incite others, or be enticed to obstruct the construction of Dock No. 3 of the Long Son Container Port project. 

    Threatened with arrest

    Police threatened them with arrest for disrupting public order — which carries a sentence of up to seven years in prison — if they continued.

    Hai Ha commune includes nearly 3,000 households with about 11,000 inhabitants, most of whom rely on fishing to make a living. The villagers say they fear that port officials will cut off their access to the waters where they fish and prohibit them from anchoring their boats.

    Villagers ignored the police order and continued their protest on Tuesday and Wednesday, hoping to prevent the dock’s construction.  

    The woman quoted above said that the villagers are not afraid of going to jail because they don’t want to lose their home beach.

    But if they have to relocate as a result of a loss of livelihoods, villagers will expect satisfactory compensation and a new living area with spaces to safely anchor their boats, she said.

    “We staged a march and did not offend anyone or did not cause any harm,” she said. “None of us offended the police. We followed the traffic law, [and] we walked on the roadside and stayed in rows.” 

    The port will join four other industrial projects surrounding the 1,200-hectare (2,965-acre) commune. The others are a cement factory, a port for coal transportation in the north, a thermal power plant in the west, and a steel factory in the south.

    Though the projects have created jobs for locals, they have also created serious environmental pollution, negatively affecting residents’ lives, a second woman said.

    Translated by Anna Vu for RFA Vietnamese. Edited by Roseanne Gerin and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Vietnamese.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • A court in Germany convicted four scientists on Tuesday 24 October for taking action against institutions fueling the climate crisis.

    The four activists are members of the international climate campaign group Scientist Rebellion. The group of scientists take non-violent direct action (NVDA) against the governments and corporations failing to act on warnings from the scientific community.

    Scientist Rebellion activists convicted

    A judge at the Munich Regional Court sentenced the four activists for trespassing and causing criminal damage during a series of peaceful protests.

    In October 2022, the activists had participated in three days of action against major fossil fuel financier BlackRock, car manufacturer BMW, and the German government for their role in exacerbating the climate crisis.

    On the first day, Scientist Rebellion activists poured molasses to symbolise oil on the floor and windows of the BlackRock offices in Munich.

    Following this, the scientists stuck themselves to the road to cut off traffic on the central Odeonsplatz – a large square in the heart of Munich. Scientists Rebellion said this second action took aim at the government for its inadequate climate plans.

    Activists carried out their final action at the BMW headquarters, where they smeared molasses and stuck scientific papers onto the cars and walls. On top of this, Scientist Rebellion members glued their hands to a BMW M8, which they said was the most polluting car in the exhibition.

    Funding fossil fuels and failing climate targets

    As the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock funnels huge sums into fossil fuels. For example, in 2022, German campaign group Urgewald found that the company had ploughed $109bn into the coal industry.

    Additionally, a new Urgewald report on 19 October revealed that BlackRock is the world’s largest institutional investor in eight of the world’s top coal plant developers. It poured US $1.68bn into these eight Chinese coal power companies.

    As the Canary’s Glen Black has previously reported, the company has signed up to the Net Zero Asset Managers’ initiative (NZAM). In particular, it has pledged its green credentials while maintaining enormous holdings in fossil fuels:

    US asset management giant BlackRock topped the list of firms signed up to NZAM. It had exposure to all 15 oil and gas firms, with investments totalling $116bn last year, according to Carbon Tracker.

    Moreover, a new study from 20 October identified how the company has been increasing its shares in two major fossil fuel companies since the Paris Agreement.

    Meanwhile, car manufacturer BMW has vociferously lobbied against climate policies. For example, the car group has driven opposition against a COP26 pledge to phase out internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles. Alongside this, it has challenged an EU 2035 zero emissions target for cars and vans as well as a similar UK ban on new petrol and diesel sales after 2030.

    Of course, activists also targeted the German government for its climate failures to date. Climate Action Tracker tracks the climate policy progress of 39 countries and the European Union. In September, it found that Germany’s current trajectory is “insufficient” to meet the Paris climate goals.

    Valuing private property over life

    The judge handed down a fine of 1,680 euros to each of the four Scientist Rebellion activists. If they fail to pay the fine, the activists will instead serve 105 days of prison.

    During the trial, the judge recognised that the activists’ intention was to draw attention to the climate crisis. Notably, he acknowledged climate breakdown as “the greatest challenge for humanity”.

    Plant biotechnology scientist Lorenzo Masini from Italy was among the four activists convicted on Tuesday. He said that the judge was:

    valuing private property higher than life.

    Fellow activist and defendant Nate Rugh from the US echoed this. Rugh, who conducts research on environmental conflicts from carbon offsets in Spain, said:

    We are in the most dangerous moment for our species. A recent study has calculated that a billion people will die if we go over 2 degrees of global warming, while the world is on course to a 3.2 degree temperature rise by 2100, that would lead to the inevitable collapse of civilization. As someone who understands the science, I have a moral duty to act.

    Scientists are increasingly turning to civil disobedience to compel policymakers to take concerted climate action. In 2022, a group of scientists had penned an article in the journal Nature calling for the scientific community to engage in civil disobedience. They argued that:

    Civil disobedience by scientists has the potential to cut through the myriad complexities and confusion surrounding the climate crisis in a way that less visible and dispassionate evidence provision does not, sending a clear signal that scientists believe strongly in the evidence and its implications. When those with expertise and knowledge are willing to convey their concerns in a more uncompromising manner than through papers and presentations, this affords them particular effectiveness as a communicative act. This is the insight of Greta Thunberg when she calls on us to “act as you would in a crisis”.

    In a press release after the trial, Masini’s statement concurred with their call to action:

    There are moments in history in which we are called to take a clear position. This is the time. We used our privilege as scientists to preserve the beauty of this world and be on the right side of history.

    The trial on Tuesday marked the start of several court cases against the 16 Scientist Rebellion activists involved in the action.

     

    Feature image via Scientist Rebellion.

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Groups from across the South West are coming together on Saturday 28 October –  not only to protest but also to organise. They’ll be demonstrating against the triple threat of the crises that we now face: nature, climate, and social justice. The organisers say that the only way we can address these multiple issues is to come together – and leading the charge is Extinction Rebellion (XR).

    XR: uniting to survive

    The XR South West-led event on 28 October is called ‘Unite to Survive’. The group will be there to demand action, and also to foster what they describe as “community resilience”.

    The day will consist of various parts. A press release from the organisers said:

    The protest rally will begin at 10am at the top of Cow Lane in Victoria Park (BA1 2LZ) in Bath, with stalls, workshops, speeches and performers – plus satellite actions nearby – with a march through the city centre starting at 12.30, a ‘Discobedience’ mass dance afterwards and then a Community Assembly at 2.30pm.

    The list of groups involved in the day of action is huge. Joining XR South West will be:

    Surfers Against Sewage, Greenpeace, Wiltshire Wildlife Trust, Climate Choir Movement, Friends of the Earth Bristol, Christian Climate Action, Frome Families for the Future, Parents For Future Bath/Bristol, Shift Bristol, Kidical Mass Bath, Stop Rosebank, Mogg Watch, Bath Stop War Coalition, BAAN (Bristol Airport Action Network), Sacred Earth Activism

    The organisers have noted that the Labour and Green parties are also supporting the action – presumably in the form of their local groups.

    The climate crisis: from Bristol to the world

    XR South West and its fellow organisers’ objectives apply to the South West, but also the UK and globally. For example, in Bristol the government has given the go ahead for an expansion of Bristol airport. It will increase the site’s capacity by two million passengers a year.

    The airport has said that it aims to be carbon net-zero by 2030. However, as euronews reported, this commitment excludes all of the CO² caused by flights. Moreover, the additional capacity will emit another 484,000 tones of equivalent CO² every single year. So actually, the net-zero claim is classic greenwashing.

    Of course, this is in line with the government’s broader climate-wrecking policies. It’s already issued another 100 new North Sea oil and gas licenses. This includes the Rosebank field. Over its lifetime, exploration of this could produce 500m barrels of oil. This is equal to the annual greenhouse gas emissions of the world’s 28 lowest-income countries.

    Globally, it’s a similar story. As the Canary previously reported, a new study project has estimated that global emissions of CO² will rise to record levels in 2023. The CICERO climate research institute in Norway has estimated that the world is on track for a 1% rise in global emissions next year, as well.

    Everything’s linked

    But the climate crisis is far from the only problem that our society is facing right now. The organisers of Unite to Survive said in a press release that:

    The cost of living crisis, social injustice, the climate crisis and nature emergencies are all linked. We cannot thrive – or survive – on a planet that is overheating and suffering severe species loss, and habitat destruction. We must all come together to demand clean jobs, fair pay for all and environmental protection. Together we can create change. Join us!

    Overall, the groups aim to:

    build unity amongst similar groups, raise continued public awareness and increase pressure on governments at all levels to listen to the public and scientists, and act now to hold a binding Citizens Assembly to create the changes we need to tackle the crises we face.

    Some of the groups involved involved have commented ahead of the day of action.

    Bringing climate, Nature, and social justice together

    Karen Grattage from Parents for Future said:

    Parents for the Future is joining Unite to Survive because as parents we feel our place is to protect our children by acting on the climate and nature crises. Research shows that if 25 per cent of people engage with the emergency, we can reach a social tipping point to help secure a safer, fairer world for children everywhere

    Sara Venn from Edible Bristol said:

    The reason we are keen to be involved in Unite To Survive is that Edible Bristol and community gardens are places of connection and community where we work to create resilient futures for people and to bring them together using food and growing as a mechanism for that, whilst growing in a way that challenges both climate and biodiversity crises. Bring climate and social justice together.

    As the organisers summed up:

    The impacts of the climate and nature crisis are likely to hit the poorest and most vulnerable the hardest. Let’s show we care and stand together in the name of equality and humanity.

    The groups’ approach is to be commended – tackling the triple threat of nature, climate, and social justice crises is the only way we can solve any of them. Moreover, strengthening unity between groups is also important – so, the day looks set to be a promising start to XR’s Unite to Survive organising.

    Featured image via XR 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Around 5,000 people descended on Downing Street on Wednesday 18 October. They were there to remember all those Israel had killed in Gaza and the Occupied Territories in recent weeks.

    Meanwhile, 10,000 others descended on the US Congress in protest at its support for Israel‘s war crimes. However, amidst all this, politicians and the media were still defending Israel – with even some supposedly left-wing journalists undermining the Palestinian people.

    Mass killings by Israel – yet the media still toes the line

    At the time of publishing, Israel had killed over 3,400 people in Gaza, plus more in the Occupied Territories.

    The mostly deadly incident so far was Israel’s attack on the Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza, which killed at least 500 people. Israel has denied it’s responsible. It blamed the group Islamic Jihad, saying the blast was caused by a misfired rocket. Outlets like the BBC parroted this – with its supposed fact-checking Verify service toeing the line:

    However, as Channel 4 News journalist Alex Thomson pieced together, Israel’s so-called ‘evidence’ is littered with holes – like fake audio that doesn’t match maps:

    This hasn’t stopped Western governments and much of the media, as well as even some supposed left-wing journalists, from either accepting Israel’s version of events, or giving credence to the idea that we ‘don’t know’ who bombed Al-Ahli:

    However, while people debate what seems quite clearly to be a case of Israel lying to cover up its crimes, the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign (PSC) in the UK took action.

    Vigils and protests for Gaza

    The PSC organised a vigil outside Downing Street at 5pm on 18 October:

    It came amid both prime minister Rishi Sunak and opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer maintaining their support Israel – while failing to acknowledge its war crimes. At Downing Street, people prayed for those Israel has killed – as well as those who remain:

    It’s not just the UK government that is complicit in Israel’s genocidal intent. Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) has accused the UK arms industry of complicity in Israeli war crimes. For example, the UK industry provides 15% of the components for the F35 stealth combat aircraft. Israel is using these to bomb civilians in Gaza. CAAT estimates that since 2016, the contract for the components is worth £336m.

    Former Canary editor and CAAT media coordinator Emily Apple said in a press release:

    Through its arms sales, and particularly through the supply of components for the F35s, the UK is complicit in war crimes in Gaza. Meanwhile, BAE Systems, one of the companies involved in producing the F35s, has seen its share prices reach a record high.

    Meanwhile, in the US, Jewish Voice for Peace and its allies occupied Congress – calling for their government to act:

    As Al Jazeera reported, cops arrested around 500 people – while one protester told the media outlet that he was honouring his family’s history:

    I see my job as carrying on their legacy as Jews who see their role as standing up for stateless and oppressed people all throughout the world… I see no better way to do that than fighting for a ceasefire and peace in Gaza today.

    Western complicity in Israel’s war crimes continues

    However, both in the US and the UK there seems to be little sign of the political will to stand up to Israel.

    US president Joe Biden wants his government to give $100m in aid to Gaza and the Occupied Territories – to effectively clean up the mess he helped create. Of course, this is just 1% of the $10bn Biden is reported to be giving to Israel:

    As one person at the Downing Street vigil summed up:

    This is not a complicated issue. Do not be scared to speak. This is genocide. It is not antisemitic to stand against genocide. Please demand that your leaders do something.

    There appears to be little chance of a change of course by Western leaders. So, protests will continue – with another scheduled in London on Saturday 21 October. This begs the question, though – how many more Palestinians will Israel kill in that time, while much of the world stands idly by?

    Featured image via Chris Nineham – screengrab

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • When a passenger plane was forced to land in Minsk in 2021, one man screamed: ‘They’ll kill me’. Many of his countrymen and women now realise they are also not safe, even in exile

    For a few days in May 2021, the perilous reality of being a dissenting voice in Belarus was laid bare when pilots on board Ryanair flight FR4978 bound for Vilnius in Lithuania were forced to make an emergency landing in Minsk after entering Belarusian airspace.

    The pilots had been told by Belarusian air traffic control that the plane had a bomb on board. When one of them announced to passengers that the plane was being diverted to Minsk, a young male passenger leapt to his feet. He shouted that if the plane landed he would be seized by the authorities. “I am wanted there, they’ll kill me,” he screamed.

    Continue reading…

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

  •  

    NYT: For Jewish New Yorkers, Shared Grief Puts Divisions on Hold

    The New York Times caption (10/13/23) read, “Jewish New Yorkers from across the political spectrum gathered outside the United Nations this week in the wake of the terror attacks in Israel.”

    A New York Times article headlined “Shaken and Grieving, Jewish New Yorkers Put Aside Differences” (10/14/23) appeared at the center of the front page in the print edition one day after it was posted online. Headlined online “For Jewish New Yorkers, Shared Grief Puts Divisions on Hold” (10/13/23), the piece hardly reflected the reality among New York City’s Jews, many of whom have been vocal and in the streets against Israeli policies toward the Palestinians long before this new war unfolded.

    Readers who picked up their Saturday Times and saw the piece, below the lead photo of fleeing Gazans and a lead story on Israel’s impending ground invasion, would get the impression that a monolithic Jewish community in the United States’ most Jewish city sat in self-imposed collective silence about Israel’s far-right government, the intelligence failures before the Hamas surprise attack, and the brutality of the Israeli response.

    What did not show up on the front page, nor updated on the online version, was that on Friday night, hundreds of Jewish activists and their allies protested outside Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer’s Brooklyn home, demanding an end to US support for Israeli militarism (Business Insider, 10/14/23).

    Newsweek (10/14/23) reported that “approximately 80 Jewish protesters were arrested Friday as they demanded officials in five major US cities,” including New York City, “to stop Israel aggression toward Palestinians with fears of a ‘genocide’ breaking out in Gaza.”

    ‘Put aside divisions’

    New York Times photo of Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie

    New York Times photo (10/13/23) of Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie, who “said he has seen Jewish New Yorkers come together to grieve across pre-existing political divides.

    The Times piece—by John Leland, a Times veteran and prolific music and culture writer—relied on a handful of voices, like Eric Goldstein, chief executive of United Jewish Appeal–Federation of New York, as well as progressive rabbis Amichai Lau-Lavie and David Ingber. It quoted Stuart Himmelfarb, who “runs a small Jewish nonprofit agency,” and Betsey Nevins-Saunders, “who runs a criminal defense clinic at Hofstra University’s law school.”

    Himmelfarb said he put aside his critiques of the Israeli government, saying his new focus was, “How in the world can the hostages be saved?” According to the Times, “the scale and scope of the attacks” inspired Nevins-Saunders to hold her fire against Israeli policies. Ingber said the crisis “has laid bare for many in the liberal community the dangers of anti-Israeli and anti-Zionist ideologies.”

    The closest thing to a dissenting view in the piece was Nevins-Saunders, who “said she was not willing to put aside her criticisms of Israel,” but then proceeded to do just that:

    Right now we do not have to say, “Yeah, but—”; “Sorry for the pain in Israel, but—”…. Sometimes we’re so quick to go to the “but” part that we negate that opportunity to grieve.

    Lau-Lavie, saying “it was time to put aside divisions and focus on shared grief,” told the Times:

    Our political position now makes no difference. Left, right, pro-occupation, anti-occupation, don’t know about it—we’re hurting and we’re shocked and we’re horrified and we want Israel to get through this.

    I first encountered Lau-Lavie in 2006 when I covered religion for the Stamford Advocate, and I can say he’s generally someone with thoughtful ideas on both religion and the conflict in the Middle East; he was a big part of the protests against the far-right Israeli government’s judicial power grab this year (Vox, 7/24/23). The perspectives in the Times piece are valid, but they don’t represent any kind of complete picture of Jewish opinion in the unfolding of the new Israel/Palestine war.

    ‘Dismayed’ by ‘massive escalation’

    Jewish Currents: “We Cannot Cross Until We Carry Each Other”

    Arielle Angel, editor of Jewish Currents (10/12/23), warns that “Jewish grief is routed back into the violence of a merciless system of Palestinian subjugation that reigns from the river to the sea.”

    The fact is that the actual mood among New York City’s Jews is that the phrase “two Jews, three opinions,” still applies. And if the opinions quoted in this piece matter enough for the Times, then so should other Jewish voices.

    It should include someone like Audrey Sasson, executive director of the New York–based Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ). In a statement (10/7/23) issued days before the Times piece, she said that while she grieved for the Israeli dead and feared for the hostages, her group was “fearful about what’s to come,” and were “angry that leaders continually choose extremism, violence and occupation, and dismayed that official Israeli and US statements are calling for massive escalation.”

    It could have quoted someone like Arielle Angel, editor-in-chief of the New York–based Jewish Currents, who gave anything but a simple response (10/12/23) to the ongoing trauma in the Middle East, grappling with how left-wing and progressive Jews sought to channel their grief in the face of a mounting catastrophe in Gaza. The Times knows who Angel is, as the paper profiled her (12/30/22) last year, and it interviewed her (10/10/23) for a response to a pro-Palestine rally in Manhattan that came under heavy press criticism (Politico, 10/10/23; New York Post, 10/11/23).

    Brad Lander, who as the city’s comptroller is the highest-ranking Jewish-American official in New York City government, wrote on Twitter (10/13/23) that it is, indeed, possible to hold nuanced views of the situation. “Watching what’s happening in Gaza right now—as someone who cares deeply about the future for a Jewish and democratic Israel—is excruciating,” he said. “I can’t stop thinking about the hostages,” he added. “And I can’t stop thinking about the children of Gaza.”

    The paper could have, at the very least, included coverage of the Jews protesting outside of Senator Schumer’s house for the print edition, and provided an update in the online version, in order to present a much fuller and more nuanced picture of how New York’s Jewish communities were responding to the situation. This rally was important, because Schumer is perhaps the most powerful Jewish American in the federal government and his spur-of-the-moment trip (The Hill, 10/13/23) to Israel is widely seen as strong US support for Israel’s fierce military assault on the people of Gaza. The fact that Jewish activists took to his home to protest this move shows that Jewish opinion in New York City is nowhere near the univocal scene painted in the Times.

    ‘Don’t weaponize my grief’

    Middle East Monitor:     Israel,
    Middle East,
    News,
    Palestine

56% Israelis believe Netanyahu should resign at end of conflict with Palestine: Poll

    While the New York Times suggests Jewish Americans ought to be putting politics aside, Jewish Israelis are sharply debating the current situation (Middle East Monitor, 10/12/23).

    The Times piece ends at a “somber prayer gathering” in Borough Park, a Hasidic neighborhood in Brooklyn, quoting one activist saying that normally he’d engage in discussions about how to “make Palestinian life easier” but added, “That’s not an appropriate conversation in these days.”

    But the Borough Park Jewish community is but one of very many Jewish communities across the city. It does a disservice to Jews to say that they’re all letting the emotional weight of the initial Hamas attack put a damper on difficult political discussions. In Israel, Guy Ziv, associate director of American University’s Center for Israel Studies, told NPR (10/16/23) that one poll “shows that only 29% of the public now think [Netanyahu is] qualified to be prime minister,” which “includes many of his own voters.” Various media have reported how the Israeli public has responded to the Hamas attacks by blaming Netanyahu (Middle East Monitor, 10/12/23; Jerusalem Post, 10/13/23; Bloomberg, 10/13/23; Ha’aretz, 10/16/23).

    Sonya Meyerson-Knox, senior communications manager for Jewish Voices for Peace, told FAIR in an email that despite the documentation of many Jewish organizations and individuals marching against Israeli aggression, the paper painted a skewed picture:

    In this article, however, the New York Times neglects the voices of tens of thousands of anti-occupation and anti-Zionist Jews who feel deeply alienated from legacy Jewish institutions and their support of the Israeli government. Many Jewish New Yorkers (of all ages) do not support the Israeli government, its military occupation or its apartheid regime—and they feel this way more strongly now than ever before. By neglecting the voices of so many Jewish New Yorkers, this article furthers the incredibly problematic myth that Jews are a monolith, and that to support Jews in this moment requires supporting the Israeli government’s genocidal war on Palestinians.

    In an interview with FAIR, JFREJ’s Sasson noted that in contrast to the tone of the Times article, her group’s members were able to simultaneously grapple with their grief in response to the Hamas attacks, their worry about the hostages and their ability to speak out against Israeli policies. “We can hold many truths,” she said, speaking about how many of her members were experiencing many emotions at the same time. Sasson added:

    A lot of our members are mobilizing to participate in actions that are calling for a ceasefire, and are trying to simultaneously hold their grief and say, “Don’t use my grief, don’t weaponize my grief.”

    Did the Times piece weaponize Jewish grief? By marginalizing opposition among New York’s Jews to Israel’s brutal campaign against Gaza, it certainly made it easier for the bloodshed to continue.


    ACTION ALERT: You can send a message to the New York Times at letters@nytimes.com (Twitter: @NYTimes). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective. Feel free to leave a copy of your communication in the comments thread.

    FEATURED IMAGE: New York Post photo (10/13/23) of a Jewish Voices for Peace protest at Sen. Chuck Schumer’s home.

    The post NYT Ignores Dissent to Convey Image of Jewish Unanimity appeared first on FAIR.

    This post was originally published on FAIR.

  • The University of Manchester (UoM) is once again under fire over its dire student accommodation. This time, freshers are threatening a rent strike after it emerged bosses have barely made any changes since the last academic year’s strike by students.

    UoM: an ongoing rent strike

    The Canary has been following the story of the UoM rent strikes. Around 650 students have been withholding their rent from the university. This is because bosses increased rents on halls by up to £450 for the 2022 academic year. Plus, the state of accommodation is appalling.

    Back in February, students occupied areas of the university in protest. They were part of the group UoM Rent StrikeBailiffs eventually removed them. However, bosses have responded disproportionately, even taking the students to court to try and stop the strikes.

    Perhaps most ridiculous incident was university bosses taking disciplinary action against 11 of the students – all for performing a peaceful protest. However, that didn’t go according to bosses’ plans. A UoM panel found that only one of the six allegations bosses made against the students was true: that they’d breached health and safety rules by barricading themselves into buildings.

    However, the UoM still warned those students that if they took part in more action, it could expel them. Not that this has deterred people – now, a new batch of students will be taking action.

    The action continues

    First year students at the UoM have said they will be continuing the rent strike because bosses have put rents up yet again. UoM Rent Strike said in a press release:

    On average, rent has increased a further 6% from last year, continuing to rise faster than the 2.8% increase in maintenance loan. On top of this, the University continues to provide subpar spaces to its students. Within weeks of moving in, students in Denmark Road accommodation lost water for six days – with others dealing with flooding, damp, and infestations. Last year, the University made a £120 million profit, and UoM Rent Strike feel they should not continue to profit off their students in this way.

    UoM Rent Strike said that first year students should cancel their rent direct debit in time for the first payment on the 20 October. It’s urging them to sign up to join the strike. Any student who lives in university-run accommodation can join the action.

    While the group acknowledged that the university has not put rents up by as much as it was expected to, it says there are still issues:

    Oak House has seen a basic refurbishment. Yet even Oak House is not considered affordable by the NUS definition (50% of the maximum maintenance loan), and rent continues to be high. From the small victories of last year’s strike, and those of the strike in 2020 (resulting in a 30% rent decrease 2020-21), the campaign sees reason to continue this year.

    Moreover, some of the images coming out of the halls show they are in a state of disrepair:

     

     

    Stop treating students like dirt

    UoM Rent Strike says its demands for this academic year are:

    • A reduction of all… rents by a third.
    • A commitment from UoM that all new accommodation built as part of the Fallowfield Redevelopment will be affordable (under 50% of the maximum English maintenance loan).
    • Guarantee every 1st year student accommodation they can afford, by changing the application process to take finances into account.
    • All rent increases capped to the annual increase of the English maintenance loan.
    • Students receive full rent refunds for every day which maintenance issues are not fixed.

    UoM Rent Strike also said bosses must stop punishing and victimising students who take action over rent and living conditions. It said:

    The University of Manchester is not allowed to impose academic punishments as a result of rent striking, but despite this, students report being subject to illegal threats of expulsion from the University, and a complaint has been submitted to the Competition and Markets Authority. Last year, every rent striker was issued either a £25 or £50 fine, depending on the length of their strike. All of these fines have been fully covered by the Rent Strike fund, which managed to raise enough money and support to prevent anyone having to pay more than they should have.

    So, it seems that while UoM Rent Strike made some progress in getting bosses to listen, overall, little has changed. First year students getting involved in the action is a necessary move if people are going to make university bosses take notice.

    Featured images and additional images/video via UoM Rent Strike

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Auckland Museum has apologised for the hurt caused after it staged a light display in support of Israel on Sunday night.

    Auckland Museum lit its building up in blue and white. On social media, the museum said it had lit up “in solidarity with Israel”.

    “Our thoughts go out to the many civilians impacted as a result of the terrorist attack a week ago,” the museum had said.

    “As a war memorial, we value the importance of peaceful dialogue and understanding.

    “We condemn all acts of violence and terrorism. This evening the museum is lit in blue and white in condemnation and as an expression of hope for peace.”

    Researcher Dr Arama Rata said within hours, about 100 people had gathered outside the museum, many holding Palestine flags and chanting “Free Palestine”.

    She said a verbal confrontation arose between the Palestine supporters and a group of Israel supporters.

    Red fabric-covered lights
    Dr Rata said Palestine supporters subsequently covered the lights with red fabric blacking out the display.

    She said the museum must issue a formal apology to the community, saying its actions have caused deep divisions for people who are already hurting.

    Alternative Jewish Voices co-founder Marilyn Garson, a Jewish woman who spent four years in Gaza providing humanitarian aid to shelters, said the board of the War Memorial Museun was either partisan, or uninformed.

    “They feel solidarity only with Israel. So they single out one acknowledged crime while massive crimes against Palestinians are unfolding. I don’t understand how Palestinian civilians can be invisible to the board of a war museum,” she said.

    “It seems to me that it is the antithesis of a war memorial’s mission to downgrade some human lives. They’re saying that they feel for these civilians and not those civilians. So someone really doesn’t understand the concept of civilian safety.

    “A war memorial should act to hold back the violence, they need to learn into their blind spot. I want them to call for the end of this horror.”

    Personally apologised
    In a statement, chief executive David Reeves said he personally apologised and they were reviewing the feedback they had received from Sunday night.

    “I acknowledge the depth of feeling around our decision to light the museum on Sunday night,” Reeves said.

    “We wanted this to be an expression of hope for peace — our approach was wrong, and I personally apologise for the distress and hurt caused to members of our community,” he said.

    “I am carefully reviewing and reflecting on all of the feedback we have received. As a War Memorial Museum, we continue to hope for deeper understanding and a peaceful resolution to conflict.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Asia Pacific Report

    A peace researcher and other pro-Palestinian supporters are calling on Auckland Museum to apologise over a furore about the “unethical” lighting of the main building in the blue and white colours of the Israeli flag.

    Researcher Dr Arama Rata said she wanted the museum to issue a formal apology to the community over the insensitivity over the lights incident last night.

    Israeli security forces have been bombing Gaza daily for the past week with at least 2215 Palestinians killed and 8714 wounded, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Among the dead are 720 children.

    The Israeli forces are poised for a massive air, sea and ground invasion of the enclave of about 2.3 million people.

    The bombing is in retaliation for an attack by the Hamas military wing into southern Israel last Saturday which left 1300 people dead, including 265 soldiers, and more than 3300 wounded.

    “Auckland Museum is supposed to be a welcoming place for all members of our community. Their actions tonight have caused deep divisions for people who are already hurting,” Dr Rata said.

    ‘Horrors of wars’
    “The museum is entrusted with many of our taonga, and regularly holds exhibitions helping us to remember the horrors of wars.

    “Their actions today show they have no respect for human suffering. Their actions were highly unethical.”

    Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa chair John Minto also sent a protest note to the museum’s chief executive, David Reeves.

    “We were appalled to see Auckland Museum lit up in the colours of the Israeli flag at a time when Israel is conducting slaughter — there is no other word for it — of the Palestinian people in Gaza.

    “Palestinians are used to seeing such awful behaviour from Euro-centric institutions such as the museum.”

    According to a statement by the protest group, the museum posted on its Instagram social media account a message saying, “This evening, your museum is lit in blue and white in solidarity with Israel. Our thoughts go out to the many civilians impacted as a result of the terrorist attack a week ago today.”

    An image of the main building showing the blue and white light accompanied the message.

    ‘Free Palestine’ call
    Within hours, about 100 people had gathered outside the museum, many holding Palestine flags and chanting “free Palestine”.

    Cars with Palestinian flags also drove in procession around the museum, drivers honking their horns and blaring music.

    An argument developed between Palestine supporters and a small group of Israel supporters who had also gathered at the foot of the hill below the museum, holding Israeli flags.

    Police arrived and calmed the row.

    By 9pm, the museum lights had been turned off.  Later, white lights were turned back on, according to the protesters’ statement.

    Palestine supporters subsequently covered the lights with red fabric.

    Israel faces widespread condemnation from the international community for issuing an evacuation order for more than a million people living in northern Gaza.

    The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons, Paula Gaviria Betancur, said she was “horrified” by the order and demanded that Israel immediately rescind it, saying “forcible population transfers constitute a crime against humanity, and collective punishment is prohibited international humanitarian law”.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Tens of thousands of people across the UK took to the streets in support of Palestine. Whilst many of the rallies successfully provided space for Palestinian voices, some were marred by antagonistic policing.

    London marches for Palestine

    As Israel continued bombing Gaza, Palestinian solidarity groups across the country called for rallies on 14 October. The biggest and most significant of these was in London, where an estimated more than 100,000 people turned out. Videos showed the entirety of Portland Place, home to the BBC, filled with people:

    The rally marched to Downing Street, where it then hosted speeches by Palestinians:

    As well as a speech by former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn:

    Meanwhile, the crowd had some choice words for current Labour leader Keir Starmer – after he endorsed Israel committing war crimes against the Palestinian people in Gaza:

    The BBC‘s building had earlier that morning been covered in red paint. Direct action group Palestine Action claimed responsibility. It said in a press release that it had done so:

    in response to it’s recent coverage of Palestine, which has been complicit in manufacturing consent for the occupation’s genocide of Palestinians.

    As the Canary previously reported, the BBC and other corporate media have been complicit in spreading anti-Palestinian propaganda – to give cover to Israel’s attacks on Gaza. For example, as we previously wrote, we:

    analysed the first 20 minutes of BBC News at Six on 11 October. When you remove anchors Clive Myrie and Sophie Raworth’s monologues, the BBC dedicated 84% of the reporting to human stories and analysis around Israel. It gave just 16% of the same type of coverage to Gaza.

    Meanwhile, at the London protest, there were also reports that the Met Police had aggressively policed the demonstration. Black Protest Legal Support said its members had witnessed cops engaging in “violence against both protesters and Legal Observers”. The group also said police were forcing the removal of kuffiyehs, a traditional Palestinian headdress. The Met had earlier issued a Section 60AA, which makes refusal to remove face coverings an arrestable offence.

    BBC News reported that police arrested four people under the Section 60AA power. LBC reported that the Met arrested a total of 15 people during the London rally:

    Marchers in London hold a banner saying "Free Palestine"

    Masked up pro-Palestine marcher in London holds a green smoke flare

    Cities across the UK march for Palestine

    People in other cities across the UK also took to the streets in support of Palestine:

    This writer was at the Norwich rally where more than a hundred people including Palestinians turned out to the steps of City Hall. Speakers included Palestinians, Muslims, and trade unionists. Police were present but remained calm, escorting one person away after they heckled a speaker:

    Rally for Palestine in Norwich 14/10/23

    Rally for Palestine in Norwich 14/10/23

    Rally for Palestine in Norwich 14/10/23

    People in cities across the world also held pro-Palestine rallies over the weekend, though Germany and France had both banned such demonstrations.

    Listen to Palestinians

    It’s clear that people throughout the country have seen through the overwhelming anti-Palestine propaganda put out by world leaders and the corporate media. While rallies and demonstrations aren’t likely to have an impact on Israel’s attacks, they have provided a space for Palestinian voices to be heard.

    Those voices spoke of pain, sorrow and grief – not only of the Israeli state’s actions but of complicity by world leaders and the media. They also spoke of strength, belief and hope in the resilience of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and around the world. For everyone feeling helpless as we watch on, they are messages we need to remember and amplify.

    Featured image and London images via Aidan Frere-Smith, Norwich images by the Canary

    By Glen Black

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The Court of Appeal has refused two Just Stop Oil protesters a chance to challenge their sentences. They were handed what their lawyers called “extraordinary” three-year sentences for stopping traffic on the Dartford Crossing. And the court’s refusal to allow an appeal has raised serious concerns over protest laws.

    What’s the difference between deterrence and chilling effect?

    On 12 October, the Court of Appeal told Morgan Trowland and Marcus Decker that it would not permit the pair to challenge their existing sentences at the Supreme Court. Decker and Trowland had stopped traffic on the Dartford Crossing for roughly 37 hours in October 2022. They had scaled the bridge’s mast to protest the UK’s approval of new oil and gas licences and were protesting under the Just Stop Oil banner.

    Basildon Crown Court found the pair guilty of public nuisance on 4 April 2023. By that point, they’d already spent five months on remand. The court then gave them custodial sentences, with Trowland receiving three years and Decker receiving two years and seven months. Just Stop Oil described the sentencing as “draconian”, while their lawyers said they were “extraordinary” in length.

    Trowland and Decker’s first attempt to appeal the sentencing was rejected in July. Appeal judges said at the time that the penalties went “well beyond previous sentences” for similar actions, but that the terms reflected “Parliament’s will” as outlined by the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Act.

    Carr reinforced this position on 12 October. Trowland and Decker had attempted to take their appeal to the Supreme Court. However, the Court of Appeal denied this, with Carr stating:

    the sentences meet the legitimate sentencing aim of deterrence for such offending in current time

    However, she then claimed that:

    The sentences should not be seen as having a “chilling effect” on the right to peaceful protest or to assembly more generally; deterrence and “chilling effect” are not the same.

    Tightening the screws on dissent

    The PCSC Act trod a controversial path to parliament, including giving rise to the Kill the Bill movement. The government brought it in to give police greater powers against protests, but it was widely criticised by researchers, civil rights groups and protest groups as draconian and authoritarian.

    One of its clauses legislated a new crime of ‘public nuisance’. However, the Act ambiguously worded what constituted a nuisance. The Network for Police Monitoring (Netpol) said in its summary of the bill that:

    It is not yet clear what any of the terms covered by the new public nuisance offence will mean for protesters.

    However, it is public nuisance legislation that the courts used to convict and sentence Trowland and Decker. So we now have one example of what the offence means for protest – and how the courts will use it to defend the state and capitalism.

    On the same day that the Court of Appeal rejected the Dartford Crossing pair’s plea, the Guardian published How criminalisation is being used to silence climate activists across the world. It doesn’t mention Trowland and Decker, but its timing is notable. It quoted David Armiak, research director at the Center for Media and Democracy, saying the UK’s PCSC Act was:

    part of a last-ditch, industry-backed effort to protect its profit model in the face of public demands to turn to renewables and divest from fossil fuels as the climate emergency intensifies

    That legislation was bolstered less than a year later by the Public Order Act, an equally authoritarian anti-protest law.

    Despite what Carr said, it’s clear that the PCSC Act’s intention was exactly to have a ‘chilling effect’. And the decision to refuse Trowland and Decker’s appeal is meant to double down on this capital-led, state-enforced hostility. Sadly, their sentences may be a sign of things to come.

    Featured image via Just Stop Oil/YouTube

    By Glen Black

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • UK has led the way, with countries across the continent making mass arrests, passing draconian new laws and labelling activists as eco-terrorists

    Human rights experts and campaigners have warned against an intensifying crackdown on climate protests across Europe, as Guardian research found countries across the continent using repressive measures to silence activists.

    In Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and the UK, authorities have responded to climate protests with mass arrests, the passing of draconian new laws, the imposing of severe sentences for non-violent protests and the labelling of activists as hooligans, saboteurs or eco-terrorists.

    Continue reading…

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

  • Guardian investigation finds growing number of countries passing anti-protest laws as part of playbook of tactics to intimidate people peacefully raising the alarm

    As wildfires and extreme temperatures rage across the planet, sea temperature records tumble and polar glaciers disappear, the scale and speed of the climate crisis is impossible to ignore. Scientific experts are unanimous that there needs to be an urgent clampdown on fossil fuel production, a major boost in renewable energy and support for communities to rapidly move towards a fairer, healthier and sustainable low-carbon future.

    Many governments, however, seem to have different priorities. According to climate experts, senior figures at the UN and grassroots advocates contacted by the Guardian, some political leaders and law enforcement agencies around the world are instead launching a fierce crackdown on people trying to peacefully raise the alarm.

    Continue reading…

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

  • Luisa Neubauer, of Fridays for Future, cites language used by the chancellor amid protest crackdown

    Severe policing and “scary” political rhetoric is fuelling abuse against climate activists, Germany’s best-known environmentalist has said.

    “It’s not a shift any more, it’s a slide,” said Luisa Neubauer, from the German branch of Fridays for Future, the protest movement that grew out of Greta Thunberg’s school strikes. “There’s an increase in hate language, there’s an increase in threats, and the threats are getting more concrete. So they’re not saying any more ‘I hate you’ but they’re saying ‘We should come to your place, we should go get you.’”

    Continue reading…

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

  • As Israel continues its assault on Gaza, in the UK direct action group Palestine Action is calling for people to mobilise against British companies complicit in the Israel’s apartheid and carnage against the Palestinian people.

    Palestine Action: a history of direct action

    For years, Palestine Action has been taking direct action against British companies that supply weapons, or components of them, to the Israeli state. For example, in September 2022 the group shut down UAV Engines Ltd, which is owned by Elbit Systems. UAV specialises in making engines for combat drones. Palestine Action said that:

    Elbit openly market these as ‘battle-tested’ on the Palestinian population. The Hermes 450 aircraft has been used to surveil and attack the people of Gaza for over a decade, decimating thousands of lives.

    This is despite attempts by the company, and the government, to deny that the Israeli military uses UAV Engines’ products. However, an Information Commission Office investigation revealed that UAV Engines holds a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) with the Israeli military, stopping it from saying it supplies to them.

    In September 2022, cops arrested ten activists who were protesting against UAV. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) eventually charged two of them. However, a judge acquitted them, agreeing that Palestine Action’s tactics in this case were proportionate compared to what UAV’s products would end up doing to Palestinian people.

    Elbit Systems: a legitimate UK target

    This is just one example of how Palestine Action actively resists the Israeli apartheid. The group’s main target has always been Elbit Systems. It’s an Israeli weapons company that works out of the UK. As Palestine Action said in a press release, its:

    main target has hitherto been Elbit Systems and their affiliates. Elbit Systems are a mainstay of the occupation and its aggression: manufacturers of 85% of Israel’s drone fleet – without which these assaults on Gaza would be much limited, sole supplier of its small-calibre ammunition, and responsible for producing a range of ‘battle tested’ munitions, high-explosive rounds, and mortar bombs.

    The group has been relentless in targeting the company:

    Elbit have seen their British operations undermined continually for the past three years, with Palestine Action having refused to allow them a quiet moment. We have shut down two of their factories and cost them hundreds-of-millions in now-voided Ministry of Defence contracts.

    Now, amid the chaos unfolding in Gaza and the Occupied Territories, it’s calling on people to mobilise further.

    Working underground

    Palestine Action has created a list of 50 companies that it intends to target in the UK. They are organisations that the group says are “complicit in Elbit’s murderous arms trade”. It has created a website where people can find out where these companies are based. You can view the website here.

    It said in a press release that:

    We acknowledge that no company can operate in isolation. Elbit relies on a broad, complex supply chain and each facilitator of its crimes against the Palestinians plays their own part in the bloodshed – from office suppliers to logistics, landlords to recruiters. These companies willingly partner with, and profit on the back of, Elbit Systems and its business of bloodshed. By enabling this company to operate in Britain, their partners are accountable for the cruelty and suffering conducted with Elbit weaponry. Murderous drone strikes in Gaza, imperialist border-security operations in the US, EU, and Britain, and weapons exports to regimes including Myanmar and Azerbaijan: these are the activities enabled when companies align themselves with Elbit Systems.

    On top of this broadening of target companies, the group has also launched a new initiative. It’s encouraging people to set up their own, “autonomous” groups. Palestine Action has created the “Underground Manual”, where it explains how to set up your own group and how to take direct action. You can read the manual here as a pdf.

    ‘Direct action’ against ‘any friends’ of Israeli apartheid

    Palestine Action summed up its new initiatives by saying:

    For those of us in Britain, the US, EU, and elsewhere, we have the privilege, and it could be said the obligation, of taking direct action against Israel’s weapons factories. These factories are placed in companies allied with the occupation regime, with both the host country and Israel profiting from the production of weaponry either bound for, or developed upon, Israel’s genocidal occupation.

    Listed companies include the likes of Kuehne + Nagel, providers of shipping services for Elbit; Fisher German, property managers for Elbit’s UAV Engines factory in Shenstone; ADS Group, an arms industry body of which Elbit is a member, and similar such participants in their criminal enterprise. Targets will remain on the list until they make a public statement announcing they have permanently cut all ties with Elbit. Until that point, direct action will continue against any and all friends of apartheid.

    The group’s latest pushback against companies complicit in Israel’s apartheid is probably going to cause uproar from some people. The state will likely clamp down hard on the group – given, for example, it’s now talking of restricting people’s right to wave the Palestinian flag.

    However, whatever the UK authorities do to people taking direct action, it pales in comparison to the horror the apartheid Israeli state has been, and continues to, mete out against Palestinians.

    If you would like any further information on Palestine Action, please contact info[at]palestineaction.org

    Featured image via Palestine Action

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A 20-year-old Cambodian man who was thrown out of a state-run school because he was too short has again been assaulted by security forces as he staged another protest against his expulsion.

    Keo Sovannrith told Radio Free Asia that he was demonstrating alone in front of the Ministry of Education on Monday when local authorities in civilian uniforms pulled him into a car and beat him, leaving him with a torn shirt.

    “I am very upset for a society with such authority,” he told RFA. “I was slapped in the face. I was dizzy. I could not get up.” 

    Keo Sovannrith gained admission to the National Institute of Physical Education last November despite standing 162 centimeters (5 foot 4 inches) tall, under the 165 centimeter (5 foot 5 inch) minimum requirement for applicants.

    But in December, shortly after participating in an entrance ceremony at a Phnom Penh stadium, he was removed from enrollment with no explanation, along with 11 other prospective students.

    ENG_KHM_StudentAssault_10092023.2.jpg
    Keo Sovannrith protests in front of the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports in Phnom Penh on Aug. 28, 2023. Credit: Keo Sovannrith seeks justice Facebook

    In July and August, Keo Sovannrith and several others protested each Monday in front of the ministry to demand readmission to the teacher training program. They said the institute’s enrollment requirements were too opaque and randomly applied.

    Police surrounded and beat them on Aug. 21. Video of the incident was widely viewed on Facebook.

    Plans to sue authorities

    On Monday, Keo Sovannrith said he protested alone at the Ministry of Education because the other 11 former students are either too afraid to demonstrate or can’t afford to travel to Phnom Penh.

    He added that the Ministry of Education recently offered him a government job so that he would stop protesting. He told RFA that he turned them down because he prefers to be a physical education trainer and wants justice for his expulsion.

    “I understand that violence is against the law. I will sue them,” referring to the officials in the Phnom Penh district of Daun Penh who assaulted him.

    RFA wasn’t able to reach Daun Penh district Inspector Teang Chansar and Ministry of Education spokesman Kan Puthy for comment on Monday. Daun Penh district Gov. Chea Khema told RFA he was too busy to answer questions.

    Monday’s beating of Keo Sovannrith is just the latest example of Cambodian authorities using violence against non-violent protesters, said Am Sam Ath of human rights group Licadho. 

    “We as civil society organizations do not support any act of violence, no matter which side it is on,” he said. “Authorities should especially be tolerant in all these matters.”

    Translated by Sok Ry Sum. Edited by Matt Reed and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Khmer.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Just Stop Oil and was authored by Just Stop Oil.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • A jury has found an activist who occupied cladding company Arconic’s offices not guilty. The company produced the cladding and insulation for Grenfell Tower. Arconic also makes parts for fighter jets Israel uses against the Palestinian people. So, the defendant’s victory was a victory not only against Arconic, but also Israel’s ongoing apartheid.

    Shutting down Arconic for Grenfell and Palestine

    On 14 June 2021, activists from campaign group Palestine Action occupied and shut down Arconic’s factory in Birmingham:

    As Palestine Action noted in a press release:

    Arconic manufactured and supplied the cladding and insulation system in the Grenfell Tower, which Fire Expert Witnesses have found “substantially to blame for the tragedy and that the panels were “the primary cause of upward vertical fire spread, downward vertical fire spread, and lateral fire spread”. 72 people were killed in the preventable fire.

    Over two days, activists began dismantling the site:

    The local community also came out in support:

    The police response was predictably violent:

    However, the fire service refused to assist the cops in removing protesters from the roof. Eventually, police arrested two activists:

    One of those activists was Sohail Sultan. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) charged him with criminal damage, and his trial began on 2 October.

    Enough flag waving: direct action is needed

    On Thursday 5 October, the jury unanimously found Sultan not guilty of criminal damage against Arconic. As Palestine Action said in a press release:

    They took 3 hours and 25 minutes to deliberate on whether the action taken which cost Arconic over £500K was done to protect property in Palestine and/or in necessity to save lives.

    Specifically, on top of Arconic producing the Grenfell cladding, the company is complicit in Israel’s apartheid against the Palestinian people. Palestine Action noted:

    On top of this unsafe cladding, Arconic manufactures components and materials for Boeing Apache Helicopters and Lockheed Martin F-35 Fighter Jets. Both of these are routinely deployed by the Israeli military in aerial assaults on Gaza, including in the May 2021 bombardments which killed 230 Palestinians including 65 children. One of Arconic’s major shareholders – Elliot Investment Management – was founded by Paul Singer, who has funnelled money into Israeli settlements in the West Bank, the ‘friends of the IDF’, and anti-BDS organisations.

    During the four-day trial, Sultan said:

    It’s one thing to stand on the ground, wave a flag and hope it makes the news, it’s another to stand on a roof and stop the production of F-35 fighter jets that kill innocent people.

    Clear, Sultan and his fellow activist’s motivations resonated with the jury. As Palestine Action noted:

    The not guilty verdict was reached after the jury deliberated on whether or not Sohail’s action was taken to immediately protect property in Palestine and in necessity to save lives.

    A bittersweet victory?

    Palestine Action said that the verdict was:

    A monumental victory not only for a principled actionist, but for the campaign against companies who profit from massacring people in Palestine and Grenfell. The verdict strongly suggests that the public agree it is Arconic who is guilty for their crimes in Palestine and Grenfell, not those who take action against them.

    The case follows on from a similar trial of two Palestine Action activists whom the CPS charged with obstructing the highway. It was over them blockading an Elbit Systems-owned company which makes drone parts. In their case, the judge acquitted them on the basis that their actions were proportionate.

    However, these cases contrast with a judge jailing Palestine Action activist Mike Lynch-White for over two years. He was involved in the occupation and shutting down of another drone part manufacturer that supplies Israel. So, while Sultan’s victory is to be celebrated – it’s worth remembering that not all activists standing up to oppression have been so fortunate.

    Moreover, as always, all this pales in comparison to what the people of Grenfell have been, and continue to go, through – and likewise, the Palestinian people.

    Feature image via Palestine Action

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The High Court has announced that human rights group Liberty can take home secretary Suella Braverman to court over anti-protest laws. Liberty says that her actions were unlawful – as she pushed through changes which parliament already rejected, in what the group calls the Tories’ latest “power-grab”.

    Braverman’s draconian Public Order Act

    As the Canary previously reported, the Tories brought in the Public Order Act earlier in the year:

    The draconian Public Order Act was given royal assent on 2 May, dramatically increasing police powers to arrest protesters. The Home Office has already cited the new Act in threatening letters to anti-monarchists. The campaign group Republic received intimidating letters this week, listing the arrest powers under the new Act. Extinction Rebellion has also received similar threats.

    In fact, the Guardian reported that one ‘senior’ insider, who knew about the discussions between the police and the government, confirmed that the Act had been brought into force early, ahead of the coronation on 6 May.

    The new Public Order Act powers include penalties of a year in custody for blocking roads, railways and airports. In addition, protesters who use the tactic of locking-on could face up to six months in prison.

    However, during the passage of the law through parliament the House of Lords rejected parts of it. Specifically, it refused to sign off on Braverman reducing the threshold of what constitutes “serious disruption” caused by protesters. This is the level at which police are allowed to try and stop demonstrations.

    So, instead of accepting the House of Lords’ decision, Braverman pushed her changes through via the back door. In June, after the Public Order Act became law, the home secretary used secondary legislation to change it. This is where a minister can make changes to existing laws without having to get parliament to vote on it.

    Groundbreaking – but not in a good way

    At the time, Braverman’s move caused outrage. The cross-party House of Lords Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee said of her actions:

    As far as we can ascertain, this is the first time a Government has sought to make changes to the law by making those changes through secondary legislation even though those same changes had been rejected by Parliament when introduced a short while before in primary legislation. This raises a constitutional issue as to the appropriate use by Government of secondary legislation, particularly as it arises in the context of an area of law which is important and attracts controversy.

    As the Guardian reported, Labour’s home affairs spokesperson in the Lords – Vernon Coaker – said:

    It is an absolute fundamental constitutional outrage, what has actually taken place. Primary legislation was defeated. So what does the government do? It doesn’t bring forward new primary legislation; it tries to sneak through, in an underhand way, secondary legislation without proper public consultation. They undermine the workings of our parliamentary democracy and, as such, it is shocking.

    Of course, Labour’s outrage is performative – given it failed to support Green Party peer Jenny Jones’s fatal motion in the Lords which would have stopped Braverman.

    So, the home secretary’s changes are currently law. The real-world implications of this are that police now have almost free rein to stop whatever protests they like. This is because the change Braverman made means they can now stop demonstrations even if they only cause “more than minor” disruption – whatever that may mean.

    Liberty: see you in court

    However, Liberty are not having it – and the High Court has agreed. It has said the group can bring a legal challenge to Braverman’s changes. Liberty said that:

    the Home Secretary was not given the powers by Parliament to take this action, making her actions a serious overreach which violate the constitutional principle of the separation of powers because the measures have already been rejected by Parliament.

    Liberty’s interim director, Akiko Hart, said:

    This is just the latest power grab from this Government, which has shown it is determined to erode the ways people can hold it to account, whether that’s in Parliament or on the streets. The Home Secretary’s actions give the police almost unlimited powers to stop any protest the Government doesn’t agree with – and the way she has done it is unlawful.

    We are taking legal action to make sure those in power are not allowed to put themselves above the law. Our message to the Home Secretary is clear – see you in court.

    Katy Watts is the lawyer leading Liberty’s case. She said:

    The Home Secretary has side-lined Parliament to sneak in new legislation via the back door, despite not having the power to do so. This overrules Parliament who voted these same proposals down just a few months ago – and is a flagrant breach of the separation of powers that exist in our constitution.

    The wording of the Government’s new law is so vague that any anything deemed by police to cause ‘more than a minor’ disturbance could have restrictions imposed upon it. This same rule was democratically rejected earlier this year, yet the Home Secretary has gone ahead and introduced it through other means regardless.

    It’s really important the Government respects the law and that the Home Secretary’s decision is reversed immediately.

    Dwindling democracy

    Braverman’s move was hardly surprising – given that the current crop of Tories are some of the most authoritarian in recent memory. As the Canary‘s Joe Glenton previously wrote:

    Under the Tories, a range of authoritarian bills have passed into law. And they have brought with them the sense of democratic space narrowing before our eyes.

    With the Spy Cops Bill, the Policing Bill, the Overseas Operations Bill, and the Snooper’s Charter, it is evident that many of the basic rights which have been won over many years are being stripped back

    As such, if Liberty can navigate the courts to stop at least one aspect of the Tories’ current assault on all our rights, then that would be a win for everyone.

    Featured image via the Telegraph – YouTube and Liberty – screengrab

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Fossil Free London staged a march of hundreds of people through the capital on 30 September. It was protesting the recent regulatory approval for the development of Rosebank oil field in the North Sea. Meanwhile, new research has revealed what we could be losing as a result.

    Rosebank: emissions equivalent to 28 countries

    On 27 September, the North Sea Transition Authority gave drilling the go-ahead at the new Rosebank oil field, near Shetland in Scotland. The regulatory body, which is a public body sponsored by the Department for Energy, gave consent and Norwegian state-owned oil company Equinor to operate the oil field.

    The company, along with private company Ithaca Energy, had reportedly satisfied the regulator’s environmental concerns. However, as the Canary previously reported, past estimates have predicted massive amounts of pollution from Rosebank:

    Campaigners have previously estimated that the enormous project… will produce over 500m barrels of oil over its lifetime. This would equate to the annual greenhouse gas emissions of the 28 lowest-income countries combined.

    As a result, Fossil Free London led an “emergency” protest against the approval and what it means for the climate.

    Marching out

    On 30 September, hundreds marched from the Department of Energy Security & Net Zero at Whitehall to the Norwegian embassy on Belgrave Square. The demonstration included speeches by Green Party deputy leader Zack Polanski and Lauren MacDonald of #StopRosebank:

     

    The following day, Fossil Free London said it occupied the Intercontinental Hotel on Park Lane. The location was picked because Equinor will gather there with other fossil fuel companies for a coming Oil & Money summit:

    Joanna Warrington, spokesperson for Fossil Free London, said in a press release that:

    Our government is too cosy with big oil and now we’re paying the price. Instead of investing in schools, hospitals and the green energy transition, they are pouring billions of pounds of public money into the pockets of oil giant Equinor.

    Developing this enormous oilfield will do nothing but reinforce our dependence on dirty fossil fuels, drive fuel poverty, and accelerate the climate crisis.

    The group also stated that it also plans to “shut down” the Energy Intelligence Forum later this month. Anders Opedal, head of Equinor, is one of the event’s speakers.

    What the money could be spent on

    Friends of the Earth Scotland raised alarms over the government’s tax breaks for Equinor. The Energy Profits Levy, or ‘windfall tax’, is supposed to bring money into the UK through the taxation of oil and gas developments. However, a government incentive scheme means the operator could claim back 91p on every pound it invests in the project.

    In a press release, Friends of the Earth Scotland said that a 91% reduction on the reported £3.1bn investment Equinor and Ithaca Energy will make into Rosebank is equal to £2.8bn. As a result, the climate action group stated:

    this public money would be better invested in insulating homes and installing heat pumps which would bring down household bills and climate emissions as well as reducing the need for fossil fuels. The UK has some of the leakiest homes in Europe.

    The Scottish Government estimates it would cost approximately £12,000 to install a heat pump and insulate an average home. The tax break to Equinor would more than cover the costs for the 224,000 households across Aberdeen City Council and Aberdeenshire Council areas.

    The group’s just transition campaigner, Rosie Hampton, added:

    Fossil fuels are driving the cost of living crisis as well as the devastating extreme weather we are increasingly witnessing around the world. If politicians were genuine about a fair and fast transition away from oil and gas, investing in warmer homes would be an obvious place to start. Pouring more time and money into oil and gas is doubling down on the problem rather than grasping the solutions.

    War on the climate

    Rosebank’s approval is just the latest in a long line of climate-wrecking moves by the government.

    In December 2022, it approved the creation of Whitehaven coal mine in Cumbria. Some of the coal from the mine will feed the UK’s steel industry, but the government expects 85% of the coal will be exported. Campaigners have estimated that the mine will produce 220m tonnes of greenhouse gases during its lifetime.

    Meanwhile, a map published by Friends of the Earth at the start of September revealed there are at least 15 new onshore oil and gas projects on the road to approval. This is in addition to the availability of roughly 100 new licences for drilling in the North Sea.

    Over the past few weeks, the Tories have also hitched their party to a range of populist anti-environmental measures. They included a delay in the ban on petrol and diesel cars, watering down the phase-out of domestic gas boilers, and ending requirements for landlords to meet energy efficiency targets.

    The recent State of Nature 2023 report said that one in six species in the UK are at threat of extinction, with climate breakdown being one of the major reasons for this catastrophic situation. Rosebank will do nothing to help that, and will instead enable an already-rich few to profit from the death of the planet. If that isn’t worth protesting, we don’t know what is.

    Featured image via Fossil Free London

    By Glen Black

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • People came out in force to protest during the Tory Party conference. On Sunday 1 October, the People’s Assembly organised national demonstrations in Manchester. However, the protest wasn’t without incident, as cops stopped an entire coach of activists coming from London. They used the excuse of having ‘intelligence’ on them to search the vehicle – and racially profiled one demonstrator in the process.

    People’s Assembly: marching on the Tories

    Year after year, the People’s Assembly has organised actions during the Tory Party conference. 2023 was no different. The group is staging a Festival of Resistance in Manchester – including workshops, entertainment, and debates. However, the centrepiece of the People’s Assembly’s organising was a National Demonstration on 1 October.

    People gathered at 12pm to march through central Manchester. Many different groups were represented. The trade unions present included the National Education Union (NEU); National Union of Rail, Maritime, and Transport Workers (RMT); GMB; and the Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union:

    Thousands of people also came out to join them:

    Campaign group Stand Up To Racism had a heavy presence:

    Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) also had members at the march:

    And people travelled from across the UK to be there:

    Labour mustn’t ‘entrench’ Tory policies

    At the end of the protest, crowds heard from speakers who highlighted the Tories’ many misdemeanors. As the Morning Star reported, NEU general secretary Daniel Kebede told the assembled masses:

    The spending on the school estate — the reason for the crumbling schools — is just a third of what the Office for Government Property says is needed.

    [Education Secretary] Gillian Keegan says the children prefer porter cabins. But it’s not the children of Eton or Harrow that have to endure them.

    Kebede said the Tories at the conference must:

    listen to the voices of teachers, to the parents, and to the children who bear the weight of this burden. But if you don’t listen, we will make you listen on our picket lines and through protest and we will push back through any sense of decline.

    He also issued a warning for the increasingly right-wing Labour Party:

    We do not want the unfair and damaging policies of the party in blue to be entrenched by the party in red. Our children are an investment, they are not a burden.

    Cops’ new rationale under the Tories: stop the coaches

    However, the People’s Assembly demo wasn’t without its problems. Greater Manchester police stopped a coach carrying activists that were coming up from London – apparently because “intelligence” told the cops that the protesters were going to cause trouble:

    Campaign groups including Keep Our NHS Public were on board:

    South East London People’s Assembly told the Canary that cops held the coach for an hour. All they took was a flare and some marker pens. However, as Ellen Clifford from DPAC noted, the only person they searched was a Brown woman:

    The cops stopped the bus under the Public Order Act. Recent amendments to the act allow cops to stop anyone they think might cause serious disruption. Of course, the this argument is clearly nonsense when it comes to the People’s Assembly.

    The Canary sat in on a meeting for the demo prior to the event, where organisers rightly highlighted that People’s Assembly protests never have any issues with police. The group’s A-to-B marches are always arranged in conjunction with local councils and cops. So, it’s bizarre – yet perhaps telling – that even the politest of protesters are now police targets:

    Other that this, it appeared the demo went off without a hitch. At this point, it’s looking unlikely that the Tories will win the next general election – although a Labour victory will hardly be a cause for celebration. However, the People’s Assembly’s action served as an important reminder of the strength of feeling that exists against the Conservative Party – and an example of how people can still organise collectively in the UK.

    Featured image via South East London People’s Assembly – screengrab 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  •  

    Tens of thousands of climate protesters gathered in Midtown Manhattan on September 17, kicking off Climate Week as President Joe Biden arrived in New York to speak at the United Nations General Assembly. These protests—some of the biggest since before Covid—had a pointed message, largely directed at Biden himself: End fossil fuels.

    The Biden administration has passed historic climate legislation through the Inflation Reduction Act, which seeks to create clean energy jobs, increase investments in renewables and build infrastructure to support resilience in communities most vulnerable to the climate crisis.

    At the same time, however, oil and gas production are still expanding. This year, the US exported a record amount of petroleum, and was also the biggest liquefied natural gas exporter in the world. The Biden administration also greenlit the ConocoPhillips Willow Project, a new oil drilling venture in Alaska (Vox, 9/8/23).

    Meanwhile, the scientific consensus is straightforward—and bleak. We are at imminent risk of surpassing the internationally agreed-upon threshold of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2023 report warned that global emissions need to be cut by almost half by 2030 if we are to meet this goal. The planet’s current 1.1°C increase has already led to more frequent and deadly severe weather across the globe.

    The urgency with which we need to bring down emissions is clear. Still, news media muddy the waters, encouraging public apathy by focusing on protesters’ tactics at the expense of their demands.

    Bloomberg missing the point

    Bloomberg: The Big Climate March Returns in an Era of Soup-Throwing Protests

    Bloomberg (9/16/23): “Marches—even quite large ones—don’t always get widespread media coverage.”

    Previewing the demonstrations, Bloomberg’s “The Big Climate March Returns in an Era of Soup-Throwing Protests” (9/16/23) spent more time analyzing the psychology behind different forms of demonstration than the dire consequences if protesters’ demands are not met.

    The piece compared traditional climate marches to more disruptive, but still nonviolent direct action tactics utilized by groups like Extinction Rebellion, Just Stop Oil and Blockade Australia in recent years. Across the world, demonstrators have taken to blocking roads and airport runways, overrunning billionaire-frequented Hamptons destinations, deflating SUV tires, gluing themselves to various surfaces—including the US Open tennis court—and, yes, throwing tomato soup on (glass-protected) Van Gogh paintings.

    The piece outlines why many activists feel they need to engage in more extreme demonstrations to gain more attention—by citing a problem it is complicit in:

    The rise of disruptive protests is, in part, a reaction to the feeling among some activists that traditional mass actions aren’t effective. Marches—even quite large ones—don’t always get widespread media coverage, limiting their usefulness in garnering attention.

    The piece demonstrates just how to perpetuate that problem, offering only one paragraph on protesters’ demands, in the form of a quote from local youth activist Bree Campbell:

    “We’re marching to make clear to President Biden that we expect him to uphold his campaign promise for him to be the climate president that we elected,” says Campbell. Those taking part want him “to stop approving fossil fuel projects and leases, phase out fossil fuel production on public lands and waters, and to declare a climate emergency so that he could halt crude oil exports and investments in fossil fuel projects abroad.”

    Beyond this statement, there is no acknowledgement of the reality that these demands are not only urgent, but in line with scientific consensus and the UN’s Paris Agreement. Instead, Bloomberg moves on to questioning mass protest marches’ ability to change policy, relying on the expertise of cognitive psychologist Colin Davis, a protest researcher at Britain’s University of Bristol.

    “We had 2 million people on the streets [in the UK in 2003], protesting against the invasion of Iraq,” he said. “Obviously, it happened anyway, despite the people coming out against it.”

    Davis cited a similar dilemma with Brexit.

    The piece would have benefited from some introspection: News media played a crucial role both in disseminating government lies about nonexistent Iraqi weapons of mass destruction that ratcheted up support of the war, and in framing Brexit as a popular anti-establishment rebellion (FAIR.org, 3/22/23, 10/15/21).

    Bloomberg spent considerable time analyzing and pathologizing climate activists’ strategies by comparing their movement to the ostensible efficacy of others—including Black militant movements of the 1960s. Yet it spent almost no time explaining the life-threatening conditions that caused activists to develop these strategies in the first place.

    Crucial connections

    Bloomberg: NYC Climate Protests Draw Thousands Ahead of UN Gathering

    Bloomberg‘s report (9/17/23) on the march ahead of the UN meeting followed the pattern of marginalizing protesters’ demands.

    After this pre-event article lamented that large-scale marches often don’t receive enough media coverage, a follow-up piece offered only a short recap, which also did not elaborate on why and how quickly we need to tamp down our fossil fuel use (Bloomberg, 9/17/23).

    Despite its point that traditional marches usually garner less media attention, Bloomberg also failed to spell out this crucial connection during a more “disruptive” protest. When the Just Stop Oil protesters threw soup at Van Gogh’s famous Sunflowers painting in 2022, the outlet (10/14/22) covered the demonstration in detail, being sure to specify the brand of tomato soup thrown at the painting, and where and when Van Gogh painted it. Yet it did not acknowledge the existence of a climate crisis, or fossil fuels’ central role in it.

    Failing to clearly spell out the connection between protesters’ actions and the existential threats behind them leads to the framing of their demonstrations as merely symbolic at best and hysterical at worst. In reality, these protesters’ demand to end fossil fuels is concrete and in line with scientific consensus.

    If the media avoid making these clear connections, it won’t matter what tactics protesters use.

     

    The post Bloomberg Muddies Climate Protests’ Vital Message: End Fossil Fuels appeared first on FAIR.

    This post was originally published on FAIR.

  • The People’s Assembly is gearing up for its national demonstration and Festival of Resistance in Manchester. The group is holding the events during this year’s Conservative Party conference – and People’s Assembly is determined to make its supporters’ presence known to the Tories. The message will be clear: Tories out – now.

    People’s Assembly: back at the Tory Party conference

    It’s been over ten years since the People’s Assembly first launched with a letter in the Guardian. Its initial mandate was clear: an end to the then-coalition government’s austerity programme, and a reversal of its cuts. Its remit has since broadened.

    From protests on the rise in foodbank use to demanding a different kind of post-pandemic ‘new normal’, People’s Assembly has often been at the front of the UK’s political protest movement. Now, it’s once more got the Tory Party conference in its sights.

    The People’s Assembly has organised a national demonstration against the Tories on Sunday 1 October in Manchester. The protest will start at All Saints Park, Oxford Road, at 12pm. It will go directly past the Tory conference (where its likely the protest will be the nosiest), and end at the Castlefield Arena:

    People's Assembly national demo route

    Speakers at the demo will include:

    • National Union of Rail, Transport, and Maritime Workers (RMT) general secretary Mick Lynch.
    • National Education Union (NEU) general secretary Daniel Kebede.
    • Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) general secretary Kate Hudson.
    • Ellen Clifford from Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC).
    • Fran Heathcote, president of the Public and Commercial Services (PCS) union.
    • Lindsey German from the Stop the War Coalition.

    People's Assembly national demo speakers

    Festival of Resistance

    The demo is part of a wider programme of events which the People’s Assembly is calling a ‘Festival of Resistance’. The four-day programme will see a wide range of talks, events, debates, and entertainment. Many of these will be held in a marquee at Piccadilly Gardens.

    One of the events is the ‘Stick it to the Tories Big Night Out’ on Saturday 30 September. Starting at 7:30pm at the Mechanics Institute, the evening will bring together comedy, music, and politics. It will feature:

    • Barbara Nice (comedian).
    • Laura Pidcock (People’s Assembly national secretary).
    • Barbarella (musician).
    • Gerry Potter (rebel poet).
    • Paul O’Connor (PCS senior national officer).
    • Steph Pike (rebel poet).
    • Jonathan Mayor (comedian).

    People's Assembly Festival of Resistance schedule

    You can find more details on some of the events here.

    Turning ‘anger into action’

    Paula Peters is a disability rights activist with DPAC. She said in a press release:

    The Tories are planning to cut the welfare state even further and ramp up poverty as a result. Join the People’s Assembly on Sunday 1st October in Manchester. Turn the anger into action. See you on the streets.

    Ben Sellers from the group Campaign for Trade Union Freedom added:

    The Government’s anti-strike legislation concerns us all. It’s part of a network of authoritarian measures to prevent us from fighting back. We must never allow that. Join the People’s Assembly demo at the Tory Party conference in Manchester on October 1st.

    Groups have been organising transport to the national demonstration. You can find out more here. People’s Assembly still needs volunteers to help steward the demonstration and to help with the Festival of Resistance. If you can support with this, get in touch via office(at)thepeoplesassembly.org.uk.

    Working-class people paying the price

    The People’s Assembly summed up by saying:

    From austerity to the cost of living crisis, it is all too clear that the only people paying for the Tories deliberate destruction of public services, welfare and communities are ordinary, working class people. This year alone we have seen food price inflation at 19.1% – it’s fastest pace in over 40 years. Coupled with falling wages, a massive rise in rents and energy bills at an all time high, people are struggling ahead of an already predicted harsh winter.

    In the meantime the Tories, and their financial backers, are enjoying one bonanza after another. Profits for energy companies are at an all time high, supermarkets have cashed in on the increase in food prices and the PM himself cannot go one week without benefitting from the decisions coming from Westminster. Despite their claims to be world beating, the only thing this party seems able to beat is the corruption, cronyism and callousness of their previous leaders.

    Within [the last week] Sunak has U-turned on climate pledges, forcing the public to once again shoulder the brunt of future damage arising from climate change.

    So, if you free from Saturday 30 September and want to stick it to the Tories – while also having some fun along the way – then People’s Assembly needs you.

    Featured image and additional images via the People’s Assembly

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.