Photo from Bristol Gap demonstration
Mike Taylor | 22.01.2001 16:02
Branch Sec Bristol NUJ
Bristol Activists Group
Broadmead, Bristol's pedestrianised shopping centre was split in two today as 150 Bristol Activists descended and sat down in protest at the systematic abuse of sweatshop labour by US clothes chain GAP.
Bristol Activists Group
Broadmead, Bristol's pedestrianised shopping centre was split in two today as 150 Bristol Activists descended and sat down in protest at the systematic abuse of sweatshop labour by US clothes chain GAP.
No Sweat
Broadmead, Bristol's pedestrianised shopping centre was split in two today as 150 Bristol Activists descended and sat down in protest at the systematic abuse of sweatshop labour by US clothes chain GAP. The sea of faces dividing the walkway held placards reading "GAP - Globally Abusing People" and "GAP rips off child labour and sweat shop labour". The protest gained momentum as local shop workers on lunch breaks and teenagers grabbed pickets and joined in. In the swarm, lines could be seen forming as passers-by queued up to sign petitions calling for an end to GAP's global profiteering. Julie carrying a petition board said how one woman, feeling guilty after having bought a GAP bodywarmer was reminded that she hasn't benefited at all from the exploitation - it cost her an outrageous £55 and needed her to work for hours and hours to pay for it. GAP is anti-union and non-unionised. Its UK workers are as much without rights as its Cambodian or Chinese counterparts earning a few tens of pence an hour.
So, what is to be done next? We need to mobilise ourselves to recruit GAP workers into their shop workers union. An organised strike by those exploited in the West in solidarity with those exploited in the East can put a full stop on child labour. No sales, no profit. But local action must go hand in hand with a perspective that argues for organised global action to cripple transnational corporations like GAP and institutions like the World Bank, IMF and the WTO they bankroll to allow them free reign. Many workers now have this perspective which is why Chris Harman's pamphlet on the IMF sold out within minutes of us protesting and why this week's Socialist Worker reading "Greedy Multinationals" was gobbled up and lead to the recruitment of some school children who, like many of their classmates, are coming to terms with a world where they like what they see but cant afford it. Anti-capitalism has arrived in Bristol and local brands such as GAP, Starbucks and Macdonalds struggling to hide their tarnished corportate images are likely to get a pasting. Protests can spread easily to every high street and GAP shipments and hauliers can be blockaded. No sweat. Just do it.
Broadmead, Bristol's pedestrianised shopping centre was split in two today as 150 Bristol Activists descended and sat down in protest at the systematic abuse of sweatshop labour by US clothes chain GAP. The sea of faces dividing the walkway held placards reading "GAP - Globally Abusing People" and "GAP rips off child labour and sweat shop labour". The protest gained momentum as local shop workers on lunch breaks and teenagers grabbed pickets and joined in. In the swarm, lines could be seen forming as passers-by queued up to sign petitions calling for an end to GAP's global profiteering. Julie carrying a petition board said how one woman, feeling guilty after having bought a GAP bodywarmer was reminded that she hasn't benefited at all from the exploitation - it cost her an outrageous £55 and needed her to work for hours and hours to pay for it. GAP is anti-union and non-unionised. Its UK workers are as much without rights as its Cambodian or Chinese counterparts earning a few tens of pence an hour.
So, what is to be done next? We need to mobilise ourselves to recruit GAP workers into their shop workers union. An organised strike by those exploited in the West in solidarity with those exploited in the East can put a full stop on child labour. No sales, no profit. But local action must go hand in hand with a perspective that argues for organised global action to cripple transnational corporations like GAP and institutions like the World Bank, IMF and the WTO they bankroll to allow them free reign. Many workers now have this perspective which is why Chris Harman's pamphlet on the IMF sold out within minutes of us protesting and why this week's Socialist Worker reading "Greedy Multinationals" was gobbled up and lead to the recruitment of some school children who, like many of their classmates, are coming to terms with a world where they like what they see but cant afford it. Anti-capitalism has arrived in Bristol and local brands such as GAP, Starbucks and Macdonalds struggling to hide their tarnished corportate images are likely to get a pasting. Protests can spread easily to every high street and GAP shipments and hauliers can be blockaded. No sweat. Just do it.
Mike Taylor
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
Technical point
22.01.2001 18:15
Lovely piece with a great photo. If at all poss could you compress/make smaller the photos youpost up in the future. It makes sense for two reasons: 1) It appears in total on the screen 2) It takes less time to download.
Ask someone about Photoshop/Fireworks software to learn more.
Cheers. Dan
Dan Anchorman
Great to see GAP under pressure!
23.01.2001 12:24
On the subject though there's loads of good free or (cheap) shareware graphics utilities you can use to resize, crop, compress pictures etc - some of them are very small files and dont take much system resources, so they're great for using on low end laptops (where running a full version of photoshop would slow things right down).
Actually Freeserve has a very good listing:
http://5star.freeserve.com/Graphics/
Loads here:
http://www.softwarenow.com/Multimedia_and_Graphics/
Some here also:
http://www.thefreesite.com/Free_Software/Graphics_freeware/index.html
-
wicked
24.01.2001 01:05
nosweat UK
e-mail: nosweat@destroyimf.org
Why sell paper advocating slavery on demo?
26.01.2001 13:42
. . . under Socialism there will not exist the apparatus of compulsion itself, namely, the State: for it will have melted away entirely into a producing and consuming commune. None the less, the road to Socialism lies through a period of the highest possible intensification of the principle of the State . . . Just as a lamp, before going out, shoots up in a brilliant flame, so the State, before disappearing, assumes the form of the dictatorship of the proletariat, i.e., the most ruthless form of State, which embraces the life of the citizens authoritatively in every direction. . . No organization except the army has ever controlled man with such severe compulsion as does the State organization of the working class in the most difficult period of transition. It is just for this reason that we speak of the militarization of labour."
Leon Trotsky
Terrorism and Communism
1919
Joe
Great Day-Out
29.01.2001 16:32
Thom Wall
Thom Wall
e-mail: thom.wall@telewest.co.uk
other gap demos
04.03.2001 22:04
http://www.resist.org.uk/gap.html
graeme keir
e-mail: graeme_keir@hotmail.com