200 gather to stop removal of fire engine
red letter | 07.06.2005 13:10 | London
MP George Galloway today warned fire chiefs that plans to remove a fire engine from his east London constituency would have to be carried out "over the bodies" of demonstrators.
The Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, who beat Labour's Oona King in one of the shock results of last month's general election, spoke as 200 local residents and trade unionists massed outside Bethnal Green fire station this morning in protest at cuts made by the London fire and emergency planning authority.
The cutbacks saw central London's Manchester Square fire station close today with the loss of two engines and 53 jobs. Bethnal Green is set to lose one of its two fire engines.
But Mr Galloway, who called the Bethnal Green protest with the backing of the Fire Brigades Union's London region, warned: "These cuts will cost lives of people in Bethnal Green and Bow."
The area had more tower blocks and overcrowded flats - danger areas for fires - than any other borough in London, he said
The MP warned fire chiefs: "If Respect in this borough is able to save this fire engine by stopping the authority taking it away, that's exactly what we'll do. We are only mobile telephone calls away.
"They will be forced to take that machine out over the bodies of those who have come to defend it."
The MP, who was expelled from the Labour party over his opposition to the war on Iraq, said the fight for the fire engine was of a piece with his anti-war stance.
"The same people killing Iraqis are taking our fire engine away, and they're doing both for the same reason," he said. "They support an economic and political system that wants to make the maximum profit from the earth while putting minimum public expenditure back in."
The LFEPA is expected to try to remove the fire engine on Thursday.
The Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, who beat Labour's Oona King in one of the shock results of last month's general election, spoke as 200 local residents and trade unionists massed outside Bethnal Green fire station this morning in protest at cuts made by the London fire and emergency planning authority.
The cutbacks saw central London's Manchester Square fire station close today with the loss of two engines and 53 jobs. Bethnal Green is set to lose one of its two fire engines.
But Mr Galloway, who called the Bethnal Green protest with the backing of the Fire Brigades Union's London region, warned: "These cuts will cost lives of people in Bethnal Green and Bow."
The area had more tower blocks and overcrowded flats - danger areas for fires - than any other borough in London, he said
The MP warned fire chiefs: "If Respect in this borough is able to save this fire engine by stopping the authority taking it away, that's exactly what we'll do. We are only mobile telephone calls away.
"They will be forced to take that machine out over the bodies of those who have come to defend it."
The MP, who was expelled from the Labour party over his opposition to the war on Iraq, said the fight for the fire engine was of a piece with his anti-war stance.
"The same people killing Iraqis are taking our fire engine away, and they're doing both for the same reason," he said. "They support an economic and political system that wants to make the maximum profit from the earth while putting minimum public expenditure back in."
The LFEPA is expected to try to remove the fire engine on Thursday.
red letter
Comments
Hide the following 9 comments
Nonsense
07.06.2005 14:05
Sianna
Sianna....
07.06.2005 14:57
Wondering if anyone can confirm or deny the rumour that 7 Tower Hamlets councillors are about to defect to Respect? If I were them, I'd ditch the careerist bastards as they will lose their seats next year when Respect takes them anyway.
Dancing on Oona Kings grave....
How many were there then?
07.06.2005 15:04
Need to know
There was more!
07.06.2005 15:05
counter-spook!
Oh pants...
08.06.2005 10:09
Sad thing is that while you're slapping each others backs for getting 200 'residents' (give me strength) you'll miss them actually taking the fire engine away!! We'll wait and see wont we.
The noise from the road works was more impressive than your lickspittle talk and as usual no action to actually prevent this from actually happening.
Sianna
Reality check
08.06.2005 11:33
Tower Hamlets resident
moan whinge snipe - but do nowt
08.06.2005 13:14
Now they're doing direct action, what do you say? 'Pointless crap, sad Trots' etc etc.
So I wonder.. what great life-changing action have you done? Or do you in fact prefer to sit on your well-fed arse coming up with new reasons for sniping at anyone who tries?
Mr Spoon
Poor Mr.Spoon...you are a loon!
08.06.2005 15:47
Selling papers and pretending that all who attended a gathering were all local residents does not a success make.
Now if the community were properly mobilised without trying to recruit them and a physical defence of the fire engine were in place, perhaps something could be done.
Like I said above, lets wait and see shall we?
Meanwhile the local community suffer while foolish reformists practice their parliamentary theatrics.....
Sianna
More action needed
09.06.2005 09:03
Trade unionists joined the protest at Bethnal Green fire station on Tuesday.
Around 200 people protested outside the Bethnal Green fire station, east London, on Tuesday morning.
They came to oppose attempts by the London fire authority to remove one of the station’s two engines.
The protest was called by Respect and local MP George Galloway, with the support of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU).
It was an example of the militant campaigning Respect is encouraging throughout the East End following the party’s breakthrough at the general election.
George Galloway told protesters, “Tony Blair is strutting round Washington as if he’s the president of the G8 and the European Union.
“Is he really saying that the fourth richest country in the world cannot afford to keep a fire engine in a very busy station in the heart of its capital city?
“This is a further indication that New Labour no longer represents the interests of working people. When they come to take this engine, they’ll have to move it out over our bodies.”
East London FBU official Ian Leahair said there will be blood on the hands of London’s chief fire officer for any deaths caused by this cut to the service.
Mark Harding spoke for the London region of the RMT rail workers’ union.
He said, “These cuts will endanger the travelling public, local residents and RMT members who work on the tube and who depend on a properly funded fire service. My union pledges to support the firefighters and their campaign.”
respectable