BBc London at Rampart & the Other G20 (Glasgow)
redrag | 31.03.2009 15:32 | G20 London Summit | Social Struggles
Here are 2 interesting piececs on BBC website (1st link is a report which includes interview with activist at Rampart Social Centre):
London 'should not host G20':
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/7969275.stm
&
The other G20:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/7973907.stm
World leaders are preparing to discuss a way out of the global recession at the G20 summit in London. But there's another G20 that doesn't just melt away after a few days - in Glasgow. Meet the residents of an unlikely postcode lottery.
There are no TV crews assembling in Glasgow's Maryhill district, no hushed security sweeps for international dignitaries.
The bakeries, tanning salons and bookmakers which pepper the area's main drag are not about to host any discussions which could transform the world-wide economy.
But it is not just the G20 abbreviation that this traditionally working class corner of inner-city Glasgow shares with the gathering of the planet's top heads of government.
Here, too, the talk is of little else besides the economic slowdown. Except that in places like Maryhill, unemployment, poverty and the credit crunch are more than just abstract terms.
An ominously high number of shopfronts are boarded up. The busiest premises on the Maryhill Road is easily the Job Centre Plus. Next door to the local police station - the setting for ITV's long-running detective drama Taggart - is a pub called The Politician. Its shutters are pulled firmly closed.
Maryhill, like much of west-central Scotland, knows all about recession and hardship. During the 1980s, the region underwent the trauma of rapid deindustrialisation and soaring joblessness that was termed "shock therapy" when it was repeated in Eastern Europe a decade later.
See where Glasgow's G20 is
There were, undoubtedly, many winners here. Glasgow's transformation from a manufacturing heartland to a service economy saw its spruced-up city centre transformed into a Mecca of boutiques and style bars. The handsome Victorian sandstone apartments of Maryhill, too, drew some middle-class gentrifiers, attracted by the area's proximity to Glasgow University and the fashionable West End.
But the dilapidated 1960s high rises which loom over the landscape are a stark visualisation of those who have not prospered.
'Stupid money'
Sitting by the Forth and Clyde canal, groundwork labourer John Torrance, 31, has been waiting hours for his foreman to pick him up. However frustrating he finds hanging around, John cannot afford to walk away from a potential pay packet.
Rising bills have hit his wallet hard. He wants to sell the two-bedroom flat he shares with his wife and three children, but the depressed housing market is against him.
John admits he knows little about the agenda for the G20 beyond what he has read in the papers. But he knows what he wants it to achieve.
"All that stupid money, all that carry-on with RBS," he says with a shake of the head. "It's the government's fault for letting the banks get away with it in the first place.
"It's time for them to get their fingers out and really do something about it - make it better not just for their class, but for the working class, for everybody from the bottom up."
For an area in which 29% of the population are already classified as "income deprived" by the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation, it is the impact of rising costs which is hitting hardest.
Outside the local Tesco, Janice Doran, 55, shakes her head when asked about the G20. But she only has to peer into her shopping bag for a reminder that a recession is under way.
"The prices of everything are going up - not by 5p or 6p but by 15p," she says, peering into her carrier bag. "If you're out of work, you really notice that."
'Iraq waste'
It is barely easier for local entrepreneurs hoping to generate wealth. The sun is shining outside, but newsagent Zak Khan, 43, has had to stop selling ice lollies from his shop.
His last energy bill from Scottish Power nearly doubled to £410, making his deep freeze too expensive to run. In the grand scheme of things, it might be only a minor illustration of the economic slowdown, Zak acknowledges. But it is the credit crunch's most petty frustrations, he believes, with which the gathering dignitaries are least equipped to empathise.
"Do you really think the G20 leaders understand these sort of decisions?" he asks, frowning. "They'll sit around their table, but they won't be talking about the things that affect people around here.
"These are the people that got us into trouble in the first place. They should have been saving during the good times, but instead they wasted all that money on the war."
But outside on Maryhill Road, Kim Dellanzo, 42, a nurse and mother-of-one, disagrees.
Although she has seen Maryhill improve for the better in the decade she has lived here, she believes the crisis can only be solved by addressing the assumptions that have underpinned development here.
"We're all kind of responsible to a point," she admits.
"As a society we're very consumerist. Very me-ist. We just want everything without realising that there are things you have to do - you have to work for it and you have to save up.
"We don't make anything. We're not self-sufficient. We're dependent on investment - but if there's no investment and no money then we're stuffed."
Maryhill might not be used to the outside world paying attention to what it has to say.
The voice of this G20 might be all too rarely heard. But it is in communities like this that the actions of their more powerful namesakes will be tested.
redrag
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