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Marching Mothers on the Move

Anne Neale | 10.03.2011 18:53 | Anti-racism | Gender | Social Struggles

On SATURDAY 12 MARCH Mothers are Marching In defence of Everyone's survival and welfare, and for an End to cuts, poverty and discrimination. We'll be meeting on the north side of Trafalgar Square (in front of the National Gallery) at 12 noon then marching to SOAS for a Speak-out. Keynote speaker: distinguished campaigner and author SELMA JAMES
on International Women's Day:how rapidly things change.


While the government targets women for cuts, piling more unwaged caring work on us, Alan Sugar ditches women who may want to have babies. Being a woman doesn’t fit in with their economy. Are women unfit for purpose – or is their purpose anti-life?

Women from all backgrounds are marching to demand social and financial recognition for mothers who produce and care for the world’s people, and a total change of priorities. Mothers and other carers see the deficit as another excuse to take back benefits and services our labour and taxes have paid for. We are told there is no money for food, housing, health, support, education and the environment. But we can see no shortage of cash to pay for banks, bonuses and weapons of war, while shielding corporations from tax.

All over the Middle East and North Africa women have found their voice and with men and children are risking their lives to bring change. We need change too, right here in Britain. And we are finding our voices too: students protesting against school fees and the abolition of the EMA, people with disabilities, pensioners, single parents, job seekers and workers whose jobs are under threat are marching, occupying universities and town halls, blocking roads.

As mothers we can help bring together all who stand for life, uniting against war and exploitation. Fathers, sons, brothers, partners . . . will be marching in support.

The Mothers March is part of international Global Women's Strike events in a number of coutnries:
Guyana: March and public meeting in Georgetown of Afro-Guyanese, Indo-Guyanese and Indigenous women for: Living incomes for mothers & all carers; End violence vs women & children.
Haiti: March of earthquake survivors in Port-au-Prince.
 India: Mothers Marches of Dalit and Tribal women and children followed by Public Meetings in Mahasamund District, Dhamdari District and Saraipali Bloc. Men are supporting. Main demands: against poverty and violence against women; for food security for mothers and children, women’s land rights, health rights, free education for all children, including girls, and money and facilities in government schemes for village disabled women.
Italy: Gruppo Donne No Dal Molin protest outside the new US army base in Vicenza; Women in Struggle Collective, holding a vigil with an open mic at the market in Cremona.

Peru: Conference in Lima by the domestic workers trade union SINTTRAHOL calling for implementation of ILO convention which guarantees better working conditions for domestic workers; Implementation of Law 27986 and creation of an employers’ register so employers have to obey the law.

Poland: Lodz Gender incorporated Mothers March demands into their MANIFA demonstrations on 8 March both in Warsaw and other cities and symbolically joining Mothers March at their event in Lodz.

USA: Marches in Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Philadelphia and San Francisco.

Venezuela: Gathering in Los Teques main square.

Women say: Why I’ll be marching on 12 March

Ø ‘My daughter has a life-threatening disability. Mothers like me get no respite. They are even pushing us to go out to work. We are heading for disaster.’

Ø ‘It’s frightening to raise children in a world where they are not valued.’

Ø ‘Asylum seekers were cut first. No recourse to public funds, food vouchers, destitution. That’s what they intend for everyone.’

Ø ‘We run a small health food shop. Times are hard. My oldest child is losing his EMA. I don’t know how we’ll manage.’

Ø ‘We use the library all the time, for revision, books and films for holidays.’

Ø ‘Women are not believed. I was raped, accused of lying and jailed.’

Ø ‘Legal aid enabled me to sue the police for assault and wrongful arrest. Without it only the rich can afford justice.’

Ø ‘Mums of young children are treated as “workless”. When I was on Income Support I could be available to my son.’

Ø ‘After a life of labour, pensioners are told living longer is an economic crisis.’

Ø ‘Grandparents are expected to step in. We’re also expected to retire later.’

Ø ‘After school clubs are closing. Children are “collateral damage” for the cuts.’

Ø ‘They took alternative therapies like homeopathy out of the NHS. Now they want to take the whole NHS. They’ve been at it for years. If we don’t stop them now, we’ll lose it.’

Ø ‘I was tortured and claimed asylum. My children weren’t allowed to join me. I worry about them terribly.’

Ø ‘My partner was violent. I reported him and social services took my children. Why punish us?’

Ø ‘We share our house with others to reduce costs. Cuts in housing benefit will make it impossible, especially in London.’

Ø ‘I went into sex work to support my kid and pay for my degree.’

Ø ‘People are told to blame “others” for the cuts. Racist attacks go up, bullying, against immigrants, disabled people, lesbians, gays, trans. It’s scary.’

Ø ‘Child Benefit should be universal. Kids should see they and their mums are valued. Means testing stigmatises; many kids hide they’re on school meals.’

Ø ‘Young people want to find their own way to activities. Without out-of-school clubs, sports, music . . . we are impoverished.’

Ø ‘Flooding, drought. They even tried to take our forests. They don’t respect anything.’

Anne Neale
- e-mail: gws@globalwomenstrike.net
- Homepage: http://www.globalwomenstrike.net