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Nuclear waste travelling from France to Germany, protests en route

06-11-2010 02:07

Diary of nuclear waste transport from France to Germany:

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CUTZ:this week in Bristol and beyond ...

06-11-2010 00:22

Treason, gunpowder and plot edition
"They're plotting in Gloucester, marching in Taunton, protesting in Bath and singing battle hymns in the Dean. The English are stirring ... Will the peasants revolt?"

[Most links removed]
P R O T E S T

NATIONAL DEMO NOW!
The Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) is demanding that a national trade union demonstration against cuts should be held this year in late November or early December. At present the TUC is not planning a major demonstration until 26 March 2011. The PCS is asking all trade union branches to demand trade union executives and the TUC general council support the PCS's call for a demonstration now. The most likely date for an action is December 11.

FOREST OF DEAN
Foresters are united in their opposition to a sell-off of public forests in England including parts of the Dean. A meeting, on November 1, set up a steering group to act as a source of “reliable information regarding the possible threats of a sell-off of the Forest woodlands and to coordinate opposition. Colin Smith, chairman of Friends of the Forest, said: “We declare our strongest opposition to even the slightest threat to our public woodlands, especially, of course, to the Forest of Dean. We hope all local environmental groups will unite to nip this lunatic suggestion in the bud.”

HANDS OFF OUR FOREST!
A massive protest in song to stop the proposed sale of Forestry Commission woodlands will take place at the Fern Bonfire, Speech House Field, Coleford, Forest of Dean on Saturday November 6 from 6pm. Anyone who attends can join in a resounding rendition of the 'Battle Hymn of the Dean' – last sung when the woodlands were threatened in 1993. Penned by the late Lily Dunn, the rallying call will hopefully be backed by the Forest of Dean Male Voice Choir members. Be there!

BATH
Bath Anti Cuts Alliance are organising a protest to coincide with a B&NES full council meeting to vote on cuts. Meet outside the Guildhall, Bath on Tuesday 16 November from 5.30pm.

TAUNTON
Taunton and West Somerset Trades Union Council is organising a march and mass rally on Saturday 6 November in Taunton to protest against Somerset County Council’s budget, which is set to slash £43 million worth of services with a loss of 1,500 jobs. Anyone wishing to take part in the protest should assemble in French Weir from 10.30 am. The march will set off at 11.00 am. Speakers includes Robin Head of the National Union of Teachers, Councillor Andy Govier (Labour), Councillor Ross Henley (Liberal Democrat) and Lisa Youlton of UNISON, as well as speakers from the PCS (Public and Commercial Services Union) and the RMT (Rail, Maritime and Transport Union).

GLOUCESTER
There will be a march and rally against cuts in Gloucester on Saturday November 20. The march starts from Gloucester Park at 10:30am sharp.

VODAPHONE
Bristol joined the #UKuncut protests last Saturday and successfully shut down £6bn tax evader Vodaphone's shop in the Broadmead shopping centre for the day. More such actions are promised and the protestors even seem to be picking up support from Westminster with Bristol East MP, Kerry McCarthy applauding their action.

FIXTURE CONGESTION
Don't fight 'em, bankrupt 'em! Planning an action in Bristol on a weekend? Why not s-t-r-e-t-c-h those resources and make sure it coincides with a Rovers or City Match? Help the boys in blue feel the pain of those 20 per cent cuts coming their way. After all, we're all in it together right?
City fixtures - http://www.bcfc.co.uk/page/Fixtures/0,,10327,00.html
Rovers fixtures - http://www.bristolrovers.co.uk/page/Fixtures

ANTI-CUTS BLOG
Some anarchists have started an anti-cuts blog called Anti-Cuts Action Bristol and Bath. The strapline is "Don't Rock the Boat, Sink the Fucker". All contributions welcome.
http://anticutsaction.wordpress.com/

U N I O N S

AMBULANCE WORKERS
Ambulance workers in Bristol, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire and parts of Somerset might be balloted over strike action say Unison. Great Western Ambulance Service is changing shift patterns but staff say it will mean some shifts starting at anti-social times and just one break in 12 hours. Unison are promising "to work in partnership" with the ambulance service over the matter. Expect an abject cave-in then.

In related news Great Western Ambulance Service boss David Whiting has quit after just 19 months.

BBC
Bristol NUJ are asking people to support BBC staff who are on strike for 48 hours this Friday and Saturday over the corporation's proposal to cut their pensions. They say, “Staff face losing tens of thousands of pounds over the course of their pension. The new BBC scheme will cap pension increases at only 1% a year. NUJ members have voted overwhelmingly to take industrial action.”
Messages of support to bristol@nuj.org.uk and campaigns@nuj.org.uk

KIRKLEES
Council workers are poised for strike action in Kirklees, Yorkshire after Unison members voted in favour of holding a ballot. The ballot comes as Kirklees Council threatens its workers with hundreds of compulsory redundancies. If passed, industrial action would happen in mid-December. Branch secretary Paul Holmes says the level of discontent has escalated since the job losses were first proposed. He said: “I was surprised how angry people were. They’re angrier than they were two months ago.”

B R I S T O L

CPS
A Bristol lawyer says trials are collapsing in Bristol because prosecutors are swamped with work due to a recruitment freeze at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). However, the bosses' spokesman and cover-up artist Barry Hughes, head of Avon and Somerset CPS, says, "I do not recognise the crisis being described."

The lawyer, Steve George, an associate solicitor with Bobbetts Mackan, says: "Within the last month eight or nine trials I've personally dealt with have collapsed due to papers not being served properly by the CPS."

Ian Kelcey, chairman of Bristol Law Society, confirms Mr George's story claiming the CPS was understaffed and under-resourced. "It's not just Bristol. It's happening around the country. If we don't have a proper criminal justice system we will be moving very quickly towards anarchy," he said.

JUNKET JANKE
Crisis? What Crisis? Bristol's Lib Dem leader Barbara Janke flew out to Spain this week to attend the EUROCITIES 2010 Zaragoza conference. The conference "focuses on the analysis of how cities develop innovative tools to create a strong identity and to promote themselves at different levels, both nationally and internationally" (sic). Ms Janke attended the junket with her absurd £72,000 a year part-time Director of Place. The cost is unknown as is the point.

CULTURE
There's still no shortage of money available to Bristol City Council to employ consultants. Latest through the door is the Chair of Culture South West, Peter Boyden, a "cultural strategist”. He's produced a report: “Can Bristol afford not to have cultural ambition? A Provocation”, about “networked ecologies” and “cultural clusters”.

The economic meat of the report, such as it is, appears in a 'Why culture matters' section. This finds Peter - openly begging for public handouts to vested interests - claiming “A top-class cultural offer underpins a strong business economy” and “creative industries represent a significant growth sector in the city and the wider West of England area”. Evidence for this is not included. Which is just the kind of voodoo economics that also tells us hosting four World Cup matches will earn Bristol £150m and used to tell us that the city was a growth centre for the financial services industries, before, that is, they all went bust and we had to bail them out at the expense of the poor, the old, the weak, the frail and the ill.

The overall idea behind all this crap seems to be to throw money at marketing sections of the publicly subsidised culture industry to an international tourist class so that locals can work in dead-end service jobs on minimum wage.

CUTS MEETING
Bristol City Council''s Quality of life Scrutiny Commission meet to discuss cuts on 8 November. Arts, festivals, libraries, waste disposal, sports, licencing, voluntary sector grants, housing, homelessness, pest control and food safety will all be under the microscope. This is one of the few times councillors will be publicly discussing their proposed cuts.

CALL TO RATION SERVICES
Bristol City Council's auditors, Grant Thornton, have told the council they will need to ration or reduce the level of services they deliver in order to achieve proposed efficiency savings of £9.2m and balance the budget in 2010-11.

AUDIT
The council's auditor's have also queried the performance of their 'transformation programme' and whether it provides value for money. The centrepiece of this business school waffle is Chief Executive, Jan Ormondroyd's woeful new call centre in Whitchurch where half the calls from the public go unanswered while council tax collection and housing benefit claims are screwed-up in their hundreds.

MORE AUDIT
The auditors have also advised council managers and the cabinet to try and find out what the hell is actually happening in their own organisation. "The Council should develop its corporate performance management arrangements, to ensure both the Strategic Leaders and Cabinet fully understand how the Council is performing," they say.

NON-DOM TAX LOSS NEWS
Bristol City Football Club have announced a £11m loss for the year. Their auditors say, "These conditions indicate the existence of a material uncertainty which may cast significant doubt about the group's ability to continue as a going concern."

This is the football club that Bristol City Council wants to hand public land to at a knockdown price on the basis that the club's new stadium will bring huge economic benefits to South Bristol. Quite how a financial basketcase on this scale is beneficial to anyone - apart from footballers on £10k a week plus pay deals - is not something Bristol City Council have explained.

HOUSING BENEFIT
The Guardian has identified Bristol as an area of high rents where housing benefit changes are likely to have a big impact. The ConDems propose to cap housing benefit payments; force single claimants under 35 to live in shared accommodation; cut jobseeker's allowance (JSA) claimant's housing benefit by 10% for every year they remain out of work and reduce the local housing allowance (LHA) - the amount a council is able to pay in benefit - from the 50th percentile to the 30th percentile of market rents.

MORE HOUSING BENEFIT
Over 8,000 tenants in Bristol will lose out under the new housing benefit rules say local housing professionals. Most will be in work or pensioners.

RENTS
Information is beginning to appear suggesting that social housing rents in Bristol are set to rise by 50% plus.

SCHOOL TRANSPORT
Bristol City Council are cutting free bus passes for pupils travelling to faith schools. The council spends £400,000 a year transporting pupils who live more than walking distance from their nearest church school. The cut is part of a £3.7 million programme of spending cuts in its children and young people's services budget.

POOL NEWS
Campaigners are claiming that plans by Bristol City Council to convert the former Bristol North Baths in Bishopston into a 'state-of-the-art' NHS health centre, library, hydrotherapy pool and flats have become unworkable due to the recession. The council's developer Chatsworth Homes had hoped to fund the project by demolishing the former library in the and area developing luxury flats. However, this is no longer possible “due to uncertainty in the property market”. The Victorian swimming baths have been closed for five years now, despite continuing protests from the local community, and the building is deteriorating rapidly. Bristol City Council claim that “work is taking place behind the scenes”.

ON THE BUSES
Contracts to run 60 subsidised bus services in Bristol are being put out to tender by Bristol City Council. The 60 contracts are worth £5m and fifty five per cent of the bus services supported by the authority are currently run by First bus. Despite some of the highest fares in the UK, First say their Bristol operation “is not an extraordinarily profitable exercise". Few people in Bristol are likely to believe this.

HOMELESS
Homeless women sleeping rough on the streets of Bristol will come to serious harm because of the lack of a women-only night shelter in the city say homeless charities as some of the harsher realities of the spending cuts become clear.

FERRIES
Bristol City Council has transferred a £38,000 transport subsidy from the Bristol Ferry Boat Company to Number Seven Ferries for 'a commuter service' that will no longer run to the railway station at Temple Meads. We reported last week that the Bristol Ferry Boat Company had cancelled their service claiming it was uneconomic. Lib Dem transport boss Gary Hopkins justified the new subsidy saying, “it makes Bristol a much more attractive place.”

THE CAVALIERS
Jim White, a former Lib Dem Cabinet Member in Bristol, has accused Bristol City Council officers of having “a very cavalier attitude towards public money” after a freedom of information request revealed that 74 flats in Knowle West that officers proposed demolishing due to "inherent structural defects" were in fact structurally sound. Mr White says the cost of demolition of the 74 flats would be between £3.5 million and £4 million. He said, "demolishing these buildings is a lazy idea that seems to display a lack of understanding of the finances of property development."

ELITIST TWAT
The University of Bristol's Vice Chancellor, Eric "shall we go for lunch?" Thomas, says university tuition fees rising to £9,000 a year is "welcome news".

B A T H

QUITTERS
Two senior Bath politicians have quit their parties. Both former mayors; Sir Elgar Jenkins has left the Conservative Party and Peter Metcalfe the Liberal Democrat Party. Sir Elgar has been a member of the Tory Party for more than 50 years and says he has “lost faith in the ability of his party's national front bench”. Metcalfe, who has been a member of the Liberal and Liberal Democrat parties for more than 40 years, says he is "very disturbed" by the coalition's stance on child benefit and other social security issues.

COMMUNITY HEALTH
The B&NES Community Health and Social Care Services partnership is set to be privatised. A spokesman for the partnership says, "In order to accommodate pressures and to be viable for the future, the new organisation may need to carry out a degree of restructuring or reorganisation of staff, just as will be required within other council and PCT activities.”

1,700 staff are currently being consulted on the changes that will establish either a charity or a community interest enterprise underpinned by a limited company. Another option would be for the partnership's services and staff to be taken over by the council or the Royal United Hospital NHS Trust and remain in the public sector.

DIY CUTS
Bath and North East Somerset Council is asking people to come up with their own ideas to help the council save millions. The council has already told their divisional directors to come up with plans to trim their budgets by up 10 per cent and has now launched a website inviting people to address the following questions: what should we do less of? What should we cut altogether? What services should we protect?”

S O U T H G L O U C E S T E R S H I R E

LOCAL AUTHORITY
South Gloucestershire Council is pressing ahead with plans to radically restructure and "change the way it provides services". This week a scrutiny committee voted in favour of the proposals, which will see the council commission the private sector to provide services rather than deliver them themselves. Huge job losses and a significant drop in the quality of services are expected.

N O R T H S O M E R S E T

BUSES
The Nailsea town bus service, run by North Somerset Coaches, may have to stop running if changes are made to the amount paid for OAP fares. The number two and four routes which run from Nailsea to Backwell throughout the day may be pulled. North Somerset Council currently pays 91 pence for every journey taken by a pensioner using a bus pass. This funding will be cut by up to a third.

VOLUNTARY SECTOR
A disability charity only has the cash to stay afloat for the next three months. The Nailsea Disability Initiative has enough money to pay the rent on its shop unit in the town centre until the end of January. The service is staffed by volunteers and rents an office at Crown Glass Place. It relies entirely on grants, fundraising and donations to cover its annual running costs of around £20,000. The charity gives advice to disabled people on how to claim the benefits they are entitled to and sees between 750 and 1,000 people a year.

COPPERS
Police 'beat officers' covering Worle, Locking, Hutton, Banwell, Winscombe, Sandford, Puxton, Kewstoke, West Wick and Wick St Lawrence in North Somerset have been told that their positions are likely to go. Avon and Somerset Police have refused to comment.

G L O U C E S T E R S H I R E

LOCAL AUTHORITY
Conservatives on Gloucestershire County Council are calling for the number of councillors to be cut from 63 to 53 to save £80,000 a year. The change, they say, would bring the county in line with the national average and recognise the council’s diminishing financial resources.

BED CLOSURES
Bed closures at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital have led to a decline in patient care according to a consultant. Roger Close, an orthopaedic consultant at the hospital, says a cut in the number of beds has meant some trauma patients have not received the level of care that they might have had. This summer 45 beds at GRH were closed on a trial basis. This smaller trial went ahead after initial plans to close up to 200 beds to save £30million caused a public outcry.

S O M E R S E T

LOCAL AUTHORITY CUTS
Somerset County Council's cabinet has voted unanimously to cut their budget by £43 million as part of an effort to reduce a £75 million deficit. The cuts include shedding 1,500 jobs, halving the road repairs budget, scrapping the arts budget in its entirety, slashing bus subsidies, axing eight out of 18 household waste recycling centres and undertaking a major review of libraries. Services for children with special educational needs and the disabled will also be hit, while people receiving more than 20 hours home care will be told to fund the extra hours themselves or move into care homes. Over 200 protestors attended the meeting.

D E V O N

NHS
Nurses face pay cuts and office jobs are being axed as bosses at Plymouth's Derriford Hospital seek to save £27 million this financial year as well as achieve massive efficiency targets. The hospital chiefs say "radical changes are needed".

C S R

CARE
The government has quietly dropped legislation for free provision of personal care at home for people - mainly elderly - who have been discharged from hospital.

HOMECARE
The Local Government Association is warning that councils might have to restrict adult care services to those who have "critical" needs. If councils tighten eligibility criteria to exclude those whose need for care is currently classified as "substantial" it would mean no one living in their own home would be able to access such care.

Bristol City Council's new adult care proposals seem to confirm the LGA's fears. Bristol is now looking to focus its homecare services on elderly people requiring high care provision – such as people with dementia - while closing any residential homes for these people. Meanwhile the future of homecare for frail older people with lesser 'substantial' care needs is not directly addressed.

NHS
King's Fund chief economist John Appleby says the 0.1% budget rise for the NHS promised in the Comprehensive Spending Review is inadequate and that “cost shunting” by the NHS on to local authoritiy budgets is inevitable, particularly for post-hospital care.

EDUCATION
Money for school sport in the former Avon area is to be axed by £2 million a year. Funding for eight School Sport Partnerships in Bristol, North Somerset, South Gloucestershire and Bath and North East Somerset will be withdrawn by the Department for Education in August 2011 as part of the comprehensive spending review. Staff working for the partnership will be made redundant in April.

SEARCH AND RESCUE
More than 100 people protested at Rest Bay, Porthcawl last weekend over proposals to restrict search and rescue operations in the Bristol Channel, currently run from Chivenor in Devon. Chivenor currently provides 24-hour search and rescue cover across south Wales, north Devon, Somerset, and the Bristol Channel. Under the new proposals night-time cover would be provided from Culdrose in Cornwall or from Anglesey. The protest campaign has spread to south Wales from Devon where it was launched by the mayor of Ilfracombe.

BISHOP HAS A BASH
The Bishop of Bath and Wells has told the House of Lords that government spending cuts could leave hundreds of thousands of people homeless in the next 25 years.

RESEARCH
The IPPR (Institute for Public Policy Research) has published a brief but useful overview of the Comprehensive Spending Review.

P R I V A T I S A T I O N

PLUNDER NEWS
Bristol's GPs and practice managers are being invited to attend a special conference - 'Managing Change in General Practice' - that "will provide an in-depth view on the government’s white paper - ‘Equity & Excellence: Liberating the NHS’". Taking place at the Bristol business lair, Leigh Court Mansion, on 17 November, the conference is being organised by entirely disinterested parties such as as PKF Accountants, Veale Wasbrough Vizards lawyers and Royal Bank of Scotland - the bankrupt bank!.

AWP
Staff at the Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust say plans to turn the partnership into a foundation trust “have passed the point of no return”. The partnership has been working towards foundation status for three years now. Many AWP staff believe foundation trust status is a prelude to further privatisation. It will certainly allow bosses to ditch national NHS pay, terms and conditions agreements in favour of local settlements.

POST OFFICES
John Bowman, president of the South West branch of the National Federation of Sub-Postmasters, has spoken out about legislation to privatise the Royal Mail. He claims there is no specific information about what the government are going to do about Post Office branches once the legislation is passed. Mr Bowman says 40 per cent of sub-post offices business comes from the Royal Mail. "Post Offices won't be shut down, we'll go bust instead," he says.

SWRDA
Vince Cable's Department of Trade will take charge of disposing of business and technology assets from the scrapped South West RDA, while Communities Secretary Eric Pickles will manage the land and buildings sell-offs. The South West RDA is listed as having 55 land and building assets. The list includes plots three and six at Temple Meads, Bristol along with phase three of the Bristol business centre and Bristol Science & Technology Park. The assets are expected to go to the highest bidder and the cash to the Exchequer.

E C O N O M Y

GRADUATES
Unemployment among graduates is at its highest for two decades. Around 21,000 people - that's 8.9 per cent or one in eleven - who left university last year, are without a job six months later, as graduates suffer from the effects of the recession, according to a study by the Higher Education Careers Services Unit (HECSU).

UNEMPLOYMENT
The cuts will result in 1.6m lost jobs across the UK over the next five years with the private sector taking the biggest hit. The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) says the impact of the government's spending cuts on the workforce, along with the imminent rise in VAT, will be greater than the official estimate from the Office for Budget Responsibility. Research by the CIPD has found that around 900,000 jobs will be lost from the private sector, with another 725,000 jobs expected to be cut across the public sector. This equates to around 16,000 jobs in Bristol - about the current jobless total - based on calculations by the Guardian last week.

DISTRESSED ASSETS
There's been a 126 per cent rise in distressed asset sales in the west in the last six months, largely due to insolvency cases. Pubs lead the way with a 189 per cent increase in sales.The hotel market is affected too, with the number of distressed hotel businesses sold in the period increasing by 90 per cent. Distressed restaurant sales were up 67 per cent while the retail sector stayed flat, mirroring last year's busy levels.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
The commercial property sector in the South West continues to feel the effects of recession. James Gregory, RICS, a partner atAlder King, says: "We are seeing a mixed picture for the commercial property sector in the South West. The year started positively, but falling stock markets, worries over the impact of spending cuts and the sustainability of the recovery have created a degree of caution, which is impacting on the commercial property sector.”

PLANNING
It looks like the ConDems will be embarking on a developer-friendly overhaul of the planning regime in the next parliamentary session. Planning minister Bob Neill says, "It's important we help our businesses and not hinder them with unnecessary burdens, so they can continue to be competitive and invest in communities throughout the country."

Business minister Mark Prisk says, "We must stop putting obstacles in the way of British businesses. They will be the driving force behind our future economic growth."

These are exactly the same businesses and developers who were the driving force behind the profitable asset-price bubble that collapsed in 2008. They have subsequently set about bleeding the welfare state dry to pay for their greed and errors. That's some investment in communities throughout the country.

LEPs
The ConDem's plan to boost jobs in the regions will be a "failure in large parts of England", a Government minister has said. Mark Prisk, the Business and Enterprise Minister, says there are "strong concerns" among business leaders about local enterprise partnerships (LEPs). These bodies - very loose coalitions of businessmen and local politicians - could be "in danger of failing to aid economic growth" he says in a leaked letter.

Business Secretary Vince Cable last week confirmed the West of England, which is made up of Bristol, Bath, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire, will be among the first wave of LEPs. They will replace regional development agencies when they are scrapped in two years' time. However funding arrangements for this new body are, as yet, unclear.

B U S I N E S S

AVIVA
Aviva, Britain's second-largest insurance group with a large employment presence in Bristol is consolidating. They are selling their Taiwanese business and are looking at further disposals. They are also cutting several hundred jobs in Canada and shutting their final salary pension scheme in the UK in order to save £400m.

BRISTOL EVENING POST
Around 25 jobs will be axed at Northcliffe Media in Bristol, home of the Evening Post and the Western Daily Press. Production of the Daily Press will be moved to Plymouth.

A E FINCH
Bristol signmakers A E Finch & Co Ltd have gone in to administration. Eight jobs will be lost.

BANK OF IRELAND
Fifteen jobs are to go at the Bank of Ireland on Temple Way, Bristol as part of a restructuring scheme. The losses will be from project management staff and group services who manage the bank's properties. About 850 people are employed at the former Bristol & West headquarters, in support services, customer care, group payments and customer operations.

RBS
Staff in Bristol working for RBS, which has just announced a £1.4bn loss for the third quarter of the year, have been told that posts in the bank's insurance department are being moved to Delhi. The bank, 40 per cent owned by the taxpayer, has already shed hundreds of jobs over the last two years. Staff are said to be angry that posts are being transferred overseas.

Know about people, politics and policy in Bath, North Somerset, South Gloucestershire or beyond? Then contribute to CUTZ and help make it the regional leader for cuts news.

In a trade union? Know what’s happening in workplaces in the west? Write and tell us. Remember: silence and secrecy are the bosses’ best weapons …

Being made redundant? Problems at work? Being cut? Contact BRISTOL IWW - "an injury to one is an injury to all". bristoliww@riseup.net or Tel: 07506 592180

Got any news about cuts in Bristol, Bath or beyond? Send stories, rants, gossip, informed speculation and the rest to Cutz, the brashest and best cuts news in the west: bristol_citizens@yahoo.co.uk

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Big thanks to all our contributors - you know who you are (and we know who yer not)

Full article | 5 comments

Open Letter to UAF re: Northern March Against Racism 2010

05-11-2010 23:44

Dear TCAR members and supporters,

The following open letter is being sent this week by the organising group for the Northern March Against Racism, after much consideration. It is a response to an unacceptable act of sectarianism by a leading member of UAF (Unite Against Fascism) to undermine the Northern March Against Racism, which has been called by TCAR. Unfortunately, this is not the first time that leading members of UAF around the Socialist Worker Party have attempted to undermine the work of other anti-racist organisations in the North East. We are writing this open letter in the hope that this issue will be addressed by UAF and that similar situations can be avoided in the future.

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Anti-cuts action against vodafone - Brighton

05-11-2010 22:37

Demo against Vodafone's 6 billion tax dodge.

12:00pm
Clock Tower, Queens Road, Brighton

Full article | 1 comment

BAe confronted in Oxford

05-11-2010 22:09

Outside at the start
On Wednesday a jobs fair at Oxford Town Hall which featured several weapons companies was disrupted by a group of people protesting. All photos taken by Oxford CND.

Full article | 6 comments

The Green Bubble is about to Burst

05-11-2010 21:34

The Green Bubble is about to Burst

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Oxfordians protest against Trident

05-11-2010 21:22

In May 2005, a Trident Ploughshares Affinity Group called The Tamarians occupied Drakes Island for six days and put up enormous ban the bomb banners overlooking Plymouth Sound.

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uprising in forest of dean

05-11-2010 21:22

foresters resist privatisation of forest
see call to arms for bonfire rally on sat 6
Cinderford district councillor Graham Morgan said, referring to the Dean Forest Riots of 1831: “I predict another Warren James-style uprising, with fences being torn down. You’ll see me at the front of the barricades.”
Cinderford shopkeeper Alan Bowkett has set up a Facebook group called Stop The Forest Of Dean From Being Sold Off, and there is a national online petition at www.38degrees.org.uk/page/s/save-our-forests#petition


Full article | 2 comments

Cambridge Students Against Fees Demo

05-11-2010 20:16

Student
ARU & Cambridge University student unions organised a local march against fees & cuts, in preparation for the National NUS march on November 10. Some photos follow ...

Full article

NUJ Strike : members picket at BBC Nottingham

05-11-2010 19:25

Friday 5th November 2010, BBC staff joined the picket outside the BBC building here in Nottingham.

Friday 5th November 2010, BBC staff joined the picket outside the BBC building here in Nottingham.

Journalists from across the BBC walked out at midnight in the first of two 48 hours strikes in protest at plans to devalue their pensions.

NUJ members at the BBC started taking part in strike action at 12.01am on Friday 5 November 2010 for the next 48 hours to stop the BBC Pensions Robbery.

NUJ members have been working and paying into a pension scheme, the BBC have proposed ripping up the current pension arrangements and replacing them with a pension scheme that will see staff paying more in contributions and working longer and getting less in retirement.

As a result, NUJ members have been left with no choice but to strike to defend their financial futures.

The NUJ say that "already been overwhelmed by the support for the campaign so far from staff at the BBC and not just NUJ members. Colleagues in Bectu have inundated us with messages of support, with many refusing to cross picket lines to get into work. It’s clear that staff right across the BBC are keen for us to win - as it would mean a better pensions deal for all".


National Union of Journalists  http://www.nuj.org.uk

BBC pensions strike - Live updates
http://www.nuj.org.uk/innerPagenuj.html?docid=1796

For background information on the dispute leading up to the strike action -

http://www.nuj.org.uk/innerPagenuj.html?docid=1679

____________________________________________
ALAN LODGE
Photographer - Media: One Eye on the Road. Nottingham.  UK
Email:                 tash@indymedia.org
Web:                   http://digitaljournalist.eu
Member of the National Union of Journalists [NUJ]
____________________________________________
"It is not enough to curse the darkness.
                                   It is also necessary to light a lamp!!"
___________________________________________
<ends>

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This Week in Palestine Week 44 2010

05-11-2010 18:25

Audio
Welcome to this Week in Palestine, a service of the International Middle East Media Center, www.imemc.org, for October 30, through November 5th, 2010.

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Radical Workers' and Students' Bloc on Education March - London - 10th November 2010

05-11-2010 18:22

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=125398030849617

ORIGINAL: http://www.afed.org.uk/component/content/article/203.html

 

Meet at 11am at Horse Guards Avenue, SW1.

On Wednesday 10th November 2010 the NUS and UCU have organised a demonstration in London 'Fund Our Future: Stop Education Cuts' in protest against the cuts in education.

read more

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Roehampton University Scraps Human Rights

05-11-2010 18:22

Unique and popular Undergraduate Human Rights degree to be scrapped by University in spending cuts, students rise up to make their voices heard!

 Roehampton University in London has this week announced that it is to axe its unique Human Rights undergraduate programme which was awarded 4.5 million in government funding and which is one of only several institutions offering an undergraduate degree in Human Rights studies. 
    Roehampton University is currently home to Crucible - the only government-recognised centre of excellence in teaching and learning in the field of human rights in the country, students from across Europe and the UK come to the University to study on the popular undergraduate programme which explores the concepts of freedom and equality, crimes against humanity and the International Criminal Court. The programme is supported by organisations such as Amnesty International and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and was the first of its kind.
    The axing of the Human Rights Degree is the first in a planned series of cuts that the university is rumoured to be making many of which are thought to impact upon humanitites subjects.
   Staff and students are embarking upon a large campaign to save their Human Rights department which not only educates those directly enrolled on the course but which creates a general sense of community and awareness amongst the university staging events and talks relating to Fair trade,current affairs and the environment.
   Students will be staging a large protest to make their voices heard on Thursday 11th November during an international symposium for human rights which is to be held at the university. There will be a meeting to discuss action on campus on Tuesday 9th November at 1pm. Further details can be found on the Save Human Rights at Roehampton Facebook Page.

http://www.roehampton.ac.uk/undergraduate-courses/human-rights/
 
 http://www.roehampton.ac.uk/news/events/november-2010/Contested_Boundaries.html

Full article

Students arise – anti-fees/cuts actions coming up

05-11-2010 18:22

Will S Williams MP keep his pledge?
Or will he prove to be another back-sliding MP, and like so many LibDem MP's utterly corrupted by power?
Now is the time for current and prospective higher education students to take to the streets. Resist. Strike. Occupy.

This is what Stephen Williams, MP for Bristol West, pledged before the elections:
“I hope you will be pleased to learn that it remains the policy of the Liberal Democrats to scrap tuition fees for all students undertaking their first undergraduate level degree. I believe it is right both in principle and in practice to scrap the tuition fee model of part-financing for higher education. In addition, I think it is only fair that part and full-time students should be treated equally, whatever the system, when studying for their first degree. The Liberal Democrats will therefore also abolish fees for part-time students studying for a first undergraduate level degree.”
From http://www.stephenwilliams.org.uk/pages/fees.html
We dont think he will keep to his pledge, will he prove us wrong tonight? And if he wont keep his pledge, what shall we do with him?

Debate tonight at Uni of Bristol Student Union, 6.30 to 8pm, with Stephen Williams & Kerry McCarthy MP's, plus President of the NUS, on the Question 'Are we all in it together?'
Details http://www.ubu.org.uk/events/01112010/are-we-all-in-it-...ebate

Students Arise – now is the time to kick back
Hot on the heels of French students demos and occupations, and with 40,000 Irish students on the streets of Dublin just a few days ago (http://anticuts.com/2010/11/03/mass-protest-40000-irish...blin/), now its time for UK students to get stuck in. With the LibDemCon's confirming removal of the fees cap, and prospective students facing fees of upto £9k per year,
National student anti-cuts demo 10 November in London – lets do it.
Possible days of action locally 23 & 24 November, focusing on occupations, 'lobbying' or lobbing MP's, outreach to the public, and encouraging high school students to join in to defend their futures.

National Campaign Against Fees & Cuts - http://anticuts.com/
Publicising resistance to the LibDemCon cuts - http://anticuts.org.uk/

Full article | 2 comments

EDL, Brighton, the Crude Awakening, Anti-cuts marches - what can we learn?

05-11-2010 17:53

Lessons for the movement:
The Poll Tax Riots and 4 weeks of actions – EDL, Brighton, the Crude Awakening, Anti-cuts marche. How can we learn and move forward.

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Nottm Animal Rights Events:

05-11-2010 17:25

Time once again to get off the net and onto the streets.
Draw a big breath, its time again for a round-up of Nottm Animal Rights events:

 

 

Find more details on:

Veggies/Sumac Diary: http://www.veggies.org.uk/diary.htm
The Animal Rights Calendar: http://www.veggies.org.uk/arc.php
or the search box at http://www.veggies.org.uk/

(Thanks Dave for this report)

__________________________________________________________

Saturday 6th - Animal Aid Compassionate Christmas Fair (Sheffield)

Also Veggies catering at Lincoln Veggie Fair

__________________________________________________________

Sunday 7th - Veggies catering at Kensington Animal Charities Fair

and hoping to help at Alternative Vegan Festival (also in London) on the same day

__________________________________________________________

Thursday 11th - Brinsley Animal Rescue Work Day, transport from Broxtowe, 6:15pm - call 07599 282851
Now that winter draws on the Tuesday work days may be replaced by sessions on Saturdays, when the group is not busy elsewhere.

Thurs 11th is also Remembrance Day - Remember the animal victims of war, today and on Sunday.
http://www.veggies.org.uk/event.php?ref=1402

__________________________________________________________

Friday 12th - demo at Harlan (Hillcrest Farm, a bunch of nasty people supplying animals for vivisection) 3pm-5pm

Transport from Sumac 2:30pm to support Derby AR on their first Harlan Demo

Followed by Greyhound demo at Colwick Park at 6:30

_____________________________________________________

Sat 13th - National Anti-Fur March in London

Shared transport with Derby AR Group

Also

Day of action -FOR- Humane Medical Research:
info stall in Nottingham, probably by Victoria Centre Clock Tower.
or meet 11:00 @ Natural Food Co.

Also

Vegggies catering at Footprint Zines Fair in Leeds

____________________________________________________

Sunday 14th fur demo @ Paul Smith
12noon at 20 Low Pavement Nottingham, NG1 7EA, near side entrance of Broadmarsh
http://www.paulsmith.co.uk/shop-locator/paul-smith,1272,SP.html

____________________________________________________

Weds 17th - Possible Friend or Food 'dog meat' trailer campaign in Derby

Thurs 18th- Possible Friend or Food 'dog meat' trailer campaign in Nottingham

http://www.veggies.org.uk/2010/10/friend-or-food/
____________________________________________________

 

 

Full article

boycott vodaphone demo newcastle tommrow 6th november

05-11-2010 17:14

demo against vodaphone tommrow 12pm

Full article | 1 comment

25,000 students march in Ireland

05-11-2010 17:00

Upwards of 25,000 students from across Ireland descended onto the streets of Dublin on Wednesday, 2,000 students broke off and occupied the Department of Finance, here are 2 interviews with students present.

Full article

Student Uprising as University Axe Human Rights

05-11-2010 15:47

Roehampton University plans to axe its unique Human Rights degree programme which was originally boosted after a 4.5million goverment injection of funding . Students are planning a nationwide campaign to save the Human Rights department which is one of only several in the UK and which was the very first of its kind. Angry students are organising protests to coincide with an International Symposium on Human Rights to be held at the University next week.
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