Hugo Chavez

Dear friends,

International committee has agreed the following statement and I am going to tonight’s candle light vigil, as well as signing the book of condolences in Bolivar Hall.

Best wishes,

Derek

As International Co-ordinator of the Green Party of England and Wales I would like to offer condolences to the Venezuelan people for the loss of President Hugo Chavez. Along with Jean Lambert MEP, Richard Mallander then chair of the Green Party Executive and other members of the Green Party, I had the pleasure of meeting Hugo Chavez when he spoke in London in 2006.

Venezuela is one of the few countries in the world that has become more equal in the last decade. Hugo Chavez did so much to create community development and social inclusion boosting health care, housing and education. He was a friend to those in the barrios and indigenous people. While Venezuela, like Britain in the 1980s, has an economy highly dependent on oil, their government has been an advocate at climate negotiations of strong cuts in CO2 emissions. While cancer has taken Hugo Chavez, his legacy, like that of Simon Boliver, will live on.

Derek Wall

Coming together – People’s Assembly update

By Sam Fairbairn National Secretary, Coalition of Resistance

In April a whole new round of austerity measures will be implemented; from the Bedroom Tax and caps on benefits to more job losses, cuts and the continued sell-off of the NHS.

What we do in the run up to the Peoples Assembly can shape the future of the anti-austerity movement in Britain. Below is the second update. Click here to see the first.

no_cuts_closeup

Owen Jones wrote a fantastic piece in the Sunday People last week, promoting the Peoples Assembly.

The Green Party voted at their conference to support the event and agreed to send a delegation to the Peoples Assembly and to encourage local parties, regional federations and other GP bodies (e.g. GPTU) to also send delegations and to support future local Peoples Assemblies.

Sussex University Occupation, now in their third week of occupation, voted to support the Peoples Assembly.

SOAS student union and UEA student union voted to support and send delegates to the Peoples Assembly. UEA also agreed to fund transport for any student who wishes to attend.

Birmingham Trades Council, East London Teachers Association, Unite Community London and Eastern Region, County Durham Trades Union Council, RMT TfL No.1 Branch and Banner Theatre are just some of the latest supporters.

Film maker Ken Loach, one of the lead signatories on the Guardian letter, has given an interview for the Coalition of Resistance website and has agreed that at the over 40 showings of his new film, The Spirit of 45, on Sunday 17 March we can distribute publicity for the Peoples Assembly.

Over 350 people have booked their place for the assembly already and this number will rise fast.

A number of economists are signing a letter in support of the Peoples Assembly. Full details will be available shortly.

The first organising meeting for the Peoples Assembly was held last week which had representatives from across the trade union and anti-austerity movement including Unite the Union, PCS, NUT, NUJ, TSSA, Unison, War on Want, Disabled People Against the Cuts, Coalition of Resistance, Peoples Charter, Black Activists Rising Against Cuts, the Green Party, Ken Loach, Owen Jones, Roger Lloyd Pack and many more. There are now a number of things we’d like to appeal for:

1) Website we need someone who can help with developing a new website for the Peoples Assembly. If you can help please get in touch.
2) Logo help us design a logo. Send in your design to assembly@coalitionofresistance.org.uk. We will also need help designing publicity.
3) Volunteer we expect to be setting up an office in the next couple of weeks to organise the Peoples Assembly from. If you can offer a couple of days a week in the run up to the event please get in touch.

Please make sure you have registered your place at the Peoples Assembly, passed the Model Resolution at your trade union branch, student union or organisation and invited your friends on Facebook and Twitter. If you would like to organise a meeting in your locality or would like a speaker for your trade union or organisation please get in touch.

Please make sure you have added your organisations support to the list here.

Contact the Peoples Assembly team:

Email: assembly@coalitionofresistance.org.uk
Phone: 07872 481769

24 hours to stop child executions -AVAAZ

Dear friends across the UK,

4441_boy-through-window_38051_600x450_3_200x100.jpg

We have 24 hours and a rare chance to save Yemen’s youngsters from execution. If we call on foreign secretary William Hague now to push Yemen to end this terror when he meets visiting ministers on Thursday, we could win. It’s time to tell Yemen to give children a fair trial in juvenile courts instead of death row. Sign now and spread widely:

Sign the petition

Right now, 200 youngsters are locked in a cramped jail, 40 to a cell, waiting to hear whether their government will execute them. But in just 24 hours we have a rare moment to end this child killing when Yemeni ministers meet with Western governments for a major summit in London.

This scandal has just been exposed and Yemeni officials are saying if it explodes they will be forced to act. Let’s build a massive public outcry and force our foreign secretary William Hague — who is co-hosting the summit and supporting Yemen with significant amounts of aid — to demand juvenile offenders get off death row for good.

This is our chance to stop these barbaric and illegal executions. If 50,000 join this call before the meeting then we will deliver the petition to the Yemeni and British foreign ministers in London. Click here to sign and send this to everyone to end the execution of Yemeni youngsters:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_child_executions/?bdtmtbb&v=22662

Yemen is one of only a handful of countries in the world that still executes its young. Without access to a lawyer and denied a fair trial, a wave of protest among juvenile offenders has swept through Sanaa Central Prison as more than 70 young men and women enter their second month of hunger strike.

The hunger strikers are calling for an end to physical abuse and torture and to be retried in special juvenile courts. Some have reported cases of electrocution, beating on the soles of their feet and hanging by their wrists — after which they say they would confess to anything.

But there is hope. Momentum is building with a damning report just released by Human Rights Watch which reveals that since 2007, Yemen has executed 15 child offenders, and given death sentences to dozens more. And while juvenile executions are on the rise, the country’s human rights minister told Avaaz’s local partners that with enough international pressure the government will be forced to end these horrific abuses.

Hague will not want to be associated with such violence. Let’s make him speak out this week. Sign now to end juvenile executions:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_child_executions/?bdtmtbb&v=22662

Across the world, our community has time and again stood up to protect the victims of human rights abuses, and our voices have been heard. Let’s do it again for these Yemeni children now and demand international law is upheld and juvenile executions end for good.

Sam, Alice, Ricken, Will, Mais, Emily and the whole Avaaz team.

MORE INFORMATION

Yemen should stop child executions, says Human Rights Watch (The Guardian):
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/04/yemen-stop-child-executions-human-rights

Yemen unyielding on child executions (Al Jazeera):
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2013/03/20133485144413946.html

Report highlights torture and execution of juvenile offenders in Yemen (Foreign Policy): http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/03/04/report_highlights_torture_and_execution_of_juvenile_offenders_in_yemen

Yemen: Juvenile Offenders Face Execution (Human Rights Watch):
http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/03/04/yemen-juvenile-offenders-face-execution

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Will Duckworth in Scottish Socialist on-line magazine ‘The Point’ on Ecosocialism

Eco Socialism – a personal perspective

http://www.thepointhowever.org/index.php/issues/135-eco-socialism-a-personal-perspective
Or

Why I am a member of the Green Left

Cllr. Will Duckworth – Deputy Leader of the Green Party in England and Wales

Some Green Party members start from a belief that we need to save the planet from human activity but in truth the race will survive even with a 5 degree increase in global temperatures, melting of the ice caps and loss of huge areas of land mass under the rising seas. It would mean the end of civilisation as we know it, the death of most of the human race, and a return to a pre-industrial society.

This may not be considered a bad thing by some, but if we want to go down that road then lets make it a positive controlled choice rather than falling into it because we couldnt bear to have a wind turbine despoiling our beautiful countryside. Others join the Green Party because they see it as the only viable, electable political party of social justice that remains.

I have a foot in both camps but I also take the stance that first and foremost we have to ensure that we are nice to each other, that we are decent, honourable and respectful; there is no point in saving the world for the human race if we really dont deserve it. The ends do not justify the means; if we are not kind, loving and caring then we dont deserve to control the planet. Whatever we do and however important our aims, we must care about people as well as the other living creatures with whom we share our world. Yes have been accused of being an old hippy and the Green Party is often thought of as the natural home for hippies too, but that is only part of the picture.

If we can prove ourselves worthy of this amazing planet then we have to work out how to stop the continued abuse of the earths resources and the global warming and subsequent climate chaos that it is causing.

Given that we want to save the planet from this abuse and pre-empt the loss of available carbon fuels, we need to work out how we can maintain civilisation and stop the snowballing effects of climate change as well as forming arguments to explain this to the world. This is our raison d’etre and why many people joined the Green Party. We cannot continue to grow our economy and use more and more of the earth’s resources to make more things to buy and sell and throw away. It doesn’t take a genius to work out that we can’t keep growing our economy; Kenneth Boulding (husband of Elsie M Boulding and a renowned economist in his own right) said that Anyone who believes in indefinite growth of anything physical on a physically finite planet is either a madman or an economist. We in the Green Party have worked out that we need smaller scale, local production, more use of efficient, low carbon transport, more energy efficiency, reduction of waste and to get people to live closer to where they work and shop, or work and shop closer to where they live.

These are the things that may separate us from many other socialist political movements. But what unites us with them is the position that divides the Green Party. Most of us now believe that cycling and recycling alone will not save the planet.

When some people get their daily bread from the efforts of others purely by dint of the fact that they own a factory, shop, house or chunk of money we have a society that rewards avarice. It is capitalism that engenders the need for greed. The spongers in our society aren’t the poor unemployed people trying to eke out an existence on £70 a week and having the audacity to try to escape from their lot by wasting their money on cigarettes or booze. The real spongers in our society are earning their money because of their capital. Whether we have £200 in a bank account earning 2% interest, have £1,000 invested in an ethical unit trust, have paid into a pension fund for 40 years or own half of Yorkshire picking up millions of pounds in rent every week capitalism is about others doing your work for you. It is a seductive system that pulls in almost everyone who is likely to have much influence in society and shows us that money makes money and we need greed to be successful and happy.

In a so called democracy the real capitalists are those who earn hundreds of thousands of pounds from the efforts of working people, whether it is by owning property, buying and selling goods on the stock market and doing nothing with them (other than pushing down the price paid to the producer and increasing the price paid by the consumer), gambling on the price of shares and currencies or just by moving hypothetical money from one place to another. They need lots of us to think we have a finger in their honey pot because otherwise we wouldn’t let them get away with it. Workers of the world unite; you have nothing to loose but your pension fund doesn’t quite work.

This exaltation of greed; the cult of a ‘savings culture’ is the best way the rich have of keeping the chattering classes on their side and it works, with many people who believe in our environmental policies but don’t want to loose their nest egg or deny their children the right to inherit the property they own. I think this includes many Green Party members, especially, if I may stereotype, home owners in the South East who find they have enough assets to sell up, buy a house in the country and live on the interest. As someone who is lucky enough to own my own home and have a couple of grand in savings I can certainly see to allure. It is quite exciting to get a boost to the bank balance when I get given 20 or 30 quid for doing nothing, but someone has worked for that money, someone has had that money stopped from their wages or has paid it in rent or in interest on their borrowings. I don’t deserve it but I recognise that if I can save more money for the future then I will get a bigger unearned income when I retire. Don’t panic too much; we do not need capitalist structures to pay a decent state pension to all.

I have tried to illustrate how the capitalist system engenders greed, thrives on greed and encourages greed. The fact that the richest 100 billionaires could eliminate real poverty throughout the world four times over shows how greed has got totally out of hand. Money was invented to spend, not to save, and the squirreling away of a huge proportion of the world’s assets results in poverty and misery for millions. The ‘trickle down’ theory of economics which was used to justify massive pay differentials has failed as the high earners of today turn into the capitalist elite. The problem for those of us concerned with social justice is obvious but the problem for those of us concerned with the environment is that we will never reduce carbon usage and global warming while greed rules the planet. We have seen how big companies backed by millions of investors control governments’ ability to levy taxes on them or their rich benefactors and make it impossible to control the incessant use of fossil fuels, the destruction of the rain forests and pollution of our beautiful planet.

Capitalism is the enemy of the environment.

Having set out the problem we now need to work out two things: What needs to be done and how to do it.

We have to remove the tyranny of greed which pervades our capitalist society but we also have to put forward a clear vision of a modern post capitalist society. This is an area of great interest and speculation, be it an anarchistic utopia or a society which is superficially very similar to our own but with the ownership of land, home and production in the hands of the state instead of the moneyed elite – or anything in between. The Green Party sees a fairer, decentralised society with people being part of the society where they live, a society where political decisions are taken as close as possible to the people they affect, a society based on cooperation rather than competition and a drastic reduction in consumption of the Earth’s resources. We aim for sustainable society looking after all the citizens of the world.

The thing that we still have not tackled robustly or to the satisfaction of most of the Green Party is how to get there. Some think that we can do it solely through the ballot box, with a target to win strategy and a strong presence in organisations from Trade Unions to Transition Towns and this is certainly necessary but is it sufficient? Are the banks and global corporations now so strong that we have to take direct action or can we rely on them to destroy themselves in a frenzy of greed and consumerism or will it be too late by then? For if, by then, the seas have risen, civilization is in tatters and people around the world are starving to death (to an even greater extent than they are now), then we will not be able to say ‘I told you so’, even if it’s true.

All we’ll be able to say is ‘we failed’.

NHS legal advice: just in (38 Degrees)

38 Degrees Logo
Dear Andy,

It’s being called backdoor NHS privatisation. And if we want to stop it, what happens in Parliament this week is crucial. Some Green, Labour and Lib Dem MPs have tabled a motion demanding the NHS privatisation plan be immediately withdrawn. [1] So far only 72 MPs have signed up. [2] We need to make that number grow, and quickly.

In the last few hours, the legal advice paid for by thousands of 38 Degrees members’ donations has come in. The verdict seems clear. If the government forces through these new NHS privatisation rules, it will mean ministers breaking promises they made last year when they said doctors wouldn’t be forced to privatise everything. [3]

We’ve got the proof we need to show MPs that the government is breaking the promises made when the NHS law was forced through. Now we need to make sure every MP reads it, to convince them to sign the motion demanding these new privatisation rules are stopped.

If MPs hear from thousands of us we can make sure that they sign up to block backdoor privatisation. Can you click here to send an email asking them read our legal advice and oppose the plans?
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/nhs-broken-promises

The government says their ‘modernised’ NHS is supposed to be about giving more control to local doctors and communities. But under Jeremy Hunt’s new regulations, the government will force GPs to open up every part of local health services to private companies – whether or not it’s what they or local people want.

And it’s not just us saying this. On Sunday, the Observer newspaper reported an explosive letter from the head of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges to the health minister, outlining concerns that “healthcare will be disrupted and hospital services damaged as a result of time-consuming, disruptive and unnecessary tendering processes,” and that these new regulations are “at odds” with reassurances previously given to doctors. [6]

These are hardly the voices of radicals or political opportunists – so what’s it going to take for MPs to sit up, take notice and admit that something’s not right here? Let’s seize this moment and ask our MPs to listen to doctors, patients, legal experts and concerned constituents, before they make a big mistake:
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/nhs-broken-promises

We can stop this now, if we try. In the past week we’ve grown our rapid-response petition to over 230,000 signatures. We’ve chipped in to pay for expert legal advice. Now let’s make the talk in the halls of Parliament on Monday be about how many voters are getting in touch about these broken promises. Together, we can help those wavering MPs to find some backbone, and help even the diehard supporters of privatisation to realise the game is up.
https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/nhs-broken-promises

Thanks for using your voice,

David, James, Hannah and the 38 Degrees team

NOTES (supplemented by Andy Chyba)
[1] The motion was originally tabled by Green MP Caroline Lucas, but then re-tabled co-sponsored by Lib Dem Andrew George and Labour leader Ed Miliband.
[2] You can see the motion, and the latest signatures, here: http://www.parliament.uk/edm/2012-13/1104at time of posting, Bridgend MP, Madeleine Moon, has maintained her track record of ignoring EDMs.
[3] For example, Andrew Lansley sent a letter to prospective CCGs on 16th February 2012, during the height of the battle to get the Bill through parliament, in which he assured them, “I know many of you may have read that you will be forced to fragment services, or to put services out to tender. This is absolutely not the case.” See http://www.opendemocracy.net/ournhs/nicola-cutcher-lucy-reynolds/nhs-as-we-know-it-needs-prayer
[4] https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/nhs-section75-legal-advice
[5] Telegraph: Scrap NHS competition rules say 1000 in letter to Telegraph http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9901194/Scrap-NHS-competition-rules-say-1000-in-letter-to-Telegraph.html
[6] Guardian: Doctors bemoan NHS privatisation by stealth http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2013/mar/02/doctors-bemoan-nhs-privatisation-by-stealth

A challenge to you to offer your views on the population issue.

The dangers facing the earths ecosystems are well known and the subject of great concern at all levels. Climate change is high on the list. But there is an underlying and associated cause population growth, according to Attenborough.Indeed, in Attenboroughs view, there is no major problem facing our planet that would not be easier to solve if there were fewer people and no problem that does not become harder and ultimately impossible to solve with ever more. And yet there seems to be a taboo on bringing the subject into the open. He challenges to engage in dialogue on the issue in this thought provoking 22min lecture:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=fK0rXRmC4DQ

Read the discussion thread below it too – it illustrates just how impassioned, to the point of getting obnoxious, people seem to get about this subject.

Hopefully we can have a rather more reasoned and rational debate here.

As a starting point, let me echo one theme from Attenborough’s speech. There are only two options. We either manage population in some way or form, or we don’t.

If we do not, then starvation, disease and war will impose controls on population numbers at some point. The Green Party acknowledges the oxymoron that is long-term sustainable growth; the third option that underpins capitalist thinking.

The challenge therefore seems to boil down to how we should manage the situation. There are no easy answers, and lots of patently unacceptable ones in a civilised, just society.

At this point, I would like to invite readers to respond with their suggestions as to how the Green Party should respond to this issue, keeping our core values of environmental and social justice firmly in mind please!

PLEASE – do not engage in slating what you perceive to be other people’s or organisation’s views (this is far too easy and achieves nothing – and I therefore reserve the right to remove/edit such posts from this blog ) – keep it to positive suggestions for the way forward that you would support.

Greatest Living Britons – accolade for Caroline Lucas among some ‘interesting’ choices

The BBC reports that CAROLINE LUCAS has been declared the 4th Greatest Living British Woman by Best of British magazine.

She came behind this Top 3:

  1. The Queen
  2. Margaret Thatcher
  3. Maggie Smith (actor)

5th was BBC presenter Susanna Reid, so it was a fairly eclectic selection, to say the least.

On the men’s side the Top 5 were:

  1. David Attenborough (patron of Population Matters, amongst many other things)
  2. Prof Stephen Hawking
  3. Ranulph Fiennes (explorer)
  4. Prince Charles
  5. Tim Berners-Lee (world wide web inventor)

For those (like me) who have never seen or heard of The Best of British magazine, Newsstand website describes it thus:
“Proudly patriotic, Best of British magazine describes itself as the UKs Top Nostalgia Monthly, and who are we to argue? Each issue brings a rose-tinted look into the glorious past of this fair nation. It covers memories as diverse as steam power, motoring and dolls houses if it was brilliant and British you can be sure that it’ll be featured.”

I have to say I would be more prepared to endorse the men’s list (well, 80% of it perhaps), but it is great to see Caroline Lucas penetrating the consciousness of such people and getting such richly deserved recognition. I have to say that I hope this recognition by a nostalgia magazine does not signify that her best is in the past – I happen to believe she she has a huge amount to offer and a lot to still achieve. Next time around, first place beckons!

Andy Chyba

Tell EDF Energy to drop legal action against No Dash for Gas activists

THIS IS A PETITION THAT WE ALL NEED TO SUPPORT AND SPREAD WIDELY – IT STRIKES AT THE THE VERY ESSENCE OF OUR RIGHT TO PROTEST AGAINST THE ACTIONS OF BIG BUSINESS.IT COULD EASILY BE ONE OF US IN THE FIRING LINE. ACT NOW!

http://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/tell-edfenergy-to-drop-legal-action-against-no-dash-for-gas-activists

The petition plea is heart felt and heart rending:

“Our daughter Claire is one of the 21 activists who spent a week up a chimney at West Burton power station in Nottinghamshire in October 2012. Claire and her fellow activists are now being sued for £5million by EDF Energy.

Claire and her friends act on principle and are entirely altruistic in what they do. Their chosen career paths have led them, not in the direction of making as much money for themselves as they can, but rather to promote ethical and radical solutions to some of the most important issues which face the planet and ultimately the human race.

She has lobbied the government, emailed companies, signed petitions and marched with placards, but nothing changed. So Claire and her friends decided they needed to take more decisive action to get the government and energy companies to change their ways.

The group spent months preparing and training for this action; using their spare time, money and skills to enable them to scale a 300 foot chimney and survive for several days in the constant thrust of the wind. Yes, it looks dangerous, but they believe in the necessity to take such action because the alternative outcome to the continued output of emissions on this scale will cause global warming of such magnitude, that the planet will be seriously compromised and the future of the human race, uncertain. We are so proud of Claire and her friends and what they are trying to do.

EDF are suing Claire and her fellow activists for £5 million. We feel this is totally unfair. The company says that they have to take the consequences for their actions. EDF’s business is to make money, not safeguard the planet for generations to come; theirs is a short term, expedient enterprise. Its heartbreaking to think that Claire and her friends are being punished for putting themselves at risk for the good of humanity.

England celebrates its right to peaceful protest. The abolition of slavery and women’s suffrage are but two issues which have only come about through this means. We should be applauding and rewarding the group for their actions rather than allowing a multi-national organisation to put them in debt, possibly for the rest of their lives for a sum, which to EDF is a mere drop in the ocean, but well over a lifetime’s income for them.

We support Claire and her friends and admire their courage. Please sign this petition to tell EDF to drop this unprecedented legal assault.

Thank you from Barbara and Russ Fauset”

P.s. You can *like* the No Dash For Gas Facebook page on https://www.facebook.com/pages/No-Dash-for-Gas/301820216584422?ref=ts&fref=ts

Ecologist Film Unit highlights the role of UK Fractivists

Lots of familiar faces from the UK fractivist community feature in this Ecologist Film Unit 12 minute film.It shows some of our successful efforts to unite the opposition to fracking from around the regions – such as the joint deposition to Downing Street at the big demo in London.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=uCkMeAloU_k

Film description published on 27 Feb 2013
“Across the UK, Britain’s green, picturesque land is facing uncertainty after the arrival of fracking. The specter of gas wells and drilling sites, articulated trucks, waste lagoons, and other fracking detritus hangs heavy in a land more typically associated with small scale farming, cricket on the green, and “cottage” industries. But, not prepared to see their landscape altered forever, a new wave of citizen activists is gearing up to fight back.”

It is an issue that has also stirred the environmental movement in Poland too. I have relatives from Poland showing interest in environmental issues for the first time over the threat of fracking. This 10 minute film comes from the same Ecologist Film Unit series:

http://www.linktv.org/video/8706/fracking-hell-polands-dash-for-gas