Lewes Road Community Garden Benefit

People are still in the Garden despite a second attempt at eviction today.

There’s a benefit gig tomorrow night (July 23) to raise money to help protect the community garden from the Tescos juggernaut with live music from Flat Stanley plus Ade sings Rosselsongs and DJ Gene Defekt.

Address: Hectors House, 52-54 Grand Parade, Brighton
Postcode: BN2 9QA | View Map
Time: 7.30pm-12
Price: £4 donation
Web: www.lewesroadcommunitygarden.org


Posted on July 22nd, 2010 at 5:40pm under Activism

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The lessons of history

You have to laugh*. Here’s another mark of the calibre of our current leadership caste. Wannabe Next Labour leader David ‘Brains‘ Miliband excoriates Tory Prime Minister David Cameron for a lamentable grasp of history by parading his own lamentable grasp of history…

David Cameron has been criticised after mistakenly saying the UK was the “junior partner” in the allied World War II fight against Germany in 1940.

So far, so predictable. A British Prime Minister goes to Washington and abases both himself and his country. The heir to Blair indeed. Miliband then weighs in with his own ill-educated response.

He said: “1940 was our finest hour. Millions of Britons stood up and gave their lives to defeat fascism. “We were not a junior partner. We stood alone against the Nazis. How can a British prime minister who bangs on about British history get that so wrong? It is a slight, not a slip.”

Millions of Britons gave their lives? We stood alone against the Nazis? Alone alongside France, Australia, India, New Zealand, South Africa. And who’s the ‘we’, desk jockey?

And so World War II, at a distance of 70 years, becomes a virtual reality fantasy playground for two Oxford educated political point-scoring pricks, the supposed cream of this generation. All those people did not die in vain.

Neither of the two modern political parties seem particularly interested or engaged with history. It is, after all, how they keep repeating the same horrible and bloody mistakes (as any cursory study of our Aghan and Iraqi campaigns will tell you). It’s how the likes of Ed Balls can describe himself as a Bevanite without dying of shame on the spot.

Still, as the first-hand voices leave us we can probably look forward to much more of this kind of fun. Sooner or later, a politician will be able to stand up and say thanks to Tory values the Russians were able to stand firm at Stalingrad. Hell, why not go for it? Thanks to the Jedi training school being given academy status, Luke Skywalker had the proper skills to destroy the Death Star.

* Or emigrate


Posted on July 22nd, 2010 at 9:32am under Next Labour, Tories

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The Lewes Road Community Garden: When Big Society meets big business

David Cameron’s launching his Big Society today. If it works as it’s being spun it might just be a worthwhile contribution to fostering closer ties between neighbours. The cynic in me suspects its a cover for private enterprise to muscle in and strip community services to the bare minimum. For fun and profit.

That said, you can see the spirit of the Big Society in action if you know where to look. Take the Lewes Road Community Garden, for instance:

Once a bland outpost of the CARbon economy – an Esso garage – then a derelict site for over 5 years – transformed by the commitment, love and creativity of a random bunch of locals who dared ‘imagine a garden’ on the Lewes Road in Brighton.

During two days in May 2009 about a hundred people successfully created the Lewes Road Community Garden.

A place for meeting and greeting, reflection and relaxation and grubbying around in the wholesome earth.

Hundreds of plants were donated. Huge pots painted and planted. A circular lawn laid. Planters made from old tyres and scrap timber. A fresh new sign put up. Runner Beans and Sunflowers growing up the fences. A beautiful wooden bench specially made and donated.

The Garden would have stalls, gatherings and workshops. Yoga sessions every morning. Open air music gigs. Films in the dark open air. My kids learned about seedbombing and guerilla gardening there. They came home thrilled at the thought of being able to take flowers and colour to places that had none.

This is community is its real, unspun sense. Here, David Cameron could point at a very real example of people coming together and providing a service both the public and private sector can’t or won’t. So what does the future hold for the Lewes Road Community Garden?

Nothing.

In June, the Garden was evicted so developers can build a Tesco on the site.


Posted on July 19th, 2010 at 9:46am under Con-Dems, Eye Catching Initiatives

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Projection 2

Gordon was mad, bad, dangerous and beyond hope of redemption.

said the man who told us his judgement to bomb Iraq was ‘made by God as well‘.


Posted on July 14th, 2010 at 11:05am under Blair, New Labour

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Projection

There is no one to match Gordon for someone who articulates high principles while practising the lowest skulduggery.

said the man who orchestrated the Iraq war.


Posted on July 14th, 2010 at 10:58am under Blair, New Labour

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Michael Gove: deprivation, deprivation, deprivation

Mallory, education is the silver bullet. Education is everything. We don’t need little changes, we need gigantic, monumental changes. Schools should be palaces. The competition for the best teachers should be fierce. They should be making six-figure salaries. Schools should be incredibly expensive for government and absolutely free of charge to its citizens, just like national defense. That’s my position. I just haven’t figured out how to do it yet.
Sam Seaborn, The West Wing.

Well Sam, I’d suggest you start by putting the likes of Michael Gove up against the wall. If schools should be palaces, Gove is a republican. Just when you thought New Labour were the philistines, vandals and harbingers of a new Dark Age, along comes Gove and his myrmidons to burn down your school. When the Taliban destroy schools it’s barbarism, when the Tories do it it’s economic stewardship. Go figure.

So we find ourselves stuck with another cloaca who knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing. That this man is the Education Secretary should be cause for blood-spitting fury not weary shrugs.

Hands are being rubbed at the prospect of Gove being made to do a grovelling national tour to apologise for his crime of not checking his list properly. Like he gives a crap. He’ll be back from his cheap talk in time for dinner somewhere flash, his own children fully insulated from his ladder-pulling.

There are calls for Gove’s resignation. If he had any shame or empathy whatsoever he’d have resigned in disgust at the plans to abandon these schools. Him resigning because he cocked up his act of wilful vandalism (it was a schoolboy error, ha ha) and pissed on the futures of God knows how many kids doesn’t seem quite as honourable somehow.


(Via Liberal Conspiracy)

(Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said it would be ‘absolute madness’ to make any cutbacks which affected children’s education. He said that last year that when New Labour were talking about their own educational scorched earth, obviously. it was madness last year. One awaits his pronouncement on the sanity of his Tory bosses with anticipation.)


Posted on July 8th, 2010 at 10:46am under Con-Dems, Evil of banality, Eye Catching Initiatives

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‘Peripheral’, ‘irrelevant’ and ‘fringe’

Sniggering, Neo-Mosleyite, authoritarian technocrat and doomed Labour leadership candidate Andy Burnham says voting reform is ‘a peripheral issue’, ‘irrelevant’ and ‘a kind of fringe pursuit for Guardian-reading classes’. Like he can talk. At the recent general election Burnham was returned to Parliament with 48 per cent of the vote on a 58 per cent turnout. That means 72 percent of his own constituents in Leigh voted for someone else or stayed at home. Ten thousand more people sat on their arses on polling day than turned out for Our Andy. How’s that for ‘peripheral’, ‘irrelevant’ and ‘fringe’?

Still, forget about Burnham. He’s a hairdo. If he’s lucky, he might get a footnote in some treatise about how this country’s view of itself became so debased that people were willing to see the likes of him rise to positions of power. No, this is about Nick Clegg and his mangy pet project. By the time Cameron and his feral hangers-on have had their way with him and it, ‘peripheral’, ‘irrelevant’ and ‘fringe’ will look like compliments and the chance for real reform will be lost for another generation.

Poor Nick and his miserable little compromises. Just how much public humiliation will he endure from his Tory bosses before he starts to crack and what concessions he can extract from Cameron? My money’s on ‘a staggeringly cruel amount’ and ‘magic beans’. When they eventually make a documentary about Clegg’s career it’ll be prefaced with the warning ‘this programme contains scenes that some viewers may find disturbing’.


Posted on July 6th, 2010 at 1:05pm under Con-Dems, Eye Catching Initiatives, Next Labour

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Home Office advice to immigration officials criticised

Home Office advice to immigration officials criticised

Immigration official HT: ‘I daren’t even tell my mother’

The Home Office has been accused of telling immigration officials to avoid persecution back home by keeping their jobs secret.

The UK Supreme Court will rule on the legality of the advice on Wednesday involving countries where it is frowned upon to work for the Home Office.

The Home office says it is committed to safeguarding officials at risk.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees told the BBC that under the so-called “discretion-test”, in use by immigration officials and courts since 2006, immigration officials are regularly told to go home and keep their jobs secret to avoid repercussions.

‘Torture or execution’

In a BBC interview Alexandra McDowall, the UNHCR’s legal officer in London, says the discretion test “introduces an element that shouldn’t be there”.

She says it forces failed immigration officials to live “under a veil of secrecy” back home.

“Persecution does not cease to be persecution just because an individual can take avoiding action by being discreet.”

A Home Office spokesman says the new coalition government was “committed to telling officials to stop” deporting gay or lesbian claimants facing “proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution at some point in the future. Shall we say 2014? 2015?”.

SEE ALSO

Posted on July 6th, 2010 at 10:31am under Con-Dems, Human rights

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Urgent appeal: 24 Hours to Save Refugee and Migrant Justice

From the RMJ website:

A consortium of charitable trusts and city law firms, supported by Simon Hughes MP, are putting together a proposal to Government to save Refugee and Migrant Justice (RMJ). The proposal asks the Government to at least pay the money that it would have to pay anyway on insolvency on the understanding that this will be matched with up to £1,000,000 by way of grants, secured loans and donations to meet cash needs to finance work in progress.

We need concrete commitments for these funds today or as early as possible tomorrow – actual cash can come a bit later. So far today, we have been pledged £134,000. Significantly more could follow from charitable trusts and others we are already talking with. But at this point it is clear that this is going to be a very considerable challenge without some additional help.

The aim of the plan is to enable, with full transparency and without prejudicing the position of creditors, a 3 month period in which the Government can consider whether it might change the payment system, there might be time to look at some innovative solutions with the Office of Civil Society and banks and RMJ would demonstrate that it had a viable forward business model. If all that fails, at least it would provide time for an orderly transfer of our clients’ cases. We have 10,000 clients, including 900 unaccompanied children who may otherwise be left in limbo.

We are appealing for donations, however small, to help save RMJ and secure its services over the next three months. If funds from both Government and other funders can be agreed, RMJ’s administrators would, in principle, support the proposal to take RMJ out of administration.

To make a pledge, or for further information, please telephone Kathleen Commons on 07872 161 271 or email savermj@gmail.com

About Refugee and Migrant Justice

Refugee and Migrant Justice is committed to securing justice for asylum seekers and other migrants in the UK.

We are the largest specialist provider of advice and representation to asylum seekers and other migrants needing protection or other help to secure their human rights.

As well as helping individual clients, we use our considerable expertise to campaign for positive changes.


Posted on June 21st, 2010 at 4:27pm under Activism, Human rights, UK politics

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Dividing lines

In these turbulent and confusing political times, I thought it would be useful and helpful to establish the terminology we need to understand just what the hell’s going on right now. We need to be able to identify the essential differences between the political parties. So here goes.

With their loathing of foreigners and welfare claimants, and their tight embrace of neo-liberal economics, the Con-Dem coalition governemtn is very much Continuity New Labour. With their loathing of foreigners and welfare claimants, and their tight embrace of neo-liberal economics, Next Labour is very much Continuity Conservatism. Is that clear?

Continuity New Labour’s leadership are affluent white male Oxbridge graduates. By contrast, Continuity Conservatism’s leadership are affluent white male Oxbridge graduates. In this way, a clear choice is spelled out at the ballot box.

Continuity Conservatism like to deport refugees to dangerous warzones whereas Continuity New Labour like to deport people to dangerous warzones. Continuity New Labour are the masters of ugly, dog-whistle appeals to racism and xenophobia but Continuity Conservatism prefer to employ ugly, dog-whistle appeals to racism and xenophobia.

Continuity Conservatism have a deeply unpleasant, thick-necked, plain-speaking professional Northerner to communicate to the lower orders that they’re being screwed. Conversely, Continuity New Labour have a deeply unpleasant, thick-necked, plain-speaking professional Northerner to communicate to the lower orders that they’re being screwed.

The latest Continuity Conservatism mouthpiece to lay down some dividing lines* is former communities secretary John Denham. His strategy for winning back power for his party is an audacious one: appealing to the oppressed minority of middle-class Southerners (coloquially know as ‘happy families’ and ‘suburban comfort’) by punishing foreigners and hammering benefit claimants. This thinking is sure to be attacked by Continuity New Labour who see a policy of hammering foreigners and punishing benefit claimants as the way forward.

Continuity Conservatism is concerned with managing the ‘perception’ of society’s more fortunate rather than emphasising reality. Continuity New Labour on the other hand is seeking to emphasise the ‘perception’ of society’s more fortunate rather than managing reality.

See? It really all does make sense.

* Why is it always dividing lines? Because they’re so thin. You never read about dividing chasms or canyons, do you?


Posted on June 9th, 2010 at 11:41am under Con-Dems, Liberal Democrats, Next Labour, Tories, UK politics

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Links and stuff from between May 27th and June 2nd

Just what tickled my fancy in the last few days…

Posted from my delicio.us links.


Posted on June 3rd, 2010 at 11:42am under Miscellaneous dross

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Save Refugee and Migrant Justice

Refugee and Migrant Justice (RMJ) is a charity that provides free legal advice and representation to asylum seekers. The organisation is facing possible closure as a result of a new system of payment of legal aid whereby payments are only made when stages are closed. In RMJ’s case this is on average six months after work is started and can take up to two years.

They are not asking for more money, just prompt payment of what they are due. The possible closure of RMJ will effect 10,000 asylum seekers in the UK who will be left without legal representation, and may be forced to return to persecution, torture, and the threat of death. Nine hundred of their clients are children.

They have been in private touch with the new ministers but, despite some sympathy in the Home Office from Damian Green, they have just received a negative response from a junior Ministry of Justice minister. So they are launching a public campaign.

RMJ has managed to get a letter of support out today, signed by various public figures, and hope that this will put some pressure on the government. However, that alone is not enough, and RMJ are asking for support. They are encouraging people to write to the Secretary of State for Justice and Lord Chancellor Kenneth Clarke in protest at the closure. They also want to raise awareness of the situation as widely as possible, in as many different sectors as they can.

(Here’s a sample letter to Kenneth Clarke and a leaflet outline RMJ’s situation.)


Posted on June 2nd, 2010 at 4:04pm under Activism, Human rights, Tories

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Links and stuff from between May 20th and May 27th

Just what tickled my fancy in the last few days…

Posted from my delicio.us links.


Posted on May 27th, 2010 at 1:20pm under Miscellaneous dross

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The Lib Dems get the hang of it

chris_huhne_waves_goodbye_to_his_principles

‘Goodbye, my darlings.’ The energy and climate change secretary waves off his principles

The Lib Dems seem to be slipping into life in government with comfortable ease. Energy and climate change secretary Chris Huhne, for instance, has gone from being a vociferous voice against nuclear power to, as EdF chief executive Vincent de Rivaz who wants to build four new nuclear reactors in the UK describes him, ‘a man we can do business with‘.

Meanwhile…

(Via chuzzlit on Twitter.)


Posted on May 27th, 2010 at 8:24am under Liberal Democrats

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A very British barbarism

Fourteen year-old Wells Botomani on life at the hands of the UK’s immigration services…

The nights are the worst in Yarl’s Wood. Doors being banged and sometimes people crying. You always think they may be coming to your door. This fear lives in me, and I don’t know how to get rid of it.

I don’t know how to get rid of it. It’s a far lesser thing, I know, but it’s the same for me and disgust.

We did this, we do this. Is it a learned behaviour, the things we do to these people? If so, who did we learn it from?


Posted on May 26th, 2010 at 11:05am under Human rights

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The Parliament Square peace camp: if thine eye offend thee…

The recent right-wing establishment reaction to the peace camp and the arrest of Brian Haw in Parliament Square is fascinating to watch based, as it is, almost entirely on an aesthetic judgement rather than any consideration of just why the protesters are there.

It’s to be wondered why the Tories aren’t handing out nosegays and scented hankerchiefs to their swooning hangers-on. I wonder how much fuss there’d be if the protesters wore suits and had erected Art Nouveau gazebos instead of wearing jeans and t-shirts and living in tents (not that the judgement of a protest’s visual merits is the exclusive purview of Tory critics). Lost in all this is the irony that the government appears to be cracking down on protest just as they’re about to restore the right to protest.

Take a look, for example, at Tory mouthpiece Benedict Brogan in the Telegraph. He variously describes the protesters as ‘loons’, ‘ragtag’ and ‘grim’. He describes protest veteran Brian Haw as ‘dreadful’ and ‘demented’. Not once are the words ‘Iraq’ or ‘Afghanistan’ mentioned.

Tory press release machine Iain Dale had mentioned Brian Haw on his blog just once before yesterday (Britain’s biggest blogger couldn’t even get ‘Hawes’ name right when he finally got around to mentioning him yesterday) and doesn’t seem to have mentioned the peace camp before much either.

But as soon as his big mates send in the cops to hassle a few hippies, and never one to miss a bandwagon, Dale’s found his aesthetic sensibilities, declared that protesters should be judged on their visual appeal, and is holding the coats. He also elevated his dislike to a vendetta by finding one of the protester’s details and phoning the man’s employer. Oh, and he didn’t mention ‘Iraq’ or ‘Afghanistan’ either.

Sky News’ Adam Boulton tried to associate the protest with the death of a Japanese boy hit by a car. Leader of Westminster Council Colin Barrow talked about ‘ordinary workers and tourists who are prevented from going about their daily business’. This is cobblers. Parliament Square is, in effect, an enormous traffic island with no pedestrian access. Protests on the Square obstruct nobody unless they’re willing to risk the traffic to get there. You take your life in your hands trying to get on to it, certainly.

All of them eulogize Parliament Square’s beauty and the notion that it’s on a World Heritage site (it’s not, fact fans). I’m not really sure what the fuss is about in that regard. I’ve been on Parliament Square (protesting, natch) and in summer particularly, it’s a scrubby, patchy square of nondescript lawn. I wonder, before the protest camp arrived, how many times Brogan, Dale, Boulton, Barrow and the rest risked the traffic themselves to enjoy the Square’s ‘beauty’.


Posted on May 26th, 2010 at 10:46am under Activism, Civil liberties, Con-Dems

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Next Labour leadership as public humiliation: I’m afraid it’s a ‘no’ from me

Ed Milliband has the ‘X-Factor’ says ill-informed boofhead and national embarrassment, Lord Kinnock. It’s a transparent and patronising try at injecting some populist ‘glamour’ into the younger Miliband’s campaign. Good luck with that.

Next Labour, however, have actually managed to turn its leadership contest into a very real and Cowellesque display of public humiliation…

Next Labour leadership contest gets the X-Factor
click to embiggen

They’re showing the nominations for the leadership candidates in real time on their website. So, instead of unsuccessful candidates quietly bowing out when nominations close, we can all have good laugh at those with no mates. Like we did when we were children. So let’s have a look at the contenders.

Diane Abbot
For: Terrible hypocrite.
Against: Her hyprocrisy doesn’t run deep enough.

Ed Balls
For: Against the war in Iraq.
Against: For the war in Iraq.

Andy Burnham
For: Impeccably-preserved Northern credentials.
Against: Neo-Mosleyite.

John McDonnell:
For: Speaks with honesty, integrity and compassion.
Against: Speaks with honesty, integrity and compassion.

David Miliband
For: He’s not Ed Miliband.
Against: He’s David Miliband.

Ed Miliband
For: He’s not David Miliband.
Against: He’s Ed Miliband.

(If you click on the candidates on the leadership web-page you get little aggrandising biographies of each. Except for Abbott and McDonnell who, for some reason at the time of writing, still don’t have them almost a week after they entered the contest.)


Posted on May 25th, 2010 at 11:39am under Next Labour

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Andy Burnham: not a progressive candidate

Has Next Labour leadership contender Andy Burnham uttered the word ‘progressive’ at all during his campaign? One gets the feeling he’s not standing as a progressive candidate…

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mr Burnham said: “We were in denial. We were behind the issue all the time, and myths were allowed to develop. There’s still an ambivalence among some in Labour about discussing immigration. I’ve been accused of dog-whistle politics for doing so.

“But it was the biggest doorstep issue in constituencies where Labour lost. People aren’t racist, but they say it has increased tension, stopped them getting access to housing and lowered their wages.”

It’s a classic transfer of blame thing this, isn’t it? New Labour’s abject failure to address the housing shortage ‘stopped them getting access to housing’. New Labour’s failure to address the rights of agency workers, living wage programmes and exploitative employment law ‘lowered wages’.

Have refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants had their hands on the levers of power recently? I’m pretty sure Johnny Foreigner didn’t dictate housing and wage levels in the UK over the last decade. I’m almost certain that was down to the Thatcherite settlement Burnham and his mates hug so close.

And where are these ‘increased’ tensions exactly? I’m not saying they don’t exist it’s just that in the obvious places the tensions seem to have eased. The BNP were destroyed at the election. Nick Griffin and his gang weren’t beaten in Barking and Dagenham by pandering to their policies but by a strong movement of dedicated people fighting those policies.

Burnham, for some reason, doesn’t want to admit all this so it’s back to blaming the darkies, fostering grievances (how many are perception rather than reality I wonder?) and making life even harder for the most vulnerable. Like I said, not a progressive candidate. He’s not asking the hard questions but taking the easy way out.


Posted on May 24th, 2010 at 12:23pm under New Labour

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Iraq: moving on

David Miliband urges Labour to move on from Iraq. Well, he would, wouldn’t he? Not really the right person to be suggesting that though, is he? It’s an interesting dodge to be fair (steeped in arrogance and cowardice though it is), if not one open to the rest of us.

‘You’ve left your dirty underpants on the bathroom floor. AGAIN.’ ‘Yes, but it’s time to move on.’

‘Of course I was doing 37 in a 30 miles an hour zone, officer, but can’t we move one?’

‘I know hitting my wife has proved devisive in the past but it simply isn’t an issue on the doorstep. It’s time to move on.’

BREAKING: ‘Time to move on,’ says former Foreign Secretary David Miliband
‘Drug abuse in the southern port city of Basra is spiralling out of control as efforts to fight addiction and trafficking fail, according to health and security officials [...] Officials in Basra, 550km south of Baghdad and Iraq’s only trading hub with access to the sea, said the city had become a major waypoint on the drug route from Afghanistan to the Arabian Gulf, as a result of the security vacuum that followed the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.’

BREAKING: ‘Time to move on,’ says former Foreign Secretary David Miliband
‘When British forces drew down from southern Iraq just two years ago, militias conducted a systematic manhunt for their former Iraqi employees. Seventeen interpreters were publicly executed in a single massacre; their bodies were dumped throughout the streets of Basra. This predictable churn of violence against those who “collaborated” with an occupying power has been repeated through history, from the tens of thousands of Algerian harkis who were slaughtered after the 1962 French withdrawal to the British loyalists hunted by American militias after the Revolutionary War. Depressing as this history is, it is not inevitable.’

BREAKING: ‘Time to move on,’ says former Foreign Secretary David Miliband
‘Following a High Court decision today, it can be revealed that former Home Secretary Charles Clarke wrote to the Ministry of Defence (MoD) in 2005 to try and create a Guantanamo Bay-style camp in the southern Iraqi city of Basra, for one suspect, known now as HXA.’


Posted on May 24th, 2010 at 11:26am under Iraq, New Labour

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How soft your fields so green, can whisper tales of gore

In 1958, after being beaten in the race to be Governor of Alabama by his racist opponent, moderate Democrat George Wallace reportedly said, ‘I was out-niggered by John Patterson. And I’ll tell you here and now, I will never be out-niggered again’. Wallace then used his newly declared and cynical opposition to integration to court racism and the populist vote. He eventually became Governor of Alabama.

I don’t know what made me think of him.

Anyway. Immigration, immigration, immigration. They do go on about it, Miliband, Miliband, Balls, and how they’re going to hammer Johnny Foreigner. New to the party is Andy Burnham who’s running on a ‘Fewer Darkies, More Mascara‘ platform. Diane Abbott tries to speak on the issue with a little sense and compassion while everyone agrees that her entering the Next Labour leadership contest is some kind of joke.

James Macintyre in the New Statesman went as far as to tell us ‘The problem with Diane Abbott‘ (‘She is not highly valued in the Labour party,’ apparently, although Macintyre doesn’t say how he conducted his research. Did he canvas the members?). I look forward to the problems with Mililband, Miliband, Balls and Burnham being similiarly aired.

Still, it serves Abbott right really. That’s what you get when you don’t back disastrous and bloody wars or don’t try to cover up torture or don’t come over all Enoch Powell on the subject of immigration. You can’t expect to be taken seriously with a record like that, can you?

She prats about on the telly with Michael Portillo and sent her kids to public school but those don’t add up to voting for cluster bombs and white phosphorus or trying to hide a torture victim‘s mangled genitals. Her leadership bid is apparently all the poorer for it. She’s being laughed out of town while these two are a serious prospect.

Meanwhile, the Con-Dems, remain considerably and shockingly to the left of Next Labour on immigration at this early stage. Not only have they committed to releasing child refugees from internment (however that works out), they’re also promising to ‘stop the deportation of asylum seekers who have had to leave particular countries because their sexual orientation or gender identification puts them at proven risk of imprisonment, torture or execution.’

Needless to say we’ll have to see how that works in practice but you have to admit it’s a step up from telling gay people to go home and be ‘discreet’. An early test of the Con-Dems’ resolve is the case of gay Iranian actress Kiana Firouz who risks the death penalty if she’s deported. Will the Con-Dems save her?

This isn’t to say the new government has gone all soft and stopped trying to look hard and tough and ruthless themselves when it comes to the notional swarthy horde poised to steal our lands. Their promise to ‘introduce an annual limit on the number of non-EU economic migrants admitted into the UK to live and work’ is already both looking unworkable and idiotic.

So it is going to be interesting to see how the cap “mechanism” might work: set the limit high and there’s no point in having it; set it low and Britain deprives itself of workers which benefit the UK.

In trying to please the knuckle-dragging tendency it looks like both sides could end up hurting the country. Doing the Daily Mail’s and Rupert Murdoch’s work is not, it seems, in the national interest. Fancy that.


Posted on May 20th, 2010 at 5:32pm under Con-Dems, Human rights, New Labour

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Links and stuff from between May 15th and May 20th

Just what tickled my fancy in the last few days…

Posted from my delicio.us links.


Posted on May 20th, 2010 at 5:16pm under Miscellaneous dross

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When they said ‘We will end child detention,’ they meant ‘Keep on arresting babies’

At 11.36 this morning the mother of an 8-month old baby made a desperate plea for help on her mobile.

‘I told them please don’t send me and my baby in the van for nine hours, she is too young, I asked them to speak to my lawyer. But she just told me, “Look either you go in the van or we will take your baby in a separate van and you won’t see her until you get to Yarl’s Wood.”

Read the rest…


Posted on May 19th, 2010 at 6:26pm under Con-Dems, Human rights

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Child detention: moving on

Children will no longer be held at the Dungavel immigration removal centre after the Scottish government appealed for the practice to end.

Some good news? The ‘progressive’ alliance acting early on a coalition commitment? As ever with these things, it pays to read a little further…

They are now due to be moved to the Yarl’s Wood Immigration Removal Centre in Bedfordshire, which has specialist family and child facilities and support services, later. Announcing the end of the practice, [UK Immigration Minister Damian Green] said: “This is something which many groups in Scotland have been calling for, and we are now delivering this positive outcome.

‘Positive outcome’? Moving families hundreds of miles away from their local area, friends, support (and, as Martin Burns says, their legal aid) to Yarl’s Wood?

‘They told us we were going to a hotel not a prison and then they locked us up’ … The Government rejected the recommendation that the ‘use of control and restraint against a child be treated as a serious incident and logged’ … ‘Current policy and practice… remains ineffective in preventing malaria in children returning to Africa’ … ‘No awareness of the need to give MMR vaccine to infants… Most children who are removed are sent to measles endemic areas.’ … ‘Many parents complained to us that their children were getting frequent bouts of diarrhoea and vomiting.’ … ‘Despite the appointment of a paediatric nurse, there remains a lack of paediatric medical expertise.’ … ‘There has been no attempt by UK Border Agency to gather evidence on mental health outcomes for children’ … ‘He had previously been a happy child… successful at school, but now… was plagued by nightmares, and screamed in the night’

That’s a positive outcome? Sure, children are no longer being interned in Scotland but – even as an interim measure – it’s a monstrous, misanthropic fudge. This is how it’s going to be, is it? There are pilot schemes in place in Scotland put in place to avoid this. How many times does it need to be said that refugee families with children are unlikely to abscond? Hell, even the Daily Mail put the issue in black and white. Four years ago. The Daily Mail!

It’s hard to fight the sinking feeling that this is going to be a big, fat ugly case of be careful what you wish for.

See also: National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns

Update: This from the Good Morning Scotland radio show (fast forward to 2:09:20). Alison Phipps talks about her foster daughter…

Read the rest of this entry »


Posted on May 19th, 2010 at 10:19am under Eye Catching Initiatives, Human rights, Tories

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Progressive torture

Yes, yes, a ‘progressive’ alliance. The bad behind, the good ahead. What a difference an election makes.

2004:

Tony Blair repeatedly intervened in a bid to deport asylum seekers to Egypt despite being told that they might be tortured and sentenced to death [...] When Mr Blair was warned by the home secretary in a private letter that there was “ample evidence from a range of sources of serious human rights abuses in Egypt”, and that there was “little scope for pushing deportations any further”, he replied: “This is crazy. Why can’t we press on?”

2010:

Two Pakistani students arrested in a series of anti-terrorism raids have won their fight to remain in the UK after successfully arguing that they would be at risk if they were deported [...] The [Special Immigration Appeals Commission] ruled that “there is a long and well-documented history of disappearances, illegal detention and torture” in Pakistan. The home secretary, Theresa May, said: “We are disappointed that the court has ruled that Abid Naseer and Ahmad Faraz Khan should not be deported to Pakistan, which we were seeking on national security grounds [...] Two weeks after their arrest, all the men were released without charge.

Not what I’d call ‘progress’, but then that’s just me. Then you’ve got torture hider David Miliband running for leader of New Next Labour on a ‘progressive‘ ticket as well. Can’t we all now agree that the word ‘progressive’ is comprehensively knackered?

See also: Is Your Favorite Politician a Sociopath?

(Thanks to @earwicga for the link.)


Posted on May 18th, 2010 at 3:07pm under Human rights, UK politics

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Links and stuff from between May 11th and May 15th

Just what tickled my fancy in the last few days…

Posted from my delicio.us links.


Posted on May 15th, 2010 at 12:48pm under Miscellaneous dross

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