Wednesday, 24 October 2012
Friday, 19 October 2012
Hands off George Square: defending democratic rights – Report of Public Meeting
The gloves are off! The time
is now! Get organised or get banned from protesting in your own city centre
square!
A gathering of Glasgow
citizens met last night to discuss how to respond to Glasgow City Council’s
attempt to ban protest rights in George Square as part of its redevelopment
plan. The meeting was called by the Glasgow Defence Campaign.
Paul Mallon of Fight Racism!
Fight Imperialism! drew attention to the lessons of history (the struggle for
civil and political rights for the nationalist community in the North of
Ireland, the 1980s uprisings of the black community and miners' strike in Britain, the poll tax protests in Glasgow in the 1990s) to further our
understanding of the reasons why protest rights are attacked by the state in
certain periods while left alone at others. He stated “first they come for the
communists and socialists then it is the liberals and then it is broadened out
to include much wider sections of society, the German and Italian people saw
this concretely when fascism rose not so long ago”.
The following speaker from
Spain, who has been researching and in contact with the Spanish Indignados
(‘the indignant’) movement, made clear why this is a period where
democratic rights are being attacked
across Europe and the world. Mass unemployment, especially of highly educated
youth, attacks on public services, yet more and more cuts to the living
standards of the people! The ruling class she said ‘are scared!’ of the
resistance that must arise out of the misery of the masses – this is why the
police repression in Spain and Greece has reached levels reminiscent of that
meted out under fascism and the state in Britain have legalised the use of
water cannons and rubber bullets against crowds. The use of terrorism
legislation against anti-cuts protest in Europe was a clear indication of the
process of state criminalisation that is underway. The ruling class are
preparing to impose their crisis on the people– peacefully or violently –
however they deem necessary. The only solution is to get organised and reclaim
the streets!
In the discussion that
followed one attendee said that the privatisation of public space was a crucial
issue that must be opposed at every step. He applauded the GDC for taking the
initiative to call the meeting. A Green councillor went through the council
document - http://glasgowdefencecampaign.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/george-square-right-to-protest-removed.html -
outlining the £15m programme of redevelopment planned. She said that unusually
but not accidentally the document was only produced to opposition councillors
on the morning of a debate held in the city chambers on the issue. Council documents are usually given two or
three days before a debate giving opposition councillors time to go through the
details; there was clearly an attempt to thwart opposition to the proposal. One
woman named and shamed the wealthy individuals who stand to gain out the
redevelopment with contracts. A general consensus was reached; action must be
taken and taken quickly!
As for what to do next there
were calls for door to door leafleting, letter writing to newspapers, the use
of electronic petitions and direct action to raise awareness about, embarrass
and expose the council’s plans.
An
organising meeting will be held on Tuesday 30 October (details below) with the
aim of agreeing concrete plans and dates for action. The GDC is committed to
organising against any attacks on our democratic rights and the privatisation
of public space in Glasgow. We will work with anyone who shares these aims, and
will work to build effective unity and opposition on the ground.
Hands
off George Square!
Defend
the right to protest!
Oppose
the cuts!
Solidarity
with the peoples fighting back in Europe and around the world!
Hands off George
Square: action meeting
Tuesday
30 October, 7.30 – 9.30pm
Downstairs
at Bar Bacchus, 80 Glassford Street, Glasgow city centre
All
welcome – bring ideas for protest, performance, publicity, petitions and
anything else!
Monday, 15 October 2012
George Square: the right to protest removed
- GCC and Strathclyde police plan to ban rallies from gathering in George Square
- · New plans for legislation intended to stamp out ‘unauthorised processions’
- · Public meeting called in response
Glasgow City Council (GCC),
controlled by the Labour Party, has recently announced plans to undertake a
multimillion pound ‘redevelopment’ of George
Square .
As part of this plan, major
restrictions up to an outright ban on
assemblies outside the city chambers are to be imposed. It is not only
statues but the very right to protest that is being removed. Under the cover of
a sham ‘public consultation’, a fundamental attack on democratic rights in Glasgow has been forced
through.
The council’s bogus ‘public
consultation’ saw a stakeholder consultation document distributed to various
business groups and campaign organisations. This document proposes amongst
other things that George Square
no longer be used as a gathering or departure point for the demonstrations that
have marked its history. It further proposes that the council enter into
negotiations with the Scottish government in order to give local authorities and
the police even more statutory powers relating to what it terms ‘unauthorised
processions’.
This call for further legislation
comes despite wide ranging and far reaching powers to restrict and control
protests already in place through the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982 and
the amendments made to that act by the Police, Public Order and Criminal
Justice (Scotland) Act 2006, along with various powers under the Public Order
Act 1936 and 1986 and the Terrorism Act 2000.
A copy of this consultation
document obtained by the GDC is available here online for the first time.
The ‘redevelopment’ plans come
against a backdrop of Glasgow
preparing to host the 2014 Commonwealth Games, which laid the basis for the
closure of the Accord day care centre in Dalmarnock and the forceful eviction
of the Jaconelli family from their home, as well as putting the final nail of
the coffin of Paddy’s Market. The cabal of business leaders, developers and
corrupt councillors which run this city are determined that public space be
cleansed of any inconveniences such as politics and working class life. ‘Scotland with
style’ – for private business and tourism. The right to shop but nothing else.
Further, these attacks cannot be
separated from the issue of divisive sectarian Orange
marches and the dirty deal done by the Labour council with the Orange Order. In
May 2012, The Herald reported how
Gordon Matheson, leader of Glasgow City Council, was greeted with applause when
he told a pre-election hustings of around 100 members of the Orange Order that
he would ‘hold his hands up’ and admit the approach to reducing marches in the
city was wrong and would be reviewed after his re-election. The most recent
consultation published here by the GDC shows how the council, along with the
police, attempt to equate genuine protest marches such as trade union and refugee
demonstrations with the sectarian and supremacist marches held by the Orange
Order. The consultation goes so far as to describe the conduct of the racist
Scottish Defence League in approving terms. The consultation is clear: the
problem is not dozens of sectarian or racist assemblies but rather what it
terms the emerging trend of ‘unauthorised processions’ being organised via
social media.
Gordon Matheson has said that he
wants ‘to give the people of Glasgow
the Square they deserve.’ The Labour council has repeatedly shown what it
thinks the people of Glasgow
deserve: privatisation of services, poverty, cuts and corruption. No wonder our
dear leader wants protest banished from outside the gilded halls were such
decisions are made! From Tahrir
Square in Cairo to
Puerta del Sol in Madrid ,
the people are claiming the squares back from themselves.
Just over a year ago, in our
first anniversary statement the GDC concluded:
‘The Glasgow
Defence Campaign states its commitment to the argument that the defence of
democratic rights is the defence of the working class. We define that working
class as workers in jobs and the unemployed, youth in revolt on the streets,
the disabled and poor, immigrants and asylum seekers – all those who the rich
are trying to make pay for an economic crisis not of their making.’
This remains the case today. We
state that these plans are a dangerous attack on our fundamental democratic rights.
It is the latest stage in the escalating repression in Glasgow which the GDC has documented since
its formation. Interference by the state in legitimate, legal and necessary
protest and organisation must be challenged. Unity and solidarity must be
built, urgently and on the ground, in the struggle to defend democratic rights
in the fight for real justice.
To this end, the Glasgow Defence
Campaign is calling on all progressive forces in the city to oppose this latest
attack and is organising an open meeting for all to attend and contribute to:
Hands Off George Square :
defending democratic rights
Thursday 18 October, 7.30 – 9.30pm
Upstairs at The Piper bar, 57
Cochrane Street
(just off George Square )
Speakers from the Glasgow Defence
Campaign plus a speaker from Spain
on the squares movement in Europe .
All welcome.
Consultation document published below
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)