Take to the
streets – join the G8 protests
ON 2 July this year tens
of thousands of people will march through the streets of
Edinburgh to protest at the G8 summit. Amongst them will
be thousands of trade unionists, school students,
socialists, community activists and others who have been
driven to take to the streets by their will to transform
the world.
Sarah Sachs-Eldridge
There will also be one
other smaller group - the hypocrites - and chief amongst
them will be Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer,
who announced on Saturday that he plans to join the Make
Poverty History demo.
Beyond the white wristband,
how far does the Chancellor’s determination to end the
privation and misery that blights the lives of so many go?
Has this caring, sharing
Gordon come out to join us on other demonstrations?
Against the war and occupation in Iraq for example? Far
from it.
He rallied behind Blair
during the election and stood by his every action in Iraq,
which has resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths of
Iraqi civilians.
Is he kept awake at night
worrying about how the ex-Rover workers feel when Margaret
Hodge reassures them that they will find employment in
Tescos, despite the huge waste of their skills and the
massive drop in wages that would represent?
It will be clear in the
minds of the majority of the marchers that the G8’s
privatisation policies play a key role in sustaining much
of the poverty and lack of access to essentials such as
water and electricity that we want to end.
Will Saint Gordon happily
fall in behind an anti-privatisation banner? Unlikely. It
is under his watch in Number 11 that the Department for
International Development (DFID) has donated more money to
the pro-privatisation Adam Smith International than it has
to some of the poorest countries in Africa like Somalia.
DFID gave £500,000 to
provide “advice” to the Tanzanian government. Adam Smith
International spent more than half of that on a
promotional video that included the words: “Our old
industries are dry like crops and privatisation brings the
rain.”
We know only too well what
privatisation has meant for us in Britain. Far from
bringing much needed rain for those in the poorest
countries in Africa it brings the denial of essential
services.
It’s estimated that 45% of
people in the Copperbelt province, one of the wealthiest
regions in Zambia, can no longer afford to take their
children to the doctor.
This is because of user
fees (government spending on health is a third of what it
spends on debt repayments) and job losses from the
privatisation of Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines.
So Gordon, by all means
join the demo, but don’t expect anyone to want you there.
Your record and motivations are clear. You represent big
business, you do their bidding.
We represent the billions
around the world who are saying enough is enough, that
it’s time to end the rule of profit, which you defend.
On the demonstration we
will be linking the ending of poverty with the need to
consign to history the system which sustains it.
Make capitalism history.
Make socialism our future. And make Gordon Brown go home.
Come to the ISR international youth camp
2nd
to 7th July
Travel
to and from Edinburgh & camp including food and transport
to all G8 counter-summit events
£85
unwaged/ low-paid, £105 waged
If you
can’t make the whole week join ISR on the demonstration in
Edinburgh on 2 July
Travel
to and from 2nd of July Make Poverty History demo in
Edinburgh from London
£35
unwaged/low-paid, £55 waged
For
details of transport from your area to the 6 July
demonstration phone 020 8558 7947 or email
anticapitalism@hotmail.co.uk