Monday, 22 April 2019

Earth Day 2019



The first Earth Day was April 22, 1970. The idea was to raise awareness about our role in protecting our natural world.
It originally started out as more of a political movement, though today it has become a popular day for many communities to clean up litter, plant trees, or simply reflect on nature.
It was in 1970, that Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson and an activist John McConnell separately asked Americans to join in a grassroots demonstration. McConnell chose the spring equinox (March 21, 1970) and Nelson chose April 22.
Earth Day continues to be widely celebrated. The focus of Earth Day 2019 is protection of Earth species. The Earth Day Network, which runs Earth Day, claims that we are now losing species at 1,000 to 10,000 times the normal rate.
Insect populations have decreased by more than 45% worldwide, 40% of the world’s bird species are in decline, and beekeepers report annual hive losses of 30% or higher.
Many species will disappear before we learn about them or the benefits they bring to our ecosystems and our planet. The loss is so great that the welfare and future of the human species are threatened. Earth Day 2019 is marked by extreme contradictions. Scientists around the world agree that climate change, caused by an increase and trapping of greenhouse gases within the earth’s atmosphere, is our reality.  Ocean temperatures and acidity, sea levels, and coastal flooding are on the rise because of temperature shifts. As a result it is the greatest existential crisis facing humanity today.
According to Guardian Columnist George Monbiot, capitalism is destroying the earth and we need a new human right to fight for future generations https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/mar/15/capitalism-destroying-earth-human-right-climate-strike-children and only rebellion will prevent an ecological apocalypse https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/15/rebellion-prevent-ecological-apocalypse-civil-disobedience
Today’s planetary ecological crisis is due first and foremost to the increasing scale of the capitalist world economy. Capitalism is a system totally reliant on the exploitation of nature, whether that be sacrificing our clean water to frack for hydrocarbons or sacrificing our children to the production line. We must deelop new ideas of what a different future may look like outside the  constraints of both capital and fossil fuels in order to move forwards to a sustainable future for humanity, instead of one of catastrophe.
Meanwhile  inspiringly protests calling for the UK government to declare a climate emergency have entered a second week.Activists have stopped traffic in a series of demonstrations across London since Monday with actions including fixing a boat at the junction of Oxford Street and Regent Street, occupying Waterloo Bridge and disrupting the Docklands Light Railway by climbing on a train.
A total of  963 people had been arrested as of 7pm on Sunday while 40 have been charged in connection with the protests, the Met Police said.
A spokesman for the Extinction Rebellion movement said there would be no escalation of activity on Earth Day, but warned that the disruption could get "much worse" if politicians were not open to their negotiation requests. The activists are holding a "people's assembly" at Marble Arch today between 3pm and 5pm, to decide where they go next.This will be followed by a feast celebrating "life, community and collectivity". Everyone is invited, and attendees are encouraged to bring throws and flowers to decorate tables.
We should keep demanding a system change not Climate Change. There really is no Plan B, not yet at least. This world is all we have. Earth Day is a day to recognize the richness of our planet and, as its trustees, do everything we can to protect it. Happy Earth Day.

The Mekons - Deserted



The Mekons, a band that I have long loved, first emerged from the 1977 British punk scene, and progressed from socialist art students with no musical skills to the prolific, raucous progeny of Hank Williams. They have been releasing music  which  has combined politics with post-punk, folk and country music for  the last 40 years as radical innovators of both first generation punk and insurgent roots music.  For years continuing while staying true to the punk ethos. Political provocateurs. Social agitators. Punk's reigning contrarians willing outcasts, exuberant luddites the Mekons have been called all this and more. The late Lester Bangs  called them “the most revolutionary in the history of rock’n’roll” the Mekons were notorious, as critic Greil Marcus notes, for being “the band that took punk ideology most seriously.
There story began at the University of Leeds, where a politicized student body was further ignited by the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy in the UK” tour of ’77. Out of that flashpoint came one great band ,Gang of Four and a group of incompetent malcontents who picked up Gang of Four’s instruments when the group wasn’t looking.
They were from the outset highly principled stating ”That anybody could do it; that we didn’t want to be stars; that there was no set group as such, anybody could get up and join in and instruments would be swapped around; that there’d be no distance between the audience and the band; that we were nobody special
They  called themselves the Mekons after a sci-fi movie villain from the popular 1950’s comic The Eagle . releasing singles on a variety of labels and their first album, The Quality of Mercy Is Not Strnen, was recorded using a friends bands instruments. Due to an error by the record company art department the cover featured pictures of, fellow Leeds band, Gang of Four by mistake.
The group’s first iteration was a purposefully sloppy mix of mangled power chords and ideological messages, some of them aimed at the punk revolution itself; the Mekons answered the Clash’sWhite Riot” with the reality bites of “Never Been in a Riot.” They played benefits for striking miners and fought hard against the short sharp shock of Margaret Thatcher’s domestic policies.After The Mekons Story compilation in 1982 the band called it a day, with Langford forming The Three Johns, and that seemed to be that.
However they soon returned and began pumping out album after album again on a multitude of labels and even at one time making it onto a major though the resulting album was a commercial flop and though it was loved by the fans they were soon dropped like the proverbial hot potato and cut adrift again.
The band’s discovery of folk music and honky-tonk in the early ’80s recharged them for the long run; The band's longtime members - Jon Langford, Tom Greenhalgh, Dick Taylor( a greying elder who’d been in the very first Rolling Stones lineup) and Kevin Lycett - had added a superb fiddle player Susie Honeyman, an accordionist Rico Bell, multi-instrumentalist Lu Edmonds formely of the Damned. and a professional drummer, Steve Goulding (from Graham Parker's band, the Rumour), whose beat steadied the band somewhat, and then  Sally Timms arrived, her voice wicked with the weight of class warfare and long nights drinking at the local.
The albums of this era — from “Fear and Whiskey” (1985) to “I [heart] Mekons” (1993) — are majestic works of roots-rock entropy, angry and exhausted, daring and funny. Their track
Robin Hood”, interspersed choruses from Percy Bysshe Shelley with attacks on Winston Churchill as villain “shooting down/the South Wales striking miners”,  and they occupied roughly the same musical space as the Oysterband. When they recorded  ''Fear and Whisky,'' the Mekons had been transformed by exposure to American music, especially honky-tonk country and Cajun music; both are connected to British and Celtic traditions from the home front.
With abundant good humor and dark irony they  released The Mekons Rock ’n’ Roll” in 1989  it was recieved very favourably  . 'Rock-and-roll'' turns up all over the album. The sprightly ''Club Mekon'' links rock to sex, but not in the standard way; for the Mekons, each is ''a commodity, to be bought and sold.'' In ''Learning to Live on Your Own,'' a ballad, Ms. Timms sings that she'll ''throw a rock-and-roll song on the fire''; in ''Amnesia,'' a jumble of images from the 1960's, band members bellow, ''any old army high on drugs/ fight that rock-and-roll war.''Not that rock-and-roll is the only target for the band's skepticism. ''Empire of the Senseless''
Over the years and after the band had learnt to play their instruments their musical style transformed and The Mekons were now famous for playing country and folk music as well as brief forays into rock and even dub reggae. With around twenty albums to their name plus untold amount of singles and EP’s as well as appearances on dozens of compilations
For more than four decades they’ve been a constant contradiction, an ongoing art project of observation, anger and compassion, all neatly summed up in the movie Revenge of the Mekons, which has ironically brought an upsurge in their popularity around the US as new audiences discovers their shambling splendour. That the band is still with us nearly four decades after its founding, the only one of British punk’s class of 1977 still standing , is remarkable in itself. More endearing is that the Mekons’ shaggy, jaded-but-jovial communal ethos still holds strong, embracing alt-folk, country-punk, pub-rock, leftist rage, boozy humor, a rotating cast of men and women, and a dedication to taking nothing seriously but the music and the moment.
Critically and cultishly adored The Mekons deserve to be much more well known as they continue to make innovative original music  while staying true to the punk ethos. After a bit of a  hiatus these beloved survivors are back with Deserted, their first full studio album in eight years. Their new album was recorded in the desert environs of Joshua Tree, California after,the group’s bassist The Baron (aka Dave Trumfio) set up a studio in  the Yucca Valley, where the Mekons  became inspired by the surroundings, leading to the writing and recording of Deserted. “There are deserts everywhere. We took time to ponder the vastness and the weirdness of the desert. Going to the country to get your head together is a ripe old rock cliché. We went to the desert to have our brains scoured… We went from one desert to another. A more hopeful place where we arm ourselves with spikes and endure" main man Jon Langford has said and their new album is  every bit as bold, raw and imaginative as the work that’s established them as one of the most revolutionary groups in punk-rock history.


They have managed to craft something very much in keeping with their surroundings.and is drenched with widescreen, barbed-wire atmosphere and hard-earned (but ever amused) defiance. Deserted is still rooted in their dual comfort zones of raucous post-punk and rollicking alt-country, folk balladry, sea shanties and whatever else strikes their creative fancy.
The formidable opening track  “Lawrence Of California”, is inspired by the guitarist Tom Greenhalgh wandering in Joshua Tree National Park, it arrives on a swell of feedback that erupts into a shout-along gang vocal that  remind us  they’ve lost none of the firebrand punk spirit on which they were originally founded.


The next song “Harar, 1883” imagines the patron saint of punk poetry, Arthur Rimbaud’s time spent in the area of Harar, where he, “…was not troubled in the least / To give up writing poetry.”
The almost pastoral  'How Many Stars' ' sees Tom Greenhalgh’s deadpan vocals unravel a magical and occasionally mystical tale, which looks to the massive desert night sky pondering the universe and the hereafter while  in the harshness of the environment. As beautiful and moving as this song is, there is still humor in a line like “For I am pickled, I am done.” Yes, it’s a folk song about death. 



In The Desert”, Sally Timms sings about a shattered statue half sunk, a “creature of Bush and Blair”, a reference to the Gulf War and sees her quoting from the closing three lines of Shelley’s poem “Ozymandias.
The raucous 'Mirage’ follows and is anything but a dreamy number.It's raw and exciting.Calling out Mark E Smith’s name in  a brightl lit alley, as guitars grind away like buzz saws amid cries of “Where you hiding?“ This is as good as it’s going to get/Between the mirage and the sunset.”
The beautiful"Weimar Vending Machine ” makes a direct reference to “Alabama Song”by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill (also known as “Moon Of Alabama”), a song that The Doors covered  turning into  a delightful David Bowie tribute “That starts off about Iggy Pop in Berlin,” Langford explains. “There’s a story that he went to a vending machine and saw the word ‘sand’. He put his money in and a bag of sand came out.”
Then there is  the gorgeous  rambling “Andromeda”,  with a jaunty reggae beat that  is undercut  by Langford’s echoey, distorted vocals and really lovely violin playing. It’s as left-field as The Mekons can get. The album ends with the atmospheric ‘After The Rain’. It has a dark and haunting sound, a cinematic, elegiac farewell that finds the Mekons on top of their game.

 
The Mekons are without a doubt still passionate, it's embedded into everything that they do. Upon the whole the album looks like a musical landscape, that is monumental but is subject to chaos.The LP sounds fresh and not out of time.  Deserted  is a joy and  marks the welcome  return of one of the planet's most essential rock and roll bands that after 40 years still have something to say. Deserted is the Mekons at their finest, and is a proud addition to their catalog. It's folk music by folks who are pissed and disillusioned, lost and longing to be found, but only on their terms. It’s a testimony to resilience, showcasing a band still as creatively vital as when they first formed, living up to their reputation ' as the only band that matters.' The Mekons still  treading their very own idiosyncratic path and because of this the musical world is a much better place for bands and albums like this.Viva the Mekons.

 CD Track List
  1. Lawrence Of California
  2. Harar 1883
  3. In The Sun/The Galaxy Explodes
  4. How Many Stars?
  5. In The Desert
  6. Mirage
  7. Weimar Vending Machine/Priest?
  8. Andromeda
  9. After The Rain

Deserted’ is released by Glitterbeat

Friday, 19 April 2019

Easter Bunny Threatens to Strike Against Cages

 

Across the UK, millions of farmed animals are  crammed into tiny cages with no personal space. Rabbits  for example are denied their most basic needs such as solid ground under their feet, room to move, fresh air and sunlight, and grass to eat. They are kept in cages that are barren, cramped and deny the animals space to move freely, unable to express their natural behaviours   or adopt normal postures such as lying stretched out, sitting and standing with their ears erect (species typical “look out” posture) or rearing up to explore their surroundings. They cannot move normally or comfortably, and some don’t even have enough space to perform a single hop. This is bad for their mental well-being, and the lack of exercise can also lead to weakened bones. It is cruel and completely unnecessary as well as being  unaccepteable.
As a result of all this  the Easter bunny is threatening to go on strike in protest at the Governments   lack of response  to the followng petition, that calls on the UK government to end this inhumane practice by banning all cages for farmed animals.
There's not a moment to lose so please add  your name to the following and show the Easter Bunny that humans do want to stop cruel caged farming, he's counting on your support.

https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/243448

Thursday, 18 April 2019

Penguin Modern Poets

 

Over 30 years or so wandering though charity shops and bookshops I've been drawn to editions  of the Penguin Modern Poets, picking up the odd one here and there, they've long been treasured and have been a huge influence on me. Some have been easy to find, but others have been elusive and hard to find, I didn't actively seek them out, just waited for them to appear before me but am pleased to say that this week I have finally completed the set, wonders of wonders ..
When the Penguin Modern Poets series was launched in 1962, it's goal was to introduce conpemporary poetry  to a much wider audience than had previously been the case. Prior to their release, verse was often published in large and expensive, rather off-putting volumes not readily available to less affluent readers. The Penguins, however were slim, inexpensive and therefore readily available to all; as well as being much less intimidating to look at, with beautiful colourful covers, with  Alan Spain, Roger Mayne and others creating a distinctive look for them, giving  each one it's own collectable identity.
Each anthology covers three poets, and a total of eighty one writers  containing a large proportion of the most important names in British and American poetry, starting with Lawrence Durrell, Elizabeth Jennings, R. S. Thomas and ending with John Ormond, Emyr Humphreys and John Tripp, were showcased in the series's  twenty-seven book run. Each book was numbered except for one title (the 10th one),The Mersey Sound, which received a full name. They contained no biographical material or critical apparatus  and simply encouraged readers to sample widely and deeply and to compare the merits of the poetries on display. taking in every school of poetry.The series promoted loyalty to modern poetry in general, and of course loyalty to the publisher that championed it.
The anthologies became  very popular, the tenth collection, The Mersey Sound included the works of Liverpool poets Roger McGough, Brian Patten, and Adrian Henri and went  on to become one of the best selling poetry collections of all time.
I have personal favourites , the Corso, Ferlinghetti, Ginsberg and the Bukowski, Lamantia, and  Norse are particularlywell thumbed, and the Penguins have introduced me to the distictive work of  the late Lee Harwood, Kenneth Rextroth, Adrian Mitchell and B.S Johnson whose poetry since have truly appreciated .I must say however that each individual title though stand on their own merit, I love them.Ok  darn guess that makes me a materialist, I like wine too but simply adore turning a page, and I return to these Penguins time and time again.









Astonishingly all mine are still in rather  good nick, since so many of these Penguin’s had glued spines that exploded into dust,  have had to replace a few here and there, since former acquaintnces with sticky hands have lifted them, can't really say I blame them, but rather careful nowadays who I let through the door. Though I confess i'm a bit  of a hoarder, friends have been free to borrow if asked, , I'm really not that possessive, though.
They were followed by a second series of 13 new "Penguin Modern Poets" in the 1990s, and yet another series had its debut in 2016, and has now reached its seventh volume. I only have one of these, a collection that includes the poetry of one of my favourite writers Iain Sinclair. These collection are no doubt equally worthy, but they somehow lack the excitement of the original series.

Anyway all power to poetry and the poets that create them.
 
Here’s a list of the books and poets:

1. Lawrence Durrell, Elizabeth Jennings, R. S. Thomas

2. Kingsley Amis, Dom Moraes, Peter Porter

3. George Barker, Martin Bell, Charles Causley

4. David Holbrook, Christopher Middleton, David Wevill

5. Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg

6. George MacBeth, Edward Lucie-Smith, Jack Clemo

7. Richard Murphy, Jon Silkin, Nathaniel Tarn

8. Edwin Brock, Geoffrey Hill, Stevie Smith

9. Denise Levertov, Kenneth Rexroth, William Carlos Williams

10. Adrian Henri, Roger McGough, Brian Patten (entitled: The Mersey Sound)

11. D. M. Black, Peter Redgrove, D. M. Thomas

12. Alan Jackson, Jeff Nuttall, William Wantling

13. Charles Bukowski, Philip Lamantia, Harold Norse

14. Alan Brownjohn, Michael Hamburger, Charles Tomlinson

15. Alan Bold, Edward Brathwaite, Edwin Morgan

16. Jack Beeching, Harry Guest, Matthew Mead

17. W. S. Graham, Kathleen Raine, David Gascoyne

18. A. Alvarez, Roy Fuller, Anthony Thwaite

19. John Ashbery, Lee Harwood, Tom Raworth

20. John Heath-Stubbs, F. T. Prince, Stephen Spender

21. George Mackay Brown, Norman MacCaig, Iain Crichton Smith

22. John Fuller, Peter Levi, Adrian Mitchell

23. Geoffrey Grigson, Edwin Muir, Adrian Stokes

24. Kenward Elmslie, Kenneth Koch, James Schuyler

25. Gavin Ewart, Zulfikar Ghose, B. S. Johnson

26. Dannie Abse, D.J. Enright, Michael Longley

27. John Ormond, Emyr Humphreys, John Tripp



Wednesday, 17 April 2019

Palestinian Prisoners' Day, April 17 2019

On 17 April each year, Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian people, and supporters of justice and liberation for Palestine all over the world express their support to Palestinian political prisoners and mark the International Day of Solidarity with Palestinian Prisoners.On this day, and throughout the year, families of prisoners often hold protests and vigils holding photos of their imprisoned family members to keep their stories alive.
Commemorated since 1974, when the first Palestinian prisoner, Mahmoud Hijazi, was freed in a prisoner exchange with the Palestinian Resistance, 17 April is a day of protests, rallies, marches, forums and more to commemorate the struggle of Palestinians imprisoned in Israeli occupation jails and demand their freedom.
In Palestine, political imprisonment is a central feature of Israeli Apartheid with over 20% of Palestinians facing imprisonment in their lifetime. Palestinian Prisoner Day was founded to remind the world of the thousands of Palestinian political prisoners imprisoned in Israeli prisons or detention centers without charge or trial for extensive periods of time. The number of Palestinian detainess increases as Israeli occupying forces continue to wage campaigns of arbitrary arrests, while Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails continue to be subject to wide-ranging violations of their rights and dignity.Approximately 6,500 Palestinians are currently held in Israeli prisons and detention centers, including approximately 300 children and nearly 550 held under administrative detention, a form of detention without charge or trial that Israel uses to hold Palestinians indefinitely on secret information.
Since Israeli began its military occupation of the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and the Gaza Strip in 1967, more than 800,000 Palestinians have been abducted and imprisoned by Israel.  This figure represents 20% of the total Palestinian population and 40% of the Palestinian male population. It also includes 10,000 women imprisoned since 1967 and more than 200 Palestinians have died in Israeli prisons as a result of torture and lack of medical care.Furthermore, 8,000 Palestinian children have been arrested since 2000.Each year, some 700Palstinian children  undergo military  detention in a system where ill-treatment is widespread and institutionalised. For these young detiness, few rights are guaranteed  even on paper. After release, the experience of detention continues to shape and mark former child prisoners path forward.

Palestinian prisoners held in Israel have  recently called off a hunger strike that lasted a week after some of their demands were met by Israeli authorities, official Palestinian media and prisoner representatives said.Hundreds of inmates began refusing food on April 8 after negotiations with prison authorities broke down.

A statement from the Palestinian Prisoners' Club, a  non-governmental organisation said an agreement had been reached to end the recent strike.There was no immediate reaction from the Israel Prison Service. Prisoners had a list of the demands and their strike was supported by all major Palestinian factions.Hamas, which rules Gaza, in particular has objected to new electronic jammers installed in some of the prisons, to block mobile phone reception. The Prisoners' Club said the Israeli side had agreed to stop the jammers.Official Palestinian news agency Wafa said it had been agreed that public phones would be installed in the prisons.

Despite the difficult conditions of their detention, and against incredible odds, Palestinian political prisoners actively campaign for their individual and collective rights. In the absence of adequate judicial remedies, Palestinian prisoners and detainees regularly resort to hunger strikes as legitimate peaceful protest to highlight their plight.

Fears had been raised of a repeat of an 800-person hunger strike in 2017, which drew attention to prisoners' conditions.In 2017, 1,578 prisoners participated in the hunger strike overall. That protest lasted for 40 days until the Israelis conceded to one of the main demands of the prisoners. They agreed to two family visits a month for the prisoners instead of the one.

Palestinians, living under occupation and oppression, have been targeted for mass imprisonment and detention by the Israeli occupation, and nearly every Palestinian household has been impacted by political imprisonment.Investigations have revealed that prisoners are regularly ill-treated, tortured, and denied family visits subject to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, including poor detention conditions and denied family visits, not forgetting  the policy of administrative detention as a method of arbitrary detention, which results in the jailing of people without trial, on the basis of confidential evidence and without providing a reason and justification for the detainees and their attorneys. These  practices contravene fundamental standards of justice and represent Israel’s blatant disregard and violation of international conventions and norms anchored in international humanitarian law and international human rights conventions. in violation of Israel's obligations under international human rights and humanitarian law.

Under international law and conventions, including the Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War (the Third Geneva Convention), the Fourth Geneva Convention obliges Israel, as an occupying power, to provide allowances for Palestinian detainees, as enshrined in Articles 98 and 81 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Israel does not honor this obligation. Instead, Israel is punishing the Palestinian government for providing allowances to the families of Palestinian prisoners by pirating Palestinian tax revenues.

Every day, Palestinian prisoners are on the front lines of struggle, facing relentless attacks on their rights , despite their difficult circumstances, the Palestinian eople and the prisoners are still full of hope that their days of freedom will come.

All of the above are reasons why I continue to support the Palestinian  prisoners, and continue  to support the international communities efforts to ensure the immediate and effective measures to ensure that Israel releases all unlawfully detaned prisoners, and ensures that conditions of arrest are consistent with international human rights and humanitarian law.

 Palestinian Prisoners’ Day is  also a time where  we must reaffirm that there is nothing normal about occupation, apartheid, and mass incarcernation, in any context,  and .to continue to stand against state and corporate complicity with Israeli imprisonment of Palestinian political prisoners.and an end of Israel's arrest campaigns, aggressiveness and occupation of the Palestnian territories.

The following  link offers the latest facts, figures, and statistics about Palestinian prisoners.

http://www.addameer.org/statistics

Tuesday, 16 April 2019

It's Strange


It's strange
each day the same as the last
millions dying of hunger
profiteers counting their cash,
daily people getting exploited
man made crisis and refugees denied
racism and homelessness on the rise
the grains that still fall, full of doubts and fears.

It's strange
there is no end in sight
ecosystems on the precipice of extinction
sea levels rising, the planet in peril,
the shimmering light of tomorrow dissapears
dark hands of fate, twist the knive
trouble keeps brewing, spreading strife
no matter what we do, we are betrayed.

It's strange
tears of humanity lingering long
releasing sadness, breaking hearts
remember though, this pain we must share,
but moving round in circles
can be done with little fuss
a solution surely can be retrieved
beyond us, no more anguished  memories.

It's strange
how love still tears us apart
as we weep to remember
what it once contained,
some people two faced
only interested in self and position
no radiance have these people
they are stagnant and void.

It's strange
how life can weigh heavy
are we not all at times afflicted
let us share the wealth of our affliction,
salvage some hope, tear down the chains
messages of human kindness, instead of greed
in this odd little world, we can search for a new reality
let's  all try and continue until the day we die.

Above poem can now also be found here 18/4/19

https://iamnotasilentpoet.wordpress.com/2019/04/18/its-strange-by-dave-rendle/?fbclid=IwAR3EMQlsbyzK3KcHcXHmNPicTmWXj0b02FRkm2-B-QihR26TlhqDWjyS8To

Monday, 15 April 2019

Hillsborough: Liverpool Marks 30 Years Since Disaster That Killed 96 Fans



April 15 will always remain one of the most sombre days in English football. On this day in 1989, 96 Liverpool went to a game of football and tragically never came back. The terrrible events of that day at Hillsborough remain as heartbreaking now as they were 30 years ago. 
Liverpool will fall silent today for a minute today, traffic will stop in the Mersey tunnels, ferries will sound their horns and the town hall bells will toll 96 times,  to mark the anniversary of the disaster at 3.06 today the time the FA Cup semi-final  with Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough, was halted, that touched so many lives and changed the face of English football forever. .
Images of the victims printed on banners, along with the words Never Forgotten, have been put on display at the front of St George's Hall in the city. From Monday morning, 96 lanterns with lit candles will also be displayed on the steps of the hall, where members of the public will be able to pay their respects and leave tributes.
Mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson, who will lay a wreath on behalf of the people of the city, said: "The 96 have never been forgotten and even though this city is divided by our footballing allegiances, we have been united in supporting the families and Hillsborough survivors for the past 30 years, and will continue to do so.
"St George's Hall is our city's gathering place, whether to celebrate or commemorate, and I can think of no better venue to host a temporary memorial."The banners adorned with the images of the 96 will be especially powerful, and the lanterns will serve as a reminder that this city will never forget them."
A memorial service is due to be held at Liverpool Cathedral at 2.45pm. The Kop at Anfield will be open between 1pm and 4pm for anyone who would like to sit for a period of reflection.
Liverpool FC paid tribute to the 96 during their 2-0 victory against Chelsea on Sunday, holding banners and flying flags in commemoration. Other clubs and players, including former Liverpool forward Michael Owen, also paid tribute to those who died on social media.
Plans for a public commemoration event on the steps of St George's Hall were cancelled after a jury failed to reach a verdict in the trial of match commander David Duckenfield, who is charged with the gross negligence manslaughter. The Crown Prosecution Service has said it will seek a retrial, which Duckenfield is expected to oppose, at a hearing scheduled for 24 June.
The jury reached a a majority verdict to convict Graham Mackrell, Sheffield Wednesday’s then secretary and safety officer, of failing to take reasonable care of Liverpool supporters’ safety, by allocating only seven turnstiles for 10,100 people with tickets to stand on the Leppings Lane terrace at Hillsborough.
The offence, under the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act, is punishable by a fine. Mackrell, who sought in his defence to blame  Liverpool supporters for the dangerous congestion that developed at the turnstiles, will be sentenced on 13 May.
Of the 96 people who died, 37 were teenagers, most still at school, many attending their first ever away football match supporting Liverpool. Seven of the dead were girls and women, including one mother, Inger Shah, whose children Becky and Daniel were teenagers at the time. Twenty-five were fathers; altogether, 58 people lost a parent in the disaster.
Former ​Chelsea star Pat Nevin was quick to remind, more than 96 lives were irreparably damaged on that day. Many survivors still struggle to come to terms with the mental and physical wounds of the incident. It's so horrible  to think of going to a match and not returning, never mind it being covered up and being blamed for the tragedy as well. From the onset survivors of Hillsborough  spoke of how they were intimidated and threatened by  police and left feeling traumatised, accused of wasting police time because they did not like their evidence, because it did not fit into their versions of the event. 
The Police, the Conservative Government of the time, the Stadium management and the press,  all  colluded to keep us from what actually happened at the tragedy that was Hillsborough, they were lied about, especially  by the police, the scum newspaper, the dead were vilified and labelled,  and demonised. Thatcher's Conservative Government created a culture of impunity, who needed a partisan police force, because they wanted to protect their own self interests Remember too, that 164 police officers lied, 14 of whom were awarded millions of pounds of compensation between them, the Hillsborough familres have not recieved a penny. Also since this terrible occasion some Police Officers were even  promoted to senior positions.
The propaganda pumped out in the first two years after the disaster coloured public opinion. The Scum newspapers ‘The Truth’ headline, falsely pointing the finger at Liverpool fans, set the tone. The coroner’s dismissive verdict was an official endorsement of the lies. The dead, their fellow supporters who tried to save them and the bereaved were dehumanised, demonised and dismissed with the complicity of the state, .the Police, the Conservative Government of the time, the Stadium management and the press,  all  of whom colluded to keep us from what actually happened at the tragedy that was Hillsborough.

 
 Kevin McKenzie editor of the Scum at the time , sanctimonious git supremeo, sanctioned the making up of 'quotes'  he then  repeated the same lies time and time and again, a pathetic , wretched individual who only made  half apologies in order to further his own self interests. Shame , shame, shame.  
Because of this, The S*n, as it is referred to in Liverpool, became an instant target. 30 years on and the paper remains unwelcome in the city, the effect of which has led to big supermarkets and small newsagents all over no longer stocking it. Remembrance is thus not only conducted as a vigil for the lives lost, nor the want for it to be rubber stamped in the history books. It is an inherently political act and one which seeks to build solidarity with campaigns fought on similar lines elsewhere.
 Margaret Aspinall, the chair of the Hillsborough Family Support Group, whose son James, 18, was one of the 96 people killed, said the 30th anniversary would be overshadowed by the ongoing legal proceedings. She said: “We lost our loved ones at a football match, then for 30 years we’ve lived in the past. It has taken a huge toll on all the families. There are children born since, even grandchildren, and all they have ever known is Hillsborough.”
Is crucial that there is accountability and transparency in public life. At a time when members of the Government flippantly spread misinformation and lies because it suits their political viewpoint, the search for the truth is more important than ever. 30 years on it is only natural for people to pursue justice. On this raw emotional day the memory of the 96 will not be forgotten. My thoughts remain with the survivors and those affected by the tragedy as the city of Liverpool comes together to mark this sad occasion.

Sunday, 14 April 2019

Rachel Carson (May 27, 1907 - April 14, 1964) - The Sea around us


Rachel Carson died on this day in 1964, having revolutionised science and culture.
She was born on May 27, 1907, the youngest of three children. Raised in a rustic farmhouse just outside the Allegheny River town of Springdale, Penn, USA, she had ample opportunity to experience the natural world. She credited her mother with instilling in her the lasting love of nature that flows through her writing like a rising tide.
She read biology at Pennsylvania College for Women and carried out graduate work at The John Hopkins University.. She then taught at the University of Maryland and at John Hopkins. She was a marine biologist and subsequent editor-in-chief of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and a pioneer of the conservation movement in the 1960s. She wrote the classic template for the ecological movement with " The Silent Spring " in it  she delivered a bracing and alarming story of how pesticides and other toxic chemicals were poisoning the Earth. Carson's terrifying yet inspirational message instantly became a call-to-action for anyone who picked it up. Silent Spring, which drew its name from the prospect of a poisoned world in which no birds sing  opened up a  ferocious debate and found herself the target of vicious attacks. But she stood her ground. "Man's attitude toward nature," she said, "is today critically important simply because we have acquired a fateful power to alter and destroy nature. Rachel Carson's Silent Spring is credited with waking the world up to the threat we humans pose to our environment, and  ignited an environment movement that continues to spark change today.
The book captured the attention of President John F. Kennedy and was pivotal in the banning of the commonly used pesticide DDT (dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane) in 1972. It led to a grassroots movement questioning the safety of pesticide use and public calls for greater governmental control of the industry. Even now, both the book and the author herself remain icons of how a single individual can change the course of a nation’s history.
Carson’s legacy still looms large. As for whether her concerns were “hysterical and alarmist” as her detractors have consistently claimed, or a sobering warning about the impact of human ingenuity, there can be little question that the past 50 years or so  have vindicated her. She taught us that no  matter how desperate things seem, it’s not too late.
While "Silent Spring" is Carson's most famous book, she published several other books, in 1929 as a 22-year-old summer researcher with the Marine Biological Laboratory. She also worked for the Bureau of Fisheries, and conducted research at its station in Woods Hole. In 1949, Carson became the first woman to go to sea on its research vessel, the Albatross III. Her trilogy of books, “Under the Sea Wind,(1941)” “The Sea Around Us,(1951)" and “The Edge of the Sea (1955)” were all influenced by her first summer in Woods Hole and her many years working at the Bureau of Fisheries. Carson gained knowledge about the ocean and environment during her years spent there. The Sea Around Us has been  described as one of the most successful books written about the natural world, it is a poetic narrative about the life history of the oceans.
 Carson’s legacy still looms large. As for whether her concerns were “hysterical and alarmist” as her detractors have consistently claimed, or a sobering warning about the impact of human ingenuity, there can be little question that the past 50 years or so  have vindicated her. She taught us that no  matter how desperate things seem, it’s not too late.

I conclude with a brief extract from The Sea around us.

'FOR the sea as a whole,the alternation of day and night, the passage of the seasons, the procession of the years, are lost in its vastness, obliterated in its own changeless eternity. But the surface waters are different. The face of the sea is always changing. Crossed by colors, lights, and moving shadows, sparkling in the sun, mysterious in the twilight, its aspects and its moods vary hour by hour. The surface waters move with the tides, stir to the breath of winds, and rise and fall to the endless, hurrying forms of the waves. Most of all, they change with the advance of the seasons. Spring moves overthe temperate lands of our Northern Hemisphere in a tide of new life, of pushing green shoots and unfolding buds, all its mysteries and meanings symbolised in the northward migration of the birds, the awakening of sluggish amphibian life as the chorus of frogs rises again from the wetlands, the different sound of the wind which stirs the young leaves where a month ago it rattled the bare branches. These things we associate with the land, and it is easy to suppose that at sea there could be no such feeling of advancing spring. But the signs are there, and seen with understanding eye, they bring the same magical sense of awakening.'


Saturday, 13 April 2019

Let's not forget Tryweryn / Cofiwch Dryweryn



Dyfed-Powys Police have said they are  investigating criminal damage to the Cofiwch Dryweryn memorial  which has stood as a political symbol on the A487 just outside the village of Llanrhytsted , on the way to Aberystwyth commemorating the drowning of a village near Bala.
Stones from the upper half of the wall appear to have been knocked from the structure, destroying the top half of the message. Officers are aware that the memorial has been repeatedly damaged with graffiti over the last few months and that this is causing significant distress both locally and nationally. The wall has also been targeted numerous times in the past, including in 2008 when the words were altered to "Anghofiwch Dryweryn" (Forget Tryweryn).
Officers are currently at the scene gathering evidence. Inspector Chris Fraser is leading the response and has said: “I understand the strength of feeling about the Cofiwch Dryweryn memorial, and that repeated damage to it has caused significant upset in the community.
I want to give reassurance that we are taking this matter seriously, and will carry out a full investigation in to this mindless damage.
I’d also like to appeal for anyone with information about the criminal damage to come forward and speak to us by calling 101.”
If you are deaf, hard of hearing, or speech impaired text the non-emergency number on 07811 311 908. Quote reference 55 of April 13.
Assembly Member for Ceredigion, Elin Jones, tweeted that the vandalism was "a disgraceful affront to our history," and asked "what is the solution" to protect the wall.
Delyth Jewell AM added " Shameful. There is something distinctly barbaric about the fct that vandls smashed through the word Remember, A nation is made up of its memories, good and bad. Any attempt to erase that is an attack on far more than just a wall of stones."
There have been calls for a permanent Tryweryn monument as well as calls on the Welsh Government to take steps to safeguard the Tryweryn mural.
Cofiwch Dryweryn has been painted on the wall since the early 1960s in a reference to the Welsh village near Bala that was flooded to provide water for Liverpool.
The ‘Cofiwch Dryweryn’ slogan was originally painted by the academic Meic Stephens, who died last year at the age of 79, and Rodric Evans.


Actor Rhys ap Hywel is also known to have re-painted the wall as a schoolboy.
This  year on the  21st October marks the 54th anniversary of the opening of the controversial resevoir in the Tryweryn valley to supply drinking water to the residents of the city of Liverpool, it will be marking a day of grave injustice.
The battle began in 1955 when the City of Liverpool were seeking a new water supply. In the summer of that year Liverpool'sWater Committe announced its intention to drown the valley of Dolaneg, where the shrine of Ann Griffiths, the Welsh saint and hymn writer, stands. This of course, provoked uproar.
Magnaminously Liverpool bowed to Welsh demands and said they would flood the Tryweryn valley instead. This proved to be a carefully planned scheme to hoodwink the Welsh into thinking they were dictating where a resevoir could be built.
In 1956, a private members bill was put before parliament seeking permission. The bill was bought forth by Liverpool City Council, which  allowed them to by-pass the usual criteria for planning permission to the relevant  landowners in the area. It would involve disrupting railway lines and road links, and at the heart of it, the flooding of the village of Capel Celyn. This  was one of the last bastions of Welsh speaking settlements, which had its own school, the site of Wales first Sunday school, post office, a chapel, cemetery  and a number of farms and homesteads, it was  a community in every sense of the word.
Feelings were naturally instantly aroused to fever pitch as the notion of the English drowning out the Welsh, made the symbolism of the creation of the resevoir even more potent. But to members of Liverpool council, the farms that they were drowning were no more than convenient stretches of land along a remote valley floor that could be put to a more convenient and productive use to supply its own citizens with water, but to many was just an arrogant misuse of power, a flooding used primarily as a way of boosting profits.

                                
                                  Capel Celyn 

 It would be fiercely opposed, such was the passion aroused, on November 21, 1956, the people who had supposedly given Liverpool permission - in fact the entire community of Capel Celyn including their children, marched with banners  through the streets of Liverpool  protesting against the plan. It would  also see a number of individuals being compelled to take direct action against the plan, between 1962 and 1963 there were attempts to sabotage the building of the resevoir,  in acts of desperation, since previous passive demonstrations had failed. On Saturday September 22nd 1962, two men were arrested attempting to destroy the site, and then on February 10th 1963 an explosion took place at the site. It  remains to this day, the greatest symbol of the struggle of the Welsh language, a way of life destroyed on the whims of a Conservative Government without consultation by Welsh authorities, its people, or  the support from Welsh M.Ps, who were to wage an 8 year battle against it. Opposition to the scheme received the backing of the vast majority of the Welsh people, with the backing of trade unionists, and cultural and religious groups.
Control over its own water became and has remained an inflammatory issue here in Wales. The political parties were to be united in their opposition to the scheme because it was considered such an affront  to the people of Wales, because such valuable resources were being stolen away from the country. The agricultural value of the land  was rich compared to some land  that could have been considered. A feeling of great sadness because a community was being shattered and families who had lived in the area for generations were being forced to lose their homes.





When  on Thursday, October 21st, 1965, the Lord Mayor of Liverpool  came to open Tryweryn dam ( built at a cost of £20 million) where every house and tree had dissapeared, to be met by a vast crowd of protesters,  in 19 October 2005 Liverpool City Council finally issued an apology, but many thought it was just a worthless political gesture that had arrived far too late.
The tragic lessons of Tryweryn and it's reverberations are still felt to this day. The place names like bells still ring out- Hafod Fadog, Y Ganedd Lyd, Cae Fado, Y Gelli, Pen Y Bryn Mawr, Gwerndelw, Tyncerrig, Maesydail. These bells now ring underwater and are heard by no one. An evocative image, forever stitched in time, which remembers the bells of Cantre'r Gwaelod and the loss associated with inundation. It would also feed the flames of a resurgent nationalism, re-igniting the imagination, peoples identity and defence of the language? Y iath, and would pave the way for devolution, and the strengthening and protection of the Welsh Language alongside the growth of Cymdeithas Y Iaith /The Welsh Language Society. 



There is now a memorial on the side  of the lake and a memorial garden and the grave stones  from Capel Cemetry have been moved here.
At the end of the day it was not just a stretch of land that was flooded against the people of Wales's will, but a whole community of people, a culture and a language because of colonial arrogance and misuse of power. Tryweryn remains as a byword for shame and a grave injustice. Years later it would inspire the Manic Street Preachers to ask " Where are we going"?" in their song " Ready for Drowning, " and the following much anthologised poem by R.S Thomas.
A tragic story that we must continue to share. Reminding us of our history and our land, and how it has been exploited to serve the interests of others.



R.S Thomas -  Resevoirs

There are places in Wales I don't go:
Resevoirs  that are the subconscious
Of a people, troubled far dwon
with gravestones, chapels, villages even:
The serenity of their expression
Revolts me,  it is a pose
for strangers, a watercolour's appeal
To the mass, instead  of the poem's
Harsher conditions. There are the hills
Too; gardens under the scum
Of the forests, and the smashed faces
Of the farms with the stone trickle
Of their tears down the hills' side.

Where can I go,  then, from  the smell
Of decay, from the putrefying of a dead
Nation? I have walked the shore
For an hour and seen the English
Scavenging among the remains
Of our culture, covering the sand
Like the tide and, with the roughness
Of the tide, elbowing our language
Into the grave that we have dug for it.



Campaigners are currently fundraising to rebuild the Cofiwch Dryweryn mural. A GoFundMe page was set up by Elfed Wyn Jones, one of those who had repainted the mural erlier this year with members of Aberystwyth's Cymdeithas y Iaith after it was defaced with the word "Elvis" It had raised almost £2000 in a few hours.
Following yesterday’s vandalism Elfed Wyn Jones said “I’ve had enough of the Welsh Government being supine and unwilling to protect this mural. They jumped at the chance to save that Banksy in Port Talbot."
This Mural is an important landmark in Welsh history which symbolized the hurt and pain that the drowning of the village of Tryweryn caused in the 1960s,” the fundraising page says.
After the mural was desecrated numerous times in the last few years, we want to make sure it’s secure and protected for future generations. “Please donate to our cause!”
The message of 'Cofiwch Dryweryn' is such an important one to Welsh people, and it should never be forgotten, a poignant  symbol of when overwhelming voices were ignored by Westminster.

Huw Jones - Dwr ( inspired by Tryweryn)



Cofiwch Dryweryn/Remember Tryweryn

Friday, 12 April 2019

Julian Assange's arrest an 'unprecedented' threat to press freedom, advocates warn


In  dramatic scenes Australian Wikileaks founder, whistleblower and international journalist Julian Assange  was arrested on Thursday  morning at the Ecuadorian embassy after the Lenin Moreno administration removed his political asylum. Previously Assange had diplomatic asylum and had lived at the embassy since 2012, eventually gaining Ecuadorian citizenship after efforts by Sweden to have him extradited on allegations of sexual assault. Assange has vigorously denied the charges, insisting they were part of a plot by political enemies to silence him. We should however be  forever mindful though of those who have sought some form of justice, when they feel they have been wronged despite the fame or infamy of those that they happen to accuse.
 Assange originally.sought refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London fearing not extradition to Sweden but to the US over his role as founder and public face of Wikileaks. Rafael Correa, Ecuador’s former president, has since called Moreno a “traitor”:
 In the video, Julian Assange can be heard screaming, “The UK must resist this attempt by the Trump administration” as he was hauled into the van.


Shortly after, the U.S. government confirmed that Assange has been charged with computer hacking crimes for trying to illegally access "secret" materials on a U.S. government computer. The charge is officially listed as "conspiracy to commit computer intrusion."
The indictment accuses Assange of trying to access the secret material "with reason to believe that such information so obtained could be used to the injury of the United States and the advantage of any foreign nation."
The charges are aimed at the theft of information rather than the publication of material.
Those materials included thousands of US military and diplomatic files exposing controversial US military actions in Iraq and Afghanistan.Those actions included evidence of torture, a video of a US Army helicopter attack that killed two journalists in Baghdad in 2007, and the large numbers of civilian deaths that resulted from US combat action.
They also  relate to materials released by former Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning, now known as Chelsea Manning, who was convicted in 2013 of leaking classified government and military documents to WikiLeaks. She had worked as an intelligence analyst in Iraq and was arrested in 2010.The US government alleges that Assange tried to provide direct assistance to Manning in her efforts to access some of documents by cracking an encrypted password. Manning had part of the password, but needed help unlocking the rest of it. The charges say she provided copies of the Linux system to Assange, though in the documents made public so far, it does not appear he was successful in decrypting the rest.Manning was jailed again last month for refusing to testify to a grand jury investigating WikiLeaks. U.S. District Judge Claude Hilton ordered Manning to jail for contempt of court in March after a brief hearing in which Manning confirmed she had no intention of testifying. All the while, Assange was secluded in the Ecuador embassy.
Assange is currently being held at London police station where he will await an appearance at the Westminster Magistrates’ Court, on May 2 t prison video link , in relation to the extradition WikiLeaks has consistently highlighted that its founder and former editor Julian Assange has been arbitrarily detained 8+ years without charge by the UK Govt (6+ years within the Ecuador Embassy in London)  and 2 years house arrest.
Members of the legal team for Julian Assange have described the US charges against him as an "unprecedented" threat to press freedom. His lawyer Jennifer Robinson said all journalists and media organisations are put at risk by the development.Another member of Assange's legal team, Barry Pollack, said he believes the US charges could chill press freedom because of the criminalisation of interactions between journalists and whistleblowers. ,
Academics and campaigners  have condemned large chunks of the indictment that they said went head-to-head with basic activities of journalism protected by the first amendment of the US constitution. They said these sections of the charges rang alarm bells that should reverberate around the world.
Yochai Benkler, a Harvard law professor who wrote the first major legal study of the legal implications of prosecuting WikiLeaks, said the charge sheet contained some “very dangerous elements that pose significant risk to national security reporting. Sections of the indictment are vastly overbroad and could have a significant chilling effect – they ought to be rejected.”
Carrie Decell, staff attorney with the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, said the charges “risk having a chill on journalism”. She added that the tone of the indictment and the public release from the Department of Justice that went with it suggested that the US government desired precisely that effect.
“Many of the allegations fall absolutely within the first amendment’s protections of journalistic activity. That’s very troubling to us.”
The arrest marks a dramatic twist in the trajectory of Assange’s career, an arc that has seen him hailed at times as a heroic free speech advocate, a villain to others, who when he decided to uncover the mass secrets of global war crimes, espionage and dirty corporate deals, had to fight his own instinct to keep these secrets unexposed so as to protect himself. He knew that he could spend his entire life in prison, and ironically a  few weeks ago through a leak  people were alerted that the US was gearing up to give Julian  the final blow. A secret plan was hatched  to have Julian extradited - and his struggle terminated.
Now a European country, the United Kingdom, has given in to pressure from Donald Trump, and has handed Julian over. This amounts to nothing less than a coordinated crackdown on a journalist and activist: and this is part of the authoritarian shift that is taking place world-wide – from the US to Turkey, from Hungary to Brazil, and now from Ecuador to the UK.
The brave actions of whistleblowers strengthen transparency and democracy but Julian is now in custody for breaching bail conditions imposed over a warrant that was rescinded. Anyone else would be fined and released. Except that Julian Assange’s persecution is all about challenging our right to know about the crimes governments commit in our name.
Assange has long said Wikileaks is a journalistic endeavor protected  by freedom of the press laws. In 2017, a UK, tribunal recognised Wikileaks as a "media organisation." Wikileaks under his stewardship has become a thorn in the side for governments, particularly Western governments, revealing the ugly truth of crimes committed by US forces in Iraq, the West’s role in the destabilization of Ukraine in 2014, the destruction of Libya  etc.
If Assange is convicted  or extradicted  we will inch slowly away from being an open society, and the only people who will benefit are the ones who really have something to hide, and they are the ones we should be worrying about the most. Numerous people and organisations have since reacted with alarm on news of Assange's arrest.Here are a selection.

NUJ reaction: Julian Assange arrest

Following UK police forcibly removing the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, from the Ecuadorian embassy in London and arresting him, Seamus Dooley, NUJ assistant general secretary, said:
“The NUJ is shocked and concerned by the actions of the authorities today in relation to Julian Assange. His lawyer has confirmed he has been arrested not just for breach of bail conditions but also in relation to a US extradition request. The UK should not be acting on behalf of the Trump administration in this case. The NUJ recognises the inherent link between and importance of leaked confidential documents and journalism reporting in the public interest. It should be remembered that in April 2010 WikiLeaks released Collateral Murder, a video showing a 2007 US Apache helicopter attack upon individuals in Baghdad, more than 23 people were killed including two Reuters journalists. The manner in which Assange is treated will be of great significance to the practice of journalism.”
 
Freedom of the Press Foundation

said: “Whether or not you like Assange, the charge against him is a serious press freedom threat and should be vigorously protested by all those who care about the first amendment.”

And at Parliament Diane Abbott, Shadow Home Secretary spoke eloquently about the importance of whistleblowers, the contributions of WikiLeaks in revealing war crimes and that her side of the House would be very concerned about a US extradition for Julian Assange. Ms Abbott heaped praise on the activist for exposing activities relating to “illegal war, mass murder murder of civilians and corruption on a grand scale”.


And Leader of the Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn backed her words in Parliament with an unequivocal statement of support  calling on the government to oppose the extradition of Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange to the US.
The Labour leader suggested that Assange – who faces charges of conspiring to break into a classified government computer – could be sent to the US for “exposing evidence of atrocities in Iraq and Afghanistan”.



The extradition of Julian Assange to the US for exposing evidence of atrocities in Iraq and Afghanistan should be opposed by the British government.

Whistleblower Edward Snowden also called it “a dark moment for press freedom”.

We should not forget Assange for what WikiLeaks has exposed, and we must oppose the attempts to gag him. In the aftermath of his  arrest,  what happens next could pose a serious threat on journalism and the  future of free speech in general.
Julian Assange, as was Chelsea Manning, as will be Edward Snowden if he dares set foot outside Russia, is being punished for exposing  the thin veil of freedom, human rights  and civil liberties.They lied about Iraq, they lied about Libya, they lied about Syria, and they lie every day about the murky relationships between governments and corporations.

Here is a link to a RT article We are all Julian Assange

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/456239-assange-arrest-police-extradition/

and this from John Pilger The Assange Arrest is a Warning from History

https://defend.wikileaks.org/2019/04/13/the-assange-arrest-is-a-warning-from-history/

and here is Jonathan Cook's take on events

https://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2019-04-11/julian-assange-lies-arrest/

    Please also consider signing the following petitions,

https://i.diem25.org/petitions/1?show=form

https://www.change.org/p/don-t-hand-assange-over-to-the-u-s

https://www.change.org/p/free-julian-assange-before-it-s-too-late-stop-the-extradition

https://www.codepink.org/assange?utm_campaign=assange&utm_medium=email&utm_source=codepink