Ireland GAME workers fight back

After the recent announcement that GAME and Gamestation stores were to shut with the loss of thousands of jobs, workers in Ireland have followed the example of La Senza workers and occupied their store to demand their rights.

The protest is being made because GAME and PriceWaterhouseCoopers, the firm in charge of closing the company, have told former workers to make a claim to the Irish state for statutory redundancy pay.

This process can take more than a year and the employees have not been offered any support.

The workers believe, rightly, that GAME and PwC are making the former employees a burden on the Irish state and taxpayer, walking away from their responsibilities. PwC’s job is to raid the company’s to strip as much cash and assets as possible – with the workers at the bottom of the queue.

The occupation has already received loads of support and media coverage. We are asking everyone to visit their facebook page, and drop a message of support. If you are in the area, then why not make a visit which will be greatly appreciated.

You can read the occupiers’ official statement here

Join the support page on facebook here

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La Senza workers occupy store

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Primark workers set for strike action

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Workers take control of Greek hospital

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Brum Uni Students ‘I am Spartacus’ moment

Students involved in the occupation of Birmingham University have come out in support of one of their number, singled out for repression by the Tory President of his own Students’ Union.

Mark Harrop, president of Birmingham Uni Guild of Students collaborated with management to victimise students and shut down a peaceful occupation against the trebling of tuition fees.

Because of this traitor’s actions, the student faces a disciplinary hearing with the threat over expulsion held over him.

In response, his fellow occupiers have signed a letter to the university, challenging uni bosses to hold all those involved equally responsible:

“We would like to establish for the record that we also attended the occupation; we took the same actions as did Simon Furse. If you want to discipline him you must discipline us as well.”

Edd Bauer, VP Education at Birmingham Guild of Students, suspended last year by Harrop for standing alongside the students he represents, said:

“I have nothing but very great respect for the students who are willing to run the same risk of expulsion as Simon and have in solidarity essentially hung a sign saying “come and get me then you bastard’s” around their necks”

This is an excellent example of solidarity in the face of a crackdown on the right to protest and assembly on university campuses. A victory at Birmingham would strike a blow against all the other Vice-Chancellors waiting in the wings to apply the ‘Birmingham Policy’ against their own students.

The victory at Sussex Uni in March 2010, where 6 students overturned their suspensions for involvement in a campus protest is a precedent that shows that victory is possible. But to win, everyone with an interest in defending students’ freedom of expression needs to get behind the Birmingham students who are courageously taking a stand.

The full text of the letter can be read here.

 

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How we can stop Union leaders selling us out

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Stunning victory for the ‘Sussex Six’

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Unifinished Business – the student movement 1 year on

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Balfour Beatty reaps the rewards of zionist occupation

Balfour Beatty are proud to be operating in over 80 different countries around the world. But they really shouldn’t be, given the way they’ve acted in a lot of them.

In 2004-2009 a company called Parsons Brinckerhof was hired by the Israeli government to oversee the construction of a railway line from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem for Israel Railways. The route they decided that the line should take crossed the ‘green line’ marking the legal border between Israel and Palestine twice into territories stolen from the Palestinian people and illegally occupied by Israel. Of course states and corporations alike only take notice of the ‘law’ when it hits them in the pocket.

In 2009 Balfour decided that this criminal corporation would be a welcome addition to its multinational operations and bought it out, meaning that the gains from this illegal project were funnelled into the parent company.

Not content with making enough money through dodgy deals, cutting corners and corruption, bosses at Balfour clearly think it’s okay to break international law and make money off one of the world’s biggest ever land-grabs.

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UWE Students slam Balfour Beatty at AGM

Balfour Beatty – corporate killers

Can the United Nations liberate Palestine?

Riding the surge of popular optimism in the wake of the Arab Spring, Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority launched a bid for recognition of Palestinian statehood at the United Nations. In this article Kady Tait examines why the UN’s failure to achieve a lasting settlement in Palestine is rooted in its role as a vehicle to maintain the status quo in favour of the imperialist powers who founded it.

With the bid announced in late September, Abbas is playing a dangerous game. On the one hand, his mission at the UN attempts to pre-empt an eruption of the mass movements in neighbouring Egypt  and Syria in his own country, on the other it threatens to expose the futility of sustaining illusions that the United Nations can play a neutral, useful, or progressive role in the struggle for palestinian liberation.

The reactions from the US and Israel were predictable: the US declared that it would veto any vote on the Security Council, while Israel condemned the move, saying it undermined the ‘peace process’. Not a trace of irony from Obama who has attempted to cast himself as a friend of the Arab people, nor from Israeli president Binyamin Netanyahu whose attitude to the ‘peace process’ can be summed up by the 1500 deaths during the 2009 bombardment of the Gaza strip.

Abbas knows that any vote in the Security Council will be sunk by the US, so he has placed his hopes in the UN General Assembly, which has long been supportive of the Palestinians’ struggle. Indeed, countries which have declared their support for the statehood bid represent more than 80% of the world’s population. Since 1948, the General Assembly has regularly passed resolutions condemning Israel’s policy of colonisation, war and ethnic cleansing as illegal under international law.

Why is it then, that the UN General Assembly is incapable of acting upon such an overwhelming majority in favour of the Palestinians’ right to national determination, or to police Israel’s repeated violations of the UN’s mandates, resolutions and international ‘laws’?

Imperialism vs Semi colonies

Since its inception, the United Nations has been dominated by the ‘Great Powers’ of the world – the USA, France, Britain, Russia, and China. And like its predecessor, the League of Nations, it has been handicapped and paralysed by these nations’ antagonistic competition over political and military influence on the world stage.

These 5 nations are the permanent members of the UN ‘Security Council’ – the body which relegates the General Assembly to the status of talking-shop. That the UN does nothing without the agreement of the Security Council demonstrates that the true purpose of the UN is not to promote ‘world peace’ or to achieve the ‘equality of nations’. Instead it’s purpose is much more prosaic. It serves to act as a body by which the powerful imperialist nations can resolve their differences peacefully, by engaging in a game of chess whereby the 100+ semi-colonial countries who sit in the General Assembly are used as pawns, reduced to aligning themselves with one or other imperial power or bloc in the hope of retaining the crumbs from the imperialists’ table.

Imperialism is what the russian revolutionary Lenin described as the ‘highest stage of capitalism’ where financial capital concentrated in advanced nations expands across the world using its financial might to overwhelm the economies of smaller nations and subjugate them to the politics of the imperialist country. An example of this is the IMF, a financial vehicle funded in the main by the principal imperial powers. It sets conditions for lending money to poor countries, forcing them to open up their economies to the big capitalist corporations who strip the assets out of these countries in a constant expansion across the globe searching for profitable sources of raw materials and labour.

Where countries refuse to open up their economies, the power of finance capital is backed up by the armed power of the state they are based in. In this way the world is divided into imperial countries, the centres of finance capital based in the City of London and Wall Street, and the ‘semi-colonial’ countries who are subordinated politically by their economic dependence on the advanced capitalist states. The most obvious and destructive expression of this system is the African debt crisis, where African nations are prevented by the threat of economic and military sanctions from escaping the debt trap which impoverishes their people by transferring their natural wealth into the coffers of Western ‘multinational’ banks and corporations.

The division of the world into imperial powers and semi-colonies ensures the unequal distribution of the world’s resources under capitalism. While semi-colonial countries make up more than 80% of the world’s population, and are the source of the majority of the world’s natural resources, their people own much less than half of the world’s wealth.

The structure of the United Nations is arranged so that the imperial powers have a veto over any decisions which oppose their interests. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the hegemony of the USA in world affairs has been unchallenged. This is why it was able to present its invasion of Iraq as a fait accompli and why the UN is unable to enforce its mandates or international laws without the co-operation of the United States.

Why is Palestine important?

The 60-year conflict between Palestine and Israel has been a low-intensity conflict characterised by occasional short-lived outbreaks of open fighting, 1948, 1967, 1988-92, 2001, 2005, 2009. While thousands have died and the situation of millions of refugees has remained appalling, it is worth asking why it is this struggle rather than, say, the devastating war in Congo which has killed over 5 million people in the last 10 years, or the ‘War on Drugs’ which has ravaged the entire South American continent and claims tens of thousands of lives in Mexico every year, which is the subject of a huge international solidarity movement.

The Palestine-Israel conflict has remained a central feature of world politics, because it is a proxy war fought between the dominant forces in global politics since the end of the Second World War – US imperialism attempting to expand its influence in key strategic areas, jostling with French, Russian and Chinese interests in the region. While the wars which blight the African continent are the result of imperialist finance-capital’s ability to practice super-exploitation on a massive scale while the world’s media turns a blind eye, the conflict in Palestine encapsulates imperialism’s character as a union of finance, militarism and geo-politics operating in a region which will make and break imperial powers in the future decades of the 21st century.

This is why the fall of US backed dictators such as Mubarak in Egypt is an historic opportunity – and why we must fight for a genuine democratic revolution to topple Assad in Syria – not an imperialist puppet government like the NTC in Libya but a real people’s government founded on councils of the ordinary workers and youth

Only the working class, poor farmers, unemployed and youth,  have an interest in opposing imperialism in all its forms – whether it is the zionist puppet of US interests or the brutal dictators propped up for decades by western cash and military equipment.

This is why we support the revolutionary overthrow of Gaddaffi, but reject the ex-Gadaffi imperialist puppets in the NTC, and oppose any further NATO or UN interventions in the ongoing struggles in the Arab world.

Arab Spring refreshes resistance

The revolutions and revolts which became known as the Arab Spring, rocked the Middle East status quo, where US-backed dictators in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Libya, Egypt and Tunisia ruled their people with an iron fist for decades. The overthrow of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt was a defining moment in this struggle, because Egypt had long played a crucial role in refusing to challenge Israel’s occupation of Palestine. With his downfall, the Rafah border crossing into Gaza was opened, permitting a flood of supplies and ideas into the territory.

Yet in Gaza, Hamas acted swiftly to disperse pro-democracy demonstrations inspired by the Arab Spring, while Fatah did the same in the West Bank.

Nevertheless, the continuing resistance to the military junta in Egypt shows the way forward. Mubarak was brought down by a General Strike of Egyptian workers, organised through new Trade Unions and popular committees to organise defence in their communities. The continuing struggles of the Egyptian working class shows the way forward for Palestine. Mass strikes and democratic organisation can bridge the sectarian divide in Palestinian politics. The common struggle of workers and youth in Palestine can build links with those in the Israeli anti-austerity movement who also oppose the occupation.

A mass movement of resistance to Israeli occupation would no doubt see both Hamas and Fatah move to try and co-opt and contain it, attempting to pass themselves off as its natural leaders. But such a move is fraught with dangers and threats of new political organisations emerging to lead the Palestinian national resistance struggle. These new organisations can apply the lessons of the ongoing Egyptian revolution and have the potential to go far beyond the failed strategy of negotiation, compromise and guerilla warfare of Hamas and Fatah.

Why we support the vote

Abbas at the UN vote

The vote demonstrates one important principle: should the international community recognise a Palestinian state? The answer is yes. To oppose it would mean to line up, though for different reasons, with the US and Israel in opposing Palestinian national rights.

Any recognition at the UN must be seen in perspective. It will not liberate the Palestinians and it will not end the conflict. It will, however, strengthen the Palestinians’ position internationally, which exactly is why Israel is so opposed to it. But the wider goal must remain a secular, democratic and bi-national state for both peoples.

The 5.84 million Jews in Israel today are now close to being outnumbered by a growing Palestinian Arab population, comprising both those living as a minority in pre-1967 Israel and those in the post-1967 Occupied Territories. There are millions more in exile waiting for the right to return to their historic homeland.

Some Palestinians are opposed to the proposal because they see it as strengthening the corrupt Palestinian Authority and a betrayal of the refugees by accepting the 1967 borders.

Whilst these concerns are important, what is of over-riding importance is that any short term strengthening of the Palestinians’ position is not counter-opposed to the long term goal of a one state solution for Arabs and Israelis. Recognition of Palestine, even along the 1967 borders, would be a step forward, as part of a wider struggle to liberate all Palestinians.

Ultimately what is needed is a mass pro-Palestine liberation, pro-democracy and anti-imperialist movement on the streets right across the Middle East, which would weaken the Zionists’ position and strengthen the Arab revolution as a whole.

Internationally, we must win the labour movement – the trade unions, co-operatives, working class organisations – worldwide to support the Palestinian struggle and boycott and isolate the Zionist state.

We see the Arab spring as opening up historic opportunities to advance the struggle for a secular, democratic state with equal rights for men, women, Muslims, Jews and Christians in Palestine. The vote at the UN is a step towards greater recognition of the struggle, but ultimately we cannot let the imperialists in the UN be the ones to determine who is and who is not worthy of national rights. That question, and the democratic workers’ government that ensures it can only be answered by the workers themselves, in a political, military and above all international struggle against racism, dictatorship and imperialism.

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N30: strike out on the road to resistance

On the 30th of November at least 3 million workers will be striking across the country in the biggest industrial action since 1979.

It will also be the first national strike within Scottish schools in 25 years, as members of the country’s biggest teaching union, the Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS), have voted more than four to one in favour of industrial action.

While if the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) votes in favour when the ballot results are announced on 9th of November, it will be the first strike in its 114-year history.

 Predictably, the government waited until the ballot results were out before making an ‘improved’ offer – actually just a craven attempt to split workers down the middle, by offering to ‘let’ those within 10 years of retirement keep their pension (which they’ve paid for anyway), and let the rest be damned.

The Labour government pulled off the same trick in 2007 in the Civil Service, succeeding (with the able assistance of the PCS Union bureaucrats) in shafting new (younger) workers, and allowing existing workers to keep their pension deal. This was also the pension reform which was heralded as ensuring that public-sector pensions remained viable and properly financed for decades to come.

Nevertheless, Union leaders say the strikes are still going ahead. It would be pretty hard for them to say otherwise considering the huge majorities in favour of action. It’s clearly a result of the pressure building up from millions of disaffected members who have waited since 2008 for their union leaders to do something, while they have seen hundreds of thousands of colleagues sacked, their wages frozen and eaten up by inflation, and made to work harder, and longer. Yet wage freezes, VAT hikes and mass layoffs were just the opening skirmishes in the ruling class’s battle to make working people, youth and the unemployed pay for a crisis we didn’t create.

Lies, damn lies and statistics

The government continues to feed the right-wing media with statistics about how ‘unaffordable’ public-sector pensions are. The reality is that each year, pension payments amount to just 2% of GDP – much less than is spent on the Army, nuclear weapons, or bailing out banks.

The majority of public-sector workers have a pension of less than £5000 a year – hardly “gold-plated”. The average pension for Local Government is around £4000 a year, and just £2000 for women. Half of women NHS workers currently claim a pension of less than £3,500 a year.

So despite what millionaire government ministers (who wouldn’t know a PAYE form if it strung them up from a lamp-post) would have you think, public sector workers are simply fighting to keep the pensions which they’ve paid for, not the £trillion subsidies which a few thousand City bankers are busily investing in luxury yachts and £1000 cocktails.

The government wants to increase the contributions that teachers, lecturers, nurses and other public sector workers have to make to their pensions, while simultaneously reducing the amount they receive on retirement. This is not amount ‘everyone contributing their bit’, but is just another way for the millionaire coalition to rob ordinary working people of their wages, which will be streamed directly into the banks’ coffers to be gambled away on the London Stock Exchange.

The government justifies its attack on the public sector by saying that we need to reduce the national debt – however it wasn’t public sector workers that got us into this mess. It was the capitalist system and the bankers. Yet the rich have seen their wealth increase by 50% in the last year alone.

These super-rich capitalists are the ones with the real gold-plated pensions. The TUC’s 2008 Pension Watch study found that 346 directors from the UK’s top 102 businesses are set to rake in a yearly pension of more than £200,000. The most senior executives at these firms are sitting on pension funds worth £5.2million – giving them a yearly pension of £333,400. This is where the discrepancy between public and private sector pensions actually comes from. The bosses are robbing their own workers to feather their pension nests, while the government wants to convince us that the solution is to drag public-sector workers’ pensions down to the disgraceful level of the private sector!

Beyond the hype

The attacks on pensions have been accompanied by a vicious media campaign condemning public-sector workers as a lazy, incompetent burden on our society – try telling that to the millions of nurses, street cleaners and teachers who are determined to defend their rights, and fight back against the destruction of the welfare state.

The Tories dream of a society where public services are provided by private owners. There are countless examples of the shit services provided by Serco, Capitas and others as to why putting profit before people can only benefit the tiny minority of bosses and bankers who can grease palms in high places.

The strikes on 30 November have been a long time coming. It’s now crucial to organise ordinary trade union members to ensure that their leaders don’t cut a last-minute deal with the government – after all it won’t be £100k/year Union leaders who suffer as a result of the Con-Dems’ pension robbery.

And, if the leaders of Unite and Unison manage to come to an agreement with the government – as they are desperate to do – then those unions (RMT, FBU, CWU) not striking on November 30 will be next. These are some of the strongest, most militant bastions of trade unionism in the country. But if we are divided and they are left to fight alone, then they will certainly not be able to hold out indefinitely.

If they are beaten, then the 70% of non-unionised workers will face a savage onslaught from bosses who are determined to reverse decades of progress in workplace rights, pay and conditions. The attack on pensions is just the beginning. Trade Unions have accommodated to the bosses in the past, and their leaders will try to do so in the future.

It is up to us to ensure that November 30 marks the start of a radical change. The start of a genuine national movement of resistance, co-ordinated at every level – from the classroom to county, from young agency temps to trade union militants.

REVOLUTION calls on young students, workers and unemployed to take a stand and hit the streets on November 30. Whatever the next few weeks hold, the momentum of resistance must be consolidated into a national resistance that can bring down the Con-Dem government and set out the route to a radical alternative based on common ownership, democracy and the collective strength of the 99% united against exploitation, war and capitalism.

  • Education strike: school, college and university students to join picket lines and mass demonstrations on November 30th. For a united campaign to fight education cuts.
  • We won’t pay for their crisis! Renounce the debt – for a 99% tax on the 1% to make the bankers pay for their own crisis, and fund jobs, education and public services.

Read more:

Call for a General Strike

Students build resistance in run-up to strikes

Largest public-sector union votes overwhelmingly for strike action

Lobby your Student Union to support strike on N30

Strikes, occupations and the rising of the enraged

BRITAIN’S trade unions have called for a day of coordinated strike action on 30 November over the increasing pensions row in the public sector.  Unison, Unite, the GMB, the TUC and the Fire Brigades Union were among those who gave notice of ballots for a day of industrial action. It is estimated that up to 3 million public sector workers, with at least 14 unions committing to strikes, will engage in some form of industrial action over government pension reforms. The strike follows the coalition’s ever deepening attacks on the public sector, universal education and welfare system.

For many of us witnessing these current events and hearing about them on the news, a general strike may be rather an abstract or lost concept. Is it still an appropriate action to take? Where does it take us? Why is one necessary?

Many have asked what power do ordinary people have in the face of the government and the police apparatus? Indeed we witnessed the brutal repression of those protesting for their right to free education during the student movement of 2010. Scenes of police kettles and the subsequent horse charges into defenseless students are proof of this.

The revival of social movements as the agent of change certainly looks like a very convincing argument as these events unfold. We are told that class politics and ideologies centred around industrial action were dead, assigned to the pages of history. Yet numbers alone won’t be enough to shake the foundations of the system we live in. Demonstrations and mass direct action can only do so much, as the antiwar movement of 2003 has taught us. We have to ask ourselves what we can do to actually stop the cuts and save the NHS, pensions, benefits and education. In sum, how to bring down the gvernment to save our welfare state.

The Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky said that a general strike always brings to the surface a question of the relationship of power.

The current coalition, through its ‘big society’ and ‘fairness’ can be seen mimicking the attacks of Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. What we are witnessing is the classic contradiction first argued by Karl Marx when he wrote about the relationship of capital to labour. In order for capitalism to survive as a system it must create an ideal economic market of exploitation. In times of crises it must burn out and retransform itself, no matter the human cost.

Thatcher focused on such national industries as the mines, the docks, the print. This time round, Cameron and Osborne place their beady little eyes upon the NHS, what remains of our free universal education and of course the welfare system at large.

They assume that society is best organized around the individual. Thatcher famously said: ‘there is no society, there is but the individual’. Those who see past these sickening views will understand why we must organize and fight.

In order to really defeat these cuts, we must draw our attention to the economic errors of the current system, yet make our battle political. This is what a general strike is all about. A general strike which stops production and services, will empower the working class and the social movement.

Despite the great potential for change, we should not let ourselves be fooled into thinking that a mass strike is the same as a general one. A strike in the public sector does not necessarily lead to a cross-sector general strike. A general strike will be opposed until pressure from below becomes too great to resist. Organizations of the rank and file based in and around the workplace, mass meetings, strike committees and local councils of action must be set up.

November 30 is our chance to award this movement a revolutionary character, a chance to build a new anti-capitalist party and a new society.

We need a general strike, launched from below and maintained from below by all those willing to fight for a new future.

Read more:

Call for a General Strike

#Occupy resists police brutality

N30: strike out on the road to resistance

Birmingham students occupy!

Dozens of students have occupied the Corporate Conference Centre at Birmingham University. The occupation is part of a series of actions across the country in the run-up to the national demonstration on 9th November.

More info:

Birmingham Occupation Blog

Birmingham and St Andrews occupied – NCAFC

Fight for clear objectives on 9 November

Lobby your  SU to support 30 November strike

Hull Uni Re-Occupied

At around 6pm yesterday students from the University of Hull once again occupied the Staff House, housing the Vice-Chancellor’s office and used to host commercial events on campus. The occupiers were promptly locked in by university security, denying them access to water and toilets. This situation quickly changed when management realised the implications of effectively holding the occupiers hostage.
The university was initially occupied on the 13th December last year for five days before the occupiers left, vowing that it was merely a hiatus and that the struggle would continue. The fact that the occupation has been restarted shows that despite the apparent calm in the student movement, there remains a willingness to take direct action to strengthen anti-cuts campaigns. With Glasgow Uni also in occupation, we can see that university managements should be expecting a ‘hot summer’, as students gear up to use campuses as a base to fight cuts to education and local services.
With local demonstrations planned across the region as Councils announce budget cuts in the next few weeks, students are increasingly drawing the conclusion that only united action alongside public sector workers can bring about an effective resistance to the Coalition’s austerity plans. Now more than ever, co-ordination of workers and students is vital to building the unity in action that can make councils think hard about where they drop the axe, and show Uni bosses that Education isn’t for sale.
More news as it comes in.

Camden School occupiers speak out

Sixth-form students at the Camden School for Girls have taken over a room to protest against fees and cuts. Fatima, a member of REVOLUTION spoke to us from the 24-hour teach-in.

Fatima told us that 150 students were involved in the original protest, but when half the group went to fetch supplies the school locked the gates and would not let students back in. “We were quite angry about it”, said Fatima. “We’re staying the night, and we’re not budging at all!”

“I think it’s really important that this is happening in sixth forms. University students are protesting against fees, but we’ll be the people who are affected first.”

The teach-in has invited staff and students to address the students. Supportive MPs have been invited too, but the school has refused access to them and the media.

REVOLUTION members at the UCL occupation have been supporting the Camden students. Jo from the UCL REVOLUTION society threw food over the gates for the Camden School students.  Fatima said students from the teach-in would be meeting the UCL occupiers for tomorrow’s march on Parliament. “The UCL students have supported us, and we want to join in with them.”

The school have already caved into the demands of the teach-in, but Fatima replied “we said we’d protest for 24 hours, and that’s what we’re going to do.”

If the vote goes through, “It’s only the beginning. We have to carry on protesting and campaigning. Just because they [Parliament] vote for something, it doesn’t make it final. Look what happened to the Poll tax – people kept on fighting.”

The school has agreed to the demands:

  • That the school make a public statement condeming the increase in fees and the abolishment of EMA.
  • That the school does not penalise anyone for taking part in the sit in
  • That the school continues to support students in protests.

London South Bank students occupy!

At 11.15am Wednesday morning furious LSBU students stormed the Learning Resource Building, jumping the security gates and surging up the stairs, to occupy the Language Centre.

The day started at 10.30am with a large, vocal group of students who assembled – despite the intimidating presence of the police – in Keyworth Street to voice their anger at the unjust rise in tuition fees, the massive cuts at the university and the wider attacks which will effect the poorest in society. LSBU REVOLUTION maintained a highly visible presence with a vibrant, loud and colourful contingent.

At 11.10am the march set off for central London but upon reaching the entrance to the resource centre changed direction rushing the doors, jumping the security stiles to occupy first the ground floor lobby and then the second floor Language Centre.

The events bear particular significance for two reasons. Firstly the Language Centre has been the source of much anger after university management decided to close it down without any consultation with the students, stealing a valuable source of cultural, educational and personal enrichment from a largely working class student body. The occupiers are now demanding, amongst other demands, that it be re-opened.

Secondly it is the first time that LSBU has ever gone into occupation indicating that an important change has occurred in the mood of the national student body. Even in universities traditionally seen as lacking a radical tradition such as Southbank, students are turning out to defend their right to a decent education.

‘New universities’ such as LSBU will suffer worst from the government’s cuts, as they rely more heavily on teaching grants and have an intake of more working class students.

The anger felt towards management and the government have grown and already talk has emerged at the regular occupation Organisating meetings of setting up an LSBU Student Assembly to democratically discuss and determine the tactics that must be taken for the movement to succeed.

Spirits are high and many speak of staying ‘as long as it takes’ – there is a real will to fight and a belief that we can win.

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