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(en) Britain, THE NOTTINGHAM SPARROW #2 Rebel Nottingham ~ Our Nottingham May 2007
Date
Mon, 21 May 2007 19:31:30 +0300
City invasion by Robocops & Talking CCTV cameras --- Most people know of C3PO,
the Star Wars walking-talking robot with human qualities. Now meet 3 CPOs, some
of the actors posing as Nottingham City Council?s new army of Community
Persecution Officers. CPOs can best be described as ?humans with robot
qualities? because in June they will all be given head-mounted spy cameras to
record their daily interactions with citizens. Some already have them. And
that?s not all! The BBC now tells us that Nottingham has been chosen as the one
of 20 new areas for ?talking CCTV? cameras. Apparently they will shout at
passers by with child-like voices to increase the guilt of ?wrong-doing?.
Judging from what we already know about so-called community protection, these
tickings off from the sky could include anyone handing out anti-war leaflets or
sitting on the council steps. Wouldn?t it be far cheaper to combine the two
schemes and employ Daleks?
HARDsquawk ? The Sparrows? regular rant:
"Take over the Market Square!"
After the grand opening of the Square in April, what better way to take it back
for the people than hold demonstrations against the despicable way the Home
Office is treating refugees from war-torn countries in Africa. The Congolese
community and their supporters have twice used the centre of the Market Square
to shout and sing against deportations. Survivors from the Darfur region also
protested sendings back to Khartoum in Sudan, with welcome support from other
asylum seekers, No Borders & the voluntary Refugee Forum.
Letters to the Sparrows? Nest:
"Councillor?s trickery exposed"
Dear Sparrow, during the Market Square reopening celebration on March 30th, it
was amusing to watch council leader Jon Collins giving out leaflets from his
back pocket wearing a baseball cap - the sort that get you banned from shopping
centres if you are a teenager.
The front of the leaflet reproduced the ?Party on the Square? publicity so I
thought this was an official Council leaflet. But on the other side was party
political propaganda of the Labour party. Collins is standing in the May
elections and obviously couldn?t resist a bit of easy self-promotion . I have
now read on Indymedia that the Electoral Commission are far from happy and also
that a belated memo has now gone out to council staff warning against mixing
City Council and Party business.
Naughty, naughty!
Best wishes ? Laura, NG7
People Power on the Web:
Notts Indymedia: http://notts.indymedia.org.uk
The Sumac Centre: http://www.sumac.org.uk
History: Abolition of Slavery?
Judging by the local ?Abolition 200? commemoration of the Slave Trade Act of
1807, Nottingham seems to be in complete denial of any East Midlands part in
the British Empire?s use of slaves and slave trading. Never mind that slavery
still exists in many countries including some ex-British colonies, the myth
that slavery ended in the early 1800s needs to be exposed.
In the British West Indies slavery was still legal until 1838, and the 1807 Act
did not prohibit trade within the Caribbean colonies, only from Africa. Legal
slavery in Africa continued into the 20th century under Empire rule in Nigeria
and Gambia and until the late 1920s in Sierra Leone, for example. In 1921, in
reply to the governor of Sierra Leone, Winston Churchill argued that abolition
of slavery there would not be beneficial to the country's economy! So much for
the proud idea of British abolition being 200 years old, then. As for local
connections, in Notts the wealthy Mellish family whose name is associated with
Henry Mellish school in Bulwell and were owners of Hodsock Priory (where the
public pay each year to see its snowdrop garden) is an easy example of a local
connection with plantation slavery that could be talked about publicly, but isn?t.
Plus, in the 1830s, British slave owners (who even included some
abolitionists!) many who never even lived in the Caribbean, were compensated
for each slave they freed to the total tune of 20 million pounds. This money
they then used to build the cotton mills, plus gasworks for night working,
canals and railways to move the cotton away from the ports, and banks they ran
to invest in these ventures. Nottingham?s cotton spinning mills on the River
Leen are an example of these. They made life a misery for thousands of British
working class women, children and men after the official end of the Trade,
still using slave-grown cotton from America! Back-breaking and fatal indentured
labour continued in the British Caribbean plantations.
We should know by now that a government Act does not a reality make. Plus, a
year of Make Poverty History did little to dent the continuing will of business
owners and investors to fleece and exploit the poor of the ?Third World? for
profit, whilst people work and live in terrible conditions, children go without
shoes and clothes, and many people starve or are malnourished, and die of
curable diseases.
Environment: Squat the lot
Last month, a group of Notts activists held ?Spring Into Action?, a week of
activities to highlight the damage capitalism is doing to the environment.
Spring Into Action supporters occupied an empty factory building in Radford to
use as Headquarters for the week. Volunteers made the place safe and habitable
for visitors without mains electricity and running water using
environmentally-friendly compost toilets and batteries charged using bicycles!
Squatting unused buildings is often given a bad name in the press but it?s
perfectly legal and should be encouraged. While many people are homeless, in
the East Midlands alone there are nearly 60,000 empty homes, 16,500 of which
are in Nottinghamshire and a third of those are in the City of Nottingham.
These figures do not even include all the other empty commercial buildings that
could be taken over for community use. Many are listed buildings being left to
rot by their owners.
More info: http://www.eastsideclimateaction.org.uk
Work: Librarians & public library access under fire
At Nottingham University, library staff have recently had to reapply for their
employment contracts, which will go hand-in-hand with job losses for some. Part
of the reason is the introduction of self check-in and check-out scanners for
books that work with the university ID card, issued to students and academics
with a barcode for library use. Library staff are not the only ones to suffer
from this. You now need to have a card to enter the library itself. Previously
anyone, public or non-academic staff could walk in and use the facilities. Not
any more - another example of ID cards being used to deny people access to
things that used to be free.
The Nottingham Sparrow is produced by members of a local group of the Anarchist
Federation.
We are involved in a variety of political activities.
Do write to us, including letters for the Sparrows? Nest, at:
BOX AF c/o The Sumac Centre, 245 Gladstone Street, Nottingham, NG7 6HX
Find us on the web: http://www.afed.org.uk/nottingham
PDF available for download (Please recycle & copy on recycled paper, if you can!)
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