ssp logo


Recent Posts








Site Feed

SSP News Site Feed to view in your newsreader.


Radio SSP

Radio SSP: streaming internet radio



Search the Web
Search SSP News



Photos

justice for gordon gentle demo

Justice for Gordon Gentle Demo 30.10.2004

calton hill rally photos

Rally for an Independent Scottish Republic, Calton Hill 9.10.2004

nursery nurses demonstrate

Nursery Nurses Demonstrate 29.3.04

Anti Bush Demo, Edinburgh 19.09.03

SSP at Paris ESF demo

SSP at European Social Forum, Nov 2003 Paris | European Social Forum Demonstration

Socialism 2003 Pictures

Shut Down Dungavel demo 6.9.03

Anti-War demo at Scottish Parliament, March 6th

Pictures of February 15th Anti-War Demo, Glasgow

Pictures of February 15th Anti-War Demo, Glasgow

Pictures from the European Social Forum, Florence 2002

Anti-War Demo Glasgow 19th October 2002

Pictures of Sept 28th 2002 "Don't Attack Iraq" demo


Archives

SSP News Archives


Links

SSP Website
Scottish Socialist Voice
Scrap Prescription Charges
Scrap the Council Tax
Join the SSP
Local SSP Branches

Powered By Blogger TM

This site aims to comply with web standards and to be accessible for all. Thanks to glish.com. Best viewed in a browser that complies with web standards.

Friday, August 01, 2003

URGENT: Ay Family

Yurdurgal Ay and her children were snatched from their home in Gravesend on Wednesday July 17th 2002 and have been held in Dungavel Removal Centre in Scotland ever since.

The family's lawyer lodged an application seeking asylum on behalf of the children this morning but about 1.30 p.m. today (01/08/03) we heard that the family has already been removed from Dungavel to be taken to Oakington detention centre near Cambridge prior to being flown back to Germany on Tuesday in a 142-seater plane which has already been chartered for that specific purpose.

Quite simply this is an absolute disgrace and signals a change in policy in the Labour government's already inhumane immigration policy. It means that the government is now prepared to deport asylum-seeking children before their application has been properly heard and processed. The four Ay children who are aged between 7 and 14 years of age, have been here for four years, have attended school and made friends here and have been imprisoned in Dungavel for the last 13 months, but no clemency is to be shown. I am therefore asking you to fax an urgent letter of protest today to:

Beverly Hughes MP Minister for Immigration Home Office 50 Queen Anne's Gate LONDON SW1H 9AT Fax: 0207 2733965.

Thank you for your help.

Yours in solidarity

ROSIE KANE MSP
Scottish Parliament
Tel: 0131 348 5632


Inquiry call over NHS hours

Scottish Socialist Party health spokeswoman Carolyn Leckie said she agreed with the principle of midwife-led care.

"However, the introduction of midwife-only units as a replacement for maternity hospitals with all the back-up that they have is inadequate.

"That masks the real agenda, which is to reduce services.

"Instead of taking advantage of a falling birth rate to increase the midwife/client ratio they are going to continue with inadequate staffing levels which are driving midwives to distraction and impacting on the quality of care for women."
BBC News

Findlay tops legal aid table with £267,000

The top earners' table, SLAB's annual report revealed yesterday, again includes Gordon Jackson QC, the defence counsel who, despite his workload as MSP for Glasgow Govan, has retained his sixth position with a figure of £163,000.

Last night, the Scottish Socialist Party described the payments to lawyers and advocates as "obscene", singling out Mr Jackson for criticism.

Colin Fox, list MSP for the Lothians, said: "Perhaps he should think of giving his salary as an MSP to a charity for the people of Govan. He certainly doesn't need it to live and I think he should no longer claim it."
The Herald


MacDonald seeks 'new ideas' after devolution

However, Ms MacDonald claimed the arrival of the devolved parliament and the fact that there were now other parties who supported independence, had changed that.

She said: "It is not just the goalposts which have been moved, the size and shape of the ball has changed, the number of players in the team and even the game itself." The Herald

Festivals reject elitism charge The Scotsman

Thursday, July 31, 2003

Carolyn Leckie MSP

Carolyn Leckie MSP's column in the Scottish Daily Mirror

IT'S TIME FOR US TO BE GROWN UP ABOUT SEX

WE'RE weird, you know that? On the one hand, we won't even discuss sex, especially if there are minors present. On the other, we're obsessed with it. How many front pages have you seen lately, emblazoned with photos of women's bottoms, perched provocatively, flashing a bit of knicker? Sometimes you might even be able to identify the head the bum belongs to. From all corners, we're assaulted by images of women reduced to body parts. Body parts raring to go, just switch on the ignition. Worse than that, in any newsagent you can buy magazines that boast of "barely legal teens" gagging for it. That may sound shocking but these days, equating school uniforms with precocious sex appeal is mainstream stuff. An example? The same papers that went gaga over Russian pop duo TATU, a pair of supposed schoolgirl Lolitas, go ballistic at the idea of open debate on sexuality in schools.

"Women's" magazines are no better. "Be yourself!" they shriek, as long as your real self has the body of a supermodel and the face of a movie star. It's no accident that eating disorders are now appearing in countries where TV has just arrived. Young women grow up checking out their rear view in the mirror and young men grow up thinking sex is something you do to someone. It's not cool to complain. You're supposed to join in and pretend it's all a laugh.

A woman who refuses to engage is written off as a prude, someone scared of sex and hateful of the human body. As a midwife, I've probably seen more vaginas than even the most obsessive porn fan. My beef is not with anatomy. But I've a problem with the world we live in.

In some deprived suburbs of France, gang rape has become a sport called "tournante" - turnaround. Relationships have become so distorted young women are hunted like deer. Women in Dol Dol, Kenya, have found the courage to accuse the British army of years of similar "sport". It's all part of the same continuum. The commodification of women has reaped huge profits for the beauty industry, the media industry and the in-your-face sex industry. But it's a rather less lucrative affair for women.

We still earn only 80 per cent of male earnings. We still dominate in the low-paid, part-time end of the employment spectrum. We still struggle to find a level playing field and to be treated as equals. IT doesn't help that, everywhere you look, you see images of doe-eyed women in various states of undress.

On billboards, in magazines, in adverts on the bus you take into work. It doesn't help that male-dominated business - and that's all business - has an interest in keeping women in their place, in thrall to the power of men. Showing men and women in all their diversity, having equal relationships, would upset the status quo. There's too much money in insecurity. And that's too much power to give up.

We do need a debate about what is erotic and what is abusive. What sort of relationships do we wish for our children? What sort of society do we want to hand to them? One that's tilted in favour of one sex? Or one of equals? It's a debate we desperately need to have, and keep having. Without being constantly red-carded by, on the one hand, the anti-censorship brigade who equate Penthouse with the free press, and on the other, by the Victorian revivalists who'd rather leave sex education till the wedding night. We need to start being grown-up about sex. Or how can we expect our children to be?

SUCH A BAD IDEA

YOUNG people are under siege. As if the government's fixation with academic testing wasn't bad enough, now they're considering "Fat Report Cards". Yup, you heard right. Lining 'em up at school for regular, humiliating weigh-ins. Like teenagers weren't self-conscious enough as it is? Quite how this will address the rising rate of obesity is beyond me. Junk food has been revealed to be addictive. But just along a corridor from one of these proposed weigh-ins, you can bet they'll be serving up chips as normal. Obesity is now costing the NHS in Scotland £150million a year. But the Scottish Executive, it seems, cannot bring itself to spend just £24million more to introduce a measure that wouldn't just take the strain off the NHS, but immeasurably improve the well-being of our children - universal, free, nutritious school meals. Meanwhile, on Planet Holyrood, there are concerns that the seats in the new parliament building's "contemplation chambers" won't be big enough for MSPs' bums. Maybe we should line them up for a weigh-in? It's time the Labour gang stopped bullying our children and did something to help them.

COST OF PERIODS IS A PAIN

EVERY 28 days, Mother Nature gives women something to think about. Something painful, inconvenient, messy... and expensive. In Scotland, we spend £10million a year for the privilege of periods. There are three menstruating women in my house; that's £20 a month out of the household budget. What happens when your purse is empty? How many of us have resorted to rolled up toilet paper when we've been caught short? Sanitary "protection" is a multi-billion pound industry that, like all businesses, is ever on the lookout for new ways to make money. Its advertising preys on women's insecurities, using words like "discretion" and "invisibility". They don't care about the health risks, the environmental impact, or the cost to women struggling to makes ends meet. Towels and tampons should be free. And they should be comfortable, chemical-free, safe for women and safe for the environment.

CENTRE STUPID

IF you see a pink elephant drifting over Glasgow today, do not adjust your set. It's here to protest against BT's decision to shift thousands of call centre jobs to India. Directory Enquiry services have already been "remotely sourced" to Bangalore and New Dehli, and thousands more jobs could follow. The CWU, who represent many of the 10,000 call centre workers in Glasgow alone, have nothing against the people of India. Far from it. This move is bad news for everyone. For the UK, it's tens of thousands of lost jobs. For India, where call centre workers earn around £3,000 a year, it establishes them as a low-wage economy, to be abandoned the minute an even lower-wage economy becomes available. If you've got time in your lunchbreak today, pop down to the BT centre on York Street and give the call centre operators your support.

FAME ACADEMY FOR REAL PEOPLE

FAME Academy is back! I'll be glued to the TV talent show... looking for people who actually have talent. Of course David Sneddon was really discovered at the Edinburgh People's festival last year. I was there. In the front row. Colin Fox MSP is organising an even bigger People's Festival this year. A festival not just for Hooray Henrys or pampered Penelopes. A festival you won't need a bank loan for. A festival of culture for the many, not the few. I'd like to see the whole Edinburgh Festival becoming a Scottish People's Festival - with prices everyone can afford. In the meantime, get your tickets from Colin at the CWU club: 0131 556 8869 or at www.edinburghpeoplesfestival.org.uk

NURSE CASH

DRAWINGS of nursery nurses my children loved adorned my fridge for years. Their investment in our children is immeasurable and the return invaluable. But their pay packets suggest anything but. Despite two years' training and over 10 years' experience, the maximum pay for a nursery nurse in Scotland is £13,800 a year. They're asking for a modest maximum of £18,000. Labour"s Margaret Curran recently laid claim to feminist credentials, promising she'd fight to improve women"s lives and close the pay gap. Well, here's an opportunity for Margaret to put those principles into practice. By not only supporting the nursery nurses' pay claim, but also making it her business they get the wage they more than deserve. Meantime, I hope you'll join me in cheering on the valiant and determined Nursery Nurses. They've been striking since May and are really skint. The proceeds of the column go to them this week. You can help by sending donations to: UNISON Nursery Nurses Campaign c/o Joe Di Paula, Douglas House, 60 Belford Road, Edinburgh. Tel: 077996 42929. Cheques payable to: UNISON Nursery Nurses Campaign.


New move for independence

THE first step towards creating a "national movement" for Scottish independence will be taken at Inverness next month on the fringe of the SNP conference.

Taking as their model the Scottish constitutional convention which led to home rule, the organisers - mainly SNP activists - believe a cross-party coalition could move Scotland on from devolution to independence. Support for an independence coalition has found broad agreement inside the divided SNP, now preparing for a leadership contest amid accusations that it has lost its way.

The idea carries the conditional support of John Swinney, the troubled SNP leader, and the endorsement of Alex Neil, his sternest critic, who sees such a coalition restoring force to the independence cause.

The plan is backed by the pro-independence Scottish Socialist Party and its leader, Tommy Sheridan. John McAllion, Labour's most famous supporter of independence, will address the meeting with Mr Sheridan.

Organisers have also invited the Greens, who say they are open to "a greater level of independence for Scotland", along with other groups and individuals. The move partly reflects the strong support for independence in the second vote at Holyrood in May, where 33.7% of electors backed parties supporting independence, the highest yet in a Scottish election...

Mr Sheridan said: "The SSP will co-operate with all parties to put independence on the political agenda. But, of course, I will be asking for an independent and socialist republic of Scotland and I am not sure how many people in the SNP want that these days."
The Herald

Chisholm urged to intervene in maternity row

CONTROVERSIAL proposals to overhaul maternity services along the Clyde coast have caused a storm of political protest.

Malcolm Chisholm, the health minister, has been urged to step into the row over sweeping changes to maternity care which would affect 800,000 women and children from Oban to Campbeltown...

But Frances Curran, the Scottish Socialist Party MSP for West of Scotland, accused the local health board of refusing to listen to the concerns of local people.

"These are life and death issues and local women and their unborn children will pay the price," she said.
The Scotsman

  Police called after maternity unit is closed

ANGRY protesters jeered health chiefs at a stormy meeting as the axe finally fell on maternity services in Inverclyde. Police were called to the heated Argyll and Clyde NHS board meeting where it was decided to rubber-stamp the closure of the Rankin maternity unit at Inverclyde Royal Hospital in Greenock. The meeting was attended by around 100 members of the public as well as MSPs Jackie Baillie, Duncan McNeil and Frances Curran. Tempers erupted when Argyll and Bute councillor Billy Petrie said he would not support the board's recommendations to centralise consultant-led services at Paisley's Royal Alexandra Hospital. This resulted in a furious outburst from Scottish Socialist Party MSP Ms Curran who interrupted the proceedings to demand that the public have more say in the matter. Eventually police were called to warn her if she did not stop interrupting she would be removed. Evening Times

Wednesday, July 30, 2003

'People's Festival' line-up revealed


Newsnight Scotland

SSP MSP Colin Fox said the aim of the festival was to counter what he called "the silence in the schemes" as the rest of the city comes alive during August.

He said: "Of the Edinburgh Festival's 20,000 shows this year, virtually none takes place in the schemes.

"No leaflets are distributed there. No students unicycle up the Calder Road. No fire-eaters are found in the Fernieside.

"Furthermore, the escalating price of tickets now leaves many people feeling more and more excluded.

"The Edinburgh People's Festival will bring music and entertainment to an audience often ignored."
BBC News Online

Monday, July 28, 2003

It goes to the soul: John Swinney is under threat as he has never been before

The challenger is Dr Bill Wilson, a party convener from Glasgow who switched to the SNP from Labour in the late 1980s. A bright man by all accounts - he used to be employed in Glasgow University's Department of Zoology but is now doing IT work for an insurance company - he hasn't had much success in politics. In the May election he was roundly thumped by Labour, although it was the SSP that did the whipping, stealing nearly 11 per cent of his share. He is a symbol, and a victim, of the SNP's failure in West Central Scotland.

Wilson is also part of a small clique of activists who consider themselves as SNP 'fundamentalists'. They were opposed to the stock transfer of Glasgow council houses, which they believed cost them votes in the election. They are opposed to a referendum on independence. They are opposed to the 'New Labourisation' of the SNP. Their attitude is seen by others to be almost entirely negative.
The Observer