ssp logo


Recent Posts

We Will Not Be Silenced
Call to lift ban on Gleneagles march
Bid to give all kids free school meals
Free School Meals launch
Why we must have free school meals
Rosie Kane in Cuba


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.

Thursday, June 16, 2005

We Will Not Be Silenced

Rosie Kane and Tariq Ali

Supporters of G8 Alternatives again lobbied the Scottish Parliament demanding the right to demonstrate at Gleneagles when the G8 leaders visit.
Tariq Ali (pictured above with Rosie Kane MSP) was among the speakers at the protest.

Perth and Kinross council, controlled by the Scottish National Party, have refused permission for a rally unless insurance cover of £5 million is provided.

Frances Curran MSP pledged that she, and fellow MSP's, would join other protestors in defying the ban.

BBC Report

Call to lift ban on Gleneagles march

The Guardian:'We regard this as a denial of the basic right of free speech and assembly,' they said in a letter delivered to the home secretary, Charles Clarke, yesterday. 'It is simply unacceptable that no march has been allowed where the G8 is meeting.'
Mr Benn said that a political exclusion zone 'confirms our worst fears about the state of civil liberties in Britain at the moment'

Bid to give all kids free school meals

Evening Times: "A NEW campaign to give free school meals to all Scottish children was launched today.
It is the second time the Scottish Socialist Party has lodged a free school meals bill.
If passed, the bill would require councils to provide every school child with a free school meal which meets strict nutritional standards.
In 2002 party leader Tommy Sheridan submitted a similar bill.
Although it received widespread public support and some cross party backing, the bill was defeated.
The SSP say they decided the time was right to try again after seeing the public reaction to Jamie Oliver's Channel 4 TV series Jamie's School Dinners, which exposed the low nutritional value of many school meals.
MSP Frances Curran lodged the bill today, backed by the Free School Meals Campaign, which includes One Parent Families Scotland, the Scottish Churches Social Inclusion Network and the EIS."

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Free School Meals launch

EducationGuardian: "'The Scottish Socialist party's campaign for free school meals continued today with the launch of a consultation document seeking views from children as well as teachers and health professionals,' Frances Curran MSP, in whose name the bill will be lodged, said today. 'There has been a revolution in people's attitudes to the need to provide our school children with nutritional school meals over the past year.'"

Why we must have free school meals

I WRITE to offer unreserved support for Frances Curran's Free School Meals Bill. Apart from the obvious benefit this would have in helping to combat the increasing problem of obesity in our children (and consequently improving the health of our society for generations to come), this would be one of the most positive and effective steps that could be taken to reduce poverty. The following incident should illustrate the absolute necessity for such a measure, if indeed proof were needed.
SNP Councillor Jim Towers writes in The Scotsman

Monday, June 13, 2005

Rosie Kane in Cuba

Sunday Mail

Rosie Kane

CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR

WELL, I'm back on Terra McFirma after one of the most amazing weeks of my life.

The flights to Cuba took 18 hours. It was the longest journey I've made - but not just in hours and miles.

Socialism, Cuba, and Fidel Castro may not be everyone's cup of tea - but I'm a coffee drinker and savoured every drop and enjoyed the buzz.

Being in the same room and speaking from the same platform as Fidel Castro was bizarre. But it was the other people I met who made the trip so memorable.

The presiding officer from the New South Wales Parliament, a senator from Trinidad and Tobago and a leading American lawyer, were some of the representatives from 63 countries at the event focussing on the US and their war on terror.

But my encounters with the people of Cuba were the ones that mattered.

My first was with a hotel cleaner who greeted me by saying 'Hello comrade'.

I liked that. Right away I could see there was no 'them and us' between guest and the worker - exactly as it should be.

I met many schoolkids. Most of them were around 12 years old and all spoke excellent English.

I have never seen such confident and gentle young people. They have a thirst for knowledge and did not stop asking about Britain They wanted to know my thoughts on war, poverty and justice. I told them one in four children in Scotland is born into poverty. They were stunned and asked how they could help.

After the conference we were taken to the Karl Marx Theatre where we were treated to music and poetry from all over Latin America and Cuba.

It was a great evening in one of the most amazing buildings I have seen.

Cuba is no utopia. Nowhere is. For instance, prostitution in Havana is typical of any big capital city and every bit as degrading and dangerous.

I took a wee stroll through the streets of downtown Havana, found a bar and popped in for a drink.

Over a rum and ice, I got chatting with the locals. They wanted to know about Scotland, the parliament and Rabbie Burns.

We started talking about 'freedom' and the debate gathered a crowd of about 20people - it was amazing. And everyone had something to say.

Some loved Fidel others did not - and were not afraid to say so.

One man loved Cuba and Socialism but was critical of Castro. I asked if he was free to speak up like this and he assured me the days of silence were long gone.

I chirped up: 'Raise your hand if you have been imprisoned for publicly objecting to your government's policy?'

The only hand that went up was my ownI went to the market the next day and a little boy ran up and pointed at my bag. He was trying hard to tell me something.

I assumed he wanted money and handed him some change.

But he handed it right back and pointed at a pen sticking out of my handbag.

'Stylo?' he said. The wee lamb wanted my pen.

Turns out they are in short supply, thanks to the blockade.

It was a lesson. Never assume anything about Cuba without speaking - and listening - to the people