The WTO's privatisation agenda comes home to roost in one of London's
poorest boroughs, but local voices can be heard calling...
Community activists in Hackney are fighting vested interests and a
deafening press silence in an attempt to stop the debt-ridden and
notoriously corrupt council from destroying the fabric of the borough.
The council is selling off hundreds of properties in response to
government demands to sort out its finances. They range from houses and
flats to community centres, playgrounds and green spaces, nurseries and
shops. A school was also originally included on the list, but was
withdrawn after the council discovered they had no right to sell it.
The properties on sale are expected to be snapped up by developers keen
to cash in on Hackney's ongoing gentrification, while the local community
will lose vital services.
Cuts are also being made in other areas attacks on council workers'
pay and conditions have been intense, with pay cuts of up to £1500 per
year and reductions in overtime, shift allowances and flexibility
payments.
So how do we get out of this mess?
Hackney serves as an experimental laboratory for the New Labour agenda of
privatising local government services. Central government argues that
privatisation is the only solution to notorious corruption and
mismanagement. But privatisation has not served the people of Hackney any
better than bureaucratic rule. We all remember the disastrous
privatisation of Housing Benefits Services under ITNET, which cost the
council taxpayer over £25 million and many private sector residents their
homes.
We have no nostalgia for the bad old days of bureaucratic state control.
What we need, as workers and as local people, is direct control over how
resources are allocated and how services are provided in our community.
It is not about electing Socialists or other representatives to put
pressure on the government to assign more funds. We need to develop new
ways to relate to each other, in order to challenge a capitalist system
that puts the greed of a few above the well-being of our communities and
planet. We need to take direct action on the ground to stop the powerful
enrich themselves at our expense.
Grassroots action against the cuts
The campaign against the cuts and sell-offs is gathering pace. Activists
began by squatting an empty shop and setting up a spoof estate agent with
information on the properties being sold off. This was followed, on 12th
October, by an occupation of the offices of Nelson Bakewell, the real
estate agent dealing with the sales, calling for them to withdraw all
Hackney Council properties from the auction on the 15th.
The auction went ahead, but with paranoid-level security and a lively
demo outside. Inside, the auction was disrupted by local residents. The
disruption focused on the sale of Atherden Road Nursery, which was closed
earlier this year, occupied and re-opened first by protesting parents
(Hackney is currently short of around 1,000 nursery places) and then by
other locals who turnied it into a community centre.
When the bidding finally started, the price was pushed up wildly by two
campaigners bidding against each other. However, once the auctioneers
twigged they nevertheless accepted the highest genuine bid (considerably
higher than the site had been expected to fetch).
Morale down the tube
Meanwhile, council gardeners and estate cleaners objected to the cuts in
wages and jobs by staging a one-day wildcat strike on October 12th,
coinciding with the occupation of Nelson Bakewell estate agents. One
worker said, 'People don't know how much they're earning or how long
they're going to have a job,' hardly surprising that morale's down the
tube, then. The same worker said there was a feeling that Hackney want to
run an experiment in having a council with no in-house services.
In the coming months there will be strikes and actions by Hackney
workers and there will be occupations and protests by Hackney Community
Groups. We need to act together to support each other. The struggle here
in Hackney is one part of a struggle of people and communities around the
world against the privatisation and enclosure of communal resources.
Contact: Hackney not for Sale!
Email: hackneynot4sale@yahoo.com
Tel: 07950 539 254
Hackney Indymedia subsection: http://uk.indymedia.org
- 9 November: Day of local actions against Privatisation whilst the WTO
meets in Qatar.
Join us at the Town Hall Square 12.30pm.
- 13 December: Action at next Nelson Bakewell auction where more Hackney
community buildings will be sold off.
Contact hackneynot4sale@yahoo.com
A Hackney Community Conference is planned for the new year contact
Unison on 020 8985 7134.
Taken in part from www.corporatewatch.org.uk
Refusing collection
Brighton bin workers show the way in the fight against privatised
services.
In the week between the 11th and the 15th of June a workers' struggle of
a kind not experienced in the UK for a long time took place in the refuse
collection depot in Brighton. The bin workers took collective action and
occupied the depot after being sacked for refusing newly imposed work
routines brought in by the private firm taking over the refuse collection
contract in Brighton and Hove. After 4 days in occupation of the depot,
the workers managed to win their struggle and to force the Council to
terminate the private contract, while re-instating all the workers who
had been sacked.
The response of the bin workers shows how it is possible to fight
privatisation and the new 'flexible' low-wage temp work economy that we
are always being told is 'inevitable'. By forming alliances with local
anti-capitalist activists, using direct action, sabotage and not being
afraid to break the law, the bin workers won all their major demands in a
mere 4 days. And they got paid for the time they spent occupying their
own depot!
This piece is based on an article in the forthcoming issue of
Undercurrent magazine. Email: undercurrent00@yahoo.co.uk
pranksters impersonate wto rep
Since November 1999 a pseudo-official World Trade Organisation web site
- www.gatt.org - created by the anonymous masters of the political prank
and parody (r)TMark - has been extraordinarily successful in duping
conference organisers and mainstream media, into inviting fake WTO
spokespeople to address them. Last year a group of slow-thinking
Austrian lawyers stumbled on the gatt.org site and wanted Mike Moore head
of the WTO to come pep up their meeting in Salzburg. "Mike Moore"
declined, but sent two substitutes later revealed to be the "Yes Men"
the impostors' umbrella group. (theyesmen.org) who stood before
the unwitting lawyers to explain a vast but rather shocking program for
the extension of free trade. Earlier this year the Anti-WTO impostors
struck again, delivering a lecture about the wonders of slavery, the
stupidity of Gandhi, and the supremacy of free trade to an enthusiastic
crowd of scientists, engineers, and marketing professionals--all of whom
thought they were watching a slick official WTO representative, at the
"Textiles of the Future" conference in Tampere, Finland.
The 150 experts heard one Hank Hardy Unruh explain that Gandhi's
"self-sufficiency" movement was entirely misguided, because it centred
around protectionism, and that Lincoln, by outlawing slavery, had
criminally interfered with the trade freedom of the South, as well as
with slavery's own freedom to develop naturally. Had slavery never been
abolished, Unruh said, today's much cheaper system of sweatshops would
have eventually replaced it anyhow; following this free-market logic to
the end, Unruh declared the Civil War just a big waste of money.
Finally, to applause from the highly educated audience, Unruh's business
suit was ripped off to reveal a golden leotard with a three-foot-long
phallus. The purpose of the "Management Leisure Suit", he explained, was
to allow managers, no matter where they were, to monitor their distant,
impoverished workforces and to administer shocks to encourage
productivity--assuring that no "Gandhi-type situation" develop again.
"If a group of Ph.D.s cheers at such crudely crazy things, just because
it's the WTO saying them, what else can the WTO get away with?" said
Andy Bichlbaum of the Yes Men, During the protests in Genoa this July ,
a "yes man" popped up again, this time on a major TV network show about
protest's effect on the market. Passing as a representative of the WTO,
this time speaking live from Paris, he spoke about how protesters ideas
are based too much in reality and that the WTO knew Free Trade was
working because they had read the theory, some of which he proudly stated
was written in the 18th Century, he then went on to praise the
privatisation of education which "will naturally eliminate "unproductive"
thinkers from the high-school classroom, a long-term solution to the
problem of protest."
Reeling from the pranksters successes the WTO has now published a
warning on the front page of its official web site "Warning: Fake WTO
web site - http://www.gatt.org - deceitful and a nuisance to serious
users", meanwhile the yes men are laughing all the way to the bank.
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