Category Archives: Events

March 20, 2021: UN Anti Racism Day: #WORLDAGAINSTRACISM Day of Action

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER ON EVENTBRITE

#WorldAgainstRacism

Fighting Racism, Islamophobia, Antisemitism & Fascism

Organised by Stand Up To Racism & The TUC

1PM: #TakeTheKnee wherever you are

1-2PM: Live link with actions around the world

5PM: Major Online Rally

Register for Zoom link & further details

BLACK LIVES MATTER

NO TO RACISM, ISLAMOPHOBIA, ANTISEMITISM, SINOPHOBIA, ANTI-ROMA RACISM & FASCISM

REFUGEES WELCOME, DEFEND MIGRANT RIGHTS

On March 20, 2021, UN Anti-Racism Day, events will take place in cities, communities and online events around the world.

In Britain, people will be taking the knee across the country at 1PM, with a live link-up to events taking place around the world between 1-2PM

A national online rally will take place at 5PM with speakers representing the broad alliance of communities and organisations that make up the anti-racist movement in Britain and around the world.

The growth of the Black Lives Matter movement has shone a fresh spotlight on the horrific levels of racism in Britain, the US and internationally, and played a major role in the defeat of Donald Trump, the world’s number one racist. This growing, powerful force has the potential to strike serious blows against racism, Islamophobia and antisemitism.

Structural racism & health inequalities mean the coronavirus epidemic is continuing to disproportionately impact BAME communities. The British Government is attacking and vilifying refugees and migrants to distract from its failings. It is also attempting to blame Muslim and other communities for spreading the virus, further fanning the flames of racism and putting even more lives in danger.

On March 20 2021 we will come together united against racism, Islamophobia, antisemitism and fascism. We’ll stand in solidarity with refugees and migrants to send a powerful message to those in power that racism will be defeated.

Things you can do to support UN Anti-Racism Day:

  1. Add our custom made Facebook filter to your profile picture to build awareness for UN Anti Racism Day – web.facebook.com/profilepicframes/?selected_overlay_id=3845720698813328
  2. Download our poster, take a picture with it and tag us @Antiracismday‘ on Twitter using the hashtag #NoRacismNoFascism & #WorldAgainstRacism, ‘@Stand Up To Racism’ on Facebook, and ‘@Standuptoracismuk’ on Instagram.
  3. Invite your family and friends to our international rally on Saturday 20 March 5pm GMT: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/worldagainstracism-rally-day-of-action-for-un-anti-racism-day-tickets-144644055263

If you would like support and ideas, please email us at info@standuptoracism.org.uk

RESOURCES

CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE NATIONAL FACEBOOK EVENT, and click here to go to the Stand Up to Racism events page

Click here to see international press release with list of countries and campaigns taking part globally on 20 March

Click here to download the ‘selfie poster’

Click here for a wide selection of placards (downloadable PDFs)

Click here to view and download the TUC & SUTR joint letter calling for support for UN Anti Racism Day

Click here to view and download the model motion to raise support for UN Anti Racism Day

Click here for details and to book for the Stand Up To Racism & TUC trade union conference (online) on Saturday 27 February

Download PDF A7 sticker here
Download PDF A3 poster here

Article – A crucial moment for the global anti-racist movement to come together

FROM COVID19 TO BLACK LIVES MATTER
– CONFRONTING TRUMP & JOHNSON’S RACIST OFFENSIVE

Stand Up To Racism International Conference 2020

Saturday 17 & Sunday 18 October

WORKSHOPS (Via Zoom Webinar – REGISTER HERE for link) – registration closes 1pm Saturday 17 October

Saturday 17 October 3pm to 4.15pm

  • Economic Crisis, Disproportionate BAME Deaths: Why we need Zero Covid
  • Scrap section 60 – End Stop & search BLM
  • Decolonise now – confronting Britain’s colonial legacy 
  • Trump, Salvini & Le Pen – Unite Against Fascism & the racist right
  • Love music, football & culture – hate racism 
  • Refugees welcome – end the hostile environment
  • Opposing Islamaphobia & The Prevent Agenda

PLENARIES (Live on SUTR Facebook & Youtube Channels)

CLICK HERE TO WATCH ON YOUTUBE
CLICK HERE TO WATCH ON FACEBOOK

Saturday 17 October 5pm  
Black Lives Matter Vs Trump – A Decisive Moment in the Anti Racist Movement

Sunday 18 October 5pm  
Covid19, economic crisis- why we say black lives matter

By Sabby Dhalu & Weyman Bennett, Stand Up To Racism Co-Convenors.

The 2020 US presidential election, less than three weeks away, is likely to be the most fiercely contested in recent times. Donald Trump has staked his re-election on spear-heading white supremacy and clamping down on the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement.

This included the deployment of federal law enforcement agents to clamp down on Black Lives Matter protesters in cities like Portland, Oregon and Kenosha, Wisconsin and emboldening white supremacists and fascists.

The BLM movement is the biggest political movement in US history, with polls estimating 16-25 million attending demonstrations and, unlike the civil rights movement in the 1960s, the support of the majority of Americans. A Monmouth University poll in June showed that 76 per cent of Americans – including 71 per cent of white people – agreed that racism is a big problem in the US. This is a massive 50 per cent increase since the previous poll in 2015 that coincided with the first wave of the BLM movement in 2015.

The New York Times reported in June:

Never before in the history of modern polling has the country expressed such widespread agreement on racism’s pervasiveness in policing and in society at large.”

For the first time in its history, Americans supported the black community against a racist police system rooted in hundreds of years of slavery and oppression.

While the BLM movement initially emerged in response to shocking footage showing George Floyd being killed by a police officer, there is no doubt that the scale of the movement and popular support reflected the disproportionate impact of the coronavirus on black communities and anger in the general population at Donald Trump’s dismal failure in response to the COVID crisis and its economic impact.

The US has one of the worst death tolls in the world with over 200,000 deaths – a huge loss of life on American soil. African Americans formed 22 per cent of Covid19 deaths but only just over 13 per cent of the population. In addition GDP fell by more than 10 per cent in the second quarter and has hit black Americans much harder. Unemployment in the US is 5 per cent higher for the black people compared to their white counterparts, over 15 per cent and over 10 per cent for black and white people respectively.

Trump is the most overtly racist US President in the last century and it is worth remembering the rise in racism since his election in 2016.

In 2016 there were 127 anti-Muslim assaults – a record high – and higher than the 93 recorded in 2001 in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. This coincided with Islamophobic rhetoric during his election campaign. Immediately after his inauguration in 2017 Trump brought the “Muslim ban” that led to international solidarity demonstrations.

In 2017 hate crimes in the US rose by 17 per cent, with black and Jewish Americans most affected, with 2,013 and 938 attacks respectively.

2018 saw the most racist US mid-term election campaign in living memory. This included antisemitic conspiracy theories about George Soros, attacks on Latin American refugees, Islamophobia and attacks on black African Americans – as sharply reflected in Georgia and Florida. This was the climate in which 11 people were killed in an anti-Semitic attack on the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.

2020 has seen a staggering increase in racist attacks on Chinese and East Asian communities. Asian rights groups and San Francisco State University teamed up and launched the Stop AAPI Hate database which records reports of Covid19 racism directed at Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the US and received over 1,700 reports from 45 states. This coincided with Trump’s use of inflammatory phrases like the “Chinese virus.”

Such racist attacks do not take place in a vacuum and illustrate the precise danger of the campaign to stir up racism, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism and AAPI racism in order to distract from and scapegoat for economic problems and the COVID crisis.

The rise in racism, Islamophobia, antisemitism and sinophobia illustrate the need for different communities to unite against racism and put differences aside on any other issues.

As we approach the presidential election and recent polls place Democrat Joe Biden 10 points ahead of Republican incumbent Trump, there is no room for complacency. In the event of a close Biden victory, Trump has already stated he would refuse to accept the outcome and no doubt the emboldened “Proud Boys” and other white supremacist and fascist organisations will be out in force in such a situation.

States such as Georgia, Arizona and Texas have seen a sharp increase in the black and Latino populations and the mobilisation of such voters may well be key to defeating Trump. Meanwhile armed fascist militias – the violent counter movement to BLM – are threatening to ‘patrol’ polling stations to intimidate and deter black, Latino and white progressive voters.

An investigation by Channel 4 News found that the Republicans mounted a targeted campaign called “Deterrence” aimed at keeping black and other voters at home on polling day in the 2016 presidential election. The National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP) called it a modern day voter suppression campaign, using data and digital technology to keep black voters at home.

However such violent intimidation and digital campaigns by the Republicans were unfortunately aided by changes to the implementation of the historic 1965 Voting Rights Act. In 2013 the US Supreme Court abolished the Section 5 pre-clearance, which required all jurisdictions with a history of racist voting practices to get approval from the Department of Justice before making any changes to their voting laws, such as poll relocations and closures, electoral roll purges and new ID requirements. When the SC ruling came down, immediately many states moved to create new laws that made it more difficult for black people to vote.

The impact of this so far in 2020 has included reducing the polling stations in black and multicultural states, resulting in long off-putting queues – criminal in the context of Covid19 and the need for social distancing.

The Black Live Matter movement, meanwhile, has had a significant positive impact, both in the US and across the world. In Britain, spontaneous demonstrations led to the removal of statues of Slave owners and forced a reckoning with Britain’s imperial and colonial past. Urgent demands have been raise to scrap Section 60 powers, which have been used to harass huge numbers of black people, to address the disproportionate impact of COVID, and to decolonise and add Black history to the curriculum. The anti-racist movement has been massively strengthened, with new activists taking the lead and public opinion shifting towards action on institutional racism.

Trump is not the only elected leader whipping up racism and using inflammatory language to distract from their disastrous response to the coronavirus and its devastating economic ramifications.

Earlier this month French President Emmanuel Macron announced new laws to tackle “Islamist separatism” and defend secular values. Macron accused six million Muslims of being in danger of forming a “counter-society.” This followed a dramatic rise in covid cases in France over the last two months and a sharp increase in deaths in the last month.

Racism is on the rise in Europe, as well as the US, but the recent defeats of fascist and far right parties must be welcomed and recognised as victories.

The criminalisation of Golden Dawn and its failure to win seats in the Hellenic Parliament in 2019, is the product of a decades long, broad, united movement against racism and fascism led by Stand up to Racism’s sister organisation KEERFA in Greece.

Earlier this month the Freedom Party in Austria (FPO) suffered a huge fall in its vote share in the Viennese state election. The FPO received just over 7 per cent, a 23 percent fall in the previous elections in 2015.

Meanwhile the UK continues to have one of the worst death rates and coronavirus cases per million in the world and the government has routinely attacked refugees in an attempt to distract from this.

Hence the recent headlines of the use of nets to disable dinghies carrying refugees across the English Channel, Home Secretary Priti Patel’s announcement of new legislation on asylum, including the creation of an offshore detention centre for asylum seekers, and her attacks on “do-gooder” and “lefty lawyers” in her recent speeches.

Such dog whistle whipping up of racism by politicians is routinely met with racist attacks on the ground. Days after one of Patel’s speeches at the beginning of September, a violent racist attack occurred in which a white man armed with a knife entered a law firm. Lawyers at the firm said: “Responsibility and accountability for this attack, in the eyes of this firm, lies squarely at the feet of Priti Patel..”

Recent figures indicate an extraordinary increase in racist hate crimes in Britain. Racially motivated offences accounted for three quarters of all hate crimes and increased by 4,000 in 2019-20 from the previous year.

The Victim Support charity reported “significant spikes” in June and July, and intimidation of BAME communities with false allegations of flouting rules during lockdown periods. The Home Office also suggested that the rise in racist attacks in June and July was a backlash against the Black Lives Matter movement (BLM).

The government’s disastrous approach to the coronavirus, in failing to take timely measures to eliminate the virus, continues to disproportionately impact Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) communities. BAME communities account for over 25 per cent of hospital admissions and over 30 per cent of intensive care patients.

Furthermore recent research shows BAME communities were also disproportionately impacted by the economic consequences of covid. Data from the Understanding Society COVID-19 survey reveals that 8 and 10 per cent of BAME British and BAME migrant communities respectively lost their job, only 3.3% of the white non migrant communities lost their job. BAME British communities were 40% less likely than white British communities to benefit from employee protection such as furlough.

We need a public inquiry like the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry, into the disproportionate impact of Covid on BAME communities.

Local lockdowns have not necessarily in response to the infection rate and instead an attack by the Conservative government on working class, multi-cultural and poorer areas, without proper financial support such as furlough.

A report in the Sunday Times on 4 October revealed that “wealthy areas, including the chancellor Rishi Sunak’s parliamentary seat, are avoiding lockdown despite having higher Covid-19 rates than poorer areas that are subject to restrictions..”

The report quotes a letter from Professor Dominic Harrison, the director of public health for Blackburn with Darwen to the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) saying:

There is now a different level of central control applied across local authorities, with some of the more economically challenged boroughs being placed into more restrictive control measures at an earlier point in their..case rate trajectory. This has the effect of exacerbating the economic inequality impacts of the virus in those areas..”

The only effective solution to the present crisis is for the government to eliminate the virus by following a “zero covid” strategy as seen in New Zealand, Australia, China and Vietnam. This is the best way to save lives and safely and most effectively restart the economy.

This must include lockdown measures, an efficient and effective system of test, track and isolate, economic and financial support such as more funding for the NHS and schools to support more home learning, bringing back furlough and small business financial support for at least another year.

Now more than ever we must build a strong, united movement against racism, fascism, Islamophobia, antisemitism, sinophobia, celebrate our multicultural society and defend the freedom of religion, thought and cultural expression.

This year’s Stand up to Racism online conference takes place at a timely moment, where all these crucial issues will be discussed.

From Britain, Jeremy Corbyn MP, Diane Abbott MP, Dawn Butler MP, Kate Osamor MP, Richard Burgon MP, Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP, Kevin Courtney NEU Joint Gen Sec, Unison’s Roger McKenzie and Lawrence Davies, Human Rights Lawyer, Justice for Belly Mujinga will be addressing the conference, alongside many who have experienced police violence and a range of other guests.

They will be joined by international speakers including the host and producer of The Real News Network Jacqueline Luqman (US), Thanasis Kampagiannis, anti-fascist lawyer in Golden Dawn trial (Greece), Martvs Chagas PT National Secretary for Combating Racism (Brazil), Petros Constantinou (Greece), KEEFA | Bundestag member Christine Buchholz (Germany), Justice Campaigner Mahamadou Camara (France) and BLM activist Baba Aye (Nigeria)

Taking action at this crucial time will be central to the event. As well as preparing for actions over the US Presidential election, November brings Islamophobia awareness month, where anti-racists will be building solidarity with the Muslim community and renewing efforts to tackle hate crime against Muslims. As refugees face attacks from Britain and across Europe, the Care4Calais winter appeal will bring relief to some of the most vulnerable people in the continent.

January will see Holocaust Memorial day, and a host of meetings and events across the country remembering the millions who died in the Holocaust, standing together against antisemitism and fascism and saying loudly and clearly Never Again.

And on March 20th for UN Anti-Racism Day, anti-racists across the world will be organising events to bring forward a powerful message that the majority of humanity stands against racism.

Plenaries will be streamed live on Stand up to Racism’s Facebook and YouTube this Saturday 17th and Sunday 18th October at 5pm. To register for workshops at 3PM on Saturday and find out more click here.

Major International online Conference this weekend: From COVID-19 to Black Lives Matter – Confronting Trump & Johnson’s Racist Offensive

PRESS RELEASE… for immediate release

Friday 16 October 2020

Major International online Conference this weekend: From COVID-19 to Black Lives Matter – Confronting Trump & Johnson’s Racist Offensive

  • International Plenary 5PM Saturday 17 October
  • Closing Rally 5PM Sunday 18 October
  • Workshops 3PM Saturday 17 October

Over 50 speakers in 7 workshops & 2 plenaries including: Diane Abbott MP | Jeremy Corbyn MP | Bell Ribeiro-Addy MP | Dawn Butler MP | Kate Osamor MP | Kevin Courtney, NEU joint General Secretary | Roger McKenzie, Unison Assistant General Secretary | Jacqueline Luqman (US), host and producer The Real News Network | Lowkey Rapper & Acvitist | Lawrence Davies, Human Rights Lawyer, Justice for Belly Mujinga | Danny Haiphong (US), Black Agenda Report | Thanasis Kampagiannis (Greece), Anti fascist lawyer in Golden Dawn trial | Martvs Chagas (Brazil), PT’s National Secretary for Combating Racism | Petros Constantinou (Greece), KEEFA | Christine Buchholz (Germany), MP/ Aufstehen Gegen Rasismuss | Mahamadou Camara (France), Justice Campaigner | Baba Aye (Nigeria) | Shaka Hislop, former footballer & Show Racism The Red Card Honorary President | Eyewitness testimonies of police violence including Andrew Boateng, Ryan Colaço, Neomi Bennett and Mina Agyepong
 

Timetable here
Details & Registration here
Plenaries streamed on SUTR Youtube Channel here

As the Coronavirus crisis intensifies and the US prepares for Presidential Elections, a major international conference will take place this weekend bringing together campaigners from Europe, the US, Africa and Brazil to discuss challenging the global rise of racism.

Figures released this week in Britain revealed record levels of hate crime, three quarters of which were race hate, and a tripling of attacks against the Chinese community. Building unity against racism, Islamophobia & antisemitism will be a key thread of the event. As government led attacks on refugees intensify, campaigners will also call for safe passage for refugees and an end to scapegoating.

With the COVID pandemic continuing to disproportionately affect BAME communities, campaigners will call for an independent inquiry into disproportionate impact as well as immediate measures to supproess the virus while giving economic support to allow people to follow them.

Following the inspiring growth Black Lives Matter movement, speakers will call for action on police violence including an end to Section 60 Stop and search, the teaching of Black history in schools and continued pressure for a reckoning with Britain’s colonial legacy, as well co-ordinating international anti-racist activity such as UN anti-racism day, 20 March 2021.



QUOTES:

Diane Abbott MP said

“There is a general crisis in terms of public health and of the economy. Unfortunately this government and many others responds to all crises by scapegoating of all types including racism. They try to shift the blame for their own disastrous failings. We must not let them. Black people, Muslims, Jews or Chinese people did not cause this crisis. It was not caused by refugees or migrants. It was caused by government policy  and we cannot let them divide us.”


Kevin Courtney, NEU joint general secretary, said
“I urge all people of goodwill to come to the Stand Up to Racism conference this weekend. Lets come together at this moment of multiple crises to make a better world for all.”

Weyman Bennett, Stand Up To Racism Co-Convenor said:

“The Black Lives Matter movement has inspired millions across the world. As Donald Trump attempts to use racism to win a second term, this conference will hear from people at the centre of this global struggle on how we take things to the next level, defeat racists such as Trump and achieve real change.”
 

Sabby Dhalu, Stand Up To Racism Co-convenor said:

The thousands of preventable deaths caused by the disproportionate impact of COVID due to government mishandling, structural racism and health inequalities mean now is a crucial time for the anti-racist movement to meet. Over 25% of hospital admissions and over 30% of people in intensive care from BAME communities. We desperately need a strategy to eliminate, not ‘live alongside’ this virus as well as an independent public inquiry on disproportionate impact. This conference is where we can discuss making that happen.


Michael Wong (US), Pivot to Peace said:

“From its earliest history, the United States was built on the genocide of the Native Americans, the slavery of African Americans, the exploitation of Latino and Asian labor, and the “divide and conquer” strategy of pitting different working class groups against each other to keep each in “its place.”  But also from our earliest history, there have also been those Americans of all races, genders, and classes — Black, Brown, Yellow, Red, and White, male or female, rich or poor — who stood up in solidarity against enslavement, exploitation, and division, and fought for the rights of all people, regardless of race, gender, creed, or anything else, and drove positive change in America.  Today as in the past, either we all stand together, or we all hang separately.  The answer to “divide and conquer” is solidarity, the solidarity of all peoples.” 

Thanasis Kampagiannis, lead lawyer in the trial and conviction of fascist Golden Dawn, Greece, said

“The conviction of Golden Dawn is a historic victory for the anti-fascist movement in Greece and internationally. We are now fighting to the very end to ensure that stiff sentences for the leaders mean jail now not parole pending distant appeal hearings. The Stand Up to Racism conference is a welcome part of that continuing battle.”


Michael Brown, LA Black Lives Matter activist, said

“With yet another US election fast approaching this November, where both candidates on offer, Donald Trump and Joe Biden, are vying to preside over who will sit atop and further empire, austerity, attacks on workers’ rights and the national security state.  Mass movements such as Black Lives Matter are sure to play an integral role in shaping resistance during the struggles to come.

“How, when, and in what form will those struggles take shape, are still open questions. For certain, neither Trump or Biden presents any progressive way forward for the working class. Both capitalist politicians, regardless of who wins, must be challenged from the grassroots, by a multi-racial working class, conscious of its class interests. Anti-racism must be at the heart of that struggle.”
 

Jacqueline Luqman (US), Host & Producer of The Real News said

America’s refusal to see the fascism in its long history of racist and classist oppression in the US and around the world is why so many believe that fascism is just now being ushered in under Trump. Because it doesn’t look like the SS, they don’t see that fascism has always been here and has led us to this point. 
 

Danny Haiphong (US), Black Agenda Report said:

Full solidarity must be given to Black Lives Matter. Anti-China racism must be rejected without hesitation. How we express and act on these principles should be the only thing up for debate.” 


Petros Constantinou, coordinator of KEERFA, councillor Athens municipality, said

“The verdict of the trial for the neonazis of Golden Dawn on 7 October with a historic condemnation as a criminal organization, and the life sentence for the murderer of musician Pavlos Fyssas, was announced to hundreds of thousands of anti fascist demonstrators outside the Appeal court. Trade unions called a general strike of three hours that day.    

“This success was made possible because the battle against the neo-Nazis of the Golden Dawn became a matter for the people who fight for their jobs, for their schools and colleges, so that they are not killed in catastrophic floods and fires, so that the refugees and the immigrants are not lost in the waters of the Aegean, in the fences of Evros and in Moria. It is the same force that sparked anti-fascist demonstrations when Shezad Luqman was assassinated in Petralona and even louder when Pavlos Fyssas was assassinated in Keratsini.

“It is the fruit of struggles that we had to give for many years and to escalate after the 2012 elections when the Golden Dawn entered Parliament. It is a success for KEERFA that has given its strength since 2009. Mass workers action, united front against the nazis and “bring them to the court room”,  were the crucial choices that made possible this success.

“But this not the end for fascist threat! Racism opens the way for the fascists and we have to continue, by joining forces internationally against Trumps, Slavinis and Le Pens, against racist policies of Fortress Europe.”
 

Zita Holbourne, PCS vice president, said

Black people have contracted and died disproportionately from covid and those who are displaced due to climate poverty and persecution have bern left at high risk with no support, brutality and deaths at the hands of the state including the horrific  killing of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd continue, racist immigration laws mean some of us are treated as second class citizens, the injustice that continues for the Windrush generation and their descendants including Osime Brown and the adverse impacts on black and migrant workers in sectors hardest hit by the coronavirus  crisis mean that we are going through a collective trauma which never seems to end. 

“The global protests by the black lives matter movement have been a rallying call for action to address the systemic, institutional and every day racism we experience. Racism is a global issue so it is crucial that we work together across the world to combat it, but not just to respond to recism when it occurs but for race equality in our lifetime.”

Brendan Woodhouse, Fire fighter, FBU members and Seawatch activist, said 

I will be speaking at the conference to highlight Europe’s deadly border policies and the horrific effect that these are having on real human beings”

Victoria Showunmi, UCU Black Members Committee & NEC, said

“I have learned that there are some experiences that I can’t discuss with white friends, like the emotional effects of police brutality or Black on Black violence, and with Black friends I would not dare share the experiences of what I am giving a voice to now, my double identity or the difficulty of acclimating to their outspoken lingo and aggressive activism in the face of race inequalities.”

Andrew Boateng, Football coach, scout and community campaigner, who was accosted by police while crying with his son, said

It is important that people from all backgrounds stand together in the very real battle against racism, as it takes a collective of like-minded individuals striving for the same cause to make real positive change through structured solutions. Please do join the debate and contribute to making positive change an imminent reality”  

 
Ryan Colaço, stopped repeatedly by police, justice campaigner, said

You can constantly & unlawfully handcuff us but you will never silence the fight. We will get justice.”

Neomi Bennett, BEM, registered nurse, Dragons Den Entrepreneur & Inventor of Multi-Award Winning Neo-slip medical aid, 2018 Queen’s Honour recipient for services to Healthcare, and as of 2020 CEO and Founder of Equality 4 Black Nurses, said

“Equality 4 Black Nurses aims to bring about positive change by lobbying employers and government to reduce and eradicate racial discrimination in the Healthcare Sector.

 I as a Black Nurse find it deeply shocking and seriously disturbing to discover that according to data from the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), 62% of referrals and reports for investigation of Black nurses result in no case to answer.

 I was also mortified to learn that as recent as 2019 a UK report into maternal health (Oxford University) found Black women are five times more likely to die in pregnancy, childbirth or in the postpartum period, compared to their white counterparts.

 I also find it astonishing that a May 2020 study revealed that 63% of the first 106 deaths from Covid-19 were made up from Health Care Workers from Black, Asian, or Minority Ethnic backgrounds. This is compounded by the fact that Black, Asian and minority ethnic staff make up just 20% of the NHS workforce.”
 

Virgil Bitu, GR8 Gypsy Roma Traveller community, said

 “I will be speaking at the conference on Antigypsyism – the ultimate form of hate crime.”

 
Baba Aye, Black Lives Matter activist, Nigeria, said

“As we fight to overthrow capitalism and defeat racism, we learn that struggle is the way to victory.”

 
Sans Soucismusician and artist, said

“I’m really excited to take part to this panel to support music and culture against racism. We live in a world were human connection is becoming a rare privilege. Music and sport can guide us through this moment of cultural crisis by bringing people together, regardless of who they are. Change happens when we find the stillness to be able to listen to one another.”


Notes:

1. Stand Up To Racism International Conference (online) on Sat 17 & Sun 18 October – ‘Black Lives Matter – No to Trump & Johnson’s Racist Offensive’ with speakers from the UK, US & across the world.

Timetable: http://www.standuptoracism.org.uk/wp-content2015/uploads/2020/10/SUtR-conf-agenda-2020-6.pdf

Further Details:https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/stand-up-to-racism-international-conference-tickets-119722971631?fbclid=IwAR3A3Fw_kynCRaupydbhRM4xm-26ThjGKHBCJaai7tz50FzPHmhYO0Fftoc

 For further information, interviews and quotes:

info@standuptoracism.org.uk 

Solidarity with Kenosha – Black Lives Matter

The shooting of Jacob Blake seven times in the back by a Wisconsin Law official in Kenosha has unleashed a fresh wave of Black Lives Matter mobilisations in the US, determined to force action on systemic racism and police brutality.

A series of demonstrations in Kenosha immediately followed Jacob Blake’s shooting where, horrifically, two people were killed and one injured after being shot down by a far-right gunman who police allowed to walk away still carrying the rifle.

The demonstrations in cities across the US that followed were the latest in what many are now realising is a serious and longlasting movement for change. Most notably, the world of sport saw a series of unprecedented and historic series of strike actions by players and cancelling of games, starting with the Wisconsin-based Milwaukee Bucks.

“We are calling for justice for Jacob Blake and demand the officers be held accountable. For this to occur, it is imperative for the Wisconsin State Legislature to reconvene after months of inaction and take up meaningful measures to address issues of police accountability, brutality and criminal justice reform. We encourage all citizens to educate themselves, take peaceful and responsible action, and remember to vote on Nov. 3.”

– Statement by the Milwaukee Bucks basketball team

The Bucks’ action was met with immediate solidarity from their opponents the Orlando Magic and all play-off games that day were cancelled. Their sister Baseball team the Milwaukee Brewers also cancelled their game, again met with immediate solidarity from their opponents, and eventually every team in Baseball cancelled a game over the following 36 hours, as well as all Ice Hockey play-offs on Thursday and Friday.

WNBA players joined protests by wearing t-shirts with bullet holes in the back, and players from across the US and the sporting world spoke passionately about levels of racism in US society and the need for change.

Protests are continuing across the US and the World, with today’s March on Washington – ‘Get Your Knee Off Our Necks’ set to draw tens of thousands both in person and online.

In Britain, protests have taken place across the country organised by local Stand Up To Racism and Black Lives Matter groups calling for justice for Jacob Blake, and this weekend will see two crucial demonstrations in London calling for justice:

SATURDAY 29 AUGUST – US EMBASSY – 1PM – Enough is enough – Justice for Jacob Blake, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor & Black lives in the UK.

SUNDAY 30 AUGUST – NOTTING HILL – 1PM – JOIN THE FIGHT FOR CHANGE – https://millionpeoplemarch.com/