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#noTTIP banner drop on Brighton beach
Here are some photos from the excellent #noTTIP banner drop on Brighton beach & pier in November. Earlier in the day, a stall on London Road attracted tons of attention from Brightonians eager to sign the European petition and find out more about the trade treaty that will put yet more power in to the hands of big corporations
Brighton & Hove say NO to TTIP!
Caroline Lucas MP, Keith Taylor MEP, and over 100 people turned out today to our noTTIP protest. We had a boxing match between big business and citizens’ rights, inspirational speakers and representatives from a plethora of campaigning groups including Defend our NHS, Food Sovereignty Sussex, Brighton & Hove Left Unity, Brighton Women Against the Cuts, Frack Free Sussex and Brighton & Hove Green Party. We marched to the clock tower, we gave out flyers, collected signatures, booed, cheered and boxed.
Many thanks to all who gave up their Saturday to protest at the biggest corporate power grab in a decade. Alone, we can do nothing. Together, we can stop this deal once and for all.
noTTIP national day of action in Brighton Sat 12th July
Join us as part of a national day of action to say a huge NO to TTIP. We’ll be meeting on New Road, Brighton (opposite the Theatre Royal) at 11am.
We’re going to have a ‘boxing match’ between two unevenly matched opponents – Citizens’ Rights in one corner, and Big Business in the other, and we need YOU to lend support, talk to people, and tell everybody just exactly why we’re giving up our Saturday to be there. (We’ll have flyers to give out, a petition to Busines Secretary Vince Cable to be signed, placards to hold and badges to wear)
TTIP are the corporate-backed trade negotiations taking place between the USA and the EU that will mean corporations can sue governments and puts many of our citizens’ rights in danger.
Whether your interest is in the environment, in the NHS, or in civil liberties in general, it’s vital that we stand together in this and demand our government halt negotiations right now.
The event’s being co-ordinated by World Development Movement, but we really would like people from as many interested groups as possible to commit to coming. (have a look at our Facebook event page)
All the best, and see you there!
WDM Brighton & Hove
Corporate Interests vs Citizens’ Rights – you decide who wins (for once)
Heard about the Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership? Neither had we until a month ago. These under-publicised negotiations currently taking place between the EU and the USA plan to create a huge free trade zone between the two blocs.
However, the most insidious part of the treaty is that it will give corporations the right to sue governments.
What this comes down to is that if we manage to campaign our government for a change in the law – whether that be with regards environmental protection, health care provision, in fact, anything that means a corporation will lose the chance to make their usual profits, they will then have the right to sue that government for compensation.
The tribunals will be decided on by corporate lawyers. In secret. It is the very antithesis of democracy.
Sounds insane, but it’s true. And it’s happened before where there have been other trade treaties. It’s happening right now, across the world.
Strangely, nobody has consulted us on whether we want our sovereignty signed away to corporations. So we decided to take a tug-of-war to the streets of Brighton and ask people to take part to decide who ought to win – big business or citizens’ rights.
As well as winning the struggle for democracy (hooray!), we also got hundreds of signatures on our petition to be sent to Business Secretary Vince Cable, and a full-colour feature in local paper The Argus.
HSBC to be ‘demolished’ to make way for new coal mine in Brighton
On the 2nd November, dressed in hard hats and hi-vis gear, our group descended on HSBC in Brighton to announce the imminent closure of the bank to make way for a new open-cast coal mine. We even had a lump of ‘dirty coal’ ready to go.
The protest was part of WDM’s Carbon Capital campaign and took place along with hundreds of others worldwide during Dirty Energy Month. We wanted to highlight HSBC’s role in funding £3.8 billion-worth of carbon-intensive energy projects around the globe, destroying the local environment and driving forward climate change.
In the Borneo rainforest, people had been compensated for the loss of their land to make way for the coal mine – to the tune of 1/2 a pence per square metre.
We therefore decided to compensate HSBC the equivalent amount for the loss of their branch, and wrote a giant cheque for seven pence.
It was only fair, after all.