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Blog

September campaign meeting

July 7, 2018 by sheffield

Thursday 13th September, 7pm-9pm

Join us for our monthly meeting. We will be discussing upcoming events and campaigns. New members welcome. (Note: the meeting is on the 2nd Thurs and not 1st as usual)

Venue: Quaker Meeting House, 10 St. James Street, Sheffield S1 2EW (nr Sheffield Cathedral)

Filed Under: Blog

South Yorkshire Festival 2018

July 7, 2018 by sheffield

Sunday 12th August, 11am-5pm

We will be holding a stall at this annual event. See the Wortley Hall website for full details.

Venue: Wortley Hall, Wortley, Sheffield S35 7DB

Filed Under: Blog

August campaign meeting

July 7, 2018 by sheffield

Thursday 2nd August, 7pm-9pm

Join us for our monthly meeting. We will be discussing upcoming events and campaigns. New members welcome.

Venue: Quaker Meeting House, 10 St. James Street, Sheffield S1 2EW (nr Sheffield Cathedral)

Filed Under: Blog

July campaign meeting

June 10, 2018 by sheffield

Thursday 5th July, 7pm-9pm

Join us for our monthly meeting. We will be discussing upcoming events and campaigns. New members welcome.

Venue: Quaker Meeting House, 10 St. James Street, Sheffield S1 2EW (nr Sheffield Cathedral)

Filed Under: Blog

2018 Gathering: The World We Want (York)

May 1, 2018 by sheffield

Saturday 16th June, 2pm – 6:30pm

Global Justice Now’s national gathering this year brings together some fantastic speakers to talk about what a world with more equality, solidarity and environmental sustainability could look like and how we start to build it.

With speakers including:

Jason Hickel, author of The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and Its Solutions
Rachael Maskell, MP for York Central and Shadow Rail Minister
Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now
Speaker from Barcelona en Comú (social and economic justice platform currently governing in Barcelona)

And workshops and discussions on:

Barcelona and beyond: the citizen platforms democratising cities
Food sovereignty
Public ownership
The commons and access to medicine
Energy democracy
What good trade deals would look like
UK aid as global redistribution
Freedom of movement
Growth and degrowth

Book your free place

Venue: Priory Street Centre, 15 Priory Street, York YO1 6ET

Filed Under: Blog

Talk by Mariyus Noko Ngele, journalist from Congo-Kinshasa

April 11, 2018 by sheffield

Mariyus , a professional journalist, had undertaken to share with us his experience of life in Congo-Kinshasa provided that he could speak in his native French and have an interpreter. Francois Guesdon, a long-time friend of GJS, had kindly agreed to take this role. They were both warmly welcomed.

He explained that there should have been an election but, as the constitution hasn’t been followed, the present government is illegitimate. All elections, including local elections have been cancelled. There is a lot of unrest, but this does not translate into political change. The main hope for change lies with expatriates  – a third of the population now lives outside the country and the money they send back home amounts to 70% of GDP. Many educated people are living in UK and USA. They take a direct flight to Belgium, but don’t stay there.

Because of their need for Congo minerals such as uranium and cobalt, western governments including UK, France and USA are prepared to sell arms to Congo Kinshasa. The international corporations that own the mining companies have a key role. As Belgium’s trade is heavily dependent on the Congo, the Belgian government wants the present political situation to continue. However, France is now getting most of its uranium supplies from Mali, Niger and Chad. Because of Brexit, UK will no long be party to EU trade arrangements. Mariyus believes that the UK should be looking to deal with a legitimate government and not with the current one. He is confident that UK government would prefer to be dealing with a legitimate government when negotiating trade deals.

The country’s population is around 80 million, with an average age between 25 and 30. There are four main languages: Lingala, Kikongo, Tshiluba and Swahili, but Lingala is the most used because it mainly affects the sectors of commercial, military, police, social and artistic activities, and above all almost 99% of expatriates speak Lingala. French is the official administrative language but English is slowly starting to take hold.

He described the Organisation for African Unity as “an empty shell”.

Mariyus is persona non grata in Belgium because he criticises the Belgian government. He is attempting to secure his legal position here in UK before setting up a website and publishing a critique. Asked about his EU court case, Mariyus explained that since Luxembourg had declined to deal with it he had elected to use a UK court because UK interests are directly affected by his problem.

On the one hand, Mariyus has discovered that the European Commission, specifically Jose Manuel Barroso and Louis Michel, without any scrutiny and with complete impunity to this day, divert millions of Euros from Great Britain to the Union for the functioning of the institutions and then place them in a “Black Box” CDI/CDE alias CDE that it created specially for this purpose. He considers that it is his duty, as an independent journalist who has settled in Britain specifically to create his own online journal, hold conferences, write books and sell his articles to editorial offices and media on “Brexit”, to let English people know about this. At this point during Brexit negotiations Mariyus is firmly resolved to fully uncover this scandal. He does not intend to squander this opportunity.

On the other hand, Mariyus had passed evidence of the scandal to a British citizen, Nigel Farage MEP, who had chosen to take no action on it.

Mariyus and Francois were thanked for coming and conveying so much about this complex situation. Mariyus was assured of GJS’s good wishes for a satisfactory outcome of his court case.

Talk given on 1st February 2018.

Filed Under: Blog

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Primary Sidebar

Next Meeting

Our next meeting will be on Thursday, April 10th, 7.00-9.00 pm

This will be a planning meeting, with the main item finalising arrangements for our Festival of Debate event with Jason Hickel on April 29th.

If you are not on our Activist List and would like an invitation, please email globaljusticesheffield@gmail.com

Please join us if you are interested in campaigning for a better world where resources are controlled by the many, not the few.

We are continuing with online campaigns, so do join our eNews list (email globaljusticesheffield@gmail.com ) to get the latest information about current actions.

Global Justice Now website

Current Campaigns

Don't let corporate courts block climate action.
Corporate courts give fossil fuel companies the power to sue governments for taking action on the climate emergency. They are an obstacle to a clean energy transition and to achieving climate justice. Tell Boris Johnson and the trade department not to let corporate courts block climate action.

Suspend patents on Covid-19 vaccines.
We are facing a global scarcity of vaccines because big pharma patents and corporate secrecy prevent other manufacturers from making them. We need the government to remove the barriers to ramp up global supply and ensure fair allocation of vaccines. No one is safe until everyone is safe. Join the campaign for A People's Vaccine.

Contact/Follow

Email: globaljusticesheffield@gmail.com

Phone: 01142 397 790

Twitter: @GlobalJusticeSH

Facebook: Global Justice Sheffield Facebook page

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We’re part of Global Justice Now, a democratic membership organisation which campaigns against inequality and injustice in the global economy. We want to see a world where ordinary people control the resources they need to live a decent life, rather than corporations and the super rich calling the shots.


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