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Posts Tagged ‘Politics’

War on liberties

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Eva Lawrence, Just Focus Coordinator

hands behind barsThe world, since September 11 is a different place. The media permanently talks about the latest terrorist threat’ and we have a whole new vocabulary: war on terrorism’ and WMD. There is a lot of fear, and in this state of fear we are quietly allowing our freedoms to slip away.

We are being scared with potential terrorist threats and this is being used as justification to strip us of some of our most precious and hard won rights including our freedom of expression, movement and association. Historically tyrants have always stamped out free speech before anything else. These are part of our human rights that are sanctioned in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and our so integral to our way of life we often take them for granted.

However changes to laws worldwide are threatening our rights. The changes have tended to be gradual and quiet, presumably so we do not notice or become quickly alarmed. They are happening now.

Liberties under threat overseas
In December 2005 a 25 year old woman in the UK was convicted for reading out the names of the 97 British soldiers killed in Iraq, under the new Serious Organised Crime and Police Act. In another case in the UK last September, An 80 year old WWII veteran was arrested, under the Terrorism Act, for wearing a T-shirt that said that Bush and Blair should be tried for war crimes (Pilger). Both these examples impinge on our freedom of opinion and expression.

The US Patriot Act has allowed for the arrest and imprisonment of suspected terrorists’. They have been denied access to US legal process; most still held without charge or trial in Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere. A recent United Nations report has also found that prisoners have been tortured. Where is their right to be free of arbitrary arrest and exile?

What about here in Aotearoa?
According to human rights lawyer Rodney Harrison, despite the fact that the threat of terrorist’ attack is virtually non existent in Aotearoa New Zealand, a number of laws (eg. The Citizenship and Travel Documents Bill ) have been created and altered in the name of security and the war on terror’ that have reduced our freedoms. Also, with the exception of the Terrorism Suppression Act, they have no sunset clause’ which means the restrictions to our freedoms are not until the supposed threat’ has past, but permanently.

Ahmed Zaoui, an Algerian was imprisoned on the justification that he was a security threat but there was no expression of what he actually was accused of doing, as it was called classified security information’. Still now, he is under curfew in his home and awaiting the review of the security risk certificate issued against him.

What is a terrorist threat?
The word terrorist’ conjures up images of crazed fanatics killing indiscriminately. However there is no one terrorist’ group and the term is often used by those in power to describe those that they oppose. We need to understand what each of the separate groups is about and why they take the actions that they do. To understand the causes does not mean that you think the actions are acceptable or justified.

Also, think about how some of the actions of political leaders and media impacts on the risk of terror attacks. Creating a climate of intolerance and hyper-fear around religious difference or systems of government can exacerbate or create a threat where there was little or none to begin with.

It is understandable to have laws in place to be able to monitor and intercept possible threats to people. However, many of the definitions of threat are so vague that they could be used to justify interfering with people or groups, with no intent for violent acts, from expressing their opinion or taking part in groups.

For example, in February, British police cited the Prevention of Terrorism Act when they arrested and interrogated three actors from of a recent film based on the true story of three men imprisoned and finally released from Guantanamo Bay. The actors and the three men the story was based on were arresting when returning from the Berlin Film Festival where the film was screened. They were questioned about their travel, who they had met with and the political convictions of the film’s director. The actors had no specific political connections and seemed to only be singled out due to their Asian ethnicity.

Protect Your Rights
While it is important to feel safe from danger, what ever that may be, it is also equally important for people’s civil and political rights to be protected. We don’t need to give up our freedoms to do this. In the words of the United Nations Secretary General: “Our responses to terrorism as well as our efforts to thwart it and prevent it should uphold the human rights that terrorists aim to destroy. Human rights, fundamental freedoms and the rule of law are essential tools in the effort to combat terrorism — not privileges to be sacrificed at a time of tension.”

It is our responsibility to know our rights and continue to exercise them. As Madonna once said: Express Yourself!

Some of the Articles in the Declaration of Human Rights

Article 9: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.”

Article 19: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

Article 20: “Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.”

Article 5: “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”

Article 12 “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence…”

Article 13 “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country’

Article 14 “Everyone has the right to seek and enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution”

TAKE ACTION!

  • Read the media critically, don’t buy into the fear
  • Understand your rights and use them

LEARN MORE

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Amnesty International

Sources:
UK police arrest stars of award-winning film “The Road to Guantanamo” under the Prevention of Terrorism Act

This article was originally published in Jet magazine in the Focus column.

Taking back their rights

Wednesday, February 15th, 2006

Omar Hamed

“SHE
Works her hands
On the factory floor.
Sweat pours down her body.
Airtight suffocation.
Clock in clock out.
Spasmodic moments
of freedom.
Wage packet goal of survival.”

Rapped the middle aged Reverend Mua Strickson-Pua to an audience of about six hundred, mostly young people, at the Auckland Town Hall. The occasion was a public rally against youth rates and low wages, and in support of the Unite! Unions workers mostly young and mostly Polynesian who will be taking strike action in the coming months to end youth rates and gain a $12 minimum wage and secure hours in their contracts.

superspeakers

The concert was part of the supersizemypay.com campaign, which aims to bring together a broad coalition of social justice groups and the labour movement to put public and political pressure on the government and employers to live up to three demands-a $12 minimum wage, an end to youth rates and secure hours.

supersizeme1
It must have been one of the most diverse line-ups ever to grace the town halls stage in a long time. Speakers like the Green Party’s Sue Bradford and the Maori Party’s Pita Sharples alternated with musical acts like Olmecha Supreme, NZ Idol Rosita Vai and Auckland Ska Band Geneva.

The concert proved that the campaign for workers rights in the fast food industry had come along way from International Workers Day, when Radical Youth stormed Starbucks and then occupied McDonalds, shutting down Queen Street and resulting in twenty arrests, including of Tearaway Journalist Cameron Walker, for taking photos of police making brutal arrests. The occupation and subsequent arrests proved the inspiration for a public rally against youth rates in the weeks before the election, which brought together the Green Party, Unite! Union and Child Poverty Action Group, three of the main participants in the supersizemypay.com campaign against youth rates. The supersizemypay.com campaign has gone from strength to strength, with many strikes, pickets and a media conference raising the issue in the national arena.
supersizeme2

It was inspiring to see so many young people involved in taking back their rights at work. Firstly, there were the Unite! members, like Nick, the worlds first Starbucks worker to go on strike, who were taking back their rights to a living wage and freedom from age discrimination in youth rates. Secondly, there were the McDonalds workers like Mele and Meleane Manumoa who were taking back their rights to fight for a fair wage even after they were threatened with legal action from one of the world’s biggest corporations.

supersizeme3
The public rally showed that youth do have rights and if they join together and fight for them they can win. One Starbucks worker told the crowd that they were fighting a culture of apathy, but said she believed that together we could overcome that apathy. And she’s right, because if we want to make poverty history we first need to do it in our own backyard. Possibly the most pressing reminder from the concert was Sharples reminding the crowd of Nelson Mandela’s words, “Like slavery and apartheid, poverty is not natural. It is man-made and it can be overcome and eradicated by the actions of human beings.”

Check out Unite and their campaign website for Supersizemypay.com

Viviendo en un mundo de “Spanglish” porque soy una Peru Zelandesa: living in a Spanglish world because I am a Peru Zealander

Tuesday, October 18th, 2005

Hey everyone,

I am back, and I am well, confused. I keep telling people stuff in Spanish, including the people who cannot say anything except si… Anyway, I thought that maybe I should analyse my trip with a top 5’ format.

Things I will miss about Peru
1. The people… my families, the girls, my workmates, my friends, the randoms in the street who wanted to talk to me because of a reason other than the colour of my skin.
2. The fact that people do not have to get toasted to have a good night out dancing, and the fact that dancing is such a big and wonderful part of the culture.
3. The pride Peruvians have in their country and (against all odds) their soccer team.
4. Being tall
5. Eating rice with chicken, rice with potatoes, rice with beef, rice with turkey, rice with locro, rice with …..

Questions that need to be asked
1. Why can’t the Peruvians and Chileans start getting on and sending each other nice cards or something?
The war of the Pacific is a sorry history, but the English benefited more from this war than the Peruvians and the Chileans put together (through the deals that they made with the nitrate producing areas). Pisco ORIGINATED in Peru in a place called Pisco, but the Chileans also grow it because Chile was part of the viceroy of Peru which means that Chile also has a claim to it- it is a shared history thing, like Oz and NZ share rugby. The Chileans also have good grape growing land. It is the national drink of both countries and that is ok. Maybe a Chilean business owns the electricity in Peru but I bet that only a small percentage of them benefit from it. Lan said that Lima was dirty and dangerous, but I bet that there are parts of Santiago are as well. The shantytowns and poor areas are the subtext of all Latin-American towns regardless of their sizes.
2. How does wearing bare feet make you catch a cold? Does bacteria enter through the feet?
3. What does Coca Cola not cure? Why do doctors write prescriptions for it? I cannot wait to tell my dentist this!
4. What is sexy about a 30 year old who a) cannot wash his clothes b) has his mum clean his room c) thinks he is sexy? Why is being a female and single regarded as a terminal disease?
5. What’s with the rice addiction?
6. On the Rigi, they are trying to make it harder to pass by spending money on it. Why? Why don’t they do it the Peruvian way….? spend no money on it for years so that it gradually forms potholes, and cracks then it is harder to pass and costs no one a cent.

Main activities in Chincha
1. Walk around the Plaza de Armas and say hi to everyone.
2. Invent phrases that mock the Spanish accent… these do not need to make sense in any way shape of form. They only have to have lots of these letters: c, s, z.
3. Go out dancing at night… in one of the 2 discos only on Saturdays.
4. Learn to dance like a chicken…. the dances of the black people in Peru- the majority of whom live in Chincha!
5. Eat chicken with potato chips or Chinese food, or Willies Pizza or ice pudding.

Countries I am supposedly from
1. The United States… don’t all white people come from there? Is New Zealand a state close to Texas?
2. Germany… maybe it is for the colouring.
3. Chile… I do not have a Chilean accent. In fact my Peruvian slang makes the Chileans laugh lots because I speak like a Peruvian and Peruvians are supposed to have to have darker skin than Chileans… I don’t!
4. Argentina… Because I can speak Spanish so I must come from a Spanish speaking country and Argentines are ‘white’
5. England… well that is genetically true. And my surname is English.

Misconceptions
1. I voted for Bush (I have been abused for this. I always say my country has no president and they assume it is a dictatorship)
2. I am always carrying a lot of money. I had a plastic bag with toilet paper in it and some idiot grabbed it off me.
3. I always need to take a taxi… I cannot walk or catch buses.
4. There are heaps of them but I am not
5. Sharing them

Things that I did in Chincha
1. Learned heaps in my work
2. Made heaps of lifelong friendships
3. Learned some Spanish that only Chichanos say…asul madre….
4. Made a Pavlova
5. Got my shoe stuck in a hole in the street

What one can admire about my girls
1. Their shear resilience after they have had and are having such difficult times in their lives.
2. Their ability to trust and love someone who cannot understand much of the language that they talk.
3. Their beautiful smiles.
4. The fact that most of them are focused on educating themselves despite all that they have been through.
5. The way they dance.

Why I loved my work so much
1. I have enjoyed teaching the girls and getting to know and love them
2. Seeing the huge improvements in them after so little time
3. The free dancing lessons on Saturday mornings
4. My friendly workmates
5. Just the environment

Words that do not exist in Spanish
1. Now.
2. Cheesy.
3. I can’t think of any more.

Top Five Cities In Peru (not counting Chincha) in my highly biased opinion
1. Arequipa- beautiful, full of volcanoes, with good bookshops, and I have host family from Lima living there. I love it.
2. Ayacucho- Authentic, interesting and full of sites of the Huari culture and the first traces of human existance in South America were found here as well. The people are friendly.
3. Cuzco- Some people will disagree with the fact that this is not number one. It is not because it is too sold out to the tourists, and it is almost hardly Peruvian. People speak to you in English more than Spanish. It does have some amazing ruins, a great night life and some good Pisco sours.
4. Lima- Scared me at first. It is huge and when I got here I thought that I would never be able to take a bus around there by myself as there are bewildering amounts of buses of all sizes to catch. However, I can now. The city has grown on me. Each part has its own personality. Miraflores is like the spoilt teenage girl, the centre like the grandfather, La Molina like the snobby aunt, Santiago de Surco like the bookish uni student. I would now even say that I like it.
5. Huancayo- Stunning with heaps of beautiful sites and ruins. The people are very nice too.

New Crazes I have gained
1. For the music of South America… salsa, merengue, tradicional, and everything else.
2. Coffee.
3. Pisco (distilled clear alcohol made from grapes) that has its ORIGINS in PERU. Neh!!!
4. Manjar (caramel like stuff).
5. Herbal Tea.

Greens shouldn’t waste time with immoral greed merchants

Wednesday, October 12th, 2005

Cameron Walker

Despite a well intentioned and highly publicized meeting, big business still finds the Green Party scary. By the way the media has portrayed this it seems like we are all supposed to be worried that the anti-business Greens’ may well form part of the next government.

On the contrary I would be more worried if big business and their lobbyists weren’t afraid of the Green agenda.

Policies which place the best interests of the business leaders and lobbyists present at the meeting, such as Telecom CEO Theresa Gattung and Business Roundtable Executive Director Roger Kerr, don’t necessarily co-incide with the best interests of the majority of New Zealand’s people or indeed the nation’s economy.

New Zealand’s telecommunications network was built up by the taxpayer, a form of economic collectivism the likes of Roger Kerr would no doubt oppose today. In 1990, as part of New Zealand’s neo-liberal reforms, Telecom was sold off for the small sum of $4.25 billion to two American multinational corporations Bell Atlantic and Ameritech. Considering the fact that every year since 1990 Telecom has posted profits well into the hundreds of millions of dollars makes the privatisation seem like an act of corporate welfare.

Thousands of technical staff were layed off, to be replaced with contractors on worse pay and conditions. Meanwhile the ranks of management, many with no specific knowledge of telecommunications, and their pay packets ballooned. Theresa Gattung receives a pay packet of 2.9 million a year. Yet just three years ago many Telecom technical staff, found out that if they wanted to keep their jobs they would have to apply to work for a contracting firm and lose their sick leave and redundacy payments that they’d built up over many years. Telecom claimed it needed to do this to remain viable.

According to Statistics NZ only 22 percent of Telecom shareholders are New Zealanders. This means the majority of Telecom’s profits go to wealthy overseas shareholders rather than being re-invested in the New Zealand economy or in the telecommunications network.

When they act like this it’s not suprising that these so called business leaders’ would oppose Green proposals to limit foreign control of the economy, strengthen workers rights and to increase the minimum wage.

Roger Kerr, and his organisation the Business Roundtable, have spent much time, effort and resources over the past two decades, supporting basically every government policy that has increased big business profits, at the expense of workers and the poor. He is also noted for opposing policies which help the majority of people, such as four weeks annual leave.

In the 1980’s the Business Roundtable viewed Pinochet’s Chile as a suitable economic model for New Zealand to follow.

In 1988 after TV One’s current affairs programme, Frontline, exposed that the workers employed by a New Zealand forestry company in Chile were axing trees, while wearing open toed sandals and living in rat infested huts, then Roundtable Chairman Ron Trotter, argued that New Zealand needed Chilean style’ labour laws.

A few years later the Roundtable got their wish when the Employment Contracts Act was passed, leading to less bargaining power for unions and worse wages. Its not suprising that one commentator dubbed New Zealand’s free market reforms Pinochet without the gun’.

Despite the well documented evidence that New Zealand’s neo-liberal reforms greatly increased poverty and inequality Kerr says we need to go back to the days of Pinochet without the gun’.

The Greens shouldn’t waste time trying to reassure the Roger Kerrs and Theresa Gattungs of our nation. To do so appears to be appeasement. If the party is to keep its principled policies then it should expect oppostion from such unscrupulous people and organisations.

Do you speak English?

Wednesday, October 5th, 2005

Asian invasion’. Widespread immigration crisis’. Overstayers crowd workforce’. Terrorists in our midst’. Wave of foreigners’. Loss of national identity’.
prejudice2
Racial prejudice is founded on a lack of awareness; we fear what we do not understand. It occurs in varying degrees, from throwaway remarks, to the increasing number of brutal attacks on ethnic people in New Zealand.

The murder of pizza delivery worker Michael Choy in 2001 was said to be racially motivated. More recently, the vandalism of Auckland mosques in the wake of London’s terrorist bombings came as a reminder that racial and religious prejudice is still alive in our community.

Remember the desecration of Jewish cemeteries, and the physical attacks on Somali youth in Wellington and Asian youth in Christchurch?

Racial discrimination is caused by false assumptions; supposing that a taxi driver with a strong accent is uneducated, while in his home country he may, in fact, have been a leading surgeon or academic, but is unable to find such employment in New Zealand. Adolf Hitler’s anti-Semitic policies remind us of one of the darkest times in human history; caused by the idea that one race was superior. But even today, neo-Nazi and nationalist groups sill exist around the world, founded on Hitler’s philosophies.

While clearly far from the severity of Nazi Germany, New Zealand politics has not been free from racial prejudice either. A poll tax’ (entry tax), applied only to Chinese immigrants during the 1800s, was a discriminatory form of government revenue-gathering. In 1975, National leader Robert Muldoon ran a scare campaign directed at Pacific Island migrant workers. This was followed by dawn raids on suspected overstayers. The flying squad’ model that carried out those raids could be brought back in some form under a future New Zealand First (coalition) government, according to party leader Winston Peters. With immigration being a hot topic of this year’s election campaign, the race debate is far from over.

Migration and racial prejudice
Refugees and migrants can still face discrimination wherever they go simply because they’re different’. Mexican migrants face strong prejudice in the United States. In recent years, groups of Americans have appointed themselves vigilante border guards. In May this year a masked vigilante dressed in military fatigues, and armed with an assault rifle, killed a man during an attack on a group of Mexicans attempting to cross the border.

Closer to home, Australia is the only country in the world with a policy of compulsory detention of asylum seekers This includes children, some of whom have been imprisoned their whole lives. Hundreds of children and adults have been detained in Australian government-run detention centres, and on Nauru, under Australian control.

prejudice1
The nation’s cultural pulse
New Zealand’s social and cultural history has been entirely shaped by migration, beginning with the earliest known arrivals of Polynesian explorers around 1100AD. Explorers, traders, colonisers, migrants and refugees, have arrived for various reasons — often economic, while some moved to escape social or political persecution.

Refugees and migrants come from similar situations; however, while migrants choose to leave their homeland, refugees are compelled to flee to a country of asylum. New Zealand has resettled approximately 25,000 refugees in the past 60 years. The annual intake is restricted by a quota of 750. There were also 22,000 migrants who were granted citizenship here in 2004, and now call New Zealand home. “It’s just a question of becoming more used to having different people around,” says Prime Minister Helen Clark. “I have a great faith in our ability to build a nation around new waves of migration.”

A change in immigration policy in the late 1980s resulted in a sizeable influx of new migrants. Because of this, the extended families of many New Zealand immigrants have been here for at least two decades. Yet these second- or third-generation Kiwis, most of whom were born here, are sometimes seen as foreigners in what they consider to be their own homeland.

Race relations remains contentious and polarising. Issues relating to culture, identity and immigration are questioned in communities all over the world; we are privileged to live in a nation in which we can freely discuss such issues. Racial prejudice may always be an element of our society. But if we work to create and maintain dialogue between people of different races, ethnicities and cultures, our respective prejudices will lessen and we can work together towards
mutual understanding and appreciation.

TAKE ACTION!

All this low self-esteem, hate crime and discrimination can be a bit of a downer. And I know this sounds cheesy, but prejudice ultimately affects everyone, because we are excluding and alienating people who could be well worth knowing.

  • Challenge your own prejudices: everyone has prejudiced thoughts, so don’t feel guilty, just recognize that you have them and work to think and act differently.
  • Get to know people from groups who are discriminated against. It will help with understanding and not being scared.
  • School yourself up with the Prejudice Institute’s factsheet.
  • Write letters to Editors or to politicians — make sure they know it’s something you care about.
  • Link up with other people or organisations to organise pro-diversity, anti-prejudice events or groups.
  • Call it when you see it.

LEARN MORE

New Mexico’s vigilante killings
Immigration New Zealand
Refugee and Migrant Service
Understanding Prejudice — this is a great website for getting your head around prejudice.
Oxfam International Youth Parliament - check out some of the cool things other young people are doing around the world — disproving the stereotypes.

This article was written as part of the Global Focus a collaborative project of Tearaway Magazine and the Global Education Centre. It was first published in Tearaway magazine and is reprinted here with their permission.