Wide screen devices may view this page better by clicking here
Arguments for socialism :: Solidarity
All Arguments for socialism subcategories:
Solidarity
Search site for keywords: Farmers - Solidarity - Socialist - India - Protest - Birmingham - Cardiff - Food - Agribusiness
Around 300 people from the city's Indian Sikh community turned out in Cardiff Bay on Saturday 12 December to protest in solidarity with farmers in Punjab, India, taking action against the brutal right-wing regime.
Modi, the Indian prime minister, is pushing the Farmers' Act through parliament in an extremely undemocratic manner. These new laws will remove the minimum price that small farmers must currently be paid for their produce.
One speaker at the rally pointed out that this is akin to the UK government abolishing the minimum wage. It will drive farmers and their families into grinding poverty. Big agribusiness, in cahoots with the government, will be aiming to drive out the independent farmers, and monopolise control of the land to increase their profit margins. Farmers protesting for their livelihoods have faced brutal repression at the hands of the state.
Last month, India saw a general strike involving at least 250 million people, against austerity and privatisation carried out by the Modi government. Modi, a deeply sectarian Hindu nationalist, aims to sow divisions between India's various ethnic and religious groups, to prevent united struggle against his brutal capitalist policies.
Socialist Party members supported the protest, and our leaflets, with a statement from New Socialist Alternative, our sister party in India, were very well received. Socialist Party member Mariam Kamish spoke at the rally representing Caerphilly Trades Council, and received the loudest cheers of the day when she raised the need for cross-community, cross-ethnic struggles of the working class and poor to defeat the rule of Modi and the super-rich oligarchs.
Many of those attending the protest, and especially the young organisers, were extremely open to the ideas of socialism, and keen to discuss socialist solutions to the huge poverty and inequality in India. Several copies of the Socialist were sold, and we agreed to discuss future solidarity actions that we can take to support the struggles of Indian farmers and workers. (See more, visit socialistworld.net)
Birmingham Socialist party extended solidarity on behalf of New Socialist Alternative, our sister party in India, to a protest in support of Indian farmers on 12 December.
The Kisaan Rally was in response to the new laws passed in the Indian parliament in June which will significantly affect the farmers. The new law creates imbalance in the food market by removing subsides and price controls, without which prices can rapidly fluctuate depending on what the corporations decide.
This leaves the farmers without a safety net and basic rate of pay for their products. The new laws are anti-worker, pushed forward by the conservative Modi government.
The farmers have been protesting for a while with initial protest carried out in India. They have now spread internationally and taken place in the USA, Canada, Australia and the UK.
The protest had an amazing atmosphere. Many of the Gurdwaras (Sikh temples) across Birmingham came together and organised the protest. The streets surrounding the Indian Consulate in the Jewellery Quarter were full of protesters and cars.
We gave out leaflets to protesters and we were given food and drinks in return. The socialist material and our program were well received. We also had good dialogue with people about pushing the struggle further and extending the protests internationally.
The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.
The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.
The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.
Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.
We therefore urgently appeal to all our viewers to click here to donate to our Fighting Fund.
Arguments for socialism keywords:
Article dated 16 December 2020
MEMBER RESOURCES
23 Apr Socialist Party meeting: No to football Super League
26 Apr Oxfordshire & Aylesbury Socialist Party: The May local elections
27 Apr Bristol North Socialist Party: Open discussion - Question and Answers
The Socialist, weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party
Don't trust the Labour right's empty promises
Keep Liverpool council's One Stop Shops open
Liverpool hustings - only TUSC has a strategy to take on the Tories
Essex: Why I'm standing for TUSC
Socialist Party northern region meeting
With public campaigning back in full swing - now is the time to raise fighting fund
Socialist Party members - part of a left challenge for Unison's leadership
Fight back against British Gas bosses' 'fire and rehire' offensive
Retail workers desperately need a fighting and democratic union
CWU BT ballot - time for action now!
Thurrock bin workers solid in strike against pay cuts
Bus workers protest Go-Ahead's 'fire and rehire'
Ballots to defend reps on Woolwich Ferry
|
ebook / Kindle
|
PDF version
|
Text / Print
|
1130 online
|
Back issues
|
Audio files
Protesting in Leeds as part of a Socialist Students day of action on the education funding crisis. 21st April 2021
Platform setting: =