Monday, 16 April 2018

True forgiveness: ugly 20th Century racism rehashed - Powell, Lawrence, deportation threat

The broken glass of 20th Century race and class reveals its unforgiving sharpness once more in 2018.
Firstly, a clumsy BBC - often confused over how to cover race and class issues - dunks its own head in a race mire by re-hashing and re-broadcasting Enoch Powell's notorious incendiary, racist and mistaken 'rivers of blood' speech from 1968. This is where Powell predicts black immigration will lead to 'rivers of blood' in UK cities. The BBC draws an accusation on its own head of seeking to posthumously 'forgive' Powell at a time in the 21st Century when immigration and race still divide working people in the UK.


Forgive, not forget
Secondly, Neville Lawrence, the father of Stephen Lawrence - the black teenager racially murdered by white youths 25 years ago - says, in an act of true forgiveness, that he 'forgives' his son's killers, even though only two of five original suspects are in jail convicted of the murder. But, whilst Lawrence says he forgives, he says he does not forget. He says the others should be brought to justice to pay for their crime and that a police investigation should stay open. 

Unforgiving
Finally, the United Kingdom government seems to take an unforgiving stance against an estimated 50,000 older black people who came as children in the 1950s and 60s to Britain from the West Indies - from places like Jamaica, Guyana, Barbados and Trinidad & Tobago. 
For one reason or another, these people failed to secure the paperwork to confirm their right to live and work in Britain. Now, 50 years or so later, these people, for whom Britain is their only home, are being threatened by the government with deportation. Some, in these personal ID-driven times, are even being denied life-saving medical treatment as they cannot prove on paper they have a legal right to be resident in Britain.

Amnesty
Calls upon the UK government to grant these people an amnesty and the right to remain are becoming louder; especially as they are children of black people from Britain's former Empire colonies in the West Indies. These people were invited by the UK government in the 1950s and 60s to come and live and work in Britain, to help mitigate the UK's chronic labour shortages in its public services after World War II.
Many people in Britain's long-established black communities are asking whether the UK government would be so unforgiving if these people were the children of white Australians, Canadians, South Africans or New Zealanders. 

© Paul Coleman, London Intelligence, April 2018

 

Friday, 13 April 2018

Anti-smoking agency PHE tells own smoking staff to 'have more respect'


 
© London Intelligence 2018





© London Intelligence 2018


Public Health England says its 'single aim is to motivate millions of people to make changes that will improve their health' – and that includes persuading people to quit smoking.
However, PHE, an executive agency of the Department of Health and Social Care, might need to persuade more of its own staff to quit too. 
London Intelligence photographs taken on Thursday 12 April show how PHE staff routinely drop cigarette butts on to the pavement outside the gates of the agency's imposing site on Colindale Avenue, a busy pedestrian and residential thoroughfare in north London. 
These butts pile up beneath an empty butt bin.  

Apologise
Staff also heap stubbed butts on top of a Barnet Council rubbish bin right outside the PHE site’s gates. Cigarette smoke and e-cigarette vapour is also puffed over passers-by.
A PHE spokesperson said on Friday (13 April): “The cigarette butt litter is completely unacceptable and we sincerely apologise to local residents. 
"We have cleaned it up and reminded our colleagues to have more respect for the area.
"We are committed to playing our part in driving down smoking rates and this includes motivating our own staff who smoke to quit."

Note: PHE reports smoking kills 79,000 people in England every year. For each death, a further 20 smokers suffer from a smoking-related disease. 



© London Intelligence 2018


© London Intelligence, April 2018.

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Saturday, 7 April 2018

After Grenfell, a Blame Game: Grenfell Fire Update


Grenfell fire victims and the tower © Paul Coleman, London Intelligence 2017


Central and local government struggle to mitigate the ongoing tragedy suffered by Grenfell fire survivors, writes Paul Coleman

Anger centres on the slow rehousing of households evacuated from their Grenfell Tower and Grenfell Walk homes. Of 209 evacuated households, 86 remain in emergency accommodation as of 1 March 2018, according to figures from the North Kensington Law Centre. 

Another 63 households have moved into temporary accommodation and just 60 into permanent accommodation. Read more... http://www.londonintelligence.co.uk/an-ongoing-tragedy-grenfell-update/


Courtesy and © Jeff Moore Justice4Grenfell 2018


© Paul Coleman, London Intelligence, April 2018