Tuesday, 5 June 2012
WHY ASK PERMISSION FOR A BETTER LIFE?
I found this a very thought provoking poster from The Black Door. A picture is worth a thousand words, what about a thousand pictures like this dotted around your neighbourhood?
ann arky's home.
Labels:
anarchism,
anarchy,
Atlanta,
occupy,
The Black Door
Monday, 4 June 2012
A PROUD MOMENT FOR SCOTLAND.
Edinburgh celebrates the jubilee with the anarcho-syndicalist Red and Black flying at the headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland.
ann arky's home.
THE BRUTALITY OF ATOS.
The brutal stories still come out from the ATOS experience, each story is a case of human suffering. This from ATOS Victims Group News.
Hello
About two years ago I started suffering from extreme anxiety due to the pressure of my work as a college tutor combined with my caring duties for my mum. This triggered a severe panic attack and also severe alopoecia. My doctor of 20 years and my counsellor both said I was unfit for work. My medication also means that I feel very tired and have poor concentration for large parts of the day. I was placed on ESA and had to attend an ATOS ‘assessment’. I wasn’t able to travel in on my own, on the bus or by foot, due to my fear of having another panic attack; my mum, who I was meant to be caring for, cared for me and brought me in by car, despite being in pain with her own condition and needing to rest several times on the short walk from the car to the assessment centre.
The first impression I had of an ATOS centre was seeing the TV tuned to ‘The Jeremy Kyle‘ show at full volume in reception, watched by a bored security guard. This increased my levels of anxiety even further as I waited and my mum had to ask for it to be switched off. When I entered the interview room I answered all the questions as truthfully as possible whilst the ‘assessor’ ticked his little boxes on a PC.
My report said that I was able to work and that ‘I underestimated my ability to concentrate on work tasks’. This was despite the report saying that I was very subdued in the assessment and looked extremely anxious, despite me telling the ‘assessor’ that the very reason I was suffering from severe anxiety was because I was trying to combine a job with caring for my mum.
After some excellent advice from my local CAB, I found I was able to claim Carer‘s Allowance and Income Support to help me look after my mum full-time. Obviously, at no time was I ever told this by anybody at ATOS or at Jobcentreplus; I was just another statistic, boosting ATOS’s performance profits and meeting government targets. I know this; I worked for Jobcentreplus Head Office as an Executive Officer for eight years.
This experience is one of the many reasons I am now fighting the government’s cuts; their desire to move genuinely disabled and incapacitated people into a workfare style scheme that takes no account of their condition is merely a way for the government to make an easy target, people who did not cause our social and economic crisis, pay for it.
Don’t let them make the people of this country an easy target. Don’t let them forget the effects of their atrocious policies on real flesh, blood and minds. On real people who refuse to be treated like crap.
Show them that we have the guts to fight back.
Read the story:
Read the story:
IT'S TIME TO LEAVE!!
A debating point worth a little thought from Infoshop:
Conflict, safe spaces and removing people.
by Scott
Crow
May 30, 2012
May 30, 2012
To all
of us engaged in groups in general. If you will allow me for a
minute. I haven't paid attention to all of the chatter and conflict
etc . of your particular group, but I bet it is similar as to most
places. I wanted to take a moment to address anarchism and open
groups in brief. I believe our spaces have value to them and we have
all learned and shared things over their existence. Flame wars have
happened since the dawn of the interwebz and personal conflict has
happened at least since we could open our mouths. But sometimes we
have to say Ya Basta!(Enough!)
I have
been an anarchist in the real world for a long time and I do not
believe in large open groups for much more than short term
organizing. They always fall into trouble over the long haul due to
not having enough cohesion ,collective input and shared power . I
actually mostly only work in small closed collectives with people I
can develop intimate shared ideals, principles and actions.
Our
Spaces , Our Places.
Anarchism
is not about all of us getting into one big boat and heading towards
the horizon--and all getting along singing Kumbaya. This is the mess
we are in now. This 'boat' is filled with the lowest common
denominator of ideal/principles of all the participants. The way I
see it is that the horizon is the goal (follow me on this for a
minute). And instead of all getting into one big stupid boat, we call
get into our own boats, rafts, ships or whatever and head towards the
horizon without sinking each others boats. Some will get there
faster, and some will not make it, some will go in armadas. But the
key is we get there individually or collectively how we can--without
sinking each others boats.
I also
believe and practice protecting the spaces we have carved out within
groups, workplaces, meetings, housing etc. I am not a liberal who
believes we have to , or can accept everyone. It's why I am an
anarchist. We need multiple small accountable groups that can
federate , network--or not. If we can't get along then we form other
groups and don't try to sink the others boat. We don't have the
capacity to deal with everyone's personal issues--whether its drugs,
alcohol, mental health or they are just assholes looking for a fight.
There is plenty of pie to go around for all of us, plenty of problems
to solve and lots of disagreements to be had with people we like or
love without the added stress . Find the place that fits and work in
it.
Saturday, 2 June 2012
THE END OF THE BANKERS' PONZI SCHEME?
Predictions
for the global economy and banking system grow more dismal by the
day. One financial commentator, Business Insider, puts it thus; “The
problem is not Government Debt per se. The real problem is that the
$70trillion in G10 debt is collateral for $700 trillion in
derivatives--- Yes, that equates to 1200% of global GDP and it rests
on very, very weak foundations.”
Here
in Europe the financial Mafia and their action men, the national
governments, waffle with all sorts of ideological theories, from
bleak brutal austerity, to austerity with grow, but nothing is
actually being done, meetings and discussions keep them busy, sort of
fiddling while Rome burns. Of course we shouldn't blame them too
much, as in actual fact there is nothing they can do, the ship has a
large hole well below the water line, it is called “magic money
made from nothing”. What this means to the ordinary people caught
up in this the biggest ponzi scheme of all times is dire poverty and
deprivation on a scale not witnessed before. At this stage of their
game unemployment across Europe is now at 11% for the second month in
a row. Spain, has the highest unemployment rate in Europe at 24.3%,
about the same as the US during the “Great Depression”. Greece at
present has 21.7% unemployment, with Italy and Portugal both having
15.2%. France, one of the supposedly economically strong nations of
Europe has unemployment running at 10.2%. Even that saviour of the
western capitalist system, the US, unemployment has risen again and
is now at 8.2%. These figures equate to 17.4 million people out of
work across Europe, of that total 3.5 million are 25 years old or
younger, up 214,000 on the previous month. What future does that
predict for those young people of today and those still at school?
In the face of all this “economic gloom” companies across the
globe are shedding jobs like trees shed leaves as winter approaches.
To any informed
observer of the capitalist chaos that is at the present time,
destroying millions of lives across the planet, it becomes obvious
that the system cannot work for the benefit of the ordinary people,
it cannot be transformed into some fair, just and compassionate
system that will see to the needs of all our people. It is and has
always been an unfair, unjust elitist system and at present it is the
the throes of its biggest crisis since its inception, and its only
chance of survival is to plunder all public resources and assets and
in the process destroy the lives of millions of innocent people. This
chaos in the capitalist ponzi scheme is also an opportunity for the
ordinary people to organise outside the system and take control of
their own lives, control of their communities and their work places.
To start to build a system that will produce for the needs of all our
people freed from the greed for profit, a system that is built on
co-operation and sustain ability. Now is probably the best
opportunity we have had in years to bring down a system that has
exploited our parents and our forefathers, generation after
generation. In the words of the song, “From the ashes of disaster
grow the roses of success”, however it is up to us, the ordinary
people, but we have to do it without, Leaders, Presidents, Monarchs
and others of that ilk. Their record is one of greed, disaster,
exploitation, war and deprivation.
An attempt to rescue the bankers and their friends.
Friday, 1 June 2012
ASSEMBLIES, THEN WHAT?
Occupy to Self Manage
By Michael Albert
By Michael Albert
I have yet to see my nearest large occupation, Boston, or the precursor of all U.S. occupations, Wall Street. Instead, I have been on the road for the past six weeks in Thesselonika and Athens Greece; Istanbul and Diyarbikar Turkey; Lexington, Kentucky; London, England; Dublin, Ireland; and in Barcelona, Madrid, and Valencia Spain.
In all these places, I talked with diverse individuals at many meetings and popular assemblies. I met people involved in occupations, as well as audiences assembled by my hosts to hear about participatory economics. Beyond addressing assigned topics, my own priority was to learn about local movements. I repeatedly asked what folks struggling for many months wished to say to other folks first embarking on similar paths.
Boredom, Disempowerment, and Consensus Obstruct Growth
In Greece and Spain, a single message predominated. It had nothing to do with analyses of capitalism or other analytic focuses. Instead, Greek and Spanish activists reported that they had massive assemblies in widespread cities and their occupations grew, grew, grew, so that assemblies were up to 12,000, 15,000 - and then they shrunk, shrunk, shrunk, so that assemblies are now not meeting, or are meeting in the hundreds, or less. ---
In Greece and Spain, a single message predominated. It had nothing to do with analyses of capitalism or other analytic focuses. Instead, Greek and Spanish activists reported that they had massive assemblies in widespread cities and their occupations grew, grew, grew, so that assemblies were up to 12,000, 15,000 - and then they shrunk, shrunk, shrunk, so that assemblies are now not meeting, or are meeting in the hundreds, or less. ---
Labels:
anarchism,
anarchy,
Athens,
Dublin,
Kentucky,
London,
Madrid,
occupy,
people's asseblies,
solidarity
Thursday, 31 May 2012
ENTRAPMENT.
From Crimethinc:
Over the past month,
the FBI has initiated a spateof entrapment operations designed to frame anarchists as
“terrorists.” Significantly, they have not targeted longtime
organizers, but rather people who are relatively peripheral to
anarchist communities. In response, we’ve
prepared a pamphlet suitable for a wide readership explaining how
this entrapment strategy works, and an analysis exploring why the FBI
has adopted it. Please circulate these widely.
ann arky's home.
Labels:
anarchism,
anarchy,
entrapment,
FBI,
solidarity,
terrorists
I'M PROUD.
I’M PROUD.
I’m proud of my people, proud to be
one of them,
that great mass on society’s bottom
rung.
Those who, with coal-dust under their
nails
in their eyes, in their
lungs
claw at the earths
entrails.
Their brothers,
cement in their hair
in their mouth, in their
ears,
oil ingrained in their
fingers,
on their face.
Sisters, glistening with
sweat
midst the ceaseless noise of
machines
that throw out shirts, shoes, toys,
carpets
for other people.
Those with soil and sweat stuck to
their skin
smelling of the earth, feeding the
multitude,
grinding out their lives in a harsh
pitiless system
weighted down
with a sack load of half-dead
dreams,
sometimes brought to their
knees
by a tidal wave of despair,
never defeated,
groping in the dark to find
tomorrow,
keeping hope alive;
they amaze me.
Somehow, from somewhere
in this cold, cruel
unforgiving scheme of
things
they find love for their
children.
Not a teaspoonful, not a
cupful,
but buckets full, to bathe them
in,
to pour over them.
They seem to know
that one day this world will be
ours
and to take care of it
we will need those who have been
loved.
Wednesday, 30 May 2012
OCCUPY AND SOLIDARITY ARE WINNERS.
From The Irish Examiner:
Battle of Vita Cortex comes to an end after 161 days
Thursday, May 24, 2012 - 05:14 PM
One of the longest-running industrial
relations protests in the history of the State ended in Cork today.
On Day 161, the marathon sit-in protest at the Vita Cortex factory
ended with a ceremonial march out the gate. The 23 workers who
occupied the factory since December 16 have now all been paid an
undisclosed sum by company owner, Jack Ronan, as the final part of
their redundancy. The foam-workers’ stand lasted longer than the
Dublin Lockout of 1913, when James Larkin led thousands of workers
for 146 days in the most significant industrial relations dispute in
Irish history.
The former Vita Cortex staff said their campaign began on nothing more than a gut instinct and a feeling of injustice. The workers were due to leave the foam factory for the last time when it shut down on December 16 last year. When it became clear they would not receive their redundancy package of 2.9 weeks’ wages per year of service they decided to take a stand.
On a shift rota, they have occupied the building ever since, and their efforts have seen them held up as a symbol of workers’ rights. Up to 5,000 people marched through Cork to support their plight on a rainy day in February in one of the largest public demonstrations the city has seen in recent years. The campaign attracted support from soccer legends Alex Ferguson and Paul McGrath, former President Mary Robinson, philosopher Noam Chomsky, actor Cillian Murphy and Cork sport and GAA stars.
Former machinist Helen Crowley, who gave 27 years’ service to the company, said: “The whole campaign snowballed in a way. You got completely swept away in it.” After spending Christmas, New Year’s Day, St Patrick’s Day and Easter in the Kinsale Road factory, the workers were today looking forward to normal life again.
Jim Power, who worked for the company for 43 years, summed up the mood. “It’s a relief really. Now that it’s all over, I look forward to normal living again,” he said. Seán Kelleher, who worked at the plant for more than 47 years, said: “This campaign has dominated our lives for the past five months. It was the generosity of the Cork people that kept us going.”
After months of failed negotiations, the company finally agreed at a meeting in Cork earlier this month to pay the workers.
The former Vita Cortex staff said their campaign began on nothing more than a gut instinct and a feeling of injustice. The workers were due to leave the foam factory for the last time when it shut down on December 16 last year. When it became clear they would not receive their redundancy package of 2.9 weeks’ wages per year of service they decided to take a stand.
On a shift rota, they have occupied the building ever since, and their efforts have seen them held up as a symbol of workers’ rights. Up to 5,000 people marched through Cork to support their plight on a rainy day in February in one of the largest public demonstrations the city has seen in recent years. The campaign attracted support from soccer legends Alex Ferguson and Paul McGrath, former President Mary Robinson, philosopher Noam Chomsky, actor Cillian Murphy and Cork sport and GAA stars.
Former machinist Helen Crowley, who gave 27 years’ service to the company, said: “The whole campaign snowballed in a way. You got completely swept away in it.” After spending Christmas, New Year’s Day, St Patrick’s Day and Easter in the Kinsale Road factory, the workers were today looking forward to normal life again.
Jim Power, who worked for the company for 43 years, summed up the mood. “It’s a relief really. Now that it’s all over, I look forward to normal living again,” he said. Seán Kelleher, who worked at the plant for more than 47 years, said: “This campaign has dominated our lives for the past five months. It was the generosity of the Cork people that kept us going.”
After months of failed negotiations, the company finally agreed at a meeting in Cork earlier this month to pay the workers.
Article courtesy of The Evening Echo newspaper
Labels:
anarchism,
anarchy,
Noam Chomsky,
occupy,
sit-in,
solidarity
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
DAWN RAIDERS DAWN RAIDED!!
At
5:30am this morning a group of dozen protesters from Unity & the
No Borders Network blockaded and closed the gates at the UKBA
reporting centre in Brand Street Glasgow, in protest against the
continuing detention of children and the practice of early morning
raids following the harrowing dawn raids and subsequent detention of
two African families in the city over the last month.
Protesters have attached themselves through lock on tubes across the entrance of the main gates, blocking the exit for dawn raid vans, and closing all vehicle exits to the building where the heavy handed UK enforcement teams are based.
The team of protesters are chained together through tubing on which reads the slogans “STOP DAWN RAIDS” & “END DEPORTATIONS”. Banners in support of refugee rights hang across the gates.
The peaceful protest attracted the attention of 15 police officers. As protesters blocked the road this morning, members of the UKBA Enforcement Teams which carry out the dawn raids arrived, protesters believe, in preparation to carry out a dawn raid on another family this morning. Protesters believe that we have managed to successfully stop the UKBA detaining a family today.
Monday, 28 May 2012
STILL THE MOST DEMOCRATIC STATE IN THE MIDDLE EAST???
May 24, 2012 -- Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal -- One of South Africa’s largest tertiary institutions, the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) in Durban, is a site of multiple controversy but a near-disaster on May 21 deserves more reflection because it points us in a positive direction: away from allying with the Israeli state and its apartheid policies during a time of heightened racism. A representative of Israel had been invited to speak but was then disinvited, after the university was called on by staff and students to respect the “academic boycott” of Israel.
From South Africa, the African continent and everywhere else, it is a critical time to step up pressure against the rogue regime in Tel Aviv. Israel’s hard-right leader, Benyamin Netanyahu, is in a dangerous career phase, preparing to bomb Iran; illegitimately holding thousands of Palestinian prisoners in worsening conditions; expanding settlements on Palestinian land in the West Bank; terrorising Gaza; and tightening his militaristic hold over the region.
Netanyahu’s approach to protecting his core constituency was unveiled at a recent cabinet meeting, in his paranoid description of African refugee immigration (mainly from Eritrea, Ethiopia and South Sudan): “If we don't stop the problem [sic], 60,000 infiltrators [sic] are liable to become 600,000, and cause the negation of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic [sic] state.”
Interior minister Eli Yishai picked up the same theme: “They [African immigrants] should be put into holding cells or jails … and then given a grant and sent back."
In spite of police data confirming that Israelis commit more than twice as many crimes per person as African immigrants, Yishai claimed, “most African infiltrators are involved in crime”.
According to the Hotline for Migrant Workers, “In the last month, the number of hate crimes carried out by Israelis against Africans has risen tremendously. Multiple Molotov cocktails were thrown into houses of Africans in southern Tel Aviv on two separate occasions, a week apart.” Then on the night of May 23, the logic of Netanyahu/Yishai unfolded at street level when hundreds of their followers attacked Africans in what was widely described as a race riot, leaving many injured, with a dozen Israelis arrested for violence.
ann arky's home.
Sunday, 27 May 2012
THE ONLY DEMOCRACY IN THE MIDDLE EAST!!!!
It is not
very often that we hear a criticism of Israel coming from America. As
we all know America is Israel's banker and minder, and in return
Israel is the US policeman in the Middle East, who refers to itself
as, “the only democracy in the Middle East”. So when US state
department raise concerns about Israel's treatment African asylum
seekers, stating that they are being denied their basic human rights,
the situation must be serious. The US annual
report on human rights says that many asylum seekers are refused
refugee status, so cannot access health care. This report also
criticises the Israeli government officials for referring to migrants
as “infiltrators”. It is believed that in recent years,
approximately 60,000 migrants have entered Israel, mainly from Sudan
and Eritrea. The UNHCR states that, last year from 4,603 new asylum
applications Israel received, only one was approved. Their figures
also show that there are approximately 6,000 previous cases still pending.
There is also concern about the fact that Israeli authorities can
reject applications and there is no road for appeal, no independent
appeal process. All our states are riddled with right-wing
politicians, Israel has more than its fair share of those driven by
religious extremism. The US state department report criticises some
of those right-wing politicians, stating that the are stoking up
hatred by referring to “infiltrators” as a cancer, while calling
for all migrants to be expelled. There is the usual claim from the
Israeli state mouth pieces, stating that the overwhelming majority of
migrants are not fleeing war, violence and persecution, but merely
seeking a better life, (in state ideology this is a crime). A simple
look at the war, violence and persecution taking place in that part
of the world makes that kind of statement no more than an utterance
blinded by racial and/or religious hatred.
Saturday, 26 May 2012
AH, POOR NICK!!
UK Uncut has moved it targets from high street corporate tax dodgers to those, "We're all in it together" millionaire politicians. It beggers belief that the people of this country put up with being told to tighten their belts and face poverty with humility, from a bunch of pompous, arrogant over privileged parasitical milliomaires. When will we ever learn!!!
This from a BBC report:
Hundreds of anti-cuts protesters
have gathered outside Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg's home in
south-west London.
UK Uncut said disabled activists had
chained their wheelchairs at both ends of the street in Putney where
he lives. The group, which is staging protest "street parties"
in 10 UK cities, said it was targeting Mr Clegg as he was "one
of the architects of austerity". A spokesman for Mr Clegg said:
"People have a right to peaceful protest."
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said
there were no reported arrests.
UK Uncut, which has previously
targeted high profile people it believes are avoiding paying tax,
said it was now targeting politicians. Jean Sandler, 42, a UK Uncut
supporter, said: "Nick Clegg is one of the architects of
austerity; he's a millionaire and lives in a £1m home. "The
cuts are a political choice of this government and the cabinet of
out-of-touch millionaires, they are not necessary.
A NEED FOR A DEBATE.
Food for thought from AdBusters:
ann arky's home.
Dear occupiers, jammers, dreamers,
Three years after the May 1968
uprising that swept the world, the great French philosopher Michel
Foucault observed that a key strategy of power is to “appear
inaccessible to events.” Power, Foucault argued with a nod towards
1968’s failed insurrection, acts to “dispel the shock of daily
occurrences, to dissolve the event … to exclude the radical break
introduced by events.”
Forty years later, in light of
Occupy, Foucault’s observation still strikes home. Despite
achieving the impossible at unprecedented speed – sparking a global
awakening, triggering a thousand people’s assemblies worldwide, and
giving birth to a visceral anti-corporate, pro-democracy spiritual
insurrection – Occupy is now struggling through an existential
moment. Our movement has been dealt a blow: our May 1 and follow-up
events have been dissolved by power; the status quo has shown itself
to be far more resilient than many of us expected.
Now a passionate debate is emerging
within our movement. On one side are those who cheer the death of
Occupy in the hopes that it will transform into something unexpected
and new. And on the other are patient organizers who counsel that all
great movements take years to unfold.
LIVING IN A PONZI SCHEME.
We have
a system where the poor are pushed deeper and deeper into poverty,
and by legislation ruthlessly trapped there. It is a system that will
use the language of irrationality to prove its groundless claims.
There is the cry from our privileged overlords for a return to family
values while at the same time branding a mother who stays at home to
look after her children, a scrounger, and if she goes out (forced
out) to work, with no time off to care for the kids during the summer
holidays, she will be accused of being a bad mother allowing her
kids to roam the streets. On occasions when some individual “cheats”
the benefit system, all hell breaks loose and our lords and masters
scream about all the “lower class” being feckless, lazy
parasites. Though they never mention the fact that the system itself
is one big ponzi scheme, riddled with fraud and corruption, where
that fraud and corruption increases in size as you go up their
vitiated ladder.
We have to crack down on those benefit cheats!!
It is also a system dominated by super-rich, over privileged,
privately educated middle aged men, who have no perception of what it
is to live at the “ordinary” level of life, to struggle with
bills and worry about keeping a roof over your head, or whether your
job will be there next month. All that daily struggle is an alien
world to the real super-rich parasites who control the system and our
daily lives. Like I have said before, they need us, we don't need
them.
THERE WILL COME A TIME.
THERE WILL COME A TIME.
There will come a time when the hordes
remember,
who bound our grand-parents to the
yoke of oppression,
who sentenced our parents to
deprivation,
who bid poverty sink its teeth into
our heart,
who teach our children, greed is a
noble art.
Who sent our sons through the gates of
hell
to a litany of cambist
brawls,
crammed coffers with blood-stained
gold
while laughing in Ares'
halls.
"Who does these terrible things to
us?" they will ask,
and when they remember,
they'll bring an energy that is
endless
to drive a fist that is
fearless.
Then this merciless market-driven
world will crumble
under an insurrection of
integrity,
the poor will emerge from the dark
husk of capitalism
to live in the light of social
justice.
There will come a time when the hordes
remember.
Friday, 25 May 2012
FIGHT A WAGE CUT - LOSE YOUR PASSPORT.
In April, 2,000 migrant workers in a factory in Thailand that processes shrimp for a major supplier to Walmart revolted against their abusive and degrading conditions. The workers, from Cambodia and Burma, protested the seizure of their passports by factory owners in Thailand. Police were called. Shots were fired.
It wasn't just the passport seizure that incited the workers' anger - it was management slashing wages again. Their wages already failed to cover the most basic needs, and this latest action put workers deeper into the factory's debt. Many of them are still legally and financially trapped at the factory, victims of human trafficking. This is not an isolated incident. Also in Thailand, workers at a pineapple factory recently held similar protests over wage reductions. There are now reports of human trafficking involving children under 15, bought and sold to work there. More than 73% of this factory's shipments to the USA go to Walmart.
It wasn't just the passport seizure that incited the workers' anger - it was management slashing wages again. Their wages already failed to cover the most basic needs, and this latest action put workers deeper into the factory's debt. Many of them are still legally and financially trapped at the factory, victims of human trafficking. This is not an isolated incident. Also in Thailand, workers at a pineapple factory recently held similar protests over wage reductions. There are now reports of human trafficking involving children under 15, bought and sold to work there. More than 73% of this factory's shipments to the USA go to Walmart.
Sign the petition to Walmart's VP of Ethical Sourcing, calling for him to demand these factory owners end human trafficking immediately and allow independent monitors to audit all of their factories.
For more information, and to sign the petition, click here.
Ron Oswald
General Secretary, IUF
International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF)
8, rampe du Pont-Rouge
1213 Petit Lancy, Switzerland
Tel: +41 22 793 22 33
Fax: +41 22 793 22 38
web-site: www.iuf.org
General Secretary, IUF
International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF)
8, rampe du Pont-Rouge
1213 Petit Lancy, Switzerland
Tel: +41 22 793 22 33
Fax: +41 22 793 22 38
web-site: www.iuf.org
Labels:
anarchism,
anarchy,
Burma,
Cambodia,
IUF,
police brutality,
slave labour,
Thailand,
Walmart
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