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  • Thousands Of RN’s To Strike In California And Chicago Over Staffing, Patient Care

    By Doug Cunningham

    Thousands of nurses will strike hospitals in California and Chicago April 30 and May 1st. The RN’s with National Nurses United and the California Nurses Association say staffing and patient care concerns are at the heart of their strike. More than 6400 RN’s will strike, some on April 30th, others on May 1st. The nurses say they are demanding policies that “give RN’s a stronger voice in patient care delivery.” Strike locations include Kaiser Permanente’s Los Angeles Medical Center, Providence Health and Services Hospitals in Santa Monica and Torrance, California and five Sutter health facilities in Northern California. The nurses will also strike the University of Chicago Medical Center. The nurses planning to strike say patient safety and protections are compromised across the country as the corporate model of patient health care delivery relentlessly pushes for cuts to increase profits. Kaiser alone made a net profit of $4.3 billion last year. The nurses accuse Kaiser of engaging in an anti-union campaign to silence nurses advocating for patients. In Chicago staffing is also an issue, including what they say is the unsafe practice of rotating shifts for nurses.
     

  • Wapda workers union protests privatisation plan

    PESHAWAR, April 23: The All Pakistan Wapda Hydroelectric Workers Union April 22 staged demonstration against the proposed privatisation plan of the government and asked it to revise the decision.

    Carrying placards and banners, the protesters, led by union’s chairman Gohar Taj and provincial chairman Haji Iqbal, gathered outside the Peshawar Press Club. They chanted slogans against the government for its privatisation policy.

    The protestors condemned the recent firing on Class-IV employees during protest demonstration against provincial government outside assembly building. They said the use of tear gas and firing on the employees was condemnable, unlawful and tantamount to keeping the government employees from demanding their rights. The union leaders said the government had failed to functionalise all its national institutions.

    Published by Daily The News on April 23, 2015

  • WFTU Statement on the tragic deaths of hundreds of refugees and immigrants in the Mediterranean

    WFTU Statement on the tragic deaths of hundreds of refugees and immigrants in the Mediterranean

    By World Federation of Trade Unions |
    April 22, 2015

    MURDERERS AND HYPOCRITES

    The World Federation of Trade Unions representing 90 million workers in 126 countries of the world expresses its grief and frustration for the tragedy that took place in the Mediterranean resulting to the death of hundreds of immigrants and refugees on April 19th, 2015.

    The deaths of hundreds of people in the Mediterranean and particularly South of Italy are added to the long list of immigrants finding their death looking for a better livelihood while being exploited by the smugglers.

    (more…)

  • आंबेडकर जयन्‍ती पर कनहर में हुए गोलीकांड का अविकल विवरण

    नई दिल्ली। उत्तर प्रदेश के सोनभद्र जिले के कनहर में आंबेडकर जयन्ती पर हुए गोलीकांड की जांच पड़ताल करने दिल्ली से कुछ सामाजिक कार्यकर्ताओं की फैक्ट फाइंडिंग टीम पिछले दिनों सोनभद्र गई थी। इस टीम में हस्तक्षेप के सहयोगी अभिषेक श्रीवास्तव भी शामिल थे। इस गोली कांड में घायल  अकलू चेरो के बयान को इस …

    The post आंबेडकर जयन्‍ती पर कनहर में हुए गोलीकांड का अविकल विवरण appeared first on hastakshep | हस्तक्षेप.

  • 1.5 Million Black Men “Missing”

    We reprint this article from The Black Agenda Report

     We Charge Genocide: 1.5 Million Black Men “Missing”

    A Black Agenda Radio commentary by executive editor Glen Ford

    Where did all the Black men go? Analysis of population data shows so many Black males have gone to prison, died of disease of accidents, or by violence, that Black females in many communities outnumber Black men by ratios of 6 to 10. A national policy of mass Black incarceration is the primary factor – a factual basis for a charge of genocide.

    We Charge Genocide: 1.5 Million Black Men “Missing”

    A Black Agenda Radio commentary by executive editor Glen Ford

    There are more Black men missing from their communities than the combined Black male populations of Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Houston, Washington and Boston.”

    A new analysis of population data confirms what has long been obvious to every minimally conscious Black person in the United States: a huge proportion of the Black male population is missing, physically absent from the daily life of the community. Many are prematurely dead, but the largest group has been consigned to the social death of incarceration. According to a study by the Upshot unit of the New York Times, when prison inmates of both sexes are taken out of the equation, there are now 1.5 million more Black women in the country, age 25 to 54, than there are Black men. In some locations – for example, Ferguson, Missouri – there are only six Black men physically present in the community for every ten Black women.

    In white America, there is almost no imbalance in gender among the 25 to 54 age group. For every 100 white women, there are 99 white men.

    There are more Black men missing from their communities than the combined Black male populations of Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Houston, Washington and Boston. Six hundred thousand of them are in prison, and that’s not counting Black male prison inmates that are younger than 25 and older than 54. The analysts estimate that roughly half, and maybe as many as three-quarters, of the other 900,000 missing Black men have died before their time from diseases and accidents, and that 200,000 are no longer here due to homicide.

    The war of attrition is a race war.”

    Black life in America does not start out with these bizarre imbalances between the sexes. There is no gender gap among Blacks in childhood. Roughly the same number of boys and girls are born, and the ratio stays stable until the teenage years, when the war of attrition begins mercilessly grinding down the numbers of Black males. How else is this phenomenon to be described except as a war, in which 600,000 are held captive during their most productive years, 200,000 are killed by violence, and most of the rest go to early graves from accidents and diseases that cause far lower casualties among whites.

    The data show that U.S. society has become much more toxic for Black men during the very period in which Blacks were supposedly making such fantastic “progress.” The numbers show that the missing-Black-men phenomenon “began growing in the middle decades of the 20th century.” The increasing ratio of Black women to men is primarily a product of the age of mass Black incarceration. The war of attrition is a race war deliberately and methodically initiated by the U.S. government, the effects of which have been devastating to Black society on the most fundamental level: stunting the formation of Black families and the Black American group as a whole by physically removing and eliminating the men.

    The data support a totally plausible, factually grounded charge of genocide, based on international law. The U.S. government, through its mass Black incarceration policies of the last half century, has been guilty of a) “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part,” as well as b) “causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group.”

    The facts bear witness to the indictment. So do 1.5 million missing Black men.

    For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Glen Ford. On the web, go to BlackAgendaReport.com

  • Bastar: Villager Injured in Police Firing, Police Harasses Activist Soni Sori

    By IndiaResists Team,

    Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh/22 April 15): On 17th April 2015, Bhima Madkam, from Village Madenar, Police station Darbha Chowki Pakhnar and District Bastar suffered three grievous bullet injuries in a police firing. While his condition was very serious the villagers were not sure whether taking him to the Government Hospital for treatment would be helpful. After being convinced by Soni Sori and her lawyers and taking into consideration the deteriorating condition of the patient, the villagers agreed to bring him to the Maharani hospital, Jagdalpur on 21 April 2015. On the same day i.e. 21 April 2015 an application was also submitted to the police stating how Bhima Madkam had been injured in a case of police firing and demanding the police to take action against the erring personnel.

    Bhima Madkam

    Bhima Madkam, along with his family, was brought to Maharani Hospital late yesterday evening. But as soon as he reached the hospital the entire environment changed. The entire ward was cordoned off by the police and no one including Bhima Madkam’s lawyers were allowed to meet him. This is completely illegal since Bhima Madkam has not been arrested by the police but is a patient seeking medical treatment in which case he should have complete access to people as any other patient.

    The cordon of the police continued even the next day (22.4.15). In the morning certain villagers were allowed to meet Bhima but his lawyer was still not allowed access. Moreover, even journalists were debarred from entering the ward where Bhima is admitted. Several restrictions have been placed on the movement of his parents also who are not allowed to leave the ward and only allowed to leave only during meal times.

    The police is also harassing Human Rights Defender Soni Sori by stating that they will get her bail cancelled by the Supreme Court on the ground that she is ‘instigating people against the state’ and send her back to jail.

    Three people from Village Madenar and one from Village Toenar were picked up by the police on 19.4.15 and were produced before the Magistrate only on 22.4.2015. They moved an application of illegal detention before the CJM who dismissed the application without recording the statements of the accused.

    Such incidents are a clear violation of the rule of law and the constitutional mandate. The need of the hour is to allow Bhima Madkam, who is undergoing a medical treatment complete access to people. He should be the one deciding who he wants to meet and not the police. Furthermore, by harassing Human Right Defenders like Soni Sori, who are trying to assist villagers to procure redress from the District administration, the state is further alienating people and threatening the very fabric of democracy.

    Meanwhile, PUCL Chhattisgarh has made following demands:

    1. Independent inquiry and action into the injury of Bhima Madkam on 17thApril.
    2. Allow Bhima Madkam, who is undergoing medical treatment, complete access to people.
    3.    The medical treatment of Bhima Madkam and his access to medical papers should not be comprised only to support the accused police personnel.
    4. Stop arresting other villagers of Madenar who may be witnesses in Bhima Madkam’s case.
    5. Human Rights Defender Soni Sori who is continuously trying to help villagers approach the district administration for resolution of their grievances should not be threatened and harassed.
  • Potato Farmers’ Suicides in West Bengal: A Preliminary Analysis

    By Pradip Kar Over the last 15 years more than 2 lakh farmers have committed suicide in the country due to debt related problem and an acute agrarian crisis. West Bengal is no exception. Like other states, the West Bengal govt. also followed new economic policies, set up SEZs, and also introduced contract farming, and […]

  • Farmer hangs himself at AAP rally

    Farmer hangs himself at AAP rally

    A farmer from Dausa in Rajasthan committed suicide at the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) farmers’ rally at Jantar Mantar here on Wedensday.

    Gajendra Singh was among five-odd protesters who had climbed atop a tree overlooking the dais at the said rally. A suicide note was recovered from his possession, which stated that he was taking the extreme step because he had been turned out of his house by his father due to a destroyed harvest this year. (more…)

  • Tragedy in the Mediterranean: Immigration and the crimes of capitalism

    Written by Hamid AlizadehTuesday, 21 April 2015

    The death of more than 800 people who drowned when a small fishing boat capsized 60 miles south of the Italian island of Lampedusa late on Saturday brings the death toll to of people among people attempting to reach Europe by boat in 2015 alone to 1,600. This tragic event highlights the dramatic situation that has developed in Africa and the Middle East after years of imperialist meddling.

    (more…)

  • Police repression at UQAM marks sharpening of Quebec movement

    montreal-uqam-occupation-thThe past few days have seen some significant developments in the movement of students and workers in Quebec.