WORKERS WEEKLY

Year 2001 No. 77, May 8, 2001

MAY DAY 2001

South Tyneside May Day Rally and Celebration Held Successfully
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On evening of May 1, 2001, a very successful South Tyneside May Day Rally
and Celebration was held in South Shields. Around 300 people packed the
South Shields Labour and Social Club to take part in the event and hear the
speeches of Arthur Scargill, President of the National Union of Mineworkers
and General Secretary of the Socialist Labour Party, and Eric Trevett,
speaking on behalf of the Korea Friendship and Solidarity Campaign.

Jimmy Perry, chair of the South Tyneside May Day 2000 Committee, chaired the
proceedings. He spoke about the importance of May Day to the international
working class and about the work that the May Day 2000 Committee had
accomplished in re-establishing the May Day rally and celebrations over the
last two years.

Also on the platform was Roger Nettleship, Secretary of the South Tyneside
May Day 2000 Committee, who that day had announced his intention to stand as
a health worker politician candidate in the forthcoming general election.

Eric Trevett was the first to speak in his capacity as an Honorary President
of the Korea Friendship and Solidarity Campaign. He started by speaking
about the significance of May Day for the workers and in particular what it
meant in countries like Cuba, Democratic Korea and Vietnam where May Day is
celebrated with confidence in the future and where there are expectations of
rising living standards. He also mentioned China where he said that the
happiness of the people was born of the knowledge that the prospects were
good.

Eric Trevett said that Korea was a country that Britain had been at war with
on the side of the US. Therefore, he pointed out, it was more difficult to
develop the friendship movement with Korea. But, he remarked, workers should
note that Korea was an ally in World War II in liberating their country from
Japanese imperialism. The US and Britain intervened there when the people of
Korea turned to socialism, and it was the US and their allies that divided
the country. He pointed out that it was a tragedy that hundreds of British
soldiers were killed in this interventionist war of the US and Britain
against Korea, but he said it should also be remembered that the US and its
allies committed genocide against the Korean people. Korea was laid to
waste, and in the city of Pyongyang there was hardly one brick left standing
on another. Since then there had been a tremendous development of socialist
construction, and that city is now a beautiful testament to the people
moving in such a positive way.

The speaker pointed out that the people of North Korea have had their
problems and have been through natural disasters, flooding and other serious
natural events. He remarked that the difference between the way these
disasters are faced there and here is that in the DPRK the people are
involved in coming to the aid of those areas that are suffering disasters.

Eric pointed out that in his opinion there is a problem in understanding
Korea. He said that in Korea they would say that the leader has done this or
the leader has suggested that. However, he said, it is important to
understand that there is a collective leadership, and he went on to explain
that it was similar to how workers take decisions in their strike struggles
with the minority submitting to the majority.

Eric Trevett spoke also about the international situation. Among other
things, he said that there was a tendency to demonise any leader or any
country which has fallen out of favour with the British and US imperialists.
This is done to try and make acceptable the bombing that goes on against
Iraq, Yugoslavia and other countries. He pointed out that workers in this
country have got to be aware of these things and see the essence of the
class nature of the offensive that has been launched. He said that class
conscious workers are true internationalists, and we should regard the world
as a place where there is a concerted struggle against capitalism and
imperialism going on.

On this May Day, he said, we should also remember that the struggle of the
Irish people for a united Ireland is a just struggle, the struggle of the
people in Zimbabwe for land reform is a just struggle, the struggle of the
people of South Africa for cheaper medicines is a just struggle, the
struggle of the Iraqi people to lift the sanctions and end the bombing is a
just struggle, and the demand of the Palestinians for a homeland is a just
demand. Eric emphasised that it is up to the British workers to stand firmly
with all these peoples. He concluded to appreciative applause from the
audience with the words: "Workers of all lands should unite, we should
reject racism in all its forms and we should move forward to socialism."

Arthur Scargill then rose to speak and was greeted with warm applause. He
started by saying that he brought May Day greetings to the May Day rally
from the National Union of Mineworkers and from the Socialist Labour Party.
He said that he knew that the May Day Rally had been put under tremendous
pressure of a boycott because he was to be the speaker. He said that anyone
who claims to be a socialist and or a trade unionist should be ashamed of
themselves in arguing against attendance at a May Day Rally. He thanked
everyone from whatever walk of life they came for the very fact that they
were there that night to listen to the views of the people on the platform,
even though they may not all agree each with each other.

Arthur Scargill said that May Day was first started in 1890 and it commenced
as a result of a campaign for an 8-hour day. That was the origin of the
Labour Party and trade union movement campaign for May Day, he said. And, he
remarked, here we are today in 2001 and we have got people in this country
of ours who are working in almost slave conditions. He said there are people
who are working in spite of the Minimum Wage at wages that are a scandal in
the 21st century. He pointed out that it is right to struggle and that there
is an alternative. After speaking about the heroic 1984-5 miners strike he
went on to say that the NUM had been fighting for 24 years for equal pay for
women canteen workers and cleaners. In 1996, he said, the House of Lords had
ruled that there should be a settlement negotiated if possible, and in 1997
the Coal Board met with the UDM and the NUM separately. They offered the UDM
a settlement of �1,100 and they accepted it. We rejected it, he said, and
last Friday he had spoken to 1,000 women who attended a special meeting at
the National Union of Mineworkers' headquarters in Yorkshire. The agreement
that the NUM has secured will give settlements to those women of between
�3,000 and �40,000 each. That, he said, is a result of being prepared to
fight and not give in or sell out.

Speaking on behalf of the Socialist Labour Party, Arthur Scargill said that
as the participants met on the historic occasion of May Day, everyone must
spell out where they stand on all the issues of the day. He had been asked
only the previous day where the SLP stood with all the rallies that were
being held in London and were they prepared to condemn vandalism. He had
replied, yes, he condemned vandalism that is caused by capitalism, vandalism
that creates unemployment, that creates waiting lists for hospital service,
vandalism by a system that creates an education system where there are those
that can pay for better education and those that cannot. This is vandalism,
he said, vandalism in the extreme. The vandalism that ought to be condemned
is that which condemns workers to a possible term in prison for calling a
strike or closing down a factory for one day, whereas it puts in the House
of Lords the capitalists who permanently close down a steel plant or a coal
mine.

As we celebrate May Day, 2001, Arthur Scargill said, one hundred and eleven
years on from the inaugural May Day, it should be a national holiday with
everyone taking part. He said that the trade union leaders should not be
trying to operate the system better than the Tories, or better than the
capitalists. They should be out on the streets demonstrating real
alternative policies that people in Britain now need to put things right.
One of the examples he gave was the NHS, which is itself in need of
intensive care. Everybody, he said, has the right to health care on demand
and free of charge. He condemned the waiting lists, and said that when
Labour came to power in 1997 there were 1 million on the lists, but today
there are 1.6 million people who are waiting for an operation. Another
example he gave was that unemployment has no place in a democratic society
and one that dares to call itself civilised. He pointed out that in Britain
today there is poverty on a massive scale. There are ten million people in
Britain today living on or below the government's official poverty line. We
have 12 million pensioners who have been absolutely betrayed by Tony Blair
and this government, he said. He then spoke of homelessness as the scourge
of the 21st century. He further condemned New Labour for not being prepared
to invest in public transport, invest in health, or in any of the things
that would bring real value to our society.

Arthur Scargill warned about the destruction of the manufacturing base and
pointed out how fragile society and the economy were becoming, and that any
movement of the international exchange could mean that the entire economic
system would be shaken to its very foundations. The alternative was to
understand what was wrong in society and understand what is required to put
it right. He said that in the view of SLP the way forward was to get rid of
the corrupt outdated capitalist system so that the means of distribution,
exchange and of all production can be taken into common ownership.

Concluding, Arthur said: "That is why I am a socialist, that is why I am a
member of the Socialist Labour Party, that is why until the day I die I will
go on campaigning on every platform wherever it is arguing like my forebears
for those principles and those beliefs that I know are in the interest of my
class and not in the interest of theirs." To warm applause, he declared, "It
is a privilege to be with you."

Jimmy Perry, as Chairperson, spoke then about the campaign in South Tyneside
to immediately get the government to meet its responsibilities to compensate
miners suffering from chest diseases and vibration white finger.

Finally, Roger Nettleship gave a short message of thanks to the two speakers
on behalf of all the participants in the Rally.

A social followed during which people continued to discuss and engage with
the speakers late into the evening.


Socialist Labour Party: www.socialist-labour-party.org.uk
New Communist Party: www.geocities.com/capitolhill/2853

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