Waadstock 2017

Thursday 6 April

WAADSTOCK 2017

Please see above the poster for WAADSTOCK 2017, a music event celebrating the talents of musicians and singers on the Autism Spectrum.

This year’s event is on THURSDAY 6TH APRIL at 7.30pm at THE CAV nightclub, WEST TOLLCROSS, EDINBURGH.

ENTRY IS FREE (ALL DONATIONS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED BETWEEN THE PERFORMERS) BUT THE EVENT IS STRICTLY OVER 18S ONLY.

The event has a facebook page ‘waadstock’ where people can confirm their attendance and view photos from last year’s event.

If you have any queries please contact. Michael Hannam, 07718423400

STV explores Sscotland’s past in new series of People’s History Show

 Edinburgh featured in STV’s People’s History Show

31 March 8pm on STV

Edinburgh, Shetland, Dundee, Hamilton, New Lanark, Glasgow and the Borders will feature in a new series of STV’s The People’s History Show, which explores the tales of Scotland’s past in six brand new episodes.

Fronted by presenter and journalist Sarah Mack and historian and adventurer Ashley Cowie, the series looks back in time to discover the places and people that make up Scotland’s history, with Sarah and Ashley travelling from the Borders in the south to Shetland in the north.

The new series, which started on Friday, features some of the most fascinating events in Scottish history, including the Shetland Bus, the special WW2 operation that linked Shetland to Germany occupied Norway; the Great Fire of Glasgow in 1652; the historical naval base Scapa Flow; the Udston mining disaster in Hamilton; the Scots who fought in the Spanish Civil War and Dundee aviation pioneer Preston Watson.

Presenter Ashley Cowie said: “The history of Scotland is found not only in books, but in the stories and folklore of its people. This series is extra special to me as we travelled the length of Scotland and filmed some great characters in my home county of Caithness, giving the show a truly nationwide appeal.”

Sarah Mack said: “It has been a fantastic opportunity to work on a series that never ceases to amaze me with the weird, wonderful and sometimes gruesome history it explores. No matter where you live in this great country we want to encourage you to scratch the surface and take a closer look because you never know what tales and adventures you might unearth right on your doorstep.” 

Elizabeth Partyka, deputy director of channels at STV, said: “This new series is a must-see for anyone with an interest in Scotland’s history, with Ashley and Sarah travelling all over Scotland to delve into some of the most remarkable stories of our past.”

The series will also be available to watch live or for catch-up on the STV Player.

King of the Castles!

Edinburgh Castle retains No. 1 position

Edinburgh Castle has retained its position as Scotland’s top paid for visitor attraction, and jumped up two places in the rankings to be named as the 16th most visited attraction in the UK overall in 2016. Footfall at the historic site exceeded 1.7 million visitors, a 13% increase on 2015.

Scotland’s staffed heritage and cultural assets were well represented in the 2016 leader board, as a total of 14 new Historic Environment Scotland managed attractions joined the rankings for the very first time.

New additions included filming locations Doune and Blackness Castles, better known as Castle Leoch and Fort William in the hit historical time-travelling TV series, Outlander. Both attractions are benefitting from their stardom as a record 90,172 and 30,053 people explored the sites for themselves, a surge of 32% and 39%, respectively, compared to the same period for 2015.

These figures were amongst those released today – Monday 27th March – for UK wide member sites of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA). The association, which releases its figures annually, counts some of the UK’s biggest tourist attractions as members, also revealed that Scottish attractions had one of their best years on record, reporting the greatest increase of 16% and a total of 15 million visitors.

Strong visitor numbers for the same period were recorded at heritage attractions throughout the country. In Inverness, the ruins of Urquhart Castle attracted 396,397 people, St Andrews Cathedral was up 25% year on year to over 46,000 visitors. Elsewhere the 5,000 year old Skara Brae hit a total of 93,375 visitors and more than 52,000 people turned out at Melrose Abbey in the Scottish Borders.

Stephen Duncan, Director of Commercial and Tourism at Historic Environment Scotland and ALVA Board Member, said: “These latest figures from ALVA for last year show that Scotland is a major player in the UK tourism sector. It’s fantastic that Scottish member attractions collectively reported a 16% increase in footfall year on year, with over 15 million visits taking place in total.

“Heritage tourism is a key element in this wider success story. Together our iconic castles, abbeys, palaces and other historic sites, which represent thousands of years’ worth of Scottish history, welcomed over 3.7 million visitors in 2016 alone. Our visitor offering is stronger than ever before and it’s something that we will continue to build upon during 2017 as we mark Scotland’s Year of History, Heritage and Archaeology.”

Bernard Donoghue, Director of ALVA, added: “Like the 2015 figures, Scotland has continued to outperform the rest of the UK with a substantial increase in their visitor numbers. 2016 was a great year for Scottish Tourism – proving that Scotland is reaping the benefits of significant capital investment in attractions and creative programming by its institutions.”

Free training opportunity at Granton Library this week

Overcoming Language Barriers for Frontline/Reception Staff

Training Opportunity for Workers in North Edinburgh

 10am – 12pm, Wednesday 29th March 2017

Granton Library, 25 Wardieburn Terrace, Edinburgh EH4 4DT

Learn about:

• Practical ways to remove language barriers in your organization.

• Race equality in Scotland

• Some of the current challenges for BME communities.

The trainer will be Eleanor McKnight from Elite Linguist CIC. Living in Harmony and Muirhouse Library are organizing the training.

Book your free place by contacting Anita on 0131 551 1671 or anitaaggarwal@pchp.org.uk

www.pchp.org.uk

Like us on Facebook for regular updates www.facebook.com/PiltonCommunityHealthProject

Better Late … drama performances this week

In light of ongoing issues of motorcycle crime and anti-social behaviour, amongst other things, please don’t forget about two free Theatre shows coming up next week – BETTER LATE THAN DEAD–Broughton High School on Tuesday 28th March, 7pm, and  North Edinburgh Arts Centre on Wednesday 29th March, 4pm.

These tackle the issues of driving, walking and road safety and are open to all ages.

Opinion: Solidarity and Borders

It may seem obvious, but it is essential to stress that solidarity does not end at borders. In recent years, UK politicians and many celebrities have been given a public stage to describe how disappointed, even ‘sad’, they would be were Scotland to succeed and become a fully independent state – see The Independent’s ‘Love letters to Scotland from writers who want it to stay in the union’ (September 2014), David Bowie’s “Scotland, stay with us” comments via Kate Moss (February 2014), or The Herald’s ‘200 celebrities and public figures sign letter backing indyref No vote’ (August 2014), writes LUKE CAMPBELL.

Within the UK, Scotland has a shared recent history with England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. So too, Scots have a record of international solidarity with the likes of Chile and Spain. In 1974, whilst then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a personal friend of the Augusto Pinochet, 4,000 workers at the East Kilbride Rolls-Royce factory refused to repair the dictator’s Hawker Hunter aircraft used in the attack on the democratically elected socialist government of Salvador Allende.

A fan boycott campaign even took place when in 1977 the Scottish Football Association decided that Scotland’s men’s team would play at the Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos in Santiago. The stadium was used as a detention centre during the military coup, with more than 40,000 people having been held prisoner. During the Spanish Civil War, more than 2,000 volunteers from throughout the UK fought for the International Brigades against General Franco’s fascist regime.

International solidarity has never stopped at political borders, nor has it been dependent on the permission of governments. In 2003, 3million people protested in Rome against the Iraq war (a country of 57.3million at the time, the protesters representing 5.2% of the Italian population), 1.5million protested in Madrid (42.7million, 3.5%), 1million in London (50million, 2%), and 100,000 in Glasgow (5.1million 2%).  Likewise, within the political union of the UK, borders have never prevented class solidarity. When the Conservatives trialled The Community Charge (the Poll Tax) in the UK ‘region’ of Scotland in April 1989, the Scottish and English working classes protested side-by-side as they sought to abolish the charge, and prevent its implementation in our neighbouring states.

Indeed, some 1,000 people travelled from Liverpool to Glasgow for the anti-poll tax demonstration. More recently, we’ve witnessed large turnouts at demonstrations in reaction to US President Donald Trump’s Executive Order barring citizens from seven Muslim majority countries from entering the US, along with an indefinite suspension of their Syrian refugee programme.

We are already witnessing efforts to reduce the effectiveness of Trade Unions. Having introduced employment tribunal fees, and in doing so created a financial barrier to social justice, May’s Government pushed through the Trade Union Bill in May 2016. Whilst solidarity of the working class was a fundamental aspect of demonstrating participation on the global stage, as outlined above, the passing of the bill marked a “dark day for working people” according to Unite’s General Secretary Len McCluskey (May 2016).

He added that “it is the workers of England, who will bear the brunt of the Conservative government’s measures, for the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have all stated this law has no place in their countries or workplaces”. In addition, despite Theresa May’s promises to “ensure that workers’ rights are fully protected and maintained” her inaction in the face of withdrawal from the EU risks further reduction to workers’ rights.

UK Labour Party MP for Great Grimsby, Melanie Onn, who’s bill to ensure that workers’ rights remain the same post-Brexit was met by Tory filibustering, has likened May’s willingness to discuss workers’ rights post-Brexit to ‘radio silence’ (January 2017).

Onn noted that were the UK to leave the EU without replacing the European Communities Act, legislation including parental leave, the working time directive, and equal rights for part-time and agency workers would disappear. Even the Great Repeal Bill results in a scenario whereby ‘hard-fought protections could be scrapped with just a simple vote of Parliament’ (Kentish, January 2017).

An Inclusive Country?

UK records state that at present, approximately 181,000 EU nationals live in Scotland. On 13th March 2017, Westminster rejected a House of Lords bill amendment that would have guaranteed the rights of EU citizens following the Brexit process. The UK Government’s desire for any referendum on Scottish independence to be held post-Brexit may, therefore, arguably be down to a desire to prevent EU nationals from voting, just as they were denied the right to vote on Brexit itself – this being despite eligibility to vote in the 2014 Scottish independence referendum.

Only those aged 18 and over from the UK, Ireland, or the Commonwealth could vote in June’s Brexit referendum. Sixteen and seventeen year olds, legally able to leave school and get married in Scotland, were permitted to vote in the 2014 referendum, they too were ineligible. The Brexit vote saw all 32 local council authorities in Scotland vote to remain in the EU, a Scottish rate of 62% to remain compared to just 48% UK-wide. At the SNP’s Spring Conference in March 2017, Aberdeen South and North Kincardine branch tabled a motion that read, “Conference believes extending voting rights to all those who make their home in Scotland would send an important message that we are an inclusive nation that believes in equal rights.”

The motion was passed unanimously, highlighting the stark contrast in approaches taken between the UK Conservative Party and the SNP. Whilst the former Scottish Labour leader Johan Lamont may have stated on the STV that Scottish people are “not genetically programmed to make political decisions” (February 2014 – aye, seriously!), as a nation, we in Scotland voted overwhelming to remain in the EU.

Immigration was a central theme during the Brexit campaign, and since the success of the leave vote, the likes of The Guardian and The Telegraph have regularly run articles noting the concern of workers from other EU countries living in the UK regarding their right to live the lives they have built here for themselves. The Guardian (January 2017) stated that the Home Office has faced ‘a 50% increase in the number of applications [from EU citizens] seeking permanent residency since the Brexit vote on 23 June’ (56,024 in June 2016, up from 36,555 in April 2016).

In March 2017 academics at the University of Oxford stated that ‘staff would go if they were not reassured about their future’, whilst similarly The Times reported that the ‘NHS could lose 25,000 workers because of EU vote’ (March 2017) representing two-fifths of EU citizens working UK-wide in the NHS.

We have witnessed the dismantling of the NHS in England – outsourcing of national services to Virgin Care, Care UK, and Bupa, letters have been sent by NHS Trusts to asylum claimants that ‘contravene NHS guidelines’ regarding maternity care, and the passing of the Health & Social Care Act which removes the UK Government’s responsibility for the NHS (El Gingihy, 2015).

The NHS was a rarity, a British system that we could be proud of, now south of the border it has been eroded beyond recognition. With the UK Government dictating the size of the Block Grant received by the Scottish Government, little stands in the way of increased pressure being placed on the Scottish Government to follow suit. Despite assurances over the protection of “our most cherished public service”, the SNP can’t hold out forever.

Conclusion

With The Times stating that Whitehall officials are intent on forming ‘Empire 2.0’ (March 2017), remaining in the UK seems to signal an inward looking political entity, determined to relive its history. Becoming independent may be our only chance to create a modern fit-for-purpose political state, one that values the 181,000 EU nationals who have chosen to make this country their home.

The mass exodus of workers that looms over the Brexit negotiations lends itself to metaphors of rats fleeing a sinking ship. The risks posed to workers’ rights in light of the Trade Union Bill, the precariousness of the Great Repeal Bill, and the Tory mockery in the face of efforts to protect the rights of EU citizens demonstrates that despite a desire for progressive and inclusive politics from some, in the face of the current UK Government these efforts are futile.

In March 2017, the Scottish Conservative Party posted to Twitter that ‘A referendum cannot happen when Scots have not been given the opportunity to see how our new relationship with the EU is working’.

I don’t have to have experienced homelessness to know that I won’t enjoy it, and I don’t have to have lived in an isolationist UK to know that I would rather fight for an internationalist and outward looking Scotland. The people of Scotland may have a chance to break away and rebuild in the 21st century. I firmly believe we should take it.

LUKE CAMPBELL