The Socialist 27 June 2012 Hypocrites! Tories bash benefits, rich let off the hook ![]() Hypocrites! Tories bash benefits, rich let off the hook Breadline Britain - living in poverty Poverty and job worries hit mental health Teachers report children going hungry Government of rich ups war on welfare state Miliband speech: no answer to the race to the bottom Protest for affordable housing - join the Austerity Games London bus workers show their strength Police wade in at Coryton protest HMRC members show their opposition to another round of job cuts and privatisation RMT conference prepares for battle Sheffield recycling workers: Support their indefinite strike action Unison conference Delegates call for effective battle on pay Unite conference 'The renaissance of trade unionism' Block on Progress - "intolerable think tank"? Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition: Building the fight against all cuts Spain: New epicentre of crisis in Europe Kazakh embassy protest to free Bolat Atabayev |
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Home | The Socialist 27 June 2012 | Join the Socialist Party Police wade in at Coryton protestDave MurrayUnite the union stepped up its campaign to save 850 jobs at Coryton oil refinery by calling a protest at the Vopak fuel terminal in Grays on 25 June. The terminal is a major distribution hub for forecourts across southeast England. Seventy union members and supporters gathered near the gate, initially to put their case to tanker drivers on their way in. About an hour into the protest the police "allowed" the demonstration to muster in front of the gates for a "photo opportunity". As we listened to speakers including a construction electrician, Steve Hedley from the RMT, Rob Williams of the NSSN and an Asturian miner, the police became increasingly agitated. It had dawned on them that while we stood at the gates no tankers could go in or out. Their first action was to step up the pressure on the Unite branch chair to ask us to clear the gates, producing a Vopak manager who said we were trespassing - which would allow the police to invoke punitive laws related to aggravated trespass. The bulk of the demonstration stood firm, insisting on hearing out the Spanish speaker. Meanwhile, dozens of fuel tankers were backing up on each side of the gates. Ashen-faced senior police officers started trotting around to organise a more physical response. When that response came it was brutal, as a line of riot police inserted themselves between us and the gates by violent pushing and open-handed strikes. The police left us in no doubt that they were ready to step up the violence and we were forced away from the gate. The arrest of three protesters followed, one of them an activist in the rank and file committee of the Sparks construction electricians. We demand that all those arrested are immediately released without charge and that these jobs and skills are not lost. Though we only held the gates for 40 minutes, news has come in that at least one forecourt, the Tesco superstore at Hatfield, ran out of diesel that night - a glimpse of what could be achieved if Unite could deliver effective industrial action at Coryton and solidarity across the industry. In this issue Socialist Party news and analysis
Socialist Party NHS campaign Socialist Party workplace news
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition
International socialist news and analysis
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