.
We now have over 70,000 articles in our archive. Please don't forget to rate articles you read. Your votes will be reflected in the Weekly & All-Time rankings of the articles. Robert Mugabe has stolen every election & ruled Zimbabwe illegally since 2002. The most open theft was observed & proven on 29 March 2008.
           News       
  News - General 
  South Africa 
  Crime 
  Tourism 
  Zimbabwe 
  Witchcraft that Kills 
  Europe 
  AmericanCrisis 
  Middle East 
  World War III 
 Mailing Lists 
  Subscribe 
  Unsubscribe 
 Columnists 
  Collen Makumbirofa 
  Kwanele Sibanda 
  Different Perspective 
  Right Perspective 
  Robb Ellis 
  The Centurion 
Readers' Comments  
  Most Popular 
  Browse Comments 
  Guestbook 
  JTF Bulletin Board 
  Our Online Shop 
  Donations 
 
  Send us News 
 Reader's Favourites 
  The All-Time Top 40 
  Last Week's Best 20 
  The Worst 20 
 Predictions Analysis 
  Explanation 
  Latest Scenarios 
  Latest Predictions 
  Latest Comments 
  Predictions due 
  Add a Prediction 
         Other         
  Search Engine 
  Editor's Comments 
  The Editor's Choice 
  The Editor's Gallery 
  Afrikaans 
  Humour 
  Cartoons 
  Photo Gallery 
  Classic Gallery 
  Audio & Radio 
  White Homeland 
    Brainstorming 
 Quick Translation 
  Arabic 
  Chinese 
  French 
  German 
  Italian 
  Japanese 
  Korean 
  Portuguese 
  Russian 
  Spanish 

Please tell us what you think of this article by clicking on a button & rating it:-
    


Food crisis is May Day war cry

Date Posted: Friday 02-May-2008

Police clashed with union activists in Istanbul on Thursday as workers around the world roared their May Day battle cry, focusing on soaring food prices.

Clashes erupted as hundreds of police officers surrounded the main square in Turkey's biggest city to stop a planned May Day rally.

Police fired pepper gas and water cannon and detained 505 people. The police assault forced demonstrators into a building where they crowded windows, chanting: "We are the people, we are right, we will win."

Six police officers and two demonstrators were injured, according to officials quoted by Anatolia news agency.

The major Turkish union confederations later gave up their attempt to stage a rally in the Taksim square which has become a focal point for union May Day activism since 34 people were killed in a crackdown on demonstrations in 1977.



Volatile crowds also staged rallies in the Philippine capital of Manila and Indonesia's Jakarta, carrying signs that demanded "Jobs, Justice, Food" and "Lower Food Prices Now".

The struggle to afford basic food staples such as rice was the focus of many of the demonstrations in Asia, where rallies were patrolled by huge numbers of police.

Jakarta police chief Adang Firman said after monitoring the capital from a helicopter that 10 000 security personnel had been deployed and another 50 000 were on standby.

Police armed with assault rifles were positioned on highways leading to Manila.

"The economic crisis is sharper and more intense this year," said Renato Reyes, secretary-general of left-leaning activist group Bayan.

"Workers in the Philippines have every right to be angry and frustrated."

Rallies focusing on rising living costs were also held in Singapore and Bangkok, where protesters waved signs saying: "Expensive rice prices, cheap labour wages. How can labourers live?"

The soaring price of rice - the benchmark Thai variety now fetches about three times more than it did a year ago - has led to a supply crunch that is worrying governments wary of worker unrest.

In Germany, tensions over a neo-Nazi party forced a major security operation to separate rival rallies in Nuremberg. Barriers were put up to separate about 3 000 people protesting against a rival rally by 1 000 supporters of the extreme right-wing NPD.

Small groups of nationalists also "tried to cause trouble" at May Day rallies in the Polish towns of Rzeszow and Poznan, police said.

In Greece, transport and public services ground to a halt as unions called a 24-hour May Day strike against a privatisation drive and pensions reform.

Ferry boats and intercity trains were reduced to a minimum, all train connections to foreign destinations were cancelled and state carrier Olympic Airlines carried out only one flight per destination.

No newspapers were published, while radio and television stations operated on reduced staff, the main journalist union, Esiea, said.

In Russia, marchers called for economic equality, and in Cuba residents hoped their president would offer more changes.

In Morocco, the government announced it would go ahead with scheduled pay rises despite the opposition of unions which say the average 10% rise is not enough to keep up with inflation. The current minimum salary is about e160 (R1 885) a month.

About 44 000 people attended a rally in Tokyo where Japanese Communist Party leader Kazuo Shii railed against the government for reinstating a controversial petrol tax.

In communist China, business came to a standstill as China celebrated the national holiday.

Huge traffic jams blocked some roads out of Beijing and the expressway to the Great Wall was gridlocked for at least 20km. -

Source Url: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?art_id=vn20080502100904273C122546

Posted By: Jan
AfricanCrisis Webmaster
Author of: Government by Deception

The Buffalo Soldiers - The story about South Africas most amazing military unit: 32 Batallion How South Africa built Six Atom bombs Conditioned Victim? : Handbook for a Violent Society Natal 16 Years War - The Secret Black on Black war that killed 12,000 On South Africas Secret Service - An undercover Agents story 
There are no Readers' Comments for this article