Waltham Forest Health Workers Against the War
Im Charlotte and Im in UNISON, I work at Whips Cross Hospital in East London. A lot of us in the Health Service felt horrified at what happened on September 11th and immediately extremely concerned about how this was going to be used by the US, by Britain, and the bellicose warlike reaction that was already coming out.
On 17th September we issued a statement from trade unionists, we hadnt had an opportunity to have a Branch meeting or anything, but a number of people from health unions put their name to a statement which was circulated around the local health service intranet. Basically giving our support and sympathy to the people who were killed and had suffered on September 11th, but saying that there was a very very great danger of war, at that time.
We feel that what is happening now is totally unjustified. Its perpetrating more injustice, more violence. Its creating a very dangerous conflict, division, destabilising countries. And horrendous suffering to the people in Afghanistan. Its sickening to see the wealthiest nations in the world, the most powerful military forces dropping their military might on this impoverished country and now trying to dictate what happens there.
Theres a basic principle in the world which Blair and Bush and people like them are trying to completely override, which is that the people of a country, any country, have the sole right to decide what society they have, what kind of country they have.
I think we need to be very realistic about what the objectives are, and I dont think theyre dealing with terrorism. I think theyre to do with the whole so-called New World Order where global finance interests and global capital can do what they want, and all the informations coming out about the oil interests, the natural gas in the area. The importance that America and Britain see of getting a foothold there in terms of global strategy.
Are branches affiliated to your campaign?
Pat: Just on the Redbridge and Waltham Forest Health Workers, Id like to say, Im a Speech and Language Therapist and Im here with Redbridge and Waltham Forest. Theres also a group of City and Hackney Speech and Language Therapists and theres my union MSF London Region. And also some local teachers in the area where Im working, so I think as a group, people are coming together, all sorts of workers, all sorts of backgrounds, all commonly against whats going on.
What about UNISON?
Charlotte: UNISON local authority branch have voted to affiliate to the Stop the War local Coalition. I think various health branches are active and affiliating to Stop the War Coalition. Our local branch hasnt managed to do that yet.
And MSF?
Pat: I believe all of us who go to our local meetings are definitely against it. I couldnt say what the actual top of MSF position is.
But its bubbling over, below?
Pat: It certainly is going up through all sorts of different meetings like I go to London Health Advisory MSF, and my local East London branch, and the feeling with all of us, were totally against it.
Its a shame its all of us coming out, and with privatisation as well, very often the people at the top of the union arent saying things as strongly as we would like.
Is the issue being debated by the mass membership?
Pat: Good question, to which I dont know the answer.
Charlotte: Definitely it is. All sorts of people are very very concerned. The response to the letter that we sent round was very strong. There were some complaints but this group got set up because people felt very strongly that what was happening was completely wrong. People are very worried about communities being split, any concept of a religious war and people being divided on these grounds. They are horrified at the idea of lives being destroyed, people being killed, and a lot of people feel that this is just revenge. Its certainly not unified, there are some people who say well what else can we do, weve got to fight but theres a very strong feeling that this is just brutal, its causing more suffering.
Pat: I think it is very important that the unions, the organised workers, have a very strong voice on this and are very pro-active, and thats what we felt from the beginning. Our union issued a statement which is concerned and sort of critical but not actually clearly coming out against the war, just regrets that it has been deemed to be necessary. And I feel that we should be taking a stronger stand. But the thing is locally, we are, and thats what we need to be doing.
If you talk to people whove been in campaigns before they say its really quite unprecedented how so many organisations and concerns, different religions, people with different cultural outlooks are actually working together. I think its just so important. And I also think we cant separate the war from the issues weve already been fighting on, against privatisation.
You should talk to those guys there from Social Services, were facing massive cuts. All the pre-school Nurseries run by the local authority, theyre planning to shut. Theyre planning to shut Day Centres for elderly people, two of them, and places in Day Centres for people with Learning Disabilities. And major cuts to Home Care. Voluntary groups are having their funds cut.
Theyve had a strike.
Thats right. Its part of a whole agenda. Our governments cant and dont care for the people, and cant look after the interests of people here but they can go and cause destruction in other peoples countries, and theres the whole issue of costs, of one missile. But it shows their priority, their concern, they cant find the money to fund the most basic needs that weve already got, theyre taking it away, but they can find the money for this.
Dave Knight, Branch Sec. UNISON Waltham Forest Local Government
The branch is here today, weve affiliated to the national Stop the War Coalition, because were appalled by the policy of the Government. Its particularly significant for us in Local Government that money isnt being spent on the welfare of the community in Britain, and were spending it instead on dropping bombs on a very poor country. We cant hold with that, were angry about it and very unhappy with the Governments priorities at the moment.
Is this an issue that the Branch has actually debated at membership level?
We had a Branch meeting where a motion was put forward by a couple of members of the Branch Committee. We had about 50 people at the meeting and we did debate it, but the motion in the end was carried unanimously.
Would you describe it as a full debate?
I would. I think in Local Government because of the funding crisis were particularly concerned about how the Government is spending this money on Warfare rather than Welfare, and I think that rings very true in our branch. So you get the Local Government Officers together, the Social Workers, Home Care Assistants and so on and theyre just appalled, because they see the difficulty were having in running our Services, and see where the Governments putting its priorities at the moment, which we think is entirely wrong.
Hows it going in UNISON more generally?
Weve got a fairly healthy Branch at the moment, campaigning vigorously, weve obviously got tough times at the moment, with the Blair privatisation agenda which is very difficult for us, I wouldnt pretend it isnt but we are mounting campaigns constantly with user groups and so on. At the moment were battling with Social Services and we think were going to save some of the worst excesses of the cuts, though it does look like the Council will make some cuts which we will be very unhappy about. Things like Childrens Day Centres, Elderly Day Centres being closed, which is ludicrous in Waltham Forest, we need those services.
How is UNISON more widely reacting to the war?
Well theres a number of branches here so you can see theres a groundswell of opinion within UNISON about the war. Certainly I would say that London Region is against the war. Nationally theyre kind of fudging the issue at the moment, I would say.
Is that going to be taken up again?
I think so, and Im sure that come the Conference time, there will be a lot of pressure on the NEC to change its view. Because Local Government workers, Health workers, the people who make up the majority of UNISON, arent in favour of the war at all.
Are you doing things as a branch to try to draw more people into the opposition?
Obviously one of the things is to turn up to these public events, but were also working within the union, trying to put forward motions at Regional and then National level, to try and steer UNISON policy.
How much further do you think we need to go before the Government takes any notice?
I think two things always seem to work with the Government. If they think its going to be an election loser, and if we can demonstrate what a waste of money it is and how the money should be being spent elsewhere, that seems to me to be a reasonable way to try and argue the scenario. We should be worrying about the welfare of our country rather than destroying the welfare of another.