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Thousands to join in call for global justice at mini-festival

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Published Date:
18 June 2007
THOUSANDS of people are set to take part in a two-week "justice festival" to celebrate the second anniversary of the Make Poverty History march in Edinburgh.
The event starts on Tuesday and will feature a concert, dubbed Justice in the Gardens and a special fair trade market outside the City Chambers.

Other events, including film screenings and activist workshops, will take place at venues across the city.

More than 30 groups dedicated to ending climate change, world poverty and the nuclear arms race will take part in the festival, which has grown out of a one-day event held last year. Organiser Harriet Grant said she hoped it would be an annual showcase for peace organisations and charities.

"The first festival we held in Edinburgh last year was very small, but we had a lot of people coming to see what it was about," she said. "When we decided to host another event this year, we were swamped with calls from organisations who wanted to join in and host events. We originally planned it as another one-day festival but we soon realised it would have to be far bigger.

"It's going to be like a kind of mini-Fringe festival with a lot of different events in venues across the city. With the music events and fair trade market, we're hoping that thousands of people will come to see what is happening and join in. It's all about trying to keep the momentum from the Make Poverty History march going, as well as trying to address the problems of global justice and climate change."

The Justice in the Gardens event next Sunday will feature a range of musical styles including a ten-man "ska machine" and a group promising "jazz-funk-folk" fusion. It takes place at the Ross Bandstand from 1pm to 4pm.

Salsa and Latin bands will also perform at a Cuban-themed music event at the Bongo Club during the festival, while organisations such as Christian Aid, Friends of the Earth and Amnesty International will host workshops and discussions across the city.

Organisers had originally hoped The Proclaimers would perform, but the band were forced to turn down the invitation due to prior touring commitments.

However, Craig and Charlie Reid have since lent their support to the event. In a statement on the festival's website, the brothers said: "We believe in the festival's aims and principles to promote peace and justice, environmental justice, economic justice and human rights."

Edinburgh's Lord Provost George Grubb, said the festival would continue to highlight the issues raised at the Make Poverty History March.

He said: "The fact the festival has grown so much since last year, shows that the people of Edinburgh are committed to the ongoing fight against injustice."

YOUR LINK

For full details of the festival events, visit the justice festival website at www.ewjf.org.uk

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  • Last Updated: 18 June 2007 12:04 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: International development
 
1

alex paterson,

embra 18/06/2007 12:09:05

Great cause hope all goes well.

2

woodentop,

Prattling on to no actual effect 18/06/2007 12:35:59

Usual mix of do-goodery, handwringing and cant (the new word du jour is 'justice' I note). All completely pointless, but I suppose if it consoles the middle class whingers that usually attend these things it could be seen as a form of indoor relief.

'dedicated to ending climate change'. Good luck with that then; the planet's never had climate stasis.

3

Ellen,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 12:36:48

If this doesn't irradicate poverty and injustice I'll be surprised.

4

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 13:58:03

O Chairman: You probably think Africa was always poor; you probably think The Wealth of Nations describes the way the world markets actually do work; you probably think that "living on a dollar a day" means having the equivalent of a dollar to spend in local currency. You probably think your clothes and food spring into existence out of thin air, by magic.

Or maybe you don't know what I'm talking about. Your opinions are very important and I hope to hear more of them... lol.

5

JuanKerr,

Edimbra..... 18/06/2007 14:35:02

Obviously a Ewan Aitken hazed out initiative. The Councillor twinned with new Bono........

I was on the make poverty history march, Believe in the cause. But I think a lot mores going to be needed than a couple of stalls and a big stoned crustie counciloor.

If the poverty history march was turned into a make poverty history or else! One day or several day strike by all participants and countries.It would soon get them, the corporations, bailing out africa with it's fair share.

The only way these global companies and countries operate is through mass acceptance and the media wind. Dwindling profits and numbers hurt them more than words.

6

SuperMario in the Burg.,

18/06/2007 15:05:52

Well meaning Idiots.

They do this at the weekend, feel good about themselves then go back to their wee offices and jobs leaving it as someone elses problem.

7

Derick Lachlan,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 15:09:16

Excellent - good to see some people getting off their backsides and making a difference. Without people in Edinburgh making a fuss about injustice, politicians and corporations would be getting away with MUCH worse. If more people do get involved in these campaigning things then that will further reduce the injustices taking place, like unfair trade rules, human rights abuses, and exploiting the world's most vulnerable people. Good luck!

8

woodentop,

Prattling on to no actual effect 18/06/2007 16:04:15

#9 Derick - do you seriously think this will 'make a difference'? If so, you are deluded.

9

woodentop,

Hiding in a bin 18/06/2007 16:22:14

#11 - but gosh, I bet they feel good about themselves afterwards, as they sip their nice glass of something expensive (fairtrade can bog off at this point) from Waitrose.

It's intellectual onanism of the highest order.

'Workshops', I ask you...

10

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 16:25:51

#9 O Chairman. There is no one living under the World Bank lower or upper poverty line in the UK. Know what that means? It means there isn't poverty in the UK - in the sense that the word "poverty" is used to describe conditions in Africa, Latin America, etc. There's relative poverty - that's a totally different issue.

And which particular African leader are you talking about who is Empire Building instead of feeding his people? Do you know the names of any current heads of state in Africa (no using Google, now)?

11

woodentop,

Hiding in sub-saharan Africa 18/06/2007 16:51:28

#13 - the area I refer to is a basket case (with the possible exception of S Africa). And twenty, thirty and even forty years of post-imperialist guilt trip funded aid hasn't changed that.

Perhaps you'd care to suggest another solution, rather than the 'one more heave' school of thought which achieves nothing other than enriching Swiss banks and their kleptomaniac customers?

Still - makes you feel good, no doubt. Hmm?

12

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 16:53:53

#14. And how are you going to do that? Keep the consumer happy and the economy growing? Any idea that does to the rest of the world? It's globalisation: you can't make one place paradise without either building a barricade or trying to make the whole thing paradise. I'll go for the second. Enjoy your cocktails inside your bunker.

Oh, and Mugabe's conducting a one-man war against the forces of colonialism (as he sees them), with his own people as collateral damage. He's not a kleptomaniac - just a regular maniac. Get this: the really corrupt leaders have died out. Fancy that! It happened after the Cold War ended!

13

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 17:00:48

#15 - Woodentop - get on wikipedia. The aid put into Africa is NOTHING compared to the debt repayments and the trade rip offs. Sure, I'm against aid (mostly): historically it was used to prop up Chairman's beloved corrupt leaders who drove no bargain at all in trade negotiations. You, personally, benefitted from this.

Sure I've got another solution: a single African trading bloc which could bargain effectively, more democracy (which we can support by supporting the Africans who are trying to democratise the place - currently they get killed or bought off as soon as they stick their necks out), and easing off the consumerist pressure at this end.

14

woodentop,

Hiding in the library 18/06/2007 17:15:25

#17 - thanks for the advice. I normally choose to source my facts from somewhere more reliable than an on-line database which can be updated by any old Tom, Dick or Mugabe.

I, personally, benefited? I'll look out my receipts!

Surely free trade is the answer? The EC doesn't help here (primarily due to self-interest and protectionism). Consumerist pressure drives economic development, no? Otherwise we'd still all be strip farming a smallholding in Mull, and marrying goats.

15

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 17:39:25

#18 - Imagine you (or Chairman) tried to live like a cotton famer from Burkina Faso (I guess you might live six months if diseases held off). You would make no money (though you'd be working physically harder than anyone in the UK); this is because the world cotton price is very low; this is because the world market (not free at all - as you pointed out) arranges it so that if you buy nondesigner jeans they would be very cheap.

Unregulated consumerist pressure drives unequal economic development, creating an underclass. This is, like, chapter one of economics text books. Prefer those to Wikipedia?

The problem with you and some others on this board is not that your beliefs about Africa and world markets etc are wrong - it's actually that you don't have any beliefs at all. Snatches of conversations you've overheard - in a pub, as Chairman suggests - don't make for beliefs. You have to work for them. Maybe you need a good workshopping.

16

Glass Eye,

Edinburgh 18/06/2007 17:40:43

#19. That's not an answer to my point. Go read it again.

17

Glass Eye,

Head back in Sand 18/06/2007 18:05:39

Why do pseudo-right wing pundits retreat into foaming bluster as soon as anyone starts talking to them? Maybe they don't really expect anyone to pay attention.

Of course, the left wing pundits are no better.

Oh well, we'll just take it that you think I'm right, then, shall we, Chairman? 'Bye.

Come on Woodentop - surely you can come up with something better.

18

woodentop,

Hiding in the library 18/06/2007 18:05:41

#20 - there are always winners and losers, and trying to rig the market to prevent this is much more damaging than the original problem, as we have already seen. Market in cotton not looking good? Grow something else. If everyone did that rather than try to prop it up artificially, it might result in an increase in cotton prices, benefitting those who are good at growing it.

Quit the anguished heart on sleeve stuff, and the supposed moral superiority you wave around so liberally. Still, no doubt you're feeling better for it, eh?

19

Glass Eye,

Peeking out of sand 18/06/2007 18:22:54

#26 Actually, that is quite funny lol.

#25 Free markets work under idealised conditions of perfect competition. Regulation substitutes for competition in imperfect (ie actual) markets. Presumably you don't agree with monopolies, right? But an unregulated market tends to monopoly: so therefore you must agree with regulation. There is - SHOCK HORROR - a middle ground between the Soviet-style planned economy and the fictional utterly free market. Regulation is going on all the time - you, personally, are benefitting from it in Scotland when you bank, go to the doctor, watch television, breathe, walk on the street etc ad nauseum. This is all really basic economics. Have you ever read any?

There is SHOCK HORROR a middle ground between everyone being equal and having the monstrous gap between winners and losers we see in the actual world. Woodentop: your comfortable non-beliefs wouldn't stand any contact at all with the real world. Get out of the library.

It's funny how the pseudo-right wing pundits refer to the idealised theoretical models of Smith, Darwin, etc as "the real world". I guess they get some financial benefit from the self deception. Of course, the left wingers are no better - but they never seem to post on these boards.

20

Glass Eye,

Back in the sand 18/06/2007 18:32:51

#28 Oh, sorry - before I thought you were making a really subtle, ironic, insightful joke. Now I realise the terrible truth.

21

woodentop,

Hiding in front of the telly 18/06/2007 18:37:22

Corrie's on now - will get back to you later.

22

scotsman reader,

edinburgh 19/06/2007 09:31:55

ahhhhhhh the usual high standard of intelligent debate in the Scotsman online comments. It makes me so grateful to live in a country where the free expression of feeble mindedness and ignorance is so prioritised by the media.
The festival sounds great and well done to the organisers - whatever it achieves it will be more than the pathetic whingin on this website. Go back to watching TV down the pub and mouthing off to your mates about how annoying everything is in the world. Save the rest of us the bother of reading your pathetic comments please!!

23

Michael McNab,

Edinburgh 20/06/2007 00:35:37

Everyone here seems to think they know what's best for the developing world. Wouldn't it be great if there was an event where they could discuss and explain their points of view in depth, possibly educating a few of their fellow citizens along the way?

Wait.. what's this? It appears to be just such an event!

But of course the armchair pundits aren't going, they're just sitting at home bitching and flatulating. Do-gooders, you say? Give me a hundred of them before another one of you do-nothings.

Well done to the organisers. Nice to see some people taking a bit of responsibility for a change.


 

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