British oil workers fight Total sackings


This video about Lindsey, England, says about itself:

Sacked oil worker defiant

22 June 2009

Kenny Ward, who was sacked from his job at Lindsey oil terminal, gives a defiant speech to fellow workers.

From London daily The Morning Star:

Total war: Protests solid as 650 workers sacked

Friday 19 June 2009

by James Tweedie

Lindsey oil refinery workers have declared that “the gloves are off” in their dispute after employer Total sacked nearly 650 striking staff.

French oil giant Total wrote to 647 workers at its Lindsey oil refinery in Lincolnshire saying that they had until Monday to reapply for their jobs, while continuing to negotiate until the unofficial strike was called off.

Trade unions condemned the dramatic development which sparked further solidarity strikes amid warnings of a major industrial dispute. But the government backed Total, urging the sacked workers to end their “illegal” strike, reapply for their jobs and enter negotiations.

Around 1,100 construction workers building the Ensus bio-fuel plant on Teesside walked off the site in support of the sacked refinery workers.

Some 450 contract maintenance staff followed at the Stanlow oil refinery in Cheshire, 300 workers at Aberthaw power station in south Wales, 100 scaffolding contractors at Staythorpe power station in Nottinghamshire and others at Ferrybridge power station in Yorkshire.

Text messages being sent to workers across the country read: “If you’re not yet out just remember next time it could be you. We must fight this NOW.”

Some activists warned that power workers could now walk out, threatening electricity supplies. “The entire industry will shut down over this,” one warned.

The unofficial strike and factory gate protest by 1,200 workers began last week after the plant’s HDS-3 project subcontractor Shaw laid off 51 skilled contract workers while another subcontractor on the same project was hiring 60 staff.

Those who lost their jobs included many former shop-steward members of the strike committee involved in January and February’s unofficial action over jobs.

The strikers said that the redundancies were in breach of agreements between the employer and trade unions.

General union GMB general secretary Paul Kenny condemned what he called a management “lock-out,” saying: “Total have for a full week refused to meet the union to resolve the problems through ACAS.

“It seems pretty obvious that there is a mass case of victimisation taking place here. Locking out the workforce at Lindsey will not solve the problem, it will escalate it.”

Among the placards brandished at the refinery gates today was one which said: “900 sacked by greedy bosses. No to cheap labour. Yes to workers’ rights. Join the strike.”

Phil Whitehurst of GMB said the mood among the pickets was angry and predicted further action around Britain later.

“This is all about Total now. They have done this and they have to come to the table. We have been trying to get them to the table all this week. Now these men have been sacked, what can Total do now?”

Unite national officer Bernard McAulay arrived at the site just before a mass meeting of the strikers and said that he was going in to talk to the management of Total and its contractors.

He told hundreds of protesters in the refinery’s car park: “I have to say the actions of the employers and the methods they have used is nothing but despicable.”

It later emerged that the talks never got under way.

Also speaking outside the refinery, Lindsey shop steward Kenny Ward said he was among those who had lost their jobs at the site.

He said: “The gloves are off. It’s disgraceful what’s happened here.

“I’ve never walked away from a fight in my life. Total have to realise what they’ve unleashed.

“The lads have come out all over the place, Wales, Cheshire, power stations, refineries, everywhere. Even non-unionised sites are supporting us and walking out.”

See also here.

‘No more cuts! Sack Adam Crozier!’ shouted angry postal workers outside Royal Mail’s London headquarters yesterday, as 10,000 members of the Communication Workers Union (CWU) walked out on strike across the capital: here.

An explosion at Total’s Carling plant during the manual re-ignition of a boiler killed 2 workers and injured 17 more: here.

Total bosses should be brought to account for the death of a worker at one of Britain’s largest oil refineries, GMB union reps demanded on Wednesday.

New beetle species in the Netherlands


Otiorhynchus meridionalisFrom De Natuurkalender in the Netherlands:

A new invasive pest insect has turned up in the Netherlands: the snout beetle species lilac root weevil, Otiorhynchus meridionalis. This Mediterranean beetle was found in the interior garden of an appartment block in Maastricht, where it was eating privet bushes. In southern Europe, this beetle has repeatedly caused damage in market gardens.

FBI arrests US billionaire Stanford for fraud


This video says about itself:

23 October 2014

Could Allen Stanford go free? Convicted fraudster appeals.

R. Allen Stanford, convicted in 2012 of running a massive global Ponzi scheme that rivals the Madoff scandal, says he is the victim of an illegal prosecution, and “the clearest of assaults on the U.S. Constitution.”

From Reuters news agency:

Stanford, flamboyant Texan, faces criminal charges

Fri Jun 19, 2009 2:05am EDT

By Jason Szep

BOSTON, June 19 – Allen Stanford, the once high-flying Texas billionaire with a Caribbean knighthood and a penchant for publicity and cricket, has been brought down to earth with a thud after surrendering to the FBI.

The founder and chairman of Stanford Group once credited his grandfather with giving him “the inspiration to dream” and “an unwavering desire to build a business that is second to none.” Since February, that business has all but evaporated.

On Thursday, the flamboyant 59-year-old financier turned himself in to the FBI to face criminal charges, four months after U.S. regulators accused him and three of his companies of a “massive ongoing fraud.”

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission says Stanford and two fellow executives fraudulently sold $8 billion in high-yield certificates of deposit issued by Stanford International Bank Ltd in Antigua.

In those civil charges, the SEC said the bank reported “improbable” high returns.

Many burned investors have been clamoring for criminal charges, accusing Stanford of being cut from the same mold as Bernard Madoff, who admitted in March to orchestrating the biggest financial swindle in Wall Street history.

The criminal charges and the SEC’s revelations of Stanford’s empire — stretching from the Caribbean island of Antigua to Houston, Miami and Caracas — complete the picture of a finance king who lost his Midas touch along the way.

In an April interview with Reuters, Stanford said he did not run a Ponzi scheme as U.S. regulators alleged. He asserted, in what may be a preview of his defense, that his companies were well-run until the government seized them in February.

Just last year, the man known as “Sir Allen” in Antigua since being knighted there in 2006 was providing fodder for British tabloids by flying in by helicopter to bankroll international cricket matches in a blaze of publicity. Since February, he has been largely out of sight.

‘FUN BEING A BILLIONAIRE’

Stanford has often walked a fine line between critics and admirers in a business and sporting empire that reaches to Europe and across the Caribbean.

A fifth-generation Texan, Stanford made his first fortune in Houston, snapping up distressed real estate in the early 1980s before inheriting the insurance and real-estate company his grandfather founded in 1932.

Forbes put his personal wealth at $2.2 billion last year and his list of wealth-management clients once included professional golfer Vijay Singh.

Before the scandal surfaced, Stanford credited his success in part to avoiding investments in subprime mortgages that snowballed into a global financial crisis.

Asked by CNBC television in September if it was fun being a billionaire, he smiled and replied: “Yes, yes, yes. I have to say it is fun being a billionaire. But it’s hard work.”

With dual U.S. and Antiguan-Barbudan citizenship, Stanford has homes sprinkled across the region — from Antigua to St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands to Miami. Those residences and other assets have been frozen by court order since February.

A generous patron of several sports, Stanford financed a $1 million-per-player Twenty20 tournament in November in which his “Stanford Superstars” side of West Indian cricketers became instantly wealthy when they beat England’s team at his Stanford Cricket Ground in Antigua.

Back in the United States, he stirred controversy by claiming family ties to Leland Stanford, who founded Stanford University in the 1890s. The university says there is no genealogical connection between the two and sued Stanford Group in October for infringing on its trademark. (Additional reporting by Pascal Fletcher in Miami and Chris Baltimore and Anna Driver in Houston; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

Maybe renaming Allen Stanford “Allen Stanfraud” will help avoiding confusion with the Stanford of Stanford University.

See also here.

Stanford faces years in jail over ‘$7.2bn pyramid fraud’: here.

NSA spying, millions of US e-mails


This video from the USA says about itself:

EFF designer Hugh D’Andrade creates a fanciful mural-sized political cartoon depicting how the NSA’s illegal spying program operates inside AT&T‘s San Francisco facility.

For more information:
http://www.eff.org/issues/nsa-spying

Music:
“Master of Skandal’!” by Skandalo Publico
http://www.skandalopublico.free.fr/

By Tom Eley in the USA:

NSA monitors millions of American e-mails

19 June 2009

Several current and former agents within the National Security Agency (NSA), speaking on condition of anonymity, have told the New York Times that the spy agency likely monitors millions of e-mail communications and telephone calls made by Americans. The new revelations follow the disclosure in April that the NSA’s monitoring of domestic e-mail traffic broke the law in 2008 and 2009.

Last year, Congress passed legislation providing the NSA greater latitude to spy on the communications of Americans, so long as it resulted inadvertently from the agency’s efforts to spy on foreigners or those it “reasonably believed” to be outside US borders.

New film about de Menezes, killed by police


This music video is called Roger Waters – The ballad of Jean Charles de Menezes (subtitulado en español).

From British daily The Independent:

Film about de Menezes premieres in home town

By Jan Onoszko in Rio de Janeiro

Friday, 19 June 2009

The life story of the Brazilian man shot dead by police on a London Underground train because they believed he was a suicide bomber is celebrated in a film which premieres in his home town this evening.

The population of Gonzaga is expected to double in size as 10,000 people pack the town’s football ground for the first screening of the film, entitled Jean Charles.

Jean Charles de Menezes was 27 years old when Metropolitan Police officers fired seven bullets into his head at Stockwell Tube station on 22 July 2005. The force was found guilty of endangering public safety in a subsequent inquiry into the incident but no individual officers have been held accountable for his death.

The Gonzaga mayor, Esegenia-Maria Magalhaes, said: “We wish the town could have become known for other reasons, if it had to be known at all. What happened still has a profound effect on all of us. There’s a lot of indignation, pain, sadness, and Jean Charles is greatly missed. He was an ordinary boy who left us in search of a better life.”

The BBC commissioned the film and approached Henrique Goldman to direct and write it, but it later pulled out of the project because they didn’t agree on what perspective the film should take. “I don’t know why they pulled the plug,” said Goldman. He managed to keep the project going when the UK Film Council provided half the funding. “The Government which lets the police get away with murder also allows us to make the film,” said Goldman. “This schizophrenic behaviour is very British.”

Two female protesters who challenged police officers for not displaying their badge numbers were bundled to the ground, arrested and held in prison for four days, according to an official complaint lodged today: here.