Banks under siege as protesters launch 'Emergency Operation' to highlight the Government's NHS cuts
Last updated at 4:04 PM on 28th May 2011
Protesters are lining up outside banks up and down the country in opposition to proposed changes to the NHS.
Branches in London, Plymouth, Brighton, Glasgow, Bristol, Oxford, Leeds Liverpool, Bournemouth, Ipswich and Dundee have been targeted so far today.
The action is being spearheaded by the campaigning group UK Uncut, which has been joined by trade unionists and other supporters.
Police in Machester arrested nine people on suspicion of breach of the peace in connection with a protest at a branch of Santander in the city centre.
Anti-cuts: A group of students make their presence felt laying down on the pavemen in front of a Police cordon outside a branch of HSBC in Camden Town, north London
Occupation: A melee ensues as a group of activists try to force their way past a police line in Camden
The national protest intends to draw attention to the banks' role in creating the national deficit, which in turn has led to the proposals made for changes within the National Health Service.
Activists dressed in doctors' coats and armed with fake blood had been plotting to enter 35 banks across the UK and set up mock hospitals and "operating theatres".
However, some were forced to stage their protests on the streets outside when branches were closed or police lined up to keep them out.
In Camden, north London close to 100 protesters staged actions outside three banks in Camden and held a mock trial of the health secretary, Andrew Landsley.
A protester dressed as the MP was put in the stocks and pelted with tomatoes.
Barclays, HSBC and Natwest were all targeted in Camden - at Natwest protesters forced their way past a police line to gain entry to the bank.
Support: UK Uncut helped organise the protests which are against the Government's impending NHS cuts
You can bank on us: The protesters are halted by police as they target another bank in Camden
Protesters outside a branch of HSBC in Newcastle were joined by the musician and activist Billy Bragg, who addressed them by megaphone.
While in Brixton one group managed to enter a Natwest bank and stage their planned theatrical protest.
'The NHS did not cause the financial crisis – the banks did and are continuing to make billions in profits. And yet it is the NHS which is being cut,' said Candy Udwin of the Camden Keep Our NHS Public campaign, which took part.
'Here in Camden there are hundreds of jobs under threat and that is why protests like this are being strongly supported.'
Health worker and UK Uncut supporter Rosie Beech, 29, said: 'David Cameron said he wasn't going to cut the NHS. He lied.
'50,000 NHS staff will lose their jobs, whilst the taxpayer continues to subsidise the banks.
No entry: Activists, some of whom wore hospital scrubs, try to make their way past police and into a branch of Natwest in Camden
Flashpoint: Protesters clash with police as they attempt to gain entry to the bank
'Why is the Government cutting the NHS and privatising what's left rather than forcing our broken banking system to pay up?
Dubbed 'The Emergency Operation', the day of protests is the first big action organised by UK Uncut since the arrests of 145 protesters during a sit-in at Fortnum and Mason in London on 26 March, when more than 250,000 people who took to the streets to protest against government spending cuts.
UK Uncut has staged a series of campaigns against tax avoidance and public spending reductions since it was formed in October.
A Barclays spokesman said: 'We are aware of the protests and our priority is the safety of our customers and colleagues and to ensure that the branches can continue to operate wherever possible.'
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- David Cameron
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- Liverpool,
- Oxford,
- Glasgow,
- London,
- Ipswich,
- Bristol,
- United Kingdom
- Organisations:
- National Health Service
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Sell it - get real medical SERVICE.
They aren't mindless. They have a plan, to destroy. They are anarchists with nothing to offer but chaos.
Why should we suffer cuts in the NHS when its the governments open door policies that is overburdening the system and otherwise diverting funds funds from it.we pay for it so expect something for our money
Stop attacking the employees.... They havent done anything. You make their lives a misery for something they have no control over. Do u really think their bosses care?? Go sit outside their places of work not normal staff!
I support them every step of the way. The banks are taking us for a proper ride; not only did we have to pay billions to bail them out we have to pay again with our jobs and our economy; all the while the banks pay nothing whilst rewarding themselves record bonuses
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My personal view of the world via the articles i read and post, because I believe in that path, mixed with the views of others who sometimes clash with my point of view... very badly at times! Spot which ones they are. DYK that if you had projectbrainsaver type kit you would already know that, and so much more!
Saturday 28 May 2011
Banks under siege as anti-cuts protesters rally together in support of the NHS | Mail Online
via dailymail.co.uk
These people are absolutely right in their target. The banks systematically broke the world's economy and only survived because of bail outs and 'quantitative easing'. Socialism for the Rich - an invention of 2008. And now they are still there only because we, the ordinary people, have been asked to pay for their follies. What the world needs is a Debt Jubilee - a mass default. There is a web of debts between countries - if we 'cancelled' out our debts with those to whom they are owed, who, at the same time owe money to us (yes, it's that stupid!), we would immediately lose 50% of our debt. The reason we don't do this? Because the banks would lose their interest payments and the bankers would lose their bonuses. So: we should back these groups to the hilt because, almost absurdly, they are the only ones telling the truth.
- Pete, Macclesfield, 28/5/2011 16:04
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