Some 59 food processing workers who were sacked from the Two Sisters factory in Smethwick, west Midlands are continuing their struggle for justice.
The appearance of Nick Griffin, the leader of the fascist British National Party (BNP), on last week’s Question Time on BBC1 has raised the stakes for the anti-Nazi movement.
"Money for jobs and education, not for war and occupation!"
The British National Party (BNP) and the English Defence League (EDL) are flip sides of the same Nazi coin.
Former Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Deghayes addressed the protesters at the end of the march. He spoke about the horrific effects of the "war on terror".
Revelations that police have been building up a database of so-called "domestic extremists" have caused widespread outrage.
Joe Glenton, a British soldier who is refusing to return to fight in Afghanistan, received the backing of his fellow troops after he led more than 10,000 protesters on last Saturday’s Stop the War demonstration in London.
A spate of high-profile homophobic attacks has shocked and angered many people in Britain.
Serving British soldier Joe Glenton broke Queen’s orders by joining the Stop the War march in central London and addressed the rally in Trafalgar Square, Saturday 24 October 2009. He ran the risk of being arrested by doing so but he was not deterred
Thousands of people poured onto the streets of London today to protest against the continuing war in Afghanistan. Countless Afghans have lost their lives and 222 British soldiers have now died in the conflict.
It was not only in London where people came together to protest at the BBC giving a platform to Nazi BNP leader Nick Griffin.
While most of the mainstream media have pored endlessly over the details of last night’s Question Time, in a bid to unravel whether it went better or worse than expected for fascist leader Nick Griffin, a simple point has been missed—he should not have been on there at all.