EXCLUSIVE: 50 leading poverty and inequality groups and activists write to the UK government demanding change.
Pic: The UN Human Rights Council, which meets today in Geneva.
Today, the UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights, Philip Alston, is presenting his report on UK poverty in front of the UN Human Rights Council.
Fourteen million people live in poverty, one and a half million of them in destitution, four in ten children are poor, food banks proliferate, homelessness and rough sleeping are on the rise, life expectancy is falling for women born in deprived areas… And all of it despite historically high employment levels.
The conclusion is both clear and bitter: Deep cuts to public services do not work and work does not pay for too many people. If the government had intended to harm the British social fabric on purpose, their masterplan would not have needed to be substantially different from the social devastation we’ve seen this last decade.
The world’s fifth economy must do much better than this. In recent weeks, the Government has accused Mr Alston of political bias and of painting a completely inaccurate picture. It is time neither for complacency nor histrionics. We urge the Government to be responsible and engage with international human rights bodies, and above all to listen to people that are most affected by the policies they are implementing.
We are witnessing an unstoppable movement to end poverty, fight inequality, preserve public services and champion human rights. Working poor people and those unable to work deserve to be heard. Mr Alston’s verdict is out. It’s the government’s turn now. The world is listening.
Signed
- Jamie Burton, Chair, Just Fair
- Dr Wanda Wyporska, Executive Director, The Equality Trust
- Dr Nicola Sharp-Jeffs, Founder and Director, Surviving Economic Abuse
- Joanne Welch, Campaign Director, Back To 60
- Rev Paul Nicolson, Founder, Taxpayers Against Poverty
- Kath Dalmeny, CEO, Sustain: The Alliance for Better Food and Farming
- Tracey Herrington, Project Manager, Thrive Teesside
- Sabine Goodwin, Coordinator, Independent Food Aid Network
- Amanda Dubarry, Chief Executive, Caritas Anchor House
- Dr Simon Hoffman, Convenor, Wales Human Rights Stakeholder Group
- Gisela Valle, Interim Director, Latin American Women’s’ Rights Service
- Ele Hicks, Policy Manager, Diverse Cymru
- Kemi Akinola, Chief Executive, Be Enriched
- Dr Kayleigh Garthwaite, University of Birmingham
- Professor Jon May, Queen Mary University of London
- Liane Groves, Head of Unite Community
- Dr Andrew Fagan, Co-Deputy Director, Human Rights Centre, University of Essex
- Dr Madeleine Power, University of York
- Robin Burgess, CEO, Northampton Hope Centre and IFAN trustee
- Dr Mary-Ann Stephenson, Director, Women’s Budget Group
- Deidre Woods, Food Activist
- Amy Murtagh, Interim Director, Project 17
- Adele Rose-Morgan, Founder, Joining the Dots
- Tom Burgess, Executive Director, Progressive Policy Unit
- Zoe Matthews, Strategic Advisor, Friends, Families and Travellers
- Susie Ventris-Field, Chief Executive, Welsh Centre for International Affairs
- Anny Malinen, Co-Director, Research for Action
- Joel Benjamin, Campaigner, Debt Resistance UK
- Dr Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney, Joint General Secretaries, National Education Union
- Sarah-Jayne Clifton, Director, Jubilee Debt Campaign
- Asad Rehman, Executive Director, War on Want
- Jennifer Nadel, Co-founder, Compassion in Politics
- Martin Drewry, Director, Health Poverty Action
- Jackie Longworth, Chair, Fair Play South West
- Dr Faiza Shaheen, Director, Centre for Labour and Social Studies (CLASS)
- Louise King, Director, Children’s Rights Alliance for England (CRAE), part of Just for Kids Law
- Guppi Bola, Interim Director, Medact
- Sarah Yiannoullou, Managing Director, National Survivor User Network
- Nick Dearden, Director, Global Justice Now
- Dr Tomaso Ferrando, Lecturer in Law, University of Bristol Law School
- James Kenrick, CEO, Youth Access
- The Collective Staff of Plumstead Community Law Centre
- Alisdair Cameron, Co-director, ReCoCo
- Pete Richie, Executive Director, Nourish Scotland
- Howard Reed, Director, Landman Economics
- Northern Ireland Council for Racial Equality
- Peter Kumar, Chair, Discrimination Law Association
- Dr Thembi Mutch, University of Sussex
- Roosje Saalbrink, Policy and Advocacy Manager – Women’s Economic Rights, Womankind Worldwide
- Liz Lockey, Co-ordinator, York: Human Rights City Network
17 Responses to “Open letter: When the UN calls out poverty in the UK, the government must listen”
Tom Sacold
We do not need foreigners to point out our faults.
We need a real socialist Labour Party to use Brexit as an enabler so that real socialist policies can be introduced. We cannot deal with inequality until we are outside the EU’s Single Market regulations.
This is nothing more than the usual Blairite virtue-signalling.
Muhammad Haque
1901 GMT Friday 28 June 2019
By © Muhammad Haque
I am one of those who filed a series of Original
Evidence under “INPUT” to the Alston team in March-April 2019.
The contents of this “Open Letter” are based on the CLOSED MENTALITY that is driving most of the UK Poverty.
In my finding, Alston is NOT opposing Poverty Creation in the UK at all.
I shall detail the CLOSED MENTALITY in a later comment
Dave Roberts
Mr Huque. Are you the cray guy from Tower Hamlets who cannot go back to Bangladesh because of war crimes?
Dave Roberts
Should have been crazy of course! Nut case with a woolley hat, faces the death penalty in Bangladesh, or someone else?
Doreen Bevan
Stop sending so much money in aid to other countries who are probably wealthier than us. Charity begins at home. So many areas need a financial input.