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Martlets thanks its 500 volunteers as part of Volunteers Week 2019

Marlets says ‘thank you’ to over 500 volunteers by highlighting the essential contribution they make to the care and support that it is able to give local people and their families as part of National Volunteers’ Week from June 1-7.

THE National Week celebrates the diversity of volunteering and the millions of people that make a difference to their communities by giving their time to support to charities – organisers estimate that the value of volunteers helping UK charities is £22.6bn.  Volunteering is also shown to be rewarding for volunteers themselves who can learn new skills and gain confidence.

Imelda Glackin
Imelda Glackin

Imelda Glackin, CEO of Martlets explains: “At Martlets our volunteers are the absolute backbone of everything we do, and we are so grateful for their support.  We have numerous roles that suit all kinds of people who have various skills, life experiences and knowledge.  We are so pleased that our volunteers say how rewarding the experience is for them too.  Friendships are often made and it’s human nature to feel good after helping someone out.

“Some of our volunteers might be helping in our charity shops, at our warehouse, enthusiastically fundraising, supporting patients and their families in their own homes or at the hospice itself.   They could also be providing counselling and bereavement care or giving complementary therapies.

“All our volunteers play an essential part in the hospice care that we provide to patients and their families.  We could not do what we do without their fantastic enthusiasm, commitment and contribution.”

Martlets welcomes everyone from all ages (over 16), backgrounds and experience as there are so many different roles available to volunteer. Volunteering at Martlets is particularly flexible, whether people are able to offer a few hours once in a while or a regular weekly shift – anyone who becomes part of Team Martlets plays an important role in helping to keeping the charity running smoothly.

Volunteer Barry Cole has been volunteering with Martlets since 2013.  He is the hospice’s coin and scrap metal expert, sorting the change that no-one else wants.  So far, his efforts have raised over £18,000.

Barry Cole
Barry Cole

Barry said: “I enjoy volunteering, it’s so rewarding. I had retired from work in 2012 and decided to volunteer for the hospice after coming along to a volunteer open day. Initially I helped out in the pound shop and with the online sales, but one day I was asked to look at some coins with a view to selling them on eBay and it all started from there. 

“The team here are always thanking me for my efforts and people are genuinely pleased at the amount that I’ve raised; it’s nice to be appreciated.  It is quite a time-consuming task, but Martlets is such a worthwhile local charity to be fundraising for.”

For anyone interested in volunteering their help – contact the hospice’s People Services Team on 01273 718788 or email: peopleservices@martlets.org.uk

An Honest Tale of Modern Britain or – it’s not homophobic if you’re not a “fat poof”      

What does it take for a hate crime to be recorded as a homophobic incident, and for action to be taken? Craig Hanlon-Smith tells one man’s story.

Owen Syred
Owen Syred

THIS is a true story. It is August 4, 2018 and Owen Syred attends the Brighton Pride parade with his friends and their children.

Standing alongside the parade as the community floats and marching groups pass by he is adorned with stickers, flags and badges by the revellers which feature rainbows, LGBT+ organisations and their slogans.

Little did he know that later in the day, these decorations would turn him into the target of a verbal and violent attack that would change him forever.

At around 4pm that afternoon he steps off the train near his home in Lancing and begins the short walk to his house. He hears a female voice behind him yelling a combination of intended slurs “fat queer, fat poof – where you going?”. He doesn’t pay much attention and slips into a local shop but he is followed.

Jasmine Shepherd
Jasmine Shepherd

The young lady concerned Jasmine Shepherd is not alone, she is 18/19 years old, accompanied by her mother, an 11 year old girl and a boy of 12 he later discovers is the aggressors brother. The abuse continues in the shop and Owen speaks to the woman and warns her that he will have to restrain her if she attacks him, but all the time sensitive to his masculine size and her perceived vulnerability as a teenage girl.

The shopkeeper asks Owen to move away from the woman stating she is known in the area for anti-social behaviour and has previously been banned from this very store. The young woman and her party are allowed to continue shopping.

Three of them are now making phone calls stating loudly that there is a man in the shop they are about to “do-over” She reappears, continuing her tirade of verbal abuse and threatening behaviour, the abuse becomes an assault as she grabs a bottle of wine and hits Owen over the back of the head. He is momentarily unconscious and completely deaf in one ear, a hearing impediment that he will not recover from. It is August 4, 2018 and only 10 miles from a Brighton Pride that continue in its Britney bubble unaware of Owen’s plight.

The family group flee and the police are contacted. Despite the nature of the attack it is some time before the police community support officers arrive and an ambulance is called. The PCSO’s inform Owen they know the girl and that she is currently under the watch of a community order for violence in the area. She is not pursued or spoken to on this day. Or the next, or the next, or the next. She is invited into a police station and arrested two and a half months later.

Some two weeks after the attack Owen contacts the police and asks about the progress. He also enquires if this is being recorded as a homophobic hate-crime. “Are you gay?” ask the police. He is not but replies that this is irrelevant. The nature of the abuse received on account of his stickers and badges was anti-gay and homophobic. It is a homophobic attack. Owen who in his line of work in the public sector bears additional responsibility for diversity training, reminds the police that the law states ‘sexual orientation or perceived sexual orientation’.

He is in-turn told two things:

1.  That in his line of work he should be used to this kind of thing.

2.  That if he pursues this ‘homophobic’ relation to the assault he will be ‘outed’ in court. “Outed as what?” he asks, the police tell him “As a gay”.

Throughout the next few months Owen has to fight to find out the progress of the case but also for the violent assault and verbal abuse to be treated as a homophobic incident. He is told that the person dealing with this case has been off sick for six weeks hence the slow progress. He eventually talks to the Sussex Police LGBT liaison officer who “says all the right things but isn’t much use to be honest”.

He needs his GP to act as a third party witness to his life-changing injury and consistently has to state that his sexual orientation is irrelevant to the status of the assault committed against him which was homophobic.

The perpetrator of the violent crime and homophobic attack has a history of violence in the community including a knife attack and violence towards the homeless and adults with learning difficulties.

Owen, the victim, has to continuously fight for her to be arrested and this takes two and a half months during which, she commits other crimes eventually taken into account when she appears in court.

A young woman identified immediately at the scene, with a history of violence towards her community and vulnerable people, attacks a man she perceives to be gay and no action is taken against her for more than sixty days. She is eventually charged, arrested and imprisoned with the maximum penalty of over eight years. She was already in prison when taken to court for this attack for stabbing a man.

Owen said: “I was off work for four months but only paid for two, as a result of this I have faced financial difficulties. During that time I had to push and insist at every step of the way of the homophobic nature of the attack. Her family have been threatening me in the local area and shops. I have vertigo, tinnitus and am permanently deaf in one ear. Whilst I have received some excellent support from my colleagues, union and victim support, I do not want to go out. I do not want to go out in my local town or get on a train. I do, but I am cautious and feel extremely vulnerable. I work with people who are escaping countries on account of their LGBT identity and their lives are at risk, I did not expect this to happen to me here.

“I was born in the year that homosexuality was partially decriminalised. Things change and I am pleased that they do but the police should have supported me better and investigated this as a homophobic hate crime and that my not being gay does not make the crime not homophobic. I was attacked because of my perceived sexual orientation. It was a homophobic attack. Because I am a heterosexual man the police did not believe this could or should be considered homophobic. We need to support one another better LGBT+ or not. We need to support one another better whoever we are.”

Jasmine Shepherd pleaded guilty to the charge of grievous bodily harm with intent at Hove Crown Court on Tuesday, May 7 and was sentenced to eight years and six months in a young offenders’ institute. The homophobic aspect of the assault allowed the judge to provide a higher sentence.

Local action group announce date of AGM

St James’s Street Community Action Group to hold their AGM on Friday, June 14.

THE AGM will be held St Mary’s Church Hall, Upper St James Street, Kemptown, Brighton starting at 7pm.
You will be able to raise issues with a newly appointed councillor and discuss policing priorities with a local police officer.
All local residents, representatives of local businesses, and charities operating locally are entitled to attend, vote and take an active part in the discussions.
If you are interested in improving your local environment pop along. New members of the working group are needed.
For more information, click here:

Planes and Perverts: Pride and Protest – an alternative event for London Pride

LGBT+ activists and community groups in London organise alternative Pride event on the evening of Pride in London (July 6), to raise cash for LGBT+ people seeking asylum.

LGBT+ homeless and migrant organisations say that they feel excluded from Pride over the cost of being involved.

Across London there are parties which each year increasingly co-opt queer history for financial gain, while excluding the most oppressed members of the LGBT+ communities due to their lack of accessibility.

Taking inspiration from the group that inspired the film Pride, Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners, and their famous Pits and Perverts party in 1984, queer activist group Lesbians and Gays Support the Migrants (LGSMigrants) are throwing another edition of their hugely popular party Planes and Perverts on the same day as Pride in London on July 6, and organisers say it’s set to be the most-fabulous yet.

Planes and Perverts will both create an accessible space for community groups while raising loads of cash for grassroots organisations that support queer people seeking asylum.

When people arrive in the UK seeking asylum, they are often sent to disparate areas of the country, with little to no support network available.

This edition of Planes and Perverts will gather together as many of these people as possible for both Pride in London and UK Black Pride, to celebrate the strength and diversity within the LGBT+ communities.

Funds raised at Planes and Perverts will cover the travel, accommodation and other expenses for people seeking asylum to attend Pride – any excess money will also go to the African Rainbow Family and Micro Rainbow to help them continue the important work they do.

To make this party happen LGSMigrants are collaborating with African Rainbow Family, Micro Rainbow, Outside Project, The People’s Filmclub, Queefy Cabaret (Rhys’s Pieces) and Riposte.

The party will be on Saturday, July 6 from 8pm-4am at The Garage in Islington. There will be workshops, stalls, film screenings, live music, spoken word, performances and some of Londons best drag and DJs across two separate rooms.

There will be sober spaces in both areas. This party will be a safe, political and meaningful space to celebrate the diversity in our communities and what Pride really means to us – freedom, equality, justice and will be hosted by Liv Wynter, a party not to be missed!

Getting tickets in advance is highly recommended. For the full line-up of artists appearing keep  your eyes on LGSMigrants social media channels during June.

Sam Bjorn member of LGSMigrants said: “With this party, we want to capture the spirit that the original LGSM cultivated in ‘84 and create an alternative queer space that centres people most affected by a Tory government and right-wing press. This solidarity between the LGBTIQ+ community and other oppressed demographics endures, 35 years after the original LGSM event, and we want to play a part in making sure it continues to endure for years to come. Many LGBTIQ+ people have become disengaged with Pride due to its lack of political meaning and focus on corporations whilst pushing community groups to the back. Planes and Perverts is an alternative Pride event that aims to challenge this.”

Lesbians and Gays Support the Migrants are a group of queer activists, that through fundraising, solidarity and direct action, stand in solidarity with all migrants.


Event: Planes and Perverts: Pride and Protest

Where: The Garage, 20-22 Highbury Corner, London N5 1RD

When: Saturday. July 6 2019,

Time: 8pm-4am

Cost: Unwaged £5 (£1.25 fees) – Standard £12.50 (£2 fees) – Solidarity £18.00 (£2.50 fees)

To book online at Outsavvy, click here:

To book online at Ticketweb, click here:

 

 

Lord Cashman opens Pride Media Centre in Gateshead

Celebrated LGBT+ campaigner opens innovative venture, to transform lives and boost job prospects in the North East.

THE Pride Media Centre, at Stonehills, Pelaw, Gateshead, is the UK’s first LGBT+ business and media hub.

The complex, which is designed to support LGBT+ entrepreneurs through training, facilities and advice, was officially opened by Lord Michael Cashman CBE on Friday May 31.

A variety of businesses and organisations have made a home in the centre, including the not for profit organisation, Pride Community Network and multi-channel broadcaster Pride World Media, which includes Pride Radio 89.2fm and Pride World Radio, which broadcasts online to around 125 countries around the globe.

One of the founders of national charity, Stonewall, and a former actor, Lord Cashman made history with the first same-sex kiss on mainstream British television in 1989 when he appeared as Colin in EastEnders.

He has since become a leading campaigner and equality activist and in his speech to the 100 strong audience, he said: “When we set up Stonewall 30 years ago, I never thought we’d achieve equality in my lifetime and I certainly never thought I would be here in Gateshead opening the Pride Media Centre.

“What we have got here is people who have got the guts to stand up not only for themselves but for others.”

The hub has been supported by Gateshead Council and Lord Cashman said: “I know it is ideas that change the world and I congratulate Gateshead Council for the idea and the support, which sends the signal that it’s not all about the bigger cities, it is about innovation and courage to put yourself at the front.”

The hub is also the home of newly launched online television station, Out and Proud TV, and it will provide a range of support and opportunities to the LGBT+ communities and their allies, including outreach programmes designed to reach isolated members of the LGBT+ communities.

“I am very proud that Gateshead has the first LGBT+ business and media centre in the UK and this is the place where we will start something big that will have repercussions all over the UK,” said Peter Darrant, CEO of Pride World Media.

“In this strange world we live in, where we think we have all the rights, it is still very important to fly the LGBT+ flag outside.

“There is an urgency to have something like this building and we have been waiting 50 years for it, so while we officially open the centre for the first time today, this is just the beginning.”

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