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2010 Homelessness Hunger Strike Relay

Hunger Strike Relay to push for a national social housing program in Canada.
Volunteers take 1 week shifts on a liquid diet before a new volunteer takes over. The hunger strike will end after the 2010 Olympics.

     

 

 

 

January 18 2009 Baton passed to next member of the team to fast.

 

Hunger Strike Relay Team Video Interviews

 

http://rabble.ca/sites/rabble/files/imagecache/preview/node-images/phpKj1V1KAM.jpgAm Johal Bio

Each night, over 200 people sleep in the pews and floors of First United Church in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Some come in with frostbite and trench foot and are in need of immediate medical attention.

This event is repeated in city after city across the country. It is embarrassing that we have let the situation come to this state in this country. It is totally unacceptable. We need a national movement to change it now.

We are beginning a hunger strike in Vancouver. We will have new volunteers come forward each week to join the fast for a week, to support the need for a new national housing program. We will carry on the relay past the 2010 Winter Olympics and will shame the federal government in to action -- we intend to let the international community know what's happening in our city.

We also will not allow the City Engineering Department to wake people up in doorways, or allow a discriminatory ticketing regime to undermine the right to the city. We won't allow a three week international sporting event to be used as a pretext to violate the human rights and civil liberties of low-income people.

The federal government's misguided decision to eliminate the national social housing program in 1993 has had a devastating impact on the Canadian social fabric. It is a national and international human rights embarrassment where literally hundreds of people die on our streets or the effects of homelessness every year.

Canada remains one of the few wealthy nations of the world without a national poverty reduction strategy.

The National Homelessness Secretariat estimates that there are 150,000 homeless people in Canada, but most experts believe the number is between 200,000 to 300,000. Particularly, during cold and wet weather, the health and human rights implications are obviously more acute.

Additionally, 1.5 million Canadians are considered æhousing core need' which places them at greater risk of homelessness.

As more post-secondary students graduate with larger student loans, the implications of higher rent continue to have a devastating impact early on in the careers of young Canadians.

During the October 2007 visit by UN Special Rapporteur on Housing, Miloon Kothari, he recommended a large scale building of social housing units across the country.

Canada should also make its domestic laws comply with international obligations it has committed to such as the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights which has clear guidelines on the right to adequate housing. Canada will not be strong on human rights abroad, if it can't be strong on human rights within its own borders.

Canada will be receiving the final country report of the UN Special Rapporteur on Housing in April of 2009 at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

As Vancouver prepares to host the 2010 Winter Olympics, weak provincial tenancy legislation has created a public policy framework which allows evictions to take place through loopholes. Already 1,300 SRO rooms have already converted to other uses in the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood in Vancouver and there have numerous building wide evictions in the West End. The loss of these units was the basis of a complaint to the UN Human Rights Council last year.