Why Egyptians should reject the proposed consitution

International Statement – REVOLUTION IC

 

Since the downfall of dictator Mubarak in 2011, Egypt’s people have had to fight tooth and nail to get a new set of laws – a constitution – democratically created. Then they had to vote whether to accept the draft.

On the 15th of December, the first round of the constitution referendum started. The results were published soon after the second round on the 22nd of December with 64% voting for the constitution.

The content is reactionary in it’s Islamist character, defining the Sharia as the main source for jurisdiction, the absence of explicit women’s rights, the discrimination of religious minorities, and the unchanged autonomy and power of the military apparatus. The state shall guarantee the ethics, morals, and the law and order and gives a big space for interpretation for its use of power.

The outcome of the referendum means a preliminary victory of the counterrevolution. It means a setback for the opposition movement and a consolidation of the new – but, in fact, old – regime lead by the Muslim Brotherhood.

 In the struggle for the new constitution, President Morsi gave himself the power that his decisions couldn’t be fought by the court and argued that this would be necessary for the safety of the revolution. He sees himself in a struggle against parts of the state apparatus from the old Mubarak regime which still controls the judiciary. This also explains why only three representatives of the old regime got convicted in the course of the revolution. His fear of the court wanting to dissolve the Constituent Assembly caused him to empower himself and to push the referendum by fast tracking with reactionary means.

This caused huge protests against the president’s self-empowerment and against the constitutional referendum. While bourgeois forces like the liberals, and even openly reactionary forces like the supporters of the old regime, tried to get a voice within the uprising, its social roots lay elsewhere. The oppositional alliance, where even smaller socialist forces were involved, and the radical youth caused mass demonstrations leading to a political crisis in society where the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists revealed their reactionary character. The massive protests forced Morsi to withdraw his dictatorial decrees but not the referendum and the draft constitution.

During the protests, scores of clashes between oppositional demonstrators and supporters of Morsi occurred. Parts of the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists started attacks on the demonstrations leading to five people being killed and 700 being injured. As a reaction to the attacks from the Islamist forces, radical youths set an office of the Muslim Brotherhood on fire. President Morsi gave permission to the military to take people under arrest and stationed soldiers and tanks near the presidential palace. Although the military asserted not to intervene into the protests, it was clear that it should frighten the demonstrators and should be ready to intervene in case of emergency.

The most militant and progressive element of the opposition is the youth, with many of them tend to Left or anarchistic positions. This is no coincidence; the youth in Egypt suffers the most from the economic crisis. 75 percent of those 15-28 years’ old are unemployed. The biggest influence spurring the youths is the April 6 youth movement, which has a huge range and force for mobilization.

Nevertheless, the movement considers itself not as a party and couldn’t organize the most radical youth on a clear and revolutionary perspective. Still the youth has to be aware to link their struggles to other social layers with a special attention to the organized working class, which is the only force in society which can really take the government and enterprises under pressure by strike and which is able to reorganize the form of production and by that the whole society. Therefore, the youth has build their own independent organization but do so on the basis of a clear and revolutionary program that orientates toward the working class.

It is also the working class which suffers alongside oppressed layers like youths, women, and immigrants from the capitalist crisis and the reactionary regime. The social and political crisis in Egypt sharpens with the ongoing differentiation between rich and poor. The economy lies down suffering under missing incomes from foreign investments and tourism. President Morsi had to make a request for an IMF credit of 4.8 billion Dollars which is as usual connected to cost-cutting measures, in particular the cutbacks of energy subsidies, the tax increase on consumption, and a higher taxation on income.

Although the president abandoned a tax increase shortly before the referendum, which displeased the IMF, one has to consider this measure as a tactic in the referendum. The credit and the cost-cutting measures will then come next year, ruining the life of many workers, peasants, and poor in Egypt. The working class and the trade unions have to pick up a fight against the cutbacks and against the government and the Muslim Brotherhood, which tries to dominate the trade unions by undemocratically replacing the union officials with people appointed from the Manpower Minister for leadership positions.

Also the government led by the Muslim Brotherhood dropped a draft law for the freedom of trade unions. Mursi’s attempts to weaken and take over the trade unions is a preparation for a bigger attack on the working class. That’s why the struggle of the workers and the trade unions must also be struggle against the Muslim Brotherhood and the constitution.

The Constituent Assembly is dominated by the Muslim brotherhood and the Salafists and doesn’t represent the people. It had been elected by the parliament with almost no discussion about the procedure of vote and without a minimum number of female representatives and representatives of religious minorities and, therefore, had been boycotted by many liberals and secularists. Moreover, the April 6 youth movement reports about the constitution referendum on later opened polling and voters being affected by members of the Muslim Brotherhood.

The movement sent members to different towns to observe the referendum. In Damietta, Islamists offered money for votes for the constitution; in the province Menufija, a judge had to dismiss his advance men, because they tried to persuade voters for the constitution. Also, preachers in mosques called for the constitution. Nevertheless, the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists claim that the votes for the constitution mean the will of the people in spite of the ridiculous voter participation of 32%.

A representative constitution must be a constitution of the masses of the workers, peasants, and youth. There must be a constituent assembly elected by democratic councils in districts, towns, and workplaces with delegates which can be elected and deselected. These councils have to control the assembly and have to build a power which can challenge the bureaucratic, state apparatus. They have to be defended by self-defense committees and workers and peasants’ militias. This is the only way to guarantee a constitution in the interest of the masses.

But even this isn’t enough. A new, revolutionary constitution cannot limit itself to be a democratic one, since it cannot change the living conditions of the people as long as they are being exploited and oppressed by imperialism and the Egyptian capitalist class. The capitalists will fight every democratic reform by every mean as soon as it becomes a threat to their rule and their profits.

The revolution has to go on to build up democratic councils of the masses and build dual power; it has to arm itself; it has to take the power and build it on the councils of workers, peasants, youth, and the poor. It has to decide a revolutionary constitution which dis-empowers the capitalists and landlords and, therefore, nationalizes the most important companies under worker’s control, and further steps ahead to a socialist society of justice, freedom, and equality.

This requires the buildup of a common workers’ party on a revolutionary communist program, which can fight for the power of the masses and for a socialist constitution by dual power. Currently,  the elections to parliament after the passed constitution will be an important process of political dispute and an optimal opportunity create such a workers’ party.

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Gaza ceasefire: stay vigilant – keep fighting

This weekend thousands marched through central London to demand an end to the Zionist occupation of Palestine. Thousands more marched through regional towns and cities, while pickets and demonstrations were also held in many European countries.

The latest bombardments came just after elections were called for January in Israel. The shelling by tanks, planes and warships killed over 130 people and injured hundreds in the Gaza strip.

Homes, schools and sports facilities were flattened. Three Israelis were killed by rockets fired by the resistance.

The offensive was launched after Israel broke a fragile 3-year ceasefire by assassinating a top leader of Hamas. Hamas had been overseeing a serious decline in rocket-fire from the strip since the last invasion in 2009 which saw nearly 1,500 Palestinians massacred by the Israeli Occupation Forces.

Turnout in the London demonstration was smaller than expected – mainly due to the ‘ceasefire’ arranged on Wednesday. A ceasefire which Israel honoured by shooting dead one and injuring ten on Thursday.

The ceasefire brought a temporary end to Israeli president Netanyahu’s warmongering; like a dog straining at the leash he was pulled back by his US paymasters who fear a ground invasion could upset their strategy of subordinating the Arab Spring revolutions to their interests.

In particular they want to ensure that new Egyptian President Morsi is firmly in their camp before there are further uprisings in the region.

Mass demonstrations against Western-backed dictatorship in Jordan, and the ongoing revolution in Syria shows that the youth and workers of the Middle East have not finished their struggle for democracy.

Israel’s continued threats to launch an unprovoked, pre-emptive strike against Iran means regional tensions remain high.

But in any new conflict Egypt will be the decisive player. The new uprisings against Morsi’s power-grab show that the Egyptian people are still  capable of mobilising to defend the gains of the revolution. Demands to open the Rafah border crossing and provide material solidarity with the Palestinians have been key demands since day one of the revolution.

But like Mubarak before him, Morsi has no intention of  challenging Israel – despite his radical talk. Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood are a barrier that must be overcome before the Egyptian people can play a decisive role in the struggle to end the occupation of Palestine.

We say: the ceasefire is a temporary pause – Israel is playing for time. All those who support the democratic revolutions and the rightful struggle for the liberation of Palestine must continue to struggle for an end to the blockade. However there can be no peace while Israel remains the puppet of US imperialism. We need to fight for one secular state where Arabs, Jews and others can share out the land and resources. 

We fight for:

Boycott Israel – down with the Apartheid state

An end to the occupation – one socialist state for all in Palestine

Down with imperialism and its puppets – kick out Morsi, Assad and King Abdullah

 

 

 

Can the Syrian revolution win?

The revolutionary wave that toppled dictators in Tunisia,Egypt and Libya is continued by those fighting to overthrow Bashar Al-Assad inSyria. Like Gadaffi in Libya, Assad tried to prevent uprisings by bribing different parts of the population and playing Syria’s many religious and ethnic minorities against each other.

We know that the Kurds, who make up around 10% of the population, were bribed with Syrian citizenship – but this citizenship forced them to identify as Syrians, denying their true Kurdish heritage. The Kurds are a powerful force in parts of Syria, with many links to Kurdish communities in Iraq and Turkey which are fighting for an independent homeland.

By granting some autonomy and privileges to them, Assad hopes that they will side with him against the revolutionaries. Kurds, Assyrians and Azeris have long been the target of Assad’s Alawite gangs, but now he has made his main target Syria’s Sunni Muslims.

According to the UN, Syria’s death toll has exceeded 7,500 since the rising started in 2011. The true figure is probably several times higher, with thousands ‘disappeared’ into the regime’s torture camps, and tens of thousands forced to flee their homes.

Kofi Annan’s “master plan” to make UN members and Syria commit to peaceful negotiations failed because China and Russia are locked into astruggle for influence in the region with the big western powers.

Assad and his family are the loyal servants of Russian and Chinese imperialism… just as Mubarak and Gadaffi were the puppets of US, French and British oil interests in north Africa.

The Assad family have rule Syria with an iron fist fordecades – surviving by acting loyally on behalf of one or other of the great powers.

Previously in power was Bashar’s father, Hafez Al-Assad. Hafez was recognised as a man of genocide, killing thousands in places such asHoms which is also being targeted today. It’s true when they say, like father like son, huh?

On May 25 this year a total of 108 people were butchered in the Houla Massacre; the toll included 34 women, and 49 children. Militas known as Shabiha (translated to thugs in Arabic) were responsible and obviously, this incident only strengthened peoples’anger and determination to rid their country of Asad and all his supporters.

You may think, why is the West not intervening with Syria?Why can NATO murder a dictator but not even take a glance at Syria? It is such a shame that the world we live in revolves around money and oil – David Cameron continues to “mourn” for Syria, but would rather lay back and watch the Arab Spring boil right under his feet.

Syria shows that ‘humanitarian intervention’ by the imperialists is never about humanity. Indeed, in Libya British warplanes didnot drop humanitarian aid, but instead delivered death from a mile high at thespeed of sound, dropping thousands of tons of high explosive on Libyan homes.

The Western imperialists would certainly like to have areliable puppet government in Syria, like they do in many other countries – butthey don’t want a military confrontation with China and Russia.

The most important thing is that Syrian revolutionaries and their supporters win the revolution. This can be done by demanding weapons without strings attached from those who claim to support them, and building real links with the Kurds and other oppressed minorities, for example bysupporting and fighting to make the Kurdish demand for an independent homeland a reality.

This will only happen if the workers and youth overthrow Assad themselves – the interference of NATO and Russian imperialists has only brought decades of bloodshed and tragedy to the peoples of the Middle East.

Wanker of the Month: Bernie Ecclestone

There has been a surge in pro-democracy protests in Bahrain where people have been protesting against the ruling royal family who are responsible for widespread human rights abuses such as: torture, extra-judicial killings and the taking of political prisoners according to a recent human rights report. The protestors targeted the recent F1 Grand Prix to bring their movement into the mainstream of international news.

Bernie Ecclestone when talking about the protests said this:

“You know what they say – there is no such thing as bad publicity”

Funnily enough, Bernie was actually (attempting) to criticise the protestors, and not the government, by saying this.

That is because Bernie Ecclestone is the president of Formula One Management and he clearly doesn’t give a shit about the people of Bahrain. It’s not the first time he has made outrageous comments either, he has praised Hitler’s leadership style and is known for his sexist language.

He has previously condemned the anti-government protestors as a “few kids throwing Molotov cocktails”. Families of those kidnapped, tortured or killed by State forces will have a different opinion.

Clearly Mr Ecclestone is either incredibly ignorant or is just putting his head in the sand about the brutality that goes on Bahrain.

Then again perhaps he actually does not support the pro-democracy protestors as he himself is anti-democracy, a quote from an interview in 2009 may shed some light on this:

“(Hitler) brought a country that was bankrupt into a country that was very strong and that was really demonstrating what someone could do if they had the power”

“The trouble with politicians and democracy is they all the time have to compromise, they can’t do what they want to do because there is somebody in opposition”

All the talk about Hitler and politicians isn’t just talk though. Bernie is the 4th richest man in Britain. In 2011 his fortune was estimated at $4.2billion – a $200 million INCREASE on the previous year.

And when democracy gets in the way of his obscene fortune, he knows all about blackmailing so-called democratic governments into more suitable policies. In 1997, Labour was elected promising to end tobacco advertising in motorsports.

With Ecclestone’s fortune built on the huge sponsorship money poured into racing by Big Tobacco he was determined to derail this policy. Arranging a private meeting with Max Mosley (of Nazi Orgy fame) and Tony Blair, Ecclestone threatened to move F1 abroad at the cost of 50,000 jobs, 150,000 part-time jobs and £900 million in exports. In case the threat of job losses wasn’t enough to budge Labour, he sweetened the deal with a £1million donation to Labour in January 1997.

To top it all off Bernie is also a top level misogynist too. When discussing Indycar racer Danica Patrick, he remarked “You know I’ve got one of those wonderful ideas … women should be dressed in white like all the other domestic appliances.” , earlier  he also said in 2000 that women would never excel in Formula 1; it’s nice to know that the president of F1 Management is judging the racers on qualities like their racing ability and not trying to get cheap laughs out of offensive stereotypes.

Ecclestone, just like the other 77 billionaires in Britain use their wealth to skew the system in their favour. From Rupert Murdoch to Bob Diamond, a tiny minority is using the economic crisis to get their hands on ever more cash.

From blackmail to exploitation with a big dose of old-fashioned sexism in between, Bernie ticks all the boxes; he is this month’s Wanker of the Month.

Why it’s still kicking off in Egypt

It’s been a year since we watched the Egyptian people rise up and bring down the vicious tyrant Hosni Mubarak.  Yet the 12 months since 25 January 2011 have been filled with violent confrontations as millions demand an end to military rule. The massacre of 74 football fans shows the dictator may have gone, but the dictatorship remains.

Since Mubarak left the scene, the country’s been run by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), led by Field Marshall Tantawi. Though SCAF claim to support revolution and be honest democrats, their bloody record speaks for itself.

SCAF have used the army, the police, and gangs of thugs to attack, torture and kill protestors who have demanded an end to the army regime. Over 12,000 people have been tried in military courts for a range of crimes which include ‘insulting the army’ and ‘breaking curfew.’ Torture and beatings by security forces remain commonplace, and demonstrations are regularly greeted with volleys of tear gas and rocks from the state security forces. Women who have been detained faced invasive and brutal ‘virginity tests’ until popular outrage forced courts to declare them illegal in December.

Last October, when extremists burned down a Coptic Christian church, protests against the act of oppression were met with terrifying state violence which left 28 dead. What’s more, SCAF used their control of the media to claim that the Christians had attacked them, and urged Egyptian Muslims to defend the soldiers, which helped fuel further attacks on the minority Copts.

The past weeks have seen the protests increase once again. On January 25th (the one year anniversary of the revolution), millions demonstrated across the country, many calling for “bread, freedom and dignity” and a “second revolution.” Though the Muslim Brotherhood refused to officially endorse the anti-Mubarak protests of a year ago, it took part in the ‘celebrations’ of the anniversary and tried to convince people not to oppose the regime or push for further reforms.

When protestors decided to continue demonstrating in the square after the anniversary was over, the Brotherhood condemned them, leading several of their members to be ejected from Tahrir.

These protests have been bolstered after the violence at a football game in Port Said on February 1st. Supporters of the Al-Ahly football club have taken an active part in the revolution, from the initial clashes with Mubarak’s thugs to today. In recent weeks they used matches as an opportunity to sing anti-SCAF chants, fly flags and hang banners calling for justice for the victims of state violence. Many have claimed that al-Masry fans were allowed to smuggle in knives and that the exit gates at the Al-Ahly stands were locked so people could not escape.

When al-Masry fans (or state thugs pretending to be fans, according to some) rushed the pitch and the opposition stands, hundreds of police officers just stood back and allowed the violence to continue. By the end of the night 74 fans were dead, sparking larger mobilisations against state violence across the country. Thousands have demonstrated around the Ministry of the Interior building, and police stations have also been targetted. Security forces have responded with live ammunition and shotgun pellets, and by tear-gassing residential areas.

Military rulers have shown their contempt for democracy in the recent arrest of 43 activists, including 19 Americans, for pro-democracy activism they claim is illegal. Only a few weeks ago the regime felt confident enough to relax the security laws of the country, but these recent demonstrations have shown the unpopularity of the military regime.

In June, the SCAF is meant to formally handover power to the parliament, which is firmly under the control of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) who occupy around half the seats. However, the Islamists have been working closely with SCAF since the revolution began, and FJP higher-ups have promised that the military will still play an important role in Egyptian politics after the handover date. The SCAF itself has announced that it intends to hold onto the power to block laws from passing, to dismiss parliaments, to set budgets, and to sign deals with other countries.

In recent days the extent to which the Muslim Brotherhood and the military rulers support each other was made obvious when protestors calling for an end to SCAF rule and for greater political representation for women were blocked from reaching parliament by a crowd of Brotherhood members.

This relationship could also be seen in the recent elections which the FJP won, where SCAF blocked observors from monitoring and preventing corruption, vote-rigging and political threats. Many leftists refused to take part in such obviously crooked elections, and have looked beyond parliament to strikes, demonstrations and occupations to get their voices heard.

Demands for democracy are not the only issue fuelling the ‘second revolution,’ as Egyptian workers, peasants, and youth struggle to earn a living. The working-class is one of the worst paid in the region, with over 40% of the country living below the poverty line and a huge number of people surviving on around $2 a day. FJP leaders have promised to continue working with US imperialism to exploit their people and have met with representatives of the International Monetary Fund to get a loan for Egypt, despite the fact that IMF loans come with strings attached which force countries to allow multinational corporations to dominate their economy.

Huge numbers of Egyptians are sick of being forced to live in poverty by a corrupt and bigoted regime which has allowed revolutionaries’ murderers to go unpunished. Violent crackdowns on protests, blatant corruption, and continued inequality have helped to create this latest wave of resistance. Many people are aware that the SCAF’s puppet democracy will not achieve the revolution’s goals, so now is the time to build an alternative to the sham parliament.

There will be no halfway house for Egypt- a stable, democratic, capitalist state cannot exist there because of its relationship with the major imperialist countries. So long as these countries keep sucking the money and resources out of Egypt and impoverishing the population, the people will fight back until they either beat or are beaten by the state.

The workers, the poor and the oppressed of Egypt need to take control of the economy and society by establishing their own democratic assemblies, by organising their defence, and by preparing to take down the SCAF and Brotherhood leaders who seek to recreate Mubarak’s rule without Mubarak.

 

 

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Arrests as protesters storm Syrian embassies

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Return to Tahrir Square

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Religion and Revolution

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Arrests as protesters storm Syria embassy

Police have arrested 6 people after a protest at the Syrian embassy in London.

After news of a fresh massacre by pro-regime forces in the city of Homs, around 200 protesters gathered outside the Embassy from 2pm on Saturday.

Protesters chanted slogans calling for the overthrow of Syrian dictator Asad, and against ‘intervention’ by NATO.

5 people remain in custody after breaking into the embassy and 1 person was arrested for assaulting a copper, after the demonstration was kettled.

People around the world responded to a call from Syrian activists in revolutionary Cairo, appealing for demonstrations at Syrian embassies, in solidarity with the uprising.

In Germany, 20 forced their way into the Syrian embassy, damaging offices. There were similar scenes in Athens where 13 were arrested after storming the embassy there. Around 300 Syrian exiles and Libyan revolutionaries occupied the Syrian embassy in Libya, hanging the opposition flag from the gate.

Protesters in Cairo burnt down part of the Syrian embassy, while in Kuweit, windows were broken and the opposition’s flag raised. In Canberra, offices were ransacked, leaving debris strewn across the street outside.

The government of Tunisia has expelled the Syrian ambassador, and ended its recognition of the regime.

The international spread of the protests is great – the Arab Spring has inspired millions across the world. It has shown that ordinary people, when organised, can overthrow vicious regimes even when they are protected by hundreds of billions of dollars worth of military and security equipment provided over decades by western imperialists.

 

 

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100 million workers in world’s biggest strike

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Nigeria bombings aim to split resistance

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Religion and Revolution

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Religion and Revolution

On the 1st anniversary of the Egyptian Revolution, millions flooded into Tahrir Square to demand an end to military rule and counter-revolutionary violence.

The last few months have been filled with fresh uprisings against the army junta, attacks by religious extremists, and united action between Christians and Muslims to face down those who want to throw back the progress of the revolution.

Religion has a huge impact on people’s lives across the world. In many countries, religious regimes and movement dictate the way people live their lives, enforcing moral values, expectations and laws on what they can and can’t do. Throughout history religion has been used to divide, oppress and victimise certain groups of people.

Yet from the US Civil Rights movement to Liberation Theology to the Arab Spring we see that religious movement can play a leading role in progressive struggles.

This is mainly down to two factors; in semi-colonial (third-world) countries religious forces are the largest and most powerful organisations outside of government, and in imperialist countries religious practice is highest among those suffering oppression based on their race or religious beliefs.

 So during the Egyptian Revolution, the formerly-illegal Muslim Brotherhood eventually joined the protests to overthrow Mubarak. But after months of rule by a military junta, a new uprising has been condemned by the Muslim Brotherhood. They hope to rise to state power off the backs of those who made the revolution on the streets.

 REVOLUTION calls for a separation between church and state. We are in favour of the freedom to worship, and the freedom not to worship. We are for an end to religious laws.

 We say:

  • For complete separation of Church and State. No to all religious law-making or laws based on religious practice.
  • For an end to religious schools, courts and state institutions.
  • Complete freedom of worship.
  • No discrimination based on religion: for the freedom to wear religious clothes and symbols, and the freedom not to.
  • For an end to forced marriages, for the right to divorce without repercussions.
  • For an end to all discriminatory practices outside and inside religious institutions: full equality for all races, sexes and sexualities.
  • For revolution against religious regimes.

 

Zionism in the water?

With echoes of the South African Anti-Apartheid movement, activists in Palestine – from Students’ Unions to LGBTQ organisations – have asked international supporters to join a growing boycott of companies and institutions that profit from the zionist occupation.

The National Union of Students is boycotting two key companies operating on UK campuses that are directly implicated in sustaining the occupation.

The first is a water company called Eden Springs, also operating under the name “Mayanot Eden.” It is based in and sources water from an illegal Israeli settlement in the Golan Heights called Katzrin.

Eden Springs UK is a parent company of this and it provides water coolers on many campuses.

The NUS are encouraging students to lobby their universities to cancel contracts with this company to pressure it into withdrawing from all its operations in occupied territory.

A second priority is Veolia, a French company dealing in waste management and recycling. They have taken over many privatised local services across Britain which including councils, universities and colleges waste management.

This company has a major investment in the Jerusalem Light Rail. This tram network, when completed will link dozens of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank to Israel.

In April 2010, the United Nations Human Rights Council specifically declared the Jerusalem Light Railway to be “in clear breach of international law”.

Veolia also provide bus services for the settlements, yet most Palestinians can only use the buses for two stops – after which they are booted off. Alongside Israeli-only roads and a web of military checkpoints, Palestinians are subjected to the most brutal, militarised and blatant apartheid regime in the world.

Eden Springs operates on land taken by Israel in the 1967 war, evicting over 100,000 of its Palestinian inhabitants in the process. Since then, Israel has refused to allow inhabitants to return to their villages, houses and schools. They have moved Israeli settlers into the region instead and mean to stay.

The settlements are internationally recognised as illegal yet western imperialist countries are not going to condemn a state which policies the region for them. Nothing is free, and the $billions of annual US military aid to Israel is ensured only as long as Israel uses its military in the interests of imperialism.

Likewise the imperialists are silent on the right of refugees to return. It seems they are willing to take action, if belatedly, when ethnic cleansing arrives on their doorstep, as it did in the former Yugoslavia, but operate an ‘out of sight, out of mind policy’ in the Middle East. Except when they needed to invade Iraq (again).

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign targets a whole range of companies which profit from the occupation of the Palestinians’ land. The settlements are motivated as much by their exclusive access to valuable resources as they are by theological concerns. As such the BDS campaign is an important weapon which allows us to focus resistance against the economic motivation for settlement expansion.

Ultimately, the fate of the Arab revolutions will be of far greater significance to the conflict in Palestine, than any boycott campaign.

A boycott against South Africa worked in the end, but millions of those on whose behalf it was waged remain imprisoned in the unemployment and poverty ridden shanty towns.

A struggle for lasting liberation in the Middle East must be one that is carried out by the young people and workers of those countries themselves, supported by the action of an international solidarity movement. Victory means a struggle for the power of the working class over society, to create a union of secular, socialist states for workers of all faiths and none.

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Balfour Beatty reaps rewards of occupation

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Can the UN liberate Palestine?

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Will the Arab Spring reach Palestine

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Return to Tahrir Square

Tahrir Square

It’s been nearly a year since the hated Mubarak was removed from power after massive popular protests and a general strike launched by the newly-formed Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions.

On his abdication, Mubarak announced that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) under Field Marshall Hussein Tantawi  would be running operations until the elections. They set up a puppet civilian cabinet headed by prime minister Essam Sharraf.

Though they claim to be acting in the interests of the democratic revolution the SCAF is determined to hold onto power. Since Mubarak was ousted they have maintained his tradition of suppressing the rights to protest, to strike and to political expression.

More than 12,000 civilians have been dragged before military tribunals since the dictators’ fall, which is more than during his entire time in power. Many of these have been arrested and tortured for blogging, reporting, and protesting.

Thousands have been campaigning since the beginning of military rule against the ‘emergency law’ which allows the army the right to crack down on political expression, and calling for the downfall of the military rule in Egypt.

The actions of Field Marshall Tantawi and the rest of the military junta demonstrates their contempt for popular protest. On May Day they sent first undercovers and then Riot Police to break up celebrations in Tahrir Square.

In October, when Coptic Christians protested against a church being burned down by Salafist islamists, the army used live ammunition and tanks to break up the protests, before using state TV to claim that the army was attacked by the Copts. They encouraged supremacist mobs to attack the protestors, and by the time they had been dispersed, more than 20 had died at the hands of the state and the reactionaries.

With the long and complicated Egyptian election process having begun on Wednesday, and lasting over three months, many ordinary Egyptian people are rightly worried about the influence that the military regime will have over the outcome of the elections.

A second revolution?

Protestors confront the army

Indeed, the recent round of protests which have been widely hailed as the beginning of a second revolution, were primarily directed against the holding of sham elections by the same military rule.

Protestors have come to realise that the military regime that they revolted against in February is still in power, just with a new ruling clique. This was demonstrated on November 19th when families of the revolution’s martyrs protested against the continued injustice and were met with outright brutality by the police, with their rubber bullets and clubs.

This heavy-handed action brought millions out in protests, strikes and occupations across the country, which has been met with heavy-duty tear gas, rubber bullets, and in some cases live ammunition. Over 40 have died in the course of a week and thousands more were injured.

The massive popular demonstrations should be seen as a continuation of the February revolution, which forced Egypt’s ruling class to ditch Mubarak, but only to buy time to consolidate their power by ensuring that pro-establishment forces like the Muslim Brotherhood could take advantage of the chaotic election process.

Many political factions have been represented in this recent movement- socialists and anarchists joined in the demonstrations, as well as young islamists. The Muslim Brotherhood’s opposition to the protests have discredited the organisation to many and caused splits in the organisation. Attempts by their leader Mohamed El Beltagi to convince protestors to leave Tahrir Square led to him getting kicked out.

For the moment the movement has died down as the people of Egypt vote and protesters prepare for their next wave of action.

As the western media and politicians hail the high turnout at the ballot box, favourably counterposing this to the protests and strikes which shook the regime, it is clear that they, Egypt’s military junta, and Mubarak-era reactionaries clinging to power are hoping that the elections will funnel people’s anger into the manageable expression of bourgeois parliamentary democracy – where state power remains in the hand of the police, the army and the courts, who have yet to be purged of the corrupt and murderous officials responsible for thousands of deaths.

So while it is true that by voting many Egyptians are exercising a right they have fought for which their parents and grandparents never had, participation has been boosted by the threat of a fine which would be equivalent to two months’ wages for the average Egyptian worker.

State power meets popular protest

Where the junta stands

During the recent protests, Obama spoke in favour of the military junta, saying that they needed to crack down on dissent and potential disruptions to the elections.

The US has also shipped millions of dollars in military aid to the regime, arming it against any potential uprising against it of those who want to see true democracy and an end to poverty – just as they armed Mubarak for decades before.

The leadership of the armed forces are the imperialists’ best ally in Egypt, and across many states in North Africa and the Middle East. The army leaders are more than happy to allow Western multinationals to drive down wages and exploit both the people and raw-materials of Egypt so long as they’re allowed to be the middle-men with exclusive control over what power and wealth is not shipped out of the country.

Many of its leading figures were part of the Mubarak regime, they have proved their willingness to allow imperialism to continue its’ parasitic relationship with Egypt, and they have proved that they are not willing to allow genuine democracy or social change in the country. They have even publicly stated that they will not allow any new government formed from the elections to change the constitutional power of the Egyptian Army to dictate the political rights and structures of the country.

The SCAF are not the allies of the revolution, they are the most committed defenders of the existing social order. The overthrow of dictatorship and institution of (limited) democratic rights does not change the social basis of the Egpytian state. The Egyptian state remains a capitalist state, with the private ownership of the means of production by national and international capitalists unchallenged. It is the threat to this social order posed by the revolutionary general strikes which has led SCAF to launch such vicious repression against the workers’ movement.

Building an alternative 

Workers from Egypt's new trade unions

If  the masses of unemployed youth, workers and oppressed women want to end military rule, then they need to return to and develop the tactics that brought down Mubarak.

The 1.4 million workers of the Egyptian Federation of Trade Unions need to launch a general strike to paralyse the economy. They should also go to workplaces where workers aren’t unionised or are still part of the ‘official’ trade unions which are tied to the state, and argue for mass meetings to vote through strike action and set up councils in each workplace to control the strike.

These strike committees played a pivotal role the February revolution and can form the basis for a new type of democracy- a workers’ democracy. They can determine what needs to be produced and distributed for the strike to continue, organise the self-defence of picket lines and protests, and provide an alternative source of power to the corrupt regime. From committees of the workplace, workers can resurrect the popular defence and organisation committees which maintained food distribution and security in working class areas during the February revolution.

But workers cannot just ignore the army or hope that big enough strikes and protests will force them to grant limited concessions.  Instead they need to break it and prevent the regular soldiers from being used to crush their demands for democracy.

They need to encourage the soldiers to break from their officers by fighting for democracy within the army as well as wider society. Soldiers’ committees should elect their own officers and approve any orders given through the military command.

These democratic bodies, composed of workers’ and soldiers’ delegates, represent the real power in society and could form the basis for a constituent assembly which can determine what kind of society the new Egypt will be, and how it will be organised economically and politically.

May Day in Cairo

A  revolutionary party

But there is one key ingredient missing if the democratic revolution is to be made ‘permanent’ – continuing to a working-class socialist revolution. The missing ingredient is a revolutionary party which can provide leadership to the millions of Egyptians looking for an alternative to the poverty and tyranny which has accompanied both Mubarak and the SCAF.

There are a number of socialist groups in Egypt but many of them have been quick to regard the military generals as reformable and sought to engage the liberal wing of the new regime in dialogue, rather than fighting for a working-class power.

The forces are there to form a new party, in the independent trade unions, in the militant protesters, and in the youth movements  fighting to complete the revolution.

They need to commit to fighting for a permanent revolution to empower the workers and poor if they want to put an end to the counter-revolution, led by the generals, the islamists and armed and backed by western imperialism.

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1 million youth unemployed – enough is enough!

The government has achieved another milestone in its efforts to ensure those who caused the economic crisis don’t pay for it. The number of unemployed 16-24 year olds has passed the 1 million mark, as  jobless figures hit a 15-year high.

As if this wasn’t shocking enough, the figures are distorted by the hundreds of thousands who are kept off official statistics by being forced into a dizzying array of ‘work experience’, ‘training’ or ‘voluntary’ schemes – full-time, unpaid work for 30 hours a week.

Lasting just a few weeks, with no prospect for full-time employment at the end, these programmes are nothing more than state-backed conscription of youth to line the bank accounts of Britain’s wealthiest companies.

The government has suspended the requirement to pay the minimum wage to those bullied into these schemes – those who refuse are simply stripped of their benefits.

While millionaire Mayor Boris Johnson denounces OccupyLSX as ‘crusties’ his government attempts to blame unemployment on the crisis in the eurozone. There certainly is a crisis in the Eurozone – 45% youth unemployment in Spain and IMF coup d’etats in Italy and Greece –  but to claim that this is the root of Britain’s problems is a craven attempt to deflect the blame away from the their slash ‘n’ burn austerity policies.

Enough is enough

When we talk about the unemployment crisis, it’s not enough to talk about numbers alone.

We face being turned into a generation of workers with none of the pension, pay and safety rights of previous generations. Long-term mass unemployment will intensify competition of the worst kind – driving down wages, increasing temporary work – giving employers the freedom to hire and fire, giving workers the ‘freedom’ to compete with 100 others for every job vacancy.

The attacks on education, destruction of youth services, and compulsory unpaid work have put young people at the sharp end of Cameron’s Big Society.

These so-called ‘voluntary’ schemes are  a 21st century Poor Law. The suspension of the minimum wage is a dangerous precedent which paves the way for its total removal demanded by bosses and their Tory stooges.

There can be no clearer evidence that the Tory solution to the crisis is to restore the capitalists’ profit rates at the expense of the jobs, wages and working conditions of the working class.

We won’t find the solution by blaming the European Union, but we can look to Europe and beyond to find the inspiration, unity and strength to mount a resistance to the bosses who are waging a global war on jobs, services and education.

In 2005 French youth mobilised in their hundreds of thousands to defeat a law which removed employment rights for young people starting their first job.

German students repeatedly forced their government to repeal laws introducing tuition fees, while the indignados of Spain showed that our generation is not the apolitical, apathetic mass of right-wing propaganda.

Most impressively of all was the involvement of young unemployed graduates and workers whose determination continues to drive the Arab Spring, facing down dictators’ bullets and imperialist condemnation to fight for jobs and democracy.

Their crisis – our solution

Just as the economic crisis is characterised by an offensive carried out by international banks and corporations, so internationalism – solidarity and united action between workers of all nationalities – is the key to beating back the bosses’ austerity.

The resistance of British students to education cuts, and the mass mobilisations of the working class on March 26 and June 30 is the context for a youth rebellion against the parasitic elite who shed crocodile tears over cutbacks with one eye on the stock exchange and the other on their bank accounts.

November 30 is the chance for young people to say enough is enough. Join millions of workers in striking a blow at the heart of system, demonstrating our power by shutting down the country for a day. We are the ones who make their system work, and when millions of us strike back together we can discover that we are the ones with the real power in society.

  • All work to be paid the minimum wage or Trade Union rate
  • End compulsory work-for-your-dole schemes
  • A 99% tax on the 1% to fund education, apprenticeships and jobs
  • Unity is strength – all out on November 30

 

Read more

November 30 – shut down your school

N30: road to resistance

Call for a general strike

 

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