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Pakistan’s Flood: Organize vs. Rulers’ Crimes Engulfing Workers, Farmers
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- 17 February 2011 88 hits
The devastation from last year’s floods in Pakistan — 2,300 mostly poor, working-class farmers dead, 24 million displaced and 2.3 million houses and 4,655 villages destroyed — was blamed on unprecedented monsoon rains, but the real cause was the ruling class’s refusal to protect the working class.
Six months after the floods, large areas, especially in the South, are still underwater, and over 7,000,000 people lack adequate shelter. Millions of flood survivors with immune systems weakened by stress, lack of food and cold weather are at risk of pneumonia and other respiratory and water-borne diseases.
Friends of PLP have been playing a key role in organizing nation-wide protest demonstrations which began last year over the government’s failed flood relief. (Pakistan is a federation of four provinces, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh, and four federal territories, altogether totaling over 170 million people.)
Our friends pointed out that while the floods were a natural event, the homelessness of millions and the massive destruction were a disaster produced by Pakistan’s capitalist class and U.S. imperialism, placing profits before workers’ lives. As our friends join in grass-roots struggles to provide basic necessities for flood victims, communist ideas are being spread promoting a society based on the interests of the working class where careful planning would prevent such devastation.
This included exposure of the corruption of national and local officials, and their tactic of citing “security issues” to keep relief agencies away from poor areas while taking food and supplies intended for flood victims for themselves. Big landowners, many also being members of Parliament, fled before the waters rose, using state resources to divert the water’s path in order to save their homes and crops. They often re-routed it to poor areas, thereby destroying millions of homes.
Even though the government had known since last June that flash floodings would occur from July to September, the government had no evacuation plan. Poor workers, who could not pay the high cost of transportation away from the floods, watched as rising waters destroyed their homes and livelihoods.
Many breaches were made to intentionally divert floodwaters away from military garrisons, (including the Shahbaz Airbase in Sindh), which flooded Baluchistan, displacing 800,000 Baluchis. The airbase, under U.S. Air Force control since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, is the source of continued lethal raids into Afghanistan and drone attacks on Taliban insurgents, while refusing to help in desperately-needed relief work.
Although the Pakistani Supreme Court is examining cases of floodwater diversion — seeking reports from provincial officials who turned a blind eye to it — they will likely shift blame onto other exploiters and whip up national-ethnic rivalries to hide their crimes against the working class.
The destruction of crops by the floods, and farmers’ inability to plant in still water-logged fields, means another 500,000 people will need food this year. In Sindh province, home base to some of the country’s largest landowners, including the notorious Bhutto clan — the current president, Asif Ali Zardar, is the husband of ex-president Benazir Bhutto, assassinated in 2009) — an estimated 25% of children under five are malnourished and 6% severely underfed. But such figures result not only from the devastation caused by the floods but also from the long-time inequality inherent in capitalist society. (A 2002 study found a national malnutrition rate of 13.2%, and rates of 23.1% in northern Sindh and 21.2% in its southern part.)
Pakistan’s economy has been severely harmed by extensive damage to crops and infrastructure intensifying a profound economic crisis. The total impact from the floods approaches $US45 billion. The ruling class and international capitalists are determined to place the cost of this crisis on the backs of Pakistan’s working class.
Brutal austerity measures imposed by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank have led to sharper increases in food and energy prices and more cuts in social spending. The government intends to rebuild the infrastructure through public and private “partnerships,” meaning more corruption, as big business is given state funds for reconstruction.
There are daily protests and strikes over the lack of flood relief, rising prices and unemployment. More than two million energy-industry workers have been laid off, as well as massive job losses in the agricultural sector.
As in the recent earthquake in Haiti, the floods in Pakistan demonstrate that capitalism cannot provide for the needs of the working class. We call on all workers to unite across borders and fight for a communist society.
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Pickets Unite Haiti’s Quake Victims with Egypt’s Masses
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- 17 February 2011 86 hits
NEW YORK CITY, Feb. 4 — “Haiti, Egypt, USA: Workers’ Power Will Win the Day!” At the moment Haiti marked the anniversary of its earthquake with hardly anything yet “reconstructed” for ordinary people, the working class in Egypt — youth and women workers joined by students and professionals — were taking a stand against the fascist regime of Hosni Mubarak in Cairo. Fifty picketers at the Haitian consulate in Manhattan took note of this moment, both condemning the Haitian ruling class and its imperialist overlords for their neglect, and cheering the power and resolve shown by the Egyptian demonstrators.
Among our pickets were high school students embroiled in the struggles against school closings, against racist preferential treatment for charter and special middle-class schools, and against administration harassment of militant teachers who organize together with their students. They vowed to join their own struggles internationally with those of other young people: “Haitian students are under attack: what do we do? Stand up, fight back!”
One Brooklyn student led a chant for various demands for workers in Haiti, teaching us how to respond to each one in Haitian Kreyòl “Mwen dakò!” (“I agree!”). We also taught ourselves Kreyòl versions of the great chants “The workers, united, will never be defeated!” (“Ouvriye ini pa pral jamè venki!”) and “Workers’ struggles have no borders!” (“Lit ouvriye pa gen fwontyè!”).
A recent CUNY graduate said it was the most spirited and powerful rally he’d been to in a while. A worker who has spent much of the year in Haiti spoke about her experiences working with friends there, teaching classes and organizing a conference together. She drew inspiration from the understanding and solidarity with U.S. struggles shown by students, teachers, and other union workers in Haiti.
Another speaker outlined some answers to the question “Who rules Haiti?” He said that in addition to the Haitian consulate, we should picket Bill Clinton’s office in Harlem, since Clinton is at the heart of U.S. imperialist rule in Haiti.
Friends in Haiti asked us to include in our picket the demand for justice for the thousands of victims of the fascist Jean-Claude (Baby Doc) Duvalier, who had the gall to return to Haiti last month, apparently in a bid to clear his position with the Haitian courts so as to access millions in a blocked Swiss bank account. We added his name to the chant “Clinton, Préval, Duvalier, you can’t hide: we charge you with genocide!”
Members of PLP on the picket line stressed that “workers’ power” meant turning the guns around, winning soldiers in Haiti, Egypt, and the imperialist armies to join in a communist working-class revolution to smash capitalism everywhere.
This picket was one small step in a long march. Like the demonstrators in Cairo we know that, in the words of a nineteenth-century Illinois coal miners’ anthem, “Step by step the longest march/Can be won, can be won,” in Haiti, in Egypt, in the USA. As we were leaving we crossed paths with the tail end of a march of more than a thousand people targeting the Egyptian Mission to the UN. Something is stirring in the international working class and revolutionary communists are in the mix.
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‘Integration, Yes! Segregation, No! Angry Students, Teachers, Parents Expose Racist School Boss
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- 04 February 2011 88 hits
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, January 19 — “Integration, Yes! Segregation, No!” The chant rang out across the auditorium, as students, teachers and parents stood to challenge NYC schools chancellor Cathy Black. The event was the Panel on Educational Policy (PEP) meeting to vote on putting a new selective school in the John Jay campus building. While the building currently houses four schools serving mainly black and Latino students, the new school is being added to meet the needs of middle-class, mainly white families in the Park Slope neighborhood.
The PEP meeting was the final, formal Department of Education (DOE) step in approving the new school. It was also the first public meeting of new schools chancellor Black. The crowd of about 200 people was angry about attacks on working-class students across the city.
The whole meeting was filled with chanting, singing and speakers interrupting the DOE and demanding the system serve all students. Angry teachers, parents and students represented many schools threatened with closing or with the co-location of other schools in their buildings. About 40 people from the John Jay campus came to continue the fight against the racist conditions students there are facing.
Challenge Racist Chancellor
The Chancellor — who recently made a racist, genocidal “joke” about “solving” overcrowding by birth control — was continually interrupted during the opening remarks by chants and catcalls denouncing the DOE and Mayor Bloomberg’s racism. Students and speakers went to the microphones during the public comments portion of the meeting to expose the racism of inserting the Millennium school in the building and to demand that the DOE provide a decent education for all students. Several students spoke about how the entire system is racist, with one young man telling the crowd that the liberal racism of the DOE is worse than the KKK because it tries to be slicker.
While the principal of one of the schools in the building was speaking about the racism of a system where 56 years after Brown vs. Board of Education the schools are more segregated and unequal than ever, the DOE shut off her microphone before her allotted time was up. She raised her voice to be heard across the massive auditorium and finished her speech as the crowd rose with her and chanted “Integration, Yes! Racism, No! Integration, Yes! Racism, No!”
The PEP is a sham group appointed by the mayor and the borough presidents to rubber stamp Bloomberg’s and the city ruling class’s plans for the schools. While everyone knew the vote was a foregone conclusion, attending the meeting was another important step in the fight against the bosses’ attacks on working-class students. It will also help more people see the need for communist revolution as the only way to create a society that looks out for the needs of all young people.
One speaker from PLP spoke to the whole audience about how the racism the DOE builds is used to divide the working class and justify the inequality of capitalism. She said that she and her students were not facing closing or co-location, but that they understood that an attack on one group of students and teachers was an attack on all. They shut off her microphone also, but she continued anyway and held up CHALLENGE newspaper and offered it to the crowd as a tool to help defeat the ruling class.
The fight at the John Jay campus has started to spread beyond the school building. At the PEP meeting our chant from last week’s public hearing — “How do we spell racist? D-O-E!” — was started by several speakers. On the blogs and online newspapers, comments have started to more frequently take on the gutter racists and blame the DOE for the horrendous conditions of the school building and the lack of funding for the students in the four schools. Some are saying that the schools already there should be supported, and the Park Slope students should join the working-class students in them.
This struggle has been an opportunity for many people to see both the true nature of the ruling class and the potential of students and teachers to be a force to change society. Each meeting and confrontation with the DOE has seen working-class students stand up to the bosses and skillfully give leadership to the class struggle. Many teachers have come forward and united with their students against the DOE’s racism. This has been particularly inspirational.
The communist study groups that have developed out of the struggle in the schools have grown over the last several weeks. Many CHALLENGES are being distributed. This fight has a long way to go.
The PEP decision only moves things on to the next level. PLP is in it for the long haul, as it seems are many of the students, teachers and parents already involved. Whatever else happens through the rest of this year and into next when the new school arrives, there are two things we will guarantee: the battle against DOE racism will continue, and we will keep building PLP and the fight for communism.
CHICAGO, IL, January 28 — “THEY SAY CUT BACK, WE SAY FIGHT BACK!”; “THE WORKERS UNITED WILL NEVER BE DEFEATED!”; “WE NEED OUR JOBS!”; These chants shook the halls outside a budget hearing as militant black women workers from Cook County and Provident Hospitals could not get into the packed hearing room. The commissioners were deciding how much money will be cut from each department, including hospital services and jobs. Our voices were heard loud and clear, inside and outside the hearing.
Driven by the war budget and the Great Recession, the bosses plan to sub-contract the jobs of hundreds of housekeeping, dietary and other workers. These mostly black and Latino workers have historically been the mass base for PLP here. The bosses and bankers are also closing Provident and Oak Forest Hospitals, and have not restored the hundreds of jobs cut in 2007. The County health system is already more closed than open and more patients will die, all run by Democrats and in Obama’s backyard.
One doctor, a veteran anti-racist fighter, told the board that closing these hospitals was racist murder, comparing these cuts to what happened in Nazi Germany’s medical system prior to WW II. Someone also exposed short-staffing. It’s a scientific fact that complications — including death — increase sharply when the nurse:patient ratio exceeds 1-to-5 on medical-surgical units. At Stroger Hospital, nurses on these wards are routinely assigned 7 or 8 uninsured patients. Across the street at the University of Illinois Hospital, which only takes insured patients, proper staffing ratios are used.
The board did not respond and tried to carry on with their agenda when someone interrupted and said, “Start talking about patient care and these murderous cuts!” The stunned directors actually did! They asked the nursing supervisor to speak about the staffing ratios. She admitted they were unacceptable and unsafe. They asked the human resources lackey what could be done to fix it. Not much it seemed. They didn’t discuss the hospital closings, but eventually ordered security to remove the worker who had interrupted them.
Furious and Fearful
Workers are furious over these deadly racist cuts. But that fury is dampened by cynicism and fear. For the past four years we’ve been subjected to mass layoffs, ward and clinic closings and reduced services when there is a growing medical need for more than one million uninsured workers in Cook County. Through it all, the unions have assisted the bosses in their dirty work and most workers don’t see a way out.
A nurse from Oak Forest Hospital said that the long-term care patients, some on ventilators and many who are paralyzed, were told they had to find a new nursing home by the end of January. Some of these patients have been living at the long-term care unit for decades! She also said that the 38,000 patients who use the emergency room every year will be forced to go elsewhere when the hospital closes. Many will likely try to go to Stroger Hospital which has seen an increase in its ER visits from 350 to over 500 patients every day. Many others, who can’t make it to Stroger, will surely die.
Our PLP County club is searching for ways for workers and patients to break the grip of fear and cynicism. The key is developing a mass base for CHALLENGE while always trying to up the ante against the racist rulers and their union misleaders. Fighting these murderous racist attacks on patients and workers can help build the revolutionary movement
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Potential Power of Workers ‘On Full Display’: Kicking Out Capitalism Creates a REAL Revolution
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- 04 February 2011 83 hits
Open violent struggle has erupted in several North African and Middle Eastern Arab nations, inspired largely by the massive uprising of workers and students in Tunisia. That revolt has driven out President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali who has fled to Saudi Arabia, reportedly with over a ton of stolen gold.
Workers are boldly fighting their bosses. In company after company — airlines, insurance, petrochemical — workers are seizing management headquarters and demanding, with some success, that the bosses be fired. Workers are conducting regional and city-wide strikes nation-wide. In the cities of Sfax and Sidi Bouzid, mass workers’ organizations have actually seized political power, running out the mayor and city council and establishing direct organizational control over all city agencies.
These workers’ councils could develop a national network and seize power from the decrepit National Unity Government (NUG). But they don’t yet advocate expropriating the capitalists’ property and building a collectively-run communist society. Without bold communist leadership, they will fall victim to the illusion of “fair-play capitalism.” But revolutionary potential remains.
The sustained worker-student struggle continues to confront the remaining ministers from Ben Ali’s regime, including prime minister and self-proclaimed leader of a “National Unity” government Mohamed Ghannouchi. Continued protests are demanding that all ministers of the Constitutional Democratic Rally (RDC) party be kicked out as simply being “Ben Ali light” who would maintain the same corrupt capitalist clique in power.
Embarrassed by the sustained mass, militant worker-student opposition to the phony NUG, both Ghannouchi and the interim president; the representatives of the General Union of Tunisian Workers (UGTT) (trying to maintain their mis-leadership of the workers); the minister from the bourgeois Democratic Forum for Labour and Liberty; and the Progressive Democratic Party ministers are all abandoning the National Unity government, leaving it as an isolated rump. But no worker has been fooled by their transparent deception.
Workers’ Example Rapidly Spreads
Reflecting the explosive quality of the Tunisian rebellion, oppressed workers throughout North Africa and the Middle East are emulating these bold actions, with the major demonstrations against corruption, repression, mass unemployment and exploitation in Egypt, Algeria, Yemen, and Jordan. Saudi and Kuwaiti bosses are also quaking with fear.
Kuwait’s Mohammad al-Sabah recently told a foreign ministers’ meeting, “The Arab world is witnessing…unprecedented political developments and real challenges in…Arab national security….Countries disintegrate, people conduct uprisings...and the Arab citizen asks: Can the current Arab regime meet these challenges dynamically?”
In response to these workers’ rebellions, Egypt’s foreign investors are leaving in droves. According to Bloomberg News, “Overseas investors are reducing their positions because of the increased political risk stemming from what we saw in Tunisia,” said an executive of Cairo-based Acumen Securities.
THE TUNISIAN REVOLT
Motivated by massive youth unemployment, as high as 50%, poor prospects for the future, anger about the blatant corruption of the Ben Ali clique (and triggered by the desperate political suicide of a student without hope), a mass worker/student uprising challenged the Tunisian government. Ben-Ali’s offer of reforms and compromises were rejected by angry masses of workers.
Demonstrations, regional general strikes, occupations of government offices by angry workers and students continued and grew until Ben Ali could only flee. Ghannouchi, Ben Ali’s crony and prime minister over the past 20 years, took over but has also been rejected by the masses. The National Unity government is unlikely to remain.
Desperate to save their skins, many of Tunisia’s leading figures, both traditional and reformist, have suddenly become the greatest “critics” of Ben Ali, despite having fed at Ben Ali’s family trough for decades. (Over half of Tunisia’s economic activity has been tied to Ben Ali’s family for years). Workers are having none of this.
Meanwhile, the police and army have become less reliable for the bosses because of rank-and-file soldiers’ sympathy for the uprising. Some soldiers were seen saluting demonstrators in a show of support. In the rebellion’s earliest days, Ben Ali actually fired the head of the military because he refused to order the troops to shoot down demonstrators.
The military leadership, using its newly-found credibility, is calling on students and workers not to occupy certain ministries or take “extreme actions.” Although rank-and-file soldier insurgency seems to be continuing in some places, the police and the military leadership have begun to clash with the most radical rebels. Youth throughout Tunisia are organizing “Liberation Caravans” to converge on Tunis, the country’s largest city and capitol, in order to take power. The police have attacked some caravans.
The forces of reaction are gradually trying to reverse the rebellion. Some reformists are calling for the ouster of the current government, replacing it with “reliable” leaders not implicated in the violence and corruption of the Ben Ali regime. These forces are attempting to mislead workers with the promise of “clean” — but still capitalist — government.
The working class’s potential power has been on full display in Tunisia, but the reformists, especially in the union federation, as always are deliberately holding back the struggle. Previously, rank-and-file workers have often occupied the union headquarters to force them to support strikes!
While a general strike to bring down the rump National Unity government and replace it with a workers’ government would be logical, that is not in the cards. Initially the UGTT tried to be part of the National Unity government rather than destroy it. Their role is similar to the AFL-CIO leadership in the U.S.: argue weakly for workers’ interests while promoting patriotism and “national unity.”
The Role of Phony ‘Leftists’
The Communist Party of the Workers of Tunisia (CPWT), whose leader Hamma Hammami was arrested early in the rebellion and subsequently released, has been immersed in the street battles and ministry occupations. The CPWT, however, is squandering this opportunity, calling for “democracy,” not workers’ power and communism.
Specifically, its January 15th nine-point program states, “The democratic change, with its political, economic, social and cultural dimensions, requires the real end of the repressive regime,…forming a provisional government…[with] executive powers,…organizing free elections for a Constitutional Assembly which would establish the basis of a real democratic republic…[consisting of] freedom, social equality and national dignity.”
Towards Communist Revolution and An International Party
The PLP supports the bold militant actions of Tunisia’s workers and students there and will support this rebellion internationally as concretely as possible. The sharp actions of Tunisia’s working class and its allies demonstrate conclusively that capitalism, with its exploitation, racism, corruption and wars, must be eliminated everywhere on the basis of workers’ internationalism and replaced by a communist society.
We don’t need bosses, and we shouldn’t be deceived by those who want to maintain a “cleaned-up” version of capitalism, markets, wage labor and money. We call on our brothers and sisters in Tunisia to consider our vision that so perfectly reflects their aspirations in the current struggle and build PLP there as well as worldwide!
U.S. and Tunisia’s Rulers: Partners in Terrorism
Ben Ali’s Tunisian police state has been an important U.S. ally in its imperialist wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere. A UN report lists Tunisia as having secret detention facilities where prisoners are held without International Red Cross access. Tunisian Intelligence Services have cooperated with the U.S. efforts in the “War on Terror” and have participated in interrogating prisoners at Bagram Airbase in Afghanistan and in Tunisia. The U.S. State Department boasts about the active support the Tunisian security forces receive from the U.S. in spite of the Ben Ali’s government record of serious human rights violations. According to the Department’s website:
“The United States and Tunisia have an active schedule of joint military exercises. U.S. security assistance historically has played an important role in cementing relations. The U.S.-Tunisian Joint Military Commission meets annually to discuss military cooperation, Tunisia’s defense modernization program, and other security matters.” [Background Note: Tunisia, U.S. State Department, 13 October 2010: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5439.htm#relations
The U.S. has signed $349 million in military sales agreements with Ben Ali’s government. Last year the Obama administration asked Congress to approve a $282 million sale to Tunisia of 12 “excess” Sikorsky military helicopters, with war-maker GE engines.
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