deutsch |  english |  español  |  français  |  italiano  |  nederlands  |  polska  |  português  |  svenska  |  türkçe  |  中文  |  عربي  |  русский

latest news

Greece
General strike brings society to a halt

16/03/2010: Unite and broaden the struggles of workers and youth!

  Europe, Greece

 Solidarity needed - Kazakhastan
10,000 oil workers on strike in Zhanaozen city

16/03/2010: The following appeal was sent from Socialist Resistance Kazakhstan (CWI) activists. This vital strike of ten thousand oil refinery workers is facing a news blockade in Kazakhstan and also court rulings against the workers’ right to strike.

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

Britain
General Election prospects - Hanging in the balance

15/03/2010: In substance, Britain’s general election campaign is a phoney war.

  Britain, Europe

Britain
Solid two-day civil service strike shows anger of PCS members

12/03/2010: PCS members have demonstrated their anger at the attack on their Civil Service Compensation Scheme by staging a solid two-day strike that has affected courts, passport offices, jobcentres, tax offices and many other government services.

  Britain, Europe

Belgium
Successful mobilisations against far right

12/03/2010: Youth and workers need a socialist alternative

  Belgium

Ireland
Government announces further €3 billion cuts

12/03/2010: Public sector workers under attack but union leaders’ strategy is a recipe for defeat

  Europe, Ireland Republic

 World Trade
Higgins condemns use of trade agreements to dominate poor countries

12/03/2010: Joe Higgins, Member of the European Parliament for the Socialist Party (CWI in Ireland) condemns use of preferential trade agreements to dominate developing countries

  Europe, Video, World Economy

 Solidarity needed - Hong Kong
Long Hair arrested

11/03/2010: Six pro-democracy activists charged for “unlawful assembly” as China’s crackdown extends to Hong Kong

  Hong Kong, Solidarity

Greece / Ireland
Socialist MEP Joe Higgins brings solidarity to striking Greek workers

11/03/2010: “Full support for Greek and Irish workers resisting crimes of the speculators”

  Greece, Ireland Republic

Belgium
Attacks on jobs and wages threaten women’s gains

10/03/2010: Thousands marched through Brussels on 6 March to celebrate International Women’s Day.

  Belgium, Women

Portugal
public-sector strike paralyses the country

10/03/2010: Workers demonstrate their desire to resist, but what to do next?

  Portugal

Iceland
93% say ‘No’ to bail-out for investors

09/03/2010: The IMF is the problem: They are trying to dictate the policy of the country

  Iceland, World Economy

Europe
Building action across the continent

09/03/2010: Attempts by the bosses and governments across Europe to make workers pay for the economic crisis are being met by a wave of anger and protest.

  Europe

Women’s day 2010
The situation facing women in Britain

09/03/2010: Women in education, trade unions, public sector and as parents

  Britain, Women

Migrants in Hong Kong
“This is modern slavery!”

09/03/2010: Interview with Sringatin of the Indonesian Migrant Workers’ Union (IMWU) in Hong Kong

  Hong Kong

Asia
Women migrants face the brunt of capitalism’s crisis

08/03/2010: 8 March should be start of massive campaign for an inclusive legal minimum wage

  Asia, Women

Netherlands
Local elections see big losses for governing Coalition parties and opposition Socialist Party

08/03/2010: Geert Wilders’ anti-immigrant, right wing ‘Freedom Party’ makes gains

  Netherlands

Women’s day 2010
Still fighting for equality

08/03/2010: 100 years of International Women’s Day

  History, Women

Women’s day 2010
The history of International Women’s Day

07/03/2010: In 1910 Clara Zetkin, a German Marxist, proposed that the second Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen organise an International Working Women’s Day.

  History, Women

 International Solidarity
Grant asylum to refugees held in Indonesia

06/03/2010: Protest against Australian/Indonesian government.

  Indonesia, Solidarity

Britain
Death of former Labour leader Michael Foot - The end of an era of ‘Old Labour’

06/03/2010: Workers today need new party to stop bosses’ onslaught

  Britain

Bolivia
Support Left MAS Candidates with Roots in the Social Movements

06/03/2010: Build the Struggle for Grass Roots Democracy and Independence in the Social Movements! No Support for Right-Wing MAS Candidates!

  Bolivia

 CWI Announcement
Re-launch of socialistworld.net

05/03/2010: 8 March 2010: New improved CWI site - For new period of global struggles of workers and youth

  CWI

Greece
‘Reasons for workers’ rebellion!’

05/03/2010: Public and sector workers hold 5 March strike following 4.8bn euros more cuts

  Greece

Scotland
SNP government present plans for referendum on Scotland’s future

04/03/2010: Call for new powers - but to be used in whose class interests?

  Scotland

Scotland
Put the ‘News of the World’ on trial!

03/03/2010: Bring the media monsters into public ownership

  Scotland

Women and socialism
A century of struggle

03/03/2010: Hundredth anniversary of International Women’s Day

  History, Women

Women and socialism
China - Women’s struggle then and now

03/03/2010: There are important lessons from women’s struggle in Chinese history that should be studied again.

  China, Women

Chile
Earthquake in Chile

03/03/2010: The catastrophe reveals the precariousness of the Chilean state and the capitalist model presented as ‘very successful’.

  Chile

 Building a Workers’ International
Open letter to the members and former members of the IMT

02/03/2010: The International Marxist Tendency, IMT, faces its biggest crisis since its inception. The CWI would welcome an open and honest debate amongst socialist and Marxist activists about the issues raised by these developments.

  CWI, Theory

 Ireland
Joe Higgins MEP interviewed at protest in solidarity with Green Isle workers

02/03/2010: Joe Higgins, Member of the European Parliament, was interviewed at a demonstration called in solidarity with striking workers at Green Isle foods in Naas, Co. Kildare. Two of the strikers are currently on hunger strike. (27-02-10)

  Ireland Republic, Solidarity, Video

 Costa Rica
Government launches assault against port workers’ union

02/03/2010: Workers fighting privatisation - solidarity messages needed!

  Costa Rica, Solidarity

Turkey
Court ruling gives hope to Tekel workers

02/03/2010: Now link up all workers’ struggles - for a general strike!

  Turkey

tsunami disaster

A month later, poverty still kills in Aceh and Sri Lanka

www.socialistworld.net, 25/01/2005
website of the comitee for a workers' international, CWI

One month after the tsunami disaster struck the coasts of the Indian Ocean the costs are still being counted.

Clare Doyle, International Secretariat, CWI

The death toll has gone way over a quarter of a million with the latest addition of 60,000 to the figure for Aceh, northern Sumatra where a massive 220,000 are now said to have perished. The jobs of half a million more in that country were destroyed.

Scenes of the massive wall of water sweeping through the capital, Banda Aceh, have been played and replayed on our television screens and the picture of the mosque standing tall in a flattened wasteland is still featured in the press. But these images only confirm our initial verdict that it was poverty that killed. One strongly built mosque withstood what hundreds of thousands of lightly constructed poor people’s homes could not. How many tens of thousands were killed by the collapsing houses here and elsewhere after the tsunamis had struck?

Warnings

And how many tens of thousands of lives could have been saved by an adequate warning system? After the Dutch auction of governments bidding each other up on aid pledges, under the vast pressure of public sympathy and generosity, then you had the unseemly scrabble between governments to be seen as the best at installing an early warning system for the Indian Ocean. The total cost of the death and destruction wreaked on 26 December is in the billions of dollars (and even then, held lower by the minimal value of so many of the homes and livelihoods destroyed); yet the cost of installing an early warning system is between $20 and $30 million.

And now, how many of the millions of homeless are still to die because of the bungling, mishandling and undoubtedly widespread corruption surrounding the distribution of aid and essential medical supplies? A report released by the World Health Organisation last week-end talks of the ‘chaos’ wrought by the Indonesian military and civilian agencies in Aceh, only making a bad situation in the camps even more unbearable.

Presidential blunders

In Sri Lanka, too, there has been huge discontent expressed by those made homeless - both about their immediate squalid conditions but also about the plans for their future homes. A plan to build 60 new towns three miles or so inland to replace villages destroyed on the Sri Lankan coast, has been hastily drawn up with no consultation with the displaced people themselves or consideration for cultural differences in the population.

The president, Chandrika Kumarasinghe, has been just as thoughtless in relation to this as she was in declaring her intention of adopting a Tamil girl child after the disaster (and after blocking Kofi Annan from visiting the Tamil north of the island!). She now insists on a scheme where Muslim and other Tamil-speaking people should be (compulsorily) made to share three storey blocks together. And this in an area where everyone had at least a small separate enclosure or garden around their homes before the wave came.

"At the moment we all live in harmony," said one former Hanbantota resident, "But separately". "Not once have we been asked how or where we want to live", said a fisherman living in a tent near the beach. "Everything about it (Siribopura, the new town) is wrong. It’s going to turn into a slum within a year".

Cancel the poor people’s debts!

The president has also insisted that people wanting to rebuild their own houses and restart their lives should take out loans through private banks. The United Socialist Party (CWI in Sri Lanka) has said no way! No more crippling debt! In fact, if some of the country’s debt to the world’s banks and governments is being cancelled, says the USP, those resources should be used to cancel all the debts of the poverty-stricken small farmers and fishermen of Sri Lanka. Full compensation to all those who have lost their homes and livelihoods. Interest free loans for re-starting any small endeavours of the tsunami-stricken people. Nationalisation of the banks to make this possible.

Rebuilding the infrastructure in Sri Lanka, including railways and roads, where they existed and improving on them is a tall order and will require billions of dollars. The money should be switched, says the USP, from military expenditure into a massive programme of public works. In Sri Lanka, in Aceh and throughout the region, all relief and rebuilding should be under the control of elected representatives of workers, of displaced people in the camps and other poor people.

Poverty and war in Aceh

Talk of rebuilding the infrastructure of Aceh is almost farcical, since hardly any existed. Though the Indonesian military forces have been helping firms like Exxon Mobile extract the mineral wealth of the province, and making themselves rich in the process, the majority of Aceh’s population lived on the brink of total destitution. Faith in life is fading.

Now the newly elected president of Indonesia, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, is trying to convince donors and world imperialism he is intent on bringing the 30 year long war between Aceh liberation fighters (mainly organised by Gam) and the Indonesian Army (the TNA) to an end. There are due to be talks between his government and the Aceh separatists in Helsinki this week. But it is clear that the Indonesian military in Aceh has no intention of relinquishing their iron grip on the province, insisting that armed troops accompany all relief teams. Since 26 December and the declaration of a cease-fire by Gam, more than 120 alleged fighters have been killed by the TNA.

Hopes of peace

In Sri Lanka, there have been some moves towards re-starting the peace talks between the Tamil Tigers of the north and the Sri Lankan government. In the last week, a top representative of the Norwegian government which has been acting as mediator, visited the LTTE leader, Prabhakaran. He was no doubt told of the initial uneven distribution of disaster aid, with outright discrimination against the north. He would also have been told of the huge efforts made by (Tamil) hospital staff in Jaffna to save the lives of numerous Sri Lankan naval personnel when their base in the North-East was almost totally destroyed by the tsunami. In contrast, the pro-government Sinhala press had carried stories aimed at deliberately demoralising the ‘enemy’ when they described an elaborate coffin being transported north which must have been for the burial of Prabhakaran himself killed by the tsunami!

As we explained in earlier CWI material, as everywhere else, the Sri Lankan people united in the face of adversity. Tamil and Sinhala pulled together. But the chauvinists lost no time in trying to sabotage any attempts to help Tamil-speaking people. The prime minister and some MPs from the JVP (a party that mixes Sinhala communalism with ‘Marxist’ phraseology) visited one of the many camps in the north organised and run by the LTTE, now, because of protests, without the Sri Lankan Army trying to control them. They did not even get a chance to speak. They were howled at and chased out by women with brooms in hand, the worst insult to any ‘guest’!

By contrast, representatives of the USP visiting the very next day got a warm response. They went particularly into the way the USA, India and other countries were sending troops into Sri Lanka with their own imperialist interests to the fore. The demand for the US and Indian troops to be withdrawn and no militarisation of aid went down well.

The political struggle against the Chandrika government is only just beginning. Last week during her visit to lay the first brick of Siribopura (and studiously avoiding visiting the camps of the homeless around Hambantota itself), the president made clear how she would use the crisis to strengthen her Bonapartist, almost dictatorial powers.

There would be no elections for five years, she declared. There will be a referendum to get the approval of the people!…The privatisation of the phosphate industry (long resisted by workers’ action) will go ahead now and so will the rest of the programme of the World Bank. "We need the money!"…"Some people will be opposed. We will not put them in prison, but in a hotel, feed them and stop them talking!"

Siritunga Jayasuriya, secretary of the USP, commented: "People will react, there will be a boomerang effect - A big tsunami against the government."