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Brazil
Protest spreading

18/06/2013: Well over 250,000 in approximately 20 cities took to the streets

  Brazil

Hong Kong
1,000 demonstrators defend whistleblower Snowden

18/06/2013: Revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden have exposed US hypocrisy over cyber-spying

  Hong Kong

G8 summit
No to G8 austerity

17/06/2013: End the rule of big business, poverty and war

  Anti-globalisation

Brazil
Mass struggles resurface as weight of crisis is felt

16/06/2013: Mass demonstrations against the increase of bus fares in all major cities

  Brazil

Pakistan / Sindh province
Stop victimization and union busting of women health workers

15/06/2013: “We will defend our rights and continue fighting”.

  Pakistan

 India
Agitation of Workers at Pune

15/06/2013: Fed up with continued oppression, workers under the banner of ’Pradeep Laminators Workers’ Union’ have started a propaganda campaign against the bosses.

  India, Solidarity

 Turkey
End police brutality - defend anti-government protesters

13/06/2013: MEP Paul Murphy criticises EU foreign policy representative, Catherine Ashton, over calls for ’restraint on all sides’

  Turkey, Video

Greece
Government shuts down state broadcaster ERT

12/06/2013: Unions must organise general strike action now!

  Greece

 Video
Joe Higgins questions Irish Prime Minister about G8 summit

12/06/2013: Socialist MP slams huge security operation and anti-working class record of world leaders

  Video

Turkey
“Vandals” continue to fight back

11/06/2013: Erdogan seeks trial of strength with mass protests

  Turkey

 G8
Join the protest!

11/06/2013: Oppose the summit of capitalist leaders, argues Paul Murphy in the European Parliament

  Anti-globalisation, Video

 Turkey
International solidarity protests

11/06/2013: Report from London, with CWI comment on the developments in Turkey

  Turkey, Video

Obituary
Comrade Kemelo Ernest Mokgalagadi

11/06/2013: A genuine working class fighter and a revolutionary socialist

  Obituary, South Africa

Turkey
Solidarity is vital to show protesters the world is watching

10/06/2013: Socialist Party MEP Paul Murphy travelled to Istanbul to see the protests first-hand – and in his diary from the visit he tells us that the response from the country’s Prime Minister has been “brutal”.

  Turkey

Hong Kong
Tiananmen vigil sends a warning to China’s new leaders

08/06/2013: 24th anniversary of Beijing’s crackdown draws 150,000 protestors

  China, Hong Kong

Syria
Conflict threatens to spread across the Middle East

08/06/2013: Urgent need for independent working class socialist organisations

  Syria

Turkey
Solidarity with the mass protests

08/06/2013: Paul Murphy to visit heart of Turkish Protests

  Turkey

France
Fatal fascist violence in Paris

07/06/2013: An 18-year-old student activist Clement Meric was murdered in Paris in broad daylight, on 5 June, by neo-fascist skinheads. This must be answered by mass mobilisation to halt attempts by the far right to raise its head.

  France

Germany
Blockupy protests

07/06/2013: Police repression in the belly of the beast

  Germany

G8
MEPs send message of solidarity to anti-G8 protestors

06/06/2013: A group of 12 MEPs from the left wing group in the European Parliament, GUE-NGL, have signed a joint message of support to Anti-G8 protestors ahead of the summit in two weeks’ time.

  Anti-globalisation, Ireland North, Ireland Republic

Russia
CWI conference discusses perspectives for Putin’s regime

05/06/2013: Unrest grows over economic and social issues

  Russia

Turkey
Mass movement challenges Erdogan government

04/06/2013: Public sector workers take strike action against police violence – For a one day general strike as a next step to bring down the government!

  Turkey

Scotland
Thousands attend anti-bedroom tax protest in Glasgow

04/06/2013: Over 2,000 poeple attended the anti - bedroom tax rally in Glasgow’s George Square on June 1 called by the Scottish Anti Bedroom Tax Federation.

  Scotland

G8
Armed police and soldiers descend on County Fermanagh

02/06/2013: Secret Services bolster police ahead of G8 Summit in N Ireland

  Anti-globalisation, Ireland North

China / Hong Kong
Remembering 4 June 1989

01/06/2013: Vital lessons for today’s democracy struggle

  China, Hong Kong

Boycotting Israel
The socialist view

31/05/2013: ‘Boycott, divestment and sanctions’- questions and answers about the BDS campaign

  Israel / Palestine

Britain
TUSC and the road to a new workers’ party

30/05/2013: Rising support for UKIP shows both the erosion of established party loyalties and the existence of a profound vacuum of working-class political representation.

  Britain, New workers' parties

 Europe
Austerity and unemployment across the continent

29/05/2013: EU council meeting: Another attempt to put the burden of the capitalist crisis on the shoulders of youth and working people

  Europe, Video

Sweden
The reality of Swedish neo-liberalism

28/05/2013: Sweden once had a reputation as some kind of ‘social-democratic model’ with far-reaching public services and social support. But that has been dismantled by two decades of attacks – what the Economist magazine calls a ‘silent revolution’

  Sweden

Environment
Brazil’s forests

28/05/2013: Profits from destruction

  Brazil, Environment

Sri Lanka
Working class beginning to move forward

25/05/2013: The one day protest general strike held on 21 May was a significant step forward for the working class in Sri Lanka.

  Sri Lanka

Sweden
Riots in Stockholm working-class suburbs

24/05/2013: Neo-liberalism and police violence have created social time-bomb

  Sweden

30 years ago
Liverpool - a city that dared to fight

24/05/2013: Interview on Militant, the Labour Party and the struggle of the socialist led council 1983-87 in Liverpool

  Britain, History

Britain
Tories in turmoil over Europe

24/05/2013: The Tories are thrashing around in ever-deeper water on the issue of Europe.

  Britain, Europe

 Kazakhstan
Campaign leader sentenced to ten days in prison

23/05/2013: MEP demands immediate release of Housing Campaigners - solidarity still needed

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

Ukraine

Twenty years since Chernobyl

www.socialistworld.net, 14/04/2006
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

World’s worst nuclear accident

Pete Dickenson and Jon Dale, Socialist Party

As the pro-nuclear lobby steps up its campaign for a ‘new generation’ of nuclear power stations, the real lessons of the Chernobyl disaster need to be re-stated. Pete Dickenson and Jon Dale write.

Twenty years since Chernobyl

This April marks the twentieth anniversary of the Chernobyl catastrophe, the world’s worst nuclear accident. The explosion at the power plant, situated about 100 miles north of Kiev in the Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union, sent a cloud of radioactive gas around the world. The cloud contained twenty times the amount of radiation released at Hiroshima.

Estimates made at the time in the New Scientist magazine, that 100,000 would eventually die as a direct and indirect result of the radiation release, may have been too high. But if the wind had been blowing in the opposite direction on the day, towards the densely populated city of Kiev instead of over relatively sparsely inhabited areas, the outcome would have been worse than even the New Scientist estimate.

The reactor at Chernobyl was a boiling water, graphite moderated type called a RBMK, many of which are still in operation in the states of the former Soviet Union (the final reactor at the Chernobyl power station was only shut down 15 years after the incident). It is inherently unsafe in a nuclear reactor to have high temperature graphite close to steam under pressure, but this is what happens in the RBMK.

In this type of reactor, the uranium fuel rods are surrounded by graphite, which absorbs some of the heat of the nuclear reaction, a process essential to control its speed. Water is pumped past the fuel rods and graphite to carry away more of the heat, and the steam produced is used to drive turbines to produce electricity. In addition, the graphite has to be surrounded by helium and nitrogen gas to stop it burning in the surrounding air. If the hot graphite and the uranium rods come into contact with the steam an explosion is possible, producing a cloud of radio-active steam. This is exactly what happened in April 1986. The scale of the accident was made worse because there was no containment structure around the reactor that could have prevented the steam from escaping into the atmosphere.

The immediate reason for the explosion lay in the effects of a sudden power surge causing a rupture in the pipes holding the cooling water, thus bringing water into contact with the graphite. The power surge occurred in the first place because of a reckless experiment that was being conducted by technicians on an under-power reactor. Their aim was to speed up the time it took to repair faults.

The technicians were scapegoated at the time, but the reason they were conducting the experiment in the first place was linked to the then power crisis in the Soviet Union. Nuclear stations are usually operated to provide ‘base load’ electricity, that is they are operated 24 hours a day because it is difficult and time consuming to stop and start a reactor. If there are frequent faults, which means that the reactor has to be switched off, its efficiency is drastically reduced. As a result, the technicians were under pressure to come up with a quick and easy answer to the problems caused by the frequent faults in the power plant.

The real costs of nuclear

Western observers at the time, as they will probably do again now, highlighted features specifically linked to the Soviet system that contributed to the disaster, such as the reckless behaviour of the staff, driven by an impatient, bullying bureaucracy, themselves pressurised by the deep problems in the economy, combined with the poor design and unreliability of the power plant. However, the underlying cause, which was a combination of human error and mechanical failure, was the same as occurred at the major nuclear accident in the USA at Three Mile Island in 1979.

The nuclear plant there was based on a PWR (Pressurised Water Reactor), the same type that is used at the Sizewell power station in Britain. During the crisis at Three Mile Island the radio-active material at the core of the reactor came within 700F degrees of its melting point of 5,000F. If such a melt down had occurred there would have been a major disaster, possibly worse than at Chernobyl, since the melting uranium could have penetrated deep into the earth, contaminating ground water over a wide area.

Advocates of nuclear power will point to the low theoretical risk of an accident happening, but this must be set against the potentially catastrophic scale of any incident when it does occur. There are also risks of nuclear power generation not directly connected to the safety of the operation of the plant. These are primarily linked to the problems of safely reprocessing and storing the toxic waste that is produced as a by-product of nuclear power. Evidence appeared decades ago that the incidence of childhood leukaemia close to the reprocessing facility at Sellafield in Cumbria was significantly raised. In the town of Seascale, just over a mile from the plant, children under the age of ten had an incidence of leukaemia ten times the national average, although a government-sponsored report at the time said this was not significant. In the USA, at a naval ship yard in Maine, the overall death rate of workers involved in nuclear related tasks was twice the national average and the occurrence of leukaemia 45% higher then expected. These workers were exposed to very low levels of radiation, well within ‘safety limits’, indicating that there is probably no safe dose of radiation in these circumstances.

Potentially even more serious than the health problems linked to low level radiation leakage associated with reprocessing is the issue of storing toxic nuclear waste. A direct consequence of producing electricity with nuclear reactors is the accumulation of radioactive waste, uranium and plutonium. Apart from electricity generation, there is a significant amount of plutonium produced for military purposes which also has to be stored. To give an idea of the scale of the problem, the amount of toxic nuclear waste stored in the USA in 1991 was 4,900 cubic metres, with a radioactivity of 24,000 MCi (a curie is a quantity of radioactivity, MCi is one million curies). To put this in perspective, a typical radioactive source used in a classroom for a science experiment has an activity of one millionth of a curie. An average sized 1,000 megawatt (MW – one million watts), nuclear power station reactor has a total radioactivity of 70 MCi in its spent fuel one year after discharge. After 100,000 years this figure will fall naturally to 2,000 MCi, still two billion times more radioactive than a typical source used in a classroom. (There is far more waste to store now of course, compared to 1991, and the amount is increasing all the time.)

The implication of this data is that a safe storage method must be found that can be guaranteed to be secure for more than 100,000 years, a task that poses huge uncertainties and problems because it is difficult to predict what natural conditions will be after that time. If the waste is buried, the onset of earthquakes in previously unaffected areas is possible, for example. If the radioactive spent fuel is put at the bottom of the ocean the integrity of the materials used as a storage medium must be uncertain after such a long time, possibly leading to seepage. Also undersea volcanic activity could start, producing the same result.

Technical difficulties, and the understandable opposition from local communities where it has been proposed to dump the waste, have meant that there will probably be at least another ten years’ delay before any supposedly safe site is ready in the USA, and another 20 in Europe. In the meantime, much of the West’s toxic waste is being dumped on poor countries.

A new pro-nuclear drive

Since the twentieth anniversary of Chernobyl coincides with the beginning of a new pro-nuclear drive by the capitalist class in Britain and internationally, commemorating the victims of the disaster in the Ukraine will be an embarrassment for Bush and Blair, one which they will try to downplay as much as possible. This could take the form of distorting or trying to bend the record about Chernobyl’s true impact, a campaign that has already begun in sections of the media.

The political need for a new pro-nuclear position, that the Chernobyl commemoration threatens to stand in the way of, is a direct result of the looming threat of global warming, a reality that most capitalists accept now as a scientific fact and have belatedly started to respond to. In Britain Blair has announced a ‘national conversation’ about expanding nuclear power, which translated from Blairspeak means he has already made the decision to go ahead with it and the conversation he wants is about how best to sell the idea. Other world (mis)leaders are moving in the same direction because they realise that the Kyoto treaty, which is a market-based approach to tackling climate change, has proved so far to be totally ineffective. Despite noisy supportive rhetoric for Kyoto (except from Bush), the imminent turn to nuclear is a recognition of its bankruptcy.

Developing nuclear power has become the preferred option for international big business for several reasons. Firstly, by a lucky co-incidence, it does not produce any greenhouse gases, in contrast to energy generated from fossil fuels such as oil, and so meets the main criteria, if of course the huge safety issues are ignored. Second, nuclear power is relatively cheap to generate, since it utilises a well-established technology, and long-term issues such as paying for safely storing nuclear waste for the indefinite future, meeting the costs of any future nuclear accident, and decommissioning radioactive power plants, will be ignored or glossed over. Having said this, though, nuclear will still be far more expensive than pumping oil out of the desert, so why are the bosses who stand to lose most if global warming is tackled, particularly in the USA which is the biggest culprit, willing to contemplate a hit on their profits by going down this route?

One reason is that Hurricane Katrina brought home, even to the most bone-headed of the American capitalists (except Bush of course, who represents the big oil firms) that there are real long-term costs linked to the effects of global warming that will have to be factored into the equation. Also, although individual firms will never voluntarily opt for intrinsically more expensive nuclear energy sources, governments, even in the US, could go down this road if the extra short-term costs were relatively small and were not perceived to hit international competitiveness excessively. Another factor that could sweeten the pill for the USA is that the American Westinghouse firm, with its PWR-type nuclear power plant, is likely to dominate an expanded world market.

The move to nuclear power could, however, be reversed when there is a significant economic downturn that puts profits under pressure, leading to the need to cut costs even more ruthlessly than in the recent past. In these circumstances, putative nuclear plans could be ditched in favour of a return to more profitable fossil-fuel based energy generation. What is not likely to happen is that Blair, Bush, or any of their successors, will opt for a safe, sustainable option, based on renewable energy sources such as wind, wave or solar power, because the cost of doing this will very significantly hit the profits of the multi-nationals that they represent. For the moment at least most world leaders are swinging behind nuclear power and will not welcome any true assessment of the Chernobyl disaster.

Re-writing the record

When the Chernobyl reactor went into meltdown no news was released by the Soviet government of the radioactive cloud escaping into the atmosphere.

Days later the world became alerted when Swedish nuclear power workers were found to be contaminated with radioactivity – before going into work. Ever since, governments and the nuclear power industry have tried to play down the effects of Chernobyl on health.

Two early estimates of the likely number of deaths were ‘5000 to 10,000 fatal cancers over the next 70 years’ (International Commission on Radiological Protection) and ‘less than 25,000 worldwide’ (International Atomic Energy Agency – IAEA).

Twenty years later a renewed attempt is being made to cover up Chernobyl’s effects on health. Last September a report was issued by the Chernobyl Forum, set up by a number of agencies including the IAEA, the World Health Organization, a number of United Nation (UN) bodies and the governments of Belarus, the Russian Federation and the Ukraine.

Accompanying the report was a press release, entitled ‘Chernobyl: the true scale of the accident’, and subtitled, ‘20 years later a UN report provides definitive answers and ways to repair lives’. This got wide publicity. “A total of up to four thousand people could eventually die of radiation exposure from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident”, it said. “As of mid-2005, however, fewer than 50 deaths have been directly attributed to radiation from the disaster, almost all being highly exposed rescue workers, many of whom died within months of the accident”.

Even the Forum’s estimate has been challenged as too high. The Nuclear Industry Association has put the number of deaths at 41, with the possibility of a few more in the future. Dr Zbigniew Jaworowski, a former chairman of the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, says the only firm number of deaths are 28 who died on site. A higher cancer rate is because increased screening is finding cases that would otherwise have remained undetected, he argues. (Lexington Institute) So was Chernobyl less dangerous than first thought?

In fact the Chernobyl Forum report does not support the misleading headlines of its press release. The ‘fewer than 50 deaths’ directly attributed to radiation relates only to those who died from acute radiation sickness. It does not include those who are dying from cancers, or who will develop cancers in the future, as a result of exposure to radiation. The report itself estimates 8,930 cancer deaths expected in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus among 200,000 ‘liquidators’ (soldiers and workers who cleared the site), 135,000 evacuees and 7.1 million residents of the most contaminated areas.

And it has serious deficiencies. It excludes up to 600,000 liquidators. Most were men aged 20-40 in the armed forces, miners, fire-fighters and other workers. They would normally have been fitter and had a much lower death rate than the general population - the so-called ‘healthy worker effect’. But the report compares the death rates of liquidators with the Russian population as a whole, rather than men of the same age who had not been exposed.

An important study published eleven months before the report was not referred to. This compared the rate of new cancer cases in Belarus liquidators with adults of the same age in the least contaminated part of that country. It showed a 20% increase in the total number of liquidators’ cancers.

This study also compared cancer rates with those of 1976-85. There was an average 40% increase in cancer incidence, with a 56% increase in the most contaminated region. Most cancers have a latent period (between exposure and time of disease) of many years. Increased cancer rates are still being detected in Hiroshima survivors, sixty years after exposure. Such an increase in Belarus after only 15 years is alarming, suggesting many more in years to come.

The report also excludes deaths in other countries. Although exposure was low, a very large number of people were affected. Studies have shown a 30% increase in leukaemia in the US for babies born in 1987 and 1988, a 260% increase in Greece and 387% increase in Scotland and Wales (twelve cases with only three expected). Using conservative radiation risk estimates, the US Department of Energy predicted 17,400 excess cancer deaths over a 50 year period, 63% of these occurring outside the former USSR, mostly elsewhere in Europe.

The Forum’s report excludes non-cancer deaths. Two per cent of all deaths of Russian liquidators between 1986-98 were estimated to have been due to heart and circulation disease caused by radiation. This is almost as much as cancer deaths due to radiation (2.6%).

The President of the Australian Medical Association for the Prevention of War, Professor Tilman Ruff, has added to the report’s estimate of 8,930 excess cancer deaths in the three most affected countries: 4,400-6,600 cancer deaths in the liquidators for whom risk estimates have not yet been made; 5,077-6,769 estimated excess heart-related deaths in all the liquidators; 10,920 excess cancer deaths outside the three worst affected countries (based on the US Department of Energy figures); an additional 20% of cancer deaths (4,850-5,290) in future generations. This yields an estimate of 34,200-38,500 deaths.

It does not include deaths from suicide, alcohol and drug abuse, genetic effects or other causes, all of which are significantly increased in the most severely contaminated zones and among evacuees. And it does not include the suffering of those who have not got a fatal illness, but who live in fear that they will die prematurely because of their exposure to radiation.

The biggest health problems so far have not been fatal illnesses but mental health problems among evacuees and liquidators. Chernobyl pulled communities apart, uprooted families and left them without work or their homes. A similar disaster must never be allowed to happen again.

Who was affected by the disaster?

  • Workers on site at the time or sent in to fight the fire;
  • Those conscripted (mostly from the armed forces) to clean up the site, remove radioactive waste and enclose the wrecked reactor in cement. There were 200,000 of these so-called ‘liquidators’ during 1986-87 when radiation levels were highest, and as many as 800,000 by 1990;
  • Those who lived within 30km, most of whom were subsequently evacuated (116,000 in 1986, a further 220,000 later);
  • Those living in severely contaminated zones (from 5m to 6.8m people);
  • Those living long distances away where increases in radiation levels were detected, including much of Europe.

All commentators agree that there have been major mental health problems in the communities who were uprooted from their homes and who lost jobs. But not all agree that this was the responsibility of the Stalinist Soviet government who failed to protect them and then provide for them, followed by the governments that ruled as the wealth (and health) of the former USSR plummeted during the restoration of capitalism. The US-born Ukrainian, Mary Mycio, for example, has a Thatcherite explanation of their problems.

“The exaggerated awareness of ill health and sense of dependence has created… the ‘Chernobyl accident victim syndrome’.

“Given more than 40 types of Chernobyl benefits, some residents of contaminated areas in Belarus can be eligible for quite large sums of money. For example, working single mothers raising children under the age of three in contaminated districts get about $30 a month – which is around one-third the average Belarusian wage and which may help explain the rise in birth rates in contaminated regions.

“It may also have something to do with the rise in infant mortality in contaminated regions in the late 1990s – contrary to the trend of lower infant mortality in the rest of the country. More study is needed to figure out if this is due to radiation, poor health, and poor social services in contaminated regions or to the outward migration of educated young people. But the system of Chernobyl benefits gives single women who may lack the education, health, skills, or desire for parenting an incentive to have children and raise them in contaminated lands”.

Wormwood Forest: A Natural History of Chernobyl (2005) Joseph Henry Press

From The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party, cwi in England and Wales



Europe

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Turkey: End police brutality - defend anti-government protesters, 13/06/2013

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A socialist world is possible, the history of the cwi with new introduction by Peter Planning green growth, a contribution to the debate on enviromental sustainability

NEWS

Brazil: Protest spreading
18/06/2013, CWI:
Well over 250,000 in approximately 20 cities took to the streets

Hong Kong: 1,000 demonstrators defend whistleblower Snowden
18/06/2013, Text of Socialist Action (CWI Hong Kong) leaflet distributed at Hong Kong demonstration:
Revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden have exposed US hypocrisy over cyber-spying

G8 summit: No to G8 austerity
17/06/2013, Niall Mulholland, CWI:
End the rule of big business, poverty and war

Pakistan / Sindh province: Stop victimization and union busting of women health workers
15/06/2013, Fazal Abbas Shah, Secretary General Progressive Workers Federation of Pakistan:
“We will defend our rights and continue fighting”.

India: Agitation of Workers at Pune
15/06/2013, New Socialist Alternative (CWI India):
Fed up with continued oppression, workers under the banner of ’Pradeep Laminators Workers’ Union’ have started a propaganda campaign against the bosses.

Turkey: End police brutality - defend anti-government protesters
13/06/2013, Paul Murphy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
MEP Paul Murphy criticises EU foreign policy representative, Catherine Ashton, over calls for ’restraint on all sides’

Greece: Government shuts down state broadcaster ERT
12/06/2013, Leaflet text by Xekinima (CWI Greece):
Unions must organise general strike action now!

Video: Joe Higgins questions Irish Prime Minister about G8 summit
12/06/2013, Socialistworld.net:
Socialist MP slams huge security operation and anti-working class record of world leaders

Turkey: “Vandals” continue to fight back
11/06/2013, Kai Stein, first published in the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Erdogan seeks trial of strength with mass protests

G8: Join the protest!
11/06/2013, Paul Murphy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
Oppose the summit of capitalist leaders, argues Paul Murphy in the European Parliament

Turkey: International solidarity protests
11/06/2013, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Report from London, with CWI comment on the developments in Turkey

Obituary: Comrade Kemelo Ernest Mokgalagadi
11/06/2013, Mametlwe Sebei, Democratic Socialist Movement (CWI South Africa):
A genuine working class fighter and a revolutionary socialist

Turkey: Solidarity is vital to show protesters the world is watching
10/06/2013, Paul Murphy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland) first published in thejournal.ie:
Socialist Party MEP Paul Murphy travelled to Istanbul to see the protests first-hand – and in his diary from the visit he tells us that the response from the country’s Prime Minister has been “brutal”.

Hong Kong: Tiananmen vigil sends a warning to China’s new leaders
08/06/2013, Dikang, Socialist Action (CWI) in Hong Kong:
24th anniversary of Beijing’s crackdown draws 150,000 protestors

Turkey: Solidarity with the mass protests
08/06/2013, From www.paulmurphymep.eu, website of Paul Murphy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
Paul Murphy to visit heart of Turkish Protests

France: Fatal fascist violence in Paris
07/06/2013, Comments from BlockBuster (Anti-racist youth organisation in Belgium):
An 18-year-old student activist Clement Meric was murdered in Paris in broad daylight, on 5 June, by neo-fascist skinheads. This must be answered by mass mobilisation to halt attempts by the far right to raise its head.

Germany: Blockupy protests
07/06/2013, Sascha Stanicic, SAV (CWI Germany):
Police repression in the belly of the beast

G8: MEPs send message of solidarity to anti-G8 protestors
06/06/2013, www.paulmurphymep.eu - website of Paul Murhpy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland) reports:
A group of 12 MEPs from the left wing group in the European Parliament, GUE-NGL, have signed a joint message of support to Anti-G8 protestors ahead of the summit in two weeks’ time.

Russia: CWI conference discusses perspectives for Putin’s regime
05/06/2013, CWI Reporters, Moscow:
Unrest grows over economic and social issues

Scotland: Thousands attend anti-bedroom tax protest in Glasgow
04/06/2013, Matt Dobson, Socialist Party Scotland (CWI Scotland):
Over 2,000 poeple attended the anti - bedroom tax rally in Glasgow’s George Square on June 1 called by the Scottish Anti Bedroom Tax Federation.

G8: Armed police and soldiers descend on County Fermanagh
02/06/2013, Tyler McNally and Gary Mulcahy, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
Secret Services bolster police ahead of G8 Summit in N Ireland

China / Hong Kong: Remembering 4 June 1989
01/06/2013, Dikang, Socialist Action (CWI Hong Kong):
Vital lessons for today’s democracy struggle

Britain: TUSC and the road to a new workers’ party
30/05/2013, Clive Heemskerk, first published in Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Rising support for UKIP shows both the erosion of established party loyalties and the existence of a profound vacuum of working-class political representation.

Europe: Austerity and unemployment across the continent
29/05/2013, Joe Higgins, TD, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
EU council meeting: Another attempt to put the burden of the capitalist crisis on the shoulders of youth and working people

Environment: Brazil’s forests
28/05/2013, Ben Robinson, Socialist Party (CWI England and Wales):
Profits from destruction

Sri Lanka: Working class beginning to move forward
25/05/2013, Srinath Perera, United Socialist Party (USP – CWI, Sri Lanka):
The one day protest general strike held on 21 May was a significant step forward for the working class in Sri Lanka.

CWI Comment and Analysis

ANALYSIS

Brazil: Mass struggles resurface as weight of crisis is felt
16/06/2013, André Ferrari LSR (CWI in Brazil):
Mass demonstrations against the increase of bus fares in all major cities

Syria: Conflict threatens to spread across the Middle East
08/06/2013, Peter Taaffe, general secretary Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Urgent need for independent working class socialist organisations

Turkey: Mass movement challenges Erdogan government
04/06/2013, Sosyalist Alternatif (CWI Turkey) Reporters:
Public sector workers take strike action against police violence – For a one day general strike as a next step to bring down the government!

Boycotting Israel: The socialist view
31/05/2013, Judy Beishon, first published in Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
‘Boycott, divestment and sanctions’- questions and answers about the BDS campaign

Sweden: The reality of Swedish neo-liberalism
28/05/2013, Per Olsson, Rättisvepartiet Socialisterna (CWI Sweden):
Sweden once had a reputation as some kind of ‘social-democratic model’ with far-reaching public services and social support. But that has been dismantled by two decades of attacks – what the Economist magazine calls a ‘silent revolution’

Nigeria: President Jonathan declares state of emergency
21/05/2013, Segun Sango, Protem National Chairperson, Socialist Party of Nigeria:
An expressway to attacks on democratic rights! For democratic mass working peoples’ defence committees!

World economy: "Central banks are flying blind"
19/05/2013, Per-Åke Westerlund, from Offensiv, newspaper of Rättvisepartiet Socialisterna (CWI Sweden):
Increasing concerns and contradictions

Turkey / Kurdistan: PKK announces ceasefire
11/05/2013, Festus Okay, Sosyalist Alternatif (CWI Turkey):
On 8 May the PKK has begun to withdraw from Turkey. Millions are hoping now for an end to oppression and for democratic rights.

Women and the struggle for socialism: It doesn’t have to be like this
05/05/2013, Christine Thomas, Controcorrente (CWI Italy):
Christine Thomas’ book outlines how inequalities and discrimination against women have not disappeared and women’s struggles must be bound up with wider class struggle to be successful. Read the complete book online here.

Cyprus: On the edge of a catastrophic slump
25/04/2013, Niall Mulholland, CWI:
Socialist polices needed to resolve crisis in the interests of majority

US: After the Boston Tragedy
23/04/2013, Bryan Koulouris, Boston, Socialist Alternative (CWI supporters in the US):
NO to Racism and Repression

Britain: Combating violence against women
14/04/2013, Hannah Sell, on behalf of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales) Executive Committee:
A socialist perspective on fighting women’s oppression

Thatcher: A class warrior for capitalism
12/04/2013, Alistair Tice, Socialist Party regional secretary, Yorkshire:
Millions have been waiting for this day, 8 April 2013. Margaret Thatcher will never be forgiven for the devastation that her Tory governments’ policies wrought on working class communities in the 1980s - and is still being felt today.

Britain: Margaret Thatcher dies
08/04/2013, Peter Taaffe, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales) general secretary:
Thatcher’s bitter legacy

Britain: A further round of savage austerity
08/04/2013, Peter Taaffe, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales) general secretary:
We must stop them!

Israel: “There is a future” – of cuts, racism and resistance
05/04/2013, Socialist Struggle Movement (CWI Israel/Palestine):
Weak Israeli government will try to implement austerity budget, and would try to maintain the occupation, possibly under a new cover of "negotiations" with Palestinians. Resistance likely on all fronts.

Cyprus: “Working people pay high price for crisis of euro and capitalism”
31/03/2013, Niall Mulholland spoke with Athina Kariati from New Internationalist Left (CWI in Cyprus) about Cyprus’s deal with the Troika, what it will mean for working people and what is the socialist solution to the crisis:
Interview with a Cypriot socialist

China: New leadership rejects democratisation
28/03/2013, Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info:
At annual NPC-CPPCC meetings Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang talk of ‘tough reforms’ for economy, but rule out ‘Western models’

Venezuela: After the death of Hugo Chávez
24/03/2013, Tony Saunois, CWI, a shorter version of this article was first published in Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales:
Radical, populist policies and anti-imperialism helped transform the political situation

Italy’s clowns: No joke for establishment parties
23/03/2013, Christine Thomas, ControCorrente (CWI in Italy), first published in Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
In his ‘tsunami’ election tour Grillo began to give voice to the deep discontent at economic crisis and austerity

Cyprus/EU: Eurozone back in turmoil
22/03/2013, Tony Saunois, CWI:
No trust in capitalist government! No austerity for the Euro! Kick out the Troika! For a socialist alternative!
[Updated article, 25 March]

South Africa: Workers & Socialist Party launched in Pretoria
21/03/2013, CWI reporters, South Africa:
Launch surpassed all expectations

Iraq: Ten years since ‘shock and awe’
20/03/2013, Niall Mulholland, from The Socialist, weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party (CWI England and Wales):
Imperialism’s harvest of death and destruction

March 8th: The day of international working women’s solidarity
07/03/2013, Clare Doyle, CWI:
Beware the anger of women against the bosses’ system!