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latest news

G8 Summit, Northern Ireland
’Why YOU should oppose the G8’

20/05/2013: This year’s G8 summit will be held in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, on 17th – 18th June. This gathering brings together the heads of government of eight of the world’s largest capitalist economies to discuss how they can further the interests of those they represent – the super-rich, big business and the bankers.

  Anti-globalisation, Ireland North

World economy
"Central banks are flying blind"

19/05/2013: Increasing concerns and contradictions

  World Economy

South Africa
Mass retrenchment threat in mining industry demands mass action

18/05/2013: Workers and Socialist Party calls for one-day-general strike

  South Africa

Iran
What would a Rafsanjani presidency mean?

18/05/2013: Iran’s June 14 presidential election takes place against the background of deep divisions in society and the regime.

  Iran

Australia
Labour approves WA’s first uranium mine

17/05/2013: Australia’s federal environment minister Tony Burke gave the go ahead to Toro’s $270 million uranium mining project in the Wiluna region of Western Australia.

  Australia, Environment

New Zealand
Racism and recession in New Zealand

15/05/2013: Working class unity needed to defend rights and living standards

  New Zealand

Australian budget
Say ‘NO’ to the cuts agenda of the major parties

14/05/2013: We shouldn’t let either of the major parties tell us that ‘tough decisions’ or ‘hard cuts’ are required.

  Australia

Ireland
‘Bus Eireann workers in front line of class war - We should all support them!’

13/05/2013: Bus workers take strike action over savage wage cuts and attacks on conditions

  Ireland Republic

Italy
The economic crisis becomes a political and institutional crisis

11/05/2013: The latest events that have happened in Italian politics mark a new phase of development in the crisis in the third European industrial power.

  Italy

Turkey / Kurdistan
PKK announces ceasefire

11/05/2013: On 8 May the PKK has begun to withdraw from Turkey. Millions are hoping now for an end to oppression and for democratic rights.

  Kurdistan, Turkey

Malaysia
Election ’victory’ based on fraud

10/05/2013: Ruling Barisan Nasional’s widespread fraud enrages opposition supporters and young people

  Malaysia

Greece
Challenging the Golden Dawn

10/05/2013: On 2 May the neo-fascist Golden Dawn attempted to distribute food in Syntagma square in Athens to people holding proof of Greek nationality.

  Greece

British county elections
Capitalist parties rejected

10/05/2013: Time for a new mass workers’ party

  Britain

Tunisia
The calm before the storm

09/05/2013: New clashes on the horizon

  Tunisia

Pakistan
General elections held amid political turmoil

08/05/2013: Big landlords, capitalists and influential families are calling the shots

  Pakistan

Sri Lanka
Successful May Day

08/05/2013: The United Socialist Party’s May Day demonstration passed successfully through a number of populous areas of Colombo, ending at Grand Pass Junction.

  May Day, Sri Lanka

Hong Kong
Dockworkers’ strike ends after 40 days

07/05/2013: Union representatives declare a “half success” with a pay rise of 9.8 percent – but important issues are unresolved

  Hong Kong

Britain’s ’precariat’
Fighting for real jobs

06/05/2013: ’Get a job!’ is the constant refrain of privileged Tory ministers and vicious right-wing tabloids. A million unemployed young people are the subject of a relentless campaign of smears and lies.

  Britain, Youth

Liverpool
Rally marks 30 year anniversary of election of socialist council

05/05/2013: Great event remembers the ’47’ struggle

  Britain, History

 Women and the struggle for socialism
It doesn’t have to be like this

05/05/2013: 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.

  Women

Australian budget
Say ‘NO’ to the cuts agenda of the major parties

04/05/2013: Those who created the crisis should be forced to pay.

  Australia

 Nigerian May Day arrests
All DSM members released [updated]

03/05/2013: The last set of DSM members still in the detention of the state security service (SSS) in Kaduna, Northwest Nigeria, and Ibadan Oyo state, Southwest Nigeria, as of yesterday, has been released.

  May Day, Nigeria, Solidarity

 Pakistan
May Day 2013

03/05/2013: Progressive Workers Federation (PWF), TURCP and SMP organised and intervened in the May Day activities across the country

  May Day, Video

Bangladesh building collapse
Casualties of a rotten profit system

03/05/2013: It is said that where labour is cheap, life is cheap. This is never more so than in the recent horrific deaths of over 400 garment workers crushed in a collapsed building in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.

  Bangladesh

Hong Kong
Dockers’ strike shines a spotlight on Li Ka-shing’s business empire

03/05/2013: Li Ka-shing owns 13 percent of the world’s port capacity and much more besides…

  Hong Kong

Taiwan
Over 20,000 march on May Day

02/05/2013: ‘Defend pensions! Stop corruption!’

  May Day, Taiwan

Pakistan
May Day demonstration in Sindh

02/05/2013: Photos of May Day demonstration in Sindh

  May Day, Pakistan

 Nigeria
Militarisation of May Day rallies

02/05/2013: DSM comrades arrested and detained

  May Day, Nigeria, Solidarity

Portugal
Constitutional court ruling sends government into disarray

01/05/2013: CC rules budget illegal for second time, government declares war against it

  Portugal

May Day Greetings

01/05/2013: The CWI sends revolutionary greetings and solidarity to workers, young people and all those exploited by capitalism.

  May Day

Europe
EU austerity budget – cuts, cuts, cuts

30/04/2013: Irish Presidency brought unprecedented levels of cuts to the EU budget.

  Europe

Scotland
Anti-Bedroom Tax Federation launched

29/04/2013: Writing off of any debt accrued due to the bedroom tax, supporting the building of new social housing, opposing all cuts and austerity measures

  Scotland

Britain
Break with Thatcher’s legacy!

28/04/2013: Socialist policies needed

  Britain

History

Iran 1979: A revolution that was taken from the working class

www.socialistworld.net, 27/02/2009
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Why did counter-revolution triumph instead?

Chris Moore from The Socialist, weekly paper of the Socialist Party (CWI England and Wales)

Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, recently addressed thousands of supporters at Tehran’s Azadi (Freedom) Monument, to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Iranian Revolution - a revolution carried out by the working class that toppled a brutal Western puppet, the Shah. But why did the revolution eventually result in the imposition of a theocratic dictatorship? Can the Iranian working class resume its revolutionary ambitions, this time against the repressive Islamic regime?

In February 1979, the hated monarchical dictatorship of Mohammed Reza Shah was finally swept away by a general strike, with oil workers in Khuzestan in south west Iran at its heart. Millions of protesters poured onto the streets of Tehran and other Iranian cities.

This mass movement ended the so-called ‘Peacock Throne’ and Pahlavi dynasty. It was described by eyewitness Edward Mortimer in the Spectator as “a genuine popular revolution in the fullest sense of the word: the most genuine, probably since 1917.”

But unlike the Russian Revolution, the Iranian working class lacked a Bolshevik-type party and leadership that could act independently decisively for the working class, and a socialist programme which could show a way forward. Without such a leadership, a religious movement came to the fore to direct political opposition to the Shah and take power.

Background to revolution

The history of the Iranian working class is full of heroic struggles. Under the impact of the 1917 Russian revolution, the Gilan Soviet Republic was set up in northern Iran. But this was butchered by Reza Khan, the Shah’s father, who came to power through a military coup in 1921. Khan was always a pawn of British imperialism, which replaced him in 1941 with his more malleable son.

The Iranian working class has suffered from tragically inadequate leadership. The main workers’ party prior to the revolution, the Tudeh (Communist Party), was formed in 1941. Leading massive strikes, it built tremendous support during the Soviet Union’s occupation of Azerbaijan in northern Iran, while Britain occupied the south. In 1946, Khuzestan oil workers led what was called the largest industrial strike in Middle Eastern history and the Central Council of Iranian Trade Unions became the largest union federation.

By 1951 a popular movement, led by the radical nationalist prime minister Muhammad Mossadeq and his National Front, ejected Britain from the oilfields and nationalised them. The ‘mighty’ Shah fled into exile in 1953. But as Iran was an oil-rich and strategically important country, both US and British imperialism instigated a coup to return the Shah. The leadership of the 100,000 strong Tudeh effectively did nothing and fled to its Stalinist masters in Moscow.

Terror and industrialisation

To secure his rule the Shah began crushing all organised political opposition and trade unions were banned. During the Cold War, the US wanted to build Iran as a fortress for the West, massively supporting its rearmament. Backed by the CIA, the horrendous Savak secret police organisation, formed in 1956, became increasingly indiscriminate. After the Shah’s fall, one grisly cell was discovered with bed frames adapted into human cookers and with a bacon slicer type contraption for hands and arms.

Terror alone was not enough to preserve the regime, there was another rebellion in 1963. Thousands were slaughtered and Ayatollah Khomeini was exiled, not to return until 1 February 1979 when a crowd of five million greeted him.

In 1963 the Shah launched his ‘White Revolution’ of massive industrialisation, including a transformation of the countryside. Using oil revenues to buy out and enrich the mainly absentee landlords his aim was for them to invest in industry, so transforming them into a capitalist class. Imposing capitalist farming techniques, over 1.2 million peasants were driven from the land, flooding into the urban areas to live in appalling living and work conditions.

The Shah’s economic policy was borrowed from the National Front and explains why their support ebbed way. The Tudeh party suffered repression but it was politically incapable of laying the basis of a workers’ movement to overthrow capitalism, hankering only for a new Mossadeq.

Growing oil revenues fattened the opulent Peacock throne. During the 1973 Israel/Egypt war, imperialism’s puppet cut some of its strings, becoming one of the most militant members of OPEC (Organisation of Oil Exporting Countries). Oil embargoes quadrupled the price of oil. In 1976 Iran produced 295 million tonnes of oil, 10% of world production.

Breakneck industrialisation was creating a working class that was beginning to feel its strength and demand its share of the new wealth. Anger was fermenting and a reckoning was on the horizon.

Revolutionary explosions

US imperialism appeared blind to the growing prospect of unrest. President Jimmy Carter in December 1977 toasted the Shah, calling his ‘great leadership’ “an island of stability in one of the more troubled areas of the world”. The CIA reported in late 1978 that the Shah would continue to hold power for at least the next ten years. But the economy was moving into crisis. The price of oil dropped after 1976 and inflation was rampant. Austere economic measures created increased unemployment and suffering for workers.

Despite the bloody repression, protests exploded in the workplaces, mosques, universities, among the poor masses and in the myriad of stalls and traders in the bazaars.

In 1977, 50,000 urban poor people blocked bulldozers sent to clear slums in Tehran. The shooting of theology student protesters in the holy city of Qom in January 1978 sparked a general strike.

After mid summer the situation escalated dramatically as textile, machine tool, sanitation, car assembly, paper mill and other workers took action. Major strikes took place in Tehran, in the province of Fars and in Khuzestan, and especially the city of Ahwaz.

Increasingly demands went beyond pay and redundancies, calling for democratic rights, ‘Death to the Shah’, ‘Vengeance against… his American imperialist friends’. Others wanted a ‘socialist republic based on Islam’. October saw the steel workers from Esfahan in central Iran call for the expulsion of all Savak and military personnel from the plant.

Striking Khuzestan oil workers were only producing fuel for necessary uses. A desperate Shah sent in the troops and 3,000 protesters were massacred in Jaleh Square, Tehran.

Workers responded by widening the general strike. Rail workers stopped the army elite and others from travelling. Custom workers only allowed essential products like medicines and baby food into the country. The masses were rallying behind the oil workers’ call for regime change and for the Shah to go. With the army increasingly fraternising with the crowds, the monarchy was doomed and it fell on 11 February 1979.

Workers’ leaders

So how did a movement led by right-wing political Islam prise power away from the Iranian working class? Comprising three to four million among a 35 million population, the working class was numerically bigger than it was in Russia in October 1917. Crucially, the Tudeh had not grasped the lessons of Trotsky’s theory of the ‘Permanent Revolution’, that was confirmed by events during the Russian revolution, relating to semi-industrial countries like Russia and Iran.

Trotsky explained that a weak national capitalist class, reliant on landlordism and imperialism, was incapable of carrying through the historical tasks of its own capitalist revolution, ie introducing democratic rights, a representative parliament, land reform, etc. This task would fall to the working class, bringing the peasantry with them. But once achieved, workers would not want to hand over power to the capitalists but would want to struggle to bring about a workers’ government and socialist society.

Instead of leading the Iranian working class in a struggle for power, the Tudeh were in the straightjacket of the Stalinist ‘two-stage’ theory. It argued that the struggle for socialism was postponed to a future date after the establishment and development of a capitalist state. Subsequently the Tudeh only called for a ‘Democratic Islamic Republic’ and rallied behind the capitalist Islamic clerics. Their leader was even nicknamed “Ayatollah”.

Other significant left radical groups also failed to organise within the ranks of the working class. The Fedayeen came from youth supporters of the Tudeh, who took up armed struggle with guerrilla tactics after the failure of the 1953 coup.

Suffering military defeat in the mid 1970s they re-emerged on 10 February 1979 to defeat the Shah’s Immortal Guard and drive the final nail in his regime. The Islamist Mojahedin-e Khalq guerrillas called for an Islamic society without the clergy. Neither group could show a way forward by coordinating the movement nationally and disarming the Islamist clerics politically and militarily.

Religious movement

The failure of the Stalinist bureaucracy along with left Arab movements aided the growth of political Islam. They aped those capitalist nationalists who portrayed themselves as playing a progressive role by advocating ‘Arab socialism’, while not fundamentally challenging the capitalist system.

So when the Shah’s ‘White Revolution’ started to dispossess one of the biggest landowners, the Islamic church, of its land, it was forced into opposition to the regime and a process began which enabled the clergy to eventually take power.

With all political organisations banned under the Shah, opposition tended to gather in the mosques. The clergy had a well organised network, with 10,000 mosques, 180,000 members, 90,000 mullahs and 50 ayatollahs. Khomeini’s letters and tapes were smuggled in, copied and distributed. With half the population living in rural areas and two-thirds illiterate, the poor and dispossessed were stirred by the radical sermons.

They interpreted the call for the overthrow of the Shah as a struggle against totalitarianism and the demand for an ‘Islamic Republic’ as for a ‘republic of the poor’. Even an oil worker commented to a US correspondent: “Khomeini… will take power from the rich and give it to us”. An image was portrayed of an Islamic state where freedom and democracy would replace corrupt western and non-Islamic influences.

Added to this, the bazaars tended to flourish around the mosques, paying a zakat (tax) to them. When the Shah attacked the bazaars, blaming them for rampant inflation, Khomeini exploited the situation and drew in their support.

Social centres also gathered around the mosques and they played a crucial role in offering support and food to the dispossessed peasants streaming into the cities. This pushed some clergy in a left direction, with one cleric calling for public ownership of industry and a classless society.

Workers’ councils

But across Iran workers had taken matters into their own hands and occupied their workplaces and organised strike committees or shoras. Before the collapse of the regime, a committee representing the Khuzestan oil workers demanded “workers’ participation in the political affairs of the country,” as the only way for a “genuine construction” of an Iranian republic.

Delegates from shoras across the country met in Tehran at Khane-ye-Karegar or Workers’ House, organising a massive demonstration on May Day 1979. But there was no real national coordination among the different sections of workers. The Tudeh party even actively agitated against the shoras’ existence.

In the poor urban districts, shora-ye mahallat or ‘neighbourhood councils’ appeared, organising such things as delivering bread to the elderly and infirm. In spring 1980, 70% of Esfahan was run by shoras. Homeless families and poor tenants occupied luxury hotels and villas, setting up shoras. While in Kurdistan and the Turkomen area of Golestan, peasants reclaimed land.

As the spiritual leader of the Shi’ite masses and with the militant clergy the only force with clear political aims, organisation and a strategy, Khomeini was able to take the leadership of the revolution, imposing his newly formed Islamic Republican Party (IRP). Mehdi Bazargan, leader of the liberal capitalist National Front was named as prime minister for a few months, and with the backing of the Tudeh, the clerics organised a new regime.

Within two days Khomeini had ordered the shoras to disband. But he had to tread carefully. As one metal worker put it: “After the revolution, the workers noticed that the country belonged to them.” Khomeini was forced to adopt radical left phraseology and an anti-imperialist stance, especially towards the US. Returning from exile he announced “a government for the people”. In effect dual power between the shoras and central authority existed.

Khomeini balanced between the classes; he was compelled to make concessions to workers, introducing free transport and medicine and subsidising essential goods. But he was determined to smash their organisations. In March women were ordered to wear headscarves. Protests followed this decree. By April Khomeini had achieved a 99% victory in a national referendum, where the only choice was yes or no to an ‘Islamic Republic.’

Regime tightens grip

In July 1980 with state finance in crisis and unemployment at 25%, the first nationalisation decrees were issued, leading to the majority of industry being taken into state ownership, although private property was still ‘respected’.

‘Revolutionary courts’ were established, with executions of military and political leaders, police and Savak agents from the Shah’s regime. But up to ten-year jail sentences could be imposed “for disruptive tactics in factories or worker agitation”.

Shora-ye eslami or Islamic councils were developed under strict central control and established alongside the shoras. Strikes were banned and by late 1980 the Pasadaran or ‘Revolutionary Guards’ toured the factories crushing the shoras.

Ethnic minorities make up a third of Iran’s population; severely repressed under the Shah, this continued under Islamic rule. In the Turkomen region of Gorgan, the Arabic speaking oil region Khuzestan and especially the Kurdish Kordestan, region rebellions broke out and were brutally put down.

Despite strikes and other actions, by 1982 the new regime had secured its grip. Khomeini suppressed all opposition as traitors to the revolution. The regime exploited the 444-day occupation (and hostage crisis) of the US embassy by Islamic students started in November 1979 and the Iran-Iraq eight-year war, after the US-backed Iraqi regime invaded in September 1980.

Khomeini used the war to whip up fervent nationalism and thereby strengthen his power. Tens of thousands of opponents were executed, hundreds of thousands imprisoned. By 1983 the Tudeh and Fedayeen parties were totally crushed.

In the initial stages after the revolutionary wave and against a world backdrop of the distorted planned economies of the Stalinist states, Iran’s regime had to adopt a left character. But as the revolution faltered it moved in an increasingly rightward direction, and nationalised sectors were privatised.

The aftermath of the Iranian revolution sparked the growth of militant political Islam in other countries which now threatens imperialist interests.

Ironically, imperialism and its corrupt tyrannical Arab allies consciously developed right-wing Islam as a counterbalance to Stalinism and left movements. Financing thousands of religious schools in Pakistan, India and the Arab world the movement grew as the Stalinist bureaucratic system in the Soviet Union and eastern Europe stagnated and declined during the 1970s and 1980s. Defeat of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan by the Mojahedin and Arab fighters in 1989 (armed and financed by the US) and the collapse of the Stalinist system helped the rise of right-wing Islam.

Divisions

Since its inception deep divisions have existed between different factions of the Iranian Islamic regime. Vicious struggles have continued between the hardline clergy, determined to hang on to state power and sections of the so called ‘reformists’, who want to embrace western capitalism and increase privatisation.

Mohammad Khatami, Iran’s president between 1999 and 2005, brought in market reforms, backed global neo-liberalism, and so was supported by western capitalism. He became increasingly unpopular in Iran as he ignored workers’ rights and social justice and stayed silent when protesting students were attacked and shot.

Ahmadinejad was elected president in 2005, a hardliner backed by the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He promised to use oil revenues to relieve the plight of the masses and reduce the gap between rich and poor, but has failed to deliver significant improvement. He has used US threats and sanctions over Iran’s uranium enrichment programme to divert attention from his failing economic policies.

Today, inflation tops 25%, a quarter of the working population is unemployed or under-employed and unpaid wages are an everyday fact for workers. The Iranian working class is again stirring, such as the Haft Tapeh sugar cane workers, Kian Tyre factory workers and Vahed bus workers to name a few, who have staged heroic struggles while facing imprisonment and repression.

A reflection of the bankruptcy of the Iranian regime is that the discredited Khatami has just announced he will stand in this year’s presidential election. Meanwhile, Ahmadinejad tries to cling to power, using phraseology from the revolution to enhance his image as a ‘man of the people’.

As the world economic crisis deepens and the splits in the Iranian Islamic regime become more open, the Iranian working class will again flex its muscles. But without the building of an independent workers’ party with a determination to struggle for a socialist society as part of a socialist federation of the Middle East, there will be no end to the war, poverty and repression that blights the country.



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NEWS

G8 Summit, Northern Ireland:’Why YOU should oppose the G8’
20/05/2013, Socialist Party, Northern Ireland (CWI Ireland):
This year’s G8 summit will be held in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, on 17th – 18th June. This gathering brings together the heads of government of eight of the world’s largest capitalist economies to discuss how they can further the interests of those they represent – the super-rich, big business and the bankers.

South Africa: Mass retrenchment threat in mining industry demands mass action
18/05/2013, DSM (CWI South Africa) reporters:
Workers and Socialist Party calls for one-day-general strike

Iran: What would a Rafsanjani presidency mean?
18/05/2013, Kave Heydari, Iranian CWI supporter in Britain:
Iran’s June 14 presidential election takes place against the background of deep divisions in society and the regime.

Australia: Labour approves WA’s first uranium mine
17/05/2013, Socialist Party (CWI Australia) reporters Perth:
Australia’s federal environment minister Tony Burke gave the go ahead to Toro’s $270 million uranium mining project in the Wiluna region of Western Australia.

New Zealand: Racism and recession in New Zealand
15/05/2013, Jared Phillips, CWI New Zealand:
Working class unity needed to defend rights and living standards

Australian budget: Say ‘NO’ to the cuts agenda of the major parties
14/05/2013, Editorial comment from ‘The Socialist’, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI Australia):
We shouldn’t let either of the major parties tell us that ‘tough decisions’ or ‘hard cuts’ are required.

Ireland: ‘Bus Eireann workers in front line of class war - We should all support them!’
13/05/2013, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland) Reporters:
Bus workers take strike action over savage wage cuts and attacks on conditions

May Day in Nigeria: Jonathan government intensifies attacks on democratic rights
12/05/2013, Ebike Iseru, DSM (CWI Nigeria):
15 DSM members arrested at May Day rallies

Italy: The economic crisis becomes a political and institutional crisis
11/05/2013, Marco Veruggio, ControCorrente (CWI Italy):
The latest events that have happened in Italian politics mark a new phase of development in the crisis in the third European industrial power.

Malaysia: Election ’victory’ based on fraud
10/05/2013, Ravichandren, CWI Malaysia:
Ruling Barisan Nasional’s widespread fraud enrages opposition supporters and young people

Greece: Challenging the Golden Dawn
10/05/2013, Katerina Kleitsa , Xekinima (CWI Greece):
On 2 May the neo-fascist Golden Dawn attempted to distribute food in Syntagma square in Athens to people holding proof of Greek nationality.

British county elections: Capitalist parties rejected
10/05/2013, Editorial of the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Time for a new mass workers’ party

Tunisia: The calm before the storm
09/05/2013, CWI reporter in Tunis:
New clashes on the horizon

Pakistan: General elections held amid political turmoil
08/05/2013, Khalid Bhatti, SMP (CWI Pakistan), Lahore:
Big landlords, capitalists and influential families are calling the shots

Sri Lanka: Successful May Day
08/05/2013, USP(CWI, Sri Lanka):
The United Socialist Party’s May Day demonstration passed successfully through a number of populous areas of Colombo, ending at Grand Pass Junction.

Hong Kong: Dockworkers’ strike ends after 40 days
07/05/2013, Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info:
Union representatives declare a “half success” with a pay rise of 9.8 percent – but important issues are unresolved

Britain’s ’precariat’: Fighting for real jobs
06/05/2013, Claire Laker-Mansfield, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales), first published in The Socialist:
’Get a job!’ is the constant refrain of privileged Tory ministers and vicious right-wing tabloids. A million unemployed young people are the subject of a relentless campaign of smears and lies.

Liverpool: Rally marks 30 year anniversary of election of socialist council
05/05/2013, Dave Walsh, Unite Convener for Liverpool City Council, from The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Great event remembers the ’47’ struggle

Australian budget: Say ‘NO’ to the cuts agenda of the major parties
04/05/2013, Editorial comment from the May 2013 edition of ‘The Socialist’, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI Australia):
Those who created the crisis should be forced to pay.

Nigerian May Day arrests: All DSM members released [updated]
03/05/2013, Press statement by Segun Sango, general secretary DSM (CWI Nigeria):
The last set of DSM members still in the detention of the state security service (SSS) in Kaduna, Northwest Nigeria, and Ibadan Oyo state, Southwest Nigeria, as of yesterday, has been released.

Pakistan: May Day 2013
03/05/2013, Syed Fazal Abass Shah, secretary general PWF, Pakistan:
Progressive Workers Federation (PWF), TURCP and SMP organised and intervened in the May Day activities across the country

Bangladesh building collapse: Casualties of a rotten profit system
03/05/2013, The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
It is said that where labour is cheap, life is cheap. This is never more so than in the recent horrific deaths of over 400 garment workers crushed in a collapsed building in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.

Hong Kong: Dockers’ strike shines a spotlight on Li Ka-shing’s business empire
03/05/2013, Dikang, Socialist Action (CWI supporters in Hong Kong):
Li Ka-shing owns 13 percent of the world’s port capacity and much more besides…

Taiwan: Over 20,000 march on May Day
02/05/2013, Chris Dite in Taipei, chinaworker.info:
‘Defend pensions! Stop corruption!’

Pakistan: May Day demonstration in Sindh
02/05/2013, SMP (CWI Pakistan), Sindh:
Photos of May Day demonstration in Sindh

Nigeria: Militarisation of May Day rallies
02/05/2013, Press statement by Segun Sango, general secretary DSM (CWI Nigeria):
DSM comrades arrested and detained

CWI Comment and Analysis

ANALYSIS

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!

Hugo Chavez dies: The struggle continues
06/03/2013, Tony Saunois, CWI Secretary:
Millions of Venezuelan workers, the poor and youth will mourn the death of Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez

Lebanon: Public sector workers on indefinite strike over wages
04/03/2013, Tamer Mahdi, CWI:
Workers’ unity against big business shows potential for anti-sectarian, socialist alternative

Portugal: New explosion against austerity and the government
03/03/2013, socialistworld.net:
“Screw the Troika – the people are the best rulers”

Tunisia: ‘Buckshot’ Ali Larayedh appointed prime minister
27/02/2013, CWI supporters in Tunisia:
Down with the Ennahdha regime! Down with the system!

Italy: Voters reject austerity in ‘tsunami’ election
27/02/2013, Chris Thomas, Controcorrente (CWI in Italy):
Political instability, crisis and new opportunities ahead

Spain: Corruption scandal leaves government on the brink
24/02/2013, Danny Byrne, CWI:
What strategy to do away with rotten government and system?