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Turkey
“Warlike violence” to crush the movement

20/06/2013: New layer of workers, youth and poor has entered the scene with the promise: “This is just the beginning – the struggle continues”

  Turkey

 Turkey
Stop the repression

19/06/2013: Socialist MEP condemns police violence during Turkey/ EU trade relations session

  Turkey, Video

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

London Olympics opening week

www.socialistworld.net, 22/07/2012
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Manny Thain, from an edited version of an article in Socialism Today (monthly magazine of the Socialist Party, CWI England and Wales)

The greatest sporting, and money-making, show on earth

The 2012 Olympic Games, held in London, will start with the ‘Opening Ceremony’ on Friday 27 July, watched by an estimated audience of 1 billion people around the world. Beyond the sporting excellence, Manny Thain looks at the crass commercialisation and increased state repression that accompanies the ‘greatest show on earth’.

Socialistworld.net

World records will not be the only things broken at this year’s Olympic and Paralympic games. Promises for a lasting legacy - affordable housing, decent jobs, increased sports participation, and the rest - are being broken, too. The greatest sporting show on earth has been dragged down by crass commercialisation, and become a test-bed for increased state repression.

It all began with a lie: that the London Games would cost £2.4 billion. That figure was never credible. Inexplicably, it did not include VAT or security expenditure. W

ith these costs added, the bill would have totalled £3.9 billion - 20% VAT on £2.4 billion equals £480,000, plus the wildly out-of-control spending on security, around £1 billion.

So far, however, the elastic Olympics budget has been stretched to £9.3 billion. It all adds up to a massive swindle, a rip-off for working-class and middle-class people who stump up the most in direct and indirect taxes.

The government (via taxpayers) is paying £6.2 billion of that, the rest coming from the lottery (an indirect tax on the poorest). Despite assurances that the private sector would part-fund the major construction projects, the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, reckon that less than 2% of the Olympics budget has come from private funding.

The London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (Locog), the body in charge of ’delivering’ the Games, has raised another £2.1 billion to stage the show. Two-thirds of this has come from sponsorship by big business.

Locog gets a contribution from the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The rest is from ticket and merchandising sales - again, mainly out of our pockets. Locog is headed by Lord Sebastian Coe, a gold-medal-winning athlete, former Tory MP, a ’world ambassador’ for Nike sportswear, and multi-millionaire.

Sponsors

The IOC’s main sponsors each pay over £60 million on ten-year contracts. This is capitalism, so in return for that money the corporations wield colossal power. In other words, at this fiercely competitive event, the organisers go to extraordinary lengths to protect the sponsoring companies from competition. It is unlawful for non-sponsors to use the word ’Olympics’, the five-rings symbol or the Games’ mottoes.

To protect broadcasters’ rights, spectators are not allowed to upload images of events onto YouTube, or post pictures from inside the Olympic village on social media. Twitter will block non-sponsors buying promoted ads with hashtags such as #London2012. Athletes are banned from uploading video or audio recordings.

It remains to be seen how strictly the laws are applied to individuals, but the impression given so far is that the authorities really do mean business.

It is impossible to get a breakdown of ticket allocation for all the events. Lord Coe & Co refuses to provide this information. What is clear is that the more prestigious the event, the more the ticket allocation favours officials and sponsors.

The Guardian reported that, of the 80,000 seats available for the men’s 100m final, only 29,000 (36%) have gone to the public. For the finals in the velodrome, 2,500 of the 6,000 seats will go to the public.

Even this late in the day you may get a ticket if you have connections with officials from 54 of the world’s 204 countries represented at this year’s Games - the source of a booming black-market trade. The IOC has been forced to announce that it will investigate, although any report will probably be delayed until after the Games are over. What it shows is the rotten state of world athletics’ administration, run by an unaccountable, privileged clique at the top.

’Olympic family’

The preferential treatment for the 70,000 members of the so-called ’Olympic family’ - officials, athletes, media, assorted hangers-on - does not stop there. It is one thing to ensure that the athletes are well taken care off.

They, at least, play a worthwhile role at the Games. It is quite another to roll out the red carpet to thousands of cosseted, bloated bureaucrats and political leaders, some from the world’s most oppressive regimes.

They will be given exclusive border control lanes to speed their way through customs. They will be rushed to the sporting venues and hospitality suites along special road lanes, whizzing past the ’little people’ struggling through London’s traffic. Transport officials have warned of 100 days of travel disruption for the capital’s residents.

An extra 585 civil service workers are to be drafted in, while summer leave has been cancelled for existing staff. Yet 880 jobs have been cut from the UK Border Force since 2010 by the Con-Dem coalition government. As soon as the Games are over, the axe will fall again, with a further 1,550 workers due to be sacked in 2014/15, culling staff numbers down by 18% to a total of 6,440.

Of all the legacy commitments, you might think that the aim to increase participation in sports would be straightforward. Half the job will be done by the incredible performances on track and field.

But the government has abandoned its target of getting one million more people playing sport by 2013.

The numbers swimming regularly in 2010-11 actually fell by 435,000 compared with 2007-08, with those playing tennis, football and rugby also falling. Among those aged 16 to 19, overall sports participation fell by more than 100,000 to 825,900.

The Con-Dems have taken the baton from New Labour, whose policy of selling off school playing fields ensures that young people get off to a very bad start. Since 2004, the budget for school sports has been slashed from £216 million to £35 million, with 3,400 sports coaches and coordinators sacked, and grants for 1,300 proposed playgrounds scrapped.

The Con-Dems have put the boot into people with disabilities, in spite of another legacy promise to widen their access to sport. At present, 18% of disabled adults undertake physical activity for more than 30 minutes a week, compared with 38% for non-disabled adults. The government plans to replace disability living allowance (DLA) with personal independence payments from 2113.

DLA is a non-means-tested benefit worth between £20 and £131.50 a week, paid to about 3.2 million people. It helps with the extra costs of transport, equipment, care and other needs. It has been crucial in enabling disabled athletes to participate and compete.

Atos Healthcare

To enable it to do this, Atos Healthcare, which describes itself as ’the UK’s leading occupational health service provider’, has been brought in to test 11,000 claimants a week under a £100 million-a-year contract.

As a matter of course, Atos passes disabled people fit for work, driven by targets to get 500,000 people off benefits. It has left thousands wrongly denied payment. To add insult to injury, Atos Healthcare is a major sponsor of the Paralympics, paying £62 million over ten years.

Another claim which has fallen at the first hurdle is that the Games will be the ’most ethical ever’. The Independent on Sunday (6 May) reported a survey by Playfair 2012 into sweatshops producing goods for the Games.

It cites mistreatment at factories in the Philippines and China supplying Adidas, and factories run by Next in the notorious free-trade zones in Sri Lanka. None of the factories allow union membership.

Dow Chemicals is a £63 million IOC sponsor and is funding a £7 million fabric wrap around the Olympic stadium. Dow continues to deny any responsibility for the 1984 toxic gas and chemical disaster in Bhopal, India, which killed up to 20,000 people, and injured hundreds of thousands. Legal action is still being pursued in the US and India by victims and their families.

The Olympic Park has also been the focus of many protests by construction workers blacklisted in Britain, with effective trade union organisation kept off site.

One legacy guaranteed by the London Olympics and Paralympics will be a further strengthening of the repressive powers of the state. The security operation behind the Games is the largest in the UK since the Second World War.

Alongside 13,500 troops and thousands of police officers, there was to be 48,000 private security staff. The company G4S was to train 23,700 personnel and should have had 10,000 on duty in a contract said to be worth £284 million.

The Games will boost the privatisation of security services, further undermining any accountability to local communities.

Central to an understanding of the Olympic/Paralympic Games swindle is seeing how the bid was won and the stitch-ups that followed.

Before London won the Olympic bid, the Chelsfield property company had plans to build a huge shopping complex in Stratford, in the east London borough of Newham. In 2004, it was bought out by three companies: Westfield, the world’s biggest shopping centre operator, Multiplex, which built Wembley stadium, and the Reuben Brothers, property/asset dealers who made a fortune in Russia in the 1990s.

Public support is considered to be critical to any successful bid. So, the Olympic Bidding Committee (OBC), then chaired by Lord Coe, asked for the backing of Telco (The East London Communities Organisation - now known as London Citizens).

With members throughout the East End, including the support of around 80 community and religious groups, Telco had a bit of clout. It drew up an ’ethical Olympics agreement’, including demands for affordable housing for local people, education, health and jobs on the London living wage. The agreement was signed in 2004 by Lord Coe, Ken Livingstone (then mayor of London), and Labour London Assembly member John Biggs, deputy chair of the London Development Agency.

The OBC was wound up once the bid had been won - with the plans to regenerate Stratford a major selling point, and including benefits to the other ’Olympic boroughs’: Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Waltham Forest and Greenwich. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) quango was set up in 2006 to plan and develop the facilities after the Games. It refused to meet Telco or recognise the agreement on the grounds that the ODA had not existed when the agreement was signed!

Meanwhile, Westfield had bought the other companies out. It passed the housing rights on to the developer, Land Lease. By this time, the subprime mortgage crisis was looming. The Land Lease deal collapsed and Westfield was stalling on work on the shopping centre.

As the New Labour government was preparing its £50 billion bailout and part-nationalisation of the banks, £5.9 billion of public money was pumped into the Olympic project to bail it out, too. The government agreed to finance the athletes’ village, taking Land Lease on to manage it. Westfield was given £200 million of public money to pay for roads leading to the shopping complex.

Again, money taken from taxing working-class and middle-class people was handed over to some of the wealthiest property and construction companies in the world.

When the 500-acre Olympic Park reopens after the Games, in 2013, it will be named the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. It is the first park to be built in London since Victorian times and the first to be called a royal park since then. But London’s eight royal parks were created in 1851 with the passing of the Crown Lands Act.

This transferred parklands owned by Queen Victoria into public ownership. In contrast, the Olympic park and its contents will be run privately.

The Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) is the quango that oversees the park. Chaired by Baroness Margaret Ford, it has already sold the athletes’ village to a consortium led by the Qatari royal family, and plans to sell off the other bits of the park.

Privately run

The OPLC is to be replaced by another quango, the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC), with considerably greater powers over a far larger area. This means that a huge part of east London will be run privately, effectively out of the control of local government.

The legacy promise is that up to 11,000 homes will be built in the Olympic park, with 35% of them supposedly ’affordable’. It is unclear how many of those will actually materialise.

Changes brought in by the Con-Dem government in April mean that rent charged for so-called ’social housing’ (subsidised housing mainly provided by housing associations) can be increased up to 80% of market rent. This is a massive increase.

Newham includes 13 of London’s 15 most-deprived wards. Nearly half the population lives below the poverty line and 70% of children live in low-income households. There are 32,000 households on the council’s waiting list. People have no choice but to rent privately.

The consequence is that very little, if any, of the new housing will be affordable to the vast majority of the people in Newham or the other Olympic boroughs.

The Olympic and Paralympic Games are occasions to celebrate and experience inspirational feats of skill, speed, strength and stamina.

They are a chance to participate in a great global party as athletes and spectators come together, watched by millions. The capitalist system, however, only has eyes for short-term profit.

For the multinational corporations, the Games are just an immense merchandising opportunity. They dictate the pace, aided and abetted by the rotten political establishment and corrupt officialdom.



Europe

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Turkey: Stop the repression, 19/06/2013

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Marxist.net, CWI marxist archive

cwi comment & analysis

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Che Guevara: Símbolo de Lucha

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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

Turkey: Stop the repression
19/06/2013, Paul Murphy, MEP, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
Socialist MEP condemns police violence during Turkey/ EU trade relations session

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

CWI Comment and Analysis

ANALYSIS

Turkey: “Warlike violence” to crush the movement
20/06/2013, Kai Stein, CWI:
New layer of workers, youth and poor has entered the scene with the promise: “This is just the beginning – the struggle continues”

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