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Greece
Support for government in free fall

08/02/2012: General strike on 7 February opposes “mediaeval labour conditions!"

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Syria
Anti-regime protests facing ferocious response

08/02/2012: No trust in Arab League and imperialist powers

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Kazakhstan
Nazarbayev in Berlin

08/02/2012: A big protest rally in freezing temperatures greeted the Kazakhstan president as he attended a meeting to strengthen relations with the German government and big business.

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 Ireland
Joe Higgins addresses packed anti-household tax meeting

04/02/2012: Joe Higgins argues in Cork, 26 January, to resist the household tax: "Yes, we have a choice!"

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Belgium
January 30 General Strike

03/02/2012: A strike corresponding to the level of anger over austerity programme

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EU summit
No capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis

03/02/2012: The capitalist classes of Europe are all adopting the same policy of attempting to make the working class pay for the capitalist economic crisis.

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 Nigeria
Story of the great general strike

02/02/2012: A socialist view on recent showdown between government and people

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Italy
Dozens of No TAV activists arrested

01/02/2012: The repression will not stop the movement!

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Socialism
Answering Common Questions

31/01/2012: Frequently asked questions

Kazakhstan
Free Vadim Kuramshin!

31/01/2012: Urgent solidarity needed

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Kazakhstan
‘Labour Start’ editor makes outrageous claims against oil workers and CWI

31/01/2012: Worldwide solidarity campaign means the Kazakhstan regime can no longer deny 16 December massacre

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Tunisia
“The mass of people continue to struggle”

31/01/2012: Interview with two Tunisian socialists, one year after the fall of Ben Ali

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US
For an independent Left challenge in Presidential elections

30/01/2012: Fight Against Corporate Politics

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 US
Capitalist crisis and the occupy movement

30/01/2012: Bryan Koulouris explains how the USA is being transformed by the occupy movements which have arisen in anger at the growing inequality between the 1% and the 99% in the United States

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Climate change
Dithering in Durban

30/01/2012: Once again, a United Nations-sponsored climate change conference has completely failed to address the issue of global warming.

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Cyprus
Partial general strike paralyses public sector

29/01/2012: December’s industrial action against austerity just the beginning of the fight-back!

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Asia
Feeling the coming storm

29/01/2012: Whole continent on the verge of major social convulsions and political shocks

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Latin America
No escape from world crisis

28/01/2012: The illusory appearance of a peculiar isolation from the international picture of stagnation, recession and economic crisis is fragile - a new period of turbulent class conflict lays ahead

  CWI Comment And Analysis, Latin America

China
“I was arrested by China’s Secret Police”.

27/01/2012: CWI’s Zhang Shujie speaks out at hearing in Sweden’s parliament

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Egypt
Huge crowds in Tahrir Square mark revolution anniversary

26/01/2012: Masses in Cairo and other cities demand end to military rule

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China
‘Long Hair’ to attend Stockholm hearing on state repression

26/01/2012: LSD legislator from Hong Kong to speak in support of young socialist Zhang Shujie, forced to flee China

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 CWI International Meeting
Illusion of stability in Latin America

25/01/2012: Contradictions and new struggles define situation in region

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Brazil
In defence of Pinheirinho inhabitants!

25/01/2012: 3 year old child killed in fatal repression

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Kazakhstan
New wave of arrests against opposition

25/01/2012: Release Vadim Kuramshin and all those arrested – End harassment of opposition activists!

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 Kazakhstan
After the Zhanaozen clampdown

25/01/2012: 16 December underlined the need for the workers’ movement to link economic demands to the struggle to bring down the regime

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USA
Mobilize to Support Longshore Workers

24/01/2012: Key Battle for the Labour and Occupy Movements

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 CWI International Meeting
World capitalism in crisis

22/01/2012: As world economy worsens, inter-imperialist relations intensify

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Britain
Stephen Lawrence murder – The untold story

21/01/2012: How socialists and the local community fought back against racism and the BNP

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Scotland
ConDem government blunders independence referendum

20/01/2012: Scottish National Party’s version of indepdendence a nightmare for workers

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Egypt
A year of revolution and counter-revolution

18/01/2012: As economic crisis worsens, new class conflicts loom

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Nigeria
Widespread disapointment and anger as labour suspends strike

17/01/2012: Struggle forces Jonathan back a bit, but could have won far more with a more resolute leadership - We Condemn Repression by Police and Army

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Israel/Palestine

No capitalist solution to conflict

www.socialistworld.net, 29/09/2002
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

EVERYONE SAW the copious media coverage marking the first anniversary of the 11 September attacks. But how many saw mention that this month also marks the twentieth anniversary of the massacre of at least 1,500 Palestinians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon?

From The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party, England and Wales section of the CWI.

A six-week lull in the Israeli/Palestine conflict came to an end with further Palestinian suicide bombings and the Israeli Defence Force using brutal force in Ramallah - a renewed attempt by Ariel Sharon to humiliate Yasser Arafat. As JUDY BEISHON argues, only a socialist movement amongst Palestinians and also Israeli workers can break the cycle of violence and end war and poverty in the region.

No capitalist solution to Israil/Palestine conflict

The Israeli Minister of Defence at that time, Ariel Sharon, ordered Israeli troops to let Lebanese Christian Phalangists into the camps, where they spent three days on a horrific killing spree murdering men, women and children.

An Israeli government commission of inquiry found Sharon to be responsible for the massacre, but his punishment was a mere demotion from Defence Minister to cabinet minister without portfolio.

Military onslaught

Now, as Israeli Prime Minister, Sharon continues with his particularly brutal approach to the Palestinians, believing that only military might will safeguard land claimed by Israel.

Recently, he declared all peace talks and agreements of previous years to be defunct: "Oslo doesn’t exist, Camp David doesn’t exist, neither does Taba. There’s no going back to those places". He has fully supported new Jewish settlements in the Palestinian territories (settlers now occupy almost half of the West Bank), has annexed more land and holy sites and has met the second Palestinian intifada with a vicious military onslaught and reoccupation of Palestinian towns.

Palestinians are still being killed almost daily (84 in the last six weeks), including young boys armed only with stones. Reactionary right-wing Jewish settlers have gone to the lengths of placing bombs in Palestinian schools, the latest being the wounding of five eight-year-olds in a school yard near Hebron on 17 September.

The effect of reoccupation has been a halving of the Palestinian economy and a tripling of unemployment. Over two-thirds of households now live below the poverty line and UN officials estimate that 1.8 million Palestinians are dependent on foreign food aid.

A US government survey revealed that over half the children in the West Bank and Gaza are suffering from malnutrition. Israeli troops are not only instructed to impose curfews and road closures on the local population, but also on foreign aid workers as well, so worsening further the dire conditions in the towns and camps.

Palestinian leadership - A flawed strategy

FACED WITH huge repression and with no tangible gains, there was a six-week lull in Palestinian suicide bombings. Debates have taken place at all levels in occupied areas on what strategy to pursue.

With much division and dissent, Arafat’s Fatah organisation declared an end to attacks on Israeli civilians inside Israel, realising that they are counter-productive, though other organisations that have carried out suicide bombings such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad are determined to continue with them. Islamic Jihad has just carried out two attacks in two days (18 and 19 September), the second one killing six people in Tel Aviv. Sharon’s response was to send Israeli troops to systematically demolish most of Arafat’s Ramallah compound.

As there is widespread disgust amongst Palestinians towards corruption and lack of leadership in the Palestinian Authority (PA), there are hopes that elections announced for next January could bring in more representative leaders.

General discontent on the ground was reflected in a recent meeting of the Palestinian Legislative Council, when a majority of council members intended to have a vote of no confidence in Yassar Arafat’s cabinet.

Arafat was forced to engineer the resignation of the entire cabinet to avoid the vote, which was a blow to his prestige, although not a direct threat to his leadership.

PA elections are far from certain to take place, however, as they would be impossible under present conditions of closures and curfews. Sharon and other right-wing representatives of the Israeli ruling class are in no hurry to create suitable conditions. Although they want the removal of Arafat, they realise he is still regarded as a figurehead of the Palestinian struggle and so would most likely gain a new mandate.

Arafat removal

US President George Bush has also called for the removal of Arafat, while maintaining support for undemocratic and repressive Arab regimes such as in Saudi Arabia. As Robert Fisk commented in the Independent: "Yassar Arafat was not rejected because of his failure to create a democracy, he was rejected because he didn’t do the job of a dictator well enough. He failed to create law and order in the small portions of land awarded to him".

Incredibly, Arafat welcomed Bush’s speech calling for his own removal, simply because Bush paid lip-service to a Palestinian ’state’. The PA leaders look to foreign imperialist powers and to reactionary Arab regimes to further Palestinian aspirations, rather than to the Palestinians’ potential capacity for mass struggle. This stance is inevitable when they themselves rely on capitalism for their careers and personal wealth.

But their strategy cannot lead to a Palestinian state with decent living standards for all, as capitalist classes worldwide, faced with ongoing economic crisis, would not provide sufficient resources for the development of a such a state.

One look at the lack of international funding going to Afghanistan is an example of how little the main imperialist powers are prepared to give. A Palestinian state is also unacceptable to the Israeli ruling class, as they see it as a security threat to the existence of Israel.

Only a struggle by the mass of the Palestinian people for a socialist Palestine, accompanied by an appeal to the Israeli Jewish working class to support their fight, would provide a road to genuine liberation and decent living standards.

In the course of this struggle the building of democratic, armed workers’ defence bodies are an urgent necessity, as is the building of a workers’ party.

Israeli workers and the struggle for socialism

ISRAELI WORKERS need to build their own struggle against capitalism in Israel, with the aim of creating a socialist Israel in a socialist confederation of the Middle East. The idea of a single state that some organisations on the Left call for would mean that either Palestinians or Jews would be a minority in such a state.

Most Israeli Jews, having a deep consciousness of the need to defend their own state to guarantee their survival, will never be won to such a programme. And it could not be achieved forcibly, against what is the fourth military power in the world, without massive bloodshed.

A socialist solution depends on a split along class lines; Israeli workers can be won to the idea of a socialist Israel, guaranteeing democratic rights to minorities, in a voluntary socialist confederation.

At present in Israel, the need for building workers’ struggles and a new workers’ party armed with socialist ideas has never been greater. The economy has suffered from the dire state of the world economy, as well as from its own contradictions and the cost of conducting the military onslaught in the West Bank and Gaza (estimated to be $3bn annually by a senior army commander). Despite workers being told that this isn’t the time for internal conflicts, there has recently been a wave of struggles against cuts and wage restraint, including a three-hour local and central government workers’ strike.

The Israeli government is presently engaged in a dispute with Lebanon over water rights, which Sharon has said could become a "pretext for war". He has also indicated that in the event of a US war on Iraq provoking Saddam Hussein to attack Israel, Israel will not show military restraint as it did during the Gulf war ten years ago. This warmongering adds to the huge instability in the region and feelings of insecurity among Israeli people.

In the event of renewed war with neighbouring countries, significant opposition could develop in Israel as it did in the past to the war in Lebanon. This would combine with widespread discontent over cuts, pay restraint and job losses, adding to the need for workers to organise independently.


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