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latest news

Immigration
Is Australia full?

17/03/2010: A socialist analysis

  Australia, Environment

 Chile
Earthquake

17/03/2010: Facing the social earthquake, with solidarity and unity

  Chile, Solidarity

Greece
General strike brings society to a halt

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

  Europe, Greece

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

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

  Kazakhstan, Solidarity

Britain
General Election prospects - Hanging in the balance

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

  Britain, Europe

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

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

  Britain, Europe

Belgium
Successful mobilisations against far right

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

  Belgium

Ireland
Government announces further €3 billion cuts

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

  Europe, Ireland Republic

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

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

  Europe, Video, World Economy

 Solidarity needed - Hong Kong
Long Hair arrested

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

  Hong Kong, Solidarity

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

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

  Greece, Ireland Republic

Belgium
Attacks on jobs and wages threaten women’s gains

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

  Belgium, Women

Portugal
public-sector strike paralyses the country

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

  Portugal

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

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

  Iceland, World Economy

Europe
Building action across the continent

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

  Europe

Women’s day 2010
The situation facing women in Britain

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

  Britain, Women

Migrants in Hong Kong
“This is modern slavery!”

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

  Hong Kong

Asia
Women migrants face the brunt of capitalism’s crisis

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

  Asia, Women

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

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

  Netherlands

Women’s day 2010
Still fighting for equality

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

  History, Women

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

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

  History, Women

 International Solidarity
Grant asylum to refugees held in Indonesia

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

  Indonesia, Solidarity

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

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

  Britain

Bolivia
Support Left MAS Candidates with Roots in the Social Movements

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

  Bolivia

 CWI Announcement
Re-launch of socialistworld.net

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

  CWI

Greece
‘Reasons for workers’ rebellion!’

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

  Greece

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

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

  Scotland

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

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

  Scotland

Women and socialism
A century of struggle

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

  History, Women

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

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

  China, Women

Chile
Earthquake in Chile

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

  Chile

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

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

  CWI, Theory

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

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

  Ireland Republic, Solidarity, Video

Iraq

Occupation and the resistance

www.socialistworld.net, 20/03/2005
website of the comitee for a workers' international, CWI

Two years ago, the US regime promised a short war to ’liberate’ Iraq - ’operation shock and awe’.

Manny Thain, Socialist Party

It expected a rapturous welcome by cheering Iraqi crowds. A puppet regime would be installed, US control of Iraq’s oil consolidated, and a new platform to pacify the Middle East.

It was a big miscalculation. The Bush administration, apparently believing its own propaganda, overestimated its power. Above all, it underestimated the scale of opposition it would face.

Despite overwhelming military supremacy, the US and Co. have been sucked into a shadowy, urban guerrilla war of attrition: house-by-house fighting, the widespread use of informants, disinformation and death squads. There is no quick and easy exit strategy.

When US shells and missiles destroyed the predominantly Sunni city of Fallujah last autumn - taking it with the help of Shia national guard units - the stated aim was to destroy insurgent bases in order to free the city for the recent sham elections. Instead, whole sections of Fallujah have been laid to waste, tens of thousands of people left in squalid camps.

The sectarian divide has widened. Prior to the bombardment by coalition forces, most of the insurgents simply moved to cities such as Mosul, Ramadi and Baghdad. Some still operate in Fallujah itself.

Administration and security personnel are regular targets of the insurgents. One of the lawyers in Saddam Hussein’s trial was recently gunned down. Several police chiefs and politicians have been killed, from Basra in the south, through the ’Sunni triangle’, to the northern, predominantly Kurdish areas, such as Kirkuk and Mosul.

Others have focused on easier targets connected with the occupation, such as queues outside police recruitment offices, attacks which indiscriminately hit anyone in the vicinity. Iraqi soldiers have been ambushed and killed. There have been hundreds of kidnappings. The most brutal, reactionary, right-wing groups, such as al-Qa’ida, have beheaded their hostages, transmitting the images on the internet. This repulsive act in no way helps the struggle of the Iraqi people against occupation. It is, in fact, designed to sow fear among the people and attempt to provoke all-out civil war. The attacks on Shia worshippers during the Ashura festival - claiming 100 lives - were clearly sectarian acts.

Attacks on the oil supply are increasingly sophisticated. The New York Times (21 February) reported co-ordinated attacks on three major crude oil pipelines feeding the Doura refinery, on the pipeline taking refined oil to Baghdad and on trucks used as emergency back-up. The finger was pointed squarely at officials in Saddam’s regime. In mid-January, a bomb hit the plant that supplies 65-70% of Baghdad’s drinking water. Most residents had no running water for a week.

The resistance is spreading. Inmates rioted at Camp Bucca, a 100-acre prison purpose-built by the US, on 31 January. Four were shot dead by guards. The complex was built to hold 6,000 and is nearly full. The prison population is being swelled by people rounded up in counter-insurgency operations. Thousands of Iraqis are interned without trial in Abu Ghraib, police stations or CIA-run jails. New outbreaks of prisoner abuse are inevitable. Anger will deepen.

Recruitment tool

In spite of Bush and Blair’s claim that the subjugation of the Iraqi people is part of a war on terror, the occupation is the most powerful recruitment tool al-Qa’ida could have. Just as Afghanistan in the 1980s was the test-bed and training ground for al-Qa’ida, Iraq is a magnet for a new generation of right-wing political Islamists.

Up to now, Shia clerics have succeeded in maintaining restraint. They realise that Shia interests are better served - at least in the short term - by taking as much post-election constitutional power as possible. Even Moqtada al-Sadr, whose main influence is with poor and young Shia, has kept his Mahdi army quiet. The Shia militias are waiting to be called into action, but patience runs shorter with each sectarian attack or occupation force atrocity.

The inherent danger is that the main ethnic and religious groups will defend themselves behind sectarian walls. In the Rahmaniya district of Baghdad, Shia residents reportedly turned their anger at police inaction to attacks into the organisation of armed self-defence. However, they have threatened reprisals against a local Sunni population if attacks continue.

The peshmerga militias are linked to the main Kurdish parties, PUK and KDP. Their loyalties are clear. There is a plethora of Sunni Arab groups, ranging from former officers in Saddam’s Ba’athist regime to far-right Islamist forces, such as al-Qa’ida.

The various insurgents have widely differing agendas. Through sabotage, even small numbers could make occupation unworkable. And it has been reckoned that the insurgents in Iraq could total 200,000 of whom 40,000 are hardened fighters - more than the occupation forces.

The Socialist Party supports the right of Iraqis to armed self-defence against the imperialist occupation. But we argue for mass resistance by the working class and poor of Iraq rather than policies of kidnapping and suicide bombings, conducted by small and unrepresentative groups acting ’on behalf of the Iraqi people’.

Sectarian policies and methods cannot bring lasting peace and prosperity to the peoples of Iraq. Policies based on democratic collective organisation, self-defence and economic planning are necessary to unite the working class and poor.

Campaigns to reconnect utility supplies, for clean drinking water, decent food, accommodation, education and jobs link everyday struggle with the need for workers to exercise economic control. The country’s oil wealth should be used to provide people with what they need. It has to be taken out of the grasp of multinational corporations and re-nationalised under workers’ control and democracy.

A political party which represents the working class and poor is needed to put forward this programme, forging links with initiatives to set up independent, accountable trade unions, as well as community-based organisations. It would call for united action to rid Iraq of imperialist repression. It would put forward a socialist programme based on genuine democracy, which takes account of ethnic and religious divisions, and provides for the rights of minorities to live free from persecution. It would put forward the need for a socialist federation of Iraq, with the eventual aim of a Middle East socialist federation.

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