International Socialists
Israel attacks aid flotilla PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 01 June 2010 11:27

In the early afternoon of Monday the 31st of July (New Zealand time) Israeli troops attacked the first of a flotilla of ships from all around the world trying to bring aid to the beseiged people gaza, dubbed the "Freedom Flotilla". Details have been sketchy, largely due to a massive PR campaign by the Israeli state designed to obscure the truth, but a few things are known for certain. As the flotilla of aid workers, human rights and Palestinian activists as well as journalists and reporters approached Gaza, the lead ship - the Mavi Marmara - was hailed by Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) troops, and when they freely admitted that they were intending to deliver 10,000 tonnes of aid to the people of Gaza they had their communications cut off and were boarded. Despite the fact that Turkish port authorities (who oversaw the loading of the Mavi Marmara) insist that there were no weapons on board, Al Jazeera journalists on the Mavi Marmara reported that the IDF troops opened fire on the passengers of the ship more or less as soon as they stepped on board.
At least 20 of the passengers are believed to be dead (though the names have yet to be released) and dozens of others were injured.
These ships were in international waters, 65 kilometers off the Gaza coast. They were flying their sovereign flags, and were not breaching any law, international or otherwise. Attacking a sovereign vessel in international waters is called piracy.

 

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Class war in Thailand PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 30 May 2010 11:08

By Walden Bello

May 25, 2010 -- Nearly a week after the event, Thailand is still stunned by the military assault on the Red Shirt encampment in the tourist centre of the capital city of Bangkok on May 19. The Thai government is treating captured Red Shirt leaders and militants like they're from an occupied country. No doubt about it: A state of civil war exists in this country, and civil wars are never pretty.

The last few weeks have hardened the Bangkok middle class in its view that the Red Shirts are "terrorists" in the pocket of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. At the same time, they have convinced the lower classes that their electoral majority counts for nothing. "Pro-Thaksin" versus "Anti-Thaksin": This simplified discourse actually veils what is — to borrow Mao's words — a class war with Thai characteristics.

Epic tragedy

No doubt there will be stories told about the eight weeks of the "Bangkok Commune".  As in all epic tragedies, truth will be entangled with myth. But one thing will be clear: The government's decision to order the Thai military against civilian protesters can never be justified.

The casualties are still being counted. Government sources say some 52 people were killed in the week ending on May 19. Bodies are, however, still turning up, including about nine that rescue workers discovered  at the massive Central World shopping mall at the Rajprasong Intersection, which was torched by protesters. The final count is likely to be much higher. One soldier, for instance, claims to have counted 25 dead bodies on May 20, as he went with his unit on a room-to-room operation to flush out suspected Red Shirt protesters in the Siam Square area.

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European capitalism's weak link? PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 27 May 2010 04:25
Analysis: Antonis Davenellos

February 10, 2010

Sweeping budget cuts by the Greek government have provoked a fightback by labor unions and students. Tax collectors have already called a 48-hour strike, to be followed by a strike by all public sector workers set for February 10, even as the government demands a 5.5 percent wage cut for public employees. The national trade union federation has called a general strike for February 24.

But the far right is mobilizing, too. Hundreds of neo-Nazis, who have escalated physical assaults on immigrants in recent months, rallied in Athens February 6 to protest a proposed law that would grant citizenship to Greek-born children of immigrants.

Antonis Davenellos, a member of International Workers Left (DEA) in Athens, looks at the background to Greece's economic and political crisis.

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Europe's elite has no solution to the crisis PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 27 May 2010 02:58
The crisis that nearly led to the collapse of the Euro underlines the fragility of the economic system. The eurozone states have put up 500 billion euros to bail out crisis-ridden economies.

This shows the deep structural difficulties that exist and equals the biggest bailout since the collapse of Lehman brothers in 2008.

The eurozone states have also asked the IMF for a 250 billion euro loan facility. Headlines across Europe were about rescuing the Greek economy. But there is a much deeper issue—the survival of Europe’s banking system

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Bangkok is bathed in blood, yet again PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 18 May 2010 09:09
Unconfirmed reports indicate that Abhisit's soldiers have shot dead at least 50 people do far. Hundreds are injured. They say there are 500 "terrorists" in the protest site. Earlier they said that they would use snipers to shoot "terrorists".

The only terrorists are in the Government, the Army and the Palace.

The tyrants say that the Red Shirts are all determined to overthrow the Monarchy and therefore it is justifiable to kill them. So having a Monarchy is an excuse to kill anyone who fights for Democracy and Social Justice.

Various Government spokespeople, including Abhisit's academic-for-hire Panitan Wattanayagorn and Censorship Boss Satit Wongnongtuay, continue to lie and lie again, claiming that troops only fire in self defence. Yet all press reports show indiscriminate shooting of unarmed civilians including a 10 year old boy, a paramedic and foreign news reporters.

Fake human rights groups call on "both sides" to stop the violence. Yet it is only one side which is using lethal violence against unarmed pro-democracy demonstrators. Even Reporters Without Boarders demands that "both sides" guarantee the safety of reporters. How can Red Shirts guarantee anyone's safety when they are being murdered in cold blood.

Many so-called news reports write that troops fire on rioters. No one is rioting except the army. Others talk about "protests turning violent". It is not the protesters who are violent.

Unarmed pro-democracy protesters are being systematically murdered in order to keep Abhisit and his military backed government in power. The King is silent as usual. His only job, apart from counting his wealth, is to legitimise every bloody act that the army commits. Yet so-called analysts write that he has "held the country together". The fact is he has supported every crack down on Democracy. He is weak and spineless. That is why millions of Red Shirts are becoming Republicans.

The UN has just selected Thailand to be on the Human Rights Committee. What a joke! But what can one expect from a body controlled by war mongers.

Red Shirts throughout the country are standing firm in the bloody fight for Democracy, Social Justice and Human dignity. I salute them!
 
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Dunedin Meeting

Party and Class

The party is the tool of revolution. We need to have organisation to resist the system. After all, the system is organised from top to bottom to get the most out of the working class. Socialists realize the importance of this, and so we almost always have the refrain ‘organise, organise, organise’. However, we do not advocate the monolithic, all-knowing party of Stalinist Russia. We advocate a mass party, made up of working class people, not a select minority wielding power over the many. The presence of working class people in the movement is paramount above all else.

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From the Socialist Review

School students have it tough: They are supposed to be enjoying unleashing their creativity ready for the 21st century knowledge economy; but when they are exercise their creativity – say by dying their hair – they are suspended.

While this might seem a fairly trivial example of the petty tyranny of a school authority over a student, it’s something that goes on day after day, week after week in schools with grinding regularity.
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