Showing posts with label socialism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label socialism. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 September 2017

Was 1968 our global 1905?



http://cyprus.indymedia.org/node/5166

■ A special appearance by friends and comrades Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers in Santa Fe - the precious town known to some Cypriots as "Kyrenia of the high-altitude desert".
■ "“Whatever the so-called ’60s was, it was mainly a prelude to what we need to do today”, said Ayers."
 

It's an essential and burning question that keeps recurring to people who are actively engaged in the revolutionary process, in the study of its history and the theoretical foundations that might guide better guide us in understanding its curious developments in order to help bring the revolution to a VICTORY (or to a new beginning): it's the question of 1968 - the need to understand the historical role of the planetary-scale revolutionary period of the "sixties and seventies" symbolized by the year 1968.

Students of revolutionary Socialist history often see the 1905 revolution in Russia as a launching pad (a dress-rehearsal) of the 1917 revolution in Russia which gave birth to the Soviet Union. Could it be that the revolutionary period exemplified by 1968 can act as a prelude to another and more SUCCESSFUL global revolution? Can this happen even though two whole generations have already passed, and we're in the process of losing many of the people who were the bearers of the Light, Love and Consciousness from that time?

Is it possible that the Socialist revolution possesses qualities that are transcendental (like a number?), going beyond the boundaries of the particular experiences of individual persons or specific populations, embodying a transpersonal reality capable of actualizing a "small 'c' communist" society all over the globe in the same sense that we witness the materialization of Archetypes? In that sense, it would be reasonable to assume that the next global prairie-fire can be self-igniting, without the necessity of being mediated by people who have lived through 1968. Or, to say it differently, it might be possible that those would who bring that spark over across time from 1968 to the present, might be able to re-ignite the prairie through a discarnate process, through an incorporeal abstraction acting on and through objective reality.

Could it be that the contradictions discovered within capitalism and global Imperialism by marxian science keep generating the Consciousness necessary for humanity to overcome them and replace them with the socialist ~ communist ~ anarchist ~ feminist ~ green ~ autonomist society we yearn for?

What about the social and political conditions? Is it possible to envision a global collective coordinating body that will harmonize and coordinate the Movement? Are modern populations emotionally and politically capable of overcoming the individualism and narcissism enforced on us by the commodity shopping culture and the Spectacle; by narrow perceptions of collective struggle confined by the mental borders of the nation-state; and move forward to removing the obstacles to unity found among the communities and populations of the present? Of the future?

Where is the radical culture that can bind us together? Where is the organizational structure ("One Ring to free them all: One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all, and in the Light to bind them")? Where are the radical Jedi, radical Bene Gesserit, the witches and guerillas, the musicians and healthcare workers, the geeks and "fairy weirdos" who will serve as the cadre of a future revolutionary party that can emerge as a Conscious force on the stage of history to embody the Last International?

Is it viable to work in that direction? Is it premature? Are there radicals consciously and knowingly engaged in building that network? Does it already exist, hiding in plain view and gently guiding us in the direction of planet-wide Liberation?

Petros Evdokas, petros@cyprus-org.net
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Radical activists to discuss next steps of resistance

By Megan Bennett / Journal North Reporter
Friday, September 22nd, 2017 at 12:02am
https://www.abqjournal.com/1067393/radical-activists-to-discuss-next-steps-of-resistance-ex-former-weather-underground-members-to-join-sfais-equal-justice-residents-on-panel.html

SANTA FE, N.M. — Two members of the Weather Underground, the 1960s-70s radical activist group most famously known for protesting the Vietnam War and black oppression through bombings of government buildings, will speak at the Santa Fe Art Institute Sunday about current-day issues and creative solutions for fighting back.

Though they are most famous for their activism in their teens and twenties, husband and wife Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, both now in their seventies and living in Chicago, say they are not stuck in the past. The two are still activists in what Dohrn called “perilous times” with the election of Donald Trump.

“We’re not looking wistfully at a ship that already left the shore,” said Ayers. “We’re very much living toward the future. Whatever the so-called ’60s was, it was mainly a prelude to what we need to do today.” He said what he and his wife were fighting for then, like stopping the “underlying causes of war” and white supremacy, still need resolution today.

Both Dohrn and Ayers began their activism in college protesting against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and for the Civil Rights Movement, a period during which Ayers said he participated in sit-ins and was arrested at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

They later helped organize the Weather Underground – sometimes labeled, then and now, as a terrorist group – that detonated small bombs at places like the U.S. Capitol and the Pentagon to protest war and other social issues. Three members of the Weather Underground died in 1970 at a New York townhouse while creating an explosive.

Ayers and Dohrn, who was once on the FBI’s Most Wanted List, were on the run for several years until 1980 when they turned themselves in. By then, most of the charges against them had been dropped. Dohrn served less than a year of jail time for refusing to testify in a case, then went on to a career as a legal advocate and in teaching law. Ayers became an education professor in Chicago – whether he had any significant associations with Barack Obama there became an issue in presidential politics.

“My whole life I’ve been told that won’t work, that’s extreme or that’s crazy,” said Ayers about criticism of radical activism throughout the years. But he said activists can’t rely on what polls or powerful figures are saying about a movement and, sometimes, unpopular or new ideas are necessary.

Now, they’re retired college professors who keep up with movements like Black Lives Matter, as well as activism on climate change, women’s rights, protection of undocumented immigrants and other issues.

The two will participate in an “inter-generational” panel with several SFAI Equal Justice Residents, a group of local and national artists invited to work on political or social movement-related art pieces, to discuss alternatives to addressing today’s political climate.

The couple will offer a discussion of their lives, during which people can ask questions. They’ll be available afterward to sign copies of their books if audience members bring them. Dohrn said the couple welcomes all opinions and perspectives in the discussion, including those who disagree with their past tactics.

While there is no “road map” for activism, Dohrn says everyone has something they should be doing right now in response to today’s political situation. She hopes the conversation with artists will evoke some innovative ways of resistance.

“We need to talk to each other, we need to think deeply about other domains, other than just talking in which we can impact, inspire, ignite and imagine a different world,” said Dohrn.

If you go

WHAT: “SFAI Presents the Weather Underground: A Night of Radical Imagination” panel discussion, Q&A and book-signing.
WHERE: James A. Little Theater, New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Rd.
WHEN: Sunday, 6-8 p.m.
TICKETS: Free, but comes with the option to include a $10 or $25 donation to help fund the Equal Justice residency. Go to sfai.org for tickets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://cyprus.indymedia.org/node/5166
Originally published here:

Saturday, 15 October 2011

Yunanistan ve Kıbrıs isyanı

Solon Antartis: “Hristofyas Stalin kafasında...”

Hristofyas’ ınistifasını isteyen eylemcilerden, bağımsız medya ağı Cyprus Indymedia aktivisti Solon Antartis, Güney’ desiyasive sosyal gelişmeleri değerlendirdi:
Hristofyas Stalin kafasında...”

Sayfa 1
http://cyprus.indymedia.org/Solon,Havadis,024-1.pdf

Sayfa 2
http://cyprus.indymedia.org/Solon,Havadis,025-1.pdf


Hasan YIKICI ve Baraka çok teşekkürler !!
~~~~~~~~~~~

Baraka Kültür Merkezi
http://www.baraka.cc



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Odyssey Dawn

Poetry and the Slaughter of Libya
"Those hypocrite imperialist wolves participating in the so called Dawn Odyssey operation against the people of Libya should keep in mind that Homer's true Odyssey lasted for 12 years, if not more. And after the war, the participating heroes and their families faced tragic consequences for the atrocities they committed in Troy! Most of the Greek tragedies are related to that message - that whatever you do, your actions and their repercussions will catch up to you. You will find them in front of you sooner or later, one way or the other, either in life or after death which is certain for all."
- Comment from a Cyprus IndyMedia supporter who writes under the penname "L1".
It's bad enough that the Imperialists are using Homer's poetry to colourize the bombing of Libya with "poetic respectability". But much worse is the sad and sickening fact that they have no understanding of the Politics of Karma they have stirred up with their lethal attacks. That was Homer's message in the Odyssey, a moral and political lesson they refuse to accept even as their Empire is crumbling from the inescapable diminishing rates of profit at home and large popular revolts abroad. The consciousness of the oppressor is always the epitome of ignorance and arrogance.

As the Peace Movement in the West begins to react to the new war against Libya, protests are beginning to arise various forms. Street protests, art, even mainstream television are infected with a spirit of opposition to the illegal and immoral military intervention in Libya.

Please watch Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, ripping it all apart - the pretentions, pretexts and hypocrisy of the bombings:
Odyssey Dawn - Unconstitutional War
[click]

There are millions of Americans whose only contact with anti-government dissidents, with the Peace Movement, the radical and progressive community, is through Jon Stewart's Daily Show. Given this astounding reality, it's truly remarkable that such a clear political analysis and definite opposition to the war is able to surface and propagate through such a mainstream venue.

Protest at Downing Street, the UK Prime Minister's residence:

From:
http://london.indymedia.org/articles/7932

No Intervention - the Libyan People can Manage it Alone


From:
Party of the Laboring Masses - Philippines
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/03/476398.html

And in addition to bad poetry, the imperialist camp is plagued by more severe problems: the "coalition of the willing", the alliance of those who are involved in the attacks on Libya, is beginning to fall apart.

Competing interests, differences in strategy and tactics, lack of a unified command, all have contributed to a rather quick disarray among the Crusaders. Even the imperialist Corporate media recognize this and have dedicated long hours of research and worry over it:
"Analysis: Don't expect a quick ending for Gadhafi"
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110322/ap_on_an/us_libya_stalemate_analysis
Even within NATO itself, things are not going very well:
“The problem about getting NATO involved is very simple. Possibly a majority of European member nations are very dubious about this operation,” said Jonathan Eyal, director of studies at the Royal United Services Institute in London.
Keeping NATO out of Libya airstrikes suits US and France
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/commentary/reuters/2011/03/23/295748/Keeping-NATO.htm
Plus, the global allies who had allowed and enabled the attacks by abstaining at the crucial UN Security Council meeting last week are now re-thinking their stance. Nuclear giants China and Russia are going through a re-evaluation of how much leeway they want to give to the US, UK and to other NATO countries and the Arab Corporate States to intervene in Libya.
"The Communist Party's flagship newspaper, The People's Daily, said in a commentary that the United States and its allies are violating international rules and that in places like Iraq “the unspeakable suffering of its people are a mirror and a warning.”
Putin joins fierce opposition to Libya ‘crusade’
Russian PM slams 'US foreign policy trend of interfering in other countries' affairs.'
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4045538,00.htm

and
Communist leader slams Moscow’s passive stance on Libya
http://rt.com/politics/communist-russia-passive-libya/

And More Protests are Underway

Greek Communists protest attacks on Libya
http://m.thehindu.com/news/international/article1559035.ece/?secid=3044

Some Americans already protesting U.S. military involvement in Libya
http://m.ibtimes.com/libya-us-125486.html

There's already a new kind of motion on the map. US President Obama is seeking to pass off the leadership of the attacks against Libya to "some other power", and to reduce US involvement, even as the military industrial complex seeks a deeper US involvement because, war, now is the only major source of profits for the dying Empire.

And the unexpected upsurge of the Arab revolt, turned upside down now by imperialist intervention in Libya, has opened up the "wild card" of consequences. Is it possible that this war in Libya, the continued occupation of Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Cyprus, the revolts and fermentation in Syria, Yemen, Bahrain, Egypt, Tunisia, Jordan, Kurdistan, Pakistan, Algeria and Saudi Arabia, are going to have any effect other than to harden and deepen the peoples' desire for freedom and self-determination?

In the modern era of Imperialism, it always comes back to what Che Guevara taught: "Create two, three...many Vietnams".

In the now famous all over the globe "Message to the Tricontinental" that he wrote in 1966, he explained:
"...let us develop genuine proletarian internationalism, with international proletarian armies.

...Every drop of blood spilled in a land under whose flag one was not born is an experience gathered by the survivor to be applied later in the struggle of one's own country. And every people that liberates itself is a step in the battle for the liberation of one's own people....

We cannot evade the call of the hour. Vietnam teaches us this with its permanent lesson in heroism, its tragic daily lesson of struggle and death in order to gain the final victory.

Over there, the soldiers of imperialism encounter the discomforts of those who, accustomed to the standard of living that the United States boasts, have to confront a hostile land; the insecurity of those who cannot move without feeling that they are stepping on enemy territory; death for those who go outside of fortified compounds; the permanent hostility of the entire population. All this is provoking repercussions inside the United States. It is leading to the appearance of a factor that was attenuated by imperialism at full strength: the class struggle inside its own territory.

How close and bright would the future appear if two, three, many Vietnams flowered on the face of the globe, with their quota of death and their immense tragedies, with their daily heroism, with their repeated blows against imperialism, forcing it to disperse its forces under the lash of the growing hatred of the peoples of the world!"
Indeed!
Cyprus IndyMedia Collective
http://cyprus.indymedia.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Guevara: `Create Two, Three, Many Vietnams'
Excerpts of the Message published by the Militant
http://www.themilitant.com/1996/6036/6036_33.html

"Message to the Tricontinental" - the full text
http://www.marxsite.com/guevara.htm

Che Guevara on Cyprus
"The Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China have given serious warning to the United States. Not only the peace of the world is in danger in this situation, but also the lives of millions of human beings in this part of Asia are being constantly threatened and subjected to the whim of the United States invader.

Peaceful coexistence has also been put to the test in a brutal manner in Cyprus, due to pressures from the Turkish Government and NATO, compelling the people and the government of Cyprus to make a firm and heroic stand in defense of their sovereignty.

In all these parts of the world imperialism attempts to impose its version of what coexistence should be. It is the oppressed peoples in alliance with the socialist camp which must show them the meaning of true coexistence, and it is the obligation of the United Nations to support them.

We must also say that it is not only in relations between sovereign states that the concept of peaceful coexistence must be clearly defined. As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not encompass coexistence between the exploiters and the exploited, the oppressor and the oppressed."
From:
Colonialism is Doomed
Speech delivered before the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 11, 1964
http://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1964/12/11-alt.htm

Libya: as the Civil War Expands
Research and Dialogue on the Reality of the Conflict's Background
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/03/libya-as-civil-war-expands.html

Libya! - Amid the Massacres and Machine-gun Fire: Questions and Answers
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/libya-amid-massacres-and-machine-gun.html

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Libya! - Amid the Massacres and Machine-gun Fire: Questions and Answers

The Arab Revolution Spreads to Libya, Trigerring a Civil War and a Myriad Question Marks

How did the Gaddafi power structure, that used to be a long-standing progressive, anti-Imperialist and anti-colonialist political force with large significance for the Left regionally and globally, become an autocratic authoritarian regime and then ended up joining the "Western umbrella" in recent years transforming itself into an ally of Imperialism, oppressing the people with guns and tanks bought from the US and the UK, now bombing the cities in rebellion with aircraft supplied by the West?

And where is the revolution going? In some of the towns and cities being "liberated" by the armed insurgents, the new flag of the revolution is... the old flag of the pro-capitalist Monarchy, overthrown by Gaddafi long ago. Where is this conflict headed?

Please study this quarter of an hour video program with Professor Hamid Dabashi of Columbia University, exploring some of the history, the forces, and the questions involved in the Libyan uprising in dialogue with Paul Jay, of the Real News Network. The Real News Network is an independent news source that has evolved within the US Left (please use the link, or click on the picture):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AvfATCBmJg

Class Politics

...of course play a significant role in shaping current events in Libya, especially valuable when seen from the perspective of the old feudal class structures being replaced by pre-socialist formations in the transition from a pre-industrial to a modern industrial political economy.

Part of the reason why the uprising has quickly escalated to open armed insurrection and is now an open civil war is the nature of the administration that Gaddafi's revolution had created when remaking the country decades ago. With Gaddafi's help and under his initiative during his progressive and revolutionary phase, Libya made a transition from a highly centralized feudal-capitalist authoritarian Monarchy to a system of administration based on popular participation and local power with many Leftist values embedded in the structure, utilizating the petroleum industry to fund some of these social changes and to benefit the people. In Libya there is a system of decentralized direct democracy founded on peoples' power called the Jamahiriya, which does not rely on a web of central administration. Instead, power is vested in local and regional Committes that are the instruments of and the forums through which the population (at least in theory) exercices power.

Even after Gaddafi made peace with the Western Imperialist powers (in the middle of the last decade), the progressive system of local and regional social self-administration remained in place. It is this system that the population is now activating, arming itself and fighting against the oppressive regime.

The same thing had occured when the Soviet Union and its satellite countries underwent an uprising that did away with the Soviet system. Despite the Western media lies about the Soviet Union there was no "iron fist" to crush the opposition. The population utilized the local Committees and labour organizations to mobilize against the regime, and even though the Soviet Union had a much more centralized and hierarchical system of administration, the uprisings were mostly peaceful and very few people were killed in the process of the Soviet Union's dissolution. Unfortunately, instead of advancing forward to improve and deepen the socialist formations, they re-installed capitalism.

As the capitalist media apply themselves to try to explain what is going on in Libya, they try to fit the country's decentralized administration model into their "explanations" of events, but do not succeed in making much sense:
"The system of rule created by Khadafy — the "Jamahiriya," or "rule by masses" — is highly decentralized, run by "popular committees" in a complicated hierarchy that effectively means there is no real center of decisionmaking except Khadafy, his sons and their top aides."
http://www.denverpost.com/nationworld/ci_17448006

"The country is nominally run as the “state of the masses,” a socialist, decentralized system of Mr. Gadhafi's own devising known as a jamahiriya, where local committees have wide leeway."
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/editorials/the-people-are-powerful-in-the-face-of-gadhafis-terror/article1915042/

"CNN -- Libya's Moammar Gadhafi is clinging to power despite a wave of opposition due in part to a legacy of decentralized authority and divided tribal politics that has been reinforced during the embattled strongman's four-decade rule, analysts told CNN Tuesday."
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/22/libya.gadhafi.support/
There Is a Great Danger

...now that the revolution in Libya might open the doors to Western Imperialism in a more complete and influential way than before. If Gaddafi's alignment with the Western Capitalist powers in recent years was disastrous - and it was - enabling further incursions by the Empire into Libya to dominate and exploit its oil and population will be catastrophic.

So far there are no indications that the revolutionary forces have any undestanding of this, nor any political positions at all other than righteous and courageous opposition to the regime. We hope that this courage will be complemented with political knowledge and wisdom as to the dangers ahead and that the revolution will aim to preserve and deepen the gains of the Jamahiriya, rather than attempt to get rid of them.

All power to the people!
Cyprus IndyMedia Collective

http://Cyprus.IndyMedia.org
~~~~~~~~~~

More on the Arab Revolution
:

The Rising of Egypt's Working Class
The real “intelligence failure” of the ruling class
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/rising-of-egypts-working-class.html

Αλεξάνδρεια: Έκπτωτος ο Βασιλεύς Μουμπάρακ
Ο Λαός Πανηγυρίζει στους Δρόμους !
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/blog-post_12.html

Two Members of Cyprus IndyMedia Assaulted
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/two-members-of-cyprus-indymedia.html

Η Αιγυπτιακή Αντίσταση
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/blog-post_06.html

When the Moon Rises on The One You Love
The Arab Revolution
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/01/when-moon-rises-on-one-you-love.html


About the Photos:

The two photos above were published widely on the internet by the establishment press with the following text.

Residents stand on tank
Residents stand on a tank inside a security forces compound in Benghazi, Libya on Monday, Feb. 21, 2011. Libyan protesters celebrated in the streets of Benghazi on Monday, claiming control of the country's second largest city after bloody fighting, and anti-government unrest spread to the capital with clashes in Tripoli's main square for the first time. (AP Photo/Alaguri)

Residents stand
Residents stand on a tank holding a pre-Gadhafi era national flag inside a security forces compound in Benghazi, Libya on Monday, Feb. 21, 2011. Libyan protesters celebrated in the streets of Benghazi on Monday, claiming control of the country's second largest city after bloody fighting, and anti-government unrest spread to the capital with clashes in Tripoli's main square for the first time. (AP Photo/Alaguri)

Sunday, 13 February 2011

The Rising of Egypt's Working Class

The real “intelligence failure” of the ruling class
"... revolutions are not just about changing institutions. Most profoundly, they are about the dramatic remaking of the downtrodden. Revolutions are schools of profound self-education. They destroy submission and resignation, and they release long-repressed creative energies – intelligence, solidarity, invention, self-activity. In so doing, they reweave the fabric of everyday life. The horizons of possibility expand. The unthinkable – that ordinary people might control their lives – becomes both thinkable and practical." - David McNally

The following article by David McNally documents the conscious rising of the working class in Egypt and how its participation in struggles in recent years provided a foundation for the political uprising that took place just now in the country. And it traces how the political uprising, in turn, gave rise to an even wider participation of working people in the political uprising, enriching it with labour strikes, occupations and self-organized revolutionary institutions including peoples' clinics, security forces, instruments of direct democracy, and the spreading of self-organization model throughout all levels of society, from the streets to the universities and the workplaces, from the the occupied factories to the front lines of street battles.

Liberation is an act of simultaneous conscious awakening and direct action, a concrete engagement with Reality guided by a freed Consciousness, a massive collective labour of love that conjoins praxis and theory; it's a spiral in which labour struggles and political struggles fuel and nourish each other to turn in a widening rising helix. As that helix turns, it brings in more people into its process, sculpting an expansion of the liberated community outwards and higher. David McNally's article paints a picture of how this took place in Egypt and anchors it to the work of other prominent revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg, who had a lot to say about the revolutionary moment, and its process.

Observing the events of Russian Revolution of 1905, she wrote that they unfolded contrary to the expectations of dogmatists and authoritarian committee-men: "Instead of the rigid and hollow scheme of an arid political action carried out by the decision of the highest committees and furnished with a plan and panorama, we see a bit of pulsating like of flesh and blood, which cannot be cut out of the large frame of the revolution but is connected with all parts of the revolution by a thousand veins."

A brilliant analyst and thoroughly committed revolutionary, Rosa Luxemburg saw the complexities of the revolutionary phenomenon and called it as it is, a pulsation of Life affirming itself:
"The mass strike, as the Russian Revolution shows it to us, is such a changeable phenomenon that it reflects all the phases of the political and economic struggle, all stages and factors of the revolution. Its adaptability, its efficiency, the factors of its origin are constantly changing. It suddenly opens new and wide perspectives of the revolution when it appears to have already arrived in a narrow pass and where it is impossible for anyone to reckon upon it with any degree of certainty. It flows now like a broad billow over the whole kingdom, and now divides into a gigantic network of narrow streams; now it bubbles forth from under the ground like a fresh spring and now is completely lost under the earth. Political and economic strikes, mass strikes and partial strikes, demonstrative strikes and fighting strikes, general strikes of individual branches of industry and general strikes in individual towns, peaceful wage struggles and street massacres, barricade fighting – all these run through one another, run side by side, cross one another, flow in and over one another – it is a ceaselessly moving, changing sea of phenomena. And the law of motion of these phenomena is clear: it does not lie in the mass strike itself nor in its technical details, but in the political and social proportions of the forces of the revolution."
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1906/mass-strike/ch04.htm
Petros Evdokas, petros@cyprus-org.net
~~~~~~~~~~

Mubarak's Folly:
The Rising of Egypt's Workers
by David McNally

Rarely do our rulers look more absurd than when faced with a popular upheaval. As fear and apathy are broken, ordinary people – housewives, students, sanitation workers, the unemployed – remake themselves. Having been objects of history, they become its agents. Marching in their millions, reclaiming public space, attending meetings and debating their society's future, they discover in themselves capacities for organization and action they had never imagined. They arrest secret police, defend their communities and their rallies, organize the distribution of food, water and medical supplies. Exhilarated by new solidarities and empowered by the understanding that they are making history, they shed old habits of deference and passivity.

It is this – the self-transformation of oppressed people – that elites can never grasp. That is what explains the truly delusional character of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's speech on Thursday, February 10, where he prattled on in surreal disconnection from events. But while the aging dictator may be uniquely out of touch, he merely reflects the biases of his class. For it is a general characteristic of our rulers that they imagine those below them to be inherently stupid and deferential. They treat the downtrodden as labouring drones and cannon fodder for military adventures. They feed them lies and empty promises and send in the riot police when the subjugated get unruly. And most of the time they get away with it.

That is why popular revolutions are inexplicable to them. As ordinary people cast off resignation and obedience, as they take control of their communities and reclaim the streets, they become unrecognizable to their rulers. This is the real “intelligence failure” of the ruling class. Contrary to the terms of debate in security circles, it is not that they missed some indicators of institutional change; it is rather that all their models are based on the presumption of popular passivity. “Ordinary Egyptians have a reputation as fatalists,” pronounced a former Canadian diplomat to Egypt in the early days of the revolution, explaining that Egypt would not go the way of Tunisia, where dictator Ben Ali was toppled only weeks earlier.[1] In so doing, the diplomat revealed not only his own foolishness, but also the tone deaf incapacity of elites to comprehend people's power.

People's Creative Energies

After all, revolutions are not just about changing institutions. Most profoundly, they are about the dramatic remaking of the downtrodden. Revolutions are schools of profound self-education. They destroy submission and resignation, and they release long-repressed creative energies – intelligence, solidarity, invention, self-activity. In so doing, they reweave the fabric of everyday life. The horizons of possibility expand. The unthinkable – that ordinary people might control their lives – becomes both thinkable and practical.

All of this eludes bosses, bureaucrats, generals, politicians, and the vast majority of journalists because they do not understand the inner heart of a genuinely revolutionary process – that having taken to the stage of history, oppressed people are never again the same.

It is this error that explains the frantic tacking and turning of rulers confronted with mass insurgency. One moment they make concessions, the next moment they send in the goons – all in the belief that ordinary people can be beaten back into submission, or bribed with crumbs from the tables of the rich. But the longer they do this, the more they force the mass movement to broaden its base and deepen its struggles. President Ben Ali made this mistake in Tunisia; Mubarak keeps making it in Egypt. And by clinging to power in the face of mass opposition, they give the lowest layers of society the time and space to enter the political sphere. The result is that popular revolutions open the doors to great upsurges of working class struggle.

That has been Mubarak's greatest folly. It is why Egyptian capitalists, parts of the Egyptian regime and the U.S. state have concluded that he has to go. But the genie of the Egyptian workers having now been awakened, it will be very hard to put it back in the bottle.

The Birth of Popular Power

Philosopher Peter Hallward is among those few commentators who have grasped the inner workings of the Egyptian Revolution. Writing in the Guardian of London, he observes:
“Every step of the way, the basic fact of the uprising has become more obvious and more explicit: with each new confrontation, the protestors have realised, and demonstrated, that they are more powerful than their oppressors. When they are prepared to act in sufficient numbers with sufficient determination, the people have proved that there’s no stopping them. Again and again, elated protestors have marvelled at the sudden discovery of their own power.”[2]
Participants repeatedly describe how their fear has lifted. “When we stopped being afraid we knew we would win,” Ahmad Mahmoud told a reporter. “What we have achieved,” proclaimed another, “is the revolution in our minds.” The significance of such a revolution in attitudes is inestimable. But such shifts do not happen at the level of consciousness alone; they are inextricably connected to a revolution in the relations of everyday life – by way of the birth of popular power. And these new forms of people's power and radical democracy from below have emerged as steps necessary to preserve the Revolution and keep it moving it forward.

So, when violently attacked, as they were on February 2, 2011, by undercover police and goons of the ruling party wielding guns, knives, Molotov cocktails and more, the insurgents held their ground and fought back, holding Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo. In the process, they extended their grassroots self-organization. As reporters for the Washington Post noted, the rebels of Tahrir Square created popular prisons to hold undercover security forces, and people's clinics to care for the wounded:
“Refusing to end their 10-day old demonstration, protesters set up makeshift hospitals in alleyways off the square to treat their wounded, and fashioned a holding cell in a nearby travel office to detain those they suspected of inciting the violence. Organizers said they had captured more than 350 ‘thugs of the government’ among the pro-government demonstrators, some carrying police identification cards, and turned them over to the Egyptian army.”[3]
In the same spirit, the movement has formed People's Protection forces, staffed by both women and men, to provide safety and security in neighbourhoods and in the mass marches and assemblies. In some towns, like El Arish, the biggest city in the northern Sinai, official police and security forces have melted away only to be replaced by armed Popular Committees, which have maintained the peace.[4]

Developing alongside these forms of popular self-organization are new practices of radical democracy. In Tahrir Square, the nerve center of the Revolution, the crowd engages in direct decision-making, sometimes in its hundreds of thousands. Organized into smaller groups, people discuss and debate, and then send elected delegates to consultations about the movement's demands. As one journalist explains, “delegates from these mini-gatherings then come together to discuss the prevailing mood, before potential demands are read out over the square's makeshift speaker system. The adoption of each proposal is based on the proportion of boos or cheers it receives from the crowd at large.”[5]

Tahrir Square and public spaces in Alexandria, Suez and dozens of smaller cities, are now sites of ongoing festivals of the oppressed. Describing the popular security services and people's “food supply chains,” demonstrator Karim Medhat Ennarah proclaims, “We have already created a liberated republic within the heart of Egypt.”[6]

Enter the Workers

Years of courageous struggle by Egypt's workers were decisive in creating the conditions for the popular uprising. And now, mere weeks into the upsurge, tens of thousands of workers are mobilizing, raising both economic and political demands as part of a rising wave of strikes. The consequences could be momentous.

Social movements generally have been on the move recently in Egypt. The years 2002-03 saw important stirrings of political protest in solidarity with the Palestinian Intifada and in opposition to the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Shortly after this, the Kefaya (Enough) movement organized for democratic reform and the feminist group, We Are Watching You (Shayfenkom) came out in defence of women's rights.

But by 2004 it was strike action, sit-ins and demonstrations by workers that comprised the most determined and persistent oppositional activity – most of it illegal under the emergency edicts and laws that deny workers the right to form independent unions. Over the past six years or so, more than two million workers engaged in thousands of direct actions. Most importantly, they regularly won significant concessions on wages and working conditions. The result was a growing confidence among workers – so much so that genuinely independent unions began to emerge in a society where the official unions are effectively extensions of the state.

In 2006-07 mass working class protest erupted in the Nile Delta, spearheaded by the militant action of 50,000 workers in textiles and the cement and poultry industries. This was followed by strikes of train drivers, journalists, truckers, miners and engineers. Then 2007-08 saw another labour explosion, with riots at the state-owned weaving factory in Al-Mahla Al-Kobra. The youth-based April 6th Movement emerged at this point in support of workers’ strikes. Meanwhile, workers began to address the general interests of all working people, particularly the poorest, by pressing the demand for a substantial increase in the minimum wage.

Now, workers are again throwing their collective power onto the scales of the political struggle in Egypt. And Mubarak and his cronies will live to regret it.

In the course of a few days during the week of February 7, tens of thousands of them stormed into action. Thousands of railworkers took strike action, blockading railway lines in the process. Six thousand workers at the Suez Canal Authority walked off the job, staging sit-ins at Suez and two other cities. In Mahalla, 1,500 workers at Abul Sebae Textiles struck and blockaded the highway. At the Kafr al-Zayyat hospital hundreds of nurses staged a sit-in and were joined by hundreds of other hospital employees.

Across Egypt, thousands of others – bus workers in Cairo, employees at Telecom Egypt, journalists at a number of newspapers, workers at pharmaceutical plants and steel mills – joined the strike wave. They demanded improved wages, the firing of ruthless managers, back pay, better working conditions and independent unions. In many cases they also called for the resignation of President Mubarak. And in some cases, like that of the 2,000 workers at Helwan Silk Factory, they demanded the removal of their company's Board of Directors. Then there were the thousands of faculty members at Cairo University who joined the protests, confronted security forces, and prevented Prime Minister Ahmed Shariq from getting to his government office.[7]

What we are seeing, in other words, is the rising of the Egyptian working class. Having been at the heart of the popular upsurge in the streets, tens of thousands of workers are now taking the revolutionary struggle back to their workplaces, extending and deepening the movement in the process. In so doing, they are proving the continuing relevance of the analysis developed by the great Polish-German socialist, Rosa Luxemburg. In her book, The Mass Strike,
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1906/mass-strike/
based on the experience of mass strikes of 1905 against the Tsarist dictatorship in Russia, Luxemburg argued that truly revolutionary movements develop by way of interacting waves of political and economic struggle, each enriching the other. In a passage that could have been inspired by the upheaval in Egypt, she explains,
“Every new onset and every fresh victory of the political struggle is transformed into a powerful impetus for the economic struggle... After every foaming wave of political action a fructifying deposit remains behind from which a thousand stalks of economic struggle burst forth. And conversely. The workers condition of ceaseless economic struggle with the capitalists keeps their fighting spirit alive in every political interval ...”
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1906/mass-strike/ch04.htm
And so it is in the Egyptian Revolution. Tens of millions of workers – in transportation, healthcare, textiles, education, heavy industry, the service sector – are being awakened and mobilized. They are fusing demands for economic justice to those for democracy, and they are among the hundreds of thousands building popular power and self-organization. Moreover, should the rising of the workers move toward mass strikes that paralyze the economy, the Egyptian Revolution would move to a new and more powerful level.

What the coming weeks will bring is still uncertain. But Mubarak's folly has triggered an upsurge of workers’ struggle whose effects will endure. “The most precious, because lasting, thing in this ebb and flow of the [revolutionary] wave is . . . the intellectual, cultural growth of the working class,” wrote Rosa Luxemburg. ["Development of the Mass Strike Movement in Russia":
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1906/mass-strike/ch03.htm ]

In Tahrir Square and elsewhere thousands of signs depict Mubarak accompanied by the words “Game Over.” For the workers of Egypt it is now, “Game On.” •


David McNally teaches political science at York University, Toronto and is the author of the recently published, Global Slump: The Economics and Politics of Crisis and Resistance (PM Press)
http://www.pmpress.org/content/article.php?story=DavidMcNally#bookinfo
This article first appeared on his blog, http://davidmcnally.org

Endnotes:
1. Michael Bell, “Will Egypt go the way of Tunisia?” Globe and Mail, January 27, 2011:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/opinion/article1884022.ece

2. Peter Hallward, “Egypt's popular revolution will change the world,” Guardian, February 9, 2011. Available at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/feb/09/egypt-north-africa-revolution

3. Leila Fadel, Will Englund and Debbi Wilgoren, “5 shot in 2nd day of bloody clashes; amid outcry Egyptian PM apologizes,” Washington Post, February 3, 2011:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/02/AR2011020202176.html

4. Tobias Buck, “Palestinians hope for change and resumption of border trade,” Financial Times, February 8, 2011.

5. Jack Shenker, “Cairo's biggest protest yet demands Mubarak's immediate departure,” Guardian, February 5, 2011:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/05/egypt-protest-demands-mubarak-departure

6. Quoted in Hallward.

7. My sources on workers’ protests include Aljazeera, Al-Masry Al-Youm, the Center for Trade Union and Workers Services, newsocialist.org, and socialistworker.org. Special thanks to Jack Hicks for documents and reports.

The article was published by "The Bullet", an organ of the Socialist Project from Canada:
http://www.socialistproject.ca/bullet/460.php

~~~~~~~~~

Αλεξάνδρεια: Έκπτωτος ο Βασιλεύς Μουμπάρακ
Ο Λαός Πανηγυρίζει στους Δρόμους !
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/blog-post_12.html

Η Αιγυπτιακή Αντίσταση
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/blog-post_06.html

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thursday, 10 February 2011

Baraka: Münür Rahvancıoğlu Konuşuyor

Baraka: 'Ankara elini yakamızdan çek'
08 Şubat 2011
[for english language text, click here]

Baraka Kültür Merkezi, Kıbrıs’ın kuzeyinde, “halk olma hakkı ihlal edilmiş bir halkın hakları” için neoliberalizme karşı mücadele ediyor. Kıbrıs’taki son mitinge “Ankara elini yakamızdan çek!” pankartıyla katıldı ve mitingin mesajını özetleyen bu pankart faşist saldırı girişimlerinin ve Ankara’nın hışmının hedefine oturdu. Baraka’dan Münür Rahvancıoğlu ile son eylemlerin gerçek dinamiklerini, hedeflerini, öznelerini ve Tayyip Erdoğan’ın sert çıkışının Kıbrıs’taki karşılığını konuştuk

Sendika.Org: Kıbrıslıların derdi ne? Bu halk neden böylesi bir tepkiyle sokağa çıktı?

Münür Rahvancıoğlu: Kıbrıslıların derdi ekonomik temelli. 1986’dan beri devam eden 15-20 yıllık bir sürecin sonucu. Özal’dan beri ülke ekonomisine Ankara yapımı neoliberal ekonomik paketler yön veriyor. Bugün bu politikalara karşı tepkiler artık siyasal bir söyleme dönüştü. Bu nedenle Ankara bu kadar öne çıktı. Çünkü, neoliberal politikaların kaynağında Türkiye hükümetleri var.

15-20 yıllık bir süreç ama tepki şimdi patlak verdi. Şu an gündemde neler var?

Son bir yılda olanları anlatayım. Kıbrıs THY özelleşti. Çalışanları sokakta kaldı. Sırada ADSL hizmetleri vs. Dâhili telefon özelleştirmesi var. Elektrik üretim, iletim, faturalandırmasıyla tamamen özelleştirilecek. Kooperatif özelleştirilecek. Kooperatif bankasıyla, tohumculuk, tahıl, süt, hellim işletmeleriyle Kıbrıslı Türklere ait ciddi bir değerdir. Kıbrıslı Türklerin üretimde tek şansıdır. Bu özelleştirmeler Kıbrıs’ın bitmesi anlamına gelir.

Çalışan haklarında da gerilemeler var. Ek ödemeler, desteklemeler kaldırıldığı gibi maaşlarda da kesintilere gidiliyor. Bu arada Tayyip Erdoğan 10 bin lira maaş aldığımızdan bahsediyor ama Kıbrıs’ta en yüksek maaş bile 10 bin lira değil. En yüksek maaş cumhurbaşkanınındır o da 8 bin lira alır. Asgari ücret ise bin 300 liradır ve şu anda yeni işe başlayanlar için maaşların artık asgari ücretten verilmesi planlanıyor.

Tamam, Erdoğan doğru söylememiş ama bu da yüksek bir maaş değil mi? Türkiye’ye kıyasla bin 300 lira asgari ücret iyi bir rakam.

Ama Kıbrıs ve Türkiye’de fiyatlar çok farklı. Benzin ve mazot dışında her şey Türkiye’dekinin birkaç katı fiyatınadır. Ortalama iki katı diyelim. Benzin ve mazotun ucuza olması da aslında Türkiye’deki gibi bir avantaj sunmuyor. Çünkü burada hiçbir toplu taşıma hizmeti yok. Taksi bile yok. Kıbrıs’ta bir yerden bir yere gitmek için özel arabanız olmalı.

Yani ne Erdoğan’ın dediği kadar yüksek bir maaş var ne de elimize geçen para Türkiye’deki kıymetinde. Şimdi hem ek ödemeler kaldırılıp hem de kesintilere gidilince mevcut durum daha da kötüleşiyor ve halk da buna karşı çıkıyor.

“Göç Yasası” diye bir yasa var. Buna karşı Kıbrıs tarihinde pek çok ilkin yaşandığı mücadeleler verildi. Polis ilk kez bu gösterilerde gaz bombası kullandı. Ne yapıyor bu yasa. Kamuya yeni girenlerin maaşı yarı yarıya düşürülüyor, asgari ücret seviyesine geliyor.

Sendikal haklarda da gerileme var. Toplu sözleşme hakkı “Göç Yasası” ile imkansız hale getiriliyor. Yasada çalışana çıplak ücret dışında bir şey verilmeyeceği yazılı. Toplu sözleşmede ek haklar, desteklemeler isteyemeyecekseniz ne yapacaksınız. Toplu sözleşme sadece kuru ücret pazarlığına indirgeniyor.

Peki, yasanın adı neden göç?

Sendikalar, bu yasanın uygulanması halinde Kıbrıslıların yaşamasının artık imkansız hale geleceğini, göç etmek zorunda kalacağını söylüyor. O nedenle resmi adı başka olsa da “Göç Yasası” diye anılıyor.

Bu düzenlemeler şimdiki Ulusal Birlik Partisi (UBP) hükümeti dönemine mi ait? Öncesi yok mu?

Cumhuriyetçi Türk Partisi (CTP) döneminde paket hazırlandı. Daha doğrusu AKP hazırladı ve CTP’ye verdi. CTP’liler diyor ki, “Biz bu yasayı geçirmek istemedik, o nedenle de erken seçime gittik.” Ama seçime giderken hiç böyle bir şeyden söz etmediler. “Ekonomik kriz var, önemli tedbirler almamız gerekiyor,” dediler.

Bizce CTP erken seçime, bu yasaları geçirmeden önce onay almak için gitti. Seçilemeyince de söylem değiştirdi.

Paketler o kadar yeni değil ama değil mi? 15-20 yıllık bir süreçten söz ediyorsunuz?

1986’dan beri bu paketler var. O zaman bir sanayi vardı, alüminyum işletmeleri, plastik boru fabrikaları, iğne fabrikaları. Turgut Özal geldiğinde Kıbrıslılar “Biz üretmek istiyoruz” dediler. Özal da dedi ki, “Siz üretmeyin. Zaten İstanbul’un bir mahallesi kadarsınız. Biz sizin paranızı göndeririz.” O zamandan bu zamana uzanan bir süreç.

Ankara bu sorunun kaynağı… Ankara’yı hedef alan sloganların nedeni de bu.

Bu sloganlarla bir miting örgütlendi ve tartışmalar da buradan çıktı. Kim örgütledi bu mitingi, gerçekte söylenen neydi?

Mitingi Sendikal Platform örgütledi. Kıbrıslılar bu mitingde asıl olarak “Kendimizi kendi irademizle yönetmek istiyoruz” dedi. Eylemde en kalabalık grubu oluşturan Kıbrıs Türk Öğretmenler Sendikası (KTÖS) bir pankart açtı: “Ankara, ne paranı, ne memurunu, ne paketlerini istemiyoruz!”

KTÖS, Kıbrıs’taki öğretmenlerin yüzde 99’unun örgütlendiği bağımsız bir sendika. Sendikal Platform’daki diğer sendikalar arasında CTP ile ilişki içinde olanlar var. Burada KTÖS ve CTP arasında bir fark var. KTÖS her zaman bu pankartta ifade ettiklerini savundu ve bu anlamda bir tutarlılık, sözüne güvenilirlik var. CTP ise muhalefete düştüğü için iktidara karşı burada. Ancak gelenlerin önemli bir bölümü KTÖS’e güvendiği için geldi.

Katılanların bir kısmı esas olarak UBP hükümetine karşı, bir kısmı sadece ekonomik taleplerle, eylemlerde ağırlık sahibi olan KTÖS’ün de dahil olduğu kesimse sorunun yapısal olduğuna işaret eden siyasal taleplerle oradaydı.

Tayyip Erdoğan’ın çıkışı hakkında ne düşünüyorsunuz?

Erdoğan, Kıbrıs’a değil kendi iç kamuoyuna oynuyor. Bu çıkışları Kıbrıslı Türklerle Türkiye’nin arasını bozar. Ankara ile Kıbrıs arasında bir uzaklaşma bizim açımızdan sorun değil. Ancak bu sözleriyle, Türkiye ve Kıbrıs halklarının arasını bozmak istiyor ki biz buna karşıyız.

Kıbrıs’ta Türkiye’den göç etmiş Kıbrıslıların çoğunluğu da şu anda bizim tarafımızda.

Mitingdeki sloganlar Ankara’ya hitap ediyordu. Egemenler “Has.tir” yazılı pankartı mitingin zayıf karnı olarak gördüler. Bu pankart üzerinden bir tepki örgütlemeye çalıştılar. Kıbrıs’ta da birçok kişi bu pankarta içeriğinden dolayı değil ama üslubundan dolayı sempati ile bakmıyordu. Erdoğan’ın açıklamalarından sonraysa durum değişti. Ciddi bir kitle “o pankart az bile” demeye başladı. Erdoğan deseydi ki, “Tamam anlıyorum bir tepkiniz var ama o pankarttaki üslup yakışıksız oldu”, o zaman durum farklı olurdu. Ama o doğrudan Ankara adına Kıbrıslıları hedef alınca eylemin mesajının da daha iyi anlaşılmasını sağladı.

Erdoğan’ın dile getirdiği iddialar var. Güney yönetimiyle işbirliği içinde olduğunuz vs. gibi…

Eylemlerin güneyle hiçbir ilgisi yok. Maddi destek, talimat vs. gibi hiçbir şey yok. Biz güneydeki yoldaşlarımıza dedik ki, “Siz de Avrupa Birliği’nin (AB) neoliberal politikalarına muhalefet edin, Türkiye’ye değil. Bizi böyle desteklemiş olursunuz.”

Erdoğan şimdi UBP’den şikâyet ediyor, pankartları engellemedi diye. Ama biz Türkiye’den farklıyız. Gösteri ve ifade özgürlüğüne ilişkin haklar çok geniş. Yasal mevzuat farklı. Bir eylem yaparsanız, polisin işi o eylem için yolu açmaktır. Pankartta ne yazdığına da karışamaz.

Erdoğan’ın üslubu bizi çok rahatsız ediyor. Kıbrıs halkının Ankara’ya karşı tepkisini besliyor. Ama şu bilinsin. Bizim derdimiz Türkiye halklarıyla değil. Dünyanın bütün halklarının başımızın üstünde yeri var. Bizim derdimiz kendi halkını da ezen hükümetlerle.

Erdoğan aynı zamanda bir itirafta da bulundu. “Yunanistan Kıbrıs’ta ne için varsa biz de onun için oradayız” dedi. Yunanistan Kıbrıs’ta ABD için, NATO için üsler kurulsun, Ortadoğu’da emperyalizmin denetim olanakları artsın diye var. Tabii ki bal tutan parmağını yalıyor ve Türkiye ile Yunanistan’ın Kıbrıs’ta kendi çıkarları da var ama asıl olarak emperyalizme hizmet için buradalar. Erdoğan bunu itiraf etmiş oldu.

Bir de size (Baraka Kültür Merkezi) dönük faşist, provokatif bir eylem gerçekleşti. Kontrgerilla boş durmuyor herhalde. Neler yaşandı?

Bize dönük saldırı mitingden 3 gün sonra gerçekleşti. Faşistler “Ankara elini yakamızdan çek!” pankartını bahane ederek küfürlü bir eylem yaptılar. (Genç Mücahitler Derneği isminde bir derneğin birkaç üyesi Baraka'yı protesto etmek amacıyla 31 Ocak 2011 tarihinde bir "ziyaret" düzenledi. "Or.... Çocukları" gibi "yaratıcı" bir pankart açan bu şahıslar, basın açıklaması yaptı. "Kıbrıs Türktür Türk kalacak!" diye slogan attıktan sonra, tekbir getirerek Baraka'dan ayrıldılar.) Bizim tepki göstermemizi sağlamak ve tepkimizle birlikte gerginlik yaratıp eylemleri gölgelemek istediler. Ama istedikleri gibi olmadı. O konu kapandı. Esas sorun ortada artık.

*Bu söyleşi, 8 Şubat günü telefon yoluyla gerçekleştirilmiştir.


Yayınlandı:
http://www.sendika.org/yazi.php?yazi_no=35440

Sendika.Org Hakkında:
http://www.sendika.org/yazi.php?tur=makale&yazi_no=3203

http://www.baraka.cc

Münür Rahvancıoğlu ve Baraka:
http://www.kibrispostasi.com/index.php/cat/35/news/35479/PageName/KIBRIS_HABERLERI

* * *

English language

A workable machine translation of Munur's interview is here:
http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sendika.org%2Fyazi.php%3Fyazi_no%3D35440&sl=tr&tl=en&hl=&ie=UTF-8


About Sendika.org:
http://www.sendika.org/english/yazi.php?yazi_no=4578

More about Münür Rahvancıoğlu and Baraka:
http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=tr&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.kibrispostasi.com%2Findex.php%2Fcat%2F35%2Fnews%2F35479%2FPageName%2FKIBRIS_HABERLERI


http://www.baraka.cc
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

A General Strike and Gathering on Friday the 28th of January

By Şener Elcil, KTOS, Secretary General

{Please see Solidarity Statements from the Cyprus IndyMedia Collective, the Baraka radical cultural organization, and YKP (New Cyprus Party) below.}

The Union Platform
Introduction and
The Principles of the Union Platform
By Şener Elcil, KTOS, Secretary General

The political pressure on the north of Cyprus is increasing day by day. It is a well known reality that the north part of our country is administered by Turkey and the authorities here are the puppets of Turkey.

Against the Genève conventions in 1949, Turkey is transferring its population to the north part of our island and has been distributing citizenship within the separatist state that it made to be established in 1983. On one hand, global economic crisis is given as an excuse in order to decrease the wages and salaries with the ratio of %40, and the laborers are forced to pay for this crisis; on the other hand, the public spheres of the Turkish Cypriots are given to the capitals which are close to the Turkish Republic.

Turkey, which is on our island within the framework of a guarantor, was to state an adjustment and protect the territorial integrity of the Republic of Cyprus constitutional charter; transferred population to our island and started the colonization process by taking over all public spheres of the Turkish Cypriots. With the transferred population, Turkey eliminated the political will of the Turkish Cypriots and is willing to have a colony in 21st century. The ones who are affected the most because of this tragedy, which the whole world witness is the Turkish Cypriots. Turkish Cypriot community which suffered from and struggled against any pressure is driven to destruction with the imposed political practices.

Within this period, in which the matter turns out to be as “communal destruction”, our organizations are determined to continue their struggle with the strikes and actions in the schools, public institutions and harbors. It clearly shows that, the New Ottoman concept of Turkey’s expansionism policy is still continuing due to its international economic and political benefits, and since this issue is not being questioned, it seems that the benefits are preferable than the human rights. This process which Turkish Cypriots are used as hostages, and which Turkey seems to have a solution but actually does the opposite for non-solution- cannot be accepted.

Trade unions, political parties and NGO’s have prepared a declaration in order to say “STOP” to this process by organizing a general strike and meeting on Friday the 28th of January 2011.

We also wish to have the international solidarity and support for this struggle.

Best Regards,

Şener Elcil KTOS, Secretary General 24.1.2011

The Principles of the Union Platform

1. The Union Platform is a union, founded in order to protect and develop democratic, social and employee personal rights of the labour organizations. To this path, it aims “self-government of the community” by eliminating the problem of representation of the political will. The platform does not aim to be government.

2. The struggle of the Union Platform does not have any room for any organizations or political parties which trigger or support the practices that aim social catastrophe and vanishing. Ex: Those who support “Immigration Law”.

3. The Union Platform gives full support to the immediate solution of the Cyprus Problem within the parameters of the UN resolutions, and Turkish Cypriots’ position in the international arena.

4. Turkish Cypriots will of self-government should be respected.

5. The relationship between Turkey and Turkish Cypriots should be grounded on mutual respect and equality of political will. A relation which is oriented as “giving order-taking order” should be ended.

6. Turkish Cypriots have the potential, skills and knowledge for governing their own institutions. Relying on this fact, the administration of the Central Bank, Civil Defence Organization and Security Force Command should be handed over to the Turkish Cypriots; the police and fire departments should be engaged in civil administration.

7. The UBP (National Unity Party) is obeying all the impositions and pressure of the AKP Government in Turkey, just for the sake of staying in the government. Moreover, UBP is making MP transfers immorally and it has handed over the political will of the Turkish Cypriots to the AKP in Turkey. With its practices, UBP has been driving the Turkish Cypriot community to destruction and it is behaving as an enemy of the community by its wrong collaboration.

8. The Union Platform, - in the struggle of taking back the political will which is handed over to the Turkish Republic authorities; is expecting the parties in the government to support all actions unless the government take steps forward to be more effective. The actions may also include drawing back from the parliament.

9. The authorities of the Turkish Republic should give up interfering with our internal affairs. They should give an end to the practice of “shadow cabinet” under the name of advisors. The interference of the Turkish Republic Aid Commission to the decisions of the political will should be ended. The practices of financial aid should be introduced as projects, practiced through the Turkish Cypriot authorities and the biddings should be in Cyprus.

10. Within the frame of the protocols with the Turkish Republic, politically- motivated economic packet which is imposed to the Turkish Cypriots and is absolutely inappropriate in terms of economic, social and cultural structure of the Turkish Cypriots should be stopped immediately. The regulations should be eliminated.

11. Under the name of “privatization”, the public spheres of the Turkish Cypriots have been taken away from them. These practices should be ended immediately. The authoritative decisions about the functioning and future of these constitutions belong to Turkish Cypriots.

12. False citizenship distributions in our country which distracts the social, economic and cultural structure and hinder the political will of the Turkish Cypriots should be eliminated. There should be a population census under the inspection of international observers and the illicit population should be sent away. Entering the country with Identity Cards should be eliminated and the entries to the country should be under control.

13. The working conditions of the private sector labourers who work in inhumane conditions should be restored. The ILO Conventions should be practiced in our country in terms of public and private sectors.


From the Cyprus IndyMedia Collective

We extend our warmest salutations in solidarity with the Turkish Cypriot trade unions, civic and political organizations who are calling for this political General Strike. It goes far beyond "economist" demands and it includes a philosophy and ideology that can build more trust between our two communities, increase resistance to the occupation army, and eventually lay the foundations for BiCommunal Peace and Justice in our country.

We hope that all the preparations and organizing go well, and the outcome of the General Strike will improve the cohesion, unity and collective ability of the Turkish Cypriot community toward cultural autonomy and emancipation.

One Big Union!
Cyprus IndyMedia Collective

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From Baraka
28 OCAK’TA BARAKA KORTEJİNDE BULUŞALIM
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/01/28-ocakta-baraka-kortejinde-bulusalim.html

From YKP
28 OCAK’TA, SOKAKTAYIZ! DİRENECEĞİZ!
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2011/01/28-ocakta-sokaktayiz-direnecegiz.html

Previous:

A General Strike in North Cyprus?
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2010/07/general-strike-in-north-cyprus.html

Union Leaders Arrested in the North
http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2010/08/union-leaders-arrested-in-north.html

ΜΗΝΥΜΑ ΑΛΛΗΛΕΓΓΥΗΣ ΣΤΟΝ ΑΓΩΝΑ ΤΩΝ Τ/Κ φοιτητών, εκπαιδευτικών και συνδικαλιστών της KTOS και KTOEOS http://cyprusindymedia.blogspot.com/2010/04/ktos-ktoeos.html

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28 OCAK’TA, SOKAKTAYIZ! DİRENECEĞİZ!





Kıbrıs kuzeyinde birden fazla krizi uzun zamandır bir arada yaşamaktayız ve gün geçtikçe tümü de birbirini tetikleyerek daha da büyümekteler…

Çarpık yapılaşma, daha fazla maddi çıkar ve benzeri nedenlerle özellikle inşaat sektörünün yarattığı tahribat bugün Kıbrıs’ın kuzeyini ciddi bir ekolojik krizin içine sokmuştur. Çarpık yapılaşma yanında, kitle turizm yapma dayatması, gerekli gereksiz hiçbir ÇED raporu hazırlanmaksızın yapılan yollar ve hızla büyüyen, büyütülen nüfusun yol açtığı sorunlar basit bir yağmur yağmasını bile artık çevre felaketine dönüştürebilmekte… Bu ekolojik kriz daha büyük doğa felaketlerinin kapısını çalmaktadır…

Militarizmin, onun dayattı militarist uygulamaların sorun yarattığı bilinen bir gerçekken bugün bu uygulamaların çoğu kangrenleşmiş ve çeşitli daha büyük sorunlara neden olmaktadır. Başta zorunlu askerlik sorunu birçok genç için artık her zamankinden daha büyük sorundur… Geçmişte de olduğu gibi beyin göçünü tetikleyen en önemli faktördür. Bunun karşısında vicdani reddin tanınmaması gibi hak ve özgürlük ihlalleri de gittikçe daha büyük mağduriyetler yaratmaktadır. Gerek şehrin planlanması gerekse kimi verimli alanların kullanılamamasının en büyük sebebi olarak özellikle yerleşim yerlerindeki askeri birliklerdir… Kıbrıs sorununda atılabilecek kimi güven artırıcı önlemlerin önündeki en büyü engel yine militarist mentalitedir… Militarizm yarattığı bu sorunlar, diğer sosyo-ekonomik sorunlarla birleşerek krizlerden kriz beğen koşulları yaratmaktadır.

Toplumsal cinsiyet eşitliği mücadelesinde bir yerlere gelememiş olmak şimdi içinden geçmekte olduğumuz krizin de faturasının öncelikle kadınlara çıkması ama buna direnecek ya da bunu deşifre edecek bir yapılanmadan uzak olunması nedeniyle de “görünemeyen kriz” olarak önümüzde durmaktadır. Bir önceki süreçte yeni sosyal güven(siz)lik yasasında kadınların yıpranma haklarının budanmış olması, şimdi de emeklilik yaşlarında yapılmaya çalışacak olan değişiklerde kadının mağduriyeti daha fazla artacak… Genel nüfus içinde yüzde elliye varan orana sahip kadınların gerek temsiliyet alanında gerekse sosyo-ekonomik alanda yaşadığı mağduriyetler daha derin krizleri tetiklemeye devam ediyor…

Tüm bunların yanında sosyo-ekonomik krizlerimiz de derinleşerek sürmektedir. 74 sonrası yaratılan ganimet düzeni özellikle son 20 yıldır çok ciddi krizdedir. Her defasında suni önlemlerle biraz daha itelenerek statüko ayakta kalmakta ama kısa süreli suni önlemlerin sonuna gelince bir öncekinden daha büyük bir krizle karşı karşı kaldığımızı hemen anlamaktayız… 98’de deniz bittiğinde, gelen pakete var gücümüzle karşı çıkarken, o gün koltukta oturanlar da oturdukları yerin sıcaklığından var güçleri ile statükoyu savunmak istediler… Krizin yarattığı tepkiler 2004 yılına kadar bizi getirdi ve birçok kişinin kabul ettiği “yeni” bir süreci tetikledi. Ancak bu statüko değişikliği değildi, mevcut sisteme yeni suni bir kalp masajıydı. Bu sürecin 3-5 yıl sürdüğü ve yeni sıcak koltuklar yarattığı için, kriz ortamı yeninden ortaya çıktığında yine koltuklarda oturanlar oranın sıcaklığı ile statükoyu savunur pozisyona girdiler, bu bazı değişiklikleri önleyemedi ama bu değişiklik, sürecin “yenilenmesini” sağlayamadı…

Girdiğimiz ekonomik krizin çift ayağı vardır, biri dünya ekonomik krizi, diğeri TC’nin dayattığı yaptırımlar…

Geçen dönemde kimi yeni sol yazarlar bizim kapalı bir ekonomi olduğumuzu ve tanınmamış bir devlet olduğumuzu söyleyip, krizden etkilenmeyeceğimizi iddia etmişti ama tıpkı Erdoğan’ın ‘kriz bizi teğet geçti’ iddiasının yanlışlığı gibi kriz Kıbrıs’ı da kriz teğet geçmedi. Bunun sonuçlarını yaşamaktayız...

Bunun yanında 200 bin kişiyi kapsayan bir bütçe planlaması ile 500 bin kişin kamusal sorunlarını çözmeye çalışıyoruz. Birçok kamusal hizmet bu nedenlerle çökmüştür. Bu fırsat bilen bazı kesimler hizmetlerin özelleştirilerek yağmalanması için akbabalar gibi tepemizde dolanmaktadır. Kamunun reform istediği gerçeği dururken eski yapı ile daha da katmerleşen sorunları çözmeye çalışmanın başarısız olacağını herkes biliyor ama kamu kaynaklarının yağmalanması, rant elde edilmesi seçeneği dururken gerekli reformu yapmayı da kimse istemiyor…

Sosyo-ekonomik alanda yaşanan krizlerden çıkış yolu olarak sunulan daha fazla neo-liberal politika ve daha fazla Türkiyelileştirme dayatması gelinen aşamada birçok çalışanı sokağa itmiştir.

Birçok kesim son krizin sorumlusunu doğru bir şekilde Ankara’nın dayattığı ekonomik paketler olarak görmektedir…

Ancak buna rağmen krizin statükonun kendisinden kaynaklandığı, yapısal bir kriz ile karşı karşı olduğumuzu bazı çevreler ısrarla saklamaya ve bugünkü hükümeti devirerek sorunu çözebileceğimiz izlenimi yaratmaya çalışmaktadır…

YKP, 74’te yağmanın ve ganimetin paylaşılması üzerine kurulan bu düzenin artık sürdürülemez olduğunun altını çizer. Bu nedenle mücadele koltuk kavgası değil, statükonun ortadan kaldırılması için olmalıdır. Bunun da en önemli ayağı Kıbrıs sorununun çözümü için mücadeledir…

Ankara’nın dayattığı paketlere, onun memurlarının yönetmesine ve gönderdiği paralara ihtiyacımız yoktur, Kıbrıslıların kendi kendilerini yönetecek güçleri vardır. Bu nedenle YKP “talimatla yönetilmeye hayır, bu memleket bizim, biz yöneteceğiz” diyen bir yerden bu mücadelenin yükseltilmesi gerektiğinin altını çizer…

Mücadelenin sokakta kazanılacağını vurgulayan YKP’nin yeri elbette 28 Ocak’ta sokakta olacakların yanıdır…

Bu nedenle YKP tüm üye, sempatizan ve parti dostlarını 28 Ocak, Cuma saat 10’da YKP Genel Merkezi önünde buluşmaya ve sendikaların kortejine katılmak üzerine eski Peyak önüne yürümeye davet eder…

YKP, tüm Kıbrıslıları geleceklerine, ülkelerine sahip çıkmak için saat 11:30’da İnönü Meydanında olmaya çağırır…

Yeni Kıbrıs Partisi
Basın Bürosu

26 Ocak 2011

http://www.ykp.org.cy