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TUC Gaza Appeal

In contrast to union activists with a perculiar obsession, the TUC is running a humanitarian campaign to help civilians in Gaza who are suffering in the current conflict between Israel and Hamas. Regardless of your views of the conflict, in particular the rights and wrongs of the various sides, it is a fact that Palestinian civilians are suffering. If you wish to donate, please click here.

We may not all be Hamas now, but we are all human.

All proceeds will be forwarded through the Palestine General Federation of Trade Unions (PGFTU) and the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) to support emergency humanitarian relief operations carried out by them in Gaza. All trade union relief operations are co-ordinated through Red Crescent in Jordan, Egypt and Gaza and focused on the identified needs of the people affected by the events. The first ITF-PGFTU humanitarian flight is due to leave for Gaza on 08 Jan 2009. The TUC supports an immediate ceasefire by both sides, and the pursuit of a political solution to the problems of the Middle East based on two states.

With thanks to DSTFW.


Picture of a campaign

The image that came almost to define Obama’s campaign has found a home. The red, white and blue portrait of US President-elect Barack Obama, created by Los Angeles-based street artist Shepard Fairey, will become part of the permanent collection at the US National Portrait Gallery.

obama

The BBC reports that curators at the Smithsonian Institution museum plan to hang it by Inauguration Day on January 20.

“What I think is so fascinating is the ubiquitous nature,” said Carolyn Carr, deputy director of the Portrait Gallery. “When people think of a portrait of Obama, they think of this image.”

Now Mr President elect tell us what you think about Gaza.


Gaza: Victories, Defeats and Continuing Conflict

This is a guest post by Eamonn McDonagh of Z Word

We’ve already dealt with the ludicrous notion that Israel has acted disproportionately on numerous occasions. Let us now turn our attention to another argument that has been repeatedly used to criticize Israel in recent days and of which there’s a perfect example in this piece by Rami G. Khouri in El País.

Khouri says that Israeli politicians fail to realize that,

.. the more force and brutality that Israel uses against the Arabs the stronger their reaction will be, in the form of more effective resistance movements with more support from the population.

Think about that idea for a moment. The more damage and loss Israel causes to Hamas, for example, the stronger it becomes. If we follow this logic all the way home it would appear to mean that were Israel able to kill every last member of Hamas and destroy all its weapons, down to the last AK 47, then this would represent a defeat for Israel and victory for Hamas. Interesting notion, no?

Khouri would retort that what he means is that, were Israel able to destroy Hamas, it would indeed be a defeat for the Israelis; all it would be doing would be sowing the seeds for more efficient and ruthless resistance with greater popular support. But this doesn’t make any sense either. On what wells of ruthlessness, efficiency and support would a likely successor organization to Hamas be able to draw upon that Hamas itself has not been able to make use of?

There is talk here and there of a defeat for Hamas leading to favorable conditions for the growth of some sort of Palestinian version of Al Qaeda. I see no reason to think that this would occur, but if it did, what would there be to fear from it, that does not already have to be feared from Hamas?

Inflicting a smashing military defeat on insurgent organizations, provided that it is accompanied by a viable - not necessarily just or democratic - political strategy, tends to mean the end of serious resistance. Just look at Chechnya, Western Sahara and Tíbet. Not much evidence of renewed, more effective resistance in any of those places.

Inflicting a defeat on Hamas of sufficient proportions to make Gaza as docile as Chechnya is well within Israel’s military capabilities. It’s not going to happen though. The Israeli public doesn’t have the stomach for either the casualities on its own side or the mass slaughter of Palestinians that would be necessary to achieve it. Oh, and if you think that mass slaughter is exactly what Israel has been inflicting on Gaza in recent days, then you haven’t been paying much attention to world history over recent decades.

Hamas exudes the will to destroy Israel and all who live in it from every last pore of its collective body. Israel has the means to crush Hamas but only the will to deliver hard jabs and the occasional uppercut. There’s no chance of a knee in the groin followed by a few hard kicks to the head. Regardless of the forthcoming ceasefire, the conflict is thus certain to go on. This is to be both deplored and welcomed.


From the UCU Activist List

On the UCU Activists List, 2009 began with a polite request:

Can I make a personal plea, notwithstanding what is going on in the world, that 2009 sees this list more focussed on supporting activists in their activities representing members? We have challenging economic circumstances inside and outside of HE/FE. In HE we have just had the RAE results, which may just be the excuse some institutions have been waiting for to close departments and we also need to sort out pay negotiation and pay claims.

Some chance!

Up pipes Keith Hammond, a professional trot from Glasgow who “tutors in European philosophy and the postcolonialist writings of Edward Said in adult education”

Thanks Matt,

Can I ask how members of the list are seeing the horrendous work of Israel right now?  How does this fit with the debate on the list about Zionism?  Can the boycott work not now go much further?  I think real ‘events on the ground’ have made the case clear enough …

Where are all these right thinking Israeli academics?  I know … they are in the army as reservists doing God knows what because there are no international observers or members of the free international press in Gaza to watch what they are doing …

If ever there were a case for stepping up our boycott campaign it is now.  Various trade union groups are now looking at how they can put some muscle behind the campaign …  Surely we should be in there arguing with the other unions for a broadening of boycott action …

There is no holding back Israel.  It will only be in a complete rejection of their whole Zionist state in a boycott - that is argued right across the trade union movement - that there will be real peace.

All the best,

Keith

… followed by a postalanche of similar I/P emails from Mike Cushman of the LSE, Sue Blackwell of Brum, Shirley Franklin the Vice-Chair of London Region UCU, Terry Brotherstone the UCU Scotland President, Ruth Aylett of Heriot-Watt University, Gavin Reid of Leeds, and of course our old friend Haim Bresheeth, Professor of Watching TV at the University of 6th Form College.


In Senegal

This is what happened:

Nine gay men in Senegal have been sent to jail for “indecent conduct and unnatural acts”.

Homosexual acts are illegal in Senegal but lawyers for the men said the sentence was the harshest ever handed down to gay men in the country.

The judge added three years to the maximum five-year sentence after ruling that the men were also members of a criminal organisation.

Most of them belonged to an association set up to fight HIV and Aids.

“This is the first time that the Senegalese legal system has handed down such a harsh sentence against gays,” said Issa Diop, one of the men’s four defence lawyers.

The head of a gay rights organisation in Senegal told AFP news agency that the situation for gay people in the country was getting worse.

“Many gays are already fleeing to neighbouring countries because of our living conditions,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Senegal is a predominantly Muslim country and gay men and women remain socially marginalised.


At the Israeli Embassy Last Night…

The pro-Hamas demonstrators were opposed last night at the Israeli Embassy.

gaza0796

gaza810

Photos (c) Adrian Korsner, Sound Images Photography

The pro-Hamas demonstrators threw eggs. The police found some of those demonstrators had brought knives and bricks. High Street Kensington Tube was closed, as a result of the disorder.

This is what the Trotskyite-Hamas alliance is planning for future demonstrations:

Think of 100,000 descending on one building. If they decide to go inside the police will need extra forces. There are only, roughly 30,000 officers in London.

That’s why they’re panicking. Good.

you only need to get within throwing distance

It is vital that Hamas keeps up the fight until the Israelis are forced to end the action. On no account must they accept a ceasefire on Israel’s terms.

Just got this:

Can everyone who is coming to the protest in London on 10th Jan please bring balloons filled with RED paint/dye/powder so we can paint the israeli embassy in red. This is just another stunt like the shoes that were thrown last saturday, we will fly red balloons to outline the bloodshed.

gaza11

Some comments:

Keep rioting!!!
Best pics yet!
insurrection now
ah ah ah …u make laught ….. to hacked palistian people this is my ansewr to you ……GO FUK YOURSELF COP LOVER ……………..you are the only asshole …..or u are a cop or you are cop lover so once more GO FUK YOURSELF …………spark in athens , fire in paris insurrection is coming ………. and we are getting prepared ……..see you in the barricades
anon

so george galloway fucks off again! great example of the class warrior georgie boy, now do us all a favour and fuck off up yer own arse

tosy


We cannot afford more sweeping victories or more crushing defeats

Read John Strawson:

For over six decades the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has intensified despite massive Israeli military victories and catastrophic Palestinian and Arab defeats.   It appears that no victory however sweeping or any defeat however drastic can resolve the bring a solution.   Eric Lee is too quick to use national essentialism to attack Freedland.   All Freedland is doing is pointing out the reality:  Israelis and Palestinians have to live with each other.

The politics of both societies, Hamas and the Israeli National bloc, cannot be crushed or wished away.  They are factors that have to be dealt with.   We will have to engage with each however distasteful this might be.


Iran Day of Action

In the last week of December in Iran over 40 politically active students were called to the disciplinary committee of various different universities across Iran.

Most of these students were active on the student day (16 Azar) this year and while all these students and their families have been harassed already.

4 students were arrested on 3rd of January 2008 and there are now fears that the rest of these students will be expelled and even arrested.

What more there have also been arrests of trade union leaders and workers activists including Ebrahim Madadi (Bus and transport), Mohsen Hakimi, Bidjan Amiri (car industry).

This is not the first time the Islamic Republic has taken these reactionary steps to break the student movement but also to make a lesson for others to join in. Other fear provoking actions have included at least 3 stonings in the last year.

Come and show your solidarity and demonstrate against the Iranian regime.

Date: 17 January 2009
Time: 14:00 - 16:00
Location: Piccadilly Circus

http://irandayofaction.blogspot.com/


A Tale of Two Letters

Readers may or may not know that the official organ of the Communist Party of Britain, the Morning Star, has recently become free to view on the internet.

While reading the letters page earlier this morning I came across evidence for the view that while an uncomfortable number of leftists currently view Islamism and its practitioners through rose-tinted sunglasses, the malaise is not neccessarily widespread and terminal.

Exhibit A is a depressing letter from Keith Flett of Tottenham - prolific correpondent to the press, proud beard-wearer and long-time SWP member.

Here’s what he says about recent events in Gaza:

ISRAEL, a nuclear armed power, reacts to alleged rocket attacks from inside Gaza by air strikes that kill and injure hundreds.

The action is disproportionate and almost certainly illegal under international law. Normally, Western powers faced with such a situation would cut off diplomatic ties and threaten to send troops.

In fact all that has happened is that Israel has been asked to be a bit more careful in future. If anyone is looking for the root cause of continuing terrorism originating in the Middle East, here would be a good place to start.

KEITH FLETT
London N17

Writing to a newspaper to condemn Israel’s recent air-strikes on Gaza is a perfectly proper thing to do - something not normally deserving of comment; it would also be wrong to take umbrage at the mistaken confidence with which Flett delivers his rather pat legal view -  a wry smile is the correct response to such an amateur ‘analysis’. What should, however, be objected to is the fact that someone who describes himself as a historian decided to refer to ‘alleged rocket attacks from inside Gaza’. Wouldn’t it be more honest to drop the word ‘alleged’? After all, no-one in the world, not even Hamas are denying the fact of the rocket attacks.

Left-wingers don’t do their credibility any good whatsoever by trying to pretend Hamas rocket attacks aren’t real - as if they’re merely a convenient but mythical pretext for inexplicable Israeli violence or a  figment of  a hysterical collective imagination. Writing in such weaselly terms merely identifies the signatory as a person who has no compunction about arguing publicly in bad faith if it suits their current political line: in short it’s a handy way to advertise long-term membership of a political party, the SWP, in which mendacity is not only the unchallenged norm, but a way of thinking that has become internalised among its adherents to the extent that they don’t realise they’re doing it.

It is all rather depressing, but a second letter made me think there was still some hope for the survival of a Left without starry-eyed illusions in the ultimate aim of Islamists. It was a report on recent attacks on democratic rights in the world’s first Islamic Republic.

Short extracts below:

The new year in Iran has started where 2008 left off for Nobel Peace prize laureate and human rights lawyer Shirin Ebadi. Five government agents posing as tax officials raided her offices this week.

This follows last week’s raid upon the offices of the Centre for the Defence of Human Rights, when a gathering to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was disrupted and the offices were closed down.

Ebadi’s harassment is part of an ongoing campaign to discredit her and undermine the campaigns for peace and human rights in Iran with which she is associated.

In recent days, groups of pro-regime zealots have gathered in front of Ebadi’s house, writing slogans against her on the walls accusing her of being a US agent.

The letter was sent from Jamshid Ahmadi, Assistant General Secretary of the Committee for the Defence of the Iranian People’s Rights, and someone more than familiar with the fate of Iranian leftists in his homeland:

Here’s a recap for those who need reminding of what happened to the once powerful Tudeh Party as the Iranian Islamists gradually consolidated power after 1979:

While almost all other leftist parties opposed the Islamist forces at this time, and were suppressed as a result, the Tudeh Party leadership decided to collaborate with the new clerical theocratic regime. This may have been to try and take advantage of the lack of competition from the many now suppressed rival leftist groups, or to follow the pro-Tehran line of the Soviet Union.

In 1982, however, the Tudeh broke ranks. The Islamist government of Iran had closed down the Tudeh newspaper, and purged Tudeh members from government ministries. It pushed back the invading Iraqi army and had decided to advance into Iraqi territory despite having recovered most of Iranian territory. The Tudeh urged acceptance of a UN peace offer and warned that continuation of the war would `play into the hands of the imperialists.` Quite quickly the government arrested and imprisoned its leadership and later more than 5,000 members and supporters of the party. The party was banned in 1983.

From May 1 1983 to May 1984 almost all the Tudeh leadership appeared in videos, first individually and then jointing in an October 1983 a “roundtable discussion,” confessing to “treason”, “subversion”, “horrendous crimes”, praising Islam and proclaiming Islamic government’s superiority over atheistic Marxism-Leninism.

“The grand finale” of the Tudeh recantations came on May 1984 when the “party’s main theoretician” and co-founder, Ehsan Tabari, appeared on television. A man with “50 years of leftist experiences” told viewers he had read “great Islamic thinkers” such as Ayatollah Motahhari in prison following the 1982 crackdown and had now come to repudiate the works he had written over the past 40 years. He now realized that his entire life’s work was `defective`, damaging`, and `totally spurious` because it had all been based on unreliable thinkers - Freemasons nourished by the Pahlavis; secularists such as Ahmad Kasravi Western liberals and Marxists linked to `imperialism` and `Zionism`.

Tabari’s made frequent references to religion, the Twelve Imams and Islamic thinkers in his recantation and “praised Islam for its `great spiritual strength.`”

Belief by outside observers that the confession were not given freely was reinforced by the conspicuous absence of Taqi Keymanash and “13 other members” of the Tudeh central committee, who died during prison interrogation.

Keith Flett and all his fellow-travellers in the SWP may be well advised to dwell on the aphorism that those who cannot remember the past are often condemned to repeat it.

 

 

 


DePressing Stuff

If you thought the reader comments section in The Guardian’s Comment Is Free or on Indymedia was and antisemitic cesspool, then you haven’t checked out PressTV.

Comments

Note:

The views that are expressed and the links that are provided by contributors on our comment pages are the views of the general public and/or organizations and are not necessarily the views of Press TV or its associates.

James
Wed, 07 Jan 2009 21:12:02 GMT
To simon- wouldn`t your time be better spent doing your inbred rodent, bloodsucking, hooknosed, pariah, jew vermin scum mother up her rathole to keep your born evil, born terrorist jew slime gutterscum “bloodline” going? For 5000 years humanity has had to deal with jew terrorism and genocide. The day will come when human beings terminate the jew virus of earth once and for all. That will be the greatest challenge for us in the 21st century and it will come to fruition. Amen.
John Malkovich
Wed, 07 Jan 2009 20:52:50 GMT
Fucking JEWS!
Islamic Mujahideen
Wed, 07 Jan 2009 20:52:12 GMT
Alhamdulillah, we belive in Allah. Please note : If any muslim will die in this war are very lucky because we called them martyr. i hope i was one of them. We muslims love to be martyr. But Jews are looser in everyside. Piety. If they die the Hell is waiting for them. They are coward they afraid to die. Alhamdulillah we kiss the death but at the same time we kill Zionist.

Notice too (in the article linked above) how Iran’s state-sponsored broadcaster is seeking to escalate the hostilities by suggesting that Hamas are poised to strike even deeper into Israel. Is this the kind of message that is likely to get Israel to agree to a ceasefire, or is it an 11th hour attempt by Iran to scuttle it?