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Workers’ Voice newspaper: March-April edition

The U.S.-Israel war on Iran is a major escalation in the Middle East that has dangerous implications for working people everywhere. The brutality of the imperialist assault internationally is paired with the attack on civil liberties by the Trump regime inside the U.S. This includes the continued operations of ICE and Border Patrol, the threats to the 2026 mid-term elections, environmental rollbacks that deeply impact the Black community, and unchecked police brutality.
Our editorial in this issue warns us: “There is a great danger of underestimating the determination of the U.S. corporate elite to drive through this effort. We cannot rely on court rulings or upcoming elections to save us. We must organize now, not only for mass demonstrations and community networks against ICE violence, but to find our way to building a new working-class party through which we can organize our political defense on every plane and on every day.”
In this issue we also have articles on the Epstein files and the ruling class, the San Francisco teachers’ strike, and a review of the new album by U2.
The March–April 2026 edition of our newspaper is available in print and online as a pdf. Read the latest issue of our newspaper today with a free pdf download! As always, we appreciate any donations to help with the cost of printing.
Click on the image to read the paper or message us to get a hard copy:
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Africa Must Not Pay Foreign Debt to Fight Poverty
In October 2019, long before the global coronavirus epidemic, the World Bank already said without shame that: “If the circumstances remain the same, the [global] poverty rate should decrease to just 23% in 2030”. At the same time, it presents a bleak future for African countries. Also according to the World Bank: “global poverty will become increasingly African, rising from 55% in 2015 to 90% in 2030”. In other words, in 2015, 55% of the world’s poor were in Africa and in 2030, 90% of the world’s poor will be in Africa.
By Yves Mwana Mayas and Cesar Neto
Once again, we say: this was before the coronavirus crisis.
This statement resembles an ad for a horror movie. It is up to the working class and the poor to understand the mechanisms of debt, to organize and combat.
So, let’s start with two concrete examples, try to understand, explain the mechanisms of formation of the African external debt and discuss how to get out of this “catastrophe that threatens us”, as Lenin would say. In fact, it is worth resuming this important text.[1]
The formation of the current African external debt
After the Second World War, the European imperialist countries were destroyed and in debt. In the war, and especially in the countries that were occupied, roads, bridges, port facilities, electrical systems, fields and their agricultural and agrarian production, etc. were destroyed. Everything needed to be rebuilt. Everything that was built with the exploitation of workers and the overexploitation of the colonies should be rebuilt. The needs were immediate, the times were short, and therefore the exploitation of the workers intensified to “build the homeland of all“. In the colonies that had lived for decades, the imposition of slave labor, occupation of the lands of entire populations, theft of material, everything should be intensified.
Even so, the main imperialist countries lacked money. The World Bank, always attentive to the interests of the capitalists, reached out and lent money to Belgium, France and England. These three countries were very grateful for the help and reminded the WB that they needed more than money, they also needed to pass the crisis on to the colonies, intensifying their exploitation.So, the loans would not go out in the name of the imperialist countries. They would leave in the name of the colonies that should honor the debts of their metropolises. Thus, loans from Belgium would be paid by the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Burundi. French loans by: Algeria, Gabon, Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Guinea-Conakry, Ivory Coast, Niger, Burkina Faso and Benin. And English loans by: Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Nigeria, English Guyana (South America).
The intensification of the overexploitation of the colonies led to a wave of dissatisfaction that was expressed in strikes, general strikes, insurrection and armed confrontation. On the defensive due to the crisis that affected them and anti-colonial struggles, part of imperialism gave in and sought negotiated independence.
Belgian Congo: insurrections, independence and foreign debt
The Belgian Congo, later Zaire and now the Democratic Republic of Congo, was one of the countries that went ahead in the fight against the intensification of overexploitation and, as a consequence, advanced to the anti-colonial struggle.
The formation of the external debt of Rep. Democ. Congo gained a jump with World Bank loans to Belgium in the post-war period. There were obviously other loans, for example for the reactivation of the Shinkolobwe uranium mine.
For the construction of the first atomic bomb, the USA bought uranium from the Belgian company, Union Minière from Haut Katanga, produced at the Shinkolobwe mine in Congo. There were 1,200 tons. After the end of World War II, the USA continued to strengthen its atomic industry. The best uranium was in the Congo. To remove the remaining uranium, “a huge amount of money was poured into the construction of a processing plant near Shinkolobwe. The World Bank provided $ 70 million in loans to Belgium to improve Congolese transport and infrastructure and facilitate the uranium export[2]“.
And who got the debt? The US that needed uranium so badly for its imperial-military control? The Union Minière of Haut Katanga who sold the uranium? Belgium, a metropolis nation that so badly needed political support from the United States for its reconstruction? Or did the World Bank grant debt relief?Or maybe the chemical and engineering corporations: Bechtel[3], DuPont, Raytheon, Eastman Kodak, Union Carbide[4] who had big contracts for building the atomic bomb[5]? Ah … perhaps Pan American Airways, which transported the uranium illegally, Caltex (California Texas Oil Company)[6], which provided its infrastructure to cover up the American secret agents of the OSS (Office of Strategic Service)?
None of them took responsibility for this debt. It was passed on unfairly to the Congolese people. This is an “unfair debt” in the broad sense of the term. It is unfair because it was a debt that served the interests of US and Belgian imperialism, a gigantic uranium mining company, and by corporations that directly or indirectly made astronomical profits from the production of the atomic bomb. It is also illegal, unfair and immoral because the exploration and transport of radioactive uranium was carried out without any security measures. Congolese workers “were not informed about the terrible health and safety risks to which they were exposed; they were simply used as workers, as if they had no rights as equal human beings. This was a process for which the USA, the United Kingdom and Belgium have a great responsibility[7]“.The transport of uranium through the interior of the country, without protection, has led to “What we are witnessing now is genetic mutation. The pollution has been so deep that it has reached the level where we are giving birth to children without limbs, without heads, without legs. , without a mouth. This is happening not only in one case, but in many cases in Lumbumbashi“[8].
Now let’s see another example of the formation of foreign debt in Africa.
South Africa: the odious debt inherited from apartheid
For its support and maintenance the apartheid regime used extreme violence and internal and also external repression. Internal repression was based on: political imprisonment, detention without trial, torture and forced removal. On the external issue, in the face of the anti-colonial struggle in Southern Africa, in particular, Angola, Namibia and Mozambique, South Africa financed, trained, gave territorial protection and provided arms to pro-imperialist military groups.
Internal struggles against apartheid were growing day by day and putting the existence of capitalist South Africa at risk beyond the regime. At the same time, international repudiation of the racist segregation regime was growing. In 1976, the United Nations General Assembly voted Resolution 31/33 in which it urged banks not to provide financial assistance to the white minority government and called on all states to stop new investments and financial loans to South Africa.
Apartheid only ended in 1994 and in that lapse between the UN Resolution (1976) and the end of the regime, South Africa continued to repress internally and interfere in the anti-colonial struggle of its neighbors. Both tasks required weapons, ammunition, technology, etc. which continued to have access through acquisitions of international manufacturers and with the financial backing of large banks.
During the United Nation blockade, arms purchases were made by the state company ARMSCOR, which offered a premium on all transactions between 25% and 30% more than the normal cost.[9]
The large oil and steel companies in England and the USA, the communications and automobile companies in Germany, nuclear energy companies with Franco-German capital continued to invest and remit profits through the banks of their respective countries. And it was these banks that helped finance the purchase of arms.
Among these banks we can mention from the United Kingdom: Barclays and Hill Samuel; USA: Citibank and Chase Manhattan; Germany: Deustsch Bank, Dresdner Bank, and Commerzbank; France: SocietéGenérale, and Paribas; and Switzerland: UBS, and Credit Suisse. At that time, arms dealers and banks were euphoric. They said at the time: “Never [South Africans] have been as welcome in European markets as they are today[10]”
An intricate system of camouflaged operations
Armscor received orders from SADF[11] and the Central Bank of South Africa authorized purchases based on a budget item voted by the National Congress, known as “Secret Defense Accounts” (SDA – Special Defense Account). Next step, Armscor sought allies abroad for illegal purchases. There were banks for financing and banks for remittances. 70% of remittances were made by a bank in Belgium, Kredietbank and its branch in Luxembourg: Kredietbank Luxembourg (KBL).
KBL executives advised Armscor on the opening of façade companies and secret accounts. “76 shell companies were created in Liberia, which in turn operated 198 Kredietbank accounts. Another 39 shell companies were created in Panama.”[12] The scheme was set up, but great care was needed. So “over 800 numbered bank accounts meant that billions of rand moved out of South Africa did not go directly to arms companies. Instead, the money was transferred between numerous anonymous bank accounts to camouflage where it came from and to. where were you going”.[13]
In the diagram below we see the Armscor modus operandi:

It is estimated that at the height of internal and external repressive policy, in the 1980s, 25% of the national budget was used in the so-called Secret Accounts for Defense.
An odious debt
In the case of Congo we speak of “unjustdebt” and in this case it is an “odious debt”. Odious debts are those that: a) were assumed against the interests of the population and not for their benefit; b) were not consented by the population; and, c) The creditors knew the two facts above and proceeded with these loans regardless.
“In the case of apartheid, it is clear that the vast majority of South Africans did not consent to or benefit from these loans. In fact, this debt served to finance oppression and to prolong a system considered a crime against humanity. It is also true that creditors were aware of the conditions in South Africa under apartheid and the regime’s actions and their consequences for black South Africans. It has also been repeatedly raised by the international community that state funding is likely to contribute to the perpetuation of the regime and its policies.”[14].
We could continue to develop the theme of public debt in South Africa, but this example is enough for us to understand the role played by CNA-Cosatu-PC of South Africa in its 26 years of government. A blessing for bankers and transnationals.A disaster for the workers and the poor people.
After independence, the empire counterattack
The independence of African countries was a major political victory. We cannot say the same thing from an economic point of view, because, by not advancing in the expropriation of foreign capital and large capitalist groups, it left the possibility for the empire to attack. This counterattack occurred in several ways, but we want to summarize it in three major policies developed by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
- The exploitation of mineral resources is the only solution for indebted countries
In the early 1980s, there was a serious crisis in world capitalism that became known as the “Foreign Debt Crisis”. In the process, many countries declared that it was impossible to continue paying their debts. Some countries declared themselves in default and others temporarily suspended payment. In Africa, where many countries had just left the colonial period and with huge debts inherited from the old empire, as we explained in the Congo example, the debt crisis was violent. The World Bank presented an alternative through the Strategy for Minners in Africa.
The World Bank imposed a strategy where countries should close their industries, not worry about unemployment and seek to maximize mineral exploitation. According to the World Bank, “The report’s main conclusion is that the recovery of the mining sector in Africa will require a shift in government objectives towards a primary objective of maximizing long-term mining tax revenues, rather than pursuing other economic or political objectives, such as control of resources or improvement of employment”[15]
In addition to leaving aside the industrialization of countries and the generation of jobs, the World Bank imposed that mining exploitation would be at the service of paying the debt, being exploited by private companies and closing state-owned mining companies. In summary, these measures attacked the little sovereignty achieved in the struggle for independence.
2. Highly Indebted Countries
The International Monetary Fund announced in 1996 a “aid” program aimed at countries that they considered to be highly indebted, which received the pompous name of the Initiative for the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries , also known as “HIPC Initiative” for its acronyms in English. Among the 52 countries on the African continent, 33 are considered poor by the IMF[16]. The HIPC Initiative is based on the correct idea that there are countries that are unable to pay their debts. The problem is that they do not explain how this debt started or how it developed. The HIPC Initiative’s proposal is to lend more money to countries to pay interest on these debts that are illegal, illegitimate or hateful. However, they lend but demand as a counterpart “control of public spending”, that is, reduction of spending on health, education, housing, financing for small farmers, etc. Then the countries that are already considered poor, will become poorer because the Union budget will be at the service of paying interest, only interest, of the external debt.
3. Bad Governments and Corruption
Since 2011, international organizations have invented a new panacea to explain the problem of debt growth. Now the problem is bad governments, the lack of bourgeois state control bodies and corruption[17]. Of these three elements, the one that gained the most followers was corruption. In any debate at the University, in the media or in the bars where you have a beer, the conversation is always the same: the problem of corruption. For this, the bourgeoisie has an army of reformist intellectuals, NGOs, bureaucratic unionists and even churches that promote prayers “in defense of the country and against bad governments” Corruption obviously exists, but the problem with the problems is the debt itself with interest in the clouds and with mineral production totally controlled by financial capital as we can read in the article “Imperialist Financial Capital in Africa: Overexploitation of the working class and the theft of natural wealth“[18]
External debt continues to bleed on the African continent
The debt formation process in the African continent had its origin in the colonization process, following the example of the Congo reported here, which we can identify in other countries. There is another emblematic example that took place in South Africa during apartheid that was not questioned by the governments of Mandela and his successors.
In fact, throughout the post-independence years, we had other forms of bleeding from the African economy. We will describe three major ways:
- Capital Flight:
A study started in 2007[19] and constantly revised presents amazing data on capital flight. According to the 2018 edition[20]: “This report provides updated estimates of capital flight from a representative sample of 30 African countries from 1970 to 2015 using an updated algorithim. The results indicate that this group of countries los a combined $ 1.4 trillion through capital flight over the 46 year period. Including interest eranings on capital flight brings the cumulative amount to $ 1.8 trillion. The amount vastly exceeds the stock of debt owed by these countries as of 2015 ($ 496,9), making the group a “net creditor” to the rest of the world.IThis report studies 30 countries and together they represent 92% of the continent’s GDP.
And who are the ones who bleed our economies with capital flight? Let’s see this information: “Indeed oil-rich countries feature prominently on the top of the list in terms of volume of capital flight. Nigeria leads the pack with $ 340 billion, followed by Algeria ($ 141 billion), Angola ($ 61 billion), Cameroon ($ 43 billion) and the other five oil exporters with smaller amounts. The oil-rich countries together account for 55 percent of the continent’s cumulative capital flight over the period[21]“. This means that behind the capital flight are large companies, including oil companies. Everyone knows this, but States and their governments are direct agents of companies and therefore do not act.
This bleeding represents an attack on public accounts. Let’s look at other information: “The evidence also shows that capital flight represents a heavy burden relative to the size of the economy for most countries. For the 30 countries as a group, cumulative capital flight represents 65,6 percent of thei combined 2015 GDP. The ratios of cumulative capital flight to 2015 range from 9.9% for Egypt to 705.9% for the Republic of Congo[22]“.
One way of capital flight is through under-invoicing exports or over-invoicing imports. In under-invoicing, a commodity that costs US $ 100 is invoiced for US $ 10. In this way, the payment of taxes and fees on the US $ 90 is avoided and the repatriated profit is much lower. In overbilling, the mechanism is the same as a product that costs 10 is imported for 100 and in this way large amounts of dollars are sent “legally” abroad..
2. Illicit Financial Flows – IFFs:
Illicit Financial Flows increase as the capitalist crisis worldwide grows. The table below shows how, from 2004 to 2013, it jumped from 465 billion dollars to more than 1 trillion dollars. But the crisis continued to grow, the data available are from seven years ago. The question is what will be the value today?.Illicit financial flows are the result of smuggling and illicit drug trafficking, among other activities outside the law. Smuggling can range from cross-border vehicle “small business” between Sudan and its neighbors, or smuggling of wild animals or illegal forest products through Kenyan ports. Smuggling can also be of large quantities of minerals that illegally leave landlocked countries for Atlantic or Indian ports.

- The revolving door
The best way to explain the inflow and outflow of dollars is by calling the mechanism known as the “revolving door”. Between 1970 and 2002, sub-Saharan Africa received 294 billion in loans. Of these, 268 were used to pay debts and still owed 210 billion. In other words, the new loans were intended to pay off old debts. Currently, African debt is estimated at 500 billion.
Stop paying the debt to be able to live
An important organization for the struggle and defense of workers and poor people, the International Workers’ League, warns of the fact that: “The social consequences of the pandemic, associated with unemployment and decline in wages because of the economic crisis, will be brutal. In the U.S., 30 million workers applied for unemployment insurance in six weeks, a figure only seen in the 1929 depression. 20 to 25 million jobs could be lost in Brazil. The consequences can be like those of a war. Not in terms of physical bombardment of factories but the destruction of productive forces can occur on a gigantic scale, starting with the main one: the human workforce. Millions of workers can die, and hundreds of millions will be condemned to an even greater poverty than today“.
Immediately suspend the payment of the external debt. Both principal and interest. Life is more important than profit. This debt was not made by the workers and the poor people. This debt, even if it was fair (and it is not), could have already been paid with the amounts that escaped the continent with the “Capital flight” and the “Illicit financial flows – IFFs”. And as if it were little, we still have the Revolving Door mechanism, which again shows that this debt does not exist..
International campaign for non-payment of debts
Trade unions, homeless organizations, youth, women, and the poor in general should make non-payment of foreign debt the center of their claims. However, given the nature of capitalism this is not a simple task and in that sense it is necessary to build a great unity among the peoples through their organizations to impose the non-payment of the debt. Only then will our countries be able to effectively combat Coronavirus and the effects of the recession.
[1] LENIN. A catástrofe que nos ameaça e como combatê-la. -https://www.marxists.org/espanol/lenin/obras/oe12/lenin-obrasescogidas07-12.pdf
[2]Borstelmann, Thomas. Apartheid’s reluctant uncle: The United States and Southern Africa in the Early Cold War (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993), pag. 182
[3] Bechtel became famous in the 2000s, when it bought the state-owned water company in Cochabamba in Bolivia, doubled the price of water, to reduce consumption and export the surplus to Chile. The Water War in Cochabamba, defeated Bechtel and reversed privatization
[4] General Golbery do Couto e Silva, the main articulator of the Coup d’état in 1964, in Brazil, was president of Union Carbide in that country for many years.
[5]Zoellner, Tom, Uraniun: War, energy and Rock that Shaped the World. (London: Penguin, 2010 page 47)
[6] CALTEX later became TEXACO and finally Chevron Texaco. Texaco in the 1990s was famous for spreading oil on the lands of Ecuadorian indigenous reserves causing several deaths from cancer.
[7] Williams, Susan. Spies in the Congo.The Race for the Ore that Built the Atomic Bomb.( London: Hurst & Company, 2018), pag. 265
[8]idem, pag. 266
[9]Hennie van Vuuren, Apartheid Guns and Money.A Tale of Profit. Jacana: Cape Town, 2017
[10] A warn welcome from the lenders (Uma recepçãocalorosa dos credores). – EuromoneyMagazin – June 1984
[11] SADF – South African Defense Force – was the official name of the armed forces until 1994, when it was replaced by the South African National Defense Force.
[12]OPEN SECRETS. The Bankers: corporations and economic crime report” Johanesburgo, 2018 pag 12
[13]Hennie van Vuuren, pag. 204-205
[14]OPEN SECRETS. The Bankers: corporations and economic crime report” Johanesburgo, 2018 pag 18
[15]The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/ The World Bank . Strategy for African Mining – Washington/DC – 1993
[16]Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Camerún, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea Ecuatorial, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique , Niger, Central African Republic, Rwanda, Santo Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda and Zambia.
[17] https://litci.org/es/menu/movimiento-obrero/africa-nacionalizar-y-estatizar-la-produccion-mineral-para-poder-vivir/
[18] https://litci.org/en/imperialist-financial-capital-in-africa/
[19]was presented at the Senior Policy Seminar on “Capital Flight from Sub-Saharan Africa: Implications for Macroeconomic Management and Growth”, jointly organized by the Association of African Central Bank Governors, the Reserve Bank of South Africa, and the World Bank, in collaboration with the African Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the Bank of England, October 30 – November 2, 2007 Pretoria, South Africa.
[20]Ndikumana, L. and Boyce, James K. CAPITAL FLIGHT FROM AFRICA: Updated Methodology and New Estimates. 2018
[21]Idem
[22]Idem -
Court’s ACP pipeline ruling hits Indigenous communities as right-wing vigilantes mobilize


Protesters at the Juan de Oñate statue in Albuquerque, N.M., prior to the shooting. (Photo: Megan Abundis) By VINNY GROSSMAN
On Monday, June 15, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Atlantic Coast Pipeline’s (ACP) permit to build an $8 billion, 600-mile gas pipeline through mountainous forests held by the federal government. The same day, a far-right militia member “protecting” the statue of Juan de Oñate shot an unarmed protester in Albuquerque, New Mexico. These two incidents, happening almost simultaneously 1880 miles apart, illustrate the fact that colonization, displacement, and genocide of Indigenous people remain at the heart of the U.S. capitalist project and its state.
The pipeline, which would extend from West Virginia, through Virginia, to central North Carolina, poses a risk to residents in its path, many of whom are Black or Indigenous people. It would also cross environmentally sensitive forests and public parkland, including the Appalachian Trail.
One question posed to the Supreme Court, in overturning an earlier decision by a lower court, concerned which agency of the federal government had the right to allow ACP to build a pipeline through the land. The justices in their majority opinion argued that the Mineral Leasing Act authorized the United States Forest Services to issue a permit for the pipeline construction.
The pipeline route would have a particularly damaging impact on Native Americans, including members of the Meherrin, Haliwa-Saponi, Coharie, and Lumbee tribes in North Carolina. Native people make up over 13 percent of the population living within a mile of the proposed pipeline route, although they are only 1.2 percent of North Carolina’s population overall.
“Legal” aggression against Indigenous people in history
Native Americans and students of U.S. history will immediately recognize the continuity between this decision and so many other horrid acts of aggression against Indigenous people.
No federal department should have the right to determine what happens with the land in question. While U.S. law saw western Virginia (including what is now the state of West Virginia) and North Carolina as an unoccupied “hunting ground” when they were incorporated into the union, there were many Native Americans already living there, including people from the Shawnee, Lenni Lenape, Susquehanna, Conoy, Cherokee, and other nations and tribes.
The U.S. government employed various “legal” methods to evict the Indigenous occupants off their lands, including the 1830 Indian Removal Act, the so-called “treaty” between the U.S. government and the Shawnee people of 1832, the illegal Treaty of New Echota of 1835, and culminating in the act of ethnic cleansing known as the Trail of Tears in 1837-1839. The whole process was backed by the bayonets of the U.S. military and supportive vigilantes.
Since this time, a body of legislation has developed which serves to legitimize the continuous exploitation of Indigenous people and their land while granting some communities formal independence from the colonizing nation. One of the most infamous of these laws is the Mineral Leasing Act, which has been used to justify everything from strip mining for coal, dumping nuclear waste, and building pipelines in and on culturally important and even sacred land. These laws are part of a process of destroying Indigenous history and culture while also poisoning the land and people in the present.
Monday’s Supreme Court decision also shows that the liberal talking point on voting for bourgeois Democrats in order to “stack the Supreme Court” is absolutely meaningless. As the recent LGBTQIA+ ruling showed in the opposite sense, Supreme Court decisions reflect the balance of class forces and social movements.
While the queer rights decision demonstrated that the Court justices, despite their ideological or party allegiances, can be swayed when people are in the streets demanding democratic rights, the pipeline ruling shows the same from the opposite direction. The ruling was 7-2, with “progressive” darlings Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Stephen Breyer supporting the billion-dollar act of destruction. The ruling class is fairly willing to make non-economic concessions if necessary, but when major capitalist economic interests are at stake, it does not feel obliged to weaken its ability to destroy the environment and Indigenous communities at a whim.
Armed right-wing vigilantes mobilize
In line with the reactionary ruling of the Supreme Court, right-wing vigilante groups have come into the streets during the past few days, claiming the need to “protect” statues of men who oppressed Indigenous people in history. In Philadelphia, for example, a mob of white men (including members of the Proud Boys), armed with baseball bats, a rifle, and other weapons, surrounded a Christopher Columbus statue in a public park for several days in order to “guard” it. When the goons physically attacked several non-violent Black Lives Matter demonstrators, the police merely stood by and cheered them on.
Activists in the Albuquerque, N.M., area report that the right-wing militia group New Mexico Civil Guard has been showing up armed at demonstrations in recent days. New Mexico, which is number one in fatal police shootings, serves as a training ground for armed white supremacist paramilitaries who often work with local and state governments to terrorize immigrants, police the U.S.-Mexico border, and victimize Native Americans.
These armed counter-demonstrations reached a peak Monday when Steven Baca, son of a New Mexican sheriff, shot an unarmed demonstrator. Baca was “protecting” the statue of Juan de Oñate, a conquistador known for his brutality against Indigenous people. Local police are reported to have referred to Baca and the other New Mexico Civil Guard members as “armed friendlies” and to regularly fraternize with them at protests.
Nick Estes, author of Our History Is the Future: Standing Rock Versus the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance and militant with the revolutionary group The Red Nation, described the situation in a Facebook post: “[New Mexico Civil Guard] came to Gallup at the invitation of white business owners hoping to shoot some Indians. They came to our office hoping to shoot some Indians. They’ve threatened journalists. All while working hand-in-hand with the cops. What was Mayor Tim Keller’s response to all this? Support and increase the budget of the [Albuquerque Police Department]. A man nearly lost his life tonight because some fascists and their buddy Steven Baca, who cried around for his dad who was a sheriff, decided a fucking statue of a murderer, a rapist, and a mutilator had more sanctity than actual Black and Indigenous lives.
“Had people not defended themselves against these fascists, surely more would have gotten hurt or possibly killed. This city has blood on its hands; its bloody children of empire are the reincarnation of Oñate and the terror he brought. We know where we stand. It’s not just the armed fascists, it’s everyone, the politicians and the police, who enabled them. Enough. I saw people run into a spray of bullets determined to protect people. Strong hearts to the front. Stay safe and blessed. Organize. Love each other. Check in. We’re still going to be taking the streets.”
In a ringing endorsement of the strength of the mass movement, on Tuesday, June 17, the city of Albuquerque took down the statue of Oñate.
The experience of the last three weeks’ uprising following the murder of George Floyd, as well as the whole history of Indigenous struggle against colonization, show that the only way forward against racist vigilantism, environmental destruction, and ongoing ethnic cleansing is to deepen the mass movements and to make a clean break with the parties of capital.
At the same time, the movement needs to take the path of the fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline, including hundreds of thousands in the streets and on reservations standing for self-determination for Indigenous people and an end to the colonial policies of U.S. imperialism. The only group capable of directing such a fight is that of the Indigenous communities themselves. Going forward, the only class capable of taking the combined struggle all the way to a decisive victory is the international working class, in all of its diversity.
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Connecticut hotel workers fight corporate reopening

By ERNIE GOTTAHotel workers in Local 217 Unite Here led a car caravan to the state capitol on Tuesday, June 16. They filled Hartford with the sound of honking horns on their way to deliver Governor Ned Lamont a series of demands around the reopening of the economy. The action was organized in opposition to what they feel is a state reopening that only serves the interests of hotel owners.
Phase one of the governor’s reopening was marred by the opposition of small business owners. Barbershop and salon owners declared reopening was not safe for them or their customers. Lamont was forced to push back the reopening from May 20 to June 17. Hotel workers are hoping to have a similar effect on the governor. They delivered a petition signed by hundreds hotel workers across the state with demands that included mandated hazard pay, recognition that hotel employees are frontline workers, no challenges to unemployment applications, guaranteed health coverage during a layoff, keeping workers on the recall list for two years, and the endorsement of a relief fund for undocumented workers.
The union made it clear that these demands extended to all hotel workers and not just the five union shops currently organized by Local 217.
Lupe Agrado is furloughed. She’s a 21-year banquet server and shop steward at the Hilton in Stamford. She attended the rally and said, “I am worried that my job is never going to be the same, we will be exposed to the virus, and our lives are at risk. It messes with you mentally. I’m upset that the company is taking advantage of the pandemic. They treat us Latino and Black workers so low. It’s always Black and Latino workers risking their lives for the company’s benefit. The hotel owners are selfish and careless towards workers. We have no guarantees. We have no safety. We have to keep struggling.”
Leading up to the action, Local 217 released a powerful Op Ed in the New Haven Register that linked the hotel workers’ fight for a safe and just reopening with the ongoing Black Lives Matter struggle against police brutality. Sandra Walton, a Hartford Hilton room attendant, wrote, “The death and devastation wrought by COVID-19 in black and brown neighborhoods in the past three months has been punctuated by the racist murders of black individuals. It hurts more to know it did not have to be this way. It was not chance that allowed COVID-19 to disproportionately devastate black and brown communities. It was the inaction of people in power.
“Now, Gov. Lamont faces a choice. He goes on TV and says black lives matter. Workers of color are calling on him to protect us and protect our communities. Will he step up, the way we have when we’ve been called on as front-line workers? Or will he follow his friends in the hotel industry and hedge funds and allow a new wave of devastation of communities of color?”
It seems like Sandra’s message should have been an explicit part of the action on Tuesday. It’s a message that would have found its way to thousands of young students and workers who are marching every day against police brutality.
In general, the broader labor movement should be preparing today for the larger fight ahead. Union bus drivers, hotel workers, janitors, and health-care workers have all rallied separately in the past few weeks. A joint mass action of these unions would send shivers down the spine of any owner/operator trying to maximize their profits at the expense of worker health and safety. Actions connected with the fight against police brutality could usher in a new level of resistance to the ruling capitalist elite who use the police and austerity to oppress working people and minority communities.
Rank-and-file members of these unions can make this happen by pushing their coworkers to extend solidarity beyond the borders of the shop-floor fight, demanding joint actions with other unions fighting austerity, and demanding that union leadership mobilize in solidarity with the movement against police brutality.
Hotel workers expressed their fears and anger during Tuesday’s action. Ines, a seven-year Hilton room attendant and shop steward said, “If we get sick we’re going to make our families sick. And we can carry the virus without knowing and make our community sick. We demand protections.”
Similarly, Arturo Velasquez, a front-desk agent at the Stamford Sheraton, said, “We don’t know if the conditions are suitable or safe when we return back to work.”
Beyond the fear of what the future holds is an indomitable spirit characteristic of Local 217’s past cafeteria and hotel fights. Pumping up the crowd, Dieuseul Degraff, a cook and shop steward at the Hyatt Regency in Greenwich, declared, “An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.”
This scrappy local could set an important example for the labor movement by leading a dynamic and visionary fight against the coming wave of austerity. Yesterday’s actions sent a clear message that Connecticut hotel workers are angry with their current situation and that they are going to fight both the governor and the hotel bosses to win their demands.
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Delbert Africa ¡Presente!


Delbert Africa speaks at Philadelphia news conference on Jan. 22, 2020, soon after his release from prison. By his side is Ramona Africa, survivor of the 1985 police bombing of the MOVE house on Osage Avenue. (Sal Mastriano / Socialist Resurgence) By JOHN LESLIE
Delbert Africa, long-time MOVE 9 political prisoner, survivor of police violence, and fighter for justice, has passed away. Delbert was released on Jan. 18, 2020, after 41 years in prison as part of the MOVE 9. The MOVE 9 were framed up after the 1978 attack on the MOVE house in the Powelton Village neighborhood of Philadelphia.
According to Pam Africa, Delbert died at home on June 15, surrounded by family and friends.
Delbert’s daughter, Yvonee Orr-El, told a June 16 news conference in Philadelphia that her father died of prostate and bone cancer. She stated that he did not receive medical treatment in prison for 18 months after first noticing symptoms: “Had my father received the treatment he needed, the healthy, strong, smiling, humorous, sarcastic man that I called my father would still be here today.”
“What happened to Delbert was just another example of George Floyd. Delbert was deliberately, methodically, calculatedly murdered by prison officials,” said Janine Africa of MOVE. “When he came out here to these doctors and hospitals on the streets, they even said that the prisons did a lot of wrong things to Delbert. “
Police attack on the MOVE house in Powelton Village
As we noted previously on the Socialist Resurgence website, the 1978 attack on MOVE in Philadelphia’s Powelton Village neighborhood was a dress rehearsal for the May 13, 1985, police bombing on Osage Avenue. Police harassment of MOVE in Powelton Village resulted in an almost year-long siege and 50 days when no one was allowed to enter or leave the house, as cops attempted to starve MOVE out.
On Aug. 8, 1978, at 4 a.m., 600 cops surrounded the house as “… police made the first move. O’Neill ordered a bulldozer, which had a Lexan plastic shield to protect the operator from gunfire, to mow down the barricade. A long-armed ram tore the windows out of the upper floors. With the windows gone, fire hoses threw streams of water into the house” (S.A. Paolantonio: “Frank Rizzo, The Last Big Man in Big City America”).
Just after 8 a.m., shooting started, and police officer James Ramp was struck and killed by so-called friendly fire. Police fired bullets, tear gas, and water cannons into the house. MOVE members surrendered, and cops savagely beat Delbert Africa in full view of news cameras. Delbert Africa later recalled the incident: “I’m unconscious, and that’s when one cop pulled me by the hair across the street, one cop started jumping on my head, one started kicking me in the ribs and beating me.”
At a news conference in Philadelphia after his release, Delbert Africa said that despite the frame-up murder charges that sent him to prison for decades, he felt even stronger and more resolved, and he would not stop challenging the so-called “justice” system. “I want to keep on pushing the whole front of fighting this unjust system,” he said. “I want to keep on pushing it and do as much as I can, as dictated by the teachings of John Africa. Keep on working, stay On the Move.”
Cops claimed to find weapons in the MOVE house. Police ordered the house razed later that day, and any forensic evidence related to the standoff was destroyed.
Nine MOVE members—Chuck, Delbert, Eddie, Janet, Janine, Merle, Michael, Phil, and Debbie Africa—were tried and convicted in the death of Officer Ramp, in spite of evidence that he was killed by the gunfire of other cops. Seven of the MOVE 9 were released from prison after 40 years. During the long decades of incarceration, two of the MOVE 9 died in prison. At the time, John Africa was found not guilty on federal conspiracy and weapons charges.
Three cops who participated in the beating of Delbert Africa were later acquitted. Speaking at a support rally for the three cops, the head of the city’s Fraternal Order of Police chapter said, “They should have killed them all.”
Take the fight forward
In a statement following Delbert’s death, Pam Africa said: “He will be remembered as a freedom fighter, an activist. An uncompromising, revolutionary, freedom fighter who fought for the lives of all. … When he came out, that’s how he came out. As strong as he was, mentally.”
In this time of revolt against the racist criminal injustice system, the movement should be demanding the release of all remaining political prisoners. Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier, Russell “Maroon” Shoatz, and other Black Panther political prisoners remain in lockup.
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal and all political prisoners! Raze the prisons!
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Protests break out in Syria as the country faces economic collapse


An anti-government protest in Qamishli, northeastern Syria, in January 2020. (AFP) By MICHAEL SCHREIBER
Mass anti-government protests have raged in Syria this year, gaining strength during recent weeks, as the country faces economic collapse. The center of the recent protests is in the south of the country—in cities such as Dar’a, where the 2011 rebellion first gained momentum—as well as in Latakia in the west.
Sections of the population who supported Bashar Assad’s regime during the height of the war are now deserting it. This includes portions of the Druze community, who have joined protests for over a week. One message to the regime from Druze in southern Sweida province stated: “We promised to keep things peaceful … but if you want bullets, you’ll have them.” Druze also participated in an anti-Assad demonstration across the border in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
The New York Times commented on June 15, “Anger about sinking livelihoods has flared even among members of Mr. al-Assad’s Alawite minority, whose young men fought in large numbers with his forces only to find that they will share in the country’s poverty instead of reaping the benefits of victory. One Alawite man with relatives in the military said the currency collapse had made their salaries virtually worthless, with army generals earning the equivalent of less than $50 per month and soldiers earning less than a third of that.”
In January, demonstrators held up loaves of bread while chanting, “We want to live!” Now the protests have become more political. The call for Assad to leave office is frequently heard, as well as demands that Russian and Iranian forces halt their intervention in the country. A Syrian activist, Shoueb Rifai, told the British Guardian (June 12), “When your kids are hungry, you don’t think of strongmen, you don’t think of what Russia wants, you don’t worry about geopolitics. You blame the person who is in charge. And I see it happening on a daily basis, from people way up in the regime all the way [down] to the average loyalist.
“Assad’s biggest risk is no longer what Putin wants, or what Iran wants, or what regional powers are scheming. It is his own people, sitting in a pressure cooker.”
Some demonstrators have also expressed solidarity with the people of Idlib province, where for over a year government troops, aided by the Russians, have mercilessly bombed and shelled civilians in towns and villages held by rebel forces. Around a million additional people were displaced in the region in 2019.
Economic crisis out of control
After nine years of a war in which close to 700,000 people were killed, the authoritarian regime has succeeded in gaining military and political authority over most of the country. But restoring political administration hardly means that the country has become “stabilized.”
In fact, the economic situation in Syria has spiraled out of control; it is far worse than in 2011, when mass protests encouraged by the regional “Arab Spring” broke out. Inflation has skyrocketed from about 45 Syrian pounds to the U.S. dollar a decade ago to 3500 to the dollar on the black market at the present time. Efforts to stabilize the national currency have been further hit by Turkey’s decision to move the section of the country that it controls (encompassing 10 percent of the Syrian population) to the Turkish lira, and plans have been made to do the same in Idlib.
The unemployment rate rose to over 40 percent by the end of last year. Many small shops and other businesses have closed their doors. Some 80 percent of Syrians live in poverty, according to the UN. Hunger is rife in the country, as food prices have doubled in little more than a year. The average monthly salary is barely enough to buy two pounds of lemons. While the government has made attempts to distribute food supplies in some areas, it has failed to secure sufficient wheat supplies for the remainder of the year, and some NGOs are warning of the possibility of mass famine.
The economic collapse is due to a combination of factors, including the regime’s systematic destruction of the country’s infrastructure in the war and the displacement of some 12 million people from their homes—millions of whom are still living in refugee camps. The financial crisis in neighboring Lebanon (also rocked by mass demonstrations) has blocked many Syrians from drawing on their savings in Lebanese banks. Business relations have been churned up by corruption and disputes in top regime circles—including the feud between Assad and his billionaire cousin Rami Makhlouf.
Factors such as the COVID-19 crisis and the drought and searing temperatures caused by climate change also play a role in the economic downturn and the political unrest, and are likely to take more importance in coming months in exacerbating the hunger crisis. Health agencies are poorly equipped to treat people afflicted with the coronavirus, especially those who have been displaced from their homes and are living in overcrowded refugee camps or makeshift housing in places like Idlib and northern Aleppo provinces. In the last year, there have been at least 40 confirmed attacks on hospitals, according to Physicians for Human Rights, with at least 595 documented attacks on over 300 hospitals across the country since the start of the war in 2011.
Syria’s economic troubles are playing against the background of the deep worldwide economic recession and the move by the Trump administration to tighten its sanctions against Syria. The “Caesar Act, ” named after a Syrian police whistleblower who documented with his photographs at least 6700 instances of political prisoners who were murdered by the Assad regime, will come into force in several days. The act authorizes the U.S. president to order sanctions against any people or enterprises worldwide who support or do business with the Syrian government.
These issues will greatly cripple the country’s ability to gain investments to prop up the economy—and much less to acquire funds and credits for reconstructing the destroyed cities. The Times (June 15) quotes a Syria analyst in stating, “The Russians, the Iranians, the allies—they are not going to plow money into Syria. … They want a return on their investment.”
The Syrian government has organized a few pro-regime rallies while attempting to place the blame for the economic crisis entirely on the Western sanctions. But many are not convinced. One protester told Middle Eastern Eye on June 14 that he believed the government was primarily to blame for the economic problems. “The deliberate practices of the regime over the past nine years have led to a complete economic collapse and crazy increases in prices and starvation of civilians,” the demonstrator said.
Nevertheless, there is no doubt that the economic sanctions waged by the U.S. and imperialist governments in the EU will harm working-class and poor Syrians who are already under duress. The U.S. sanctions against oil trade with Syria, enacted in November 2018, caused the price of gasoline to balloon in the country, causing great discontent. Socialist Resurgence calls for an immediate end to the sanctions and all U.S. intervention into Syria.
A blow-up within the network of crony capitalism
On June 11, Assad fired his prime minister, Imad Khamis, who had been serving since 2016. No reason was given for the dismissal, but it would be reasonable to see Khamis as a scapegoat for the regime’s inability to deal with the economic crisis.
The tensions in Syria’s network of crony capitalism that is dominated by the Assad family blew to the surface this year after Assad’s business tycoon cousin, Rami Makhlouf, was charged with tax evasion. Makhlouf’s wealth expanded greatly through the privatization of Syrian state assets before the war. Later, lucrative war contracts gained by his links to the regime brought him even more wealth. In 2015, Makhlouf’s company, SyriaTel, the country’s largest mobile phone provider, was given a new 20-year license in which, for a one-time fee of 25 billion Syrian pounds, the company was granted a tax reduction for the next three years. SyriaTel’s tax burden was accordingly reduced from 60 percent in 2014 to 20 percent by 2018, which yielded huge additional profits.
But the favoritism bestowed on Makhlouf soon changed. In escalating actions taken in April, May, and June of this year, the Syrian government seized SyriaTel, demanded that Makhlouf resign from the corporation, froze his assets, and barred him from state contracts, while demanding that he pay $185 million in fees. The government also arrested about 40 SyriaTel employees and 19 from Makhlouf’s al-Bustan charity organization, stating that they would be released if Makhlouf paid the money and resigned.
Makhlouf’s businesses have been a target of some of the street protests. But Assad’s moves against Makhlouf may be seen not only as a sop to the Syrian people but also as part of an effort by his government, until now inconsistent, to offer concessions to émigré capitalists who lacked direct ties with the regime, in order to lure them back to Syria. In addition, some commentators believe that the campaign against Makhlouf is an overture to the Russian government and Russian capitalists who have considered investing in Syria; they point out that Makhlouf was closely allied with rival Iranian interests in many of his business dealings.
However, direct Russian involvement in the Makhlouf affair is hard to gauge. It could be a mistake to think that Russia would wish to go very far in rocking the boat against Syrian crony capitalism since they too are implicated in the corruption, as well as in sharing responsibility for Assad’s war atrocities. (In April, the newspaper Novaya Gazeta released two videos that document the torture and murder of a Syrian man by the Russian “Wagner” private mercenary company.) And for now, the Russians have no plausible replacement for Assad himself.
Makhlouf-controlled companies have also been implicated in the drug trade. Tons of hashish were exported from the Syrian port of Latakia in boxes of milk packed by a Makhlouf company, after being guided through sections of the country ostensibly patrolled by the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia and by Syrian military units under Bashar Assad’s younger brother, Maher Assad. The smuggling came to light after Egyptian authorities found the hashish hidden in a ship docked at Port Said in late April. That incident was soon followed by a raid by Saudi Arabian security forces, who found over 40 million amphetamine tablets that had been ferried into their country from Syria in boxes belonging to another Makhlouf company.
In the meantime, Makhlouf, rather than just accepting his guilt and punishment, has lashed out at Bashar Assad in a series of videos, threatening in one of them that if pressure on him and his companies continued, there would be “divine justice because we have started a dangerous turn.”
Given the spiraling state of the Syrian economy, the population will likely soon be facing much worse hardships. There is no reason to think that the protest demonstrations will subside. Moreover, the Assad regime is weaker now than in 2011, having lost the allegiance of part of its base and facing war weariness in own forces and those of its allies. It will find it more difficult to repress the protests by violence.
The protesters in the streets have hopefully learned their own lessons from the last nine years of rebellion. “We now need a new revolution against the corruption of the Syrian opposition and government,” Safaa al-Sayyid, a Sweida resident using a pseudonym, told Middle Eastern Eye on June 15.
“Many criminals took advantage of the suffering of civilians in the name of the revolution, and in the end, after they destroyed the country, they reconciled with the regime,” she said. “Over the past years, the biggest loser has been civilians. Enough is enough, we want to live in dignity and this is our right.”
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Supreme Court bows to mass demands, affirms protections for LGBTQIA+ workers

By ERWIN FREEDOn Monday, June 15, the Supreme Court Ruled 6-3 that employees can no longer be fired for gender or sexual identity. The decision affirms that Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which deals with employment discrimination, applies to gender and sexuality, extending legal protections to the 22 states with nothing on the books protecting LGBTQIA+ workers.
The capitalist class in the United States benefits both from the hyper-exploitation of LGBTQIA+ people as well as maintaining the ideal of the nuclear family. Monday’s ruling changes neither of these fundamental facts, but does represent a victory of the mass movement that has erupted against police brutality and that more and more is rebelling against other basic injustices of the system as a whole.
The ongoing demonstrations shaking the country out of its long political sleep began over capitalism’s inability to discipline its repressive apparatus. Tens of thousands were brought into the streets demanding the prosecution of George Floyd’s murderers. That initial program has since been expanded by the developing consciousness of the masses engaged in independent struggle. The democratic demand of jailing killer cops has taken on extra economic dimensions through the popular slogans of defunding the police and funding social services.
In recent days, the movement has taken up the fight for trans rights. Tens of thousands took to the streets on June 14 to show that Black trans people have militant support in this country. These demonstrations included over 10,000 people marching through the streets in Brooklyn, Boston, and Los Angeles. “Black Trans Lives Matter” became a battle cry ringing from coast to coast.
Mass movements versus the capitalist parties
Three weeks of mass mobilizations have made more gains for the movements for LGBTQIA+ rights, against police brutality, and abolishing the prison industrial complex than 40 years of capitalist politicians ever accomplished. At their peak legislative power in Obama’s first term, the Democrats failed to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, despite a majority in both the houses of Congress and the presidency. Now, in an attempt to not further stoke the flames of class struggle, one of the most regressive institutions in the United States have been stirred by popular demands into making concessions.
A common liberal argument for so-called lesser-evil politics is that Democrats will appoint Supreme Court judges who are more sympathetic to progressive cases. This reasoning shifts the motor of history from class struggle to horse trading between capitalist politicians. The capitalists are capable of making concessions, but they are incapable of either fighting for them or taking them all the way.
While some sections of the ruling class are more willing to give limited support to LGBTQIA+ rights, the capitalist class as a whole objectively benefits from being able to discriminate on the job and maintain internal divisions within the working class. Workers, on the other hand, have nothing at all to gain from gender or sexual oppression, and therefore can and will lead the fight for democratic rights for LGBTQIA+ people and beyond.
Decisions like the Monday ruling are reflections of the balance of forces and the dynamic of the current class struggle. The ruling that formally ends job discrimination for LGBTQIA+ people comes with a majority conservative Court, and the majority opinion was written by Neil Gorsuch, a Trump appointee. At the same time, the calculation was made to turn down making a ruling on qualified immunity for police officers. The Court and its backers in industry and the big banks are hoping that things calm down enough so that this indiscretion will be forgotten.
The fight for queer rights continues
While this ruling is a definite victory, and likely would be far more partial or even non-existent without one of the largest mass mobilizations in U.S. history, LGBTQIA+ people still face severe oppression in this country. For one thing, the legal apparatus to enforce the Supreme Court decision is still not in place in a number of states. Moreover, the implications of the ruling on matters such as discrimination in hiring LGBTQIA+ people is still not clear.
On June 13, Socialist Resurgence reported on the ongoing epidemic of violence against trans and non-binary people, especially Black trans women. LGBTQIA+ people are especially victimized by police brutality and the prison industrial complex, and they will continue to be in the frontlines against both. The movement for kicking cops out of Pride marches in previous years was an important moment in rediscovering the spirit of Stonewall among the general uptick in working-class militancy.
At the same time that discrimination on the job was outlawed, the Trump administration and state governments continue to attack trans rights on different fronts. Rules banning trans athletes from competing in high-school sports as well as the recent HHS ruling that allows doctors to misgender trans and non-binary patients remain in place. The fight against LGBTQI+ oppression will not be won until capitalism is torn up by its roots and replaced with a workers state capable of displacing the nuclear family as the core of social reproduction and guaranteeing food, housing, and inclusive health care to all.
The fight is not over, but every day the facts become clearer. Workers and oppressed people are making giant strides simply by being in motion almost exclusively independently of the ruling class. As the movement develops in the streets, it is also developing a program of radical demands that capitalism is incapable of realizing. From these mobilizations and with this program, the next step is to consolidate a class-struggle leadership on a national level through democratic assemblies and full discussions in BIPOC and working-class organizations.
These organizations would form the nucleus of a mass independent party of workers tied by a million threads to the trade unions and other organizations of struggle. This is our party to build, so let’s get to work to build it!
Photo: AP
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The Fall of Al-Watiya and the Battle for Tripoli
On February 17, 2011 a democratic revolution begins in Libya that culminates in the overthrow of the regime and the dismantling of the Libyan bourgeois state. In 2014 Libya is divided between two forces. The GNC (General National Council) based in Tripoli, and the HoR (House of Representatives) based in Tobruk on the border with Egypt. The outsider LNA (Libyan National Army) led by Khalifa al-Haftar also operated from Benghazi and Tobruk in the Libyan east. And there are armed popular militias everywhere.
By Fabio Bosco, Brazil 5/21/2020
The imperialist powers sought a solution based on the Skhirat agreement of December 2015. This agreement had four main goals:
1) the resumption of oil and gas production and export by the state company NOC (National Oil Company) in partnership with multinationals;
2) the unification of parliaments and the formation of a unified pro-imperialist government called the National Accord Government (GNA);
3) the formation of a unified national army (and the consequent disarmament of popular militias) and
4) the fight against forces linked to Al-Qaeda and Daesh that then ruled oil regions in the center of the country.
For the GNA there was agreement around Fayez al-Serraj, a member of the HoR from Tripoli. However, the Skhirat agreement failed.
From its failure, a new alternative emerged. Khalifa al-Haftar was a general of the old regime who, before the revolution, took refuge in the United States where he worked with the CIA. Funded by the United Arab Emirates(I), counting on logistical support from Egypt, armaments and mercenaries from Russia, and also support from France and Israel(II), he gathered support from the parliament of Tobruk, from various tribes to the east and south of Libya to form the LNA (Libyan National Army). His plan is to unify the country manu militari and impose a “secular” and pro-imperialist dictatorship following the Egyptian model. The LNA is made up of a few thousand Sudanese mercenaries, 1200 Russian mercenaries from the Wagner company, some Syrian linked to Bashar el-Assad regime and local militiamen.
In April 2019 General Khalifa al-Haftar launched himself to conquer the capital Tripoli. However, resistance from popular militias in the capital and several cities in western Libya prevented the fall of Tripoli which was under siege. After an agreement with the Turkish government in January 2020 and the subsequent deployment of at least 5,000 Syrian fighters, thousands of drones and missiles, the forces linked to the National Accord Government resumed the entire coastline from the border with Tunisia to Misrata and on May 18, they took over the strategic al-Watiya air base, 125 km south of the capital, breaking the siege of Tripoli.
The next major battle will be around the city of Tarhouna where the LNA militias is based to organize for the offensive against the capital. Despite recent victories based on Syrian soldiers and advanced Turkish drone technology, the country’s future is still uncertain as supporters of Khalifa al-Haftar tend to expand their military support in order not to lose positions in a future negotiation on Libya’s future.
Oil
The strength of the Libyan revolution brought oil and gas exports whose main beneficiaries were Italian and French imperialism and the Gaddafi family to a halt.
Resumed later, 90% of 1.3 million barrels exports were interrupted on January 2020 by the LNA that controls the ports in the center of the country.
The national economy revolves around the export of oil and gas. Recently, another illegal economic activity has emerged which is the control of the transit of refugees to Europe, operated by armed mafias.
The global economic crisis amplified by the coronavirus pandemic has a devastating impact on oil prices, the basis of the national economy.
The possibility of rebuilding a unified bourgeois state is small in the short term. This reconstruction would depend on a definitive military victory, either by the GNA or the LNA; or an agreement between the two; or even the emergence of a third force, whether national or foreign.
Yet the working people needs to reclaim the perspective of a second national independence and workers’ power.
The first step in this direction is to build its independent organization vis-à-vis the two bourgeois and pro-imperialist camps, be it the LNA or the GNA. This independent organization must be social, political and military.
Only this perspective can unite the working people of cities and oil fields with tribes scattered across the country and popular militias to build a workers’ and people’s government that can nationalize oil and gas, reorganize the entire economy of the country, impose workers’ democracy, break up with imperialism and link up with the struggles and revolutions in neighboring countries to move towards a Federation of socialist Arab and / or African countries.
(I) https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-linked-western-mercenaries-fought-haftar-libya-un-report
(II) https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-little-known-support-haftar-war-libya -
The Fight Against Police Must Also Target Their Political Bosses: Mayors, Governors and the President
The murder of George Floyd by the police was the last straw. This crime is one of many committed against the African-American community and also against Latinos and other minorities. It is not an isolated case and is the product of a reality that is increasingly repressive, less democratic, and directed from Washington.
By CORRIENTE OBRERA- LIT-CI, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA , JUNE 7 2020
We must realize that the police is only one of the institutions of the capitalist state, and it is designed to subjugate the population and keep them under the control of corporate power, with repression, jail and death. To maintain “order” and thus guarantee its plans of super-exploitation, enrichment and domination over communities of color and working class, through misery, racism, and repression, which can be seen with the starving wages, discrimination, and the murders that police have been committing, protected by the laws and the entire judicial system. This clearly indicates that the criminals are not only the police, but the entire judicial and political system throughout the country, that which we call the capitalist system, the system of social inequality.
The well-known “TO SERVE AND PROTECT” police slogan, should continue and say “THE RICH”: because the common and working class citizen, youth and students, are only subjected to school searches, beatings, electric shocks, pepper spray or tear gas, jail and bullets, as we have seen during these days of protest. That is why we must support the protests, but at the same time organize to change the whole current political-social system, and replace it with one of the working and popular class, socialist and revolutionary.
We must be clear that this police repression has been established and approved by the local (mayors), state (governors) and federal governments. In other words, even the Congress, the executive and the judicial systems are guilty of racism and repression, and therefore also responsible for all the murders committed by the police, as well as all the attacks against immigrants.
Today, in the context of the population’s just repudiation of police repression, politicians in government and in both parties are responding with more violence and repression, with thousands of police and national guard in the streets, imposing curfews, with thousands of protesters beaten and arrested, orders that here in California were given by Mayor Garcetti (Los Angeles), and Governor Gavin Newsom: both Democrats, whom some call “progressives” and allies of the poor, minorities and workers . It is worth mentioning the fact that Democrats and Republicans are only allies of each other, but not of the poor, and we point out as an example that during the Obama administration, the murders committed by the police were never stopped, moreover, Obama repressed immigrants massively, among which there are also black people, separating families, imprisoning minors and deporting more than 3 million human beings, were sexual violence to women, adolescents and girls is common, in addition to deaths.
We call on immigrants to support the marches without fear, because today is the time: there are thousands of allies in the streets, we must demand justice and denounce all government repression represented in racist laws, raids. Besides, ICE is as criminal as the police and we must not forget that, on the contrary, unifying the scattered struggles, many other allies could adhere to the protests, and thus strengthen the mobilizations that give more chances of victory to these causes, and that would clearly strengthen the clamor of BLACK LIVES MATTER – JUSTICE FOR GEORGE FLOYD – STOP THE REPRESSION AGAINST IMMIGRANTS – FULL RIGHTS FOR ALL IMMIGRANTS.
This movement to demand justice, to stop racism and to stop the police from killing, forces us to implement a deeper struggle, because you cannot treat an illness, which in this case is the police, without directing our struggle to what feeds, finances, and politically directs this racist and repressive mentality, which has its origin in the whole state apparatus, which is where the problem has its origin, that is, in the capitalist system which is maintained by Democrats and Republicans in all the different branches of government, protecting bourgeois, corporate, capitalist and imperialist U.S. order.
We congratulate the youth for their courage in the streets, and we call to continue mobilizing, we are for the massive integration of immigrants and to intensify the struggle, to direct it in the first place against the police, without forgetting that the main and most important struggle must be against the whole capitalist political-social-economic and military system in the country, which is the one that directs all the military structures, such as the police, national guard, and the border patrol.
Organize in struggle committees to discuss the next actions and encourage political education, raise the need to build a well-coordinated and disciplined mass movement to overcome the forces that oppress us, and focus on integrating with the working class, to achieve a much higher power in this struggle, and seek to change not only the police, but the whole capitalist system.
BLACK LIVES MATTER !
JUSTICE FOR GEORGE FLOYD AND ALL THOSE KILLED BY THE POLICE!
NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE!
LIFE IMPRISONMENT FOR ALL POLICE WHO HAVE COMMITTED CRIMES!
FREEDOM-RESPECT AND FULL RIGHTS FOR ALL IMMIGRANTS!
DISMANTLE ICE – THE ENTIRE IMMIGRATION SYSTEM AND THE POLICE!
STRENGTHEN THE MOVEMENT, WITH THE IMMIGRANT STRUGGLE!
THE PEOPLE UNITED WILL NEVER BE DEFEATED!
WORKERS OF ALL RACES AND THEIR ORGANIZATIONS, THIS IS YOUR FIGHT!
TRUMP OUT! -
Trump deepens epidemic of violence against trans people

By VINNY GROSSMANOn June 12, Health and Human Services approved a rule that allows hospitals and doctors to unilaterally define the gender/sex of their patients. The new ruling by the Trump administration appears to encourage medical staff to refer to trans women with “he/him” pronouns and trans men with “she/her” as well as to keep trans people out of the gender designated spaces that align with their self-identification. These spaces include bathrooms, changing rooms, and shared hospital rooms. There is no mention of non-binary people at all. Inter-sex people are only mentioned in passing, as an apparently unimportant argument used by supporters of trans rights to illustrate that sex is not reducible to a simple binary.
In a related development, since Tuesday, June 9, two Black trans women were murdered. Dominique Rem’mie Fells in Philadelphia and Riah Milton in Liberty Township, Ohio, mark the 13th and 14th murders of trans and gender non-conforming people reported in the United States and Puerto Rico this year. These deaths include Tony McDade, a Black trans man murdered by police on May 27 in Tallahassee.
An epidemic of violence
While the fight over trans rights has become increasingly sharp in recent years, trans people are highly affected by many different forms of violence. Over 170 trans and gender non-conforming people have been killed since 2013, with almost three-quarters of that number being Black trans women. Half of these murders were carried out by people known to the victim. The murder rate of Black trans women is seven times as high as the general population and almost three times that of Black people as a whole. There is no official government tracking of violence against trans and non-binary people, and the number of homicides against the trans community is likely magnitudes higher than the data currently shows due to non-reporting, misgendering, and being in the closet.
By all measures, trans and gender nonconforming people suffer severely escalated rates of domestic as well as public violence. This regime of terror is supported by the capitalist state, which criminalizes being trans and further escalates traumatic incidence through denying self-ID in prison and jails, putting trans women at risk to be further victimized in men’s prisons. Another terrifying example of the complete disregard of the capitalist state towards trans peoples’ safety is the case of Muhlaysia Booker, a Black trans woman who was videotaped being beaten by an angry mob and murdered less than a month later.
Anti-trans violence and the law
Capitalism depends on a strict gender binary in order to enforce the dual oppression of women as low-wage workers and the social group that bears the brunt of reproducing the working class through their unpaid domestic labor. Trans personhood is by necessity outside of this strict binary, and capital is using both its legal and extra-legal weight to crush trans existence. The bosses use legal discrimination against trans people on the job, in housing, and in schools to create a precarious section of the labor force which often has very few state and community resources and which is subject to brutal attacks.
Anti-trans laws, including disallowing trans people from sex-segregated bathrooms, encourage state and vigilante violence against trans people and especially trans women. By disallowing unconditional gender self-identification, the constant pressure from the U.S. legal system is to outlaw trans personhood. The effects have grown under Trump, in which Housing and Urban Development made moves to force homeless trans people onto the streets and the Department of Education has recently decided that competing with trans girl athletes violate the civil rights of cis girls. Neither charges, trans victimization of cis women in homeless shelters nor unfair advantage of trans girls in sports, has any basis in empirical reality. The net effect of anti-trans laws in housing, jobs, and schools is to increase the rates of suicide in and violence against the trans and gender non-conforming communities.
Struggle for trans rights! Build the movement!
Under Obama, the Democrats refused to put in policy any meaningful changes to secure a higher level of safety for trans people. The minimal reforms made through non-binding policy suggestions were easily swept aside in the period of administrative reaction unleashed over the last three and a half years.
In the vast majority of states, not only is workplace discrimination based on gender identity allowed but also the so-called “LGBTQ+ panic” legal defense. The LGBT Bar defines the panic defense as “a legal strategy which asks a jury to find that a victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity is to blame for the defendant’s violent reaction, including murder.”
At the same time that trans and gender nonconforming people are experiencing an epidemic of violence, they are also facing an onslaught of reactionary legislation and right-wing political maneuvers. Under the cover of the coronavirus, first the Idaho state government and then the whole Department of Education formally banned trans girls competing in high school sports. These bans would subject all female athletes, trans and cis, to genital observation, blood testing, and other invasive procedures. Along with other Trump-era policies, these moves pave the way for uplifting biological essentialist understandings of sex and gender which contradict both lived experience and scientific reality.
Companies have tried to co-opt the movement for trans rights with performative measures but the fact remains that the whole capitalist class benefits from trans exclusion by enforcing regimes of precarity on trans people. The banks, the businesses, and the ruling-class parties are totally discredited in their opportunist posturing for trans rights. Instead, workers and oppressed people have been fighting in the streets for moving past getting justice for murdered trans and non-binary folks to creating a society where no one is oppressed for their gender or sexual preferences.
The way forward in the fight for trans rights is the trail being blazed by the mass movement that has erupted in the wake of the lynching of George Floyd. Almost completely independent of the ruling-class parties and politicians, the demonstrations in hundreds of cities and involving millions have begun to win concessions that only one month ago seemed like impossible dreams.
In order to solidify the movement into a political force that can bring justice for all oppressed people, the next step will be to crystallize a political leadership in the form of a workers’ party composed of the most militant activists in the struggle. Such a party will necessarily have a large number of Black and Brown trans women at all levels, leading the fight for not just equality but also power.

