Nauru targeted as nuke dump site
Transcription
Nauru targeted as nuke dump site
The Guardian February 2 2005 $1.50 The Workers’ Weekly # 1213 COMMUNIST PARTY OF AUSTRALIA ISSN 1325-295X Iraqis vote First step towards democracy & independence The courage shown by millions of Iraqis in Sunday’s ballot in the face of car bombings, suicide killers and mortar attacks by terrorists, (who are misnamed “resistance fighters” by the media and even some on the left), is a huge tribute to their determination to take this first step in the long struggle for a democratic, independent and sovereign Iraq. From first accounts, the turn-out of voters in Iraq was higher than expected even though some voting irregularities have been reported by groups of NGOs monitoring the election within Iraq. The voter turnout seems to have been higher than in overseas countries such as Australia where the media and, once again, some Trotskyist organisations, inculcated fear of the consequences should they take part in the elections. Proportional representation The Iraqi electoral system is more democratic than that in Australia in that it is based on proportional representation and each Party or alliance of organisations entered a ticket of candidates. It is nonsense for the Bush administration (and no doubt Howard will echo his master’s The so-called resistance is made up of former Baathists and external terrorist organisations voice) to claim it was all down to the work of the US Government and its invading troops. Let it never be forgotten that successive US Governments armed and helped finance the Saddam Hussein regime especially during its eight-year war against Iran. The poison gas used by the Hussein regime to kill its own citizens in the north of Iraq was supplied by the US. 2 page Freed by US but still a marked man Mamdouh Habib Furthermore, following the first Gulf War in 1990 when the Iraqi people rose against Saddam Hussein they were crushed with the connivance of the US government of Bush Senior. They saved Saddam Hussein. The objective of the Bush Government is and remains the permanent occupation of Iraq and the seizure of its rich resources, especially oil. It is, even now, building a number of military bases which will be permanently occupied by US forces unless driven out by an Iraqi Government. The so-called resistance is made up of former Baathists who were privileged recipients of crumbs of power under the Saddam Hussein regime and external terrorist organisations whose objective is to impose a fundamentalist Muslim regime and, thereby, to destroy the secular society which had always previously existed in Iraq, even during the Hussein period. Travesty It is a travesty for these groups to be regarded as a genuine resistance or to believe that their objective is anything more than to create the circumstances that would bring them once again to power. Furthermore, the US occupation would prefer the return of a Baathist regime than to have to deal with a genuinely progressive government that would soon call for the expulsion of all US military forces. Forces which have been responsible for the deaths of many more of their own citizens than US troops and which use the indiscriminate weapon of suicide bombings can make no claim to be a genuine resistance. Interim government While the results are not yet known it is possible that communists and their supporters may become part of the interim government which will be formed following the election success. The interim government has the responsibility of drafting a new Constitution for Iraq. This will then be put to the Iraqi people in a referendum, hopefully before the end of the year and then new elections held for a new government. J 4 page Childcare workers’ win A mass rally just prior to the election Nauru targeted as nuke dump site Science Minister Brendan Nelson has admitted that the Federal Government is still looking for storage facilities for nuclear waste, even after the recent announcement that the US will accept spent nuclear fuel from Lucas Heights until 2016. The Minister said last week that he was still researching “appropriate” onshore sites and examining an offshore facility. He has not denied rumours that the cash-strapped Pacific island nation of Nauru will also be targeted to become a dump for Australia’s nuclear waste. The Howard Government has already bullied and bribed Nauru into being used as a dumping ground 5 page MUA battles Captain Cook for imprisoned asylum seekers from Australia. “We’re currently examining an offshore facility”, Nelson said. “We’re also going to make sure we look at an offshore facility in a remote location because, if for some unexpected reason, the offshore location we choose is not suitable for storage then it’s very important we already have developed concurrently a proposal for a secure onshore site.” Nelson is still incensed that a campaign by the people of South Australia overturned the Federal Government decision to locate a waste repository near Woomera. He has accused the states and territories 6 of “crippling parochialism and federalism” over the issue of the location for the national dump. He referred to the Boxing Day tsunami when describing potential problems for offshore sites. This would seem to rule out most of Australia’s major external territories as they are low lying and prone to seismic activity. Heard and Macquarie Islands are World Heritage listed. Nauru also poses other difficulties as a possible nuclear dump site. Its government is a signatory to the Waigani Convention, which prohibits the islands of the Pacific being used as dumping grounds. J 9 page page IMF’s “democracy” in Ukraine The Emperor speaks 2 The Guardian February 2 The Guardian Issue 1213 February 2, 2005 Sound and fury signify nothing Meetings at the Swiss tourist resort of Davos are gatherings of the “great and powerful” and this years’ meeting is not the first time that the needs of the more than one billion people living in poverty have been discussed. Despite the fine words from the industrialised countries, mass poverty remains in most of the third world countries of South America, Africa, the Middle East, India and Asia. As with the tsunami tragedy, there is more talk of debt “relief” but such talk in the past has led no where for the poverty-stricken millions. Unless the billions of dollars in loans and the huge interest payments owed by the third world countries are cancelled and not merely rescheduled, little will come of it. Rescheduling means that the repayment of principal and interest is merely delayed. Fearful of the talk of debt relief and rejecting the campaign by many for the cancellation of debt, Prime Minister Howard leapt in to denounce debt relief. In its place he put forward a diversionary proposal for “free” trade, saying developed countries should lower barriers to imports of products from the poorer countries. Sounds good, but the reality is different and Australia’s trading practices do not bear out any serious contribution by Australia. Australia’s major trading partners are the developed countries of the US, Japan, the European Union, Canada and New Zealand. Only China, as a developing country, is catching up in trade terms with the developed industrial countries. Australia’s imports from the under-developed countries and even our near neighbours in the South Pacific region are negligible. The reality is that capitalist traders look for the cheapest and highest quality goods and these are provided by the countries with the most developed technology, with the most skilled labour force and which can present their products in attractive packaging. The strength of the economies of the developed countries also allows them to cut prices if they have to compete with other countries and to offer bribes in the course of trade deals. Is the Australian government about to tell traders where they should buy their imports? Of course not! The only way to start alleviating the mass poverty in so many countries is by the cancellation of debts and positive assistance that helps poverty-stricken countries to develop their economies, lift living standards, educate their populations, provide health care, build infrastructure and exercise preference in trade relations. Otherwise, the present dramatic inequalities between countries, even if trade barriers were to be completely removed, would remain. Howard’s populist and hypocritical attacks on the European Union will, in practice, only cement the advantages of the industrialised countries over the rest of the world – and that is what Howard’s policy is intended to do. They would also help Australian agricultural exporters. While in Davos, Howard also leapt to the defence of the Bush administration when it came under criticism from some European leaders who reject Bush’s policies of pre-emptive strikes and war, in particular the US invasion of Iraq in disregard of the United Nations. Howard claimed that he does not relegate the United Nations. The fact is that Howard only sees a role for the United Nations when it goes along with the demands of the US and Australian governments. Otherwise they should be free to implement whatever invasions and interventions they decide. Anyone who expected that the election of Beazley to the leadership of the ALP would lead to some more progressive policy statements will be confounded by his remarks on the Iraq war which were limited to attacking the Howard government for its tardiness in protecting Australian diplomats in Iraq and a claim that Howard had “let the Americans down”. Obviously he intends to present himself as an even more reliable lackey than Howard. His response to the return of Mamdouh Habib to Australia from Guantanamo was limited to a proposal that the Australian government should issue a statement. He made no call for an investigation, no criticism of the government’s despicable role in which it abandoned Mr Habib and another Australian citizen David Hicks. And of course, not a word of criticism of the equally despicable imprisonment and torture of prisoners by the US Bush administration. PRESS FUND The Howard government’s aid programs are becoming notorious for their “strings”, which include forcing the subject country to accept conformity with the political aspirations of Australia and its allies. In contrast, there are no “hidden agendas” to our campaign for donations to the Press Fund. We state unequivocally – and proudly – that what you contribute will be used to assist in the struggle for the rights of working people, as well as the rights of poorer nations to independence and development. Many thanks to all those who contributed this week, as follows: Anonymous $500, Bert Appleton $40, Tom Gill (Guardian tin) $44.70, J R $50, D L $150, D Richardson $40, “Round Figure” $15.30. This week’s total: $840. Progressive total: $1680. 2005 Allegations of police harassment on Palm Island The death in custody of Palm Island man Cameron Doomadgee is still greatly affecting the small island community. Kevin Rose, a lawyer who works for the Aboriginal Lagal Aid Service in Townsville said that at least ten Palm Island residents are considering suing police for allegedly acting unlawfully in the wake of the riot that followed Mr Doomadgee’s death. Many claim police entered their homes without warrants or acted with unnecessary force. The Koori Mail of January 12, 2005 ran a front-page article entitled “Living in Fear” which described the trauma experienced by the residents. Gail Wotton, mother of a 16year old girl, described what happened: “My daughter is an innocent Christian girl who was in one house which police raided looking to arrest people and she was placed on the floor and had a weapon held at her head. I am very angry that it could have happened.” The incident took place in late November and Mrs Wotton’s daughter is still affected by the experience. Mrs Wotton was not in the house at the time but was told that police even looked inside the fridge. “How could any person hide in a fridge?” she said. Brad Foster, chief executive of Carpentaria Land Council and a Palm Island community leader, said up until a few weeks ago the police were still raiding houses in full riot gear and frightening residents. He gave an example of how it happens. “On December 31, my younger brother was sitting at home here. Three carloads of coppers rocked up in full-body riot gear with masks on, with two plainclothes police. They smashed the front and back doors and walked straight into the house. There were six kids asleep in the lounge room who were disturbed by what happened. The police said they were looking for drugs but didn’t find anything. This kind of behaviour hasn’t stopped yet.” In the first couple of days after the riot in November about 50 homes were entered by the police looking for people. There are still 30 to 40 police on the island. Premier Peter Beatty supports the police actions: “I have been supportive of the police action in restoring law and order on the island and I remain supportive.” Mr Beatty also said that people were “free to take legal action in the courts if they want to. This is a democratic society and people have legal rights.” In a democratic society people should not die in police custody and children should not be placed face down on the floor and threatened with guns. J Mamdouh Habib Mamdouh Habib, the Australian citizen who was kidnapped, imprisoned for three years in solitary confinement and subjected horrendous physical and psychological torture, has now arrived home in Australia. The United States Government released Mr Habib after admitting it lacked sufficient evidence to lay any charges against him. Mr Habib’s release reveals the utter failure of the American project at Guantanamo Bay. The major breaches of human rights and civil liberties that have occurred at Camp X-Ray have yielded little in the way of terrorist prosecutions. Although Mr Habib is now free he sets foot into his home country as Correction The pulled quote on page 4 of last week’s Guardian was attributed to Colin Powell. It was a quote from Wilson “Woody” Powell, who is the executive director of Veterans for Peace group in St Louis. We apologise to Woody and for any confusion that it may have caused readers. a marked man. Both the Federal and NSW Governments have declared that Mr Habib remains a “person of interest” and have forewarned him that he will have his movements restricted, his phones tapped and be constantly tailed by the Federal Police and ASIO. Regarding Mr Habib’s illegal kidnapping, detention and torture Prime Minister Howard has declared, “We don’t have any apology to offer. We won’t be offering compensation.” NSW Greens MLA Lee Rhiannon spoke out strongly against the continued invasion of Mr Habib’s civil liberties. “Mr Habib should be allowed to rebuild a life and family shattered by his illegal detention. Instead, Premier Carr will continue hounding him and invading his civil liberties. “Premier Carr clearly thinks NSW will succeed where the US has failed.” Ms Rhiannon said that draconian and undemocratic laws that stripped away human rights only increased the likelihood of terrorist acts. Kisch in Australia Exhibition Sydney 14 February - 24 April State Library, NSW Picture Gallery, Mitchell Wing Adelaide Migration Museum from July to December This exhibition highlights the story of Czech journalist and communist Egon Erwin Kisch (1885-1948) who was invited to Australia in 1934 to address the Australian Congress of the International Movement Against War and Fascism. Prime Minister Joseph Lyons’ government, which was dealing with the effects of the 1930s’ depression by cracking down on free speech, tried to ban Kisch from landing. He leapt from the boat breaking his leg. His story remains resonant today. The attempt to ban Kisch from speaking in Australia had the unintended effect of galvanising public opinion against the government and drawing large crowds to meetings where he spoke. Exhibited in conjunction with the Goethe-Institut “If Premier Carr, Prime Minister Howard and President Bush really want to defeat terrorism they should build up democratic rights and institutions, not trample on them.” “Breaching international law and human rights creates worldwide resentment and anger that helps groups like al-Qaida to recruit new terrorists.” And while human rights activists celebrate the return of Mr Habib, it must be remembered that another Australian, David Hicks, still remains in the Guantanamo Bay hell-hole. Mr Hicks is to face a US military court on spuriously broad and all-encompassing charges – conspiracy; attempted murder as an unprivileged belligerent and aiding the enemy. No specific charges have been laid – which indicates that the US government has very little evidence against him. He has not been charged with killing anyone, he has not been charged with any acts of terrorism, nor has he been charged for causing any specific harm to the invading forces. J The Guardian February 2 Australia 2005 3 Gunning for super profits Peter Mac The tsunami tragedy has eclipsed one very disturbing Australian legal case with potentially terrible implications for the natural environment and the rights of expression of ordinary Australians. Just before Christmas, the giant Tasmanian timber firm Gunns Ltd served writs for damages on 20 critics of its industrial practices. The company is claiming a total of $6,360,483 in damages, which it says resulted from campaigns waged by the defendants over recent years. The campaigns were aimed at The company’s legal attack against the conservationists has been criticised as extremely dangerous. blocking and/or highlighting aspects of Gunns’ activities, including their policy of clear felling massive areas of native forest to gain timber (only a small percentage of which is actually used) for woodchipping, as well as the ruthless and systematic destruction of wildlife in these areas. The company alleges it suffered because of unlawful “conspiracies” by the defendants, and because of their unlawful interference in its legitimate business operations, in particular from: • disruption to logging operations at Lucaston, Hampshire, Triabunna and the Styx Valley, • vilification of the company regarding its Burnie woodchip site, • Tasmania’s Banksia environmental awards (the company was excluded from the awards short list!), and campaigns aimed at Gunns’ Japanese and Belgian customers, and • campaigns involving the company’s shareholders, investors and banks. Pete’s Corner The 20 defendants include the Wilderness Society, Doctors for Forests, the Huon Valley Environment Centre, Peg Putt (MHA), and Greens Senator Bob Brown. Gunns Ltd is Australia’s biggest native forest logging company and the world’s biggest hardwoodchip company. It is determined to maintain its logging practices, and is willing to savagely prosecute opponents. Former state premier Robin Gray is adviser to its executive chairman, John Gay. In the 1970s Gray planned construction of a dam that would have permanently flooded the exquisite Gordon and Franklin Rivers. The plan was bitterly opposed by conservationists and was finally blocked by federal government intervention. Some 15 years ago the company’s then chairman, Edward Rouse, was jailed for 18 months for attempting to bribe a Labor MP to take action which would have deprived Tasmanian Greens of the balance of power in state parliament. David McQuentin, a former Rouse company executive, is now an assistant to John Gay. Gunns’ policies and practices have been supported by conservative state and federal governments, including the present Tasmanian Labor government. The company’s legal attack against the conservationists has been criticised as extremely dangerous for those who speak out against environmental vandalism. Some have drawn comparisons to the “McLibel” case in Britain, where two poorly paid but courageous workers were sued by the McDonalds restaurant chain for publicly claiming that the company’s practices resulted in rainforest destruction, consumer disease, and third world starvation. The case backfired against the company. The judge’s ruling that some of the defendants’ allegations had been proven resulted in extremely bad publicity for the company. However, the Gunns case is fundamentally different because the company is not arguing the truth or otherwise of the conservationists’ statements. Rather, it is alleging that their actions and statements resulted in financial hardship for the company. Moreover, the current case could set a precedent in an even wider context. The environmental implications of the Gunns case are serious enough, in a period when the safety of millions of people is jeopardised by environmental changes. However, a victory by Gunns would, by implication, threaten the right of any citizen to speak out or take peaceful protest action because of the financial harm it might cause the company concerned. It could set a legal precedent for the banning of protest action by unions, community groups and even small shareholders, over any unpopular action or proposed action, by the company concerned. It could, in short, usher in the iron-fisted rule of unbridled capital. The defendants in this case have vowed not to yield to the company’s pressure. Senator Brown, who is due to visit Japan next month to publicise the case, last week declared angrily: “I, for one, will never be cowed by John Gay, Robin Gray, their wealth or their power of destruction. They will not stop me from campaigning to save Australia’s heritage even if it means losing every penny, every home comfort, and every peaceful night’s sleep life offers.” J Ian Melrose – the Perth businessman behind East Timor TV ads Bob Briton Last September, in the lead-up to the AFL Grand Final, it was business as usual on Australia’s commercial TV. Glitzy ads promoting a seemingly endless variety of goods and services peppered the high-rating programs with distracting regularity. Then a remarkable thing happened. Thirty second ads began appearing, to put the case for a fairer deal for East Timor in the sharing out of the oil and gas reserves being exploited under the seas near the coastline of the struggling new republic. A voice of conscience had been raised amid the chorus of voices for consumption. Later 60 second ads reinforced the message. The commercials were timed to coincide with the resumption of talks between officials of the two countries on the issue. Those meetings concluded in Darwin on September 30 and were reportedly held in a cordial and encouraging atmosphere. There was an undertaking from the Australian representatives to continue the talks sometime after the Federal Elections. The tone of the proceedings was a far cry from previous exchanges between the governments in which Foreign Minister Alexander Downer had taken a bullying and dismissive stance to East Timor’s complaints. Some commentators credited the TV ads for the more conciliatory attitude of the Australian team. The ads and their effects were not heaven sent. They were paid for by Perth-based businessman Ian Melrose. The accountant became wealthy by backing a chain of optometrist stores. Friends say he never set out to become wealthy and that he remains a level-headed and generous person. Like many other Australians who have traveled to East Timor, he was struck by how little is being done to rebuild the country after decades of genocidal occupation by the Indonesian military and neglect by Portuguese colonial authorities before that. Clearly his wife shares his sympathies for the East Timorese people. She has volunteered to work as a nurse in the shaky health system being built there with scant funds. The TV ads cost Mr Melrose around $900,000 out of a $2 million campaign budget. He commissioned a Newspoll survey of Australians that revealed that 77 per cent of us believe that the International Court of Justice should determine the issue of the disputed boundary. Only ten per cent opposed the idea while another 13 per cent were undecided. Mr Downer’s claim to be representing Australia and its people in discussions up to that point were so much hot air. He spoke then and continues to speak for big capital. Mr Melrose paid for ads in regional and capital city newspapers. He also had ads published in the press in New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Singapore and Hong Kong. “[I intend] making those countries aware of Australia’s conduct and in that way putting pressure on the government to lift its game. Australia is muscling in and it’s totally inappropriate”, he told AAP at the time. His efforts clearly annoyed the Australian Government. A spokesman for the Foreign Minister said that Mr Melrose could better spend his money on disadvantaged East Timorese. So, having put the truth before the public, has the millionaire businessman got the East Timor issue out of his system? Not at all! The injustice towards East Timor continues and so does the advertising campaign. In the days prior to Australia Day, the TV ads started up again. The telecast of the Australian Open tennis tournament was interrupted with images and a message that informed viewers: “While the Howard Government has already stolen $2 billion of gas and oil royalties, East Timor desperately needs to create a health system that works…” Andy Alcock, chairperson of the Australia East Timor Association in South Australia has likened Mr Melrose to the wealthy 19th century British industrialist and socialist Robert Owen, who built model factories and communities in the UK. “It is not often that we see wealthy people being so generous to causes that will not lead to increased profits”, Andy told the media last year. J 4 The Guardian Labour Struggles February 2 2005 Childcare workers’ historic pay win Low-paid workers in the child care sector have had a tremendous victory after a long and arduous community campaign. On January 13, the AIRC (Australian Industrial Relations Commission) announced wage increases that will deliver a minimum increase of $64.50 per week for a qualified child care worker and a minimum of $82.20 per week for a diploma certified child care professional in Victoria and the ACT. Handing down the decision the Commission noted that “the quality of care, and hence outcomes for children, is positively related to the First step There are more than 80,000 people working in child care across Australia – this decision will be a first step in winning pay justice for all workers in this important industry. For the 18,000 child care workers in Victoria and the ACT this is long overdue said LHMU Childcare Union National Secretary, Jeff Lawrence. He said the union has similar pay claims in other states. “We will be pursuing organising campaigns with our union members in these states.” Most child care professionals have been paid as low as $13-$15 an hour, and will now get paid around $15- $18 an hour, under the proposals put forward by the AIRC. level of the qualifications of the staff working with children”. Commenting on the crisis in attracting people to this important industry the decision stated: “We have found that limited career path options and low pay have contributed to the current recruitment and retention problems ... the shortage of qualified staff has the potential to jeopardise the future of quality child care in Australia. Child care work is demanding, stressful and intrinsically important to the public interest.” LHMU Childcare Union members in Victoria and the ACT have been waiting for more than two years for this historic announcement. “This is a credit to the child care union members who have organised centre-by-centre, worker-by-worker, parent-by-parent, to get widespread community support for this pay increase”, said Mr Lawrence. “We know the community recognises the professional standards, high skills and dedication our members bring to their work – now they will be rewarded appropriately for their commitment.” He warned that the Howard government will have to help fund the pay increase so as to ensure parents don’t pay for it out of their own pockets. The union says parents should not have to shoulder the burden of paying these historic child care wage increases and that child care centres should not be priced out of the reach of hard-working Australian families. The Howard Government can ensure that childcare places are accessible by putting in the funding for these wage increases. “However, any new funding should be tightly regulated to ensure that the spreading corporate sector does not misuse these funds”, Mr Lawrence said. “The community does not believe that funds for childcare workers should end up in the ‘profits’ column of the child care corporates’ annual accounts, rather than the accountants column reading ‘child care workers wages’ ”. Long struggle When Dianne Terrance first got behind the campaign she didn’t think it would take this long. Ms Terrance, who works at the Spence Children’s Cottage child care centre in Canberra, said she first became involved campaign nearly three years ago because she wanted the public to better understand the job of child care workers. “I didn’t believe then it would take us more than two years to get a result. We had to convince a lot of people to join the union and get behind this campaign. “Child care centres across Canberra have been complaining for Waterfall inquiry: Govt “should be held accountable” The final report from the inquiry into the January 2003 Waterfall rail disaster south of Sydney, in which seven people were killed, has identified the lack of a proper culture of safety. In the 900-page report, commissioner Peter McInerny, noted that rail workers were constantly blamed for shortcomings in safety in the NSW railways and that the Carr government should be held accountable for the lack of safety in the system. The report warns that further accidents are likely because of a failure to implement safety reforms. The “blame-the-workers” approach is reflected in the regime put in place in August 2003. Under new regulations 31,000 random alcohol tests have been carried out on rail staff. Only 35 positive readings were returned. And out of 1200 random drug tests only 22 positive reading were returned. The cost of these drug and alcohol tests to the taxpayers is $400,000 a year. The inquiry found a long list of shortcomings related to the Office of Transport Safety Investigations being a division of state rail regulator, the Independent Transport Safety and Reliability Regulator. Under this arrangement the chief investigator of Safety Investigations is appointed by and can be removed by the chairman of the advisory board of the Reliability Regulator. This, said Mr McInerny, “creates at least the perception that the advisory board may influence the contents of the reports of the chief investigator”. As a result “the advisory board must be abolished”. The inquiry also found: “The culture of RailCorp continues to be focused on on-time running, without adequate and proper consideration being given to safety matters”. It pointed that this “culture is misconceived. Emphasis on safety increases the efficiency and punctuality of a railway.” The report also found that although RailCorp pushed a “no blame” line when safety incidents occurred, in practice this was not followed with workers immediately being taken off duty for even minor incidents and sent for psychological testing. There has been “a breakdown in trust” between management and staff. The report also noted that train drivers were mostly blamed for any disruption to services and that drivers were pressured to breach rules to meet on-time running. In addition Mr McInerny found: • Emergency response and communications are crippled by delays, lack of coordination and incompatible systems; • RailCorp fails to allow passengers to escape from trains in an emergency; • A failure to keep computer records of documents raising safety issues; • Staff reports of faulty trains have been ignored and discouraged. Recommendations from the report include: • Abandonment of the passenger containment policy in the event of an accident; • All new rail cars to have roof access for emergency services; • Managers to a certain level to receive compulsory safety training; • Management must move away from the a “blame-the-workers” approach. J a long while about the shortages of qualified workers in this important industry”, Dianne Terrance said. “No wonder there were shortages when we expected good people to work for about $15 an hour taking care of our children. This pay win will allow us to attract back to the industry qualified child care workers who can set our kids onto the right education path. “At the time when our campaign started I found it hard to believe we could eventually win. It was difficult to get people enthusiastic and keep their motivation up – many were concerned that a push for a wage increase might hurt the children and the parents.” Most child care professionals have been paid as low as $13-$15 an hour, and will now get paid around $15-$18 an hour, under the proposals put forward by the AIRC. The Commission recognised the qualifications of Diploma and Certificate III as the key classifications in the ACT and Victorian Awards. The decision said among other things: These classifications should be linked with equivalent trade rates in the proper fixing of pay rates – increases from $82.20 per week for Diploma qualified and $64.50 for Cert III qualified professionals. The conceptualisation of children’s services has changed from “child minding” to one of early childhood development, learning, care and education. “The provision of quality child care is directly related to better intellectual/cognitive and social/behavioural outcomes in children ...” A new classification structure, consistent in both ACT & Victorian awards, is to be negotiated between the parties under the direction of a separate Commissioner who will assist in the conciliation process. The new structure may have increases in the amount of yearly increments, incremental progression based on attainment of competencies and recognition of extra responsibilities of room leaders. This process will happen in a series of conferences starting on January 25, 2005, with the Commissioner to report back to the Full Bench on March 17. Final submissions are to be in by March 24, and there is to be a final hearing on March 31. J 50,000 finance sector jobs headed offshore National Australia Bank and Westpac have recently engaged the Indian firm Tata Consultancy Services to perform IT project work on their behalf. ANZ has boosted the number of employees at its Bangalore-based ANZ IT by 32 per cent from 400 to 530 to develop and maintain its “Peoplesoft” human resources and enterprise resource planning projects. ANZ maintains that the growth of its Bangalore operation will not affect its local workforce. A spokeswoman for the bank told The Australian last month, “ANZ continues to have about 2000 technology staff working in Australia and New Zealand and we have no plan to change that”. However, global business consultancy Deloitte Research expects the job exporting trend to grow rapidly and that by 2008, 15 per cent of the finance sector workforce will be relocated to cheaper labour markets. The company estimates that 50,000 of Australia’s present 344,000 finance sector jobs will move offshore within three years. Finance Sector Union national assistant secretary Cath Noye fears the changes could have devastating effects on the workforce similar to those caused by the massive wave of bank closures in the 1980s. “We want to see this discussed openly, because this is a very important issue, not just for the financial sector but for the country”, she told the press recently. J The Guardian February 2 Australia 2005 5 Janice Hamilton Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) members in Sydney staged a peaceful rally outside the offices of Captain Cook Cruises in Circular Quay on January 25. After the multi-national cruise company cancelled its lunchtime cruise, demonstrators took their protest over to Darling Harbour, marching to the underground offices of Sydney Manager Anthony Howard. They took the action in solidarity with Captain Cook union delegate David Swales, who was sacked for taking annual leave over Christmas and New Year to be with his partner and her family in Poland. David had put in a leave application months before his trip. A few weeks before he and his girlfriend were to leave, management announced he could not go – in fact no employee was to take holidays over Christmas and New Year. By this stage David had already booked and paid for a very expensive ticket to Europe, which he was told by the airline he could not change. Having worked every Christmas and New Year for the last four years, he had gone to his Senior Manager who had said that it would be OK. The Senior Manager even offered him his best wishes for the trip. When David returned six weeks later, he was sacked. At the demonstration MUA Sydney Branch Assistant Secretary Warren Smith, in calling for management to come out of hiding and negotiate with union officials, said that it was more likely that he was sacked for being a union delegate rather than for taking holidays. “Captain Cook cruises is very good at bullying and intimidating its workforce, especially women, but when it comes to facing us they run and hide.” The MUA says that workers are confronted on a daily basis with such problems as: • Disregard of safety concerns • Reduction in working hours for “not towing the company line” • When they raise issues of concern, workers are told “if you don’t like it ... then leave!” • Little or no workplace training • Management often making threatening calls to workers’ homes • No career advancement • 80 per cent of the workforce are casual with no job security • Below award wages and poor working conditions • Harassment for joining a union “We’ve had women in tears for being called fat or for being told they couldn’t have a day off to look after young children”, said MUA Assistant Branch Secretary Paul Garret. “Crew were refused counselling after fishing a dead body out the harbour, the boss has been attempting to force members into signing individual contracts; young men and women are regularly forced to extend their shift after 1am, then given no assistance to get home in the middle of the night to places like Cabramatta, and Meadowbank. The boss refused to address safety issues such as asbestos on board until the union called in the relevant authorities (WorkCover).” Captain Cook Cruises, according to its website claims to be a small family based and family-friendly company. In fact, it is hardly small. The company has assets in excess of $80 million and earns up to $100 million annually. They operate daily cruises in Sydney, the Great Barrier Reef, the Murray River, the Fiji Islands as well as running weekend safaris in Sydney and Fiji. Demonstrators voted unanimously to continue peaceful assemblies on a weekly basis until the company meets with workers and union officials or until David is reinstated by the company or the Industrial Relations Commission. David’s unfair dismissal claim is listed for Conciliation hearing on February 10 at the NSW IRC at 2pm, Hearing Room 1, Level 8 Flight Centre Building, 815-825 George Street, Sydney. In the mean time the MUA is calling for supporters to contact the Manager of Captain Cook Cruises in Sydney, Anthony Howard on (02) 9206 1122 or 0425 260 204 and demand David Swales reinstatement. J Book Shelf Manifesto Motorcycle Diaries Three classic essays on how to change the world: Che Guevara • The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels The young Che’s lively and highly entertaining travel diary. This new, expanded edition includes previously unpublished photos taken by the 23-year-old-on his journey across the South American continent. • Reform or Revolution by Rosa Luxembourg • Socialism and Man in Cuba by Ernesto Che Guevara In an introduction to Manifesto by Adrienne Rich she writes: “If you are curious and open to the life around you, if you are troubled as to why, how and by whom political power is held and used, if you sense there must be good intellectual reasons for your unease, if your curiosity and openness drive you toward wishing to act with others, to ‘do something,’ you already have much in common with the writers of the three essays in this book.” Our price is20% off the listed price!!! 170 pages - $25 plus p&p $2.50 This is a must have book for any Socialist. It was written nearly 100 years ago and is a tale of the destitute and poor in the South of England. But Tressel doesn’t simply catalogue the desperation caused by capitalism – he uses the book to fight against an unjust system and for its replacement by a socialist society. Its message is as relevant today as it was in Britain in 1906. Four great books in the Rebel Lives series: Sacco & Vanzetti (Italian immigrants, framed by the state and executed for murder in Boston during the Red Scare of the 1920s) Haydee Santamaria (Cuban woman guerrilla leader) 175 pages - $20.00 + $2.50 p&p The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists Robert Tressel 742 pages - $27.50 + $6.50 p&p Helen Keller (Revolutionary activist, better known for her blindness than her radical social vision) Albert Einstein $16 each plus p&p $2 Political Economy John Eaton A very lucid introduction to political economy which has come to be recognised as one of the best and simplest textbooks on the subject of Marxist economic theories as expounded by Marx in Capital. This is a new revised edition. $14.50 plus p&p $2.50 Send orders to: SPA Books 74 Buckingham Street Sydney, NSW 2010 Payment may be made by sending cheque or money order made payable to “SPA Books” or by credit card stating name on the card, type of card, card number and expiry date. Or call (02) 9699 8844 with credit card details to process the order by phone. Photo: Janice Hamilton MUA says “Reinstate David Swales!” Captain Cook Cruises cancelled their lunchtime cruise as MUA members rallied at Circular Quay. A proposal for a wind farm at Kurnell, the heritage listed site where Captain Cook first stepped onto the continent, has been knocked by the Carr Government. That’s fine. It’s not an appropriate place anyway. But the Government is instead considering an application by mining company Rocla to mine the peninsula’s last available sand dune. The Greens agreed that that a wind farm should not be placed at Kurnell, but pointed out that there has also been a long battle to save the area from sand mining. Knocking back the wind farm, Carr stated, “I know my Australian history, I know what Kurnell means …” It must mean open slather for mining companies. The Commonwealth Bank – that branch-closing, anti-worker institution – was quick to jump on the populist bandwagon and connect itself with Australian of the Year, Dr Fiona Wood. The plastic surgeon who led the development of sprayon skin for treating burns victims, was called “The Face of Hope” in adverts run by the bank in the daily papers last week. Attributing to Dr Wood those ballyhooed corporate traits of “enthusiasm, innovation and vision” the ads trumpeted, “The Commonwealth Bank is proud to support the achievements of great Australians”. The contrast couldn’t be sharper – a doctor who has devoted her life to healing and saving lives, and a financial giant that was once a publicly owned service and is now a profit-bloated parasite. Philanthropy is high on the Howard government’s propaganda list. So it would interesting to know what Johnnie thinks of the philanthropic innovation and vision of businessman Ian Melrose who is running a $6 million advertising campaign to hound the government over its theft of East Timor’s oil and gas. The first ad – which says the Howard Government has stolen $2 billion from the people of East Timor – ran last week during the televising of the Australian Open tennis and is part of a campaign by a coalition that includes Oxfam and the Uniting Church under an umbrella group called The Timor Sea Justice Campaign. The group warns that at every big event which Howard uses “to promote himself” they will be there “to ambush him”. Doomsday warning dept. A new study by British scientists has found that the planet’s global temperature may climb by between 2°C and 11°C this century, compared to previous predictions of 1.4°C to 4.5°C. Even smaller increases than that are expected to cause major disasters including melting glaciers, sea-level rises, shut-down of the Gulf stream and increases in extreme weather events. And Australia won’t even sign the Kyoto Greenhouse Protocols. CAPITALIST HOG OF THE WEEK: is Governor-General Michael Jeffery who on Australia Day called on the country’s youth to learn more about Australia’s democracy. He did this with a straight face. Jeffery would want to hope they don’t study it too closely. For one thing, he’d be out of a job. 6 The Guardian Magazine February 2 2005 IMF sponsored “democracy” in th The following analysis of the outside forces at work in the affairs of the Ukraine was made before last month’s re-run of the presidential election in which Viktor Yushchenko was elected as head of state. It shows the types of pressures applied to the political life of the people of that country to ensure the victory of this proUS, neo-liberal candidate. Michel Chossudovsky Opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko in the Ukrainian presidential elections is firmly backed by the Washington Consensus. He is not only supported by the IMF and the international financial community, he also has the endorsement of The National Endowment for Democracy (NED), Freedom House and George Soros’ Open Society Institute, which played a behind the scenes role last year in helping “topple” Georgia’s president Eduard Shevardnadze by putting financial muscle and organisational metal behind his opponents.” (New Statesman, 29-11-2004). The NED has four affiliate institutes: The International Republican Institute (IRI), the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), and the American Center for International Labor Solidarity (ACILS). These organisations are said to be “uniquely qualified to provide technical assistance to aspiring democrats worldwide.” (See IRI, www.iri.org/history.asp) In the Ukraine, the NED and its constituent organisations fund Yushchenko’s party Nasha Ukraina (Our Ukraine); it also finances the Kiev Press Club. In turn, Freedom House, together with the Independent Republican Institute (IRI), is involved in assessing the “fairness of elections and their results”. IRI has staff present in “poll watching” in 9 oblasts (districts), and local staff in all 25 oblasts: “There are professional outside election monitors from bodies such as the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, but the Ukrainian poll, like its predecessors, also featured thousands of local election monitors trained and paid by western groups. ... They also organised exit polls. On Sunday night those polls gave Mr Yushchenko an 11-point lead and set the agenda for much of what has followed.” (Ian Traynor 26-11-2004, the British Guardian, www.globalresearch.ca/articles/ TRA411A.html ) Needless to say these various foundations are committed to “Freedom of the Press”. Their activities consist not only in organising exit polls and feeding disinformation into the Western news chain; they are also involved in the creation and funding of “proWestern”, “pro-reform” student groups, capable of organising mass displays of civil disobedience. (For details, see Traynor, op cit) In the Ukraine, the Pora Youth movement (“Its Time”) funded by the Soros Open Society Institute is part of that process with more than 10,000 activists. Supported by the Freedom of Choice Coalition of Ukrainian NGOs , Pora is modeled on Serbia’s Otpor and Georgia’s Kmara. The Freedom of Choice Coalition acts as an Umbrella organisation. It is directly supported by the US and British embassies in Kiev as well as by Germany, through the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (a foundation linked to the ruling Social Democrats). Among its main “partners” (funding agencies) it lists USAID, the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), Freedom House, The World Bank and the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation. (Complete list at http:// coalition.org.ua/en/index.php?opt ion=content&task=view&id=29&I temid=51 ) In turn, Freedom of Choice Coalition directly funds and collects donations for Pora (See http: //pora.org.ua/en/content/view/ 83/95/ ) The National Endowment for Democracy Among the numerous Western foundations, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), although not officially part of the CIA, performs an important intelligence function in shaping party politics in the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe and around the World. NED was created in 1983 when the CIA was being accused of covertly bribing politicians and setting up phoney civil society front organisations. According to Allen Weinstein, who was responsible for establishing the NED during the Reagan Administration: “A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.” (Washington Post, 21-9-1991). In the former Soviet Union including the Ukraine, the NED constitutes, so to speak, the CIA’s “civilian arm”. CIA-NED interventions are characterised by a consistent pattern. In Venezuela, the NED was also behind the failed CIA coup against President Hugo Chavez and in Haiti it funded the opposition parties and NGOs in the US sponsored coup d’Etat and deportation of President Aristide NED was financing the G-17, an opposition group of economists responsible for formulating (in liaison with the IMF) the DOS coalition’s “free market” reform platform in the 2000 presidential election, which led to the downfall of Slobodan Milosevic. The Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) has a very similar mandate in the Ukraine, where it directly funds research on “free market reforms” in several key “independent think tanks” and policy research institutes. The Kiev based International Center for Policy Studies (ICPS) is supported by CIPE. It has a similar function to that of the G-17 in Serbia and Montenegro: a group of local economists hired by ICPS was put in charge of drafting, with the support of the World Bank, a comprehensive blueprint of post-election macroeconomic reform. Who is Viktor Yushchenko, IMF Sponsored Candidate? In 1993, Viktor Yushchenko was appointed head of the newly-formed National Bank of Ukraine. Hailed as a “daring reformer”, he was among the main architects of the IMF’s deadly economic medicine which served to impoverish the Ukraine and destroy its economy. Following his appointment, the Ukraine reached a historical agreement with the IMF. Mr Yushchenko played a key role in negotiating the 1994 agreement as well as creating a new Ukrainian national currency, which resulted in a dramatic plunge in real wages. The 1994 IMF package was finalised behind closed doors at the Madrid 50-year anniversary Summit of the Bretton Woods institutions. It required the Ukrainian authorities to abandon State controls over the exchange rate leading to an impressive collapse of the currency. Yushchenko as Head of the Central Bank was responsible for deregulating the national currency under the October 1994 “shock treatment”: • the price of bread increased overnight by 300 per cent, • electricity prices by 600 per cent, • public transportation by 900 Combined with the abrupt hikes in fuel and energy prices, the lifting of subsidies and the freeze on credit contributed to destroying industry (both public and private) and undermining Ukraine’s breadbasket economy. In November 1994, World Bank negotiators were sent in to examine the overhaul of Ukraine’s agriculture. With trade liberalisation (which was part of the economic package), US grain surpluses and “food aid” were dumped on the domestic market, contributing to destabilising one of the World’s largest and most productive wheat economies, (e.g. comparable to that of the American Mid West). By 1998, the deregulation of the grain market had resulted in a decline in the production of grain by 45 percent in relation to its 1986-90 level. The collapse in livestock production, poultry and dairy products was even more dramatic. erishment, be so popular? Why has the public image and political reputation of an IMF protégé, namely Mr Yushchenko, remained unscathed? What the neoliberal agenda does is to build a consensus in “the free market reforms”. “Short term pain gain for long term gain” says the World Bank. “Bitter economic medicine” is the only solution, much in the same way as the Spanish inquisition was the consensus underlying the feudal social order. In an utterly twisted logic, poverty is presented as a precondition for building a prosperous society. This consensus presents a World of landless farmers, shuttered factories, jobless workers and gutted social programs as a means to achieving economic and social progress. To sustain the consensus and convince public opinion requires “turning the world upside down”, creating divisions within society, distorting the truth and ensuring, The break up of the country … modeled on the experience of former Yugoslavia is, no doubt, one among several transition “scenarios” envisaged by the Bush administration. in February 2004. (For details, see Michel Chossudovsky, 29 Feb 2004, www.globalresearch.ca/articles/ CHO402D.html ) In the former Yugoslavia, the CIA channelled support to the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) (since 1995), a paramilitary group involved in terrorist attacks on the Yugoslav police and military. Meanwhile, the NED, through the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), was backing the DOS opposition coalition in Serbia and Montenegro. More specifically, per cent. • the standard of living tumbled According to the Ukrainian State Statistics Committee, quoted by the IMF, real wages in 1998 had fallen by more than 75 percent in relation to their 1991 level. (www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/ 2003/cr03174.pdf ) Ironically, the IMF sponsored program was intended to alleviate inflationary pressures: it consisted in imposing “dollarised” prices on an impoverished population with earnings below US$10 a month. (See www.imf.org/external/ pubs/ft/scr/2003/cr03174.pdf ) The cumulative decline in GDP resulting from the IMF-sponsored reforms was in excess of 60 per cent (from 1992 to 1995). Propaganda in support of the “Free Market” Under these circumstances, why would Yushchenko, who was closely associated with the process of economic destruction and impov- through a massive propaganda campaign, that no other viable political alternative to the “free market” is allowed to emerge. Why is Yushchenko so popular? For same reason as George W Bush, running on his record of war crimes, is popular. And because his opponent, outgoing Prime Minister Yanukovich, does not represent a genuine political alternative for the Ukraine, which forcefully challenges the international financial institutions and the interests of Western corpo- The Guardian February 2 Magazine 2005 7 he Ukraine has gained a lot of credibility outside of Ukraine, and I think he also deserves support inside of Ukraine”. (quoted in the Financial Times, 27-4-2001) “He added that the IMF respects Ukraine’s right to choose its leaders, but maintained that the direction of reforms must be preserved. He questioned the wisdom of the VR [parliament] spending time on manoeuvring for a vote of no-confidence in the government while reforms need to be implemented.” Replicating Yugoslavia – the partition of the Ukraine? rate capital, which are destroying and impoverishing an entire nation. The 2004 election in the Ukraine was built on a massive propaganda and public relations campaign, supported by the US, with money payoffs by Washington for political parties and organisations committed to Western strategic and economic interests. In turn, US intelligence, working hand in glove with various foundations including the NED, has consistently supported this process of civil society manipulation. The objective is not democracy, but rather the fracturing and colonisation of the former Soviet Union. The IMF and “Good Governance” In the Ukraine, the IMF not only intervened in the implementation of the macroeconomic agenda, it also intruded directly in the arena of domestic party politics. As in Russia in 1993, the Ukrainian parliament was seen as an obstacle to the implementation of the “free market reforms”. In 1999, under due pressure from Washington and the IMF, Yushchenko was appointed Prime Minister: “Yushchenko’s candidacy had been proposed by 10 parliamentary groups and factions, and Kuchma agreed with their choice ... “The weightiest argument may be the International Monetary Fund’s desire to see Yushchenko as Ukraine’s prime minister, because the provision of the former Soviet republic with extended finance facilities depends on that. “Several parliament members believe the IMF is ready to extend a loan worth US$300 million to the Ukraine in January in case Yushchenko becomes prime minister.” (ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow, 17-12-1999) Following his appointment, Yushchenko immediately set in motion a major IMF-sponsored bankruptcy program directed against Ukrainian industry, which essentially consisted in closing down part of the country’s manufacturing base. He also attempted to undermine the bilateral trade in oil and natural gas between Russia and the Ukraine on behalf of the IMF, which had demanded that this trade be conducted in US dollars rather than in terms of commodity barter. They have sacked “our own” Prime Minister! Yushchenko was accused by his opponents of having put the interests of the IMF ahead of those of the country. In 2001, Yushchenko was sacked as prime minister following a no-confidence vote in the parliament: “Viktor Yushchenko has fulfilled obligations to the IMF better and more accurately than his duties to citizens of his own country, Olena Markosyan, a Kharkiv-based analyst, has opined in Ukrainian centrist daily Den” (BBC Monitoring, 16-11-2004) “This [Yushchenko] government openly states that it executes all IMF recommendations. Though the government declares the social direction of its policy, actually it is carrying out an anti-social, anti-national policy”, said Communist Party leader Heorhiy Kruchkov (quoted in Financial Times, 17-5-2001). The international financial community took immediate action. The Ukraine was back on the creditors’ blacklist. “The West, which openly put its stake on Yushchenko recently, is not likely to sit on its hands. There is no lack of instruments to bring pressure on Kiev. Most probably the question of resuming IMF, World Bank and EBRD credits to Ukraine will be put on hold because they were expressly linked with Yushchenko’s stay in power... Talks with the Paris Club on restructuring Ukraine’s US$1.2 billion debt may run into difficulty... Not surprisingly, (Ukrainian President) Leonid Kuchma yesterday hastened to distance himself from what is happening and spoke critically about the Rada [Parliament] decision. (Vremya Novostei, 1-5-2001, original in Russian) IMF Managing Director Horst Kohler was adamant. “Yushchenko A few months after his dismissal in 2001, Yushchenko was in Washington for talks with senior members of the Bush administration. He was back in Washington in early 2003 under the auspices of the International Republican Institute. During this visit, he met with Vice President Dick Cheney and Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage. The Neocons had carefully set the stage for the October-November 2004 presidential elections. Yugoslavia was a dress rehearsal for the fracturing of the remnant republics of the former Soviet Union. As recent developments suggest, the break up of the country, namely the partition of the Ukraine, modeled on the experience of former Yugoslavia is, no doubt, one among several transition “scenarios” envisaged by the Bush administration. Creating divisions between Ukrainians, Russians, Tatars in Crimea and other ethnic groups, ing Ukrainian elections. Defence Minister Marchuk announced following these meetings that Kiev would continue to participate in “the coalition of the willing” and would maintain its troops in Iraq. Marchuk was sacked in September, barely a month before the first round of the presidential elections. Attempting a coup d’état? In a televised address on November 25, Marchuk, sent a message to the military, police and security forces to disobey the authority of the civil authorities, namely the government of Leonid Kuchma. “Ukraine’s former defence minister and head of the National Security and Defence Council has declared that he’s convinced that opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko is entitled to be recognised as the president of Ukraine.” Former Defence Minister Yevhen Marchuk called on President Leonid Kuchma and Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych to exercise good sense. Marchuk underscored that there should be no bloodshed in Ukraine. Marchuk appealed to state security officers not to fulfill illegal orders and to remember their official honour and dignity. He stressed that election fraud in the November 21 presidential runoff election, which the government says was won by Prime Minister Yanukovych, was on a mass scale. He said that there is only one way out of the tense political stand-off that has engulfed Ukraine since Monday: negotiations between Ukrainian government which is firmly aligned with Washington, with the ultimate objective of displacing the Russian military from the Black Sea. In this regard, the Ukraine has already signed several military agreements with NATO and Washington under the government of Leonid Kuchma. The Ukraine is a member of GUUAM, a military alliance between five former Soviet republics ( Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Moldova). This military alliance was initially designed in 1997 by the Ukrainian National Security Services (NSBU) in close liaison with Washington. Its objective was to undermine the alliance between Russia and Belarus, signed between Moscow and Minsk in 1996. The Ukraine also signed agreements with Poland and the Baltic states, pertaining to the control of transport corridors and pipeline routes. GUUAM lies strategically at the hub of the Caspian oil and gas wealth, “with Moldavia and the Ukraine offering [pipeline] export routes to the West.” The objective of GUUAM was to exclude Russia from the Black Sea, protect the Anglo-American pipeline routes out of Central Asia and the Caspian Sea and essentially cut Russia off not only from the Caspian Sea oil basin but also from the Black sea. Coinciding with the ceremony of NATO’s 50th anniversary at the outset of the war on Yugoslavia in 1999, the heads of State from all five GUUAM countries were present including President Leonid Kuchma of the Ukraine. They had “Yushchenko has fulfilled obligations to the IMF better and more accurately than his duties to citizens of his own country” between Russian Orthodox, Ukrainian Orthodox and Ukrainian Catholics, etc. is part of Washington’s hidden agenda. Military realignments in support of the Free Market Militarisation supports the Free Market and vice versa. The CIA oversees the NED. The donor community, including the Washington based Bretton Woods institutions, collaborate with the European Union, NATO and the US State Department. War and Globalisation go in hand in hand. While Yushchenko is considered a protégé of the international financial community, his colleague and political crony, former Defence Minister Yevyen Marchuk is an unbending supporter of US and NATO military presence in the region. It was largely the initiative of Yevyen Marchuk as Defence Minister to send Ukrainian troops to Iraq, a decision which was opposed by the majority of the Ukrainian population. In August, Marchuk met with Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld at the Crimean seaside resort of Yalta. On the agenda of the August talks: Ukraine’s participation in the Iraqi war theatre and the upcom- equals. Marchuk also appealed to Russian Ambassador to Ukraine Viktor Chernomyrdin to pass along to Russian President Vladimir Putin only objective information. He reminded officers of the Russian Black Sea fleet in Sevastopol that they are on the territory of a foreign government, and that they should remain mindful of that, calling on the Russian Federation’s defence minister to obey the law.” (See Kiev Post, 26-11-2004 and Kanal 5 transcripts, BBC Monitoring 26-11-2004) This statement by Marchuk, which calls upon the Armed forces and the Police to go against the government, essentially sets the stage for a US-NATO sponsored coup d’état. Power struggle: oil and pipeline corridors Behind the presidential elections, there is a power struggle between pro-US-NATO and proRussian factions within the leading political establishment and the military. What is at stake is not only the maintenance of the IMF sponsored macroeconomic agenda, strategic US-NATO military interests in the region are also at stake. The objective of the Bush Administration is to install a been invited to NATO’s three-day celebration in Washington to sign the GUUAM agreement under NATO and US auspices. Georgia, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan, immediately announced that they would be leaving the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) security union, which defines the framework of military cooperation between the former Soviet republics, as well their links to Moscow: “The formation of GUUAM (under NATO’s umbrella and financed by Western military aid) was intent upon further fracturing the CIS. The Cold War, although officially over, had not yet reached its climax: the members of this new pro-NATO political grouping were not only supportive of the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia, they had also agreed to ‘low level military cooperation’ with NATO while insisting that ‘the group is not a military alliance directed against any third party, namely Moscow.’ Dominated by Anglo-American oil interests, the formation of GUUAM ultimately purports on excluding Russia from the oil and gas deposits in the Caspian area as well as isolating Moscow politically.” (Michel Chossudovsky, War and Globalization, the Truth behind September 11, Global Research, Montreal, 2002, Chapter V) www.globalresearch.ca J 8 The Guardian International February 2 2005 Peace deal in Sudan Ron Bunvon The recent peace agreement between the Sudanese government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), headed by rebel leader John Garang, has effectively ended a 21-year-old civil war that claimed more than 1.5 million lives, most of them in the southern part of the country. Signed on January 9 in Nairobi, Kenya, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement concerns the north-south conflict. However, the settlement does not directly address the crisis afflicting the western region of the country, particularly in Darfur. The north-south agreement involves a power-sharing arrangement where the revenue from the nation’s oil production will be split 50-50 between the Islamic-oriented government and the SPLM/A, which represents the predominately non-Islamic south. Under the new plan, Garang is to assume the vice presidency on February 20. Sudan, which occupies territory roughly equivalent to one-quarter of the continental USA, is located in north-eastern Africa, between Egypt and Ethiopia. It has a population of 39 million. Although most of its people face conditions of extreme poverty, Sudan’s natural resources include an estimated two billion barrels of oil. It also has considerable reserves of natural gas, gold, copper, iron and other minerals. The SPLM/A says one of its highest priorities is the voluntary repatriation of refugees whose numbers, according to UN estimates, approach four million. Meeting their humanitarian needs is essential to avert a general crisis of enormous proportions, observers say. Other provisions of the agreement involve the formation of an army comprising both government and rebel soldiers, and the holding of a referendum in the south to determine whether the region’s people want independence. The agreement stipulates that Islamic Sharia law will still apply in the northern part of Sudan. Islamic law was imposed by the Khartoum government on the entire nation in 1983, including on the predominantly non-Islamic south. Laws prevailing in the nation’s capital should be neutral, according to the SPLM/A. During the signing ceremony, Garang said, “In our view the attempt by various Khartoum-based regimes to build a monolithic ArabIslamic state to the exclusion of other parameters of the Sudanese diversity constitutes the fundamental problem of the Sudan and defines the Sudanese conflict. … This provoked resistance by the excluded.” The goal of the SPLM/A is the “all-inclusive Sudanese state” with a high priority placed on the “equality of opportunity for all Sudanese citizens”, he said. The Khartoum Centre for Human Rights and Environmental Development and the Amel Centre for Treatment and Rehabilitation for Victims of Torture greeted the agreement, saying that it opens up prospects for greater freedom, peace, and respect for diversity. Noting that the north-south conflict has included massive displacement of populations, the deprivation of civil rights, abductions and torture, the two groups said they welcomed the agreement and “all the parties who participated in the negotiations and discussions, and we call for widening the cooperation and implementation of these protocols on a national basis in all parts of Sudan.” In the wake of the January 9 ceremony, and despite the continuing conflict in Darfur, US Secretary of State Colin Powell signalled a willingness to relax sanctions against Sudan. One consequence of such a relaxation will be to give US companies greater access to the country’s oil fields. People’s Weekly World J CP of China to reinforce role in public enterprises The Communist Party of China (CPC) has decided to reinforce its role as the leader of large state-owned companies and stateowned enterprises (SOEs). The Organisation Department of the Party says that party committee members should hold major posts in large scale companies, such as members of boards of directors or general managers to ensure the Party’s involvement in the major decisions taken by state-owned companies and enterprises. The objective of this decision is to facilitate the continuing reform and development of state-owned enterprises while cracking down on corruption and “ensuring the lead- ing role of SOEs in the national economy”, says a statement issued by the Organisation Department of the Party. The statement says a new mechanism should be set up in SOEs to choose talented people and managerial personnel who match with the modern corporate system and that the SOEs should combine the party’s policy on cadres with the management’s rights to employ people according to law. The SOEs should set up effective supervision systems, including education, punishment and anti-corruption measurest. Party committees working in SOEs should redouble their efforts to work out measures to encourage Iraqi unions’ plea The internationally recognised Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions (IFTU) has issued a plea for world-wide solidarity to secure the release of kidnapped union leader Talib Khadim. The President of the Iraqi Mechanics, Metalworkers and Printworkers Union was seized by insurgents at the Carton Board Manufacturing Company in the Al Zafarania District of Baghdad on January 27 while on union business. The six gunmen involved beat the unionist repeatedly with the butts of their guns before tying his legs and hands and taking him to an unknown location. The incident took place in front of terrified workers from the company. Mr Khadim lives in the Al Zafarania District and is well respected as a community activist and champion of workers’ rights. The IFTU believes that the kidnapping is closely linked in its methods and intentions to the recent brutal assassination of Hadi Saleh, the IFTU International Secretary, whose murder was condemned by unions world-wide. In spite of the dangers, Iraqi workers have made great strides towards building effective unions. The IFTU was formed in April 2003 and has since built 12 national trade unions. The IFTU is Iraq’s union representative to the International Labor Organization (ILO) and was a participant at the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) 18th World Congress held last December in Japan. It has the support of the British Trade Union Congress and other European unions. The IFTU is asking readers to send copies of any letters to the editor or other media items they might get published to their international contact in the UK, Abdullah Muhsin at abdullahmuhsin@ iraqitradeunions.org A support group has been set up in Perth. The WA Iraq Support Group can be contacted by phoning Jan Jermalinski on 08 9464 4423 during business hours. J the involvement of employees in company management and protect their legal rights, it says. Party-wide education On another front, the CPC has launched an 18-month education drive to “maintain the advanced nature of the Party”. It is the largest education course in the Party since China adopted its “opening-up” policy more than 20 years ago. It will involve all of the Party’s more than 68 million members. Chinese President and CPC General Secretary Hu Jintao told the Party on the occasion of the launch of the campaign that strengthening the CPC’s advanced nature is of vital importance for the Party’s survival, development and expansion. A document issued by the CPC Central Committee noted that in the new century, profound changes have taken place in the environment the Party lives in, the tasks the Party shoulders and the makeup of party members. The campaign is being conducted in order to adapt the Party itself to these changes. The education campaign will be an important measure to elevate the Party’s governance capability, consolidate its ruling status and complete its governing missions while maintaining the nation’s permanent stability. The campaign will help to overcome outstanding problems related to its ideology, its organisation and work style within the Party. Another feature of the campaign is that the Party will set up an open-ended long-term mechanism to invite comments from non-party personages so as to guarantee the effectiveness of the campaign. The mechanism will remain even after the education campaign concludes. The campaign is not only to resolve problems of the party members, but also to address the complaints of common people. J US marines in Sudan – the US wants access to Sudan’s oil Cuban child inaugurates 5th World Social Forum Abel Sardiña PORTO ALEGRE, BRAZIL: Last night (January 26), a six-year-old Cuban girl held the attention of several thousand participants at the 5th World Social Forum (WSF), when she officially opened the debates along with three adults. The inaugural event was held after a mass march in which 200,000 people took part according to military police estimates, a record for this type of event. The brief address opening the 2000-plus programmed events and to work “for justice, dignity as a universal human value” was read out by three adults in Portuguese, English and French, and by the Cuban child in Spanish. The child chosen, Ivette González, is the daughter of René González, one of the five Cubans serving harsh prison terms in the United States for combating terrorism. The US authorities have repeatedly denied visas to Ivette and her mother so that they can visit him. In the opening address the World Social Forum participants, who had arrived in Porto Alegre from more than 100 countries, were introduced as the members of “another and possible world”, which is standing up to “a world in which neoliberalism is furthering wars and inequalities”. The little Cuban girl and her three companions called on those present for one minute’s silence for the victims of all tragedies, especially those of the tsunamis that devastated several Asian countries. Likewise, she urged everyone to light thousands of candles for dignity, to illuminate that other possible world for which the forum movement is fighting. During the previous three-kilometre march, banners, placards bearing slogans and chants rejecting war and the US president, George W Bush, neo-liberalism, debt, and the militarization of the Free Trade of the Americas Area (FTAA) were predominant. Expressions of solidarity with Cuba, Venezuela, Palestine, and Iraq were also highlighted, as were calls for equality, peace, the right to an education, respect for the environment in all its forms and countless other demands. Moore than 2,000 conferences, events, debates and other activities are scheduled over four days, grouped around 11 major central themes previously proposed by the participants. Granma International www.granma.cu J NEW AUSTRALIAN EDITION! In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Nikolai Ostrovsky’s birth the Communist Party of Australia is pleased to present a new CD Rom Edition of the classic Soviet novel How the Steel Was Tempered Prepared from the 1952 English Edition by Progress Publishers, this edition includes the 12 original illustrations by A.Reznichenko. The novel has been formatted as a PDF in both screen-readable A5 and printable A4 pages. $10 plus $2 p&p Available from SPA books See Bookshop ad page 5 for ordering details The Guardian February 2 International 2005 9 The Emperor speaks Born-again Christian, George W Bush delivered two speeches on the day of his second inauguration last month. They were full of banalities, platitudes, hypocrisy and liberally sprinkled with religious references – “we are guided by a larger power than ourselves who creates us equal in His image” and, “America’s vital interests and our deepest beliefs … bear the image of the Maker of Heaven and earth”. His speeches were delivered in the usual moronic and insincere Bush one-line grabs. But it was the atmosphere of this US$50 million spectacular that was most vulgar. It was a display of corporate wealth with their representatives lining up to reap the huge contracts that will flow from Bush’s program for wars around the world. He has just asked Congress for another US$50 billion for the Iraq war. Bush, with his triumphal grin was a nauseating spectacle. He was flanked by Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Wolfowitz and other warmongering minions in crime. Bush threatened the “enemies of liberty” … “America remains engaged in the world by history and by choice”. It was left to Condoleezza Rice, who has succeeded Colin Powell as Secretary of State, to name the immediate “enemies” – Iran, North Korea, Myanmar, Zimbabwe, Cuba and Belarus. Needless to say nations such as Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Jordan, Morocco and Egypt, none of whose governments can be considered “democratic” nor their people to be “free”, did not warrant a mention – their autocratic governments are already toadies of the United States and that is the real criteria for acceptance by the Bush administration. The horrific consequences of Bush’s evangelical mindset that believes that he is the messenger of God are frightening to contemplate. “He is in the White House because God put him there for a time such as this”, declared US army Lieutenant-General Boykin. And this President, who definitely did not win his first election in 2000, still has many questions hanging over his head surrounding his second term election. Bush hijacked the words “freedom”, “liberty” and “democracy” as America’s private property. He used the words “freedom” and “liberty” over 25 times in one of his short speeches. In her speech, Condoleezza Rice echoed Bush with such remarks as, “Our duty … is to spread freedom and prosperity around the globe”. Global Cop The US administration intends to impose its will on the rest of the world using these clichés to justify its wars and occupations. What this means in practice can be seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. “America, in this young century, proclaims liberty throughout all the world, and to all the inhabitants thereof”, and, “It is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.” US aggression and occupation of both Afghanistan and Iraq and will be used incessantly in the future, said Bush. No country that hosts US bases – and more than 100 nations do – can be considered either free, independent or democratic. Furthermore, there is no evidence that the so-called democratic countries are capable of bringing peace to the world. In reality, “democratic” America has foisted more wars, more invasions, more assassinations, more subversion, and more interference on other countries than any other nation in recent times. And these interventions are taking place in a number of countries right now and are to be intensified in Bush’s second term. Bush ignored the terrible trauma and chaos brought to Iraq by the US invasion and his lies about weapons of mass destruction. Even his “war on terrorism” hardly rated a mention in his speeches. Bush also outlined his domestic policy which is all about pushing through the privatisation of every- US to block Canadian medicines Darrell Rankin In a total betrayal, the Martin Liberals may shut down Canada’s C$1 billion internet pharmacy business within a few weeks. US corporate drug companies are opposed to the import of inexpensive drugs. According to industry spokespersons, US President George Bush gave Prime Minister Paul Martin an “ultimatum” to stop the flow of cheap pharmaceuticals. Last year close to two million US patients purchased drugs from internet mail-order pharmacies in Canada, due to a combination of Canadian price controls, a lower Canadian dollar and a highly monopolised US drug industry. Typically, drugs in Canada cost 30 to 40 per cent less than at US drug stores. The strongest push for this change is coming from US corporate drug giants, which spent US$235.7 million in the United States on lobbying between 1997 and 1999 alone, and gave US$33.4 million to US political parties and candidates between 1997 and 2000. Federal health minister Ujjal Dosanjh, a former NDP premier of British Columbia, is drawing up regulations that will end the jobs of 4000 people in Canada, about half of whom live in Manitoba, and boost US corporate drug profits by billions of dollars over several years. Millions of US citizens will be forced to pay monopoly pricing to the corporate drug giants, if they can afford it at all. Arguments in support of the crackdown are convoluted on both sides of the border. The regulations may ban Canadian doctors from co-signing prescriptions written by American physicians, to prevent the “unethical” practice of issuing prescriptions for patients not personally examined. But a majority of US states (29) honour prescriptions written by Canadian doctors with no need for a co-signing US physician. Citing a need to guarantee Threatening the world – Bush delivers his speech thing possible including the all too limited US welfare provisions. “We will widen the ownership of homes and businesses, retirement savings and health insurance”. Bush says that “the public interest depends on private character”, thereby shifting responsibility for the welfare of society’s citizens from the State to individuals – self provision or in practice “dog-eatdog”. He continues, “the edifice of character is built in families”, a reference to his right-wing Christian fundamentalist agenda on single mothers, birth control, abortion and other women’s rights. At the end of Bush’s inauguration speech, which was concluded by his familiar “God bless America” (Bush never calls on God to bless anyone else), his minions struck up the chant “U.S.A! U.S.A! U.S.A!”, responding to the rabid nationalism inherent in every Bush word. Make no mistake, Mark Latham was right. Bush is the most dangerous man to have ever occupied the position of US President. J the amount of drugs available to Canadians, Dosanjh may ban the export of a list of widely used prescription drugs. Surely there are less drastic measures that will ensure drug supplies. In the US, politicians have expressed concerns about the “safety” of drugs imported from Canada, many of which are first exported from the US to Canada; they are the same drugs manufactured by the same companies in the same plants as drugs intended for US citizens. This prompted one US congressman to demand, “Show us the dead Canadians”. But a shortage of facts or valid reasons has never stopped pro-corporate governments from acting when profits are at stake. The Martin Liberals are bowing to the bigger profit-mongers who control Washington and abandoning workers and businesses in their own country, an outright betrayal of Canada. People’s Voice, Canada’s communist newspaper J Global briefs GERMANY: An unemployed 25-year-old woman has been threatened with cuts to her unemployment benefit for turning down a job as a sex-worker. The brothel owner had requested an interview with the woman after seeing her resumé on the government’s jobseeker database and under Germany’s new “mutual obligation” laws you are penalised for refusing to attend. BOLIVIA: Strikes and roadblocks tied up two major cities last month as residents protested against a government decision to cut fuel subsidies – a move that would raise gas prices by up to 23 percent. Hundreds of thousands of residents joined the protests in the country’s economic capital, Santa Cruz, where workers halted public and private transport. In El Alto, demonstrators were also demanding cancellation of the contract with a French firm operating their water system, accusing the company of over-charging and failing to provide service to poor neighbourhoods since it started to operate in Bolivia in 1997. In La Paz, members of the country’s largest labour federation, the Bolivian Workers Central, held several peaceful marches. The federation is demanding the resignation of President Carlos Mesa. Mesa became president in October 2003 after Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada resigned in the wake of mass street protests. GUINEA: Teachers in Guinea began an indefinite strike in January to demand a 40 percent pay raise, the United Nations’ IRIN news agency said. Bamba Camara, secretary-general of the Guinean Teachers’ Federation, said the strike was also called for full implementation of a 2000 protocol with the government, which set a formula for raising teachers’ pay. The average Guinean teacher earns about US$70 a month, but Camara said this is no longer enough to live on, in view of steep increases last year in the price of food and transportation. “Teachers’ salaries are laughable, yet they face tough living conditions. Transportation alone eats over half of their salaries, while there are other obligations like rent, electricity and water bills, and you know the price of a bag of rice nowadays is anything between $US17 and $US22 per bag”, he said. Soaring food prices, rising electricity costs and unpaid state salaries have resulted in strikes and demonstrations by railway workers, students, mineworkers and others in recent months. MOLDOVA: A recent poll has found the Communist Party of Moldova (CPRM) is the top political organisation in the former Soviet republic. In a poll by the Moldovan Institute of Public Policy, nearly 40 per cent of respondents in the country said they would vote for the CPRM – which leads the current government – in the next parliamentary election, set down for March 6. The opposition, the Our Moldova alliance, is second with 9.5 percent, followed by the Christian-Democratic People’s Party with 7.5 per cent. Others are below 5 percent. In the parliamentary election held in February 2001, Moldova became the first former Soviet republic to re-elect a communist administration. The PCRM won 49.9 per cent of the vote and 71 seats in parliament. Following the election, parliament picked PCRM leader Vladimir Voronin as president. 10 The Guardian February 2 Letters to the Editor The Guardian 74 Buckingham Street Surry Hills NSW 2010 email: guardian@cpa.org.au Unpardonable policies When Howard and his cronies came to power there was no end of promises of good things to come – everybody was supposed to be “relaxed and comfortable”. I won’t go into all the things that make me feel angry, uncomfortable and out of the pocket thanks to all the HowardCostello policies. One of them is really hurting everybody and it’s the public health system. A friend of mine needs a minor operation on his foot and has to wait for six months to have it done. Meanwhile, it severely restricts his ability to walk and causes a lot of pain. An older woman I know was told that her hip replacement operation date was 18 months away. Imagine how she feels hobbling around and in pain. Bulk billing has almost disappeared and emergency rooms in public hospitals are flooded with patients who would have otherwise gone to see their medical practitioner but can’t afford to do so now. Culture Life by & Rob Gowland Death camps, slaves and profits The bourgeois media and the leaders of many capitalist countries spent the end of last week recalling the liberation of the Nazi death camp at Oświęcim. Although located in the Polish province of Galicia, the site will forever be known by its German name of Auschwitz. Estimates of the total number of people who perished at Auschwitz vary from 1,000,000 to 2,500,000. What proportion were Jewish also varies from half to two thirds, but whatever it was it is surely horrific. But while various European government leaders and newspaper editorial writers all over the world were busy denouncing anti-Semitism and expressing their abhorrence of the Holocaust, certain basic facts were either glossed over, distorted or just plain ignored. Mostly glossed over was the fact that Auschwitz was liberated, on a wintry January 27, 1945, by the advancing Red Army, which at colossal cost in men and materiel had ripped the guts out of the Wermacht. The Red Army men found only 7650 survivors still in the camp. The Nazis had removed the other remaining prisoners ten days earlier to Dachau, Mauthausen and other camps in Germany. Ignored is the fact that Nazi extermination was not limited to the Jews. They began by murdering the Communists, Socialists and trade union activists. They went on to kill Gypsies and the mentally ill. Then the Jews Meanwhile the government continues to pour money into private hospitals. According to a report by the Productivity Commission, annual government spending on private hospitals has grown on average by 23.7 per cent during the past ten years. In comparison, the annual average growth in spending on public hospitals was only 3.7 per cent. There is a shortage of doctors in the bush and overseas doctors are being imported to fill up vacancies. It’s shameful that Australia, a rich country compared to many others cannot train enough medical practitioners to meet the needs of its citizens. The health of Aboriginal people (or the absence of it) is unpardonable. Australia has the worst record in the world as far as life expectancy and health of an indigenous population goes. Are these problems being addressed? Not that I noticed. The government is trying to turn everything into private hands, even the things that as a government it should provide free to all the citizens. I’d like to encourage everybody to make sure that these policies are fought against at every opportunity and at every level. We all pay taxes and have a right to have a say on how they are spent. Howard is never short of a quid when it comes to some military adventures. It’s time to redirect the money to people’s needs, not some of his friends’ profits. Sue Sanders Sydney, NSW and then the “Bolshevik submen” of Eastern Europe. In fact, taking account of the activities of the Nazis’ special punitive units employing mobile gas chamber vans, flame throwers for burning alive populations of entire villages, and other such refined barbarisms, millions of Slavs – Russians, Poles, Ukrainians, Byelorussians – were also systematically exterminated by Hitler’s brown plague. It is not downplaying the appalling genocide against the Jews to ask why the simultaneous genocide against so many Slavs and others is passed over? The Nazis regarded their “nonAryan” victims as sub-human, and therefore as undeserving of any pity or humanitarian concern. The bestiality that German military and police were encouraged to practice could be given free rein with such “creatures”. Ignored most assiduously, too, is the fact that the death camps were not only about killing people, about the “final solution”. They were about profit and big business. Auschwitz was in fact a complex of three neighbouring camps. Auschwitz I was the smallest and built first (opened in April 1940). It was used mainly for political prisoners. Auschwitz II is the well known death camp near the village of Birkenau, opened in October 1941. Auschwitz III, near the village of Dwory, was from May 1942 a slave labour camp. Auschwitz III supplied slave workers for the large chemical and synthetic-rubber works of IG Farben conveniently located nearby. IG Farben also made lots of money supplying the German government with the poison gas used in the extermination chambers of Auschwitz II and other camps. Prisoners arriving at Auschwitz were separated into those who were fit for work and those who were not. The old, the ill and children were put in the latter category. These were sent off to be Australia needs a new national Day In the wake of the rousing celebrations of the 150th anniversary since the stand at the Eureka Stockade on 3rd December 1854, and now yet another commemoration of our convict streak and dispossession of the indigenous inhabitants from their land, it is good time to question whether our so called Australia Day of 26th January has run its course. Who in Australia still believes in what Australia Day stands for or would want to believe in what it stands for? If the people of this nation are ever to have a symbol or portent of unity, resolve, liberty and egalitarianism, then it has to be those events on the Ballarat goldfields of November 1854, which culminated in the brief and only popular uprising in this nation’s history in the early hours of 3rd December 1854 (Is Prime Minister Howard the new Governor Hotham of this age?). As a consequence of the Eureka Stockade the people of Victoria gained: the right to vote; parliamentary democracy; the birth of trade unions and the development of the organised urban working class; and the belief by the citizenry across all classes, that a fair, decent and prosperous society for all would not be gained without struggle or by leaving it to the so called respectable landed gentry/ starved, hanged, shot or gassed to death, their clothes, hair, gold teeth and other meagre possessions appropriated to swell the coffers of the Reich. The others, the “lucky” ones, were sent to the forced labour camp. Here, as with all the unfortunates (especially those from the East) forced to do slave labour in Germany or the occupied territories, they were officially “worked to death” (in accordance with a protocol of September 18, 1942, between Himmler and Minister of Justice Thierack). The Nuremberg indictments rightly described this exploitation as being based on “the concept of extermination”. An order issued by Germany’s Plenipotentiary General for Manpower, Sauckel, said that all foreign workers assigned to forced labour “must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as to exploit them to the highest possible extent squatters, colonial mercantile capitalists and other representatives of imperial interests. As Australia moves inexorably towards a republic and attempts to forge a more inclusive and compelling national identity, a more deeply felt national day (flag and song also) is one of those symbols which will help draw us there. Richard Titelius Perth, WA 2005 The year 2004 went out with a vengeance, you might say. The tsunami with its tremendous loss of life, and the lives that will be lost as a result of it. Poor people do not have the physical stamina to deal with illness, or the support of a health and welfare system, to help them. The magnificent humanity of the Australian people will be diminished by the politics of dirty tricks, and the media beating up terrorism. On the home front the loss of life in the SA bushfires – no political gain there, as bushfires are part of life in Australia. The mentality is, you must accept bushfires. Or move to New Zealand – you have earthquakes there. Unselfish, devoted bushfire brigades, devoted to saving life and livelihood, face tougher and harder times each summer as they risk and some lose their lives. A contributor in part to bushfires is the speed of land-degrading clearances, lack of undergrowth clearing and adequate fire breaks. Bushfire brigades have to be given more resources and equipment, controlling bushfires is a year round operation. Bushfire brigades are voluntary and not appreciated enough. Water is a scarce liquid on this Australian continent, any day you pass a building site, 1st class drinking water mixes concrete, hoses down dust. We are told save water, install this and that shower head, tap, kettle, etc, etc. The answer is recycle water. Germany is well resourced with water. The Germans built the great Ruhr industrial giant with recycled water, they’ve seen beyond the natural supply of water (that was long before Nazism), at the beginning of Germany’s industrial revolution. Australia needs a national water conservation and recycling scheme, not owned and controlled by private corporations. We are heading for an environmental holocaust with the rapid dumping of waste and toxic waste. We will have to import food, in large quantities if the loss of farm land is not halted. The CPA must shake it up. The Guardian is top on political analysis, foreign affairs none to match it. The CPA has to lead the way, on the critical state of the Australian continent’s health. Anne Duffy-Lindsay Sydney, NSW at the lowest conceivable degrees of expenditure”. Quintessential capitalism, really. They would introduce such a system everywhere if only the workers wouldn’t object. All the big German corporations clamoured for access to slave labour – whether the slave labour of the camps or the shipments of slave workers provided direct from occupied countries to German employers. Making the link between exploitation and genocide quite clear was a special order issued on June 12, 1944: “Army Group Centre has the intention to apprehend 40,00050,000 youths at the ages of ten to fourteen who are in the army territory and to transport them to the Reich. “It is intended to allot these juveniles primarily to the German trades as apprentices to be used as skilled workers after two years’ training…. This Action is aimed not only at preventing a direct reinforcement of the enemy’s military strength but also at a reduction of his biological potentialities as viewed from the perspective of the future.” “A reduction of [the enemy’s] biological potentialities” – as neat a description of genocide as you could find. Auschwitz was not the only German death camp. And if the Soviet Army had not beaten the crap out of the Nazi war machine, the Hitlerites had plans for even bigger death camps across the USSR. The blueprints were already drawn up for camps that would dwarf Auschwitz, both in numbers exterminated and – above all – in the number of slave labourers who would be put to work there. The Soviet people and their Army put paid to these nightmarish schemes, at an unimaginable cost. When they liberated Auschwitz, they liberated us all. J Water The Guardian February 2 Worth Watching 2005 Rob Gowland previews ABC & SBS Public Television E Sun February 6 ~ ~ Sat February 12 pisode two in the splendid series The Private Life Of A Masterpiece (ABC 2.00pm Sundays) looks at the creation of Goya’s masterpiece The Third of May 1808. In May 1808, the people of Madrid rose up against Napolean’s occupation. French troops brutally suppressed the uprising and hundreds of people were rounded up and shot in the middle of the night. In 1814, when Napoleon was defeated, Goya was commissioned to depict “the most notable and heroic actions of our glorious insurrection against the tyrant of Europe” for the exiled Spanish King’s return. Instead of glorifying the King, the army or the state, Goya painted the Madrid rebellion and its brutal aftermath, focusing on a group of frightened, anonymous men being shot at point-blank range by a firing squad. The Third of May 1808 was the first painting to put the victims of war centre stage. Manet noticed its radical qualities in 1865 but only in the 20th century was Goya’s work seen as a prophecy of military brutality and human suffering. he ABC has shown a propensity lately for buying in ducumentaries from US cable TV. These have a dreadful sameness about them: usually following some scientist(s) on a field trip, interspersed with talking heads and a portentous commentary that tries to make up in overstatement for the lack of drama in the visuals. I therefore approached the new three-part series, Nile (ABC 7.30pm T Sundays), with some trepidation. I worried for nothing. Nile is superb. Made by the BBC, it is one of the most beautifully filmed series I have seen. The Nile is the longest river in the world, and the series shows us its history, its role at different periods in the lands through which it passes, with a quality of filmmaking that leaves for dead the usual home-movie look of most travel or archeological TV documentaries. The first episode, Crocodiles And Kings, deals mainly with the society that developed alongside the river in ancient Thebes. Cable TV, I thought, had done the Ancient Egyptian theme to death, for relatively little real benefit to viewers, but this series showed how wrong that idea is. Simply and yet lucidly the episode makes clear why Egyptian society developed alongside the river, their relationship with the wildlife beside and in the river, why their religion developed in the way that it did, and the objective reasons for these developments, all dependant on the river. How the annual flooding of the Nile, for example, both tested and confirmed the power of the Pharoah. The next episode deals with the long and difficult search in the 19th century for the headwaters of the river. I am looking forward to it. t last, a new series of Foyle’s War (ABC 8.30pm Sundays). As viewers of the two previous series will know, this is first rate televsion drama – beautifully crafted, extremely well written, excellently acted and directed. It is because it is so well written that only four episodes are made in each series. It maintains the quality but sadly limits the quantity. Made for British commercial TV network ITV1, the series is written by Anthony Horowitz and directed by Gavin Millar. The series’ setting – the early years of WW2 in Britain – has allowed Horowitz in earlier episodes to make some pertinent observations about the presence of pro-fascist elements in England and also about the military mindset. The first episode of the new A The Private Life Of A Masterpiece (ABC 2.00pm Sundays) – Goya’s masterpiece The Third of May 1808. series, The French Drop, sees Foyle come up against rivalry between different sections of British Intelligence. In particular he encounters the “dirty tricks” of SOE, the notorious Special Operations Executive. It’s another intelligent, thoughtful, and quietly gripping, program. here’s more good writing, although of a different calibre to Foyle’s War, in Trevor’s World Of Sport (ABC 10.00pm Tuesdays). A rueful comedy series about a dysfunctional sport agent, it is written and directed by Andy Hamilton (Drop The Dead Donkey and Bedtime). Neil Pearson stars as Trevor Heslop, sports agent to the stars. Trevor’s life is in a mess. He’s separated from his wife, his most lucrative client is going crazy and he’s having a recurring nightmare about accepting a prestigious award while sitting naked on the toilet. Fundamentally an honest sports agent, Trevor is desperately struggling to keep his honour in the money-infested waters of commercialised sport. Paul Reynolds, who usually plays obnoxious, pushy types, plays his obnoxious, pushy partner T Sydney New Theatre FALLING PETALS by Ben Ellis Directed by Brendon McDonall With Peter Barry, Kellie Higgins & Emma Wood 10 February – 12 March Thurs – Sat @ 8pm, Sun @ 5.30pm Tickets: $25 / $20 concession. Bookings: 02 9519 8958 New Theatre 542 King Street, Newtown Subscribe to Something strange is happening in the country town of Hollow: a mysterious plague is killing the young people. One by one they fall like petals. Three vulnerable school-leavers are caught in this diseased backwater. Success in their final exams may be the only passport out of a country town with no future. But with the deadly outbreak reaching epidemic proportions it becomes a desperate race against time, their youthful optimism threatened as the township is quarantined and the community spirals into anarchy. Falling Petals is both black satire and moving allegory, a humorous yet cautionary tale for our times. Powerful, caustic and deeply contemporary, this award-winning play challenges the cynicism of a society where youth is devalued, and strips bare the romanticised myths of the Australian outback. The Guardian □12 MONTHS: $88 ($80 conc.) □6 months: $45 ($40) □3 months: $23 ($20) NAME: ___________________________________________________ ADDRESS: ___________________________________________________ _______________________________________POSTCODE:____________ Pay by □ Cheque □ Money order to: Guardian Subscriptions 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, NSW 2010, Australia or by credit card: □Bankcard □Mastercard □Visa Card # □□□□ □□□□ □□□□ □□□□ Amount: ________ Expiry Date: ____/____ Date: ________ Signature:________________________________________ 11 The Guardian 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, 2010 Ph: 02 9699 8844 Fax: 02 9699 9833 Email:guardian@cpa.org.au Editor: Anna Pha Published by Guardian Publications Australia Ltd 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, 2010 Printed by Spotpress 105-107 Victoria Rd Marrickville 2204 Responsibility for electoral comment is taken by T Pearson, 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, 2010 Sammy Dobbs, and is quite good (he’s had lots of practice). Trevor’s World Of Sport features several famous sports stars appearing as themselves, a gimmick that does nothing for me and only occasionally ads verisimilitude to the series. A Hat Trick production, the series’ cast includes many familiar faces from series like Bedtime and movies like Love Actually. he new series of Little Britain (ABC 9.00pm Wednesdays) is described by the ABC as a “character-based sketch show”. They also say that the first series was “hailed as one of the most innovative comedies of 2003”. I found the first episode of the new series dead annoying, and not innovative at all. It turns out that “character-based” sketch comedy means sketches that have dispensed with the basic element of comedy: the gag. Instead, the writers and performers (Matt Lucas and David Walliams) have convinced themselves that all that is needed to be funny is to act the fool. And being outrageous is apparently the height of hilarious wit. In the first episode of Series Two, their character teen delinquent Vicky Pollard is caught shoplifting. She tells the security guard, “Oh my God, this is, well, harassment. God you’re so racist. It’s like being back at Borstal. Anyway, don’t listen to her, ’cos everyone knows she’s done it with an Alsatian.” T Laugh? I nearly pissed myself! Well, actually, no I didn’t. In fact, I found it so tedious that I turned off the preview tape less than half-way through. hile Johnny Howard splurges money on the military, very little money is being provided for stopping the devastation being caused by the steady advance across the Top End of the toxic Cane Toad. Cane Toads are poisonous. Predators who eat them die – quickly. They do not learn to avoid the toads. Originally from South America, the toads were introduced into Queensland in 1935 in a disastrously ill-considered attempt to biologically control the sugar cane beetle. The toads ignored the beetles and instead settled in to wreak havoc on our environment. They are wiping out native frogs, kookaburras, quoll, snakes and goannas. Richard Morecroft’s new nature documentary Goannas And The Rubbish Frogs (ABC 6.00pm Saturdays) reveals that in parts of Kakadu there are an alarming 20,000 cane toads per square kilometre – making Aboriginal communities concerned that goannas could well be wiped out. At the present rate of funding, an effective genetic control is at least a decade away. Meanwhile, wet season floodwaters are carrying the cane toads ever deeper into previously pristine wilderness areas. J W Sydney Politics in the Pub Every Friday night 6pm – 7.45pm Gaelic Club, 64 Devonshire St, Surry Hills Dinner afterwards in the Royal Exhibition Hotel across the road 4 Feb Catching the train and missing the bus. Where is the Carr? Professor Peter Newman, Director, Institute for Sustainability and Technology Policy, Murdoch University, WA; Nick Lewocki NSW Secretary Road, Transport, Bus Union 11 Feb Politics of the tsunami Panel: James Ensor, Director of Public Policy, Oxfam Community Aid Abroad; Ian Cohen MLC, NSW Greens; Professor Andrew Short, Director Marine Studies Centre, School of Geosciences Sydney Uni; James Arvanitakis Research Initiative on International Activism 18 Feb Busting the unions – what’s coming next? John Buchanan, Deputy Director ACIRRT; Sally McManus Exec Branch Sec ASU; Jim Staples, retired Arbitration Judge Inq: Pat Toms 02 9358 4834 pbtoms@bigpond.com; Janet Fischer 02 9398 8891; PO Box 325 Rozelle NSW 2039; Win Childs Fax 02 9660 6554 www.politicsinthepub.org 12 The Guardian February 2 2005 Book review by Bob Briton Faces of the Smelter – a collection of photographs commemorating Port Pirie’s industrial heritage and its people Photography by Suzanne Laslett and others There is probably no need to remind Guardian readers that in recent years public discussion about the world of work has been monopolised by the bosses’ point of view. The tabloid and broadsheet newspapers, the TV and radio news bulletins and news commentary programs have been busy influencing our view of what work looks like and how it shapes the lives of Australians in the new millennium. You could be forgiven for thinking we are all small business people or entrepreneurs of some description or high-tech headworkers. The gaps in this perfect world are filled by the hospitality industry. Students and others requiring flexible hours do shorts stints of waitering and bartending before moving onward and upward. The heavy and dirty work is now being done elsewhere, it seems. Even when the media carries depictions of people clearly still carrying on these demanding and often unpleasant tasks, the dominant image of the “post-industrial” workplace prevails. We have never had it so good, we are told. Grimy, hazardous work has been conquered along with poverty! Of course, the considerable numbers of Australians who still work in this presumably banished sector of the workforce know different. And every now and then, the reality of these workers’ lives gets proper recognition. Last September a collection of photographs of Port Pirie’s lead and zinc smelter, present and past workers and their families was brought together in a book together as part of celebrations marking the 100th Smelter’s Picnic. The images in the book were selected from an exhibition commemorating the same event and which was shown at the Port Pirie Regional Gallery in October 2003 and then at the New Land Gallery in Port Adelaide. The original idea for the exhibition came from Lucia Pilcher, director of the Port Pirie gallery and Kate Jenkins, who was then arts officer with Country Arts SA. Adelaidebased project artist, photographer Suzanne Laslett was chosen to head a team of eight keen amateur photographers from various backgrounds who lived in Port Pirie at the time. Suzanne’s own photos have ended up in private and corporate collections in Australia, UK, Germany, Japan, France, New Zealand and the USA. She has worked both as a journalist and photographer on city, suburban and regional newspapers in New South Wales, Northern Territory and South Australia – including in Port Pirie. Travelling back to Port Pirie was … “like revisiting an old friend. Industrial landscapes have always fascinated me and the hard edge of the Smelter looking across river to the backdrop of the Flinders Ranges is a powerful image … . But once inside, the immensity of the Smelter ‘persona’ was overwhelming”, Suzanne notes in the introduction to Faces of the Smelter. In all, the group comprising a retired smelter worker, a teacher on maternity leave, a graphic designer, a year 11 student, a Catholic priest, a local reporter, a member of staff at an insurance office and a police officer produced 960 photographs of the people and the plant. Of those, 87 were enlarged and framed for the exhibition along with 100 smaller images. The photographs in the commemorative book were drawn from the exhibited selection. The shots of the Smelter – then owned by Pasminco, now by Zinifex – are startling. Its structures dwarf the people and, as evidenced by the Marilyn Hayman by Suzanne Laslett respirators and headgear, threaten them as well. The black and white images convey the griminess of the plant that dominates the town and draws almost universal criticism for its effects of the health of the local people. While the plant is the subject of very mixed emotions, the workers in the photos are heroic – daring to pull chestnuts from the industrial fire so that the rest of us can shop at the hardware mega-mart and other outlets in the midst of abundance. There are also shots of them busy at their own, much smaller-scale projects: showing off their wood- Glen Bernhardt by Suzanne Laslett Faces of the Smelter Photographers: Suzanne Laslett, Mick Dillon, Kellie Higginbottom, Laura Nelson, Karen Rohde, Louise Hausler, Father Joe, Joe Pana, James Vinson RRP $15 (p&p extra). Available from Meg’s Bookshop in Port Pirie, the Port Pirie Regional Art Gallery or by contacting Suzanne Laslett: 08 8240 1610, slaslett@yahoo.com.au Danny Champion by Suzanne Laslett Communist Party of Australia Central Committee: General Secretary: Peter Symon President: Hannah Middleton 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, 2010 Ph: 02 9699 8844 Fax: 02 9699 9833 Sydney District Committee: Rob Gowland 74 Buckingham St, Surry Hills, 2010 Ph: 02 9699 8844 Fax: 02 9699 9833 sculpting skills or their tattooed body art, retired workers with their Irish flute and camera, volunteering to drive a community bus. There are glimpses of generations of family life, the pets and excursions. But towering behind all of this is the Smelter. The stylish, high quality presentation of the book does not gloss over the starkness of the Zinifex facility. If only bulk copies could be bought and left scattered on the coffee tables of the head offices of the corporations that continue to promote that other distorted, sanitised image of the world of work. J Website: www.cpa.org.au Email: cpa@cpa.org.au Newcastle Branch: 303 Hunter St Ph: ah 02 4926 1752 Wollongong Branch: Leanne Lindsay PO Box 276 Corrimal 2518 North Illawara Branch: Janice Hamilton 16/26-30 Hutton Ave Bulli NSW 2516 Ph: 02 4283 6130 The Guardian Riverina: Geoff Lawler PO Box 1016 Wagga 2650 Ph: 02 6921 4316 Fax: 02 6921 6873 Melbourne Branch: Andrew Irving PO Box 3 Room 0 Trades Hall Lygon St Carlton Sth 3053 Ph: 03 9639 1550 Fax: 03 9639 4199 Website: www.cpa.org.au/guardian/guardian.html Email: guardian@cpa.org.au West Australian Branch: Vic Williams 5B Jemerson St Willagee Perth 6156 Phone: 08 9337 1074 Brisbane Branch: David Matters PO Box 2148 Salisbury East 4107 Ph: 07 3398 9623 South Australian State Committee: Marie Lean Rm 5, Lvl 1, 149 Flinders St, Adelaide 5000 Ph: 08 8232 8200
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