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China
Panama Papers name eight Chinese leaders

06/04/2016: Massive clampdown by state censors

  China

Britain
Panama Papers scandal

06/04/2016: ‘They're all in it together!’

  Britain

Sri Lanka
Left political leader imprisoned

06/04/2016: Socialists demand immediate release

  Sri Lanka

US
Chicago teachers’ Day of Action

05/04/2016: 15,000 demonstrate

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Germany
420 attend “Socialism Days”!

05/04/2016: An expression of the recent advances and growing support for the SAV

  Germany

Belgium
Scandal in Brussels

04/04/2016: Antiracists arrested while the far right can demonstrate

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Britain
Why socialists should vote to leave the EU

03/04/2016: Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary, answers some common questions about the socialist case for exit.

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Turkey
The antidote against war, terror and exploitation.

02/04/2016: For the unity of Turkish and Kurdish working classes

  Turkey

US election turmoil

01/04/2016: Bernie Sanders campaign - an opportunity to build a new party of the 99%

  US

Bangladesh
Stop the Rampal power project

31/03/2016: The world’s largest mangrove forest lies on the deltas of three rivers: the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers on the Bay of Bengal. It is here, in an area of outstanding natural beauty called the Sundarbans, that the Bangladeshi government plans to site a coal-fired power plant.

  Bangladesh

 Britain
Steel crisis

30/03/2016: Sold down the river by Tata

  Britain, Solidarity

Belgium
How the far-right was able to disturb the vigil for the victims

30/03/2016: Action by far-right led hooligans last Sunday in Brussels

  Belgium

Britain
A new moment

28/03/2016: Extracts from a statement discussed at the Socialist Party’s recent congress

  Britain

Ireland
100th anniversary of Easter 1916 Rising

26/03/2016: A revolt against imperial power and war

  History, Ireland Republic

History
When Khrushchev denounced Stalin

26/03/2016: 1956 ‘secret speech’ a devastating blow to Stalinist regimes

  History, Russia

Britain
Socialist Party national congress 2016

25/03/2016: A serious, thoughtful, optimistic and lively national congress of the Socialist Party took place from 19-21 March.

  Britain

China
Twin meetings, mass layoffs and failed reforms

24/03/2016: Discussion on what is happening in China

  China

Belgium
Brussels terror bombings

23/03/2016: Oppose terrorism, war and poverty

  Belgium

Brazil rocked by deep crisis

23/03/2016: Dilma’s government brought to brink of collapse

  Brazil

 11th CWI World Congress
World Perspectives

22/03/2016: Amended agreed version of the World Perspectives document agreed by the CWI’s 11th World Congress

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Germany
Big gains for right-wing, nationalist, AfD in state elections

22/03/2016: DIE LINKE (Left Party) urgently needs to change course

  Germany

US
Sanders needs to run as an independent in November

18/03/2016: Continuing the Political Revolution

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France
Up to half a million on streets to stop new labour law

18/03/2016: Will there be a general strike against the Valls-Hollande government ?

  France

China
Miners’ strike while People’s Congress discusses mass redundancies

16/03/2016: Thousands march in Heilongjiang province opposing job cuts.

  China

Britain
A chance for the trade unions to lead the EU referendum debate

11/03/2016: For a socialist, working class no campaign

  Britain

Refugee crisis

10/03/2016: Cruel capitalist regimes responsible

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European Union
Alliance with Turkey to close borders

09/03/2016: Crises for refugees - and the EU – continues

  Europe, Turkey

Germany
Between hatred and solidarity

08/03/2016: The situation in Germany

  Germany

 International Women’s Day

07/03/2016: Working women’s fight for a world without oppression

  Women

Sanders campaign at a crossroads

04/03/2016: Bernie’s political revolution will be strangled if it remains imprisoned within the corporate-controlled Democratic Party.

  US

Turkey
No intervention in Syria! Stop the war on the Kurds!

01/03/2016: Two articles on the current situation in Turkey and Kurdistan

  Kurdistan, Syria, Turkey

Nepal

Maoists celebrate new ‘peace deal’

www.socialistworld.net, 14/11/2006
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Rebels to give up arms and to enter new coalition government

Per-Åke Westerlund, Rättvisepartiet Socialisterna (CWI Sweden)

“Our experience has shown that we could not achieve our goals through armed revolution so we have chosen the path of negotiation and formed an alliance with the political parties”. This was how Nepalese Maoist leader, Prachanda (BBC 9 Nov) described the latest deal with the government parties, disarming the Maoist guerrilla and giving it five ministers in the government.

After years of war and despotic rule, it is not surprising that supporters of the Maoists and wider layers in society have high expectations of the new peace deal. On 10 November, Maoists held celebration rallies around the country, including in the centre of the capital Kathmandu. "We want a republic state. Long live the Maoists," were the slogans shouted by 20,000 mainly young supporters and ex-guerrillas.

Optimism surrounded media reports on the deal. The agreement received welcoming remarks from rulers in China, the US and the UN. “We have reached a historic agreement which has drawn up a road map for Nepal”, Prachanda commented.

This deal, however, was a result of secret talks between the political elite and the Maoists, not in any way involving workers, youth and poor masses from the April revolution this year. It was this mass movement that came close to overthrowing the absolute monarchy, established by king Gyanendra in February 2005. The masses defied soldiers with shoot-to-kill orders, but they also caught the political parties, including the Maoists, unaware.

This deal is what both the seven party alliance (SPA) and the Maoists have aimed for since they formed an alliance in New Delhi a year ago. Without any political programme, they wanted to limit the power of the king and form a coalition government. Sooner than they believed, this was made possible by the April revolution.

The present deal includes:

By 21 November, the Maoist guerrilla weapons will be held under UN-remote supervision. An equal number of the state army’s weapons will also be under supervision.

Up to 35,000 Maoist rebels will be placed in 21 camps in seven regions, where they will be held until elections in June. The Nepali Army (formerly Royal Nepalese Army) is, at the same time, supposed to stay in barracks.

On 1 December, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) will get five out of 23 ministers in a transitional government.

At the same time, the Maoists will get 73 MPs in parliament. That is two less than the Nepalese Congress, and the same number of MPs as the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninists), a pro-capitalist party which resembles European social democracies, in all but name.

To underline its entrance into the state machine, the Maoists promised to dissolve the local authorities in its “liberated areas”, called “people’s governments”, and “people’s courts”.

By 1 June, at the latest, elections will be organised for a Constituent Assembly with 425 legislators (16 of its members, however, will be appointed by the prime minister). Among its first decisions, the Assembly will decide if the monarchy should be abolished or not.

Other points in the agreement include, a ‘Truth and Reconciliation Commission’ to be established, and nationalisation of all property acquired by king Gyanendra since he came to power in 2001.

Prachanda, and other Maoist leaders, firmly stress they are serious about the deal. “We will become part of the government and no violence will be tolerated by our party”. Following the elections and the formation of the Constituent Assembly, the Maoists even agreed to full disarmament of their forces and their inclusion into the state army.

Can the coalition government deliver for the masses?

For genuine Marxists, however, the deal raises fundamental questions. In what way will a coalition government with pro-capitalist parties fulfil the aspirations of the masses? Nepal is one of the poorest countries in the world. The overthrow of the panchayat system (with ultimate power resting with the king, established after a coup in 1960) in 1990, which aroused hopes among the masses, ended, within years, in deep disillusion with the parties, parliament and global capitalism.

This created the conditions for the Maoist “People’s war”, from February 1996. In the early 1990s, small ‘communist’ parties were merged into the United Left Front, which also had MPs. The ULF, with Prachanda as its general secretary, renamed itself the ‘Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)’, in 1996, and started the guerrilla actions.

From the beginning, the Maoists called for a “democratic and secular” Nepal, and did not put forward a socialist programme. They demanded, for example, free education and healthcare, and carried out parts of their programme in areas of the country they subsequently ruled. On an all-Nepal scale, however, their demands for nationalisation only concerned foreign capital and those companies cooperating with imperialism. Since the ULF was a run as an army, it had no way of involving workers and no democratic structures.

Several times, over the years, the Maoists even dropped their main demand, for a republic, and limited themselves to calling for an abolition of privileges. For example, in negotiations with the regime, in 2001, the Maoists demanded reduction of the power and influence of the royal palace. Following the massacre of several members of the royal family and a resulting crisis, also in 2001, the Maoist leader, Baburam Bhattarai, even praised King Birendra, one of those shot dead.

The paradox for the Maoists, over the last 6 years, is their growth in support and increase of their local power, on one side, and their leadership realising the war could not be won, on the other side. Since 9/11, the Nepalese army (RNA) was deployed against the Maoist guerrillas with the support of China, the US and India. This impasse led the Maoist leadership to change course, from “militant” Maoism, in the shape of guerrilla war, to ‘popular-front’ Maoism, by seeking alliances with so-called “progressive bourgeois leaders”.

But if Prachanda needed ten years experience to understand that the guerrilla war – on the basis the Maoists conducted it, without a socialist programme and without a mass workers’ party in urban areas – was a dead-end, the masses will soon realise how little will change with the Maoists entering government. Any movement fighting for a real change in the lives of the masses will immediately come into confrontation with the local capitalist class and their political representatives, as well as with imperialism. A real revolutionary socialist party in Nepal would prepare the masses for such a confrontation, not spreading illusions in the seven-party Alliance (SPA), the Indian government or the European Union, as the Maoist leaders did.

Revolutionary socialist party needed

What is most needed in Nepal is a revolutionary socialist party that can organise the masses in a democratic and fighting movement, against feudalism, capitalism and imperialism. To defend itself, such a movement would need democratically-organised defence committees. A peasant army, fighting for land reform, could serve as a valuable support to the main struggle by the workers in the cities. The Maoists, however, have left their weapons under the control of the UN, not the masses, in Nepal.

This month’s agreement is far from the end of the struggle in Nepal. There is still the possibility of a split between the SPA and the Maoists, as well as possible splits within the Maoist movement. Despite the agreement, elements of dual power still exist, with up to 100,000 people in an armed militia formed by the Maoists. Since April, Maoist police patrols appeared in the capital city, Kathmandu. If the Maoists restart the war, it would not be because they are struggling for “communism”, but rather for their own reasons of power and influence, if the result in the elections, next June, is a disappointment to them. That could be the case even locally, where Maoist ‘committees’ are used to collect taxes.

The support for and expectations in the Maoists are now at a peak. Many public rallies, involving tens of thousands of people celebrating the deal, are both a cry for peace and hope for a better life. In many cities, the rallies turned into, in effect, one-day strikes, with communications, shops and factories closed down. Amongst the youth and workers attending these rallies, many will start to look for a socialist alternative, which is not provided by the Maoists. The latter are also extremely limited by their nationalist outlook, and make no attempt to distinguish between workers and rulers in India and other neighbouring countries. The struggle in Nepal can only be victorious as part of a fight for a democratic and socialist Nepal, in a voluntary and equal federation of socialist countries in the region.



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NEWS

China: Panama Papers name eight Chinese leaders
06/04/2016, Vincent Kolo, chinaworker.info :
Massive clampdown by state censors

Britain: Panama Papers scandal
06/04/2016, Dave Murray, from The Socialist (weekly paper of the Socialist Party England & Wales):
‘They're all in it together!’

Sri Lanka: Left political leader imprisoned
06/04/2016, United Socialist Party (CWI Sri Lanka) :
Socialists demand immediate release

US: Chicago teachers’ Day of Action
05/04/2016, Two articles by Socialist Alternative members, Nick Wozniak and Steve Edwards:
15,000 demonstrate

Germany: 420 attend “Socialism Days”!
05/04/2016, SAV (CWI in Germany) reporters:
An expression of the recent advances and growing support for the SAV

Belgium: Scandal in Brussels
04/04/2016, PSL/LSP (CWI in Belgium):
Antiracists arrested while the far right can demonstrate

Britain: Why socialists should vote to leave the EU
03/04/2016, From the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary, answers some common questions about the socialist case for exit.

Turkey: The antidote against war, terror and exploitation.
02/04/2016, Sosyalist Alternatif, CWI in Turkey:
For the unity of Turkish and Kurdish working classes

US election turmoil
01/04/2016, By Tony Saunois (CWI Secretary) who recently visited the US for meetings of Socialist Alternative:
Bernie Sanders campaign - an opportunity to build a new party of the 99%

Bangladesh: Stop the Rampal power project
31/03/2016, Pete Mason, Barking and Dagenham Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
The world’s largest mangrove forest lies on the deltas of three rivers: the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers on the Bay of Bengal. It is here, in an area of outstanding natural beauty called the Sundarbans, that the Bangladeshi government plans to site a coal-fired power plant.

Britain: Steel crisis
30/03/2016, Alec Thraves, Socialist Party (England and Wales), CWI Britain:
Sold down the river by Tata

Belgium: How the far-right was able to disturb the vigil for the victims
30/03/2016, PSL/LSP (CWI in Belgium) reporters:
Action by far-right led hooligans last Sunday in Brussels

Britain: Socialist Party national congress 2016
25/03/2016, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales) reporters:
A serious, thoughtful, optimistic and lively national congress of the Socialist Party took place from 19-21 March.

China : Twin meetings, mass layoffs and failed reforms
24/03/2016, Chinaworker.info:
Discussion on what is happening in China

Belgium: Brussels terror bombings
23/03/2016, Linkse Socialistische Partij/Parti Socialiste de Lutte (CWI Belgium) :
Oppose terrorism, war and poverty

Brazil rocked by deep crisis
23/03/2016, Marcus Kollbrunner, LSR (CWI in Brazil):
Dilma’s government brought to brink of collapse

France : Up to half a million on streets to stop new labour law
18/03/2016, Leila Messaoudi, Gauche Revolutionnaire (CWI in France):
Will there be a general strike against the Valls-Hollande government ?

Kazakhstan: European Parliament condemns treatment of political prisoners
16/03/2016, CWI reporters:
Basic rights must be respected

China: Miners’ strike while People’s Congress discusses mass redundancies
16/03/2016, Dikang, chinaworker.info:
Thousands march in Heilongjiang province opposing job cuts.

Ireland: Establishment parties hit a wall of anger
14/03/2016, By Cillian Gillespie and Ruth Coppinger MP, Socialist Party (CWI in Ireland) members:
Political crisis looms

Britain: A chance for the trade unions to lead the EU referendum debate
11/03/2016, Clive Heemskerk, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
For a socialist, working class no campaign

Refugee crisis
10/03/2016, Editorial from the Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Cruel capitalist regimes responsible

International Women’s Day
07/03/2016, Clare Doyle, CWI:
Working women’s fight for a world without oppression

Sanders campaign at a crossroads
04/03/2016, socialistalternative.org, US:
Bernie’s political revolution will be strangled if it remains imprisoned within the corporate-controlled Democratic Party.

Ireland South: Voters reject ’two-and-a-half party system’
03/03/2016, Interview with Ruth Coppinger TD:
Left makes important gains

CWI Comment and Analysis

ANALYSIS

Britain: A new moment
28/03/2016, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales), published in April 2016 issue of Socialism Today:
Extracts from a statement discussed at the Socialist Party’s recent congress

Ireland: 100th anniversary of Easter 1916 Rising
26/03/2016, Cillian Gillespie, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland):
A revolt against imperial power and war

History: When Khrushchev denounced Stalin
26/03/2016, Niall Mulholland, from Socialism Today (April 2016 issue of the monthly journal of Socialist Party, England & Wales):
1956 ‘secret speech’ a devastating blow to Stalinist regimes

11th CWI World Congress: World Perspectives
22/03/2016, socialistworld.net:
Amended agreed version of the World Perspectives document agreed by the CWI’s 11th World Congress

Germany: Big gains for right-wing, nationalist, AfD in state elections
22/03/2016, Sascha Stanicic, Sozialistische Alternative (CWI in Germany):
DIE LINKE (Left Party) urgently needs to change course

US: Sanders needs to run as an independent in November
18/03/2016, Calvin Priest, Socialist Alternative (CWI supporters in USA):
Continuing the Political Revolution

European Union: Alliance with Turkey to close borders
09/03/2016, Per-Ãke Westerlund, from Offensiv - the weekly paper of Rattvisepartiet Socialisterna (CWI in Sweden):
Crises for refugees - and the EU – continues

Germany: Between hatred and solidarity
08/03/2016, By Sascha Stanicic, Sozialistische Alternative (CWI in Germany):
The situation in Germany

Turkey: No intervention in Syria! Stop the war on the Kurds!
01/03/2016, By Murat Karin, Sosyalist Alternatif (CWI in Turkey) and Paula Mitchell, Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
Two articles on the current situation in Turkey and Kurdistan

US: Nevada Goes to Clinton – Sanders Looks to Super Tuesday
26/02/2016, Calvin Priest, Socialist Alternative (CWI in the USA):
Huge enthusiasm for Bernie Sanders’ call for a political revolution leads to serious challenge to Hillary Clinton

Five years on from the “Arab Spring”
20/02/2016, Serge Jordan (CWI), article to be published in the March 2016 edition of Socialism Today, No.196.:
The “Arab Spring” revolutionary wave brought dictators in Tunisia and Egypt crashing down. It swept through the Middle East, inspiring workers and youth the world over. It has since ebbed, however, leaving the region wracked with war and sectarian conflict.

CWI 11th World Congress: South Asia wracked by instability
15/02/2016, Geert Cool, CWI Belgium:
Huge potential for workers’ struggles

US: Bernie’s political revolution opens new era for American politics
13/02/2016, Patrick Ayers, Socialist Alternative (CWI in the USA):
Build a #Movement4Bernie to Defeat the Billionaire Class and the Democratic Party Establishment.

CWI 11th World Congress 2016: Women and oppression in class society
13/02/2016, CWI World Congress Document:
A socialist approach

CWI 11th World Congress: Upheaval of traditional European political framework
12/02/2016, Sarah Wrack, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Workers’ fury at austerity and capitalist system will find more expression

11th CWI World Congress: A World in turmoil
11/02/2016, Kevin Parslow, Socialist Party (CWI England & Wales):
Renewed economic crisis, wars, political polarisation & class struggle perspectives

Africa: New political storms and mass struggles
08/02/2016, CWI 11th World Congress Document:
Opportunities will arise for working class and poor to organise

India: Rising class struggle reflects seething anger of working class
08/02/2016, Anand Kumar, from Dudiyora Horaata (Workers’ Struggle – newspaper of the CWI in India), Bangalore:
Is ‘Modimania’ on the wane?

World relations, economy and the class struggle
08/02/2016, Socialistworld.net:
CWI 11th World Congress document

Spain: A break in the political establishment
07/02/2016, Danny Byrne, CWI (article from issue 195 of ’Socialism Today’):
December’s elections broke the hold of the two main capitalist parties for the first time since the Franco dictatorship. The high vote for representatives of workers’ and social movements, and the recovery of the left-populist Podemos, open up a new phase in the struggle against austerity.

Japan: Social and political unease after “twenty lost years”
03/02/2016, Carl Simmons, Kokusai Rentai (CWI in Japan):
Weakness of opposition is Prime Minister Abe’s only strength

World Economy: Capitalism buffeted by choppy waters
02/02/2016, Lynn Walsh, from The Socialist (weekly paper of the Socialist Party, CWI England & Wales):
Bosses strive to offload cost of crisis on working class - a struggle for system change is needed

Venezuela: Right-wing landslide
20/01/2016, Tony Saunois, from February edition of Socialism Today, magazine of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
First electoral defeat suffered by the Chavistas since Hugo Chávez was first elected president in 1998

Leningrad: ‘Hero City’
19/01/2016, Clare Doyle (fuller version of a review article to be published in the February 2016 issue of Socialism Today):
900 days of siege in World War Two

China: Financial turmoil spreads fear across global markets
14/01/2016, Per-Åke Westerlund, with additional reporting by Vincent Kolo:
Setting the tone for 2016?