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latest news

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

  CWI

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

  US

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

  Britain

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

Ireland
Government routed in general election

29/02/2016: Establishment parties in crisis, as a new Left rises

  Ireland Republic

China
Crisis set to deepen

27/02/2016: Year of the Monkey opens with economy in worst situation for decades

  China

US
Nevada Goes to Clinton – Sanders Looks to Super Tuesday

26/02/2016: Huge enthusiasm for Bernie Sanders’ call for a political revolution leads to serious challenge to Hillary Clinton

  US

South Africa
Worker and student protests intensify

25/02/2016: #OutsourcingMustFall campaign becomes point of reference for the working class

  South Africa

Britain - EU referendum
Vote OUT the Tories

24/02/2016: The referendum on 23 June is not just about the EU but is also an opportunity to pass verdict on Cameron and his rotten government

  Britain, Europe

 Ireland
Successful AAA-PBP electoral rally in Dublin

23/02/2016: Below, videos of TD’s (members of Irish Parliament) Paul Murphy and Ruth Coppinger at a public meeting of the Anti-Austerity Alliance/People Before Profit, after a mass demonstration of tens of thousands against water charges in Dublin

  Ireland Republic, Video

Five years on from the “Arab Spring”

20/02/2016: 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.

  Middle East

Italy
Roman politics riddled with scandal

19/02/2016: Five Star Movement can gain

  Italy

North Cyprus

‘Moderate leftist’ wins presidential election on peace ticket

www.socialistworld.net, 16/05/2015
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

Workers’ common front, north and south, can find solution to island’s division

Athina Kariati, New Internationalist Left (CWI in Cyprus)

Leaders of divided Cyprus are taking part in new ‘peace talks’ that began on 15 May, when Nicos Anastasiades, president of Greek Cyprus, met Mustafa Akinci, newly elected ‘moderate leftist’ president of North Cyprus. Both Akinci and Anastasiades are reported to propose that the island, partitioned in 1974, should be united as a two-state ‘federation’.

Athina Kariati, looks at circumstances surrounding Akinci’s election and prospects for a real peace process.

socialistworld.net

“Peace cannot be prevented in Cyprus”, under this slogan and to the accompaniment of a traditional Cypriot Dilirga song - a symbol of bicommunal brotherhood - people outside the electoral centre received news, on 26 April, of the election victory of Mustafa Akinci.

Winning 60.5% support - the highest percentage for a presidential election since 2003, and one of the highest for a president on either sides of divided Cyprus - Mustafa Akinci is now the new president of North Cyprus.

Although Akinci ran as an independent candidate he comes from the leftist TKP (Toplumcu Kurtuluş Partisi - Communal Liberation Party), the predecessor of social democratic TDP (Toplumcu Demokrasi Partisi – Communal Democracy Party). During his 14 years term as mayor in north Nicosia (1976 to 1990), he became a well-known figure for peace and bi-communal collaboration.

In the first round, Akinci was supported by TDP, as well as by the leftist BKP party (Birleşik Kıbrıs Partisi – United Cyprus Party), the Baraka cultural centre and a new leftist organisation, Bagimsiz Yolu (Independent Road). Due to the erosion of support for the traditional parties and splits in their ranks, Akinci was able to win the first round. The votes for the TDP and BKP together (parties that usually win seats in the parliament) were not enough to give them victory.

Abstention a big ’winner’

The disillusionment of Turkish Cypriots towards the political parties was obvious in the elections, as it was during the last parliamentary and municipality elections (when abstention went from 25% to 30%). The abstention in the first round reached its highest ever figure, at 38%, which only fell to 35% in the second round. However the polarization around the two candidates from the first to second week of elections shows a reawakening of political debate in the north.

The traditional right parties found their votes split. The two right wing candidates, Eroglu and Ozersay, had to share a fall in their votes. Eroglu represents the traditional, nationalist right wing, which is connected to Turkey. A younger generation, led by Ozersay, is more neo-liberal and prefer to be connect to international capital rather than stay trapped by Turkish capitalism.

The CTP-BG (Cumhuriyetçi Türk Partisi – Republican Turkish Party), the traditional leftist party now in government, stood Sibel Siber as its presidential candidate. Instead of standing a party member with more left credentials, Siber represented the “united forces” (BG) and is a founding member of the centre right wing DP. Not only did he fail to win support from centre right voters, Siber’s candidature did not help the CTP-BG to overcome problems they have had since last year’s local elections. It caused a split in the base of the party and amongst CTP supporters, including those on the left representing an older generation. Many voted for Akinci in the first round.

Second round as ’referendum’

In the second round, Eroglu tried to transform the elections into a referendum for or against the existence of the Northern statelet (TRNC), the continuing presence of the Turkish army on the island and its role as ‘guarantor’ of the rights of Turkey. Eroglu focused on Turkish people living in Cyprus, threatening that if they voted for Akinci they would be deported from the island. This campaign of terror did not have the result he expected. Out of the three districts that are more populated by people who have come from Turkey since 1974, only one, the Karpas district, was influenced by the threats, and very marginally since the majority for Eroglu was very small. Not even bribery, which reportedly Eroglu’s staff used, had any significant influence on the election result.

On the contrary, the terror campaign aimed at Akinci failed. He won support from CTP members at a special conference of the party and from the most militant primary, secondary and university teachers’ unions. They publicly called for a vote for Akinci, as did women’s organisations, human rights NGOs and even the NGO led by Ozersay, ‘Toparlaniyoruz’ (‘we get together’). Supporters of Ozersay failed in their bid to get the NGO to call for people to vote ‘at will’ and instead the NGO made a public call to support Akinci. It was the first time that the left, unions and ‘civil society’ organisations united to support one candidate.

Old nationalist regime gone

Eroglu lost the elections with 39.5%. He was the last candidate of the generation that represented the old nationalist Turkish Cypriot ruling class which affiliated with the interests of Turkish capital and the Turkish army. Eroglu declared that he will not run for elections any more. His rival on the right, Ozersay, will try to fill the void.

Ozersay, a neo-liberal, ‘cosmopolitan’ right winger, known as a technocratic negotiator in negotiations over the future of Cyprus, won 21% in the first round - a percentage that is quite high given that he was running for the first time. So even if Turkish Cypriots rejected the old right wing regime candidate, the ruling elite has found a more cosmopolitan, neoliberalist representative, younger and new to the political arena, on who to build support.

Enthusiasm and hope in both communities

Nevertheless the Akinci’s victory was met with enthusiasm and hope in both communities that a settlement to the national question can be found. People from both communities celebrated the election results in Inonu square, on 26 April. For the first time during the speech of a new president in the north the word “motherland” was not used. On the contrary, Akinci stressed his goal of achieving independence for the Turkish Cypriot community, a relationship of ‘brotherhood’ with Turkey - not a ‘mother-child’ relationship anymore - and the will to fight for a federation in Cyprus.

Akinci also took a lot of time to mention a taboo issue - the suffering of Greek Cypriots during the Turkish invasion in 1974. When a CTP MP, Dogus Derya, mentioned the same issue in parliament all the forces of the regime were arrayed against her. Not only did Akinci mention 1974, he countered any future attack from nationalists by saying that “we will work so that such a suffering will not happen again”.

Akinci spent time addressing Turkish people living in Cyprus, in reply to, as he called it, “stale propaganda” about sending them back to Turkey. He stressed that people who work in northern Cyprus should be part of the solution.

Finally, Akinci made an appeal to the Greek Cypriot President Anastasiades, saying that it was up to both of them to solve the national question on the island.

“I will do what I have promised”

On the first day of his presidency, Akinci had a public confrontation with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on a live phone discussion that was broadcast on TV. Akinci said the north Cyprus and Turkey relationship is one of ‘brotherhood’ and not of a ‘mother to child’ kind. Akinci gave more hope to Cypriots, from both sides, that he will do what he promised.

However the national question, and the reality of the dependence of the north on Turkey, will not be solved just with declarations.

The unsolved national question stems from the conflicting interests of the Greek Cypriot, Turkish Cypriot and Greek and Turkish ruling classes. The nationalist forces are regrouping on both sides, ready to intervene in case any new attempted settlement does not serve the interests of the elites. The economy has to be taken into consideration. Erdogan threatens to stop the funding of the economy of the north if the conflict against his government continues. More austerity in the south is also on the cards. In these circumstances, workers can become vulnerable to chauvinistic policies, if there is no clear left alternative.

Greek Cypriot President, Anastasiades, although he seems to be in favor of a solution, represents the neoliberal, reactionary forces, local and international, and is personally associated with scandals. The neoliberal part of the Greek Cypriot ruling glass is not entering negotiations with good will. Actually they are aiming a solution that will make possible for them to take control of the whole of Cyprus through their economic power.

The only class that will has nothing to lose but to benefit from a settlement of the national question is the working masses, which made the difference in the north’s elections.

Now is the time for a formation of a common front of workers, north and south, a common front of the left, the unions and ‘civil society’ - local working class communities - that will create the conditions for a solution to the national question. In order for this movement to succeed, it needs a socialist programme, to be able to answer the nationalists and to fight unconditionally against nationalism, austerity and neo-liberalism, on both sides, and to fight for full democratic rights, for all.

A socialist programme would plan the economy democratically on both sides of the island, gaining genuine independence from both Turkey and the Troika. That will include the non-payment of the debt to either of them, and to rationally plan the economy by taking the banks and the major industries under the control and management of the working people in Cyprus, so that they work in the interests of the working people in Cyprus and not the profits of the big capitalists. This movement has to unite with the movements in Greece and Turkey, to gain the support and solidarity but also build a sustainable, peaceful united, federal socialist Cyprus in a united socialist Europe and whole area, on a voluntary basis.



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NEWS

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

Ireland: Government routed in general election
29/02/2016, Danny Byrne, CWI:
Establishment parties in crisis, as a new Left rises

China: Crisis set to deepen
27/02/2016, Editorial from《社会主义者》Socialist magazine issue 36 (February-March 2016):
Year of the Monkey opens with economy in worst situation for decades

South Africa: Worker and student protests intensify
25/02/2016, Reporters from the WASP (Workers and Socialist Party, CWI in South Africa):
#OutsourcingMustFall campaign becomes point of reference for the working class

Britain - EU referendum: Vote OUT the Tories
24/02/2016, Editorial of the Socialist, weekly paper of the Socialist Party (CWI in England & Wales):
The referendum on 23 June is not just about the EU but is also an opportunity to pass verdict on Cameron and his rotten government

Ireland: Successful AAA-PBP electoral rally in Dublin
23/02/2016, Socialistworld.net:
Below, videos of TD’s (members of Irish Parliament) Paul Murphy and Ruth Coppinger at a public meeting of the Anti-Austerity Alliance/People Before Profit, after a mass demonstration of tens of thousands against water charges in Dublin

Italy: Roman politics riddled with scandal
19/02/2016, Giuliano Brunetti, ControCorrente (CWI in Italy):
Five Star Movement can gain

Israel/Palestine: Over 140 attend successful ‘Socialism Conference’
18/02/2016, Youval Sorek, Socialist Struggle (CWI in Israel-Palestine):
Israeli and Palestinian activists discuss resisting Nentanyahu and urgent need to build socialist forces

India: A Marxist view of Modi’s Hindutva
17/02/2016, Peter Taaffe speaks to Jagadish Chandra, New Socialist Alternative (CWI in India):
Analysis of the present situation in India from an internationalist perspective

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?