Archive for February 27th, 2011

George W. Bush did help inspire the Mideast & North African rebellions

Neocon apologists for the Bush regime have been all over the airwaves attributing the Mideast and North African rebellions to President George W. Bush’s push for “democracy in the region. Silly as it is, this argument has some truth to it, but not in the way they think.

Rather, as Shadi Mokhtari argues, it was the horrors of bu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and the CIA’s secret torture centers, aimed as they were at dehumanizing Arab and Muslim men, which led the Arab world to make pursuit of human rights as essential part of their agenda.

A particular event can trigger a rise or decline in rights consciousness in any country or culture in the world- East or West. Abu Ghraib served as a pivotal moment for human rights consciousness in the Arab world. Because the torture and abuse depicted was so widely seen as directed towards the Arab or Muslim man, many felt a profound sense of personal violation. As they grappled to formulate a response, they often found themselves invoking human rights. “Abu Ghraib probably brought home the concept of human rights more strongly than anything else. People started debating human rights issues in talking about Abu Ghraib…What is your right to be treated like a human being in dignity?” an Arab activist told me in Amman in 2006. Gauging public sentiment, some Arab leaders joined in. Hosni Mubarak called Abu Ghraib “abhorrent and sickening, and against all human values and human rights confirmed and defended by the international community”.

Denials of fair trials in Guantanamo, CIA black sitesrenditions of terrorist suspects to third countries known to torture, and legal formulations paving the way for “enhanced interrogation techniques” all brought discussions of human rights further to the fore of Arab consciousness. Instead of viewing human rights as a Western imposition, increasingly it became a language that Arab populations embraced to challenge America’s post-9/11 policies.

Mokhtari concludes:

Undoubtedly, America’s post-9/11 rights failings are just one of many factors coalescing to bring about the Arab world’s current engagements with the human rights paradigm. Indeed, the most powerful catalyst for the dramatic events of the last two months is Arab populations’ own lived experience of oppression. Still it is important to recognize that historically societies have often embraced human rights on the heels of a human rights tragedy that profoundly impacts them. In many ways, the post-9/11 denials of human rights that were overseen by George W. Bush were the Arab world’s tragedy that brought to light the urgency of claiming rights.

February 27th, 2011

While condemning Libyan war crimes, US moves to protect its war criminals

The US has been making sounds about punishing through the International Criminal Court (ICC) all those who commit atrocities in Libya. But it turn out, as reported by the Telegraph, that the US moved to exclude a large proportion of those reportedly committing war crimes, the mercenaries imported from other countries.

The US insisted that the Security Council referral to the ICC exclude anyone not from Libya, who would be subject only to punishment by their own countries. The US administration was terrified that the Security Council action could set a precedent that would apply to US agents. They did this apparently to protect US war criminals who commit their crimes in countries subject to the ICC would have impunity.

Thus, once again, protection of US war criminals is of higher priority than are Libyan civilians being massacred in their hundreds or thousands.

Libya: African mercenaries ‘immune from prosecution for war crimes’
African mercenaries hired by the Gaddafi regime to kill Libyan protesters would be immune from prosecution for war crimes due to a clause in this weekend’s UN resolution that was demanded by the United States.

By Jon Swaine

The UN Security Council agreed on Saturday evening to freeze international assets belonging to the Gaddafis and their key aides, to ban them from travelling and to block all arms sales to Tripoli. It also called for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate the killings of demonstrators.

This inquiry could lead to senior Libyan ministers and officials being indicted to stand trial for crimes against humanity at The Hague and being given lengthy prison sentences.

But it has been widely alleged that many of the attacks were in fact carried out by foreign mercenaries hired by Colonel Gaddafi. And the US insisted that the UN resolution was worded so that no one from an outside country that is not a member of the ICC could be prosecuted for their actions in Libya.

This means that mercenaries from countries such as Algeria, Ethiopia and Tunisia – which have all been named by rebel Libyan diplomats to the UN as being among the countries involved – would escape prosecution even if they were captured, because their nations are not members of the court.

The move was seen as an attempt to prevent a precedent that could see Americans prosecuted by the ICC for alleged crimes in other conflicts. While the US was once among the signatories to the court, George W. Bush withdrew from it in 2002 and declared that it did not have power over Washington.

The key paragraph said that anyone from a non-ICC country alleged to have committed crimes in Libya would “be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction” of their own country. It was inserted despite Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the UN, saying that all those “who slaughter civilians” would “be held personally accountable”.

Speaking to reporters outside the council chamber, Gerard Araud, the French UN ambassador, described the paragraph as “a red line for the United States”, meaning American diplomats had been ordered by their bosses in Washington to secure it. “It was a deal-breaker, and that’s the reason we accepted this text to have the unanimity of the council,” said Mr Araud.

Carne Ross, a former British diplomat to the UN, said on Sunday that a mechanism was needed urgently to allow Libyans to inform the ICC who should be charged with crimes against their compatriots.

“With no diplomats in situ, I don’t see how outside states can know who these people might be,” Mr Ross wrote on his blog. “Instead, how about providing a channel for Libyans on the ground observing the crimes of the regime to nominate people?”

Mr Ross, who now runs a non-profit diplomatic advisory group, suggested that international authorities set up “an email address where Libyans can nominate people for sanctions” or even open a online “Wiki” on which Libyans could build a list of perpetrators.

1 comment February 27th, 2011

General strike in Wisconsin? Maybe

At yesterday’s Boston rally in support of Wisconsin workers, one speaker from SEIU, a former Congressional candidate, called for a General Strike. Inspiring as it was, I was surprised he let his rhetoric go that far. Then today I came across this article in the Madison Capital Times that indicates that Wisconsin workers and supporters are seriously discussing taking this step if the Koch Industries governor doesn’t relent in his anti-union attacks.

If Wisconsin workers take this step, it will be up to their supporters nationwide to offer massive solidarity on a scale not seen in many decades. Perhaps people will again get into their blood that “An injury to one is an injury to all!” as union workers and progressives used to know instinctively.

Regardless of what happens in Wisconsin, the class struggle in the US is heating up in ways that have appeared unimaginable for decades. That’s what can  happen when a kleptocracy on attack  meets worker solidarity.

Wisconsin: Could a General Strike Happen Here? Experts Say Maybe

By Pat Schneider

The confrontation between labor and politics at the Wisconsin Capitol was just starting as workers in Egypt who left their jobs and took to the streets toppled a government, and it wasn’t long before activists in Madison began invoking the spirit of that uprising. “Fight like an Egyptian” emerged one cry as picket signs cheering the people’s revolt half a world away were raised in protests on the Capitol Square.

Thousands have thronged the Capitol daily since large scale demonstrations began Feb. 14. Madison school teachers called in sick for several days to protest and on Feb. 21, the Madison-based South Central Federation of Labor took the unprecedented step of endorsing a general strike among its 45,000 members if Gov. Scott Walker’s controversial budget repair bill is made law.

Could such a radical action get off the ground here?

Local labor leaders are careful to point out that no strikes have been called; the federation does not have the authority to call a strike and several union leaders stressed that job actions would be individual workers’ decisions. But students of labor point to a confluence of circumstances in Madison with dramatic potential.

It is just possible, they say, that it could happen here.

General strikes have been very rare in the United States. Strikes widespread enough to interrupt general commerce date back to the Great Depression of the 1930s when longshoremen in San Francisco, autoworkers in Toledo, Ohio, and teamsters in Minneapolis touched off protests that helped establish industrial unions.

And while the labor struggle in Madison is unfolding in the context of budget deficits exacerbated by the severest economic downturn since the Depression, labor activists say the real conflict is over union power and partisan political influence.

It is dissatisfaction with the political system, not economic desperation, that sets the stage for a general strike, says Reza Rezazadeh, a professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville who has studied revolutionary strikes against repressive regimes in his native Iran and elsewhere. In the United States, he says, activists are challenging a political system that, despite freedom of the press and freedom of speech, is shaped by the influence of the economic elite and corporations.

Walker’s challenge to union power is part of an established movement by the Republican Party to cripple unions, the most influential funding source for Democratic candidates and causes, say analysts of the showdown in Wisconsin. Aside from increasing contributions by employees for pension and health care costs, Walker’s budget repair bill would also sharply restrict the power of most public unions to bargain with their employers. “It is viewed nationally and correctly as a decisive turning point for the future of labor nationally and for the Democratic Party more broadly,” says Harley Shaiken, a labor expert and professor at the University of California-Berkeley.

Whether a general strike would be an effective tool for labor, local leaders will have to decide, Shaiken says. But the likely public reaction to any widespread job action would be an important consideration, and polls show a majority are opposed to stripping public workers of collective bargaining rights, he points out. A nationwide Gallup poll released last week found 61 percent of respondents opposed to an erosion of collective bargaining rights among public unions, and even a Wisconsin poll funded by the conservative-leaning Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity found 56 percent in favor of public unions’ collective bargaining powers.

To mount a general strike, labor unions would have to take a more unified stance than is usual, with truck drivers and food service workers finding common cause with public sector workers, says Gene Carroll, director of the Union Leadership Institute at the New York City campus of Cornell University. To gain public support to allow it to be effective, an even more embracing class perspective would need to take shape, he says. “In Wisconsin, to the extent that people who are not in the public sector begin to understand that the designs of the government to break collective unions’ bargaining rights are in fact an attack on the economic and political rights of anyone working for a living – the possibility of a general strike is conceivable.”

On the other hand, a strike that does not win public support can be a public relations disaster, says Don Taylor, an assistant professor at the School for Workers at University of Wisconsin-Extension. But in Madison, where the battle over collective bargaining is centered, circumstances favor support for widespread job actions, he says.

Not only does the area have many public workers whose families have a direct interest in the issue, but it also has many other residents who are sticking up for their rights. “A lot of people not connected to the labor movement have a strong progressive outlook on issues of people’s rights and social justice,” Taylor says.

“Do I anticipate every worker in and out of a union would walk off the job? No. Could a strike be large enough to have significant leverage? Yes,” he says.

Even the prospect of such an action might unnerve business leaders and other citizens, prompting them to call the governor’s office and say “fix this thing,” says Taylor.

The political standoff over workers’ rights continues into a third week, but some of the urgency for labor unions locally has been relieved by the actions of their public employers. The Madison School District delayed until May the issuance of pink slips for teachers despite looming state funding cuts; the Madison City Council met in special session on Feb. 17 to approve outstanding labor contracts.

Nonetheless, David Poklinkoski, president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 2304, says area labor is more united than it ever has been. Meetings of the Labor Federation — which covers 97 labor organizations in six counties — can be tense over competing interests, he says, but the vote to endorse a general strike was unanimous. “The breadth and depth of solidarity in the labor movement right now is unbelievable,” says Poklinkoski, whose union represents employees of Madison Gas & Electric.

“We know the private sector is next,” he says of efforts to strip workers’ rights. “Local unions are trying to figure out what to do if the governor doesn’t change his mind and work out a reasonable solution to this.” That includes studying general strike actions of the past, as well as the budget repair bill’s impacts beyond collective bargaining.

“The local union will not call a general strike – it would be each person’s individual decision,” he says.

Leaders of Local 60 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which includes many city of Madison and some non-teacher Madison Metropolitan School District employees, are asking their members to think about a general strike.

“We’ve been asking people to think about what they would do,” says President Donald Coyier, so that if the union calls for a job action, they are ready.

Idling transportation is a key element of general strike efforts, Rezazadeh says, but there’s no sense yet if that could happen in Madison. Teamsters Local 695, the union that represents Madison bus drivers, is not a member of the Labor Federation. Recording secretary Gene Gowey says union members are protesting and transporting other protesters to the Capitol Square, but as to a strike, he says his members are “attempting to address issues in a peaceful, law-abiding way.”

The stakes are high for strikers. State law restricts strikes by public employees, but job actions in protest of proposed legislation might not be considered a “strike” under state law. Private sector workers might not be protected by federal law in general strikes not related to contract provisions or unfair labor practices, meaning that they could be fired.

Meanwhile, some Madison residents are beginning to meet and talk about how the community might respond to a general strike. One of them, union supporter Judith Zukerman-Kaufman, recalls how during a 1960s parent protest that kept Chicago schoolchildren out of classrooms, alternative schools were established. Creating similar set-ups to teach children about civil rights or labor history is one thing people are starting to talk about here, she says. “There are seeds of some ideas.”

Madison teacher Susan Stern says that the focus of her union continues to be legal protest. “But people are starting to ask: ‘What if?’”

******

For more than a decade, Madison Capital Times reporter Pat Schneider has reported on the communities — neighborhood, ethnicity, lifestyle and avocation — that make Madison what it is.

February 27th, 2011

Up to 100,000 in Madison for workers’ rights

An estimated 70,000-100,000+ people rallied in Madison in 15° temperatures yesterday to oppose Gov. Walker’s union-busting antics. This was the largest Madison rally since the Vietnam War. Tens of thousands of others rallied in every state across the country. The press hardly reported these momentous events as they filled their “news” propaganda shows with anti-union politicians and pundits and did everything to keep the voice of ordinary people from being heard.

I was with 2,000 or so in Boston, the second large pro-Wisconsin workers rally this week that we had.

We may well be witnessing the birth of a new worker-citizen movement.

Here is footage from Madison:

Here a member of police union announces support for other workers, and explains who he works for, and who Gov. Walker works for. This is an important development, in not allowing the cops to be turned against other workers. The Illinois Fraternal Order of Police has also expressed solidarity with Wisconsin protesters:

February 27th, 2011


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