16 Apr 2015

Australian government dispatches 330 more troops to Iraq

Peter Symonds

The Australian government on Tuesday formally signed off on the dispatch of an additional 330 troops to join the US-led military intervention in Iraq and Syria. The soldiers are due to start leaving this week for a two-year deployment to the Taji military complex north of Baghdad, where they will operate alongside the first New Zealand troops to be sent to the new Middle Eastern war.
The troops will boost Australian forces already in Iraq, which include 170 special forces soldiers and an air taskforce of 400 personnel sent last year. Australian combat aircraft have conducted at least 100 strikes against targets inside Iraq, while refuelling planes have provided support to other coalition aircraft in the Middle East. The special forces troops are due to be withdrawn in July.
Writing in yesterday’s Australian, Prime Minister Tony Abbott justified the military commitment by denouncing the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) as a “death cult” that “continues to inspire acts of evil” across the world. ISIS, however, is very much the creation of the sectarian conflict set off by the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq and the US-backed civil war in Syria to oust President Bashar al-Assad. Washington only acted against ISIS when its militia crossed from Syria into Iraq and threatened the US-installed regime in Baghdad.
Abbott also directly linked the deployment to the 100th anniversary of the landing of Australian and New Zealand troops (Anzacs) as part of the British-French invasion of Turkey in World War I. “I have no doubt our armed forces will face up to this challenge with the same resolution, courage and professionalism their predecessors displayed a century ago,” he wrote.
Abbott’s reference makes clear that the hundreds of millions of dollars being lavished on the official centenary “celebration” of World War I militarism serve very contemporary purposes—to condition the public and prepare for new wars. As in World War I, the Australian ruling elites are supporting the wars of the leading imperialist power—in this case the United States—to ensure the protection of their own interests in Asia and globally.
Acutely aware of widespread anti-war sentiment, Abbott was at pains to stress that the Australian troops were being dispatched to train Iraqi forces and would not be sent into combat. He left open all options, however, including a longer and larger deployment, telling the media: “[O]bviously we keep these things under constant review.”
Asked about extending Australian air strikes into Syria, Abbott declared that there were no plans “at this stage,” but noted that Australian aircraft were already supporting Coalition airstrikes inside Syria.
Abbott’s Liberal-National Coalition government has the full bipartisan support of the opposition Labor Party. While making no comment on this week’s cabinet decision, Labor leader Bill Shorten gave the deployment his stamp of approval in January when it was first announced. In late January, Shorten made an unannounced visit to Australian troops in Iraq to mark Australia Day and hail “the men and women [who] continue the Anzac tradition.”
Greens leader Christine Milne complained on Tuesday about “mission creep” and the lack of “a clear idea of what victory would look like.” Despite commenting that “the entire conflict is an intractable mess driven by sectarian hatred,” Milne did not oppose the US-led war or expose its predatory aims, underscoring the purely tactical and nationalist character of the Greens’ opposition to Australian military involvement.
Writing in the Australian, Peter Jennings, executive director of the government-funded Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said the Australian military would eventually need to consider moving from conducting “static” training exercises to accompanying Iraqi troops in combat. “Our experience in Afghanistan is that’s often something you need to do if you’re going to see local forces persist with military operations,” he stated.
Pressure to send Australian troops into combat is likely to mount as plans are made for an offensive to retake the northern city of Mosul from ISIS. In theAustralian yesterday, Abbott described the recent seizure of Tikrit by pro-Iraqi government forces as “an important milestone” and described the mission of Australian troops as “preparing the Iraqi security forces for the next phase of the campaign—and ultimately retake Mosul, the death cult’s de facto capital in Iraq.”
Well aware of the mounting evidence of war crimes carried out by Shiite militias aligned with the Baghdad government, Abbott claimed that the Australian troops would be “mentoring and training [Iraqi forces] in professional military conduct, including the law of armed conflict.” He warned that “reconciling Iraq’s feuding groups... means recognising Iraq’s Sunni population, ensuring they are properly represented and protecting their rights.”
Australian special forces, however, are already implicated in sectarian atrocities. Abbott again confirmed yesterday that they provided “training and assistance” to the Iraqi Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS)—special forces units with a long record of carrying out sectarian murders and terrorising the Sunni population.
The CTS has its roots in Shiite special forces units that were recruited and trained by the US military between 2006 and 2008 and give free rein against Sunni insurgents and the Sunni population. The Sydney Morning Heraldreported in January that President Obama transferred control of the CTS units from the US Defence Department to the CIA.
A former Australian Defence intelligence analyst told Fairfax Media: “The CTS delivered results in operations against AQI [Al Qaeda in Iraq, ISIS’s forerunner], but it was at the expense of the rule of law, and of building the rest of the Iraqi security forces, which collapsed in the face of ISIL [ISIS].”
CTS units, along with Shiite militias, were central to the recent Iraqi government offensive to capture Tikrit. In a press briefing in February, a US CENTCOM official foreshadowed an offensive in April or May—later denied—to retake Mosul, with a brigade-sized CTS force playing a prominent role.

Nordic countries sign defence cooperation agreement aimed at Russia

Jordan Shilton

The five Nordic countries, NATO members Norway, Denmark and Iceland, and non-NATO members Sweden and Finland, announced a new defence cooperation agreement last week aimed explicitly at confronting Russia.
The deal will see expanded military exercises in the region, intensified collaboration on the production of military equipment, and a more extensive sharing of intelligence between the countries.
Russia responded angrily to the Nordic defence deal. The foreign ministry’s website declared Sunday “Nordic defence co-operation … has begun to be directed against Russia in a way that could undermine the positive engagement accumulated over the past decade.”
The agreement was announced in a joint statement published in the Norwegian daily Aftenposten by the defence ministers of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark, and Iceland’s foreign minister. The statement opened by repeating the propaganda of the US and its imperialist allies that Russian aggression triggered the Ukraine crisis, declaring, “The Russian aggression against the Ukraine and the illegal annexation of Crimea are violations of international law and other international agreements. Russia’s conduct represents the gravest challenge to European security. As a consequence, the security situation in the Nordic countries’ adjacent areas has become significantly worsened during the past year.”
The claim that the move is a response to Russian aggression is thoroughly dishonest. The reality is that, with the full backing of US imperialism, the Nordic countries are committing themselves to transforming the region into yet another area of potential conflict with Moscow.
The text of the agreement makes this clear when it asserts that a key aim of the stepped up military cooperation would be defending the sovereignty of the three Baltic republics. This echoes the declaration of US President Barack Obama, who stated during a trip to Estonia last year that NATO had an eternal commitment to defend the Baltic republics.
The ministers wrote, “Russia is undertaking huge economic investments in its military capability. The nation’s leaders has [sic] shown that they are prepared to make practical and effective use of military means in order to reach their political goals, even when this involves violating principles of international law… The Russian military are acting in a challenging way along our borders, and there have been several infringes on the borders of the Baltic nations.”
It did not help the ministers’ case that Sweden has now been forced to admit that the alleged incursion into Swedish waters by a Russian submarine last autumn was in fact nothing more than a workboat.
Russian press reports Saturday cited Swedish Rear Admiral Anders Grenstad telling the Swedish TT news agency that there was no submarine and that the Swedish Navy changed the wording from “probable submarine” to “non-submarine” when referring to the massive search mission lasting one week and involving over 200 troops, helicopters, stealth ships and minesweepers to search the Baltic Sea.
The latest defence agreement is just one part of broader moves to integrate Sweden and Finland more closely into the US-led NATO military alliance. Norway, Denmark and Iceland were all founding members of the alliance when it was created in 1949. Helsinki and Stockholm have officially maintained their distance and remain non-members.
Finland shares a 1,000-kilometre border with Russia and has extensive trading relations. Moreover, there is wide public hostility to joining NATO in both countries. With an eye to parliamentary elections taking place next weekend, Carl Haglund, Finland’s foreign minister, told public broadcaster YLE, “In my opinion this Nordic security cooperation is one thing and NATO membership is a totally different matter.”
In practice, however, the Swedish and Finnish militaries are increasingly integrated into NATO operations. Both countries are members of the NATO Partnership for Peace initiative, which also includes Ukraine. They regularly participate in NATO operations, including a major exercise in the Baltic in late 2013, “Steadfast Jazz,” that involved thousands of military personnel, ships and aircraft mobilising across Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
All of the military exercises to be conducted under the deal are to conform to NATO standards, which many see as the preparation for full membership. The first, Arctic Challenge, is to take place at the end of May in Norway and Sweden. A large contingent of US F16 fighters based in the UK is expected to be involved.
The defence agreement coincided with a major NATO naval operation off the coast of Scotland, scheduled to run over two weeks. Britain’s Royal Navy led a fleet of 55 warships, 70 aircraft and 13,000 sailors in operations including submarine tracking and amphibious landings. Warships from the US and Canada are involved. While these particular exercises occur twice annually, this will be the largest operation to date.
The latest move has been prepared in discussions involving the leading European imperialist powers. A meeting last November in Oslo, Norway, saw representatives from twelve countries come together, among them British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon and Germany’s ambassador to Norway Dr. Axel Berg. Also attended by the defence ministers of the three Baltic republics, the talks agreed to expand the access of Norwegian, Swedish and Finnish fighter planes to all Nordic airspace for weekly joint training missions.
Referring to the NATO summit last September, where it was agreed to establish a rapid response force together with a massive military build-up in Eastern Europe, Norwegian Defence Minister Ine Eriksen Søreide stated that “resolve and firmness” would be required in the region.
States “emerging from conflict” would be helped to participate in international military exercises in conjunction with NATO, as well as in reforming their defence sectors with NATO or EU assistance.
As the largest Nordic nation, Sweden is playing a critical role in the new military plans. Having long ago abandoned its formal neutrality with its participation in the Afghanistan conflict, followed by its sending of Saab Gripen fighter jets to take part in the Libyan war in 2011, it has emerged ever more openly as a military ally of US imperialism.
Sweden is currently leading the Nordic defence cooperation operations, and is also the leader of the Nordic Battle Group, a European Union unit.
Since coming to power last September, the Social Democrat-Green Party coalition in Stockholm has stepped up the aggressive anti-Russian policy of its right-wing predecessor.
As well as initiating last autumn’s “submarine search”, the government also continues to seize on alleged incursions of Russian aircraft into Swedish airspace to justify a military build-up.
The previous government announced massive spending increases for the defence budget over the coming decade, and the Social Democrats and Greens have vowed to continue this policy.
The day before the Nordic defence agreement was unveiled, Stockholm confirmed plans to send up to 120 military personnel to northern Iraq as part of the US-led war against ISIS. Although the troops are officially in the country to provide training to Kurdish forces and offer “advise and assist” support, such claims have been used by other countries whose military forces have ended up in frontline combat activity. The Swedish contingent will be under the command of the US military.

China’s growth rate takes another downturn

Nick Beams

Warnings by the International Monetary Fund earlier this week that the global economy will experience a prolonged period of lower growth were immediately underscored by Chinese data released yesterday. The world’s second biggest economy expanded at its slowest pace since the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis in 2008–2009.
The significance of the figures was not so much in the headline result—growth of 7 percent in the first quarter of 2015 compared to 7.3 percent in the previous quarter—but where the slowdown occurred.
Before the eruption of the financial crisis, Chinese growth of 10 percent and more was fuelled by increased exports. Since then, it has been sustained by internal infrastructure investment and a real estate and property boom, both financed by government stimulus measures and credit expansion. But the ending of this artificial boom over the past year is now finding its reflection in the industrial economy.
China’s crude steel production fell over the first quarter by 1.7 percent, the first decline on record, as a result of the slowdown in construction projects and the accumulation of unsold apartment buildings. Pig iron production, a stage in the steel-making process, fell by 2.3 percent.
China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported that the growth in property investment and infrastructure is the lowest on record. Tom Murray, the managing director of the Beijing-based J Capital Research, told theAustralian Financial Review: “New housing construction has fallen off a cliff in China.”
According to the NBS, fixed asset investment, including all infrastructure and property investment, grew by 13.5 percent in the first quarter, compared to the 20 percent growth rates recorded as recently as two years ago. The downturn in the residential property market was highlighted by a 32.4 percent decline in the area of land sold, compared to one year ago.
Other areas of the Chinese economy also showed a marked slowdown in spite of efforts by financial authorities to stimulate the economy. The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has cut interest rates twice since November and lowered borrowing costs. Yet firms are still reluctant to invest because of a growing weakness in consumption demand and the already high levels of corporate debt.
Retail sales, which measure final consumption demand, grew at a nine-year low of 10.2 percent in the year to March.
Other figures showed that the deceleration is increasing. Factory output grew by 5.6 percent in March, compared to 6.8 percent in January and February.
The industrial production slowdown is already having a major impact on countries in South East Asia that export semi-manufactured goods, which often receive their final form in Chinese factories. The value of China’s imports in the first quarter fell by 17.3 percent compared to a year ago.
The slowdown in steel production will further add to the pressure on the Australian economy as the price of iron ore, Australia’s largest single export earner, continues to slide.
From levels of more than $100 per tonne a little more than a year ago, it has now slumped to below $50, with predictions that it could go as low as $35. The slide is a result both of falling Chinese demand and decisions by two of the world’s major producers, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, to increase supply with the aim of driving their higher-cost rivals out of the market.
Commenting on the fall in steel and pig iron production, the chief information officer at the consulting group MySteel, Xu Xiangchun, warned: “This is not good news for Australian iron ore miners. The iron ore price hasn’t seen its bottom yet.”
Besides its impact on the economies of countries that supply it with components and raw materials, China’s slowdown is having significant financial effects. The interest rate cuts initiated by the PoBC have halted the rise of the renminbi, provoking a move of money out of the country into international property markets. According to a report in the Financial Times, real estate brokers estimate that Chinese buyers are now the single biggest force in the US, UK and Australian property markets.
The speculation in property is part of a broader process, which has seen an explosion in financial activity as the economy has slowed.
The Economist magazine recently noted: “Between 2010 and 2014, when China boasted the world’s fastest growing economy, its stock market was consistently among the world’s worst performers. Since July of last year, this relationship has flipped. Whereas China’s growth has drifted steadily lower, its share indices have doubled in value.”
The latest data show that the Shanghai Stock Market Index is up 20 percent for this month and 30 percent for the year. While Chinese markets do not have the same impact on the world financial system as Wall Street, their operations are substantial. As a Sydney Morning Herald article noted, last Friday about $250 billion worth of Chinese stocks changed hands. This is equivalent to the daily value of trades on US markets.
The share market boom appears to have been fuelled, at least in part, by a drop in short-term funding costs in China of about 2 percent over the past month—the result of rate cuts initiated by the PoBC, supposedly with the aim of trying to boost the real economy.
As is the case around the world, the main effect of the rate cuts has been to fuel speculation and parasitism. This underscores the fact that, far from providing a way forward for the world economy as a whole—the prospect often touted in the years immediately following the global financial crisis—Chinese capitalism is afflicted with the same malignancies as its international counterparts.

Another 400 refugees feared dead in latest Mediterranean Sea disaster

Stefan Steinberg

Four hundred migrants fleeing Libya have reportedly drowned after their boat capsized in the Mediterranean last weekend. A spokesman for the International Organisation for Migration in Italy told Agence France-Presse that survivors reported there were up to 550 people on board when the ship sank. Around a dozen bodies have been recovered so far.
If initial estimates of the scope of the tragedy prove correct, this would be the largest loss of life at least since around 360 migrants drowned in October 2013 after their boat sank near the island of Lampedusa.
There is good reason to believe that the number of deaths in the Mediterranean Sea will continue to rise. According to official tallies, more than 8,500 people were rescued trying to cross the Mediterranean between April 10 and 13 alone, including at least 450 children. Many of the refugees were fleeing war zones in Libya, Syria and Africa.
Judith Sunderland, the acting deputy director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch, declared, “If the reports are confirmed, this past weekend would be among the deadliest few days in the world’s most dangerous stretch of water for migrants and asylum seekers.”
According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) up to 500 migrants and asylum seekers died in the Mediterranean this year before the current disaster. This figure represents a 30-fold increase over recorded deaths during the same period in 2014. An estimated 3,200 people died in all of 2014. So far this year, the number could be approaching 1,000 with the death toll expected to rise dramatically as warmer conditions encourage more migrants to take to the seas in coming months.
Many of those rescued over the weekend remained in Italian vessels while others were transferred to already overcrowded refugee centers on the Italian coast and on nearby islands where they confront intolerable living conditions.
The latest flood of refugees from the Middle East is the direct result of the criminal wars conducted by the US, the European Union and its member states. Leading European states have fully supported and participated in the US-led military operations for regime change in Iraq, Libya and Syria. The unrelenting military offensive by western imperialist powers over the last two decades has plunged the Middle East and large swathes of Africa into chaos and conflict. By 2014, an estimated two million of the six million inhabitants of Libya fled the country following US-French-British bombing campaigns in 2011.
The subsequent western-led campaign to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad plunged the country into civil war and forced an estimated four million to leave the country. Many fled to neighboring Turkey but others made the treacherous journey to Europe, including some of the victims of last weekend's tragedy.
Now the US and Saudi Arabia, with the backing of the European nations, are extending the battlefront to Yemen. This imperialist warmongering has led to the highest levels of refugees fleeing their homelands since the Second World War.
As desperate migrants increasingly seek refuge in Europe, the EU is transforming the Mediterranean into a no-go zone with the increasing number of deaths at sea serving as a de facto deterrent to others.
Following the outcry after the Lampedusa tragedy in 2013, Italy launched a search and rescue naval operation called Mare Nostrum (“Our Sea”). In practice, sea rescue was always of secondary importance to the operation. The deployment of the navy was primarily intended to block migrants from reaching Italy by detecting refugee boats off the coast of Libya and Tunisia and escorting them back to North Africa.
Nevertheless, an estimated 150,000 refugees were rescued under the program. Mare Nostrum was the scrapped last November and replaced by the much smaller and less well-equipped Triton surveillance mission, run by the EU's external border agency, Frontex, whose primary mandate is border control, not search and rescue. This was a conscious decision by EU authorities to end any effective rescue operations and allow the number of deaths at sea to soar.
At the same time European political parties of all shades are stepping up their anti-immigrant policies aimed at blocking migrants from entering the continent while deporting those already here. On April 14, the leader of Italy’s ultra-nationalist Northern League called on all local authorities to resist “by any means” requests to accommodate asylum seekers. He declared that his party was ready to take actions to prevent arrivals.
In Germany refugee centers have been the target for a wave of fire bombings in recent weeks, while far right organizations such as Pegida have conducted vicious xenophobic campaigns denouncing immigrants as social spongers and equating Islamists with terrorists. In both Italy and Germany, organizations such as the Northern League and Pegida receive tacit support government parties, which argue that it is necessary to “seriously” consider the arguments raised by the racists. While broad layers of the German population have taken to the streets to defend the rights of immigrants both the governing Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Social Democratic Party (SPD) have entered into talks with supporters of Pegida.
Local German officials have also raised the idea of housing refugees in concentration camps. A recent report in Der Spiegel on the appalling conditions of refugee centers in Germany began with the declaration on one inmate who said, “In Syria you die quick, here you die slowly”.
On Tuesday, the European Commission responded to the weekend’s boat tragedy with plans for a so-called “comprehensive migration agenda”. At the centre of the plan is the setting up of offshore camps in North African countries to incarcerate and intimidate immigrants and asylum seekers before they can leave their countries. The measures are described bluntly in one report as a step towards “outsourcing border control and containment mechanisms to prevent departures.”
Referring to the plan Judith Sunderland of Human Watch commented, “It’s hard not to see these proposals as cynical bids to limit the numbers of migrants and asylum seekers making it to EU shores.”

Blackwater and the crimes of US imperialism

Patrick Martin

This week’s sentencing of four former Blackwater mercenaries to prison terms ranging from 30 years to life is an event that, by its entirely exceptional nature, underscores the effective immunity for US war criminals, in Iraq, Afghanistan and beyond.
Nicholas Slatten, Evan Liberty, Paul Slough and Devin Heard were convicted on multiple counts of first-degree murder or voluntary manslaughter, as well as the use of heavy weaponry in a crime, for their actions on September 16, 2007. The four were among a group of Blackwater guards who opened fire on Iraqi civilians in Nisour Square, Baghdad, killing 17 people and wounding another 20.
The names of the victims have hardly been reported in the American media, although they are listed in official documents. They include nine-year-old Ali Mohammed Hafedh Abdul Razzaq; Ahmed Haithem Ahmed Al Rubia’y, 20, an aspiring medical student, and his mother, Dr. Mahassin Mohssen Kadhum Al-Khazali, 46, a dermatologist; Osama Fadhil Abbas, a 52-year-old car dealer; Mohamed Abbas Mahmoud, 47, a delivery truck driver, and his son Qasim, 12 years old; Sa’adi Ali Abbas Alkarkh, 52, a businessman; Ibrahim Abid Ayash, 77, a gardener, a passenger on a bus; and Ali Khalil Abdul Hussein, 54, a blacksmith commuting to work on his motorcycle.
Also killed were Mushtaq Karim Abd Al-Razzaq, 18, an Iraqi soldier standing at a military checkpoint; Ghaniyah Hassan Ali, 55, killed on a bus as she sheltered her daughter from the spray of bullets; Mahdi Sahib Nasir, 26, a taxi driver who was the sole support of seven other family members; Hamoud Sa’eed Abttan, 33, father of seven, in the square looking for work, along with his cousin, Uday Ismail Ibrahiem, 27, father of three.
These bare descriptions are important, because they suggest the wide range of victims of the US conquest and occupation of Iraq, which led to the deaths of an estimated one million people: young and old; men, women and children; laborers, students, professionals. As the World Socialist Web Sitehas repeatedly pointed out, what took place in Iraq from 2003 on was not merely imperialist aggression and mass slaughter, but the destruction of an entire society, one of the most advanced in the Middle East.
Meanwhile, as the New York Times reported Wednesday, mercenary outfits like Blackwater have prospered, reaping billions in profits, with their contractors frequently outnumbering actual uniformed personnel in US-dominated countries like Afghanistan. Security subcontractors for the military, the State Department, and giant US and multinational corporations do as much as $100 billion worth of business, the newspaper said.
The Blackwater mercenaries were among the most flagrant killers in Iraq, but hardly unique. There are numerous reported incidents of mass murder conducted by US soldiers, special forces operatives and private contractors. Many more such incidents are unrecorded, because no victims survived. But some of these were among the hundreds of atrocities made public by Private Chelsea (Bradley) Manning, who released logs of military reports to WikiLeaks, some made public under the title “Collateral Murder.”
The military justice system has condemned Private Manning to a 35-year prison term for exposing war crimes, but it has prosecuted only a handful of US soldiers for murdering, raping or maiming Iraqis, no matter how strong the evidence and how grisly the circumstances.
More importantly, the politicians and generals who organized and led the US war in Iraq have gotten off scot-free. Under the principles laid down by the Nuremberg Tribunal after World War II, the leaders of the US government during the Iraq War—George W. Bush, Richard Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, George Tenet, Paul Wolfowitz—and top military commanders from Tommy Franks to David Petraeus are guilty of the crime of planning and executing a war of aggression. They are collectively responsible for all the deaths that ensued as a result of their actions.
The list does not stop with the Bush-Cheney administration. President Barack Obama, Vice President Joseph Biden, and their top military-intelligence officials continued the US occupation for another three years, and have relaunched the war beginning in August 2014, using as a pretext the emergence of Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a former Al Qaeda affiliate that was armed and financed as part of the US-backed war against the Assad regime in Syria.
Under Obama, the US war crimes against the Iraqi people have become war crimes against the entire population of the Middle East. Libya, Syria and now Yemen have been destroyed as functioning societies by US-backed civil wars, bombing and drone missile strikes.
The perpetrators of these horrific crimes have the blood of millions on their hands. But under the global capitalist system, this is regarded merely as the price of doing business, and extracting the oil wealth of the Persian Gulf and Central Asia. The war criminals of American imperialism—and their counterparts in the lesser imperialist powers—can only be brought to justice by an international movement of the working class against imperialist war and for socialist revolution.
As a critical step forward in this struggle, the International Committee of the Fourth International is holding an international online May Day rally on Sunday, May 3. We urge working people and young people throughout the world to attend this important event.

Sri Lanka: Deterioration Of The Legal Intellect: IV

W. J. Basil Fernando

A determination issued by the United Nation’s Human Rights Committee on 1st April 2015, reveals extraordinary failures on the part of Sri Lankan State agencies – the police, the forensic pathologist, the Attorney General, and the Supreme Court – regarding a custodial death that took place at the Moragahahena Police Station on 26th July 2003. The following Committee Members participated in the examination of the case in question: Yadh Ben Achour, Lazhari Bouzid, Sarah Cleveland, Olivier de Frouville, Yuji Iwasawa, Ivana Jelic, Duncan Muhumuza Laki, Photini Pazartis, Mauro Politi, Sir Nigel Rodley, Victor Manuel Rodriguez-Rescia, Fabian Omar Salvioli, Dheerujlall B. Seetulsingh, Anja Seibert-Fohr, Yuval Shany, Konstantine Vardzelashvili, and Margo Waterval.
The facts of the case are that Sunil Hemachandra (Sunil) was once a healthy and a literate man with no criminal record. He was a daily paid labourer, mostly engaged in tapping of rubber and climbing trees for plucking coconuts.
His misfortunes began, ironically, when he won a lottery ticket of a little over 3 million rupees (approximately USD $25,000). Through the lottery agent, the Moragahahena police learned about Sunil having won the lottery; the Officer-in-Charge of the Moragahahena Police Station sent a police officer with the message that Sunil should arrive at the Station, along with his ticket, and stay there for his own safety. Sunil did not comply this request. Instead, he went with his mother and aunt, en-cashed his winning ticket, and immediately deposited it in his aunt’s bank account. Thereafter, he bought a van for 1.2 million rupees, a three-wheeler for one of his nieces, and gave 5,000 rupees to his nephew as a gift.
A few weeks later, a team of police officers from the Moragahahena Police Station came looking for Sunil; they inquired from his aunt whether Sunil had spent his lottery money. One of the police officers warned, “his [Sunil’s] happiness would not last long”. The police officers left a message for Sunil to report to the Moragahahena Police Station.
On the same day, Sunil, accompanied by an acquaintance, Chanaka, and along with the son of the lottery agent, Lionel, went to the police station. At the Police Station, one of the police officers (a Sub Inspector) requested Sunil to pay money as “support”. Sunil had replied that the money was not with him and declined to pay. The same police officer then insisted on the payment of 25,000 Rupees “to cover the expenses of a procession of the Vidyaratne Temple in Horana”, to which Sunil agreed.
On 22nd July 2003, five police officers from the same police station arrived in a vehicle at Sunil’s aunt’s house and, seeing him asleep in his room, identified him as being “the one who won the lottery” and then they proceeded to beat him, which included hitting him on his head. The police officers proceeded to arrest Sunil and Chanaka and continued beating Sunil at the time of the arrest and during the ride in the police jeep to the police station, when he was hit on his head and in his abdomen. Chanaka was hit in the face, several times, when he asked the officers to stop beating Sunil.
Sunil and Chanaka were taken to the Moragahahena Police Station and placed in a small cell with several other detainees. Next morning, Chanaka found that Sunil was visibly unwell and was bleeding from his nose and his mouth, and was not able to stand. Chanaka alerted the police officers of Sunil’s critical health condition. However, the officers merely asked Chanaka to take Sunil to the backyard and to wipe the blood off his face. The bleeding however, continued uninterrupted from his nose and mouth and Sunil began vomiting blood clots. One of the police officers directed Chanaka to give Sunil an iron rod to hold, which is done in the case of epileptic attacks.
The same morning, Sunil’s aunt came to the police station and found Sunil lying on the floor of the cell bleeding from his nose and mouth. She too alerted the police about Sunil’s serious condition, but was chased away by the police.
It was only later during the day that Sunil was finally taken to the Horan Base Hospital in a police vehicle. Sunil’s aunt visited him at the Police Station and was told by Sunil that he had been brutally assaulted by the officers. She found him to be in severe pain and his face was red and swollen.
Later, on the same day, two police officers from the same station arrived at the hospital to record Sunil’s statement. But he was only able to mention his name. However, the police officer wrote something on two lists of paper while talking to the other. The officers then obtained two impressions of Sunil’s left thumb, in lieu of his signature, although Sunil was capable of signing his name.
The next day Sunil’s family learned that he had been transferred to the National Hospital in Colombo, where he had undergone brain surgery. On 26th July 2003, staff at the National Hospital informed his aunt that Sunil passed away earlier that day.
Three days before his death, while Sunil was in hospital, Sunil’s aunt went to the office of the Assistant Superintendent of Police in Horana, and attempted to complain of Sunil’s arrest and torture. But her complaint was not recorded by the Superintendent of the Police. It was only on 26th July 2003, that the Assistant Superintendent of the police in Horana recorded a statement from the aunt and Chanaka, who was released from police custody.
Sunil’s aunt also made a complaint to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), and with the help of a human rights organisation “Janasansadaya” lodged a Fundamental Rights Petition before the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, in which a number of officials and institutions were cited as respondents.
The aunt’s complaint to the NHRC remained unanswered till August 2008, when the NHRC stated that as a Fundamental rights case had been filed before the Supreme Court, the NHRC will not make any inquiry while the case is pending. Since then, Sunil’s family has not heard from the NHRC.
The Additional Magistrate of the Colombo Chief Magistrate’s Court opened an inquiry into Sunil Hemachandra’s death and heard the statements of Sunil’s aunt and Chanaka. The Additional Magistrate noted that in the police report from Moragahahena Police Station “there was no entry whatsoever, revealing the reason for which Sunil has been arrested by the police”. The Magistrate also noted after observing the victim’s body in the mortuary, that among other injuries he noted an injury of “about one inch slightly above the buttocks on the left side of the back”.
A few days later, a Consultant Judicial Medical Officer (JMO) from Colombo conducted a post mortem examination. His report documented ten pre-mortal injuries, four contusions, four aberrations, one peri-orbital haematoma (“black eyes”) around the left eye and one surgical incision. However, the JMO made no record of the injury on the left side of the back observed by the Additional Magistrate. The JMO identified the cause of Sunil’s death as “acute subdural haemorrhage following a head injury caused by blunt trauma”. The report identified four possible origins of fatal haemorrhage: a heavy blow on the back of the victim with a weapon or a kick with boots; a fall due to being pushed; accidental fall; or a fit due to alcohol withdrawal or epilepsy. Strangely, the report concluded that it was “possible that the cause of death was a fall following alcohol withdrawal, a finding seemly derived solely from the discovery of an “enlarged and fatigued liver” in the body of the deceased.
On 8th August 2003, the Magistrate of Horana directed the Senior Superintendent of the Panadura Police to investigate and produce the suspects before the court as the circumstances surrounding the victim’s death seemed suspicious.
However, on 29th August 2004, the Attorney General decided that no charge could be filed in connection with Sunil Hemachandra’s death as there was no evidence of any assault on the victim. On the basis of this reference by the Attorney General, the Magistrate removed the case from the roll.
Regarding the author’s petition to the Supreme Court, which was made in September 2003, a decision was made on 6th August 2010. The Supreme Court dismissed the application based on the conclusion that “the fall being due to a fit following alcohol withdrawal was highly possible”.
Concluding findings of the UNHRC
The UN Human Rights Committee considered Sunil’s case on the basis of information placed before the Committee. It should be noted that Sri Lanka as a State party was under obligation to reply to complaints placed by the UNHRC under the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. However, despite requests having been made to the state party, twice, by the UNHRC, the State party made no reply to the allegations made in this Communication.
UNHRC arrived at the following findings:
Arbitrary deprivation of life
Regarding the author’s claims under Article 6, in relation to arbitrary deprivation of Sunil Hemachandra’s life, the Committee recalled its jurisprudence, in which it determined that by arresting and detaining individuals, the State party takes the responsibility to care for their life, and that a death of any type in custody, should be regarded as prima facie a summary and arbitrary execution. “Consequently there should be a thorough, prompt, and an impartial investigation to confirm or rebut this presumption, especially when complaints by relatives or other reliable reports suggest unnatural death”. Members of the Moragahahena Police Station arrested Sunil Hemachandra on 22nd July 2003 at his place of residence. Four days later, on 26th July 2003, he died in the National Hospital in Colombo, as a direct result of an “acute subdural hemorrhage following a head injury cause by blunt trauma”. Although the victim was bleeding uninterruptedly, i.e. he was in a visibly critical medical condition the day after his arrest and placement in detention (23rd July 2003), the police failed to seek medical assistance for at least three hours.
State party’s investigation into suspicious circumstances of the death of Sunil inadequate
The Committee has recalled that criminal investigation and consequential prosecution are necessary remedies for violations of human rights, such as those protected by Article 6 and 7 of the Covenant. In this case, the Committee has observed that all investigative steps undertaken by the State party were carried out by members of the Moragahahena Police Station, i.e. the same police forces which arrested and detained Sunil Hemachandra; that the investigation ordered on 8th August 2003 by the Magistrate of Horana was closed, further to the Attorney General’s decision of 29th April 2004 not to pursue charges for assault; that it took the Supreme Court seven years to rule on the Fundamental Rights Petition filed by the author; that, in its decision on 6th August 2010, the Supreme Court discarded the possibility of the victim’s custodial death as a result of torture, without ordering any independent investigation to ascertain the facts and identify possible perpetrators: no police officer was identified as a suspect and interrogated, let alone suspended or brought to justice. In the absence of any explanation by the State party, the Committee has concluded that the State party’s investigations into the suspicious circumstances of the death of Sunil Hemachandra are inadequate. The Committee has concluded that the State party’s authorities, either by action or omission, were responsible for not taking adequate measures to protect Sunil Hemachandra’s life, and to properly investigate his death and take appropriate action against those found responsible, in breach of Article 6 paragraph 1, read alone, and in conjunction with Article 2 paragraph 3 of the Covenant.
Torture and failure to provide immediate medical attention
The UNHRC has concluded that severe torture had been committed at the Moragahahena Police Station and that the State party has also failed to provide immediate medical attention even after the serious condition of the detainee was brought to their notice.
Illegal arrest
The UNHRC concluded that the arrest and detention of Sunil Hemachandra was also illegal and that the State party failed also to inform the reason for his arrest.
UNHRC Recommendation to be fulfilled by the Government of Sri Lanka within 180 days
The UNHRC has recommended that Sri Lanka as a State party should undertake a prompt, thorough, and independent investigation into the facts, ensuring that the perpetrators are brought to justice, and ensuring reparation, including payment of adequate compensation and public apology to the family. The State party should also take necessary measures to ensure that such violations should not recur in the future. The State party had been requested to provide information about measures taken to give effect to the Committee’s views within 180 days. The State party is also requested to publish the Committee’s views and to have them translated into the official language of the State party and be widely circulated.
Will the new government act differently from the Mahinda Rajapaksa government?
The Mahinda Rajapaksa government completely ignored all the views and recommendations of the UNHRC delivered during the term of its office. The question now is whether the new government headed by President Maithripala Sirisena – who has promised to discontinue with the way the previous government conducted itself in relation to international affairs including relationships to the United Nations – will act differently with regard to the findings and recommendations of the UNHRC in Sunil Hemachandra’s case.
President Maithripala Sirisena has made good governance the major slogan of his government. The UNHRC observations and recommendation in this case expose the extreme deficiencies relating to good governance in Sri Lanka; of particular importance are the failures mentioned by the UNHRC regarding the failure to conduct impartial inquiries into custodial deaths. Also of importance is the UNHRC criticism of the Attorney General’s interventions into criminal cases in order to stop the investigations, as it happened in Sunil’s case
What is also unique in this case is that the UNHRC has made observations regarding the failures of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka to call for a fresh inquiry, whereby the Court could have intervened to defeat the police scheme to deny justice by subverting inquiries into a custodial death.

Can Diplomacy Solve the Chaos in the Middle East?

Sufyan bin Uzayr

When it comes to the Middle East, everything happens at a pace that is too fast to comprehend. Proxy wars, manipulations and unjustifiable violence — unfortunately, a region so blessed and so beautiful is nowadays mostly known for all the wrong things.
As of now, Iran-Arab relations are turning from bad to worse with sectarian rhetoric and regional rivalries resulting in a weird form of power struggle that will have many losers, and probably zero winners. Both Iran and Saudi Arabia have entered into a stare-down in Yemen, and with nearly all the major states of the region taking sides, the flames of these tensions are reaching as far as Turkey and Pakistan. Add to it the fact that the recent nuclear deal between P5+1 and Iran can affect regional strife even further, and the chances of a zero sum game look even bleak.
At this point, one needs to wonder: what can be the possible solution for Middle East?
The Nuclear Deal
Question is: how will the US-Iran nuclear deal affect regional balance of power? Now, there are many faces to this question, and it can be broken down as under:
* How will Iran’s nuclear deal affect Saudi Arabia’s terms with USA?
* Will this lead to a possible cooperation between USA and Iran? It must be noted that Iran did help USA against the Taliban back in 2001.
* Both Israel and Saudi Arabia are not too pleased with this nuclear deal. Will it mean that they resolve their differences and take a principled stand against Iran?
* Even more so, how the hardening power triangle in the region, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Iran, react? Will it lead to an even greater three-sided sectarian conflict?
* On paper, Saudi Arabia is fine with the US-Iran nuclear deal. Does it mean USA will help Saudi Arabia in its regional endeavors as a return of favor? If so, will USA openly oppose Iran’s stand in Yemen?
A big factor here is the rise of the Islamic State (or ISIS, or ISIL, or Da’esh, whichever name you like to use). Virtually every player in the region is not fond of IS (accusations and conspiracy theories aside, IS surely does not have any open supporters per se). In fact, the recent nuclear deal might just have happened as an outcome of the fact that USA needs Iran to fight against IS in Iraq and possibly in Syria.
Can Diplomacy Work?
Recently, at the Turkish-Iranian summit, Iran gave a warm reception to Turkish President Erdogan. Even though both Turkey and Iran do not see eye to eye on various issues, they still managed to agree to double their trade from $14bn to $30bn.
The same model should be implemented in case of Saudi Arabia and Iran as well. Diplomacy is the way forward, war is not.
Of course, such a summit seems unlikely as of now, especially because the Islamic Middle East has multiple players in the picture: Turkey on one hand, the Saudi Arabian party on the second, and Iran and its friends on the third. More importantly, the volatile borders in the Middle East are surely not sensible, and a good number of them were drawn not by legitimate methods but as a by-product of imperialism. The divisions in the Middle East — be it the case of Iraq, or Syria or Palestine or even Saudi Arabia and Iran themselves — are more artificial and less logical.
But this is precisely why diplomacy can be helpful. As a matter of fact, the best way forward for the Arab World would be complete unification, in sync with the aspirations of the Arab people and against the wishes of both Israel and oil-hungry West. Sadly, that seems unlikely as of now, and whether you like it or not, Saudi Arabia is the de facto face of the Gulf. As such, any solution will have to acknowledge the reality and focus on arriving at a conclusion thereafter. Similarly, Iranian borders and desires may be questionable, but it does stand tall as a powerful Islamic entity, and can serve as a legitimate check against Zionist aggression (something that the Arabian powers have failed to do so far).
Conclusion
Right now, the most plausible solution to the crisis in Yemen as well as Syria would be a diplomatic arrangement between all the parties involved, sans the foreign detractors. Probably Turkey and Qatar can mediate, whereas Saudi Arabia, Iran and other relevant parties can sit together and discuss the details. Day dreaming? Might be, but it is still better than engaging in dumb sectarian strife and offering additional leverage to NATO and Israel.
Both Saudi Arabia and Iran are currently involved in a race to the bottom, with each party declaring itself to be the sole voice of sanity. In such a tug of war, there are no winners, and if the current trend continues, all of Middle East will fight its way back to Stone Age.
For Middle East, unification is the cure, but since that is not happening anytime soon, unity is what we should strive for.

Reparations Movements Meet To Make International Connections

Linn Washington Jr.

Dignitaries from three continents gathered in New York City recently to sharpen their strategies for confronting some of the world’s most powerful nations over a subject that sizeable numbers of citizens support in the nearly two-dozen nations represented: reparations for the legacy of a history of slavery, colonialism and government-sanctioned segregation.
Those dignitaries, whose number included ambassadors and legislators, along with luminary activists and legal experts, participated in the three-day International Reparations Summit convened by the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, a research, policy and advocacy organization based in the United States.
Dr. Ron Daniels, President of the Institute, stated, “We are delighted that the Institute of the Black World can be a clearinghouse for ideas and strategies on how to pursue reparations for historical crimes and injustices against people of African descent in the U.S. and across the Americas.”
An action in 2013 reenergized reparations activities already operative in the U.S., throughout the Americas, in Africa and in Europe. That is when CARICOM, the organization of Caribbean nations, announced its plans to also mount actions against former European colonial countries for native the slave trade, colonialism and genocide against indigenous peoples. That was the first time that a collection of countries had agreed on taking coordinated action for reparations.
“We have a just cause. And we have a duty to right the wrongs done during the slave trade, slavery and colonialism,” CARICOM representative Dr. Douglas Slater said during the opening session of the Summit. “Today, racism continues to impede development of African peoples all over the world.”

The Rise of Religious Powers and the Failure of the Left in The Middle-East

Souad Sharabani

Souad Sharabani: In the past three decades or so, Communists, trade unionists and secular nationalist movements like pan Arabism were replaced by religious and ethnic dividers as the forces that mobilize, galvanize and divide the people in the Middle-East. We see the same results in every country with different circumstances. What are the factors that explain the rise of religious fundamentalism and the decline of the left? I had the opportunity to sit with Ramzy Baroud to talk about these issues and more.
Ramzy Baroud is an internationally syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books, and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently completing his PhD studies at the University of Exeter. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
Ramzy Baroud: In the Middle East, and in the Arab world in general I would say the socialist alternatives were failing, particularly with the decline of the Soviet Union’s influence. The Soviet influence unified the ranks of various Arab countries that always revolved within the Soviet Bloc. South Yemen was a particularly potent example.
That failure was not simply the outcome of socialist bloc’s crumpling geopolitical regional models, but also because Middle Eastern countries (also under the influence or due to pressure from western hegemons) were experiencing a rethink. That was the time of the rise of the Islamic alternative, which was partly a genuine attempt at galvanizing the region’s own intellectual resources, and partly because of the funds coming from rich gulf countries to control the rise of the Islamic tide.
That was the time when the slogan: Islam is the Solution became quite dominant. That new slogan pierced through the collective psyche of various Arabic intellectual groups throughout the Middle East and beyond, specifically because it seemed to be an attempt at tapping into the region’s own historical and cultural references.
The general idea was: both US-western and Soviet models have failed or are failing, and there is an urgent need for alternative.
Souad Sharabani: when you are talking about the how the Soviet Union failed the Middle East, that also tells me that the left throughout the years was not able to build a solid foundation among their people. So that even when the Soviet Union collapsed the left would have been able to remain on solid ground among their people?
Ramzy Baroud: that is a good point. If you look at the rise of the left and the various political manifestation of the left in Europe, in Asia, in Latin America, you find it, more or less followed a set model, some experiences more accentuated than others, starting at universities, the work place and so on.
The rise of the left necessitated some kind of marriage between the ideas, mobilization and action.
If I must generalize, in the Arab world, there was a relatively a strong intellectual component of the left. But the intellectual left hardly ever managed to cross the divide between the world of theories and ideas, which was available to the educated classes, into the work place, the peasants and the average man and woman on the street. Without mobilizing the workers, peasants, and oppressed masses, the Arab left had little to offer but further rhetoric.
Souad Sharabani: Could it be that in the Middle East at the time, the majority of the population was, and still are peasants/rural communities, and the left was predominantly in urban centres and therefore were unable to penetrate into these communities?
Ramzy Baroud: Perhaps, but I would say unwilling, not unable. It is important to navigate through the course in which politics and power intertwine. Where political elites are based in urban centers, and the power is divided between whichever group manages to prevail. These elites have their specific political affiliations, parties, newspapers, and universities. Whatever arrangement is being hashed between the elites, as a result of conflict or agreement, it is often sorted out in these power centers, far away from the rest of the country, where the factories and the farms continue to operate without much disturbance, enriching the rich and furthering the misery of the poor.
Rarely did the left challenge that paradigm and reach out beyond the confines of these hubs of power.
Souad Sharabani: Why was that the case?
Ramzy Baroud: Mostly because of the mindset, and the understanding that politics is also the business of the elites, not the poor. And any political change that happened had to go through the same dynamic. The left is a component of that dynamic, to challenge it would be to challenge their own access to power.
Souad Sharabani: Were the governments’ at the time more oppressive towards leftist groups than Islamic ones?
Ramzy Baroud: Of course both groups were oppressed through out the years. The levels of oppression differed depending on the country. For example the left was not as oppressed in Iraq as they were in Saudi Arabia. Some progressive leftist elements were incorporated into the regime, were allowed to operate within acceptable margins of the ‘political life’ there. The Ba’ath party had some tolerance for some and no tolerance for others, all depending on who agreed to play by the rules.
There was no room for leftists, or any manifestation of the left in Saudi Arabia, or for anyone who opposed the King for that matter.
In fact, because of that shared oppression of political Islam and radical left, there was a degree of affinity between activists from both of groups, as they shared prison cells, and were tortured and humiliated together.
Souad Sharabani: The religious groups or parties that came to power throughout the Middle East people did not support them for strictly theological reasons, but more for social, political and economic reasons am I right?
Ramzy Baroud: I think the experience of the Muslim Brotherhood vs. Al Nour Party in Egypt is enough to confirm your assumption here. The Al Nour party arrived to the political scene quite recently, and is more driven by religious rhetoric than any particular sociopolitical program. Yet they are far less popular than the Muslim Brotherhood.
The Muslim Brotherhood are more worldly and open to political compromises, yet they were much more popular among Egyptians if you compare them to the Salafia.
Souad Sharabani: The Islamic groups like the Hizbalaha in Lebanon, the Islamic Brotherhood in Egypt, or Hamas in Palestine, created almost parallel governments providing their people the services that their governments stoped providing such as health care, education, housing, and other forms of welfare support. Am I correct?
Ramzy Baroud: That’s true. This momentum began with the nationalization of various oil industries, and the increase of oil prices. The region was flooded with a lot of money that came from the Gulf. We started seeing that slowly constructed apparatus of institutions, educational, health related and so forth.
The point of contention is: was this all planned in advance? I will argue that the rise of political Islam was not pre-calculated, but rather it just happened. The Saudis wanted to translate their wealth to influence, and various Muslim communities welcomed the pouring of funds, and began to build institutions, construct hospitals, mosques, schools, establish newspapers, and so on. The Americans then seemed okay with the idea that these groups will counter the Soviet influence, especially considering the war in Afghanistan.
Souad Sharabani: It is very interesting to note that in Iran, in Egypt and in many other Middle Eastern countries, we talked about the fact that the peasants and the working poor are the big supporters of Islamic parties, but it is also the merchant class. What do they have in common?
Ramzy Baroud: Surely you can find a common ground between people of various walks of lives. You can always find a wealthy Republican and a poor or lower middle class individual putting their class differences aside and uniting behind a political party, no matter how odd that unity may seem.
In the Middle East, religion or sect has always been grounds for unity, even if that unity seems frivolous or challenges obvious class conflict.
Souad Sharabani: Originally the educated classes were the force behind the left in the Middle East, now we are seeing the educated classes joining the religious groups. Is it because they were unable to improve their lives under the existing systems?
Ramzy Baroud: The early 1990’s was a turning point. The collapse of the Soviet Union brought to an end its political influence and outreach. At that time there was a lot of oil money coming in. Numerous Islamic Universities opened up all over the world. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries were able to send tens of thousands of students all over Europe to get engineering and other degrees. The tide was reversed in terms of the demographics of the educated classes.
The hegemony over education was largely broken. Look at Hamas in Gaza. Many of their leaders and members have high degrees, in engineering, or medicine. And that has become very common among all Islamic groups in Palestine, in Egypt, in Morocco and so forth. So the hegemony over education and over the articulation of the discourse is longer in the hands of the political or intellectual elites.
Now your other point about employment, this is actually the key point here. In most of the Arab countries, we do not have functional independent institutions that operate outside the realm of governments, where you could still be a leftist and operate in a free uncontrolled environment, maintain your ideology and still thrive academically and financially and professionally.
So ideologically driven intellectuals are left with few options: either live on the margin of society – you know, the maverick communist guy sitting in a coffee shop in Cairo speaking about the proletariat – or join existing institutions to remain financially afloat. Those who opted for the latter, needed to compromise to the extent that some of them are now mouthpieces for the very governments that continue to oppress their people.
Some of them ended up working for semi government institutions, some of them would end up working with NGOs, but the vast majority of them seemed to disconnect from their masses-rich slogans and old values.
As a result, the thrust of their political power as a group has diminished so greatly through out the years. If you think of Egypt for example, can you think of one overriding powerful leftist organization that operate in Egypt? Not a single one. There are ‘leftists’ but they hardly register as movers and shakers of the current political landscape.
Souad Sharabani: The Islamic Brotherhood of Egypt, Hamas, Hizbalaha, or even the Ayatollahs of Iran, these governments are not interested in creating a Taliban style governments in their respected countries. Am I right?
Ramzy Baroud: far from it, really. They are interested in power, but within a more dynamic political atmosphere, which would both guarantee their existence and influence.
Their challenge was to come with some form of political vision that would allow them to maintain a substantial degree of Islamic identity, yet create a functional modern political institutions, that intersects, to an extend with the principles of modern political democracy.
It is not easy to come to terms with all that real democracy actually entails in a region that has few, if any, democratic experiences.
Souad Sharabani: The conditions in the Middle East are very bleak. Wherever I look I see wars, death and destructions. Is there any hope in site?
Ramzy Baroud: Don’t forget these societies fought and are fighting against extremely corrupt, brutal, calculating manipulative dictatorships like Hosni Mubarak that have been in existence for decades. It is not just about an individual dictator but it is the class that has controlled every aspect of life in every nation. In order to uproot these corrupt systems, the price is predictably high. But someone has to stand up and challenge the system.
Needless to say that old colonial and neocolonial powers are very much invested in the Middle East because of oil, and because they want the Middle East to be ‘stable’ according to whichever way it suits their interests.
I think there is another issue that is quite important and that is the demographics of the Arab world. For the most part, they are very young populations, who grew up with social media. They had access to ways of communicating their oppression, and organize.
And Egypt in particular for me is not a source of depression it is a sort of optimism. Now since the crackdown by SISI, every single day that youthful population is now being educated the language of revolution. They are spending time in jails, and that what revolution is all about. It is about spending time in jails, it is about murder, it is about being liquidated by the regime, and it is about suffering and it is about pain. And once that is saturated only then you will have the true mindset of revolution. And I think now, the Egyptian public beginning to educated themselves what revolution is, and what is needed of them once SISI comes down. And I think it is only a matter of time before SISI is out.