8 Jan 2022

Spanish authorities to cut COVID-19 reporting as cases explode

Alice Summers


Hundreds of thousands of people are being infected with the coronavirus every day in Spain, as the far more contagious Omicron variant fuels an unprecedented rise in cases. Daily cases have only fallen below 100,000 once since December 27, with 99,671 infections reported on December 28. On December 30, the highest ever single-day total of 161,688 was recorded. Up until this point, the largest one-day infection total in any previous wave of the pandemic had been 44,347.

People wearing face masks queue for a COVID-19 test at La Paz hospital in Madrid, Spain, Dec. 28, 2021. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)

Currently, over 1.8 million inhabitants of Spain are sick with COVID-19, more than a seventh of the total cases recorded in the Spain since the start of the pandemic, and roughly 4 percent of the population.

Even this is likely just the tip of the iceberg, as Spain’s inadequate testing facilities have been unable to cope with the surge in infections. Test positivity rates have reached a staggering 33 percent nationwide, well above the World Health Organization’s (WHO) threshold of 5 percent—considered an indicator that the pandemic is under control. In some regions, such as Navarra, more than half of all tests conducted are returning positive results.

The Socialist Party (PSOE)-Podemos government has responded to this unfolding public health catastrophe by threatening to stop recording infection data. According to RTVE, the Spanish Ministry of Health and the regional governments are drawing up plans to change the way that COVID-19 cases are recorded, so as to focus on hospitalizations and deaths, thereby downplaying the dangers of mass infection.

RTVE explained that a new system would be implemented which would make it unnecessary for regions to record data case by case, moving instead towards the health reporting system used for other diseases like flu. “Experts” from the health ministry reportedly explained that it was “unsustainable” to continue testing all suspected cases given the high incidence of the disease.

As of Friday, the incidence rate hit 2,722 per 100,000 in Spain, with some regions reporting rates of over 5,000 or 6,000 per 100,000.

The PSOE-Podemos government has also announced plans to scale back its contact-tracing program in light of the explosion of cases. Close contacts of confirmed coronavirus cases will only be identified by the government’s track-and-trace service if they are in environments considered “high risk,” such as in care homes or health centers. Infected individuals will otherwise be responsible for tracking down their own contacts and informing them of the potential risk.

The PSOE-Podemos government has made clear that it plans to take no action to protect the health and lives of the Spanish people, fully embracing the fascistic policy of “herd immunity.” On Friday, PSOE Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told a meeting of the party’s Federal Committee that the country “is better prepared than a year ago” to confront COVID-19 and insisted that “we are going to have to learn to live with it like we do with many other viruses.”

Admitting that his policy had no scientific basis, Sánchez then proceeded to double down on his government’s vaccine-only strategy: “While we are waiting for science to tell us if this variant is more or less harmful, what we do know is that vaccination protects us more against contagion and against the severe illness.”

Sánchez’s demand that the population “learn to live with the virus” is an open acknowledgement of what has long been the PSOE-Podemos administration’s policy. The ruling class intends to let the virus run rampant throughout the entire population, no matter the cost in health and lives, so as not to infringe on the profits of big business and the banks.

For this reason, the Spanish government has insisted that all children return to in-person schooling on Monday, January 10, in order to allow parents to continue working in unsafe factories, offices and other workplaces to generate profits for the companies.

Next to no measures will be in place to ensure the safety of teachers, pupils and their families, other than that children and educators should wear masks and regularly wash their hands, and that classrooms should be well ventilated. These vague instructions will be completely ineffective under conditions in which the virus is circulating massively throughout the Spanish population.

In a statement on Tuesday, PSOE Education Minister Pilar Alegría lied about the danger of the virus, falsely claiming that children would not be at risk in schools. “Our classrooms are safe,” she stated. “Choosing in-person [schooling] is the best option. It guarantees the right of education in conditions of equality and equity.” Alegría said nothing of the right of children and their families to not be infected with a serious and potentially deadly disease.

On Friday, the Health Ministry then announced that school classrooms would no longer have to quarantine if COVID-19 cases are detected, unless there are at least five infections among their members, or at least 20 percent of the pupils.

This follows an earlier decision by the PSOE-Podemos government at the end of December to reduce quarantine time for the population as a whole from 10 days to seven for asymptomatic cases. A negative PCR test will not be required to end the quarantine period.

Meanwhile, hospitals are nearing collapse as the virus surges through health care staff and the population more broadly. Infections of health workers have roughly quadrupled in a month, up from 1,024 in the last week of November to 3,952 in the last week of December. This is nearly three times more than during the “fifth wave” in July and August, which peaked at 1,378 health care worker infections in a single week.

In the Basque Country, one of the worst hit regions so far, the Satse nursing union estimates that between 4 and 7 percent of health care workers are currently off sick with the coronavirus. The Basque Health Service (Osakidetza) has been forced to draw up lists of volunteers to cover shifts. Hospitalizations have increased by 76 percent since December 20 in this region, while ICU admissions have increased by 30 percent.

Health care workers are being forced to deal with skyrocketing hospitalizations, with 14,426 people in hospital as of January 7, more than at any point since mid-February last year, during Spain’s catastrophic “third wave.” This is an increase of roughly a third in a week. Over 2,000 people are currently in Intensive Care Units (ICUs) with COVID-19, the highest number since the peak of the “fifth wave” at the start of August. This number is also rapidly rising, increasing by around 13 percent over the last seven days.

The Spanish and international ruling class’s prioritization of profits over lives is incompatible with a scientifically guided fight against the virus. Only a conscious mass movement of the Spanish, European and global working class directed against the bourgeoisie and its policies of mass infection can end the pandemic and save lives.

India reports first Omicron death as daily infections surge past 100,000

Wasantha Rupasinghe


India, where COVID-19 cases have recently begun growing exponentially, officially confirmed its first death from the highly infectious Omicron variant Wednesday. Friday saw a second, of a 45-year-old woman from Odisha’s Balangir district.

Health workers set up beds inside a ward being prepared for the omicron coronavirus variant at Civil hospital in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, Dec. 6, 2021 [Credit: AP Photo/Ajit Solanki]

These reports shatter bogus claims by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government and the capitalist ruling elite that the new variant is “milder” and that there is “no need to panic.” It has now spread to 27 of India’s 36 states and Union Territories.

The first victim, a 73-year-old retiree who tested positive for COVID-19 earlier in December but recovered from the disease, had in fact died on December 31 in Rajasthan’s Udaipur district.

The fully vaccinated man was admitted to a government hospital on December 15 after testing positive the same day. Tests done on this man on December 21 and 25 came back negative. However, on December 25, his genome sequencing report confirmed that he had the Omicron variant. Dinesh Kharadi, the Chief Medical and Health Officer in Udaipur, told reporters: “The death appeared to be from post-COVID pneumonia with comorbidity of diabetes mellitus, hypertension and hypothyroidism.”

Joint Secretary for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare Lav Agarwal, who is at the forefront of efforts to paint Omicron as “milder,” downplayed its role in this death, saying: “He was an elderly person who had diabetes and comorbid conditions.” Instead of alerting the public to the devastating emergency situation emerging worldwide as the Omicron variant spreads, Agarwal encouraged the public to write it off as the product of old age and ill health, not deliberate policies.

Capitalist politicians proceed with naked indifference to life. In May 2020, as 400,000 people fell ill and 4,000 died every day in India, Modi government health advisor Jayaprakash Muliyil warned: “With a substantial opening up of the lockdown, India may see at least two million deaths.” Yet Modi opened up the lockdown before viral spread had ended and contact tracing was set up, and epidemiologists have estimated that at least 6 million people have died in India of COVID-19, though the notoriously under-counted official toll now stands at 483,178.

Leading scientists have repeatedly shown that even doubly vaccinated individuals are significantly less protected from the Omicron variant, which is increasingly becoming dominant over the Delta variant that caused India’s second wave. This has now been confirmed, tragically, in that India’s first Omicron-related death was of a vaccinated individual. In one study of 183 Omicron infections, health authorities found that 87 or nearly 50 percent of them were fully vaccinated.

Instead of citing this to stress that vaccines alone will not halt the pandemic and that lockdowns and strict public health measures are urgently necessary, Indian authorities have responded by announcing that the “use of masks and surveillance is key to breaking the chain of transmission.” However, basic measures like masking, even if fully implemented, are not enough to break the tidal wave of cases of the highly contagious Omicron variant.

In May, the Modi government said India’s entire adult population of 940 million would be “fully vaccinated” by the end of 2021. However, as of December 31, only 64 percent of India’s adult population was “fully vaccinated” and around 90 percent had received a first dose. Average monthly vaccinations have also been systematically falling in September, October and November as 8.1 million, 5.4 million and 5.7 inoculations, respectively.

India started vaccinating the 15-to-17 age group (120 million people, according to the 2011 census) only at beginning of January 2022, as the third wave of the pandemic loomed. Unlike many other countries in the world, such as in Europe, where adults are around 80 percent of the population, adults constitute only 63 percent of India’s total population. This means that even if adults were fully vaccinated, one-third of India’s massive 1.38 billion population would still be without protection provided by vaccines.

The consequences of Modi’s murderous policy are emerging. “Scores of children below six years—who are not yet included in the vaccination drive—have been struck by Covid over the last five days, often with breathing distress, severe weakness and high fever leading to hospitalization,” the Times of India reported on January 6, adding: “A substantial number of children below three years are among those affected.”

Modi and the entire Indian ruling class like their international counterparts are aware of the disastrous consequences of their murderous herd immunity policy, which let COVID-19 rip through millions of unprotected people unchecked.

On Friday, India recorded the highest number of daily cases in over 200 days, as its daily COVID-19 cases exceeded the grim milestone of 100,000 (117,100), 28 percent higher than 90,928 the previous day, and nearly seven times higher than a week ago. However, Indian national health official Arti Ahuja admitted that “in the absence of sufficient testing, the true level of infection spread in the community would not be revealed.” On Friday, 302 people died of COVID-19 in India.

Mumbai, India’s financial capital with over 20 million population, recorded 20,181 cases Friday, the most since the pandemic began in 2020, and 33 percent more than Thursday’s 15,666 cases. Likewise, India’s capital Delhi on Friday reported over 15,000 daily COVID-19 cases, the most since May 6. While Mumbai city officials said in a daily health bulletin that “only 8 percent of those infected were hospitalized,” the massive surge in the number of infected could mean that these 8 percent could swamp hospitals, as in earlier waves of the pandemic.

Already, hundreds of medical workers including doctors in Mumbai's biggest hospitals have been infected with COVID-19 in recent days, NDTV reported on January 6. Despite massive surges in cases, the state government said Thursday: “There is not case for a lockdown.” So far, it has enforced limited restrictions that include closing down schools and colleges till February 15.

Indian authorities’ repeated statements that “Omicron is less severe than Delta” testifies to the criminal ignorance and indifference of Modi and the entire ruling elite towards the lives of millions of Indians. With a smaller percentage of the population vaccinated, leaving hundreds of millions completely open to the highly transmissible Omicron variant, medical experts expect a surge in cases and in hospitalization rates in coming days.

“Omicron will lead to a much higher number of cases in a shorter period, leading to a disintegration of our already overburdened healthcare system,” Mahek Nankani, an Assistant Programme Manager at the Takshashila Institute (TI) and Dr. Harshit Kukreja, a Research Analyst with the TI warned in the Deccan Herald on December 30. They showed this would leave hospitals incapable of caring for other patients with non-communicable diseases, such as chronic diabetes.

The Indian political establishment, devoted to the profit interests of a tiny capitalist elite, have totally ignored this shocking aspect of the pandemic, which has already led to a massive humanitarian crisis. Following the footsteps of his counterparts worldwide, particularly in the United States, Brazil and Europe, Modi has not allocated the massive resources needed to upgrade India’s health infrastructure. Instead, he has continued diverting billions of dollars into the coffers of a tiny layer of Indian multi-billionaires.

7 Jan 2022

Swedish Institute Creative Force 2022 Grants Program

Application Deadline: 31st January 2022

Eligible Countries: 

    • In Africa, Asia & MENA:
      • Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia
      • Bangladesh, Cambodia, Vietnam
      • Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Syria, Tunisia, Yemen
    • In Eastern Europe & Turkey:
      • Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldavia, Turkey and Ukraine.
        NB: they do not grant funding to projects which include financial support to public sector partners in Belarus (state, regional, municipal).

About Swedish Institute Creative Force Award: It is a funding programme for international projects which work though media or the arts to strengthen basic freedoms and rights. It offers two types of grant:

  • Seed Funding is available for carrying out a planning trip, a visit or a pilot project, for example.
  • Collaborative Projects  are larger projects with a creative, capacity-building aspect and sustainable goals. You can also use this funding to scale-up a project which has previously received Seed Funding.
Type: Grants

Eligibility for Swedish Institute Creative Force Program: 

  • Any type of organisation which is registered in Sweden.
  • Your organisation must have been registered for at least one year (for seed funding) or two years (for collaborative projects).
  • You must write your application jointly with a partner organisation in one (or more) of the Creative Force target countries (see below).

Selection Criteria: 

  • The main applicant is a Swedish-registered organisation.
  • The project uses media or the arts as a means to strengthen democracy, freedom of expression and human rights in the target countries.
  • The project fulfills the specific Creative Force programme objectivesfor the country(s) you want to work with.
  • The project includes some kind of transfer of knowledge between partners.
  • You have a target group of highly motivated people in the partner country(s) who want new skills or knowledge to help them bring about change.
  • The project’s achievements will continue to spread and have an impact after the project has finished.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Swedish Institute Creative Force Award: 

  • Seed Funding: up to SEK 100,000 for an initiative which you must complete within 12 months.
  • Collaborative Projects: up to SEK 500,000 per 12-month period. A project may last 24 months at most (in other words, you can apply for max. SEK 1 million).

How to Apply for Swedish Institute Creative Force: Apply Here

It is important to go through the Application instructions on the Program Webpage (see Link below) before applying.

Visit the Program Webpage for Details

Award Providers: Swedish Institute

Six Things the Media Won’t Tell You About Ukraine

Ted Snider


On January 10, American and Russian officials will meet to discuss Putin’s proposal on mutual security guarantees. Western media and political analysts have cast Putin’s demands that NATO not expand further east to Ukraine and that NATO not establish military bases in former Soviet states nor use them to carry out military activity as bold and impossible.

Here are six crucial pieces of background that the western media will not tell you.

The NATO Promise

Putin’s demands are only bold if it is bold to ask NATO to keep its promises; his demands are only impossible if it is impossible for NATO to keep its promises.

On February 9, 1990, Secretary of State James Baker assured Gorbachev that if NATO got Germany – a huge concession – NATO would not expand one inch east of Germany. The next day, West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher made the same promise to his Soviet counterpart, Eduard Shevardnadz. Earlier, on January 31, 1990, Genscher had already publicly declared in a major speech that there would not be “an expansion of NATO territory to the east, in other words, closer to the borders of the Soviet Union.”

Recently declassified documents make it clear that all the western powers, including not only the US and Germany but also the UK and France, repeatedly made Russia the same promise.

Seven years later, when the US had already broken that promise, Clinton made Russia a second promise. Having expanded NATO far east of Germany, at least they would not permanently station substantial combat forces. That was the promise the US signed in the NATO-Russia Founding Act on Mutual Relations. It was a reiteration of the earlier February 1990 promise that, not only NATO membership, but NATO troops would not extend east.

So, far from being bold or asking the ridiculous, what the media will not tell you is that Putin is not asking for any new Western concessions. He is asking only that the West honor the commitments it has already made.

The Coup

The catalyst for the crisis today in Ukraine was the 2014 coup. That coup was set up and supported by the US. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was faced with the choice of economic alliance with the European Union or with Russia. Polls at the time clearly showed that Ukrainians were nearly evenly split on which economic alliance to choose. Yanukovych’s choice of either package would have divided the country. Putin offered Yanukovych a way out: both Russia and the EU could help Ukraine and Yanukovych doesn’t have to be forced to choose. The US and EU rejected Putin’s peace offering. According to Stephen Cohen, Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at Princeton, “it was the European Union, backed by Washington, that said in November to the democratically elected President of a profoundly divided country, Ukraine, ‘You must choose between Europe and Russia.’”

The stage was now set for strife in Ukraine. And the US stoked that strife. Led by Senator John McCain and Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs Victoria Nuland, the US publicly endorsed and supported the coup protesters. The White House then provided cover and legitimacy to the violent protesters in the streets. Through The National Endowment for Democracy, the US also funded projects that helped fuel the coup.

More sinister than that even, the US was deeply involved in the plotting of the coup itself. Nuland was caught plotting who the Americans want to be the winner of the regime change. She can be heard on an intercepted call telling the American ambassador in Kiev, Geoffrey Pyatt, that Arseniy Yatsenyuk is America’s choice to replace Yanukovych (and he did). Most importantly, Pyatt refers to the West needing to “midwife this thing,” a metaphorical admission of America’s role in leading the coup. At one point, Nuland even seems to say that then Vice President Biden, himself, would be willing to do the midwifery.

Nuland then pressured security forces to stop guarding government buildings and allow the coup protesters in. The opposition then took advantage of the absence of MPs from the south and east because of a pre-scheduled congress of regional politicians and of intimidation that forced many others to flee to ensure that it had the numbers to take over parliament in a coup disguised as democracy.

So instead of a Russian puppet president betraying his people and abandoning an economic alliance with the European Union in favor of an economic alliance with Russia, what the media will not tell you is that the catalyst of the current crisis was a US engineered and supported coup of a democratically elected president.

The Connection

The media will also not tell you about the crucial connection between the NATO promise not to expand east and the coup in Ukraine. The economic alliance with the EU was not the benign package presented to the Western pubic. It was not just an economic offer. According to Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at Princeton, Stephen Cohen, the European Union proposal also “included ‘security policy’ provisions . . . that would apparently subordinate Ukraine to NATO.” The provisions compelled Ukraine to “adhere to Europe’s ‘military and security’ policies.” So the proposal was not a benign economic agreement: it was a security threat to Russia in economic sheep’s clothing.

Professor of Russian and European Politics at the University of Kent Richard Sakwa says, “EU enlargement paves the way to NATO membership” and points out that, since 1989, every new member of the EU has become a member of NATO. It’s not only that the EU package subordinated Ukraine to NATO, since the EU Treaty of Lisbon went into effect in 2009, all new members of the EU are required to align their defense and security policies with NATO.

Far from being just an economic agreement, Article 4 of the EU’s Association Agreement with Ukraine says the Agreement will “promote gradual convergence on foreign and security matters with the aim of Ukraine’s ever-deeper involvement in the European security area.” Article 7 speaks of the convergence of security and defense, and Article 10 says that “the parties shall explore the potential of military and technological cooperation.”

So, the EU economic alliance was an aggressive package that hid in it NATO’s expansion right up to Russia’s border. The media won’t tell you that either.

What Crimea Wants

What made Russia’s annexation of Crimea so threatening to the US was not the annexation itself. In itself, Crimea is not so important to the US. What was so threatening was what the annexation meant in terms of Russia’s relationship to the US and in terms of its changing role in the world order.

Alexander Lukin, who is Head of Department of International Relations at National Research University Higher School of Economics in Moscow and an authority on Russian politics and international relations, explains that the reason the annexation of Crimea was crucial is that, prior to that, since the end of the Cold War, Russia had been considered a subordinate partner of the West. In all disagreements between Russia and the US up to then, Russia had compromised, and the disagreements were resolved rather quickly. “The crisis in Ukraine and Russia’s reaction to it have fundamentally changed this consensus,” Lukin says. “Russia refused to play by the rules.” Crimea marked the end of the unipolar world of American hegemony. Russia drew the line and asserted itself as a new pole in a multipolar world order. That is why the US is so threatened by Russia’s response to the events of 2014 and the US coup. It is the battle over which US hegemony will be fought.

The coup in Ukraine led to the Russian annexation of Crimea. But that was not an act of aggression. It was a defensive reaction to Western encroachment deep into its sphere of influence and right up to its borders. It was a defensive reaction to the oppression of Russian-speaking people on its borders. NATO expansion had knocked on Russia’s doors. In 2014, “it came to ‘brotherly’ Ukraine,” as Lukin puts it, “a region for which Russia has special feelings and most of whose residents consider themselves Russian.” That was Russia’s red line, and it annexed Crimea. But not as an act of aggression. Rather the annexation was “in response to the aspirations of a majority of its residents.”

Sakwa says that “It is clear that the majority of the Crimean population favored unification with Russia.” A majority voted for unification with Russia when the question was put to a referendum. The accuracy of the exact result has been the subject of debate, but Sakwa says that “even in perfect conditions a majority in Crimea would have voted for union with Russia.”

So, far from being an act of Russian aggression in seizing Crimea, what the media will not tell you is that Russia was responding to Western aggression and answering the call of the majority of the people of Crimea.

What the Donbas and Russia Want

While the US and the Western media exaggerate the threat of an unprovoked Russian invasion of Ukraine – an invasion Noam Chomsky has recently said that “most serious analysts doubt” – what they won’t tell you is that Russia wants very badly not to invade Ukraine. That’s why they haven’t for the past seven years. Anatol Lieven, who is a senior research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, points out that “Russia has not annexed Donetsk and Luhansk (the two Ukrainian provinces that make up the Donbas) or recognized their independence.” He says that “annexation is not Russia’s preferred option for the future of the [Donbas] region,” and adds the important reminder that “Moscow could have annexed the Donbas (as it did Crimea) at any time during the past seven years but has refrained from doing so.”

When the Donbas region of Eastern Ukraine tried to follow Crimea’s path back to Russia, Putin tried to prevent their referendums, even while he accepted Crimea’s. Sakwa reports in Frontline Ukraine that “Putin showed little sign of wanting a Crimea-style takeover of the region, repeatedly rejecting requests to accept the territory as part of Russia.” When Donbas did hold elections, though Putin “respected” the results, he declined to accept them or be bound by them.

In addition to Russia’s actions being defensive and not expansionist, there are a number of reasons Putin would be hesitant to invade Ukraine. One is the US promise that it “will respond decisively.” Another is the difficulty in winning, controlling and holding the Donbas region. But another is that it is strategically more beneficial for Russia not to annex the Donbas. Anatol Lieven told me in a personal correspondence that “it makes much more sense for Russia to leave the Donbas as part of Ukraine and use it as a lever first to block NATO expansion and secondly (if it can be made an autonomous part of Ukraine) to influence Ukrainian politics from within.” As long as the Donbas is part of Ukraine, it can vote against NATO membership; if Russia annexes it, it loses that vote.

So, contrary to the media message, Russia doesn’t even want to annex the Donbas. And what do the people of the Donbas want?

The US maintains that it is helpless to promise that Ukraine won’t join NATO because it is up to the people of the Ukraine to make that decision. That is ironic because it is not clear that the people of Ukraine want to join NATO, and it is certainly unclear that the people of the Donbas do.

Contrary to the portrayal in the media of a people desperate to escape Russian and to run into the arms of NATO, Volodymyr Ishchenko, research associate at the Institute of East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, reports that “Ukrainians are far from unified in support of NATO membership.” Ishchenko says that the majority of Ukrainians do not favor NATO membership. He reports that support stands at about 40% but that even that minority number is misleadingly bloated. The number has swelled to 40% by no longer including Ukrainians from the pro-Russian regions of Crimea and Donbas in the surveys. He adds that even where support for an alliance with Russia has dropped, it has not migrated to the NATO camp but to the neutral camp.

So the real picture is one the media won’t tell you: Russia doesn’t want the Donbas and the Donbas, and possibly even Ukraine, don’t want NATO.

Hypocrisy

Russians also feel the sting of hypocrisy when it comes to Ukraine and Crimea. They point to Kosovo and Cuba.

In 2008, the US supported the secession of Kosovo over Russia’s objections, but they call Crimea’s secession a gross violation of international law by Russia. “As a result,” Lukin says, “Russia sees the West’s position on Crimea . . . as nothing more than a case of extreme hypocrisy.”

Sakwa points out in Frontline Ukraine that Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia without even having a referendum. Yet “many Western countries, with the US in the lead, had recognized Kosovo’s independence despite repeated UN resolutions upholding the territorial integrity of Yugoslavia.” Sakwa also points out that the US endorsed “the infamous advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice . . . that Kosovo’s declaration of independence ‘did not violate general international law’.” Why is what’s fair for Kosovo not fair for Ukraine?

And what about NATO troops and weapons pushing right up to Russia’s borders? How would the US respond if Russia placed troops and weapons on America’s border? The Munro doctrine tells us clearly how the US would interpret Russian encroachment into the American sphere. And the Cuban missile crisis tells us clearly how the US would react to Russian troops and weapons on America’s border.

The annexation of Crimea was not a Russian act of expansionist aggression or intervention. It was the defense of a red line against US expansionism that broke a foundational US and NATO promise and against an interventionist US supported coup. Russia has been unwilling to annex the Donbas and responsive to the will of the majority in annexing Crimea. The US is threatened by Russia’s activity because Russia has drawn the line and is no longer playing a submissive and cooperative role in the US led world order. The Eastern Ukraine-Russian border is the line over which the battle of US hegemony is being fought. But the Western media won’t tell you that.

Kazakhstan mobilizes military, kills dozens in attempt to suppress mass protests

Jason Melanovski & Clara Weiss


The Central Asian country of Kazakhstan has been hit by a wave of mass protests over hikes in the price of liquified petroleum gas (LPG), presenting a major challenge to the continued rule of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

Demonstrators stand in front of police line during a protest in Almaty, Kazakhstan, Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022. Demonstrators denouncing the doubling of prices for liquefied gas have clashed with police in Kazakhstan's largest city and held protests in about a dozen other cities in the country. (AP Photo/Vladimir Tretyakov)

On Thursday, the Kazakh government mobilized the military against protesters. In an “anti-terrorist operation” to “cleanse the streets” of Almaty, the country’s largest city, dozens of people were reportedly killed, hundreds injured and over 2,000 arrested. Channels on the social media app Telegram indicate that the state’s action has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of demonstrators in recent days and the hospitalization in critical condition of dozens more.

Earlier attempts by the president to stem the protests, which began on January 2, by announcing the resignation of his cabinet and the possible dissolution of parliament failed. Starting on Tuesday, a state of emergency, including a ban on all strikes, was imposed across the country.

The government has also shut down the internet and various telecommunications services and social media, including WhatsApp, Facebook, Telegram and the Chinese app WeChat. The Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, has begun sending troops to the country to help quell the protests. Most countries have cancelled air travel to Kazakhstan, as airports remain shut.

The protests erupted on January 2 in the industrial town of Zhanaozen in western Kazakhstan when the government refused to continue providing subsidies to contain the price of LPG, which is used by many Kazakhs as car fuel rather than gasoline. According to the government, the elimination of subsidized prices was intended to attract foreign investment and increase the profits of local gas producers who claimed to be operating at a loss. As a result, the price quickly doubled from US$.14 per liter to $.28 per liter. From Zhanaozen, protests spread quickly to other areas, soon engulfing virtually the entire country.

Speaking to Radio Azattyq, a protester in Zhanaozen gave vent to the social anger felt by masses of people over three decades of social decline and misery. “The authorities say there is not enough gas, that a plant built 50 years ago is decrepit and outdated. So, what have they been doing for the last 30 years?” he asked. “Sleeping?”

Almost a decade ago, Zhanaozen was the site of a police massacre of 16 striking oil workers. It is one of many industrial monotowns, created around a single industry, that emerged as a product of Soviet industrialization in the 1930s and 1940s. Many such cities throughout the former Soviet Union, most notably in Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine, are still population centers of the industrial working class.

Attempts by President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to deflect responsibility for the crisis by blaming gas stations for price-fixing and making promises to “introduce a set of measures in order to regulate the price of gas” have failed to stem the social unrest. The government’s statement that it had instructed gas station owners to reduce the price of LPG to 21 cents per liter has also not contained the situation.

Protest have drawn in both the Russian- and Kazakh-speaking populations. Many demonstrators have raised demands for the government to resign and for the creation of a new system for the election of regional governments. One of the most popular slogans reportedly has been, “Old man go away” (“starikh ikhodi”), a reference to the 81-year-old Nursultan Nazarbayev, whose family has dominated Kazakh politics for the past three decades.

Nazarbayev, a former Stalinist bureaucrat who oversaw the restoration of capitalism in Kazakhstan and served as the country’s president from 1991 to 2019, epitomizes the post-Soviet oligarchy that has enriched itself on the sale of oil, metals and other natural resources for 30 years. While the average Kazakh salary is just $570 a month and many earn the minimum wage of just $97 a month, Nazarbayev reportedly has a net worth of $1 billion and owns more than $107 million of luxury properties in London.

After his resignation as president in 2019, Nazarbayev continued to retain significant influence as head of the country’s Security Council. It was only in December 2021 that he handed over the reins of the ruling party to Tokayev. On Wednesday, Tokayev removed Nazarbaev and his nephew from the State Security Committee in another failed attempt to quell the protests.

While demonstrations in Zhanaozen and most of the country have remained peaceful, protesters in Almaty have increasingly clashed with authorities. The Kazakh government claims that police and national guard troops have been killed. On one day, some protesters seized control of Almaty’s airport and its main government buildings, smashing bank windows and overturning police cars in the process. The presidential palace was also set on fire. Video on social media shows protesters distributing rifles. The exact circumstances and forces involved in the events in Almaty remain unclear.

Tokayev blamed foreign trained “terrorist” gangs for the street clashes and claimed that five aircraft had been stolen from Almaty’s airport. He called the events “an undermining of the integrity of the state.” Some reports indicate that the government is no longer certain of the loyalty of its armed forces.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Wednesday endorsed the measures taken by the Kazakh government to quell the protests, called for the fastest possible “normalisation” of the situation and warned against any “outside” intervention.

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, who brutally cracked down on protests and a strike movement in his country in 2020, called upon Kazakh demonstrators “to get on your knees and apologize before the military.”

The oligarchies that have emerged out of the restoration of capitalism 30 years ago are united by their fear that events in Kazakhstan are the harbinger and potential starting point of a much broader movement by the working class across the entire region. Western media reports also have stressed the threat of “instability’ in Kazakhstan.

In the absence of an independent socialist political leadership, the danger facing the working masses of Kazakhstan is that the protests will be both brutally suppressed by the government and exploited by reactionary political forces. Russian media reports already indicate that the country’s main political opposition party, the right-wing “Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan,” has begun to play a role in the demonstrations.

Kazakhstan is of major economic and geostrategic significance, bordering both on China’s Western Xinjiang region and Russia. It has vast resources of oil, gas, uranium and wheat, and is a hub for various gas and oil pipelines in Central Asia.

While the Kazakh government has historically aligned itself with the other oligarchies of the former Soviet Union, including Russia, it has also opened its doors to the US. The New York Times reports that Exxon Mobil and Chevron have invested tens of billions of dollars in the western part of the country. Chevron is the more heavily invested of the two oil giants, holding a 50 percent stake in the country’s largest oilfield, Tengiz. Kazakhstan has also recently forged closer ties with Turkey, another NATO member.

Over the past decade, Kazakhstan has developed close economic relations with China, which have become the focal point of tensions within the country’s ruling elites.

Mounting crisis in Australian hospitals drives workers to quit

Martin Scott


As COVID-19 infection numbers and positivity rates rapidly climb across Australia, more and more health workers are warning of the mounting catastrophe in the hospital system.

Westmead Hospital nurses protest on December 1 over staffing levels and COVID-19 safety (Source: Australian Nursing and Midwifery Journal)

Amy Halvorsen, a registered nurse (RN) from Westmead Hospital in Western Sydney, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation she had resigned because she could not continue working under “chaotic and dangerous” conditions.

“I am just so sick of the COVID narrative and constantly feeling the pressure of the government’s failures,” Halvorsen said.

The nurse explained that staff shortages exacerbated by the large number of health workers currently infected with COVID-19 or in isolation, had left her ward with only one third of its usual workforce.

She said: “It’s scary. We don’t have the support to care for our patients the way they need to be cared for.”

Health workers and patients had also been put in danger, Halvorsen said, because, in a desperate bid to plug the staffing gap, nurses who had been exposed to the virus and were possibly infectious have been ordered back to work by NSW Health. “They’re told to get tested, keep their mask on and only go home if they test positive.”

She continued: “I believe this is becoming a health crisis and the public needs to know how dire the situation is inside the hospitals right now.

As of Wednesday, more than 3,800 health workers in New South Wales (NSW) were in isolation.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, 260 workers at Liverpool Hospital alone have contracted the virus, while a further 105 are in isolation. As a result, the Herald reported, surgeons were this morning emailed an urgent appeal to fill in and provide basic patient care on wards.

Despite the already dire conditions, the southwest Sydney hospital has reportedly been told to expect 600 COVID patients within weeks, up from around 200 at present. Concord Hospital, in inner-west Sydney, is also preparing to treble its COVID capacity.

Halvorsen described the immense pressures on health workers to continue working and remain silent. With staff “too scared” that speaking publicly would get them sacked, and reluctant to strike because “if we walk out people will die,” the RN came to the conclusion “the only way I can protest is to leave.”

At Tweed Hospital in northern NSW, 18 staff—more than 10 percent—have resigned since December. Nurses at the hospital have reported working “double shifts every day,” while doctors have been forced to use their own cars to drive asymptomatic COVID-positive patients home because no alternative transport is available.

Infections are also growing in the highly vulnerable aged care sector. NSW Health authorities have reported around 400 new COVID-19 cases in the sector over the past four days.

At the Lilian Wells aged care facility in western Sydney, 56 residents and 19 workers have contracted COVID-19. Two double-vaccinated residents have died and a further 15 have been transferred to hospital.

In addition to the risk to residents and workers of severe illness and death, isolation measures have also affected care in other ways. The Australian yesterday reported a 72-year-old woman in a southwest Sydney facility had not been able to shower in almost a week due to staff shortages.

Across the country, there are currently more than 1,800 COVID-19 cases in aged care.

NSW Health yesterday told the state’s hospitals to expect more than 4,500 admissions for the virus within the next month. A senior NSW doctor warned this trebling may occur even sooner, telling the Guardian, “in two weeks we’ll be having 400 admissions a day,” up from around 120 at present.

The doctor warned this would severely limit the capacity of hospitals to treat non-COVID patients: “Almost the entire staffing structure will be diverted to Covid with very little left for people, you know, having heart attacks and strokes [or] gastrointestinal bleeds, or whatever else it is that people are normally in hospital with.”

Currently 1,738 patients are being treated for COVID-19 in NSW hospitals, up from 834 a week ago. The number in intensive care units (ICUs) has also doubled in the past seven days to 134, while 33 are on ventilators.

At least 13,000 additional NSW COVID-19 patients are being “cared for outside the hospital setting,” while more than 186,000 others are “self-managing” their disease at home, as hospitals and health authorities urge people not to present for treatment unless absolutely necessary.

Ambulance services and emergency departments in NSW and around the country are so overwhelmed that even people who are struggling to breathe are waiting hours for transport and admission to hospital.

Another senior Sydney doctor told the Guardian: “This is a real crisis. There’s going to be triage medicine,” meaning doctors will be forced to delay treatment, even for serious conditions, including “not-super-urgent cancer.”

The rapid surge of COVID-19 in Victoria, where new infections over the past seven days are 323 percent higher than the previous week, prompted the cancellation of elective surgery starting yesterday.

The number of patients hospitalised for COVID-19 in the state has grown from 428 on New Year’s Eve to 644 today, while the number in ICU has almost doubled from 54 to 106.

A pause on elective surgery was also announced in NSW today.

More than 78,000 new COVID-19 cases were reported in Australia today. The national positive test rate of 34.41 percent indicates that this is a mere fraction of the real total.

Around the country, 20 deaths from the virus were reported today, the highest daily figure since late October.

Yesterday, NSW reported the death of James Kondilios, a 23-year-old former weight lifter who had received two vaccination doses and had no underlying conditions.

The death of this healthy young man exposes the lies promoted by governments, health officials and the corporate media that young people are not at risk from COVID-19 and that vaccination alone can end the pandemic.

Both Victoria and NSW have in recent days made minor changes to public health settings.

In NSW singing and dancing will be prohibited in hospitality venues, entertainment facilities and major recreation facilities from tomorrow, but this will not apply to weddings. In Victoria, the capacity of indoor hospitality and entertainment venues will be limited to one person per 2 square metres.

The changes will have minimal impact on these industries, with many businesses already forced to close because of staff shortages and low patronage as a result of concern over the pandemic.

While these puny measures will do nothing to stem the raging pandemic, they sharply expose the anti-scientific character of the recent limiting of the definition of “close contacts” to only include exposure in a household.

Victorian Health Minister Martin Foley said yesterday the density limit had been reintroduced because the surge in cases was “overwhelmingly” among young people working in hospitality.

The deepening crisis is the product of the criminal “let it rip” policies of Australian state, territory and federal governments, Labor and Liberal-National alike. In line with the profit-driven demands of big business, these governments have refused to implement even the most basic public health measures, known and understood for centuries, to prevent mass illness and death.

The rampant infection caused by the murderous actions of the ruling class has crippled the already desperately underfunded public health system, which has been starved of resources through a decades-long bipartisan attack on wages and funding, enforced by the unions.

Omicron is not “mild”

Andre Damon


As the Biden administration abandons any pretense to stopping the spread of COVID-19, the White House and the corporate media have adopted a new slogan to justify the mass infection of the population: The Omicron variant that is overwhelming hospitals and killing hundreds of Americans daily is “mild.”

An elderly patient lies on the floor of the emergency department of UK's Royal Bournemouth Hospital in November, before the Omicron surge. (Credit: WSWS Media)

“A case of COVID-19 for a fully vaccinated and boosted person will most likely mean no symptoms or mild ones similar to the common respiratory viruses,” US President Joe Biden said on December 21, effectively equating the pandemic that has killed 855,000 Americans with the common cold.

Omicron will result in “legions of asymptomatic, mild and untested cases,” writes financial executive Rob Arnott in a column in the Wall Street Journal, prompting him to ask, without irony, “Should I try to catch the Omicron variant of Covid to advance the cause of herd immunity?”

“Omicron Is Milder,” declares David Leonhardt in a New York Times column published Wednesday, which uses the term “mild” eight times.

“Because it is milder than earlier versions of the virus, Covid now appears to present less threat to most vaccinated elderly people than the annual flu does,” Leonhardt says, adding “Covid increasingly resembles the kind of health risk that people accept every day.”

All of this, however, is, according to Maria Van Kerkhove, the technical lead of COVID-19 response at the World Health Organization, “dangerous” misinformation.

“To suggest that Omicron is ‘just a mild’ disease is dangerous,” Van Kerkhove said. “Case # are astounding…even with lower risk, we will see hospitals overwhelmed.

“Omicron is not mild. Omicron is not the common cold. And that rhetoric that is out there, the narrative that is out there, is dangerous and it is deadly.

“Omicron and Delta are infecting individuals, they’re putting people in hospitals, and if you have huge numbers of cases, you will have increased hospitalization.

“This virus, Omicron, will reach vulnerable populations, it will reach older populations, and will see increasing deaths among those individuals. So to suggest that Omicron is just a mild infection, is just really dangerous.”

“New year, new delusion. ‘It’s mild.’ It’s turtles all the way down,” sighed virologist Kristian G. Anderson, comparing the endless stream of misinformation about COVID-19 to an infinite regression.

As developmental biologist Malgorzata Gasperowicz pointed out over a month ago, “A virus that spreads more rapidly, even if milder, could cause much more deaths.” But Omicron is “not mild” because “Transmission. Is. The most important.” And Omicron is massively transmissible.

Her warnings have been proven catastrophically correct by the spread of the disease:

  • On Thursday, there were 126,000 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in the United States. By the end of the day today, the number of people hospitalized will exceed the highest level ever. Overwhelmed hospitals are cancelling elective procedures and prematurely discharging ill patients, while those coming to emergency rooms are forced to wait for hours.
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention projects that, over the next month, the death toll will shoot up rapidly, reaching 3,500 per day toward the end of January—close to the highest since the pandemic began.
  • Child COVID-19 hospitalizations have soared, with 672 children being hospitalized each day in the United States, more than double the week before.
  • There is no indication that Omicron involves a reduction in the incidence of Long COVID, potentially meaning millions of people will be debilitated for months, years, or their entire lives.

The reality is that use of the term “mild” to describe COVID-19 does not come from the lexicon of scientists studying the disease, but from the advertising business.

The US Food and Drug Administration has long warned that “Tobacco products that are labeled or advertised with the” term “mild...mislead the public into thinking that these products cause fewer health problems than other cigarettes. However, they still pose a heavy health risk.”

The technique used by big tobacco companies to sell death in the form of cigarettes has now been co-opted by the media and federal government to sell death in the form of mass illness.

There are certain tropes used by the American media to make the inhuman and immoral seem familiar and ordinary. “Enhanced” interrogation. “Targeted” killing. “Moderate” Al-Qaeda-linked militias sponsored by the US in Syria.

So, too, the enormous power of the American media has been used to make the population accept death on a massive scale. One article by Ezekiel Emanuel, whose previous claim to fame was his statement that “society” would be “better off” if people did not live past 75, states that the government should no longer even bother counting COVID-19 deaths.

But for all the endless spin, for all the endless lies and cover-ups, the pandemic is real. Close to a million people are dead in the US alone. And hundreds of thousands more will die unless urgent action is taken.