18 Nov 2023

Comparing How the West and China Offer Loans to Developing Countries

John P. Ruehl


Established Western economic institutions are facing a formidable challenge from Chinese newcomers, each side offering distinct and competitive lending strategies with far-reaching consequences for global infrastructure and development.

In October 2023, amid celebrations commemorating the 10th anniversary of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in Beijing, Pakistan and Chinese leaders signed a multibillion-dollar deal for a railway project. As a pivotal component of China’s efforts to promote economic integration and develop infrastructure abroad, Pakistan has received significant developmental assistance from Beijing through the $62 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Nevertheless, Western nations and financial entities have also been strategically maneuvering in Asia, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approving a $3 billion loan for Pakistan in July, “saving it from defaulting on debt.” Other countries in the region are experiencing similar competition. Bangladesh, for instance, inaugurated the BRI-linked Padma Bridge Rail Link in October, and weeks later received a $395 million loan from the EU. That month, Sri Lanka struck a debt deal with China, while the U.S. extended a $553 million loan for port construction in Colombo in early November.

As competition over infrastructure and investment has grown in recent years, standoffs between Western and Chinese lenders over debt restructuring and relief have intensified. Lenders hesitate to offer relief packages, fearing that one creditor’s concession might allow a debtor country to use that relief money to pay off others. These impasses underscore the challenges being faced by the decades-old Western-dominated financial system and lending initiatives.

The foundation of this system was laid at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944. The meeting established the IMF to ensure stability of the international monetary system and offer policy advice and financial assistance to countries in economic crisis. It has since grown and comprises 190 member states, while its “sister organization,” the World Bank, was created simultaneously and has grown to include 189 member countries. The World Bank focuses more on long-term assistance through loans and grants, supporting infrastructure and poverty reduction in developing countries.

Efforts to democratize these institutions have been made, but both the IMF and World Bank still remain under significant Western influence. Western countries are overrepresented on the IMF’s board and voting arrangements, while all the IMF’s managing directors have been European. All the World Bank’s presidents except for Bulgarian national Kristalina Georgieva, who served as acting president in 2019, have been U.S. citizens, and the voting shares of the bank have not been rearranged since 2010. Both institutions are based in Washington, D.C.

In addition to the IMF and World Bank, other Western-dominated (or heavily influenced) multilateral development banks and institutions include the Paris Club, the European Investment Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the Asian Development Bank. Government initiatives like USAID, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency (USTDA), and the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, as well as private banks, also play prominent roles in advancing Western economic interests.

China’s role in multilateral banks like the IMF and World Bank has expanded as its economy has grown. But Beijing continues to criticize the current global debt governance system as “dominated by the ‘Paris Club-IMF-World Bank’ structure of the West,” and has chosen to create its own path to expand its economic influence globally.

China’s state capitalism offers a unique alternative to Western infrastructure and development initiatives for the first time in decades. Through its robust, globally integrated economy, technological expertise, and extensive industrial power, Beijing can help fund and build projects on a scale that rivals the West in a way not even the Soviet Union could achieve. Furthermore, Chinese assistance does not require political and economic reforms typically attached to Western developmental initiatives.

China’s approach has seen significant success. It has become the world’s largest creditor since 2017, and is lending more than the IMF, World Bank, and Paris Club combined, said Brent Neiman from the U.S. Department of the Treasury in September 2022. With $1 trillion spent and more than $2 trillion in contracts, China’s BRI has transformed global trade routes and economic development and is even garnering interest from the Taliban.

Center for Global Development 2020 study estimated that Chinese loans generally have a 2 percent interest rate, in comparison to 1.54 percent for the World Bank’s concessional loans, and the penalties for late repayments have increased since 2018, according to AidData. Nonetheless, most BRI partner countries view China’s project positively.

To implement its vision, Beijing has deployed a network of national financial organizations, including the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC), China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), China Development Bank (CDB), the Export-Import Bank of China, China Construction Bank (CCB), Silk Road Fund, China Investment Corporation (CIC), China International Development Cooperation Agency (CIDCA), and the People’s Bank of China.

Though China has largely focused on striking bilateral deals, it has developed some multilateral initiatives. The New Development Bank was created in 2015 and is headquartered in Shanghai. It is increasingly seen as a method to encourage transactions in China’s currency, the renminbi, between BRICS member states. Meanwhile, the Global Development and South-South Cooperation Fund (GDSSCF) is being used for China’s software-focused Global Development Initiative (GDI). But China’s major multilateral project is the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), which was established in 2016. Now with 106 approved members, the AIIB focuses on lending to investment projects, infrastructure, transport routes, energy, and information networks.

Other countries, including Western nations such as Germany, have some influence in the AIIB. Nonetheless, the bank is dominated by China. It has an effective veto over major decisions and has been governed by China’s former vice minister of the finance ministry, Jin Liqun, since its founding. China’s dominance prompted the AIIB’s Canadian communications chief, Bob Pickard, to resign in 2023.

A divided response by Western countries to China’s initiatives has further undermined their traditional dominance. Many expressed interest in the AIIB as it was being formed, and Washington failed to dissuade them from joining the bank. The U.S. then attempted to counter the AIIB with the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which came into force in 2016. However, the U.S. left the organization in 2017 under former President Donald Trump, and the project was repackaged into a smaller one.

China’s newfound leverage has seen it confront the West around the world. In 1990, for example, Western countries accounted for 85 percent of infrastructure construction contracts in Africa. Yet from 2007-2020, Chinese entities provided $23 billion in funding for infrastructure projects across sub-Saharan Africa, more than double lent by banks in the U.S., Germany, Japan, and France combined, according to a study by the Center for Global Development. In 2020, Chinese entities were responsible for 31 percent of all infrastructure projects in Africa valued at more than $50 million, up from 12 percent in 2013, while the West’s contribution to the projects in Africa declined from 37 percent to 12 percent during the same period, according to the Economist.

Brazil and Mexico enjoy significant investment from China, and Argentina officially joined the BRI in 2022In August 2023, China highlighted its increasingly important role in Argentina’s economy by providing a $3 billion loan that allowed the South American country to avoid default. Even in Eastern Europe and the Balkans, China has spent billions of dollars linking countries to the BRI.

Nevertheless, the U.S. and the collective West maintain considerable economic influence and have responded assertively. The U.S. passed the BUILD Act in 2018 and the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII) in 2022 to increase investment and infrastructure development in developing countries, and the EU put forth its Global Gateway program in 2021, “the bloc’s new infrastructure partnership plan that’s seen as an alternative to China’s worldwide Belt and Road Initiative.” Meanwhile, the World Bank’s lending to sub-Saharan African nations soared from $26 billion in 2019 to $49 billion in 2023, while the World Bank and the ADB also overtook Chinese entities during the COVID-19 pandemic to become Southeast Asia’s biggest sources of funding, said a report by the Lowy Institute.

The U.S. and the EU have also expressed support for developing a new transport corridor connecting India, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean Sea. Furthermore, the West has presented a united economic response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, including the World Bank halting all its programs in Russia. The AIIB’s $100 billion fund also still pales in comparison to the IMF’s $800 billion mobilization capacity.

Both the West’s and China’s economic lending and infrastructure practices, however, have faced criticism. Former Chief Economist at the World Bank, Joseph Stiglitz, has stated that the conditions placed on borrowing countries by the World Bank and IMF often cause significant pain for local populations and stifle economic development in these nations. UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated in 2023 that the IMF and World Bank benefit richer countries at the expense of poorer ones, urging for change.

China’s projects have faced criticism for predominantly employing Chinese companies and workers, as opposed to making local hires, resulting in protests and attacks against them. BRI deals are also criticized for being opaque in terms of financing and implementation, and countries struggling to repay loans have found themselves giving up some autonomy to their export revenues. And while allegations of Chinese debt diplomacy are often exaggerated in Western media, Chinese economic opportunism has increased debt burdens and debt-for-equity swaps with BRI partners.

Pakistan’s multifaceted economic challenges persist despite its engagement with Western and Chinese lending and infrastructure institutions. The country is grappling with neighboring Afghanistan’s instability, its longstanding rivalry with India, the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, devastating flooding in 2022systemic corruption, and soaring energy prices caused by the conflict in Ukraine.

While these challenges remain complex, investment stands out as a potential remedy. Rather than engaging in blind competition, a more effective use of funds for all parties involved could be achieved by acknowledging and pursuing greater coordination between Western and Chinese economic interests in the country, such as increasing Pakistan’s energy efficiency. Amid their competition, the AIIB and World Bank signed a framework for cooperation in common areas of interest in 2017, and the AIIB has similar agreements with the Asian Development Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

Despite the rise of alternative markets, China stands as the sole challenger to the West’s established lending and infrastructure development networks. This rivalry has already prompted slow reform in the decades-old financial system, offering support to emerging powers and impoverished nations. While more equitable economic statecraft may prove elusive, borrowing countries have an opportunity to leverage the best deals essential for their progress.

German Constitutional Court rules climate change fund is unconstitutional—A signal for further social cuts

Peter Schwarz


Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court’s ruling on the federal government’s Climate Change Fund is not a legal, but a political decision. It reduces the previously agreed budget by €60 billion in one fell swoop and is a signal for further social spending cuts.

The Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe [Photo by Tobias Helfrich / CC BY-SA 3.0]

The highest German court on Wednesday upheld a lawsuit by 197 Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) lawmakers, declaring unconstitutional the reallocation of €60 billion originally earmarked to fight the coronavirus pandemic into the climate change fund. The court ruled that it violates the debt brake enshrined in Germany’s Basic Law since 2009.

The judgement has far-reaching consequences. As a result, the almost completed federal budget for 2024, which already contained drastic cuts in social spending, is effectively a dead letter. According to the court ruling, the budgetary lawmakers must “compensate for commitments already made, which can no longer be served, in another way”—in other words, save the missing billions elsewhere—which means further social spending cuts.

As opportunities for savings, various journalists and politicians have already pointed to the citizens’ benefit, basic child protection, housing policy, support for refugees, subsidies to assist with the cost of heating modernisation and the climate change plans of the federal government.

However, the ruling not only affects the €60 billion for the climate change fund, but also all special funds with which the federal and state governments have circumvented the debt brake. The federal government alone currently maintains 29 such special funds with debt facilities amounting to several hundred billion euros. Such funds are only permitted in an “exceptional emergency situation.”

CDU leader Friedrich Merz already rejoiced that this was “the end of all shadow budgets, at least those that are debt-financed.” According to the CDU, the €200 billion special fund to subsidise energy prices is also affected by the ruling.

However, the ruling also has consequences for the federal states, including those governed by the CDU. It “has an impact on budgetary practice not only in the federal government, but also in the federal states,” said Chancellor Olaf Scholz (Social Democrats, SPD), who was head of government in the city state of Hamburg before moving to the federal government as finance minister.

With its ruling, the Federal Constitutional Court has interfered deeply with the powers of the government and parliament. A critical commentary in the Süddeutsche Zeitung spoke of a “license to co-govern.” The verdict carries “paternalistic traits” and narrows “the scope of politics.”

Nevertheless, the verdict was largely welcomed by politicians and the media or accepted without objection. In a first statement, Scholz declared that his government would carefully evaluate the verdict and “respect it entirely.”

The reason for this is that the government and opposition have long been looking for ways to squeeze out of the working population the huge increase in spending on rearmament and war—about €89 billion in the coming year alone after the recent increase in military aid to Ukraine—and the huge sums with which they subsidize corporations and keep stock prices high. With the Constitutional Court’s ruling, they can now present this as a practical constraint that they cannot escape.

The debt brake was included in the Basic Law on May 29, 2009, immediately after the global financial crisis, with the combined votes of the SPD and CDU/CSU. It was intended to ensure that the half a trillion euros that the German government had provided to rescue the banks from their self-inflicted crisis would be saved by budget cuts, and not by additional debt, and that even subsequent governments could not change this.

All federal states also passed corresponding laws. The WSWS commented on this in 2011, on the occasion of the introduction of the debt brake in the Hessian state constitution:

With this credit-cap, the ruling politicians are consciously and voluntarily depriving themselves of the ability to deal with public finances. The prohibition against further public borrowing will have consequences for social, education and health services, street maintenance and public provision in general. The credit-cap will be used as the justification for increasing the costs of energy, water, public transport, sanitation, childcare, sports facilities and many other social services.

Since then, public infrastructure, education and healthcare funds have been cut, pensions and wages have been reduced and the costs of rent, water and electricity have been drastically increased. On the other hand, an increase in taxes on profits, wealth and top income was excluded.

But in view of the escalating wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, in which Germany is playing a leading role, this is no longer enough. For months, the ruling elites have been discussing how to intensify the attacks on the working class. Refugees and migrants are declared scapegoats for the financial hardship of the municipalities and thus the right-wing extremist Alternative for Germany (AfD) is strengthened in a deliberate manner.

Canada’s Trudeau government reaffirms support for Israel’s Gaza genocide, as crackdown on protests intensifies

Roger Jordan & James Clayton


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with Israeli War Cabinet and former Defence Minister Benny Gantz Wednesday to reassert Ottawa’s “support for Israel and its right to defend itself, in accordance with international law.”

Trudeau called Gantz to underline Canadian imperialism’s backing for Israel’s genocide against the Palestinians, after he faced criticism from the far-right Israeli regime for stating at a press conference Tuesday that the killing of babies, children and other civilians “has to stop.”

Canada, alongside the United States, is among Israel’s closest international allies. In addition to supplying the country with weaponry and maintaining close links with its military, Canada has repeatedly voted at the United Nations together with Washington and a handful of tiny Pacific island states to oppose even the most timid criticisms of Israel. In a recent UN General Assembly vote on a resolution condemning the expansion of settlements and settler-violence in the West Bank, Canada was one of just seven nations to vote against it, along with the US, Israel, Hungary, the Federated States of Micronesia, Marshall Islands, and Nauru.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanyahu, shortly after his Liberal government came to power in Nov. 2015. [Photo: Twitter/Trudeau]

In his remarks Tuesday, Trudeau made statements that during past conflicts would have been taken for granted. “I urge the government of Israel to exercise maximum restraint. The world is watching, on TV, on social media—we're hearing the testimonies of doctors, family members, survivors, kids who have lost their parents. The world is witnessing this killing of women, of children, of babies. This has to stop,” he said.

Trudeau did not go so far as to call for a ceasefire, let alone condemn Israel for committing war crimes and violating international law. But the ruling elites in Canada, the US, and Israel are so fully committed to the Netanyahu government’s genocidal onslaught on the Palestinians that not even the most timid and transparently hypocritical criticisms can be tolerated. Netanyahu responded on Twitter/X, tagging Trudeau in a post that blamed Hamas for all civilian deaths and rejected any criticism of Israel’s savage slaughter. Within Canada, pro-Zionist forces from the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre and B’nai Brith Canada denounced Trudeau’s remarks, as did a cabal of neo-conservative and far-right newspaper columnists.

Trudeau responded by calling Gantz to make clear to the Israeli regime, Washington and the Canadian public that Canada “stands with Israel” as it commits genocide against the Palestinians. After declaring that Israel has the “right” to “defend itself,” Trudeau, according to a Prime Minister’s Office readout, condemned “Hamas’ terrorist attacks, including the atrocious use of Palestinian civilians as human shields.” The conversation concluded with Trudeau and Gantz denouncing all opposition to the Israeli onslaught on Gaza as antisemitic. “In the face of the rise of antisemitic events in Canada and around the world, Prime Minister Trudeau and Minister Gantz condemned antisemitism in all its forms and agreed on the need to address it head-on,” stated the readout.

Trudeau’s call was all the more significant in that it came just hours after Israel launched its bloody and criminal raid on the al-Shifa hospital, the largest medical centre in Gaza. Citing their own lurid, unsubstantiated claims that Hamas was using the hospital as a command centre, the Israel Defence Forces repeatedly bombarded and fired at the hospital, killing patients and medical workers.

The fact that not even the Prime Minister can make the most tepid criticisms of what everyone can see is the mass slaughter of defenceless civilians by a heavily-armed Israeli state backed by the imperialist powers underscores how all-embracing the regime of political censorship and repression against the opponents of the onslaught on Gaza has become.

Propped up by its trade union and New Democratic Party allies, the Trudeau government has retained its fulsome support for the Israeli war machine as it has bombarded hospitals, schools, and other places of refuge, while denying the 2.3 million residents of Gaza access to the most basic necessities of human life, including water, fuel, and food.

The New Democrats demonstrated their contempt for democratic rights early on in the Israeli bombardment by expelling the Ontario legislator Sarah Jama from its legislative caucus. Jama had previously issued a statement declaring her solidarity with the Palestinians and condemning Israel as an “apartheid state,” a description supported by the United Nations and Amnesty International. The NDP’s move opened the way for Doug Ford’s rabidly hard-right Ontario Tory government to censure Jama, thus preventing her from speaking on any issue in the legislature until she repudiates her statement supporting the Palestinians and apologizes.

Part of the Oct. 21 Toronto demonstration denouncing the Canadian-US backed Israeli onslaught on Gaza's Palestinians

The trade unions have focused on diverting the mass protests in defence of the Palestinian people that have developed across the country into impotent appeals to the Trudeau government to push for a “ceasefire.” Moreover, they have failed to mobilize workers to defend individuals who have been witch-hunted by the political right for declaring their support for the Palestinians, such as Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Ontario President Fred Hahn.

The suppression by the NDP and unions of opposition in the working class and among young people to Israel’s genocidal assault on the Palestinians has emboldened right-wing and far-right forces to step up their smearing and witch-hunting of protesters.

City of Toronto Councillor James Pasternak has submitted a motion to ban Palestinian solidarity protests on City property, calling upon the Ontario Attorney General and the City of Toronto Police to “consult on what steps can be taken quickly to protect the public from such hate speech…”. Toronto has seen protests involving tens of thousands over each of the past three weeks.

Speaking to Joe Warmington of the right-wing Toronto Sun, and dripping with contempt for democracy, Pasternak fretted that “We’re verging on mob rule, where law and order is breaking down, and groups of people who have grievances are taking over public spaces, they’re interfering with traffic flow, with commerce, with the movement of emergency vehicles, and they’re sucking up an enormous amount of police resources.”

After demonstrators shut down the main offices of Scotiabank in Toronto on Thursday Nov 8, answering the call of the Palestinian Youth Movement to “Shut it down for Palestine,” Warmington opined, “Is taking over the lobby of one of Canada’s largest banks in downtown Toronto to protest Israel considered a hate crime?” Scotiabank has been targeted due to its $500 million stake in Israeli weapons maker Elbit Systems, whose Canadian offices were also shut down the same day.

After three activists briefly interrupted the “Scotiabank Giller Awards for Canadian Fiction” on November 13, holding up signs declaring that “Scotiabank funds genocide” Warmington reveled in the prospect of their imprisonment due to their use of “forged documents” to enter the gala event, and their act to “obstruct, interrupt, interfere with the lawful use, enjoyment or operation of property.”

On November 15, Palestinian Canadian doctor and activist Tarek Loubani posted about his imminent arrest by police for the “crime” of smearing ketchup on the office door of his local MP, Peter Fragiskatos, in protest over the Liberal legislator’s refusal to demand a cease fire. Loubani was previously imprisoned by the Egyptian dictatorship for attending a demonstration in 2013, and was shot in Gaza by the IDF in 2018.

Those expressing public solidarity with the beleaguered Palestinians of Gaza have been targeted, sometimes successfully, for disciplinary action, up to including termination from their jobs.

  • Arij Anwer, a Muslim chaplain at Western University was fired due to a comment on Twitter, replying to neo-conservative journalist and ex-Tory Senator Linda Frum: “Stop spreading lies of beheading babies or rape of little girls. It’s been debunked. No one is celebrating the murder of Israeli babies. Palestinians are mourning the death of their babies. It’s incredible how Israel sympathizers simultaneously are the oppressor and the victim.”
  • Sabreina Dahab, a Trustee with Ontario’s Hamilton Wentworth District School board is under investigation for a “breech of the Trustee Code of Conduct” for tweeting “75 years of violent occupation and apartheid and the expectation is that Palestinians will be passive observers in their genocide?”
  • Javier Dávila, a Student Equity Advisor at Toronto District School Board was suspended for sharing social media posts documenting the Palestinian solidarity activities of students at Marc Garneau High School.

US Department of Education announces probe into alleged antisemitism on college campuses

Emma Arceneaux


The US Department of Education announced Thursday that it has launched investigations into six universities and one public school district for alleged violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Five of the investigations are related to allegations of antisemitism and two are related to alleged incidences of Islamophobia.

The schools currently under investigation are Columbia University, Cornell University, the University of Pennsylvania, Wellesley College, Lafayette College, the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, and Maize Unified School District in Kansas.

Palestinian supporters protest at Columbia University, Thursday, October 12, 2023 in New York. [AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura]

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona told CNN that he expects more investigations will be forthcoming. Cardona warned that schools which fail to comply with the department’s recommendations risk losing federal funding.

Details of the specific allegations under investigation have not been released. However, the investigations come amid an intensifying campaign led by the Biden administration to suppress growing opposition to Israel’s genocidal war against Gaza, which has the full backing of the Democratic White House and US imperialism. Central to this campaign is the smearing of opposition to Israel’s war crimes as “antisemitic.”

On college campuses, students have been doxxed, blacklisted and penalized by administrators for voicing political opposition to the escalating US-Israel genocide, which has already claimed the lives of more than 12,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children. The Israeli Ministry of the Interior has itself defined the aim of the war on Gaza to be the removal of the Palestinian population through a combination of mass killings and forced expulsion from the territory.

Palestinians inspect the damage of a destroyed house following an Israeli airstrike in Jabaliya refugee camp, on the outskirts of Gaza City, Sunday, November 5, 2023. [AP Photo/Mohammed Alaswad]

There is a particularly perverse and vile irony in the attempt to brand opponents of ethnic cleansing in occupied Palestine, which include many thousands of Jews in the US and around the world, as “antisemites,” given the tragic fate of European Jewry in the Holocaust.

The investigations into the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) and Wellesley College follow a federal civil rights complaint filed on November 9 against the schools by the Brandeis Center, a Zionist organization founded by Kenneth Marcus, former assistant secretary of education for civil rights under Donald Trump. The Brandeis Center has student chapters at law schools throughout the US, whose stated purpose includes fighting “anti-Israelism,” countering the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, and promoting “Israel legal advocacy.”

The complaints against Penn and Wellesley state that “Zionism is an integral part of Jewish ethnic and ancestral identity for many Jewish students,” and, on that basis, argues that anti-Zionism constitutes “erasive anti-Semitism.”

Last week, Penn President Liz Magill issued two statements alleging incidences of antisemitism on campus. The first cited “vile, disturbing antisemitic emails threatening violence to members of our Jewish community.” It added that the FBI had been informed of a potential hate crime. However, a campus police investigation found “no credible threat” to campus safety. The details of these emails have not been released.

Magill issued a second statement last week in which she denounced “vile, antisemitic messages [that] were projected onto several campus buildings.” Multiple news reports that repeated the claim of “vile antisemitism” showed images with the projected messages blurred out. However, pictures of the projections shared on social media disprove this slanderous allegation.

The so-called “hateful” messages included the following: “Free Palestine,” “Let Gaza Live,” “Liz Magill: call for ceasefire now,” “From the Sea to the River, Palestine will live forever,” and “10,000 murdered by Israeli occupation since October 7.”

Wellesley College confirmed to local news that the Department of Education investigation is related to the complaint filed by the Brandeis Center. In this instance too, the allegation of antisemitism rests upon students’ opposition to Zionism. On October 19, student resident assistants sent an email to their dormitory’s residents stating that “there should be no space, no consideration, and no support for Zionism within the Wellesley College community.” The university forced the students to issue an apology.

As of Friday morning, both Lafayette College in Pennsylvania and the Maize Unified School District in Kansas said that while they had received notification of Department of Education investigations, neither had been given details of the allegations.

Cooper Union did not comment on the investigation, though it follows the attempts last month by the corporate media to portray a peaceful Palestine solidarity protest on campus as an antisemitic rampage. Reports of Jewish students being “barricaded” and locked in the library in the face of threats to their safety were soon debunked. City officials later acknowledged that some pro-Israel counter-protesters voluntarily waited in the library during the protest, and that school officials closed the library for approximately 20 minutes.

At Cornell University, the specific allegations under investigation are not known, but may be related to the arrest last month of Cornell student Patrick Dai. He was arrested and charged in federal court for multiple alleged internet posts that made violent threats, including threats to “shoot up” the predominantly Kosher dining hall on campus.

Columbia University did not comment on the investigation. The elite university has been one of the focal points of the government-led campaign to intimidate and ban student opposition to the genocide in Gaza. As at a number of other universities, the far-right media group Accuracy in Media drove its “doxing” truck around campus with the names and images of students alleged to be affiliated with pro-Palestinian groups.

Last week, Columbia suspended the student organizations Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), claiming that the groups’ peaceful protests and sit-ins “repeatedly violated University policies related to holding campus events, culminating in an unauthorized event Thursday afternoon that proceeded despite warnings and included threatening rhetoric and intimidation.”

Building upon the month-long campaign to slander and intimidate students, the growing efforts to ban student groups and campus protests outright mark a significant escalation in the attempts to criminalize all opposition to the war crimes of the US and its Israeli ally. In Florida, far-right governor and Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis was the first to issue an order to deactivate SJP chapters in the state university system. Brandeis University has also banned the SJP.

This week, the administration of George Washington University in St. Louis announced the suspension of the campus SJP chapter for at least 90 days following a peaceful protest action in which students projected messages onto a university library building. As with the projected messages at Penn, the George Washington administration turned reality on its head. The messages, which university President Ellen Granberg declared to be “antisemitic,” included, “End the siege on Gaza,” and “GW is complicit in genocide in Gaza.”

The federal investigations by the Biden administration into US colleges occur against the backdrop of growing opposition to the genocidal war against Gaza, while the barrage of propaganda and lies used by the Biden administration to justify war crimes are rapidly breaking down.

The Department of Education’s announcement follows the pro-genocide “March for Israel” in Washington D.C. on Tuesday, at which leaders of both parties of US imperialism joined hands to declare their unconditional support for Israel and its war crimes. The event featured speeches from real antisemites, including evangelical pastor John Hagee, who has previously stated that Hitler was sent by God to drive the Jewish people “back to the land of Israel.”

The investigation was also announced one day after US Capitol Police violently assaulted Jewish activists who held a peaceful vigil and protest demanding a ceasefire at the headquarters of the Democratic Party in Washington D.C.

Having failed in its desperate attempts to intimidate protesters by equating criticism of the US-backed genocide with “antisemitism,” including demands for a ceasefire by Jewish activists, the ruling class is directly resorting to anti-democratic and repressive measures, in violation of constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech and political expression, to censor opposition. The threat to withhold funding from public universities and school districts, many of which already face massive budget deficits, is a directive to school administrators to crack down on political opposition.

At the same time, the lie that the interests of the Jewish people are represented by the policies of the state of Israel, a state founded on ethnic cleansing and genocidal violence, creates conditions for a dangerous equivalency between Zionism and Judaism.

Australian government rams through bill to impose unprecedented restrictions on released detainees

Mike Head


In just over 12 hours on Thursday, the Australian Labor government teamed up with the Liberal-National Coalition opposition to push through both houses of parliament a bill that inflicts a police-state regime—essentially a new totalitarian form of detention—on people being released, by order of the country’s highest court, after being previously imprisoned indefinitely.

Protesters stage a rally outside the Park Hotel calling for the release of refugees being detained inside, in Melbourne, Australia, Friday, Jan. 7, 2022. [AP Photo/Hamish Blair]

The bill was also supported by One Nation leader Pauline Hanson, Tasmanian independent Jacqui Lambie, all the “teal” independent members of parliament and Australian Capital Territory independent David Pocock, before being rushed to the governor-general for royal assent.

Thursday’s events expose the true repressive face of parliamentary democracy. The ruling establishment, currently led by the Labor Party, is ripping aside fundamental democratic rights, flouting even the extremely limited protections of basic legal rights in Australia’s 1901 Constitution.

These events underscore a reactionary political atmosphere being drummed up by the ruling parties and media, full of inflammatory allegations against supposed “illegal immigrants,” under conditions in which all the politicians involved are also backing Israel’s murderous assault on the people of Gaza in blatant defiance of international law.

Under the unprecedented legislation, the previous detainees—mostly refugees who cannot be deported—will be forced to wear ankle bracelet monitoring devices “at all times” and are effectively confined to house arrest, potentially for life. They face the threat of imprisonment for up to five years, with a mandatory minimum of one year, for breaching any of the far-reaching restrictions placed on them.

These restrictions, more than a dozen, include confinement to set locations with 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfews, limits on travel, and exclusion from designated forms of employment. Those released must report constantly to the police or other authorities, including on their living arrangements, finances, memberships of organisations and associations with other people.

All these controls can be imposed or varied by executive fiat, by the immigration minister, without “natural justice.” That is, there is no right to a prior hearing, let alone a procedurally fair or unbiased hearing. The minister can simply decide that a person “poses a risk to the community.”

This is after people were detained indefinitely and unlawfully in immigration facilities for years, in one case almost 13 years.

As government ministers admitted in parliament, the bill’s provisions could very well violate the High Court’s November 8 ruling that indefinite detention of asylum seekers and other non-citizens—a regime first introduced by the Keating Labor government in 1992—constituted “punishment” without judicial process.

Agriculture Minister Murray Watt told the Senate there was a “degree of constitutional risk” in the emergency changes.

After enforcing unlawful detentions for decades, the judges on November 8 said they breached the Constitution’s separation of powers doctrine, but have yet to issue reasons for the court’s apparent partial about-face.

The High Court decision has so far resulted in the release of 84 people, with the legality of the detention of a further 340 people in detention for more than a year also in doubt.

Lawyers for some of the released detainees have mooted a legal challenge to the new law, saying it imposes new forms of punishment without trial. David Manne, the executive director of Refugee Legal, said the bill was tantamount to imposing “a further form of deprivation of liberty, a further form of indefinite detention, because there are also no time limits on these conditions.”

For now, the bill’s measures apply only to non-citizens—imposed via conditions on temporary visas. But they set chilling precedents for wider use against anyone accused of conduct or views deemed an unacceptable threat to “national security” or the underlying economic order of capitalism. This is occurring amid threats by governments to ban protests against the Gaza genocide, falsely accusing participants of antisemitism or “hate speech.”

Despite all being blackguarded by politicians and media headlines as “murderers” and “rapists,” only some of the released detainees had been convicted of crimes. These included several serious offences, while others were locked up for traffic offences. But all had served their sentences. Had they been citizens, they would have been released, either on parole or unconditionally.

A large proportion of the detainees—78 reportedly—are owed refugee protection and cannot be removed from the country without defying the International Refugee Convention. At least 30 of them were detained indefinitely on various accusations, ranging from endangering “national security” to belonging to bikie groups, giving incorrect information in visa applications, changes in circumstances, or posing risks to “the health, safety or good order” of Australia.

Media commentators and the Greens, who opposed the Migration Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions) Bill 2023, described the parliamentary rush as a “capitulation” by the Labor government to the aggressive refugee-bashing demands of the Coalition, spearheaded by opposition leader Peter Dutton.

In parliament, however, Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil boasted that the bill was harsher than anything introduced by Dutton when he was home affairs minister in the previous Morrison Coalition government.

“The Leader of the Opposition loves to present himself as a tough guy on borders,” O’Neil said. “He never wrote laws as tough as this… These laws allow us to do things that no government has ever been able to do before: to put ankle-monitoring bracelets on people we are concerned about… What’s really important about this bill is that for the first time we criminalise people who do not follow these visa conditions.”

O’Neil declared that she agreed with Dutton that “some of the people at the heart of this decision have committed deplorable crimes; disgusting crimes—crimes that no-one in this parliament, surely, would accept. That is why we kept them in detention.”

These kinds of allegations were quickly inflamed by the corporate media, notably on talkback radio, tabloid newspapers and breakfast television.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was equally determined to assert Labor’s “tough” credentials. He claimed personal credit for the bill, saying he was “fully involved” in the proceedings from San Francisco, where he flew on Wednesday to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit hosted by US President Joe Biden.

By demolishing what is left of the Labor government’s claims to defend civil liberties, the bill’s rapid passage has caused political shock and unrest. Laura Tingle, the chief political correspondent of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “7.30” current affairs program, said it was a “dark day” for “the way we make laws in Australia.”

She wrote: “In the space of 12 hours on Thursday, the Australian Parliament passed legislation about what remains, to the public, a largely ill-defined and unknown group of people—but variously described by some of our MPs as ‘hardened criminals’ and ‘absolute animals’—in a legislative exercise alarming in its chaos and deeply concerning in its origins.”

In reality, the proceedings exposed the real character of parliament and the ruling class.

For their part, the Greens accused the government of endangering the “rule of law” by rushing through legislation that would end up back in the High Court. “The government has acted in haste, panicked at the fearmongering of Peter Dutton,” Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young said.

That is a cover for the reactionary role and record of Labor, with whom the Greens are hoping to form a coalition government after the scheduled 2025 federal election because of collapsing popular support for the government.

In 2005, moreover, the Greens joined the Howard Coalition government and the Labor Party in the most notorious previous instance of ramming laws through parliament on an “emergency” basis. That legislation vastly expanded the already sweeping “counter-terrorism” laws by enabling people to be arrested, charged and convicted for allegedly planning unspecified “terrorist acts.”

The 2005 legislation, adopted under the banner of the “war on terror” that served as the pretext for the catastrophic US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, also introduced new forms of detention without trial, including for citizens, such as “control orders” and “preventative detention.”

The Coalition is calling for such types of detention to be imposed on the released detainees, and the Labor government has foreshadowed further legislation that may do so.

Sri Lankan President Wickremesinghe’s 2024 budget deepens attack on workers and the poor

K. Ratnayake


On Monday, President Wickremesinghe announced his government’s budget for 2024. In line with the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) austerity dictates, the budget will make further inroads the social conditions of workers and the poor.

Ranil Wickremesinghe [Photo: United National Party Facebook]

Addressing parliament, Wickremesinghe invoked the teachings of Buddha, telling the country’s suffering masses that Buddha “advised against leading a pompous and extravagant life, while receiving a low income… We should spend according to the income we receive.”

Wickremesinghe’s appeals to Sinhala-Buddhist chauvinist sentiments will not fool anyone. At least 28 percent of the country’s 22 million-strong population lives in poverty and, according to a 2023 UNICEF report, one in two children goes hungry every day.

Currently an estimated 17 percent of the population is food insecure with nearly two-thirds forced to borrow money, spend hard-earned savings, if they have any, or adopt other coping methods, just to feed their families.

Blaming the masses for Sri Lanka’s ongoing economic crisis, Wickremesinghe declared, “We resorted to borrowing or printing money to provide jobs, increase salaries, distribute free rice, offer relief, and maintain state-owned enterprises.”

These are blatant lies. The official unemployment rate amongst youth was 15 percent in 2019, even before the economic crisis hit, with most young people employed in temporary jobs. At the same time the big corporations are raking in huge profits while the salaries of state employees, which remain stagnant, are eroded further by high inflation.

Colombo responded to the economic crisis precipitated by COVID-19 and the US-NATO war against Russia by unleashing brutal attacks on working people and destroying hundreds of thousands of jobs. At least 500,000 people lost their jobs in 2022.

Wickremesinghe pompously told parliament of Monday that measures taken by his government in first half of this year had seen a 50 percent increase in tax revenue and that inflation had dropped to 1.5 percent in October down from 70 percent in September 2022.

But at what cost? State revenue has gone up because of increases in income tax and higher value added tax (VAT) rates and, while the overall inflation rate has fallen, the prices of all essentials are higher. These measures have imposed unbearable burdens on workers and the poor.

In March, the IMF agreed to release a $US3 billion bailout loan, conditional on the imposition of harsh social attacks. These included slashing government expenditure to produce a surplus by 2025; increasing tax revenues via higher VAT and income tax rates; the privatisation of state-owned enterprises; huge job cuts in the state sector, and sharp reductions to welfare programs.

The IMF, however, withheld a second installment of its loan in September because the government failed to reach its revenue target. It only released the second tranche in October, after the government pledged to achieve all the IMF’s demands in the coming period. The government’s 2024 budget has been devised to fulfill those targets.

The budget envisages expenditure of 7 trillion rupees ($US21.47 billion) and revenue of 4 trillion rupees. The projected 2.85 trillion ($8.73 billion) budget deficit will be mainly bridged by even higher tax rates, the privatisation of more state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and further borrowings. Fifty percent of 2024 budget expenditure will go to principal debt repayments and on interest, with 3 trillion of this to repay foreign debt.

Wickremesinghe announced that the cost-of-living allowances of public sector workers, which have not been increased since 2015, will be increased by 10,000 rupees per month. This will not start until April next year with allowances payments accumulated from January to March 2024 to be paid in installments within a six-month period, starting in October 2024. This paltry increase will not compensate for massive wage erosion over previous years.

State pensioners will receive a meagre increase of 2,500 rupees, as a cost-of-living allowance, starting in April next year. The government, however, announced that state employees’ contribution to the pension fund will rise from 6 percent to 8 percent next year, in other words, a 2 percent cut in their salaries.

In 2024, nearly 50,000 poor families will be given ownership of their small homes, currently provided to them at a monthly rent of 3,000 rupees. This cosmetic measure will do little to overcome drastic housing shortages. According to the Urban Development Authority, more than 200,000 homes are needed in Colombo alone.

The government has allocated a total of 183 billion rupees for the approximately two million people receiving “Aswesuma” welfare payments, up from the 60 billion currently allocated. This means an estimated 400,000 severely poor families will receive 15,000 rupees per month, another 800,000 to receive 8,500 rupees per month for three years. Others will receive smaller benefits between December and March next year. These allowances are grossly inadequate amounts.

The annual allocation for the country’s crumbling public health service is 410 billion rupees, an increase of 88 billion while education is to receive an additional 5 billion rupees on top of the current 237 billion rupees. These allocations are below inflation and will not compensate for the desperate situation facing the public health and education sectors.

Substantial parts of these vital sectors have been handed over in recent decades to the profit-hungry private sectors by Sri Lankan governments. The Wickremesinghe government is stepping up the conversion of free public health and education into fee for service institutions.

Other budget measures include:

* VAT will be lifted from 15 to 18 percent, starting in January, which means further increases in the price of all goods and services.

* Local Government Authorities (LGA) will be “encouraged” to provide their services via a “self-financing model.” During the next five years the central government will gradually reduce, and then eliminate, its financing of all LGA salaries. This means the LGAs will have to increase service charges for residents in order to finance the jobs and wages of hundreds of thousands of local government workers.

Further moves towards the privatisation or commercialisation of SOEs include:

* The sale of 20 percent of shares in state banks to private investors.

* Restructuring of the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) through the transfer of generation, transmission and distribution processes to 14 companies.

* The state-owned Telecom has already announced that will sell off a 50.23 percent majority stake to private investors.

Wickremesinghe declared that his government’s so-called reform program would “liberate the people from economic hardships.” This is a fantasy.

Last year Sri Lanka’s GDP growth rate was -7.8 percent. Although this year’s estimated growth rate is -1 percent, growth for the first half of the year was -7.9 percent. These are not just statistics. The escalating economic crisis in Sri Lanka, which is a sharp expression of a global process, will have an even more devastating effect on the jobs and social conditions of the masses.

The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, the country’s main big business lobby, praised Wickremesinghe’s budget declaring it a “framework for national development—pragmatic implementation and timely execution will be key.” In other words, it is a program that will open up additional avenues for extracting greater super profits.

Anura Kumara Dissanayake, leader of Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and its National People’s Power (NPP), declared that Sri Lanka’s economy for the past 75 years had been “built on loans, money printing and selling assets.” The 2024 budget, he said, “contained proposals to borrow and sell assets, essentially putting Sri Lanka’s economy back on the same old, failed path.”

Sajith Premadasa, leader of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), the main parliamentary opposition party, said the budget “promises heaven but will lead the people to hell…This budget pleases the rich and oppresses the poor. It is nothing but an attempt to make the IMF happy.”

While the SJB, JVP/NPP and other opposition parties criticise the budget, they are all committed to IMF austerity and have no alternative. Their denunciations are aimed at cynically exploiting the deep opposition of workers and the poor for electoral purposes. If elected to power, they would collaborate fully with the IMF and its demands.

While the working class has repeatedly shown its readiness to fight the government’s IMF-dictated measures, it is blocked time and time again by the trade unions which call isolated and limited actions.

Public sector union bureaucracies called protests in October and early November calling on Colombo to grant 20,000-rupee monthly allowance, peddling illusions that the government would be pressured to grant this demand in the budget. This proved to be another deliberate lie with Wickremesinghe completely ignoring these demands.

Many of the unions are controlled by the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna, or by the JVP and SJB which are all committed to the IMF program, as are various so-called independent unions.

17 Nov 2023

Make Our Planet Great Again (MOPGA) Visiting Fellowship Program 2024

Application Deadline: 

16th January 2024

Type: Fellowship

Eligibility For Make Our Planet Great Again (MOPGA) Visiting Fellowship Program:

Foreign researchers who fulfil the following conditions can apply:

  • having a doctoral degree for less than 5 years  
  • being exclusively of foreign nationality
  • not have resided in France after September 1st 2023 (for more than 90 days)

A research stay convention with the host institution will be established between the institutions and the laureates and will detail specifically the means made available by the laboratory so that the researcher can carry out the research project.

Number of Awards: 40 fellowships will be awarded to the young researchers over a 12-month period from Sept 2023

Value of Make Our Planet Great Again (MOPGA) Visiting Fellowship Program: The fellowship includes the following benefits:
– Monthly allowance of 2,500 euros  
– Moving allowance of 500 euros
– Support for social security coverage 
– Support for health insurance

A visiting fellowship agreement with the French host institution will be established between the institutions and the laureates. It will specify the means and resources made available by the host laboratory so that the researcher can carry out the research project.

Duration of Award: 12 Months

How to Apply: Applications should be submitted via the following link: here.

1. Your CV with the list of your publications in English (4 pages maximum)
2. Copy of your PhD diploma
3. CV of your research supervisor in the French host institution for the visiting fellowship (2 pages maximum)
4. Letter of support from the French host institution 
5. Letters of recommendation (maximum 3)
6. Copy of your Passport or National ID

Visit Award Webpage for Details