17 Mar 2016

French government, trade unions rework reactionary labor reform

Anthony Torres

Faced with growing opposition among youth and workers to the reform of the Labor Code, Prime Minister Manuel Valls presented trade union and business confederations a redrafted version of Labor Minister Myriam El Khomri’s law, hoping to win their approval and support.
Valls insisted that he wanted to promote “social dialogue” between business and trade union groups. He said, “Much has been done on the issue of personal accounts, on workers’ rights, the great principles. There were problems, I admit.” He added, “there was a moment when we did not find the time, the right moment, to present it as we have done in the last few days. We needed to take fifteen extra days to listen and to hear.”
Valls’ presentation of a touched-up law is a cynical maneuver to lull to sleep workers and youth who are opposed to an entirely reactionary reform. The superficial modifications presented by Valls change nothing fundamental about the bill. The key element—it allows the trade union to negotiate contracts at the level of individual firms that violate the Labor Code—was never put in question at any step of the talks.
Fines for improper mass sackings, which the previous bill specified so as to allow companies to engage in improper sackings while calculating their costs in advance, are now to be fixed by an arbitrary government decree. They would be three to fifteen months’ salary, depending on workers’ seniority.
The government refused to change new criteria facilitating mass layoffs. The only modification is that judges will now be allowed to monitor the decisions of a transnational corporation in France, to ensure that it is not using accounting tricks to generate losses in its French operations. However, bitter experience teaches that workers cannot count on the courts to defend them. Judges have many times ruled in favor of mass sackings and, under the state of emergency, for prison terms against workers struggling to defend their jobs.
Finally, programs to assist youths not in employment or training are more cynical smoke and mirrors to try to obtain the student union bureaucracies’ support for the reform. Valls boasted that his “bill was welcomed by the second-largest student organisation,” the Federation of General Student Assocations (FAGE).
After visiting the prime minister at the Matignon palace, Laurent Berger, the national secretary of the French Democratic Labor Federation (CFDT), praised the reactionary reform as a “potential vehicle for progress for youth and workers.”
The Stalinist General Confederation of Labour (CGT) and Workers Force (FO) unions, and the National Union of French Students (UNEF), have called for continued protests.
These bureaucracies’ claims to oppose the reform are based on lies. Calls for protests by the CGT and UNEF are political maneuvers aiming to channel anger among workers and students behind the perspective of yet another renegotiation and slight modification of the reactionary bill with the Socialist Party (PS) government.
Since President François Hollande was elected in 2012, the CGT, the other union bureaucracies, and their political allies like the New Anti-capitalist Party have proven themselves to be the PS’ best allies. They stifled opposition in the working class to France’s most unpopular government since World War II, as it carried out mass sackings, austerity, and war measures.
Over the course of four years, the unions and their allies have not called a single significant national demonstration, as they had in past presidential terms, because they feared they would not be able to contain workers’ anger and might accidentally trigger an uncontrolled protest.
This same fear underlies the decision of Hollande and Valls to rework the labor reform, fearing that discredited unions and political parties could not control the broader movement of workers and students that could ensue.
During the March 9 demonstration in Lyon, students blockaded several high schools, and clashes broke out with police which, under the new state of emergency, blocked the demonstration’s path. At least two protesters were hospitalized after police fired rubber bullets and smashed open a protester’s skull with a police baton.
The central question facing workers and youth on these protests is the need to establish the political independence of the working class from the unions and pseudo-left organizations, and the urgency of building a political leadership for the working class.
As the WSWS indicated in its leaflet addressed to the March 9 demonstration, “All genuine opposition to the reactionary measures of the PS is welcome. It would however be a fatal error for this movement, which is still in its early stages, to limit itself to a national framework, to demanding revisions or even the withdrawal of the El Khomri law by the unions. Talks between these illegitimate bureaucracies and the PS, under the jackboot of the state of emergency and with the permanent threat of NATO military escalation against Russia in Syria and in Europe, will only produce new attacks on the workers. Above all, they will do nothing against the dangers of war and dictatorship that threaten workers in France and around the world.”
It added, “The struggle against the El Khomri law must be developed into a political struggle against the NATO powers’ war drive, and against the anti-democratic state of emergency decreed after the November 13 attacks. This struggle must be for socialism, based on the working class. The natural allies of the workers and youth in France in this struggle are the workers across Europe and the world.”

Refugees face death and despair on Greek-Macedonian border

Katerina Selin

Scenes like these in Europe are unknown since the end of World War II: thousands of people living in pools of mud and flooded tents, crying babies transported across rivers, entire families wading barefoot through water and mud, fighting their way through bushes and forests in an attempt to cross the Macedonian-Greek border.
The shocking pictures and videos currently transmitted from northern Greece to the whole world reveal the brutal nature of European refugee policy. The closure of the Balkan route denied tens of thousands of people refuge in central Europe. The plight of refugees is being exacerbated by representatives of the European Union in order to deliberately deter people.
The closure of the Greek-Macedonian border cost three refugees their lives on Sunday night. Two men and a woman from Afghanistan drowned in a river while trying to cross the border. The other 23 people in their group were taken to the Macedonian border town of Gevgelija and had to be treated for hypothermia.
On Monday, over 2,000 refugees from the border camp at Idomeni set off to cross into Macedonia at a spot without a border fence, close to the Greek village of Chamilo.
Leaflets were passed from hand to hand with instructions in Arabic on how to cross the Macedonian border. The flyer apparently encouraged people to quit the camp and head for the border. Who issued the leaflet remains unclear; according to Spiegel Online, it may have stemmed from Syrians who had successfully fled to Germany and shared their experiences via Facebook. Unknown “volunteers” have also been linked to the flyers.
Regardless of who was responsible for the leaflets, the reason for the flight to the border was the desperation of the refugees. A twenty-year-old Syrian from a group of refugees who crossed the border summed up the attitude of the refugees. He told Zeit Online: “I know that I might be arrested in Macedonia. But I have nothing to lose,” he said.
Residents in Chamilo watched in horror as families with small children and infants, the elderly, and the handicapped, poorly protected against rain and cold, walked past their houses until late at night. They helped them with blankets, water, food, and even a pram.
At a raging torrent behind Chamilo refugees and helpers erected a rope across a river and with luggage and children on their shoulders struggled through the water. A video shows a boy who tried to cross, without holding the rope: he was immediately swept away by the river’s current and had to be rescued.
At a second river on Macedonian territory, the Mala Reka, about 1,500 people struggled through bushes and managed to cross the border. There, they were immediately surrounded and arrested by Macedonian police and soldiers. Most were taken to a school and other buildings in the Macedonian border village of Moin.
Slowly, details about the refugees’ fate in Macedonia have come to light in the last two days. Police arrested about 60 journalists, photojournalists and helpers and dispatched them to a prison in Gevgelija, so that no witnesses could document their brutal anti-refugee policy. Before the arrested were released, they had to pay a fine of 250 euros for “illegal border crossing” and received a six-month travel ban.
EU leaders are well aware of what was in store for refugees trying to cross the Macedonian border. On March 1, police chiefs from Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Hungary and Austria met in Belgrade to discuss methods to deal with refugees.
Two days later Macedonia sent a 12-page list to neighbouring countries detailing its requests for armaments to protect its southern border.
Macedonia’s “shopping list” to deal with refugees included pepper spray, tasers, “special bombs”, grenade launchers, a crowd control dispenser, and armoured vehicles.
Macedonia has announced it will return all the refugees to Greece. According to Greek police, Macedonian security forces have already deported several hundred refugees in military vehicles on illegal forest trails. However, it is still unclear whether all the refugees have been returned to Greece.
Many refugees reported by the brutal treatment by the Macedonian police and military forces. “They yelled and beat us, they put us in military vehicles and returned us at 02.00 in the morning”, one Syrian told the Greek daily Kathimerini, after he arrived back in Idomeni.
Refugees who yesterday walked back to Idomeni told Greek state television ERT of beatings and ill-treatment. They were forced to wait in the rain for hours without food or water and then driven in military vehicles to the border, where they had to crawl through a hole in the fence back to the Greek side.
The aid organization “Save the Children” told the British Guardian that the Macedonian authorities left the shivering refugees in their wet clothes exposed to the elements, without any information for orientation. On their return to Idomeni, rain forced many to spend the night outdoors. “Some people collapsed on the roadside and needed medical assistance on the spot.”
About 400 refugees were unable to cross the border into Macedonia and stayed on the riverbank. The starving people, including many sick children, then trudged back on Tuesday to Idomeni.
After nearly three weeks, around 12,000 refugees wait under catastrophic conditions in the makeshift camp in Idomeni, which is sinking into the mud after days of rain. New tents have been erected, because most refugees prefer to remain in Idomeni rather then move into an official Greek camp. They fear their imminent deportation to Turkey and hope that the Balkan borders will be reopened after the European Union summit on Thursday.
The situation also remains critical at the Greek port of Piraeus, where nearly 4,000 refugees are located. Many are sick and weak. On Tuesday a child with hepatitis A was hospitalized; a few days ago a girl in Idomeni received the same diagnosis.
In Piraeus, many refugees refuse to be placed in other accommodation and are awaiting the results of the summit. The government is trying to convince refugee to move, stressing the allegedly “humanitarian” conditions in reception centers and camps. But according to ERT, refugees have already returned from these camps to Piraeus because of intolerable conditions there.

Mexican union leaders paid over $30 million for imposing cuts on oil workers

Neil Hardt

A March 14 report published in Mexico's La Jornada reveals staggering corruption and payouts between the state-owned oil company Pemex, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), and the oil workers and electricians unions.
According to the report, titled "Numerous perks for union leaders of Pemex-CFE," leaders of the National Oil Workers Union of the Mexican Republic (STPRM) and the National Union of Electrical Workers of the Mexican Republic (Suterm) received massive payouts as part of a quid pro quoagreement with the government and the company. In 2015, the trade unions agreed to contract modifications which enforced unprecedented pension and job cuts on Mexican oil workers.
Signed documents cited by La Jornada show that the leaders of the two unions, Carlos Romero Dechamps and Victor Fuentes del Villar, received $21 million USD and $11 million USD in payouts, respectively. The payments, which will be distributed amongst the leaders’ cronies, were disguised as resources for "travel allowance, spending, and celebration."
The payments reveal the key role played by the trade unions in orchestrating a historic transfer of wealth from the working class to the pockets of the Mexican bourgeoisie and their allies on Wall Street and in the multinational oil corporations.
The terms of the deal worked out in November 2015 by the trade unions, the government, and Pemex illuminate the character of the conspiracy against the Mexican working class. The retirement age will be raised from 55 to 60 for those workers with less than 15 years with the company while new hires will be forced to take a defined-contribution plan as opposed to the defined benefit plans that current workers have. In January, Pemex announced 10,533 jobs would be cut in 2016.
The Wall Street Journal salivated over the deal, calling it "the biggest change to the collective bargaining contract since Pemex was created in 1938."
The cuts will open up billions of dollars to be spent on speculation and profiteering. One anonymous senior Pemex official told the Journal that "the overhaul could cut pension liabilities by about 400 billion pesos ($24 billion), or around a quarter of the total liabilities."
The Mexican trade unions are not workers’ organizations, and their leadership lives extravagantly off the payoffs for their betrayals.
For example, the daughter of STPRM leader Romero Deschamps posted a series of photographs of herself traveling via private jet to many corners of the world. The luxurious photos of Paulina Romero Deschamps, known as the "Princess of the PRI" for her father's connections to the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), caused a scandal when they were released in 2013.
The opulent lifestyles of the trade union bureaucracies are funded not only by payoffs from the government and corporations, but also through stealing the wages of the workers themselves. According to political analyst Denise Dresser, Deschamps received $15.3 million in 2011 in oil worker dues money. Despite claiming to make just $1,900 per month in STPRM salary, Deschamps himself owns a $1.5 million mansion in Cancun (which he has described as a "cottage") and reportedly gave his son a $2 million Ferrari automobile as a present.
The conspiracy by the unions, the government, and Pemex against the working class is the culmination of decades of attacks on oil workers who have long been regarded as representing the high-water mark of working class living standards in Mexico.
The expropriation of the Mexican oil industry by President Lazaro Cardenas in March 1938 remains perhaps the most widely celebrated political act in post-revolutionary Mexican history. The expropriation itself was the product of a careful balancing act by Cardenas and broad sections of the Mexican bourgeoisie, who both sought to limit foreign exploitation of oil to create a basis for enriching the national bourgeoisie and to stem widespread socialist sentiment among the working class.
Founded in August 1935, the STPRM was immediately brought under the control of the corporatist Mexican Confederation of Workers (CTM) through the dealings of the infamous Mexican Stalinist Lombardo Toledano. A series of wildcat strikes in 1937 that the STPRM and the Stalinists were unable to contain frightened the Cardenas administration to such a degree that Cardenas declared that the strikes were “due on the part of the workers substantially to the lack of cohesion of the organizations which form the [STPRM].” Furthermore, Cardenas expressed the Mexican ruling class’s fear of socialism when he said that the government felt “anxiety [over] the deception which the workers may suffer at the hands of those who are within the ranks of the workers and who are serving antagonistic interests.”
In response to these concerns, Cardenas announced the expropriation of the oil industry in March 1938 after the foreign companies refused to abide by a ruling from the Mexican Supreme Court granting the right to collective bargaining under the STPRM. In the aftermath of the expropriation, American, English, and Dutch oil interests attempted to orchestrate an international boycott of Mexican oil. The move was greeted with widespread enthusiasm by Mexican workers and peasants, many of whom offered to donate chickens and livestock to pay off the debt Cardenas insisted be paid to the companies. In the aftermath of the expropriation, oil workers were in fact not granted the wage increases for which they had initially struck.
The massive poverty, widespread corruption, and violence that pervade Mexican society today are the product of the decades-long collusion of the Mexican bourgeoisie with imperialism, aided by the corporatist trade unions and their wealthy charro leadership. The product of this corrupt alliance is the drive toward the privatization of the oil industry through intensified attacks on Mexican oil workers.

Argentina sinks Chinese fishing vessel

Bill Van Auken

China’s Foreign Affairs Ministry has expressed “serious concern” and demanded a full explanation for the sinking of a Chinese fishing boat by an Argentine coast guard cutter in the south Atlantic on Monday.
All 32 members of the Chinese vessel’s crew were rescued after the attack, four of them by the Argentine gunboat that attacked them and the rest by other Chinese ships that were nearby. Argentine authorities took the captain of the Chinese ship into custody.
The Argentine Naval Prefecture issued a statement justifying the armed attack on the Chinese fishing boat, which it said was fishing in violation of Argentina’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone off the country’s coast.
The report claimed that the vessel failed to respond to repeated radio messages delivered in English and Spanish, as well as to visual and audio signals, instead turning off its lights and attempting to escape into international waters.
The chase continued for several hours before Argentine cannon fire tore through the Chinese boat’s hull, causing it to sink. The Argentine military sought to justify the attack by claiming that the Chinese vessel had at one point attempted to ram the coast guard ship.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said on Tuesday that China’s ruling State Council had attached “high importance to this incident.” Upon its instructions, she added, the Foreign Ministry had expressed “serious concern” to the Argentine government and demanded that it “conduct a thorough investigation” of the attack on the Chinese vessel, ensure the safety and rights of its crew members and “take effective measures to avoid any repetition of such an incident.”
While the Argentine government issued no immediate statement in relation to the incident, the daily Clarin reported that there was “enormous anxiety in the Argentine Foreign Ministry and in the Presidency of the Nation over the transcendence that Beijing is giving to the matter.”
This “transcendence” is in large measure due to the coming to power last December of Argentina’s new right-wing president, Mauricio Macri. During his election campaign, Macri devoted some of his right-wing attacks agains his Peronist predecessor, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, to charging that extensive trade and credit deals with China were “lacking in transparency,” and even alleging darkly that there were “secret” agreements with Beijing.
After his election, he and his ministers took the line that trade with China was too important to let politics interfere.
China is the third largest investor in Argentina and its second largest trading partner, after neighboring Brazil. Chinese investments together with merger and acquisition operations in Argentina have risen to $8.3 billion in the last five years.
There have already been signs, however, that Macri intends to shift away from the close cooperation that Fernandez had forged with Beijing.
After Macri’s replacement of the military high command, the Argentine Defense Ministry announced last month that it is urgently seeking to obtain engine replacements and other resources to completely overhaul a fleet of A-4R Skyhawk fighters that it bought from the US in 1994. The announcement indicated that the Macri government is backing out of a deal to buy new Chinese fighters that was to be funded by loans backed by Argentine commodities.
Next week, US President Barack Obama is traveling to Argentina after his much publicized visit to Cuba. The second leg of the journey is seen by Washington in many ways to be as important as the first. It is aimed at capitalizing on the election of Macri and the broader crisis of the so-called left governments of Latin America, including those of Maduro in Venezuela, Morales in Bolivia, Rousseff in Brazil and Correa in Ecuador.
All of these capitalist governments were able to utilize a portion of the increased revenues from the commodity boom to fund limited social assistance programs, while adapting a more nationalist posture in relation to Washington, made possible by increased ties with China. With China’s economic deceleration and the slide of much of the region into recession, the continuation of these policies is becoming untenable.
In an interview with CNN’s Spanish language station, Obama this week hailed Macri’s coming to power as the advent of a “new era.” He charged that Fernandez’s policies “were always anti-American” and that her government had not “adapted to the global economy as effectively” as it could.
Macri’s “adaptation” has taken the form of mass layoffs of public employees, now reportedly totaling over 100,000, attacks on social programs and a move to rapidly pay off the so-called vulture funds, which bought up Argentina’s debt at bargain prices and then refused to settle along with other creditors, holding the country hostage for full face value. Among the principal beneficiaries will be US billionaire and prominent Republican Party contributor Paul Singer, who stands to gain a 369 percent return on his investment.
The Pentagon, meanwhile, views the political shift in Argentina through the prism of the so-called pivot to Asia, with senior military analysts warning that the drive toward military confrontation with China must be extended to repelling Beijing’s growing economic, political and military influence in Latin America.
No doubt within this context, the Argentine sinking of the Chinese fishing boat is being studied with great interest in Washington.

US Federal Reserve aligns itself closer to market demands

Nick Beams

The US Federal Reserve said Wednesday it would keep interest rates on hold and scaled backed forecasts for how rapidly it will lift them for the rest of the year. When the Fed increased its base rate in December last year it appeared to be on course for four rate rises over the next 12 months.
On this occasion, the median projection of participants in the Federal Open Market Committee for the movement of interest rates, comprised from the so-called “dot plot” predictions of individual members, saw the Fed base rate at 0.875 percent by the end of the year, compared to the present level of 0.5 percent. The projection was below earlier forecasts and implied no more than two increases this year.
While it had been expected there would be no rate rise this meeting, it was still thought the Fed could move to tighten rates in June. That may still take place, but its probability has been lowered with the timeline for further rate rises pushed out to September or even December.
While last December’s rise of 0.25 percentage points proceeded with little disturbance, in the first two months of this year markets fell sharply and there was criticism that the Fed’s move to higher rates was out of line with what was being revealed by the gyrations of the financial system.
Consequently, yesterday’s indication that four interest rate hikes for this year had been taken off the table was broadly welcomed, though there was one dissenting vote from a member of the FOMC who wanted to see an immediate rate increase.
The overall response to the decision was that the Fed, in the words of one analyst on the CNBC business channel, had moved “to where the market wants it to be.”
A financial analyst cited by the Wall Street Journal remarked: “The Fed and the market being on the same page is somewhat of a relief. It removes one of the tangles we’ve had this year.” Another commented that the announcement “gives some investors a sense of security that they didn’t have.”
In other words, the flow of cheap money, used to finance share buybacks, mergers and acquisitions and other forms of financial speculation is going to continue. The markets duly showed their appreciation as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has continued to rise in the past month on the growing belief that the Fed would pull back on interest rate rises, closed up 74 points to reach its highest level for the year so far.
This was another expression of the perverse logic which dominates the markets, namely, that bad news on the real economy is good news for finance.
The Fed statement said economic activity in the US had been expanding at a “moderate pace”, which it expected to continue, with the housing sector on the improve and labour market indicators strengthening. “However, global economic and financial developments continue to pose risks,” it continued.
The statement also noted that “business fixed investment and net exports have been soft.”
The former is significant because investment in new plant and equipment, building and construction is the key driver of the real economy. Exports are also crucial because they comprise a major component of the bottom line for major global US corporations. American firms have been experiencing tougher international market conditions because of the rise in the value of the dollar relative to the value of the currencies of their competitors in Europe, Japan and Korea.
It was not referred to in the FOMC statement, but no doubt one of the factors in the Fed’s decision to keep interest rates on hold and slow the pace of further rises was the fear that a move towards tightening would push up the value of the dollar against both the euro and the yen, worsening the position of US firms.
In their recent decisions, both the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan have pushed interest rates to negative levels and increased the supply of cheap money under their respective quantitative easing (QE) programs.
The lowering of currency values is not a stated aim of European and Japanese QE—all countries maintain an official stance against the launching of currency wars—but both the ECB and the BoJ want to see a reduction in the value of the euro and the yen. That has not taken place in the recent period, largely because of the expectation that the Fed would not raise rates on this occasion. However, had it not indicated a shift away from future rate tightening, the dollar may have resumed its rise, and impacted on the position of US firms in increasingly competitive global markets.
The official statement on the international situation was formulated in bland language with the Fed saying that future assessments would be based in part on “readings on financial and international developments.” No doubt behind closed doors, some more pointed language is being used.
The Fed would clearly like to return the US interest rate regime to something resembling what were once regarded as “normal” conditions. But it has been pushed away from that objective by the policies of other major central banks, which are moving further from that situation with expanded financial asset purchases and the introduction of negative interest rates.
In its decision on Tuesday, the Bank of Japan did not further ease its monetary policy, following its surprise decision at the end of January to introduce negative rates. But it did indicate it may go further in that direction later in the year. In his press conference, BoJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda claimed the bank’s policy was working but then gave a downbeat assessment of the future. He said that the pick-up in exports had paused while public expectations of future inflation have “recently weakened.”
As the Financial Times noted: “That language raises the chance of further easing because the BoJ pays close attention to expectations.”
Significantly, for the second time in a row, the Fed did not provide a risk assessment in its official statement. Its omission points to the fact that US and other financial authorities have no idea of where the financial system is heading. After welcoming the relatively calm in response to last December’s decision, they were totally blindsided by the market turbulence in January and February and clearly fear another round of volatility could take place at any time.
Their decisions are being made in a situation where the policies of the key central banks are on diverging paths and there is an undeclared currency war between the major economic powers, official denials notwithstanding.

16 Mar 2016

Total Energy Summer School

Do you want to join 80 fellow students as well as leading faculty from around the world for four days of stimulating learning and discussion on the energy industry?

 
 
 
 
The Total Energy Summer School (TESS) is your chance to join a dynamic community of current and future energy leaders, working with industry stakeholders and leading academics and experts.
TESS will be held in Fontainebleau, near Paris, France from 10-13 July 2016. Successful applicants will be funded by Total to join this exceptional event. What’s more, all applicants will have the opportunity to follow one key interactive session online, live-streamed from Fontainebleau during the Summer School.
THE FUTURE OF ENERGY STARTS WITH YOU
For the first time, TESS 2016 will bring together students, leading academics and industry experts from all over the world to explore future challenges and solutions for the energy industry.
This innovative programme promises four days of intensive and thought-provoking intellectual challenge and personal development. Through a stimulating mix of lectures and group activities, 80 students from around the world will work alongside academic and industry thought leaders to explore the energy of the future. This is a unique opportunity for high-ability students to:
  • Increase and share their knowledge of the energy industry
  • Interact with senior thinkers and leaders in the field
  • Develop intercultural skills, and experience working with a truly international group
  • Build a network of senior and peer contacts in the sector
WHO CAN APPLY?
Students from any discipline can apply for a place at TESS. Priority will be given to students in the final year of  their Bachelors degree or enrolled in a Masters degree programme.
FAQ
The programme is entirely in English so a good level is important to make the most of the opportunity if you are selected.
Your travel and accommodation, and other costs associated with attending TESS will be covered by Total.
YOUR APPLICATION – DEADLINE 15 APRIL 2016
To apply there are 3 short steps: complete your profile, motivation statement and a short quiz.
The deadline is Friday 15 April 2016. Please note that applications will be reviewed on an ongoing basis and places per country are limited. We strongly recommend applying as soon as possible.

Commonwealth Distance Learning Scholarships

Commonwealth Distance Learning Scholarships support candidates to study Master’s degree courses that are either offered in partnership with universities in developing countries, or delivered directly by UK institutions.
You can apply for a 2016 Commonwealth Distance Learning Scholarship for the following Master’s courses. For full details of these courses and the application process, you should contact the relevant institution.
Cardiff University
Bangor University
Open University
Queen Mary, University of London
Royal Veterinary College
SOAS, University of London
  • MSc Public Financial Management (available to citizens of Malawi and Tanzania only)
UCL Institute of Education
University of Birmingham
University of Edinburgh
University of Leicester
University of Liverpool
University of Oxford
University of Southampton
University of Stirling
  • MSc Dementia Studies (available to applicants from Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka only)
University of Strathclyde
  • MSc Finance (available to applicants from Kenya, Malawi, and Tanzania only)
  • MSc Hydrogeology (available to applicants from Botswana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe only)
University of St Andrews
University of York

Eligibility

To apply for these scholarships, you must:
  • Be a citizen of a developing Commonwealth country, refugee, or British protected person
  • Be permanently resident in a developing Commonwealth country
  • Hold a first degree of at least upper second class (2:1) standard. A lower qualification and sufficient relevant experience may be considered in certain cases

Terms and conditions

For full terms and conditions, see the Commonwealth Distance Learning Scholarships 2016 prospectus

How to apply

You must make your application using the CSC’s Electronic Application System (EAS). Click here for full information on how to use the EAS, including detailed guides.
Before applying, you must check with your UK university for their specific advice and rules for applying. You will be required to complete a university application form in addition to your EAS application form.
All applications must be submitted by 23:59 (BST) on 3 May 2016.

Enquiries?

All enquiries about these scholarships should be directed to the university to which you wish to apply.
Please note that the CSC does not charge candidates to apply for any of its scholarships or fellowships through its Electronic Application System (EAS), and it does not charge organisations to nominate candidates.

Your Commonwealth - through your lens!

Join us in celebrating the diversity of the Commonwealth’s 53 countries and its people!

We want to showcase and celebrate the beauty and individuality exhibited by each person living in the Commonwealth. We hope this competition inspires people throughout the 53 member countries of the Commonwealth to use their photography skills to engage with this year's theme of 'An Inclusive Commonwealth'. 
The competition is open to Commonwealth citizens of all ages, and photographs must have been taken in a Commonwealth country. The competition will run from 14 March until 25 April 2016.
For more details, please read Rules of Entry and Terms and Conditions

'An Inclusive Commonwealth'

The Commonwealth Theme for 2016 celebrates the diversity of the Commonwealth, which is made up of more than two billion people. Every one of them is different, and each of them has something unique to offer. The Commonwealth builds a better world by including and respecting everybody, and we hope this year's Commonwealth Photography Competition will help us celebrate the richness and diversity of all people living in the Commonwealth.

Awards

The winning photographs will form part of an exhibition at the Commonwealth Secretariat's headquarters in London throughout 2016. These photographs will also feature in a new Commonwealth Calendar for 2017 and be published and promoted on the Commonwealth's website and social media accounts. Each featured finalist will receive a copy of the calendar, in addition to a cash prize.
The decision of the judges is final. No correspondence will be entered into. All winners will be notified by email on/by 4 May 2016. 
Commonwealth Photographer of the Year 2016
The photographer with the picture judged by a panel of judges to be the best overall will receive a cash prize of £1,000 (GBP). 
Regional Awards
The best photographer from Africa, Asia, Caribbean and the Americas, Europe, and the Pacific will each receive a cash prize of £500 (GBP).
Highly Commended Award
The photographer with the entry which receives the most ‘likes’ on Instagram will receive £100 (GBP). 

Social media

View and like competition entries on Instagram
Follow us on Twitter
Like us on Facebook
Download and print the Competition poster to help spread the word. 
Before entering the Competition, please ensure you have read, and agree to, the Terms and Conditions
Enter the Competition

IREX Photo Contest

Overview
Welcome to IREX’s 5th annual Photo Contest! Enter now for a chance to win cash prizes totaling over $1,000. We encourage you to submit your best images of scenes and individuals around the world that demonstrate one or more of four theme categories:
1. Empowering Youth – Photos should demonstrate how youth, as active community leaders and informed citizens, represent opportunity for the future and positive change.
2. Cultivating Leaders – Photos should explore how diverse leaders strive to serve others and drive change at every level of society.
3. Strengthening Institutions – Photos should demonstrate how institutions build just, prosperous societies through community engagement, accountability, and responsive governance.
4. Extending Access to Quality Education and Information – Photos should explore how independent media, quality education, and new technologies increase access to information and contribute to civic engagement in communities.
Entry is free and open to all. Please review the contest rules before submitting.

Deadline: Monday, April 25, 11:59PM EDT.

Please connect with us to help us select the People’s Choice winner on Facebook and to find out if you are a winner.

Prizes

There are five prizes total. A panel of international development and photography experts will choose the winners for the Best of Category prizes $250, four). The People’s Choice prize will be decided by IREX’s fans on Facebook. IREX may also select up to five honorable mention finalists. Winners will be announced on Monday, May 9.

Brief Contest Rules

• Entries are limited to 5 photos per person.
• Entrants may only win one prize.
• All entries must be in digital format and at the highest resolution possible in a .jpeg, .jpg, or .png format. Files submitted may not be larger than 10 megabytes.
• All entrants must hold exclusive rights to the photographs they submit and by entering are claiming such ownership.
• By entering the Contest, all entrants grant an irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide non-exclusive license to IREX, to reproduce, distribute, display and create derivative works of the entries. For more information on liability, please see the complete contest rules.