13 Oct 2017

Underground in Raqqa

Patrick Cockburn

Shortly before the siege of Raqqa began in June, Islamic State officials arrested Hammad al-Sajer for skipping afternoon prayers. Hammad, who is 29, made a living from his motorbike: he carried people and packages, charging less than the local taxis. IS had arrested him a number of times before – mostly for smoking cigarettes, which were banned under IS rule – but he had always been released after paying a fine or being lashed. Attendance at prayers was compulsory and he had missed the Asr, the afternoon prayer, because a passenger had made him wait while he went into his house to get money for his fare after a trip to Raqqa’s old city. Hammad expected to be fined or lashed, but this time he was sentenced to a month in prison. Except it turned out not to be prison. On his first morning, ‘militants blindfolded us and took us in a vehicle to a place that seemed to be inside the city because it took no more than ten minutes to get there.’
Hammad and the other prisoners, all of them local men, were taken to an empty house. In one of the rooms there was a hole in the floor. Rough steps led down about sixty feet before the tunnel flattened out into a corridor, which was connected to a labyrinth of other tunnels. A fellow prisoner, Adnan, told Hammad that IS had started work on what was effectively a subterranean network a year and a half earlier. In other words, construction began in 2015, after IS’s spectacular run of victories ended and it started its long retreat in the face of Kurdish offensives backed by coalition firepower. To escape the aerial bombardment, IS decided to disappear underground, digging immense tunnel complexes underneath its two biggest urban centres, Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, to help it defend itself when the final assaults came.
Few people in Raqqa knew the extent of the excavations going on beneath their feet – not even Hammad, who rode his motorbike around the city every day. The entrances were always in districts from which local inhabitants had fled or been evicted. ‘When we got into the tunnels we were amazed,’ Hammad remembers. ‘It was as if an entire city had been built underground.’ IS must have needed an army of workers to build it – but then there were large numbers of prisoners and jobless labourers to draw on. The prisoners were told as little as possible about what they were doing: anyone who asked a lot of questions was punished. Hammad saw rooms with reinforced concrete walls and ceilings, and what looked like boxes of ammunition piled up on the floor. When he asked about the boxes, he says, one of the guards ‘hit me on my back with a piece of cable and said: “Don’t poke your nose into things. This is not your business. Do your job and keep quiet.”’ The foreign fighters on duty were silent and unapproachable, but some of the guards were locals and occasionally talked to the diggers during the ten-hour working day. ‘Sometimes they joked with us because they were bored and tired,’ he says. One day he asked one of them what all this hard work was for. ‘This great construction will help the lions of the caliphate to escape,’ he said (the ‘lions’ were the IS emirs and commanders). ‘They have a message to deliver to people and they should not die too soon.’
IS officials used prisoners to work on the tunnels when they could, but they also hired labourers. One of these was Khalaf Ali. When IS seized the city in 2014, he was selling cigarettes in the street. ‘I was picked up by some militants who took me to a commander,’ he says. ‘They did not take me to prison, but they confiscated my boxes of cigarettes and said that if I sold cigarettes again, they would put me in prison and I would get thirty lashes.’ He started spending his days in a local square with other unemployed men; they would wait for a car or truck to stop and offer them odd jobs – moving furniture, mending broken doors or windows. In April 2016, Khalaf was sitting in the square with the others when an IS security man said he wanted to talk to them. At first they were nervous, but the official said they could have work if they registered their names at an IS office. When they showed up at 7 a.m. the following day, they were told they had to agree to certain conditions: ‘We must not talk about what we were doing in public as it was one of the caliphate’s secrets and, if we violated this condition, they would kill us as traitors.’ They were blindfolded and driven a short distance to an empty house, where the blindfolds were removed. It wasn’t the house Hammad had first been taken to: here, there were no stairs, just a sloping tunnel about 150 feet long, which took them around sixty feet underground.
‘We entered an area that looked like a residential complex,’ Khalaf remembers. ‘There were many rooms: some under construction, others finished, with concrete walls.’ The labourers used trolleys to move the excavated soil to a certain point in the tunnel, where other men, whom he didn’t know, took charge of moving it up to the surface to be dispersed. The various teams of workers were forbidden to talk to one another. Khalaf’s team was responsible for moving furniture, including sofas and beds, to completed rooms. ‘There was electricity, though not in every room, and the corridor had lights.’ As the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) advanced towards Raqqa and the American bombardment intensified, IS doubled wages from $4 to $8 a day, though money was deducted if the IS officials were dissatisfied with the quality of the work. Once Khalaf asked an IS militant who had first had the idea of building these underground complexes. He was told that it was ‘our brothers in faith’: ‘in Afghanistan,’ the militant said, ‘many attacks were repelled and failed because of the tunnels.’
Hammad and Khalaf, who didn’t know each other, escaped separately from Raqqa during the first weeks of the siege. Hammad fled in the early morning with a group of men, moving from house to house whenever there was a break in the fighting. They took advantage of a tactical retreat by IS fighters to run towards the Kurdish-led forces, stopping every ten minutes to hide behind walls and the wreckage of houses until they reached safety. The SDF questioned them to make sure that they weren’t IS infiltrators, and then took them to a camp for displaced people at Ain al-Issa, north of Raqqa. Khalaf’s journey out of Raqqa was even riskier: after a number of people in his neighbourhood were killed, he and thirty others decided to try to escape from the city guided by SDF radio broadcasts. Even so, Khalaf says, they were sometimes trapped inside a house by the fighting for several days. ‘Finally we fled, but we lost some of our friends,’ he says. ‘We saw their bodies lying there as we ran, but everybody was afraid of snipers so we couldn’t go back for them.’
The siege of Raqqa, a small city on the Euphrates with a population before the war of less than 300,000, has now been going on for four months. IS fanaticism is one reason it hasn’t fallen sooner, but that alone wouldn’t be enough to stop the SDF, with the might of American airpower behind it. The network of tunnels connecting up bunkers, hideouts and hidden escape routes is the key to the resistance. IS fighters are able to move swiftly underground, shifting positions before they can be detected and eliminated by bombing or shellfire. As in Mosul, the only way for the attackers to advance without sustaining heavy losses has been to call in coalition airstrikes so intense that much of the city has already been destroyed. The Kurdish general commanding the SDF, Mazlum Kobane, was quoted on 26 September as saying that his forces now hold 75 per cent of Raqqa, but there are still some 700 IS fighters and 1500 pro-IS militiamen in the city centre. They can probably hold out for weeks or even months, using the same skills in urban warfare that IS demonstrated during the siege of Mosul. A combination of snipers, suicide bombers, mortar teams, mines and booby traps slow down and inflict damage on the enemy. For IS, eventual defeat is inevitable, but they remain dangerous: last month a group of IS fighters in SDF uniforms killed 28 SDF men in a surprise attack.
Still, tactical agility won’t be enough to save the caliphate, which is now being overwhelmed on multiple fronts. Islamic State’s great strength came from the way it combined religious cult and war machine; its weakness was that it saw the whole world as its enemy, which meant that it would always be outnumbered and outgunned. Without allies and dealing only in violence, it led an unlikely alliance of states normally hostile to one another to find common cause against it, and engage in a degree of reluctant co-operation. As IS comes close to losing its power, old rivalries and divisions are beginning to re-emerge – but in a political landscape significantly reshaped by the war with IS.
A decision IS took three years ago – after its columns had won speedy victories over the Iraqi and Syrian armies and captured much of eastern Syria and western Iraq – helped to set the stage for the next phase of the conflict: instead of keeping up the pressure on the demoralised forces of the central governments in Baghdad and Damascus, IS diverted its forces to make war on the Kurds in both Iraq and Syria. In August 2014, it launched a surprise attack on the Iraqi Kurds which almost reached their capital, Erbil, and in September it started a prolonged assault on the Syrian Kurdish city of Kobani. Quite why IS did this remains a mystery: it’s possible that it was acting with the encouragement of Turkey, which was alarmed by the growing strength of the once marginalised Syrian Kurds. Whatever the explanation, the Kurds in both Syria and Iraq unexpectedly found themselves, much to their political benefit, in the front line of an international campaign against IS. The Peshmerga in Iraq and the People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Syria were suddenly awarded support from the most powerful air force in the world. Turkey had been prepared to see Kobani fall to IS, but the city was saved by intense US airstrikes, though 70 per cent of its buildings were left in ruins. The US had been desperately seeking reliable ground troops in Syria and found them in the YPG, which took control of much of the southern side of the Syrian-Turkish border. In Iraq, the Kurds used the defeat of the Iraqi army in northern Iraq at the time of the fall of Mosul to seize the ‘disputed territories’ outside the boundaries of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), thereby expanding the Kurdish-controlled area by 40 per cent.
***
Kurdish leaders in Syria and Iraq have long wondered, mostly in private, whether they would be able to retain their political and military gains once IS was on the road to defeat. Early last year, Muhammad Haji Mahmud, a senior Peshmerga commander, told me that the war with IS had brought great benefits to the Iraqi Kurds: ‘We have become a regular army, rather than a guerrilla force; are supported by US and European air power; can buy weapons openly; and are praised internationally for fighting terrorism.’ His big fear was that the Kurds wouldn’t ‘have the same value internationally’ once Mosul was liberated and IS defeated. Nor did he think they would have the strength to hold onto the disputed territories without international support. In Syria, too, Kurdish leaders worry that they are over-extended and too reliant on the Americans, who may stop supporting them diplomatically and militarily once Raqqa and the last IS strongholds have fallen. Turkish intervention is one threat; another is the Syrian army, which – with Russian air cover – has surrounded IS at Deir Ezzor and will now want to advance to take the oilfields further east. Developments in Iraq and Syria often mirror each other: the Syrian army captured East Aleppo in December 2016 and the Iraqi army took Mosul seven months later. The trend in both Iraq and Syria has been for the military power of the central government to bounce back – which poses a mounting threat to Kurdish separatism.
Now that the outcome of the war with IS is no longer really an issue, the conflict in the region is turning towards confrontation over the powers, and even the existence, of the two Kurdish quasi-states: the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq, and what the Syrian Kurds call Rojava, in the north-east corner of Syria. In 2012, following the uprisings of the Arab Spring, the Syrian army withdrew from Kurdish cities and towns in the area, and what to all intents and purposes is the Syrian branch of the Kurdistan Workers Party, the PKK, which had been fighting a guerrilla war in Turkey since 1984, took over. As a US military ally against IS from 2014, the Syrian Kurds field an army about 50,000 strong. Their fighters are now moving into eastern Syria, where they will confront advancing troops of the Syrian army. A collision is probable and its outcome uncertain, but for the Kurds it is fraught with danger, since they can’t know what American policy towards them will be under Trump.
However, the first real post-IS crisis for the Kurds has come not in Syria but Iraq. The non-binding referendum on independence for the Iraqi Kurds held on 25 September was opposed by the UN, US, UK, France and Germany as well as by regional powers including Turkey, Iran and Iraq. The last three promised retaliation against the KRG if the vote was held, a threat that its president, Masoud Barzani, interpreted as a bluff. It turned out to be a very real threat and within days of the referendum, Baghdad had closed Iraqi airspace to international flights out of Erbil and Sulaimaniyah. The Iraqi government held joint military manoeuvres with Turkey and Iran and is threatening to take control of the KRG’s borders. The Kurds’ overwhelming vote for their own independent state has had the effect of highlighting the scale of the obstacles to their self-determination. Iran, Turkey and the Iraqi government are now united as never before and in a position to enforce a blockade on the KRG; there is a limit to what the Kurds can do by way of retaliation.
‘The Kurdish leadership in Iraq doesn’t really have any military or diplomatic options,’ says Omar Sheikhmous, a veteran Kurdish leader who believes the KRG has badly overplayed its hand. Barzani’s decision to hold a referendum – driven primarily by intra-Kurdish political divisions – may come to seem a serious miscalculation. Before the poll, Barzani rejected compromise proposals from the US and its European allies while Kurdish leaders underestimated the likelihood of Turkey and Iran following through on threats that had proved hollow in the past. Sheikhmous had warned me before the vote that the Kurdish leadership in Iraq could be about to ‘throw away all they had won over the previous twenty or thirty years’. He compared the referendum with other classic blunders in Iraqi history, such as Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, when he entirely misjudged how other powers would respond. KRG leaders wrongly believed that Turkey and Iran wouldn’t want to jeopardise their sizeable economic interests in Iraqi Kurdistan by objecting to the vote. But neither Turkey nor Iran can countenance the prospect of independence for Iraqi Kurds since it would inflame their own Kurdish minorities. Turkey’s reaction was especially hostile: the Kurds, Erdoğan said, ‘are not forming an independent state, they are opening a wound in the region to twist a knife in’. Barzani had cultivated good relations with Erdoğan, who now says that the relationship is finished: the KRG, ‘to which we provided all support, took steps against us, it will pay the price’. In future, he says, Turkey will deal only with the Iraqi government. Iraqi Kurds are hoping the US will once again come to their rescue by mediating between them and their opponents: they say the roads into Kurdistan are still open and that nothing has yet changed on the ground. The KRG may survive its present isolation but the risk is growing that the Kurdish quasi-states will go the same way as the caliphate.

Germany: Public prosecutor drops investigation into NSA spying

Justus Leicht & Peter Schwarz 

The massive spying operation on German citizens and millions of innocent people carried out by US and British intelligence agencies, together with the German Federal Intelligence Service (BND), will have no legal consequences. The Federal Prosecutor General dropped the investigation last week.
The surveillance practices of the secret services were disclosed four years ago by former CIA employee Edward Snowden and was headline news in Germany for months. Now the Federal Prosecutor General has justified the end of the investigation in a statement of only two paragraphs.
It states that his own investigations, as well as those conducted by a parliamentary committee of enquiry into the activities of the National Security Agency (NSA), “have provided no reliable evidence for activities aimed against the Federal Republic of Germany by an intelligence agency (§ 99 of the penal code) or any other criminal offences.” There was no evidence that “US or UK intelligence agencies systematically and massively monitored German telecommunications and Internet traffic.”
This is an obvious lie. The huge amount of data made public by Edward Snowden, plus additional research by journalists and the parliamentary committee of enquiry launched in March 2014, uncovered a wealth of material documenting illegal and massive surveillance. And this despite the fact that the work of the parliamentary committee was hampered by censored and falsified files, missing statements and numerous other forms of harassment, including the spying on the committee itself.
It has been substantiated that the NSA, over a period of 10 years, stored more than 10 million Internet data units and 20 million—on some days up to 60 million—phone calls a day from Germany during its Eikonal operation. Along with spying on millions of innocent citizens, the collected data was used for economic espionage and the monitoring of high-ranking European politicians.
However, the NSA did not have to use secrecy or force to gain access to the German telecommunications networks. This access was provided by Germany’s foreign secret service, the BND, which tapped phone lines, passed the data onto the NSA monitoring centre in Bad Aibling and worked closely with the US intelligence agencies in evaluating the data.
Even the approximately 800,000 selectors (IP addresses, email addresses, telephone numbers, etc.) examined by the BND over a period of 10 years and updated several times a day originated from the NSA. The data included information over high-ranking officials from the French government and the European Commission, as well as companies such as EADS (Airbus). Nevertheless, the BND passed the material onto its American partner.
According to a report in Zeit Online in May 2015, the BND captured 6.6 billion metadata a month and passed on up to 1.3 billion to the NSA. One hand washed the other. The BND, with the help of the NSA, was able to circumvent the constitutionally protected secrecy of telecommunications. In exchange, the US intelligence services gained valuable data. In October last year the Federal Constitutional Court effectively gave its blessing to this practice by deciding that the German government did not have to hand over the selector lists to the parliamentary committee of enquiry.
The German government not only knew about the illegal espionage activities of the NSA and BND, it supported them. In April 2015, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung cited documents submitted to the parliamentary committee of enquiry confirming that the German chancellor’s office knew that the NSA intended to spy on the populations of Germany and Europe, and let it happen. The Bildnewspaper quoted one source: “They said, ‘We need information from the Americans, that’s how it goes, we do not want to endanger our cooperation.’”
It is against this background that one has to judge the dropping of all charges by the Prosecutor General. There is no genuine separation of powers at the highest level of the German judiciary. The Prosecutor General himself states on his official web site: “The Federal Prosecutor General at the Federal Court of Justice is not part of the judiciary. Organisationally, he belongs to the executive.” He is a “political official” who must fulfil his tasks in accordance with the views and objectives of the federal government and can be placed in temporary retirement at any time without further explanation.
This means that, in this case, the German government, which controls both the secret services and the Prosecutor General’s office, is investigating itself. There is no democratic control. The secret services which, in terms of organisation and personnel, have their roots in the corresponding bodies of the Nazi Third Reich, represent a state within the state. Even parliamentary committees only receive access to material which the executive permits.
The Prosecutor General does not regard its duty to be the investigation of legal and constitutional violations by the secret services, but rather to cover up for them. This has already been demonstrated during the trial in Munich of the neo-Nazi terror gang, the National Socialist Underground (NSU), in which the Prosecutor General is leading the prosecution.
During the four-and-a-half year trial, all sorts of minor details relating to the personal life of the main defendant, Beate Zschäpe, have been thoroughly investigated. But all attempts by joint plaintiffs to shed light on the role played by intelligence service agents and informers and the police in the activities of the NSU were ruled as inadmissible by the Prosecutor General.
Although it is now clear that more than two dozen informers and undercover agents were operating in the environment of the NSU, in its concluding plea the prosecutor’s office dismissed accusations that such agents had played an active role in the construction and cover-up of the NSU as “unfounded speculation by so-called experts” and “will o’ the wisp” fantasies.
The NSA-BND scandal has already had consequences for the federal government and the German parliament. They have now created a legal basis for what were up to now illegal espionage operations. In June and October 2016, they expanded the powers of the BND. It is now permitted retrieve all data from telecommunications networks with international traffic, also inside Germany.
The web site Netzpolitik.org commented: “The most important consequence is that all the illegal practices of the BND, which have come to light through the work of the parliamentary committee, have been subsequently legalized. The BND now has many more opportunities and money to expand its mass monitoring.”
The secret services, which hitherto shunned publicity, now feel emboldened to undertake a public relations campaign. Last week the heads of the BND, the Federal Agency for the Protection of the Constitution (domestic security, BfV) and the Military Intelligence Service (MAD) jointly addressed a public meeting of the German parliamentary control board. After answering some questions formulated in advance, they all demanded more powers.
Their catalogue of demands includes easier access to messenger services such as WhatsApp or Telegram, the capacity to “hack back” (i.e., cyber attacks), etc. BfV chief Hans-Georg Maaßen also requested access to IP addresses from people who watched videos from certain foreign servers. BND President Bruno Kahl and his MAD colleague Christof Gramm reported a job growth of 10 percent in their agencies.
Echoing Maaßen, Kahl complained about the lack of legal cover for certain IT operations, which are “technically possible”: “When the reconnaissance is completed to the point where hostile structures and causes are identifiable, it would make sense to shut down the source of the attack.” In addition, the BND still needed judicial approval to deploy trojans to conduct telecommunication monitoring and online searches, a power recently approved for the police.
The massive tooling up of the secret services has long since shattered the framework of democratic norms and legality and increasingly assumes the form of an authoritarian police state. This is an international phenomenon that can be observed in all developed capitalist countries—in the US, France and, most recently, Spain. It can only be understood as the reaction of ruling elites to the profound crisis of capitalist society. The ruling class is preparing to forcibly suppress all social and political opposition.

UK government refuses funds for unsafe tower blocks post-Grenfell

Robert Stevens

Thousands of people nationally are living in buildings that are unsafe, in both the public and private sector, due to the criminal inaction of local and central government.
Following the Grenfell Tower fire, it was revealed that in England alone at least 228 high-rise buildings, over 18 metres in height, were potential death traps. They all have the same or similar aluminium composite material (ACM) cladding that was a central factor in a small kitchen blaze in a fourth floor flat that engulfed the entire 24-storey building.
This is only the tip of the iceberg, with an estimated 30,000 buildings—of all types and sizes—throughout the UK possibly having similar cladding.
After the fire, the Conservative government was forced to instruct councils and housing associations to compile lists of buildings that were deemed unsafe. The government claimed that money would be forthcoming for cash-strapped councils—whose budgets have been slashed, in some cases by 50 percent over the last decade—to complete remedial work.
This was a lie. Councils are faced with bills that run into the tens of millions of pounds to remove and replace flammable cladding. In addition, no money has been made available to help fund the installation of sprinkler systems, despite fire brigades insisting they are essential to prevent the spread of fires in tower blocks.
Even a tower block adjacent to Grenfell Tower has been revealed as unsafe. An investigation by the LBC Radio station, in which Chartered Surveyor and fire safety expert Arnold Tarling inspected the building, found “insecure rubbish chutes running all the way up the building; fire escapes with doors so heavy and stiff, they were inaccessible to disabled people; and fire doors that are flammable.”
According to the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG), 31 local authorities have demanded funding from the government for carrying out remedial work. A Guardian article reported that the DCLG is in talks with just six authorities while “others had been invited to provide further information about how the work they wished to undertake was essential.”
In the city of Salford, north west England, the Labour-run council has borrowed £25 million to fund the removal of flammable cladding from nine tower blocks that tests found had “no flame retardant properties.” The council has contacted the government regarding providing funding for the work without success.
Thousands of high-rise blocks in the UK do not have sprinkler systems installed, as fitting them has only been legally required since 2007, and only then in new-build high-rises over 30 metres tall, in England. The legislation did not apply to older blocks. It is estimated that just 2 percent of tower blocks in England have sprinkler systems.
Following Grenfell, fire brigades nationally have insisted that retroactively fitting sprinklers systems in all high-rises was necessary to prevent future catastrophes. Last month, Paul Atkins, a fire safety expert who will present testimony at the Grenfell Inquiry, told the BBC, “If they’d [the Grenfell residents] had a sprinkler system the fire would have been deluged before it got to the cladding. … To date no-one has ever died in a fire with a sprinkler system in the household, so the proof’s in the pudding. You’ve got a 99 percent chance of surviving.”
According to Atkins, installing a sprinkler system in Grenfell Tower would have cost between £500,000 and £700,000.
According to the Guardian, at least four councils—Westminster, Croydon and Wandsworth in London and Nottingham in the east Midlands—have been refused central government money to fund sprinkler systems. Nottingham council proposed to install sprinklers in 13 towers at a cost of £6.2 million. Demonstrating the criminal disregard of the ruling elite for the safety of thousands of social housing residents, they were told bluntly by Housing Minister Alok Sharma that money would not be forthcoming as “The fire safety measures you outline are additional rather than essential.”
Post-Grenfell, the government instructed local authorities and housing associations to carry out surveys on the safety of buildings under their control, but private sector owners of high-rises were not compelled to do so. Private owners of developments less than 18 metres tall are exempt from any responsibility.
In June, the DCLG said it was merely “offering private owners of residential buildings [in England only] an opportunity to test cladding on blocks over 18 meters high …” A letter sent to private owners stated, “If you wish to take up this offer, then you will need to submit samples for testing” and “Cut out two samples of at least 250x250mm in size from each location sampled.” Such samples were then to be sent to a testing centre in a jiffy bag!
All political parties are implicated.
Scotland is run by a Scottish National Party (SNP) administration, and for decades before that by Labour Party local authorities.
Last month, it emerged that combustible cladding had been installed on many private high-rise blocks in the city of Glasgow, with residents living there not informed.
At first 57 blocks were identified as unsafe, before this figure was reduced to 19 without explanation. It was only at the end of September that residents in the 19 blocks were even informed that they were living in buildings with combustible cladding.
SNP-run Glasgow City Council has refused to publicly identify either the original 57 blocks or the 19. However, last week the Evening Times reported that three of the privately-owned blocks are located at Glasgow Harbour. Two of the towers contain 273sqm of cladding and another smaller block, 37sqm.
In 2005, following the 1999 Irvine Tower fire, regulations were passed by the Scottish government, then under Labour control determining that all materials used for “external cladding and associated cavities” were required to be non-combustible and the entire system should inhibit the spread of fire. However, this condition was not imposed on tower blocks built and clad prior to that date—meaning that the safety of many tenants and property owners in social housing and privately-owned blocks remain threatened.
In Slough, the council has been forced to take over the freehold of privately-owned Nova House—at an unknown cost to the public purse—after it failed two safety tests. The block houses 200 residents and has combustible ACM cladding. It is estimated that the cost of making the building safe is £1 million with the council stating that the previous private owner, Ground Rents Estates 5 Limited, did not have “the capacity to do what is needed …”
Since September 27, a fire engine has been permanently stationed—at the council’s expense—in the car park next to the block.
As with Grenfell Tower, it appears that cost cutting was involved in the cladding process, as the original cladding intended for the building that would have passed safety checks was not used.
Nearly four months since the Grenfell Tower fire, and a month since the government inquiry into the inferno began, not a single person has been charged let alone arrested for a crime in which scores perished.
The Metropolitan Police have not said a word about its “criminal investigation” since September 19 when it said officers would continue working in the tower into the New Year and only open another police operation into Grenfell when that was finished.
Hundreds of survivors of the fire remain in temporary accommodation, with just 10 households out of 203 permanently rehoused.

Trump threatens to jettison NAFTA, as trade disputes intensify

Roger Jordan & Keith Jones

With Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau standing at his side, US President Donald Trump repeated Wednesday his threat to pull the US out of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
Following a brief White House meeting with Trudeau, that was overshadowed by escalating Canada-US trade tensions, Trump said that if the US-initiated talks to “modernize” NAFTA failed, his administration would scuttle the 23 year-old trade pact. “It’s possible we won’t be able to make a deal,” said Trump, adding “I think Justin (Trudeau) understands this, if we can’t make a deal, it will be terminated and that will be fine.”
Trudeau, whose Liberal government has bent over backwards to develop a closer working relationship with the Trump administration in the hopes of maintaining Canadian big businesses’ privileged access to the US market, subsequently acknowledged that NAFTA is perilously close to collapse. “We’re ready for anything,” he told a press conference later Wednesday.
Whether the Canada-US-Mexico trade agreement is ultimately refashioned or unravels, the negotiations over NAFTA 2.0 have already demonstrated that the world capitalist crisis that exploded in 2008 has entered a new stage, marked by a turn to “beggar thy neighbor” economic nationalist and protectionist policies, which as in the 1930s are fueling explosive inter-imperialist and great-power rivalries.
The Trump administration, in keeping with its reactionary “America First” agenda, is seeking to reorganize NAFTA to make it a more explicitly North American protectionist economic bloc, firmly under Washington’s domination. In the name of “fair trade,” US negotiators are demanding massive concessions from Mexico, including the elimination of its $50 billion-plus trade surplus with the US. Canada, as exemplified by the recent US Commerce Department decision imposing countervailing and dumping tariffs of 300 percent on Bombardier C-Series jets, is also facing a host of unpalatable demands.
But Trump’s chief target is America’s main global economic rivals—China, Germany, and to a lesser extent, Japan. US negotiators are very much approaching the NAFTA negotiations from the standpoint of making it a better platform from which to vie for markets, resources and profits around the world. In the midst of the NAFTA talks, Washington has launched a series of trade actions expressly targeting Germany and China, including ordering an investigation into whether steel and aluminum imports are imperiling US “national security.”
This aggressive drive goes hand in hand with the further escalation of the US military-strategic offensives in the Middle East and against Russia and China, including in recent weeks repeated threats on the part of Trump and US Defense Secretary James Mattis to “annihilate” North Korea, a close ally of Beijing.
Canada has dramatically expanded its military-security partnership with the US over the past quarter century, as Washington has sought to offset the erosion of American global economic predominance through a series of ruinous wars. This is because Canada’s imperialist elite calculates that it can best assert its own increasingly important global interests in alliance with Washington and Wall Street.
To virtual unanimous applause from the Canadian media and political establishment, Trudeau has sought to demonstrate to Trump and his cabinet of generals and billionaire cronies that Canada is the America’s staunchest ally. This has included steps to further align Canada’s military and security policies with those of Washington, by announcing a 70 percent hike in military spending by 2026 and agreeing to a US request to “modernize” NORAD (the North American Aerospace Command).
Significantly, Trudeau did not rule out striking a bilateral trade pact with Washington should the NAFTA talks fail, after Trump publicly raised the possibility when he appeared with the Canadian prime minister at the conclusion of their meeting.
Although the issue has been all blacked out in press coverage of their talks, Trump hinted the two countries would deepen their security-military cooperation as he went into his meeting with Trudeau. The US President, who last week likened a dinner with high-ranking military officers as the “calm before the storm,” remarked that in addition to defense, “I guess we’ll also be discussing mutual offense, which people don’t mention too often.”

Throwing Mexico under the bus

The suggestion of a bilateral Canada-US trade pact prompted Arturo Sarukhan, Mexico’s former ambassador to the US, to bluntly state, “Some of us in Mexico think that on several occasions our Canadian friends have come close to throwing us under the bus.”
NAFTA’s demise would accelerate the rise of protectionism around the world, further fueling tensions between the major powers and paving the way to global trade war and military conflicts.
However, NAFTA’s fate is by no means sealed. Substantial sections of the corporate elite in both the United States and Canada want to retain it, seeing it as the best means to continue to ratchet up the exploitation of the working class and compete on the global stage with their main rivals. Over 300 US state and local chambers of commerce addressed an appeal to Trump Monday, urging him not to withdraw from NAFTA.
Thomas Donohue, head of the US Chamber of Commerce, sharply criticized the negotiating tactics being pursued by Trump administration officials in the talks, describing some of the US demands as “poison pills” designed to scuttle any deal.
One of these proposals would grant American companies sweeping access to government procurement contracts in Mexico and Canada, while making any US procurement contracts won by Canadian and Mexican firms conditional on US companies being awarded similar-sized procurement contracts in the home country of the company involved.
US officials also want a hike in the percentage of cars and other vehicles that must be produced in a NAFTA country to qualify for tariff-free access, from the current level of 62.5 percent to 85 percent. In addition, 50 percent of a vehicle would have to be produced in the US.
Wilbur Ross, Trump’s Commerce Secretary, acknowledged the hard line adopted by Washington in comments this week, suggesting that government procurement and auto content demands were nonnegotiable. Said Ross, “I think that you will find we will get increased percentages in the rules of origins and I think you’ll find the car companies will adapt themselves to it.”
US negotiators are also expected to demand a so-called sunset clause that would cause NAFTA to expire after five years if all three countries do not agree that it continue, an idea strongly attacked by business groups for the uncertainty it would create for investors.
Washington’s aggressive drive to bolster US big business at Canada’s expense constitutes a huge crisis for the Canadian bourgeoisie, given the importance of its strategic partnership with Washington and dependence on the US market. Fully three-quarters of Canada’s exports go to the US.
Not only are Washington and Ottawa at loggerheads over NAFTA and the trade action that Boeing, America’s largest export earner, initiated against Bombardier. Following on from the actions taken by the previous Obama administration, the US Commerce Dept. has imposed tariffs of more than 20 percent on Canada’s softwood lumber producers.
At their Wednesday meeting, Trudeau told Trump that in retaliation for the tariffs on Bombardier, Canada is scrapping a planned purchase of Boeing Super Hornet fighter jets and will instead buy used FA-18 fighters from Australia. Provincial governments aligned with Trudeau, including Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals in Ontario, have threatened to impose “buy Ontario” provisions in retaliation for any US measures against Canada.
While in Washington, Trudeau held a meeting with the House Ways and Means Committee, hoping to secure support of key US Congressmen for maintaining NAFTA and, in the event that proves impossible, for a bilateral trade deal. According to reports of the gathering, committee members urged Trudeau to lift restrictions on dairy and poultry imports, and the prime minister pushed back by citing US government programs to support agriculture.
Divisions between Washington and Mexico City are even more pronounced. Mexican officials, according to media reports, increasingly appear to be accepting the likelihood that they will be expelled from NAFTA. “Mexico is much bigger than NAFTA. We have to be prepared for the different scenarios that could come out of this negotiation,” Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray Caso told the Mexican Senate Tuesday.
NAFTA has been used by US and Canadian big business, and their junior partners in Mexico, to pit workers against each other in a race to the bottom.
The unions have been complicit in this, systematically suppressing the class struggle and imposing wage and benefit cuts and speed-up in the name of saving “American” or Canadian jobs.”
Now with the commercial struggle intensifying, the pro-capitalist unions are lining up behind their respective governments and ruling elites to support trade measures aimed at pushing more of the burden of the economic crisis onto “foreign” workers.
The AFL-CIO, the United Steelworkers, and Canada’s Unifor have all embraced Trump’s call for “fair trade” and are tirelessly peddling the fraudulent claim that Trudeau and Trump, notorious for his anti-Mexican chauvinism, can be pressured into reaching a deal that will advance workers’ interests.
Unifor has taken this to its logical conclusion in the current strike by 2,800 GM CAMI workers in Ontario. While refusing to fight for any of the workers’ just demands for an end to two-tier wages and other concessions, it is appealing to the corporate giant to guarantee Mexican workers be laid off first in the event of a downturn.
Whether a compromise is reached or the trade pact collapses, the deepening crisis of NAFTA exemplifies the ever-widening breakdown of world capitalism and underscores the urgency of workers across North America adopting a socialist internationalist strategy. Workers—Canadian, Mexican and American—must assert their common class interests in opposition to all sections of big business, their political hirelings and their agenda of pushing the brunt of the crisis onto working people through job and wage cuts, the dismantling of public services, and war.
This requires making the objective unity of workers in all three countries a conscious strategy, the unification of their struggles, and the fight for workers’ government in Ottawa, Washington and Mexico City that would use North American economic integration to raise the economic well-being and cultural level of the population, not maximize profit for a tiny, rapacious elite.

Temporary shutdown of GM Detroit-Hamtramck plant signals new threat to auto jobs

Shannon Jones

Faced with declining sales of passenger cars General Motors said this week that it will close its Detroit-Hamtramck assembly plant for six weeks starting in mid- November. Starting October 20, the plant will be on a reduced work schedule, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
When the plant reopens in January the auto company said it plans a 20 percent production cut at the facility, a move that may result in some 200 layoffs. The report did not say if the job cuts would be permanent.
In March, GM eliminated the second shift at the Detroit-Hamtramck plant, resulting in the elimination of over 1,000 jobs. The United Auto Workers did not oppose the job cuts, justifying them on the grounds that they were the result of “market conditions.”
A statement released by GM declared, “As a result of declining overall industry volumes, the Detroit-Hamtramck plant will be making schedule adjustments to keep supply and demand in balance. Effective October 20, the plant will operate under a reduced production schedule. This action will help maintain more stable production.”
The new layoff announcement follows a spate of temporary production cuts by Ford and several thousand permanent layoffs by General Motors, most recently the elimination of the third shift at its Spring Hill, Tennessee plant. Earlier this year GM cut shifts at its Lordstown, Ohio plant and factories in Delta Township and Lansing Grand River, both in Michigan, as well as its Fairfax, Kansas plant.
The continuing layoffs are an indication that the long sales boom in the US auto industry is coming to an end. While light truck and SUV sales have held fairly steady, bolstered by low gas prices, passenger car sales are down significantly. All told GM sold 82,179 fewer cars in the first half of 2017 than in the same period last year. The company is reportedly considering the elimination of six car models.
The Detroit-Hamtramck facility builds the Chevrolet Volt electric vehicle, the Cadillac CT6, Chevrolet Impala and the Buick LaCrosse, all considered to be slow selling passenger cars. GM currently has a 10-month supply of the LaCrosse on hand, where a two-month supply is considered normal.
There are about 1,800 workers, including 1,580 hourly production workers, currently employed at the Detroit-Hamtramck plant. The factory employed some 3,000 workers at the beginning of the year, before the layoffs began. Many of the workers who were laid off had given up other jobs and travelled long distances to work at GM after being encouraged by GM and the UAW to believe their jobs would lead to permanent employment.
GM and all the auto companies are under enormous pressure from Wall Street to cut costs in order to maintain their stock prices. Despite earning billions of dollars in profits sweated off the back of autoworkers, GM is continuing its cost cutting offensive. It is currently engaged in a battle against Canadian autoworkers employed at the CAMI plant in Ingersoll, Ontario. The facility builds the popular Equinox sports utility vehicle. The company is maintaining a hard line against workers who are determined to win pay and benefit increases after years of concessions, and has threatened to “wind down” production at the plant if the strike is not ended.
Instead of investing in new production or improving pay and benefits, GM has squandered billions in stock buybacks aimed at boosting the company’s share values, including $9 billion in 2016-17. Partly as a result of these efforts, as well as ruthless cost cutting, GM stock has enjoyed a recent surge.
The continuing job cuts amid soaring auto company profits highlights the irrationality of the capitalist profit system, which subordinates the job security and incomes of workers to the vagaries of the market. The UAW completely accepts job cuts as necessary for the financial health of the auto companies. Insofar as the unions have anything to say about jobs, it is to rant at the overseas competitors of the US-based car companies, as though Mexican, Canadian, Asian and European autoworkers were the enemies of American workers, not the US auto bosses.
The 2015 UAW-GM contract paved the way for the car companies to carry out mass layoffs. It increased the number of temporary and part time workers who do not have minimal protections, such as Supplemental Unemployment Benefits (SUB). It also maintained the hated two-tier wage system, in reality a multi-tier system that saddles new hires with lower wages and SUB pay. Indeed, temporary workers have taken the brunt of the job cuts and the Detroit-Hamtramck plant.
The World Socialist Web Site Autoworker Newsletter waged a struggle against the layoffs in the winter and spring of 2017 at the Detroit-Hamtramck plant, rejecting the position of the UAW that market conditions dictate all. The Autoworker Newsletter sought to build a rank-and-file opposition to the job cuts, published articles and held regular interventions at the plant, including a picket.
At the time, the Autoworker Newsletter warned if the cuts were not stopped, the fate of all the jobs at the plant were in question. Now, these warnings are being confirmed.
The WSWS spoke to a veteran worker at the GM Fairfax assembly plant. She said workers there had just returned from a four-week layoff. “We have a 200-day supply of the Malibu. My personal thought is there will be more layoffs. It always seems to be the workers who are the ones that suffer.
“I have about 20 years and I’m making little more than when I first hired in. The cost of living has gone up and our pay has not.
“I blame the UAW for everything we have lost. The minute they had a hand in GM stock, that was the end for us. We were bullied into agreeing to the last contract. We had given up so much, holidays, more medical co-pays, cost of living, all told 10 percent of our income. The company only gave us back 3 percent of what we lost.”
Meanwhile, Fiat Chrysler is in the midst of a retooling and restructuring drive in the United States that could result in the long-term loss of jobs. The company ended US passenger car production last year to focus on more profitable light trucks and SUVs.
Most immediately threatened are workers at the Warren Truck assembly plant just outside Detroit. The plant will reportedly be closed in January as production of the Dodge Ram truck is shifted to the nearby Sterling Heights Assembly Plant (SHAP) that is currently closed for retooling. Some Warren Truck workers will be shifted to SHAP and others laid off while the Warren Truck facility retools, reports are for the production of the Jeep Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer, slower selling vehicles that likely will not require nearly as large a work force.

12 Oct 2017

Stanford University Draper Hills Summer Fellowship Program (Funded to Attend) 2018

Application Timeline:
  • Deadline: Wednesday, 15th November, 2017.
  • Program Date: Sunday, July 15- Friday, August 3, 2018.
  • Applicants will be informed of their selection to the program by April 2018.
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Transitioning countries
To be taken at (country): Stanford University, California, USA
About the Award: Launched in 2005, the Draper Hills Summer Fellowship on Democracy and Development Program (DHSFDD) is a three-week academic training program that is hosted annually at Stanford University’s Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law.  This training program provides a unique forum for emerging leaders to connect, exchange experiences, and receive academic training to enrich their knowledge and advance their work.
For three weeks during the summer, fellows participate in academic seminars that expose them to the theory and practice of democracy, development, and the rule of law. Delivered by leading Stanford faculty from the Stanford Law School, the Graduate School of Business, and the departments of economics and political science, these seminars allow emerging leaders to explore new institutional models and frameworks to enhance their ability to promote democratic change in their home countries.
Type: Fellowship
Eligibility: 
  • This program is aimed at mid-career practitioners working actively in the fields of democracy, development, and the rule of law. Applicants can be working as policy-makers, academics, legal professionals, social entrepreneurs, business entrepreneurs, and leaders of civil society organizations (such as representatives of trade unions, nongovernmental organizations, the media, business and professional associations).
  • In their present capacity, applicants should play important and influential roles in their country’s political, economic, and social development. Participants should have demonstrated professional and personal achievements in a relevant sector of democracy, development, and the rule of law.
  • Successful applicants will have academic credentials necessary to participate and contribute to the six-hour seminars each day, and tackle advanced academic readings to complement the classroom-based curriculum.
  • A working knowledge of English is an important prerequisite for participation in the program. It is expected that each fellow have a solid command of written and spoken English to fully benefit and participate in the program.
  • The ideal participant will have extraordinary motivation and a keen interest in learning as well as sharing knowledge and experiences to help build and enrich the alumni community.
Selection Criteria: Due to the large volume of applications for the Draper Hills fellowship received each year to the fellowship program, we take our selection criteria very seriously. Please review the criteria below very carefully before submitting your application to the program. If you do not meet these criteria your application will not be reviewed.
  • This is not an academic fellowship but meant for practitioners only. We value practical experience over academic credentials, and we admit scholars only to the extent that they are active in government, public policy, civil society, economic development and rule of law. They should hold leadership roles in their respective sector.
  • Applicants must be mid-career practitioners and have at least ten to 12 years of experience to qualify for the fellowship. Those with more experience are much more competitive in the selection process.
  • Candidates must be from and currently reside in a country where democracy is not well entrenched. Candidates residing outside their home country due to war or conflict may be granted exceptions. Applicants will not be accepted from countries such as: the U.S., Canada, Australia, Japan, and member states of the European Union.
  • Candidates must be at least 28 years of age at the start of the fellowship in July 2018. The average age of our fellows at the time of the program is 38.
  • Candidates must be actively working in the field of democracy, development, and the rule of law. We do not accept candidates who are in the midst of full-time university degree programs.
  • Candidates must have a solid command of written and spoken English. All program materials and sessions are in English. Participants will also be required to give 9-minute TED-style talks throughout the three-week program regarding their work and motivation. English language proficiency is very important in order to benefit and contribute to the program dialogue.
Number of Awardees: 25 to 30
Value of Fellowship: Stanford asks all applicants to be prepared to contribute towards the cost of their participation in the fellowship, if they are selected. Typically this comes in the form of a fellow covering round-trip airfare to the Program. Stanford will pay for accommodations, meals, and transportation costs during the duration of the Program. In the past, some fellows have asked their employers to subsidize their travel to Stanford based on the benefits that the training will contribute towards their professional and organizational advancement. They may also choose to fundraise for these costs after selection decisions are issued in April 2017. A small travel fund is available for fellows who under no circumstances can support their travel or need to apply for a partial subsidy. Priority for accessing the travel fund will be given based on need, and destinations where airline fares to California are exorbitant.
How to Apply: In order to apply to the Draper Hills Summer Fellows Program please create an account through the online portal. The application form is available once you login and will be available through the deadline, Wednesday, November 16, 2016. Due to the volume of applications, we strongly suggest that you submit the application form as soon as possible. You will be asked to contact two references to furnish letters of recommendation to support your candidacy to the program. A complete application package will be due no later than Wednesday, November 16, 2016.
Please ensure you go through the Application Guidelines and Scholarship Webpage before applying.
Award Provider: Stanford University
Important Notes: Applicants are required to participate the entire duration of the Draper Hills fellowship program at Stanford University. They must be sure that they can be absent from their professional obligations during that time and must make a commitment to attend the full program upon acceptance.

Leeds University Business School Scholarships for Kenya, Nigeria, India and Vietnam 2018/2019

Application Deadline: 6th April 2018
Offered annually? Yes
To be taken at: UK
About the Award: The award this year will be offered to all nationals of Kenya, Nigeria, India and Vietnam and will be used to aid select students in the payment of tuition. The University of Leeds Business School offers a range of funding and scholarship opportunities to support and reward undergraduates who have the potential to be outstanding students.
Type: Undergraduate
Eligibility: All self-funding candidates who are nationals of India, Kenya, Nigeria and Vietnam who apply for an undergraduate course at Leeds University Business School are eligible for this award
Number of Awardees: Up to eight(8) scholarship slots available. Two (2) slots for each country
Value of Scholarship: Candidate will receive an award of £2,500 per year for each standard year of study towards the cost of fees
Duration of Scholarship: Duration of Undergraduate Course
How to Apply: In order to be considered for a scholarship, you must be currently holding a conditional or unconditional offer for 2018 entry.
You can apply for this scholarship by downloading an application form and following the instructions.
Award Provider: Leeds University Business School, UK

University of Sussex PhD Research Scholarship for International Students (Fully-funded) 2018

Application Deadline: 2nd February 2018
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: International
To be taken at (country): UK
Eligible Fields of Study: Arts and Humanities.
About the Award: The Sussex Chancellors Scholarship is a merit-based award recognising, and rewarding, phd students who want to undertake phd research in arts and humanities at the University.
Type: PhD, Research
Eligibility: 
  • Applicants must be classified as an international fee paying student and able to commence their PhD in September 2018 or January 2019
  • Applicants must meet the University’s academic entry requirements and the IELTS English Language Requirements contained in the postgraduate prospectus.
Number of Awardees: 10
Value of Scholarship: Fees and stipend plus a Research Training Support Grant (RTSG)
Duration of Scholarship: Scholarships are tenable for one year in the first instance, renewable annually for a maximum of 3 years.
How to Apply: There is no separate application form, to be considered for this scholarship applicants should enter the title of the scholarship in the finance section of their PhD application
Award Provider:  The University of Sussex

Leadership and Advocacy for Women in Africa (LAWA) Fellowship Program - USA

Application Deadline: Friday, 12th January, 2018
Offered Annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Over 80 women’s human rights advocates from Botswana, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe have participated in the LAWA Program, and we hope to include Fellows from additional countries in the future.
To be Taken at (Country): Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C., USA
About the Award: The Leadership and Advocacy for Women in Africa (LAWA) Fellowship Program was founded in 1993 at the Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C., in order to train women’s human rights lawyers from Africa who are committed to returning home to their countries in order to advance the status of women and girls in their own countries throughout their careers.
Type: Fellowship, Masters
Value of Fellowship: The LAWA Fellowship provides the tuition for the Foundations of American Law and Legal Education Course (a U.S. $2,200 benefit) and for the LL.M. degree (a U.S. $46,865 benefit) at the Georgetown University Law Center, as well as professional development training. Candidates who are admitted to the LAWA Program must be prepared to cover the costs of all additional expenses (such as their visas, travel, housing, utilities, food, clothing, health insurance, books, etc.), and must be able to demonstrate to the U.S. Embassy for visa purposes that they have the funds available to cover those expenses (approximately $28,000).
Duration of Fellowship: The entire LAWA Fellowship Program is approximately 14 months long (from July of the first year through August of the following year), after which the LAWA Fellows return home to continue advocating for women’s rights in their own countries. The LAWA Program starts in July, when the Fellows attend the Georgetown Law Center’s Foundations of American Law and Legal Education course. From August through May, the LAWA Fellows earn a Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree at Georgetown with an emphasis on international women’s human rights and complete a major graduate paper on a significant women’s rights issue in their home countries. After graduation, the LAWA Fellows then have an opportunity to engage in challenging work assignments for several months at various public interest organizations to learn about different advocacy strategies to advance women’s human rights, before returning home to continue advancing women’s human rights in their own countries.
Upon completion of their Program, LAWA Alumnae have returned home to assume prominent leadership positions enabling them to focus on women’s rights issues in non-governmental organizations, government agencies, law schools, courts, legislatures, and private firms.
More Fellowship Guideline: LAWA Alumnae have formed their own non-governmental organizations, such as the Women’s Legal Assistance Center in Tanzania and Legal Advocacy for Women in Uganda (LAW-Uganda) to promote women’s human rights in their countries (e.g., by bringing impact litigation under their countries’ statutes, constitutions, and the human rights treaties that their countries have ratified).
How to Apply: The 2018/2019 LAWA Fellowship application is available here.
Award Provider: Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, D.C., USA

University of Oxford Dulverton Scholarships for Europe and sub-Saharan African Students 2018

Application Deadline: 8th or 19th January, 2018
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Countries in sub-Saharan Africa and the EEA
To be taken at (country): University of Oxford, UK
Eligible Fields of Study: Master’s or DPhil courses
Type: Postgraduate
Eligibility: 
  • Eligible candidates ordinarily resident in South Africa may also be considered.
  • If you are resident in an eligible country outside of the EEA, you should be intending to return to your country of ordinary residence on completion of your studies.
  • Priority will be given to applicants who have not previously studied in the US or UK.
Number of Awardees: 2
Value of Scholarship: The scholarship covers course fees, college fees and a grant for living costs of at least £14,553.
Duration of Scholarship: Awards are made for the full duration of your fee liability for the agreed course.
Eligible Countries: You must be ordinarily resident in one of the following countries:
Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cabo Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Europe: Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Georgia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Hungary, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Turkey, Serbia, Slovakia and Ukraine.
How to Apply: There is no separate application process for this scholarship: to be considered, submit your application for graduate study by the relevant January deadline (8 or 19 January 2018, depending on your course). Selection is expected to take place by the end of May 2018.
Award Provider: The scholarships are funded by the Dulverton Trust