26 Mar 2021

Amazon workers strike in Italy

Will Morrow


Thousands of Amazon workers and delivery drivers participated in the first-ever nationwide strike in Italy on Monday.

According to the national union federations, approximately 75 percent of employees struck. Amazon reported a much lower strike rate of between 10-20 percent. The company reportedly employs more than 9,500 workers directly across the country, and an estimated 15,000 via a network of third-party subcontractors, who are not directly employed by Amazon but are subject to the diktat of its onerous quota algorithms.

In this Thursday April 16, 2020 file photo, The Amazon logo is seen in Douai, northern France. (AP Photo/Michel Spingler, File)

The strike takes place amid a major campaign by the trade unions in the United States to secure recognition at Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama plant. Democratic President Joe Biden has publicly backed the unionization campaign and called on Bessemer workers to vote for union recognition. In this context Jacobin magazine, the publication of the Democratic Socialists of America, a pseudo-left faction of the Democratic Party, has prominently reported on the Italian strike, labeling it as “historic for the labor movement” and a sign of a potential “revival of the unions.”

The strike in Italy clearly points to the enormous opposition and growing resistance among Amazon and other workers around the world. The company has significantly expanded its Italian operations over the past five years, including building six new fulfillment centers since 2017.

Striking workers who spoke to the media described conditions of brutal exploitation. Francesca, 30, told La Repubblica, “When you are involved in picking, you have to do the same movement for eight hours, inside a cage. You do not change. Within a few days, you have pain in your arms, back and knees. On the third day, a picker was unable to walk due to the leg pain. … After a month, your wrist tendons ache. Every now and then someone faints.”

Gianpaolo, 38, said he wears an ankle brace because of the long journeys of more than 20 kilometers he has to walk each shift. “The system is driven by an algorithm, which demands results,” he said. “Whoever is in charge does not care how those numbers are obtained. The power is in the hands of these managers, 25- to 30-year-olds who have just graduated, who sometimes decide to use it even in an uncompromising and dangerous way.”

There is a sharp contrast between the sentiments of Amazon workers, however, and the interests motivating the trade unions who called Monday’s strike. It is worth noting that in the various statements about the strike, the unions did not raise a single concrete demand relating to wages, working hours or conditions as the reason for the action. Rather, their central demand is that Amazon agree to negotiate with them on the terms of a national agreement and establish “stable trade union relations” with them.

Three national unions—Filt Cgil, Fit Cisl and Uiltrasporti—announced the strike two weeks ago, after they claimed Amazon had refused to continue negotiations with them on a national contract covering delivery drivers.

The CGIL released a statement by Confederal Secretary Tania Scacchetti on Monday, declaring, “Today is a very important day. The workers of the Amazon supply chain have decided to protest to claim a normal system of trade union relations.” She added, “In a company with that type of turnover, it is correct to build a system of relationships that recognizes workers with a performance bonus and contractual conditions. That is, stable trade union relations.”

CGIL General Secretary Maurizio Landini stated that the strike “requires answers from the multinational and the immediate reopening of negotiations.” He called for “concrete acts by the government and Parliament, to reaffirm the principle that doing business in our country means recognizing the right to national and collective bargaining and to a correct system of trade union relations.”

These appeals make clear the real concerns of the unions, which have nothing to do with defending the interests of Amazon workers.

By “stable trade union relations,” they mean the incorporation of the trade unions into the structure of corporate management, to function as a well-paid industrial police force against the workers. They would oversee, not the raising of Amazon workers’ conditions, but their continued reduction, the boosting of profits and the suppression of strike activity. Their difference with Amazon comes down to how much of the money extracted from the workforce should go into the bank accounts of the unions and their well-paid executives.

This is the function that trade unions play internationally. Under the impact of globalized production and the development of multinational corporations, their earlier program of limited national reforms has been transformed into one of increasing the exploitation of the workforce and boosting the “international competitiveness” of their own nation-state.

Across Europe, over the past three decades, the unions have been more closely incorporated into structure of the capitalist state. The results have been a continued disaster for the working class in a relentless growth of social inequality and poverty.

In the United States, the DSA is attempting to use the strike as an argument for strengthening the trade union apparatuses. On Tuesday, Jacobin published an article by Francesco Massimo, entitled, “Italy’s Amazon Strike Shows How Workers Across the Supply Chain Can Unite.”

Massimo writes: “In the last two decades, Italian confederal unions went through a process of institutionalization—following an embrace of social dialogue and corporatism from the 1990s onward, which fueled a process of incorporation into the Italian state. Unions gained access to policymaking—but in exchange conceded wage devaluation and an end to industrial conflict. This especially hurt unions’ ability to mobilize the periphery of the labor market—notably, the emerging logistics industry.”

In other words, the unions’ role in lowering wages and suppressing strikes over decades has repulsed millions of workers, who see no purpose in paying these pro-business entities. In the latest walkout, Massimo admits, “loyal to their narrow conception of social dialogue, [the unions’] their aim is to force Amazon back to the negotiating table—to establish the normal industrial relations that exist in other sectors.”

Despite the devastating picture he paints of the unions, Massimo nevertheless still writes as a supporter of “social dialog” between the union bureaucracy and corporate management. His conclusion is not that workers should break from the trade unions and form their own independent, rank-and-file organizations of struggle. Rather, he proposes that workers continue to subordinate themselves to these pro-corporate bureaucracies and engage in hopeless attempts to push them to the left.

He declares that Monday’s strike “is historic for the labor movement. But whether it can also prompt a broader revival of the unions depends on workers’ ability to keep the fight going and extend it to other workers…”

Pseudo-left parties like the DSA defend the trade unions not inspite of but because of their anti-working class policies. They speak for affluent sections of the middle class, including trade union bureaucrats, whose wealth has been inflated by three decades of social austerity, the suppression of strikes and rising share prices.

The Socialist Equality Party urges workers to form their own rank-and-file committees at Amazon hubs and fulfillment centers, independent of the trade unions and controlled directly by workers themselves. These would provide the means for reaching out and uniting with Amazon workers internationally, which is the only basis upon which a successful struggle can be waged.

This must be combined with a new political strategy, based upon the mobilization of the working class internationally for socialist policies. Corporate giants like Amazon should be taken out of private hands and transformed into public utilities, democratically controlled by the working class and used for the rational organization of society according to social need.

Profits before lives: German government abandons “Easter pause”

Johannes Stern


The ruling elite is determined to continue its “profit before lives” COVID-19 pandemic policy, which has already claimed over 75,000 lives in Germany alone, at any price. This was underscored by the decision of the federal and state governments on Wednesday to overturn the so-called “Easter pause” after just one day.

The original decision agreed by the conference of minister presidents and Chancellor Angela Merkel early on Tuesday to extend the Easter weekend by a single day was nothing more than a symbolic act. In the midst of the rapidly escalating and more lethal third wave, one extra day off work would have done nothing to curb the rapidly increasing infections, the spread of virus variants, and a new round of mass death.

Despite this, a storm of rage erupted from big business, the political establishment and media after Merkel announced the Easter pause at a press conference on Tuesday morning. Foaming at the mouth, spokesmen for the major corporations and business lobby groups made clear that they would not accept a single additional day on which assembly lines remained at a standstill and profits were not generated.

Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) together with Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Söder (CSU) and Berlin Mayor Michael Müller (SPD) at the press conference after the Corona summit on March 22nd. (Michael Kappeler/Pool Photo via AP)

“Sudden plant shutdowns are inconceivable for an internationally connected economy,” stated the president of the Auto Industry Association (VDA), Hildegard Müller. “Paint shops and energy centres as well as many others” can “not just be shut down on command.” The president of the Association of Family-owned Businesses, Reinhold von Eben-Worlee, objected, “Who will pay for this additional loss? The slogan in the government is obviously, money grows on trees.”

Merkel apologised already the following day. There could be “no doubt” that “the idea of the so-called Easter pause was a mistake,” she asserted during an official question-and-answer session in parliament. “Effort and usefulness” must “always at least be semi-proportionate.” In this particular case, there were “far too many questions to be resolved, from the payment of wages to the loss of working hours and the situation in the plants and businesses.”

The response was jubilation from the same business lobbyists, politicians, and media outlets who had sharply criticised the chancellor just one day earlier. “I think it’s a sign of strength when one admits to a mistake,” enthused VDA president Müller. “The fact that the Chancellor so rapidly assumed full personal responsibility deserves great respect,” stated the president of the Central Association of German Trades, Hans Peter Wollseifer.

Politicians from all parties spoke along similar lines. “Yes, it is good to admit to mistakes. That helps further democracy,” said the Green Party’s parliamentary group leader, Katrin Göring-Eckhardt. Even Alexander Gaulland, the head of the right-wing extremist Alternative for Germany’s parliamentary group, celebrated Merkel’s about-face in his speech as “the day when everything changed.” Prior to that, the 16 minister presidents, including the Left Party’s Bodo Ramelow from Thuringia, apologised and endorsed the new “anti-lockdown” line.

What this means is obvious. Under conditions of an escalation of the pandemic, threatening more lives than ever before, the ruling elite is moving to end all public health restrictions. It is necessary to emerge from the “permanent cycle of lockdowns” and “open a new chapter,” stated North-Rhine Westphalia’s minister president and leader of the Christian Democrats, Armin Laschet, on Wednesday.

Tobias Hans (CDU), minister president in Saarland, announced Thursday that his state would exit the lockdown immediately after Easter. “As of 6 April, more private and public life will be possible,” he said. He specifically announced the reopening of cinemas, gyms, and outdoor restaurants. Further openings would follow after April 18.

Merkel explicitly declared her support for the reopening offensive in her government statement on Thursday. The government had “agreed a reopening plan with the minister presidents on 3 March that allows for a much greater degree of regionalisation.” She is of the opinion “that some states—I’m thinking of Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein—are using these options correctly.”

Merkel and the ruling elite know very well that this course is paving the way for a catastrophe. Leading virologists like Melanie Brinkmann and Christian Drosten warned already in February that a further “easing” of restrictions could lead to up to 100,000 daily infections in the summer and 180,000 additional deaths among people aged under 60. The total abandonment of lockdown measures would, according to projections, cost up to 1 million lives in Germany.

The reactionary goals being pursued by the ruling elite with their murderous reopening policies are obvious. Firstly, they want to extract the massive sums spent on coronavirus emergency bailouts, which flowed overwhelmingly to the major corporations, banks, and super-rich, from the working class. An additional factor is the aggressive imposition of the geostrategic and economic interests of German and European imperialism.

In yesterday’s government statement on the European Union (EU) summit, Merkel informed the parliamentary deputies that Germany and Europe must use the current situation to increase their influence in the global competition between the major powers. “We know that Europe cannot stagnate or wallow in the crisis, but that we must rise to the challenges,” she stated. One of the issues is for “Europe to decisively enforce its digital sovereignty. It’s about speed. It’s not just about the how, but also the when.”

The production and distribution of life-saving COVID-19 vaccinations are also being subordinated to capitalist profit and the geopolitical rivalries between the major powers. “We will have to talk about how we can become more independent across Europe. That includes above all the issue of vaccine production,” said Merkel. The problem of vaccine distribution is “how much can be produced on European territory at this moment? Because we can see clearly: British production sites manufacture for the British market, the United States is not exporting.”

While the ruling elite promotes vaccine nationalism and profit-making, only a mere 4.3 percent of the population have been fully vaccinated. Additional billions of euros are not flowing to the funding of a Europe-wide coordinated vaccine campaign, but rather to rearmament and war. On Wednesday, the federal government agreed to increase military spending by a further 5 percent next year, reaching an annual budget of €49.29 billion. On Thursday, parliament approved the extension of the deployment to Afghanistan by another year.

The World Socialist Web Site described the pandemic one year ago as a trigger event that would rapidly intensify the political, social and economic crisis of the capitalist system. In every country, the ruling class is intensifying its push for social spending cuts, the strengthening of the domestic apparatus of state repression, and the rearmament of the military. The murderous drive to reopen everything and promote mass infections is a central component of this policy.

Opposition to this is developing around the world. Workers are organising independent rank-and-file committees to secure safe working conditions and launch a counter-offensive against the attacks on wages and jobs that are being organised by management and the trade unions. Teachers and students are fighting the dangerous return to school. On Wednesday evening, the hashtag #GeneralStrike was the most discussed topic on Twitter for more than three hours.

The organisation of a general strike to impose a real lockdown—i.e., to close schools and all nonessential production due to their role as the main vectors for the pandemic with full financial support for workers and small businesses—requires a clear political leadership and perspective.

The Socialist Equality Party wrote a few days ago in its statement, “One year of the COVID-19 pandemic: a disaster caused by capitalism”:

The pandemic proves the necessity of the abolition of the capitalist nation-state system. It shows that the defense of the most vital interests of society is inseparable from the expropriation of the financial oligarchy and an end to private ownership of the means of production. It makes clear the urgent necessity for a scientifically-managed, rationally-organized and democratically-controlled world economy.

The fight for socialism is a global struggle for a society that prioritizes life over profit, human need over the wealth of the oligarchs and international collaboration over national conflict.

With the de facto ending of the lockdown in Germany, this perspective is more than ever a matter of life and death.

Inadequate isolation measures in Papua New Guinea as COVID-19 surges

John Braddock


Amid a surge of coronavirus cases, the Papua New Guinea (PNG) government implemented a nationwide isolation strategy on March 21. The belated move was a desperate bid to stop an explosive spread of COVID-19 as the number of confirmed cases in the impoverished country has more than tripled in the past month.

On Thursday, PNG reported its largest number of confirmed infections over a 24-hour period, with two more deaths. The National Pandemic Response Controller and police commissioner David Manning reported 351 new cases, raising the national total to 4,109. This is an increase of 1,021 cases over a period of six days. The official death toll has risen to 39, with parliamentarian Richard Mendani among the deceased.

Community transmission of the coronavirus is described by Prime Minister James Marape as “rife.” The official trend is alarming, but with a total of just 60,680 tests having been conducted in a population of 9 million, the sixth lowest rate in the world, and contact tracing near non-existent, these figures are undoubtedly a vast understatement.

Medical staff of Papua New Guinea’s Defense Force receiving COVID-19 training last year (Credit: World Health Organization/PNG)

Jonathan Pryke, of Australia’s Lowy Institute, told the Sydney Morning Herald that residents in Port Moresby are now regularly hearing “house cries” as people mourn the death of loved ones. “You are just hearing anecdotally of people dropping dead right around the country,” he said.

Under the PNG government’s month-long isolation strategy, movement of people between villages and districts is restricted and mask use in public venues mandatory. Domestic flights are allowed if travelers undertake temperature checks and produce a negative COVID-19 test result. Travel between provinces can continue for essential business, healthcare and returning home.

There is a ban on gatherings of over 10 people and all sporting events are suspended. Nightclubs, hotels and gambling facilities will be closed. Religious gatherings, however, can go ahead with a maximum of 50 people. Schools will be shut.

Manning has stated that compliance with recommended safety measures has been “a big challenge.” Belinda Kora, a PNG reporter for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, said that many public testing sites are closed because staff members have fallen sick with coronavirus and the costs of private tests remain prohibitive. “I am unsure how I will be able to isolate myself or my siblings in our family home if one of us tests positive to this deadly virus,” Kora said.

The state-owned Ok Tedi corporation began a two-week suspension at its copper mine in the Western Province, the hardest hit area outside the capital Port Moresby. The Australian government has suspended travel exemptions which had allowed fly-in-fly-out mining and energy workers to travel between the two countries, after several cases appeared in hospital and isolation facilities in Cairns, Northern Queensland.

The PNG government’s measures fall far short of the necessary full lockdown required to rein in the rampant virus. Business activities, including retail outlets, markets and shops can open 13 hours a day and restaurants for 15 hours. Government departments and buildings all remain open. Public transport and taxis continue to operate with mask-wearing requirements.

The strategy, which allows for extensive business activity, is consistent with Marape’s declaration following a lockdown last July that “COVID-19 not only affects us health-wise but also economically. We must adjust to living with the COVID-19… we will not shut down our country again.”

The country’s fragile health system meanwhile faces near collapse. National Doctors Association Secretary Sam Yockopua told local media that 35 doctors at PNG’s main hospital, Port Moresby General, have tested positive for COVID-19. Last week some 140 frontline staff at the hospital had registered confirmed infections.

The health workforce is fast depleting as staff who test positive are required to isolate for ten days. Hospital wards are overflowing with COVID-19 patients and running out of beds and ventilators. Hospitals and clinics in other parts of the country are facing similar crises. Angau hospital in PNG’s second largest city Lae suspended services last week due to a surge in COVID-19 cases.

Port Moresby’s Rita Flynn gymnasium is now being used as an extra COVID ward, but it only has a 43-bed capacity. Service provider St John’s is helping set up an extra centre for COVID-19 patients at the Taurama Aquatic Centre, seeking to upgrade the facility to around 300 beds that can manage higher acuity patients.

The government has sourced only 200,000 AstraZeneca vaccine doses from Australia and 70,000 from India and these will not arrive at least until April. The Australian Financial Review (AFR) reported that the PNG government is unlikely to take up an offer of 100,000 doses of the Chinese-made Sinopharm vaccine, which is yet to gain approval from PNG regulators.

The AFR described Australian officials as being “vigilant” about Beijing’s offer. However Brendan Crabb, chief executive of the Burnet Institute and an expert in PNG health, said while he was aware of the “geopolitical stakes” involved, the “astronomic” increase in PNG infections meant the use of Chinese-made vaccines should not be ruled out.

The Australian government this week sent 8,000 doses of AstraZeneca from Australia’s stockpile to immunise frontline health workers in PNG. Canberra has also appealed, so far unsuccessfully, to the EU to divert to PNG a million of 3.1 million doses of AstraZeneca that Australia had contracted for but was yet to receive.

The miserable contribution by PNG’s former colonial power is a pitiful response to the catastrophe unfolding on its northern doorstep and will do nothing to contain the escalating COVID-19 outbreak. The Australian ruling class never demonstrated the slightest concern for the PNG masses when it ruled over them, and has no concern for them today. While Australian mining conglomerates plunder the country, the PNG working class and semi-subsistence rural villagers live in extreme poverty.

Canberra’s cynical move is designed to position Australia in the intensifying international “vaccine diplomacy” conflict. Quad leaders from the US, Australia, Japan and India are seeking to control vaccination logistics for the Asia-Pacific region as part of their moves to strengthen military and strategic ties to confront China and prepare for war.

The Pacific’s second local imperialist power, New Zealand, has likewise expressed “concern” over the worsening situation in PNG but only agreed “to assist where we can.” On top of $NZ6 million ($A5.5 million) provided in coronavirus support, a NZ Defence Force flight was last week sent to Port Moresby with supplies and emergency equipment for just 1,000 patients.

It is not known when any more vaccines could arrive in PNG under the international initiative known as COVAX, which will purportedly provide doses for free to poorer developing nations. Any rollout has been disrupted by wealthier nations hoarding their own supplies while across most of Asia, Latin America and Africa very few have received a vaccine.

As the WSWS has noted, vaccine nationalism has exacerbated the pandemic. The distribution of the lifesaving medications has been inequitable and chaotic. Low-income countries have asked the WHO to help them procure vaccines and provide scientific and technological support to establish manufacturing capacity in their countries. The US, the UK and the EU have all resisted any such measures.

Researchers at the University of Queensland noted last week that when vaccines do arrive in PNG, poor electricity access means there are “serious questions” over their safe distribution. Vaccine must be stored at cold or ultra-cold temperatures along the supply chain. Hospitals and medical centres will need stable electricity to power refrigerators to store the doses before they are administered.

Only about 13 percent of PNG’s people, however, have reliable access to electricity. This is not an isolated issue. In 2019, about 770 million people globally lived in “energy poverty,” and the problem has only grown worse due to the COVID pandemic.

300,000 deaths in Brazil: A capitalist crime against humanity

Tomas Castanheira


Brazil surpassed the grim milestone of 300,000 COVID-19 deaths on Wednesday. In each of the country’s states and regions, the Brazilian population has witnessed a brutal waste of lives, the result of the criminal indifference of its ruling elite.

We have yet to complete three full months of the year 2021, but in this brief period more than 100,000 Brazilians have lost their lives to COVID-19. The toll of the pandemic has escalated very rapidly since the year began, with the average number of daily infections jumping from 36,000 to more than 77,000. They are still on an upward trend, with a record of 100,158 infections recorded on Thursday.

The rampant advance of the virus throughout the country has provoked Brazil’s “greatest health and hospital collapse in [its] history,” according to the public health institution Fiocruz. Thousands of critically ill patients are waiting for an ICU bed on waiting lists that total approximately 900 people in Paraná, 750 in Greater São Paulo, 700 in Minas Gerais, 500 in Rio de Janeiro, 500 in Ceará, 400 in Goiás, and hundreds more in practically every state in Brazil.

Residents place roses on mattresses symbolizing COVID-19 victims, during a protest against the Government's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

Doctors are already being forced to choose who will receive treatment and who will be left to die. But there are imminent threats that the depletion of hospital supplies, including medical oxygen and intubation medications, will seriously compromise the ability to care for even those who have managed to secure a hospital bed.

The prospects for the coming weeks are terrifying. If immediate measures are not taken, researchers at Fiocruz have warned that Brazil will by April reach an average of 4,000 to 5,000 deaths per day.

But Brazil’s catastrophe has an impact far beyond its national borders, which the coronavirus needs neither a passport nor a visa to cross. On Wednesday, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) warned of the devastating threat posed by the growing pandemic in Brazil to neighboring South American countries.

The regions in Venezuela, Peru, and Bolivia that border the northern part of Brazil have reported serious increases in cases in recent days. On Brazil’s southern border, Paraguay is facing a hospital collapse, and Uruguay, which had exceptionally low numbers during the first wave of the pandemic, is suffering a rapid escalation of infections and deaths.

The efforts of the governments in these countries to wall off their populations with border controls and restrictions on the entry of Brazilians are seriously undermined by the deep cross-border integration of economic and social life. Moreover, the more infectious Brazilian P.1 COVID-19 variant, a major factor in the explosion of cases in Brazil, has already spread widely to neighboring countries, as well as to other parts of the world.

The failure to exert any control over the spread of the pandemic in Brazil has led not only to an accelerated reproduction of this virulent strain but is turning the country into an open-air laboratory for the generation of other COVID-19 mutations, and possibly even a new virus, an even more infectious and lethal SARS-CoV-3.

A recently published study by researchers at the Fiocruz COVID-19 Genomic Surveillance Network identified relevant mutations in 11 sequences of SARS-CoV-2 coming from five different Brazilian states. The scientists conclude: “These findings support that the ongoing widespread transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in Brazil is generating new viral lineages that might be more resistant to neutralization than parental variants of concern.”

The ominous dangers posed to the Brazilian and world population by this catastrophic evolution of the disease are treated with the crudest contempt by Brazil’s fascistic President Jair Bolsonaro. He continues to pursue his government’s murderous herd immunity policy to its ultimate consequences, demanding that Brazilians stop “whining” about mass death and get back to work.

Bolsonaro is fighting to ensure that no measures to contain the spread of the virus conflict with the economic interests of Brazilian capitalism. Reaffirming his dictatorial threats, he warned that his government and his army are preparing “harsh measures” against any lockdown decree, in order to guarantee the “right of the people to work.”

To force workers into super-infected workplaces, he relies, above all, on the immense economic pressures placed upon the masses. The explosion of unemployment, rising food prices, and the cutting of emergency aid by the government is imposing unprecedented levels of social desperation upon every section of the working class.

According to Getúlio Vargas Foundation (FGV) researcher Daniel Duque, over the past year, 22 million more Brazilians fell into poverty. Three out of 10 Brazilians are living under some degree of food insecurity. In the favelas, the poor working class neighborhoods in Brazil’s urban centers, 68 percent of residents have no money for food, as indicated by a poll from the Favelas United Center (CUFA).

The combination of unbearable economic hardship and the immeasurable suffering caused by the pandemic are fueling an explosive growth of social opposition in Brazil. In recent days, strikes and protests have broken out among teachers, oil workers, bus drivers, app delivery workers and other sections of the working class. Workers are demanding workplace safety, livable wages and political change.

Sensitive to this threat from below, sections of the capitalist elite fear that Bolsonaro’s policies will provoke a social and economic explosion calling into question their class domination over society.

That position was exposed in an “open letter” by economists and businessmen criticizing Bolsonaro’s handling of the pandemic. Among its signatories are former ministers and former presidents of the Central Bank, the head of Brazil’s biggest meatpacking corporation and the chairman of the board of Itaú Bank—the largest financial conglomerate in the Southern Hemisphere. Joining them was the author of the economic program of the pseudo-left Socialism and Freedom Party (PSOL).

The letter stated that “as long as the pandemic is not controlled by competent federal government action” the economic recession “will not be overcome.” Its recommendation, repeated over and over, is that the government spend the least possible amount required to contain a social explosion.

Its first and central demand is the acceleration of the purchase and distribution of vaccines. Thus far only six percent of the population has received a first dose. The letter claims that “the vaccine cost-benefit ratio is on the order of six times for every Real spent on purchase and application.” Next, it advocates the free distribution of masks and government encouragement of their use, affirming that it would have “a low cost compared to COVID-19 containment benefits.”

While proclaiming that the “need for a lockdown must be evaluated,” the letter expresses extreme concern about the “scope of activities covered” and its duration. It asserts that “the best combination is one that maximizes the benefits in terms of reducing virus transmission and minimizes economic effects.” The same standard is applied to financial aid, which should be lean and focused on the most affected sectors of the population.

The letter also makes a virulent attack on school closures, claiming that the criminal experience of reopening schools in São Paulo, which caused thousands of infections of educators and students and dozens of deaths, was proof of the “relatively low level of infection in schools.”

This supposed opposition within the ruling class to Bolsonaro is a complete fraud. None of what is proposed guarantees an effective containment of the pandemic. While posing cosmetic differences with Bolsonaro’s policies, this program is founded upon the same hostility to the determinations of science and the interests of preserving lives.

This same essential program finds political expression in the rotten alliance, widely celebrated in the bourgeois media, between the Workers Party (PT) and the Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB), the traditional party of the Brazilian right, materialized in the National Governors Forum. The governors represented in this body have kept all economic activities open in their states and promoted the homicidal reopening of schools. With the single difference that they do not attack the use of masks and vaccines, as Bolsonaro does, they bear the same criminal responsibility for the COVID-19 disaster in Brazil.

This is also, fundamentally, the program of the trade unions, which has acted as arms of the corporations to keep them operating regardless of the risks to workers and society as a whole. The unions have systematically sabotaged workers’ struggles for the closure of businesses and schools. These organizations have also responded with nervousness to agitation among their ranks and, like the bourgeois sector behind the “open letter,” demanded the acceleration of vaccinations for their workers so that capitalist exploitation can return to normal.

Combating the catastrophe created by the pandemic requires an independent working class program, which points in a radically different direction.

Instead of a partial lockdown, based upon a cost-benefit analysis weighing profits against human lives, the working class must fight for a shutdown of all activities that are non-essential to society. Those activities that are maintained should operate under workers’ control and with the aid of scientists and health professionals to ensure workers’ safety. A full income—not starvation bonuses—must be provided for all working families.

The implementation of this program is required to save the lives not only of working people in Brazil, but of their class brothers and sisters all over the planet.

The global nature of the COVID-19 pandemic proves the necessity of the abolition of the capitalist nation-state system. The struggles of the workers in Brazil must be united with those of the international working class to stop the spread of the coronavirus and to implement socialist measures, including the expropriation of the financial oligarchy and the ending of private ownership of the means of production to make way for a scientifically organized and democratically controlled world economy that places human lives over profit.

Australian Royal Commission report whitewashes responsibility for aged care crisis

Clare Bruderlin


The Australian government’s Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety recently released its final report. The inquiry held 23 public hearings over two years and received more than 10,000 submissions from aged care residents and their families, staff, providers and government agencies.

The submissions revealed a catastrophic crisis. Virtually no aspect of the aged care system is accessible, transparent, affordable and adequately funded or staffed. Yet the report conceded that its findings are fundamentally no different to those in numerous previous inquiries.

Commissioner Tony Pagone stated: “The problems in the aged care system are neither new nor unknown. There have been more than twenty substantial official inquiries into aspects of the aged care system over the past twenty years. Many of these inquires have made similar findings and offered similar recommendations for improvement to those that we make in this report. The responses by successive governments have failed to tackle the underlying problems.”

Royal Commission in Age Care Quality and Safety (Source: YouTube)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the inquiry in September 2018, in an effort to quell public anger over media revelations of the abuse, malnourishment and neglect of many elderly residents of nursing homes, and to divert attention from the impact of ongoing cuts and privatisation of the industry by Liberal-National and Labor governments alike.

As with the previous inquiries, this one acts as a cover for those responsible for these conditions. In its final hearing, it stated: “Now is not the time for blame. There is too much at stake. We are left in no doubt that people, governments and government departments have worked tirelessly to avert, contain and respond to this human tragedy.”

The final report, entitled “Care, Dignity and Respect,” made 148 recommendations. Whilst these were characterised as a “call for fundamental reform of the aged care system,” they were predominately administrative measures that do not deal directly with the quality of aged care services.

Many of the recommendations centred around the adoption of a new Aged Care Act, which should be aimed at “ensuring the safety, health and wellbeing of people receiving aged care,” and include a “universal entitlement for high quality and safe care based on assessed need.” The commissioners recommended that the new Act list “rights of older people receiving aged care,” but these only “may be taken into account in interpreting the Act.”

Moreover, a proposal for National Decision-Making Principles to guide the drafting of relevant federal, state and territory laws was made in 2014 by the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC). The same recommendation was repeated in a further 2017 ALRC inquiry.

Other recommendations included the creation of an “independent office of the Inspector-General of Aged Care to investigate, monitor and report on the administration and governance of the aged care system,” a “review of certificate-based courses for aged care,” and a “review of aged care quality standards.” Previous inquiries have made similar calls for reviews.

The recommendations are not enforceable or mandatory, nor is a five-year time frame set for the government to implement them. There was also disagreement between the commissioners on 43 recommendations, primarily on questions of funding and governance.

In a press conference, Morrison signaled that the government has no intention of taking any action to address even the “urgent and short-term” priorities set out by the report. He stated: “I thank the commissioners because they know there are no easy fixes… It will take quite considerable time to achieve the scale of change that we want to and need to.”

Likewise, opposition Labor Party leader Anthony Albanese said: “Labor will take time to digest and work our way through the recommendations of the Royal Commission.”

According to the report, in order to implement its recommendations, government funding would need to increase by $10 to $20 billion a year. Morrison announced a meagre $452.2 million package—less than the $537 million pledged in response to the inquiry’s interim report in November 2019.

This is in line with the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, which resulted in the deaths of more than 600 aged care residents and the infection of over 1,700 aged care workers. Just $1.8 billion was pledged to aged care services to cope with COVID-19, a fraction of the hundreds of billions allocated to bail out big business.

Professor Joseph Ibrahim, Head of the Health Law and Ageing Research Unit at Monash University, commented: “Saying it will take five years to get anything done means another 200,000 older people will have lived and died in aged care before we see a change. The $450 million that has been allocated now is less than 3 percent of the total annual budget for aged care, so it’s really just, it’s not very much at all.”

The report outlined four concerns for immediate attention: food and nutrition, dementia care, the use of restrictive practices and palliative care. But the recommendations, even if implemented, would do nothing to significantly improve the lives of those in aged care.

The commissioners recommended an immediate increase to aged care residents’ Basic Daily Fee of $10 per resident per day, to pay for living needs “including nutrition.” This was described as an “urgent need for action,” yet it is only proposed to be implemented by July 1.

Submissions from the public showed that despite the extraction of 85 percent of the aged pension from every resident, the average amount spent on food in these facilities is just $6.08 per resident per day. The single aged pension is $944.30 per fortnight, 85 percent of which amounts to $802.66. Of this, just $85.12 is expended on food, meant to cover three meals a day and morning and afternoon tea.

The inquiry heard that widespread understaffing means that many aged care workers do not have the time or training or provide adequate care for residents, particularly for those with high-care needs like dementia.

Yet the report only recommended that by July 2023, the government should “establish a dementia support pathway to provide a comprehensive, clear and accessible post-diagnosis support pathway for people living with dementia, their families and carers.” In the same time frame, it recommended that the government should merely “review and publicly report on,” the state of specialist dementia care services.

Despite commissioning a report by the University of Wollongong’s Centre for Health Service Development which found that, on average, each resident in a residential aged care facility receives 180 minutes of care per day, of which just 36 minutes are provided by registered nurses, the inquiry’s recommended time frame to address this is 2022.

By 2022, the report recommended an abysmal 200 minutes, or around 3.5 hours, of care per resident day—an increase of just 20 minutes—of which 40 minutes would be provided by registered nurses. By 2024, it recommended an increase to 215 minutes of care per day, with 44 minutes to be provided by registered nurses.

Also by 2024, the standard would require at least one registered nurse on site at each residential aged care facility at all times. But no staff-to-patient ratios were proposed.

The trade unions welcomed the report. They have facilitated the privatisation of aged care and the attacks on workers’ wages and conditions by suppressing strike action and enforcing regressive enterprise bargaining agreements for decades.

The Australian Nurses and Midwives Federation called on the government to “urgently respond” to the report’s “recognition that staffing levels in aged care are too low and that staff ratios should be introduced.”

The Health Services Union (HSU) said its members were “hoping this report will finally provide the impetus to change the system for good.” It claimed that government and opposition members were “open to another HSU suggestion,” a possible aged care levy. It insisted: “The future looks brighter.”

In reality, the appalling conditions in aged care, which have worsened during the coronavirus pandemic, can be explained only as a result of the capitalist system, which subordinates everything, including life itself, to the interests of private profit.

Unless the working class undertakes independent political action in defence of the elderly, which means fighting for a workers’ government to expropriate the corporate health empires and major banks and corporations, these conditions will continue to deteriorate.

COVID-19 cases surge across India

Wasantha Rupasinghe


Yesterday, India, the third worst-impacted country in the world, reported 53,364 coronavirus infections, the highest number in a single-day in more than five months. Its total caseload is now over 11.73 million with a death toll of more 160, 440, even according to under-reported official records.

The rapidly increasing number of infections exposes repeated claims by Prime Minister Narendra Modi that his government has fought “the most successful battle” against COVID-19.

Rijo John, a health economist and adjunct professor at Rajagiri College of Social Sciences in Kerala, told the India Spend website on March 22 that “daily new cases on a seven-day average have risen by 167 percent (from its seven-day average low point in February),” while “deaths have increased by 71 percent in the same period.”

Health workers screen residents for COVID-19 symptoms at Deonar slum in Mumbai, India, Saturday, July 11, 2020. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

The surge in cases appears to be bound up with new COVID-19 variants. According to the Health Ministry, a new “double mutant variant” (a reference to two mutations, E484Q and L452R) of the coronavirus has been detected in 18 Indian states. This is in addition to other strains or variants of concern (VOCs) that have also been detected in other countries.

A ministry press release on March 24 said: “Since INSACOG [a multi-agency Indian network monitoring genome variations of the virus] initiated its work, 771 VOCs have been detected in a total of 10,787 positive samples shared by States/UTs [Union Territories].”

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh told the media on March 23 that 81 percent of the 401 samples sent by his government for genome sequencing tested positive for the highly infectious UK variant.

Maharashtra state, home to India’s commercial capital Mumbai, reported its highest-ever daily cases at 31,855 yesterday. On the same day, Dharavi, a massive Mumbai slum, registered its largest daily tally at 5,190, a massive jump from the previous day’s count of 3,514. Despite the surge, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Cooperation has not recommended a total lockdown.

Dharavi, which is home to over 650,000 people, with a population density of 227,136 per square kilometre, has recorded a 62 percent increase in COVID-19 cases so far this month compared to February. Maintaining social distancing and hygienic conditions is virtually impossible in the slum where families of eight to ten members live in 10 x10 feet rooms.

Similar or even worse conditions prevail in many other large cities throughout India. Apart from Maharashtra, 19 other states and Union Territories, including Karnataka, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh, have reported their highest number of cases since January.

According to an article in the Indian Express on March 25, over 50 percent of the 13,083 beds at dedicated COVID-19 healthcare facilities are occupied. “At least 65 percent of ICU beds are occupied, whereas only 281 of 987 ventilator beds are available,” the newspaper reported.

A doctor from the King Edward Memorial government hospital in Mumbai, one of the oldest in the city, told Reuters: “If cases continue to rise like this for a week or so, a crisis is imminent.”

Addressing a March 17 online meeting of state chief ministers, Modi admitted that infections were rising in many previously unaffected areas. “This increase is more than 150 percent in 70 districts of the country in the last few weeks,” he said, warning that this could lead to “a country-wide outbreak.”

Modi did not propose any emergency measures and instead attempted to pass on the responsibility to the state governments, complaining that local administrations were “not showing seriousness on the issue of masks.”

The prime minister, in fact, has pursued a disastrous herd immunity policy, allowing the virus to spread across the country unchecked. State governments throughout India, taking a lead from Modi, are pursuing the same program.

State governments, Modi cynically declared, need to be “serious on ‘test, trace and treat’ as was being done for the last year.”

Contrary to this assertion that Modi’s government has responded “seriously” to the pandemic, India, which has a population of about 1.37 billion, has only carried out around 235 million sample tests in the past twelve months—i.e., only 5.8 percent of the population have been covered.

Modi, moreover, has ruled out a second national lockdown and only some states have imposed limited restrictions. In Maharashtra, the state government introduced some restrictions in Nagpur city between March 15 and 21, but all shops, apart from those delivering essentials, could stay open till 4 p.m., and restaurants until 7p.m.

Exposing the real situation, a senior Maharashtra state government official told Reuters on March 18: “We have asked industries there to operate with minimum manpower as much as possible.” In other words, there will be no industry closures or any other measures that might harm capitalist profit-making.

While governments and health authorities are attempting to blame ordinary people for the spike in infections, the catastrophe is a direct result of the herd immunity program, as well as meagre health budget allocations over decades by consecutive central and state governments. These policies and the uninterrupted operations of businesses and industries over the past 12 months have benefitted India’s multi-billionaires, major corporations and the capitalist class as a whole.

Modi and Indian health authorities now claim to be conducting the “world’s biggest vaccination program,” including jabs for people over the age of 60.

The Financial Times reported on March 22, however, that the program “excludes millions of vulnerable Indians, who often live for years with undiagnosed diabetes and hypertension—conditions which are both indicators for priority vaccine.”

India’s vaccination program, which began in mid-January, has met just 7 percent of its target of administering 500 million doses by July 2021. In order to achieve this target, it must administer 3.65 million shots per day.

The Modi government’s ill-prepared COVID-19 lockdown in March last year, which gave the population just four-hour’s notice, led to the immediate lay off of over 100 million internal migrant workers, most of them from the so-called unorganised sector. The government provided no social support to these workers and their families.

The lockdown was not combined with mass testing, contact tracing or the allocation of billions of rupees in additional healthcare spending, and failed to achieve its declared aims. Millions of workers were thrown into extreme poverty and hunger and hundreds of thousands of small-businesses collapsed.

An Indian Express article on March 24 cited a survey by Azim Premji University (APU) researchers. Based on national data, it revealed that more than half of those who lost their jobs during the pandemic were still unemployed in December. The newspaper also reported that 90 percent of those surveyed reported a “reduction in food consumption during lockdown; of them only 30 percent of respondents reported that food consumption was back to pre-lockdown levels in November.”

25 Mar 2021

Pulitzer Centre Persephone Miel Fellowship 2021

Application Deadline: 23rd April 2021

Eligible Countries: International (Female journalists and journalists from developing countries are strongly encouraged to apply).

About the Award: The fellowship, overseen by the Pulitzer Center in collaboration with Internews, is designed to help journalists from the developing world do the kind of reporting they’ve always wanted to do and enable them to bring their work to a broader international audience. The fellowship will benefit those with limited access to other fellowships and those whose work is not routinely disseminated internationally. Miel fellowships involve reporting from within the applicant’s native country—or following migrant communities from there to other locations.

Type: Fellowship (Professional)

Eligibility: The Persephone Miel fellowships are open to all journalists, writers, photographers, radio producers or filmmakers, staff journalists as well as freelancers and media professionals outside the U.S. who are seeking to report from their home country. Female journalists and journalists from developing countries are strongly encouraged to apply. Applicants must be proficient in English.

Selection: The fellowship recipient will be selected by the Pulitzer Center in consultation with Internews. Selection will be based on the strength of the proposed topic and the strength of the applicant’s work as demonstrated in their work samples. We are looking for projects that explore systemic issues in the applicant’s native country and that provide an overarching thesis, rather than individual spot-reports from the field.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: 

  • The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting will provide a travel grant of $5000 for a reporting project on topics and regions of global importance, with an emphasis on issues that have gone unreported or under-reported in the mainstream media. Specific grant terms are negotiated during the application process based on the scope of proposed work and intended outcomes. Payment of the first half of the grant is disbursed prior to travel, upon receipt of required materials, and the second half on submission of the principal work for publication/broadcast.
  • The Pulitzer Center will also offer $2500 to cover travel expenses associated with travel to Washington, D.C., to meet with Pulitzer Center staff and journalists and take part in a 2-day workshop. Depending on the specific needs of the fellow, this may occur prior or after the reporting takes place.
  • The Center works with fellowship recipients to distribute their work across multiple platforms in the U.S. to reach the widest possible audience. Projects with multimedia components that combine print, photography and video are strongly encouraged.

How to Apply: Click here to go to the Pulitzer Center Grant Application webform.

Visit the Program Webpage for Details

Canada IDRC Gender in STEM Research Initiative 2021

Application Deadline: 22nd April 2021 (17:00 Eastern Daylight Time)

About the Award: In the last decade, pioneering work by a number of scholars and organizations around the world has increased awareness of the importance of a more inclusive approach to science, in particular one that integrates women as scientists and users of science, and that recognizes gender analysis as integral to high-quality research and innovation. Several initiatives have been launched in response, and some advances have been made. Nonetheless we continue to observe twin deficits in women’s representation as leaders in science — notably, in natural sciences, and engineering and maths — and in the integration of gender analysis in these fields. This requires a redoubling of efforts to deepen understanding about the twin gender deficits in STEM and propose evidence-based strategies for how higher education and science systems can respond.

This initiative, therefore, will support university-led consortia to expand and deepen scholarship in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), particularly in Africa, on the challenges and opportunities that women scientists experience in STEM fields and on the importance of gender analysis in STEM research. The initiative will increase localized evidence on the key factors that constrain or support women scientists and gender analysis in STEM at different levels and in different STEM domains, on actual or potential strategies (structures, programs and policies) to address these, and on lessons learned at the level of universities and responsible ministries, nationally and regionally. Through research, consortia will be expected to identify innovative approaches that increase the capacity of universities and other higher-education institutions to be more inclusive of women and gender analysis in STEM. The ultimate objective is to increase the contribution of science to gender equality.

Expressions of interest (EoIs) are invited from research consortia that bring together the range of multi-disciplinary and sectoral perspectives, capacities, and contributions needed to undertake gender in STEM research in line with the objectives, outcomes, and themes of this funding opportunity, as set out below.

Eligibility: Applications are eligible from consortia involving at least two public universities based in at least two eligible LMICs. Consortia may also involve researchers based at other institutions in these and other countries, and other stakeholders, as appropriate. Consistent with the focus of the call, we expect women scientists to play a leading role in the consortia as established and emerging researchers.

 Selection Criteria:

Eligible Countries: Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. Up to eight consortia may be funded, half being in Africa.

Number of Awards: 8

Value of Award: CA$1 million to CA$1.25 million per research consortium; a total of CA$8 million is available for this call.  

Duration of Award: 36 months

How to Apply: Apply in link below

  • It is important to go through all application requirements in the Award Webpage (see Link below) before applying.

Visit Award Webpage for Details

Slovak Government Scholarships 2021/2022

Application Deadline: 30th April 2021 by 16:00 CET (4 pm)

About the Award: The Government of the Slovak Republic approved the establishment of the National Scholarship Programme of the Slovak Republic for the support of mobility of students, PhD students, university teachers, researchers and artists in 2005. The National Scholarship Programme of the Slovak Republic (NSP) is funded by the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak Republic.

Type: Masters, PhD, Research, Short Course

Eligibility: Eligible applicants for a scholarship in the framework of the NSP:

A) students who:

  • are university students at universities outside Slovakia;
  • are students of the second level of higher education (master’s students), or are students who at the time of application deadline have already completed at least 2.5 years of their university studies in the same study programme;
  • will be on a study stay in Slovakia during their higher education outside Slovakia and who will be accepted by a public, private or state university in Slovakia for an academic mobility1 to study in Slovakia.

All 3 conditions must be met. This category does not apply to doctoral (PhD) studies (or their equivalent).

  • Duration of a scholarship stay (students): 1 – 2 full semesters (i.e. 4 – 5 or 9 – 10 months) or full 1 – 3 trimesters, in case the academic year is divided into trimesters (i.e. 3 – 4 or 6 – 7 or 9 – 10 months).

B) PhD students whose higher education or scientific training takes place outside Slovakia and who are accepted by a public, private or state university or a research institution in Slovakia eligible to carry out a doctoral study programme2 (e.g. the Slovak Academy of Sciences) for an academic mobility1 to study/conduct research/artistic stay in Slovakia.

  • Duration of a scholarship stay (PhD students): 1 – 10 months.

C) international university teachers, researchers and artists who are invited to a teaching/research/artistic stay in Slovakia by an institution with a valid certificate of eligibility to carry out research and development, which is not a business company3 and it has its seat in Slovakia.

  • Duration of a scholarship stay (university teachers, researchers or artists): 1 – 10 months. 

Eligible Countries: International

To be Taken at (Country): Slovakia

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: The scholarship is intended to cover international scholarship holders’ living costs, i.e. the costs related to staying in Slovakia (food, accommodation, etc.), during their study, research/artistic or teaching stay at universities and in research organisations in Slovakia. The scholarship holder can ask for assistance concerning accommodation and formalities related to entering and staying in the territory of the Slovak Republic either his/her host institution, or he/she can handle all the necessities him-/herself. 

Duration of Award: When planning your scholarship stay, the following applies:

  • beginning of the scholarship stay:

o    students: the earliest date of the beginning of the stay is 1 September 2021; the latest date of the beginning of the stay is 1 April 2022

o    PhD students, university teachers, researchers and artists: the earliest date of the beginning of the stay is 1 September 2021; the latest date of the beginning of the stay is 31 August 2022

  • completion of the scholarship stay:

o    students: the latest date of the completion of the stay is 31 August 2022

o    PhD students, university teachers, researchers and artists: the latest date of the completion of the stay is 30 November 2022

How to Apply: Scholarship applications are submitted online at www.scholarships.skOnline application system is opened at least 6 weeks prior to the application deadline. Applications can be filled in only in case that the online application system has already been opened.

  • It is important to go through all application requirements in the Award Webpage (see Link below) before applying.

Visit Award Webpage for Details