20 Dec 2023

Cardinal Crimes: Absolute Rule and Fleecing the Holy See

Binoy Kampmark



Photograph Source: Claude Truong-Ngoc / Wikimedia Commons – CC BY-SA 4.0

Like a bank with branches everywhere, the Catholic Church will go after its own when circumstances permit, wherever they are.  In other instances, it will take the opposite tack, shielding the detractors or deviants from local scrutiny, and concealing them from the burden of accountability.

Italian Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, former adviser to Pope Francis and the second ranking official in the Vatican’s Secretariat of State, could not count on the latter, though his prosecution had a pungent whiff of scapegoating to it.  After some two-and-a-half years of tense church drama and institutional intrigue, a Vatican court sentenced the Pope’s former chief of staff to five-and-a-half years in jail for financial crimes, permanent disqualification from holding public office and a fine approximating to $8000 euros.

In 2020, a displeased Pope Francis accused Becciu of appropriating the equivalent of US$100,000 in Vatican funds via a non-profit outfit run by the cardinal’s brother.  This, as things transpired, was merely the beginning.  Proceedings against Becciu commenced in 2021, with the prosecution’s brief heaving with charges of embezzlement, abuse of office, conspiracy and witness tampering.  The punishment sought was not inconsiderable: a prison term of seven years and three months, a fine of 10,329 euros, and a ban from holding office.

An important focus of the case centred on the development of a London investment property costing the Vatican Secretariat of State an eye-popping total of 350 million euros between 2014 and 2018.  A former Harrods warehouse, the property was intended as a site for luxury apartments.  Instead, much fleecing took place, with very financially minded brokers pocketing tens of millions of euros in fees and commissions, topped by a bill of 15 million euros for ceding control of the building.

The property, subsequently sold at considerable loss, was seen as nothing less than a mechanism for fraud.  The court was convinced that the crime of embezzlement had been proven, with the amount coming “to about one-third of the availability at the time of the Secretariat of State because it violated the provisions of the administration of ecclesiastical property.”

Showing himself to be very a much a brotherly sort, Becciu was also found guilty of embezzlement for transferring 125,000 euros to a charity run by his brother Antonio in the cardinal’s home diocese of Sardinia and using Vatican money to pay a Sardinian security consultant (one dare not call her an intelligence analyst), Cecilia Marogna.

The number of defendants involved in this enterprise suggest scope, scale and complexity. They include former Vatican employee Fabrizio Tirabassi, convicted of extortion and money-laundering, and Enrico Crasso, who earned his crust offering financial advice to the Vatican, found guilty on a number of charges including embezzlement.  Both defendants received sentences of seven-and-a-half years and seven years respectively.

This crowded cosmos of heady corruption also featured the exploits of Raffaele Mincione, an investment manager closely connected to the London investment, and businessman Gianluigi Torzi, the glue in brokering the final stage regarding the purchase of that property.  Torzi was found guilty of extortion and sentenced to a six-year prison sentence iced with a six-thousand-euro penalty; Mincione, convicted on embezzlement and money laundering charges, received five years and six months.

Marogna also found herself with a sentence of three years and nine months, with her company receiving a penalty worth 40,000 euros.  Her case proved to be a particularly salty one, given her receipt of 575,000 euros via her Slovenian-based front company from the Vatican’s Swiss bank account, ostensibly to provide Becciu advice on securing the release of Sister Gloria Celia Narvaez, who had been kidnapped by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb.  But the amount in question was a double payment; Becciu and Marogna had already been furnished a separate amount of 1 million euros to facilitate the release of the Colombian nun using the services of the British security firm Inkerman. (Narvaez was released in October 2021.)

With some extra cash to stroke and burn, Marogna proceeded to, according to Slovenian bank records linked with her front company Logsic Humanitarne Dejavnosti, purchase luxury goods and enjoy well pampered resort vacations.

Other defendants, albeit of the less colourful variety, also featured.  Fines of less than US$2000 were handed out to Tommaso Di Ruzza and René Brülhart for failing to report what amounted to a suspicious transaction, while lawyer Nicola Squillace received a slap on the wrist with a suspended one year and ten months sentence.

Throughout these lurid proceedings, lawyers for the defence expressed agitation at what they saw as a lack of due process and a conspicuous absence of respect for human rights on the part of the prosecutors.  In one notable example, the prosecutors, defying an order by tribunal president Giuseppe Pignatone, refused to make available the taped video testimony of their star witness and supergrass Monsignor Alberto Perlasca, the individual whose hands most dirtied the London real estate investment.

Some of these concerns stand to reason: the long shadow of absolutist power in the form of Pope Francis, whose office fuses executive, legislative and judicial authority, was ever cast throughout.  The Holy See, mindful of such power, has also been assiduous in avoiding subscribing to human rights conventions that would provide an avenue of review to the European Court of Human Rights.  As Becciu’s attorney, Fabio Viglione, declared in October 2021, “These are harmful to the right of the defence that affect the right to a fair trial.”

Marogna’s own legal team also noted that the prosecution’s refusal to produce court ordered documentation would be intolerable in the formal Italian court system.  As a defence memorandum authored by international law specialist Riccardo Sindoca remarked, “In a normal situation, in all countries having a judicial system that could be considered autonomous and impartial and structured in a way to safeguard a fair trial, the refusal would have been immediately sanctioned.”

All exercises of calculated scapegoating or selected sacrifice suggest a cleansing of the collective social and political body.  The body, duly purified, can ignore the corrupting ailments it was afflicted with.  In the past lay disease; now, glorious pink health awaits.  But institutions such as the Catholic Church, and any large corporate entity spanning the globe, use such instruments less as matters of purification than distraction.  The rot often goes deeper.  In the meantime, the ledger of distractions will likely bulk; expect further appeals, a rapidly scribbled film script or a Becciu Netflix special.

Strikes erupt after the formation of new PSOE-Sumar government

Santiago Guillen


A new wave of strikes has erupted across Spain after the installation of the new, pro-war, pro-austerity government of the social democratic Socialist Party (PSOE) and Sumar, a coalition of pseudo-left and Stalinist parties.

Over 30 different sectors including healthcare, education, transport, fire services, logistics, mining, oil, aeronautics, metalworks, auxiliary car industries and sanitation, among others, are affected.

The strikes show the determination of hundreds of thousands of workers in Spain and all over the world to end the crippling cuts to their standard of living, but also prove they cannot defend their interests while subject to the control of the bureaucratic cliques running the trade unions, linked to parties like the PSOE and Sumar, that police the class struggle on behalf of the corporations.

On Monday, 1,500 workers at Amazon’s logistics centre in Dos Hermanas, Seville, southern Spain, began an indefinite strike to demand better wages and conditions. The strike is being followed by 90 percent of the workforce according to the trade unions, the social democratic General Workers Union (UGT) and the Sumar-aligned Workers Commissions (CCOO). Workers earning an average of only 1,400 euros a month are trying to secure pay parity with other centres, where wages average 2,000 euros. In addition, they are demanding better overtime compensation and that holidays be counted as weekly rest.

Dos Hermanas is one of Amazon’s most modern logistics centres in Spain. Fully robotized, it began operating in September 2020 and covers an area of almost 180,000 square meters, 26 football fields. It has a storage capacity of 25 million products and an average of 450,000 units are prepared every day.

In the north eastern region of Catalonia, 55,000 nurses have been on indefinite strike since last week. They are protesting an agreement signed between the regional Catalan government and the UGT and CCOO which does not increase their wages or recognize their professional category.

Despite the fact that the strike has only been called by the sector’s minority unions and that draconian minimum service levels have been imposed by the regional Catalan government, of up to 100 percent in some positions, large numbers of workers are taking part, with a large demonstration of thousands of nurses held on December 15.

Regular strikes have broken out in the health sector throughout the year in different regions and affecting doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers, reflecting the deterioration of public healthcare under austerity. The unions, however, have deliberately isolated these struggles and refused to call for a unified action across the country.

Last week, 9,000 workers from Technological company, a subsidiary providing computer services to the consulting firm Accenture, also went on strike. In some centres 100 percent of staff participated. Workers are demanding higher wages.

According to the unions, the workforce has lost purchasing power equivalent to 58 days of work in the last three years. Meanwhile, the members of the company’s board of directors have raised their salaries by 36 percent. The consulting sector is known for its heavy exploitation of workers, pressured to meet stringent deadlines.

In the airline industry, 3,000 ground service workers for Iberia, the flag carrier of Spain, part of International Airlines Group, went on strike in eight airports across the country. They are demanding an end to sub-contracting to other companies, which frequently means a worsening of their working conditions.

Striking Spanish service workers [Photo: Servicios CCOO]

In Correos, the state-owned company responsible for providing postal services, workers have been called out on strike for December 29. Repeated strikes at the company have taken place in recent years in pursuit of better working conditions.

These are just some of the strikes that are affecting hundreds of thousands of workers, but there are many others including at private schools across the Basque Country; garbage collectors in Coruña; recreational and betting machines company Operibérica in Getafe; induction hobs and ovens company BHS-Balay in Zaragoza; footwear company Pablosky in Toledo; automotive component company Airtel in Zaragoza; and steel company Comforsa, the largest industrial company owned by the Catalan government.

Underlying these strikes are the high levels of inflation that have sunk real wages in the last three years, plus long-term precariousness and poor working conditions. Real wages in Spain fell 5.3 percent between 2019 and 2022.

Last year saw the highest number of strikes since 2012, the year of an explosion of industrial disputes following the Egyptian Revolution and European Union-wide austerity in the aftermath of 2008 global financial crisis.

The trend accelerated in 2023, with a 21 percent increase in the number of strikes compared to the same period in 2022. This came to a partial halt with this year’s general elections in the month of June, the subsequent negotiations to form a new government and summer holidays.

Now, spurred by the arrival of Christmas, a very important period for business activity in key sectors of the Spanish economy such as hospitality and transport, workers are once again fighting against poverty wages, below-inflation increases and deteriorating working conditions. Similar actions are taking place throughout Europe and the world, mobilizing workers who face not only police repression but also the trade union bureaucracy which is actively collaborating with companies to suppress, exhaust and derail these struggles.

Although across 2023 headline inflation is only expected to reach just over 3 percent, this data does not reflect the daily reality facing the working class. Food prices have risen by 9 percent, transportation by 5.2 percent and clothing by 4.5 percent, while the wage agreements signed by the trade unions meant an average salary increase of 3.49 percent.

Basic products are increasingly becoming a luxury, such as olive oil—a staple of the Spanish diet—the price of which has increased by 66.7 percent in one year; rice, with an increase of 17 percent; and legumes and vegetables, 16.8 percent.

Added to this is the fact that housing costs are still completely out of control. Rent for a 60-square-metre home in Madrid represents 112 percent of the minimum wage.

Regarding working conditions, according to a report published this year by the Ministry of Labor, 46.9 percent of workers (8.1 million) are in precarious employment. Adding the unemployed and precarious self-employed brings the total to 11.9 million people. These workers suffer enormously, with the report estimating that in 2020, 170,000 of the 500,000 diagnosed cases of depression (34 percent) came down to precarious employment.

The eruption of a new strike wave poses the need to break with the trade union bureaucracy, which does not serve the interests of workers but stands in alliance with the PSOE-Sumar government against them. They are determined, in the cause of global competitiveness, to inflict a defeat on every struggle mounted by workers through a combination of bureaucratic betrayal, savage police repression and draconian minimum services laws.

The strikes take place against the backdrop of a global upsurge of the class struggle all over the world, directed against the efforts of the ruling classes to slash workers’ wages, living standards and benefits to pay for NATO’s war against Russia in Ukraine, support for the Israeli genocide in Gaza—part of a military escalation throughout the Middle East—and a massive programme of arms spending.

Nippon Steel acquires US Steel for $14.9 billion

Jessica Goldstein


Nippon Steel Corporation, the largest Japanese-based steelmaker, announced Monday that it would acquire US Steel for $14.9 billion. The acquisition will be completed as an all-cash transaction at $55.00 per share of US Steel’s remaining stock.

US Steel's Edgar Thomson plant in Braddock, Pennsylvania, on December 18, 2023. [AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar]

The sale of the 122-year-old Pittsburgh-based steelmaker, at one time the world’s largest company, is a further sign of the decades-long decay of American capitalism and loss of industrial dominance.

US Steel was formed in 1901 after US financier JP Morgan funded the the merger of smaller companies owned by Andrew Carnegie, Elbert Gary and other steel barons. It played a central role in the history of labor struggles including the 1919 Great Steel Strike.

The acquisition takes place as the US intensifies its economic and military conflict with China and expands military operations around the world to grab up markets and raw materials and offset its economic decline.

The sale was met with anti-Japanese chauvinism and militarism from Democratic and Republican politicians and the United Steelworkers union, which have long used nationalism to divert the anger of workers over the destruction of jobs and living standards by the capitalist steel owners and their “partners” in the USW bureaucracy.

“Today, a critical piece of America’s defense industrial base was auctioned off to foreigners for cash,” US Senator J.D. Vance, Republican from Ohio, said in a statement. “I warned of this outcome months ago and will oppose it in the months ahead.”

“It’s absolutely outrageous that US Steel has agreed to sell themselves to a foreign company,” Pennsylvania Democratic Senator John Fetterman said in a statement. “Steel is always about security—both our national security and the economic security of our steel communities. I am committed to doing anything I can do, using my platform and my position, to block this foreign sale.”

“We strongly urge government regulators to carefully scrutinize this acquisition and determine if the proposed transaction serves the national security interests of the United States and benefits workers,” the United Steelworkers President David McCall said in a statement.

A White House press spokesperson stated Biden was aware of the deal and that it could face “regulatory review,” leading to a 3 percent decline in US Steel’s share values. While it is not clear if the Biden administration will block the deal, it sees Japan as a close ally in American imperialism’s economic and military conflict with China.

The acquisition is part of the global restructuring of the steel and auto industry (US Steel is a major supplier to the auto industry), which threatens the jobs, wages and conditions of workers throughout the world.

The Granite City Works mill near the Illinois-Missouri border was part of the deal with Nippon (NSC), and the future of the now-idled facility is uncertain. Four hundred workers were laid off in September 2023 as part of the process of preparing the corporation for sale and idling the last blast furnace at the plant. Six hundred more workers were laid off in November following the indefinite idling of Granite City Works, linking them in struggle with thousands more who have lost their jobs in the US and around the world as part of an international end-of-year jobs bloodbath.

The announcement of NSC’s takeover comes six months after US Steel began to look for buyers privately, courting a slew of rival steelmakers. US-based Cleveland Cliffs offered to acquire US Steel in private talks on July 28, before the company publicly announced its “strategic alternatives” process on August 13. The offer “proposed acquiring 100 percent of the outstanding stock of U.S. Steel for a per share value of $17.50 in cash and 1.023 shares of Cliffs stock,” according to the website Business Wire.

The proposal would have created a virtual monopoly blast furnace (raw) steel producer in the US and the only American steel company in the top 10 worldwide and top four outside China. Raw steel production, though being outpaced by electric arc furnace (recycled) steel production, remains important to the interests of construction and vehicle manufacturing due to its quality.

The majority of US Steel’s steel manufacturing output has been produced through a raw steelmaking process, creating steel from iron ore and coke in blast furnaces. In recent years, it has invested in electric arc furnaces to produce steel from recycled material, in many ways a more labor- and cost-efficient process. Because the very nature of recycled steel production requires far less coal than blast furnaces, electric arc furnaces bolster the amount of government subsidies that corporations can win for meeting carbon caps.

There is an overall shift toward what is referred to as “decarbonisation” among steelmakers in the US and the competition for government subsidies for meeting carbon caps. Like the shift to electric vehicles in the auto industry, this is not driven primarily by environmental concerns but by the US government’s geo-political, economic and military conflicts with China.

A 2023 report by Global Energy Monitor found that the industry is falling far short of efforts to cut carbon emissions required to meet the goal of keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, outlined by the International Energy Agency (IEA) Net Zero by 2050 scenario.

The report found that “the iron and steel industry account for 11 percent of global carbon emissions and 7-9 percent of global greenhouse emissions,” and that steel industry emissions total more than all the emissions from passenger cars in the world combined. GEM called for no further reinvestment in blast furnace steelmaking by 2025. US Steel’s commitment to moving toward restructuring around hybrid electric arc and raw steel production likely made the sale attractive to a major buyer like Nippon.

The United Steelworkers union strongly backed the acquisition bid from US-based Cleveland Cliffs, just as it backed Cliffs 2020 acquisition of the majority of ArcelorMittal USA’s operations in 2020. The USW announced it would only back Cliffs’ proposal and no others, exposing both it’s role as a business partner of the corporations and their assault on steelworkers’ jobs and conditions.

Cloaking the bureaucracy’s own financial interests behind hypocritical concerns for workers rights, USW President McCall said, “To say we’re disappointed in the announced deal between U.S. Steel and Nippon is an understatement, as it demonstrates the same greedy, shortsighted attitude that has guided U.S. Steel for far too long.”

McCall complained that neither US Steel or Nippon Steel “reached out to our union regarding the deal, which is in itself a violation of our partnership agreement that requires US Steel to notify us of a change in control or business conditions.” He said the union did not know whether NSC “has the capacity to live up to our existing contract. This includes not just the day-to-day commitments of our labor agreement, but also significant obligations to fund pension and retiree insurance benefits that are the most extensive in the domestic steel industry.”

The existing contracts for 11,000 USW members, as rank-and-file steelworkers know from their day-to-day struggles, do not keep workers protected from injury or death on the job, from retaliation for raising safety concerns, and do even less to protect retirement benefits as multiple benefit tiers have been created with the help of the USW in order to “keep domestic jobs competitive.”

In a company press release Monday, US Steel said all of its “commitments with its employees, including all collective bargaining agreements in place with its unions, will be honored and NSC is committed to maintaining these relationships uninterrupted.”

In other words, Nippon Steel intends to maintain the “partnership” with the USW, which has rammed through decades of concessions contracts that have benefited the profit interests of shareholders. The low labor costs enforced by the USW were undoubtedly a selling point for giant corporations like NSC.

The past two national collective bargaining agreements between the USW and US Steel were pushed through behind the backs of workers in 2018 and 2022. Both included wage cuts, deepening the financial instability that steelworkers and their families have faced for decades, and neither contract contained a single protection for workers’ jobs while at the same time expanding the companies’ rights to hire contract workers in its drive to cut labor costs.

The 2018 contract was ratified under conditions in which the union blocked a nationwide strike against US Steel and ArcelorMittal USA, which has since sold its US operations to Cleveland Cliffs. The USW defied unanimous strike votes and signed a four-year deal, which did not include a single protective measure for workers’ jobs.

US Steel has seen its most profitable periods in the years following, a result of the 2018 betrayals by the USW leadership and the significant wage and benefit cuts that workers suffered. From 2020 to 2021, US Steel’s gross profits increased over 30-fold, rising from $183 million in 2020 to $5.74 billion in 2021, surpassing even its profits in 2018 and 2019.

One year after the 2018 deal was signed—with many workers still not having received the full contract—US Steel announced plans to lay off a total of 1,745 workers at its Great Lakes mill south of Detroit and to idle the mill, shifting remaining operations to Gary Works in Indiana, following job cuts earlier in 2019.

The USW has also played a critical role in blocking struggles that would disrupt the war plans of US imperialism. This is exposed by late former USW President Tom Conway’s secret talks with Biden in February 2022 to block a national strike by 30,000 oil refinery and petrochemical workers for better pay and working conditions, and to push through a deal that Conway boasted “did not add to inflationary pressures.” The aim of the talks was to ensure that no strike action by workers would hinder energy production that the Biden administration would need in order to continue its proxy war against Russia in Ukraine.

19 Dec 2023

Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) Africa Research Programme 2024/2025

APPLICATION DEADLINE:

7th January 2024, EOD CET

Tell Me About Award:

The Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI), based in Rome (Italy), is seeking to hire a Researcher leading our analytical and policy work on Africa. Successful candidates are expected to demonstrate expertise of African domestic, regional and international trends, notably in the Sahel and the Horn, as well as knowledge of the political, economic, climate, migration and security dynamics on the continent.
His/her tasks will include:

  • Leading research projects within IAI’s Mediterranean, Middle East and Africa Programme on political, social trends in the Sahel and the Horn, as well as EU foreign policy towards this area;
  • Writing and editing of research reports, analysis and commentaries for publication;
  • Coordinating the organisation of seminars and conferences and drafting reports about their results;
  • Supporting the coordination of national and international research groups;
  • Participating as a speaker in seminars and conferences;
  • Assisting with the Programme’s fundraising and networking activities.

TYPE:

Fellowship

Who Can Apply?

The ideal candidate should have:

  • A Master Degree or be a PhD candidate with at least three years of professional experience in research; 
  • Familiarity with fieldwork research in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa is a plus;
  • Full English proficiency; knowledge of Italian would be an asset;
  • Familiarity with grant-making initiatives funded by the EU and other public and private entities (e.g. Horizon 2020, Horizon Europe, etc.);
  • Ability to work collaboratively and effectively in a team environment.

WHERE WILL AWARD BE TAKEN?

Rome, IAI, Via dei Montecatini, 17

HOW MANY AWARDS?

Not specified

What Is The Benefit Of Award?

The successful candidate will be offered a term contract lasting 11 months, from 1st February 2024 to 31 December 2024, with possibility of renewal. The offered salary is € 23,100.00 gross paid in equal monthly installments with relative tax and social security deductions as provided by law.

HOW LONG WILL AWARD LAST?

February – December 2024, with the possibility of renewal

How To Apply:

Applications must be submitted by 7 January 2024 to placement(at)iai.it, email object: last name – Rif. Africa-2024, attaching the following documents in a pdf format:

  • curriculum vitae, with explicit consent to the processing of personal data as per GDPR 2016/679; the cv shall include date of birth, relevant work experience and any additional qualifications – including obtained or ongoing PhD studies (ma. 3 pages) or relevant work experience; 
  • short motivational letter (max. 1 page)
  • list of publications, of which at least one available full-text
  • signed consent form for the processing of personal data (IT, download).

No phone calls, please.

Shortlisted candidates will be invited for an interview which will take place by 25 January in Rome at IAI headquarters, or online (Skype or other platforms) if that is not possible for substantiated reasons.

Please note that the Selection Board’s work and deliberations are strictly confidential.

No communication will be sent to non-selected candidates, whom we thank in advance for their interest.

VISIT AWARD WEBPAGE FOR DETAILS

Amnesty International/Human Rights Watch expose Greece’s lies over drowning of 600 migrants on the Adriana

Robert Stevens


Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have confirmed that Greece was directly responsible for the sinking of the Adriana fishing vessel and drowning of more than 600 migrants.

On June 14, the Adriana sank off Greece’s port of Pylos. The disaster was one of the largest losses of life in a single event ever recorded and shocked the world, adding to the 20,000-plus drowned in the Mediterranean over the last two decades.

A handout image provided by Greece's coast guard on Wednesday, June 14, 2023, shows people covering practically every free stretch of deck on the Ardiana, a battered fishing boat. The boat later capsized and sank off southern Greece, leading to the preventable deaths of more than 600 people [AP Photo/Hellenic Coast Guard via AP]

The mass murder of refugees was the result of brutal “pushback” policies designed to prevent desperate refugees and asylum seekers from entering “Fortress Europe.” Last week marked the passing of six months without anyone being brought to justice for this heinous crime.

Meticulous research and investigations by the German regional broadcaster NDR, the Guardian, the research agency Forensis and the Greek organization Solomon concluded that the Adriana was towed by the Hellenic Coast Guard towards Italian waters, leading to the boat capsizing.

This body of evidence is substantiated by the nearly 4,000-word Amnesty International/Human Rights Watch report, “Greece: 6 Months On, No Justice for Pylos Shipwreck.”

It explains “The Adriana, a severely overcrowded fishing trawler, capsized in the early morning of June 14, 2023, leading to the death of more than 600 people. It had started its journey from Libya five days earlier with an estimated 750 migrants and asylum seekers, including children, mainly from Syria, Pakistan, and Egypt. Only 104 of those onboard survived and 82 bodies were recovered.”

The human rights organisations “interviewed 21 survivors, 5 relatives of 5 people still missing, and representatives of the Hellenic Coast Guard, the Greek police, nongovernmental organizations, United Nations and international agencies and organizations.”

They found that “in the 15 hours between receiving the first alert that the Adriana was in their [Greece’s] search and rescue region, and when it capsized, Greek authorities failed to mobilize appropriate resources for a rescue.”

The report states, “The authorities were clearly aware of indicators of distress, such as overcrowding and insufficient food and water, on the Adriana and, survivors said, knew about corpses on board and requests for rescue…

“Survivors said that a Coast Guard patrol boat attached a rope to the Adriana and pulled, causing the boat to capsize. They also alleged that, after the boat capsized, the Coast Guard boat was slow to activate rescue operations, failed to maximize the number of people rescued, and engaged in dangerous maneuvers.”

The deaths triggered ongoing investigations, including an inquiry by the European Ombudsman opened in November into the Coast Guard’s actions and “the role of the European Union border agency Frontex, whose aircraft initially sighted the vessel, while the agency’s Fundamental Rights Officer is pursuing his own investigation.”

In their contributions to the European Ombudsman’s inquiry,  and  “contend that Frontex should have continued its monitoring of the Adriana and issued a mayday call. Frontex told the organizations that it is the responsibility of national authorities to coordinate search and rescue operations and that it did not issue a mayday alert because it did not assess an ‘imminent risk to human life.’”

As a nation vital in sealing Europe’s southern border, successive Greek governments have committed many crimes in keeping asylum seekers out, including an incident within the last decade in which another ship was put in danger and lives lost as the result of a towing operation—the Farmakonisi shipwreck.

The report notes, “Survivors of the 2014 Farmakonisi shipwreck claimed that the Hellenic Coast Guard tied a rope to tow their boat toward Turkey. A 2021  highlighted other cases in which the Hellenic Coast Guard towed migrant boats out of its waters…

It notes, “In 2022, the European Court of Human Rights  for the shortcomings in its rescue efforts and in its subsequent investigations in the 2014 Farmakonisi shipwreck in which 11 people died.”

It is well established that the tardy and unserious response of the Greek authorities to calls alerting them that the Adriana was in danger was a major factor in the eventual sinking of the vessel. The Greek Joint Rescue Coordination Center (JRCC Piraeus) was first alerted about the Adriana at 11:01 EEST on June 13—the day before the boat sank—by the .

The report states, “The patrol boat sent by JRCC Piraeus, the PPLS920, was not equipped to perform a large-scale rescue. According to , the vessel had only 43 individual life jackets, 8 life preserver rings, 2 inflatable life rafts able to transport 39 people, and one auxiliary inflatable vessel. JRCC Piraeus did not mobilize other assets, although  that vessels were available in closer ports, and  [previously tasked to monitor and provide assistance to the fishing vessel] despite the PPLS920’s limited rescue capacity.”

At that stage people were already dead onboard a ship that had been travelling for five days in blistering heat, with refugees packed like sardines in the hold and on the deck. Frontex confirmed to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch that  on the Adriana.

The report summarises, “Until the Adriana capsized and sank shortly after 02:00 EEST on June 14, and despite formally assuming coordination of the incident and receiving evidence of distress, the Hellenic Coast Guard took limited action to ensure the safety of those aboard.”

What was carried out by the Greek Coastguard was a policy of social murder. The remit of the coastguard was to make sure that the boat did not enter Greek waters.

According to the report, “Seven survivors said Greek authorities instructed the Adriana via satellite phone to follow the PPLS920 toward Italy. Some of them said the Adriana could not keep up with the PPLS920 or experienced engine problems.”

Gamal, from Egypt, recalled, “When they tied the rope… they pushed our boat to the left very fast… They go left, the boat sinks left, then they go right, the ship sinks more on the right…”

After this reckless action by the Hellenic Coast Guard, the vessel sank within 20 minutes. “”

The report rejects claims made by the Greek authorities that those on board said they did not want or require assistance and cites eyewitness testimony that such claims are lies.

In any case, such justifications hold no weight legally. The report notes, “Greek authorities have an obligation under the International Convention on Safety of Life at Sea and the International Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue to act upon situations of distress at sea…

 that the obligation to take ‘any measure necessary for the safety of the persons concerned’ remains even ‘where… the persons on board refuse to accept assistance.’”

The latest victims of Fortress Europe were killed this week when 61 people, mainly from Nigeria, the Gambia and other African nations, died after their boat capsized off Libya’s coast. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that there were 86 people onboard the ship that left Zuwara during the night of December 13/14.

IOM spokesperson Flavio Di Giacomo commented that these deaths were part of the toll of more than 2,250 people who have perished this year already on this particular Mediterranean migration route. According to the IOM’s Missing Migrants project, at least 940 migrants were reported dead and 1,248 missing off Libya between 1 January and 18 November. This is a sharp rise on the 529 dead and 848 missing off Libya in 2022.

This is considered a success as far as the bourgeoisie is concerned. The Greek migration ministry reported in November on a 33 percent decrease in the number of migrant arrivals to the country—4,584 compared to 6,863 in October. The ministry attributed the fall positively to its “comprehensive and multi-level strategy” addressing “irregular migration and trafficking”. This was “remarkable if compared to the rise of the phenomenon observed elsewhere, such as in Italy, Croatia and also in Spain,” it boasted.

This week the European Council on Refugees and Exiles wrote, “In the last few days, the hotline Alarm Phone reported multiple incidents of pushbacks and non-assistance by Greek authorities.” Among these were the following:

·        “On 5 December, the hotline informed the Hellenic Coastguard about a group of 43 people in distress near Lesvos. The coastguard left the group to drift until it reached the Turkish waters...

·        “On 7 December, 22 people in distress near Lesvos called for assistance and reported that a military boat was near them. Alarm Phone said that the military boat ‘is not assisting and instead pushing them (people in distress) further away from the coast’ despite seeing that water was entering the refugees’ boat… Already in the first week of December, the Hellenic Coastguard have pushed back 6 groups who contacted Alarm Phone’, the organisation added.

·        “On 11 December, the Turkish Coastguard said in a press release that it had rescued a total of 122 migrants who were pushed back by Greek authorities into Turkish territorial waters.

·        “On 13 December, the hotline published an email sent by a group of 17 people, including an unconscious woman, saying, ‘We were captured by the Greek Coast Guard near the island of Kos and our boat was destroyed and left at sea begging for urgent help we will die of cold’”.

Record high for debt repayments by low-income nations

Nick Beams


The genocide in Gaza, where bombs rain down every day killing thousands, destroying schools, hospitals and refugee centres and pulverising the facilities and resources necessary for life, leading to starvation and disease, is only the most egregious form of capitalist-imperialist violence against the world’s people, against life itself.

Another is the destructive oppression and violence being imposed by the global financial system as it sucks the life blood out of billions of people in so-called low- and middle-income countries via debt and interest repayments.

This siphoning of wealth takes place seamlessly, automatically, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a day through the relentless operations of the global capitalist financial system. The extent was revealed in the annual International Debt Report issued by the World Bank last week.

It found that developing countries spent $443.5 billion last year to service their public debt—almost half a trillion dollars—financed by draining resources from critical health, education and other social needs, such as combating the effects of climate change.

These payments, which rose by 5 percent from a year earlier and could increase by 10 percent in 2023‒2024, are the highest on record.

However, the situation is even more severe for the 75 poorest countries. Their external debt service payments reached a record $88.9 billion in 2022 and are predicted by the World Bank to rise by 40 percent over 2023‒2024. Their interest payments alone have quadrupled since 2012 to reach $23.6 billion.

Chief economist and vice-president of the World Bank, Indermit Gill [Photo: The World Bank]

“Record debt levels and high interest rates have set many countries on a path to crisis,” said Indermit Gill, the chief economist and vice-president of the World Bank.

The figures indicate this is something of understatement. Many countries and their populations are not on a path to crisis, they are in one which is worsening every day.

“Every quarter that interest rates stay high results in more developing countries becoming distressed—and facing the choice of servicing their public debts or investing in public health, education and infrastructure,” Gill said.

He said the situation warranted quick action. But as Gill and other officials throughout the institutions of global capitalism such as the World Bank know very well, this is not going to take place. The crisis has been building up for years and has been the subject of countless reports by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank as well as aid agencies such as Oxfam, but nothing has been done to counter it.

The debt situation has worsened markedly over the past two years because of the entirely predictable effects of the interest rate increases by the world’s major central banks. In the past three years there have been 18 sovereign defaults in 10 developing countries. This was greater than the number recorded over the previous two decades.

At the same time, the flow of private finance has dried up. As Gill noted, when interest rates started to rise in 2022 private creditors followed the money with the result that they pulled out $185 billion more in principal repayments than they disbursed in new loans.

“Today, one of every four developing countries is effectively priced out of international capital markets,” Gill said. For the poorest countries “debt has become a nearly paralysing burden.”

The crisis for developing countries is not only a result of higher interest rates but has been exacerbated by the “let it rip” policy of the major imperialist powers in response to COVID. In a report issued in October 2022, Oxfam found that “despite the worst health crisis in a century, half of low and lower middle-income countries cut the share of health spending of their budgets.”

Almost half of all countries cut the share going to “social protection” while 70 percent cut the share going to education.

“Our index shows that most governments completely failed to take the steps to counter the inequality explosion created by COVID-19. They ripped away public services when people needed them most and instead left billionaires and big corporations off the hook to reap record profits.”

An examination of the crisis reveals how it is impossible to find any way out through the framework of the capitalist system. In fact, attempts to do so only create worsening conditions.

For example, as the Guardian economics correspondent Larry Elliott noted, many of the lowest income countries are faced with an extra burden. They confront the “accumulated principal, interest and fees they incurred for the privilege of debt-service suspension under the G20’s Deby Service Suspension Initiative, which was announced at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.”

Another instance is the fate of the plan set forth some years ago by bourgeois economists. They claimed to have a solution to the dependence on foreign loans which had had such devastating effect in the 1980s and into the 1990s. The idea was that countries should borrow in their own currencies.

A recent article in the Wall Street Journal detailed some of the results. It noted that “local currency debt is now the biggest drain on many developing countries’ balance sheets.”

At the time of the downfall of the Rajapakse government last year, Sri Lanka was spending nearly 40 percent of its revenue paying interest on local currency debt.

In 2022, Ghana spent one-third of its revenue in local debt as interest rates on three-month government-issued treasury bills soared to 36 percent. Interest payments on domestic debt were more than what was spent on healthcare and education combined.

In Pakistan, payments on local currency debt are expected to account for more than half the government’s revenue this year.

The World Socialist Web Site has explained that the genocidal barbarism directed upon the people of Gaza is the product of a capitalist order “rotting on its feet.” The same can be said of the social and economic devastation being inflicted on billions of people through the relentless, remorseless grind of the financial system.

The stench arising from the death agony of this social order is so powerful that it is starting to waft up into the nostrils of some of the highly placed individuals in the institutions set up after World War II to create the illusion that it was possible to contain the horrors that had erupted in the first half of the 20th century.

Last summer, in a speech in Paris, the secretary of the United Nations Antonio Guterres commented that “the global financial architecture is outdated, dysfunctional and unjust” and that “even the most fundamental goals on hunger and poverty have gone into reverse after decades of progress.”

Clarence Thomas demanded more money just before receiving gifts from his ultra-rich supporters

Kevin Reed


Supreme Court Judge Clarence Thomas demanded a salary increase and threatened to quit the high court in 2000 just before ultra-rich supporters stepped in and gifted him with cash and other favors, according to a new report published by ProPublica on Monday.

Clarence Thomas, Oct. 7, 2022 [AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite]

Based on interviews and other documents that have not been previously available to the public, ProPublica reported that, after nearly a decade on the court, Thomas “had grown frustrated with his financial situation.”

At the time, “Thomas’ salary was $173,600, equivalent to over $300,000 today. But he was one of the least wealthy members of the court, and on multiple occasions in that period, he pushed for ways to make more money.”

Thomas attended an “off-the-record conservative conference” in early January 2000 at a five-star beach resort in Sea Island, Georgia, at which he gave a speech. On the flight back, Thomas sat with Florida Republican Representative Cliff Stearns and complained about his compensation.

Although Thomas’ keynote presentation at the Awakening conference, a “conservative thought weekend” that featured “golf, shooting lessons and aromatherapy along with panel discussions with businessmen and elected officials,” was paid for by the organizers, the Supreme Court judge did not include the trip on his annual financial disclosure.

While complaining to Stearns that Congress should give Supreme Court justices a pay increase, Thomas said that if lawmakers did not act, “one or more justices will leave soon,” possibly within the next year.

The ProPublica report says that Stearns—who served in the House of Representatives for 24 years and played a leading role in the congressional efforts to undermine and end the right to abortion—became concerned that Thomas might resign from the Supreme Court.

In a recent interview, Stearns said of Thomas, “His importance as a conservative was paramount. We wanted to make sure he felt comfortable in his job, and he was being paid properly.”

ProPublica reviewed details of Thomas’ personal finances, including the fact that he “had borrowed $267,000 from a friend to buy a high-end RV,” that he and his wife, Ginni, bought a house on five acres of land in Virginia for $522,000 and that “the couple regularly borrowed more money, including a $100,000 credit line on their house and a consumer loan of up to $50,000.”

Among the documents obtained by ProPublica is a confidential memo from 2000 written to then-Chief Justice William Rehnquist by a top administrative official of the judiciary, L. Ralph Mecham. After he spoke with Stearns, Mecham wrote that the “delicate matter” of Supreme Court judge compensation needed to be addressed, “I understand that Justice Thomas clearly told him that in his view departures would occur within the next year or so.”

These right-wing figures at the court and in Congress were not only concerned about Clarence Thomas, who was among the least wealthy members of the court. Antonin Scalia, who was nominated by Ronald Reagan in 1986 and served until his death in 2016, had nine children and was not as wealthy as the other judges on the court.

As Mecham wrote to Rehnquist, “from a tactical point of view” Democrats in Congress might oppose a raise if they believed “the apparent purpose is to keep Justices [Antonin] Scalia and Thomas on the Court.” Several months later, ProPublica says, “Rehnquist focused his annual year-end report on what he called ‘the most pressing issue facing the Judiciary: the need to increase judicial salaries.’”

The report goes on to say, “But around 2000, chatter that Thomas was dissatisfied about money circulated through conservative legal circles and on Capitol Hill, according to interviews with prominent attorneys, former members of Congress and Thomas’ friends. ‘It was clear he was unhappy with his financial situation and his salary,’ one friend said.”

At one point, an effort was mounted in Congress to lift the ban on justices being paid for making speeches. “At Sen. Mitch McConnell’s request, a provision removing the ban for judges was quietly inserted into a spending bill in mid-2000,” the report states. This move came under public scrutiny, including from the Legal Times, which referred to it as the “Keep Scalia on the Court” bill, and it was dropped.

ProPublica says, “Congress never lifted the ban on speaking fees or gave the justices a major raise. But in the years that followed, as ProPublica has reported, Thomas accepted a stream of gifts from friends and acquaintances that appears to be unparalleled in the modern history of the Supreme Court.”

In other words, to get around the problem of a politically motivated salary increase, other means were found to pay off the corrupt Clarence Thomas in exchange for his ongoing support for right-wing opinions on the court. The report continues, “Some defrayed living expenses large and small—private school tuition, vehicle batteries, tires. Other gifts from a coterie of ultrarich men supplemented his lifestyle, such as free international vacations on the private jet and superyacht of Dallas real estate billionaire Harlan Crow.”

A previous report by ProPublica published last April detailed the relationship between Thomas and Crow, which included large gifts that went undisclosed. Among these was that Crow paid for two years of private high school for Thomas’ grandnephew, worth approximately $100,000.

Within several years, Clarence Thomas’ and his wife’s fortunes changed dramatically. In 2003, he received a $1.5 million advance for his memoir and Ginni Thomas, who had been a congressional staffer, was hired by the Heritage Foundation and “paid a salary in the low six figures.”

The new report summarizes the gifts showered on Thomas by his benefactors, “In 2008, another wealthy friend forgave ‘a substantial amount, or even all’ of the principal on the loan Thomas had used to buy the quarter-million dollar RV, according to a recent Senate inquiry prompted by The New York Times’ reporting. Much of the Thomas’ leisure time was also paid for by a small set of billionaire businessmen, who brought the justice and his family on free vacations around the world. (Thomas has said he did not need to disclose the gifts of travel and his lawyer has disputed the Senate findings about the RV.)”

Amid the numerous factual exposures of his out-and-out corruption, Clarence Thomas’ continued presence on the Supreme Court is an expression of the deep-going rot that pervades both big business parties and all three branches of the American government.