30 Jul 2018

Future For Nature Award (Fully-funded to Arnhem, the Netherlands plus €50,000 Cash Prize) 2019

Application Deadline: 16th September 2018

Offered Annually? Yes

Eligible Countries: All

To Be Taken At (Country): Arnhem, the Netherlands

About the Award: Future For Nature supports young, talented and ambitious conservationists committed to protecting species of wild animals and plants or conservation of nature in general. These individuals can make the difference for the future of nature.

Type: Contest

Eligibility: The following solid criteria will be used in the Selection Procedure for the Future For Nature Award winners:
  • The candidate should not be older than 35 years on 30th April 2019, i.e. born after 30th April 1984.
  • The Future For Nature Award is awarded to individuals only, not to organizations.
  • The candidate has achieved substantial and long-term benefit to the conservation status of one or more animal and/or plant species or that of a specific population of one or more animal and/or plant species.
  • The candidate has demonstrated leadership and entrepreneurship in his/her conservation work.
  • The candidate has been creative and innovative in his/her work.
  • The main approaches in his/her work have proven to be cost-effective.
  • The candidate must be determined to continue his/her conservation work, as the Award aims to stimulate the winner’s future work and is not an “end of career” prize.
  • The prize should be used towards a conservation project of the winner’s own choice.
Selection Criteria: Members of the DSC assess the applications of which 6 to 10 are selected using the following set of criteria:
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Substantial and long term effect of species protection
  • Creativity and innovativeness
  • Cost effectiveness
  • Determination to continue
  • Quality of the project proposal
Work related to the conservation and protection of endangered species (IUCN’s Red List) is given priority.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: 
  • Winners will present their work at the Future For Nature Award event at Royal Burgers’ Zoo in Arnhem, the Netherlands. The event will take place in March, April or May 2019. Travel and accommodation expenses will be covered by the Future For Nature Foundation.
  • € 50.000.  The cash prize should go towards the work of the winners for 100%. That is, Future For Nature will not allow administrative deductions to be made or claimed by mother organizations.
How to Apply: 
  • Application form Future For Nature Awards 2019
  • Application form (See in Program Webpage Link below) should be submitted as an email attachment to info@futurefornature.org. The subject of the email should read: SURNAME CANDIDATE – Candidate FFN Award 2018. For example if your name is Bill Jones: JONES – Candidate FFN Award 2019.
  • Answer all the questions in English in the given order without exceeding the maximum number of words mentioned.
  • Do not add any additional documentation. Your application will be used to select ten nominees for the Future For Nature Awards 2018. The ten nominees will be requested to provide further information (written info, photos, information for the FFN website, 5-minutes film), which will be used to select the final three winners.
Visit  Program Webpage for Details

Award Providers: Future For Nature

ARNTD Scholarships for Post-Doctoral Short-term Research Visits to LOEWE Centre DRUID, Germany 2018/2019

Application Deadline: 1st August 2018

Eligible Countries: African countries

To Be Taken At (Country): Germany

About the Award:  We welcome applications from highly qualified and motivated post-doctoral African scientists with a strong research focus on neglected tropical infectious diseases (NTDs) and other poverty-associated diseases.

Fields of Research: The seven research areas of the hosting institutions of the DRUID consortium are:
Research areaKnowledge and skills requiredInstitutionGroup
Human T-cell responses against Leishmania parasitesCell culture; FACS based analyses of blood cellsPaul Ehrlich Institute, LangenZandbergen
Schistosomiasis, sexual maturation as drug targetCell/worm culture; molecular biologyGiessen UniversityGrevelding
In silico identification of inhibitors of NTD targets (pharmaceutical chemistry, drug discovery, docking)Excellent PC knowledge (Linux); chemistry; tools for chemoinformaticsMarburg UniversityKolb
Medicinal chemistry (synthesis, drug design)Synthetic organic chemistryMarburg UniversityDiederich
Redox-active enzymes as drug targets against malariaMolecular/ structural biology, protein biochemistryGiessen UniversityBecker
Complement-inhibitory proteins of Borrelia causing relapsing fever in AfricaMolecular biology; protein biochemistryFrankfurt UniversityKraiczy
Pathogenesis of Rift Valley FeverMolecular biology; cell biology; virologyGiessen UniversityWeber

Type: Research

Eligibility: Applicants must meet the following:
  1. Candidates must hold a doctoral degree (e.g. PhD, DrPH, DSc) and must provide evidence of a strong theoretical and methodological background;
  2. Must be currently engaged as a post-doc or equivalent by an academic, health, or research institution in Africa for the duration of the grant;
  3. Must demonstrate having a commitment to NTD-related research as well as the skills and experience required to carry out the proposed work at the German host institution.
  4. Must have excellent oral and writing skills in English.
Number of Awards: 7

Value of Award: The DRUID Centre will support successful applicants financially in the form of short-term fellowships covering the proposed work, travel costs, insurance, and the recipients’ cost of living for the duration of the fellowship in Hessen, Germany.

Duration of Programme: approx. 3 months in 2018 or 2019

How to Apply: To apply, click here. Please feel free to also visit the DRUID or ARNTD websites detailed below. Interested applicants will be expected to submit a 1-2-page motivation letter, detailed CV, list of publications, summary of methodological expertise, and present research/description of research environment. The LOEWE Centre DRUID and ARNTD actively support women in scientific research and strongly encourage women to apply for the fellowships. Applications must be related to the research focus of one or two out of the seven research areas of the
hosting institutions of the DRUID consortium (see list above)


Visit Programme Webpage for Details

Award Providers: LOEWE Centre DRUID, ARNTD

ICFJ Safety Reporting Fellowship for Journalists from Developing Countries (Fully-funded to Bangkok, Thailand) 2018

Application Deadline: 17th August 2018

Offered Annually? Every 2 years

Eligible Countries: All. Priority will be given to journalists from Developing Countries

To Be Taken At (Country): Bangkok, Thailand

About the Award: Safety 2018 is a milestone event in the field of injury prevention and safety promotion. Every two years, this world conference brings together over 1,000 of the world’s leading researchers, practitioners, policy makers and activists to discuss experiences and solutions that aim to reduce the burden of unintentional injuries. The 13th World Conference, under the theme “Advancing injury and violence prevention towards SDGs,” will be hosted by WHO and the Thai Government in Bangkok, from Nov. 5-7, 2018.
ICFJ invites journalists from all over the world to apply for the Safety 2018 Reporting Fellowship. The fellowship will include a workshop prior to the conference on Nov. 3-4, 2018, and attendance at the conference sessions from Nov. 5-7.
During the workshop, ICFJ trainers and WHO experts will provide an overview of different safety issues, including road safety, water safety and drowning prevention, violence-related injury, and other safety and injury prevention topics. Trainers also will work on strengthening the fellows’ reporting skills, with a particular focus on tracking down data from different sources, creating data-driven reports, and developing visualizations and graphics to engage audiences.

Type: Workshop, Fellowship

Eligibility:
  • Journalists who apply for the fellowship must be fluent in English.
  • Priority will be given to journalists from low- or middle-income countries.
Selection: Selection will be based on the journalists’ professional qualifications, relevant experience such as demonstrated interest in the topic of injury prevention or road safety, English-language proficiency, and endorsement by a newsroom manager.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: The 2018 Safety Reporting Fellowship program will cover all fellowship-related costs, including travel to the conference, accommodations and registration.

How to Apply: Applicants will be asked to provide the following:
  • An essay (no more than 500 words) detailing your motivation and goals for seeking the fellowship, including three specific changes you hope to make to your work as a result of the workshop;
  • At least one fleshed-out story idea (300 – 500 words) for an in-depth safety and injury-prevention reporting project that incorporates data. Applicants may focus on their own countries, and include ways to use digital tools and social media to engage audiences in a dialogue about these vital safety issues;
  • A commitment to produce at least three safety stories during and after the conference;
  • A letter of support from an editor or newsroom manager endorsing the journalist’s participation in the program to demonstrate understanding of the fellowship’s value and support for publishing, posting and/or broadcasting the journalist’s coverage of the conference and story project;
  • A brief biography (up to 300 words);
  • A resume or curriculum vitae;
  • Two samples of work focusing on safety or injury prevention published/posted/broadcast recently (after 2015).
Click here to apply. ICFJ will inform the finalists by Sept. 7, 2018.

Visit Programme Webpage for Details

Award Providers: This programme is funded by The World Health Organization.

Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD) Grants for Enterprise Development in Developing Countries 2018

Application Deadline: 5th September 2018

Eligible Countries:
  • Funding will be prioritized for projects in the 7 countries: Ethiopia, Colombia, Ghana, Indonesia, Malawi, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Tanzania
  • Projects in other developing countries eligible for Norwegian development assistance may also be considered. Among these, projects in low-income countries will be given priority.
About the Award: Enterprise Development for Jobs aims to contribute to job creation in developing countries by stimulating the establishment of new business enterprises or expansion of existing ones.
The ultimate beneficiaries of the activities funded through the grant scheme are people in developing countries for whom new jobs are created.
The main objective of this call is to stimulate renewable energy projects that increase access to renewable energy and thereby contribute to job creation and poverty reduction.
The purpose of this call for proposals is to fund feasibility studies of renewable energy projects, pilot projects, and training, that can start implementation during 2018 or 2019.

Type: Grants

Eligibility: 
  • Potential grant recipients are Norwegian and foreign private sector companies with ability to create new private sector jobs, or companies (producers) that can demonstrate ability to increase access to renewable energy in developing countries.
  • Eligible activities include but are not limited to feasibility studies, partner search, pilot projects, training of local staff, and local infrastructure investments related to the company’s investment in energy production capacity.
  • Only projects in the following sector will be given priority under this call for proposals: Energy, defined as renewable energy
  • Grants will not be given to private sector activities that produce weaponry or other military material, intoxicants such as alcoholic drinks and narcotics, or tobacco.
Requirements for applicants
  • The applicant must own a minimum of 25% of the planned investment (in cases where joint ventures are considered). Any exception to this rule must be based on special justification.
  • Grant recipients must have ethical guidelines for their business operations. These shall as a minimum meet the requirements of “Guidelines for the preparation of ethical guidelines for Norad grant recipients”. See ethical guidelines – Guide for Norad’s grant recipients. See also Declaration concerning ethical guidelines.
  • The applicant shall confirm that it has undertaken adequate security assessments for the employees that will work in high-risk areas, hereunder any mitigating measures related to training, guidance material, insurance and equipment.
  • Projects supported under this scheme must comply with the EEA Agreement rules on state aid.
Selection Criteria: Norad will assess and rank the applications based on the following criteria:
  • Likelihood of increasing access to renewable energy, measured by net increase in production capacity (in MW).
  • Geographical and sector-specific scope in accordance with applicable Norwegian priorities.
  • The project is commercially viable in the long term, but all or parts of the project would not have been realized without the grant (additionality).
  • To what extent the project is catalytic, i.e. triggering capital or other forms of engagement from the private sector.
  • The viability of the business plan and documented competencies and experience.
  • Cost efficiency of the grant-supported activities.
  • The extent of the applicant’s ownership and participation in the project.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award:
  • The minimum grant size is NOK 500.000.
  • Applicants may submit a project outline for a long-term project, in which an initial estimate is made of the grant support needed for the various project stages. Funding for different stages may be triggered based on pre-defined milestones achieved.
  • Maximum funding rates for salaries to employees and consulting are respectively NOK 550 and NOK 1,000 per hour.
  • Travel between home country and project country is approved for economy class only. Travel within the country of origin or a third country must be justified.
  • Norad covers project expenses related to consulting and legal fees, as well as external experts’ work and travel costs. Fees for auditor review of the project reporting are also covered, as well as minor project-related costs such as mail, telephone, car rental, accommodation, etc.

  • How to Apply: APPLY

    Visit the Program Webpage for Details

    Award Providers: Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD)

    Important Notes: 
    • Please note that support is given only to grid-connected power projects and off-grid projects that serve local communities, but not to projects for own power consumption.
    • The scheme does not provide investment support or loans but does provide grants to activities that contribute to early-phase project development and activities that limit commercial risk before investment decisions are taken.

United Nations Global Compact Winter Internship 2018 – USA

Application Deadline: 17th August 2018

Eligible Countries: All

To be taken at (country): New York, USA

Eligible Field of Study: Not specified

About the Award: The United Nations Global Compact pursues two complementary objectives: (1) making the UN Global Compact and its principles part of business strategy and operations everywhere; and (2) facilitating cooperation among key stakeholders by promoting partnerships and other collective action in support of UN goals.
Depending on their level of experience and training, UN Global Compact interns will:
  • conduct research relating to the topic of corporate citizenship, especially on human rights, labour, the environment and anti-corruption;
  • draft and edit publications, papers and other documents;
  • liaise with Global Compact stakeholders on key corporate citizenship topics;
  • support the organization of meetings and events;
  • assist with outreach activities;
  • handle email and other inquiries;
  • assist in the implementation of the Global Compact’s integrity measures;
  • perform administrative tasks as assigned.
Type: Internship

Eligibility: 
  • Applicants must be enrolled in an undergraduate or graduate degree programme (bachelors or second university degree, or higher) at the time of application and during the internship; or
  • Under some circumstances, applicants may have graduated within less than one year to commence a UN internship.
Value of Internship: Internships at UN Headquarters are unpaid. Interns must therefore be able to cover their costs of travel, accommodation, as well as living expenses during the internship period.

Duration of Internship: We encourage candidates to apply for the following sessions:
  • Winter: October to December (3 months, possibility of 3-month extension thereafter)
  • Winter: January to March (3 months, with possibility of a 3-month extension thereafter)
How to Apply:
  • Those interested in pursuing an internship with the UN Global Compact must submit an online application at the UN Careers website.
  • Scroll down to the bottom of the homepage to the “Search Job Openings” section and select “Internship” under the Category field, and “New York” under the Duty Station field. Click on the Search button. This will lead you to a list of various internship openings. You will need to search for the UN Global Compact internship by Job Opening ID Number.
  • The Global Compact Internship Job Opening Number is 96988. Candidates are strongly recommended to pay attention to the job opening number to make sure that their applications reach the UN Global Compact Office.
Visit Internship Webpage for details

Award Provider: United Nations Global Compact

Important Notes: Due to the large number of applications received, only accepted interns will be notified a few weeks before the beginning of the session or within 4 weeks after each session’s application deadline.

Women in News (WIN) Leadership Development Programme for African Women Journalists 2018

Application Deadline: 15th August 2018

Eligible Countries: African countries

About the Award: WIN works with media companies and their high potential female employees to overcome the gender gap in management and senior management positions. The programme seeks to equip women media professionals in middle and senior management positions with the right skills, knowledge and attitudes to help advance their careers. WIN provides them the support networks they need to take on a greater leadership role within their organizations and works with their organizations to create environments for high potential women to succeed.

Type: Training

Eligibility: 
  • Applicants eligible for this call should be working in these countries: Botswana, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania and Kenya.
  • Media women with a minimum of 2 years in a middle management position (editorial or a senior journalist)
While in previous years WIN has been accepting media women mostly from the print media, this year the call is being extended to even those in digital and electronic media.

Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: Successful applicants will benefit from the following:
1- Online Leadership and Media Management Training
2- One-on-one coaching support
3- Peer Mentoring
4- National and Regional Networking opportunities
5- Opportunities for bespoke topics at national events, which include but are not limited to mobile journalism as well as other practical skills that can be used in and outside the newsroom.

In addition, participants who have the right aptitude and demonstrate commitment to the WIN programme through completion of the online course, participation in National Gatherings, participation in all assigned coaching sessions and engagement with the Future Leaders programme may be considered for a Master Class Fellowship to do a Certificate in Media Management Studies with WITS University of South Africa.

Duration of Programme: September 2018 to June 2019

How to Apply: 
  • Interested applicants can download the nomination form here and the MoU form here. Please fill and send both documents.
  • In the event that you fail to download) request an application form by sending an email to the following email addresses:
  • For applicants from Rwanda, Zambia, Botswana and Zimbabwe, please send your requests to womeninnewsbrzz@gmail.com
  • For applicants from Kenya, Tanzania and Malawi, please send your requests to womeninnewseca@gmail.com
ALL APPLICATIONS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED BY 15 AUGUST 2018.

Visit Programme Webpage for Details

Important Notes: Successful participants will be expected to travel on specific occasions throughout the programme. Your availability for this will be crucial for the overall success of the programme.

Global Geopolitical Economy and BRICS Sub-Imperialism

Dominic Brown

Ten years after the 2008 global financial crisis, the global economy is still stagnant and there are few prospects for a recovery. As a result, we have seen a deepening of the social crisis with rising unemployment and inequality, which is what underpins the war against women, increased crime and violence, and the unravelling of the social fabric, especially here in South Africa.
This process is not new, it has been unfolding over several decades and has given rise to the phenomena of neoliberalism, globalisation and financialisation. These are capital’s means to overcome the crises of capitalism globally. The crisis has subsequently developed into multi-dimensional, overlapping crises of the global economy, environment, energy, food. At its core, this represents a crisis of over-accumulation of capital, with too many products and too few consumers.
We cannot understand the current political shifts (nationally and internationally) without putting them in the context of (a) historical changes in the capitalist economy (b) the current crisis of neoliberal capitalism.
Unfolding economic Crisis
We are in a period of stagnant growth, rising inequality and a 27% rate of unemployment (it is even more alarming – more than 35% –  if discouraged workers are included in the statistics). Of particular significance is the decline in growth rates in China, and recessionary conditions in so-called emerging markets such as Brazil, Russia and South Africa. As a result of the slowing world economy and a potential imminent financial meltdown, we see:
1) Currency wars and trade in an attempt to gain a trade advantage
2) A fall in aggregate demand, leading to a fall in commodity prices, yet more intense extraction of minerals, cash crops, oil and gas, as corporations abuse nature even more in desperate search for profit
3) A rise in debt and decline in stock market prices from unprecedented bubble levels
Altogether, depreciating currencies, falling commodity prices and declining stock prices, all reinforce each other, ultimately leading to a deepening of the crisis – and a further slowing down of the economy. The debt becomes ever more difficult to repay, with several African countries now effectively defaulting.
A major problem is that if an economy is stagnant, then there are very little incentives for capital to invest in productive sectors of the economy. As a result, there will be a strong need for external forces to extricate the global economy from crisis. However, the neoliberal phase of capitalism has eroded many potential instruments that can be used to stimulate aggregate demand.
This puts the global economy in a similar quagmire that we were trapped in during the interwar period from 1918-39, resulting in an intensification of neoliberal practices. The very cause of the crisis we face today, is being used to try and get the global economy out of crisis, even though it is a false solution.
Unfolding political crisis
One of the mechanisms being used to stimulate economic growth is the capital’s push for new frontiers. During the commodity super-cycle, this was reflected in the massive increase in trade and investment in Africa, where six out of the ten biggest recently discovered oil reserves are located. The demand was predominantly from China, as its 2009-12 Keynesian strategy required raw materials. This created intensifying competition between the United States of America, European Union and China.
Although Chinese demand was reduced considerably and there was a devastating crash of commodity prices in 2015, as Lee Wengraf shows in her new book, Extracting Profit and the New Scramble for Africa, we have entered into a period of neo-colonialism. Commodity prices ticked up again in 2016-17 but unless the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative restores demand, Africa’s commodity production system has no prospect of returning to past growth. The result is more extreme exploitation of existing fields, s extraction makes up in volume for what it is has lost in the higher prices.
As a result of the deepening economic crisis, we are seeing major shifts in the global political terrain. To understand these shifts it useful to recall the interwar period, especially the political and social responses to the economic crisis of the Great Depression, culminating in the rise of classical fascism in Italy and Germany, as a metaphor for today. As a consequence of the deep economic stagnation in that period, the world saw the rise of extreme racism, xenophobia and narrow nationalism.
Today, the extended economic recession has seen the re-emergence of these perspectives reflected in new national leaders with neo-fascist tendencies: Donald Trump (USA), Recep Erdogan (Turkey), Narendra Modi (India), Viktor MihályOrbán (Hungary),Rodrigo Duterte (Philippines), and Benjamin Netanyahu (Israel).  
Rising geopolitical conflict
It is critical to understand resurgent fascism within the context of a struggle for hegemony over the global capitalist economy. Unravelling hegemony emboldens ultra-nationalism, racism, xenophobia and hyper-militarization etc., particularly when the left is not organized enough to provide an alternative.
The stagnant global economy, unravelling hegemony of the US, newfound Russian military capacity and rising Chinese economic power has brought about a new phase of inter-imperialist rivalry and an increasingly volatile geo-political context. Even though the US is still the world’s hegemon economically, militarily and politically, its hegemony is under threat. This decline of US hegemony is evident in the Rise of Trump, following his promises to “Make America great again”. Trump is giving confidence to other right wing populists around the world, especially Europe.
For Lenin, “an essential part of imperialism is the rivalry between several great powers in the striving for hegemony.” Given the threat of military conflict in a backdrop of deepening ecological crisisJohn Bellamy Foster argues that the re-emergence of inter-imperialist rivalry is leading to “potentially the deadliest phase of imperialism”.  As Gramsci observed in the earlier period, “The old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum, a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.”
The interregnum – a time of monsters
In this interregnum that we find ourselves in, global politics is in a state of flux and instability. In order to assert dominance in the fight for global hegemony, we have already seen the emergence of a “New Cold War” between the US and Russia. Furthermore, there are an increasing number of US military bases around the South China Sea (a territory that has huge amounts of untapped oil reserves and is vital for Chinese shipping lanes). We have also seen increased military spending, and an expansion of the war economy. Besides incipient military conflict (through proxy wars in particular) we are also seeing the rise of currency wars and trade wars.
Currency Wars
Over the last decade, China has been supporting the growth of the rest of the world with state-led demand stimulation. But global stagnation and reduced exports as a share of GDP forced China to depreciate its currency in order to keep its goods priced more attractively. (Other ways China has cheapened its goods is denying trade unions the right to organise, maintaining a migrant labour system which transfers reproduction costs to the countryside, clamping down on protest, permiting extreme pollution and downplaying safety and heath in production.)
Trade wars
With the rise of neoliberalism, there has been much less use of standard ‘Keynesian’ strategy of higher state spending aimed at stimulating the economy (i.e. expansionary fiscal policy). As a result, the preferred option to combat global depression is to pump the world economy with money (‘Quantitative Easing’) and, in Washington once economic nationalists gained the upper hand in the Trump regime, to implement trade restrictions. Import duties have been slapped on Chinese products entering the US, with Trump now threatening further increases in tariffs on $500 billion worth of Chinese products.
The implications include a contraction of global trade, jobs losses as well as declining investment and growth.  We are already seeing this unfold in South Africa, where 7000 jobs are threatened in the steel, aluminium and car sectors, as a result of US and Chinese competition manifesting itself in trade and currency wars. As more countries are drawn in, their products that once went to the US market will be switched to others, including South Africa.
The role of the BRICS
The Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) bloc is not providing an alternative to the rise of right-wing populism. Instead, many of the BRICS governments have authoritarian regimes: Michel Temer, Vladimir Putin, Modi, Xi Jinping and Cyril Ramaphosa (albeit to a lesser degree than the others).
However, they are playing different roles within the unfolding geopolitical situation. Russia under Putin and Xi are engaged in inter-imperialist rivalries, in direct conflict with the US in certain military theatres such as the Middle East and East Asia. They are also pushing a strong neoliberal agenda and are very dependent on extractive industries (especially China). Africa is their economic playground, but there are also prospects for military competition especially in areas prone to Islamic extremism such as the Horn of Africa. Chinese pipeline, port and electricity-generation investments in Lamu – near the Somali-Kenya border – are vulnerable.
Meanwhile India and China suffer extreme border tensions in several sites, with the Belt and Road Initiative aiming to traverse the hotly-contested Kashmir area of Pakistan. India maintains a brutal occupation of part of Kashmir, refusing a plebiscite to establish the potential for a new state. Nearby, the US continues its drone bombing of Pakistani and Afghan terrain.
South Africa and Brazil are smaller players in the unfolding geopolitical contests, and are not in direct competition with the US.But along with the other BRICS, their companies are major players in Africa, heavily investing in industries related to mining and agriculture, driving massive land grabs.
The increased investment in Africa in extractivist industries comes at massive environmental and social costs. Increased investment in extractivist industries is coupled with the concept ‘4thIndustrial Revolution’ which entails an increase in capital-intensive industry, automation and surveillance. Thexe further threaten jobs and people’s existence.
How to respond?
We should be organising against the imperialist and subimperialist modus operandi of the US and BRICS leaders. In doing so, there are number of critical demands including:
1) A public audit of the national debt, in order to discern what debt is legitimate and what debt is odious, towards a cancelation of all illegitimate debt, since so much now comes not only from Western bankers but also BRICS governments led by the China Development Bank (in corrupt loans to Eskom and Transnet).
2) We should be demanding the type of investment that we want to harness in South Africa, which can meet basic needs and advance socially-controlled technology (such as generic AIDS medicines), instead of uncritically welcoming any sort of foreign direct investment.
3) This would include the “right to say no” to more mining and oil/gas drilling, based on the principles of free, prior and informed consent, in favour, instead, of a socially owned renewable energy programme as a central part of the just transition from fossil fuel industries. In doing so, we have shown, at least one million climate jobs can be created in South Africa. This could be a driving force towards a Fourth Industrial Counter-Revolution, for a wage-led, low-carbon development path
4) Finally, given the emergence of new imperialist rivalries between the US, China and Russia and the increased the potential of war, we need an international anti-war movement as well as much greater international solidarity in taking forward the struggles of workers and the poor.

Argentina Militarizes the Drug War

Brian Saady

The President of Argentina, Mauricio Macri, announced last Monday that the military would now be involved in domestic crime efforts. It was a reversal of a law akin to the U.S. law, the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878. (The Posse Comitatus Act was also amended by Congress during the Reagan administration as part of the war on drugs.)
This decision by Macri is deeply troubling on multiple levels. Bear in mind, he’s taking this step toward authoritarianism while thousands of Argentine protestors have recently contested his decision to accept a $50 billion loan from the IMF.
There are also glaring historical implications. Argentina was ruled for several years by a military dictatorship after a U.S.-backed coup deposed Isabela Peron in 1976. This “Dirty War” conducted by the Argentine government, in conjunction with the U.S. government, led to the death and disappearances of thousands of liberal activists. Merely expressing one’s political views was punishable by extrajudicial death during this reign of government-induced terror.
Unfortunately, Macri’s human rights record doesn’t ease concerns. After all, he took a photo op with a police officer who is now under indictment for murder. The officer shot a man in the back who had stabbed and robbed a U.S. tourist. More important, Macri appointed two Supreme Court justices who have ruled in favor of early release for hundreds of convicted war criminals. Likewise, Argentine activists have been jailed and murdered under mysterious circumstances.
As you may have guessed, Macri has used the war on drugs to justify this decision for domestic military operations. Argentina is arguably the last country listed by the average person when asked to name a South American nation harmed by drug trafficking.
However, in fairness, there is a legitimate problem of corruption and violence in Argentina associated with the illegal drug trade. In particular, the Tri-Border Region (where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay share a border) is widely known as a smugglers paradise for drugs, guns, counterfeit goods, bootleg cigarettes, money laundering, etc.
And that exact area is where Macri is in the process of developing a hub of U.S.-coordinated counternarcotics operations, along with a U.S. military base. In fact, according to the Mexican news outlet Aristegui Noticias, Macri is planning on building multiple U.S. military bases throughout the country.
The war on drugs has been described by some academics as the “Trojan Horse” of U.S. foreign policy. The reason being, the U.S. government has been able to wage an unofficial Neo-Cold War under the pretense of fighting drug cartels throughout Central and South America.
In a very high-profile challenge to U.S. hypocrisy, Bolivian President Evo Morales kicked the DEA out of his country in 2008. He cited a book, “The Big White Lie,” written by former DEA whistleblower Michael Levine. That book made it clear that the U.S. government gave carte blanch to some of the world’s top drug lords because they were allies of the American intelligence community.
Three years earlier, Hugo Chavez accused the DEA of spying on his administration before kicking them out of the country. If that sounds outlandish, do you remember the scandal in 2014 revealing that the NSA had recorded and archived every phone call in The Bahamas? Well, the DEA provided the backdoor for that information.
Likewise, consider the example of former Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli. He was coincidentally extradited last month from Miami to Panama to face charges of corruption and illegal spying. WikiLeaks documents showed that Martinelli pressured the DEA, on multiple occasions, to use their wiretapping capabilities to spy on his rivals.
With that said, neither Hugo Chavez nor Evo Morales demonstrated a strong anti-narcotics template. Both countries have been plagued by drug trafficking and related corruption. Nonetheless, it’s been proven, time and again, that U.S. aid for counternarcotics comes with strings attached and far-ranging negative consequences.
Several Latin American nations can attest to the damage inflicted from militarizing the drug war. Most people think of Mexico or Colombia regarding this subject. However, El Salvador was the original model for this subtle form of surreptitious hegemony.
As a reminder, the Salvadorian Civil War ended in 1992 with about 75,000 people killed and 1 million people forced into refugee status. Roughly 85% of the casualties were attributed to U.S.-backed government or paramilitary forces.
Hence, in the year 2000, the sight of U.S. troops conducting operations in El Salvador was an unsettling sight. In fact, their presence practically violated prior peace agreements. However, the U.S. government had a loophole; the troops were there to enforce “counternarcotics” operations.
In the following year, the U.S. Congress authorized a program known as “Plan Colombia.” It has since provided the Colombian government with over $10 billion worth of military aid, intelligence services, etc.
The stated purpose of this program is counternarcotics, but the supply of drugs has continued to ebb and flow throughout the years. In fact, cocaine production in Colombia is currently at record levels. Then again, the intent of this program can best be described as part of the Neo-Cold War to suppress the communist rebels in Colombia.
In short, this counternarcotics funding has enabled a Colombian government with an atrocious human rights record. The scandals associated with the Colombian military are too numerous to list concisely.
Notably, the Colombian government was deeply aligned with a now-defunct paramilitary group, the AUC, which was a designated terrorist group. That AUC’s successor groups continue to exist as organized crime syndicates terrorizing the country with violence and murdering social activists in high numbers.
Despite the results from Plan Colombia, Mexico followed suit in 2006 with the Merida Initiative. Over a few billion dollars of U.S. taxpayer money has been squandered in this counterproductive pursuit.
Clearly, the drug war in Mexico has been a failure. The murder rate in the first half of 2018 is higher than the record level from last year and, obviously, drug-related violence is the leading driver of this crime.
Military involvement in Mexico’s law enforcement has done nothing to stabilize the country. In fact, human rights violations have increased by over 1,000% since Mexico launched its drug war.
The military has downright acted with impunity. For instance, Amnesty International released a report demonstrating that the military routinely uses violence to gain confessions and intelligence information. It’s extremely rare for reports of these abuses to be investigated and result in a conviction.
Unfortunately, it looks like this dysfunctional police state is here to stay. Last year, Mexico’s deeply corrupt Congress passed an awful “Internal Security Law,” which will provide the Mexican military with more leniency to violate Mexican citizens’ constitutional rights and less transparency from outside investigators.
To sum up, we don’t know if Macri’s decision to mobilize the military within Argentina’s borders will have the same level of negative consequences. However, we do know that the historical precedents are extremely foreboding.

Are We About to Witness the Last Battle of the Syrian War?

Robert Fisk

Will it be the Last Battle? For three years, Idlib has been the dumping ground for all of Syria’s retreating Islamist militias, the final redoubt of every combatant who has chosen to fight on, rather than surrender to the Syrian army and the Russian air force – and to Hezbollah and, to a far smaller degree, the Iranians.
Brigadier general Suheil al-Hassan, the “Tiger” of Syrian military legend and myth – who can quote the poet Mutanabi by heart but prefers to be compared to Erwin Rommel rather than Bernard Montgomery – will surely take his “Tiger Forces” with him for the final reckoning between the Damascus regime and the Salafist-inspired and western-armed Islamists who dared to try, and very definitely failed, to destroy Bashar al-Assad’s rule.
Thanks to Donald Trump, it’s all over for the “rebels” of Syria because they have been betrayed by the Americans – surely and finally by Trump himself in those secret discussions with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, perhaps the most important of the “unknowns” of that translators-only chat – as they have by the Gulf Arabs.
Three weeks earlier, the Americans had told the rebels of southwestern Syria below the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights that they were on their own, and could expect no more military assistance. Even the White Helmets, the first-responder heroes or propagandists of the rebel war (take your pick, but be sure they will soon be described as “controversial”) have been rescued with their families from the rebel lines by the Israelis and dispatched to safety in Jordan.
The Israelis are a bit miffed that they weren’t thanked by the White Helmets’ civil defence units for their humanitarian assistance – but what do they expect when they spent their time attacking Iranian, Hezbollah and Syrian forces during the war, supplying medical aid to the Nusrah Islamist fighters who came to their lines and never – ever – bombed Isis? Do the White Helmets want to be associated with Israel right now?
But the Israelis got what they really wanted: a Russian promise that the Iranians will stay far away from the Israeli-occupied Syrian Golan plateau. It’s all a bit odd, since there are precious few Iranian troops in Syria – and you can forget the humbug from the Washington “experts” – but it fits in with Benjamin Netanyahu’s morbid and theatrical conviction that Iran is “a noose of terror” round Israel’s neck. In any event, Putin knows a thing or two about the Syrian war: bombs talk, but so does cash.
For why else has Putin just announced a $50bn (£38bn) dollar Russian investment in Iran’s oil and gas industry? Isn’t this simply a downpayment for Iran’s past investment in Syria’s war? A “thank you but you can go now” gift from Moscow in return for a, no doubt, triumphal march-past in Tehran of Iran’s returning “victorious” forces, back from their Islamic revolutionary duties in Syria?
After meeting Putin in the Kremlin less than two weeks ago, Ali Akbar Velayati, “Supreme Leader” Khamenei’s senior adviser on foreign affairs, agreed that their talks “focused on Russian-Iranian cooperation … as well as the situation in the region, including developments in Syria”. And there you have it. Iran’s economy is propped up, but it’s got its Syrian marching orders from Putin.
None too soon for the Iranians, no doubt. It was quite a shock for me to see the rich and wealthier middle class Iranians flooding into Belgrade this past month, bringing their cash and treasures to the west through one of the few European countries still permitting visa-free entry for the sanctioned Iranians. Cheap flights from Tehran and other Iranian cities are landing daily in Serbia, and Belgrade’s hotels are packed with Farsi-speaking guests, all set – presumably – for new lives in the west. The European Union, needless to say, is threatening the Belgrade president that if he doesn’t block the profitable Iranian “tourists”, it will end the no-visa travel which Serbian citizens enjoy in the rest of Europe.
Meanwhile the Syrian army, fighting the last no-surrender Islamist groups around Deraa, will also return to the edge of the United Nations buffer zone on Golan where it was based before the civil war began in 2011. In other words, the “Southern Front” will be resolved, leaving only the Idlib Redoubt and the city of Raqqa which remains in the hands of militias who are still loyal – if they can be expected to be much longer, given the fact that Trump is ratting on them – to the US. Putin can probably solve this problem, if he hasn’t already done so in his Trump pow-wow.
But Idlib is a bigger deal. No doubt, we shall see further Russian-sponsored “reconciliation” talks between the Syrian authorities and the rebel groups inside the province. There will be agreements, private and public, whereby those who wish to return to government-controlled territory may do so. But given the fact that Idlib contains those Islamists and their families who earlier rejected such offers in other cities – many of them were bussed from Ghouta and Yarmouk in Damascus and from Homs and other towns where they surrendered, directly to Idlib province – their future looks pretty bleak.
We all like wars to have a “final battle”, of course. Jerusalem and Baghdad – strangely enough – were the only enemy “capital” cities invaded by the Allies during the First World War. And we know that the fall of Berlin to the Russians ended the European bit of the Second World War. We’ll leave out the fall of Saigon for obvious reasons (the wrong side won), and the various Middle East “capital” conquests (Jerusalem in 1967, Beirut in 1982, Kuwait in 1990, Baghdad in 2003), because they all left bloody legacies which continue to this day.
But we should remember one thing. The Syrian army is used to pitch battles. So is the Russian air force. Certainly, Nusrah’s siege of the government-held Jisr al-Shugour military hospital in Idlib – and the massacre of many of its army defenders and their families three years ago – is unlikely to be forgotten when the last battle begins. Moscow is not going to welcome any Islamists “home” to Chechnya. And Ankara will not want to scatter Idlib’s veterans across the plains of Anatolia – especially when Erdogan is still obsessed with an attempted “Islamist” coup two years ago, tens of thousands of whose alleged supporters still languish in Turkey’s luxurious prisons.
The west is certainly not going to help. There’s the old UN donkey, I suppose, which could be led into Idlib on a “temporary” peace-keeping mission – but that will not commend itself to a Syrian president who intends to return every square kilometre of the country to the regime’s exclusive control. An even tinier dumping ground might be available if the rebels of Idlib are shunted into the northern enclave of Afrin – already largely controlled and populated by Turkey’s erstwhile friends from Isis. Certainly, the west won’t want the detritus of the Islamist army which it helped to arm. Political asylum for the White Helmets is likely to be the full extent of its generosity, along with the usual aid to refugees.
But we must also remember that those nations which have so long sought the overthrow of Assad will now be trying – ever so slowly – to reestablish some form of relationship with the regime in Damascus. French diplomats, speak it not, have been taking tourist trips in and out of Syria from Lebanon for almost a year. So have discrete envoys from other European nations. The Americans will want to play their own little role – Trump-like and weird as it may be – and there, at this critical moment, Putin will be on hand.
But what of the five million Syrian refugees whose host countries – European, of course, but also Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Egypt – would dearly love them to go “home”. And therein lies, perhaps, the clue to this “end of war”.
The Russians are ready to supply guarantees of safe passage home to refugees – what these promises are worth remains an open question when many thousands of the homeless are fearful of the regime – and Moscow’s men are reported to have already arrived in Lebanon, which hosts up to a million and a half Syrians, to chat about the logistics. Gulf Arabs – particularly Qatar – are said to be interested in financially rebuilding Syria. So if they won’t surrender militarily, can the Idlib “rebels” be bought off? Not least by the Arab nations which supported them in the first place. These are early days. But all wars come to an end. And that’s where history restarts.

Dalit women struggle in Pakistan

Sheshu Babu

As election results are almost declared, Pakistan is entering new phase of governanc under a new premier. Hindus comprise about 1.85% of Pakistan population ( wikipedia.org and as of 2010, it had fifth largest hindu population in the world. Pakistan census separates scheduled castes from the main body of hindu population who constitute a further 0.25% of national population. Thus, dalits constitute significant numbers in the population of Pakistan. More than 85% of hindus are dalits according to Chander Kumar, activist ( Pakistan dalits in peril, published 24 March 2012,countercurrents) and they have been living for over 5000 years in Pakistan.
Bad situation
Chander Kumar analysed the plight of dalits citing work done by the Royal Mandate of the Dalit Development Programme. Several members of Dalit Programme identified the problems faced by dalits in Pakistan viz caste discrimination, lack of education, technical skills, water shortage, overwhelming of the community engaged in hard labor and manual work etc.
They are also facing hardships from dominant muslim community. Both hindu upper castes and muslim majority overlook them and do not address their problems on political stage . Dalits in Pakistan remain in severe state.
Struggles with ruling community
Dalits have tried to take on patriarchy in hindu community and people of their own community as in India . Dalits had to counter Muslim domination. They are struggling to come out of the narrowminded peoples . The usual struggles in pakistan against mass tyranny from dominant muslims continued till recent times.
Dalits enter politics
Krishna Kumari became the first woman from Kohili community of hindus to be elected as a senator through Pakistan Peoples party ticket. (Pakistani Hindu senator from ‘ untouchables ‘ rejects caste by KHUNWAR KHULDUNE SHAHID, March 6, 2018, www.atimes.com). She is the second hindu woman after Ratna Bhagwan Chawla but first one from ‘dalit ‘ community. She is a human rights activist. Talking to Asia Times , she said that discrimination of dalits exist in India and not in ‘ . She abhors being labelled a dalit and insists that she would work for all hindu and muslim backward people in the area.
Though there may not be stark caste discrimination as in India, the dalits in Pakistan also face problems. Since all the hindu community is being persecuted by the rulers, differences between castes in hindus of Pakistan may remain dormant. Other senators of hindu community also condemned the tag of ‘ untouchable ‘ being labelled at her.
Meanwhile, two dalit women Radha Bheel and Lelan Lohar contested as independents candidates from Mirpur Khas district of Sindh . (This Pak elections, Hindu Dalit Women Brandish A Pencil For Rights, by AHMED SAEED and Umer Bin Ajmal, posted 24, July,18, thequaint.com ). In 2016, Bheel, alongwith some other members of dalit community started a movement called Dalit Sujaag Tehreek (DST) to highlight the conditions of backward classes.
Contrary to Krishna Kumari views, Radha Bheel feels that dalit community are being discriminated against. She says that though dalits are in a majority, tickets are given mostly to upper castes candidates. ‘……..No party focusses on the issues we are facing …’
She says. Lohar says her real fight is with feudal lords and points out that she was threatened and asked to withdraw or face grave consequences. She was married at very early age and one of her daughter died due to ill- treatment of in- laws after getting married at a young age.
There are others who filed papers for the elections. Some are contesting from general seats. Even differently abled Ansoo Kohili is aspiring. She rose to fame for starting a school at her cattle shed. ( Zulfiqar Kunbhar, posted June 12, 2018, dailytimes.com). After Sunita Parmer, five more dalit women have come forward to contest. They all are not satisfied with selection of candidates from upper castes.
Though the results may or may not reflect the victories of these women, their courage to contest should be appreciated. In a Muslim dominated country, dalit women are taking the cudgels to fight theocracy of the dominant religion as well as caste conflict in hindu community. Dalit power is becoming a potent force in Pakistan.