30 Aug 2018

Tax cuts boost US bank profits to record highs

Trévon Austin

On August 23, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) reported that US commercial banks and savings institutions brought in a record $60.1 billion in profits in the second quarter of this year. The sum easily surpassed the $56 billion in bank profits in the first quarter and was up $12.1 billion, or 25.1 percent, from the second quarter of 2017.
In a statement, the American Bankers Association said the “real driver of earnings” last quarter was strong lending, though the group also credited tax “reform,” deregulation and the strength of the economy.
The FDIC, however, acknowledged that the Trump administration’s $1.5 trillion tax cut, which dramatically lowered the corporate rate, was largely responsible for the increase in profits. A secondary factor, it said, was the rise in interest rates. The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates twice this year and is expected to raise them again once or twice before the end of the year.
The vast bulk of the profit increase is occurring at the larger banks rather than the so-called “community banks.” Of the 5,542 insured institutions, some 5,111 are currently counted as community banks. This much larger group saw its net income rise by about $1.1 billion from a year ago, or 21.1 percent, to $6.5 billion in the second quarter. This means that the larger banks, about 1 percent of the total, took in almost 90 percent of the total profit.
The profit surge was also propelled by stock buybacks and the weakening of rules on bank speculation. In June, the Federal Reserve loosened restrictions on high-risk trading conducted by the major banks after intensive pressure by Wall Street and the Trump administration. The change effectively released banks from restrictions on the kind of speculation that led to the 2008 financial crisis.
US corporations are on track to spend a record $1 trillion to buy back their own stock in 2018. This completely parasitic practice diverts capital from useful production and the provision of jobs to pushing up stock prices, which overwhelmingly benefits the richest 5 percent of the population, including corporate CEOs and big investors.
Banks and corporations are channeling the bulk of their savings from the tax cuts into stock buybacks, dividend increases and mergers and acquisitions. Second quarter share repurchases are up 57 percent from the same period a year earlier. In the tech sector, the year-over-year increase is 130 percent.
The parasitic growth on Wall Street is accompanied by the continuing decline in the social position of the working class. Even though the official unemployment rate, at 3.9 percent, is the lowest in nearly two decades, real wages remain stagnant and are beginning to decline due to rising inflation.
The suppression of wages is a conscious strategy that makes the vast inflation of stocks and other financial assets possible. The average compensation of American CEOs has grown by 71.7 percent since 2009, while compensation for the average worker has grown only 2.1 percent over the same period.
The trade unions have played a critical role in facilitating this vast redistribution of wealth from the bottom to the top. For decades they have suppressed strikes and other forms of working class resistance, stepping up their role as industrial police since the Wall Street crash of 2008. As a result, the level of strike activity in recent years has fallen to the lowest level since records began in 1947.
This year has seen a marked growth of strikes due to increased anger and militancy among workers, not because of any shift in the pro-corporate policies of the unions. The wave of teachers’ strikes earlier this year was the result of rank-and-file initiatives carried out largely in defiance of the teachers’ unions. The unions scrambled to gain control of the walkouts in West Virginia, Oklahoma and Arizona in order to isolate them and sell them out.
Labor’s share of national wealth in the US has fallen from 66.4 percent in 2000 to 58.9 percent in 2018, a transfer of wealth worth $1.4 trillion this year alone.

Canadian troops deploy to Mali to prop up pro-Western puppet government

Felix Gauthier

The Canadian Armed Forces’ (CAF) contingent of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (UNMISMA) announced that it had achieved full operational readiness on August 15, just one day before the publication of the results of Mali’s presidential election.
In recent years Canada has provided logistical support to French military operations in Mali and the Sahel region of Northern Africa. But this is the first time that it has committed hundreds of troops on a long-term basis to upholding “stability,” i.e., imperialist domination, of a region ravaged by nearly a century-and-a half of colonial and neo-colonial domination, where levels of human misery remain among the highest in the world.
The Canadian troops in Mali are part of a “peace-keeping mission,” under the UNMISMA banner, comprising 12,000 troops and 2,000 police from 56 countries. The mission ostensibly expresses the will of the “international community,” but is in reality under the effective control of the western imperialist powers, with France, the traditional colonial power, playing the leading role.
Canada’s intervention is entirely in line with this. Presented as an act of humanitarian charity, the CAF operation is part of Canada's efforts to advance its global economic and strategic interests in the context of growing inter-imperialist rivalries, and in particular to secure its claim to a share of the mineral resources of the Sahel region. Canadian companies have long been active in exploiting Mali’s gold resources.
Since coming to power in 2015, the Liberal government of Justin Trudeau has expanded Canada’s role in the principal US military-strategic offensives—in the oil-rich Middle East and against Russia and China—and, in preparation for future military conflicts, has announced a 70 percent hike in defence spending by 2026.
At the same time, both to provide political cover for this militarist foreign policy and to exploit other opportunities to advance Canada’s predatory interests, Trudeau has announced “Canada’s return” to UN peacekeeping. While the Conservative opposition has suggested this is a distraction from expanding Canada’s military partnership with the US and developing the CAF’s war-capabilities, the government and military high command have emphasized that contemporary UN peace-keeping missions are more “peace-making” missions, i.e., counter-insurgency operations; and that “peace-making” provides Canada with the opportunity to deepen military partnerships with allies, while “putting to good use” the expertise the Canadian military developed through its thirteen years of fighting a neo-colonial war in Afghanistan.
At a UN peacekeeping conference in Vancouver in November 2017, Liberal Defence Minister Harjeet Sajan and Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland announced Canada would deploy some 600 military personnel, military transport aircraft, and up to 150 police officers, in UN missions around the world, including a maximum of 200 per mission.
With more than 250 CAF members now deployed to Mali, this threshold has already been exceeded. Last month, the government also announced the deployment of 20 civilian police officers to Mali, most of whom will be recruited from the Sûreté du Québec (Quebec Provincial Police).
The Canadian troops are accompanied by five heavily-armed Griffons and three Chinook helicopters, reconfigured into medical stations.
Although the Canadian mission is publicly presented as a “medical assistance” and “peacekeeping” endeavor, the CAF high command has insisted on rules of engagement that make clear the CAF will be an active participant in Mali’s French-led counter-insurgency war. As one expert interviewed by the Globe and Mail noted, “In practice, it is difficult if not impossible to differentiate between peacekeeping operations and anti-terrorist operations”. Speaking to the same newspaper, a government representative commented, “For self-defence, we will do whatever is necessary to protect our UN partners and Canadians.”

The new “scramble for Africa”

In the five months since the Canadian government announced the Mali deployment, the UNMIMSA forces have been drawn ever more deeply into combat, suffering mounting fatalities. Of the 170 casualties that UNMISMA has suffered during the past three years, 70 have occurred since March. These losses have led the UN to designate Mali its most dangerous mission.
Officially, the UN troops are supposed to oversee the so-called peace process enshrined in a treaty signed by Mali’s government and Tuareg rebels in Algiers in 2015.
In reality, the UN intervention is part of a new scramble for Africa among the imperialist powers—a scramble that is being spearheaded by the US, France, Germany and Britain, but in which Canada is determined to play a role. As with the operations of the imperialist powers across the continent, their involvement in Mali is also motivated by their concern about the growth of Chinese influence and investment in Africa.
While its roots lie in Mali’s history of colonial and imperialist oppression, the current war arose out of the chaos and destruction wrought by the 2011 NATO regime-change war in Libya—a war led by the United States, but in which Canada played a major role. Forces drawn from the Islamist militias that overthrew the Gaddafi regime with NATO air-support took advantage of the ensuing political vacuum to cross the desert into the Sahel region.
In alliance with separatists drawn from the Tuareg, an impoverished minority in Saharan Africa, many of whose members where chased out of Libya following the fall of the Gaddafi regime, they subsequently launched a rebellion in northern Mali against the government based in Bamako, in Mali’s south.
Weakened and in crisis, Mali’s government was overthrown in a military coup in January 2012. The following year, Paris stepped in to bolster the Bamako-based regime, deploying troops to Mali under Operation Serval. This was followed in July 2014 by Operation Barkhane, which saw thousands of French troops deployed to countries across the Sahel under the pretext of fighting terrorism.
Four years later, Mali remains mired in communal and ethnic strife. Despite the large foreign military presence, large parts of the country remain devoid of state structures and increasingly experience violence, fueled by social misery and turf wars among the western-sponsored government and rival political forces.

Atrocities in the name of “the war on terror”

Ever more openly, the “war on terror” being mounted by Mali’s Bamako-based government with the support of France and its international allies, such as Canada, is becoming a “dirty war” against the Malian people.
The discoveries in recent months of mass graves containing the bodies of dozens of civilians illustrate the real character of Mali’s neo-colonial government and the “peace” enforced by UNMISMA. For several years, reports have implicated the Malian Armed Forces (Fama), as well as various forces involved in “anti-terrorist” operations (including the G5-Sahel, comprised of troops from neighbouring countries), in hundreds of arbitrary detentions, cases of torture, and summary executions of civilians.
Since the beginning of the year, Malian government forces have targeted members of the Fulani ethnic group in Mopti, a region that lies northeast of Bamako in the center of the country.
Twenty-five Fulani civilians accused of terrorism were found in a mass grave near Mopti on June 18. In this case, the government admitted the army’s involvement. A week later, in the same region, the bodies of a further 32 Fulani civilians were found.
Already last year, the UN Security Council established a general sanctions regime for Mali after the discovery of two mass graves in the Kidal, a Tuareg-dominated region in the country’s north. In April, Human Rights Watch reported the torture and execution of 27 men in the Mopti region. A UNMISMA press briefing the same month reported at least 95 summary executions since February in Menaka (a part of the Gao region) of persons accused of banditry and terrorism, including children. Many other cases of state abuse have been reported by local people, but only a fraction of them have been documented or acknowledged.
In July, during the official election period, a demonstration was jointly organized by Fulani and Dogon groups to report on the crisis in the Mopti region. One demonstrator told RFI, “People are always afraid, either of armed groups or of the Malian army itself. Currently, the Malian army is the most feared in the Mopti region because of various abuses.”
A recent article in the French daily Libération illustrates the alienation of the Malian people from the government and state whose authority the Canadian military is now upholding: “The Fulani have always been hounded by the State, victims of racketeering, despised [...] The repeated abuses of the Malian army reinforce their mistrust of the State, and push some among the youth to turn to [Islamist militias].”
The anti-democratic and unpopular character of Mali’s imperialist-backed government underscores the hypocritical and cynical nature of Canada’s claims to be mounting a “humanitarian” intervention in the west African country. This false narrative is promoted by the entire political establishment, including the social-democratic NDP.
The two-round presidential election that concluded August 12 was a charade, aimed at providing the Malian government with “democratic” credentials. According to UNMISMA, a massive deployment of the security forces that have routinely resorted to atrocities would ensure the integrity of the vote. In reality, there was little voting in much of the country. In central Mali, where popular opposition to the current government is strongest, violence and threats of violence contributed to a very low turnout.
On August 16, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (IBK) was declared re-elected with 67.16 percent of the votes against 32.84 percent for his opponent, Soumaïla Cissé. The latter is accusing the government of vote-buying and ballot-stuffing, and charging that government troops disrupted his campaign, including by arresting campaign leaders.
Nevertheless, UNMISMA was quick to give its stamp of approval for Keïta’e re-election, declaring in a press release that “the International Community will continue to work with Mali’s elected authorities for lasting peace and genuine security throughout the country.”

Sri Lankan fishermen demonstrate to demand fuel price reductions

Naveen Dewage

Hundreds of multi-day trawler owners and their workers protested at Galle Face in central Colombo last week to demand the Sri Lankan government reduce recent rises in the cost of diesel fuel. In May the government increased diesel from 95 rupees per litre to 110 rupees, and in July lifted it again to 118 rupees (about 73 US cents).
The increases have crippled the small-scale fishing industry and drastically affected the living conditions of fishermen, farmers and other small producers and traders who depend on diesel and kerosene.
Demonstrators gathered at Galle Face on August 23 carrying placards with slogans that read: “We don’t need subsidies but reduced fuel prices,” “Don’t destroy the multi-day fishing industry” and “Rulers! Don’t pick pockets by hiking up fuel prices.”
A section of the demonstration
The protest was called by the All Island Multi-day Vessel Owners’ Association (MVOA). The organisers had planned to present a letter containing their demands to Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena in the hope that this would pressure the government to reverse the fuel increases.
The government, however, responded by deploying police who blocked the rally, claiming it would “inconvenience the public.” A senior officer threatened to “take action” against the demonstrators telling them that they could only present their demands to the presidential secretariat.
Under pressure from angry demonstrators, MVOA president Sujith Fernando rejected the police threats, declaring that the fishermen had been deceived twice this year and they needed to do something that government would “feel.”
The fishermen rallied at Galle Face and then attempted to march toward the presidential secretariat only to be confronted by police armed with batons and water cannons who brought in steel barricades to block the march. An anti-riot police squad was also on stand-by.
Police said they would only allow 11 MVOA representatives to meet with presidential secretariat officials. While angry fishermen said they would not move without a resolution to their concerns, MVOA officials directed the protesters to withdraw.
Police mobilised against the protesting fishermen
Sri Lanka has almost 4,650 multi-day vessels which supply deep-sea tuna to large seafood companies for export to Europe, America and other foreign markets. Around 30,000 families are dependent on the industry, which is a major source of foreign exchange for Sri Lanka.
Last week’s demonstration is part of a wave of protests this year by Sri Lankan fishermen against fuel increases, the rising cost of fishing equipment and other necessary items.
In May, tens of thousands of small-boat fishermen protested in coastal areas across the country over a 130 percent increase in the price of kerosene. Fishermen demanded the government reduce kerosene to its previous level of 44 rupees per litre. In the face of this mass opposition the government temporarily cut the kerosene price to 70 rupees per litre and promised subsidies but refused to lower diesel prices. Predictably, Colombo’s subsidy promises have not materialised.
The government’s fuel increases are in line with the social austerity and privatisation measures demanded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Under the new arrangement Sri Lankan petrol, diesel and kerosene prices are directly determined by the world market. The IMF did not release the fourth instalment of a bailout loan until Colombo implemented the new “price formula.”
Multi-day fishing vessels, which spend several days at sea, usually consume between 10,000 and 15,000 litres of diesel which, together with food, bait, ice and other expenses, cost between 1.6 million to 2 million rupees each trip.
The income from each fishing harvest is then divided—half for the vessel owner and the other half equally between the workers. Losses are allocated in the same way amongst the workers as a debt and deducted from the income of the next fishing expedition.
Last week’s hour-long discussion between MVOA representatives and a presidential secretariat official was futile. MVOA President Fernando told the media that the official would look into steps taken by the fisheries ministry and had suggested a possible future discussion with President Sirisena. Protesting fishermen denounced the empty promises.
Protesting fishermen
Like the trade unions, MVOA claims that a meeting with Sirisena will resolve the disastrous situation facing workers in the fishing industry are bogus. The government functions as a direct tool of the IMF in ruthlessly imposing its austerity measures. The MVOA’s claims that the economic problems facing small boat owners were solved by the temporary reduction in kerosene prices are also false.
Sunil, a fishing worker from Mahawewa, near Chilaw told the WSWS reporters that he had recently sold his fishing vessel.
“I’m a professional fisherman. Our last fishing expedition yielded an income of just 2.1 million rupees against an expenditure of 1.9 million rupees. When the workers’ share, half of the profit, was divided among the six workers, each one only received 16,000 rupees. Forty-three days hard work were required for this amount, which is scarcely enough to eke out a living for two weeks let alone settle our previous debts.”
Fishing vessel owners, he explained, face a real crisis. “One of my friends, a vessel owner, told me that he had to pawn all of his jewellery for the first time in his life last month to settle a 1.5 million rupee debt.”
Rogus, a fisherman from Thoduwawa near Chilaw told the WSWS: “Every day the price of essentials increases which makes life hard. The cost of preparing fishing nets has also gone up by thousands of rupees. No lasting solution to our problems can be found from the government in power.”

Italy’s far-right interior minister charged with kidnapping

Marianne Arens

The state attorney in Agrigento, a city on the southern coast of Sicily, is investigating Italy’s interior minister and federal secretary of the Lega (League, formerly the Northern League), Matteo Salvini, for deprivation of liberty, illegal detention and abuse of office.
Salvini oversaw the holding of 177 refugees on board the Italian coast guard ship Ubaldo Diciotti as hostages. He declared the migrants could only leave the vessel and set foot on Italian soil once other European countries promised to take them in.
Salvini threatened otherwise they would be deported back to Libya. For 10 days, Lega and the Five-Star Movement coalition government refused to allow the exhausted, desperate refugees to disembark.
The migrants were rescued from the Mediterranean by the coast guard near Lampedusa on August 16. The ship was only given permission to enter the port of Catania on August 20, and only 27 children and unaccompanied minors were then allowed to leave the ship. A further 150 refugees were forced to remain on board until Saturday, although scabies was widespread and there were several suspected cases of tuberculosis.
The migrants were finally allowed to leave the Ubaldo Diciotti on Saturday night. Non-European Union (EU) member Albania and EU member Ireland had agreed to accept 25 people each. The remaining 100 migrants were offered housing by the Italian Episcopal Conference—a desperate attempt by Pope Francis to improve the badly battered reputation of the Church following the most recent revelations of clerical child abuse.
Also on August 25, Luigi Patronaggio, the senior prosecutor in Agrigento, initiated proceedings against Salvini. He accuses the interior minister of violating both Italian and EU law. By law no one can be detained for more than 48 hours without a judge’s order.
Patronaggio is a well-known figure in Italian legal circles. He has carried out investigations into Sicilian organised crime and put Marcello Dell’Utri, the mafia criminal and adviser and personal friend of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, behind bars. Berlusconi served as head of the Italian government for years in a coalition with the Lega Nord, the predecessor of Salvini’s Lega.
On Sunday, Patronaggio handed over the Salvini case to the Tribunale dei Ministri (ministerial court) in Palermo, a special court that investigates members of the government. Referring to the refugees, Patronaggio said: “It’s about people forced to leave their country and their families under painful circumstances to escape war and misery.”
In truth, however, the entire European Union belongs in the dock alongside Salvini.
EU officials are responsible for the deaths of thousands who have drowned in the Mediterranean. Those rescued are among the few to have reached land safely. At the end of June, the EU decided to seal off “Fortress Europe” using the infamous Libyan coast guard to police Europe’s Mediterranean shores and prevent NGO volunteers from leaving port to rescue those shipwrecked.
In so doing, the EU has condemned an unknown number of refugees to death on the open sea. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the number of people reaching Italy by August 22 fell from 97,500 to 19,400 compared to the same period last year. Despite this decline, 1,546 cases of drownings or missing persons were recorded during these eight months.
Salvini has reacted with aggression and scorn to the prosecutor’s investigation. In front of fascist supporters in Pinzolo, in northern Italy, he placed all blame on the EU, which he accused of being “vile and useless.” “They do not deserve our money,” so Italy will stop making contributions, he said.
Concerning the charges, Salvini said he would forgo the immunity he is entitled to as a member of the Senate. “I’m ready when they come to get me,” Salvini said, declaring the charges against him to be “a disgrace.” “They can arrest me, but not the 60 million Italians who want things to be different.”
Salvini’s provocative stance is in response to the government’s rapid loss of support. Faced with a deep economic and social crisis, he is seeking to mobilise the most right-wing forces.
The government’s policy of building up the army and police and its attacks on democratic rights are increasingly meeting with resistance. On Saturday, more than 1,000 people demonstrated in Catania calling for the release of the migrants. “They are illegally detained,” one participant told the daily la Repubblica. “We want to show we are in solidarity with them.”
None of the official parties were to be seen, and when members of the former ruling Democratic Party (PD) appeared, they were turned away by chanting protesters. One speaker said, “Many here are unemployed, others are students with two jobs; they work in precarious jobs or are pensioners who cannot make it to the end of the month. We can imagine how the refugees are doing: we all want to live.”
Salvini’s claim that his policy is based on “60 million Italians who want things to be different” provoked a massive wave of reaction on the Internet. Many posted statements by workers, residents and even tourists on the coast countering the propaganda of the Lega. A meeting between Salvini and the Hungarian Premier Viktor Orbán in Milan this week was accompanied by protests.
With its fascist baiting, the government is trying to distract attention from growing tensions. A massive financial crisis lurks in the background that will not allow the Lega and the Five-Star Movement to fulfil any of their election promises. The governing parties had promised to restore pensions, introduce a basic income and cut taxes—policies costing billions that are now evaporating in the wind.
The recent collapse of the Morandi Bridge in Genoa, which claimed 43 lives, exposed the ailing state of the Italian economy and society. Hundreds of people were made homeless and still lack proper aid and a roof over their heads.
In September, the government will present its 2019 budget and the EU then has to approve it. This helps explain the aggressive propaganda by government members against the EU. Along with Salvini, his coalition partner Luigi Di Maio (Five-Star Movement) has announced that Italy will “no longer transfer euros” to the EU.
Italy has the second largest public debt in the EU after Greece (€2.3 trillion) [US$ 2.7 trillion], and Finance Minister Giovanni Tria faces the serious problem of refinancing several hundred billion euros’ worth of bank loans. At the same time, there are three deadlines looming regarding Italian creditworthiness. Rating agencies Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s will give their ratings on August 31, September 7 and October 26, respectively.
The Italian government of the Lega and the Five-Star Movement can only hold on to power and propagate their right-wing filth because there is no effective opposition and the working class lacks a party capable of providing it a socialist perspective.
In particular the phoney “leftist” politicians on the fringes of the former Democratic Party are trying to absorb and neutralise the resistance of working people. After shielding the anti-working-class policies of various centre-left governments for years, they are now firmly opposed to mobilising resistance to the new government’s fascist policies. For such forces even the investigations by prosecutor Patronaggio go too far. Several pseudo-left politicians have scornfully dismissed them, claiming they merely fuel Salvini’s far-right propaganda.

UN condemns Burma’s persecution of Rohingya minority

Oscar Grenfell 

A UN fact-finding panel issued a report on Monday calling for the prosecution of six senior Burmese generals on charges of genocide over their role in the state persecution of the country’s Rohingya Muslim ethnic minority. The document is the sharpest rebuke by the international body against the Burmese regime, since it launched wholesale ethnic cleansing last year.
The findings by the UN body follow a series of reports documenting mass killings, the destruction of entire villages and the forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya from Rakhine state in the country’s north-west.
Since last August, the military has conducted a series of brutal operations across Rakhine, on the pretext of combatting Rohingya insurgents. The Burmese government brands the Rohingya, who have lived in Burma for decades, or even centuries, as “Bengalis” or “illegal immigrants” and has called for their removal to neighbouring Bangladesh.
The UN report condemned the Burmese military’s actions as “gross human rights violations,” which are “shocking for their horrifying nature and ubiquity,” and “undoubtedly amount to the gravest crimes under international law.”
The six senior generals named in the report include Min Aung Hlaing, the commander in chief of the army, who plays a key role in the military-backed civilian government. The report recommended that Hlaing be among those investigated and prosecuted for overseeing genocide.
The panel rejected the claims of the army that their actions were a defensive response to “insurgent” attacks, noting that brutal army incursions into Rakhine had been planned at the highest levels of the military prior to small-scale rebel actions in August, 2017.
The report stated that the coordinated character of the military onslaught was demonstrated by the fact that many of them were “strikingly similar.” In different villages, army personnel had arrived and begun firing indiscriminately. The same modus operandi—of rounding up men and boys and sexually abusing women and girls then burning the entire village—was present in many of the cases examined.
According to the UN panel, almost 400 villages have been destroyed and close to three quarters of a million Rohingya have been forced to flee, most of them to squalid refugee camps in Bangladesh. It stated that an estimated death toll of 10,000 was “conservative.”
Significantly, the report held Burma’s civilian government, including First State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, as responsible for the massacres.
Suu Kyi has been promoted for decades in the West as a heroic fighter for democracy. She played the central role in the stage-managed move from open military dictatorship, to nominal civilian rule in 2011. Freed from a decades-long house arrest, she rapidly assumed the leading role in the new government.
The transition, which maintained the dominant role of the military generals in Burmese politics, was overseen by the US and the major European powers. The holding of stage-managed elections was used as a pretext for normalising relations with Burma.
Washington’s aim was to undermine Burma’s close ties with China and draw the geo-strategically critical country into the US-led military encirclement of Beijing, in preparation for war against China. It coincided with the Obama administration’s 2011 launch of the US “pivot to Asia,” a vast military build-up in the Asia-Pacific, which included the strengthening of military alliances strategic partnerships throughout the region against China.
The UN report coincides with mounting concerns in Washington over Burma’s ongoing economic and military ties to China. As is invariably the case, the condemnation of war crimes by the US and the other major powers is entirely selective and always aligned with their own predatory geo-strategic interests.
The UN findings have been accompanied by calls from the US political establishment for tougher action against the Burmese regime, including expanded sanctions targeting the top military generals. This is viewed as a means of ramping up pressure on Burma, to force it out of Beijing’s orbit.
An editorial by the Washington Post, which has close ties to the US State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency, yesterday called on the Trump administration to replicate the actions of the UN, by labelling the actions of the Burmese military as “genocide.”
The White House has previously branded the persecution of the Rohingya as “ethnic cleansing.” Explicit use of the term “genocide,” however, would provide the grounds for sharp sanctions against the military top brass. Five army commanders and two army units were hit by US Treasury sanctions earlier this year, while broader sanctions legislation has yet to pass the Congress.
The Washington Post’s posture of outrage over the events in Burma is utterly hypocritical. It has maintained a deafening silence on the US-backed bombardment of Yemen, which has seen the Saudi Arabian regime conduct a genocidal campaign against Houthi minority rebels.
The paper has agitated for ever-more direct US intervention against Syria, as part of the protracted regime-change operation against the government of Bashar al-Assad, and has played a central role in the campaign by sections of the US military and intelligence establishment for an escalation of the US confrontation with Russia.
The real concerns underlying the demands that the Trump administration step up its moves against Burma were spelled out in an accompanying Washington Post article that warned about China’s growing influence.
The article stated: “Beijing expects to secure access for its companies to a resource-rich neighbor on the Indian Ocean and a strategic partner in efforts to tamp down criticism of China’s more muscular exercise of power in the region.”
It noted that Burma, “occupies an important role in Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature Belt and Road plan to build infrastructure and deepen trade ties throughout Eurasia.” Beijing is seeking to establish a China-Myanmar (Burma) Economic Corridor, including through the development of a massive Indian Ocean port in Kyaukpyu, in Rakhine state.
Washington has been openly hostile to the Belt and Road initiative, which it views as a direct challenge to its attempts to secure unbridled hegemony across the geo-strategically critical Eurasian landmass. If it were to become operational, the plan would facilitate trade relationships that could bypass US-dominated economic trading blocs and regional institutions.
The Washington Post article indicated that there are divisions within the US ruling elite over how to respond to China and Burma’s deepening ties. These are indicated by the apparent hesitancy of the Trump administration to expand sanctions, and the alleged attempts by Republican Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell, to block the passage of legislation targeting Burma.
Citing prominent strategic analysts at Washington-based think tanks, the article stated that if the US presses ahead too quickly with its escalation of pressure on the Burmese generals and civilian leaders, this would risk “drawing them further into Beijing’s orbit” and could “allow China to regain regional prestige befitting an emerging superpower.”
In other words, US strategy towards Burma is dictated by its drive to retain hegemony throughout the region, on behalf of the Wall Street banks and corporations that view China’s economic rise as a threat to their own predatory interests.

29 Aug 2018

Fogarty Global Health Fellowship Programme for Researchers from US and Developing Countries 2019/2020

Application Deadline: 1st November 2018

To Be Taken At (Country): Eighteen training sites across ten countries in Africa and Asia are available in 2019-20 through the Harvard-BU-Northwestern-UNM Consortium.

About the Award: The program provides opportunities to generate a new cadre of global health researchers, educators, and professionals who will be prepared to address the new challenges in global health. The program provides fellows with a 12-month, mentored research fellowship in innovative global health research to promote health equity for populations around the world. The fellowship is aimed towards: US doctoral students (PhD, DrPH, etc.), professional students (MD, DDS, DVM, PharmD, Engineering etc.) and postdoctoral fellows, as well as foreign postdoctoral fellows from affiliated international sites in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

Type: Fellowship, Training

Eligibility:
Pre-doctoral Trainees
Trainees must meet ALL of the following requirements:
  • Must be U.S. citizens or permanent U.S. residents. OR citizen of the LMIC country in which they are proposing to conduct research.
  • Must be enrolled in accredited doctoral level program (MD, PhD or equivalent) in public health, government, business, design, engineering, education, medicine, nutrition, law, pharmacy, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and nursing
  • Health-professional students who wish to interrupt their studies for a year or more to engage in full-time research training before completing their formal training programs are also eligible.
Post-doctoral trainees
  • Must be (a) U.S. citizens or permanent U.S. residents OR (b) citizens of LMIC with sites participating in the program.
  • Must have received, as of the beginning date of the training period, a PhD, MD, DDS, or comparable doctoral degree from an accredited domestic or foreign institution. Comparable doctoral degrees include, but are not limited to, the following: DMD, DC, DO, DVM, OD, DPM, ScD, EngD, DrPH, DNSc, DPT, PharmD, ND (Doctor of Naturopathy), DSW, PsyD, as well as a doctoral degree in nursing research.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: 
– Monthly stipend for 12 months. All stipends are potentially taxable under U.S. and international law.
– Funding for research support (lab supplies, software…)
– International health insurance for U.S. applicants
– Required vaccinations for U.S. applicants
– Visa and passport fees
– Roundtrip overseas travel to the training site for U.S. applicants
– Travel and accommodation to attend the orientation at NIH in July


Duration of Programme: Trainees are expected to spend 12 months in training and be available to begin the fellowship in July 2019, with a 2-3 weeks of training in the U.S.

How to Apply: Apply Here

Visit Programme Webpage for Details

Award Providers: Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Northwestern University, University of New Mexico (HBNU) Consortium.

UNDP/UN Women Open Innovation Challenge and Call for Youth Led Social Entrepreneurship Innovative Solutions Facing Youth in Africa 2019

Application Deadline: 18th September 2018

About the Award: This Challenge invites African youth entrepreneurs to step forward to help realise the Goals of Africa: We call on young people, especially women and girls, to present us with their innovations for SDG attainment in their communities and countries across Africa. Areas of particular relevance for this Challenge include youth access to sustainable livelihoods, youth engagement in governance / political participation, leadership and decision making, as well as youth action in preventing violence and other harmful practices against young women and girls.

Type: Contest

Eligibility: You are eligible for the Challenge if you answer “yes” to all of the following questions:
  • Are you African, aged between 15 and 35 years?
  • Do you have an innovative, replicable, scalable idea that could transform your community, country… or even
    Africa?
  • Would you like to contribute towards the attainment of the SDGs and therein especially gender-related targets and indicators of SDG 1 (poverty), SDG 5 (gender equality and empowerment of women and girls), SDG 8 (decent employment) and SDG 9 (industry, innovation and infrastructure)?
  • Do you have the passion to help Africa progress – but struggle to find the support you need to turn your idea
    into reality?
If you are between 15 and 18 years old, you can still apply for the Challenge and stand a chance to be profiled and recognized at the Africa Youth Conference as an outstanding innovator. Grants, however, can only be awarded to
entrepreneurs with a minimum age of 18 years.


Selection Criteria: Key factors that are being considered are whether the proposed solution:
  • Is inclusive and has great potential for impact (e.g., reduces poverty for the most disadvantaged especially
    women and girls).
  • Is sustainable (e.g., provides a long-term solution, is gender balanced and sensitive, is environmentally sustainable, climate smart, financially sustainable, etc.).
    Is transformative, innovative and can be scaled up easily.
    Is replicable in other environments and can be replicated across more African countries than that of the applicant.
    Is broadly accepted and widely accessible to all targeted beneficiaries and/or potential users especially women
    and girls.
    Is available for sharing.
    Builds on technologies or methodologies that are adaptable to various contexts for the benefit of all population
    including women and girls.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: Winning entries will receive funding to develop, validate and scale innovative ideas. The grants will be awarded to entrepreneurswho would like to test their innovative solutions orgrow existing ventures, as per the following categories:
Idea Stage: 5,000 USD (seed grants)
Growth Stage: 10,000 USD (scale grants)


How to Apply: To apply for the Challenge and stand a chance to win grant funding to pursue your entrepreneurship venture and / or profile your innovative idea/solution, fill and submit the form below.
In addition to your written response, we encourage you to make multimedia submissions. This can include a short video (which can be recorded using a phone) narrating in a summary form your initiative or high-resolution action photographs of the solution.


Visit Programme Webpage for Details 

Wealth of Nations Reporting Workshops on Illicit Finance in Africa 2018

Application Deadline: 9th September 2018.

Eligible Countries: African countries

To Be Taken At (Country): Workshops will take place in Johannesburg, South Africa

About the Award: Wealth of Nations is a long-term engagement, and journalists who take part must commit to all elements of the scheme, signing an agreement to this effect. These elements include:
  • The production of stories or investigations on illicit financial flows
  • A mentoring support scheme that will help produce these stories
  • Intensive training on reporting illicit finance
    • The first workshop will take place from Monday, 15 October – Friday, 19 October 2018 at the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism in Johannesburg
    • Selected participants will be invited to a follow-up workshop in early December 2018
Journalists will not be considered to have completed the scheme until they have completed all the elements, which include producing at least one story or investigation on illicit financial flows and will not receive their certificates until this point.

Type: Workshops

Eligibility: 
  • Journalists with at least two years of professional experience.
  • It is an advantage if you are familiar with investigative journalism, reporting on finances and/or dealing with numbers more generally. But if you have a strong motivation to learn about and understand these issues then we will consider your application.
  • You must be able to spend significant time working on illicit finance stories or investigations.
  • Both freelancers and staff journalists may apply. Journalists working for a news organisation will need consent from their editor to take part. Freelancers should provide evidence that one or more media organisations will be willing to take their work.
  • Journalists working in any medium or multiple media are welcome to apply (print, online, radio or television).
  • Journalists should be based in Africa and working for one or more African media organisations.
  • Journalists applying must have fluent English.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: 
  • If selected, you will take part in one intensive workshops (5 days) covering illicit finance, reporting on companies, accounts and budgets, and investigative techniques. Workshops will take place in Kampala or Dakar (TBC).
  • You will propose one or more story ideas that you wish to work on within the scheme – we will provide experienced journalists to help you pursue your stories right up to publication/broadcast
  • Selected participants will receive modest funding to help them realise their stories or investigations; those who are funded may have further opportunities for training
  • You will have exclusive access to expertise through our network of illicit finance experts
  • You will also have access to story ideas and editorial advice, and will be invited to share your own expertise with participants from other regions
Successful applicants will receive a full bursary that will cover air travel expenses (economy class), accommodation, local transfers and meals. Please note that you need to check visa requirements and ensure you have the necessary documentation required. The cost of your visa and any other related costs will be the responsibility of the participant.

Duration of Program: The first workshops will take place between 15 October – 19 October 2018

How to Apply: 
  • Two work samples
  • A letter from your editor consenting to your participation and confirming that any story written as part of the programme will be published in the publication you work for
Please have these ready before you begin the form.

Click here to begin the application form.

Visit Program Webpage for Details

Award Providers: Wealth of Nations

Important Notes: you will be asked to upload samples of your work, as well as a letter from your editor consenting to your participation. Please have these ready before you begin the form.

Adobe Research Women-in-Technology Scholarship for Female Undergraduate Students in STEM Fields 2019

Application Deadline: 28th September 2018

About the Award: Adobe Research creates innovative technologies for software products to better serve consumers, creative professionals, developers, and enterprises. Adobe brings together the smartest, most driven people to give them the freedom to nurture their intellectual curiosity, while providing them the necessary resources and support to shape their ideas into tangible results.

Fields of Study: This scholarship is intended for students studying computer science, computer engineering, or related technical fields.

Type: Fellowship, Undergraduate

Eligibility: In order to be eligible for the 2019 Adobe Research Women-in-Technology Scholarship, applicants must meet all of the following criteria:
  • Be a female student currently enrolled as an undergraduate or masters student at a university for the 2018-2019 academic year.
  • Intend to be enrolled as a full-time undergraduate or masters student at a university for the 2019-2020 academic year.
  • Be majoring in computer science, computer engineering, or a closely related technical field.
  • Maintain a strong academic record
  • Not have a close relative working for Adobe Research.
Number of Awards: Not specified

Value of Award: The Adobe Research Women-in-Technology Scholarship includes:
  • A $10,000 award paid once.
  • A Creative Cloud subscription membership for one year.
  • An Adobe Research mentor.
  • An opportunity to interview for an internship at Adobe.
How to Apply: Applications must include:
  • A resume
  • Academic transcripts from your current and/or past institution
  • Three references (our online application system will request letters from your references via email)
  • Answers to up to four essay questions, which will be available when we start accepting applications
  • An optional 60-second video or multimedia submission describing your dream career.
Click here to begin.

Visit the Program Webpage for Details

Award Providers: Adobe

Important Notes: Scholarship recipients will be announced by December 21, 2017.

What is FireEye?

Kevin Reed

In back-to-back announcements last week, the social media platforms Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Blogger and Google+ reported that they had removed hundreds of user accounts, pages, channels and posts on the grounds of “coordinated inauthentic behavior” and “spreading divisive content and misinformation.” The social media companies further justified their censorship measures with assertions that the closed accounts were linked to a political influence campaign of the Iranian government.
On August 21, Twitter posted the following on its Twitter Safety account: “Working with our industry peers today, we have suspended 284 accounts from Twitter for engaging in coordinated manipulation. Based on our existing analysis, it appears many of these accounts originated from Iran.”
On the same day, the head of Facebook cybersecurity policy, Nathaniel Gliecher, published a blog post titled, “What We Have Found So Far.” He wrote, “We've removed 652 pages, groups and accounts for coordinated inauthentic behavior that originated in Iran and targeted people across multiple internet services in the Middle East, Latin America, UK and US.”
Two days later, Google SVP of Global Affairs Kent Walker published a blog entry titled, “An update on state-sponsored activity,” writing, “We identified and terminated a number of accounts linked to the IRIB (Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting) organization that disguised their connection to this effort, including while sharing English-language political content in the U.S.: 39 YouTube channels that had 13,466 total US views on relevant videos; 6 blogs on Blogger; 13 Google+ accounts.”
Many of the shuttered accounts were connected to web sites with left-wing views and political positions opposing the crimes of the American, Saudi, and Israeli governments in the Middle East. Other accounts purported to be in support of US Senator Bernie Sanders and expressed support for Palestinians and opposition to the state of Israel.
As the World Socialist Web Site has explained, the unified actions of the social media companies represent a new stage in an expanding US government-directed censorship of the Internet that began more than a year ago. In August 2017, the WSWS proved that changes to Google’s search algorithms that promote “authoritative” news sources were also suppressing left-wing, socialist and anti-war websites.
That the content of the social posts of supposed “bad actors” and “coordinated manipulation” is in direct conflict with US foreign policy agenda demonstrates that Twitter, Facebook and Google are acting in concert with government entities. In fact, the common thread between the unified censorship of the social media companies was their reliance upon information provided by FireEye, an IT firm with close ties to the US State Department and Wall Street and managed by former military intelligence and law enforcement officers.

What is Fire Eye?

FireEye is a publicly listed $3 billion cyber-security company founded in 2004 and based north of San Jose, in Milpitas, California. The company began by developing expertise in tracking and shutting down botnets that spread email spamming operations around the globe. According to one industry expert FireEye has “become the Navy SEALs of cybersecurity, especially for next-generation cybersecurity threats.”
Through a series of acquisitions over the past five years, FireEye has emerged as a prominent provider of investigative services for high-profile cyber-attacks on American corporations such as the breach of customer data at Target (2013), the hack of Sony Pictures email servers (2014) and the Experian data breach (2017).
A major aspect of the present-day operations of FireEye is government contracts for network security at the state and federal level. FireEye has contracts with US government departments and there have been reports of close ties between the company and the National Security Agency.
FireEye has played a prominent role in the campaign regarding “Russian meddling” in the 2016 elections and it is a proponent of the claims that Russia has “weaponized” social media. The firm published a report on the alleged disinformation and influence campaign of the Russian government following the testimony of FireEye CEO Kevin Mandia before Congress on March 30, 2017.
Mandia served in the United States Air Force and was a computer security officer in the 7th Communications Group at the Pentagon and a special agent in the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. He began his commercial cyber-security career working as a contractor for Lockheed and later founded Mandiant, a company that investigated espionage by the Chinese government and also held contracts with the Defense Department.
The President of FireEye is Travis Reese, who was co-founder of the Computer Forensic and Intrusion Analysis Group at Aegis Research Corporation, which has held multiple Defense Department contracts over the past 15 years. Previously he was a Special Agent with the United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations.
The main financial muscle behind FireEye is Bain Capital Management, the hedge fund once run by Mitt Romney. FireEye’s chairman of the board is Enrique Salem, managing director of Bain Capital Ventures, formerly CEO of Symantec, a director of ADP and other software giants, as well as a member of President Obama’s Management Advisory Board.

The FireEye report on “Iranian Influence”

The censoring of social media accounts by Twitter, Facebook and Google was based primarily upon information provided to them by FireEye. On August 23, FireEye published a 38-page report titled, “Suspected Iranian Influence Operation.”
The report includes flowcharts, account names and screen shots of specific websites and social media accounts that it claims exist to “promote political narratives in line with Iranian interests,” adding, “These narratives include anti-Saudi, anti-Israeli, and pro-Palestinian themes, as well as support for specific U.S. policies favorable to Iran, such as the U.S.-Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA).”
However, as the title of the document suggests, FireEye provides only speculation of any connection between the targeted online publishers and the Iranian government. As with the previous “Russian interference” campaign, where no proof of social media meddling in the 2016 elections was ever provided, the FireEye report says, “While highly unlikely given the evidence we have identified, some possibility nonetheless remains that the activity could originate from elsewhere, was designed for alternative purposes, or includes some small percentage of authentic online behavior. We do not currently possess additional visibility into the specific actors, organizations, or entities behind this activity.”
The concept of “coordinated inauthentic behavior,” a phrase that wreaks of state repression, is being developed and promoted as part of advanced forms of Internet and social media censorship. The technology monopolies are preparing measures, with the assistance of government contractors like FireEye, to shut down the websites, email accounts, social media pages and blog posts of forms of expression that they deem are outside the spectrum of “authentic” sources.
The targeting of supposed Russian and Iranian influence in US politics is part of the strategic rollout of these censorship techniques as they are being tested and perfected. These methods will be used to stifle and shut down social and political opposition by masses of people against growing inequality, war and attacks on democratic rights. We encourage readers to contact the World Socialist Web Site and report instances of social media censorship and to join our campaign to defend freedom of speech on the Internet.

Whistleblowers expose Australian government crimes at Nauru refugee camp

Oscar Grenfell

Over the past week medical professionals and social workers have blown the whistle on the dire conditions facing refugees being held in Australian detention on the tiny Pacific Island nation of Nauru. They have reported widespread trauma and self-harm among children, untreated health problems and medical crises threatening deaths.
The exposures are a damning indictment of successive federal governments, Labor and Liberal-National alike, which have denied asylum to refugees seeking to arrive in Australia by boat, consigning them indefinitely to virtual concentration camps.
The reports have shown that a number of children have suffered life-threatening medical crises. One staff-member on Nauru told the Guardian: “Everyone on the island knows how serious this is. We have been saying for months a child is going to die in these circumstances.”
Anonymous statements from government employees, published by the Guardian, revealed that at least three children were flown from the island to Australia last week to receive urgent medical care.
On Friday a federal court judge ordered that a female child be transported immediately to Australia for hospitalisation. For much of the past three weeks she had refused to eat or drink.
Three separate doctors had issued reports to government authorities calling for her to be flown to Australia. They stated that she was suffering from “resignation syndrome,” a condition common among imprisoned child refugees who withdraw from all interaction and activity.
According to the Guardian, the girl recently told an Australian advocate: “I can’t live in this island anymore. I hate everything and everyone around me. I hate to go outside. We left our country to have a good and better life, but we faced the worst life ever, the life which forced us to end it.”
In another case, authorities had repeatedly blocked the medical transfer of a 12-year-old Iranian refugee boy to Australia despite warnings from staff that he could die. As of last week the boy, who has been imprisoned on the island for five years, had refused all food and water for up to a fortnight and was being fed intravenously. A staff member stated: “They know about this in Canberra but nothing is happening.”
One of the children reportedly removed from the island last week was a 14-year-old boy who has not left his bed for at least four months. Medical staff reported that his depression was so severe he no longer ate, washed or went to the toilet. They warned that he may suffer permanent disabilities as a result of severe muscle wastage.
Other child victims are even younger. The Guardian reported on the case of Ahoora, a seven-year-old whose Iranian family has been incarcerated on Nauru since he was just three-years-old.
The boy cannot read or write, has been prescribed strong anti-depressants, and has been described by doctors as experiencing “deep psychic suffering” and post-traumatic stress disorder. They have warned that these conditions will only worsen with continued imprisonment.
Ahoora’s mother self-harms by burning herself with cigarettes. She sent a letter of complaint about the treatment of her son to the company that manages the refugee camp, Canstruct, daubed in her own blood.
Confidential government documents obtained by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “7:30” program, aired on Monday night, revealed shocking suicidal crises among the more than 100 children detained on Nauru.
In one instance last June, a 14-year-old girl doused herself in petrol as she was holding a lighter. In another, a ten-year-old “attempted to self-harm by ingesting some sharp metal objects,” which appeared to be taken from fencing wire.
Dr Vernon Reynolds, a child psychiatrist who worked at International Health and Medical Services (IHMS), an Australian government contractor on Nauru, told “7:30” he was “surprised” that no refugee children had yet taken their life on the island. He insisted that Australian authorities were “neglecting these kids,” and that if nothing were done, further injuries, and possibly deaths would occur.
Reynolds had been due to return to Nauru in April, but was allegedly blocked by Australian authorities who were hostile to his clinical recommendations and critical reports.
Fiona Owens, a social worker who headed IHMS’ child mental health team on the island from May to July, told “7:30”: “The only thing a lot of the children are thinking about is how to die. They Google it on the internet. The extreme possibilities are death of children, death of adults, continual death of adults and children.”
Jacinta O’Leary, another whistleblower who worked as a nurse on Nauru last year, reviewed the trauma caused by the government’s refusal to transfer refugee women to Australia for abortions. Until threatened court action late last year, the Australian government had claimed, for several months, that all medical treatment, including pregnancy terminations, was the responsibility of Nauru authorities. Abortions are illegal in Nauru.
The whistleblowers have taken a courageous stand in defence of democratic rights and against the bipartisan persecution of refugees. Current and former staff who expose crimes at detention centres have previously been threatened with prosecution and imprisonment.
The 2015 Border Force Act passed by the Liberal-National Coalition government and the Labor Party made it a crime for any person working in a detention centre to publicly reveal the conditions of asylum-seekers, with “violations” punishable by up to two years’ incarceration.
The government last year made amendments to the legislation in response to legal action taken in the high court. The changed laws, however, included punishments for the release of information that could harm “national security,” a sweeping and vaguely defined provision.
The dire plight of refugees on Nauru is a damning indictment of the entire political establishment. It was the Greens-backed minority Labor government that, in 2013, reopened the brutal detention camps on Nauru and Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island, and decreed that the asylum-seekers incarcerated in them would never be allowed to set foot in Australia.
This vicious program has made Australia a world “model” for the abrogation of the right to asylum and the brutal persecution of the most vulnerable sections of the working class, fleeing US-led wars, invariably supported by Australia, and government persecution. The country’s “border protection” program has also been hailed by US President Donald Trump, along with neo-fascists across Europe.