Saturday, February 11, 2012

Pan-African Journal Worldwide Radio Broadcast on Labor & Civil Rights in African American History, Today, 6:00-8:00pm EST

For Immediate Release

Media Advisory

Listen to today's Pan-African Journal worldwide radio broadcast from 6:00-8:00pm EST.

Just click on the URL below:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/fight-for-truth/2012/02/11/the-pan-african-journal
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Event: African American History Month Forum
Date: Saturday, February 11, 2012, 5:00-8:00pm
Topic: Labor Rights, Civil Rights: A Legacy of Class Struggle
Speakers: Martha Grevatt & Abayomi Azikiwe
Location: 5920 Second Avenue at Antoinette, North of WSU Campus
Sponsor: Workers World Party Detroit Branch
Dinner Served: Featuring African American Cuisine
Contact: 313-459-0777 or 313-671-3715
E-mail: detroit@workers.org or panafnewswire@yahoo.com
URL: www.workersworld.net/detroit

African American History Month Forum on Labor Rights, Civil Rights: A Legacy of Class Struggle

February 11 is the 75th anniversary of the victory of the 1937 Flint Sit-down strike, one of the most significant events in U.S. labor history. After occupying General Motors plants for 44 days, workers won recognition of the United Auto Workers and the first industry contract.

This victory set off a chain reaction. Not only autoworkers but workers in steel, textile, retail, restaurant, public service and other sectors won union recognition. During this year of working class upsurge African American workers, as well as Latino/a, Asian, Native, immigrant and women workers, played a pivotal role.

February 11 is also the 22nd anniversary of Nelson Mandela's release from prison and the first anniversary of the resignation--after the Egyptian masses took to the streets--of ex-President Hosni Mubarak. The struggle in Egypt inspired the occupation of the state capital building in Madison, Wisconsin, and the Occupy Movement that has swept the country.

February 12 is the 44th anniversary of the start of the Memphis sanitation strike. African American workers began this strike on Lincoln's birthday to draw attention to the slave conditions they were working under, which led to the death of two workers who were crushed inside a compactor.

Martin Luther King, Jr. was in Memphis to show solidarity with the strike when he was assassinated on April 4th, 1968. On April 16 AFSCME Local 1733 had won their first contract in the city.

February is African American History Month. We invite you to a public forum on these important historical milestones, where we will draw lessons for the struggles unfolding right now.

Please come out and hear two interesting and compelling speakers:

Martha Grevatt--who has been a UAW Chrysler worker for 24 years, first in Ohio and now in Detroit. She has written extensively on the crisis facing autoworkers for Workers World newspaper. She is the author of a pamphlet, "In Our Hand is Placed a Power: the Flint Sit-down Strike" and is working on a book on the same subject.

Abayomi Azikiwe--Editor of the Pan-African News Wire, has researched and written extensively on the political and social history of Southwest Tennessee where Memphis is located. His presentation will focus on the sanitation workers strike as a culmination of a decade-long struggle in the region and the relationship of these historical developments to the current situation involving African American workers in the South and in the city of Detroit. Azikiwe is the author of "Africa and Imperialism," a pamphlet published in 2011 by Workers World newspaper. He is also a contributor to two books published recently: "Haiti: A Slave Revolution" and Gaza: Symbol of Resistance.

US/NATO-Backed Rebels in Libya Ask Niger to Hand Over Al-Saadi Gaddafi

February 11, 2012 11:52 AM

Libya asks Niger to hand over Gadhafi's son

TRIPOLI, Libya — Libya demanded Niger hand over one of Moammar Gadhafi's sons who is under house arrest in the neighboring African nation after he warned in a television interview that his homeland was facing a new uprising.

Mohammed Hareizi, spokesman for the ruling National Transitional Council, said Saturday that Niger must extradite Al-Saadi Gadhafi and other ex-regime officials to "preserve its relationship and interests" in Libya.

The demand came days before the first anniversary of the Feb. 17 start of the uprising that led to months of civil war and the eventual ouster and death of the longtime Libyan leader. Al-Saadi Gadhafi and more than 30 other loyalists fled to Niger after Tripoli fell to rebels in September.

Niger Justice Minister Morou Amadou confirmed the demand had been received but said Niger's government has refused to extradite al-Saadi and the others to Libya because they risk being killed. However, Amadou said the government would agree to extradite al-Saadi to the Hague upon request by the International Criminal Court.

Gadhafi's son told Al-Arabiya TV in a telephone interview that supporters of his father's ousted regime "are suffering tremendously" in Libyan prisons at the hands of the country's new rulers. He also said his return to Libya was imminent.

He said he is in contact with people in Libya on a daily basis and claimed "70 percent of Libyans are unhappy with the current circumstances. They are ready to cooperate to change these conditions."

Gadhafi's son pointed to the proliferation of weapons in the oil-rich North African nation as many former rebels have refused to lay down their arms. He said Libyans were tired of widespread chaos.

"There is an uprising that will happen everywhere in the country," he told the station. "This will be a new popular uprising."

He called the new leadership a group of gangsters who are unable to control the various militias in the country. But he also said he was in touch with members of the NTC, which is governing the country until presidential elections can be held, and militia members. The NTC denied Saturday it has been in touch with Gadhafi or any of the former regime officials.

The interview infuriated Libya's leadership. Hareizi said the head of the NTC Mustafa Abdul-Jalil and Libya's foreign minister had discussed the issue with their counterparts in Niger and "stressed that they will not tolerate the issue and they will take firm measures." He didn't elaborate.

Al-Saadi Gadhafi's comments echoed complaints about the state of the Libya as the new leadership struggles to impose its authority over the vast desert nation since Gadhafi's regime was overthrown and the autocratic leader was captured and killed on Oct. 20.

International human rights organizations have complained of rampant torture of inmates in makeshift prisons operated by militias accused of seeking to exact revenge against the slain leader's former supporters. According to the U.N., various former rebel groups are holding as many as 8,000 prisoners in 60 detention centers around the country.

Libya's new leaders have promised to step up efforts to rein in the gunmen.

Another Gadhafi son, Seif al-Islam, was arrested in November by fighters in Libya's remote southern desert. He has been held largely without access to the outside world ever since and Libyan authorities say they want to put him on trial at home, despite an arrest warrant issued by the ICC.

Al-Saadi Gadhafi is not wanted by the ICC but is the subject of U.N. sanctions. He fled to Niger in September soon after the Libyan capital Tripoli fell to rebels.

Known for his love of professional soccer, Gadhafi's son reportedly had a colorful past that included run-ins with police in Europe, drug and alcohol abuse.
___
Associated Press writer Dalatou Mamane in Niamey, Niger contributed to this report.

Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501713_162-57375774/libya-asks-niger-to-hand-over-gadhafis-son/#ixzz1m6DrPCCL

Greek General Strike Erupts Over Austerity Measures

Protests over Greece's austerity cuts turn violent

Associated Press
Friday, February 10, 2012

Greece's future in the eurozone came under renewed threat Friday as popular protests again turned violent and dissent grew among its lawmakers after European leaders demanded deeper spending cuts.

The country's beleaguered coalition government promised to push through the tough new austerity measures and rescue a crucial $170 billion bailout deal after six members of the Cabinet resigned.

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos promised to "do everything necessary" to ensure Parliament passes the new austerity measures that would slap Greeks with a minimum wage cut during a fifth year of recession. He also promised to replace any other Cabinet members who did not fully back his efforts.

"It is absolutely necessary to complete the effort that began almost two years ago to consolidate public finances, restore competitiveness and economic recovery," Papademos told an emergency Cabinet meeting.

Draft legislation for the new austerity measures was submitted to Parliament after the five-hour meeting ended.

In central Athens, clashes erupted outside Parliament between dozens of hooded youths and police in riot gear. Police said eight officers and two members of the public were injured, while six suspected rioters were arrested.

The violence broke as more than 15,000 people took to the streets of the capital after unions launched a two-day general strike that disrupted transport and other public services and left state hospitals running on emergency staff.

Scores of youths, some in gas masks, used sledge hammers to smash up marble paving stones in Athens' main Syntagma Square before hurling the rubble at riot police.

Debt-stricken Greece does not have the money to cover a $19.1 billion bond repayment on March 20, and must reach a vital debt-relief deal with private bond investors before then.

Papademos said the bailout and the deal with private creditors would return Greece to growth next year, and deliver a 4.5 percent primary surplus in 2012 - better than an earlier official prediction of 1.1 percent of gross domestic product.

"A disorderly default would cast our country into a catastrophic adventure. It would create conditions of uncontrollable economic chaos and social explosion," he warned.

"Greeks' standard of living in the event of a disorderly default would collapse, and the country would be swept into a deep vortex of recession, instability, unemployment and penury. These developments would lead, sooner or later, to exit from the euro."

He also warned that, "Either we will achieve an agreement that will set the country on a new course, or, if we backtrack, in yet another historic display of cowardice, we will head for collapse. I want to be clear. These are not just crucial moments, they are dramatic for the country."

Greece has promised to approve the new austerity measures as emergency legislation by late Sunday, despite deep public resentment.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/02/10/MNO11N65TV.DTL

This article appeared on page A - 3 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Friday, February 10, 2012

Libyan Son of Gaddadi Says Uprising Against US-backed Regime is Coming

10 February 2012
Last updated at 18:55 ET

Libya's Saadi Gaddafi threatens to lead uprising

Saadi Gaddafi fled to Niger in September

One of the sons of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has threatened to lead an uprising against the country's transitional government.

Saadi Gaddafi made the comments in a television interview from Niger, where he fled after his father was toppled.

He said he still had many followers in Libya, including within the ruling National Transitional Council (NTC).

Col Gaddafi, who ruled Libya for four decades - was killed in October after months of civil war.

A BBC correspondent in Tripoli says the authorities are worried about possible action by Gaddafi loyalists, but the possibility of Saadi Gaddafi leading a big uprising seems remote.

In a phone interview with al-Arabiya television, Saadi Gaddafi said he wanted to return to Libya "at any minute".

"First of all, it is not going to be an uprising limited to some areas. It will cover all the regions of the Jamahiriya and this uprising does exist and I am following and witnessing this as it grows bigger by the day," he said, using his father's term for Libya.

He said he was in regular contact with the army, the militias, NTC officials, and other members of the Gaddafi family.

Saadi Gaddafi escaped across the border after NTC forces overran the Libyan capital, Tripoli, in August.

In December, authorities in Mexico said they had stopped a plot by a criminal gang organisation to smuggle Saadi Gaddafi into the country.

CIA Web Site Knocked Off Line by Anonymous

10 February 2012

Last updated at 20:37 ET

FBI probes Anonymous phone hack

Hackers have claimed responsibility for making the CIA website inaccessible on Friday - the latest attack on a US federal agency.

A Twitter post on a feed used by hackers' collective Anonymous said "CIA Tango down", a phrase used by the US Special Forces after killing an enemy.

Anonymous said in another tweet that just because it reported a hack, that did not mean it carried out the attack.

This would not be the first time the CIA website has been put offline.

In June 2011, a group affiliated with Anonymous, Lulz Security, temporarily brought down the agency's homepage.

The CIA site remained offline on Friday evening after several hours, and a spokeswoman said the agency was looking into the reports.

Hackers usually target such websites through a denial-of-service attack, which involves bombarding the site with traffic until its servers are overwhelmed.

There is no suggestion that the security of the CIA's actual computer systems have been compromised.

Earlier this month, Anonymous managed to intercept a conference call between the FBI and British police as they discussed legal action against hackers.

And following the shutdown of the Megaupload file-sharing website last month, a statement attributed to Anonymous claimed responsibility for shutting down the websites of the Department of Justice and FBI, among others.

Thursday, February 09, 2012

Moratorium & Momentum: As Foreclosures Loom, Movement for a Two-Year Halt Gains Traction

Moratorium & momentum

As foreclosures loom, movement for a two-year halt gains traction

By Curt Guyette
Metro Times, Detroit
Published: February 8, 2012

The group Moratorium Now, along with its allies in the Occupy movement and others, has been racking up a string of victories since last December.

By taking to the streets — or even just threatening to take to the streets — the activists have been able to get big banks to reverse course and halt foreclosure-related evictions that seemed imminent.

The effort to help Chris Jaszczak keep his café, performance space and loft at 1515 Broadway in Detroit was a particularly high-profile crusade that resulted in Citibank giving the local businessman a loan modification instead of the boot, as it was ready to do.

But there have been less-noticed victories as well, including one last week when the Bank of New York Mellon relented and allowed Bertha and William Garrett to remain in their northwest Detroit home. They'd been renting a home that was foreclosed on. But instead of watching as their possessions were loaded into a Dumpster, the Garretts were instead allowed to purchase the place from the bank.

As heartening as these and other individual victories are, however, they remain anomalies. According to Detroit attorney Jerry Goldberg, a leader in the Moratorium Now! movement, warned that people should not be deceived by a` decline in foreclosures last year. There's good reason to keep the fight against banks going.

The California firm RealtyTrak, which monitors foreclosure activity, reported a significant slowdown in repossessions in 2011. The problem is, that decrease wasn't primarily because of improving economic conditions or the success of any programs designed to help owners retain their homes.

Rather, as RealtyTrak CEO Brandon Moore noted in a report:

"Foreclosures were in full delay mode in 2011, resulting in a dramatic drop in foreclosure activity for the year. The lack of clarity regarding many of the documentation and legal issues plaguing the foreclosure industry means that we are continuing to see a highly dysfunctional foreclosure process that is inefficiently dealing with delinquent mortgages ..."

Moore was referring, at least in part, to the issue of so-called "robo-signings" that involved the widespread failure of lenders to follow legally mandated procedures when foreclosing on property owners.

As the confusion was being sorted out, lenders held back on seizing properties. But the logjam that existed last year appears to be breaking.

"There were strong signs in the second half of 2011 that lenders are finally beginning to push through some of the delayed foreclosures in select local markets. We expect that trend to continue this year, boosting foreclosure activity for 2012 higher than it was in 2011, though still below the peak of 2010."

More than 1.8 million homes either received default notices or were foreclosed on last year. This year, that number is expected to exceed 2 million.

Michigan remains among the 10 states hardest hit by the crisis.

But it is a national issue. Which is why Goldberg reports that activists around the country are showing interest in a national conference intended to promote the moratorium and devise strategies that might help get it implemented. It will be held at the Central United Methodist Church in Detroit on Saturday, March 31.

"The demand for a moratorium on foreclosures has never been more timely," says Goldberg.

Certainly there is widespread dissatisfaction with efforts currently under way to prevent people from losing their homes. A recent Gallup poll found that 58 percent of Americans prefer the government take "further steps" to address the crisis.

For Goldberg and other activists, the surest way of addressing the problem is to institute a moratorium.

"Today, with the federal government owning or backing 75 percent of mortgage loans through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and HUD, and paying the banks full value for the inflated, fraudulent and predatory loans, the president has the absolute authority to implement a two-year moratorium on foreclosures and foreclosure-related evictions through executive order."

For more information on the conference phone 313-680-5508 or see nationalmoratorium.org.

Sudan's Bashir Accuses Foreign Groups of Using Darfur for Profits

Sudan’s Bashir accuses foreign groups of using Darfur for profits

February 8, 2012
Sudan Tribune

(KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir has accused foreign groups of profiting from the crisis in Darfur, vowing to fully implement a deal aimed at ending years of insurgency and dependency on aid in his country’s western region.

Bashir made his remarks in a speech delivered on Wednesday during a packed rally held at the stadium of El Fashir, the provincial capital of North Darfur State, to celebrate the inauguration of the Darfur Regional Authority (DRA), which was re-established under the Doha Document for Peace in Darfur (DDPD) signed in mid July last year between the Sudanese government and the rebel group, the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM).

The new body is designed under the DDPD to act as the principal instrument for the implementation of the framework text. Also with the other regional and national institutions, the DRA has to guarantee the effective enjoyment of all rights and freedoms in the region.

The celebration in El Fashir was attended by a host of dignitaries including Chadian President Idris Deby, the Qatari Minister of Justice Hassan Abdellah Al-Ghanim, Burkina Faso’s foreign minister and former United Nations African Union (UN-AU) mediator for Darfur Djibril Bassolé, and the special joint representatives of the UN-AU peacekeeping mission in Darfur (UNAMID) Ibrahim Gambari.

In the speeches preceding that of Bashir, President Deby and the Qatari minister urged other rebel factions which rejected the Doha accord to join the peace process.

Deby said that there are no alternatives to the DDPD and pledged that his country, which neighbours the troubled region, would contribute despite its "humble resources", to strengthening peace in Darfur.

Similarly, Bassolé and Gamabari said that non-signatory groups need to enter into dialogue with the government without preconditions in order to end the war and achieve stability in Darfur.

The DRA’s chairman and LJM leader, al-Tijani Sissi, also delivered a speech in which he said that the will to realize peace in Darfur has never been stronger, urging other rebel groups to join the DDPD.

The Doha framework agreement left a room for the inclusion of other non-signatory groups, the most notably of them is the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), whose leader Khalil Ibrahim was killed last month.

JEM along with two factions of the Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM) led by Abdel Wahid Mohamed Nur and Minni Arkoi Minnawi have not signed the DDPD. Unlike the SLM factions which have not been included in the Doha talks, JEM participated in the negotiations but refused to sign the agreement.

In his address, Bashir granted clemency to LJM members and instructed the authorities to begin the process of security arrangements to integrate former rebels into regular forces and gather arms from the hands of civilians.

He also said his government was seeking to foster reconciliation between rival tribal groups and patch up Darfur’s social fabric which has been destroyed by the conflict.

Turning to the issue of displacement, Bashir promised those living in camps to end their misery and dependence on humanitarian aid, calling on them to return to the villages.

The Sudanese leader went on to launch an attack on foreign aid groups, saying they have used Darfur crisis as a money-making scheme.

He singled out the Save Darfur Coalition, a US-based advocacy group comprising more than 160 organisations, as an example of those who made profits out of Darfur. He told the crowd that those in charge of coalition had raised gigantic amounts of fund to help Darfur, but they ended up putting that money in their own pockets.

The current round of conflict in Darfur has led to the death of 300,000 people and displacement of 2.7 million since its eruption in 2003, according to UN figures. Incidents of insecurity still occur despite a significant lull in fighting in recent years.

Foreclosures Settlement Could Spur More Home Seizures in the United States

Foreclosure Deal to Spur U.S. Home Seizures

By Prashant Gopal and John Gittelsohn
Bloomberg
Feb 9, 2012

The $25 billion settlement with banks over foreclosure abuses may trigger a wave of home seizures, inflicting short-term pain on delinquent U.S. borrowers while making a long-term housing recovery more likely.

Lenders slowed the pace of foreclosures as they negotiated with attorneys general in all 50 states for more than a year over allegations of faulty and fraudulent paperwork used to repossess homes. With today’s agreement, banks are likely to resume property seizures.

“The best thing about the settlement, frankly, is that it will be done,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist for Seattle-based Zillow Inc., a provider of home-sales data. “The shadow of the settlement hung over the market for a year now.”

The backlog of foreclosures has trapped homeowners in properties they can no longer afford, depressed prices by increasing the number of abandoned properties and led banks to tighten mortgage credit standards because of uncertainty about their potential obligations. Foreclosure starts fell 46 percent in December from October 2010, when the investigation into the so-called robo-signing of mortgage documentation began, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc.

The agreement will direct $17 billion to writing down debt to buffer about 1 million homeowners from foreclosure. About 11 million U.S. homeowners have negative equity, or owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, according to CoreLogic Inc., a real estate data provider. That has limited their ability to sell or refinance and reduced the incentive to keep paying.

Strategic Default

Principal reductions may help cut the number of mortgage defaults by improving homeowners’ finances and reducing incentives for so-called strategic default, when homeowners walk away from a property because they have too much negative equity, according to a Federal Reserve report sent to Congress on Jan. 4. Home prices have dropped 33 percent from their July 2006 peak, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of values in 20 U.S. cities.

U.S. homeowners have $750 billion in negative equity, Humphries said. The settlement will help the housing market “at the margins, but little more,” according to an analysis late last month by London-based Capital Economics of the impact of the settlement on housing.

Principal was reduced on 10,772 loans, or 7.8 percent of the mortgages with payment modifications, in the third quarter of last year, according to the office of the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency. All of those loans were held by private investors or bank portfolios.

Reductions ‘Seem Small’

“There has been a lot of discussion of principal reductions and whether that’s the one measure the U.S. housing market needs to get it going again,” Paul Diggle, a property economist at Capital Economics, said in a telephone interview this week. “That may well be the case. But the amounts of principal reductions under the settlement seem small.”

The agreement announced today includes $5 billion in cash for states to pay for foreclosure-prevention initiatives. Loan servicers will refinance $3 billion in mortgages to lower homeowners’ interest rates and pay about $1.5 billion to homeowners harmed by botched foreclosures.

About 5 million homes have been lost to foreclosure in the U.S. since 2006, according to RealtyTrac.

Excluding 92 Percent

The agreement may help about 1 million homeowners with mortgage forgiveness, forbearance or loan modifications, according to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan. About 750,000 more may benefit from direct payments of as much as $2,000 to compensate them for servicing errors.

For California, which has the highest number of properties in the foreclosure pipeline, banks agreed to pay $12 billion to help 250,000 homeowners with principal reductions or short sales, when a lender agrees to a sale for less than owed on the home, according to Kamala Harris, the state’s attorney general.

Florida Loan Modifications

Borrowers in Florida, the state with the second-most foreclosures, will receive an estimated $7.6 billion in benefits from loan modifications, including principal reduction, according to state Attorney General Pam Bondi.

The money set aside for mortgage-debt forgiveness also can be used for short sales. Banks have been stepping up the sales by pre-approving deals, streamlining the closing process, forgoing their right to pursue unpaid debt and in some cases providing as much as $35,000 in “relocation” incentives. The deals accounted for 33 percent of financially distressed transactions in November, up from 24 percent a year earlier, according to Santa Ana, California-based CoreLogic.

The total value of the agreement with lenders including Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. may grow to $40 billion if the next nine largest mortgage servicers sign on to the agreement, Donovan said. In a best-case scenario, if all banks participate fully, the deal might be worth $45 billion to homeowners and victims of foreclosure.

Testing Effectiveness

The money may have an added benefit: It will test the effectiveness of principal forgiveness in preventing defaults, and may spur a larger-scale program if successful, Diggle said.

After a six-year slide in home prices, demand is showing signs of strengthening, bolstered by a jobless rate that fell to 8.3 percent last month. The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy previously owned homes in December held near a 19-month high, indicating that stabilization in the market that began in late 2011 may continue this year.

The surge of home seizures may drive down home values, at least for a while, in a fragile market. The number of new foreclosure filings fell 34 percent last year, according to RealtyTrac, building up a backlog of homes that now may flood the market with low-cost properties.

“All of this will result in more foreclosure pain in the short term as some of the foreclosures that should have happened last year instead happen this year,” Daren Blomquist, a RealtyTrac vice president, said in an e-mail today.

About 1 million foreclosures with be completed this year, up 25 percent from 2011, according to the firm.

‘More Price Weakness’

“I think there’ll be more price weakness, because we’ll see the number of distressed sales pick up,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “But I think the price declines will be modest. I think the banks themselves are going to be very sensitive to market prices. I don’t think they’re just going to dump property. That wouldn’t be in their best interest.”

Lenders are unlikely to flood the market because it will damage prices for all properties, according to Sam Khater, senior economist for CoreLogic. Banks may be limited by their own capacities to process foreclosures. The settlement prohibits the practice of robo-signing, which employed assembly lines of workers to sign thousands of foreclosure documents at a time without verifying them.

“You can’t dump all these properties at the same time,” Khater said. “That would be disastrous. You have to release them in a slow and measured fashion, so the market can absorb them.”

Obama Administration’s Programs

The settlement adds to a series of recently expanded government steps to protect consumers and encourage lenders to refinance homes and modify payment terms for homeowners facing foreclosure.

President Barack Obama this month proposed plans to expand loan modifications for delinquent homeowners to include some principal reductions through his administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP. Underwater homeowners would be able to refinance at current low interest rates through the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. Some of the refinancing plans require Congressional approval.

Programs under the administration’s Making Home Affordable program had $29.9 billion in aid pledged as of Jan. 30.

Bulk Home Purchases

Separately, Fannie Mae, the mortgage company under U.S. conservatorship, invited investors to apply for a new program to buy foreclosed homes in bulk to be managed as rental properties, under another program announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The goal of that program is to reduce the inventory of foreclosures while providing rental homes to people who can’t qualify to buy or don’t want to own.

“No action, no matter how meaningful, is going to by itself entirely heal the housing market,” Obama said at an appearance with state attorneys general in Washington today. “But this settlement is a start. And we’re going to make sure that the banks live up to their end of the bargain.”

There remains a danger that “a wave of foreclosures” may destabilize the housing market, said Susan Wachter, professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

“The logjam has to be unleashed and it has been -- this will do that,” she said. “That’s a good thing. But then there needs to be methodical loan-by-loan determination of the best resolution.”

Demand for Rentals

Investors are likely to buy many of the foreclosed homes that come on the market to take advantage of low prices and demand for rentals, Zandi said. About 21 percent of home sales in December were investor purchases, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Private equity funds including Los Angeles-based Oaktree Capital Management LP and New York-based GTIS Partners announced plans in January to buy $2.5 billion of foreclosed single-family homes to manage as rentals, focusing on states with the highest number of foreclosures, such as California, Florida and Nevada.

“There’s pretty strong investor demand, particularly in some markets where prices have overshot,” Zandi said. “They’ve gone well below what you’d expect given incomes and rents.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Prashant Gopal in New York at pgopal2@bloomberg.net; John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Taub at dtaub@bloomberg.net

Secessionists Clashes Erupt in Somaliland

Somaliland clashes with secessionists

2:52pm EST
By Mark Anderson

HARGEISA, Feb 9 (Reuters) - The breakaway territory of Somaliland is battling its own secessionists in a dispute that has raised tensions with neighbouring Puntland, in an area of Somalia usually more peaceful than the rest of the country.

The fighting first erupted in January after the leaders of the northern regions of Sool, Sanaag and Cyan decided to band together into a new state called Khaatumo and declared they wanted to be an independent region within Somalia.

Somaliland's troops have since clashed with militia fighters loyal to Khaatumo, with reports of dozens of casualties. Puntland's President Abdirahman Mohamud Farole stepped into the row on Wednesday, accusing Somaliland of creating chaos.

"It is unfortunate that Somaliland is sowing seeds of insecurity in the peaceful towns of Puntland at a time the world is solving the entire country's violence," he told reporters, calling for Somaliland to pull its troops back.

The newly declared Khaatumo state is near the border with Ethiopia and is a disputed area that Somaliland seized from Puntland in 2007, though relations between the two territories have improved since.

The chairman of Khaatumo's foreign relations forum, Osman Hassan, has said unless the dispute is resolved "it is bound to escalate into a wider regional conflagration as other clans related to one side or the other take sides".

Both Somaliland and Puntland have enjoyed relatively stability compared to the rest of the Horn of Africa country and international mining and oil exploration firms are prospecting in both regions.

The fighting also comes ahead of a conference in London on Feb. 23 bringing together heads of government and international organisations to discuss ways to end the instability in Somalia.

Somaliland is an internationally unrecognised state that declared independence from Somalia in 1991.

Fighting between Somaliland forces and Khaatumo fighters flared up again on Wednesday near the border town of Buhoodle, after a week-long stalemate, forcing thousands to flee.

"Somaliland's national army has repulsed the attack by the Khaatumo militia, which attacked them in the early hours of the morning (on Wednesday), after the arrival of reinforcements," Somaliland's Minister of Defence Ahmed Ali Adami told Reuters.

Adami said three government soldiers were killed and 12 wounded in Wednesday's fighting.

Mohamed Yousouf, a member of Khaatumo's new administration, told Reuters by phone from Buhoodle, they had lost six fighters and 11 were wounded. He said they had captured four Somaliland soldiers, while seven of their fighters had been seized.

"Somaliland and Puntland claim that the Khaatumo region is part of their territory, but we want to be an autonomous region that is part of the Federal Republic of Somalia," he said.

"We have had no communication with the government in Puntland at all," Yousouf said. (Additional reporting by Hussein Ali Noor in Hargeisa and Abdiqani Hassan in Bosasso; Editing by David Clarke)


SOMALIA: Fighting displaces thousands in Somaliland

HARGEISA/NAIROBI, 9 February 2012 (IRIN) - More than 1,000 families (about 6,000 people) have been displaced from the town of Buuhoodle and nearby villages in eastern Somaliland after heavy fighting on 8 February between the Somaliland Army and clan militias loyal to the newly created Khatumo State, locals told IRIN.

The area has been disputed, with both the self-declared republic of Somaliland in northwestern Somalia, and the self-declared autonomous region of Puntland in the northeast, claiming them.

Khatumo State was established on 12 January by clans from the area that want to remain part of the larger Somalia.

Abdi Farah Abdulle, an elder in Buuhoodle, told IRIN that people had been moving from the area for fear of being caught in the fighting since 26 January when the first clashes erupted. "But after yesterday's fighting, many families have left the town. This morning many more are leaving. I saw many families using whatever means they can to get out."

Abdulle said most of the displaced fled the nearby villages of Sooljooto, Maygagle and Shangale. Most of the displaced were living in the open with no proper shelter, he said.

He said the area had been suffering from severe water shortages before the clashes. "These families have gone to areas with few or no water points. One drum [200 litres] of water costs around 120,000 shillings [about US$4], an amount the vast majority cannot afford."

Abdulle said the movement of people was still ongoing, since the armed groups were still facing each other.

A local journalist told IRIN the fear in Buuhoodle and nearby villages was that fighting could resume any time.

He said many of those displaced were in areas difficult to access. "So far no aid has reached them and some are living in the open."

He said no fighting had taken place in Buuhoodle since 8 February but the frontlines were only 18km from the town.

Exact casualty figures were not available. "We have seen 10 dead and 20 injured but those are the ones who reached the town. We don’t know how many have died on the frontlines,” the journalist said.

Dialogue

Abdillahi Jama Geeljire, Somaliland's Minister of Fisheries and Ports, told IRIN that Somaliland forces had not initiated the clashes. "Our forces were attacked by a clan militia and had to defend themselves."

Geeljire said the Somaliland authorities would do whatever was necessary to end the conflict through dialogue. "We are offering them to discuss whatever grievances [they have] and cease their hostile activities."

He said Somaliland would do whatever was necessary to make sure "no more blood of our people [Buuhoodle residents] is spilled".

He did, however, warn that Somaliland would defend its territory. "Somaliland is capable of defending its territorial integrity and we will do so if forced."

He said the conflict had the potential to spread and destabilize the whole region - "something we don’t want to see but those who are behind these attacks must cease and desist".

Beware of Uncle Sam's Motives in Africa

Beware of Uncle Sam’s motive

Wednesday, 08 February 2012 00:00
Zimbabwe Herald
Panganai Kahuni

The US Ambassador's instalment in The Herald of 20 January, 2012 calling for Americans and Zimbabweans to dialogue or brainstorm on how to improve their relations raises interesting questions. As one carries out a critical analysis and evaluation of the article, it seems to portray the ambassador as a merchant of dialogue.

His address to Zimbabwean scribes could be viewed in marketing as a strategy of rebranding or repackaging a product for it to regain its market share.

It must be clearly understood that the product remains largely the same, but changes only in outlook.

In diplomacy, he could easily be viewed as smart, witty or shrewd.

This is aimed at making people believe there is a positive shift in the American Policy on Zimbabwe.

It must again be very clear in people's minds that there will be no policy change as evidenced by America's continued imposition of sanctions on Zimbabwe.

While dialogue is encouraged and brainstorming is ingenious, both must be practiced in a sincere manner.

The ambassador is not sincere. America never dialogued or brainstormed with Zimbabweans when they unilaterally imposed sanctions on us. It has, in fact, continued to unilaterally impose sanctions on Zimbabwe's productive institutions, influential leaders and executives. Zimbabwe has raised its case through the UN after America had wanted to place it on UN Chapter 7 that would have allowed both America and Britain to use NATO to invade Zimbabwe.

China and Russia blocked the evil moves.

Zimbabwe has always opened its doors for dialogue and brainstorming with the US and any other country.

But it has been the US and its allies that have been arrogant and playing the concept of dominating small and weaker nations.

People wonder whether the US respects the tenets of dialogue and brainstorming.

According to the oxford dictionary brainstorming means "discussing ideas spontaneously and openly".

According to the same dictionary spontaneous means "occurring without external influence; instinctive and natural". However, the practice has been that Americans have always wanted to be more "brainy" than Zimbabweans, in defining the meaning of dialogue and brainstorming.

To Americans dialogue and brainstorming means discussing ideas spontaneously and discretely with a strong view of advancing American interests and objectives. Nations must subjugate themselves to the whims of America. Fellow Zimbabweans, English is the first language for the Americans. One cannot be faulted in thinking or assuming that Americans should understand it better and behave positively to the letter and spirit than Zimbabweans.

Surprisingly though, is better understood by Zimbabweans than Yankees. Zimbabweans have behaved in a more civilised manner than Americans, to the letter and spirit, in reacting to the meaning of the English tenets of dialogue and brainstorming.

Even MDC-T and its coterie of party officials have since seen the need to behave to the tenets of English meanings; to the letter and spirit as evidenced by Tendai Biti's attack on America's unilateral imposition of sanctions on Mbada and Marange diamonds.

It is time people in Zimbabwe, especially those in MDC-T, realise the need to collectively show the US and Britain the door out of interfering with Zimbabwe's internal affairs as has always been the call by Cde Mugabe. It is, indeed, time for the MDC formations to show the Americans and the British, the way out of political and diplomatic arrogance.

These imperial giants should be told in clear terms that no country or combination of countries could thrive in the long term by exploiting others.

This writer is certain that when enough of us become aware of how we are being exploited by these economic giants we would all rise against the Americans as has happened at Wall Street. The dialogue and brainstorm that the US Ambassador was agitating to the scribes, is a concept of making America and its allies swim in riches and the majority drown in poverty, hunger, pollution, diseases and violence.

We all need to commit ourselves to navigating a path towards compassion, democracy, social justice and equitable distribution of wealth.

If the American Ambassador and his embassy team are genuine men at work, aimed at real dialogue, for the socio-economic good of all Zimbabweans, let us see them putting a sanctions lifting programme, that immediately takes effect.

It is the lifting of sanctions that allows our strategic institutions, influential progressive executives and political leadership to function effectively resulting in improved bilateral relations between Zimbabwe and America.

It is only the lifting of ZIDERA that would allow for an honest and fair dialogue between America and Zimbabweans.

Mr Ambassador, Zimbabweans do not hate America but it is the American political leadership that hates Zimbabweans for repossessing their land and crafting an effective indigenous empowerment Act.

If America respects Zimbabwe as a sovereign state, then ZIDERA and all other sanctions must go for the good of the two nations.

--Panganai Kahuni is a social commentator.

US Slides From 'Democracy' to Corporatocracy

US’ slides from democracy to
corporatocracy

Thursday, 09 February 2012 00:00
Zimbabwe Herald
Garikai Chengu

No government can be perfect, because all governments are composed of humans, especially those humans most attracted by power and profit. Which begs the question, does power attract morally corrupt people or does power morally corrupt people?

Nowhere is this question more pertinent than the global bastion of democracy and power - America.

Over the past half century, America's power has waned and she has descended from popular democracy to corporate dictatorship.

America has experienced a fundamental shift of democratic power from the man on the street to the men on Wall Street. All the while, the American elite and their indentured politicians are losing legitimacy.

The morally bankrupt inner workings of a corporate dictatorship are fiendishly simple: A slice of corporate profit goes towards funding political campaigns, in return for guarantees that losses will be booked on the taxpayer's account.

Heads, we win, tails, taxpayers lose.

Therefore, there is little moral or material difference between Las Vegas and Wall Street. The average Joe loses and the house always wins. However, in both New York and Las Vegas, winnings are privatised, but in only one city are losses born by the taxpayer.

Zero bankers went to jail for casino-like leveraged bets, that almost wrecked the economy, and yet nine hundred and seventy two people were arrested for speaking out about it. In fact, over the last few years, the top 30 American companies spent more money on lobbying politicians than they paid in federal taxes, according to a report from the non-partisan reform group Public Campaign.

The American people want jobs from these companies, but Wall Street wants higher priced stocks. This forces American firms to offshore the jobs to countries where labour is cheaper.

Electorally, America is a two-party dictatorship whose gerrymandering and blockage of third parties from ballots and debates, results in most electoral districts being one-party fiefdoms.

Democracy in America is merely an exercise in allowing people to decide who will be the next CEO of the nation's Corporatocracy. The President's major shareholders are the military lobby, the Israel lobby, the Pharmaceutical Lobby and Wall Street.

The President only turns to the people of America once every four years to sew him a cloak of democratic legitimacy. Nothing threatens America's elites more than truth.

For their perch in society is predicated on a lie: "without us haves there would be more have nots."

As it stands, the President and CEO of America's corporate regime is a President for both the haves and have yatchs.

However, what the have nots - who form the 99 percent underclass - need is a grassroots revolution, a fundamental transfer of power from the corporatocracy back to the people.

The tentacles of corporate dictatorship are successfully peeling away democracy in elections, government and finance. Now they are rolling back freedoms and human rights.

When an empire runs out of gold coins at home and is down to the last arrow in its quiver abroad, it turns to the spear. Legalising torture, indefinite detention, Guantánamo Bay and draconian privacy laws are just the tip of said spear. Corporatocracy camouflaged as democracy at home and plunder masquerading as humanitarianism abroad.

When an nation is run as a corporatocracy her relations with other nations will naturally be profit driven. To a corporate dictatorship the cost of war is profit. Recent wars in the Middle East have cost the average taxpayer trillions of dollars and lost sons and daughters. But the wars have raked in billions of dollars for Washington's military industrial complex.

In fact, more than 70 American companies and individuals have won up to US$27 billion in contracts for work in postwar Iraq and Afghanistan over the last three years, according to a recent study by the Centre for Public Integrity.

According to the study, nearly 75 percent of these companies had employees or board members who either served in or had close ties to the executive branch for Republican and Democratic administrations, for members of Congress of both parties, or at the highest levels of the military.

How then gentle reader do Americans turn "we the corporation" back into "we the people?"Who will invade America to liberate her people from the stranglehold of vile corporate dictatorship and bring democracy?

No one.

This is one revolution that young Americans, with dwindling job prospects, spiralling student debt and no health care, will have to fight without foreign intervention.

--Garikai Chengu is a research scholar at Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

Unemployment in Africa Blamed on Poor Resource Allocation

Unemployment blamed on poor resource allocation

Thursday, 09 February 2012 00:00
Herald Reporters

YOUTH unemployment in Africa is a manifestation of inequitable allocation of resources, President Mugabe has said.
Speaking at celebrations to mark the 20th anniversary of the African Capacity Building Foundation in Harare yesterday, the Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces said Zimbabwe was addressing the challenge through a number of initiatives.

"For Zimbabwe, we are addressing this cha-llenge in a number of ways as will be seen in the make-up of Government where we have ministries dealing with SMEs, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment, the development of agriculture and the promotion of the use of information technologies."

President Mugabe said Africa was carrying the largest contingent of the global population of young people with 60 percent of its inhabitants below 24years.

"Yet if managed well, this youth represents Africa's best development asset over the next decades," he said.

"For this to happen, it is important to better understand Africa's youth in order to design and implement the best policies aimed at unlocking its creativity and innovativeness."

President Mugabe said Africa was confronted by many challenges on its path to sustained growth and development than ever before.

"There is no denying that Africa needs to substantially improve growth performance if it is to achieve the Millennium Development Goals against the backdrop of the global financial crisis and economic recession in the Euro Zone," he said.

President Mugabe said Africa still needed to position herself in an increasingly globalised world to find solutions to the challenges the continent is facing.

He singled out high food prices, the need for agricultural transformation, unemployment and political instability.

"Central to the myriad of challenges facing our continent is the inadequacy of human and institutional capacity and the absence of a systematic and institutionalised mechanism for peer learning and experience sharing amongst countries," President Mugabe said.

He said there was an urgent need for a public sector that is knowledgeable, efficient, empowered and committed and a private sector that is innovative, growth-oriented and competitive.

Civil society, he said, should be constructively responsive and capable of collaborating with both the public and private sectors with the view of achieving development goals.

ACBF's commitments to Zimbabwe have amounted to US$18 million in grants.

"These funds have supported the implementation of projects with both national and regional scope," said the President.

"As Government, we welcome ACBF's commitment to work with the Government of Zimbabwe within the framework of its new strategic thinking."

The ACBF has supported Zimbabwe's capacity building project to strengthen the national statistical systems, capacity programme for the Ministry of Regional Integration and International Co-operation and the public sector management training programme, among others.

ACBF executive secretary Dr Frannie Leatier said her organisation was driving the agenda to end economic dislocations of the 1990s and promote indigenous human capital development.

She said Africa should take charge of its economic development and eradicate poverty.
"We should develop think-tanks and institutionalise dialogue and improve quality of policy, reverse brain drain and pull Africa out of poverty," said Dr Leatier.

ACBF executive board chairperson Mr Paul Baloyi said Africa's economic gains and resources have been eroded in the past 15 years due to broken institutions and conflicts.

He said the global economic crisis impacted negatively on the continent and donor funding had shrunk resulting in economic slowdown.
Mr Baloyi said the leadership in Africa should identify and sustain key elements such as capacity building to capacitate weak elements.

"We are the custodians of our resources and conflicts choke Africa from performing. We need efficiency and good governance," he said.

Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who is an ACBF governor, said Africa was coming from a narrative of pessimism and there was need for continued peace to create a conducive environment for certainty, job creation and food security.

He said the continent required capacity building to attain technical capacity, one of the areas Zimbabwe was still developing.

"We need to rebuild capacity and come up with qualitative elements, which are in line with the social contract. We need to create capacity, retain and utilise it," Minister Biti said.

Botswana Military Leader Commends Zimbabwe's Indigenization Policy

Botswana army chief commends Zim indigenisation policy

Thursday, 09 February 2012 00:00
Peter Matambanadzo in MARANGE
Zimbabwe Herald

Botswana Defence Forces Commander Lieutenant General Tebogo Carter Masire has commended Zimbabwe's indigenisation policy urging the country to ignore propaganda on programmes that benefit and empower people.

Lt Gen Masire was speaking after a tour of Arda Transau Farm in Odzi where 437 families were relocated from Chirashika in Chiadzwa, Marange.

"This is wonderful work here. It's beautiful . . . all this criticism on Zimbabwe's diamonds being blood diamonds it's all propaganda.

"This shows the use of natural resources for the people. People have houses that they never dreamt of owning in their whole life," Lt Gen Masire said.

Newly elected Kimberly Process Certification Scheme chairperson Ambassador Gillian Milovanovic this week said the Marange diamonds cannot be classified as blood gems.

Ambassador Milovanovic said Cote d'Ivoire was the only country dealing in conflict diamonds.

Lt Gen Masire had earlier toured Anjin Investments, one of Zimbabwe's diamond mining firms in Chiadzwa.

"I see so much potential and Zimbabwe is destined for a great future," he said.

Lt Gen Masire and his delegation comprising Brigadier Therego Seretse Phatswane, Colonel Morokotsi Kenneth Kethebogile and Major Keoogile Milton Gaaitsege met some of the beneficiaries of the housing scheme.

Lt Gen Masire also visited the primary and secondary school, clinic and a modern water purification plant at Arda Transau.

Addressing the beneficiaries, Air Force of Zimbabwe director general logistics Air Commodore Innocent Chiganze, who also accompanied Lt Gen Masire, urged them to cherish the strong ties between Zimbabwe and Botswana.

"Botswana assisted us during the liberation struggle and we must appreciate that relationship.

"Many Tswanas were killed by the Rhodesian forces so we must cherish and respect and show gratitude to Botswana," Air Commodore Chiganze said.

He said the two countries will continue to share vital information in addressing challenges.

The beneficiaries of the housing scheme expressed their gratitude towards Government and Anjin Investment for building them decent homes.

"I am very happy I had never dreamt of owning a house in my life. I want to thank Government and Anjin for this," Mr Solomon Mhlanga Ndamera said.

He urged other villagers still in Chiadzwa to comply, saying diamonds mined would benefit not only the community but also Zimbabwe at large.

Another beneficiary, Amai Florence Femere said she was happy to have a house with proper sanitation.

"We are grateful and we want people to know that we have benefited from our natural resources," Amai Femere said.

On Tuesday afternoon, Lt Gen Masire visited the Anjin diamond mine.

Anjin human resources manager Mrs Lindiwe Ngwenya led the tour and outlined how the Look East policy was benefiting Zimbabwe.

She said Anjin has invested close to US$310 million in setting up opencast mining operations in Marange with at least seven processing plants.

Mrs Ngwenya also took the delegates through the security facilities installed at the mine such as advanced body X-ray scanners, CCTV, the 24-hour observation towers to show the strict adherence of the firm to the
Kimberly Process requirements.

Lt Gen Masire is expected to conclude his visit by paying a courtesy call on Defence Minister Emerson Mnangagwa before meeting President Mugabe tomorrow.

Post-Mubarak Egypt Still Faces Formidable Challenges

Post-Mubarak Egypt still lost

JAILAN ZAYAN | CAIRO, EGYPT - Feb 09 2012 14:26

The spectacular uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak a year ago turned the political order upside down in Egypt where the former ruler is now in jail and once-oppressed Islamists in Parliament, but for most Egyptians the grievances remain unchanged.

Mubarak's unshakeable three-decade rule crumbled under the weight of 18 days of unprecedented street protests, forcing the strongman to resign on February 11 last year and prompting a wave of collective euphoria.

The uprising pumped energy into the country: political parties were formed, debates whirred everywhere and power was handed over to a military council that vowed to pave the way to democracy and swiftly return to the barracks.

For the first time in decades, Egyptians felt they had a stake in the country's future.

"Egypt will never be the same," proclaimed US President Barack Obama the day Mubarak fell.

But a year later, the jubilation has given way to frustration and anger as political dissent continues to be stifled, corruption still prevails and price hikes pile pressure on households.

"Mubarak may have left, but the two pillars of his regime, a strong police state and an unjust economic system, remain in place," said Rabab al-Mahdi, a political science professor at the American University in Cairo.

But the very same two factors are what is driving the revolution forward, she said.

Many changes

Protesters who embraced the military as supporters of the revolution have turned their anger against the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which they accuse of mismanaging the transition and seeking to retain a degree of power.

Demonstrators have been taking to the streets for months to demand the ouster of the military ruler, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, Mubarak's longtime defence minister who is now in charge of the country.

They accuse the army of human rights violations, violence against protesters and sowing instability to justify its position at the top of the political ladder.

Mahdi concedes there is a long way to go to achieving the goals of the revolution of freedom and social justice but admits "there have been many changes".

The uprising brought the first court appearance of an autocratic leader toppled by the Arab Spring protests.

Mubarak, his interior minister and six security chiefs are facing trial for their involvement in the killing of protesters during the uprising.

His two sons Gamal and Alaa -- symbols of power and wealth-- are also behind bars with a host of former ministers and officials on charges of corruption.

It was an epic downfall, with the once absolute ruler reduced to a caged invalid, a scene unthinkable before the January 25 revolution when the mere mention of his health could land an editor in jail.

'The fall of the Pharoah'

The first hearing in August saw the ailing 83-year-old Mubarak wheeled into court on a stretcher, drawing a collective gasp from Egyptians who watched the "fall of the Pharaoh" live on tv.

His arch foes, the Muslim Brotherhood -- long banned and and whose members suffered a widespread and sometimes brutal crackdown at the hands of the interior ministry -- formed the Freedom and Justice Party and now control almost half the seats in Parliament.

The more hardline Salafi movements, whose adherents were jailed for years, have become new power brokers, with the Al-Nur party coming second in Egypt's first free and democratic elections that wrapped up in January.

The players may be different, but the debates in Parliament reflect the same concerns as a year ago: the price rise of butane gas, fuel shortages, corruption, police violence.

"Much has changed, but more remains the same," said analyst Seif Abdul Shahid in a recent column in the state-owned Ahram Online website.

"The real issue is not taking power, but defanging power. When the people called for the end of the system, it meant more than persons," he wrote.

The new Egypt has also been gripped by instability since Mubarak's omnipresent and hated police force disappeared from the streets during the uprising.

Street clashes between police and protesters, sectarian violence, attacks on a pipeline that supplies gas to Israel and armed robberies have only further infuriated Egyptians.

Activists have called for mass demonstrations and a general strike on Saturday, vowing to keep their unfinished revolution alive. -- AFP

Source: Mail & Guardian Online
Web Address: http://mg.co.za/article/2012-02-09-postmubarak-egypt-still-lost

Black Libyans Continue to Face Persecution by US-backed Rebel Regime

Libya's 'forgotten hostages' continue to live in fear

OLIVER HOLMES | TRIPOLI, LIBYA - Feb 01 2012 19:09

'Fitna' is widely used in Arabic but difficult to translate directly into English. Roughly defined, it means the intentional stirring of chaos between people.

Fitna is why Muammar Gaddafi occupied the town of Tawergha, held its residents hostage and used it as a base to besiege and shell the coastal city of Misrata in last year's civil war, refugee Kareem al-Barra said.

"He wanted to turn Libyans on each other, to divide and rule," said Barra, one of thousands of displaced black Libyans who have suffered revenge attacks from victorious anti-Gaddafi forces since the war ended.

Barra and his family were forced from their homes and driven out of Tawergha in August and now live in a refugee camp on the outskirts of Benghazi.

"We consider ourselves war hostages," he said.

Gaddafi's strategy last year stirred suspicion and hatred between the ethnically Arab people of Misrata and the black Libyans in Tawergha, refugees say. It worked so well that even after the dictator's death, it interferes with Libya's new rulers focus on rebuilding and reconciliation.

Although no-one will admit it, a number of Tawergha's residents did serve voluntarily in the Gaddafi forces. Barra says his people are being persecuted for that supposed collaboration and being mistaken for the sub-Saharan African mercenaries who fought for Gaddafi in the war.

Too scared to return

"Everyone wants to return but we are too scared. The rebels from Misrata think we fought with Gaddafi but we were trapped inside Tawergha," Barra said, sitting in a corrugated iron building at the centre of Gargounis camp, one of five camps in Benghazi that house more than 19 000 Tawergha residents.

"Now [fighters from Misrata] are still destroying Tawergha and attacking black Libyans on sight."

The more than 28 000 displaced people from Tawergha and its surrounding villages add to the difficulties of Libya's interim rulers tasked with creating a democratic state from scratch.

In addition to addressing the refugee issue, the National Transitional Council (NTC) must quell regular clashes between rival militias, bring down youth unemployment and secure its borders against arms traffickers, al-Qaeda insurgents and migrants trying to reach Europe illegally.

Elections are promised for June but many here say they will have to be pushed back.

Barra paints a dark picture of life in Tawergha when Gaddafi's forces set up a base there at the start of the war in February 2011.

The electrical engineer-turned-refugee says 12 000 Gaddafi-loyal soldiers arrived in the quiet coastal town over the course of two nights.

'Impossible to escape'

"They were all black like us, some of them African mercenaries and some from Saba city, in Libya's Sahara desert," Barra explained, gesturing vividly with his hands.

"They seized fuel and set up checkpoints, making it impossible to escape," he added. A few tried one night but were caught, given on-the-spot trials and found guilty of treason: "Seven entire families were killed. Nobody could get out and if people were sick or injured, they would die in the street."

Other men from Tawergha, sitting idle in the refugee camps in Benghazi, said Gaddafi promised the town's elders that he would turn the city into a "paradise" after the war.

"Really he was scared about the rebels reaching Sirte," said a volunteer from a local religious charity working at the camp, referring to Gaddafi's hometown where he was killed in October.

Tawergha, known for its fertile soil and salt mines, lies between Misrata and Sirte.

After five months, the Misrata rebels pushed the brigades out of Tawergha but raised hell as they did, Barra said.

'Revenge attacks'

"Then the Misrata problem started," he said, his eyes focused on the memory. "There were revenge attacks in retaliation for the siege of Misrata. People were killed in front of their families. The entire city fled between August and October."

Once inhabited by almost 30 000 people, Tawergha is now a ghost town. Horses, camels and goats roam the streets, feeding on rubbish and shrubs.

Above the doorways and windows of each of the concrete buildings -- some five or six storeys high -- black soot from fires paints the wall. Houses are splattered with bullet holes and many buildings have collapsed. The detritus of spent rockets-propelled grenades line the streets.

Human Rights Watch's emergencies director Peter Bouckaert, who has worked on and off in Libya since the war started, said Misrata rebels have looted and destroyed homes in Tawergha as well as the neighbouring farming villages of Kararim and Tomina.

"Every time we visit the area, we have witnessed rebels looting and burning homes," he said.

"The civilian and military leadership should remember that the International Criminal Court has full jurisdiction over war crimes being committed in Libya, and forcibly displacing a civilian population and destroying their homes are war crimes."

Documenting abuses

At a second refugee camp in Benghazi, Tawergha resident Ahmed Ali Farhat has been documenting abuses against his countrymen as the "fitna" continues.

"People fled from Tawergha to all over Libya but they are still being harassed, especially by roaming Misrata rebels who pursue them," the elderly man said as he walked through the camp, the grounds of a empty cement factory.

"Two days ago some rebels from Misrata roughed up some Tawergha here in Benghazi," he said. A line of black men stood waiting in front of a USAid truck handing out clothes nearby.

"Another group of eight Tawergha people were caught in Sirte. One was stamped to death," he said. He plans to file a report on the incident to the interim government.

As rain started to beat down, Farhat looked at his townsmen, miles from home and cowering under makeshift huts. He was pessimistic Libya would address the atrocities committed before and after the war, or that he would ever be able to return home.

"There is no security as the Libyan government is still not in control of the country," Farhat said. "They have not looked seriously at our case." -- Reuters

Source: Mail & Guardian Online
Web Address: http://mg.co.za/article/2012-02-01-libyas-forgotten-hostages-continue-to-live-in-fear

Malema May Be Gone, But Issues Still Remain in South Africa

Malema may be gone, but issues still remain

By Zuma Ndlovu
Mail & Guardian

Late on Saturday morning, in true African time, a ramrod Cyril Ramaphosa delivered a flinty speech that was not only a preamble to the African National Congress’s verdict on youth league leader Julius Malema, but a warning sign to the rest of the party: ill-discipline will not be tolerated. By upholding the guilty verdict, the national disciplinary committee of appeals stripped Malema of his power and with no real support outside of the ANC Youth League structures, and with the tax collector, public protector, and Special Investigating Unit closing in on him, it would take a miracle of biblical proportions to resurrect this cadre’s political career from the tomb it’s been chucked in.

But was the ANC’s decision disciplining or silencing the ANC Youth League?

Before Julius Malema entered the political scene, there was very little public discourse on the acute socio-economic issues faced by a growing number of young South Africans today. After 18 years of political freedom, more than half of South Africans under the age of 25 remain unemployed – among the highest jobless rates in the world. Many live idly with few prospects of ever being employed. The promise of education as the gateway to a better life remains questionable on a good day, as too few are able to meet the requirements necessary to enter into higher education institutions. For those who do qualify for university admission, the competition for a place in a university has intensified, as the country simply does not have enough institutions of higher learning. The bulk of South Africa’s youth has been relegated to front row seats to watch a small portion of the country live Mandela’s dream.

Malema’s political career may have been short-lived, but the issues that gave rise to his popularity continue to plague the country. Despite Malema not being the preferred candidate for the role of vanguard for the poor, there is concern that the ANC used its disciplinary processes to shut down the debate on nationalisation of mines in South Africa, rather than enforcing discipline within its ranks.

The ANC was forced to investigate nationalisation as a possible alternative policy largely because of the pressure exerted by the league. Since 1994, the ANC has generally leaned toward mainstream growth development models supplemented by welfare and job creation initiatives as the main strategy to improve socio-economic conditions. Adam Smith’s promise of a trickling down of wealth has, however, failed in South Africa just as we’ve seen it fail in more “developed” economies. Like their global counterparts, ordinary South Africans are no longer buying into capitalists’ solution and are ready to hear alternatives.

Albeit badly handled, the nationalisation debate was the first time that a larger portion of the country took part in a national discussion on the economic path that South Africa is on. Serious questions were raised on the efficacy of current policies, and even though it was from structures within the ANC, the debate was youth-driven. It was not a sexy or nation-building topic, and it was bound to make those in the wealthier classes uncomfortable, but it was a natural next step for a country whose citizens had been cordial to each other for too long, afraid to ask the difficult questions about the inequitable status quo.

Malema’s call for nationalisation of mines and banks and expropriation of land, although not on the official charge sheet, until this morning, was seen by many to be the real reason why the ANC acted firmly and decisively against the ANC Youth League leadership. Capitalists who had popped champagne at the young leader’s downfall were forced to spit their Moet back in the bottle when the ANC’s secretary general Gwede Mantashe announced at a press conference in Luthuli House on Monday, that nationalisation was “not a Malema issue, but an ANC issue”. The ANC may have been seeking to reassure its youth members in particular that the decisive actions taken against the ANCYL president were not meant to close the discussion on alternative economic policies for development. However, the nationalisation debate is back in the corridors of Luthuli House and no longer encouraged for robust public debate.

If this was a move by the ANC to shut down dissenting opinion on economic policy, it is not a wise one, because South Africa’s youth will not go hungry indefinitely. Political and economic decisions cannot continue to be made far from the prying eyes of those who are expected to religiously vote for the ANC while accepting all its decisions without question.

More broadly, South Africans must accept that the honeymoon phase of the rainbow nation’s marriage is over. The Malema-induced fear that engulfed the wealthier classes is also a reflection of a nation that does not trust the strength of the democratic institutions in the country. Celebrating Malema’s demise simply because he made certain classes uncomfortable is not a win for our young democracy. If South Africa is to move toward a meaningful democratic and economic solution for all its citizens, there must be better engagement on difficult discussions required to move the country forward between people from different social and economic backgrounds.

Once the dust clears and wounds heal, the ANCYL will have to pick a new leader to carry its cause to the Mangaung conference. There’s already growing speculation that Ronald Lamola may be the next leader, a man described by a Mail & Guardian source as “more aggressive than Julius [Malema] and … without the abrasiveness”. It’s still early to tell whether a new boogie man is being created or whether, if elected, the lawyer will better articulate the youth message without the distractions from questionable lifestyle choices. What is clear is that Malema’s political career may be buried, but the issues remain unaddressed.

As South Africans, we assume that our society is stable, developed, and incapable of the kinds of outbreaks that occurred in North Africa early last year. But the recurring xenophobic attacks and the violence of service delivery protests should be a signal that there is still much for this country to resolve. If there is indeed truth to the saying that “democracy lives in the ANC”, it would not be in South Africa’s best interest for the ANC to muffle its youth.

In Britain: Why Are Pro-Regime Change Lefties in the Leadership of the Anti-War Movement?

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

WHY ARE PRO-REGIME CHANGE LEFTIES IN THE LEADERSHIP OF THE ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT?

This is a good article from 'Socialist Action' which outlines the latest developments with Syria in relation to the Arab League, the west and the UN. Importantly it also focuses on a small group of people presenting themselves as leftists in the anti-war movement around a group - Counterfire - who were expelled/left the organisation called the 'Socialist Workers Party'. The SWP heralded the lynching of Gadafi - which was facilitated by two nato air-strikes on Gadafi's convoy - as something to be welcomed comparable to the killing of Italian fascist leader Mussolini. Obviously these people cannot get their heads around this, but to compare the death of the most important anti-imperialist leader of Africa and of the Global South of recent times with the leader of Italian colonialism, who colonised Libya wiping out a massive part of the Libyan population, just shows one how far from any understanding of the people of the Global South organisations like the swp are.

Members of the Counterfire group are in leadership positions of the anti-war movement, which along with other dodgy elements in the anti-war movement who believe in regime change in Libya, Syria, Iran etc including Kate Hudson, Yvonne Ridley, Anas Tikriti, and Azzam Tamimi, all of whom clearly believe in regime change in Syria as they did in Libya, and are positively open to the possibility of military intervention by nato and/or GCC countries in Syria.

As a result, the anti-war movement has for sometime lost its momentum and sees pathetically small amounts of people turning up to their half-hearted mobilisations, this is unsurprising as its clear that elements within the leadership would like regime change in Syria as they have championed the same in Libya. How an anti-war movement can have a leadership that is supportive of the strategic war aims of the west just goes to show how weak anti-imperialism is in the anti-war movement and in the left in general in England. Stop the War Coalition could not even muster one national mobilisation in the 6 month long nato bombing campaign of Libya.

Nothing short of a completely new anti-war movement needs to be built, one which divorces from the politics of sectarianism and eurocentric liberalism, and is rooted in resistant-oppressed communities, addresses the concerns of African communities and western-backed wars across Africa (which the anti-war movement has never addressed, and actually helped facilitate in the case of Libya), and has a clear and militant line of anti-imperialism and internationalism.

Sukant Chandan, Sons of Malcolm
-----------------------------------------------
After Libya: Syria, counterrevolution and Counterfire

The veto, by Russia and China, of a US-backed UN Security Council resolution aimed at giving cover to stepped up imperialist intervention in Syria has made this more difficult. But this setback will not stop the offensive of the US and the other imperialists, backed by Israel, to overthrow Syria’s government.

This is now the most immediate imperialist aim in the Middle East, as it will cut the supply lines to Hezbollah in Lebanon, further isolate Iran, and by these means strengthen Israel.

This imperialist offensive, conducted with active collaboration of the most reactionary Arab states in the region, headed by Saudi Arabia, as outlined in a previous article on this website, follows on from their victory in Libya. Defeating this imperialist offensive is the crucial task of progressive forces on an international scale.

It is therefore shocking that in Britain the left wing organisation Counterfire has been supporting the side of this counter-revolutionary offensive, and promoting forces in Syria which are directly tied to imperialism.

This repeats the position it held during the NATO-led, assault on Libya where it also supported the side of the imperialists in the conflict – an analysis of these positions is here.

This article looks at the struggle in Syria and the positions of Counterfire on it, However, the same arguments would apply to other currents which also supported the imperialist offensive in Libya and the present one in Syria.

UN Resolution

The draft UN resolution that was vetoed on 4 February, would have endorsed imperialism’s ‘regime change’ strategy – that is the drive to overthrow Assad and impose an imperialist backed government in Syria.

The vetoed motion said that the Security Council ‘fully supports’ the Arab League request that Assad transfer power to a deputy and a government of national unity within two months – a position formulated and promoted by the Saudi dictatorship, the US’s key ally among the Arab states.

Russia had successfully argued for the removal of clauses in the draft that threatened military action against Syria. However, before supporting this new motion Russia sought further amendments which would impose the requirement for simultaneous withdrawal from the towns on both the Syrian government forces – as set out in the resolution – and on the armed opposition groups operating inside Syria – not mentioned in the resolution.

The US, wanting no such restrictions on the armed opposition to the Syrian government, declared these proposed amendments unacceptable, ended further negotiations on the resolution and pushed it to a vote.

Of course, the veto in the UN will not deter the imperialists. The US and its allies had been stepping up their campaign in support of the opposition and against Assad despite the veto of an earlier UN resolution in October 2011. Their response to this new setback at the UN is simply to intensify the offensive.

U.S. Secretary of State Clinton has called for establishing a ‘friends of democratic Syria’ group to coordinate imperialist aid to the Syrian opposition. France has already signed up to this group, which is likely to be similar to the ‘Contact Group on Libya’ that coordinated NATO operations with the Libyan opposition. The US imperialists rapidly followed this with the withdrawal of their ambassador from Syria.

With US encouragement, the Arab League is ignoring the veto and claiming the 13-2 vote means there is ‘clear international support for the resolutions of the Arab League’. Qatar is calling for Arab states to assemble a military intervention force.

Counterrevolution

The overall context for the situation in Syria is imperialism’s response to the wave of struggle swept across the Middle East last year – in particular the overthrow of Mubarak in Egypt. Initially throw on the defensive, imperialism responded by launching a determined counterrevolutionary offensive to hold back and divert further advance of the popular revolt. Across the region, strongly supported by Israel and the Saudi regime, it mobilised its clients and sought new allies to defeat the progressive wave of struggle.

The six month war that toppled the Libyan government delivered a significant blow to the Arab revolution. The next objective of this counterrevolutionary offensive is to overthrow the Syrian government. Alongside this, the US continues to consider military action against Iran’s nuclear program. Both countries are under threat.

Syria, the FSA and SNC

Despite the difficulties of dealing with conflicting information coming from Syria, it is clear the regime retains significant support.

There are regular large mobilisations across Syria in support of the Assad government, some are even reported in the Western media such as these examples from the New York Times, BBC, Euronews and the Guardian.

Also the Qatar Foundation, even though it is based in one of the countries playing a key role in the attack on the Syrian government, found in apoll it commissioned last month that 55 per cent of Syrians do not want their President to resign.

The Syrian regime, including its military, currently remains essentially united. All reports indicate that the defections from the army are of individuals and small groups, not whole units. As a 5th February review entitled ‘The how-to guide to toppling tyrants’ in the FT commented: The principal reason most in the region expect Mr Assad to cling on for a while is that soldiers have defected as individuals and not en masse.’

Confronted with this situation imperialism is coordinating various proxy military forces and orchestrating guerrilla attacks. Like the Contras sent to attack Nicaragua in the 1980s, these groups are financed, armed and trained by imperialism and its clients. The groups include Libyanfighters fresh from assisting NATO’s campaign in their country.

The various groups, including the so called ‘Free Syrian Army’ (FSA) are widely reported to being hosted and shielded by Turkey and Jordon, trained by France and Britain, provided with intelligence by the US and financed by Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

These armed groups attack Syrian government forces, but also target civilians and economic infrastructure. Sectarian violence is encouraged against the minority Shia community.

The FSA is calling for a direct imperialist military intervention in Syria along the lines of the assault made last year on Libya. In short the FSA is directly allied with imperialism.

The Syrian National Council (SNC) is likewise allied to the imperialists – it calls for foreign military intervention and coordinates closely with the FSA. It is being pulled together in a similar fashion to Libya’s National Transitional Council (NTC) as the ‘regime-in-waiting’. Imperialism is building up international support for the SNC. The new Libyan regime – which most identifies with it for obvious reasons – already recognises the SNC as ‘the sole legitimate government of Syria’. Saudi Arabia, a strong backer of the SNC, has indicated it will confer such recognition at some later date. Key imperialist powers are also indicating their public backing for the SNC. The US, France and Spain treat the SNC as ‘a legitimate representative of the people’. Currently the SNC is recognised in some capacity by 16 states.

Sectarianism, Saudi Arabia and Qatar
A long standing tool used by imperialism to divide and rule in the Middle East is to promote conflict between different branches of the Muslim faith. Currently a wave of anti-Shia sectarianism is being whipped across the region. In Iraq it has helped divide those opposed to the US occupation. It was promoted against last year’s uprisings in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia and it is used to promote hostility to the governments of Iran and Syria.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar are central to this campaign. The dictatorial feudal states of the Gulf are potentially threatened by mass struggle for democracy. Fearing for their survival, the Saudi Arabian and Qatari monarchies have taken decisive action against the wave of struggle dubbed the ‘Arab Spring’. Saudi Arabia led Gulf States’ military forces into Bahrain in March 2011 to put down the popular movement. Both mobilised the Arab League behind imperialism’s proposed attack on Libya. Qatar reoriented its influential media outlet, Al Jazeera, to assist this campaign.

Both are centrally assisting the offensive against Syria. Saudi Arabia initially pushed for an Arab League monitoring mission into Syria, but when the Mission’s report effectively backed many of the Syrian government’s claims, Saudi Arabia pulled out of the Mission and pushed the rest of the Arab League to suspend its work.

The Arab League Monitoring Mission

The Arab League Observer Mission to Syria did not confirm the imperialist propaganda that has been aired so much this past year. It reported (English translation here) armed opposition groups including the Free Syrian Army, using armour piecing weaponry, which have been killing civilians as well as Syrian troops and their confirmed targets have included a civilian bus, a train carrying diesel, bridges and pipelines. It also noted ‘many parties falsely reported’ the conflict with some media reports of explosions or violence by the regime being entirely false and others exaggerated.

Libya

It is only necessary to look at what is now happening in Libya to grasp what a successful offensive against Syria would mean. Many tens of thousands of Libyans were killed and the country ravaged causing immense human misery. Victorious NATO installed its puppet NTC regime, about which there is nothing remotely progressive or ‘revolutionary’. It awards lucrative oil contracts to the countries whose military campaign put it in government. And violence continues in Libya. Even some NGOs in the West are now raising objections to the executions,torture and abuse, carried out under the new regime and which have been particularly directed against black people.

Counterfire

Counterfire, since taking the same side of the military conflict in Libya as the imperialists, has down played the imperialist threat to Syria and been promoting an analysis of the current conflict sympathetic to the principal forces allied to imperialism.

As Lindsey German explained in the July 2011 documentary Syria At The Crossroads: 'there will be pro-Western forces involved in the demonstrations...it is also true that if the West gets a chance to exploit these divisions they will, but both of these questions are relatively minor in comparison with do the people of this country, as with all the other countries in the Arab world, have the right to demonstrate against their government....and that has to be an absolutely unequivocal right'.

This is wishful thinking. The questions of imperialist involvement in the opposition movement are not ‘relatively minor’ – the campaign is being organised, led, and backed by imperialism. The fate of the entire population rests on such questions, as was clear in Libya.

Counterfire has also been running a series of articles by Khalil Habash, the main line of which is to support the forces fighting the Syrian government. Habash encourages support for opponents of the regime irrespective of whether or not they are clearly tied to imperialism, including supporting the FSA. A recent article on 11 January lauds the FSA and argues that it ‘helps the Syrian revolution and the popular movement’. Supporting an armed group allied to imperialism is to politically aid counterrevolution.

To justify support for the FSA, Habash entirely misrepresents reality by omitting to indicate its ties to imperialism through its funding, arming and training and its support for imperialist military intervention.

Habash also sowed illusions in the Syrian National Council (SNC) after it was established in August 2011 to a fanfare of imperialist support. Theanalysis on 13 September absurdly described the SNC’s Chairman Burhan Ghalioun as a ‘prominent leftist figure’.

Ghalioun is not remotely left wing, as can be seen from the explicitly counterrevolutionary programme he outlined to the Wall St Journal on 2 December. There he spelt out that he stands for a Syria no longer allied to Iran, but to the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia with support for Hezbollah and Hamas cut off.

Clearly he is a very public ally of imperialism.

Since then presenting Ghalioun as leftwing has been untenable, so Habash tried to cover his tracks and acknowledged the SNC’s pro-imperialist alignment in an article on 14 December but does not conclude that this places it firmly on the side of the counterrevolution. For Habash the problem with the SNC is not its fundamental alignment but that it ‘relies too heavily on the recognition by imperialist powers’ and that (as is argued in an article of 11 January) it does not ‘reinforce the popular movement inside the country’. Only imperialism can be assisted by its favoured alternative government, the SNC, ‘reinforcing’ its intervention in Syria.

Habash verbally claims that foreign intervention in Syria, as in Libya, would throw things backwards but promotes the FSA, which is a direct conduit for that intervention.
Counterfire, by playing down imperialism’s threat to Syria and uncritically presenting Habash’s views as serious analysis, is pursuing the same path it took over Libya.

In earlier conflicts those associated with Counterfire, although then within the SWP, played a central role in mobilising wide coalitions of forces against the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. In both these conflicts Counterfire opposed the side backed by the imperialists.

This changed when Counterfire supported the side of imperialist counterrevolution in Libya last year, and is reinforced by it going down that same path on Syria.

These positions supporting the counter-revolutionary, pro-imperialist side in the conflicts in Libya and Syria are weakening the activity of the anti-war movement in response to both interventions. While it would not be possible for the anti-war movement to have mobilised mass forces against the intervention in Libya – or currently in Syria – there has been no significant impact of the anti-war movement on wider sections of public opinion that the most convinced anti-imperialists. Lack of clarity and inconsistency of argument against the imperialists’ open and covert intervention, downplaying the reality of actual covert imperialist intervention in Syria, and presenting the imperialist-linked oppositions as in someway progressive has added to confusion in the movement rather than to the forces opposed to the imperialists’ ploys.

On 28 January the Stop the War Coalition organised a protest which was officially against intervention in Iran and Syria. Whilst the threats to Iran were addressed by the protest’s organisers, imperialism’s growing offensive against Syria was scarcely mentioned. Despite the protest’s official title the Stop the War Coalition’s placards only referred to Iran, with no reference to Syria.

A principal Stop the War Coalition speaker at the event, its National Officer John Rees did not even mention Syria – despite the fact that significant military action against Syria backed by imperialism is already underway rather than still threatened as against Iran.
At a time when imperialism is increasing its offensive against Syria Counterfire is trying to spin a false ‘narrative’ that the pre-eminent target at risk of imperialist violence is Iran without mentioning the imperialist violence already being waged against Syria. This is because Counterfire is supporting the forces backed by and tied to imperialism in Syria.

Counterfire made a disastrous mistake in supporting the side of counter-revolutionary forces in Libya. Unfortunately they haven’t learned any lessons from this in relation to Syria.

Following the veto of the UN motion on Syria, the imperialists are stepping up their offensive, arming the Free Syrian Army, supporting the SNC, encouraging the Arab League to consider military intervention, setting up a pro-opposition ‘contact group’ and other steps. It is vital the left takes a completely clear position against this imperialist offensive and those they are supporting in Syria.