Category: Action
Is the French Communist Party back?
| April 2, 2012 | 8:25 pm | Action | Comments closed

By Zoltan Zigedy

Via: http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/2012/04/is-french-communist-party-back.html

After years of retreat and opportunism and consequent loss of support and influence, the French Communist Party (PCF) is showing signs of life. Aligned with smaller parties in the Left Front (Front de Gauche, FG), the PCF has rallied around the presidential candidacy of Jean Melenchon for the forthcoming first round of French elections. The latest polls show Melenchon with over 14% of the prospective voters, ahead of all other candidates excepting Hollande (PS) and Sarkozy (UMP).

This once dynamic party succumbed to the allure of reformism, anti-Sovietism, and compromise with its embrace of the so-called “Euro-Communist” stance in the seventies. With over half a million members immediately after World War II, and garnering more votes than any other party at that time, the PCF was poised to become the dominant force in French politics, if not the first CP to launch a Western European country onto the road to socialism.

In fairness, the US and its NATO allies did everything to see that this did not happen. The Marshall Plan, coupled with covert activities of the CIA, served to undermine the Party’s ascendancy. But as early as the 1960s, the PCF began a rightward tilt to curry electoral favor and seek a left coalition with the compromised Socialist Party of Francois Mitterand. This trend escalated under the leadership of Georges Marchais, who constantly repositioned the CP ideologically to earn “respectability” and middle-strata appeal. Locked in this concessionary cycle, the Party leadership distanced itself from the Soviet Union and its history while seeking an image of bourgeois civility and sobriety.

Thus began a long period of further compromise and decline.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, the leadership – first under Robert Hue and then Marie-George Buffet – the PCF embarked on a process of discarding Leninism entirely and refashioning the organization as a social-democratic formation—the so called “la mutation.” Believing that the departure of the Soviet Union reflected a failure and rejection of Leninism and revolutionary Marxism, Hue and Buffet sought to establish a moderate party of the left suitable to the new moment. Instead, the PCF membership and electoral strength sank dramatically, culminating in Buffet’s failure to attract even 2% of the votes in the 2007 Presidential first round election, a nadir unprecedented since the Second World War. The Party’s courtship with opportunism proved disastrous.

The creation of the Left Front and the ascendancy of Pierre Laurent to the position of National Secretary have seemingly brought a modest reversal to the Party’s long-term decline. Beginning with the municipal elections of 2008, the PCP has shown some electoral vigor.

But most significantly, the 2012 electoral campaign behind Jean Melenchon has brought new energy and organizational credibility to the Party. Opinion polling has shown a strong and unexpected support for the Melenchon candidacy. The campaign culminated in a mass rally of between 110,000 and 150,000 at the Place de la Bastille in Paris on March 18, the anniversary of the Paris Commune. Speeches demonstrated at least a new symbolic militancy, with references to the Revolution of 1789 and the Paris Commune.

Perhaps the surest mark of the new direction of the PCP is the endorsement of Francois Hollande, the Socialist candidate, by the PCF’s former leader, Robert Hue. Hue led the Party from 1994 until 2002, the period of its most dramatic ideological and popular slippage. Surely that unfriendly endorsement demonstrates that some things have changed for the better.

Melenchon has campaigned on re-nationalizing many of the leading corporations, strengthening the public sector, and criminalizing corruption and fraud in the private sector. He favors direct democracy—national referenda — on all questions of French sovereignty, especially with regard to the EU. In addition, the Left Front supports higher taxes on the rich, a substantial increase in the minimum wage, and expanded rights of immigrants.

Pierre Laurent, National Secretary of the PCF, sees the campaign as more than another call for electoral support; rather, he views the movement as an invitation to “prenez le pouvoir”—to take the power.

Christian Piquet, spokesperson for the Gauche Unitaire, a component of the Left Front, reminds us that with the campaign “We are building a force indispensable for the defeat of the right, and also for the redistribution of the cards on the Left.” This resolve to unite the objective of defeating the right with strengthening the left is a mission lost on much of the left in Europe and the US, and a welcome reminder of the dialectics of Marxist politics.

Hopefully, the Communist Party of France has taken a large step towards returning to the militancy and tradition of its past.

Zoltan Zigedy
zoltanzigedy@gmail.com

Letter of support from Canada for the struggle against anti-communism
| April 2, 2012 | 8:20 pm | Action | 1 Comment

You have my continued support and solidarity in your ongoing campaign to eliminate the old anti-communist laws in Texas. I will do whatever l can to help your cause.

I am very impressed and inspired by you comrades. You have an outstanding, attractive website which l have been reading regularly over the last year. The articles are critical, thought provoking and informative. Your website is more interesting than the central CPUSA website. I have also enjoyed reading the articles posted by your club criticizing the Webb leadership. A lot of us in Canada have been concerned and dismayed about the direction Webb has taken the CPUSA in recent years. We see strong parallels between what happened in Canada prior to 1991 and what the Webb leadership is doing today. Former CPC party leader George Hewison and his cohorts nearly dismanteled the party here: dissolving the YCL, allowing party publications to separate and close down, ceased running candidates during elections, closing down bookstores, expelling members who were critical, etc… The Webb leadership has undertaken similar actions in the USA. In particular, we were shocked here when they decided to cease publishing the PWW and Political Affairs, both widely read by Canadian Communists. We are fearful here the Webb leadership has designs to liquidate the CPUSA.

I have a question for you if you don’t mind answering me. How has the Webb leadership treated the Houston club as the result of your open and well founded criticisms?

A comrade in Canada

Answer from the website: They ignore us!

Cuba’s Economic Reforms: Strengthening the Cuban Revolution
| April 1, 2012 | 9:47 pm | Action | Comments closed

Written by Bill Preston and Carl Gentile

via: www.mltoday.com

The writers are Cuba solidarity activists in the U.S. Peace Council and U.S. Labor for Friendship with Cuba.

Almost 80 people packed a classroom at Pace University’s downtown New York campus on a relatively warm, mostly sunny Saturday afternoon, on March 17, 2012, to learn about new developments in Cuba directly from diplomats of the Republic of Cuba.

The panel’s purpose was to explain the economic reforms and new period of socialist construction launched in Cuba in 2011. Marxism-Leninism Today (www.mltoday.com) sponsored the panel, a first for the electronic journal, at this year’s Left Forum. The Left Forum, which takes place once a year in New York City, gathers activists and intellectuals across a wide range of political tendencies from anarchist and social-democratic to Communist.

Its venue, on a college campus across the street from City Hall, is a short walk to Wall Street and an even shorter walk to the park that continues to be a site of Occupy Wall Street, where dozens marking the movement’s six-month anniversary were beaten and arrested by the New York Police Department the same day of this panel on Cuba on the nearby campus.

Walter Tillow, a member of the editorial board of Marxism-Leninism Today and of the Louisville, Committee to Free the Cuban Five, first explained that the two invited speakers from Cuba were unable to make it because of the U.S. blockade. Juan Lamigueiro, Deputy Chief of Mission of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington, DC, and Patricia Pego Guerra, First Secretary at the Interests Section, were denied the right to travel from the nation’s capital to New York City by the U.S. State Department.

The Cuban diplomats were not given the courtesy of a reply to their request to travel within the country, but rather received a “no answer” type of denial. The prohibition on their travel outside of Washington, DC made it impossible for the Cuban diplomats to participate in this, the largest annual gathering of Left academics in a country whose rulers boast of its freedom of speech. Tillow also said that professor Nelson Valdes, also slated to be on the panel, was unable to attend because of illness.

The audience was urged to contact the White House and the U.S. State Dept. to protest the prohibition on travel within the country and the specific fact that Left Forum attendees were not allowed the right to hear the Cuban envoys to the U.S. in their own words.

Roger Keeran, a professor at Empire State College, SUNY, chaired the panel and introduced participants who, already in New York City, were able to substitute for Juan Lamigueiro and Patricia Pego on such very short notice: Jairo Rodriguez Hernandez, Attaché, and Alaim Pena, Third Secretary, both with the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Cuba to the United Nations.

Prof. Keeran mentioned that Cuba had adopted about 300 new policy guidelines in 2011 in furtherance of the economic reforms, and that when he visited Cuba last year with the second annual delegation of U.S. Labor for Friendship with Cuba everybody in Cuba was talking about the changes.

Jairo Rodriguez began by discussing Cuba’s economic development in general perspective. Rodriguez noted the challenges facing Cuba, which he explained to the U.S. audience was a small poor country with no significant resources. He enumerated as well the critical external factors that have always impacted Cuba’s historical development: Four hundred years of Spanish colonialism, followed by 60 years of U.S. neo-colonialism until 1959–during which the real decisions on Cuba were made in Washington, DC and, finally, the U.S. aggression and blockade for the past 50 plus years.

Rodriguez explained that in the early 1990s Cuba lost 85 percent of its foreign trade and about 34 percent of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) when socialism in the U.S.S.R. and many other socialist countries was overthrown. However, because of Cuba’s socialist system, not one hospital or school closed. Nor was a single worker laid off. Socialism’s continuing existence in this small poor country meant the continued provision of free healthcare for all and free education through university.

However, U.S. blockade measures only increased after the overthrow of the U.S.S.R. and other socialist countries, becoming stronger in 1992 with the Torricelli Act and in 1996 with the Helms-Burton Act.

Rodriguez concluded his initial overview by noting that the global economic crisis from 2008 on, plus several major hurricanes that hit the island in recent years, added to Cuba’s challenges of recovering from the aggravated U.S. blockade in the wake of the collapse of mutual aid and cooperation with former socialist countries.

This is the context in which the Sixth Congress of the Communist Party of Cuba in 2011 adopted the general guidelines for the new period of economic reforms. The Constitution of the Republic of Cuba provides for the Communist Party to lay out such guidelines.

Pena explained the details of the guidelines now being implemented. First of all, there were thousands of meetings and proposals put forward at all levels of political responsibility among wide masses of the people of Cuba prior to the Sixth Congress. The economic reforms adopted by the Sixth Congress proceed from the socialist character of the Revolution proclaimed 50 years ago. They continue and form part of the ongoing guarantee of the irreversibility of the Revolution, of its socialist character. The main focus in the new period is to update the economic and social system with a view to adapt to the challenges noted above.

The guidelines of the Sixth Congress are oriented to the people’s socialist ownership of the means of production. Only socialism is capable of overcoming the difficulties encountered by the Revolution. Socialism means equal rights and opportunities for all citizens in this society characterized by the people’s socialist ownership of the means of production. “No one will be left unprotected,” Pena stated.

The guidelines were discussed and approved by a majority of the Cuban people in an open, democratic, and participatory process. Almost nine million people participated in over 150,000 meetings, as a result of which two thirds of the initial proposed guidelines–or 68% to be precise—were modified before the Sixth Congress finally approved the final guidelines.

Pena specified the international context for the Sixth Congress’s approval of the guidelines: The structural and systemic crisis of capitalism, with its financial, cultural, and environmental ramifications. Cuba is affected profoundly by this crisis, as manifested by instability in the prices of its exports, and increased demand for and problems of access to credit. In sum, the purchasing power of Cuban goods has declined.

He acknowledged positive counteracting trends that have arisen, creating new opportunities whose fuller development will be stimulated by the economic reforms: Since 2004, the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America has deepened Cuba’s economic relations in the Hemisphere. Increased revenues have come from healthcare services exports to Venezuela. And Cuba has expanded economic relations with China, Vietnam, Russia, Iran, Angola, Algeria, and Brazil. In the context of the crisis, the solution requires a strategic and long-term vision. In Cuba’s socialist society these plans are being implemented not only by government agencies but also by the concerted efforts of the entire people.

Pena stressed that in the new period of economic reforms the economic system will continue to be based on socialist ownership and will be governed by socialist distribution principles: From each according to his or her individual capacities, to each according to his or her work. Within this system, economic reforms will accentuate the following: Deficit reduction, import substitution, energy self-sufficiency, competitiveness, and high value-added goods and services. All of these policies will be guided, Pena reiterated, by the overarching principle that no one will be unprotected. Everything will be conducted and assessed and if necessary modified to fit the goal of guaranteeing the continuation and irreversibility of the development of socialism.

Rodriguez explained the relationship between economic reforms and the Cuban Revolution’s enduring goal of protecting the country’s national sovereignty and independence. He unequivocally stated that Cuba will correct its new policies in the future if outcomes are not conducive to this core commitment of the Cuban Revolution: Decisions will be made in Cuba, not in Washington or Miami. The goal of the economic reforms is to maintain the fundamental social and economic achievements of the revolutionary process in health, education, and culture–and the success of the reforms implemented will be gauged against this perspective. Economic reforms are aimed at adapting to internal and external challenges–without dramatic social impacts. Education and healthcare are free and will remain so. The core perspective animating the Communist Party of Cuba’s approach to the economic reforms is that people, not capital, are central to the process.

During the question and answer part of the panel session, it was noted by one of the audience attendees to the overwhelming approval of other audience members that the independence and sovereignty of Cuba will not be decided by people in the U.S. or other imperialist countries who say they’re left-wing intellectuals. It was also pointed out that one of the big advantages of the economic reforms is that they will bring the black market out into the open.

The role of the Workers’ Central Union of Cuba, the Central de Trabajadores de Cuba (CTC), the country’s four-million member labor federation, was also pointed out, and how the CTC’s involvement in the deliberative process before, during, and after the promulgation of the guidelines shows that the Cuban Revolution is not a mere “revolution from the top” as imagined by petty-bourgeois critics, that the CTC’s organization of the working class in the economic reform deliberations reflects a continuation and deepening of the revolutionary process.

Fielding questions, Pena noted that Cuba is not following any foreign experiment or model in updating socialism. He addressed the updating of socialism in the areas of housing and self-employment. One of the Revolution’s first measures was to give the Cuban people property rights to the housing in which they lived. Prior to the Revolution, the vast majority had to pay rent. The economic reforms aim to build on this fundamental revolutionary achievement in order to address an existing housing shortage. Economic reforms in the area of housing will make it easier to sell or buy housing. Self-employment is another area of economic reform.

New forms of self-employment created through implementation of the guidelines will not damage the essence of the socialist system: It will be self-employment in what Pena termed non-essentials, such as in cafeterias, restaurants, barber shops, and auto repair. New licenses have been granted for self-employed workers in these non-essential activities. Pena specifically noted that this does not change the essence of socialism or create a new class of big capitalist exploiters in Cuba. “People won’t get rich through auto repairs,” he added. The Communist Party and the government and people will focus anti-corruption policies on preserving the socialist essence of the economy by combating the tendencies and individuals representing its opposite.

During the questions and answers period, Rodriguez introduced Oscar Leon Gonzales, the Deputy Permanent Representative of Cuba to the United Nations, who reiterated for the audience’s benefit that Raul said Cubans need to continue to discuss the economic reforms in a democratic way, that Cuba will not allow investors to profit through corrupt officials. The rule of transparency, the Ambassador made it clear, is manifestly in Cuba’s interest, since the country would actually demotivate foreign investment by failing to crack down on corruption.

On the issue of housing, Rodriguez added that Cuba does not aim for big business in real estate to emerge, that the Communist Party, government, and people will keep reviewing developments to ensure that this does not occur. He acknowledged a reality that presently exists, and has for some time, namely the fact of differing social status by virtue of simply having family or friends in the U.S. or Spain–the impact of an extra $50 given by an overseas family member, for example, makes it possible to do many things because health and education are already free. The solutions to the inequities, Rodriguez affirmed, will be found in the enterprises and in the neighborhoods by the Cuban people, who are one and the same as the Cuban government–unlike in capitalist countries.

On the issue of self-employment, Rodriguez added that in the past, state-owned cafeterias paid salaries to workers regardless of the quality of their services, good or bad, and that nobody could get fired from a cafeteria job no matter how bad the quality of their work. With self-employment, the self-employed will also pay taxes. In addition to obeying regulations, self-employed business people, such as barbershop owners, will pay taxes to the government. Until now, in Cuba’s socialist society no one paid any tax.

By law, in Cuba’s socialist society everyone has a place to work. Rodriguez reiterated that nobody will be left unemployed: This is a principle of socialism. But now, with the economic reforms, people will be redirected to sectors where labor is actually needed. For example, university studies will be geared much more to agricultural engineering and other sectors where talent is needed and skills and knowledge must be more widely developed for the sake of the people. Too many individuals–he gave as an example an institution with which he was familiar, the University of Cienfuegos–are studying law or journalism or philosophy for that to make sense for Cuba’s economic needs at this time.

Pena noted that Cuban youth, an important part of the revolutionary process, themselves took up a central role in the discussions leading to these conclusions. Rodriguez added that the role of youth changes with the development of the revolutionary process. Fidel at Moncada, that was youth, then. Now, youth, with their energy and knowledge, need to be in school or working, or on the road of doing either: Their main role and responsibility is to defend and implement the Cuban Revolution in the current period, as well as to defend the independence of Cuba. Rodriguez noted that Raul said that Cuba needs more young people in the National Assembly of People’s Power; needs more young people as managers, and also needs for young people to become businessmen and businesswomen.

In the more general realm of labor allocation, Pena noted that management and unions together are analyzing which employees should be moved to other activities

The U.S. blockade is the biggest obstacle and challenge to Cuba, Rodriguez reiterated towards the end of the panel session. U.S. relations are a priority for Cuba, while Cuban relations are not a priority for the U.S.–with the exception of Miami. The U.S. remains the main threat to Cuban independence and national sovereignty. Notwithstanding this, Cuba reaffirms its willingness to work with the U.S. to fight terrorism and narcotics trafficking. At the same time, Cuba will not relent in ceaselessly working for freedom for the Cuban Five unjustly imprisoned in the U.S., and for an end to the U.S. blockade: These two big issues dominate U.S. relations for Cuba.

Pena noted in response to an audience member’s comment that Cuba is the largest per capita producer of organic food in the world that Cuba is an agricultural country that has become a net importer of food. The economic reforms aim to stimulate national production of food, for example, vegetable production in the cities.

Rodriguez noted in response to an audience member’s question that the economic reforms mean people in the licensed areas of self-employment mentioned above can now hire others unrelated to them. Previously, people could only legally hire family members. Now, the self-employed in those non-essential sectors such as cafeterias, restaurants, barber shops, and auto repair can hire others and as many as they wish for their own single individual cafeteria, restaurant, barber shop, or auto repair shop. But they will need to pay taxes on each hire. And in addition to regulations the self-employed owners of these businesses must accommodate themselves to a trade union of private-sector workers that organizes workers in the new businesses.

The authors found the panel discussion by the Cuban diplomats most helpful in grasping the nature of the economic reforms and their relationship to the ongoing process of socialist construction in Cuba.

March 25, 2012

Petition to Repeal the Anti-Communist Law in Texas
| March 31, 2012 | 12:43 pm | Action | 1 Comment

Download your own copy here.

Text is as follows:

We, the undersigned, petition the Texas State Legislature to repeal the anti-communist law which is still in effect. We view this law as anti-democratic, highly discriminatory and unconstitutional as well as libelous. The law is as follows:

Title 5, Subtitle A, Chapter 557, Subchapter A. Sedition and Subchapter C. Communism.” Sec. 557.021 reads “DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter: (1) “Communist” means a person who commits an act reasonably calculated to further the overthrow of the government: (A) by force or violence; or (B) by unlawful or unconstitutional means and replace it with a communist government.” Sec. 557.022 reads “RESTRICTIONS. (a) The name of a communist may not be printed on the ballot for any primary or general election in this state or a political subdivision of this state. (b) A person may not hold a nonelected office or position with the state or any political subdivision of this state if: (1) any of the compensation for the office or position comes from public funds of this state or a political subdivision of this state; and (2) the employer or superior of the person has reasonable grounds to believe that the person is a communist.

This law is in direct contradiction with documents from the CPUSA constitution.

Article VI, Section 3 (Rights and Duties of Party Members) asserts:
It shall be the obligation of all party members to struggle for the unity of the working class, against all forms of national oppression, national chauvinism, discrimination and segregation, against all racist ideologies and practices, such as white chauvinism and anti-semitism. It shall be the duty of all party members to fight for the full social, political and economic equality of the African-American, Mexican-American, Puerto Rican, Native American Indians, Asian and Pacific Islanders, other oppressed minorities, immigrants and the foreign born, and to promote the unity of all people as essential to the advancement of their common interests … It shall be the obligation of all party members to struggle against all manifestations of male supremacy and discrimination against women, and to fight for the full social, political and economic equality for women … It shall be the obligation of all party members to struggle against homophobia and all manifestations of discrimination against gays, lesbians, bisexual and trans-gender people, and to fight for their full social and civil rights.

Of course, there is nothing here or anywhere else in the constitution of the CPUSA about “violent overthrow of the government” except under disciplinary procedures.

Under Article VII, Section 2 (Disciplinary Procedures and Appeals), the CPUSA constitution declares:

Subject to the provisions of this article, any member shall be expelled from the party who is a strikebreaker, a provocateur, engaged in espionage, an informer, or who advocates force and violence or terrorism, or who participates in the activities of any group which acts to undermine or overthrow any democratic institutions through which the majority of the American people can express their right to determine their destiny.

The definition of “communist” held by the state of Texas excludes all members of the Communist Party USA.

For this reason we demand that this unreasonable law be repealed right away before the taxpayers of the state of Texas have to foot a very expensive bill in a legal battle which will inevitably overturn this injustice to Texans.

George Galloway victorious in Bradford, England
| March 30, 2012 | 10:03 pm | Action | Comments closed

Check out these videos on the victory of George Galloway:

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article30944.htm

World Federation of Trade Unions solidarity rally in Palestine
| March 29, 2012 | 9:01 pm | Action | Comments closed

Watch the WFTU video on the Solidarity Rally in Palestine and send it to your friends.

Vean el video de la FSM en la Manifestación de Solidaridad en Palestina y envíenlo a todos sus amigos.

Suivez le vidéo de la FSM pris à la manifestation de solidarité en Palestine et envoyez-le à vos amis.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTIvSyuYl0A&list=UUGVOfL_91xETHO-8p5cFYtw&index=1&feature=plcp

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4eJ0ugz6rs&list=UUGVOfL_91xETHO-8p5cFYtw&index=2&feature=plcp

International Conference in solidarity with Palestine
| March 27, 2012 | 9:02 pm | Action | Comments closed

Speech by the General Secretary, George Mavrikos

Via http://www.wftucentral.org/?p=4961&language=en

22 March 2012

Palestine, Ramallah, 22-3-2012

Speech by the General Secretary, George Mavrikos

Dear comrades,
Dear brother Ibrahim Haidar,
Dear brothers and sisters, Palestinians,

“Palestine” is a long lasting crime of Imperialism. Since 1916 when the English and the French “in the Sykes-Picot Agreement” defined their spheres of influence using a ruler and today the plots for the New Middle East, with the imperialist attacks and interventions in Afganistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Iran, the collar around Palestine narrows even more dangerously.

The Palestinians suffer under the barbarity of the Israeli Occupation, the occupation of the territories after the six-day war, the separation wall built by Israel, the organized attacks against the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Half of the Palestinians live under the poverty line. Unemployment is dramatic and it gets more difficult for the Palestinians to work having to pass through the check-points which humiliate them daily. More than 5.5 million Palestinians are refugees while more than 10.000 Palestinians are imprisoned in more than 30 detention locations. Torture and degradation is a daily routine for the Israeli army. More than 120 settlements have been built illegally in the occupied territories. The access to clean water and supplies is extremely limited. New numbers for more dead Palestinians are announced daily.

Those numbers may be showing the reality but they are not enough to describe the brutality experienced by the Palestinian People. Nor are they enough to describe the heroism and the self-sacrifice of the Palestinians who do not compromise, who continue to struggle against the imperialist barbarity against the murderous policy of Israel and the USA, for decades.

“Palestine” has also brought to light the dynamics and the power of the internationalist solidarity. The workers and the ordinary people around the world are on the side of the Palestinians. They have chosen sides. The World Federation of Trade Unions with a consistent and stable action is standing on the side of the Palestinian People in struggle. It supports morally and practically this struggle. It organized campaigns to inform and to mobilize the working class worldwide to express international solidarity.

We organized a three-day strike on the ports of the world in June 2010. We organized complaints in the ILO. We organized a solidarity campaign for the recognition of the Palestinian State in September 2011 where dozens of messages reached the International Organizations.

We state once more that we will not cease to support the struggle of our brothers in Palestine until the goal for an independent, viable and democratic Palestine in the borders of 1967 with East Jerusalem as its capital is succeeded.

We will continue with action and initiatives to demand:

• The end of the settlements and the withdrawal of all settlers who have settled across the borders of 1967.

• The demolition of the separation wall in Jerusalem.

• All the Palestinian refugees to be granted the right to return to their homes, based on the relevant decisions of the UN

• The elimination of any exclusion against the Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza strip.

• The immediate release of imprisoned Palestinians and other political prisoners kept in the Israeli prisons.

• The withdrawal of the Israeli army from all the occupied territories of the 1967, including the Golan Heights and the Sheba area of Southern Lebanon.

Because history and its lessons teach us, brothers, that the force of overthrow are the class-oriented, internationalist struggles. No positive development for the people has come out of the imperialist mechanisms. They cannot and the will not implement the vindication of the Palestinian People, they cannot and they will not impose peace in the Middle East.

The imperialist interventions and the intra-imperialist rivalries in the countries of the North Africa, Middle East, in Afganistan, in Iraq etc. prove that the UN today is utilized to legitimize the attacks and the occupation and to equalize the perpetrator and the victim. While the decisions of the UN against Libya, Iraq, Afganistan are implemented rapidly, the dozens of decisions for a just solution for Palestine are still in papers, unapplied.

The real solution will come only through the continues heroic struggle of the Palestinian People with the support of the progressive popular and workers movement.

We have a duty, comrades, to do more.

We have a duty to edify the working class of our countries that the struggle for the wages, for the labour and social rights is inseparably connected with the struggle against imperialism, the struggle against the bourgeois-class which is squeezing the working class and our people, the struggle against the monopolies, the struggle for a society without exploitation.

The Palestinian People must be vindicated. This is our duty we are held accountable for every day.

The World Federation of Trade Unions with is members and friends who struggle in 120 countries of all the continents will continue to stand actively in the side of the Palestinian People.

This is a commitment we undertake here, in your presence. Until the final victory.

Viva the Palestinian People!

Viva the Palestinian Struggle!