John Passant

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Gillard's gender pay gap
Evidently Julia Gillard has the interests of working people and retirees at heart.  So I ask her to explain her role as Employment and Workplace Relations Minister and Deputy Prime Minister for almost 3 years in addressing the gender pay gap? Under Labor it actually increased to 18.2%. So apart from platitudes, what will Prime Minister Gillard offer to redress the imbalance and cut the gender pay gap to zero by 2013 if she is re-elected? Or could it be that such a policy would be too costly for her key supporters – business? So she will talk about equal pay for equal work but do nothing.  Add equal pay to the mining tax, climate change. WorkChoices Lite, the Australian Building and Construction Commission and many other examples of Gillard and Labor not being prepared to upset their real masters – the rich and powerful. (0)

The grate debate
I am  looking forward to the grate debate and the victory of the worm over the two grubs. (0)

The worm will win
My prediction is that the worm will win tonight’s debate, not the two grubs. Vote for the worm, not the grubs. (0)

Build a socialist alternative

Labor and the Liberals have the same policies on war, refugees, attacking living standards, cutting public services like schools and hospitals, screwing Universities and doing nothing about climate change. They both run the system for the bosses and their profits. It’s time for a real alternative – a socialist alternative of democracy where production is organised to satisfy human need. The first step in that process is fighting against the attacks of whichever party is managing capitalism for the bosses. Come along to hear John Passant from Socialist Alternative argue the case against capitalism and for socialism and why you should be a socialist on Thursday 22 July at 6 pm in room G 40 Haydon-Allen Building ANU.
(6)

Refugees are welcome here
If a regional processing centre for refugees is such a good idea, why not set it up in Australia? With safeguards for refugees  like community housing rather than locking people up. (0)

The real face of the mining maggots
Remember those nice mining company people who opposed the Resource Super Profits Tax for purely altruistic reasons – the economy, their workforce, mine workers’ jobs and wages? Xstrata workers have gone on strike and set up a five day picket line to win a decent deal from these caring sharing bastards. (0)

Canberra meeting: Onine interview with Sherry Wolf

Canberra Socialist Alternative forthcoming public discussion:
 
Politics and LGBTI rights today: online interview with US activist and author Sherry Wolf
 
Thursday 8 July 6 pm Room G 31 Copland Building ANU 
 
Sherry Wolf is the author of Sexuality and Socialism, an American socialist and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual and Intersex rights activist. In her book Sherry argues that to see a world free of sexual oppression, it is essential that we get rid of capitalism. It is the politics of looking to the working class that is key to this, and she reminds us that “What humans have constructed, they can tear down”.
 
(0)

Equal pay for all women
Will Julia Gillard be paid 17% less than Kevin Rudd? Equal pay is the right of all women, not just bosses like Gillard. (0)

A sick system
Know how when you are sick you lie in bed on one side and then after a while roll over to the other side? Then after a little while you roll back again? But rolling around from one side to the other doesn’t cure the illness. Politics in Australia is like that. At the moment. (0)

An early election?
The Sydney Morning Herald today shows first preferences for the ALP up 14 percent to 47 percent after the leadership change. The Greens are down 7 percent. On a 2 Party Preferred it would be 55 to the ALP and 45 to the Opposition. On these figures Labor would romp home.  The Gordon Brown effect maybe? Gillard must be tempted to go very soon. Perhaps in August before the footy finals begin? ‘To legitimise my leadership and give us a fresh mandate’ no doubt. (0)

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Pakistan: faultline of the war on terror

The “war on terror” has devastated Iraq and Afghanistan, and is destabilising a number of other countries.

The war has spiralled to create dreadful conflicts in Yemen and Somalia, and intensified tensions across the world.

But the country now most threatened by the war is Pakistan.

The US has stepped up its interventions in Pakistan, with almost 50 drone bombings in the north western border region with Afghanistan killing over 400 people in the last year.

This has created huge anger and a crisis for the government.

Faced with growing anger in Britain at the bloody war in Afghanistan, prime minister Gordon Brown last month chose to put the blame for its failures on Pakistan.

“I believe that after eight years, we should have been able to do more, with all the Pakistani forces working together with the rest of the world,” he said.

“We’ve got to ask ourselves why, eight years after 11 September, nobody has been able to spot or detain or get close to Osama bin Laden, nobody’s been able to get close to Zawahiri, the number two in Al Qaida.”

The speech caused consternation in Pakistan, not least because the question should really be levelled at the Nato countries that have occupied Afghanistan since 2001.

But Pakistan’s rulers were also annoyed as they have signed up to the war, by engaging in a brutal offensive against the people the West regards as “terrorists”.

In October this year, at the behest of Britain and the US, the Pakistani army launched a major offensive in South Waziristan, a mountainous tribal region of Pakistan that borders Afghanistan.

More than 30,000 troops are fighting fierce battles with groups loosely united under the banner of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan – the so-called Pakistani Taliban.

Support for these Islamists has grown as anger at the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the economic crisis, has risen. The Taliban have fought the government, the US and in some cases wealthy landlords.

Army mortars and shells bombard the villages on a daily basis, while US drone bombs fall on unsuspecting civilians and fighters with almost mundane regularity.

Gordon Brown and US president Barack Obama’s demand that Pakistan does more to fight the Taliban supposes that “terror” is the main enemy of the people. It is not. For the vast majority of Pakistanis, the main enemy is hunger.

The country is ranked 144th out of 175 in the United Nations’ human development index. Outside of Africa, only Yemen and Haiti score lower. More than 50 million people, around a third of Pakistan’s population, live in absolute poverty.

And with the refugee crisis now spiralling out of control as a result of the military offensive, things are set to get much worse.

According to the United Nations, more than a quarter of million people have fled the fighting in Waziristan.

They joined the 1.9 million that remain displaced after being forced to desert their homes during the military offensive in the Swat Valley earlier this year.

The government has closed the areas surrounding the conflict in Waziristan to journalists, meaning there are few reports of this human tragedy.

The West’s attempts to use slogans of freedom and democracy to justify the extension of the “war on terror” into Pakistan are looking increasingly hollow.

The government of president Asif Ali Zardari, which bowed to US pressure to order Pakistani forces to bomb their own citizens, is already completely discredited less than two years into its rule.

Collapse

The country is on the brink of economic collapse and has asked the International Monetary Fund to help it avert a balance of payments crisis.

Food and energy shortages, escalating fuel prices and a sinking currency are hitting the poor.

Millions face the ravages of unemployment. But Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party does not care about the poor. Elite figures are mired in corruption.

Zardari owns property throughout the world, including Britain, where he paid £4.35 million for an estate in 1995.

It is little wonder then that a recent wave of bombings that have targeted government and military institutions have not elicited much public sympathy with the victims.

“The government is in tatters,” says Karachi-based socialist Riaz Ahmed. “It is barricaded in their headquarters. The imposing structures where the government ‘rules’ from are now the prisons of a bygone power.”

Riaz says that the government has responded to the growing sense of crisis by attempting to create a “false polarisation” between itself and the Taliban.

It hopes that repeated terror attacks in the cities will push the people into its arms.

“Whenever the government is attacked in its military or police torture headquarters, the next day a city centre is bombed,” he says. “It seems designed to appear as though the war between the Taliban and the military is in fact a war between the Taliban and the Pakistani people.

“The resulting condemnation of the Taliban then becomes an act of endorsing the US-led wars in Afghanistan, and now Pakistan.”

As part of its campaign to enlist public support for the war against the Taliban, Pakistan’s rulers are increasingly prepared to do deals with militias that have blood on their hands.

Government ministers are known to have obtained weapons for the armed wing of the MQM party that controls Karachi – despite the fact that it uses them for the purposes of ethnic cleansing.

These are same thugs who gunned down the democracy movement that rose against the dictatorship of General Musharraf in 2008.

The supporters of the “war on terror” ignore these actions by their allies.

There are few signs that the military campaign in Waziristan is winning. The population there owes little loyalty to the Pakistani state, having rarely seen any economic or social benefits from being part of it.

Instead, the US and Pakistani barrage of bombs is likely to drive the fiercely independent tribal people into the arms of the very Taliban fighters that the West wants targeted.

Ordinary Pakistani soldiers, who almost universally come from poor peasant backgrounds, are unlikely to be happy about being ordered to kill other poor Pakistani peasants.

The growing worries are causing divisions in the Pakistani ruling class. Some sections of the army are dismayed at the assault on “Islamic fighters” who have proved so useful to the military regimes that have run Pakistan for most of its 62-year history.

They envisage a situation where the tribes that played a central role in the Mujahadeen struggle against the Russian occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s could again have their uses – especially if Nato were to be defeated on the other side of the border.

The combination of the extension of the “war on terror” into Pakistan with the growing economic crisis is fuelling tensions – including demands for secession by oppressed nations that never accepted their forced incorporation into Pakistan in 1947.

If the military campaign in Waziristan went badly, there are some who predict that the whole country could begin to crack.

Were this to happen, the West would have to accept the lion’s share of responsibility.

In its bid to shore up the ongoing occupation of Afghanistan, a country of 30 million, it will have brought an all-out civil war to a country of some 175 million.

This article, by Yuri Prasad, first appeared in the UK weekly Socialist Worker.

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Comments

Pingback from JohnPassant: Pakistan next to go? http://enpassant.com.au/?p=6070 « My Blog
Time December 24, 2009 at 6:22 am

[...] See the article here: JohnPassant: Pakistan next to go? http://enpassant.com.au/?p=6070 [...]

Pingback from En Passant » Pakistan: faultline of the war on terror | Desi Blog
Time December 24, 2009 at 9:02 am

[...] the original post: En Passant » Pakistan: faultline of the war on terror Posted in News Tags: Barack, barack-obama, brown, does-more, fight-the-taliban, gordon-brown, [...]

Comment from Sid
Time December 24, 2009 at 11:12 am

The following story appears in todays news. Assuming that it is factual, I have trouble reconciling that action against the western led actions.

I do not condone the occupation of sovereign land on the pretext of hunting terrorists, but, my emotive response to a legal system that reflects the culture of that country and prescribes punishment that does not meet current practice in most other countries (normally referred to as the West) makes me question the gains that are to be had from “the war on terror”. Supposing that a Western victory is had; at what cost to all?

The occupied state will continue under agreement to maintain its legal system, developed from its own culture, nominally, a religious culture that does not align with a world standard.

NEWS ARTICLE
Kidnappers to have noses, ears cut off
By South Asia correspondent Sally Sara

Posted Wed Dec 23, 2009 7:05am AEDT

A Pakistani court has ordered two men have their nose and ears cut off as punishment for inflicting similar injuries on a woman they abducted.

A judge in the eastern city of Lahore has ordered the punishment for two brothers who kidnapped their cousin, after she refused to marry one of them.

The men cut off the 20-year-old woman’s nose and ears to permanently disfigure her.

The judge ruled the men should suffer the same injuries as their victim.

The sentence was delivered under Islamic law, but similar punishments have not been carried out in other cases.

Human rights activists say more needs to be done to protect Pakistani women, without resorting to revenge.

The convicted men have also been fined and sentenced to life imprisonment.