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437개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.

  1. 2006/03/29
    3.28 프랑스, 反CPE 투쟁
    no chr.!
  2. 2006/03/28
    팔레스티나, 3.27
    no chr.!
  3. 2006/03/28
    3.28 영국.. 전국파업!
    no chr.!
  4. 2006/03/27
    이스라엘<->팔레스티나..
    no chr.!
  5. 2006/03/25
    네팔뉴스 #12
    no chr.!
  6. 2006/03/24
    프랑스, 反CPE 투쟁
    no chr.!
  7. 2006/03/23
    프랑스 투쟁......
    no chr.!
  8. 2006/03/23
    이스라엘, 인종 차별
    no chr.!
  9. 2006/03/23
    인터뷰 F. Fukuyama
    no chr.!
  10. 2006/03/22
    팔레스티나 3.21
    no chr.!

네팔 전국총파업 #2

THE 2nd DAY OF THE GENERAL STRIKE

 

Yesterday EuroNews and the German Vox TV reported heavy attacks by the RNA against demonstrations of the democratic movement.. But students and and young workers and unemployed persons were fighting back. According to CNN many leaders of the democratic movement were arrested..

 

 

eKantipur reported this..

 

Over 200 arrested, dozens injured; police open fire in Patan, Dang

Kantipur Report

KATHMANDU, April 7 - Police Friday morning rounded up over 200 demonstrators from dozens of places inside the Ring Road area of the Kathmandu Valley as protestors took out rallies chanting anti-monarchy slogans defying the government ban order on day two of the general strike.

Seven-party alliance leaders Astalaxmi Shakya, Krishna Gopal Shrestha Bachaspati Devkota, Yogendra Sangraula and Gobinda Koirala are among the arrested.

Sources at the Nepali Congress party said that around 100 leaders, party activists and students have been arrested during the protests.

Shukra Raj Sharma, Sushil Man Sherchan and Ram Chandra Adhikari were among the NC leaders arrested in the morning, party sources said.

Clashes between protestors and riot police were taking place in Patan, Bhaktapur, Kirtipur and Kalanki till late evening.

In Patan, situation remained tense as the protestors torched a motorcycle, vandalized a temporary police booth, set fire to the post office and hurled stones at police, who in turn fired rubber bullets and dozens of tear gas shells to disperse the protestors. Nepal Students Union (NSU) activist Anil Khanal was hit by a rubber bullet in the leg. He is undergoing treatment at Patan Hospital.

In the same incident Ravi Maharjan and Umesh Kumar Paudel of the NSU were seriously injured in baton charge and tear gas shell firing by the police.

Demonstrators in Patan also torched the post office at Patan Dhoka and two motorcycles. Protestors vandalized a private car and set on fire a taxi for defying the general strike.

In Gongabu, a student activist of Nepal Students Union-Democratic was injured in police baton-charge. They have locked the Gongabu VDC office.

In the Central Campus at Kirtipur, police entered the student's ladies’ hostel and resorted to baton-charge. Student leader Pranaya Singh Munna said that half a dozen students were injured in the police action. Police arrested seven students from the hostel.

This is the first time that the policemen forcefully entered the ladies’ hostel and beat-up the students indiscriminately.

The students vandalised two statues in Tribhuvan University premises. Two students were hit and injured by a police van.

The protestors have locked up the Kirtipur Municipality Office and took two security men under control for a while.

In Bhaktapur, the protestors entered the Municipality Office, set fire to documents and locked the office. They have also vandalised the Land Revenue and Education offices.

In Butwal, teargas shells fired indiscriminately by police at the Pushpa Lal Chowk landed in the nearby Lumbini Nursing Home leaving some half a dozen patients unconscious.

Civil servants join protests

Meanwhile, expressing their solidarity with the ongoing agitation of the seven-party alliance, civil servants have joined in the protests.

On the second day of the general strike today, employees at Nepal Rastra Bank, the central bank of Nepal, stopped banking operations and staged a demonstration in the premises of the office at Thapathali. Official works were also halted in all the other branch offices of the bank.

Likewise, protest demonstrations were staged at Rastriya Banijya Bank, Nepal Bank, Nepal Telecom, Agricultural Development Bank, Nepal Electricity Authority, Food Corporations, among others. The employees halted their works throughout the day today.

Doctors’ demonstrations

Doctors today staged protest demonstrations at TU Teaching Hospital and Kanti Hospital at Maharajgunj, Ayurved Hospital, Naradevi and B.P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Dharan.

Dozens of health professionals at Teaching Hospital observed a silent rally within the premises of the hospital.

 

 

NYT, IHT published this yesterday

 Nepal police fail to stem protests for democracy

 

NepalNews..

Maoists leading and controlling anti-govt. protests: Minister Thapa

 

Demonstration continues across the country; protestors set fire to Lalitpur post office

 

Guardian, UK..

Hundreds arrested in Nepal protest

 

 

 

Once again.. the developments in Nepal could lead sooner or later to a new kind of society. We should follow this developments.... Aeh... this is just my opinion... aeh... nothing else....

 

 



진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

네팔 전국총파업 #1

THE FIRST DAY OF THE NATIONWIDE

GENERAL STRIKE IN NEPAL

 

PERHAPS JUST THE BEGINNING

OF THE FINAL SHOWDOWN..

 

 

eKantipur reported following

 

Day1 of general strike: 500 arrested nationwide

The seven-party alliance Thursday staged nationwide protest demonstrations on the first day of their four-day general strike, with police arresting nearly 500 protesters across the country.

More than 300 protestors were rounded up for defying the government ban on rallies and gatherings from different places in Kathmandu today, party sources said.

The Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist) in a statement said that the police arrested 250 protestors in the capital while 64 others were arrested in Hetauda as the party activists and supporters staged demonstrations against the royal government.

Meanwhile, reports from Rajbiraj said, Darshan Yadav, an UML cadre, who was seriously injured in a police baton charge during a protest rally on Wednesday, has died.

Yadav died while undergoing treatment at Rajbiraj Zonal Hospital yesterday night.

Small protest rallies were taken out from Koteshwor, Naya Baneshwor, Chabahil, Jorpati, Basundhara Chowk, Maitidevi, Gongabu, Thamel, Bangemuda, Chhetrapati, Sitapaila, Kalanki, Kalimati, Kirtipur and other areas.

Nepali Congress secretary Shovakar Parajuli said that over 50 party members and student leaders were arrested by police from various areas in the valley this morning.

Among the arrested include party leaders Meena Pandey, Sujata Koirala, Dinbandhu Shrestha, Shashank Koirala among others.

Nepal Congress-Democratic party sources said that at least 18 activists were held by the police during demonstrations.

Government authorities had mobilized large numbers of security men including plainclothes security personnel to clampdown on the protest demonstrations.

Likewise, clashes between security personnel and protesters erupted for a long period at Kalanki. Policemen fired dozens of teargas shells to disperse the agitating activists.

Policemen baton charged the protesters even entering the houses of local residents at Kalanki. Several pedestrians and locals were injured in the police baton charges.

Educational institutions, business houses and major markets remain closed while the streets wore a deserted look in the valley.

Most of the private and public vehicles opted to remain off the roads. But press vehicles, ambulances and vehicles belonging to diplomatic missions and security forces were seen on the streets.

Police, meanwhile, said that by noon some 100 protestors had been arrested in the valley.

"A motocycle was torched in Bhotebahal and three other vehicles have been vandalized," a police officer said.

Meanwhile, student leader of Nepal Students Union said at least a dozen students were arrested from Maitidevi and Chabahil during demonstrations. A dozen others were injured during clashes with riot police.

Among the arrested include Sudeep Mohan Bhattarai, Gajendra Karki, Sundamani Acharya, Swastika Poudel and Badri Mudwari.

The students also burnt a government motorcycle in Kirtipur and vandalized two vehicles and four taxis in Chabahil. Policemen and protesters clashed for nearly four hours there.

Scores of policemen in three trucks were forced to flee the area after thousands of political activists in Kirtipur chased them away. The activists, following the clash with the policemen, took out a rally around Kirtipur.

Outside the capital, normal life was crippled by the general strike. Only vehicles belonging to media houses and ambulances could be seen on the roads along the major highways across the nation.

UML sources said that 65 protestors were arrested in Birgunj, 23 in Pokhara, 24 in Ilam, nine in Ramechap, 10 in Surkhet and six in Damauli today.

Expressing their solidarity with the ongoing mass movement launched by the seven mainstream political parties, doctors today staged demonstrations in the capital.

The doctors gathered in the premises of the TU Teaching Hospital and said that they would join the parties’ protests to help resolve the current crisis facing the nation.

Meanwhile, Dr. Kedar Nar Singh KC, who was on his way to hospital, was seriously beaten up by the police today. Dr. KC, whose legs are believed to be broken, is undergoing treatment at TU Teaching Hospital.

“A total success”

 Talking to eKantipur leaders of the alliance have vowed to intensify the demonstrations against the “autocratic monarchy” across the nation.

Nepali Congress Spokesperson, Krishna Prasad Sitaula said today’s demonstrations were a total success.

“Significant numbers of people have participated in the first day of our general strike,” Sitaula said.

He also called on all professionals and employees to join the parties’ demonstrations.

“Today’s demonstrations have shown that people are ready to agitate against autocracy,” KP Sharma Oli, UML standing committee member said.

Criticizing the government crackdown on political activists, Oli said, “It shows the government’s defeated mentality.”

Nepali Congress-Democratic Dr Minendra Rijal said that the large turn out of people proved that today’s demonstrations were a success.

“We call on all the people to join the upcoming agitation against the autocratic monarch,” he said.

 

NepalNews wrote this

Over 400 protesters arrested; dozens injured in 7-party protests

 

Al Jazeera

Hundreds arrested in Nepal protest

 

IHT, AP

Nepal arrests 300 as opposition strike begins

 

 

 

Please check out also GEFONT, the main Nepalese trade union, for a kind of independent informations

http://www.gefont.org/



 

 

 

As I wrote before there is no real independent news about the current situation in Nepal, even it could be the first liberated country in the 21st century.

For example when you check out the web site from CPN.M..

http://www.cpnm.org/

...you find nothing! It is really unfortunate! Just in the international and Nepalese, such as eKantipur, bourgeois media you find some more detailed informations... But I will try my best to find and publish more stuff about it in the next days.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

네팔뉴스 #18..

THE STATE TERROR SHORT BEFORE THE SHOWDOWN ALREADY STARTED..


 

NepalNews reported this just one day before the nationwide general strike, organized by the Seven Parties Alliance and the CPN.M

 

Govt announces curfew in the capital

Hundreds arrested in Kathmandu ahead of 7-party general strike

 

eKantipur reported this

Govt imposes curfew in capital; begins crackdown on leaders; scores of professionals arrested

In a clear attempt to foil the seven-party alliance’s four-day general strike and political showdown scheduled to begin from Thursday, the government has issued curfew orders in Kathmandu and Lalitpur with effect from 11 p.m. tonight till 3 a.m. in the morning.

The government’s move follows waves of arrests of political activists and professionals from demonstrations staged in the capital on the eve of the alliance-called April 6-9 general strike and the April 8 ‘huge’ political showdown.

Earlier today, plainclothes security personnel arrested at least three dozen leaders of various political parties from their homes while riot police arrested around 40 professionals including journalists, lawyers, professors and doctors during a peaceful demonstration at New Baneshwor, Kathmandu, Wednesday morning.

The protest rally was organized by the Professional Alliance for Peace and Democracy Nepal (PAPAD) defying the government ban order on demonstrations.

On Tuesday evening, local authorities in Kathmandu and Lalitpur issued prohibitory orders on all kinds of public meetings within the Ring Road area.

Among the arrested include 14 journalists, 13 lawyers, five professors, and three doctors.

"Police intervened in our peaceful protest and we were arrested soon after our protest rally started at 7 this morning," Balram Baniya, secretary of the Federation of Nepalese Journalists told eKantipur over the phone from police custody in Tinkune.

"The police baton charged the protestors injuring several of us. Gopal Thapaliya has been seriously injured and has been taken to Bir Hospital," said Baniya.

Those arrested are president of Federation of Nepalese Journalists Bishnu Nisthuri, general secretary Mahendra Bista, chairman of Nepal Bar Association Sambhu Thapa, former FNJ president Harihar Birahi, SAFMA's Gopal Thapaliya, journalists Kosh Raj Koirala, Yuvaraj Acharya, doctors Kedar Narshingh KC, Madhu Ghimire and Mahesh Maskey among others.

Early this morning, plainclothes security personnel arrested over three dozen leaders of various political parties from their homes, just a day before the planned four-day general strike of the seven party alliance, party sources said.

"Plainclothes police have arrested at least 20 leaders including Keshab Baral, Subhash Nemwang, Raghu Pant and Arun Nepal among others from their homes between 5-6 am Wednesday morning," said UML leader Rajendra Pandey.

Pandey also said that police raided the homes of Mukunda Neupane, Surendra Pandey, Astalaxmi Shakya, Gokarna Bista, and student leaders Khimlal Bhattarai and Bhanubhakta Dhakal this morning.

Leader of Nepali Congress party Shovakar Parajuli said that plainclothes police arrested NC central member Sunil Kumar Bhandari and leader of Nepal Trade Union Congress Manju Bhattarai from their homes this morning.

"Police also searched the houses of NC spokesman Krishna Prasad Sitaula and other leaders who were not present at their homes when the crackdown began," said Pandey.

Similarly, spokesman of Nepali Congress-Democratic Minendra Rijal, general secretary Bimalendra Nidhi, leaders Man Mohan Bhattarai and Indra Bahadur Gurung were arrested from their residences this morning.

Also arrested were NC-D student leaders Kiran Poudel, Kalyan Gurung, Shree Ram Lamichane, Nuwakot district chairman Dhurba Adhikari, Bardiya's Arun Singh Rathaur, Kathmandu district secretary Damodar Poudyal, regional chairman Chakra Thakuri and Manju Khand of NC-D Women's Association.

The leaders including Bimalendra Nidhi, Manmohan Bhattarai, Jip Tsering Lama, Bhim Rawal, Subash Nembwang, Minendra Rijal, Mohan Basnet, Chetan Thakuri and Manju Khad, who were being held at Duwakot in Bhaktapur and Mahendra Police Club in Kathmandu were, however, released in the presence of Kathmandu District Court authorities in the afternoon.

Journos arrested, released later

Meanwhile, police detained at least 14 journalists who tried to defy the government ban order on gatherings and rallies from New Road area in Kathmandu Wednesday afternoon.

Those arrested include Kanak Mani Dixit, Shiva Gaunle, Damodar Dawadi, Baburam Dhakal, Bal Kumar Neupane, Nirmala Sharma, Hemnata Kafle, Dharmendra Jha, Rajendra Aryal, Dev Raj Rimal. The names of four other journalists could not be immediately known, reported our correspondent Deepesh Das Shrestha from New Road.

They were arrested from a protest rally organised by the Professional Alliance for Peace and Democracy Nepal (PAPAD).

Police intervened as the protestors moved forward from New Road to Indrachowk defying the ban orders.

All of them were released later.

 

..............................................................................

 

More news from the current situation in Nepal, but unfortunately not independent, you will find here

 

BBC News - Nepal police in rally crackdown

 

BBC News - Nepal rebels call a partial truce

 

BBC News - Nepal government rejects truce

 

...............................................................

And last but not least please read the interview with the chairperson of the CPN.M with the BBC

 

Prachanda interview: Transcript

 

 

 

 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

독일, 프랑스..

The German bourgeois magazine Der Spiegel published yesterday following articles

 

Letter From Berlin
 
Germany's School of Hard Knocks

By Marc Young

 

Recent revelations about a violence-plagued high school in Berlin have Germans worried about the state of their country's education system, the decay of modern society and the poor integration of foreigners. But are things really that bad and are Germany's immigrants to blame?

 

Anyone who's spent time in Berlin knows what a safe city it is. Sure, there's petty crime and occasional violence like in any big city, but compared to London or even the new cleaned-up, Disneyfied version of New York City, Germany's capital is a very peaceful place to live. That is, unless you happen to be teacher at the Rütli high school in Berlin's scruffy Neukölln neighborhood.

Last week, a letter from the school's faculty describing a complete breakdown of discipline and growing tendency towards violence by the students was made public. The situation had gotten so bad that some teachers refused to enter their classrooms without a mobile phone they could use to call for help if they were threatened. One Rütli teacher even told SPIEGEL that he often dreamed one of the out of control teens would "finally burn the place down" so he wouldn't have to face another day working there.

So what's life like at a Berlin school where 83 percent of the student body has a non-German background? The faculty letter describes an institution that appears to fail both its students and the teachers working there: "We must realize that the mood in some classes currently is marked by aggressiveness, disrespect, and ignorance towards adults ... The tendency toward violence against property is growing ... In most of the families of our students, they are the only ones getting up in the morning. For them, school is a stage and battleground for attention. The worst culprits become role models."

The letter created an immediate uproar across the country. How could this happen? The ensuing frenzy by the German media made the Rütli school sound like it could rival the worst inner-city schools in the United States. Police and metal detectors at the doors was the answer offered by a few pundits. Some politicians pointed to the extremely high percentage of students from immigrant families. Was it not evidence of Germany's failure to integrate foreigners and a warning against further immigration?

But the calls for prison-like security and the xenophobia-tinged scapegoating of foreigners completely miss the mark. If anything, the whole episode is more an indictment of an antiquated German school system that shunts students off into different academic tracks early on, as well as the country's inability to make many immigrants feel they are valued part of German society.

 

Neukölln is not South Central LA

 

To be sure, by German standards Neukölln might be a rough and tumble place. The Berlin district does struggle with widespread joblessness and a fair chunk of its non-German inhabitants are indeed marginalized from the rest of society. But the neighborhood and its schools certainly can't compare with downtown Detroit. No one is getting shot on a daily basis -- not at Rütli and not in the neighborhood -- and there is nothing of the kind of gang violence found in South Central Los Angeles.

The kids at the Rütli are without a doubt disrespectful, destructive and uncivilized. But such uncouth youths are a problem wherever apathetic and disengaged parents fail to care for their children. It would therefore be easy to chalk up the "scandal" about the school simply as another example of Germans talking down their own country. It's in fashion these days to complain about the decay of Germany's economy and society. Whether it's the country's chronically high unemployment, the inability to compete in a globalized world, or simply the poor state of German soccer, moaning and Cassandra-like panic has become something of a national pastime. But dismissing this as Teutonic malaise would be wrong for several reasons.

While not as bad as they are made out to be, Germany shouldn't wait until things get worse before it tackles the problems exposed by the Rütli school affair. If anything, this should serve as incentive for a long-overdue revamp of the German school system. Currently, high schools are broadly separated into three tracks: Gymnasium for university-bound students, Realschule for the less academically inclined, and Hauptschule -- vocational schools like Rütli -- that all too often end up being receptacles for problem kids from troubled homes. Germans have unfortunately long clung to this inflexible system which needlessly segregates children early on and frequently determines a person's later station in life. In Berlin, the children from many immigrant families are predictably more likely end up at a Hauptschule than Gymnasium.

 

A socio-economic problem

 

And that leads to the next point: Although poor integration certainly doesn't help matters, the horror stories emanating from the Rütli school have less to do with immigration than with basic socio-economic problems. It wouldn't be hard to find a young black man born and raised in Detroit who feels just as marginalized in American society as a young Arab or Turk in Neukölln does in Germany. And there are most certainly a number of schools in economically depressed eastern Germany filled with just as many troubled German kids from failed households.

The outgoing principal at the Rütli school, Brigitte Pick, recognized that in a letter published on Monday in the Berlin daily newspaper Der Tagesspiegel. "The actual problem doesn't stem from the Arabic, Turkish or Serbian background of the students, but rather the lack of opportunities for them," she wrote. "The Hauptschule is only chosen by marginalized groups without a future and from students expelled from elsewhere."

Cem Özdemir, a Turkish-German member of the European Parliament, pointed out in a SPIEGEL ONLINE commentary last week that this has, in effect, exacerbated efforts to integrate foreigners into German society, since the children of immigrants and the children of middle-class Germans have very little contact with each other in the country's school system.

Of course, when parents no longer teach their children how to behave as civilized human beings, it makes it very difficult for teachers to do their job no matter how committed they are as educators. But this is a universal lament in nearly every modern society. Unless young men and women feel that they have both a stake in their society and a shot at a decent future in it, there is little a shocked and outraged nation can do to convince them otherwise.

 

More about this issue maybe later, when I got a workplace, computer with internet... Right now I am just writing in PC bang..

.................................................................

 

 

France's Lost Generation
 
The Faces Behind the Protests

By Francois Krug in Paris

 

Behind the scenes of mass protest in France are high school students who fear a dismal future, university students who see their opportunities shrinking and McJobbers who are struggling to make ends meet as they are pushed from one company to the next.

These days, Paris's Latin Quarter looks more like Baghdad's Green Zone than the traditional home of France's thinkers and writers. The neighborhood has become a no-go zone. The streets surrounding the Sorbonne University are empty and blocked with steel barricades. Students and teachers have given way to policemen in riot gear who stand ready to repel assaults with water cannons and tear gas.

The Sorbonne has long been a reminder of the power of youth protests in the country since the May 1968 upheaval that shook the government of then-president Charles de Gaulle to its core. More than three decades later, it has again become a lightning rod for social upheaval. On March 10, more than 200 students occupied the Sorbonne to protest labor reforms recently pushed through parliament by Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin. The government promptly sent in the riot police to drive the rebellious students out. Officials had won the battle, but the Sorbonne protests sparked a nationwide political war that pitted university and high school students fearful for their future prospects against the government. The protest turned into a national revolt that quickly created disruptions at more than 80 of the country's universities and hundreds of high schools. This Tuesday, the country experienced its second general strike in seven days

When Villepin announced in March he would loosen French labor laws to make it easier to hire and fire young workers, disillusioned youth erupted in anger -- evoking memories of 1968 and last autumn's riots in the banlieue suburbs of Paris. To curb the staggering youth unemployment rate, which rose to 22 percent in March, Villepin created the "contrat première embauche," or first-time employment contract. Previously, it had been extraordinarily difficult for French firms to fire employees who had been with a company six months or longer, but CPE allows workers 26 or under to be fired without notice or reason within their first two years on the job. Villepin had hoped the new legislation would give employers greater incentives to hire young people. 

For a few weeks, the government staunchly defended CPE, but as the protests mounted, President Chirac intervened on Friday, announcing he would sign the law, but he order changes to be made to its most controversial clauses. The probationary period would be reduced to one year and employers would need to state a reason for firing workers.

Chirac's reassurances, however, have done little to assuage French youth. The Sorbonne has now been closed for three weeks, and all of its students are gone but one.

 

The lone counter-protester

 

Alexandre Duclos sits on a camping chair right outside the sealed-off Sorbonne Square. For a week now, the 23-year-old philosophy student, who is working to obtain his doctorate, has been holding a hunger strike in an attempt to reopen the university here on the sidewalk. "France has become a police state," he says in a weary voice. "This government is deaf and blind. Look at what they did in the suburbs (during the November riots) and what's happening now. Their only answer to people's sufferings is to send in the army. This country is sick."

Duclos has turned his abstract philosophy into reality by starting a protest of his own. But once the student movement is over, he will be forced to confront harsher realities -- on the job market. "I haven't thought about it yet," he admits. "Actually, I don't care." Asked about his dream job, he hesitates. "I guess I'd like to be a street philosopher," he finally answers, without any trace of irony.

As it turns out, Duclos has found an unintentional job as a tour guide.

An Italian woman stops by. She is disappointed by the neighborhood's tranquility. "Nothing's happening here, where should I go?," she asks him. "What are you looking for?" he asks. "Students, protests, action!" Duclos directs her to nearby Censier University.

 

The occupied campus

 

Further south in the Latin Quarter, student protesters still control Censier University. They have been enforcing their own rules on the campus for five weeks now and access is barred to strangers. Courses have been cancelled and replaced with political debates, documentary film screenings and plays. Every other day, students vote on whether to continue the strike and the occupation of the university.

This may look at first like a reenactment of the glory days of 1968. But there's a marked difference: the '68ers' had dreams, but today's students only have fears. "We don't want a revolution, we want jobs," explains Mathilde, a 21-year-old Italian studies major. "Baby-boomers could choose their jobs and keep them for life." Truth be told, their parents did have it easier: In 1968, only 6 percent of French university graduates were still jobless after finishing school. That rate has since swollen to a discouraging 29 percent. And for the first time since the end of World War II, young workers are earning less than their parents did at the same age.

"We're supposed to build the future, but our generation is being sacrificed," says Romain, a 21-year-old communications student who, like many others at Censier, declines to give his last name. "I'm speaking as part of a collective movement, not as an individual."

For many French students, giving up job protections that have long served as the cornerstone of French labor policy is unthinkable. "With CPE, the government is blackmailing us," says Nadège, a 20-year-old media and cinema studies student. "What they're saying is: If you want a job, you have to accept  the fact that you may be fired at any time without complaining." Nadège works part-time in a warehouse, wrapping DVD boxes, and she has a better sense of the job market than most of her friends at the university. "I'm ready to accept reforms, but not this one," she explains. "But when you protest against reform in this country, the government describes you as a conservative. Our generation isn't conservative or revolutionary. We simply refuse to be singled out like this. This is a social protest, not a cultural revolution."

 

The high school students

 

The CPE legislation has also outraged high school students, who have served as an important part of the anti-CPE protest movement. The high school arm is being led by the Union Nationale Lycéenne (UNL), the country's national high school student union.

UNL's tiny office looks like a student's bedroom -- empty soda cans, paper packaging from fast food and piles of leaflets and newspapers are strewn about all over the desks and floor. But the office, hidden in a rundown building in the Pigalle neighborhood far north of the Latin Quarter, also serves as the control room of the high school protest movement

"Sorry for the mess," Floréale Mangin says, apologizing to visitors. "We've had a pretty busy day." Early in the morning, UNL members were arrested while blockading Paris's city freeway. In the afternoon, others invaded a train station and stopped traffic for two hours. And Mangin, one of the union's leaders, is now getting ready for a night of meetings and phone calls to prepare for the next wave of demonstrations.

At 17, she has already mastered the French rules of protest. Rule No. 1, she says, is to use any means necessary to put pressure on the government -- including disrupting the lives of normal people with traffic jams and train delays. "Making noise is the only way to get heard," Mangin explains in a soft-toned voice. Rule No. 2: When the government seems ready to bend, demand even more. Mangin remains unmoved by Chirac's plan to water down the CPE: "We won't negotiate until they fully back down."

Mangin is part of a new generation of protesters. Unlike the 1968 revolutionaries, these rebels are highly pragmatic. "We're not the children of the '68ers,'" she says, "Our movement is different. We are dealing with education and unemployment -- real issues, not ideals. This is a social protest, not a cultural revolution."

But there is more to this than the usual social protest. It is also a political war between generations. Young high school and college students are challenging politicians who are older than their parents and sometimes old enough to be their grandparents. Chirac is 73 and 85 percent of the representatives at the Assemblée Nationale are over 45.

"They don't live in the same world as we do, how can they decide what is good for us and build our future against our will?" Mangin asks. As a teenager, she has already honed her political skills, but she is not a full citizen yet. She will first be eligible to vote in 2007, just in time for crucial presidential and general elections.

 

20 and unemployed

 

Eugène Simsek is taking a cigarette break outside the local office of the government's job agency in the working-class neighborhood of Clignancourt, on the northern outskirts of Paris. The 20-year-old unemployed worker has just printed out the latest job postings and is giving them a careful read. "Restaurants, only restaurants," he mumbles. "I'm tired of restaurants!"

The documents in Simsek's hands would infuriate student protesters. They are proposals for jobs that adhere to an earlier version of CPE that was created for small businesses last year without much protest. Economists are still doubtful that the reforms will have much of an impact on the economy. Major employers are worried about the current uproar and most haven't adopted the controversial contracts yet. But if Simsek's case is any indication, Villepin may be right -- at least in certain respects. The new legislation could help Simsek to find a new job.

And the fact that it wouldn't give Simsek any job security doesn't seem to bother him. Since he left school two years ago, Simsek has gotten by with a handful of McJobs -- working as a bartender, a waiter and as a call-center operator. Last year, he finally signed an unlimited-length contract and became a salesman for a window-making company. His employer had hired him under the contract because of generous tax incentives, but it then turned around and laid him off on the last week of his three-month probationary period. Simsek has been jobless for two months now.

Villepin's legislation is expected to provide a boost to people like Simsek, who have limited education and experience and remain hopelessly unemployed. Unfortunately, as the government and the media focus their attention on the university students, people like Simsek remain the unheard voices of the French revolt. For them, unsteady jobs are not a threat. They are already a reality.

"Villepin's contract is unfair," he says, "But it's no worse than the other ones. I'm ready to sign it. I can't refuse proposals. Right now, I have no hope of getting a steady job." 

 

Perhaps the current situation in France for former students is not so different from the situation in S. Korea.... 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

팔레스티나 vs. 이스라엘..

The Israeli bourgeois daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported yesterday following

 

 

Al-Zahar wants 'Palestine from river to sea'

Palestinian foreign minister, Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar tells officials ministry's policy should be to establish Palestinian state in place of Israel, says Jewish State must not be recognized

Israel must not be recognized and the Palestinian Foreign Ministry should aim to establish a Palestinian State from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean, in place of the Jewish State, PA Foreign Minister Mahmoud al-Zahar said according to Palestinian media reports.

 

Al-Zahar made the remarks during his first meeting with Foreign Ministry officials and ahead of the first session to be held by the Hamas-led Palestinian government.

 

Fatah officials, who are closely monitoring the situation, said in recent hours that prospects for the continued existence of the Hamas government appear slim. Such government would not be able to last as long as Hamas refrains from modifying its positions, which only serve to isolate the cabinet, the Fatah sources said.

 

The Hamas-led government's first session was Wednesday in Ramallah and Gaza and headed by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh. The session was held via satellite, with more than half of the government ministers staying in Ramallah.

 

During the session, Haniyeh announced "Palestinian coffers are empty", and added that his government inherited problems left behind by the previous Fatah-led government.

 

No diplomatic declarations were expected during the meeting, which was mostly dedicated to internal Palestinian affairs, and particularly efforts to battle the financial crisis faced by the PA through a three-month emergency plan.

 

Meanwhile, the Palestinian street is closely monitoring the new government's conduct and its chances of survival, while Hamas works to end the growing isolation faced by the government.

 

Elsewhere, London-based Arabic-language newspaper al-Hayat reported that Fatah is considering the establishment of a shadow cabinet that would operate along the Hamas government and be ready to take its place should the official government collapse....

 

Read the full article, including many talkbacks, here

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3236542,00.html

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

네팔뉴스 #17

THE NEPALESE GOVERNMENT IS THREATENING WITH STATE TERROR

 

NepalNews reported yesterday..

 

Govt is set to foil seven-party agitation: Home Minister

 

Home Minister Kamal Thapa has said the government is fully prepared to crack down on the pre-scheduled four-day general strike of the seven opposition parties beginning April 6.

“The government will take strong steps to contain the general strike and other protest programmes of the parties. Since the Maoists are also involved in the general strike, the government must foil it,” Thapa said at a programme organised in Lalitpur on Tuesday to welcome the cadres of Nepal Samata Party (Samajbadi) who joined his Rastriya Prajatra Party (Thapa).

The Home Minister claimed that there was a “very dangerous Maoist conspiracy” behind the protest programmes called by the seven parties. He also insisted that the parties were playing into the hands of the rebels.

The government, however, would use “minimum force” to foil the seven parties’ protest programmes, Thapa said, without explaining what he meant by minimum force.

Thapa also made it a point to slam the Maoist statement to observe ceasefire in the Kathmandu Valley. “The ceasefire is nothing but a subterfuge. There is a dangerous conspiracy behind it,” he said and added that Monday’s Maoist statement was nothing but propaganda.

The Home Minister’s views came as the opposition alliance continued sporadic protests in Kathmandu during which over two dozen leaders and activists were arrested.

In an attempt to thwart the pre-scheduled mass demonstration of the alliance in the capital, the district administrations of Kathmandu and Lalitpur today announced indefinite prohibitory orders within Rind Road area with effect from Wednesday.

http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2006/apr/apr04/news08.php 

 

4.4 student protest in Kathmandu

 

eKantipur wrote this

 

Govt bans public gatherings in capital

The district administration offices of Kathmandu and Lalitpur on Tuesday issued sweeping orders banning all kinds of public gatherings in areas within the Ring Road.

According to separate statements issued by the DAOs of Lalitpur and Kathmandu, the ban will be in place from Wednesday, just a day before the seven-party alliance’s pre-scheduled four-day general strike and capital-centred political showdown.

Student and youth leaders associated with the agitating seven mainstream political parties have said they will answer fittingly if the government resorts to draconian measures to foil the alliance’s peaceful general strike scheduled for 6 to 9 April in the capital.

Last week, Home Minister Kamal Thapa had said that the government would foil the upcoming parties’ four-day nationwide general strike, “at any cost”.

Yesterday, in a sign of support for the peaceful general strike and demonstrations, Maoist rebels announced to halt any “military action” in the Kathmandu Valley with effect from Monday evening.

The statements issued by the chief district officers of the two districts said the ban was imposed due to the increasing violence and unruly activities in several parts of the Kathmandu Metropolis and Lalitpur Sub Metropolis.

In a statement issued yesterday, Chairman of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M), Prachanda alias Pushpa Kamal Dahal, said his party had decided to “halt all kinds of military actions in the Kathmandu Valley “keeping in view the requests made by the seven parties and civil society groups and also to expose the claims by the royal government that the Maoists were planning to infiltrate the protest programmes organized by the SPA.”

On Jan. 20, the government had imposed ban orders and a daylong curfew to foil the alliance’s political showdown.

 

Meanwhile some days ago the main Nepalese Trade Union Gefont decided the full support of the nation wide general strike.

http://www.gefont.org/summary.asp?flag=3&cid=85

 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

4.4 프랑스, 反CPE 투쟁날...

Yesterday again, according to the bourgeois German media, in France more than 2,5 Million people demonstrated against the CPE.


 

For more details and a chronology of the struggle day please check out

English language coverage of the young workers’ revolt in France

http://www.libcom.org/blog/

 

 

The British Guardian reported following

Demonstrators march in France


 

IHT reported this

Protesters take to the streets again in France

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

오늘, 프랑스, 反CPE날..

Yesterdays IHT wrote this..

 

France prepares again for a day of strikes

 

France prepared for another week of protests and a nationwide strike on Tuesday after student organizations and labor unions rejected a compromise offer by President Jacques Chirac on the government's new youth employment law.

Chirac formally enacted the legislation on Sunday and sought at the same time to defuse a political crisis by calling on lawmakers to soften two of the law's most contested provisions: a probation period of two years and the right of employers to fire workers with no justification during that period.

On the face of it, Chirac's decision to sign the measure was a face-saving effort for the embattled Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, who had almost single-handedly championed the measures.

But by leaving changes in the hands of the governing Union for a Popular Movement party, or UMP, the president effectively bolstered Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, Villepin's main rival on the right, who also is head of the UMP.

"We now have a clear sense that we are no longer dealing with the prime minister but with the UMP lawmakers, and their leader is Nicolas Sarkozy," François Chérèque, head of the CFDT, France's second largest union, said in a radio interview over the weekend.

But critics of the law appeared more determined than ever to bring it down, with or without modifications.

"The declarations by the president will boost the mobilization" on Tuesday, said Jean-Claude Mailly, leader of the labor union Force Ouvrière. "I have made a list of all strike notices. It will be a big day."

Like last week, when strikes were organized across much of the country and hundreds of thousands of people poured into the streets of Paris alone, public transportation is expected to be significantly affected Tuesday. Both the national rail company, the SNCF, and the Paris transportation system, the RATP, predicted disruptions, while walkouts also were planned by employees at Air France.

 

Six of seven civil service unions said they backed the strike and, in a sign that the protests this week may surpass those last week, workers in media, banking and telecommunications said they would join the effort.

In addition, the opposition Socialist Party made a formal call for the first time to join the strikes. On Sunday members were at the Richard Lenoir market in Paris, near the Bastille monument, distributing fliers stating: "Now more than ever: Withdraw the CPE," the French acronym for the labor measure.

Meanwhile, a new opinion survey by the CSA institute, published Sunday in Le Parisien newspaper, indicated that 62 percent of France's citizens found Chirac's offer unconvincing. Two out of three said they thought the student movement had been strengthened, and three out of four thought that Villepin, the architect of the law, had been weakened.

The president's double-barreled approach of enacting the legislation while calling for changes has left the country in a legal limbo: Companies have the right to employ new staff members under the new youth contract in its current form, even though the president has asked them not to do so until the changes have gone through Parliament.

In a televised address Friday night, which was watched by more than 20 million people, Chirac asked that lawmakers halve the current probation period to one year and oblige employers to justify any decision to dismiss a young employee.

Laurence Parisot, head of the Medef, France's biggest employer federation, said on Europe 1 radio over the weekend that she hoped companies would not use the new contract before it was revised.

Jack Lang, one of many potential Socialist presidential candidates, was quoted in Le Parisian on Sunday as saying, "Legally speaking, it's incomprehensible to sign a law and say that you should not apply it."

And in a front-page editorial in the newspaper Le Monde, its publisher Jean-Marie Colombani described Chirac's request as a nondecision that leaves the country adrift: "He did not come down on either side. He was content to evade the issue."

The leader of the UMP in the lower house of Parliament, Bernard Accoyer, said he would try to meet union leaders to discuss changes in the law as early as Tuesday. He said that, at the earliest, a new bill could be expected in early May.

Sporadic protests against the legislation continued through the weekend, although the police said the country was relatively calm compared with the heated end of the week. About 1,500 demonstrators assembled in Paris, while 300 people organized a counterdemonstration nearby. Students, who late last week embarked on a series of wildcat protests, pledged similar actions in the days ahead.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/03/news/france.php

................................................................................

 

To follow today the latest developments there, please check out

 

English language coverage of the young workers’ revolt in France


 


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

네팔뉴스 #16

While the National General Strike in Nepal, starting on Thursday, organized by the Seven Parties Alliance, together with the CPN.M is coming closer, eKantipur published following article

 

Maoists halt "military actions" in Kathmandu Valley

The Maoist rebels have brought to a halt all kinds “military actions” in the Kathmandu Valley with effect from Monday evening.

Issuing a statement this afternoon, Chairman of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M), Prachanda alias Pushpa Kamal Dahal, said his party had decided to “halt all kinds of military actions in the Kathmandu Valley until the next statement from the party.”

The Maoist declaration comes three days ahead of the seven-party alliance’s (SPA) April 6-9 nationwide general strike and a major showdown in Kathmandu on April 8.

In the statement Prachanda has made it clear that his party had taken this decision “keeping in view the requests made by the seven parties and civil society groups and also to expose the claims by the royal government that the Maoists were planning to infiltrate the protest programmes organized by the SPA.

“To expose the conspiracy of the autocratic feudal group to instill military terror on the capital-focussed peaceful showdown under the pretext of infiltration by the People’s Liberation Army, to create an easy environment for the general public to move forward with the peaceful movement with determination, and taking seriously the requests made by the seven political parties and the civil society,” the statement reads, “all military actions in the Kathmandu Valley have been suspended until the next statement from the party.”   

The statement, however, reiterates the Maoists’ active support to SPA’s peaceful protest programmes and has appealed to the people of all levels “to come out on the streets to create a new history of a Loktantrik Nepal.”

Govt orders employees not to attend parties’ programmes

Meanwhile, the government today ordered all government employees not to participate in the SPA’s protest demonstrations.

The warning came in a letter sent to all the ministries and constitutional bodies by the Office of the Council of Ministers.

Yesterday, Chief Secretary Lok Man Singh Karki had said that the government would immediately take action against employees who participate in the SPA’s movement.

Parties welcome Maoist move

Meanwhile, talking to eKantipur over the phone, Nepali Congress Spokesperson Krishna Prasad Sitaula welcomed the Maoists’ announcement.

“The step taken by the Maoists in view of the peaceful demonstrations in Kathmandu is a welcome move,” said Sitaula, adding that it would help make the alliance’s programme peaceful.

Welcoming the Maoists’ declaration on a light note, UML Standing Committee member K.P. Sharma Oli urged the Maoist leadership to declare a truce nationwide.

“The valley-centred ceasefire is not satisfactory in the sense that it cannot make a positive contribution to restore peace in the country. The ceasefire should be made nationwide to make it a complete success,” he said.

Minendra Rijal, spokesperson of the Nepali Congress-Democratic said the Maoists have made an encouraging move.

He, however, said a nationwide ceasefire would be more effective to make the environment conducive for the alliance's peaceful movement. He said, “I hope the Maoists will think about it in the days ahead.”

Earlier this week, Home Minister Kamal Thapa claimed that the government will foil the upcoming parties’ four-day nationwide general strike, “at any cost”.

The Minister also reiterated that the government would “treat the seven-party alliance like the Maoists as the pre-planned programmes are that of the rebels.”

The government also issued a statement urging the public to defer visits to Kathmandu except in urgent cases saying that the measure was part of its strict security arrangement aimed at controlling "terrorist activities".

http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?&nid=70203

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

팔레스티나 미래..

..from the Israeli point of view

 

Yesterdays Isreali bourgeois daily Yedioth Achronoth published following article

 

Corrupt kleptocracy vs. tyrannical theocracy

 

It is time to re-think the conventional wisdom about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

A central tenet of prevailing conventional wisdom regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict is that the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the territory that came under Israeli administration in 1967 – the West Bank (Judea and Samaria) and Gaza - is a sine qua non for a resolution of a seemingly intractable dispute.

 

Indeed this position is so widely held that it has become almost an "article of faith" in international circles - and woe betide anyone with the temerity to question its validity. In fact, one of the remarkable aspects of this belief is that appears totally immune to the ravages of empirical fact and historical experience.

 

While it is reasonably understandable why this view has taken root in the Arab and Muslim world, it is far more puzzling why this should be the case among those who purport to be liberal intellectuals. For there is an accumulating body of evidence to suggest that the establishment of a Palestinian state, under any foreseeable future leadership, is likely to have the perverse consequence of promoting values that are diametrically opposed to those to which its liberal intellectual proponents allegedly subscribe… and which, curiously enough, they invoke to justify their support for such a state.

 

Little reason for hope

 

There is, of course, little reason to believe that a nascent Palestinian state will blossom into a political entity significantly different from all the other Arab states in the region, where accepted parameters of liberal democracy such as the freedom of the press, individual liberties, due process, the equitable dispensation of justice and the rule of law, and the status of women are hardly the distinguishing hallmarks of the incumbent regimes.

 

And although the Palestinians indeed managed to conduct a reasonably orderly election (albeit in large measure under Israeli auspices and which brought Hamas to power), the first decade of self-rule has often been characterized by persecution of journalists, harassment of the press, arbitrary arrests, mob lynchings (by Palestinians of Palestinians), and a high rate of "honor killings" of Palestinian women by their male kinfolk.

 

With the election of Hamas, it is doubtful, to say the least, that matters will improve. Indeed, quite the reverse is likely to be true. Thus, it is puzzling why those who profess support for the tenets of liberal democracy should push for the establishment of an entity in which such anti-liberal features are likely to flourish.

 

Intellectual honesty

 

This conundrum needs to be addressed seriously, for it seems highly anomalous that the notion of statehood should be given such overriding sway that it outweighs all other considerations – including those of the personal welfare and quality of life of individual Palestinians who have been left languishing in misery while a failed and fraudulent leadership has lead, or rather mislead, them deeper and deeper into an endless saga of tragedy.

 

Surely then, at some point, the international community should pause and reassess the moral validity and the practical viability of the Palestinian statehood issue. In many respects it is becoming increasing difficult to defend the moral merit and the political prudence of the entire endeavor.

 

The enduring inability of the Palestinians to succeed in establishing the apparatus of a state for themselves is a matter that its proponents – in the interest of intellectual integrity - must address. For only the dogmatic, the doctrinaire, and the demagogic can overlook the irksome question of why the Palestinians have failed so resoundingly and consistently to achieve statehood when so many other national movements with far less moral and material support have succeeded in far more daunting conditions – even against mighty empires rather than a micro-state like Israel.

 

Unprecedented support

 

Of course, some will protest that it is misleading to characterize Israel in this manner and point out that it has enjoyed strong superpower support of the US. True enough.

 

But it should also be remembered that for almost four decades, the Palestinians, too, had had even more unmitigated support from a superpower, the USSR, plus that of China and of India, the whole "non-aligned" bloc of nations, and the entire Muslim world. To this one might add the strong endorsement of major international institutions such as the U.N., and highly favorable coverage of nearly all the leading media channels together with strong sources of sympathy within the U.S. administration, particularly the Arabists down at "Foggy Bottom".

 

So a lack of international political backing certainly cannot account for the poor Palestinian performance. Neither can the lack of international economic support - for in the period between the signing of the Oslo Accords in the early 90's and the outbreak of the Palestinian "intifada" late in 2000, the Palestinians the highest per capita recipients of international aid in world.

 

Yet in spite of these very favorable conditions – certainly far more benign than those experienced by almost any other movement of national freedom since WWII - the Palestinians have not managed to produce any semblance of a stable productive society. Indeed, quite the opposite is true.

 

Almost a decade-and-a-half has passed since the benevolent Oslo Accords were virtually thrust upon the Palestinians by an unprecedented accommodative Israeli administration which, to a large degree, not only recognized their claims for self determination, but actually identified with them.

 

Yet in this period the Palestinian leadership used the Oslo process to create a repressive and regressive interim regime that provided little, but successfully managed to pillage the Palestinian people. Indeed the Palestinian Authority has perhaps the unique, if dubious, distinction of attaining "failed state" status even before it was established.

 

Kleptocracy or theocracy

 

It is highly doubtful that the radical Islamists who have now assumed power will be able to remedy this condition. Almost half a century after the establishment of their "national liberation" movement, the Palestinian leadership has provided its people with a harsh choice between two distinctly unpalatable alternatives: the corrupt kleptocracy of the former regime or tyrannical theocracy of the present one.

 

In light of these grim and grisly facts, it seems only proper that the international community pause to reflect on the feasibility and desirability of persisting with the idea of a Palestinian state as if it were an axiomatic inevitability. This should be especially true for those who have a genuine concern for the humanitarian plight of the Palestinian people.

 

Other possibilities

  

It seems not only proper, but pressing, that the international community begin to seriously consider scenarios for the resolution of the Middle East conflict that do not include the creation of a Palestinian state. Such alternative paradigms should focus on attempting to alleviate genuine humanitarian suffering rather than endeavoring to implement spurious political enterprises.

 

While the details of such alternatives are beyond the scope of this article, one alarming point should, in closing , be emphasized: Unless there is a paradigmatic shift in the thinking applied to the Palestinian predicament, the recent events in the Palestinian administered territories – particularly the widespread lawlessness and factional gunfights – suggest that the Palestinian people may soon be forced to face a third alternative even more uninviting than the previous two – that is the prospect of a descent into chronic chaos and anarchy.

 

Dr. Martin Sherman is a political scientist at Tel Aviv University

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3235672,00.html

 

.....................................................................................

 

Btw.., if you want to fight your enemy you have to study him, or her... W.I. Lenin

 

.....................................................................................

 

PS.. Latest news and articles

IDF kills Palestinian boy in clashes north of Jerusalem

 

 


Fatah activist makes propaganda for Hamas+Fatah

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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