사이드바 영역으로 건너뛰기

9.23 反戰 집회..

 

 

Today's anti-war rally in Seoul..

 

 

 

 

..was, in my opinion, nothing more as for "a clear conscience"/self satisfaction - just a kind of polit-entertainment... without any results/consequences(mi-anh hae-yo.. I'm really sorry!)

 

 

 

 

(*)

 

A report(in Korean), incl. a video, you can check out here(Voice of People):

 

http://www.voiceofpeople.org/new/2006092351557.html


A lot of beautiful pictures - but finally that's all what's left.. - you can see here:

 

http://blog.jinbo.net/tkdcjsdk/?pid=75

 

http://blog.jinbo.net/save_nature/?pid=148

 

[9.23] 자이툰 연내 완전 철군을 위한 9.23 반전행동 

 

Ohmynews published this(also incl. video):

http://www.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?at_code=362067&ar_seq=1

 


 

500 anti-war demonstrators..

(Hankyoreh wrote "1천여명..", they just can't count..^^)

 

 

 

 

Hopefully tomorrow's peace rally/demo will have more power..


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

* "'STOP THE WAR' 페이스 페인팅": wow, it's a really strange language...^^

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

공무원노조 탄압..

 

S.K. STATE TERROR

AGAINST LABOR UNION

 

 "The government tries to destroy our union, using the same methods as the past military dictatorships. We will strongly resist the authorities.." (Kwon Seung-bok, chairman of KGEU)

 

 

Union Offices of Government Employees Shut Down (Korea Times, 9.22)
 
 
The Ministry of Government Administration and Home Affairs Friday began to shut down 140 outlawed offices of the Korean Government Employees’ Union (KGEU) across the country despite strong protest from the unionists.


In addition to 12 offices such as those located in Socho-gu, Seoul; Namgu, Inchon; and Kyonggi Province which were already closed, 140 more were to be subject to the crackdown, according to the ministry.
 

Since the ministry announced the deadline to close the KGEU offices Thursday, tension between the two parties has been increasing.


It has decided to forcibly close the offices of alleged illegal civil servants’ unions, such as the KGEU, which used government buildings without permission, unless they are converted into lawful labor unions.
 

With the closure scheduled, the ministry sent documents to local entities nationwide on Thursday, with the request to prepare thoroughly so that the shutdown process takes place without difficulty.


``KGEU has been conducting illegal group activities, such as election intervention, by creating a trade union against law. It was unavoidable to take measures to forcibly close down the offices,’’ said a ministry official.
 

However, KGEU Chairman Kwon Seung-bok started a hunger strike in Seoul yesterday to protest the crackdown.


``We have been carrying out just union activities but the government is forcibly closing offices just because we have not registered them,’’ said Kwon. ``We will continue to fight together other civil organizations and labor unions such as the Korea Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU).’’
 

About 200 law experts and lawyers yesterday urged the government to withdraw its decision to close down KGEU offices and stop oppressing union activities of government employees
 

``Many other labor organizations including the International Labor Organization (ILO) have emphasized the need to permit unionized activities of government employees and solve the problems through dialogue. Instead of blocking their activities through forceful means, the government should support the establishment of KGEU,’’ a KGEU statement said.
 

With the deadline for the crackdown approached, the unionized government employees across the nation braced themselves to block the government’s shutdown.
 

Unionized workers from Mapo and Kuro district offices in Seoul were holding sit-in strike surrounding themselves with barricades with water and electricity supply stopped.

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200609/kt2006092217284511990.htm

 

 

 

Source of the pics: Chamsesang News

 

 

 

Reports in Korean you can read here(by Voice of People, incl. two video docus):

행자부는 최악의 악덕사업주인가

행자부, 전국곳곳 공무원노조 사무실 침탈

 

[공무원탄압분쇄19:00]용산구청도 강제폐쇄 (Chamsesang News)

 

And another documentary by Chamsesang you can watch here:

http://www.newscham.net/news/view.php?board=coolmedia&id=1429

(공무원노조 마포구청 노조사무실 강제 폐쇄)

 

 

 

The ultra-conservative daily JoongAng Ilbo is writing following:

 

Officials close offices of civil service union
 
Enforcing an earlier ultimatum, the Home Ministry yesterday ordered local governments to immediately close 150 offices of the Korean Government Employees' Union's around the country. Members of the unauthorized union put up a stiff fight in many cities.


By 8 p.m., 93 offices had been closed down; another 12 had earlier been shuttered by local administrations. There are 162 union chapter offices nationwide.

 

The ministry issued the order to clear all the union's offices after the group defied rules requiring it to register as a union with the Ministry of Labor. The union claims more than 100,000 members; it chose not to register as a union because of laws that severely limit the rights of public-sector unions to take job actions.
 
Union members promised to man the barricades in several cities, and police were called in to control attempts at violence. Forty-nine union members were arrested in Seoul, Busan and Gangwon province on charges of resisting the order to clear the premises. Eight more union members were arrested for unauthorized demonstrations in Jeongseon, Gangwon province while Lee Young-sup, the home minister, was attending a meeting there.
 
In Busan, about 100 city officials and police met resistance as they tried to evict 17 union members who built barricades in a hallway and turned fire extinguishers on the officers. The office was emptied after a scuffle; no injuries were reported.


"Legitimate union activities are guaranteed by law, but the civil servants' union chose not to abide by the law," a ministry official said. "We had no choice but to evict them."

 

Kwon Seung-bok, the head of the union, complained that his organization had done nothing illegal. "Our activities are all legitimate, but the government is forcibly shutting down our offices just because we did not register," he said. "We will fight against the government in cooperation with the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions."

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/200609/22/200609222200105609900090409041.html

 

Korea Herald is writing this:

Unionists ejected from offices   
 

 

Finally the "left-liberal" Hankyoreh...

 

Gov’t workers union shut down by police
Civil servants’ labor group says it will continue struggle
  
 
The government shut down about 140 offices of the Korean Government Employees’ Union (KGEU) on September 22, under a law stating that the union must register as a legal entity. The law went into effect in January, but the union had refused to do register itself officially, saying that the law would limit its freedom of assembly and freedom to strike.

Police were sent to forcibly close the offices, and clashed with members of the KGEU in many parts of the country. Forty-nine union members were arrested.


The Yeongdeungpo district police station forcibly pulled the unionists out of their local office and closed the office that morning. In the process, the police arrested seven demonstrators, including Jeong Jong-gwon, chairman of Seoul committee of the Democratic Labor Party (DLP). Meanwhile, the Jongno district police station took in six union members, who disregarded an order to vacate their office. In the union’s Mapo district office, 10 unionists were arrested after a confrontation with police.


According to the police, among 104 offices which will be forcibly shut down, 35 have already been completely closed and 54 are in the process of being vacated.

 

Regarding the enforcement of the shutdown, an official of the Ministry of Government Administration and Home Affairs said, "The public servants’ union hasn’t registered as a legal entity, disregarding the law enacted this year. As we can’t associate with unlawful organizations, we will continue to urge those union members to withdraw from the union after shutting down the union offices."


In response, the KGEU, supported by the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), one of the nation’s two largest umbrella labor groups, firmly declared that it would strongly resist the government measure. In consequence, clashes and conflicts between the authorities and the union will likely become even more serious. "The government tries to destroy our union, using the same methods as the past military dictatorships. We will strongly resist the authorities and fight to recover our union offices," said Kwon Seung-bok, head of the KGEU. Kwon has been on a hunger strike for 11 days.


Choi Nak-sam, a spokesperson of the KGEU, said, "We can’t accept the current law, which completely ignores workers’ fundamental rights. We are going to stage a joint demonstration with civic groups."


Civic organizations urged the government to stop suppressing the union. Over 200 legal experts, including lawyers and jurists, held a press conference in front of the Central Government Complex in Seoul, reproaching the government for its measures toward the union. The group said that bodies such as the International Labor Organization (ILO) also urged the government to solve the problem through dialogue.


In a statement, the DLP said, "The government is interfering in labor rights by forcing us out of our offices for the sole reason of not registering as a legal entity, when our actions have been just."

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/159476.html



 

Source of the pic: Voice of People

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

9.23/24 A&P(*)^^

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Let's come together to Peace March for Pyeongtaek

   
The 4th Great March for the Peace in Pyeongtaek is to be held at Seoul Plaza on Sunday.


The March, expected 100 thousand protesters take part in, will be an important event to stop the US base extention in Pyeongtaek.


Around 45 thousand people who had signed for being the member of the arrangement committee promised that they may not only participate in the march but also have other people make it with.


The prostesters will shout "Re-negatiate the Agreements related to the US base extention plan in Pyeongtaek", "Stop the demolition", and "Free Kim Ji-Tae, the representative of residents in the base site" etc.


'Korea solution Committee against US base extension in Pyeongtaek(KCPT)' is asking people to join in the march with his or her family, friends..., Voice of People wrote.

http://www.vop.co.kr/english/news_view_eng.html?serial=51442

 

 

*****

 

 

 

 

이라크 점령 종식 한국군 레바논 파병 반대 이란 공격 반대 평택 미군기지 확장 반대

자이툰 연내 완전 철군을 위한 9.23 반전행동

일시: 9월 23일(토) 오후 3시
장소: 서울역 광장(광화문으로 행진)
주최: 파병반대국민행동

-사전 반전 행사: 반전 페이스 페인팅, 반전 솜사탕 나눠주기, 참여연대 자원활동가들의 반전 캠페인

-사회: 정대연(파병반대국민행동 기획단장)

-공연: 정윤경

-연설

1. 민주노동당 권영길 의원
2. 미국 평화재향군인회
3. 다함께: 김우용(기아자동차 노조 조합원)
4. 평화재향군인회: 표명렬 대표

-공연: 우리나라

-연설

5. 평택 범대위: 유기만(평택 전국행진단)
6. 평화여성회: 정경란(평화여성회 한반도 평화센터 소장)
7. 사회진보연대: 공성식 활동가
8. 청소년: 이슬(전쟁에 반대하는 청소년들)
-결의문 낭독: 향린교회 나성국 목사
-집회를 마치고 광화문으로 행진 

 

*****

 

 

* Agitation and Propaganda(^^)

 

PS: Actually the music in the video is strange, really very strange... but finally its very beautiful, funny..



진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

9.17 독일/선거(fin)

(Federal) State Elections in Germany..

In East Berlin, the former capital of the GDR(German Democratic Republic/East Germany) the Left Party(the former Party of Democratic "Socialism", the former "Socialist" Unity Party of Germany - the ruling party in GDR) had it main strongholds in the entire Germany. During the last election in 2001 in some parts of e. Berlin they got more than 50 percent of the votes. And then they joined the government in Berlin.. as a junior partner of the "Social Democrats"(SPD). In this situation they supported a massive cutting of social services, the destruction of many public work places, and so on..in the city.

And the result now: especially in the eastern part of the city they lost f.. a lot of voters - on average 18 percent. In some areas 30 percent!!

On the other side the neo-Nazis, also active in Berlin, mainly in the eastern part, won seats in five destrict parliaments. In 62 polling stations in Berlin - only in the east - they became the third strongest force after the SPD and Left Party (LP).

The only "left alternative" to the LP, the WASG(Election Alternative Social Justice) got in the most areas only half of the votes of the neo-Nazis. WASG is a group, founded in West Germany(with frustrated former SPD members, old style "socialists" and some trotskyist activists), which want to unite next year with the LP. But WASG in Berlin during the election campaigned against LP. But except a massive confusion in the "left movement" in Berlin they won nearly nothing..

The other election to (federal) state parliament was in Mecklenburg Vorpommern(just check out the articles 9.17 독일/선거 #1/2). There the neo-Nazis won really f.. a lot,

like in:

Postlow:            38,6 percent (of the votes)

Belesewitz:       32,2 percent

Bargischow:     31,1 percent

Neu-Kusenow: 31,1 percent

and so on (where they became the strongest political party).

Of course this results will not change Gemany completely(aeh~ is there something to change here???), not really.. Because, especially in the eastern parts - the former GDR -the ideas of national"socialism" - intolerance, racism.. are common parts of the daily ordinary life in the "normal society".

 

 

Something about German neo-nazi movement(better said reality) you can check out here:

http://base21.jinbo.net/christian/020913.html (base21)

 

*****

 

Today's edition of the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth wrote following about the election result/success of neo-Nazi party NPD and the background:

 

Germany's choice

 

Education cutbacks to blame for far-right party's success?


Mecklenburg-Pomerania, situated in the northeast, is the most anonymous and sparsely-populated federal German state. Its name rarely makes the headlines, not only because of its difficult pronunciation.
 

Far Right 
   
The Germans, incidentally, have found an original way to solve this semantic problem. They have nicknamed the remote province Mac-Pom, roughly translated as "Mac-Fries," which lends a "foreign" ambience to the historic homeland of the impoverished Prussian nobles and forgotten communist activists.


Some two million of Germany's population of 80 million reside in Mecklenburg-Pomerania. It is the land of a thousand lakes and a well-known tourist destination affording breathtaking views, picturesque castles and long beaches. However, the local economy is in ruin and unemployment is high.
 

Local mentality a hindrance


Contrary to other areas in former communist East Germany, Mac-Pom has been unable to recuperate since the reunification.


The fact that Mac-Pom is the electoral province of German Chancellor Angela Merkel doesn't help matters much, while the local mentality hasn't been instrumental. When Merkel recently hosted President Bush in Mac-Pom, residents complained about the high expenses incurred by the presidential visit and the inconvenience posed by the strict security measures implemented.


Last Sunday Mecklenburg-Pomerania became the hottest topic in German politics when the neo-Nazi National Party (NPD) made history by passing the voting threshold and entering the local parliament with six representatives. In the last elections four years ago, the party received just 0.8 percent of the total vote. This week it gained 7.1 percent of the popular vote.


Mac-Pom has become the fourth largest German state among the 16 federal states with neo-Nazi representatives in its parliament. For clarification's sake: This figure comprises a quarter of the federal states in Germany.


Three of the federal states that granted representation to neo-Nazi parties are located in East Germany. Added to this is the fact that the NPD succeeded in securing representation in four Berlin states, formerly part of East Germany.


Expressing ceremonial apprehensions

 

German politicians from both Left and Right expressed the ceremonial apprehensions reserved especially for such occasions. But in fact it was a predictable outcome.

 

The composition of the current cabinet, a coalition that includes two major parties, and the unification of the conservatives and the social-democrats are a sure path to a people's protest against the political margins.

 

Although the economic situation has improved somewhat in recent months and even unemployment has declined, the simple man on the street does not feel he is benefiting from the stability. Worse than that, ordinary residents sense they are the ones paying the price.

 

The neo-Nazi's prime target electorate is the younger generation. The highest number of votes came from voters aged 18 to 24, and NPD became the third largest party after the two ruling parties.

 

Bloody scuffles

 

The party is putting a lot of effort into adopting an image of a "centrist" party, while at the same time it is communicating its violent messages that ignite bloody scuffles with its political foes.

 


The recent elections in Berlin were the most violent since the end of World War II. Such scuffles often ended with injured left-wing activists.

 

If according to so many youngsters the NPD is a legitimate choice, Germany's future will face a severe problem. Perhaps this is the right time for the German government to reassess its decision to significantly cut back the budget allocated to educational programs aimed at educating youth against right-wing extremism.

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3306233,00.html 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

N. Atlas

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


"Mish Fidilak" by Natacha Atlas, 2001

 

 

 

ya habibi ana mosh fadiya lak, wo la fadiya li l gharam
hafdo badin a'gui lek, ana lly mak kallam

khalina baid choway
yemkin enssa l'assiya
khalina, khalina, khalina
yemkin enssa l'assiya
denta lli amelta fiy, ya habibi kan ketir

ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah ah ah ah aaah...

law geey tahayerni
ibaad, ibaad any
-mosh aweza houbek!
enssa hawak liya, dana chouft bianiya
-el ghadr min albek!

law law law geey tahayerni
ibaad, ibaad any
mosh aweza liya, dana chouft bianiya
-el ghadr min albek

khalina baid choway
yemkin enssa l'assiya
khalina, khalina
yemkin enssa l'assiya
denta lli amelta fiy, ya habibi kan ketir

ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah ah ah ah aaah...

bilach tikadebni
law marra sadani
-inta tahiit!
sadani habibi, ya adri wo nassibi
-inta tnassiit!

bilach tikadebni
law marra sadani
inta tahiit!
sadani habibi, ya adri wo nassibi
-inta tnassiit!

 

khalina baid choway
yemkin enssa l'assiya
khalina, khalina
yemkin enssa l'assiya
denta lli amelta fiy, ya habibi kan ketir


ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah
ya habibi ah ah ah ah ah aah...

 

(harrharr.. YA HABIBI..^^, its Arabic and means..^^ ya habibi ah-ah..^^)

 

 

 

 

To learn more about her(N. Atlas) please check out this(Wikipedia):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natacha_Atlas

 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

D.C.D.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Summoning of the Muse

by Dead Can Dance, 1987


진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

9.17 독일/선거 #2

About before yesterday's state parliament elections in Germany int'l media reported yesterday following (tomorrow I'll write some more details about the final results):

 

Far right wins seats in Germany (al-Jazeera)

 

A far-right party compared to the early Nazis by the German government has won seats in a regional parliament, helped by a weak economy and anger at Angela Merkel's ruling coalition.


Results showed the National Party of Germany (NPD), which advocates closing German borders to immigrants, won 7.2 per cent of the vote in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, a northeastern state on the Baltic Sea which borders Poland.


The result would allow the NPD to enter the regional assembly, making Mecklenburg-Vorpommern the third state in the former communist east with far-right representation.


The result alarmed mainstream politicians and Jewish groups, who called on the federal government to renew its bid to ban the party after a previous attempt failed.


Dieter Graumann, vice-president of the Central Council for Jews in Germany, said: "The government must look for ways to impose a ban."


Narrow victory


Final results gave the Social Democrats (SPD) 30.2 per cent in Mecklenburg, down from nearly 41 per cent in the state vote in 2002. It was uncertain if they would continue their local coalition with the former communist Left Party or ally with Merkel's Christian Democrats.


Election data showed 15 per cent of 18- to 24-year olds voted for the NPD in Mecklenburg.


In a federal election exactly one year ago, Merkel won a disappointingly narrow victory over Gerhard Schroeder, her predecessor, forcing her into a coalition with his SPD party.


Many Germans had hoped her "grand coalition", with its big majorities in both houses of parliament, would be able to push through crucial reforms.


But it has been plagued by infighting and struggled to deliver promised changes to the healthcare system. Experts say this has helped boost smaller parties such as the NPD.


Weak economy

         
In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the state where Merkel has her local constituency and where she hosted George Bush for a barbecue in July, the economy is weak and nearly one in five is without work, and the jobless rate hovers above 30 per cent in some areas. Like other states in the former communist east, it has seen many leave in search of jobs.


Those conditions have provided fertile ground for the NPD, which was accused of using thugs to bully rival parties during the campaign. Its leaders have played down Nazi responsibility for the second world war and questioned the extent of the Holocaust.


Several hundred protesters gathered outside the parliament building in the Mecklenburg state capital Schwerin, waving "Nazis Out" posters on Sunday.


The federal government has compared the party to the Nazis of the 1920s and tried to ban them in the country's highest court in 2003. It failed after members of the party who testified turned out to be informants planted by the police.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/127DE884-A102-4907-8E4F-A22364A0E52C.htm

 

 

Far-right party wins seats in German election (NYT/IHT
  
A far-right party made further inroads in Germany's economically fragile east on Sunday, winning seats in a state election in Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, a lonely land of farms and fishing villages that is the home constituency of Chancellor Angela Merkel.
 
The National Democratic Party, which openly espouses xenophobic and neo-Nazi views, was projected to win slightly more than 7 percent of the vote, according to preliminary results. That was less than analysts here had feared, but enough to clear the threshold of 5 percent for seats in the state legislature.
 
Extreme-right parties will now be represented in three of Germany's six eastern states - a trend that worries officials and underlines the divide between the country's eastern and western halves. Far-right parties have negligible support in more-prosperous western Germany.
 
"This shows the extreme right is a stable and growing force in the east, but it is not an earthquake," said Hajo Funke, a political scientist at the Free University of Berlin. "It's not a danger for our democracy."
 
The result, however, is a rebuke for Merkel and her conservative party, the Christian Democratic Union, which lost votes in Mecklenburg and fared even worse in the second of the two state legislative elections on Sunday, in Berlin. There, the popular mayor, Klaus Wowereit, led his Social Democratic Party to a comfortable victory.
 
Voters appeared to be punishing Merkel's party, 10 months after it squeaked into power in an unwieldy "grand coalition" with the Social Democrats. The Social Democrats, who govern Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, lost ground there, too, and it was not clear whether they could salvage their coalition with the Party of Democratic Socialism, the former East German Communist party.
 
Merkel, who began her political career in Mecklenburg 15 years ago, has tried to focus attention on the region, inviting President Bush in July for a visit. But the state has one of the highest unemployment rates in Germany, which makes it a breeding ground for extremism, analysts say.
 
The National Democratic Party, which the German government once tried to ban, won seats in Saxony, a similarly depressed eastern state, in 2004. Another far-right party is represented in Brandenburg, the state that surrounds Berlin.
 
"The grand coalition hasn't presented a forceful program to tackle Germany's problems," Funke said. "These parties take advantage of the frustration of those who have no chance of a social or economic future."
 
One of the few winners on Sunday was Wowereit, who was given a strong mandate as mayor of Berlin, with the choice of renewing his coalition with the Party of Democratic Socialism or forming a new one with the Greens, the largest vote-gainer since the last election, in 2001.
 
The victory may foretell a greater national role for Wowereit, a 52-year-old lawyer who has become a star in Berlin. His party-going style seems to suit his late-night town, and his disclosure before the last election that he is gay only added to his appeal. On Sunday, Wowereit appeared on stage with his partner, Jörn Kubicki, a neurosurgeon.
 
With the departure of Social Democratic leaders like Gerhard Schröder, and a lack of other rising stars, Wowereit has made his ambitions plain. "I would like to have more say that I have had in the last five years, when we had to clean up the city," he said in a recent interview with the German magazine Stern.
 
Whether he has done so is a matter of debate. Berlin is strangled by debt, a jobless rate of nearly 20 percent and a shrinking commercial base. Wowereit, who is known as Wowi, prefers to focus on its role as a cultural center and tourist magnet. Berlin, he said last year, is "poor but sexy" - a line that has become a tongue-in-cheek slogan for the city.
 
His opponent, Friedbert Pflüger, a Christian Democratic member of Parliament, tried to portray the mayor as a lightweight. But in a city that rewards flamboyance, Pflüger, an establishment politician originally from the western city of Hanover, never stood a chance.
 
"Up until now, he hasn't been a strong voice in politics on the national level," Uwe Andersen, a political scientist at Ruhr University, said of Wowereit. "He may think this result strengthens his position."
 
 FRANKFURT A far-right party made further inroads in Germany's economically fragile east on Sunday, winning seats in a state election in Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, a lonely land of farms and fishing villages that is the home constituency of Chancellor Angela Merkel.
 
The National Democratic Party, which openly espouses xenophobic and neo-Nazi views, was projected to win slightly more than 7 percent of the vote, according to preliminary results. That was less than analysts here had feared, but enough to clear the threshold of 5 percent for seats in the state legislature.
 
Extreme-right parties will now be represented in three of Germany's six eastern states - a trend that worries officials and underlines the divide between the country's eastern and western halves. Far-right parties have negligible support in more-prosperous western Germany.
 
"This shows the extreme right is a stable and growing force in the east, but it is not an earthquake," said Hajo Funke, a political scientist at the Free University of Berlin. "It's not a danger for our democracy."
 
The result, however, is a rebuke for Merkel and her conservative party, the Christian Democratic Union, which lost votes in Mecklenburg and fared even worse in the second of the two state legislative elections on Sunday, in Berlin. There, the popular mayor, Klaus Wowereit, led his Social Democratic Party to a comfortable victory.
 
Voters appeared to be punishing Merkel's party, 10 months after it squeaked into power in an unwieldy "grand coalition" with the Social Democrats. The Social Democrats, who govern Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, lost ground there, too, and it was not clear whether they could salvage their coalition with the Party of Democratic Socialism, the former East German Communist party.
 
Merkel, who began her political career in Mecklenburg 15 years ago, has tried to focus attention on the region, inviting President Bush in July for a visit. But the state has one of the highest unemployment rates in Germany, which makes it a breeding ground for extremism, analysts say.
 
The National Democratic Party, which the German government once tried to ban, won seats in Saxony, a similarly depressed eastern state, in 2004. Another far-right party is represented in Brandenburg, the state that surrounds Berlin.
 
"The grand coalition hasn't presented a forceful program to tackle Germany's problems," Funke said. "These parties take advantage of the frustration of those who have no chance of a social or economic future."
 
One of the few winners on Sunday was Wowereit, who was given a strong mandate as mayor of Berlin, with the choice of renewing his coalition with the Party of Democratic Socialism or forming a new one with the Greens, the largest vote-gainer since the last election, in 2001.
 
The victory may foretell a greater national role for Wowereit, a 52-year-old lawyer who has become a star in Berlin. His party-going style seems to suit his late-night town, and his disclosure before the last election that he is gay only added to his appeal. On Sunday, Wowereit appeared on stage with his partner, Jörn Kubicki, a neurosurgeon.
 
With the departure of Social Democratic leaders like Gerhard Schröder, and a lack of other rising stars, Wowereit has made his ambitions plain. "I would like to have more say that I have had in the last five years, when we had to clean up the city," he said in a recent interview with the German magazine Stern.
 
Whether he has done so is a matter of debate. Berlin is strangled by debt, a jobless rate of nearly 20 percent and a shrinking commercial base. Wowereit, who is known as Wowi, prefers to focus on its role as a cultural center and tourist magnet. Berlin, he said last year, is "poor but sexy" - a line that has become a tongue-in-cheek slogan for the city.
 
His opponent, Friedbert Pflüger, a Christian Democratic member of Parliament, tried to portray the mayor as a lightweight. But in a city that rewards flamboyance, Pflüger, an establishment politician originally from the western city of Hanover, never stood a chance.
 
"Up until now, he hasn't been a strong voice in politics on the national level," Uwe Andersen, a political scientist at Ruhr University, said of Wowereit. "He may think this result strengthens his position."

http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/09/18/europe/web.0918germany.php

 


Ghosts of Nazi past (Guardian)

 

A regional election in Germany saw a province dip back into the darkest parts of the 
In the end, the result was as bad as everyone had feared. Germany's neo-Nazis pulled off a widely anticipated electoral coup last night, with the far-right winning 7.3 % of the vote during elections in the north east state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.


The NPD comfortably exceeded the 5 % hurdle necessary to win seats. It will now sit in the state's regional assembly in Schwerin for the first time. This is the second time that the NPD has got into a regional parliament in three years, confirming fears that the party is now an established part of the political landscape, especially in Germany's depressed former communist east.

 

Ahead of yesterday's poll, hundreds of neo-Nazis flooded the rustic state, turning the party's stronghold town of Anklam into a neo-Nazi HQ. The tactic worked. In some Baltic villages in the east of the state, the NPD got as much as 15 % of the vote. The NPD did best where unemployment was highest. In many areas here it is more than 25 %.


This morning's German papers, reporting on the poll and yesterday's election in Berlin, gave a gloomy reaction. Der Tagesspeigel said there was no point in pretending that the NPD's voters - most of them under the age of 30 - had somehow been tricked into voting for a bunch of unashamed racists. "Whoever voted for this party, knew what they were doing," the paper said.


The Berliner Zeitung conceded that the "real winner" of yesterday's election was the NPD's leader in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Udo Pastörs. The fact that other parties treat him as a 'pariah' merely helps his cause, the paper said, adding: "Nobody had so many cameras and microphones thrust at him".

 

It was not clear this morning, meanwhile, what coalition would govern in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, a lush Baltic region which includes Angela Merkel's seaside constituency. The Social Democrats (SPD) emerged as the biggest party with 30.2 % of the vote - but only after a night of heavy losses.

 

The state's SPD premier, Harald Ringstorff, now has to decide whether to continue his existing left-wing coalition with the post-communist Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) - or enter into a new one with the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU).

The CDU won 28.8 %; the PDS 16.8 %; and the right-wing liberal FDP party made it back into the assembly with 9.6 %.

 

In Berlin, the picture is a bit clearer. Berlin's popular Social Democrat mayor Klaus Wowereit was the undisputed winner of yesterday's election - winning 30.8 % of the vote in Berlin and another term as mayor. This morning's papers show him putting an affectionate arm round his partner, Jörn Kubicki.

 

Wowi, as Berliners call him, now has to decide whether to govern in coalition with the Greens or the PDS. The Greens did better than expected with 13.1 %.

 

Die Linke - as the PDS is known - had a terrible night, and saw much of their support, especially in east Berlin, evaporate. The party polled 13.4 %, almost 10 % less than during the last election in 2001.

 

Two trends this morning appear clear. Firstly, the neo-Nazis in Germany appear to be here to stay. Secondly, the Christian Democrats do not appear to have benefited much from the fact that their leader Angela Merkel is Germany's chancellor, and the head of a 'grand coalition' government in Berlin with the Social Democrats. Her long term ability to win elections is still in doubt.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/germany/article/0,,1875278,00.html

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

美대사관/불법..

Following strange story K. Times will publish in its tomorrow's edition:

 

US Envoy’s Wife Violated Work Law

 

Lisa Vershbow, a costume jewelry maker and the wife of U.S. Ambassador to South Korea Alexander Vershbow arrived in Seoul last year, bringing with her many pieces of her work. In a recreation room near the embassy residence’s pool behind Toksu Palace, she soon set up a workshop, complete with a cozy fireplace.


At diplomatic receptions she handed out an attractive parchment name card, identifying herself as a working jewelry designer. Then in June, Mrs. Vershbow entered into an arrangement with the Sun Gallery located in fashionable Insa-dong.

 

Over a two-week period, the gallery sold 20 million won ($20,000) of Mrs. Vershbow's aluminum and plastic ornaments seemingly without concern that the ambassador's wife had a workshop, but no work permit. The ambassador’s wife and the gallery split the revenue.

 

The question became what difference is there between Mrs. Vershbow and anyone else who comes to Korea and earns money without the government's authorization?

 

Hundreds of such illegal immigrants are rounded up each year and deported. In 2005, the Justice Ministry took 27,295 people into custody for working in violation of their visa status...

(Please read the entire article here: http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/nation/200609/kt2006091817372211990.htm

 

 

Well, just call Immigration Office in Mok-dong!

SHE HAS TO BE ARRESTED AND DEPORTED! (as soon as possible!!!)

 

 

 

PS: Likely her husband - the so-called "ambassador" of the U.S.A. is her broker.. So, of course, he have to be arrested and deported too!!


 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

자본주의 현실

 

 

"The developing destruction of the industrialization in the West created a new class of un-productive and mentally neglected. These alliens in the own country become a serious danger for the democracy." (Der Spiegel, 9.16)

 

This sentences should describe just the growing number of more and more unemployed proletarians in Europe, especially in Germany.

 

 

 

 

 


 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

9.17 독일/선거 #1

Today in two German (federal) states, Berlin and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, parliamentarian elections are taking place.

Both states, including the former West-Berlin, are located in the east of the country. Mecklenburg-Vorpommern(M.V.) is located in the far east of Germany, on the border to Poland and the Baltic Sea(like the eastern part of Berlin it's a part of the former GDR/East Germany).

 

Already a few days ago German newspapers, such as Berliner Zeitung, wrote about the "phenomenon" that a large majority of the voters, especialy in the east of Germany, don't believe in democracy anymore. Instead more than 60 percent of the voters think that the "Socialism is a good model for the society".  

 

In this situation it will be perhaps no surprise that a large percentage of the voters will elect a neo-Nazi party. Because they represent a real German "Socialism" for them, just a National "Socialism". A "Socialism" where the state is strong, where "law and order" is ruling, where no foreigners are disturbing their life, where work places are reserved only for Germans(even there are only few foreigners living in this regions!!).. Slogans like "German 'Socialism' instead of the One-World-Order" or National 'Socialism' against globalization" are very attractive for large parts of the population, especially in the former East Germany. So it's no surprise that representatives of neo-Nazi organisations are arrived since long time in the middle of the society, they are nor just "honored" parts of many eastern communities.

 

Anyway.. in about 4 hours we know more about the results of the elections..

 

Skinhead family father and neo-Nazi

election propaganda in M.V.

 

 

About the role of neo-Nazi organisations in this election campaign The Guardian(UK) wrote yesterday following:

 

Neo-Nazis poised to win seats in German state parliament

· Polls put party above 5% threshold for success
· Poor economic conditions in east fuel discontent


Germany's racist neo-Nazi party is poised to make a stunning breakthrough at elections this weekend, entering a regional parliament for the second time in three years, polls suggest.


According to a poll for ZDF television, the far-right National Party of Germany (NPD) is likely to win 7% of the vote in elections on Sunday in the north-east state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. A poll by Infratest puts the party on 6%.

 

The projected result is above the 5% of the vote parties must achieve before they can sit in parliament, and means the far-right MPs could have seats for the first time. "We are very confident. It's extremely likely we are going to make it," Michael Andrejewski, the NPD's candidate in its stronghold town of Anklam, told the Guardian yesterday.

 

Mr Andrejewski said voters in Germany's depressed former communist east were turning to the neo-Nazi right because they were disillusioned with mainstream politics and fed up with the region's unemployment rate.


"People are furious. They are disappointed with this government. Unemployment here is 30%. If we can win here we will have established a trend. Our mid-term goal is to win seats in the Bundestag [Germany's federal parliament]."


A result above 5% would be an embarrassment for Germany's leader, Angela Merkel, whose seaside Baltic constituency is part of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The region is abundant in lakes and forests, but is one of the most economically depressed parts of the country. Unemployment is officially put at 18%.

 

Hundreds of neo-Nazis have flooded into the state. The party has teamed up with local Kameradschaften, gangs of far-right skinheads - some of whom are standing as NPD candidates. Volunteers have hung up thousands of xenophobic placards and distributed copies of the party's far-right newspaper, the Island Messenger. They have also intimidated workers from other parties, it is alleged.

 

Rival candidates concede the NPD has waged a meticulous, professional campaign. "I have to admit that to a certain degree we have failed," said Uwe Schulz, Anklam's Social Democratic candidate.

 

Mr Schulz, whose party governs in the state's regional assembly in Schwerin with the post-communist Party of Democratic Socialism, added: "My father came back from the second world war with a leg missing. These people appear to have learned nothing from the Nazi era. To hear these ideas and slogans again makes me furious."

 

Nationally, the NPD has had little impact. But in 2004 it won 9.25% of the vote in the east German state of Saxony in a surprise result, entering a regional parliament for the first time since 1968. Victory tomorrow would confirm fears that the party is an established feature of Germany's political landscape, analysts say.

 

In several Baltic villages in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern the far-right now provides social services. It runs businesses and organises discos. The NPD has abandoned its skinhead image, fielding candidates in immaculate suits.

 

"There are a large number of people in east Germany who have become estranged from democracy," said Hajo Funke, a political scientist at Berlin's Free University. "Mainstream parties have failed to address local problems."

 

Günter Hoffmann, founder of Anklam anti-Nazi group Bunt statt Braun, said: "The big mistake happened after the fall of the Berlin wall. The need to establish and teach democracy in the east was overlooked. We are now picking up the bill."

 

The quiet, stealthy rise of extremism in the state is linked to its woeful economic condition, analysts say. After reunification in 1990 manufacturing industry collapsed. Anklam's population shrank from 22,000 to 14,000 as the young fled west.

 

Success for the NPD tomorrow is likely to provoke an anguished debate among the ruling Christian and Social Democrats about what went wrong. Both govern in Berlin in a coalition led by Mrs Merkel.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/germany/article/0,,1873834,00.html

 

 

And about today's elections in general AP wrote today this:

Germans vote in state elections that could mean gains for far right

 


 

 

 

 

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

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