The Left Berlin News & Comment

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Schule muss Anders (School must be different)

Parents, school students, teachers, social workers, educators and others united for better schools in Berlin


04/11/2021

Schooling in Berlin is unjust. Pupils do not receive the support that they really need. Teachers, educators and social workers are overloaded, because they do not have enough co-workers. Berlin must recruit 3,000 teachers a year, but just 900 graduate from Berlin Universities. This means increasingly more tasks in decreasing amounts of time. Parents must compensate for what the school is unable to do. Berlin education politics is plugging holes, instead of supporting school students in the way they need. But school must be different (#schulemussanders) and this is possible.

In the next 5 weeks, the new coalition treaty [for the Berlin government] will be passed. This is where the educational guidelines for the next 5 years will be set.

We must decide NOW

Either we watch on as in the next 5 years holes will continue to be plugged or we finally ensure that schools and children receive what they need. Come to the demonstration, join our campaign channel on Telegram and become active.

This is why we are demonstrating together as parents, school students and staff on Saturday, 6th November at 2pm

Start: Haus der Statistik (3 minutes walk from Alexanderplatz at the corner of Karl-Marx-Allee and Otto-braun-Straße)

Final rally; 3pm in front of the Roten Rathaus

Parents, staff and school students will be joining to hand over petitions to leading politicians. The signatures on the petitions have been collected at over 100 Berlin schools.

Please being people with you

It makes a difference whether we attend the demo with 800 or 2,000 people. The more of you are there on 6th November, the greater the public pressure. The demonstration will be peaceful, and children are welcome.

You can find flyers for the demo which you can print out yourself here.

If you would like printed posters and flyer, send a mail to info@schule-muss-anders.de

Who are Schule muss anders?

The non-party education campaign “Schule muss anders” is supported by the Initiative “Schule in Not” (school in need), the Berlin alliance for school including, the Berliner Bürgerplattformen, the GEW Berlin teachers’ union, the lsfb (Landesverband der Kita- und Schulfördervereine Berlin-Brandenburg – Regional association of nursery and parent-teacher associations Berlin-Brandenburg), the teaching initiative Kreidestaub and the State stident committee. On top of this, many staff, parents and school students who have not been previously organised are active in the campaign.

What are the demands of the Campaign Schule muss anders?

  • More time for team and relationships – relief for all

  • Teams from different professions at the schools

  • More personnel and training places

  • Fight discrimination and guarantee participation

You can find further information and the details of our demands here.

Let us stand together for the future of education in this city and its schoolkids!

News from Berlin and Germany, 5th November 2021

Weekly news roundup from Berlin and Germany

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Deutsche Wohnen & Co welcomes SPD grassroots push for a quick implementation of referendum

The SPD district associations of Mitte and Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg have made public a motion for the state party conference in which they demand the implementation of the referendum within one year. The Intiative Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen welcomes the SPD base’s push for a quick implementation of the referendum. If Franziska Giffey continues to delay the clear work order to expropriate Deutsche Wohnen and Co, she is not only going against almost 60 percent of the voters – but also against her own party base,” says Carmel Fuhg, spokesperson for the initiative. Source: DWE

S-Bahn privatisation may be not possible

At the special party conference of Berlin’s Left Party a fortnight ago, at which it was decided to (re)start the current coalition, the Left Party (“die Linke”) parliamentary group leader in the House of Representatives, Carsten Schatz, remarked: “We have agreed on the municipalisation of the S-Bahn.” However, there was no mention of this in the exploratory paper agreed between the three parties for the continuation of the “Red-Red-Green” government. Also, there is much to suggest that in the end DB, in the form of its subsidiary S-Bahn Berlin GmbH, will continue to be the sole operator of the entire network after 2027. Source: jW

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

die Linke” demands 200 euros for those at risk of poverty

Against the background of increased consumer and energy prices, the Left Party (“die Linke”) is proposing a one-time payment of 200 euros for poorer people. “We have to react if we want people not to freeze in winter,” said party leader Susanne Hennig-Wellsow in Berlin. According to the Left Party leaders, the 200 euros should be paid out on 1 December to about 13 million people at risk of poverty. The one-off payment would at the same time act as an economic stimulus package. In addition to the one-off payment, the proposal also includes an immediate increase of Hartz IV at the rate of inflation. Source: Berliner Zeitung

Former head of the LKA supports a study on racism in the police force

Sabine Thurau, retired president of the Hessian State Criminal Police Office (LKA), has called for a study on the prevalence of right-wing extremism and misogyny in the police. “Such a study can be very helpful, even vital, not only for society but also for the police themselves,” she said. For Thurau, the police is still a “very well-functioning organisation”, but she also notes “a deeply worrying, critical development”. Thurau retired when she reached the age limit on 31 March. Her term of office included, among others, the search for the author of the right-wing extremist “NSU 2.0” threatening letters. Source; islamiq

Far right Bessin runs as candidate for AfD chairperson in Brandenburg

The AfD member of the state parliament Birgit Bessin wants to run for the state chairmanship of her party in Brandenburg. At a press conference in Potsdam on Wednesday, the current deputy state leader announced her candidacy for the executive board election at a state party conference on 20 and 21 November in Prenzlau. She is running to succeed former state party leader Andreas Kalbitz, whose party membership was revoked first by the AfD federal executive and then by the AfD federal arbitration court last year. The 43-year-old Bessin is considered a confidante of Kalbitz and, like him, stands for the AfD’s far-right course. Source: rbb

Left challenges market model on environment

In view of rising energy prices, the Left Party (“die Linke”) parliamentary group leader Dietmar Bartsch is proposing the cancellation the next stage of the CO2 price increase. This is a 20% increase which is planned for January. Instead, he said, the future federal government should “put the entire market model to the test”. Energy prices are out of control, according to Bartsch, and the upcoming winter threatens to be particularly expensive for people. Over the weekend, CSU leader Söder has spoken out in favour of a reduced VAT rate on energy and fuel to relieve the burden on consumers. Source: deutschlandfunk

The peaceful resistance will continue

Interview with Shadia Abdel-Moneim, political secretary of Sudanese Communist Party in Berlin

Hello, thanks for talking to us. Could you start by introducing yourself? Who are you and how are you active?

Thank you for this chance to elaborate on the situation in Sudan. I am Shadia Abdel-Moneim, the political secretary of the communist party branch in Germany, a human rights defender, especially vulnerable groups. I am one of the founders of a number of associations and initiatives [established] as resistance bodies to the Bashir regime throughout the 30 years of the bloody dictatorial Islamic regime in Sudan. I worked closely with a number of women’s and youth groups in conflict areas for peace and justice.

Today, after the revolution, I am struggling with groups of Sudanese activists inside Sudan and in diaspora in order to achieve the slogans of the revolution and establish a better reality for Sudanese people.

Briefly, what is happening in Sudan at the moment?

The security committee of the Bashir régime, which shares the transitional government with civilians, led by its chairman Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, carried out a military coup on October 25, 2021. This was part of a series of military coups which began with the palace coup of April 11, 2019. The goal is the same – to prevent the mass movement from achieving the goals and slogans of the glorious December Revolution.

Who is Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and should we fear him?

Burhan studied in a Sudanese army college, then later in Jordan and at the Egyptian military academy in Cairo, where fellow alumni included Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Burhan and Sisi are longstanding friends, though the Sudanese general has lifelong affiliations with the kinds of Islamist movements that Sisi has outlawed.

He was absolutely instrumental to the devastation caused in Darfur, he fought in the region and was a military intelligence colonel coordinating army and militia attacks against civilians in West Darfur state from 2003 to 2005.

Burhan’s time in Darfur is significant also because it brought him into contact with the warlord Mohamed Hamdan Dagolo, widely known as Hemeti. Hemeti became leader of the Janjaweed, the Arab militias that brought death and despair to Darfur, and which have since morphed into the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), with Hemeti still at the helm.

These various sources of power and wealth have come under threat from Sudan’s civilian-led government and it is thought that this is partly why Burhan and Hemeti have moved when they have. Both he and Hemeti are said to be mindful of being held accountable for past actions in Darfur, and Burhan had been lobbying to dissolve the civilian-led council of ministers.

This is Burhan and Hemeti’s coup, but the relationship between the two men is difficult because, among other things, Hemeti projects himself as a leader abroad, and is closer to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed. Burhan is considered to be Egypt’s man. Hemeti is a more charismatic, more cartoonish figure than the quietly spoken, methodical Burhan, and the RSF leader is more closely associated with the atrocities surrounding the transition to democracy – most notably, the massacre of more than 128 people in Khartoum in June 2019 – than the armed forces general.

Two years ago, mass demonstrations removed former President Bashir. Are those forces still active, and how are they reacting to the coup?

Protests and resistance against the Bashir regime began in Sudan from the first day of his rule, and the regime met it with brutal repression. Trade unions and professional and factional unions were dismantled. The regime also worked to weaken and divide political parties.

In 2008, journalists began to form the Journalists’ Network. After that, the Doctors Committee and the Democratic Lawyers Alliance were formed, and the features of this alternative gathering of the unions seized by Al-Bashir’s authority began to become clear. At the initiative of the Journalists’ Network, a grouping of these three bodies was formed, and the Teachers’ Committee joined it until the assembly became composed of 17 unofficial union bodies.

These bodies demanded rejecting partnership with the military, rejecting the flawed constitutional document, rejecting the incomplete Juba peace and adhering to a transitional period led by civilians. Thus, we can say that the masses that overthrew Bashir are able to thwart the coup and adhere to the goals of the revolution, and are now more organized to do so.

What is the role of women in your revolution?

It is well known that Al-Bashir’s was a hardline Islamic regime, that worked in coordination with international Islamist groups, which pursued an approach hostile to women’s liberation.

Since its early days in Sudan, Al-Bashir’s regime began to restrict women and imposed on them the so-called Islamic dress, which is a headscarf and a black abaya. Women resisted in all their factions, except for those belonging to the ruling organization. The regime retreated under the weight of women’s resistance and was satisfied with the veil, and women’s resistance continued.

In the early nineties, the regime enacted what is known as the Public Order Law, which blatantly targeted women. It also enacted articles in the criminal law that criminalize women. Through its arsenal of laws and restrictions imposed on women, the regime has been confiscating the gains that women gained through hard struggle since the fifties of the last century.

In response to all these attacks on women’s gains, women organized to create resistance bodies from pressure groups and associations under different names, but all of them came together to resist the regime and its degrading laws against women.

I can say that women determined their position early on from the regime, and the unity of purpose helped them in this, and the resistance of women continued until the revolution, and they were among the most important factions that led the revolution, and this was because they were organized and ready to topple the regime more than others

What is the state of the organised Left? What parties are there and how are they relating to the movement?

The largest left-wing parties in terms of organization, number and political position is the Sudanese Communist Party. Other leftist trends include Baathist and Nasserist parties influenced by the Arab National socialism.

With the exception of the Communist Party and the Sudanese Socialist Democratic Party, all of these parties supported the neoliberal Hamdok government and now stand against the will of the people to break up the partnership with the military and proceed with building a civil and democratic state.

What have you learned from uprising in neighbouring countries like Egypt?

Despite the geographical location of Sudan, the nature of Sudanese political and personal life itself is different, and therefore the experience of the revolution in Sudan is different. Since political independence, the Sudanese have struggled for freedom and democracy and carried out two revolutions, October 1969 and April 1985. The two revolutions were aborted with regional and international interventions.

In both revolutions, there was a political leadership that, despite its weakness, was present and in one way or another related to the masses. This was not the case in the Egyptian revolution, where the leadership of the revolution was activists. In Sudan in recent years, voices have risen asking the masses to isolate and bypass parties, and these voices are trying to implement the Egyptian model in Sudan.

In my estimation, the most important lesson that we have to learn from the revolutions of the Arab Spring, and specifically the Egyptian revolution, is to keep the army away from practicing politics, prevent the army from sharing power and prevent their control of any economic investments. We should be strengthening the political leadership represented in political parties, trade unions, and resistance committees.

Do you think that the US and German governments can play a positive role in your liberation?

Of course, it is clear that international and regional foreign interventions in Sudanese affairs have had a very negative impact on political stability in Sudan since political independence in the fifties. In my personal assessment, Germany is trying to understand the nature of Sudanese society, political and social, and this is a correct start. Germany and the United States of America can help the Sudanese to build a state of freedom, peace and justice, the civil and democratic state for which they gave thousands of martyrs.

This can be done first: by hearing the voice of the masses represented by its living forces from resistance committees, political parties, factional and demanding forces.

Second: Stop supporting the militias, as the European Union, led by Germany, used to do, when they supported the Janjaweed militias led by Hemeti in what is known as the Khartoum process to stop illegal immigration and extend the borders. In return, they have to help the Sudanese in disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of these various militias in accordance with international principles, and help in building a single national army that performs its globally recognized mission of protecting the homeland and guarding the constitution.

Third: restricting the hand of the regional axes from interfering in the internal affairs of the Sudanese state and respecting the right of the Sudanese to formulate the future of their state and national sovereignty by applying pressure on them instead of pressure on the Sudanese to accept fragile and harmful settlements for the future of the revolution and the state

Fourth: Not to pressure the Sudanese, represented by the political parties and the civilian component, to accept partnership with the military, to return to the constitutional document rejected by the masses, or to abide by the Juba Peace Agreement. It did not address the roots of the peace crisis and did not accommodate all conflicted parties, such as those displaced by the war and the factions of Abdul Wahed Muhammad Nour and Al Helou.

They can assist the Sudanese in dismantling the institutions of the former regime by freezing the assets of its symbols abroad, pressure to hand over wanted persons to the criminal court, and technical assistance in handing over companies and funds in the possession of the military to be under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Finance.

Technical assistance in building the institutions of democratic transition, such as the establishment of the Constitutional Court, the reform of the judiciary, the establishment of the constitutional conference, the establishment of the Electoral Commission, the enactment of the election law, and the restructuring of the Ministry of Statistics in preparation for the population census.

In my estimation, this is the role that helps in the stability of Sudan. Other than that, if settlements are imposed, protests and political turmoil in Sudan will continue.

What happens next?

The coup is isolated internally and externally. Also knows that the international community, the African Union and the axes do not dare to support the coup in light of the unequivocal popular rejection.

There are compromises and mediation efforts taking place now, but it is also very clear that no one is negotiating with the masses and no one is negotiating in the name of the masses. Which means that any solution will not work if it does not take into account the demands of the masses that raised them in their slogans.

The December 2019 revolution was the result of the accumulation of a continuous struggle over the years. The peaceful resistance will continue using the same tools from peaceful protests to civil disobedience and political strikes, until the Sudanese reach the slogans of the revolution: “freedom, peace and justice, civility, the people’s choice”.

No matter how many obstacles are placed in front of them and no matter how long it takes, I know exactly how strong the Sudanese are and the strength of their patience whenever they have a clear, agreed goal.

How can people in Berlin support your movement?

I am absolutely certain that international solidarity and belief in the right of peoples to freedom, peace, justice and a decent life will help a lot in changing the balance of power and help public opinion to put pressure on their governments in choosing to align themselves with the will of the people.

People in Berlin can:

  1. Organise solidarity activities with the Sudanese people.
  2. Lead a global campaign to put pressure on Abdel Fattah al-Burhan to restore the internet and communications.
  3. Organize a large campaign to stop the killing and arrest of protesters.
  4. Put pressure to hand over wanted persons to the International Court
  5. Call on the international community to declare the Janjaweed a terrorist organization.

After the election, what’s next for the German climate justice movement? 

The climate movement must rethink its strategy and make it clear that ‘green growth’ and technological fixes will not save us from climate catastrophe.


02/11/2021

September came to an end in Germany with the much lauded ‘Climate Election’ and a very sobering result. Early in the year the polls had shown a clear majority in favour of progressive parties. However the election results show that conservative, neoliberal and right wing parties retain substantial support, despite their lack of climate ambitions. As usual, Germans were anxious about too much change and voted for the better of two bad options. The Green party’s lead in the polls had melted away in the weeks leading up to the election, the Left party (die Linke) almost failed to get into parliament at all, and meanwhile the far right once again received their reliable share of the vote.  

It is to the credit of the numerous groups that make up the climate justice movement that the climate issue had become so important in this election campaign. Fridays for Future have been striking tirelessly for nearly three years; lignite mines, forests and car industry exhibitions have been occupied as part of ongoing civil disobedience movement; and on a local level many people are organizing themselves into local climate protection initiatives. In surveys of the general public, climate is now always named as the most important issue we face. 

The climate justice movement in Germany has become versatile and powerful in recent years, and its voices have become an integral part of the political discourse. However, the election results clearly indicate that its strategies and plans must now change. 

Climate Action? Unfortunately they missed the point 

To understand why the election result is such a disappointment from a climate perspective, and why the movement must redirect itself, we first need to look back at the election campaign. In the run up to the election, climate change was at the top of the media agenda; however, the political discourse fell far short. Fighting climate change was primarily presented as a financial issue and the question was posed time and again: ‘What would climate action cost and how does your party suggest we pay for it?’. As a result, the much more pressing question was never asked: ‘What will it cost us financially, but also socially, politically and existentially, if we do not take action on climate change?’ Can we afford to not take action on climate change, or to do too little, at the expense of future generations? And what does that actually mean for our children and grandchildren? 

Secondly, throughout the campaign climate policy was framed as a punitive debate on what people should and shouldn’t do. ‘Will we soon not be allowed to own a car?’ ‘Can we still go on holiday to Mallorca?’ ‘How many steaks will your party allow me to eat?’ Instead of discussing the most necessary social and political transformation project of all time, the discussion was reduced to the ways in which regulatory policy should limit individuals’ behaviour. Climate action was associated only with sacrifice and not with the chance to transform our society to become fairer and more sustainable. 

These debates diverged greatly from the goal of climate action and the demands of the climate justice movement. It’s unsurprising, in this context, that the Social Democratic Party (SPD) Chancellor candidate Olaf Scholz was presented as the ‘Climate Chancellor’, despite his proposed withdrawal from coal mining by 2038, when there is unanimous scientific consensus that this would be far too late to meet the goals set by the Paris Climate Agreement. Armin Laschet, the Chancellor candidate for the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) was also pandering to calls for climate action. However, when faced with the catastrophic flooding in his own state North Rhine-Westphalia, he declared: ‘today is not the day to discuss changes to political policy’. Meanwhile, the Green Party candidate Annalena Baerbock was always on the defensive both personally and politically and faced constant sexist attacks. But through her constant repetition of buzzwords like “awakening” and “change”, she missed the opportunity to make a rousing and convincing case for climate action. Meanwhile, die Linke tried to concentrate on its core issue of social justice but stumbled rather awkwardly through the climate debates, in which the party leaders made statements completely contrary to their own manifesto. Ultimately, it was not made clear why one should actually vote for them at all.

Even before the election campaign, it was clear that none of the parties had a program that could meet the Paris climate target of limiting global heating to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. So it was already evident before the election results came in that the climate justice movement would not be represented by any party in parliament. Climate may have been the number one issue of the campaign, but despite all the protests, all the occupations, all the public appeals and legal challenges, climate action was not an electable issue. 

The ‘Climate coalition’ and the ideology of digital green growth

At this stage, coalition negotiations are still taking place, but it is quite clear that a new government will be made up of a ‘traffic light coalition’ led by the SPD, with the Greens and Free Democrats (FDP) as junior partners. So what exactly does this mean for climate protection? First of all, one could optimistically state that climate protection is important to all three parties and that they hold it up at least as a metaphorical fig leaf. It will not simply be a matter of making a commitment to climate action either. Since a historic ruling by the Federal Constitutional Court in April, the German government is already legally required to significantly increase their ambitions on tackling climate change. 

What will become important during the coalition negotiations is what the parties involved actually understand by ‘climate action’ and what measures they will and won’t push for. The following roles are most probable in the traffic light coalition: The SPD will be the biggest barrier to climate action since it typically puts the interests of workers in the fossil fuel industry, as well as banks and corporations, first. As the Greens want to hit the ground running, they will probably start by ambitiously putting a number of climate protection proposals and measures on the table. The FDP will predictably play for time. Instead of tangible policies it will propose vague notions of “innovations” and “digital technologies” that it believes will get us out of the climate crisis. 

That may be a simplification, but we might end up backed up behind a traffic light that refuses to turn green.

There is also another very real danger. While all parties can rhetorically agree on more climate protection, the FDP and the pragmatic wing of the Greens will be joined by technophiles and political technocrats who love technology and the catchphrase: ‘a growing green and digitized economy.’ Green and digital solutions are the great promise of salvation. We can continue to do business and live the same way with magically less emissions. This green growth ideology has been around for years and has delivered less-than-successful results. The global economy continues to grow and become more digital and green, but neither emissions nor resource consumption are falling.

Instead, we have global temperatures rising far too fast, widespread biodiversity loss, and deepening social divisions worldwide. Empirically, new and efficient technologies do not lead to less resource use; in the worst cases, they actually lead to more. Nevertheless, a traffic light coalition will mainly rely on exactly this old wives’ tale as a promising climate measure, with dramatic implications for the climate.  

So in the end, it could well be that the concept of climate protection will itself lead to very few controversies, and that the negotiating parties will be able to agree on it very quickly. The commitment to more climate protection could even become the glue that holds the coalition together. Especially if it is combined with promises of more business, more technology and, above all, more growth. After all, this sounds just as optimistic as it is meaningless and ineffective, and requires hardly any political sacrifice from the co-ruling parties.

For the climate justice movement, however, it is clear that climate protection can not be achieved by increasing the number of electric cars, nor by capturing CO2 from the atmosphere, nor with emissions trading or autonomous air cabs. But this also means that the resistance to these new climate policies will have to be organized differently from now on.

New strategies and struggles

If the new German government, in contrast to the Merkel years, is much more committed to climate protection and is at least, on paper, moving in the direction of the demands of the climate movement, then the climate movement must also change. Although the Green Party is now part of the government this will not lead to significant change. The climate movement is therefore not going to become less important. Quite the opposite. Precisely because climate justice cannot be achieved with purely technological and digital innovations, strong social movements are needed more than ever to point out these gaps and contradictions. It will be up to the young people at the demonstrations and occupations to highlight the inadequacies of these measures and demand a rethink. This will also require a rethinking of their own strategy. Many groups like Fridays for Future have so far committed themselves to continuing their current strategy, in an almost naïve hope that if they carry on protesting, their demands will eventually be listened to by politicians. Appeals alone, however, will no longer suffice. Instead, the climate movement must credibly and intelligently justify why green capitalist measures are insufficient and will only exacerbate our problems. They must explain why a comprehensive transformation rather than a green coat of paint is needed across the board. This task is much more difficult to accomplish than a strategy of cautious warnings that many have pursued so far.

Of course, the climate movement will always find its places of resistance and hope. At the moment, attempts are still being made to save the village of Lützerath from the coal excavators, which also puts a much earlier coal phase-out back on the political agenda. There will also be forest occupations again when new motorways are planned, just as there will be the Friday school strikes. But for a comprehensive critique of green growth climate protection policies, it will no longer suffice to highlight the same scandals in different locations over and over again. 

Therefore, long-term plans are needed now for the time after the “climate campaign”, after the occupations, after the mass actions and after the strikes. 

There are several possible scenarios. It is likely that many activists will soon withdraw from activism altogether. Some will accept the tiny success of the government but most will be bitterly disappointed in unachieved goals. Nevertheless, large numbers of young people in particular are now highly politicized and are committed to continuing the fight. They may decide to reform the more progressive parties from within, or form alternatives to them, in an attempt to give the climate movement genuine representation. Although the new Klimaliste party has already predictably failed in this attempt, new projects could still attract activists. Further development and escalation of the previous civil disobedience strategies is also conceivable. Many activists are already considering ways to disrupt the destructive fossil and green capitalist system. It is likely that some parts of the climate movement will become much more radicalized and begin new methods and tactics to galvanize radical climate action. 

Last but not least, there is the question of the extent to which the previous struggles can also be developed and expanded. Because real climate protection can only be achieved with climate justice, and that in turn requires a comprehensive social transformation, not just changes in energy production. It also means changing the way we work, where and how we live, how we get around, what we eat, and how we communicate with each other. This requires struggles throughout society, along the lines of the plaza occupations in Spain or the recent movement to change the constitution in Chile. The climate movement must also link local concerns with global justice in order to have a truly transformative effect on society. The next few years under a traffic light coalition will show if the climate movement can succeed in initiating precisely this revolution in our society.

This article was written in German for theleftberlin.com. Translation; Alice Lambert

 

 

“Not All the Walls Have Fallen With the Berlin Wall”

Interview with Taleb Alisalem about Western Sahara, Africa’s last colony


01/11/2021

Hi Taleb, could you start by introducing yourself. Who are you and how are you active politically?  

My name is Taleb Alisalem. I was born in the Sahrawi refugee camps and then I moved to Spain, where I had the opportunity to study and work and make a “normal life”. But obviously as Sahrawis we never can have a “normal life” because half of my family continues to live in refugee camps, and the other half lives in the areas of Western Sahara that Morocco occupies illegally. My town is still divided by a 2700km wall with more than 10 million mines along it. So we can never have a normal life as this conflict crosses over and completely modifies our lives.  

So that is why I dedicate all my time and effort to fighting to change this sad reality that my people suffer, to helping the voice of my people reach the world and above all, to making it possible for my people to finally return home in a free Western Sahara.  

Saturday, 6th November sees the 46th anniversary of the Green March. What was the Green March and why is it important?  

Western Sahara was a Spanish colony for almost two centuries, in 1975 Spain decided to leave Western Sahara without finishing the decolonization process. What Spain did is sell the territory to Morocco and Mauritania, this happened after signing an agreement in Madrid in November 1975. After that agreement, Morocco began its occupation of Western Sahara through what it called the “green march.”  

We Sahrawis call it the “black march” since it led to the beginning of the occupation of our land and the bombing of our people that resulted in the exile of thousands of Sahrawis to Algeria, and in the death of thousands more.  

Many African countries liberated themselves from colonialism in the decades following the Second World War. Yet Western Sahara remains a colony. What happened and why?  

That is a very good question, the fourth commission of the United Nations, which is in charge of the decolonization process of all countries in Africa, to this day, continues to consider Western Sahara as the last colony in Africa pending decolonization. Why?

Western Sahara was a Spanish colony for almost two centuries. Spain decided not to comply with the decolonization process and hand over sovereignty to the Sahrawi people, preferring to do “business” with Morocco and Mauritania and hand over the territory to them in exchange for trade agreements.

Obviously that was completely illegal, which is why, until today, legally Spain continues to be the administering power of Western Sahara. But no Spanish government has wanted to take responsibility and initiate that pending decolonization process. The relations between Morocco, which physically occupies Western Sahara, and Spain, which legally occupies it, are very good relations that do not contemplate respecting the right of the Sahrawi people to exist freely on their legitimate land.  

The United Nations have been present in Western Sahara for the past 30 years. What has been their role?  

When Spain left Western Sahara in 1975 and handed it over to Morocco, which began to occupy the territory militarily, the Sahrawi people began armed resistance, through their liberation movement, the Polisario Front. This movement went to war with Morocco to try to expel it from the Sahrawi territories that it illegally occupied. The war began in 1975 and lasted 16 years until, in 1991, the UN presented a peace plan that both parts, Polisario Front and Morocco, accepted.  

This plan consisted of stopping the war, with a commitment to carry out a referendum on the population of Western Sahara, where they could choose to be part of Morocco or be an independent state. The UN promised that this referendum would take place within a period of nine months.  

30 years passed and that referendum was never held. Morocco blocked all attempts by the UN mission (MINURSO) in charge of carrying out this referendum, and the UN did not want to impose any position on Morocco either. And so, 30 years passed where the Sahrawi people only waited in refugee camps, or were living in the occupied part of Western Sahara suffering all kinds of human rights violations by Moroccan occupation forces. Sahrawi people experienced 30 very hard years of a wait that never ends.

There had been a ceasefire in the area until around a year ago, but this has now been broken. What happened, and how has that affected the general life of people in Western Sahara?  

After 30 years waiting for a referendum that never came. 30 years where the Sahrawi people peacefully asked for a solution. 30 years where Morocco continued to exploit the natural resources of Western Sahara generating millionaire profits, and silencing with torture and jail the Sahrawis who dared to oppose the Moroccan occupation. 30 years where the other half of the Sahrawi people lived in refugee camps in one of the harshest deserts in the world. 30 years being separated  by a 2700 km wall built by Morocco. 30 years of silence from the UN, the international community and the European Union. The Sahrawis were already tired.

A group of Sahrawi people decided to travel to the extreme south of Western Sahara and hold a peaceful protest in an area called Guerguerat. This area was heavily trafficked by trucks that the Moroccan occupation used to transfer all the resources that they stole from Western Sahara. The group of Sahrawi protesters closed that truck crossing. Because of this, the Moroccan army left the wall on November 13, 2020 and fired weapons at civilian protesters.  

The Polisario Front considered this attack a breach of the peace agreement signed in 1991, and announced that we, the Sahrawis, are returning to armed struggle against Morocco.  

The Sahrawi people are a peaceful people, but that day we all celebrated that decision, because after 30 years of suffering endless waiting, finally, maybe the war could make the world, the UN and the international community listen to us.

How are West Sahrawis resisting occupation and how successful are they?  

Since Morocco occupied Western Sahara in 1975, it implemented a harsh colonial policy with the aim of completely erasing the Sahrawi identity. Morocco prohibited wearing typical Sahrawi clothes, speaking in the Sahrawi dialect, prohibited several Sahrawi houses living in the same street. It filled Western Sahara with Moroccan settlers, to whom the Moroccan government offered houses and work to travel from Morocco and move to Western Sahara. Also, the Moroccan occupation employed a tough policy in education where children were taught that the Sahara was always part of Morocco.  

All these strategies failed because there was always a great feeling of identity and revolution in the Sahrawi people, there were always protests against the Moroccan occupation, Sahrawi flags were always raised. The occupation forces practiced murder, torture, jail, even disappearances against any Sahrawi who publicly protested against the Moroccan occupation. There are thousands of registered cases of torture and murder. Organizations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the UN have denounced these events.  

Despite all this, to this day, the Sahrawi population who live in the occupied areas of Western Sahara continue to peacefully resist the Moroccan occupation. The most recent case is the case of the Sahrawi activist Sultana Khaya, she has been under house arrest for a year. At her home in Western Sahara, the Moroccan occupation forces surround her home, have tortured her to the point of losing an eye, have raped her and her sister, cut off their electricity and they are unable to leave the home where they are arrested. Despite this, Sultana and her sister go up to the roof of the house every day to raise the Sahrawi flags and shout slogans against the Moroccan occupation. You just have to look on the internet; this is happening today. The case of Sultana Khaya is just one example of hundreds of other cases of Sahrawis in the occupied territories of Western Sahara.  

How strong are Left-wing parties in Western Sahara? How are they active in the resistance?  

In Western Sahara we do not have parties yet, remember that our land still suffers from colonization. We only have a single liberation movement that unifies and represents all of our people. The Polisario Front is the armed movement that represents our people and fights for our rights politically and militarily.  

Once we have control of all our occupied territories, and the decolonization process is completed, resulting in the Independence of Western Sahara; that is when the liberation movement will dissolve to form different political parties.  

What is the German and European involvement in the occupation?  

The European Union is directly responsible for the occupation and suffering of our people. The European Union is responsible for two reasons:  

1- According to the United Nations, legally Spain continues to be the colonizing power of Western Sahara. Therefore, it is Spain who must promote the decolonization process so that Morocco leaves Western Sahara and the Sahrawi people can have the sovereignty and independence that corresponds to them on their legitimate land. Spain is a member country of the European Union, and if Spain does not want to assume that historical and legal responsibility, the European Union should press for Spain to comply.  

2- The European Union has trade agreements with Morocco that include Western Sahara, that means that there are European companies that are dedicated to exploiting the natural resources of Western Sahara, this generates very important economic gains for Morocco, providing an incentive  to continue perpetuating its illegal occupation.  

Former German ex President, Mr. Horst Köhler, was the UN Secretary General’s envoy for Western Sahara. Köhler spent many years trying to find a solution to this conflict but Morocco blocked all his attempts to reach an agreement, finally in 2018 he ended up resigning.  

Germany’s position has always been neutral, but as Sahrawis we do not ask for or expect neutrality, rather we need a clear position and support for our people and our just cause.  

One of the main German companies involved in the occupation is Heidelberg Cement, who are also involved in land grabbing in Palestine. You can also draw comparisons with the wall being built by Morocco on the West Saharan border and the one separating the West Bank from Israel. To what extent is your campaign united with other campaigns against imperialism and occupation?  

So far we know that there are more than 80 international companies exploiting the natural resources of the Sahrawi people, being direct accomplices with the Moroccan regime in its illegal occupation of Western Sahara.  

Most of these companies are European; some are from Germany. No European government has denounced these events, even knowing that the high European court has ruled on three occasions that the agreements of the European Union with Morocco should not be extended to Western Sahara since this territory is not part of Morocco.  

About the wall? After its occupation of 80% of the territory of Western Sahara, Morocco built the largest wall in the world after the Chinese wall, this wall completely seals the part that Morocco occupied. It is 2,700 km long and has more than 10 million antipersonnel mines along the entire wall. This wall completely divided the Sahrawi people, half live in refugee camps, the other half, on the other side of the wall in the occupied part. These families have not been able to meet for more than 40 years. I always say that “not all the walls have fallen with the Berlin Wall”. Unfortunately in my country, the wall still exists to this day.  

What are your immediate demands on the Moroccan government and on international politicians?  

Our demands are the same as always. We ask Morocco to abandon our land that they occupy illegally, we ask Morocco to stop exploiting our natural resources, to stop raping and murdering our people, we ask Morocco to destroy the wall it built to separate our people, and to recognize that was a mistake to occupy Western Sahara. We ask Morocco to give us our sovereignty so that the Sahrawi people can be free and have an independent state on our legitimate land.  

To the international community, our demand is to not be complicit in perpetuating the occupation and mistreatment of our people. We ask them to stop looking the other way, and to support the end of occupation and colonialism in Western Sahara.  

We tell the international community, that the war that is being experienced in Western Sahara right now will be a massacre if they do not act quickly to find a solution that brings peace to the region.  

Finally, what can people in Germany and elsewhere do to support your campaign?  

There are many ways to help, first of all our fight is against the information blockade. People can investigate, they can learn more about the Sahrawi conflict, they also can visit the refugee camps or denounce these events in their social circles. I invite all people who are interested in helping to participate in the events that are organized in support of the cause of the Sahrawi people.  

For example, this Thursday, November 4, there will be a talk about Western Sahara in Berlin, also on Saturday, November 6, we will hold a demonstration in front of the German Parliament to demand the rights of the Sharawi people. I invite everyone who wants to participate in all these events, I invite you to get closer to this cause and defend it because just causes belong to everyone.