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News from Berlin and Germany, 4th August 2022

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


04/08/2022

NEWS FROM BERLIN

1,200 cases of Monkeypox in Berlin

The risk of contracting so-called monkeypox is particularly high in Europe and has prompted the World Health Organization to declare a public health emergency of international scope. With more than 1,200 cases, Berlin is the lone frontrunner in Germany – about half of all infections in Germany were registered in the capital. When the first cases became known in the country, the warnings were mainly directed at men who have sexual intercourse with other men. But the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) emphasizes the risk is not limited to this group but refers in general to people whose sexual partners change often. Source: morgenpost

Lederer demands new Corona rules from the federal government

Berlin’s culture senator Klaus Lederer (“die Linke”) calls for new Corona rules for Autumn and Winter. Lederer hopes that cultural institutions will not have to close completely again. He can also imagine an extensive extension of the nine-euro ticket. The politician also commented on the possible energy shortage in Winter. He said that here, too, it was important to hear from the federal government what was being planned. In his opinion, a gas price cap was conceivable. Massive support measures would probably be necessary in all areas. The state of Berlin might have to take out additional loans or pass a supplementary budget. Source: rbb

Square in Kreuzberg to be named after left wing musician

The musician Rio Reiser (“König von Deutschland”, “Alles Lüge”), who died almost 26 years ago, will have a square named after him in the heart of SO 36, as the district is also called by many after the old postal delivery area 1000 Berlin 36. The plans of the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg´s office were published in the official gazette in April last year. The decision was controversial, for example because the notoriously male-heavy list of streets and squares is already short of women’s names. The district also expects Minister of Culture Claudia Roth (Greens) to attend the inauguration ceremony on 21 August. Source: Berlin.de

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Gas shortage and planned protests

In July, the AfD parliamentary group leader in the House of Representatives, Kristin Brinker, already demanded “direct aid for electricity and heating costs for citizens”. It is certainly not an easy time. After two years of COVID-19, other issues such as Ukraine, inflation, among others, could be taken up in protests in autumn at the latest “especially from the right-wing extremist and Reichsbürger scene”. Recent surveys by the Insa polling institute made it clear the energy issue could tempt even more people to protest. The far-right “Free Saxons” are already calling for a “wave of energy protests” in the Free State. Source: Berliner Zeitung

Lower Saxony: coal returning to electricity market?

The first reserve coal-fired power plant in Germany has returned to the electricity market. It is the Mehrum power plant in Hohenhameln (Peine district) in Lower Saxony, between Hanover and Braunschweig, which belongs to the Czech energy company EPH. It is the only “market return” of a power plant that has been reported to the Federal Network Agency so far. According to the operator, the Mehrum power plant has been in reserve since the beginning of December 2021. The power plant has been back on the grid since Sunday noon, and it will now be in operation for at least 14 days to stabilise the grid. Source: jW

Lufthansa pilots ready to strike

A strike by pilots at Germany’s largest airline is moving another step closer. Just recently, ground staff paralysed Lufthansa for a whole day. In a ballot, the voting members of the Vereinigung Cockpit (VC) pilots’ union voted in favour of industrial action with a very clear majority: 97.6 per cent of Lufthansa pilots and 99.3 per cent of Lufthansa Cargo pilots voted in favour of industrial action, as a union spokesman explained. According to the union, the turnout was over 93 per cent in both flight operations. However, no motion for strike action has been filed, so far. Source: DW

Important medicines are missing in Germany

The Arcaden pharmacy in a shopping centre in Berlin is busy as usual, but some of its medicines are not available. This is not an isolated case: the supply bottlenecks affect the whole of Germany. The Federal Association of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers mentions that, beyond this, other explanations are given such as “delivery delays by various active ingredient manufacturers”. Probably the most important reason, however, is a financial one. Some medicines, such as painkillers for children, are not profitable enough. But other drugs, as the breast cancer drug Tamoxifen, were not available at the beginning of the year. According to the industry, this was also because of its costs. Source: DW

Dream of violent overthrow

Marvin E., who is being led in handcuffs into Room II of the court building in Frankfurt am Main on Tuesday, is a linnet. Small, inconspicuous, and looking much younger than the 20-year-old he is. But he is alleged to have been willing to murder to spark a “race and civil war” for “white supremacy” in the world. This is what the indictment says. The man, who was still running on the list of the local CDU in the Hessian local elections in spring 2021, built at least 15 large explosive devices, intended to use them for attacks in line with the DWS ideology. Source: nd

Left wing Internet platform cleared of accusations of criminality

The public prosecutor office in Karlsruhe has dropped preliminary proceedings for the formation of a criminal organisation against alleged operators of the internet platform “Indymedia linksunten”. According to a post by Antifa Freiburg, the decision was made last week due to lack of evidence. To justify the classification of the platform as a criminal organization, the Federal Ministry of the Interior insinuated in 2017 that the independent internet platform was pursuing purposes contrary to criminal law and was therefore anti-constitutional. This was shortly before the federal election and after the protests against the Hamburg G20 summit. Source: jW

Berthold Brecht and the 1953 East Berlin Workers’ Uprising

The socialist playwright’s ambiguous attitude to the mass action shows his contradictory attitude to so-called “State Socialism”


03/08/2022

On Sunday, 31st July, I visited the Brecht/Weigel house in Buckow as part of a trip organised by the Berlin LINKE Internationals and DSA Berlin (more information at the foot of this article). Inside the house, one subject dominated above all others – the East Berlin workers’ uprising of June 17th 1953.

There are at least three different places in and around the house where you can read Brecht’s poem Die Lösung (The Solution). That’s the one that ends “Would it not in that case be simpler for the government To dissolve the people And elect another?”. The poem was never published in Brecht’s lifetime, eventually appearing in Die Welt in 1959.

Other artefacts show Brecht positioning himself much more guardedly. There are typewritten letters to the government and to SED leader Walter Ulbricht, expressing his concern and pledging his friendship with the Soviet Union. We also see a copy of the front page of the State Newspaper Neues Deutschland in which Brecht is quoted as saying: “the workers’ demonstration was abused for warlike purposes” and “I hope that the provocateurs will be isolated and their networks broken.”

On the other hand, there are also transcripts from discussions in Brecht’s theatre, the Berliner Ensemble, on 17th and 18th June, where he clearly shows support for the demonstrators. We also see reports from his fellow actors and theatre workers who say that some of the quotes attributed to him in the Party media reflected neither his feelings nor his vocabulary.

The 1953 Uprising

Maybe it’s worth briefly explaining the 1953 uprising here. On 16th June, construction workers struck against work quotas. The next day, one million people demonstrated in East Germany, in particular in Berlin. 25,000 people demonstrated, but they were cleared away by Soviet tanks. When Brecht was expressing his friendship with the Soviet Union, he is implicitly supporting this action.

This was one of the first indications that one of the Eastern European “workers’ states”, which had been effectively imposed by the Soviet military after the Second World War, was actually acting against the interest of Eastern European workers. In the “workers’ state” of East Germany, workers were demonstrating against the government for better conditions.

One lesson to be drawn from this action is that the actions required to win reforms in the East were not fundamentally different to those in the West – strike actions and mass demonstrations. It also showed that the Soviet-backed states could deal with opposition just as ruthlessly as the capitalist states of the West.

This is not the place to have a detailed discussion about the class nature of post-war Eastern Europe, but briefly put, in East Germany a small number of people (let’s call them the ruling class) profited from the exploitation of the majority (who we can call the working class). As a State-sponsored playwright, Brecht found himself in an uncomfortable position between both groups.

The social democratic writer Günther Grass satirised Brecht’s dilemma in his play “The Plebians Rehearse the Uprising”. A dramaturg (“Der Chef”, known as The Boss in the English translation), who is clearly modelled on Brecht, is leading his actors in rehearsals for his new version of Corialanus (a play which Brecht did try to rewrite between 1951 and 1953). Meanwhile, real workers come into the theatre to report from a real workers’ uprising which is happening outside the theatre. They ask Der Chef for his support.

Martin Schofield describes what happens next: “The workers … accuse him [The Boss] of wanting to remain in favor with the authorities simply to save his theatre. The Boss tries on his side to involve the rebellious workers in his production, to help them see what went wrong with theirs. For the Boss, integrity resides in sticking to the artifice of of his production rather than in trying to play a part in the real uprising”.

What to make of it all?

First of all, although Brecht maintained an Austrian passport until the end of his life, he genuinely believed that the DDR was the least bad option – a belief that was confirmed by his experience in Hollywood, where he briefly became the eleventh member of the Hollywood Ten (more about this, below).

Secondly, his life in the DDR was one of relative privilege. The State gave him his own theatre, with full artistic control. He could afford this lovely lakeside house in Buckow alongside his Berlin home near Hegel’s graveyard in Chauseestraße.

But thirdly, the DDR was less than a decade old. West Germany had retained much of the old Nazi State apparatus. Nearly 100 former Nazis held high-ranking positions in the Justice Ministry (This was not a temporary phenomenon. Over half of West German lawyers and judges between 1949 and 1973 had been members of Hitler’s party).

This article started as a much shorter post on my facebook page. Reacting to the original post, someone remarked: “BTW Brecht was not allowed to live in West Germany, which tells a lot and is a scandal by itself. Few people of the establishment want to be remembered of this today. (The Trotskyist Ernest Mandel was also not allowed entry to West Germany decades later).”

In contrast, many of the East German leaders had spent the war in exile or in Concentration Camps. This was a country which called itself Communist and anti-fascist, and Brecht still considered himself to be a Communist and anti-fascist.

My friend Victor Grossman defected to the DDR in 1952 after facing a one year prison sentence for having been a member of the US Communist Party. In 1953, he was living in East Berlin. Victor was always a critic of the establishment – East and West, but he is adamant that the uprising was a manoeuvre by the CIA. Now I disagree fundamentally with Victor on this, but it does show that serious socialists were suspicious of the action. It is not too much of a flight of fancy to think that Brecht shared these suspicions.

What did Brecht really think?

We’re unlikely to ever know what Brecht really thought, but I think that both his private talks, as articulated in die Lösung, and his official statements, were made with a degree of sincerity. When workers rose up, he did feel automatic sympathy, but he also knew that the West was determined to destroy the country to which he had chosen to move for political reasons.

So, his reaction was typically Brechtian. Brecht’s plays are littered with opportunists, who ultimately act out of self interest – “Erst kommt das Fressen, dann kommt die Moral” (Food comes first, then morality), as he (or one of his characters) says in the Threepenny Opera.

Whether it’s Macheath in the Threepenny Opera in Victorian London, Mother Courage in the Thirty Years War, Galileo faced with torture and death by the Spanish Inquisition or Schwejk in the Second World War, a recurring theme in Brecht’s plays is the cocky individual who outwits the authorities and survives.

This is, in effect, what happened when Brecht testified before Joe McCarthy’s House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1947. Accused of being a Communist, he spent 2 days in court willingly answering the questions put to him with a string of hilarious gibberish, before fleeing the country.

There was a slight difference in Brecht’s attitude to the 1953 uprising. He felt nothing but contempt for his US-American McCarthyite prosecutors. On the other hand, he had something invested in the East German government. But he wasn’t going to put his neck on the line, and ultimately chose to support the DDR against what he saw as the forces of agents of imperialism. Brecht never did speak out publicly in support of the uprising.

But he never destroyed the manuscript of Die Lösung.

We visited the Brecht-Weigel Haus on one of the €9 Travel Ticket tours organised by the Berlin LINKE Internationals and DSA Berlin to discover relatively unknown parts of Germany. Two further trips are planned – to the former concentration camp at Sachsenhausen on 14th August (date tbc) and to the DDR art archive in Beeskow on 21st August. No need to book up. Just turn up at Alexanderplatz station at the time given in the Event description with your €9 ticket.

New Book on the British National Health Service is a Useful Tool in Fight for Just Healthcare

Review: NHS Under Siege. John Lister, Jacky Davis (eds.)


02/08/2022

Like Woody Guthrie’s guitar (a ‘machine for killing fascists’), ‘NHS Under Siege’ is intended not just to educate, but as a weapon to inform and strengthen the fight for the National Health Service (NHS) and social justice. Edited by two veteran campaigners and with a forward by the writer Michael Rosen, the book has contributions from, trade unionists, academics, public and child health experts, health policy analysts and COVID bereaved relatives. With attacks on healthcare funding in Germany and across Europe, it is fruitful to compare the experience of struggle in the UK for for just healthcare system in a post-COVID world.

The first of these writers is Michael Marmot reminding us that while the NHS must be defended against attack, there is also a need to focus on the conditions that make people sick in the first place – the social determinants of health and health equity. Even before the pandemic, life expectancy increases had slowed dramatically, health inequalities were increasing and life expectancy for the poorest was getting worse. This was the direct result of fiscal policies that led to massive decreases in public expenditure and dramatic increases in child poverty.

A major section of the book draws on the People’s COVID Inquiry, elegantly summarised by Jacky Davis, exposing lack of preparedness, sluggish response, failure to protect both workers and the vulnerable, preference for the private sector, cronyism and corruption, and lack of accountability for tens of thousands of COVID deaths.

The adverse effects of austerity policies are explored in detail together with the ever present and misleading spin from government. For example, £34bn funding marking the NHS 70th birthday in 2018 was in fact only £20bn in real terms. The last decade ended with 9,000 acute and general beds closed, 22% of mental health beds lost, the pre-COVID waiting list increased from 2 million  to 4.5 million cases, deliberate lying to the public about the prospect of forty new hospitals, and unacknowledged needs related to a four million increase in population. The NHS now faces an existential crisis both from ten years of austerity that wiped out the growth of the previous decade and the huge challenge while ill-prepared and under resourced of dealing with the covid pandemic.

The authors argue that the ‘besieging forces’ (right wing politicians, private health care corporations, etc.) don’t want to replace the tax funded system, but to exploit it more fully by ensuring the greatest flow of profitable activity to private providers, while also maximising the numbers of patients who will opt to pay for elective treatment rather than face long delays. A core NHS would be maintained to treat emergencies, provide care for maternity, complex and chronic cases, train staff and foot the bill for the poor, sick and elderly. Ministers continue to gaslight the public about ‘spending more than ever before’ on health when the truth is quite the reverse. Each year since 2010, the health budget has grown less than the previous average increase in spending, bringing real terms cuts as resources lag behind rising costs.

Key expectations that there would be a ‘national upgrade in prevention and public health’ set out in the 2014 Five Year Forward View for NHS were not met, while service providers have been overwhelmed by a slew of undeliverable objectives, lacking the investment and workforce required to make them feasible. Policies, decisions and circumstances that have brought us to this situation, the actual and real term cuts in spending, the fragmentation, the privatisation, the so-called reforms, reorganisation and plans that have weakened the NHS and made it more dependent on the private sector, including the most recent reorganisation into Integrated Care Systems, are documented and deconstructed.

A devastating recent report from the parliamentary Health and Social Care Committee has characterised the current situation in the NHS as the ‘greatest workforce crisis in its history’, castigating government for an absence of credible strategy, with critical gaps in almost every area of care. Health policy analyst Roy Lilley concludes the book by pointing out that without a workforce plan the NHS will fail, leading to a poor service for poor people. While he also opines that ‘no one plans to fail, they simply fail to plan’, it is difficult to read this book and not conclude that government policy does indeed amount to planned failure.

The authors stress that the siege of the NHS has been opposed, and their intention is to arm and fuel the resistance. Defences could be strengthened now by new money, above inflation pay rises for staff, and all investment being channelled into reopening, rebuilding and expanding NHS capacity rather than squandering on private providers.

This book should be read by anyone interested in both defending and rebuilding the NHS and in addressing health inequity more generally as a matter of social justice, packed as it is with facts and insight presented in an accessible and well referenced form. It should also be read by anyone with any pretension to wanting to examine critically the claim by the conservative government that it cares for and has been generous to the NHS. John Lister reminds readers of the long history of campaigners fighting to defend and improve services, going back to the 1970s. This book should help inspire new generations of activists as well as stimulate the development of novel strategy and tactics. The question is raised that If the mission of the NHS is to put the equity of health and wellbeing at the heart of all policy, how much more should this be true for the whole of society? Read the book and join the fight.

NHS Under Siege. John Lister, Jacky Davis (eds.). The Merlin Press Limited, Dagenham, 2022