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The Occasional Knowledge-Hungry Shark

Two underwater telecables were cut in the Baltic Sea last Sunday. Who is to blame?


22/11/2024

The internet is under attack, and Western politicians have been quick to point their fingers in Putin’s general direction. Two underwater telecables in the Baltic Sea were cut Sunday night and Monday morning this week. One connected Lithuania to the Swedish island of Gotland, the other ran from Finland to Rostock in Germany. 

Despite few details, on Tuesday a statement by Germany, France, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom claimed  — without specifically mentioning the cables — that, “Russia is systematically attacking European security architecture.” The German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius also stated that, “No one believes that these cables were cut accidentally.” He then added, apparently without a hint of irony, “We also have to assume, without knowing it yet, that it is sabotage.”

This is the third alleged attack in the Baltic Sea since the war between Russian and Ukraine began close to three years ago, the first two primarily targeting gas pipelines. It is unclear who carried out the first attack in September of 2022 on a pipeline built to carry Russian gas, but they succeeded in causing major damage. The Americans and the Russians have since blamed each other, although media reports from Germany’s investigation point towards a pro-Ukrainian group. 

The second attack in October 2023 was first denounced by Finland as having been caused by “outside activity”, and various European leaders hinted at Russian aggression, only for some awkward information to come to light: a Chinese tanker ship was apparently to blame. It seems to have dragged its anchor along the sea bed and damaged the pipeline, although it’s unclear whether this was due to incompetence or done on purpose.

Again this week, before events were clear, European leaders pointed to sabotage. The day following Pistorius’ bravado statements, it was reported that a Chinese bulk carrier was at the site of both breaches at approximately the times they took place. The signs are once again pointing to an accident, although as of the time of writing, neither the accidental nature nor the Chinese ship’s responsibility have been confirmed.

It would be far from the first time an undersea cable was damaged by accident. According to the telecom data provider TeleGeography, there are around 100 breaks per year, and around two thirds of these come from fishing boats trawling the ocean floor, or inconveniently placed anchors. Add to that natural wear and tear, earthquakes, and the occasional knowledge-hungry shark, and there’s little space left for international intrigue.

The spine of the internet

Underwater telecables are of major structural importance in the modern world, and so perhaps forgiveness can be extended to politicians who panic and point fingers at the possibility of attacks. They were originally used to transfer telegraphs, then telephone calls and now today the internet as well. The cables themselves, alongside fears surrounding them, have a long history — the first international treaty on the matter included the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires among its original signatories.

The underwater cables that carry phone calls and internet traffic are surprisingly thin, about the width of a medium carrot, although notably longer. Closer to shore, they are thicker due to increased protective layers. While the landing points are generally considered the most susceptible to attacks, actual attacks have tended to target sections deep underwater, where there are fewer witnesses or risk of escalation than would come with attacking infrastructure located on foreign soil.

During the Cold War, the Americans and the Soviets engaged in a back-and-forth which showed that the underwater sections of telecommunications cables were more than weak enough to be targeted. In 1959-60, five transatlantic cables near the USA were cut one after another, leading to accusations of foul play. The American Navy seized a Soviet fishing trawler which was at the site of each of the cuts, but were unable to prove its responsibility. Then, throughout the 1970s and 80s, the American National Security Agency spied on Soviet communications by having a submarine tap Soviet cables.

More recently, American and other Western political commentators have continuously raised concerns that these cables are a weak point. In 2015, Forbes ran an article titled, “How Bad Would It Be If The Russians Started Cutting Undersea Cables? Try Trillions In Damage”. In 2019, a NATO-associated journal published a detailed piece outlining the risk. Just this summer, the Financial Times published another article warning of the possibility of attacks. 

There is a slight irony here, as despite all the alarming articles, the 2019 piece still feels the need to offer what feels like fairly basic advice to those who run the supposedly high-risk landing ports: they should implement “perimeter fences”, “video surveillance cameras” and “guard[s]”.

There are admittedly some good reasons to be afraid. Even today, upwards of 95% of internet traffic is run through these cables, despite all the attention given to satellites. The WhatsApp messages you send from your phone to family or friends abroad go to the nearest cellphone tower, and then straight into a cable. Add in work emails, the recipe you looked up on an Indian website, the German website you used that has servers in the USA for whatever reason, and of course, trillions of dollars in digital transactions swirling around the globe; everything from grandma sending you birthday money to grandpa’s tax-dodging offshore accounts.

All this information is primarily run through undersea cables. As seen on this map, most places have enough cables that just cutting one would be more of a costly inconvenience than an economic and security crisis, as data could be re-routed through other cables with little or no noticeable loss in service. 

This is true of the current situation in the Baltic Sea, although Finnish users may find their internet slightly slower than normal. Some geographically remote places like Australia or Patagonia are exceptions, though. The Black Sea is also surprisingly sparse on cables.

Serious outages, even short ones, would prove costly to the financial markets, not to mention the cost of repairing the cables. But in times of war, any damages to communication lines could have costs ranging well beyond the economic, interrupting the flow of communications to military forces — not to mention the psychological impact such an attack would have. Youth across Europe have already been struggling with the rising costs of bread since Russia invaded Ukraine. How would they manage if Putin shut down their internet?

Privatisation and confused jurisdiction

Despite their importance and the long-standing international agreements relating to them, the actual jurisdiction over undersea cables is still quite confused. This is made worse by the fact that most of these cables are privately owned, a fact as unsurprising as it is depressing. Major corporations like Google are becoming increasingly responsible for them as well, with industry insiders claiming just last month that Meta has plans for a new around-the-world cable.

In the Baltic Sea breaches, the shorter Lithuania-Gotland cable belongs to the Swedish company Arelion. The other cable leading to Rostock was the 1173 km long “C-Lion1”, owned by the Finnish company Cinia and originally built in 2016. Cinia has said that a ship is being dispatched, and repairs should be completed before the end of the month. 

The muddled political jurisdiction was shown by the response to the alleged attack on the Finnish and Swedish companies. Both countries launched inquiries from their respective national investigative bodies, although the Finnish allowed the Swedes to take the lead. This was presumably because at least one (but seemingly both) of the cuts was close enough to Swedish shores to be in the Swedish Exclusive Economic Zone, as Cinia said in its statement

This left Germany (not to mention Lithuania) in the awkward position of wanting to be outraged by an attack on their internet infrastructure, but having nowhere to funnel this anger. It was, after all, an attack on a Finnish-owned cable on Swedish territory. The only impact it had on Germany was on its internet, leaving the state with no investigations to launch or other practical ways of showing displeasure. Pistorius had to make do with an accusatory and potentially embarrassing statement. If news comes out confirming that it was an accident due to the Chinese ship, he may end up hoping more damaged cables prevent the news from spreading this close to an election.

As mentioned above, whether Putin is behind these latest cuts or not, it certainly isn’t the first time European governments have too quickly accused Moscow, nor is undersea sabotage a new tactic. But while the ringing of war bells is a cause for concern, the largest threat to internet infrastructure over the long term may be massive corporations seizing control of our means of communication by building and purchasing the cables that connect the world. With the growing monopolisation of these cables, the main threat to the freedom of the internet may be on a Meta-level as well as a physical one.

Unframe Festival

A Weekend of Socialism, Culture, and Community


21/11/2024

This weekend, Berlin’s Oyoun transforms into a hub of resistance and creativity with the Unframe Festival, running from November 22 to 24. This three-day event brings together lectures, panel discussions, workshops, theatre, and film in German and English to tackle themes like decolonization, anti-capitalism, intersectionality, and collective liberation. Unframe provides a critical space for confronting systemic oppression while imagining alternative futures through knowledge and cultural expression.

In a world where authoritarianism is rising, and inequality continues to deepen, Unframe offers a platform for activists, thinkers, and artists to reflect, strategize, and inspire. Through its diverse programming, the festival blends political engagement with cultural exploration, creating an opportunity for meaningful dialogue and action.

Challenging Colonial Narratives and Historical Legacies

Unframe opens with discussions that confront the lasting impacts of colonialism and imperialism. One standout session is “Is German guilt to blame for the oppression of Palestinians?”, which examines how Germany’s historical reckoning with the Holocaust has shaped its policies toward Palestine. This deeply reflective lecture highlights the tensions between historical responsibility and current political realities, offering a thought-provoking start to the festival.

The theme of colonial legacies continues with “Das Gewicht der Wörter” (The Weight of Words), a panel on Saturday featuring Moshtari Hilal and Sinthujan Varatharajah. This session dives into how language is wielded as both a tool of oppression and a medium of resistance, inviting participants to rethink how narratives shape power dynamics.

On Sunday, “Antizionistische JüdInnen unter Generalverdacht” (Anti-Zionist Jews Under General Suspicion) addresses the challenges faced by Jewish voices critical of Zionism. This session sheds light on the stigmatization and marginalization of these perspectives, framing them as an essential part of global liberation movements. “Decolonial Jewish Diasporism” expands on this by imagining Jewish identity beyond nationalist frameworks, emphasizing solidarity with decolonial struggles worldwide.

Intersectionality in Action

A key strength of Unframe is its ability to connect struggles across race, gender, class, and geography, highlighting the systemic forces that shape oppression. On Saturday a panel “(Un)Democratic Mechanisms” explores how modern democracies often fail to serve marginalized communities. Featuring Pauline Jaeckels, Lucas Febraro, and Alexander Gorski, and moderated by James Jackson, the discussion critiques democratic structures and their inability to uphold civil liberties.

For those drawn to feminist critique, “Imperialer Feminismus – eine marxistische Analyse” (Imperial Feminism – A Marxist Analysis) on Friday offers a sharp analysis of how capitalist and imperialist frameworks co-opt feminist movements, undermining their transformative potential. This session provides a critical lens on how gender equality is often commodified within global systems of power.

Saturday also offers unique opportunities for collaboration and creativity through workshops. “Imaginative Justice” by Salma Said and Miriam Coretta Schulte stands out as it is conducted in three languages – English, German, and Arabic. This interactive session challenges participants to imagine a world free of borders, surveillance, and exclusion, blending accessibility with radical creativity. It exemplifies Unframe’s commitment to fostering inclusivity and collective participation.

Climate Justice and Resistance

The intersection of climate justice and anti-imperialism is another major theme at Unframe. On Saturday, “Klimagerechtigkeit, Antiimperialismus & die Klimabewegung” (Climate Justice, Anti-Imperialism, and the Climate Movement) critiques the neoliberal co-optation of climate activism. Speaker Hasan Özbay calls for a return to anti-imperialist principles, urging activists to address the global inequalities at the heart of the climate crisis.

On Sunday, the panel “The unity of our struggles, the diversity of our tactics” emphasizes the importance of solidarity across movements, focusing on the connections between environmental justice and liberation struggles worldwide.

Cultural Expression and Storytelling

Unframe’s cultural programming underscores the power of art and storytelling in resistance. The “Memories Carried” art exhibition runs throughout the weekend, showcasing works that explore themes of migration, displacement, and resilience. Guided tours provide deeper insights into the artists’ processes, making this an essential experience for attendees.

The festival also features a carefully curated selection of films. Friday’s screenings include “From Ground Zero” by Tutku Efe, a narrative on resilience after systemic destruction, and “Uncle, Give Me a Cigarette” by Jamen Abu-Khatir, which reflects on longing and loss amidst displacement. On Sunday, “Taste of Cement” by Ziad Kalthoum offers a visually stunning exploration of Syrian construction workers in Beirut, caught between rebuilding a foreign city and mourning the destruction of their homeland. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Ziad.

Saturday’s “Bleib ängstlich – bleib sicher” (Stay Fearful – Stay Safe) combines German and English storytelling in an experimental theatrical performance. The show explores how fear shapes individual and collective identities, providing a powerful commentary on the ways we navigate security and uncertainty in modern life.

Why Unframe Matters

Unframe Festival stands out for its ability to weave together intellectual debate, grassroots activism, and cultural expression. Its programming not only confronts systemic injustices but also celebrates the resilience and creativity of those fighting for liberation. For someone like me, drawn to the intersections of politics, storytelling, and activism, sessions like “Das Gewicht der Wörter”, “Eye witness report from West Bank”, and “Imaginative Justice” exemplify the festival’s capacity to inspire and connect.

Whether you’re interested in the global implications of climate justice, the intricacies of democratic systems, or the role of art in resistance, Unframe has something to offer. It’s more than a festival – It’s a call to action, inviting us to imagine and work toward a better world. This weekend at Oyoun is an opportunity to learn, connect, and reflect on the movements shaping our future. Join the conversation and be part of the change.

For more information, visit their Instagram or official website.

Check the timetable here.

Film Review – No Other Land

Accusations of antisemitism are nonsense. This is a groundbreaking film


20/11/2024

Directors: Yuval Abraham, Basel Adra, Hamdan Ballal (Occupied Palestinian Territory, Norway).

Summer 2019, the West Bank. A line of bulldozers enters one of the villages belonging to the community of Masafer Yatta, South of Hebron. In a short space of time, they destroy some of the village’s stone houses. Local residents complain, but they are told by the soldiers accompanying the bulldozers that this is all legal, the houses are being removed to make way for a closed military training zone. The soldiers are armed and aggressive. The villagers are not.

Flash back 20 or more years to Basel Adra’s first memory. He was woken by a flashlight carried by an Israeli soldier coming to arrest his father, not for the first time. Within a couple of years, Basel was accompanying his activist parents on demos, and soon he was filming them. He first trained as a lawyer, but what can you do in the Israeli courts? He is now a social media activist who documents the daily brutalisation of Masafer Yatta by soldiers, tanks, and armed settlers.

Early on in the film, Basel meets Yuval Abraham, an anti-Zionist Israeli journalist. Many villagers are suspicious of Yuval – the only Israelis they have met so far have been those who terrorise them. But Basel and Yuval strike up a friendship. As well as documenting the horror of living in the West Bank, No Other Land also shows their growing Bromance. At one point, Basel jokingly suggests that they leave and go to the Maldives. At another, one asks the other when they are going to get married.

Such moments of levity stand in stark contrast to the random daily terror which is inflicted on the locals. One villager says that his family has lived here since the 1830s. This does nothing to stop Israeli soldiers razing people’s homes to the ground. Villagers are not allowed to rebuild them, as that would require a building permit. And to get a building permit you need to apply to an Israeli court. So they rebuild their homes at night until the bulldozers return. Many people are now forced to live in caves.

Basel asks Yuval why, unlike so many of his countrymen, he cares about basic human rights for Palestinians. Yuval attributes his activism to learning Arabic – something which caused the Israeli secret service to offer him a job, which he declined. Maybe Yuval’s radicalisation was down to more than just learning a language, but he has remained true to his beliefs. He spends increasing amounts of time in the village, helping rebuild buildings and trying to motivate himself to write more about the resistance.

The villages are filmed over a period of years, over which the Israelis – led by an obnoxious arsehole in mirrored sunglasses called Ilan – get increasingly confident. After a while, they do not just demolish homes, they confiscate building tools and even power generators. When one young man, Harun Abu Aram, tries to stop the soldiers taking away his generator, they shoot him in the neck, rendering him quadriplegic. They then tear down his home, forcing him to live in a cave. Harun later dies of his wounds.

We actually see the footage of the shooting of Harun, well some of it at least. As with much of the footage here, we first see an altercation filmed on handheld cameras, then the soldiers threatening the people taking the film. As the soldiers get more aggressive, we see more pictures of stony ground as the person holding the camera runs away. In this case, these pictures are accompanied by the sound of  a shot, followed by a woman screaming: “what have they done to my son?”

Many scenes remain uncommented, as there is honestly nothing to say. Children are first locked into their classrooms, then forced out at gunpoint. A playground is destroyed. Basel’s father is arrested and taken to a military prison – again. As a bulldozer approaches a house, a woman shouts out: “my daughters are still in there!” A soldier impassively says “doesn’t matter!” Even if the soldiers are just obeying orders, as they claim, there is no justification for such malevolent indifference.

Basel proudly tells the story of how his school was built – the only one in the village. Normally, any building works were disrupted by Israeli soldiers, but Basel’s mother had a plan. In the daytime, the women and children would work on the building site, and at night, the men would come out and get the job done. Surprisingly, the plan worked, and soon the school was built. Unsurprisingly, the Israelis condemned it to be torn down. And then Tony Blair arrived.

I hate to give any credit to the soulless war criminal, but for once Blair’s actions had a positive effect. He was in Masafer Yatta for just 7 minutes (we see footage of him surrounded by burly bodyguards), and yet his appearance shamed the Israeli government into letting the school stay. Basel ruefully says “This is a story about power.” Even this victory was short-lived. Later footage shows the school being demolished after the television cameras had moved elsewhere.

Basel teases Yuval for wanting a quick solution. When Yuval is worried that an article he wrote did not generate enough clicks, Basel replies: “You want the occupation to end in ten days, and then you go home … You have to get used to being a loser.” Basel accuses his friend of having too much enthusiasm. He says that Yuval thinks that this conflict can be solved by a nice article, but Basel has to live through all this and cannot afford such self-indulgence.

Earlier footage shows that Basel was not always so cynical. We see him early on saying that if his footage of Israeli atrocities could reach an international audience, maybe the US authorities would understand and get Israel to stop. Watching the film in late 2024, when the atrocities have become much worse and much more public, and the USA and Germany continue to fund the destruction, it is easy to understand why Basel has become much less hopeful of any diplomatic solution.

For most of the time, Basel is indefatigable, but occasionally he too feels defeated. At one point, he says he doesn’t want to end up like his father, not because he isn’t proud of his parents’ activism, but because he isn’t sure whether he has his father’s staying power. He considers stepping back from activism, as he is tired, and after his father’s arrest someone’s got to look after his petrol station (in truth, a single pump) and ensure that the family has the money it needs to survive.

You’d be forgiven for asking if Basel’s activism is worth it. We see several scenes of him telling IDF soldiers that he’s filming them, but they don’t care. They know the courts are on their side. In one scene, Basel shouts out that he has press ID, but this does not protect him from a vicious beating. And yet, however futile it may seem, Basel says that the fact that the villagers are still there is proof of their resilience. Their very existence is valid and necessary resistance.

Despite their camaraderie, the film shows the asymmetry of Basel and Yuval’s relationship. At the end of the day, Yuval can drive home and take a shower. Basel cannot do this for a number of reasons. Firstly, the authorities have banned cars with Palestinian number plates in Masafer Yatta. Secondly, Basel also has a personal driving ban. And even if he could drive away and leave his home, he would not get far because of the checkpoints. He certainly could not drive along the roads which only allow Israeli drivers.

Besides which, even taking a shower at home is becoming increasingly difficult. Emboldened by the previous repression and by a government – and a society – which supports them, Israeli soldiers destroy not just houses but all sources of water. Concrete is poured into the main well, hoses are chopped up, pipes and any other source of water are physically attacked. The villagers look on helplessly. One says “they are trying to starve us”. Or as Basel later says: “they destroy us slowly”.

If the constant attacks by soldiers aren’t enough, then the settlers arrive, armed with guns and baseball bats. Unlike the protesting Palestinians, the settlers are not attacked by the army – indeed we see soldiers accompanying them as they go on the rampage. In one of the final scenes, we see them shooting someone in the stomach, resulting in immediate death. A soldier watches on indulgently. We later learn that the victim was Basel’s cousin.

Why is all this happening? Why does Israel need to expel Palestinians from their traditional homelands? The official excuse is that the Israeli army needs room to train (how much space do you need to practise shooting unarmed civilians at point blank range?). We even see Israeli news coverage implying that the villagers are encroaching on military land – that is, that the army was always there and the villages which have existed since the early 19th Century are just a myth.

Towards the end of the film, leaked documents explain what is really going on. The expulsions are aimed at stopping “Arab expansion”. This is a topsy-turvy world in which “expansion” is used to describe staying where you are. The aim is to force the villagers into cities like Ramallah, where they are easier to control. And the sad fact is that these policies are starting to take effect. Later, we hear that many villagers cannot take any more brutality and have indeed moved out.

In amongst the grainy handheld footage, some scenes are beautifully shot, especially evening scenes from inside the village after the Israeli soldiers have gone. In the background, we see glorious landscapes, in the foreground ordinary people trying to get on with their lives in an impossible situation. If it wasn’t for the occupation, these lives could be idyllic. This film is about the relentlessness of the occupying forces but it is also about Palestinian indefatigability.

The film’s title is taken from what one of the villagers says to the soldiers who try to evict her from her home: “We have no other land.” And yet, I don’t know if it’s intentional, but it has a second meaning. Is there another country on Earth which could carry out such barbarities with impunity, while other governments, including our own, do not just ignore what is going on, but continue to provide Israel with the weapons and bulldozers used to destroy people’s lives?

Although No Other Land won both the jury and audience awards for Best Documentary at the Berlinale, it was recently used as the justification for a new “antisemitism resolution” passed by virtually all parties in the German Bundestag (the other justification was the Indonesian art collective Taring Padi, who exhibited at the most recent Documenta exhibition. In a country where the second most popular political party is full of fascists, it is not a good look to blame antisemitism on foreigners).

Before the film was screened today, a message from the cinema owners, Yorck Kinos, flashed up. It wasn’t on long enough for me to read it all, but it said something like: “we hope no Jews are offended by this film, blah blah, German history, blah blah, please don’t be antisemitic”. I don’t know whether the statement was voluntary or the result of government pressure, but the idea that your main take-home point from this film could be antisemitic says much more about Germany than about the film itself.

No Other Land was supposed to wrap in early October 2023. There is a cautionary post script in which we are told that since 7th October, things in the villages have got worse. But the villagers remain resilient. As Basel says, “We have to raise our voices, not be silent as if no human beings live here.” This film is part of this resistance, it allows us to hear the voices that are usually silenced, particularly in Germany. It isn’t showing in many cinemas, but the one I saw it in was full. Try and see it if you can.

Drowning in profits

Itziar Cedar analyses the capitalist causes & fascist effects of the storm system Dana that recently caused massive destruction and took many lives in Spain.


19/11/2024

Satellite view of the storm DANA over Valencia on 29 October at 6:30 a.m. EUMETSAT 2024, Wikimedia Commons

Did you hear the pig’s screams? They were on their way to the slaughterhouse when storm system Dana happened, forced to stay in the truck, in the middle of the flooded road, for hours, in these conditions, before getting their necks sliced (half of them died before getting there). Even in this extreme context, the death machine didn’t stop for them. Or the workers. 

After the tragic events that took place in Valencia, which Roser Gari Perez wrote about in her 4th of November article, the storm moved to the south of Spain, on November 13th, reaching Málaga, resulting, once again, in very serious risks for workers who were forced back to work in factories, supermarkets and train stations. The president and potential criminal of one of the main supermarket chains (Mercadona) decided once more not to close the stores despite the red alert announced in Malaga by the local authorities, and 2 weeks after directly harming his workers in Valencia. The workers from the public transport company Renfe, were also held back in their workplaces until 5pm, when stations where already closed and flooded, and the city practically collapsed, leaving them helpless and unable to reach their homes. Other big companies operated the same way, not allowing workers to leave or forcing them to move with their cars and trucks through the floods.

Paradoxically (or maybe not) the mayor of Malaga, from the conservative right-wing party (Partido Popular) announced that same day in the morning, that there was “no problem” and “no heavy rains happening”, and that he saw no reason to activate the emergency alert – statements that were contradicted by the streets full of water, the closed shops and the incidents reported by different emergency institutions. Hours after these words, the Malaga City Council had to fully activate the Municipal Emergency Plan, which had already been partially activated since the previous Tuesday. Let that sink in.

Regarding Dana in Valencia: another consequence of the political ineffectiveness and hate politics of right-wing and far-right governments, as in the case of Vox, has been the instrumentalization of racist campaigns in the midst of disaster. We know that fascism uses crisis contexts to spread its ideas, and in this case, Vox created an online fake news flow accusing the (already right-wing conservative populist racist government) of prioritizing aid to immigrants over support for those affected. Not only that, but they also spread digusting lies about migrants looting and robbing stores and supermarkets. Turns out, as seen in many videos, that the migrant community was unconditionally involved from the very first moment, in organising food, resources, rescue and cleaning teams, as in the case of the Islamic Cultural Centre of Alzira, which not only contributed in the forementioned tasks, but also housed a dozen volunteers and people who had lost their homes, allowing them to spend the night in the mosque. As Rashid Garbhi, the imam of the Centre stated  “we are involved in everything that has happened. We have no choice, it is our duty to help our brothers. We are part of the social network and we have to share the emotions and also the material and the spaces; we have to help in whatever way we can. We are all a family, we are part of this society and what happens here happens to us”.

How the Spanish central government is facing this whole situation is a critical question. One the one hand, its general lack of interest in stopping the development of intensive farming practices that are directly responsible for flooding, is politically motivated. The distribution of subsidies under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy favours large agribusiness while side-lining small-scale, traditional agriculture which operates with more sustainable methods, which mirrors, once again, how the State and big corporations are destroying working class lives from the core of the system. Julia Martínez Fernández, PhD in Biology and technical director of the New Water Culture Foundation states “…until recently, traditional agriculture included practices aimed to protect soil and water, such as plant covers, crop rotations, terrace cultivations and management of natural barriers.” She argues that it is frustrating to see how the popular viewpoint still portrays current farming practices as local, small and sustainable, when the reality is the complete opposite: it is large companies that dominate the sector and promote intensification. Martínez Fernández concludes “We need to rethink the model. There are many hidden costs that all citizens pay. Administrations cannot continue to look the other way”.

And speaking of looking away, another urgent matter that Pedro Sánchez and his big business friends are openly lying about is weapon exports to Israel. Last week, Sánchez made the following statement: “Since October 7 (2023), Spain has not exported any type of weapons or military equipment to Israel (…). I believe that it is urgent that, in light of everything that is happening in the Middle East, the International Community stops exporting arms to the Government of Israel”. It is not the first time that he instrumentalises the Palestinian cause to avoid losing votes and demobilise the Palestine solidarity movement, as the material reality of Spanish weapon trade with Israel does not reflect his words. A report of the Delàs Centre for Peace Studies entitled “Bu$in€ss as usual. Analysis of the Spanish arms trade in 2022-23 and arguments for an arms embargo on Israel”, published in July of this year, states that after October 7th, 2023 military exports to Israel have continued ranking Spain as the EU country with the 5th largest exports of weapons and munition to Israel after October 7th (with 1.1 million euros), and continues to do until today, with the complicity of a genocidal president who lies to the majority of the population who are against the illegal occupation of Palestine and genocide of the Palestinians.

In times of crisis, the interests of the ruling class become clear: profit over people, and empty rhetoric over change. The exploitation of workers during natural disasters, and the cruelty inflicted on humans and non-humans, are reminders of a system that dehumanizes the working class for the benefit of the few. Spanish political leaders, like Pedro Sánchez, publicly denounce violence while the country’s arms industry continues to profit from the blood of the people in Palestine, Western Sahara, Kurdistan, and Valencia, and all the countries that suffer the systemic violence of imperialism by the Spanish weapon industry. Such hypocrisy just proves the deep ties between government and corporate and imperial interests, teaching us that solidarity must go beyond identity politics and focus on the material conditions that exploit us all. We need a united front that rejects exploitation, imperialism, and the destruction of working-class lives both at home and abroad, and standing together against a system that prioritizes profit over everything else.

 

“Western Decline Is Not the Decline of the So-called Rest of the World”

Interview with Henry Urmann, co-author of Poetic Justice of the Global South: An analysis of the Scandal Picture People’s Justice by Taring Padi


18/11/2024

Hello, Henry. Thanks for talking to us. Could you start by introducing yourself?

My name is Henry Urmann. I live in Frankfurt. I am married to an Indonesian woman and that’s how I took an interest in Indonesian culture. As many others, I was outraged by the—I have to say—xenophobic media and political response to the documenta fifteen. With a dear friend, Hans-Jürgen Weißbach, we started to do some research and published our book last year. We also started a blog, www.peoplesjustice.de. And hopefully next year we can hold an exhibition to show and explain the painting to the German public.

The so-called “documenta scandal” has suddenly come back into the news in Germany, after the government justified pushing through an antisemitism resolution because of “antisemitic scandals like those of the Berlinale and documenta”. For people who haven’t been following this, what happened at Documenta?

At documenta, Indonesian artists, the Indonesian curators and organisers were accused of antisemitism, and it was claimed that several pieces of art contained antisemitic visual code. The explanations of the curators and artists were not taken into full consideration. 

The painting that caused the outrage was created by the Indonesian art collective Taring Padi 20 years ago. Members of Taring Padi were participants in the democratic overthrow of the last dictator of Indonesia in 1998. At the documenta they were pressured to remove this huge painting of 100 square metres which was in the middle of Friedrichsplatz in Kassel. In the documenta exhibitions before, the artworks which were placed in Friedrichsplatz became part of the art canon so this was really significant. Removing works of art is something that authoritarian governments do. It was a blatant act of censorship that we had to wrap our heads around.

How did German media and German politics react to the mural?

Without further investigation, they repeated the most superficial and raw accusations against People’s Justice. This was to be expected from the notorious Bild Zeitung, but what was fascinating and shocking was that the allegations were also expressed by the left liberal media, like taz, Frankfurter Allgemeine or Süddeutsche Zeitung

People who would usually be seen as moderate and even very progressive participants in the debate, like Meron Mendel, took a hard line against this painting and accused the whole of documenta of having an antisemitic atmosphere. 

Specifically, the accusation was that part of the mural had antisemitic content. What was your answer to that accusation?

It remains a tricky thing to depict a Jewish character with the insignia of the SS. I am convinced that it was painted with a very provocative intention to display the realities of a nasty world where victims like Henry Kissinger who lost a big part of his family in the Holocaust can become monsters while they fight their monsters. 

What happened next was that not just Taring Padi were banned—there was also censorship of other artists who were exhibiting at Documenta. How did that happen?

Taring Padi were not completely banned. They still held a big exhibition in the Hallenbad Ost. But other artworks were also criticised. There were demands to end the documenta completely and demands to remove other pieces of art for being antisemitic. 

And there was a public hostility towards the community of foreign artists from the Global South fueled by German politicians. In his opening speech, [German president Frank-Walter] Steinmeier said that there are boundaries, and that these boundaries were crossed. [Author: Steinmeier accused documenta ofthoughtless and reckless approach to the State of Israel.”]

The artists and other participants of the opening event were appalled by this initial statement and the climate it helped to create. The British artist Hamja Ahsan expressed this when our chancellor, Olaf Scholz refused to visit documenta. 

How did you get personally involved?

Our friends in the German-Indonesian community in Frankfurt were quite upset about the behaviour of the artists themselves. They criticised the artists for not defending themselves in response to the media coverage. They found the artists’ response to be too weak and also dishonest. This viewpoint is also shared by some people who were working at documenta. They said there was a lack of contextualization and of explanation. 

They were also outraged, of course, at the accusations of antisemitism. These accusations did not only relate to the artists and the artwork, but also to the whole community. My friends were shell shocked by the turn of events, the statements of Steinmeier, and the defamation of the artists and the artwork. 

After we talked about it in our circle of German-Indonesian friends, I started researching a little bit deeper into Indonesian history. I looked at the People’s Justice painting, and I had an idea. The painting depicts concrete historical figures, like Henry Kissinger, Muammar al-Gaddafi, and Queen Elizabeth. That helped me to understand the painting, but also the strange reaction of the artists. 

In the book, we first focus on everything that is depicted in the painting. It contains so many references to art history, Pop Culture and the Indonesian understanding of their history and world history after World War Two. 

So we explain what’s depicted in the painting, the whole narrative. We explain the historic context of when the painting was made, following 9/11 and during the war on terror, which began in Afghanistan. We explain how this played out in Indonesia at that time. We also talk a little bit about the artists, the Taring Padi collective and their friends and the whole art scene there.

We also give an interpretation of how this weird kind of coalition developed that we see now, between the Springer Presse and the ‘woke’ Left came into being.

Do you see a parallel between what happened at documenta and the current discussion about ‘cancel culture’?

Definitely, it’s part of cancel culture. I think Salman Rushdie explained very well in his speech last year about the cancel culture that comes from the Left and from the Right. 

Do you think it’s the same thing? Do you think the Left and Right are as bad as each other? 

I think that while the right-wing cancel culture is an authoritarian response to the current crisis, this left-wing cancel culture which has a bit of a Kamala Harris vibe, but is also fueled by this specific German arrogance and sense of superiority. We call it politisch-korrekte Fremdenfeindlichkeit in our book, ‘woke xenophobia’ you could say, stereotyping people from the Global South with misogyny, authoritarianism and antisemitism.

This all happened in 2022. It was a long time before October 7th. How do you think attitudes in the art world have changed since?

I think it’s very clear now to more people than before, that the charge of antisemitism is weaponized against opinions and art that does not fit into a certain narrative.

Surprisingly enough, even Stefan Ripplinger, one of the early anti-Deutsche who was co-founder of Jungle World, shared our interpretation of the painting in his new book, Kunst im Krieg. He clearly says now that the charge of antisemitism is weaponized—I know that even people in the Green Party see that this is happening in the parliament, and it’s happening everywhere.

Do you think this is a specifically German thing?

No. It’s also happening in the Anglo-Saxon world, just look at what Donald Trump plans with the universities.

What do you think the role of an artist is during a genocide?

The painting People’s Justice is dealing with the anticommunist genocide of millions of innocent civilians that happened in Indonesia in 1965, 1966. A mass murder programme with the complicity of the western powers and under the cover of the western media. Does that sound familiar?

Reflecting on this trauma the Indonesian artists of Taring Padi created a strong message about the state violence in the last cold war. The painting emphasises the transnational character of the perpetrators and therefore the necessity of transnational solidarity and remembrance, it’s warning the spectator of complicity and also shows a path towards reconciliation and a future where victims and victimizers can live together peacefully again. 

Going back to the question about what the artist should do, art is never simplistic and does not contain only one message. Art is the effort to turn something bad into something good. I think what always changes in times of crisis is that in good times, an artist sees life through the lens of art. And In a time of crisis, you see art through the lens of your life. You may come to different conclusions.

Documenta is a long running institution. The event in 2022 was the 15th documenta. Do you think the festival can survive the scandal?

There was a struggle about the code of conduct, and it ended with a compromise, which everyone can live with at the moment. The artists are not supposed to sign anything or give a big declaration that they will do this or not do that. It was on the verge of collapse, but I hope the next documenta in 2027 will go smoothly. 

Will all artists take part? There’s been talk of boycotting both documenta and Germany.

I’m a very optimistic person in general. Since the Ampel-coalition started, we’ve seen a lot of well intentioned, badly executed things going on in Germany. I can’t yet imagine that things will continue like this much longer. But of course there is a realistic danger that artists will turn away from Germany.

Although it looks like we won’t have an Ampel-coalition for much longer

For me the bigger context is what documenta and the Ampel-coalition stood for. Look, I am from Frankfurt and there we achieved to become this cosmopolitan, progressive and prospering city not with, but of immigrants. My hopes for Germany to get there are diminished for some time to come and that has to do with this xenophobic climate that the documenta scandal helped to produce.

To finish off, could we go back to where we started? Documenta was cited as a reason for the antisemitism resolution. What does this resolution mean for the progressive immigrant country that you’re talking about?

Like I said, it’s just another well-intentioned, badly executed piece of politics. I don’t know what it will bring. We had a BDS resolution that did not have a very strong influence in Germany. You can’t push out the reality of mainstream opinions in other countries for too long. It doesn’t work. Like you can’t have a Linke that is the only socialist party in the world that does not express solidarity with Palestine.

We are still excluding the world, and excluding the mainstream opinions of other countries. But people consume media from different countries. This has to be part of the German debate again, and I’m sure it will. It’s going to happen after the war and the violence come to an end, and this will come to an end.

You have said a couple of times that you’re hopeful. With everything that’s going on, how can you keep hope?

Understanding the Indonesian perspective, studying and deciphering this painting was an incredible pleasure and I was just in Indonesia, not only the weather, but also the political and economical outlook is so much brighter than here. They had the best 20 years of their last 500 years. They are looking at a bright future. 

We are having so much trouble coming to terms with the fact that while, of course, the Holocaust was the most terrible event of the 20th century, decolonization was the most important one. One event makes you incredibly pessimistic, the other fills you with hope. And this is still an ongoing process.

So optimism of the will, pessimism of the intellect?

No, it’s like a double vision. Western decline is not the decline of the so-called rest of the world which is now the majority of the world. There is a prosperous world out there. We have to accept that there are not only amazing artists in Indonesia, in Africa, in Latin America, China and in the Middle East. But there are also more scientists, doctors, managers and pilots in all these countries than in Europe and USA. 

We can’t unmake the past, but the future for the global majority is bright. That’s also what I see expressed in the painting.