HANDS OFF SYRIA!

HANDS OFF SYRIA! NO WAR ON IRAN!

The International League of Peoples’ Struggles (ILPS), Commission 4 on just peace condemns the recent airstrikes of the President Joe Biden-led US military on Syria. We call on all anti-imperialist and democratic forces around the world to stand in solidarity with the people of Syria against continued US-back aggression, which has included the military of the US and Turkey and their reactionary collaborators.

The US airstrike occurred on February 25, 2021, nearly 5 weeks earlier than it took the Trump regime into its term to order its first airstrikes against Syria. The Pentagon characterized the strike as a defensive measure that “aims to de-escalate the overall situation in both Eastern Syria and Iraq”. The Pentagon further tried to claim that this so-called “de-escalation” was in response to Iranian-backed militias launching rockets into Iraq. This claim is no different from Trump’s early 2020 assassination of Iranian General Qassim Suleimani within an Iraqi military base. It is clear, therefore, that Biden has signaled that his administration will continue the same policy of aggression towards Iran that all of his Democrat and Republican predecessors have followed, once again using direct attacks against the people of Syria and Iraq as its strategy for military dominance.

As the Resist US-Led War Movement recently wrote in its own statement on the issue, “Rather than heeding the calls of the tens of thousands of people who took to the streets in Iraq and worldwide last year demanding ‘U.S. Out!’, Biden is digging in his heels and jeopardizing chances for true peace in the region. This should come as no surprise, given that Biden and his cabinet members namely U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin III have carried the near identical Democrat and Republican Party strategy of increased sanctions and warmongering.”

This airstrike marks the first known ordering of military force by Biden, who almost immediately upon taking office declared an end to US support for the war on Yemen. Rather than living up to this falsified claim as a peace President, these airstrikes show that the January Yemen declaration was merely a ruse attempted to placate the hundreds of thousands who took to the street globally to demand an end to this brutal war of annihilation against the Yemeni people.

The US has maintained its long support for the war on Yemen for the same reasons that it has maintained its policies of sanctions, airstrikes and US-backed civil war in Syria: to increase its military supremacy and political influence in the region, particularly against Iran. As ILPS Commission 4 wrote in our “No War On Yemen!” statement in January, “The Yemen conflict has been time and again shown as a war maintained by the ‘Houthi rebels.’ The truth is that Saudi Arabia brutally invaded Yemen and was provided intelligence, fuel and military support from the USA, Israel among other allies including NATO and other reactionary states such as Turkey.”

As a Commission of a global anti-imperialist alliance organizing against all wars of aggression, ILPS Commission 4 stresses seriously the recent airstrikes against Syria are tied inextricably to US imperialism’s strategic assaults against the people of West Asia and North Africa, among them the support for the war on Yemen, the backing of the Zionist occupation of Palestine and the Moroccan occupation of Western Sahara, the continued drone strikes against Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan and the consistent military arming of fascist puppet states like Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey. We call on all those who aspire for a just and lasting peace to struggle against these acts of aggression by the leading imperialist power of today. With reaction and fascism rising and imperialist aggression intensifying on many fronts, the peoples of the world must share knowledge, organize and mobilize to unite in action as one movement.

peace4@vcn.bc.ca

https://peace450.wixsite.org/website

International League of Peoples’ Struggles (www.ilps.info)

NO WAR ON YEMEN

STATEMENT OF COMMISSION 4 OF THE INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE OF PEOPLES’ STRUGGLE

The International League of Peoples’ Struggles (ILPS), Commission 4, endorses and supports the call for a global day of protest against the slaughter and neglect of the Yemeni people. There will be actions on the ground in Canada, Sweden, UK, Germany, Italy and the US, as well as a main online forum on January 25.The situation is in acute crisis and utterly deplorable.  Anyone with a basic support for human rights and holding a humanitarian view must condemn the attacks on Yemen.

The people of Yemen, coming from one of the poorest countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are suffering from air raids, death and injury, loss of infrastructure and basic supplies and mass displacement for six years. According to refugee agencies, in a population of 29 million, 13.5 million people are at risk of starvation. Yemeni Union of Agricultural Cooperatives reports that coalition airstrikes have systematically destroyed local food systems by targeting agricultural land, poultry farms, food processing plants, rural markets, fishing boats, and ports. The recounting of cruelties and atrocities faced by the Yemeni people is beyond count. In short, URGENT ACTION is needed to stop this imperialist, unjust war!

According to one of the action day organizers, Stopwar UK:

Since 2015, the Saudi-led bombing and blockade of Yemen have killed tens of thousands of people and devastated the country. The U.N. calls this the largest humanitarian crisis on Earth. Half the country’s people are on the brink of famine, the country has the world’s worst cholera outbreak in modern history, and now Yemen has one of the very worst COVID death rates in the world: it kills 1 in 4 people who test positive. The pandemic, along with withdrawal of aid, is pushing more people into acute hunger (communiqué of Dec. 30, 2020).

It is ironic that almost two years ago, the calls put forward by ILPS in 2019, are still being echoed at the call for united action on January 25, 2021. We affirm and add to the demands put forward:

  • Stop foreign aggression on Yemen, especially targeting of essential food and agriculture infrastructure, including fishing vessels and markets;
  • Stop weapons and war support for Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates;
  • Lift the blockade on Yemen and open all land and seaports free from attack;
  • Restore and expand humanitarian aid for the people of Yemen;
  • Resume payment of salaries to government employees suspended for the last two years and support for the Yemeni Riyal through a professionally managed central bank;
  • Mobilize funds for humanitarian assistance and recovery programmes to help Yemenis to rebuild their millennial systems of food production;
  • Support efforts to build national dialogue and to formulate peace agreement that respects Yemeni sovereignty;
  • Call upon members of the international community, particularly the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Canada, Australia, Spain, Brazil, and Finland, to halt forthwith all arms sales to parties in this conflict;
  • Countries, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan, Morocco, Egypt, and Sudan must terminate their military engagement and to contribute to a peaceful resolution of the conflict.

The Yemen conflict has been time and again shown as a war maintained by the ‘Houthi rebels.’ The truth is that Saudi Arabia brutally invaded Yemen and was provided intelligence, fuel, and military support from USA, Israel among other allies including NATO and other reactionary states such as Turkey. Human Rights Watch had even as early as 2015 warned that the US might be liable for laws-of-war violations in Yemen due to its continued sales of weapons to Saudi Arabia.

Saudi-backed Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi took over Yemen after Ali Abdallah resigned in 2014. Intended as an interim government, it overstayed its welcome.  The Houthis, who comprise 80% of Yemeni population, did not accept this change as a move towards democracy and forced Hadi’s resignation. Hadi accepted this and moved to Saudi Arabia in 2015 where he was convinced by the Saudis to rescind his resignation, and moved to Aden, calling it Yemen’s temporary capital. Hadi has been backed by a Saudi-led coalition marked by aggressive military intervention in Yemen against the people’s movement struggling for a legitimate representation and democracy.

The US Imperialism has enacted coercive economic measures against Yemen. Saudi-led coalition imposes restrictions on trade and controls the ports in Yemen, putting sanctions on fuel, food, and medicine and other basic essentials. It is a shameful façade that countries such as the US, UK, Germany, Saudi Arabia, and UAE have provided the vast majority of humanitarian assistance to this man-made crisis, yet these are the same countries that are directly or indirectly responsible for the coercive war by supplying arms and military equipment. The coalition-backed government selectively withholds salaries from civil servants, exacerbating Yemen’s liquidity and devaluation crisis. What was to be a seven-day siege has turned into six long years of nightmare for the Yemeni people.

Of course, it is no secret that the war provides a steady stream of customers for the arms trade of profit-seeking imperialist nations. The role of Israel and Turkey can be also be understood in context to their political and hegemonic aims and geopolitical strategy that entails militarization from West Asia to Africa and Central Asia. They have been establishing bases and engaging directly with neighbors such as Greece, Tigray in northern Ethiopia, and Azerbaijan. Israel is a major arms trader doing business with the worst reactionary regimes, even the fascist Modi government of India.

The US is still the leading aggressor and one extending a multi-faceted strategy to defend and sustain the global system of exploitation, domination and plunder. Its ideology and approach has developed since the Cold War to target independent states and independence or democracy movements and nationalization and democratization policies and projects. It has been expanding the territories and waters beyond the North Atlantic by building bases and plowing the waters of all the seas.  It has been forming new alliances and cooperative relations with reactionary and terrorist states on all continents and allowing some of them, such as Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Israel, to act as proxy aggressors. While its economy cannot keep up the financial demands of continued, multiple aggressions, the US has been relying on reactionary states to do its dirty work as long as independence, nationalization and democracy projects are kept in check and it maintains its regional market share and influence.

It is always the people who pay the cost of war. The humanitarian crisis in Yemen is extreme and merits a concentrated international campaign to rally concerned and compassionate people together to demand an end to the war.

For information on the global action, go to www.stopwar.org.uk/world-says-no-to-war-on-yemen-25-jan-2021/.


The ILPS is the International League of Peoples’ Struggles, an anti-imperialist alliance.   (www.ilps.info)

Commission 4 is concerned with wars of aggression and counter-revolution and nuclear weapons and all weapons of mass destruction.

Website: https://peace450.wixsite.org/website

E-mail: Peace4@vcn.bc.ca

Campaigns:

Stop the War on Yemen!

Humanitarian aid now!

End the economic coercive measures now!

Unite the people against aggression and weapons of mass destruction!

Build the people’s movement for just peace!

Oppose militarism and fascism!

UN Peace Day Message

BUILD THE GLOBAL MOVEMENT FOR JUST PEACE!
MARK U.N. INTERNATIONAL PEACE DAY WITH ACTIONS FOR PEACE WITH
SOCIAL JUSTICE, LIBERATION AND DEMOCRACY


Mass actions and organizations have been growing against imperialism and state terror. Keep up the momentum to build an even broader and greater movement of the people for peace with social justice, social and national liberation and genuine democracy! Take another step forward by organizing people’s actions on U.N. International Peace Day, September 21!

Challenge the United Nations members to confront the aggressors and occupiers, and negotiate resolutions the major issues facing the people: food insecurity, lack of housing and
infrastructure, violence, insufficient means of livelihood, state repression, climate change, etc.

Popular dissent in the forms of street actions and discussions have been intensifying as the world crisis has been intensifying since last year. Historic achievements have been made. There have been large international gatherings to analyze the crisis and oppose the chief cause of the crisis, the imperialist system led by the US. Solidarity and collective work are blossoming. People have been taking to the streets in resolute, direct response to police brutality, systemic discrimination and exploitation and the lack of decent health services. The world has also been witnessing great efforts to lift the painful chains of colonialism that still exist. The youth have been getting in motion to call for action to oppose racism, relieve climate change and stop large-scale extraction industries. Through these activities, ndividuals are getting politically active and new organizations are springing up, while previously existing groups are expanding and stepping up their work.


This is the correct path to take. Build on these developments. The people must become more politically aware nd engaged in grassroots organizing. Fundamental change will take a united, global movement that understands the exploitative and plundering nature of the global system of monopoly capitalism, its armed defense, policies of neo-liberalism and hostility to any non-compliant nation or state. The peoples of the world must represent themselves and take up the cause for just peace, liberation and real democracy. The powers that be will not simply give up unless the working people and oppressed actively and as a whole face them an demand it. The people must not gamble that capitalism will develop a heart or that new faces in the signify big change. They must not give up their struggles.


Imperialism as defined by Lenin is the contemporary form of global capitalism, with its monopolies dominated by financial oligarchs that put profits before people in their quest for exponential growth and ceaseless, forceful, worldwide expansion. Military and industry are tied. They work in tandem mostly outside the political processes and scope of the law. Imperialism is an inherently irrational and violent system that operates without concern
for human welfare and that has abandoned social development and human rights altogether. The crisis of overproduction, inflation, disparity and debt never resolved, austerity measures have been imposed to grab more land, exploit labour further, privatize state resources, deregulate industry and trade to the max and rely on non-productive, even destructive, and intangible markets.

The chief result is more conflict. In fact, war and “state security” are a very lucrative industry that wants to keep business booming. States crack down on the people, turn over more land and ruin ecologies at the behest of foreign and local corporations, violating indigenous lands and rights more and more, destroying nature and farmlands, displacing communities, causing starvation, pandemics and other hardships and stirring up resistance. War and resistance rage. The US and its allies strategize to take every possible measure to damage states that nationalize industries and expand public services, and they punish national liberation movements that seek to throw out occupiers or build their own, self-reliant nations, even financing and unleashing terrorists and meddling in internal affairs to win. Misinformation is spread and racism, communalism and gender bias incited to preserve the status quo. Cruel economic blockades that deprive working people of daily necessities are exacted to strangle societies that do not conform.


Comprehending the motivations, relations and machinery of the imperialist system, one can see why the questions of, for instance, Palestine’s or the Kashmir’s independence, peace between North and South Korea, social equality and guarantees of home and livelihood are never settled. We can see how and why the Crimea, Libya, Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq are in constant turmoil and why the US and company want to destroy Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela. The minority of the world’s very wealthy and their way of amassing private wealth would be greatly disrupted if such problems were properly addressed and resolved. They wish to stem and confuse popular criticism and rebellion. It does not make much difference which political officials they prop up. When Barrack Obama became US President, some political commentators suggested it meant the end of racism and a resolution to race relations. Hardly so, as we can plainly see today. Likewise, merely voting in women to high positions of power has not relieved women of daily oppression, inequality and discrimination. Counting on the election of nominally democratic or liberal political parties has not brought about real democracy or any substantive, lasting relief from war and crisis. Far from impeding militarization, aggression and the arms trade, they more often facilitate military practice and allow fascism to rise. Despite the people’s hopes, this has been the case no matter who gets into power or what narrative they tell in France, the UK or Canada, for example.

The people must get directly involved in movements for real change themselves. They must hold high a clear peoples’ agenda for just peace. The UN leadership has been calling for a global ceasefire because of the pandemic. Certainly, suspension of military operations and withdrawal of troops would reduce the spread of the coronavirus. It would not resolve the question of peace, however. A whole host of issues would have to be addressed for conflicts to be resolved. Perpetrators such as the US, its allies, Israel, Turkey and Saudi Arabia would have to be recognized as aggressors and they would have to give up arms trading and use, close bases, scale down and send their troops home. All weapons of mass destruction would have to be outlawed. Plans for reparations including reconstruction and legal justice would have to be drawn up, and treaties and apologies made. Land, social and political reforms that benefit the people would have to be negotiated, as well. Adherence to well-known principles of social equality, healthcare and education for all, human rights (labour, civil, gender, national, etc.) and national sovereignty would have to be respected and enforced.


Occupations and civil wars must go through peace processes with reconciliation and justice defined and planned. For example, Palestinian resistance to Israel’s occupation cannot be resolved until the occupation and aggression against Palestinians are acknowledged and ended. Then negotiations would have to work on a plan for reparations, demilitarization, justice for the victims of crimes against humanity, poverty and social inequality, expropriation, food insecurity and housing. Other examples are the peace process between the US, South Korea and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and that between the National Democratic Front of the Philippines and the Philippines state. For the former, all parties would have to cease military activities, the US would have to pull back its forces and sign a treaty, territorial rights be respected, past wrongs addressed and issues concerning North-South relations negotiated. As for the Philippines, the questions of land distribution,
dire poverty, food insecurity, human rights violations, democratic norms and public services, as well as restitution, must be negotiated and settled. In that peace process, the human rights conditions have been signed off, but past and present governments keep balking at settling the land and social demands. Instead of settling the conflict, the government has walked away from the table to intensify its military operations and state repression against resisters and critics to heights not seen before. The human rights situation is worse than ever. The so-called democratic states such as the US, European Union and others continue to let the atrocities happen while they help the vicious state of the Philippines and profit from the abominable conditions.


With respect to world peace, aggressor states must be named and held accountable. Arms trade and the use of weapons of mass destruction would have to be sternly contained along with unconventional weapons including cyber- and psy-war, biological and chemical warfare. Unjust economic coercive measures (i.e., “sanctions”) would need to be suspended. Foreign militaries would have to withdraw and foreign bases close. Sovereignty and diverse models of political-economy must be respected. Reconciliation with indigenous peoples would have to be worked out and colonialism dismantled once and for all. These are huge, long term tasks. The main obstacle to accomplishing these steps is the global military-industrial complex that profits from conflict and imperialist expansionist and harbors land/ market-grabbing intentions. The US plays the key role in defending and overseeing the intrusions and bullying of monopoly capital. It and all its allies such as NATO and ANZUS
members have to be subdued and held accountable, international law and United Nations decisions followed.


To the ILPS and Commission 4, peace does not mean acquiescence and silence. Humankind would be doomed were we to be passive and quiet as the world becomes increasingly dangerous and unsustainable and human life more precarious. Let us deepen our commitment to struggle against imperialism for just peace on September 21 and make Peace Day meaningful. Build a unified struggle for a better world!


The people cannot afford to give up their rights and future, and stand by as the chaos, excess, violence and suffering burn up the planet. Waiting for each election period to mark a ballot is not enough political involvement. Join the movement for change. It is a matter of life or extinction. There are many ways to be a part of it and contribute. Use your best skills and knowledge and the time and connections you have. Most of all, make sure your voice is heard and that you are there to listen to others and plan a workable, sustainable course
together with your peers and communities to guarantee a better world for future generations. Together the best of human know-how, values and wisdom will prevail.


Long live international solidarity! Peace with social justice! Social equality for all!
Stop the US war machine! No weapons of mass destruction!
Close the bases! Troops go home! Down with fascism, bigotry and all reaction!

Commission 4 is concerned with wars of aggression and counterrevolution and all weapons of mass destruction.
https://peace450.wixsite.org/website Peace4@vcn.bc.ca
Ilps.info.com International League of Peoples’ Struggles

JUSTICE FOR “COMFORT WOMEN”!

Call for Just Peace and an End to Wars of Aggression and Military Sexual Violence Against Women
On August 14, 2020, the world commemorates the end of World War II in 1945. During the Great Depression, an acute global crisis of capital, conflict in the Eastern hemisphere was stirred up when imperial Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931. It had already been occupying Korea. In the Western hemisphere, the expansionist ambitions of Germany sparked an all-out international war when Nazi soldiers marched into Poland in 1939. Soon, both aggressive camps were aligned as the Axis powers led by Germany and including fascist Japan, Spain and Italy while the Western Allies including the USSR mounted their defense.

This horrific war spanned continents from Africa to Asia (South, West, and East), from Oceania and the South Pacific to the Americas. Eventually, the aggressors were defeated only through great sacrifice by the peoples of both the occupying and occupied countries, a war that is the most devastating in human history, with deaths estimated at 75-80 million from combat, starvation, disease, mass extermination against Jews and others, the US bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima and the Soviet’s decisive maneuvers against Germany and Japan.

This date is also being commemorated in many parts of the world as International Day Against Japanese Wartime Military Sexual Slavery. This is to remember the war crimes committed by the Japanese Imperial Army in the Asia-Pacific region against women in countries it razed, occupied or colonized – Korea, China, the Philippines, and Indonesia, among others.

The ‘comfort women’ system remains as one of the most atrocious war crimes committed against women where thousands were forced into servitude and sex slavery to Japanese soldiers. While many other instances of military sexual violence occurred during this period, the ‘comfort women’ system was the only instance where the state took a direct hand, issuing an imperial directive that enabled the systematic and large-scale transport or coercion of women and girls for such atrocious purpose. At the same time, the Japanese governments have repeatedly denied justice both to the former ‘comfort women’ and to many other victims including those who were mobilized for wartime forced labor.

It is 75 years since the end of World War II but Japan still refuses to accept responsibility for this crime against humanity. In fact, as a junior partner of the US in the latter’s current pivot to Asia, Japan is now pursuing a track similar to what it took 75 years ago: the path of aggression and military expansionism, in whose name the Imperial government committed its wartime atrocities against women and against nations.

The Shinzo Abe government uses trade and official development assistance as pressure points on debtor nations such as the Philippines to revise people’s understanding and remembrance of history. It obliterates all references to its wartime atrocities while promoting the false notion of being a savior to justify its invasion of Asian nations in WW II as well as to justify the current militarist thrusts of the Abe government.

As we single out Japan and call for its official recognition of its war crimes, so do we shout out against wars of aggression and state terror in their various forms carried out by other imperialist powers in many parts of the world. We condemn the US imperialist alliance that is supporting and carrying out terror, threatening, attacking, meddling in and militarizing around numerous nations.

In particular, we oppose the heightened US-China military conflict in the West Philippine Sea, a conflict fueled by the two countries’ common intent of seizing control of the international passage and thus establishing another point of control over international trade.

We rise against these forms of aggression as they violate the sovereign will of the Filipino people and endanger the entire region. We rise against wars of aggression wherever they occur. Cases abound of how wars of aggression or intervention always trample upon women’s rights and women’s bodies, where rape becomes a heinous instrument to subjugate the population and render the populace, particularly women, into slavery and servitude.

Today there is the most acute economic crisis ever, complicated by the pandemic, and tensions among states run high. The situation is very unstable. Terror reigns in many instances as reaction and fascism rise again. Budgets are being drained for military purposes. The extremely lucrative arms trade also drives conflicts. Amid the general violence, poverty, bigotry, morbidity, displacement and death are increasing. The people must organize, unite and build a global struggle against imperialism towards just peace.

Justice for victims of Japanese military sexual slavery!

No to another generation of “comfort women”!

Justice for all victims of imperialists’ war of aggression!

End wars of aggression!

Stop the US war machine, its allies and reactionary regimes!

Long live international solidarity!

Joint statement by International League of Peoples’ Struggle Commission 7 (The cause of women’s liberation and rights against all forms of sexual discrimination, exploitation and violence), Commission 4 (The cause of just peace against weapons of mass destruction and wars of aggression and counter-revolution), and Commission 1 (The cause of national liberation, democracy and social liberation against imperialism and all reaction), and the International Women’s Alliance.

NO MORE HIROSHIMAS!

ACTION CALL OF ILPS COMMISSION 4, Aug., 2020
UNIVERSAL NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT NOW! STOP MILITARIZATION!
JUST PEACE FOR THE PEOPLES EVERYWHERE!
Join local commemorations of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and make these pledges in the fight for just peace.

The anti-imperialist alliance known as the International League of People’s Struggles (ILPS) met in Hong Kong from June 23 to 26 where 400 members and guests agreed to mark the anniversaries of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with demonstrations in their areas around the world. The resolution came from decisions and a program of action made by the Commission for just peace against wars of aggression and counterrevolution and against nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction (Commission 4).
The Commission 4’s updated program for this year also entails actions and statements for August 6, 9 and 14, plus webinars on August 8 and 16 collaborated with Commission 13 opposing science and technology used for war. We have a statement and encourage actions at Japan embassies and consulates to demand an apology and compensation for so-called “comfort women” on August 14 again this year. There may be a webinar on US imperialism in the Asia-Pacific in September. We will conclude this series of activities with an international day of action against wars of aggression, militarization, militarism and imperialism on September 21, UN Peace Day.
However, Commission 4 asserts the demand for social, land and economic reforms to meet the peoples’ needs before the masses struggling against occupation, foreign aggression and state repression, starvation and human rights violations for national their rightful national and social liberation. They are justified in demanding these life and death concerns be addressed before ceasing their struggles. As we said in our statement to the UN in response to its call for a global ceasefire in view of the coronavirus pandemic: “We act according to the principles of just peace, that is peace through negotiations for a resolution to the issues that cause peoples’ revolutions and resistance. Only if and when social justice—land, political and social reforms—are seriously addressed and settled should the people cease their struggles. We also oppose state repression against people’s just struggles and state policies that result in mass deprivation and suffering.”
Tensions of inter-imperialist rivalries and all the contradictions of a global system in deep crisis are higher than ever before. The COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed this situation and the failures to meet the needs of the people. Military mobilization is increasing while militarist and terrorist ideas and groupings are flourishing and the arms production industries churning while the people everywhere are working to resist and create alternatives to the failing system. Every tactic of imperialism, from cyber attacks to misinformation campaigns, from economic attacks to support for terrorism, from internal interference for regime-change to armed interventions, is being deployed against states that deviate from the imperialist blueprint and movements that resist or pursue the path of independence. The people must rise to the challenge; the whole planet is at stake.
Reviewing history and acknowledging both injustices and victories for just peace is important. In commemorating the large-scale bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that murdered and maimed 100’s of thousands of unarmed civilians, including 30,000 Koreans and some Americans, we oppose nuclear and other weaponry of mass destruction. More than that, we oppose aggressions past and present of all states trying to take over others, capture markets and societies and dictate to and impose systems on them. In that light, the ILPS and its friends and allies together oppose US, Japanese, Chinese, Canadian, European and other imperialist bodies that are causing much destruction around the world.
Japan occupied and warred against neighbouring countries in the early 20th century. Its government has returned to an aggressive policy that celebrates this past and seeks to restore imperialist Japan. We condemn imperialist Japan’s past and present actions and policies.
We also condemn US imperialist’s past and present military aggression and militarism, from organizing coups and human rights violations against socialism in Latin America, to meddling and arming itself and terrorists against sovereign nations in Eastern Europe and Western Asia (aka “Middle East”). We strongly oppose the alliance between Japan, the US and South Korea and this alliance’s supporters in Canada and Europe in their efforts to deprive and destroy North Korean society. We are against the continuing massive nuclear presence and nuclear power expansion in the region. We applaud the ongoing real efforts to resolve the war and reunify Korea.
We stand firmly against the militarization of the Asian-Pacific region that is already stirring up international conflicts to skirmishes with fire power, driving retaliatory strategies, disturbing and monopolizing waters and lands important for food and traditional practices, harming women and children, and prolonging wars such as the just guerrilla war against the vicious repressive and greedy government of the Philippines.
Countries such as North Korea and Iran are struggling to survive against threats and sanctions. Nuclear energy development is a necessary component of providing energy to run industries and infrastructure; safer and smaller scale designs of nuclear plants are being made these days, nuclear weapons development is seen as a necessary deterrent against the blackmail and threats of states holding 1,800 active nuclear warheads at the ready, such as the US, Russia Federation and France. Missile testing is seen as necessary for launching communications satellites and preparing for defense. We see a return to Cold War attitudes and tactics in the conflicts between US, Russia and China.
US imperialist rhetoric, mobilizations and policies cause a ripple effect of violence and militarization, for which it refuses to take responsibility. The monopoly capitalist economy, still today represented by, centralized in and defended by the US, is based on principles of violence against others and it depends on production for war. It is a system that constantly produces violence: labour, gender, economic, family, environmental, cultural and military violence. Now that it is coming apart at the seams, it is even more violence prone. The US runs military bases around the world and uses bases and proxy armies where it can, such as in Yemen, Syria and Palestine. It is blocking trade and interfering to ruin advances in several democratic countries such as Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua. It operates key international financial institutions that strangle social development. It supports multi-national corporations and exploit and plunder, especially those providing rare minerals and fossil fuels for weaponry and energy.
The people must continue to organize and rise to fight against this inherently violent system in order to achieve just peace. Conflicts cannot be resolved without properly and truly addressing just social, political and land reform demands. Negotiations are always preferred, and every act of legal, civil society must be attempted, but the armed self defense and opposition to repression and military aggression is often called for. The ILPS, while opposing wars of aggression and militarization/ militarism, defends such just struggles for just peace.
ILPS specifically calls on democratically minded and peace-loving to organize and mobilize for just peace. Oppose colonial relations and policies! End the support for and dependency on the arms trade. Demand an end to all economic coercive measures by US and allies, get out of Latin America, Western Asia, the Asia-Pacific and Eastern Europe! Reject NATO, ANZA and other imperialist military pacts.

No more Hiroshimas! Oppose militarization and aggression!
Just and Lasting Peace! End the sanctions!

Dismantle NATO! Hands off Venezuela, Cuba, Syria, Yemen, Iran and North Korea!

Occupation is a crime! Free, free, Palestine!

Ilps.info http://www.facebook.com/Ilps.info/

Commission 4: peace4@vcn.bc.ca; https://peace450.wixsite.org/website

CEASEFIRE FOR JUST PEACE

STATEMENT #2 OF ILPS COMMISSION 4 IN SUPPORT OF CEASEFIRES AND RELEASE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS WORLDWIDE

PEACE WITH SOCIAL JUSTICE! END IMPERIALIST OCCUPATION AND AGGRESSION!

SUPPORT THE JUST STRUGGLES OF THE PEOPLES FOR SOCIAL AND NATIONAL LIBERATION!

Commission 4 of the International League of Peoples’ Struggles (ILPS), an anti-imperialist alliance of organizations engaged in mass struggles, is concerned with wars of aggression and counter-revolution and nuclear weapons and all weapons of mass destruction.

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, called for a global ceasefire in a statement issued on March 23, 2020. (https://www.un.org/press/en/2020/sgsm20018.doc.htm) He wrote, “The fury of the virus illustrates the folly of war. That is why today, I am calling for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world.  It is time to put armed conflict on lockdown and focus together on the true fight of our lives.” He repeated this call on April 3.

On March 25, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet called for governments to reduce the number of people in detention and release every person detained without sufficient legal basis, including political prisoners and others detained for expressing critical or dissenting views.

These appeals were made especially because of the circumstances of COVID. We agree with these calls in principle. However, there has been little cooperation. Imperialist and reactionary states who have released some prisoners merely making a token gesture as political window dressing. The few prisoners so far released have been those convicted of serious crimes. Worse, we have learned of conflict situations where COVID is being deployed as a weapon in that authorities in power have sent infected persons to certain sites.

The poorest people in the poorest lands are most at risk to both the virus and aggression. We wish to defend and protect the peoples currently in struggle for their survival, basic rights, basic services including health care, lands and sovereignty. They fight in self-defence against deprivation and hostile and reactionary governments. Ultimately, we aspire to realize demilitarization and a halt to aggression and occupation, state terror and human rights violations. With this objective in mind, we cannot advise the peoples, armed or not, to give up their life and death struggles.

We act according to the principles of just peace, that is peace through negotiations for a resolution to the issues that cause peoples’ revolutions and resistance. Only if and when social justice—land, political and social reforms—are seriously addressed and settled should the people cease their struggles. We also oppose state repression against people’s just struggles and state policies that result in mass deprivation and suffering.

Consider the views of V. I. Lenin, as interpreted and explained by S. Gnosh in 1960: “https://www.marxists.org/archive/shibdas-ghosh/1959/07/x01.htm, undated) “It would be possible to effectively preserve lasting peace if the significance of the principal characteristic features of the present-day changed international situation is properly understood and the task of conducting peace movement is grounded solidly in intensifying the national liberation movements in colonies and semi-colonies and the struggles for socialism in capitalist countries.”

If the UN is going to call for release of political prisoners and cessation of armed fighting, we challenge tthe UN to address mainly the states responsible to uphold, promote and protect the rights of the people while secondarily reaching out to non-state actors.

Therefore, we issue the following set of calls. We make these recommendations in the light of the global pandemic and the sound emergency measures to (1) minimize travel and (2) adjust state priorities to address health, food and housing first, ahead of non-productive sectors such as the military. It is an opportune moment to act in the interest of the welfare of all the peoples of the world.

cancel NATO missions, close NATO bases and send all NATO troops home

send all foreign troops to their home countries, including US troops

cancel all military exercises

end all general economic sanctions

free all political prisoners

cancel all arms trade and call for arms and military contract related production to be converted to the production of human necessities related to health care, food and housing

initiate a UN campaign to get states to reduce military spending and reprioritize their state responsibilities according to the UN Declaration on Human Rights, that on Indigenous peoples’ rights, and all universal standards set by the UN and other credible international bodies concerned with the rights and welfare of all

restrain states with penalties for continuing occupations, aggressions, economic sanctions and interference including regime change and elections rigging

Revised release of May 15, 2020

The ILPS is the International League of Peoples’ Struggles, an anti-imperialist alliance.

Pres. Ortega’s Message

April 22, 2020

Published by the Nicaragua Network, a project of Alliance for Global Justice!
NicaNotes is a blog for Nicaragua activists and those interested in Nicaragua, published by the Nicaragua Network, a project of the Alliance for Global Justice. It provides news and analysis from the context of Nicaragua Network’s long history of struggle in solidarity with the Sandinista Revolution.

NicaNotes: “It is time to swap nuclear weapons for hospitals”

President Daniel Ortega addresses Nicaragua’s people (and a world in crisis)
Good afternoon, Nicaraguan sisters and brothers, Nicaraguan families. First, our Solidarity and our Condolences to all the families who are suffering from the hardships of this pandemic, whose loved ones have died; some who are in serious condition in Intensive care; others in quarantine. All are suffering and in great pain. This is a time that calls for solidarity and unity among the peoples of the World.
And when we call for solidarity and unity as the peoples of the World, it means that we are being called to Peace. That is the first principle: Peace; to put an end to all types of war, to all types of aggression, against any people, and to cultivate Peace, to strengthen Peace. Because only a world at Peace will allow us, particularly the more developed countries, to create the conditions so that on this planet we do not face such dramatic situations as those in developed countries where there is a lack of beds and medical instruments, simply because the health services do not reach the people, do not reach the poor, do not reach the workers. Public services have been totally abandoned.
Of course, there are great, highly qualified hospitals, with a lot of technology and great scientists. But who can go to pay for services in a private hospital in a developed country or in a developing country? This is what is bleeding, that is, the world’s flesh has been ripped open by this pandemic.
And what use are atomic bombs? Are atomic weapons going to end the virus, the missiles that are being developed now in these arms races to conquer space and turn space into a battlefield, for killing, to kill? What are those weapons for? These weapons are not for life, they are not for health; they are not for the feeding of millions of human beings that perish year after year from hunger.
These weapons are for killing! And trillions are spent on them! And those who spend those trillions know perfectly well that these weapons cannot be used, because the day they are used, the entire population of the Planet will disappear. They know perfectly well! So why this madness of investing billions and trillions in weapons?
And how many epidemics, how many pandemics has humanity experienced? How many? How many millions of human beings have died in those pandemics, in those epidemics? In the midst of the World Wars, in the First World War, in the Second World War, there were epidemics and pandemics, and in the midst of the epidemics and pandemics there was no ceasefire. They kept killing each other, making war.

I am convinced that this pandemic, this virus that has multiplied throughout the planet, no force is able to block it; there is no barrier that can block it, there is no wall that can block it. There is no way! There is no billionaire who can block it.
Of course, peoples in developing countries are the most exposed, the most vulnerable to this pandemic, and we already know how tragedies are repeated every year in developing countries, from the migration from Africa, seeking to reach Europe, during which thousands of adults, women and children die, drowning there in the sea, in that beautiful sea there, from Europe facing Africa, North Africa, and from North Africa they seek a way into Europe.
There are those migrants, there they are right now. What can these migrants do in the face of this pandemic, and likewise the migrants here who are also moving northwards, where we see that many of them are kept in cages there. Nicaraguans who have been deported home tell us how they are caged, how they are mistreated, and that there is no health care.
But what health care can they give them, if they don’t even have the capacity in that country, the world’s greatest superpower, the greatest military power in the history of humanity, the greatest economic power in the history of humanity, which does not have the capacity to meet the needs of its own citizens in its great cities. This is a tragedy that Europe is experiencing too.
This is what we can see and it is calling upon us, and it is a call that we can make from this small country, where we are facing the pandemic with our limited resources. With great patience, with great discipline, with great sacrifice on the part of health workers, with a high level of citizen engagement, with a high level of discipline from the workers, with great dedication from the Army, from the Police, protecting security and our territorial integrity; well, we have been fighting the fight.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, from the moment it was decreed on March 11th: Let’s see, from March 11th to April 15th, we had 1,237 reported deaths. Of all these, just one was from coronavirus. The other deceased, men, women and children, why did they die? From malignant tumors, diabetes, renal disease, acute myocardial infarction, hypertensive diseases; traffic accidents, cerebrovascular accidents, liver cirrhosis, neonatal asphyxia, congenital malformations, neonatal sepsis, bacterial pneumonia, septicemia. Suicides… yes, suicides! Drownings, yes, by drowning! Deaths from HIV.
See how much pain we’ve had in these families too! So much pain! We are talking about the period from March 11 to April 15, in Nicaragua, 1,237 people died from different causes.
And in the fight to take care of these families of people who arrive injured and need hospital care, in this fight to also bring health to thousands of Nicaraguans, how many medical consultations took place in this period? Thousands of doctor’s visits, thousands of operations, totally free of charge. Thousands of hemodialysis treatments!
Here the health system has not stopped providing free hemodialysis; that is the public health system. The private one is different, the private one charges, of course. The poor go to the public health system. The workers use it, and families looking for ways to improve their lives.
Hemodialysis! We’ve been incorporating even more hemodialysis systems; incorporating radiotherapy systems to attack cancer more effectively; inaugurating ICUs in the departmental hospitals and in municipal hospitals. Recently an ICU was inaugurated in Chontales, in Juigalpa.
In the midst of this pandemic, we have not stopped working, because here if we stop working, the country dies, and if the country dies, the people die, they get wiped out. If rural workers stop planting to harvest beans, if they stop sowing to harvest corn, if they stop planting to harvest coffee, if they stop sowing to ensure the supply of potatoes, carrots, radishes, onions… because, thank God, we are a country that even in the midst of the greatest difficulties, the greatest tragedies, the greatest boycotts, we are a country with working people and thanks be to God with land our people know how to cultivate very well and also know how to raise livestock.
Our people will not die of hunger! Big investments, big capital, can be affected by all these developments, because there is a supply chain in the field of international trade, in the field of international markets, which is unquestionably impacted and causes unemployment, which is felt here.
Well, the important thing here is that we have continued working, following guidelines very conscientiously and with great discipline; our people follow the rules the Health System dictates. And this is repeated everywhere, multiplied not only by transmitting these guidelines via the media, but also through house to house visits, giving people leaflets and explaining to families how to protect themselves from this pandemic. That is what helps explain and what does explain why the pandemic has spread so slowly. It’s not that it hasn’t entered Nicaragua, of course it has entered and has already caused one death, but its progress has been slow; and everyone affected has been as a result of outside contact.
Over the last few days they arrested a Nicaraguan girl in Costa Rica, a 17-year-old girl, who was pregnant. The Costa Rican authorities arrested her because she was crossing the border illegally. Immediately the media there began reporting that the Nicaraguan girl had Coronavirus. But the Costa Rican authorities, acting with great professionalism, seriousness, and responsibility, examined her and said: She does not have Coronavirus! That is to say, a Nicaraguan woman has not been found carrying the virus from Nicaragua to a sister country.
But yes, sister and brother Nicaraguans arriving from other countries, when they come, they are detected; they may not arrive seriously ill, but they are subject to the corresponding procedure [at the airport and borders]. The majority have left the process of care, examination, follow-up, treatment [and have recovered], even some serious cases that seemed to be dying.
One of them, a very well-known comrade of ours, lived in the United States, and arrived very, very seriously ill, including from other illnesses he already had. And well, we prayed to God, and he managed to survive the state he was in, thank God, when he seemed about to die. There was another woman who arrived very seriously ill. That is, when the doctors began caring for her, they thought it would be hard for her to survive.
But they received care from Nicaraguan doctors, who are highly specialized, highly skilled, not only because they have studied in our country, but also because they studied specialized careers, specializations in other countries, in other sister nations.
In Cuba, in the Soviet Union, how many doctors studied [medical] specialties? In Mexico, how many doctors have done specializations there! In Venezuela, how many Nicaraguans have received specialized training! And how many specialized doctors from the United States too… in other words, we do have highly specialized doctors.
And as for hospitals? Practically 90% of the hospitals that are in the public health system are equipped with all the basic resources to care for patients to the extent of the bed capacity that these hospitals allow.
There are enough respirators. Thank God it has not been necessary to use all the ventilators; some have been used, but not all have been used.
Intensive Care Units? Yes, we have Intensive Care Units everywhere, with highly specialized doctors.
The reserve of medicines in the health system, in the whole public health system, including of course the Social Security system, there we are talking about 90% and sometimes more, and some medicines that only the State has, like Interferon for example.
In other words, we have the capacity to care for the population, while the rate at which the epidemic has spread has been one we have managed to control… Yes, we have managed to do so!
In other words, we didn’t call for a stampede. If we had triggered a stampede, what happens to people in stadiums would have happened to us—we would have been crushed. Instead, in an orderly manner, and guided by international standards, we have been adopting a series of measures and applying them according to our national reality, our material possibilities, our economic possibilities, our scientific possibilities.
Meanwhile, the police are also protecting the country’s security. Imagine, if we were to send the Police to isolate themselves, or if we sent the Army to isolation, and rural workers to isolate themselves and stop producing, the country would simply disappear. So here it has been a combination of careful measures to be able to deal with this plague.
The latest data was given today by Doctor Saenz. He gave the latest data on the cases we currently have. In the region we have the least number of cases.
Of course, it’s also true that we have many hospitals, we have built many hospitals; even the hospitals they burned down in April 2018, we have already rebuilt them; the health posts they burned down that April, we have already rebuilt them. Yes, we have already rebuilt all that! And all the equipment, and medical instruments they destroyed by fire in April, we have already bought and replaced them.
We’re building roads, we’re opening bridges. Yes, for example the Malacatoya Bridge, a historic bridge, just like the highway to San Carlos, after years and years, after centuries waiting for that highway. The Malacatoya Bridge, which is the second largest bridge in Nicaragua, opened in the midst of this situation, and none of the workers have been affected. No cases have been found in the town of Malacatoya.
So, the thing now is to continue managing with follow-up, with permanent monitoring. In any case, when patients are found to have signs that could be symptoms of the virus, they are isolated and treated, and once they have passed the isolation period, well, if they are ok then they go home, they get to go back out on the streets.
I do believe that this is the time for change in the world. This is a sign from God, yes… this is a sign from God, who is telling us: You are going the wrong way, spending trillions on atomic bombs, on atomic weapons, on military bases, on military alliances. It is fine for the army to protect a country’s sovereignty and territory and a country’s security—that is all right. And the Police, that is fine. But those transnational forces now only aspiring to dominate the whole planet; that is a sin!
And God is telling us, the Lord is telling us, the Lord is sending us this sign, and this is our chance to make a change towards Peace. This is the time for those great resources to be used decisively once and for all, the peoples of these countries that are suffering the onslaught of this pandemic, the peoples of the developed countries that are suffering, it is hitting them terribly, they can decide to tell their Governments: No more money for nuclear arms, for sophisticated weaponry. Let us limit weapons to those needed to protect our territory.
And those funds that have already been allocated, amounting to billions and trillions, let them be reallocated to build hospitals for the poor, for the people and for the workers, right in the United States, who so badly need them. They should be given all the medical equipment needed so they are prepared to face situations such as this. Because this is not the first time a pandemic has ravaged the world, but it is the first pandemic to hit this hard. Although pandemics have affected the developed world before, this one is hitting the developed world much harder, and it is hitting international markets, it is hitting stock prices, and it is hitting the world economy.
So, it is time to swap nuclear weapons for hospitals, for health posts, for all the basic conditions that can be provided to the peoples of the developed countries, and for them to cooperate so that we in the developing countries can also enjoy that protection.
In other words, the best atomic weapon humanity can have is health, medicine, hospitals, preventive medicine, and curative medicine, and for that we need resources, and we know very well who has them, and we know very well how they use them; therefore, now is the time for change.
And it is time to change the United Nations as well, and we have been repeating this for years. The United Nations needs to be totally remodeled, reconverted, reconstituted… It must be re-founded, as Father d’Escoto said when he was President of the United Nations General Assembly. It must be re-founded, and he planted the Nicaraguan flag there, proposing the re-founding of the United Nations, the re-founding of all the instruments of the United Nations, the re-founding of those regional instruments which are also totally discredited, decrepit and worn out.
The world demands an ethical and moral re-founding, and that happens because resources need to be placed where they belong, so as to save lives and give security to families, and give true Christian Love to Humanity.
Thank you, Nicaraguan Sisters and Brothers.

Cuba on COVID19

The Covid-19 Pandemic Evidences the Need to Cooperate Despite Political Differences
Statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs — Cuba

The impact of COVID19 can already be measured and will be assessed in the future by the striking numbers of people infected, the unacceptable numbers of deaths, the unquestionable damages to the world economy, production, trade, employment and personal income of millions of people. It is a crisis that goes well beyond the scope of health.
The pandemic has emerged and spread amidst a scenario previously marked by overwhelming economic and social inequalities within and among nations. With unprecedented migratory and refugee flows, xenophobia and racial discrimination have reemerged. The remarkable advances of science and technology, particularly in the area of health, focus in the pharmaceutical business and commercialization of medicine, rather than in securing the wellbeing and healthy living of majorities.
Covid19 has come into a world overburdened by production and consumption patterns, especially in highly industrialized countries and among the elites of developing countries, that are unsustainable and incompatible with the finite character of natural resources upon which life on the planet depends.
Before the first case was identified, there were 820 million people suffering from hunger worldwide; 2.2 billion people with no access to fresh water; 4.2 billion without access to safely managed sanitation services and 3 billion lacking basic amenities for hand washing.
This scenario becomes more inadmissible when it is known that globally around 6.7 billion dollars are spent on a yearly basis only in advertising, while military expenditure amounts to 1.8 trillion dollars that are completely useless in the combat against the COVID19 threat, which has already taken the lives of tens of thousands of people.
The virus does not discriminate. It does not distinguish the rich from the poor. However, its devastating effects multiply there where people that are most vulnerable and get the lowest incomes live, in the poor and developing world, in the pockets of poverty of large industrialized cities. Its impact is specially felt where neoliberal policies and social spending cuts have limited public administration capacities of the State.
Covid19 has taken more lives where governmental public healthcare budgets have been cut. It has caused more economic damages where the State has little or no options to bail out those who lose their jobs, close their businesses and suffer the dramatic reduction or loss of their personal and family income source. In most developed countries the death toll is higher among the poor, migrants and, in the specific case of the United States, among African Americans and Latinos.
To top it all off, the international community has to deal with this global threat while the biggest military, economic, technological and communicational power of the world implements a foreign policy that seeks to incite and promote conflicts, divisions, chauvinism and supremacist and racist positions.
At times when the worldwide combat against the Covid19 pandemic requires boosting cooperation and the leading role of international organizations, particularly the United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization (WHO), the current US administration attacks multilateralism and seeks to disqualify the established leadership of WHO. It also insists in its petty strategy of taking advantage of the circumstances to impose its dominance and attack countries whose governments it has discrepancies with.
Some examples serve to illustrate that, like the recent and serious military threats against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and the announcement, the day before yesterday by the US president, of the Pan-American Day and Week from April 14 to 18, accompanied by Monroe-Doctrine-inspired neocolonial statements against Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba, reminiscing of the Pan-American Conference, condemned 130 years ago by José Martí. Around those same days; but in 1961, the Bay of Pigs invasion took place.
Another example is the immoral and persistent attack against Cuba’s selfless efforts to assist countries that have requested cooperation in the fight against COVID19. Instead of promoting cooperation and a collective response, top officials of the US State Department devote their time to issue statements threatening governments that faced with the drama of the pandemic exercise their sovereignty and decide to request Cuba’s assistance.
The United States officials are knowingly committing a crime, when in the midst of a pandemic they attack Cuba’s international cooperation, seeking to deprive millions of people from their universal human right to healthcare services.
The magnitude of the current crisis compels us to cooperate and practice solidarity despite political differences. The virus knows no boundaries or ideologies. It threatens the lives of all and therefore it is up to all of us to fight against it. No country should assume it is big enough, rich enough or powerful enough to defend itself, isolating itself and ignoring the efforts and needs of others.
Sharing and providing valuable and reliable information is urgent.
Steps have to be taken to allow for the coordination of the production and distribution of medical equipment, personal protection equipment (PPE) and medicines, with a sense of justice. Countries with more available resources should share them with most affected countries that are least prepared to cope with the pandemic.
That is Cuba’s approach. The humble contribution of a small nation with limited natural resources and submitted to a long and brutal economic blockade. For decades we have accumulated experiences in the development of international cooperation in the area of health, as generously acknowledged by the World Health Organization and our counterparts.
In the last few weeks, we have responded to cooperation requests without hesitance to consider political coincidences or economic advantages. So far, 21 brigades of healthcare professionals have been deployed to join in the national and local efforts of 20 countries, that are added or strengthen existing medical collaboration brigades in 60 nations that have now joined efforts to combat COVID 19 in the countries where they were already providing services.
We have also shared some medicines produced by Cuba that according to our practice have proven effective in the prevention of or therapy against the disease. In addition, our healthcare personnel has taken part from Cuba and via teleconferences in consults and discussions on specific treatments for patients or groups of patients in several countries.
All these actions are undertaken without neglecting the responsibility of protecting the Cuban population, duty that is rigorously fulfilled despite the huge limitations imposed by the US economic, commercial and financial blockade. Those who are interested may find the data supporting this assertion as they are publicly available. Anyone with a shred of decency will understand that the blockade poses remarkable pressure over Cuba to ensure the material inputs and equipment that support the public healthcare system and those specifically required to address this pandemic.
A recent example was an aid cargo from China that could not be shipped to Cuba because the carrier claimed the US blockade banned it. On that matter, top US State Department officials had the nerve to say that the United States does export medicines and medical devices to Cuba. Nonetheless, they have failed to support those fallacies with a single transaction between the two countries.
It is common knowledge and widely substantiated that the economic blockade is the main obstacle for Cuba’s development, prosperity and for the wellbeing of Cubans. That harsh reality due solely to the obstinate and aggressive behavior of the United States government does not prevent us from providing our help and solidarity. We don’t deny anyone our assistance, not even to the country that causes Cuba so much harm, if necessary.
Cuba is convinced that these times require cooperation and solidarity. Cuba pursues a politically unbiased international endeavor that seeks to develop and share the scientific research results and experiences of several countries in the prevention of the disease, the protection of the most vulnerable and social behavior practices that will contribute to shorten the duration of the pandemic and slowdown the loss of lives. Cuba strongly believes the role and leadership of the United Nations and the World Health Organization are indispensable.
If we act together, the propagation of the virus will be halted, in a faster and more cost-effective manner.
Then we will have to deal with the economic and social crisis the pandemic is causing, the dimensions of which nobody has dared predict yet.
However, we cannot wait for that day to come to join efforts to overcome the huge problems and threats we shall find ahead and deal with those that were piling up before the pandemic took the first lives.
If developing countries are not guaranteed access to technologies that are mostly available in highly industrialized nations, especially in the area of health, and if they fail to share science developments and their products in an unimpeded and selfless manner, the vast majority of the world’s population will be as exposed or even more exposed than today in an increasingly interconnected world.
If politically motivated coercive economic measures against developing countries are not lifted and if they are not exempted from the payment of the burdensome and unpayable foreign debt and freed from the ruthless tutelage of international financial organizations, we cannot delude ourselves into thinking that we will be in a better position to respond to the economic and social disparities that, even without a pandemic, kill millions of people every year, including children, women and elders.
The threat against international peace and security is real and constant attacks against some countries only made it worse.
It can hardly be expected that the eventual end of the pandemic will lead to a more just, secure and decent world if the international community, represented by each country’s governments, does not press forward to agree and adopt decisions that have proven stubbornly elusive so far.
Similarly, questions will arise as to how well prepared is humanity to face the next pandemic.
There is still time to act and mobilize the will of those who are responsible. If we leave it up to future generations, it may be too late.
Havana, April 16, 2020

STOP AGGRESSION, DEMILITARIZE!

STATEMENT OF ILPS COMMISSION 4 ON THE QUESTION OF CEASING HOSTILITIES DURING THE PANDEMIC

PEACE WITH SOCIAL JUSTICE! END IMPERIALIST OCCUPATION AND AGGRESSION!

SUPPORT THE JUST STRUGGLES OF THE PEOPLES FOR SOCIAL AND NATIONAL LIBERATION!

 

Commission 4 of the International League of Peoples’ Struggles (ILPS), an anti-imperialist alliance of organizations engaged in mass struggles, is concerned with wars of aggression and counter-revolution and nuclear weapons and all weapons of mass destruction.

 

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, António Guterres, called for a global ceasefire in a statement issued on March 23, 2020. (https://www.un.org/press/en/2020/sgsm20018.doc.htm) He wrote, “The fury of the virus illustrates the folly of war. That is why today, I am calling for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world.  It is time to put armed conflict on lockdown and focus together on the true fight of our lives.”

 

We agree with the spirit of this call. However, we wish to defend and protect the peoples currently in struggle for their survival, basic rights, basic services including health care, lands and sovereignty. They fight in self-defence against deprivation and hostile governments. Ultimately, we aspire to realize demilitarization and a halt to aggression and occupation, state terror and human rights violations. With this objective in mind, we cannot advise the peoples, armed or not, to give up their life and death struggles.

 

We act according to the principles of just peace, that is peace through negotiations for a resolution to the issues that cause peoples’ revolutions and resistance. Only if and when social justice—land, political and social reforms—are seriously addressed and settled should the people cease their struggles.

 

Consider the views of V. I. Lenin, as interpreted and explained by S. Gnosh in 1960: “https://www.marxists.org/archive/shibdas-ghosh/1959/07/x01.htm, undated) “It would be possible to effectively preserve lasting peace if the significance of the principal characteristic features of the present-day changed international situation is properly understood and the task of conducting peace movement is grounded solidly in intensifying the national liberation movements in colonies and semi-colonies and the struggles for socialism in capitalist countries.”

 

Therefore, we issue the following set of calls. We make these recommendations in the light of the global pandemic and the sound emergency measures to (1) minimize travel and (2) adjust state priorities to address health, food and housing first, ahead of non-productive sectors such as the military. It is an opportune moment to act in the interest of the welfare of all the peoples of the world.

 

  • cancel NATO missions, close NATO bases and send all NATO troops home
  • send all foreign troops to their home countries, including US troops
  • cancel all military exercises
  • end all general economic sanctions
  • free all political prisoners
  • cancel all arms trade and call for arms and military contract related production to be converted to the production of human necessities related to health care, food and housing
  • initiate a UN campaign to get states to reduce military spending and reprioritize their state responsibilities according to the UN Declaration on Human Rights, that on Indigenous peoples’ rights, and all universal standards set by the UN and other credible international bodies concerned with the rights and welfare of all
  • restrain states with penalties for continuing occupations, aggressions, economic sanctions and interference including regime change and elections rigging

End Economic Sanctions!

STATEMENT OF COMMISSION 4 OF THE ILPS -March 2020

END GENERAL ECONOMIC SANCTIONS NOW!

Take Action against Sanctions that Harm the People!

Commission 4 of the International League of Peoples’ Struggles is the Commission against wars of aggression and counter-revolution and against weapons of mass destruction. We join in solidarity with the organizations who called for a global weekend of actions against general economic sanctions from March 13 to 15.

The blanket economic sanctions imposed by US imperialism and its allies are counter-revolutionary devices that mostly aim to weaken states and movements of the people who stand up to imperialist interference, plunder and exploitation. Far from securing peace, human rights and economic development, they cause shortages of daily necessities and hardship to the working people. Also, they often rob a targeted state such as Cuba, North Korea, Nicaragua and Venezuela of huge state revenues from international activities that could be employed to serve their people more. They thus incite or intensify conflict, far from resolving tensions.

Sanctions are causing suffering to Iranian, Venezuelan, North Korean, Nicaraguan, Cuban and other peoples.  All standardised form of economic warfare implemented by US imperialism today, they are aimed against states that stand in the way of its exploitation and profits. They are part of its arsenal and are aggressive. Such sanctions are carried out despite widespread condemnation. As in the case of Cuba, UN votes on the Cuban blockade have shown a vast majority of UN member states wish an end to the blockade. General economic sanctions punish entire populations. US sanctions on Venezuela and Nicaragua are illegal. Economic sanctions against North Korea, Venezuela, Cuba and Iran are cutting off basic supplies, blocking local commerce and trade and depriving the people, which has resulted in a lowered standard of living and held back development. Although some political sanctions properly decided by international bodies and appropriately implemented might justifiably curb truly repressive regimes and reduce oppression, general economic sanctions destroy societies, intended to force them into submission to foreign powers seeking domination and subjugation.

When are sanctions justifiable? Take Israel, for example. It is a highly militarized state illegally occupying and colonizing Palestine. It inflicts terror and horror against civilian Palestine on a regular basis with the blessings of the US and its allies including Canada, France and Britain. However, Israel clearly commits crimes against humanity on a massive scale, with impunity. Concerned and justice-minded people around the world, however, participate in boycotts and divestment in solidarity with the Palestinian people. This campaign targets major corporations that sell arms and supplies to the Israeli war machine. Part of this campaign is the arms embargo, which advocates a stop to sales of arms and military contracts to Israel. It has had some success. Such is a worthwhile kind of sanction. The UN could do more; it could suspend membership. Other states could maintain diplomatic distance.

There are situations crying out for action against viciously repressive regimes, such as the Duterte regime of the Philippines that has continued an all-out war on the people. It regularly unleashes terror on communities who are struggling to survive acute poverty and defending the right to life and livelihood with peace and social justice. In the pretext of fighting communism, the state national police and armed forces, with the aid of the US, carry out extrajudicial killings of civilian community leaders, labour organizers, protesters, human rights defenders and journalists. Crimes against humanity are the norm in the Philippines. Still, countries including Canada carry on business as usual, awarding aid and trading with the corrupt and bloody-minded bureaucratic-capitalist and land-owning elite. Other states could stop such business dealings and refuse to sell arms. The US could pull its troops out of the region and stop training and supplying the regime. Such would be sanctions that would help the people of the Philippines. Also, other states could cooperate by maintaining diplomatic distance, in such a way as not to harm migrant Filipino workers. Again, here is a context in which a UN measure to suspend membership would be just. It is also a context in which support for the peace talks and the peoples’ demands for land, social and political reforms should be strongly insisted.

In Venezuela, food and household supplies are plentiful in the upscale urban districts. Perhaps to take advantage of the effects of the blockade and the expectation of shortages, prices have been jacked up astronomically. Medium and small-sized businesses have not been able to access some materials for production and sale, owing to high pricing or unavailability. There may be some withholding and hoarding of goods. In poorer areas, restaurants and shops have little to offer customers. Some Venezuelans have chosen to leave the country. Regional tourism is at a standstill. Fortunately, the pro-people government, with the assistance of benefactors and genuine humanitarian agencies such as the Red Cross, has a food program to deliver rations to those in real need. As well, it is assisting communities to spearhead local, micro-farming initiatives to create self-sustaining food sources. There are strategies of sharing and self-reliance in the communes. Where necessary, charities and churches dispense hot meals to school children and families. They solicit funds from foreigners so that they can pay for food and distribute it. It is amazing that the Bolivarian government under Chavez and subsequently by Maduro has been able to proceed with providing free transportation, education and healthcare as well as constructing houses under these conditions. It has worked hard to build understanding and make special deals with friendly states, so as to restore some trade. It could do so much more for the people if the billions of dollars of funds held abroad were released, and if billions of dollars in revenues from trade were flowing normally.

Commission 4 of the ILPS demands an end to the illegal and cruel economic measures against the Venezuelan and Nicaraguan people imposed by the US aided by its friends such as Canada. Unfreeze the Venezuela state funds withheld abroad and return them to the government of Venezuela. End the blockades against Cuba and North Korea. End the general economic sanctions against Iran. Diplomatic and select trade sanctions against real oppressors who violate the rights of the people and pose real threats. Take a stand against imperialist aggression and domination in all its forms, military or economic or otherwise. Negotiate as much as possible; no military invasions or coups. Stop meddling.

 

Stop the US War Machine!          US Troops, Go Home!                No Sanctions!                    Defend Sovereignty!

ILPS week of global anti-war action from May 25 to May 30, 2020

Mobilize against the arms trade show, CANSEC in Ottawa, May 27-28