Archive for the ‘crime’ Category

Imperialism, climate crisis and Palestine liberation

September 22, 2024

We need to look at the Palestinian cause as a fundamental cornerstone to our struggles against US-led imperialism and global fossil capitalism, argues Hamza Hamouchene

Red Pepper, 30 August 2024

6 to 7 minute read

A large fire raging in the background with an olive tree and a person looking on in the foreground
  • Settlers setting Palestinian land and olive trees on fire in Beit Ummar, West Bank in 2009
    CREDIT: PALESTINIAN SOLIDARITY PROJECT

At the climate Summit, COP 28, held in Dubai in December 2023, Colombian President Gustavo Petro declared that ‘Genocide and barbaric acts unleashed against the Palestinian people is what await those who are fleeing the south because of the Climate Crisis…What we see in Gaza is the is the rehearsal of the future’.

I think he is right. The genocide in Gaza can be a harbinger of worse things to come if we don’t organize and fight back vigorously. The empire and its global ruling classes would be willing to sacrifice millions of black and brown bodies as well as white working-class people so they can continue accumulating capital, amassing wealth, and maintaining their domination.

Shifting costs to nature

Capitalism has always been a system of unpaid costs. The costs are systematically externalised and shifted somewhere else: a) to women and carers in terms of social reproduction that is largely unpaid, b) from urban to rural areas, c) from North to South where sacrifice zones are created, a dynamic facilitated  through dehumanisation, othering and racism; and d) externalising costs to nature  and treating it for centuries as an entity to dominate and plunder, if not to commodify but also considering it as a waste sink. This led to the ecological and climate crisis.

The impacts of the global climate crisis we are going through are differentiated through class, gender, and racial lines, as well as between urban and rural areas, North/imperial cores vs South/peripheries. They are also distinguishable through coloniser-colonised lines.

Palestinians and Israelis inhabit the same terrain but there is a huge disparity in impact and vulnerability because Israel settler-colonialism has grabbed, plundered and controlled most resources from land to water to energy and has developed, on the backs of Palestinians and with the active support of imperialist powers the technology that will help to relieve some of the impacts of the climate crisis.

The impacts of the global climate crisis are differentiated and distinguishable through coloniser-colonised lines

Global climate justice and Palestinian liberation

It may feel misplaced or even not appropriate to talk about climate and ecological issues in the context of genocide in Gaza, but I would argue that there are important intersections between the climate crisis and the Palestinian struggle for liberation. In fact, I would say that there will be no global climate justice without the liberation of Palestine and that the Palestinian liberation is also a struggle to save the earth and humanity. This is not mere sloganeering, and I will explain in the paragraphs below.

First, Palestine today perfectly demonstrates the ugliness of the current system and concentrates its deadly contradictions. It also shows its tendency to be moving towards the usage of cruel outright violence on a large scale. Gramsci once said: ‘The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born…In this interregnum, a great variety of morbid symptoms appear’.

Second, what is taking place today in Gaza is not just genocide. I am not sure we have the right terminology to describe all the destruction and death unleashed today on Palestinians. Notwithstanding this observation, what is also happening is an ecocide or what some described as a holocide, which is the annihilation of an entire social and ecological fabric

Third, the genocidal war in Gaza as well as other wars also highlight the role of war and the military-industrial complex in exacerbating the ecological and climate crisis. The US army on its own is the single largest institutional emitter in the world, larger than whole Western countries such as Denmark, and Portugal. In the first two months of the war in Gaza, Israel’s emissions were higher than the annual emissions of at least twenty countries. About half of these were due to weapons transportation by the US to Israel. The US is not only an active player in the genocide but also a significant contributor to the ecocide taking place in Palestine.

Fourth and this is my main argument (based on the work of Adam Hanieh and Andreas Malm): we cannot dissociate the struggle against fossil capitalism and US-led imperialism from the struggle to liberate Palestine. Israel as a Euro-American settler-colony in the Middle East  is an imperial advanced outpost. Alexander Haig, US secretary of state under Richard Nixon once Put it bluntly: ‘Israel is the largest American aircraft carrier in the world that cannot be sunk, does not even have one American soldier and is located in a critical region for American national security’.

The Middle East and the global fossil regime

The importance of the Middle East in the global capitalist economy cannot be overstated. Not only does the region today play a major role in mediating new global networks of trade, logistics, infrastructure, and finance, it is also a key nodal point in the global fossil fuel regime and plays an integral role in keeping fossil capitalism intact through its oil and gas supplies. In fact, the region remains the central axis of world hydrocarbon markets, with a total share of global oil production standing at around 35 percent in 2022. Israel has also been seeking to play a role as an energy hub in the East Mediterranean (through newly discovered gas fields such as Tamar and Leviathan), an aspiration bolstered by the EU’s attempts to diversify its energy sources away from Russia in the context of the War in Ukraine. The genocide that Israel is carrying out wasn’t an obstacle for granting licences to various fossil fuel companies to explore for more gas in the first weeks of the genocidal war.

Two main pillars today form edifice of US hegemony in the region: Israel and the oil-rich Gulf monarchies. Israel as the number one ally in the region plays a fundamental role in maintaining the domination of the US-led empire in the region (and beyond) as well as its control of its vast fossil fuel resources, mainly in the Gulf and Iraq. It is within this framework that we need to understand the US’ and its allies’ efforts in politically and economically integrating Israel in the region from a dominant position: pioneering technology, weaponry and surveillance material but also water desalination, food production through agribusiness, energy, etc.

The normalisation deals between Israel and other Arab countries go back to the Camp David Accords of 1978 between Israel and Egypt and to the peace treaty between Jordan and Israel in 1994. A second wave of normalisation, the Trump-brokered Abraham Accords, took place in 2020 with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco. 

The Palestine liberation struggle is not merely a moral and human rights issue but is a struggle against US-led imperialism and global fossil capitalism

Before the 7th October attacks, it was expected that Saudi Arabia and Israel, under the patronage of the US, would sign a similar deal cementing the US imperial designs for the region. This would have liquidated, once and for all, the Palestinian cause. Hamas, an integral part of Palestinian resistance, disrupted these plans through its 7th October attacks.

The Palestine liberation struggle is thus not merely a moral and human rights issue but is fundamentally and essentially a struggle against US-led imperialism and global fossil capitalism. There will be no climate justice without the dismantling of the deeply racist Zionist settler colony of Israel and without the overthrow of the reactionary Arab regimes, chiefly the gulf monarchies.

Palestine is a global front against colonialism, imperialism, fossil capitalism, and white supremacy. It is incumbent on all of us from climate justice activists to anti-racist organizations and anti-imperialist agitators to actively support Palestinians in their liberation struggle and uphold their undeniable right to resist by any means necessary!

The task in front of us is very challenging but as Fanon once exhorted us to do, we must, out of relative obscurity, discover our mission, fulfil it, and not betray it.

This is a lightly edited version of a speech that Hamza Hamouchene gave in a panel at the Black Lives Matter Liberation Festival, held on 13 July 2024 in London

Hamza Hamouchene is the North Africa programme coordinator at the Transnational Institute

Did God speak to the former US President G. W. Bush? Some reflections

August 8, 2015

Nasir Khan, August 8, 2015

“God speaks through me. Without that, I couldn’t do my job.”
— George W. Bush, quoted in Lancaster New Era, July 16, 2004

Such was the claim of the former US President. He said this after the US armed forces had invaded and occupied two large countries, Afghanistan and Iraq. At that time, he was the most powerful leader of the mighty militarist superpower as well as a ‘divinely’ elevated person because God communicated with him. To my knowledge, in modern history we do not find another instance when a mortal man and the immortal God joined forces for U.S. to unleash two destructive wars! However, the implications of his pronouncements had a direct bearing on his political stature and his policies. Even though, he made his policies and issued his executive orders with the help of his close neoconservative advisers and secretaries but in doing so he was doing God’s work. God was speaking through him; therefore, God mandated whatever he did. God had chosen the right man to do His work!

If we accept the claims of divine guidance, for the sake of argument, that he, in fact, made on many times, then we can point to the results he achieved by his genocidal wars. Under his leadership, the US armed forces invaded and occupied Afghanistan and Iraq in the most brutal way. They killed hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis and Afghans who had no quarrel with the people of the United States or posed any threat to the global U.S. hegemony and power. The destruction of Iraq was systematic. The Bush administration undertook the destruction of Iraqi state and its infrastructure as a necessary step to imposing the imperial diktat in the Middle East. It uprooted the social and administrative structure of Iraq and replaced it with sectarian puppet regimes that followed the orders of Washington and the Pentagon.

To make the imperial take-over easy and to neutralise any resistance to the new geopolitical order in this vast and oil-rich country, imperial masters used sectarian discord of the population as a convenient tool. How did it matter to Bush if Sunni and Shia turned against each other and started terrorist violence against their own people – the people of Iraq? Religious fanatics and miscreants were free to weaken Iraq while the occupiers could have an easy task to control the country and its resources. Thus, the US occupation could continue with greater ease while the country was drenched in bloodshed and mayhem that is still going on.

Through his destructive policies in the occupied Iraq, the Bush administration destabilised the whole region and played with the lives of millions of Iraqis by reducing them to destitution, poverty, homelessness and helplessness. The rampant killings in Iraq have claimed the lives of uncountable victims. In the first 7 years of US occupation, about 1.3 million Iraqi died. The main source of this incredible catastrophe that engulfed Iraq in 2003 was the US invasion. The ultimate responsibility of the present cycle of violence and bloodshed remains with Mr Bush.

Mr Bush’s military invasion and occupation of Afghanistan resulted in large-scale deaths of Afghans. The brutal treatment of the prisoners of war and the innocent victims in the process of occupying Afghanistan is a dark chapter in the history of twenty-first century. The occupying power violated the Geneva Conventions regarding the treatment of prisoners of war, international humanitarian conventions and all norms of international law. All this happened because God said to Bush to do so! In fact, this is a preposterous assertion that even Al Capone would not have resorted to! Let us take a common sense view of his claim and its consequences. What that means is that the former president is not responsible for the wars and war crimes but someone else is! In legal terms, he is implying that God is vicariously responsible for his wars and war crimes. In this way, he absolves himself of any responsibility for his actions and his policies as the head of US Government! A very convenient but cheap method to deceive the world, no doubt!

There is no need for us to enter into any lengthy theological discourse on God and his attributes. It is common knowledge that most believers see God as a kind, merciful and loving power. For having such attributes, believers hold Him in high respect and praise Him. It is hard to think that the Heavenly Father, as Christians call God, could have asked or encouraged Mr Bush to start major wars of aggression and commit the most heinous crimes against other weaker nations in this century. In brief, to impute such designs to God or because of fulfilling a mission from God is a reprehensible act on the part of Mr Bush. In the eyes of any sincere believers, he is maligning God in a vicious way if he believes in Him as he seemingly professes to do.

Alternatively, what if he really believed in what he asserted about God? That is something, which we can look at cursorily from a legal point of view. In criminal law, the actions of the alleged offenders are primarily judged for the mens rea – that is, their state of mind and intentions when they committed some indictable offence. In some cases, they are entitled to the defence of diminished responsibility or diminished capacity if their mental condition was impaired in such a way that they did not fully understand what they did. If such a defence is successful, the accused are given mitigated sentences or sent for medical treatment, depending on the gravity of offences involved. In an old case of acute insanity, one person beheaded a sleeping man just to see what he would do when woke up in the morning but didn’t find his head!

There are many cases when people hear sounds or messages from some unknown sources exhorting them to do something that may amount to a criminal offence. A hallucination is a perception that is not based on objective reality. It is very much a subjective condition of mind and in this condition, people may see or visualise things that having nothing to do with reality. In this age, we come across cases when some people say they have heard God or God has given them some message. If Mr Bush is sincere in his claims about God speaking to him, then that is something for which only the professional psychologists can offer their expert views.

In case  a judicial miracle (which I don’t see taking place!) takes place and the world sees the former US president, G.W. Bush, being prosecuted for his wars and the alleged war crimes in a court of law then the question of hallucinations would certainly be an issue in any legal process. However, facts point to a different direction: That he acted with deliberation and premeditation in pursuing his policies and his destructive wars.

Gaza is burning and the Arabs sit and watch

July 14, 2014
Dr Mohammed Al-MisferDr Mohammed Al-Misfer

There have been many times when oppressed people resisting their oppressors gain international solidarity for their cause as public opinion sways in their favour. They embody bravery as they continue to resist against their enemies. We saw this pattern manifest itself in Vietnam when the people struggled against the biggest superpower in the world. The Vietnamese demonstrated how they turned to each other for support when the northern city of Hanoi stood as a beacon of light for its counterpart Saigon in the south. Soon after, the southern Vietnamese people embodied the spirit of resistance and achieved all of their goals.

When it comes to the Palestinian case, the situation is entirely different, for in the Gaza Strip (Southern Palestine) we see true armed resistance being engaged in the battle against the Zionist enemy, which is armed with the most sophisticated weapons and is using all of its power and influence throughout the world to frame this conflict as it sees fit; it is from this that the Palestinian people in Gaza can find no escape. Gaza is burning and its natural supporters, the Arabs of the region, sit and watch. The Palestinian Authority under the leadership of Mahmoud Abbas, based in the West Bank city of Ramallah (which we can consider here to be the northern region of Palestine), should be the biggest advocate for its people in Gaza. And yet, all we here are murmurs and useless statements being made here and there.

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Israel’s Buffoon: The UN Nakba

May 14, 2012

By Vacy Vlazna, uruknet.info, May 13, 2012

On May 15, 1948 the unilateral proclamation of the State of Israel which erupted into the brutal Palestinian Nakba or Catastrophe was also catastrophic for United Nations (UN) ringing the death knell for its stature and authority.

Like medieval kings, the US and Israel employed the UN to be its fool running around with a cap o’ bells and sceptre (rendered useless by US veto) beginning with the 1947 Resolution 181, passed on 29 February by members (under coercion) recommending the partition of the British Mandate of Palestine into Jewish and Palestinian states which was understandably rejected by Palestine but accepted by Israel as a step toward its Zionist expansionist goal for the full realisation of a Jewish Eretz Israel.

Ironically, on 30th February Menachem Begin, head of the terrorist gang, Irgun, brazenly announced the Zionist immutable dogma, “The partition of Palestine is illegal. It will never be recognised… Jerusalem was and forever will be our capital. Eretz Israel will be restored to the people of Israel. All of it. And forever.”

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US Helicopters Attack Pakistan, Killing More Than 50

September 27, 2010

NATO Confirms Apache Helicopters Launched Attacks Against Pakistani Territory

by Jason Ditz, Antiwar.com,  September 26, 2010

NATO spokesmen are confirming tonight that a pair of US Apache helicopters crossed the border from Afghanistan into Pakistan, launching an attack against tribesmen in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) which killed over 50.

NATO says that the tribesmen they attacked were believed to be the same ones responsible for an attack against a NATO base in the Khost Province of Afghanistan. The Khost Province borders FATA’s North Waziristan Agency, a regular target for US drone strikes.

Though it is not the first time US forces have crossed the border and launched attacks into Pakistan, such attacks have been exceedingly rare (and followed by angry reactions from Pakistan’s military and civilian government). NATO has also repeatedly tried to distance itself from previous attacks, insisting there is no basis for crossing the border.

NATO depends on Pakistani territory as a supply route for its troops in land-locked Afghanistan, and following a pair of 2008 raids by US troops into Pakistan the nation’s government briefly blocked the supplies. With many, many more NATO troops in Afghanistan now than in 2008 the supply route is all the more vital, though simultaneously all the more fragile.

Indian troops kill 72 Kashmiris in August: Report

September 1, 2010
Indian troops killed 72 Kashmiris including 31 teenagers and four women during August, a Kashmiri news agency reported.

World Bulletin / News Desk, Sep 1, 2010

Indian troops killed 72 Kashmiris including 31 teenagers and four women during  August, a Kashmiri news agency reported.

The Himalayan region is at the heart of a decades-long dispute between India and Pakistan, who have fought two of their three wars over the issue since they won freedom from British rule in 1947.

According to the data compiled by the Research Section of Kashmir Media Service, of those people three were killed in custody.

Kashmiris see India as an “occupier” and accuse the ruling of systematic violations, killing dozens of civilians in Himalayan region.

Tens of thousands of Muslims have been killed since pro-independent moves grew against Indian rule in 1989.

The Indian troops also damaged a residential house during the month, according to the report.

On Tuesday, Indian forces fired and wounded five civilians in Maisuma neighborhood of Srinagar. Five people were injured Monday when police fired on a group of men playing a board game, local residents said and called the shooting unprovoked.

Human rights workers have complained for years that innocent people have disappeared, been killed by government forces in staged gunbattles, and suspected rebels have been arrested and never heard from again. Authorities routinely investigate such allegations, but prosecutions have been rare.

Authorities deny any systematic violations and say all reports are investigated and the guilty punished.

India’s brutality has turned Kashmir into a living hell

August 30, 2010

But you’re a Westener. You see how things are here. We have been living like this for twenty years. When you go back to your country you tell them. You ask them why they aren’t helping us.”

By Giogiana Violante, The Comment Factory, August 29, 2010
Police brutality in Kashmir

This is the first time in weeks I have had access to the internet. I have not been allowed to receive or send text messages for three months. Just like all Kashmiris my telephone has been barred from such contact. The local news channels have been banned. India controls everything here. And then kills it. The situation is horrific. Over these months of food rationing and persistent curfew whereby all is closed and the streets totally deserted in utter silence, suddenly a protest arises and then spreads throughout the whole city in a surge of frustrated and famished rioters shouting ‘AZADI AZADI AZADI’ (freedom) until it dissipates suddenly into a cacophony of gunshots and clouds of teargas.

I observe all this going on at a  safe remove of only one metre by a big thick brick wall interrupted by the Mevlana Rumi gate to Kashmir University, where I am residing. I see through the iron bars hordes upon hordes of protesters being shot at randomly, and I stand there repellently incapable of doing anything. An endless cycle of silence and violence. The Indian army own total control and freedom to shoot at will, to shoot to kill, anyone whom they choose to.

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 INDIA: Random firing upon civilians in Kashmir

August 30, 2010

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION – URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

August 30, 2010

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information from credible sources in Jammu and Kashmir concerning the arbitrary shooting of civilians by the security forces stationed in that state. It is reported that the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) stationed in the state often fires small projectiles at civilians while engaging in patrol duty so as to force the civilians stay indoors. In one such incident reported from Tarzoo Sopur at least 26 civilians have been injured including a 15-year-old boy, Danish who is feared to permanently loose his sight in his left eye after being hit by a projectile.

CASE DETAILS:

The AHRC has received information from credible sources from Srinagar, that on August 19, the CRPF while on patrol duty at Tarzoo Sopur in Baramulla district started firing randomly at civilians in an attempt to force the civilians remain indoors. The officers fired at random into alleyways and on the main street, using rifles loaded with cartridges that could fire several small, but high velocity projectiles, like those fired from a 12 gauge shotgun. It is reported that at least 26 persons were injured in the firing, of which one is 15-year-old Danish Ahmad Shiekh who was hit when he was returning from the local mosque after offering prayers.

It is reported that four small projectiles hit Danish; one his forehead, two on his back and one in his left eye. Danish was taken to Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS) in Srinagar, where he is currently undergoing treatment. The doctors treating him has reported that it is unlikely for Danish to regain sight in his left eye, which was hit and injured badly by a small projectile. Danish is a student at the Government School Takiabal, in Sopur.

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Middle East War: U.S. Doctors Approved Torture and Denied Medical Care to Captives

July 7, 2010

by Sherwood Ross, Uruknet.info, July 5, 2010

5abughraib.jpg

American doctors in the Middle East routinely approved the torture of captured suspects and denied them critical medications such as insulin, sometimes with lethal consequences, according to a documented report published in the “Utne Reader.”

In Dec., 2002, Defense Secy. Donald Rumsfeld issued a directive allowing interrogators to withhold medical care in nonemergency situations so that “men with injuries including gunshot wounds were denied treatment as a way to make them talk,” writes author Justine Sharrock. Although the directive was soon revoked, “the practice continued,” she said.

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INDIA: DIAL M FOR MASSACRE

July 1, 2010

Clinching documentary evidence corroborates serious charges against Narendra Modi and key officials in his administration

BY TEESTA SETALVAD, Combat Communalism, June 2010

Three months ago, our covert story, SIT-ting on the Truth (March 2010) exposed the frivolous and shallow investigations of the Gujarat massacres undertaken by the high-profile Special Investigation Team (SIT) appointed by the Supreme Court and headed by former CBI director RK Raghavan. One of the major issues raised was the deliberate refusal of SIT – influenced as it was by the three officers of the Gujarat police cadre, Shivanand Jha, Geeta Johri and Ashish Bhatia – to examine available documentary evidence to pin responsibility for complicity and gross dereliction of duty by top police officers, civil servants and politicians.

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