Livingstone pulls the strings
Londons mayor has personally
invited sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi to speak at the European Social
Forum, reports Tina Becker, and he continues to make other demands
As October 14 and the ESF draws closer, it becomes more and more
obvious that Ken Livingstone is pulling the strings. At this weeks
Assembly for the protection of hijab he used the opportunity
to personally invite sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi to speak
at the European Social Forum. Presumably Livingstone believes
that, having donated £250,000 of taxpayers money to
the ESF, he himself now has the right to decide who can, and who
cannot, speak.
Having no working class or socialist programme - not even the semblance
of one - Red Ken makes great play of his commitment
to multiculturalism, feminism, anti-fascism, the environment, etc.
He personally opened the pro-hijab assembly, organised by the Muslim
Association of Britain, which took place on Monday July 12 in City
Hall, the headquarters of the Greater London Authority. Undoubtedly
his invitation to al-Qaradawi, the keynote speaker, is another example
of populism and pandering to muslim clerics (after his disgraceful
call on RMT workers on the London underground to cross the picket
line on June 30, some might say a bit of pandering to the left might
be in order).
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Of course, Livingstone has no right to invite al-Qaradawi or anybody
else to the ESF. It is up to all the accountable groups involved
in the event to decide which speakers we want to hear - and that
after discussion in Britain and Europe, through the ESF programme
group.
Al-Qaradawi might be a crowd puller. His visit to Britain has been
accompanied by hysterical press coverage. The Sun and the Daily
Mail in particular went into overdrive, calling him the sheikh
of hate and an islamic nutter, and demanding that
Livingstone cancel the hijab assembly altogether. A totally different
view was given by the mayor himself, who referred to him as a moderate
quoted out of context. Livingstone has claimed his positions had
been misrepresented and that he had never called for homosexuals
to be stoned.
Al-Qaradawi himself, however, has not disputed that he has described
homosexuality as a disease that needs a cure, that this
cure could be death; nor that it would be acceptable
in some circumstances for a man to beat his wife. According to BBC
Monitoring, al-Qaradawi said last year: Oh god, destroy the
usurper Jews, the vile crusaders and infidels. He said the
killing of the American telecom engineer, Nick Berg, by islamic
militants in Iraq, had to be seen in the right context.
He has, however, condemned decapitations, the twin towers attacks
and suicide bombings outside Israel (all quotes from The Times July
7).
No doubt, as a leading member of the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qaradawis
positions are hardly compatible with those of democratic and secular
socialists. However, that does not mean that the left should demand
a ban on al-Qaradawi entering Britain, as gay rights campaigner
Peter Tatchell has done. Neither should we necessarily declare that
he should not speak at the ESF.
There must, however, be strict conditions. If the democratically
accountable bodies of the ESF decide al-Qaradawi should speak, he
must not be allowed to go unchallenged - what about Peter Tatchell
debating with him? Would al-Qaradawi find that acceptable?
In general we are against no platforming reactionaries, including
muslim fundamentalists and even fascists. The only way to completely
overcome backward ideas is, of course, to change the social conditions
which produce them. Meanwhile, in furthering that objective, we
should champion open debate and rational discussion.
The governments plans to introduce a law to ban incitement
to religious hatred must also be strongly opposed in this
context. Home secretary David Blunkett announced on July 7 that
this proposed law would defend every faith and make
the vilification of islam a crime - unlike sikhs and
jews, muslims are not covered by existing race hate
legislation. The christian faith is already protected by the absurd
blasphemy laws, which prohibits giving offence to those who practise
it. Predictably, it is argued that the christian-only blasphemy
laws are inappropriate for a multicultural society, where all religions
should have equal status and the right to be respected.
There are two main reasons why socialists should oppose such laws.
Firstly, they represent an attack on free speech - giving the authorities
the right to decide what can and cannot be said - and cedes them
powers that, in all likelihood, will eventually be used against
progressives and working class militants.
Secondly, individuals ought to have the right to embrace or reject
religion, which must therefore be open to scrutiny, criticism and
even condemnation. That does not, of course, mean that discrimination
against muslims or buddhists because of their religious views is
acceptable - just that those views ought to be contested.
In discussing these questions, we might find that al-Qaradawi has
a useful contribution to make at the ESF - in any case that is not
up to Livingstone.
Small, but beautiful?
At the July 7 coordinating committee meeting, many ESF activists
were stunned to hear that there will only be space for 152 plenary
meetings and seminars at the ESF in October - less than half the
number held at last years event. The GLAs representative
at the meeting claimed that this was because all the commercial
providers of translation equipment across Europe put together
could not manage to equip more than 20 rooms at the same time.
This cannot be true: representatives from Babels (the volunteer
organisation that will oversee translations at the ESF) were told
at a separate meeting that hiring equipment from outside the UK
was too expensive - there were certain budget restraints
to be considered. Of course, the coordinating committee has yet
to be presented with a budget. Those not involved in the inner
circle (around the Socialist Workers Party and Livingstones
well paid GLA officials from Socialist Action) are simply informed
about certain decisions long after they have been made.
For example, we were told last week that an events management
company will be employed to oversee the event. It looks as
if a job tender has already been sent around various companies -
without any prior discussion of the need for such a company at any
ESF committee. Also, there are apparently plans for a massive
concert on the last day of the ESF and, again, nobody quite
knows who is organising this and who the performers will be - Livingstone
maybe?
The GLAs £250,000 donation is turning out to be something
of a poisoned chalice: as there is still hardly any other money
available, Livingstone can exercise almost total control over the
event - via his loyal and uncritical minions in Socialist Action.
The GLAs donation will be spent on what he chooses - not what
those actually involved in setting up the ESF have in mind.
In the process, the whole character of the event has changed dramatically
in the last few months. Undoubtedly, it will go ahead. But hardly
as the inspiring and liberating left festival we have seen in the
last two years. Critical forces have been sidelined and excluded,
decisions are made by a few selected Livingstone loyalists and unfortunately
some groups have decided to withdraw altogether. The question of
facilitating European-wide networks has been totally sidelined and
the whole event is taking on the shape of a bureaucratic Livingstone-style
rally with its own somewhat strange agenda.
Like our French and Italian comrades, we must insist on the ESFs
political independence. If that means we have to forego the GLAs
donation, then so be it. The ESF is after all not just a single
event, but a long-term project to bring together progressive and
left forces across Britain and Europe on a higher political level.
Livingstone has made it very clear that he is not interested in
any such thing.
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