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Weekly Worker 542 Thursday September 2 2004
Ending chaos and avoiding civil war
Mohsen Karim, a member of the central committee of the Worker-communist
Party of Iraq, addressed the CPGBs Communist University 2004
The Worker-communist Party of Iraq sees the USA and political islam as
two sides of terrorism. Thirty-five years of Saddams oppression
did not stop us opposing the war against Iraq. We predicted the consequences
of the war and we have unfortunately been proved correct: chaos, violence,
the breakdown of society and the strengthening of political islam.
The war created opportunities for those islamists who did not want to
take a stand against America to gain some power by joining the Governing
Council. Three islamist groups have joined the GC, alongside tribalists
and nationalists. On the other hand, other islamists, as well as Baathist
remnants, have taken up armed resistance against the Americans, so that
Iraq is now a battleground between islamists and nationalists on the one
hand and the occupying forces on the other.
The war between these two forms of terrorism has caused immense damage
to civil society in terms of the destruction of all forms of social services,
healthcare and so on. The occupying forces have done nothing to maintain
even the most basic levels of welfare provision. The resulting poverty
and unemployment have created great anger against US forces - anger which
the islamist resistance groups have taken advantage of. Those islamists
who have joined the Governing Council are trying to impose their own reactionary
ideas; those who are in the resistance also want to remove all freedoms
from the people.
The laws operating under the interim government are as bad as those under
Saddam: no separation of religion from the state; no recognition of womens
or childrens rights - things are just as bad for women and workers
as they were before. When they interviewed Saddam, he told them, You
are using exactly the same laws as I did, so nothing has really
changed in that respect.
The islamists want to replace civil law with sharia law and they are attempting
to impose it through violence and terror. In some municipalities of the
south this has already happened. So at present the people of Iraq find
themselves caught between the forces of the US military and the forces
of political islam, whether in power or in opposition. It is a tragic
situation.
Baghdad was a modern, civilised city but now women dare not go out without
the veil - a reflection of the islamification of society. Women who do
so face kidnapping, rape - even murder. On the streets there are large
numbers of children living wild - orphaned, abandoned, abused. According
to the Arabic Labour Organisation, more than 70% of the Iraqi labour force
is unemployed. The level of life for nearly all Iraqis is very low. The
desperation and pessimism which flow from the present chaotic situation
have produced a marked increase in drug abuse. Part of the army
recruited by Muqtada al-Sadr is composed of drug-taking young people.
Between them, the occupation forces and the islamists have deprived Iraqis
of all hope for the future.
What the people of Iraq want is peace of mind, security, welfare and equality.
The idea that the Iraqi people are islamic and that Iraq is an islamic
country is completely mistaken. Of course, there are many people who consider
themselves to be muslim, but they too want prosperity, freedom and a modern
way of life. Even under Saddam they struggled for a modern life and they
do not want to live in an islamic state. The islamists currently in government
or in the resistance, who want to impose their views on the population
by force, are not popular.
After all, if the people of Iraq were devout muslims, then these islamists
would not find it necessary to impose their will by threats and acts of
violence in the way they do. The people of Iraq are no different from
anybody else in the world - they want to live in peace in a modern welfare
state. We in the WCPI see ourselves as representing the demands of the
people for such a life and we have offered a solution to get Iraq out
of the current crisis. We condemn both the US occupation on the one side
and the forces of political islam and nationalist forces on the other.
We do not recognise political islam as representing the genuine opposition
of the people to the occupation.
We want to return Iraq to civil society, and for this reason we have called
a conference in support of our project, Returning civil life to
Iraq. We are asking all organisations to take part and sign a common
declaration, which should consist of the following:
- We demand immediate withdrawal of the occupying forces, because their
presence only serves to strengthen islamic and fundamentalist trends,
allowing them in the name of resistance to bring chaos and
further violence to the country. Self-evidently, the US is not in Iraq
to bring freedom, but to preserve its own interests. Hence,
we demand the withdrawal of the occupying forces as a precondition for
freeing Iraq from chaos. We are calling for an international force to
help protect Iraq from civil war, and for international solidarity from
secular and progressive movements to help us achieve it.
- We call for a provisional government formed from a congress of all organisations
in society, a provisional government that will create an environment of
political freedom, to be followed by free elections. At the same time
we say that the provisional government should respect rights and recognise
them in law.
- We call for the complete separation of religion and state, to protect
society from islamic law and the dangers of fundamentalism. People should
not be recognised on the basis of their religion or national identity,
but on the basis of their human identity.
- We demand full equality of men and women and unconditional freedom for
political activity - a crucial demand at the moment - so that people can
be brought into political activity as free citizens.
- Capital punishment must be abolished.
- The rights of the Kurdish people to independence must be respected and
a referendum called. This issue is important in order to prevent the danger
of civil war, for which Kurdish, islamic and Arab nationalist forces are
already gearing up.
We are fighting for a workers state as our ultimate aim. But at
present a provisional government is needed in order to return civil society
to some kind of order and security. Whereas the forces of occupation,
of political islam and the nationalists want to continue the present state
of war and uncertainty, we want to rally people around the idea of a provisional
government, to mobilise women and individuals. As a result, the WCPI is
being attacked from both sides and recently one of our comrades
has been killed in the city of Kut.
As regards the question of an international force, I want to stress that
demonstrations in the west should be renewed in favour of a progressive
secular government in Iraq. Anti-war movements and those organisations
which defend womens rights and human rights across the world can
be a force for the demand for a provisional government in Iraq, bringing
international support for the demands of the Iraqi people. When the US
forces go, there is a real danger of civil war leading to even greater
chaos and suffering. The purpose of having foreign forces would be to
prevent such a development, to stave off civil war. We should look at
the example of East Timor. As regards our own efforts, we have made a
start by arming the people in those areas where we have a presence.
The sheer depth of political, economic and social dislocation means that
the working class currently lacks all sense of direction in a very complex
situation. The old methods cannot be relied on and new methods must be
found. Some people say that we should identify our primary and secondary
enemies in order to build our strategy. Obviously, the primary enemy is
capitalism itself, but the idea of creating a hierarchy of enemies comes
from Mao. As we see it, US imperialism and political islam are two sides
of the same coin, both parts of the same terror system, contributing equally
to the oppression of workers. That is why we would never consider any
form of alliance with political islam. It is a mistake to categorise our
enemies as primary and secondary. What we call for is an independent force
to restore security. The policies of WCPI at this moment in this chaotic
situation is restoration of civil society, freedom, welfare and security
for the Iraqi people.
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