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Weekly Worker 549 Thursday October 21 2004
More
articles on the ESF can
be found by clicking here
Paying the price
The London ESF was characterised by unprecedented levels of open dissent
and protest against the bureaucratic stage-management of the whole event
- inside and outside the official ESF structures. Mark Fischer reports
The leader in The Guardian of October 18 was spot on when it observed
that each European Social Forum tends to reflect the prevailing
politics and tensions of the host country. Given the deeply fractious
nature of the left in Britain, it was not hard to predict that, in contrast
to Florence and Paris, the 2004 ESF would be marked by protests and a
widespread feeling of exclusion. A number of groups went so far as to
organise their own event rather than participate in what they saw as a
Livingstone jamboree: There was the Beyond ESF event of the
anarchist Wombles group in Middlesex University; people around the London
Social Forum set up a Solidarity Village in Conway Hall; and
Indymedia organised their own four-day event in Camden Centre.
Minority rule
The October 15 plenary, End the occupation of Iraq, was abandoned
after a small group staged a loud, but shambolic protest against the presence
on the platform of Subhi Meshadani, the general secretary of the Iraqi
Federation of Trade Unions. A 40-strong contingent led by a small group
of Iraqis and including a good number of Workers Power comrades headed
for the centre aisle and advanced, chanting, on the platform. (I was confidently
assured by a leading SWPer that the Iraqi comrades were Mike Marqusees
lot - ie, the Iraq Occupation Focus. I checked with the IOF - they
were not).
The group was stopped by stewards and a 20-minute stand-off ensued, with
the protesters refusing to allow the meeting to continue while Meshadani
remained on the platform. A compromise was proposed by Sami Ramadani,
a member of the Arab Media Watchs advisory committee. Before making
his proposal, the comrade emphatically underlined that he was an opponent
of the occupation, that he supported the Iraqi peoples right to
resist and that he passionately disagreed with the invitation to the IFTU
apparatchik - all to the obvious discomfort of some of the British people
on the platform.
Having established these credentials, he suggested that those who wanted
to register a protest at Meshadanis presence should stage a walkout
when it was his turn to speak rather than wreck the whole meeting.
There was no coherent response from the protesters, but the simple fact
that they stayed put settled the question. Their position was made weaker
by the plain fact that the vast bulk of the 800-strong meeting was in
favour of hearing the man speak. The hostility to this small minority
increased after two votes clearly indicated that the overwhelming majority
wanted them to end their action and the meeting to resume. The votes were
also reinforced with some extremely hostile chanting and heckling directed
against the protesters.
There is confusion about what happened next. The few WP comrades I subsequently
spoke to insist that these votes were respected by their organisation
and that their comrades began to make their way to the back of the hall.
I have to say, from my vantage point, standing on a chair some eight metres
from the action, I did not see any signs of this - certainly not immediately
after the votes themselves (although it was certainly difficult to work
out exactly what was going on in the tight-pressed scrum).
Also, it does not seem to have been the impression of comrades who had
the advantage of viewing the whole debacle from the stage. Sabah Jawad,
billed to speak from the Iraq Democrats Against the Occupation and also
associated with Arab Media Watch, expressed justified frustration with
the action of this very small minority. It meant that he was not able
to expose the treacherous role of the IFTU. Also, he quite correctly expressed
concern that this clumsy protest might enable Mashadani to present himself
as a victim of the ESFs lack of democracy (see www.arabmediawatch.com).
Comrades from Workers Power in particular might like to reflect on the
competence of tactics that allowed Lindsey German to pose as a brave champion
of the meetings democratic rights and won her a roaring standing
ovation from the vast majority of those present for her brave confrontation
with the forces of censorship. Not a clever nights work, comrades.
Wombles
revenge
Many comrades will know something of the take-over of the Saturday night
plenary session, Stop fascism and the far right in Europe,
by an anarchist hit squad of 200-plus. As theatre, the action had impact
and was certainly not without a political justification of sorts. Many
in the audience were enthused by the invasion and - in their own inarticulate
way - the anarchists succeeded in articulating frustrations with this
tightly-controlled jamboree.
However, we should be critical of this manifestation of the alternative
ESF. The traditions of anarchism are no more organically democratic than
those of the SWP or those GLA satraps, the wretched Socialist Action sectlet.
It was common knowledge well in advance that an anarcho-hit squad was
on its way. Obligingly, they announced it 24 hours in advance on an e-list.
Also, the City Hall building was fly-posted on the morning of the stunt,
just in case Livingstone was unaware of their intentions (he was supposed
to speak in the session, but was diplomatically absent on the night).
There were pretty detailed rumours circulating among delegates all day
concerning what was being planned, the numbers involved and an approximate
time.
So when it actually happened, the stunt was about as unanticipated as
Christmas. Clearly they had inside help, though. They were able to storm
through previously locked side doors. Their speeches condemning Livingstone
and the commercialisation of the ESF were met with a good deal of sympathy.
In stark contrast to the disruption of the Iraq meeting the night before,
the anarchos actually struck a chord with the majority of the audience,
who shared, at least in part, their resentment. Meanwhile the majority
of the SWP were nowhere to be seen. They were far away in Friends Meeting
House at the Respect rally.
A representative of Babels, the international network of volunteers that
provides the interpretation and translation for all plenaries and seminars,
also indicated their dissatisfaction in a formal statement - later read
out throughout the event. It spoke of the many opportunities of
experimentation and innovation [that] have been missed during the organisation
of this forum resulting in the exclusion of many people, organisations,
networks, groups and even countries. The London ESF had instead
been characterised by neoliberal practices of organisation, management
and service delivery
with the result that the forum has been entirely
dependent on the state.
This statement - from a group that has been central to the success of
previous ESFs - totally undercuts the nonsense from the self-serving GLA
apparatchik Lee Jasper and others that the disruption of the Saturday
night plenary had nothing to do with how the event was organised
and that - farcically for any comrade who has followed the detailed reports
in the Weekly Worker - no viewpoint was excluded. Predictably,
given his job as a well-paid professional anti-racist, Jasper was at pains
to characterise the demonstrators as an exclusively white group
of anarchists engaged in harassing black and Jewish speakers
(The Guardian Letters, October 19).
Entertainingly, he was effectively slapped down the next day by members
of some of Britains leading official anti-racist campaigns, including
Suresh Grover of the National Civil Rights Movement, Piara Power of Kick
It Out and Ashika Thanki of the Newham Monitoring Project.
They bluntly stated that the man was engaged in nothing more than a crude
attempt to portray as a racist attack what was effectively
a protest against the lack of democracy and consensus by the GLA in the
organisation of this years European Social Forum. Jasper was
attempting to smear the protest - which was supported by large sections
of the audience
using accusations of racism to provide political
cover for what was clearly political dissent aimed at his employer, the
GLA, and the mayor of London
Whatever the rights or wrongs of such
protests, Lee Jasper and the GLA must not play the race card
to silence these voices (The Guardian Letters, October 20).
Quite right - but Jaspers smears are unfortunately typical of the
poisonous atmosphere of crude denunciation and censorship that has been
fostered in the London ESF by the likes of him and Livingstones
shield-carriers, Socialist Action.
The fallout
Predictably, arrests immediately followed as the main body of protesters
withdrew. (the meeting on anti-fascism and anti-racism actually restarted
after the anarchists withdrawal).
In a preparatory meeting for the Assembly of Social Movements which took
place simultaneously, Pierro Bernocchi of the Italian trade union confederation,
SinCobas, condemned the involvement of the police and urged the meeting
to demand the immediate release of those lifted. There was enthusiastic
applause - apart from the SWPers present and the leading SA honcho and
well-remunerated Livingstone employee, Redmond ONeill. These comrades
looked decidedly grumpy and exchanged some significant glances. Indeed,
comrade ONeill attempted to speak on this question. To oppose comrade
Bernocchis principled call, perhaps? To support the arrests, even?
Sadly, we will never know. Rahul Patel, the SWP chair of the session,
thought better of letting the man in - possibly one of the SWP comrades
more diplomatically astute acts of censorship.
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