|
Weekly Worker 598 Thursday October 27 2005
Workers
of the world, unite! (except in Pakistan - and indeed anywhere else)
Any way it comes
Yet another cash crisis is looming, as, once again, we look set
to fall well short of our £500 target this month. With only four
days to go for our October fund, we have only £310. That’s right
- just £30 received over the last seven days.
But all is not lost. If just a dozen or so comrades could let us
have £10 or £20 straightaway, we would easily make the full amount
by our deadline of noon on Monday October 31. Mail your donation
first class as soon as you read this or - even better - go onto
our website and make your contribution using your credit or debit
card. That way, we will be sure to get it without having to rely
on the vagaries of the post.
Talking about our website, I’m sorry to have to repeat that perennial
complaint of mine - not a single online donation made this week.
True, there were not so many readers as last week - 14,876, compared
to 15,720 - but surely a few of you are due to show your appreciation?
Thanks go to comrades ES (£20) and HD (£10) for coming up with
the goods - even if they did write us an old-fashioned cheque. But,
to be honest, I’ll take it any way it comes - just as long as you
get it to me by Monday next. Please don’t let me down, comrades.
Robbie Rix
Click
here to download a standing order form - regular income is particular
important in order to plan ahead. Even £5/month can help!
Send cheques, payable to CPGB, BCM Box 928, London WC1N 3XX
Donate
online:
|
Ted Crawford of the Revolutionary History editorial board highlights
the shameful duplication of socialist effort in the race to aid earthquake
victims
I have become very interested in the Pakistani earthquake and the response
to it, since my eldest daughter is working as a volunteer with Oxfam in
Kashmir dealing with the horrors. To my amazement I have found that there
are no less than four quite distinct efforts to help the victims by different
Trotskyist groups. There appear to be at least another two (see Weekly
Worker website), but the situation at the moment as regards these
four, representing the affiliates of one French and three British groups,
is as follows.
First, the Pakistani Struggle group, which is affiliated to the International
Marxist Tendency (previously the Committee for a Marxist International)
- the tiny Grant-Woods tendency around Socialist Appeal in the
UK. This is the Pakistan Trade Union Defence Campaign (PTUDC), whose details
appear on www.marxist.com/pakistan-earthquake-appeal101005.htm and to
which you can send money by PayPal. This seems the most important of the
purely Trotskyist efforts. It appears to have sent about 15-plus lorries
with relief supplies to the affected areas and also claims to have organised
doctors in four medical teams plus supplies. Struggle has a number of
good accounts and photographs on its website
Second, the Committee for a Workers’ International, whose main affiliate
is the Socialist Party, or Taaffe tendency, which calls itself the Trade
Union Rights Campaign Pakistan (TURCP). You can send money to the TURCP
at PO Box 52135, London E9 5WR. It claims to have about seven to eight
lorries with relief supplies to the affected areas, but the CWI has much
less information about Pakistan on its website than the Socialist Appeal
group.
Thirdly, there is the Lambertist organisation, which is very small in
Pakistan, but has a presence in the trade unions. It asks for money and
goods to be sent to the Working Women’s Organization (APTUF) at the following
address: E5, 48/A, Rehmania Street, Zaman Colony, Cavalry Ground Extension,
Lahore, Pakistan.
Finally, the Socialist Workers Party is collecting money for Islamic
Relief, which, judging by the information in the article in the Weekly
Worker (October 20), is a charity best avoided by anyone with a
tincture of leftism - or indeed anyone who wants their money to get to
the wretched people for whom it is supposedly destined.
The divisions among these groups owe more to differences in Europe decades
ago rather than in Pakistan today (that they have tactical differences
in Pakistan, I know, but these I judge to be the effect rather that the
cause of the separation). Such divisions have very little to do with the
appalling catastrophe affecting the people in the mountains. Indeed, in
so far as different groups have a line on the effects of the earthquake,
it appears to this untutored eye to be exactly the same for all of them.
Let us return to first principles. How can we best help the class and
the poor victims? First, there is clearly a need for unity and joint work.
Because the PTUDC is obviously the biggest and appears to be the most
effective, perhaps the others should have thrown themselves into that.
However, I greatly doubt whether the PTUDC ever asked them to do so, even
if they should not have needed to be asked. And I suspect that the Struggle
group made no efforts to involve the other leftists as well as Trotskyists
in joint activity - in fact I doubt it even crossed their mind. Alas,
I would guess all these groups have been too much infected from Europe
by the syphilis/Aids of sectarianism.
Yes, members of the British SWP, you are the biggest group in the UK,
but the Struggle tendency with the PTUDC is the biggest in Pakistan. (True,
their Socialist Appeal affiliate here is a tiny group of old buffers -
often as old as me.)
Certain minimum demands should have been made - they are so obvious,
they would hardly need to be agreed - such as open the borders, denounce
corruption and government inaction, and thereafter people should have
got down to it. Even from the crudest sectarian accounting point of view,
there would be lots of contacts made with active, decent young people
in the course of doing relief work - apart, that is, from actually helping
the sufferers by digging latrines for them. And differences of approach
between the groups could be argued about (if the volunteers had any energy
left) in the evening. Such is often the best form of political education.
It appears from the bourgeois press that all the efforts of the politicals
and even the foreign NGOs are dwarfed by those of the various islamist
charities. At least that is what they say (see ‘Extremists fill aid chasm
after quake group banned in Pakistan dispenses relief’ Washington Post
October 16). Often the tone of these reports is rather hostile, and one
cannot be sure that they have not exaggerated the role of the islamists
for their own journalistic/imperialist agendas. They also try to find
something sinister in the fact that a few have been armed with revolvers
to protect the goods they were bringing in.
Now I cannot say I have investigated the efforts of all the left tendencies
as fully as I would like, since it is difficult at this distance to know
exactly what is going on. At any rate I have given my money to the PTUDC,
which seems to be both the largest and to have a good political line as
regards opening the frontier with India to relief efforts. It also appears
to have some sort of united front with some Indian leftwing MPs, including
the Communist Party of India (Marxist), on the issue of opening the borders.
That seems excellent to me, as does the guarding of its lorries from the
lumpen thieves by squads of Young Socialists shouting “No to national
war! No to religious war! Yes to class war!”
Most of the other leftwing groups have very little about their contribution
on their websites that I could find - although this does not mean to say
they are making no effort. However, the motives, intention and general
attitudes of the small Communist Mazdoor Kisan Party (CMKP) appear excellent,
although, of course, much of its politics is Stalinist garbage. The CMKP
website contains a couple of very interesting accounts. The impression
they left was of absolute confusion and of a great hatred of the generals.
They mention that the foreign NGOs are closely controlled by the government.
I have my criticisms of the PTUDC - in particular the fact that Alan
Woods is being built up as a great guru with a somewhat pompous and overlong
address to the people of Kashmir, which is at a prominent point on the
www.marxist.com website. What is more, it is stated that this was read
out to the comrades at all 20-odd encampments where the CMI are working
and greeted with loud applause. Quite ridiculous. (I did pass this view
of mine on to Alan and I have to admit I got a courteous note from him,
thanking me for my money - even if he said nothing of my criticism.)
Finally it will be said, who the hell is this Ted Crawford? What does
he represent? I represent the Common-Sense Tendency, comrade. There
are not many of us, it is true - and you can see how Musharref and the
CIA are trembling in their shoes because of the activities of the Trotskyists.
No wonder they do not bother about us.
Print this page
|