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Weekly Worker 611 Thursday February 9 2006
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Democracy in the dock
It all helps
At 15,640, our web readership was considerably up last week
compared to the recent period. But that doesn’t stop me making my
usual complaint - again nobody used the online facility to make
a donation to our fighting fund.
However, a couple of useful gifts that arrived by snail mail helped
save my bacon. Thank you, JH, for your £30 cheque and you, DP, for
the £20 postal order. Thanks also to our number one fan in Norway,
comrade SW, for his usual monthly contribution of £15.
Added to that I have another new standing order to report - just
£5 a month from comrade EB, but it all helps, and our total of extra
regular donations is rising slowly.
Also rising slowly is our February fund - the above gifts only
amount to £70 towards our £600 target. And don’t forget - this is
a short month of only 28 days and we are one third of way into it!
We could do with a nice increase to match our website
hits. Anyone out there like to help us out?
Robbie Rix
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Fight the BNP but defend freedom of speech too - Eddie Ford comments
To much media rejoicing, Abu Hamza al-Masri - or “Captain Hook” - has
been jailed for seven years on multiple charges of “soliciting murder”,
“inciting racial hatred”, possession of a “terrorist encyclopaedia”, etc.
Furthermore, Hamza also faces the prospect of extradition to the United
States on charges of trying to set up a “terrorist training camp” in the
state of Oregon.
Sentencing him, the judge remarked that he had “helped to create an atmosphere
in which to kill has become regarded by some as not only a legitimate
course but a moral and religious duty in pursuit of perceived justice”.
In response, Hamza’a lawyer said that the former Finsbury Park mosque
preacher considered himself “a prisoner of faith” who was now undergoing
a “slow martyrdom”.
Communists find this verdict deeply troubling. Of course, we do not say
this out of any affection or political sympathy for Hamza - far from it.
He is no anti-establishment freedom fighter, but rather an obnoxious,
loud-mouthed, reactionary bigot whose crazed rhetoric promulgates a violent
hatred of anything and anybody deemed inimical to the ‘laws of Allah’
- such as Jews, homosexuals, democracy, women’s liberation, and so on
almost endlessly. Hamza is a virulent anti-communist who condemns muslims
that participate in elections or lend any sort of credence to democracy
and secularism. He hankers for a terroristic dictatorship that would crush
all those who demur from his harsh and anti-human interpretation of what
constitutes a model islamic state.
In many respects, Hamza has a near perfect counterpart in the British
National Party’s Nick Griffin - except, of course, that Hamza is a member
of Britain’s demonised muslim minority, while Griffin wants to ride to
power with the support of the white majority. Unlike Hamza, Griffin walked
away a free man last week after the jury at Leeds crown court cleared
him and fellow BNPer Mark Collet of various counts of using “insulting
or abusive words intended to stir up racial hatred”. Now facing a retrial
on four similar counts - particularly his inflammatory assertion, caught
on a BBC documentary, that islam is “a wicked, vicious faith” - Griffin,
just like Hamza, uses every opportunity to stir up hate against those
sections of society that he and the odious BNP regard as a threat to the
‘British way of life’ (like asylum-seekers, immigrants, gays, Jews, muslims,
leftists, etc). Self-evidently, Griffin is working towards the day when
his rhetoric is translated into action, either by unofficial
squads of goons or, preferably, by the state-bureaucratic machine itself.
In this respect, words do matter - they cannot be neatly separated
from actions, for the simple reason that there is such a thing as cause
and effect and under certain circumstances this can take a baleful form.
Communists are not ‘anything goes’ libertarians and hence have no inherent
objections to the idea of the state being forced to take legally sanctioned
actions against individuals or groups that are clearly intent on encouraging
murder and causing general mayhem. But such actions would have to be through
the courts and under full public scrutiny.
However, communists are also militant defenders of free speech, and we
oppose all measures which give the authorities the right to decide what
can and cannot be said, or to adjudicate as to what is ‘correct’ or not,
or to decree what is ‘hateful’ or not.
To put it even more bluntly, we do not trust the existing state one iota
- whether it is headed by Tony Blair, David Cameron or even those ‘nice’
Liberal Democrats. Indeed, communists fearlessly say that it is the British
state, not the likes of Abu Hamza or Nick Griffin, which is the main enemy.
Britain forcibly colonised, savagely oppressed and ruthlessly plundered
Ireland, India and half of Africa in order to further enrich the already
fabulously rich. It mastered the art of divide and rule. Religion was
pitted against religion, tribe against tribe and people against people.
Communists will never forget this - even if social democrats and liberals
find it convenient to do so.
Nor has the beast changed it nature, whatever the nowadays ‘democratic’
or anti-racist/fascist spin. Today the British state both uses and blames
migrants and poor foreigners - whatever their skin colour, ethnicity or
religious-cultural background. It stands before the world as the most
loyal ally of US superimperialism, a thug nation-state, ever ready to
use nuclear, chemical or other such WMDs. Hypocritically and criminally,
it helped the US starve, bomb and then invade Iraq - and is now sabre-rattling
against Iran because it wants to develop its very own WMDs (hardly surprisingly
when it looks next door to Iraq and sees what happened to a state not
in possession of WMDs).
And, ultimately, it is the state which stands guard over the whole rotten
system of inequality and exploitation, breeding alienation, poverty and
the social sickness that produces the BNP, the July 7 bombers and the
Abu Hamzas of this world. In extremis the very same state, and, of course,
the class that stands behind it, would energetically promote and, if need
be, unleash groups like the BNP - just as the Italian capitalists did
with the blackshirts and the German capitalists did with the Nazis.
In other words, reactionary and backward ideas can only be genuinely
eradicated by overturning existing social conditions. But, in the meantime,
such views are generally best fought in the open, where they have
no room to hide and fester. For instance, Jason Gwynne’s The secret
agent - the BBC documentary that prompted the Leeds trial - was a
brilliant, and personally brave, exposé of the BNP and amply demonstrated
once again that the organisation is a cesspit of racism, anti-semitism
and thuggish violence.
This is surely the most effective way to deal with Hamza - using the
weapon of open, democratic exposure. But thanks to this week’s court verdict,
his prestige will almost certainly rise, especially amongst young, alienated
muslims - after all, Nick Griffin has boasted how his trial “brought us
more donations than ever before, including one of £20,000 - the biggest
in our history. We’ve never had such good publicity before.”
The very real danger is that the government will use the Hamza case to
make inroads into all our democratic gains. As well as being found
guilty of “using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour
with intent to stir up racial hatred”, he was also convicted of “possession
of threatening, abusive or insulting recordings of sound”, and the “possession
of a document or record containing information of a kind likely to be
useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism” - namely,
The encyclopaedia of the Afghan jihad.
This so-called “terrorism manual”, which Hamza claims he received as
a gift (Christmas present, perhaps?) apparently explains how to make explosives,
organise a terrorist unit and, according to the prosecution team, “suggests
potential targets such as Big Ben and the Eiffel Tower”. This clearly
sets a dangerous precedent, as he was not accused of actually writing
the book; neither was he charged with using it to make bombs or even tell
his followers which targets to attack. Rather, Hamza has been convicted
for the mere possession of this ‘encyclopaedia’ (not that you need
to be a genius to work out what kind of buildings might make good targets
or how to make a bomb - all you need is access to the internet and a vaguely
competent knowledge of Google).
For communists, this is alarmingly reminiscent of the recent Old Bailey
conviction of six men belonging to the neo-Nazi group, Racial Volunteer
Force. Five of the accused, all former members of Combat 18, were sentenced
to a combined total of 15 years on the charge of conspiracy to stir up
racial hatred - while the sixth man, 40-year-old Kevin Quinn, was given
a two-year suspended sentence for possession of the screwball anti-semitic
pamphlet, The longest hatred: an examination of anti-gentilism.
Somewhat ironically, this would no doubt be a publication that preacher
Hamza would thoroughly approve of, especially given his belief that the
Jews “know how to control people” and “know how to control our leaders”
- by keeping “a file for each one of these politicians, how much homosexual
you are, how many money he has taken as bribe, whom his wife goes with,
which child he has been abusing and they got all this against them”. Of
course, the author of The longest hatred proclaims her devout commitment
to christianity.
So, no, communists certainly do not agree with Gordon Brown that the
seven-year sentence slapped on Hamza shows “why we need laws against the
glorifying of terrorism and why we need to stop extremist muslim clerics
trying to enter the country”.
Nor do we concur with the judgment of The Guardian, which
points the finger at the more ‘irresponsible’ sections of the media: “If
this conviction marks an end to the watchful tolerance of odious incitement
against Jews, gays and other non-believers, there may be a lesson for
the media too. It is regrettable that those with the loudest voices and
most repulsive views are most often seen and heard. It was a misjudgement
by the BBC’s Today programme to broadcast a long interview about
the Danish cartoons on Monday with Omar Bakri Muhammad, leader of the
extremist al-Muhajiroun group, now happily in Lebanon ... Community relations
in a democratic, multi-faith society need careful nurturing: it is good
news that this disruptive voice of hatred has now been silenced” (February
8).
No doubt The Guardian would regard most of those on the far left
as being in possession of “repulsive views” - including our comrades in
the Socialist Workers Party, who have been so keen to mobilise protesters
to demonstrate outside Leeds crown court, yet to date have not made a
single critical comment about Abu Hamza or Omar Bakri Muhammad in Socialist
Worker. Interestingly enough though, we read this in the latest issue:
“Many people will be outraged that two confirmed Nazis with a history
and record of poisonous bigotry against ethnic minorities can walk free
on charges of incitement to race hatred. Griffin claimed he was attacking
islam rather than muslims. The government’s religious hatred bill, which
was designed to close this loophole, was gutted in a Commons vote last
week” (February 11).
Would this, by any chance, be the very same bill (“gutted” or not) that
in all likelihood will lead to more convictions along the lines
of the now safely imprisoned Abu Hamza? We eagerly await an answer on
this from our SWP comrades.
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