Robert Gerard "Bobby "
Sands (Roibeard Gearóid Ó Seachnasaigh ) died at 1.17am on 5th of May 1981 after being on hunger strike for 66 days in the Long
Kesh Maze Prison in Northern Ireland in protest against British
treatment of political prisoners. He was 27, emaciated weighing a mere 95
pounds his fillings having fallen out, his organs shut down and the
whites of his eyes turned orange from toxins released.
Over the next few months, 9 other republican prisoners followed him, the
culmination of a 5 year struggle in the prisons of Northern Ireland
demanding jail reforms and the return of special category status
allowing them to be treated as prisoners of war , allowing them the
privileges of POW's as specified in the Geneva Convention. Using hunger strikes as a practice of political and social resistance
has its first records in 5th century India. The records tell us that
people who felt wronged for some reason sat without eating in front of
the household of the accusing person. This action had a lot of cultural
symbolism, with the accusers’ honor being tarnished for leaving a person
without eating in front of their homes. Hunger strikes, as a means of action often have since been used as a last resort in the
fight against a particular injustice.
Bobby Sands had been bought to the republican struggle through personal
experience after being intimidated out of his job as an apprentice car
builder by fellow workers. and after his family were intimidated out of
their home in Rathcoole, a predominantly loyalist area of North
Belfast, growing up under the cloud of nationalist and toyalist
divisions, Catholics like Bobby were reduced to second class citizens
while the Protestant majority were granted privileges in jobs, education
and services.
In 1971 the British introduced internment - allowing its forces to
arrest anyone they saw fit and hold them indefinitely without charge. In
1972 at the age of eighteen the year he joined the IRA he was picked up by the police beaten
up and tortured after some handguns were found in a house he was staying
in and was sentenced to 5 years in Long Kesh, he was rearrested in 1976
and in a juryless trial was sentenced to 14 years for possession of a
gun found in a car he shared with 5 other people
Developing his political ideas he was to become a leader and
inspiration to the prisoners. During this time Bobby read widely and taught himself Irish which he was later to teach the other blanket men in the H-Blocks. He pushed hard for prison reforms
confronting the authorities, and for his outspoken ways was often given
solitary confinement sentences He was also a prolific writer, who wrote
numerous poems.
On 27 October 1980, republican prisoners in the H Blocks of Long Kesh
began a hunger strike. Many prisoners volunteered to be part of the
strike, but a total of seven were selected to match the number of men
who signed the Easter 1916 Proclamation of the Republic. On 1 December three prisoners in Armagh Women’s Prison joined the
strike, including Mairéad Farrell , Mairéad Nugent and Mary Doyle.
‘I
am (even after all the torture) amazed at British logic. Never in eight
centuries have they succeeded in breaking the spirit of one man who
refused to be broken. They have not dispirited, conquered, nor
demoralised my people, nor will they ever.’ Bobby Sands wrote at the time.
In
January 1981, it became clear that the British Government had reigned
on an agreement that had been made/. Prison authorities began to supply the prisoners with
officially issued civilian clothing, whereas the prisoners demanded the
right to wear their own clothing.
In the aftermath of this Bobby Sands, then leader of the Irish
Republican Army (IRA) in the Maze Prison, refused food on 1 March
1981 and so began a new hunger strike. The choice of the date was significant because it marked the fifth anniversary of
the ending of special category status (1 March 1976). The main
aim of the new strike was to achieve the reintroduction of 'political'
status for Republican prisoners. Special category, or 'political',
status would be achieved if five demands were met: the right
of prisoners to wear their civilian clothes at all times; the
right to free association within a block of cells; the right not
to do prison work; the right to educational and recreational facilities;
and the restoration of lost remission of sentence. It later became
clear that the IRA leadership outside the prison was not in favour
of a new hunger strike following the outcome of the 1980 strike.
The main impetus for a new protest came from the prisoners themselves.
The strike was to last until 3 October 1981 and was to see 10
Republican prisoners starve themselves to death in support of
their demands.
The tactic of the hunger strike has
a special place in Republican history and has proved very emotive
for Nationalists in Ireland throughout the 20th century. The
impact that could be achieved on world opinion was clear in 1920
when Terence MacSwiney, then Lord Mayor of Cork, died in Brixton
Prison, London, on day 74 of his hunger strike. A passage from
a speech he had made at his inauguration as Lord Mayor was to
be recalled during the 1981 hunger strike: "It is not those
who can inflict the most, but those who can suffer the most who
will conquer".
In the weeks and days before Sands died, there were two major attempts to unconditionally end the hunger strike. The first was an intervention by the European Commission on Human Rights. This was supported by the Dublin Government and the SDLP as a way to alleviate nationalist pressure on them to take Britain to task by supporting the prisoners' demands. The second was the visit to Sands from the Pope's Private Magee, Both interventions ended in failure following re-affirmation to their relatives by Sands and some of the other hunger strikers, like Raymond McCreesh and Francis Hughes that they would not settle for less than their five demands. Margaret Thatcher the ""Iron Lady" British Prime Minister at the time decided that
no concessions be made to the prisoners, and with cold and calculated
cruelty she and her government allowed them to die, but on March 30th, 1981 he was nominated as candidate for the Fermanagh and South
Tyrone by-election caused by the sudden death of Frank Maguire, an
independent MP who supported the prisoners’ cause. He was subsequently elected to Parliament in a defiant rebuke to the British Government from the
people of Northern Ireland having won 30,492 votes, ten thousand more
than Thatcher in her London Constituency of Finchley and with a majority
twice as large becoming the people's own M.P. I remember Thatcher's ( British PM at the time)
callous refusal to reach any compromise - " crime is crime, it is not political." she
said, which only served to reinvigorate the republican cause at the
time. It is estimated that over 100,000 people attended Bobby's
funeral on March 7th where he was laid to rest in the Republican plot at Millbank Cemetery, Belfast. His death saw an international outpouring of grief and anti British
demonstrations taking place. Protests were held in Paris, Milan,
Ghent , Australia and Greece. In a ripple effect that was felt across
the world.
After the death of a further nine more republican prisoners the hunger strike was called of on October 8 after pressure from the strikers families And although Margaret Thatcher claimed victory , her government conceded the
hunger strikers demands and even after the hunger strike protests ended even she, the
main adversary of Sands and his comrades was moved to say years later " It was possible to admire the courage of Sands and the other hunger strikers who died."
Meanwhile,
history has shown disgust with the name of Margaret Thatcher and no
one, other than those officially charged with doing so, attended her
funeral, people danced in the streets and congratulated each other
on being rid of the evil woman. Bobby Sands name though will always be remembered, his sacrifice never forgotten. Today
his smiling face is known the world over and his fight for freedom
remains an inspiration wherever people rise up against injustice, from Palestine to Kurdistan.
In political terms , the 1981 hunger strike marked a sea change in Irish republicanismand
in the history of the Northern Ireland conflict, the scale of the mass
campaign in support of the prisoners helped turn the republican
struggle increasingly towards a political, rather than a purely military
focus , away from violence, decommissioning and towards ceasefire which
would be crucial in laying the ground for the peace process which would
have once seemed inconceivable., marking a turning point in the bitter 30 year conflict over British rule.
The Republican
movement had achieved a huge propaganda victory over the British
government and had obtained a lot of international sympathy.
Active and tacit support for the Irish Republican Army (IRA) increased
in Nationalist areas. Political support for Sinn Féin
(SF) was demonstrated in two by-elections (and the general election
in the Republic of Ireland) and eventually led to the emergence
of SF as a significant political force in Northern Ireland. The
British government's fear that SF would overtake the Social Democratic
and Labour Party (SDLP) as the main representative of the Catholic
population of Northern Ireland was a key reason for the government
signing the Anglo-Irish Agreement (AIA) on 15 November 1985.
Following Bobby Sands death Nelson Mandela led a hunger strike by prisoners on
Robben Island to improve their own conditions..Palestinian and Kurdish prisoners have since increasingly used the same tactics too as an ultimate form of resistance, and it is easy to understand that a
people deprived of its cultural, ethnic and religious existence find
hunger strikes a useful tool. It equally reinforces the need for urgent,
material support amongst those in solidarity with their cause.
to bring attention to their
plight.
Bobby Sands stature keeps growing, and his poetry and songs still resound, let us remember him, let us never forget.He said before he died " our revenge will be the laughter of our children." - a phrase that says all that we need to know about him and looks beyond the bloodshed to true peace.
The Peoples Own M.P - Christy Moore
Here is a link to a previous post on Bobby Sands that includes some of his fine poetry
He died in springtime,
When flowers were waking,
But his passion born of love and anger,
Remained undimmed, his will unbroken,
On the side of justice and right,
The most profound human hunger of all,
Through pain and struggle he rode on,
Kept up the fight, let the world be his witness,
Let truth shine it's light, for his cause to be seen,
Strength and courage carried this poets bones,
No fear, only defiance was to be seen in his eyes,
And now today his spirit still lives on,
As the ugliness of injustice continues to roam.
The Haymarket Riot (also known as the “Haymarket Incident” and
“Haymarket Affair”) occurred on May 4, 1886, when a labor protest rally
near Chicago’s Haymarket Square turned into a riot after someone threw a
bomb at police. The rally at Haymarket Square was organized by labor
radicals to protest the killing and wounding of several workers by the Chicago police during a strike the day before at the McCormick Reaper Work. The demonstrators were calling for greater power and economic security, standing against capitalism and calling for an eight hour day.
Anarchist leader August Spies, a German immigrant, was among the many
people who were angered by the police’s reaction to the McCormick
strike. He had been giving a speech to strikers a short distance from
the factory, and had witnessed police open fire on workers. Spies rushed
to the offices of the Arbeiter-Zeitung, an anarchist newspaper
he edited, and wrote a leaflet denouncing the incident. He headlined
the flier “Workingmen, To Arms.” That evening, as word of the McCormick
killings spread, another group of Chicago anarchists planned an outdoor
rally to protest police brutality. They scheduled the gathering for the
following evening at Haymarket Square, a large space on Desplaines
Street.
At the May 4th meeting a number of radical and anarchist speakers addressed a crowd of over 3,000 people. August Spies opened the rally by climbing atop a hay wagon and giving a
speech on the “good, honest, law-abiding, church-going citizens” who
had been attacked at the McCormick factory. He was followed by Albert
Parsons, a former Confederate soldier turned radical anarchist. Chicago
Mayor Carter Harrison was even in attendance to ensure the protest was
peaceful. And the meeting was peaceful but the mood became more confrontational when the police tried to disperse the crowd. As scuffles broke out, someone who has never been positively identified threw a bomb at police lines. (some have since claimed was an agent provocateur in the pay of the authorities to try and stoke up division.) The bomb landed and exploded unleashing shrapnel. One officer was killed and several were wounded. The police responded by drawing their weapons and firing into the panicked crowd. Seven policemen were killed, most likely from police bullets fired in the chaos, not from the bomb itself,and at least one civilian died as a result of the violence that day, and an untold number of other people were injured.
The aftermath created widespread hysteria, further repression and a national wave of xenophobia, as hundreds of foreign born radicals and labor leaders were rounded up in Chicago and elsewhere in what is seen as the first great political witch hunt and frame up trial, used as an excuse to crack gown on the entire labor movement. Inevitably anarchists were rounded up, and treated to what today would be termed rough justice.
A grand jury eventually indicted 31 suspected labor radicals in connection with the bombing, and eight anarchist leaders from the revolutionary syndicalist tradition were convicted of instigating violence and conspiring to commit murder. in a controversial trial, despite lack of evidence and no connection to the actual bomb. The judge, Judge Gary, gave one of the most shameful performances that this country has ever seen, and it has seen plenty from its judges. He helped choose the jury,to make sure it would convict. He questioned men who stated they had already formed an opinion about the case, had definite prejudices against Anarchists, Socialists and all radicals, were not certain they could render an impartial verdict--and ruled that they were not disqualified! He said from the bench that :-"Anarchist,Socialists and Communists were as pernicious and unjustifiable as horse thieves" and, finally, in charging the jury, that even though the state had not proved that any of the eight men had actually thrown the bomb , they were guilty of a conspiracy to commit murder .He imposed the death sentence on seven of the men, and the eighth was sentenced to 15 years in prison.In what is seen as a racist show trial, which like all kangaroo courts is seen as a travesty of justice. Many of the accused not even present when the incident took place.
Four were hanged,and one by the name of Louis Lingg committed suicide the day before his scheduled execution and three, Oscar Neebe, Samuel Fielden and Michael Schwab were eventually pardoned.
The men have since become known as the Haymarket Martyrs, Albert Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fischer and George Engel who were tried and convicted and executed for their political beliefs, not for their actions, still occupy an honored history in the place of class struggle in the United States and internationally whose sacrifice is remembered every year on May 1st International Workers Day, whose deaths sparked protests around the world.
"These are my ideas. They constitute a part of myself. I cannot divest myself of them, nor would I if I could. And if you think that one can crush out these ideas that are gaining ground more and more every day; if you can crush them out by sending us to the gallows;if you would once more have people suffer the penalty of death because they have dared to tell the truth - and I defy you to show that we have told a lie- if death is the penalty for proclaiming the truth, then I will proudly and defiantly pay the costly price."
-- August Spies, just before he was sentenced to death on 0ctober 9th 1886.
Engel, Fischer, Parsons and Spies were taken to the gallows in white robes and hoods. They sang the Marsellaise, then the anthem of the international revolutionary movement. According to witnesses , in the moments before the men were hanged .Spies shouted, " The time will come when our silence, will be more powerful than the voices you strangle today!" Witnesses reported that the condemned men did not die immediately when they dropped, but strangled to death slowly, a sight which left many speakers visibly shaken.
The Haymarket affair is now generally considered significant as the origin of the International May Day observances for workers, when in July 1889, a delegate from the American Federation of Labor recommended at a Labor conference in Paris that May 1 be set aside as International Labour Day in memory of the Haymarket martyrs and the injustice metered out to them, and has become a powerful reminder of the international struggle for workers rights, that I for one try not to forget.
Rather than suppressing labor and radical movements the events of 1886 and the execution of the Chicago Anarchists,actually mobilised and galvanised a new generation of radicals and revolutionaries. Emma Goldman a young immigrant at the time later pointed to the Haymarket affair as her political birth. Lucy Parsons widow of Albert Parsons , called up on the poor to direct their anger at those responsible - the rich. In 1938 , fifty-two years after the Haymarket riot , workdays in the United States were legally made eight hours by the Fair Labor Standards Act. It is up to us to keep the memory of the Haymarket martyrs alive. to learn the lessons of their struggle so that they did not die in vain, acting as enduring symbols of labors struggles for justice.
Following the Haymarket affair, trial and executions, August Spies, Adolph Fischer, George Engel, Lous Lingg and Albert Parsons were buried at the German Waldheim Cemetery (later merged with Forest Home Cemetery).
The Pioneer Aid and Support Association organized a subscription for a funeral monument. In 1893, the Haymarket Martyrs' Monument by sculptor Albert Weinhert was raised at Waldheim. It consists of a 16-foot-high granite shaft capped by a carved triangular stone. There is a two step base, which also supports a monumental figure of a woman standing over the body of a fallen worker, both in bronze. It was dedicated on June 25, 1893, after a march from Chicago. The inscription on the steps read, "1887," the year of the executions. Also, there is a quote attributed to Spies, recorded just before his execution by hanging: "The day will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you are throttling today." On the back of the monument are listed the names of the men. On the top of the monument, a bronze plaque contains text of the pardon later issued by Illinois governor John Peter Altgeld]
The dedication ceremony was attended by 8000, with union flags and the American flag draped on the monument. European unions and American organizations sent flowers to be placed. Many activists and labor leaders were subsequently buried nearby. Michael Schwab and Oscar Neebe were also buried at Waldheim when they died. Samuel Fielden is the only Haymarket defendant who is not buried at Forest Home. For years, annual commemorations were held.
Since the 1970s, the Illinois Labor History Society has held the deed to the monument and been responsible for its maintenance and restoration. It conducts monthly guided tours of Forest Home Cemetery from May through October.
In October 2016, volunteers and scientists dug near the base of the monument, where they recovered a time capsule that had been buried under the cornerstone on November 6, 1892, during the monument's construction. The time capsule, which is 24 inches (62 cm) tall and 12 inches (30 cm) wide, was made of stone or concrete and capped in marble. According to a list in the records of the Pioneer Aid and Support Association, the time capsule contained newspaper articles, letters to and from the Haymarket defendants, and photographs of the men and their families. It also held trial documents, essays, and letters and testimonials from a number of labor unions and fraternal organizations. In addition, it may contain a bust of Albert Spies.
Haymarket Time Capsule Mystery
We should remember that when workers celebrate May First, they are commemorating a struggle for the 8-hour day that began in America and the American labor leaders who paid for that cause with their lives. The Haymarket martyrs were bold pioneer fighters for a better society and they paid so with their lives for their devotion and clear-sightedness. Although they sleep all these years in Waldheim Cemetery, their work was not in vain and they are not forgotten.
Named for Voltaire by her freethinker father, Voltairine de Cleyre (1866-1912) endured an impoverished midwestern childhood before her father converted to Catholicism and sent her to a Canadian convent, where she spent her teenage years. This experience, which she later invariably referred to as nightmarish, left her a militant atheist, and for many years she was one of the American freethought movement’s star lecturers. She was briefly a socialist after encountering Clarence Darrow in 1887, but the example of the Haymarket martyrs soon inspired her to take up their cause. She is buried near their graves in Waldheim.
Light upon Waldheim - Voltairine de Cleyre
Light upon Waldheim! And the earth is gray; A bitter wind is driving from the north; The stone is cold, and strange cold whispers say: What do ye here with Death? Go forth! Go forth!”
Is this thy word, O Mother, with stern eyes, Crowning thy dead with stone-caressing touch? May we not weep o’er him that martyred lies, Slain in our name, for that he loved us much?
May we not linger till the day is broad? Nay, none are stirring in this stinging dawn — None but poor wretches that make no moan to God: What use are these, O thou with dagger drawn?
“Go forth, go forth! Stand not to weep for these, Till, weakened with your weeping, like the snow Ye melt, dissolving in a coward peace!” Light upon Waldheim! Brother, let us go!
Today World Press Freedom Day provides an opportunity for people around the world to celebrate the
fundamental human right to freedom of expression. Every day,
journalists around the world face the threat of intimidation,
censorship, imprisonment and violence, including torture, for their
efforts to report on human rights violations.
The press acts as a medium of communication between the government
and the people. The free press has a huge responsibility of reporting
the truth and shaping people's opinions. Hence to mark the importance of
the press, World Press Freedom Day is celebrated every year.
World
Press Freedom Day popularly known as World Press Day is one of the
calendar events planned, organised and promoted by the United Nations,
observed annually on May 3.
The day is celebrated to raise
awareness regarding the importance of freedom of the press. The day is
reflection among media professionals about issues of press freedom and
professional ethics.
"A free press
can, of course, be good or bad, but, most certainly without freedom, the
press will never be anything but bad." - Albert Camus
May
3 the World Press Freedom Day is a day of support for media and the
reporters right to hold the powerful to account, It is also a
day of remembrance for those journalists who lost their lives in the
pursuit of a story. As
per UNESCO, on May 3, national and local celebrations for World Press
Freedom Day will take place around the world, which includes online
debates and workshops.
World
Press Freedom Day was first proclaimed by the UN General Assembly in December
1993, following the recommendation of UNESCO's General Conference.
Since then, 3 May, is celebrated as World Press Freedom Day.
As per the official UNESCO Website, the World Press Freedom Day 2021
theme is 'Information as a Public Good'. As per UNESCO, this years theme
serves as a call to affirm the importance of cherishing information as a
public good and exploring what can be done in the production,
distribution and reception of content to strengthen journalism and to
advance transparency and empowerment while leaving no one behind. A theme of great importance as the Covid-19 pandemic still grips the
world and fake news and disinformation continue to harm health, human
rights and democracy alike.
World Press Freedom Day acts as a reminder to governments of the need to
respect their commitment to press freedom. That the importance of a
free press in a functioning and safe society and serves to commemorate
the journalists who have lost their lives in support of free press. In a
time when media coverage is prone to fear-mongering and sensationalism,
taking the time to appreciate and seek out journalism with integrity
has never been more important. Freedom of expression is a fundamental
human right as stated in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
The day May 3 also marks the anniversary of Windhoek Declaration.A
statement of press freedom principles put together by African
journalists in 1991 to promote an independent and pluralistic African
press.
Media Worldwide is facing crises on multiple fronts, exacerbated by
the COVID19 pandemic.As the death toll mounted amidst an economic crisis of
unprecedented proportions, promoting transparent reporting was a global
necessity. Yet, several countries stand accused of acting too late in
warning the world about the timing and extent of the threat.
Worldwide, the nonpartisan group Reporters Without Borders https://rsf.org/en issued its
annual World Press Freedom Index April 20, noting that journalism, which
it calls “the main vaccine against the virus of disinformation,” is
blocked or seriously impeded in 73 countries and constrained in 59
others. Together, that represents 73% of the 180 countries evaluated. It illustrates the oppression of
journalists from North to South and a pandemic in its own right seems to
have fomented.
Ultimately, the freedom of the press can only be guaranteed by a
coordinated global effort, public awareness and a focus on the long-term
advantages of a more critical world.
In the midst of the rising pandemic of misinformation - may today remind
us of how vital press freedom is in ensuring that people have access to
verified, fact-based, and unbiased info, both on or offline. Today, citizens from various countries are voicing their concerns
about Press freedom and asking their respective governments to release imprisoned journalists. People' thoughts today are with journalists
who are facing violence and punishment for bringing out the
facts..
From Julian Assange to Jamal Khashoggi, Palestinian journalists, and others across the globe who have continued to struggle for freedom of expression and opinion indifferent to the ongoing attempts at silencing them. This day presents
itself as a great opportunity to shed some light on the violations to
press freedom faced by journalists and the difficult reality in which
they have to carry on their work. Today we pay our tributes to those who risk their freedom and lives to speak
the truth.around the world despite some being harassed, censored, attacked, detained and even murdered in the exercise of their profession..
"Freedom of the Press, if it means anything at all, means the freedom to criticize and oppose." - George Orwell.
In welcoming news Human Rights Watch,https://www.hrw.org/ a leading organization monitoring rights abuses worldwide, has just released a scathing new report "A Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution on Tuesday, drawing on years of documentation,and case research from different sources, shows us Israel's oppressive policies against Palestinians., which is bound to cause powerful ripples that will be felt throughout the solidarity movement for Palestinian rights, freedom and liberation.
The 213 page report which is accompanied by graphics co-produced with Visualisinf Palestine, details the ways in which Israel is intentionally pursuing the domination of Jews over Palestinians in all parts of the land, as well as in the diaspora, regardless of their legal status, It argues that the policies and actions o the Israeli government against the Palestinian people amount to systematic apartheid and unlawful persecution that must be stopped..
The report reads, "Every day,a person
is born in Gaza into an open-air prison, in the West Bank without civil rights, in Israel with an inferior status by law, and in neighboring
countries effectively condemned to lifelong refugee status, like their
parents and grandparents before them, solely because they are
Palestinian and not Jewish.”
While the term "apartheid" was first used in relation to South
Africa's racist segregation of non-white citizens, the report said it
was now a "universally recognized legal term" that described crime
against humanity under international law.
An apartheid system is
defined by "an effort to maintain domination by one racial group over
another, a context of systematic oppression by the dominant group over
the marginalized group (and) inhuman acts," HRW said.
The accusation of persecution is based on "the widespread
confiscation of privately owned land, the effective prohibition on
building or living in many areas, the mass denial of residency rights,
and sweeping, decades-long restrictions on the freedom of movement and
basic civil rights," the publication says.
HRW also noted that the report is not comprehensive, as it does not
include all human rights abuses in the areas, including those committed
by armed groups or Palestinian authorities.
Omar Shakir, the Israel and Palestine Director of Human Rights Watch, had this to say about the report:
"Apartheid is the reality today for millions of Palestinians, and its incumbent upon the international community to recognize the reality for what it is, and have the courage to fight apartheid."
Israel, for its part, rejected the findings. Its foreign ministry dismissed the report's claims as "both preposterous and false."
But in order to maintain domination, Israeli authorities systematically discriminate
against Palestinians. This institutional discrimination that Palestinian
citizens of Israel face includes laws that allow hundreds of small
Jewish towns to effectively exclude Palestinians and budgets that
allocate only a fraction of resources to Palestinian schools as compared
to those that serve Jewish Israeli children. In the occupied territory,
the severity of the repression, including the imposition of draconian
military rule on Palestinians while affording Jewish Israelis living in a
segregated manner in the same territory their full rights under
Israel’s rights-respecting civil law, amounts to the systematic
oppression required for apartheid.
Israeli authorities have continued to commit a range of abuses against
Palestinians.in order to maintain domination, systematically discriminating
against Palestinians. This institutional discrimination that Palestinian
citizens of Israel face includes laws that allow hundreds of small
Jewish towns to effectively exclude Palestinians and budgets that
allocate only a fraction of resources to Palestinian schools as compared
to those that serve Jewish Israeli children. In the occupied territory,
the severity of the repression, including the imposition of draconian
military rule on Palestinians while affording Jewish Israelis living in a
segregated manner in the same territory their full rights under
Israel’s rights-respecting civil law, amounts to the systematic
oppression required for apartheid.
In addition to finding Israel guilty of the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution the report makes several recommendations including for states to consider sanctions as well to condition military aid to Israel and HRW called on the ICC prosecutor to “investigate and prosecute individuals credibly implicated” in apartheid and persecution. ( Last month, the International
Criminal Court (ICC) had
already announced it would investigate war crimes in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israel has said it will not
cooperate with the probe.)
The United Nations must also take action by establishing an
envoy position focused on ending persecution and apartheid worldwide,
and businesses operating in the OPT must stop contributing to any
actions that facilitate the deprivation of Palestinian rights such as
the demolition of their homes.
The reports findings would not be possible without the decades of
struggle and resistance of Palestinians, who continued to resist even as
the international community remained silent. But
what we are witnessing could well be the beginning of the end of
Israel's impunity for the systematic oppression and dispossession of the
Palestinian people.It also represents a milestone for the wider
movement.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967, the same year it annexed
east Jerusalem. Since then, Jewish settlers in both areas have absorbed
increased amounts of land. Palestinians in east Jerusalem and across
much of the West Bank are regularly denied building permits, while
Jewish home construction has steadily grown.
Israel's settlement
policy in the occupied Palestine is illegal under international law,
particularly international humanitarian law, including the Fourth Geneva
Convention, which relates to the protection of civilians in time of
war. Palestinians
should have the same rights and freedoms as anyone else, not to have their rights denied or be
treated
differently because of their ethnicity or religion.
HRW thankfully is the latest in a lineup of top human rights groups, including Israeli NGOs Yesh Din and B’Tselem, that have publicly stated in recent months that Israel is
perpetrating apartheid and maintaining a regime of Jewish supremacy.
They join a growing movement, led for years by Palestinians and allies,
that has been working to debunk mainstream myths about Israel’s military
occupation and redefine the nature of the oppression Palestinians face
on the ground.
Ultimately, HRW is saying that apartheid is not some conditional, future scenario , that threshold has been crossed. Apartheid is the reality
today for millions of Palestinians, and it’s incumbent upon us the
international community to recognize the reality for what it is, and
have the courage to fight apartheid.
We can do this by supporting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, a non-violent initiative, supported by 170 Palestinian civic groups that encourages individuals, nations and organisations to censure Israel's consistent violations of international law and human rights standards through various boycotts.Now that one of the world;s foremost human rights organisations has detailed how Israel's actions cross the legal threshold of the crimes against humanity of apartheid, will it still be considered antisemitic to say so, It's time to Make Apartheid History once and for all and to dismantle the walls that maintain it. You can read and share the report below.
The death of Benito Mussolini, the deposed Italian fascist dictator, occurred on 28 April 1945 in the final days of World War11 in Europe, when he was summarily executed by Italian partisans in the small village of Guilino di Mezegra in northern Italy.
Born July 29,1883, in Dovia di Predappio. he was an intelligent and inquisitive from an early age. In fact, he set out to be a teacher but soon decided that career wasn't for him. Still, he voraciously read the works of great European philosophers like Immanuel Kant, Georges Sorel, Benedict de Spinoza, Peter Kropotkin, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Karl Marx,
Mussolini had initially been a member of the Socialist Party in 1900 and had begun to attract wide admiration. In speeches and articles he was extreme and violent, urging revolution at any cost, but he was also well spoken. Mussolini held several posts as editor and labor leader until he emerged in the 1912 Socialist Party Congress. He became editor of the party's daily paper, Avanti, at the age of twenty-nine. His powerful writing injected excitement into the Socialist ranks. In a party that had accomplished little in recent years, his youth and his intense nature was an advantage. He called for revolution at a time when revolutionary feelings were sweeping the country.
However in March 1919 Mussolini founded another movement , the nationalist Fasci di Combattimento, named after the Italian peasant revolutionaries, or ' Fighting Bands,' from the 19th century. Commonly known as the Fascist Party, Mussolini's new right-wing organization advocated Italian nationalism, had black shirts for uniforms, and launched a program of terrorism and intimidation against it's leftist opponents, it won the favor of the Italian youth, and Mussolini waited for events to favor him.
The elections in 1921 sent him to Parliament at the head of thirty-five Fascist deputies; the third assembly of his movement gave birth to a national party, the National Fascist Party, with more than 250 thousand followers and Mussolini as its uncontested leader. In October 1922 Mussolini successfully marched into Rome, Italy. He now enjoyed the support of key groups (industry, farmers, military, and church), whose members accepted Mussolini's solution to their problems: organize middle-class youth, control workers harshly, and set up a tough central government to restore "law and order." Thereafter, Mussolini attacked the workers and spilled their blood over Italy. It was the complete opposite of his early views of socialism.
King Emmanuel 111, who had little faith in Italy's parliamentary government, asked Mussolini to form a new government. Initially, Mussolini was appointed prime minister at the head of a three-member Fascist cabinet, cooperated with the Italian parliament, but aided by his brutal police organization he soon became the effective dictator of Italy, In 1924, a Socialist backlash was suppressed , and in January 1925 a Fascist state was officially proclaimed ,with Mussolini as 11 Duce, or 'The Leader.' Once in power, Mussolini took steps to remain there. He set general elections, but they were fixed to always provide him with an absolute majority in Parliament. He suspended civil liberties, destroyed all opposition, left wing parties were suppressed and in 1929 imposed an open dictatorship ( absolute rule), At the same time Mussolini also carried out an extensive public-works programme and the fall in unemployment made him a popular figure in Italy.
In 1928 John Heartfield created The Face of Fascism a montage that dealt with the rule of Benito Mussolini which spread all over Europe with tremendous force. "A skull-like face of Mussolini is eloquently surrounded by his corrupt backers and his dead victims".
Italy controlled Eritrea and Somalia in Africa but had failed several times to colonize neighbouring Ethiopia.. When Mussolini came to power he was determined to show the strength of his regime by occupying the country. In October 1935 Mussolini sent in General Pietro Badglio and the Italian Army into Ethiopia.
The League of Nations condemned Italy's aggression and in November imposed sanctions. This included an attempt to ban countries from selling arms, rubber and some metals to Italy. Some political leaders in France and Britain opposed sanctions arguing that it might persuade Mussolini to form an alliance with Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany
Over 400,000 Italian troops fought in Ethiopia. The poorly armed Ethiopians were no match for Italy's modern tanks and aeroplanes. The Italians even used mustard gas on the home forces and were able to capture Addis Ababa, the capital of the country, in May 1936, forcing Emperor Haile Selassie to flee to England.
Outside Italy Mussolini is remembered as something of a buffoon. But he unleashed a cruel violence that, though it might not match that of Hitler or Stalin, was then something new in the world. Mussolini was responsible for the deaths of a million people. They were killed during the terror in Italy and vicious colonial wars in Libya, Somalia and Ethiopia.
They died because of his support for General Franco in the Spanish Civil War and fascist Italy's own butchery in the Second World War. Mussolini also waged a merciless war against the anti-fascist Resistance movement that liberated so much of Italy between 1943 and 1945 .
Though not the driving force behind the Second World War, he was drawn by ambition and ideology into an alliance with Nazi Germany, an alliance that invaded many countries.This alliance with Hitler involved the deportation of Italian Jews and compliance in the Holocaust.
As the tide of war turned, Italy was invaded, and in July 1943 disgruntled Italian politicians ousted Mussolini from power. He was imprisoned but then rescued by the Germans, who had invaded Italy when it made peace with the Allies.The Germans installed Mussolini as leader of a puppet state in northern Italy. But a combination of Italian partisans and Allied armies gradually drove back the Germans, who could not commit more troops thanks to the Allied liberation of France and invasion of Germany.
During the last days of the war in Italy, with defeat imminent fascist dictator, Benito Mussolini, attempted to escape the advancing allied Army by hiding in a German convoy headed towards the Alps Partisans stopped and searched the convoy and though disguised found Mussolini alongside his mistress Ckara Petacci, wearing a private's overcoat over his striped General's pants, he was instantly regonized. His bald head, deeply set jaw, and piercing brown eyes gave him away. Mussolini had developed a cult-like following and instant recognisability over the past 25 years, due to his face being plastered all over propaganda nationwide, and now it had come back to haunt him.
The partisans seized Mussolini and Petacci. Fearing that the Nazis would again try to liberate the dictator, the partisans hid the pair in a remote farmhouse for the night. The following day, 28 April 1945 Mussolini and Petacci were removed from the house and driven to the small village of Giulino di Mezzegra on the shores of Lake Como. They were ordered to stand in front of a stone wall at the entrance to Villa Belmonte where both were executed by machine gun fire.
There’s no uncertainty, however, about what happened to Mussolini’s body in the hours after his execution. In the pre-dawn hours of April 29 the corpses of Mussolini, Petacci and 14 fellow fascists were placed in a truck and hung in Milan’s Piazzale Loreto, a deeply symbolic public square for the anti-fascist forces. There, eight months earlier, fascists acting under orders from Hitler’s SS publicly displayed the bodies of 15 executed partisans, from that moment onward, partisans called this place the ' Square of the Fifteen Martyrs.'
After Mussolini’s arrest in July 1943, jubilant crowds mutilated images of the dictator. Now, as the sun rose on the “Square of the Fifteen Martyrs,” residents of Milan had the chance to do the same thing, only this time for real. They hurled invectives and vegetables at the dictator’s corpse before kicking, beating and spitting upon it. One woman, deciding Mussolini wasn’t dead enough for her, emptied a pistol into the dictator’s body and shouted, "Five shots for my five assassinated sons!" The executions are the first conspicuous demonstration of mob violence carried out by the partisans who until up to then had been kept under control by their leaders.The partisan commander-in-chief General Rafaea Cadorna said at the time that such incidents were regrettable but desirable in this case as a way for the public to vent their anger against the former dictator and his cohorts.
In early afternoon, American troops ordered the bodies to be taken down and Mussolini’s bullet-ridden corpse transported to the city morgue. By this point, Mussolini’s badly beaten body was barely recognizable, but a U.S. Army photographer still staged the bodies of the former dictator and his mistress in each other’s arms in a macabre pose. Benito Mussolini who brought destruction to 20th century Europe, died in ignominy but it was a death that brought peace to many oppressed by the man known as Ill Duce.
After his death and the display of his corpse in Milan, Mussolini was buried in an unmarked grave in the Musocco cemetery, to the north of the city. On Easter Sunday 1946, Mussolini’s body was located and dug up by a young fascist, Domenico Leccisi, and two friends. Over a period of sixteen weeks it was moved from place to place ,the hiding places included a villa, a monastery and a convent — while the authorities searched for it. Eventually, in August, the body (with a leg missing) was tracked down to the Certosa di Pavia, a monastery not far from Milan. Two Franciscan friars were charged with assisting Leccisi in hiding the body.
Word of Mussolini' death spread quickly. Hitler , for one, heard the news on the radio and vowed not to have his corpse desecrated in the same manner as Mussolini's. People in Hitler's circle reported that he said, "This will never happen to me,"
In his final will, scrawled on a eice of paper, Hitler said " I do not wish to fall into the hands of an enemy who requires a new spectacle organised by the Jews for the amusement of their hysterical masses. On May 1, mere days after Mussolini's death , Hitler shot his mistress and new wife Eva Braunn, and then after swallowing some poison shot himself in the mouth.. His inner circle in the bombed out garden behind the Reich Chancellery, wrapped their Fuhrer in a Nazi flag, doused the bodies with gasoline and set them on fire as Soviet forces closed in. The Russians found remains of his teeth.
.Mussolini was so influential that the name of his Fascist party has since been adopted as a catch-all term for extreme right-wing politics based on racism, authoritarianism, and hate and sadly on the anniversary of Mussolini’s death on 28 April has become one in which neo-fascist supporters mark with major rallies. In Predappio, Mussolinis home town a march takes place between the centre of town and the cemetery. The event usually attracts skinheads and self proclaimed fascists that includes speeches, songs and people giving the fascist salute.
However every year on April 25, Italians gather round heavily laden tables and barbeques and chant ' Bella Ciao'(Goodbye Beautiful) at least a dozen times, right hand on the hert.From 1943-1945,the lyrics of the song Bella Ciao was modified and sung by the anti-fascism Resistance Partisiani against Mussolini and the Nazi German forces occupying Italy and again in the struggle against the Italian Social Republic and its German allies during Italy's Bella Ciao has become an anthem for the anti-fascist movement worldwide and versions have been used in revolutionary events in Spain, Greece, Tunisia,and Palestine.
And every year on April 25, Italians gather round heavily laden tables and barbeques and chant ' Bella Ciao at least a dozen times, right hand on the heart. In March and April 2020 , under Italy's first strict lockdown, Bella Ciao could be heard constantly coming from the roofs, windows and balconies overlooking empty streets in Rome, Milan and Bologna, like a reassuring collective mantra. Here's one of my favourite versions of this great rousing song of resistance. Long may the forces of fascism be defeated and given no victory as the flowers of resistance still grow strong.
During
the afternoon and early evening of Monday, April 26th, 1937, the
German and Italian fascist air forces destroyed the Basque town of
Guernica . The war crime was ordered by the
Spanish nationalist military leadership and carried out by the Congor
Legion of the German luftwaffe and the Italian Aviazone Legionairre.
Designed to kill or main as many civilians as possible, Operation Rugen
was deliberately chosen for a Monday afternoon when the weekly town
market would be at its most crowded.
Spain at the time was embroiled in a convulsive civil war that had begun in July
1936 when the right-wing Nationalists led by General Francisco Franco
sought to overthrow Spain's democratically elected Popular Front Government It did not
take long before this bloody internal Spanish quarrel attracted the
participation of forces beyond its borders - creating a lineup of
opponents that foreshadowed the partnerships that would battle each
other in World War II. Fascist Germany and Italy supported Franco while
the Soviet Union backed the Republicans. Millions of people around the world felt passionately that rapidly
advancing fascism must be halted in Spain; and more than 35,000 heroic volunteers from dozens of other countries made
their way to Spain to fight and die under the Republican banner
including the Abraham Lincoln Brigade from the United States.
Guernica, in the Basque country
where revolutionary sentiment among workers was deep, was defenceless
from the bombers, which could fly as low as 600 feet.The raid’s purpose was to test a new bombing tactic to intimidate and
terrorize the resistance. For more than three hours, waves of explosive, fragmentary, and incendiary devices were
dumped in the town. In total, 31 tons of munitions were dropped between
4.30 in the afternoon and 7.30 in the evening. In the aftermath of the
raid, survivoHistory rs spoke of the air filled with the screams of those in
their death throes and the hundreds injured. Civilians fleeing the
carnage in the fields surrounding the town were strafed by fighter
planes. Human and animal body parts littered the market place and town
center, such , such horror.Guernica was effectively wiped of the
map. From a population of 5,000 some 1,700 residents were killed and a
further 800 injured. Three quarters of the buildings were raised to the
ground. Farms four miles away were flattened.
The destruction of Guernica was part of General Franco's wider, brutal
campaign against the existence of the Spanish Republic. This campaign
led not just to widespread destruction of property, but thousands of
civilian casualties too, as well as widespread displacement. Many sought
refuge abroad, as many as 3,800 Basque children were evacuated to
England and Wales for the duration of the war. The British Government at
the time callously refused to be responsible for the children, but
throughout the summer children were dispersed to camps throughout
Britain. Eight of these colonies were here in Wales. They were received
with a mixture of hostility and kindness, but they had all managed to
escape the grips of Franco's fascist Spain.
The significance of Guernica is that it was the first time that
civilians were deliberately targeted in an air attack; it was the first
time that a population centre was carpet bombed from the air; and it was
one of the first times that a population was used as a target from the
air by a foreign power to test the effectiveness of its aircraft and
the effectiveness of terror on the civilian population.Guernica
changed the mode of war. Before then, civilians in cities and towns away
from the front were by and large were relatively safe. In wars before then
air power was not capable of such bombing attacks. In World War I, by
and large, troops slugged it out in trenches on the front and there was
no air war.
News of the atrocity reached Paris several days later. Eyewitness reports filled local and international newspapers.
Picasso, sympathetic to the Republican cause, was horrified by the reports. Guernica is
his memorial to the massacre, and after hundreds of sketches, the
painting was done in less than a month before being delivered to the
Fair’s Spanish Pavilion, where it became the central attraction. Rather
than the typical celebration of technology people expected to see at a
world’s fair, in his mural, they saw a raw and
anguished anti-war statement, a haunting piece of work that
became a universal howl against the ravages of war. On a large
canvas he painted deformed
figures of women and children writhing in a burning city.A broken sword
in hand, a dismembered fighter lies with wide open eyes, an impassive
bull, a wounded dove and an agonising horse nearby. Picasso did
not agree with Franco´s regime and he was living in France for a long
period of time until his death in 1973 when he was 91 years old. One of
the most famous passages about his life is when he was interrogated by
the Gestapo while the Nazi occupation in Paris. When the officers saw
the Guernica they asked him “Did you paint that?” and he
replied “No, you did” Picasso's picture still resonates with tragedy,
capturing the full terror and horror of this terrible moment in history. It is still regarded as the 20thcentury’s most powerful
artistic indictment against war, and remains just as relevant to
civilians around the world who continue to be caught in today’s
conflagrations. The work’s emotional power comes from its immense size
of 349 cm times 776 cm (about 11ft tall and 25ft wide). It is a painting
challenges rather than accepts the notion of war as heroic.
.For many Basque people, the memory of the bombing and Picasso's visceral artistic response form part of their cultural identity. Franco, who ruled Spain as a fascist dictator for nearly forty years,
from 1936 until his death in 1975, claimed the attack on Guernica never
took place. They tried to blame the Basques, but the truth is Germany
deliberately bombed the town to destroy it and observe in a clinical way
the effects of such a devastating attack, practicing a new form of
warfare, where only civilians were the targets.In October 1937, a
Nationalist officer told' a Sunday Times correspondent: 'We bombed it, and bombed it, and bombed it and Beuno why
not.'
The Republican forces sent Guernica on a global tour to create
awareness of the war and raise funds for Spanish refugees. It travelled
the world for 19 years before it was loaned to The Museum of Modern Art
in New York for safekeeping. Picasso refused to allow it to return to
Spain until the country “enjoyed public liberties and democratic
institutions,” which did not occur until 1981 following Franco’s death.
Today it is on permanent display in the Reina Sofia, Spain’s national
museum of modern art in Madrid.
This atrocity horrified the world and helped shift public opinion
towards the Spanish Republican Cause, but shamefully the British
Government stuck steadfastardly to its non intervevention line. The
fascists hated liberalism and humanity, their ideology was one of evil
destruction, 'Long Live Death' they cried. Guernica represented their
creed, with one of the Fascist Generals declaring " Like a resolute
surgeon, free from false sentimentality, it will cut the diseased flesh
from the healthy body and fling it to the dogs. And since the healthy
flesh is the soil, the diseased flesh, the people who dwell on it,
fascism and the army will eradicate the people and restore the soil to
the sacred national realm... Every socialist, Republican, every one of
them, without exception, and needless to say, every Communist, will be
eradicated, without exception.' An ideology of unfettered hate, and
evil..... it's ideology still trying to tear the world apart, it's forces still seek to gather, fostering hatred and division.
After Guernica , George Steers eyewitness account in The Times described
what he saw as 'without mercy, with system', words that remain
tragically pertinent to the bloody legacy of carpet bombing in conflicts
ever since. Conflicts that continue across the world.... humanity still
descends into darkness.... the Rape of Nanking, the Second World War,
the Holocaust, Syria, Bahrain, Cheknya, Rwanda, the continuing
confontation between Israel and Palestine......
At the United Nations in 2016, French Ambassador Francois Delattre
compared the destruction in the Syrian city of Aleppo to
Guernica.“Aleppo is to Syria what Guernica was to the Spanish war, a
human tragedy, a black hole destroying all we believe in,” he said.
So we must remember Guernica , and its legacy, we must make sure the
fascists are stopped in their tracks, we must not let them pass.... we
must carry on singing nopasaron to
whatever disguise they dress themselves up in.It is important and timely to reflect on this tragic occasion .Guernica must be remembered , for our
time, and for future generations, a terrifying rendition of the
slaughter of innocents.
By April 1939, all of Spain was under fascist control and
Franco declared a victory .Solidifying his power with a brutal
dictatorship by oppressing and systematically killing any political
opposition.Over half a million people were killed in
the war, and in the next few years many tens of thousands more were
executed, not forgetting all those who died from
malnutrition, starvation, and war-engendered disease. General Franco's
military regime remained in power
until his death in 1975 depriving Spain of
freedom for several decades afterwards, the wound inflicted still
resonates.
Guernica - A.S Knowland
Irun- Badajoz - Malaga - and then Guernica
So that the swastika and the eagle
might spring from the blood-red soil,
bombs were sown into the earth at Guernica,
whose only harvest was a calculated slaughter.
Lest freedon should wave between the grasses
and the corn its proud emblem, or love
be allowed to tread its native fields,
Fascism was sent to destroy the innocent,
and, goose-stepping to the exaggerated waving
of the two-faced flag, to save Spain.
But though the soil be saturated with blood
as a very efficient fertiliser, the furrow
of the ghastly Fasces shall remain barren.
The planted swastika, the eagle grafted
on natural stock shall wither and remain sere;
for no uniformed force shall marshall the sap
thrilling to thrust buds into blossoms, or quicken
the dead ends of the blighted branches;
but the soil shall be set against an alien crop
and the seed be blasted in the planting.
But strength lies in the strength of the roots. They shall not pass to ruin Spain!
Reprinted from The Penguin Book of Spanish Civil War Verse (1980)