Friday, 30 December 2011

Let the sons of the revolution not die being peace-trapped

December 28, 2011

By Sandipan Mitra
Let the sons of the revolution die fighting, as they always do. Let them not die being peace-trapped.
One can say that the Maoist nature is characterized not only by its unwavering devotion to the cause of a humanely better future, but also by its credulity of a suicidal kind. A little more than a year back the Maoists had put their faith in Mr. Palaniappan Chidambaram; the outcome was the gruesome murder of Cherukuri Rajkumar Azad by the security forces. Now they put faith in Ms. Mamata Banerjee, the outcome is the grisly murder of Mallojula Koteswar Rao, better known as Kishenji, India’s second most wanted Maoist, by the same notorious security forces.
One cannot overlook the fact that Mr. Chidambaram and Ms. Banerjee moved pawns of the same type - peace talks - and the Maoists were checkmated. On the first occasion, they lost Azad, their spokesperson and one of their brilliant theoreticians, and this time their loss is Kishenji, a politburo member with extraordinary organizational skill and military acumen. Ironically enough, although the primary objective of the Maoist rebels is the overthrow of the existing political system by violent means, it is in the prospect of peace talks that they like to be trapped into. Peace, more than war, keeps doing incalculable harm to the Maoist rebellion. It also commands the importance of run-on focus in any discourse related to the resistance and revolutionary movements.

Sanity from George Galloway - No to War with Iran - Stop this madness !

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Egypt's Revolutionary Artists' Union Revived in Tahrir Square

Friday, 23 December 2011

US Caught Smuggling Weapons to South Korea

The Wukan Village Uprising

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Wukan, China: Open revolt against land grabs and corruption

Posted by redpines on December 20, 2011

A fierce rebellion is taking place in Southern China’s Guangdong province. The village of Wukan has evicted the officials from the corrupt Chinese Communist Party. Some reports claim the village is completely free of party control. Even so, the village seems to be receiving solidarity in the form of food and supplies from nearby towns.
For months, villagers in Wukan have been protesting against the government’s seizure of land for commercial purposes and against corruption in general. The people of Wukan are demanding the government return the body of Xue Jinbo, who died after being abducted. Jinbo was negotiating land agreements between the village and the party.
Since the late 1970s, the Chinese people have suffered as the gains made under the country’s socialist period (1949-1976), have been destroyed by capitalist policies. Hundreds of millions have been displaced and thrown into insecurity, while inequality has skyrocketed. Many in the cities have become fabulously wealthy, while millions endure sweatshop conditions and rural areas have been left behind. The revolt in Wukan suggests farmers and workers may not stand for this situation for much longer. 
“It is right to rebel” — Mao Tse-Tung


Monday, 19 December 2011

Glenn Greenwald Reports on Bradley Manning's Military Pre-Trial Hearing

The specter of Kishenji, ‘Peace-Talks’ and Us

December 18, 2011

by Anubhav Sengupta
Too tempted one might be to write on Kishenji, the Maoist leader and his gruesome death in the Lalgarh Jungle as yet another instance of the Indian state being fascist and repressive. One might also be interested (as done by Saroj Giri, Trevor Selvam) to commemorate his martyrdom as a true revolutionary and make assessment of his political career within the authentic praxis of revolution. One will be tempted precisely because even after two weeks or more our heart is heavy, eyes are burning in helpless rage and we are feeling little empty with that glorious smile (one photo in media captures that everlasting smile, thankfully forever) lost with blown away, mutilated jaws of Kishenji. As one of my school friend who is a CPI(M) cadre also recognizes — whether we say it loud or not, we knew— that man, contrary to our charismatic mainstream politicians, sacrificed thirty-six years of his life in underground for a dream of revolution never asking anything back in return but similar conviction from his comrades. Those who think he is blood-thirsty, gun-trotting demon can think so; how does it matter they might just very well think George Bush is the liberator of the world.

Egyptian Police Beat & Expose Female Protester

Egypt - Wild Inhumanity of Egyptian Military



Ten people are now known to have been killed and hundreds injured since the trouble began on Friday.

Disillusionment in Nepal - A Soldiers Story




This is what the Bhattarai/Prachanda revisionist line means for the soldiers and the people - will the Kiran Badal group in the Maoist Party rise to the challenge and fullfill the hopes of disillusioned comrades.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Saudi Woman Executed For "Witchcraft"

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Official NATO Video: Afghanistan's mineral wealth

Corporations Hoard Milk in Venezuela

Harry Bridges Ballad by ILWU Local 94 Foremen's Union