Nov 28, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Death toll in Hong Kong fire rises to 94, hundreds still missing

The fire that destroyed seven high-rise residential buildings in Hong Kong is nearly extinguished, after burning for more than 36 hours. At 9 a.m. Hong Kong time, the Fire Department announced that 94 people had died and 76 were injured.

Those numbers will only continue to rise. The number of missing has not been updated by authorities in 24 hours and still stands at 279. It is now the worst fire in Hong Kong’s history since a warehouse fire in 1948 killed 176 people.

The Wang Fuk Court apartment complex in Tai Po caught fire in the mid-afternoon on Wednesday. The complex was under renovation. Like so much of the rest of Hong Kong its buildings were encased in bamboo scaffolding and green mesh netting. The immediate cause of the fire has not yet been uncovered, but once it began, it tore through the scaffolding and netting that surrounded the structures at breathtaking speed, engulfing seven towers in the conflagration.

Surviving residents report that fire alarms did not go off. The windows were encased in highly flammable Styrofoam. An elderly survivor told the press that his home had been entirely dark, the windows covered from the outside with Styrofoam. He had glimpsed the fire through a chink in the Styrofoam covering his bathroom window and managed to evacuate. Others would not have seen the fire at all.

Prestige Construction and Engineering Company, the firm in charge of building maintenance at the estate, appears to have used illegal, unregulated materials, including Styrofoam and flammable mesh. The Hong Kong Labour Department only keeps a record of the past two years’ infractions by companies on its website, but even in this limited window, Prestige was convicted of two safety offenses on other construction sites in November 2023. It was operating 11 ongoing construction projects at residential estates.

Police arrested two company directors and one consultant from Prestige Construction on suspicion of manslaughter. They seized bidding documents, a list of employees, and computers and mobile phones during a raid on the construction company’s offices.

Flame-resistant mesh costs $HK90 per sheet, flammable mesh, illegal on any building over four stories, costs $HK50. It is probable that illegal cost-cutting measures, designed to save $HK40 (about $US4.50) per sheet, rapidly spread the fire through seven of the eight Wang Fuk towers.

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The Labour Department reported that it had warned Prestige of fire hazards at Wang Fuk Court a week before the blaze. On three occasions, warnings of labour safety violations were issued since July last year.

This begs the question: why was nothing done? What is the significance of repeated government warnings if, when no changes are made, the only outcome is additional warnings. While details remain murky, it is clear that there was, at a minimum, a great deal of government laxity in corporate oversight and regulation, if not outright complicity in the violations.

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At least one Filipino and two Indonesian maids died in the fire. At least eight migrant workers are still missing, according to the Asian Migrants Coordinating Body. The actual numbers are doubtless higher. Facebook posts among the domestic worker community contain appeals to locate those who are missing along with the infants for whom they cared.

Scores of domestic workers are reported as having survived according to their consulates and are now in evacuation shelters. Their visas are contingent upon employment and they will almost certainly be sent home by the Hong Kong government.

Over a thousand residents now reside in evacuation centers and emergency shelters, sleeping on the floor. Many are still frantically inquiring after missing loved ones. There has been an outpouring of support from ordinary people throughout Hong Kong, supplying donations and coordinating aid.

Government aid to the victims has so far been paltry, bordering on insulting. City chief executive John Lee Ka-Chiu pledged that the government would create a $HK300 million ($US39 million) fund to assist the victims, including a cash handout of $HK10,000 to each household. That is the equivalent of one month’s rent for a 300-square foot unit. To move into a unit in Hong Kong requires paying first and last month’s rent, a one-month security deposit, and half a month’s rent to the realtor, three and half times the amount of aid the government is offering.

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The housing crisis is one of the defining social features of Hong Kong, which is consistently one of the most expensive cities in the world. Seven and half million people live in about 80 square kilometers of housing. The hourly minimum wage in Hong Kong is $HK42.1 [approximately $US 5.41] an hour, having gone up just $HK2.1 in 2025, a rise of about 27 US cents.

The housing crisis in Hong Kong is not the product of overpopulation, but of extreme inequality and real estate speculation.

Hong Kong is home to a significant segment of the world’s mega-rich. The rich live in multi-story homes, sometimes even entire medium-rise buildings dedicated to a single family. A single wealthy family may employ 20 or 30 domestic workers: drivers, nannies, cooks, a crew for the yacht. They live on the Peak, or the finance district of Central, they shop for Gucci and Prada in the malls of Tsim Sha Tsui, the most expensive real estate in the world. Maserati and Lamborghini sports cars are not an uncommon sight on the streets of Hong Kong, a city with a highly efficient public mass transit system, where it is difficult to ever drive more than 60 kilometers an hour.

Meanwhile, 220,000 people live in rented spaces, known as “cage homes,” that are smaller than the standard Hong Kong parking space. The number of such subdivided units is growing, particularly in older, working class neighborhoods like Sham Shui Po. A small electric fan and a rice cooker at the foot of the bed, stacks of neatly folded clothes and other slight mounds of possessions sit atop the sheets in the windowless rooms. Each bed space is enclosed in a cage that can be locked when the resident is away from “home.”

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The system of public housing in Hong Kong began after another catastrophic fire in the slums of Shek Kip Mei on Christmas Day in 1953 that left 53,000 people homeless. Needing to shelter the working population, and feeling the ideological and political pressure of the victorious Chinese revolution just across the border, the British colonial government created tenement housing, allocating 120 square feet to each unit, with a system of communal restrooms and wash areas. These were homes, but their architecture resembled prisons.

Current subsidized housing rents at about 30 to 40 percent below market rate, but market rate is among the most expensive in the world. It takes an entire month’s income for a family to pay for subsidized housing; they must live, pay school expenses for children, save for college, conduct their lives out of a second or third income.

Grief over such catastrophes turns to anger. As it is for the working class around the globe, the social and economic conditions in Hong Kong are explosive, and outrage is coming to the surface.

2. European governments oppose any negotiated settlement to Ukraine war

US President Donald Trump’s attempt to negotiate a settlement of the US-NATO war with Russia by striking a deal with Moscow has met with fierce resistance in Europe and is destroying the transatlantic alliance with the US. The days when the US was considered a “partner” are irrevocably over.

Trump has “finally ruined America’s reputation as a reliable and reasonable ally,” wrote Berthold Kohler, editor of the German daily F.A.Z. The fact that Kiev now has to kowtow to Trump is “the punishment for having been grossly negligent in ensuring its own security by making itself dependent on an unreliable partner.” French President Macron was right “in calling for strategic autonomy,” which must now be pursued much more consistently.

There is agreement on this in the most important European capitals. But the pursuit of “strategic autonomy”—the building of armed forces that are equal to the formidable American military machine and capable of continuing the war against Russia—is incompatible with the social conditions that have long dampened class antagonisms in Europe. It puts fierce class struggles on the order of the day.

“Strategic autonomy” requires the transfer of gigantic sums from social to military budgets, the destruction of hundreds of thousands of jobs in the international trade war and the reintroduction of conscription. Parents must once again prepare to “lose their children,” as French army chief Mandon recently said. In short, “strategic autonomy” requires the “Trumpization” of Europe.

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After the war, the United States rescued European capitalism, which had been completely discredited. At that time, the German bourgeoisie sat covered in blood from head to toe on the ruins of the war it had instigated. The bourgeoisie of Italy and France had collaborated closely with the Nazis. There was a widespread conviction within the working class that capitalism had failed and had to be abolished.

Two factors prevented the overthrow of European capitalism. The first was the Stalinist bureaucracy in Moscow, which used its influence over the Communist parties to nip any revolutionary initiative in the bud. The second was the US, which needed Western Europe as a bulwark in the Cold War against the Soviet Union and as a market for its products, and helped European capitalism back on its feet with the Marshall Plan.

Today, the US is not a stabilizing factor in world politics but the greatest destabilizing factor. The richest country in the world has become the most indebted. American imperialism is trying to extricate itself from its crisis by imposing punitive tariffs on opponents and allies, threatening them militarily and declaring war on its own working class. This did not begin with Trump but with Ronald Reagan. It continued under Democratic and Republican successors and has reached a new dimension with Trump.

The crisis of US imperialism is not only driving American but also European society towards a revolutionary confrontation. As Trotsky wrote a hundred years ago, “American capitalism is revolutionizing overripe Europe.” The social mechanisms and political institutions that restrained the class struggle in the past are collapsing under the pressure of American punitive tariffs, the profit demands of the financial markets, and the enormous costs of rearmament.

Good education, adequate healthcare, high wages and secure pensions are things of the past. Reformist unions and parties have turned themselves into stooges of capital. Pseudo-left parties such as Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain, the Left Party in Germany—and Mamdani in New York—fall into line as soon as they are elected to government office. 

The bankruptcy of the social reformist parties has allowed right-wing demagogues to capitalize on growing discontent. But that is beginning to change. The mass protests against Macron’s pension reforms in France, the large demonstrations against the Gaza genocide in Britain and Spain, and the current general strikes in Belgium, Italy and Portugal demonstrate this.

This movement does not yet have a revolutionary character. It is dominated by traditional trade unions, syndicalist grassroots unions and pseudo-left groups. It remains stuck in the illusion that pressure can force the ruling class to change course. But workers and young people are learning fast. The failure of protest politics makes them receptive to a revolutionary, socialist perspective—if it is systematically fought for.

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The conflict with the US is not welding Europe together but exacerbating rivalries between the European powers. The reconciliation between the “arch-enemies” Germany and France, which fought three costly wars against each other within 75 years, was less due to the insight of Adenauer and de Gaulle than to pressure from the US. Today, Paris and Berlin agree on rearmament and continuing the war against Russia—but neither wants to cede leadership in Europe to the other.

A deal between Putin and Trump would not end the Ukraine conflict. It would only be another step on the road to a third world war. Real peace can only be achieved through the independent intervention of the international working class to put a stop to all warmongers.

3. Canadian imperialism plans to militarize the “whole of society” in preparation for global war

Canada’s Liberal government, led by the blue-chip executive and central banker Mark Carney, plans to militarize the economy and embed the armed forces in all areas of social life. This goal was underlined by the allocation of vast new sums in this month’s federal budget to building up the armed forces and Canada’s military-industrial base, and by the recent revelation that Ottawa is planning to create a massive 300,000-strong military reserve for deployment in an emergency. 

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The only “sacrifice” possible in a capitalist society in which profits are extracted from the labor power of the working class and appropriated as private profit is the complete subordination of the working class to austerity and war. Alongside its imperialist allies in the United States and Europe, Canada’s ruling class is planning to wage a war or wars of aggression against Russia and China by 2030. This will require a massive increase in the rate of exploitation of labor, as the economy is reorganized for rearmament and war, and the state suppression of strikes and other form of working-class opposition.

There is no significant opposition to this incendiary agenda within the ruling class. All are agreed that Canada must be a protagonist, as it was in the two world wars of the last century, in a new imperialist partition of the world, so as to lay claim to markets, resources, production networks and geostrategic influence.

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Faced with global trade war and mounting layoffs across Canadian industry, the government is touting military spending as a key component of its strategy to “grow” the economy. What a fraud! Rearmament will be paid for through massive social spending cuts and tax rises, will embolden the ruling class in hurtling to the precipice of global war, and only further enrich the arms merchants and various politically well-connected operators. 

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he Carney government’s 2025-2026 budget, which parliament approved earlier this month thanks to the connivance of the New Democrats, Greens, and trade union bureaucracy, is meant to kick-start a massive decade-long hike in Canada’s military spending.

In just the current fiscal year, the Carney government has increased defense spending from 1.4 to 2 percent of GDP. But it is also vowing to quickly go far beyond that and hike Canada’s defense expenditure to 5 percent of GDP or $150 billion annually by 2035.

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A further $20.4 billion will be directed towards recruitment of new soldiers and the retention of existing ones through pay raises. The lowest ranks will see their pay increase from $43,368 to $52,044 annually. To put this in its proper, class perspective, the top 100 CEOs whose dominant social position these soldiers will be defending with their lives earn an average of $62,660 in a single day.  

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The Ottawa Citizen’s David Pugliese has revealed the existence of a heretofore secret “Mobilization Plan” to enlist up to 300,000 civil servants and civilians into the Canadian Armed Forces “Supplementary Reserve” force. This force currently consists of a mere 4,384 retired or former CAF soldiers. The organized reserves are also to be dramatically expanded to 100,000 from 23,500 today.

These unprecedented plans would put 1 percent of Canada’s population under military command. They are being undertaken entirely behind the backs of the public. The mobilization plan was “signed by Chief of the Defense Staff Gen. Jennie Carignan and defense deputy minister Stefanie Beck on May 30, 2025,” according to Pugliese.

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This poses the question; what foreign provocations is Canadian imperialism planning, along with Washington and their NATO allies, that would result in a missile strike on Canadian soil? The answer is not hard to find. The Canadian military has been at the forefront of imperialist operations against Russia. Canadian forces lead NATO’s international military brigade in Latvia, and have armed and trained Ukraine’s right-led military, including helping to integrate pro-Nazi militia under Operation UNIFIER. Canada is also deeply integrated into the preparations of the US, and its chief Asia-Pacific allies, Japan and Australia, for war with China.

In recent months, Carney has worked closely with Paris, London, and Berlin in the “coalition of the willing” that the principal European imperialist powers have created to ensure the NATO-instigated war on Russia continues. Last week, the head of France’s military, General Fabien Mandon declared that France must be “ready to lose its children,” and “suffer economically” if it is to prevail over Russia. These remarks were met with public outrage, but were defended by French President Emmanuel Macron and his government.

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Military leaders in the imperialist countries are unabashed in demanding a so-called “Whole of Society approach” to fighting wars. According to the CAF’s Mobilization Plan, this requires the creation of a “servant culture around sovereignty and public accountability” that “will necessitate shaping, facilitation and engagement with the Privy Council Office, other government departments and agencies as well as socialization with the Canadian public.”

Translated into plain English, this means that the Canadian government plans a massive propaganda campaign to force the working class to accept its war of choice. The government’s model in this fascistic endeavor is Finland, “a recognized leader in this area.”

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The working class must break decisively with these warmongers, and build its own independent, revolutionary socialist leadership, the International Committee of the Fourth International, and its Canadian section, the Socialist Equality Party, so as to put an end to capitalism and the threat of a catastrophic global conflagration. 

4. Potsdam museum curator promotes Zionist propaganda at the opening of pro-Palestinian art exhibition—A response by Italian artist Costantino Ciervo

Old women-consent-dissent by Costantino Ciervo

Berlin-based Italian artist Costantino Ciervo is no stranger to controversy. Over the past four decades, the self-proclaimed political artist and socialist has created artworks that address the plight of some of the most exploited sections of the working class—undocumented workers in Italy, migrants who have died crossing the Mediterranean and the persecution of the Palestinian people. In the course of his work he has often encountered the indifference or even the hostility of cultural institutions.

However, the reaction to his latest exhibition, “COMUNE—The Paradox of Similarity in the Middle East Conflict,” came from an unexpected source. In his introductory speech to the audience attending the exhibition’s opening at the Fluxus Museum in Potsdam (on the southwest border of Berlin) on November 15, the curator of the museum, Tamás Blénessy, expressed his vehement opposition to the content of the exhibition, which seeks to encourage debate and shed light on the background to the persecution of the Palestinian people by Israel and the imperialist powers led by the United States. The World Socialist Web Site has dealt with the content of the exhibition in a previous article.

The artist on conflict in Palestine: 

"In my opinion, the only answer is a one-state solution, a federation of two populations living together in one state giving full freedom to two different historical and cultural traditions, based on social equality. I have sought to express this concept in the exhibition in the form of a sewing machine that sews the outline of Palestine from 1917, and in the middle, the territory occupied by Israel. The steady diminution of Palestine at the hands of Israeli expansionism during the past 75 years to the tiny rump state of Gaza and some villages in the West Bank is shown in the background to the portraits on show in the exhibition." 

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The artist on his creative technique: 

"My approach is metaphorical. I took an existing person from the internet, a photo of a Palestinian, and told the AI to make a copy of this person as a twin, but the characteristics in terms of clothing and symbols should not be so Palestinian but rather Jewish. I want to show that while they differ in their clothing, with regard to their physical and facial features, they are siblings, that in essence, as fellow humans beings living in societies under the same stress and pressure, they have more in common than in mere appearance. The source of their differences is external, in particular, the priorities of the major imperialist powers which seek to divide in order to maintain their rule."

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The artist on AI:

"I think highly of the idea. The problem with AI is private ownership. As long as AI exists and is developed in private hands—I’m talking about people like Sam Altman, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and worst of all, Peter Thiel, a billionaire who owns platforms like Palantir, a powerful company that provides its services to the secret services in the US, for example. AI must be taken out of private ownership and put into the hands of the working class and the exploited. It must be transparent, it must be open source, so that knowledge remains transparent and is used for progressive purposes. And this includes building a new platform, for example, to specifically disseminate Marxist ideas, which are often misused or misrepresented." 

5. Germany’s all-party coalition for a war budget

The German parliament, the Bundestag, is debating the 2026 federal budget this week, which is due to be adopted on Friday. As we wrote in an earlier article, it is a war budget

Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (Social Democrat-SPD) can spend more than twice as much money as last year. While the defense budget stood at €52 billion in 2024, it will rise to €108 billion in 2026. Two-thirds of this will come from the regular budget, one-third from the €100 billion “special fund” approved at the start of the Ukraine war.

But this is only the beginning. According to official financial planning, the defense budget is to rise to €162 billion by 2029, amounting to 3.5 percent of GDP. By then it will be financed entirely from the regular budget. In addition, a further €500 billion will flow over the next five years from the “special fund for infrastructure”–which, like Hitler’s autobahn (motorway) construction once did, is designed above all to make roads, railways and bridges “fit for war.” In this way, Germany is preparing to continue the war against Russia independently of the United States as well.

These colossal sums are being financed through increased national debt. Of the €525 billion total budget for 2026, €98 billion will come from new loans. Added to this are a further €83 billion from the two special funds, bringing total new borrowing to a record €180 billion. Business associations and political parties are unanimous that workers, pensioners and the poor will ultimately be made to pay. 

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The growing opposition of the European working class to their governments’ policies of war and cuts was the real elephant in the room during the entire general debate. While MPs were speaking, a general strike paralyzed Belgium in protest against the government’s austerity budget there. In Italy and Portugal, similar general strikes are planned for the coming days. In London, parliament was simultaneously debating the Starmer government’s new austerity budget that brutally slashes social benefits.

The growing resistance of the European working class creates the conditions to stop governments’ policies of war and social devastation. But to succeed, it must be united internationally and armed with a socialist program to overthrow capitalism.

6. Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, known as H. Rap Brown in the 1960s, dies in federal prison at 82

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin 

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, the fiery speaker and agitator known as H. Rap Brown when he led the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee down the path of black nationalism in the 1960s, has died in prison at the age of 82. 

Al-Amin, serving a life sentence without parole in connection with the shooting death of an Atlanta sheriff’s deputy in 2000, died in a North Carolina prison hospital. He was reportedly ill with multiple myeloma. Al-Amin had consistently maintained his innocence in the murder case and had appealed the conviction twice, most recently in 2019. He is survived by his wife of 53 years and his two sons. 

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H. Rap Brown became one of many figures associated with the civil rights struggle who attracted the attention of the FBI, then headed by the notorious racist and red-baiter J. Edgar Hoover. This was the period in which the COINTELPRO program was used to heavily infiltrate the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and also to infiltrate the Black Panthers and set up the murders of such figures as Fred Hampton and Mark Clark in Chicago in 1969. Other Panther leaders were killed or jailed. H. Rap Brown’s name was attached to a 1968 act of Congress entitled “H. Rap Brown Federal Anti-Riot Act,” making it a crime to “incite, organize, promote or encourage” a riot. Brown had not played any public role in the rebellions that had swept Northern and Western cities, including Detroit, Chicago and Los Angeles, but the racists and right wingers in Congress ignored that fact. Brown told the press at that time, quite accurately: “We don’t control anybody. … You don’t organize rebellions.”

The targeting and harassment of Brown continued and was intensified from that time, provoked in part by his incendiary language as head of SNCC. He was convicted of robbery in 1971 and, though insisting on his innocence, served five years of a 5- to 15-year sentence at the infamous Attica Prison in upstate New York.

It was there that the former SNCC leader converted to Islam. When he emerged from prison, his name had been changed to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin. He moved to Atlanta, Georgia, establishing a mosque, opening a small grocery, raising a family and becoming well-known for community work of various kinds.

The FBI campaign against Al-Amin never ended. After the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993, he was questioned but not charged. In 1995, he was actually arrested in connection with a shooting case but released after the main witness admitted that he was pressured to incriminate Al-Amin or else face jail himself. According to documents later uncovered by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the FBI sent paid informants into Al-Amin’s mosque in an effort to link him to various crimes, including the drug trade and 14 murders. Again, despite the huge effort and expenditure, no charges were forthcoming.

Finally, in 2000, after a heavily-armed group of police descended on his home in the dark of night to serve a warrant on a relatively minor charge, the authorities nailed their target on a murder charge. One sheriff’s deputy was killed and another was slightly wounded. The wounded deputy testified that Al-Amin was the killer, although the defense pointed out numerous holes in the prosecution case. The witness claimed that he had shot Al-Amin in the stomach, for instance, but when the defendant was arrested four days later, there was no sign of a wound or of blood on his clothes. There were other contradictions, but the prosecution secured a conviction, although the jury mandated a life sentence instead of a the death penalty.

During his trial in 2002, Coretta Scott King was among numerous prominent figures who expressed concern that Al-Amin would not receive a fair trial. Among them was Andrew Young, the former mayor of Atlanta and one of the leading figures in the political establishment. An advertisement in the Atlanta newspaper along similar lines was signed by folksinger Pete Seeger, Congressman and former SNCC leader Julian Bond, poet Sonia Sanchez and others.

All the evidence, beginning from the murders of the 1960s and continuing through the revelations of the role of Cointelpro, the harassment of Al-Amin in particular, and the shaky evidence at his 2000 trial, points in the direction of a frame-up. As Al-Amin himself declared, in an interview from prison with the New York Times on the eve of his 2002 trial: “The F.B.I. has a file on me containing 44,000 documents. At some point they had to make something happen to justify all the investigations and all the money they’ve spent.”

The phrase perhaps most often associated with Al-Amin is that violence is “as American as cherry pie.” It is somewhat ironic that his death occurs almost simultaneously with the airing of Ken Burns’ latest series, The American Revolution. The 12-hour program depicts, among other things, the extreme violence of the revolutionary struggle conducted by the American colonies against the British King George III from 1775 to 1783. Al-Amin was not wrong in recognizing the reality of violence and above all the responsibility of the oppressor for this violence. His program, however, was a bankrupt and reactionary one. It rejected socialist internationalism in favor of black nationalism. Nevertheless, Al-Amin’s death requires a reaffirmation of the need to defend democratic rights in the face of the reactionary onslaught of a decaying social order.

7. Australia: Thousands of Queensland teachers join second one-day strike

On Tuesday, thousands of teachers across the Australian northern state of Queensland joined their second 24-hour strike and protest rallies in less than four months. 

But at the rallies they were offered no perspective by union officials except to keep appealing to right-wing Premier David Crisafulli for an unspecified deal or accept arbitration, which will prohibit any further industrial action on their fight against low pay and intolerable conditions.

This is the first time since 1997 that two stoppages have been held, highlighting the severity of the crisis facing teachers, as well as the mounting difficulty that the Queensland Teachers Union (QTU) bureaucrats are having in containing the anger and concerns of educators.

At the strike rally in Brisbane, the state capital, QTU leaders told the 2,000 teachers who joined the event that the strike could have been avoided if only Crisafulli had picked up the phone.

For weeks, the union bureaucrats had pleaded for an agreement from him for a below-inflation 3 percent interim pay rise and a narrowing of issues to be determined by arbitration in the Queensland Industrial Relations Commission (QIRC).

The Liberal National Party (LNP) government has dismissed these pleas, however. Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek told the media that the government was keen to begin the arbitration process, and the strike would make no difference.

QTU officials are trying to prevent debate and suppress opposition by teachers to their repeated efforts to impose another sellout agreement with the state government, just like those under the previous state Labor government from 2015 to 2024, that will do nothing to address the poor wages and onerous workloads, and the resulting severe staff shortages.

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Similar discontent with pay and conditions is brewing among teachers nationally, including stoppages and protests in Tasmania and Victoria. But the QTU and other teacher unions, all affiliated to the Australian Education Union (AEU), are trying to keep the struggles isolated to individual states.

The union bureaucrats want to avoid a conflict with the federal Labor government, which is continuing to systematically underfund public schools, while pouring billions of dollars into AUKUS and other preparations for war.

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In pleading for a deal with the government, the QTU bureaucrats have refused to specify any demands on salaries or conditions. In their negotiations for a new agreement with the government, they are adhering to “interest-based bargaining” (IBB) which junks the previous union process of submitting a log of claims. Instead, it consists of “exploring the common interests” with management and devising means of satisfying those interests at workers’ expense.

This is a corporatist partnership. It takes to a deeper level the enterprise bargaining system that was imposed by the Keating Labor government and the unions during the early 1990s, to split the working class into individual workplaces, ban most industrial action and subordinate workers to the profit demands of “their” employers.

The IBB process is another stage in the decades-long transformation of the unions into industrial policing agencies, functioning as nothing but instruments for helping to inflict the agenda of the corporate elite on their members.

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The Committee for Public Education (CFPE), the educators’ rank-and-file network, urges teachers to set up their own school committees, independent of the Labor and trade union machine. Across the working class, these committees can initiate a political fight against the subordination of all human needs, including education, to the profit demands of big business.

8. Australian Labor government demands deeper austerity cuts

Recent developments show that the Albanese Labor government is increasingly cutting essential social programs—including public hospitals, disability services and science. It is seeking to meet the demands of the corporate elite for cuts and higher productivity, while pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into military spending in preparation for war.

In the government’s latest move, Finance Minister Katy Gallagher’s department ordered federal departments and agencies to provide details of spending cuts worth up to 5 percent of their annual budgets. This cost-cutting, to be imposed in just the next 12 months, is in addition to a mandatory 1 percent annual “efficiency dividend.”

The demand for 6 percent budget savings in one year will inevitably mean cuts to jobs and services. According to a report in the Australian Financial Review, departments are already reducing their workforces through natural attrition and freezes on hiring for non-essential roles. The relatively small Treasury department plans to cut 250 jobs, or 15 percent of its workforce, over two years. Much larger cuts are likely for the big health and social services departments.

Key government departments, including Health, Climate and Energy, Social Services and Attorney-General’s, have reportedly sounded the alarm in their briefs to ministers, warning of budget cuts as large as 50 percent in coming years and asking where they should plan to cut workers.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Gallagher are preparing to deliver a mid-year budget update in December, endeavoring to meet corporate demands for “budget repair” to reduce projected deficits totaling around $40 billion a year for the next decade, according to Parliamentary Budget Office estimates.

“Budget repair” is a euphemism for axing social and health programs as part of an agenda of austerity under conditions of anemic economic growth of less than 2 percent a year, historically low levels of corporate investment and the global volatility fueled by the Trump administration’s tariff war and slowing economic growth rates.

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Labor’s war-related spending is accelerating. This year’s budget, issued in March, committed Labor to increase military outlays to nearly $59 billion this financial year, or about 2.04 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), rising to $74 billion or around 2.23 percent of GDP in 2028–29. The AUKUS military pact with the US and Britain, directed against China, requires the expenditure of at least $368 billion by Australia over a decade.

Nonetheless, the ruling class is demanding that the government step up its measures. A November 24 editorial in the Australian Financial Review declared the necessity to “make the economy more productive and resilient” to “withstand and respond to global shocks.” This will mean an accelerated offensive against the jobs and conditions of the working class and deeper cutbacks to social spending.

9. Elevated Australian inflation rules out further interest rate cuts

Australian home buyers battling to pay off mortgages have no possibility of even any limited relief through a cut in interest rates for the foreseeable future. The latest inflation numbers released on Wednesday have taken that prospect off the agenda and made it likely that the next move will be up rather than down. 

The annual inflation rate in the year to October jumped to 3.8 percent, up from 3.6 percent in September, well above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) target range, with a major factor being the 37.1 percent increase in electricity prices following the withdrawal of subsidies by state governments.

The biggest increase in the index was housing, up by 5.9 percent, which includes the cost of electricity as well as rent and building costs. But this figure is a vast understatement because it does not include the cost of mortgage payments. They are excluded because the cost of buying a home, putting a roof over the head of one’s family, is considered a capital expenditure item, not a current expense.

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Echoing the recent call by the International Monetary Fund for greater fiscal discipline and advancing the demand for social spending cuts, an Australian editorial said that “reliance on taxpayers to pay for everything from childcare to more HECS debts, health, aged care and National Disability Insurance Scheme services comes at a price—inflation, higher interest rates and higher tax.”

As with all such calls, it did not even mention the major increases in government spending on the military as the Labor government integrates itself more deeply into the war preparations by the US against China.

10. Tanzania: The December 9 protest, Nyerere’s “African Socialism” and the Struggle for Permanent Revolution—Part Three

The betrayals that shaped Tanzania’s postcolonial trajectory cannot be understood outside the international struggle waged by the Trotskyist movement against Pabloism, a revisionist and opportunist current that emerged within the Fourth International led by Michel Pablo and Ernest Mandel.

The revolutionary upsurge that followed the catastrophe of the Second World War shook both Europe and the colonial world. In Europe, large sections of the bourgeoisie, discredited by their collaboration with fascism, would have been unable to reestablish their power and stabilize capitalism without the decisive political intervention of the Stalinist bureaucracy and the economic might of US imperialism.

Moscow instructed the Communist parties in France, Italy, and Germany to support bourgeois governments, disarm the resistance fighters, and suppress any independent initiative of the working class. In Greece, Stalinism ensured the victory of the bourgeoisie in the civil war by withholding vital support from the workers and partisans who had fought the Nazi occupation. These betrayals saved European capitalism from collapse and allowed it to reassert its grip on its colonies.

It was in this context that Pabloism arose within the Fourth International. Confronted with the temporary stabilization of capitalism and the creation of deformed workers’ states in Eastern Europe, Pablo abandoned Trotsky’s insistence on building independent revolutionary parties of the working class. He called for dissolving Trotskyist organizations into the “mass movements” led by Stalinist, nationalist, or petty-bourgeois forces. Any attempt to characterize such movements by their class nature, he insisted, reflected “old-type Trotskyist immaturity.” Trotskyists must integrate themselves “unconditionally” into national-liberation movements even when these were bourgeois in leadership.

The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) was founded in 1953 in opposition to this revisionism. Led by James P. Cannon of the American Socialist Workers Party, Gerry Healy of the British Socialist Labour League (SLL), and Pierre Lambert of the French Internationalist Communist Party, the ICFI defended the program of Permanent Revolution and the need to construct independent Trotskyist parties.

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While recognizing that leaders like Nyerere, Nkrumah, Mboya, Nasser, or Nehru could strike harder bargains with imperialism, Trotskyists insisted that they acted as buffers between imperialism and the mass of workers and peasants. “The dominant imperialist policy-makers both in the USA and Britain recognize full well that only by handing over political ‘independence’ to leaders of this kind […] can the stakes of international capital and the strategic alliances be preserved in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.”

For Marxists, the decisive question remained the political independence of the working class, secured through the building of a revolutionary socialist party. The SLL concluded:

It is not the job of Trotskyists to boost the role of such nationalist leaders. They can command the support of the masses only because of the betrayal of leadership by Social-Democracy and particularly Stalinism, and in this way they become buffers between imperialism and the mass of workers and peasants. The possibility of economic aid from the Soviet Union often enables them to strike a harder bargain with the imperialists, even enables more radical elements among the bourgeois and petty-bourgeois leaders to attack imperialist holdings and gain further support from the masses. But, for us, in every case the vital question is one of the working class in these countries gaining political independence through a Marxist party, leading the poor peasantry to the building of Soviets, and recognizing the necessary connections with the international socialist revolution.”

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The SLL insisted that no solution could emerge from within the confines of bourgeois nationalism or Stalinism. “Other nationalist groups making more radical demands will only be driving a harder bargain with imperialism, not fighting to smash it.” The only viable perspective lay in “A Marxist leadership, basing itself on the working class”, one that would consciously link the African revolution with the struggles of workers in the imperialist centers. 

The elevation of bourgeois nationalism by Pabloism to the role of revolutionary leadership cut off the most militant layers of the anti-colonial movement from the program of Permanent Revolution. The fragmentation of Africa into more than fifty states along colonial borders was not the “inevitable” outcome of a bourgeois-democratic stage, but the direct product of the counterrevolutionary role of Pabloism.

Today, the ICFI’s defense of Permanent Revolution stands vindicated. Nationalist movements like the MPLA, FRELIMO, the ANC, the FLN, KANU, ZANU-PF, once hailed by the Pabloites, have all demonstrated their bankruptcy. They have either collapsed, been overthrown, or survive as ruling elites presiding over regimes enforcing IMF austerity, privatization, and the violent suppression of workers and rural masses. Trotsky’s warning that history would “not leave one stone upon another” of the old Stalinist and social-democratic parties now applies equally to the national-liberation movements.

The fight waged by the ICFI remains decisive: the struggle for genuine national liberation and socialism in Tanzania, as in every country, requires the construction of a revolutionary Marxist party rooted in the working class and oriented to world socialist revolution.

11. Attendees speak on London public lecture by David North, and announcement of Socialism AI

World Socialist Web Site reporters spoke to some of those who attended the Socialist Equality Party event held in London on November 22,“The American Volcano: Towards Fascism or Socialism”. 

12. United Kingdom: Corbyn’s Your Party bars World Socialist Web Site reporter from founding conference

The World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) has been barred from reporting at the founding conference of Your Party in Liverpool on November 29-30. Our application was refused Wednesday evening with a message which read:

Dear applicant,

Thank you for your interest in attending the Founding Conference of Your Party. Unfortunately, your application has been unsuccessful.

We have a limited capacity for media in the ACC, and sadly that means we are not able to approve accreditation for all those who apply.

You will be able to follow debates on a livestream via our social media - so keep a look out for that.

Kind regards,
Your Party Press Team

This is a risible justification. The ACC is an enormous complex, hosting the M&S Bank Arena with a capacity of 11,000; the Exhibition Centre Liverpool with 8,100 meters squared of subdivisible floorspace; and the BT Convention Centre with a 1,350 seat auditorium, a further 3,725 meters squared of floorspace and 21 breakout rooms.

Yet apparently no space can be found for a single journalist from the WSWS, recognized internationally as an authoritative source of Marxist comment, analysis and news reporting. Published since 1998 and available in over 30 languages, the site has a regular readership of hundreds of thousands of socialist-minded workers and young people from every continent.

While blocking the WSWS, Your Party officials have made space for the Daily Express and the Daily Mail, two of Britain’s leading right-wing tabloids. Both newspapers confirmed Your Party has accredited their reporters. During the 1930s, workers dubbed Viscount Rothermere’s newspaper The Daily Heil due to its support for Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. The Express promotes the most vile and fascistic forms of anti-immigrant racism.

The BBC, the Guardian, and countless other media organisations that have been at the forefront of witch-hunting the left, including through manufactured claims of “left-wing antisemitism”, will doubtless be present. The denial of press credentials to the WSWS is an act of targeted political exclusion carried out by the Corbynite apparatus which runs Your Party.

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For all their fraudulent claims to “openness”, “accountability” and “doing politics differently”, the Corbynites in the leadership, led by Jeremy Corbyn himself, are ferociously hostile to this sort of scrutiny. Unable to justify their political positions and actions, they resort in time-honoured fashion to the methods of bureaucratic censorship and exclusion. 

*****

Despite Your Party’s efforts, the WSWS will be reporting on the founding conference in the coming days. In the meantime, we encourage workers and young people to read the coverage its organisers wish they could stop:

Messages of protest to Your Party demanding the overturn of their ban on the WSWS should be sent to: press@yourparty.uk

13. Workers Struggles: Africa, Europe, & Middle East

Africa

Nigeria: 

Doctors continue strike despite government misinformation

Unpaid security guards hold protest over unpaid salaries, bringing hospitals to a halt in Abuja

South Africa:
Health workers in Gauteng march to demand funding for collapsing healthcare system

Tunisia:
Doctors walk out over health system in decline

Security guards at Cape Town building project strike over wage arrears

Europe

Belgium:

Workers in fourth general strike this year to protest government austerity cuts

Italy:

Metalworkers strike and demonstrate against major job losses as government seeks buyer for main steel producing company

Kosovo:

Public broadcast television workers strike after weeks without pay

Portugal:

Thousands of public service workers strike against proposed anti-worker legislation

Spain:

Primary health and care workers in Galicia strike and protest for improved pay and conditions

United Kingdom:

Tate gallery staff strike over inadequate pay offer

Hospitality workers in Glasgow, Scotland set to begin five-week stoppage over pay and conditions

Further strikes by Transport for Greater Manchester workers over pay

Middle East

Iran:

Protests continue across country over deteriorating living standards and social conditions

14. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk! 

 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.

Nov 27, 2025

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Thanksgiving 2025 in America: Misery for workers, unprecedented wealth for the elite

This is an expression of the callousness of the ruling class as a whole, not merely the Trump administration. To cut $8 billion a month from food stamps, the fate of tens of millions is being thrown into turmoil. Meanwhile, the ruling elite is engaged in a massive accumulation of wealth. Ten billionaires increased their wealth by $700 billion this year. Elon Musk received a new $1 trillion pay package at Tesla. Larry Ellison became $100 billion richer in a single day—enough to fund the entire food stamp program for a year. 

2. Video of David North’s lecture in Berlin: “Where is America going?” 

3. US escalates war threats, branding Venezuelan government a “foreign terrorist organization”

With the largest US armada assembled in Latin American waters since the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, the Trump administration is poised to launch a new criminal war of aggression. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly declared that he has made up his mind on Venezuela but declined to elaborate on his supposed decision. Conflicting reports have suggested anything from a full-scale US war for regime change, to a decapitation operation to kill or capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, air strikes on Venezuelan infrastructure and government targets and even a bargain struck directly between Maduro and Donald Trump at the point of a gun.

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Why this naked US aggression? Under conditions of a deepening US and global capitalist crisis, Washington and America’s ruling oligarchy view control over Latin America’s resources and the imposition of obedient client regimes as central to defending their waning global dominance. Venezuela’s enormous oil reserves, the largest on the planet, make it a prime target. 

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This predatory aggression is further driven by Venezuela’s increasing strategic ties with US imperialism’s premier rival, China, which now accounts for 80 percent of the country’s oil exports, thanks in large measure to Washington’s stifling sanctions regime. China is not only buying Venezuelan oil but has taken the badly needed commodity as payment on some $60 billion in loans to the country. It has invested billions directly into Venezuela’s oil sector, while also engaging in the limited sale of arms.

For its part, Russia has forged a “strategic partnership” with Venezuela, selling the country some $14.5 billion worth of arms, including advanced air defense systems such as the S-300VM. Meanwhile, Russia’s state energy giant Rosneft has established joint ventures with Venezuela’s national oil company (PDVSA) in the exploitation of several oil and gas fields. Hundreds of Russian personnel are present in the country.

A US attack on Venezuela would be aimed not at that country alone but at driving China and Russia out of the entire Western Hemisphere. The strategy of reversing the historic decline of US imperialism and the rise of China as South America’s principal trading partner with Tomahawk missiles and smart bombs is patently berserk, but it is driven by the logic of US imperialism’s intractable crisis. A US war would not only destabilize the entire region but would have global ramifications stretching from Ukraine to the South China Sea.

Those among the petty-bourgeois nationalist circles in Latin America who believe that either Beijing or Moscow will come to Venezuela’s defense, however, should consider the recent vote on the UN Security Council ratifying Trump’s colonialist project for completing the Gaza genocide in which both countries abstained. The fate of entire nations and peoples has become bargaining chips in the drive toward a third world war with no crime too terrible to contemplate.

At home, the same US ruling class that is rushing toward a disastrous military adventure in Latin America is implementing police state measures to suppress dissent and protect its profits. The conflation of “narco‑terrorism” with migration and internal “enemies” paves the way for the use of a war to expand military powers, carry out mass detentions and abolish democratic rights. It is the working class that will be forced to pay the price for the US capitalist crisis in blood and social repression as the Trump administration prepares to invoke the Alien Enemies Act and to deploy troops in major US cities.

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The struggle against US aggression cannot be advanced through reliance upon capitalist politicians in the US, bourgeois nationalist regimes like that of Maduro in Venezuela or Washington’s geo-strategic rivals in Beijing and Moscow; it must be rooted in the class struggle and the fight to unite workers across borders against imperialism and capitalist exploitation. 

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The working class must demand an immediate end to the threatening US military deployments and covert operations against Venezuela. All warships, aircraft and troops must be withdrawn from the southern Caribbean and the wanton murder of civilians brought to an end now.

The choice is stark: Either workers unite internationally to overthrow the capitalist system that breeds wars and social barbarism, or the ruling classes will drag the world into a new epoch of imperialist carnage.

4. Dozens killed, hundreds missing in Hong Kong inferno

A huge blaze has engulfed a complex of residential high-rise towers in the northern New Territories district of Hong Kong. At the time of posting, the death toll stands at 44 but is almost certain to rise further, as 279 people are still unaccounted for. Currently 68 people are in hospital 25 in a serious condition and another 16 are classified as critical. Some 900 people are in emergency shelters.

The fire began yesterday afternoon local time just before 3pm in one of eight 31-storey towers in the Wang Fuk Court complex in Tai Po, and spread to all but one of the towers as a result of high winds. The buildings, which were undergoing renovations, were all surrounded by bamboo scaffolding and construction netting that likely contributed to the speed at which the blaze spread. 

By 6:22 pm, the emergency alert was raised to the highest level—5. There were 128 fire trucks, 57 ambulances and 767 firefighters deployed to the blaze. They battled the inferno in very difficult conditions throughout the night. One firefighter, 37-year-old Ho Wai-ho, has died and another has been injured.

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The fire risk in Hong Kong has been “extreme” for most of the past week because of dry conditions. Red Fire Danger Warning was in force yesterday, according to the Hong Kong Observatory, a government weather service, and remains in place.

The cause of the fire has yet to be determined, but the use of substandard and flammable materials by the company carrying out renovations and repairs contributed to its spread. Three men—two directors and a consultant of the construction company—have been arrested by police on suspicion of manslaughter.

“We have reason to believe that the company’s responsible parties were grossly negligent, which led to this accident and caused the fire to spread uncontrollably, resulting in major casualties,” Eileen Chung, a Hong Kong Police superintendent, told the media.

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The deadly fire points to the dangers of the widespread use of bamboo scaffolding in Hong Kong. According to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, industry estimates from January suggest that 80 percent of major construction and renovation projects used bamboo scaffolding, which is lighter but above all cheaper than the steel alternative. 

In March, the Hong Kong government started to phase out bamboo scaffolding, citing worker safety. Between 2019 and 2024, there were 22 deaths involving bamboo scaffolders. The proposal, however, only applies to public building projects, and then only to 50 percent of such projects from March onwards.

*****

The fire in the Wang Fuk Court complex is Hong Kong’s deadliest since at least August 1962, when a blaze in the city’s Sham Shui Po district killed 44 people. A fire at the Garley Building on Nathan Road in Kowloon in November 1996 killed 41 people and injured 81. 

The Wang Fuk Court complex, which was built in 1983, is government-subsided housing aimed at alleviating the heavy burden of housing costs in Hong Kong, notorious for being one of the most expensive cities in the world in which to live. Even then, applicants have to meet strict requirements and often wait for years before getting an apartment.

Already comparisons are being drawn with the inferno that engulfed the Grenfell Tower, a council housing complex in London, killing 72 people. As in Hong Kong, the working-class residents were living in a death trap after the local Conservative-run authority presided over a cosmetic facelift that cut corners to save money. The building was fitted with combustible cladding that allowed the fire to jump from floor to floor and created enormous difficulties for firefighters.

5. American authoritarianism in Anniversary: It does happen here

Anniversary is a serious film about a serious matter, the emergence and triumph of a totalitarian political movement in the US. Certain chilling scenes and images remain with the viewer despite the film’s too narrow or confused outlook that unfortunately limits its overall impact. Anniversary is one of a number of recent films that address—or attempt to address—the burning question of mass state repression and fascism.

*****

As noted, there are strong moments here. The buildup of repression and fear within a continuously worsening political climate is authentically presented. It reminds one a little of the Frank Borzage films, Three Comrades (1938, written in part by F. Scott Fitzgerald) and The Mortal Storm (1940), with the latter film sharply depicting the malignant growth and influence of Nazism. Anniversary’s final scene in particular is genuinely disturbing, as the full dimensions of a police state come into view. Lane, Chandler and the other performers are convincing. Their hearts are clearly in their work. 

Dylan O’Brien offers one of the strongest performances as Josh Taylor, the frustrated, failing novelist swept up by a right-wing political movement that ultimately makes him feel confident and influential, a semi-cultured petty bourgeois with the fierce need to bully and dominate, including family members. He evolves into a repugnant American “Blackshirt” (almost literally) in front of our eyes before falling victim himself to an act of treachery. Again, such a portrait brings to mind another, more highly developed film character, the Italian fascist functionary and central figure in Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Conformist (1970) played by Jean-Louis Trintignant.

These are all significant strengths.

Anniversary fails to be more compelling than it is, because it lacks almost any historical or social connections and driving forces. Why has “The Change” emerged in the form it does? Why does it gain mass traction? What are the conditions under which the erstwhile “democratic” state turns toward dictatorship? What are the social and economic forces propelling this repressive movement? Aside from a few oblique references to the Cumberland Corporation, about whose operations we learn next to nothing, there is no indication of financial interests involved. The transformation of the US into a police-state dictatorship, not a small global question one hardly needs to add, comes about more or less seamlessly for almost entirely unexplained reasons.

*****

All in all, the events surrounding the distribution or non-distribution of even such a blunted work as Anniversary point to the need of filmmakers to be far keener and politically astute and more aggressive in their work, and to genuinely tackle the very advanced crisis situation. A noncommittal or “non-partisan” (in the true sense of the word) stance is the very last thing we need.

6. Australia: Cobar residents oppose rapid reopening of Endeavor mine after fatal explosion 

Miners and residents from the remote New South Wales (NSW) community of Cobar spoke with World Socialist Web Site reporters last week, voicing their opposition to Polymetals’ decision to rapidly reopen its Endeavor Mine following the tragic deaths of shift supervisor Ambrose Patrick McMullen, 59, and charge-up operator Holly Clarke, 24, in an underground explosion in the early hours of October 28. The blast left fellow team member Mackenzie Stirling, also 24, with serious injuries, including hearing damage. 

Located 685 kilometres west of Sydney, Cobar is a small community of about 3,500 people dominated by the mining industry, which began operations in the 1870s following the discovery of copper in the region. About 40 percent of the local workforce is directly employed in mining, with many others working in related industries servicing the area’s copper, silver, gold, zinc and lead deposits.

Within days of the fatal explosion—and even before separate funerals were held for McMullen and Clarke, or the release of an interim report by the NSW Resources Regulator—Polymetals announced that the Endeavor Mine would reopen on November 5. By November 15, with no opposition from the NSW Labor government, the regulator, or the Australian Workers Union and the Mining and Energy Union, the mine had resumed operating at full production.

Last Saturday afternoon, more than 640 people gathered at the Cobar Memorial Services Club to honour Holly Clarke’s life. The capacity crowd heard speeches from family members and friends.

Immediately after the explosion, the company told Endeavor Mine employees not to speak to the media or even to friends and family about the explosion, the deaths of McMullen and Clarke, or conditions at the mine.

Despite these anti-democratic efforts to silence the working-class community, residents raised concerns about the reopening of the Endeavor Mine before a serious investigation into the tragedy had been conducted. 

7. Australia: CSR plasterboard factory workers locked out over pay claim

Workers at the CSR Gyprock factory in Yarraville, Melbourne have effectively been locked out by the company over a pay claim.

After workers began limited work bans on November 14, part of “protected” industrial action, management threatened it would not pay workers who took part. Workers responded by going on strike—the only option left besides accepting the company’s proposed enterprise agreement or working for free.

CSR has offered workers a four-year agreement containing nominal pay increases of 4 percent in each of the first two years, 3.5 percent in the third and 3 percent in the fourth. This would be totally inadequate to keep up with the rising cost of living. The official annual inflation rate is already at 3.8 percent and shows definite signs of rising further, with a 1.3 percent increase recorded in the September quarter alone.

There are around 60 full-time workers at the highly automated manufacturing plant, which supplies plasterboard (drywall) products to the building industry and retail customers.

CSR is the largest plasterboard maker in Australia, and the only brand stocked by major hardware and building products supplier Bunnings. The company is also a key manufacturer of numerous other building products, including insulation, cladding, bricks and rooftops. 

CSR was acquired for AU$4.5 billion last year by French multinational Saint-Germain, which employs some 170,000 workers worldwide.

Workers told the World Socialist Web Site that CSR had prepared for the lockout by stockpiling product in advance and hurriedly training casuals to serve as strikebreakers.

8. Trump administration plans to deploy 500 more National Guard soldiers following D.C. shooting

Shortly after 2:00 p.m. in Washington D.C. on Wednesday, a shooter opened fire on two West Virginia National Guard soldiers, critically injuring both of them. The alleged shooter was identified by CNN and CBS News as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old from Afghanistan who came to the United States in 2021 and was a resident of Washington state.

Neither of the soldiers has been identified beyond the fact that they were from West Virginia. Lakanwal and the two soldiers are both currently hospitalized. The shooting took place just two blocks from the White House.

Police claimed 15 shots were exchanged. National Guardsmen and the shooter were both armed. According to police, the shooter ambushed the two Guardsmen and was then taken down by other Guardsmen who heard or witnessed the shooting.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, the FBI, US Secret Service, Metropolitan Police and National Guard soldiers swarmed the area, while the Treasury Department and the White House were put into a “lockdown” status. Flights in and out of Reagan International Airport were also temporarily halted.

As of this writing, police have yet to identify a motive in the attack. Initial reports indicate Lakanwal immigrated to the United States in 2021 following the US withdrawal from Afghanistan and the return to power by the Taliban. After US proxy forces in Afghanistan disintegrated following the US military’s withdrawal, approximately 200,000 people from Afghanistan, many who worked with and for US and allied forces during the 20-year occupation, were allowed to immigrate to the US under Temporary Protected Status (TPS).

Earlier this year, as part of Trump’s mass deportation operation, TPS was terminated for millions of people, including the majority of Afghan-born that came to the US in 2021 and later. In terminating TPS for people from Afghanistan, the Trump administration argued that Afghanistan under Taliban rule was now “safe.” Reports indicate Lakanwal was legally in the United States until September of this year.

The shooting is already being used by the Trump administration to justify further military deployments and attacks on democratic rights. Shortly after the shooting, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth publicly announced that President Trump, currently in Florida, requested additional troops be deployed to D.C.

*****

On his social media site, Trump characterized the shooter as an “animal” and said he will “pay a very steep price.”

The only reason Guardsmen are in D.C. in the first place is because Trump ordered the troops deployed to the city in August under the pretext of “fighting crime.” In reality, the troops are part of Trump’s ongoing efforts to establish a police military dictatorship. Since returning to the White House earlier this year, Trump has deployed National Guard units alongside federal agents in an effort to normalize heavily armed troops on US streets.

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In response to a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the D.C. deployment, last week U.S. Federal Judge Jia M. Cobb ruled Trump “exceeded the bounds” of his authority and that the Guard were being used for “non-military, crime-deterrence” reasons, in violation of Title 49 of the D.C. Code. While Cobb ruled the deployment illegal, she also issued an administrative stay on her decision for 21 days, allowing the Trump administration to appeal.

9. United States: Tyson eliminates 3,200 jobs with closure of Nebraska beef plant

Last week, Tyson Foods announced it will close its massive beef plant in Lexington, Nebraska, a facility that directly employs roughly 3,000–3,200 workers in a town of about 11,000 people.

The closure is scheduled to take effect on or around January 20, 2026, according to the company’s WARN notice to the Nebraska Department of Labor. Workers have been told that they have no guaranteed transfers, meaning these are essentially permanent job losses.

Built in 1990 and later acquired by Tyson, the plant has been an economic backbone of the city, employing a significant portion of the local workforce. Its ability to slaughter up to 5,000 heads of cattle per day—about 5 percent of total US capacity—turned Lexington into a crucial node in the beef supply chain.

The impact will have devastating consequences for workers and for the community of Lexington, creating a chain reaction in which other small businesses depending on these workers will suffer as well. Workers and their families will be forced to uproot themselves in search of new jobs.

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Slaughterhouses and meatpacking plants are among the most dangerous and deadliest workplaces in the United States. A study published this year by the U.S. Department of Agriculture found that 81 percent of poultry workers were at high risk of developing musculoskeletal injuries. In 2023, the Economic Policy Institute reported an average of 27 workers a day suffer amputation or hospitalization, according to new OSHA data from 29 states.

In addition, many workers are often immigrants—in some cases, undocumented—because these are the only jobs available to them. They face the dual threat of injuries inside the plant and the danger of being kidnapped and disappeared by ICE on the outside.

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Despite claiming its beef division is under financial pressure, Tyson Foods is still one of the biggest and most profitable meat companies in the world. In 2025, the company brought in $54.4 billion in sales and made more than $2.2 billion in operating income, mostly from its chicken and prepared-foods businesses. 

The announcement is inseparable from broader political and economic forces. Although Tyson has not pointed to Trump’s nationalist tariff policy as the cause of the Lexington shutdown, recent shifts in federal trade posture, including moves that would expand access for cheaper imported beef from countries, such as Brazil and Argentina, intersect with a domestic market straining under soaring beef production costs. Retail beef prices have risen sharply, with prices up over 13 percent for ground beef and 16 percent for steaks over the past year.

The plant is non-unionized. However, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW), whose members include thousands of meatpacking workers, sought to blame foreign workers by declaring: “This decision also raises serious questions about our national priorities. The Administration and Congress should be working to strengthen these workers and their communities by boosting production here at home. Instead, our leaders are flirting with importing beef from Argentina and unleashing tariffs that cut off foreign markets to American beef, pork, and chicken. Meatpacking workers across this country deserve better.”

The unions have long promoted nationalism, which seeks to tie workers to this or that country and this or that ruling class, and the UFCW’s comment fundamentally reflects this. The issue is not native-born workers versus foreign-born, but the working class versus the capitalist ruling class. That is, workers confronting the dictatorship of capital, which decides at will to destroy jobs, communities and livelihoods across the United States and the world.

10. At least 132 people killed in flooding in Southeast Asia

More than 100 people have been killed in Southeast Asia during a week and a half of intense rains throughout the region. Most of the destruction has taken place in Vietnam and Thailand, though Malaysia has also been affected.

At least 98 people have been killed in Vietnam as of Wednesday, while another 10 remain missing, since heavy rains began on November 16. An 800-kilometer stretch in the central region of the country has been the most heavily affected, with rainfall last week exceeding 1,900 millimeters in some areas. This is approximately equal to the average rainfall for the entire year.

The worst-hit province is Dak Lak where 63 people have been killed. Many of the roads have been blocked, with rescue personnel dropping supplies to stranded survivors from helicopters. Shops and homes have been destroyed or are under mud. Damage to the region, including crops, is estimated at $US545 million. At least 186,000 homes have been damaged and 3.2 million livestock and poultry have been killed. “We’ve never experienced that much rain and such bad flooding,” 45-year-old Pham Thu Huyen, a resident of Khanh Hoa Province, told the media.

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Vietnam is one of the world’s most flood-prone countries and has been particularly hard-hit this year, with major storms striking the country in September and October. This includes Typhoon Kalmeagi, which tore through the region in early November, striking the same central region of Vietnam, killing five. 

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More rain is expected at the end of this week as Typhoon Koto, the 15th storm to form in the South China Sea, approaches Vietnam. While its path is currently unpredictable, heavy rains in the central region are expected from November 28 to 30.

While natural disasters like intense rains and typhoons cannot be prevented, they can be planned for. Yet under capitalism, the drive for profits takes priority over all else, including the safety and well-being of a population living in a flood-prone region.

Following its embrace of pro-capitalist reforms in 1986 under its Doi Moi program, the Stalinist regime in Hanoi carried out widespread construction with little regard for the impact on the environment. According to Kyoto University’s Center for Southeast Asian Studies, by 1996 Vietnam’s four major urban districts had lost nearly two-thirds of water bodies, which are important for managing floods.

Furthermore, Vietnam’s system of 7,300 reservoirs and dams throughout the country are outdated and poorly run, making flood management difficult and more dangerous. Many of these reservoirs and dams were built decades ago.

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On top of this, many of the reservoirs are operated individually rather than as part of a single, planned system. Operational procedures are also based on outdated information, without taking into account the new conditions that have developed as a result of climate change. This means flood planning, including the discharge of water, may be carried out without consideration for broader conditions. Uncontrolled spillways are also particularly vulnerable.  

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As in Vietnam, poor disaster management is rampant in Thailand, where floods are also common. The Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI), a Bangkok-based think tank, wrote in an article published in January: “Thailand’s flood problems stem from three main issues: centralized policies with poor coordination on the ground, outdated early warning systems, and insufficient funding with misplaced priorities.”

11. “You’re told don’t be a troublemaker”: New York postal worker speaks on deaths of Nick Acker and Russell Scruggs Jr. 

The World Socialist Web Site conducts an interview with a New York City Postal Service worker on safety at her facility. 

12. United States: After 4-month delay, Pennsylvania Democrats pass pro-corporate austerity budget

After a 135-day impasse, the Pennsylvania legislature finally passed a $50 billion budget on November 12. The overdue budget offers little to working class residents grappling with inflation, rising rents, foreclosures and job losses while providing substantial benefits to the corporate sector.

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The attacks on working people throughout the state did not stop Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro—widely considered a top prospective candidate for the United States president in 2028—from taking full credit for “staying at the table” and “getting things done.” In a statement to the Inquirer, Shapiro contrasted his approach to the budget with the conduct of national leaders in the federal shutdown last month.

“I think it’s a stark contrast, frankly, with what happened in D.C., where they didn’t stay at the table, they didn’t fight, and they got nothing,” he stated of the congressional Democrats. Shapiro stated of the budget on his social media accounts that “A budget isn’t just a bunch of numbers on a spreadsheet—it’s a statement of our values and our commitment to our fellow Pennsylvanians.”

In fact, Shapiro and the Democratic Party are fully complicit in creating an ongoing crisis in the region. Amid growing economic hardships, both state Republicans and Democrats agreed on yet another objective: lowering the corporate net income tax rate.

*****

As Republicans and Democrats remain unable to find money for programs and services that benefit the working class while simultaneously lowering the corporate tax rate, other potential funding streams were bypassed. Governor Shapiro did not even include his own proposal of a 52 percent tax on skill games, an untaxed form of gambling in the state. Another proposed tax that was omitted from the bill was a tax on online sports betting.

The deliberate removal of possible revenue was presented as part of Josh Shapiro and the state Democrats’ strategy to capitulate to the Republicans and big business. Shapiro claimed that in a divided government, passing a budget requires everyone to “give a little and understand the perspectives of others a little bit better.”

*****

The role of the Democrats is to provide a facade of opposition to the corporate domination of society. They pay lip service to programs and services that benefit workers, knowing full well that the interests they serve will demand that they be slashed. 

A very similar strategy was pursued by the national Democrats in Congress, as they offered Trump an off-ramp from a budget deadlock, a situation in which the vast majority of the population blamed Trump and the Republicans for the shutdown. This followed an election where Democrats had picked up significant victories. Rather than press the advantage, the Democrats decided to give in to Trump and allow the fascist President an opening to continue his assault on living standards and the [US] Constitution.

13. Italy’s general strikes against the 2026 budget of austerity and war

Italy’s proposed 2026 budget law has provoked a wave of opposition that is coalescing into two national general strikes, the first led by the base unions USB, CUB, SGB, Cobas (small ostensibly left and militant formations) on November 28-29, followed by a separate strike called by the much larger CGIL trade union on December 12. The confrontation unfolding in Italy is a political eruption of the working class against a government steering the country into austerity and militarism.

The fascist Meloni government’s draft budget is a declaration of war on the Italian and international working class. Modeled after Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” it is crafted to restructure the economy toward war spending, corporate profit, and authoritarian rule. At its core is the massive diversion of public resources from wages, essential services, and social protections into a multiyear rearmament program aligned with the European Union’s Re-Arm initiative and NATO’s strategic directives.

Tens of billions are stripped from healthcare, education, pensions, and local services to meet military-spending targets dictated by Brussels and Washington. Workers are being compelled to finance a war drive they oppose overwhelmingly.

*****

The working class has responded with anger and determination. Earlier this month, the base unions’ national assembly of cadres and delegates issued a mandate for a national general strike on November 28–29. On this basis, USB, CUB, and other rank-and-file unions formally proclaimed the November 28 strike across all public and private sectors.

USB and the base unions have framed their strike as a militant, anti-austerity action centered on wage recovery, defense of public services, opposition to war spending, and rejection of the government’s social and economic policies.

USB and CUB issued political indictments of the 2026 budget and the broader war agenda. Both denounce the shift of resources from wages and essential services to rearmament and condemn Italy and the EU for backing Israel’s genocide in Gaza. They oppose the conversion of industry and research to military purposes, the movement of arms through ports, and the expansion of repressive laws to silence dissent.

The budget, they declare, loots workers’ futures through privatizations, subcontracting, and a planned €22 billion surge in military spending, serving corporate and imperialist interests at the expense of the working class.

*****

Italy’s unrest is part of an international wave of resistance. Across Europe, workers face the same basic program: slashing social protections, increasing the burden on ordinary people, and diverting massive funds toward militarization.

In Belgium, a general strike was called for November 26 against pension cuts, abolished wage indexation, and benefit reductions, while the government raises military spending to meet NATO’s 2 percent target. In Portugal, a national strike on December 11 opposes draconian labor reforms under a right-wing government backed by the fascistic Chega party, even as Portugal commits to raising military spending to 5 percent of GDP by 2035.

These protests are rooted in a broader crisis: European governments are using the NATO-Russia war as geopolitical cover and economic justification for austerity and rearmament. They are treating the war as an opportunity to accelerate a social counter-revolution, increase police powers, repress dissent, and make workers pay for the warmongering ambitions of their ruling classes.

*****

The upcoming general strikes follow a major eruption of working-class opposition in Italy earlier in 2025, when mass protests broke out against Italy’s complicity in the genocide in Gaza. In September and October, tens of thousands took to the streets in more than 75 cities. Transport networks were disrupted, schools shut down, and port workers refused to load or unload arms shipments. This movement forced the union bureaucracies to call for mass actions, revealing the explosive potential of rank-and-file mobilization.

The anger has not dissipated. It is flowing into opposition to the 2026 budget and the broader fight against militarism.

What is emerging in Italy is the initial stages of a world revolutionary crisis. Across Europe, right-wing governments are intensifying austerity, militarization, and repression. The ruling classes are preparing for war abroad and class confrontation at home. Workers are beginning to push back.

14. UK Labour’s budget piles on suffering for workers, but not enough to satisfy ruling class

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said that her budget choices were “not austerity, not reckless borrowing, but cutting tax, cutting [National Health Service] waiting lists and cutting the cost of living.” But this was a budget that satisfied neither workers increasingly hostile to the Starmer Labour government, nor a ruling class demanding far more savage austerity than has been imposed so far.

Such is the crisis of the Labour government that there was speculation that if the bond markets responded unfavorably, this could spell the end of Reeves as Chancellor and hasten the end of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s time in Number 10.

Sky News correspondent Beth Rigby said that she was told ahead of the budget by a “cabinet minister” that “this will be a budget for self-preservation and not the country”.

The government is hemmed in on all sides, with rising anger from below, particularly over a cost-of-living crisis pauperizing millions of workers, countered by the financial elite who are insisting on further cuts to public spending to enrich the corporations and banks and increase military spending.

15. Tanzania: The December 9 Protest, Nyerere’s “African Socialism” and the Struggle for Permanent Revolution—Part Two

Isolated by the defeats suffered by the European working class, the Soviet Union became increasingly dominated by a conservative bureaucratic caste under Joseph Stalin. This bureaucracy gradually usurped political power from the working class, betraying the revolutionary internationalism that had guided the October Revolution and the Comintern. In place of the global strategy of Permanent Revolution advanced by Lenin and Trotsky, Stalin promulgated the reactionary nationalist doctrine of “Socialism in One Country,” severing the fate of the Soviet workers’ state from the worldwide struggle for socialism.

Stalin’s program meant the subordination of the international working class to the narrow, nationalist interests of the Soviet bureaucracy, which was preoccupied with safeguarding its own privileges. Through its influence over the Communist parties of the Comintern, Stalinism sowed confusion and disorientation within the workers’ movement, leading to a series of historic defeats.

In China, Stalin forced the Chinese Communist Party into the bourgeois nationalist Kuomintang, insisting on a “bloc of four classes” that included the national bourgeoisie during the Second Chinese Revolution of 1925-1927. Trotsky warned that this would disarm the working class, and the 1927 Shanghai massacre of tens of thousands of communists by the Kuomintang vindicated his warnings.

In South Africa, the Comintern imposed the “Native Republic” thesis on the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA), demanding a capitalist stage under a black bourgeoisie before socialism. This subordinated the party to the African National Congress and bound the working class to bourgeois nationalism. It became the basis for the CPSA’s long-running alliance with the ANC, a partnership that continues today as they preside over one of the most unequal societies in the world.

Trotsky opposed this two-stage strategy. In his “Letter to South African Revolutionaries”, he rejected policies that subordinated workers to bourgeois nationalism and warned that Marxism must base itself on the independent mobilization of African workers. He insisted that the party “must champion with all its strength the complete and unconditional right of the blacks to independence,” but emphasized that “only the proletariat, leading the native masses,” could resolve the national and agrarian questions, which pointed directly toward the struggle for a workers’ state rather than a bourgeois stage.

In Germany, the Communist Party refused to form a united front with the Social Democrats against the Nazis, even though until 1932 the combined workers’ organizations were numerically—and, due to their base in the working class, socially—far stronger than Hitler. This sectarian line helped clear the path for the Nazi takeover in 1933. The Soviet bureaucracy then swung to the opposite extreme, ordering Communist parties to form popular fronts with liberal bourgeois forces and abandon any struggle in the colonies so as not to jeopardize Moscow’s diplomatic manoeuvres with imperialism.

Soon after, the British and French sections abandoned agitation for colonial independence, in the name of “anti-fascism” and “defending democracy.” The absurdity of this line was clear in Portugal, where the Communist Party, operating clandestinely under the fascist Estado Novo dictatorship, avoided advocating independence for Angola or Mozambique. By subordinating colonial liberation to the diplomatic interests of imperial powers, Stalinism discredited socialism in the colonies.

When General Francisco Franco launched his fascist coup in 1936 and sparked a three-year civil war, his most decisive forces comprised 80,000 Moroccan colonial troops. But the Popular Front government, dominated by the Stalinists, refused to proclaim Moroccan independence from Spain. As the Trotskyists insisted, a revolutionary appeal to the Moroccan masses could have shattered Franco’s base and opened a joint struggle of Spanish workers and the colonised against imperialism. Instead, Stalin suppressed any such action for fear of upsetting Britain and France, helping seal the defeat of the Spanish Revolution.

Stalin launched the Great Purges of the 1930s, physically exterminating the finest representatives of generations of Marxist intellectuals, that would culminate in the murder of Trotsky in Mexico in 1940 by a GPU agent. In the Soviet Union, close to one million people were executed in this counterrevolutionary violence between 1936 and 1939. Across the Comintern, countless militants who had once fought for the October Revolution and pioneers in the founding of Communist Parties in their respective countries were eliminated. Albert Nzula, the CPSA’s first black Secretary General was killed after showing sympathy for Trotsky and voicing criticisms of Stalin.[1]

The Stalinist counterrevolution disoriented millions of left-wing workers. With Trotskyism suppressed inside the Soviet Union and persecuted across Europe, the emerging African working class was left without the revolutionary internationalist perspective necessary to lead the struggle against imperialism.

In this vacuum, a new current began to take shape: Pan Africanism. Its most influential architect, George Padmore, had risen within the Stalinist apparatus. As a trusted Comintern official in Moscow, he had participated in disciplinary commissions tasked with policing ideological loyalty and rooting out alleged “Trotskyists” within the Chinese Communist Party and other sections.

Padmore only broke with the Soviet Bureaucracy in 1934 when it became clear that Stalin had abandoned any genuine interest in anti-colonial struggles and viewed the nationalist movements in Africa, as elsewhere, as bargaining chips in his diplomatic maneuvers with the imperialist powers. His ideas, however, remained firmly rooted in a Stalinist nationalist outlook.

Padmore’s role was only enhanced after the catastrophe in East Africa. Seeking an accommodation with Mussolini as a counterweight to Hitler, the Soviet bureaucracy courted fascist Italy as it launched its colonial war on Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935. Stalin supplied Italy with oil, coal, and wheat, even as opposition erupted across the world: thousands demonstrated in Accra, dockworkers in Cape Town and Durban refused to load Italian ships, and labor militants in Marseilles blocked supplies.

Against Stalin’s policy and the empty sanctions of the League of Nations, Trotskyists called for “independent sanctions of the working class, its own boycotts, strikes, defense funds, mass demonstrations that can aid the battles of Ethiopian peoples.”

The invasion of Ethiopia, which left 760,000 people dead in a country of only six million, became a political watershed for a generation of African intellectuals and workers. The fall of the continent’s only independent state to a fascist power profoundly shaped figures such as Jomo Kenyatta, Kwame Nkrumah, and I. T. A. Wallace Johnson, and helped radicalize emerging layers of African labor.

The crisis elevated Padmore’s international stature, enabling him to mentor the nationalists who would later lead newly independent states. Many worked closely with Padmore at the 1945 Pan African Congress in Manchester. After Ghana’s independence, Padmore joined Nkrumah as an adviser and helped shape the political direction of the new regime.

Central to Padmore’s program was the insistence that national liberation would come through an aspiring African elite. In his wartime essay “The White Man’s Duty,” Padmore explained, “These educated or ‘Europeanized’ Africans constitute the intelligentsia of the West African colonies. They represent the vanguard of the national and progressive movements which today are voicing increasingly the political and economic aspirations of the African people. This is a natural development.”

Padmore argued explicitly that the task was to contain Marxism through nationalism. “The only force capable of containing Communism in Asia and Africa,” he wrote, “is dynamic nationalism based upon a socialist program of industrialization.” 

On this basis, he appealed to the imperialist powers to grant independence. This outlook became the ideological foundation for the nationalist regimes that would ultimately suppress strikes, block socialist opposition and ensure Africa remained subordinated to imperialism.

*****

In opposition, Trotsky and his co-thinkers founded the Fourth International in 1938 to uphold and advance the revolutionary strategy of world socialist revolution. The founding manifesto declared: “The Fourth International supports unconditionally the struggle of the colonial and semi colonial peoples for national independence. But it warns that genuine liberation is possible only through the conquest of power by the working class, which alone can break the chains of imperialism and unite the oppressed masses across national boundaries.” 

*****

The rise of Julius Nyerere’s Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) is often presented as an inevitable outcome of Tanganyika’s march to independence. Nationalist, Pan-Africanist, and Stalinist historians claim that the working class was too small and too immature in Tanganyika to lead the struggle for socialism. Tanganyika, it is also claimed, was too underdeveloped to build socialism. From this, they conclude that the working class and peasantry could only play a subordinate role to the petty-bourgeois nationalist intelligentsia. TANU, they insist, was the “natural” and unchallengeable leader of the liberation movement. 

This framework inverts the real historical process. It ignores the lessons of Marxism and the October Revolution that only the working class can lead the peasantry and unify the oppressed masses in a revolutionary struggle. It erases the post-war emergence of a modern, militant African working class whose power spanned beyond colonial borders. Above all, it obscures the decisive question of leadership: Stalinism, still falsely equated with socialism, destroyed the Trotskyist leadership capable of forging this class into an independent revolutionary force, even as the Fourth International fought under exceptionally difficult conditions to preserve that perspective.

*****

Between 1951 and 1955, Tanganyika saw an average of 60 strikes per year involving around 8,000 workers. After 1956, the movement accelerated dramatically. Between 1956 and 1960 the number rose to 146 strikes annually, involving nearly 60,000 workers, with more than 480,000 man hours lost each year. By 1960, on the eve of independence, there were 203 separate labor disputes involving over 89,000 workers.

From one registered union with 381 members in 1951, the movement expanded to 35 unions with 203,000 members by 1961, around 42 percent of Tanganyika’s workforce, one of the largest unionization rates on the continent. The formation of the Tanganyika Federation of Labour (TFL) in 1955 with 17 affiliated trade unions linked together dock, rail, plantation, municipal, and clerical unions. By 1958, sisal workers had established a National Plantation Workers Union with 30,000 members

*****

These struggles were driving toward working-class unity across East Africa, reflecting a continent-wide upsurge against colonial rule. Yet this international tendency toward unity was broken by nationalist parties, whose Stalinist and Padmore-inspired Pan-Africanist outlooks reinforced colonial divisions and splintered workers along territorial lines. 

*****

The claim that Nyerere “inherited an underdeveloped country”, used to justify his later policies, serves to obscure the real history. Tanganyika emerged from colonial rule with an illiterate population that had faced decades of mistreatment and racism, an economy serving extraction, scarcity of resources and trained manpower. But the decisive fact was that the working class across East Africa was rising, linking struggles across borders and industries, and intersecting with mass discontent among the peasantry. What prevented this force from leading a socialist struggle was not “immaturity,” but the political straitjacket of nationalism and the absence of a revolutionary, internationalist leadership.

As Trotsky had warned, the democratic, economic and social aspirations of workers and peasants could not be resolved through the creation of Tanzanian capitalist state along the borders of colonialism and within the imperialist framework.

16. Turkey: The Böcek family's death by poisoning in Istanbul: A preventable tragedy

The tragic deaths of four members of the Böcek family, including two children, in Istanbul while on holiday from Germany and staying at a hotel in the Fatih district has revealed the deadly consequences of Turkey’s unregulated and profit-driven tourism business and the state’s systematic neglect of its duty to protect public health.

On the morning of November 12 , the Böcek family went to the hospital by taxi suffering from nausea. After undergoing examination and treatment, the family returned to their hotel. However, when they fell ill again repeatedly during the night, an ambulance was called to the hotel to take them back to hospital. Shortly after, the children, Kadir Muhammet (6) and Masal (3), died. Their mother, Çiğdem Böcek, died in intensive care on 14 November, their father, Servet Böcek, died on 17 November after several days of treatment.

Initially, it was assumed that the deaths were caused by food poisoning. However, as the investigation progressed it emerged that the deaths were caused by a disinfestation carried out in the hotel to eradicate bedbugs. According to the state-owned Anadolu Agency, the Forensic Medicine Report stated that “phosphine gas” had been detected in towels, face masks and swab samples taken from various locations in the family’s hotel room. It is believed that the phosphine gas seeped in through the bathroom ventilation system. Two other tourists staying at the same hotel were hospitalized with similar symptoms. 

A hotel employee, the owner of the pest control company and his son, and an employee of the pest control company, were arrested. The hotel owner was placed under house arrest, while the receptionist was prohibited from leaving the country. The hotel was temporarily evacuated. However, these measures treat the problem as solely the result of individual mistakes and open the door to new disasters. 

*****

The reduction of public health and safety measures, the abandonment of basic oversight and the widespread use of cheap and unregulated chemicals are leading to preventable deaths. Institutions with oversight authority have been rendered ineffective for years due to budget cuts. Unlicensed pest control companies, meanwhile, are gaining a larger share of the “free market” through social media advertising.

Dr. Afşin İpekci, an Emergency Medicine Specialist from Istanbul University, stated that low-cost chemicals and their easy availability have led to widespread uninformed use, adding that the fundamental problem stems not from a lack of knowledge but from the system encouraging uncontrolled use. According to İpekci, the fact that individuals who are not competent in the risks, effects, and conditions of use of these chemicals have access to them is itself a security issue.

“Being cheap and effective does not mean it is harmless,” says İpekci, emphasizing that the opportunity for early intervention was lost because the necessary information was not shared. These assessments confirm that the disaster that befell the Böcek family was the result of a profit system that disregards human life and health.

17.

Free Bogdan Syrotiuk! 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.