ISRAEL’S WARS OF ETHNIC CLEANSING THREATEN THE GLOBAL CATASTROPHE OF WORLD WAR III!

ONLY THE INTERNATIONAL ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT FOR PALESTINE CAN PREVENT WORLD WAR III!

End All Military Aid to Israel!

No Support for War with Iran! No More Attacks on Iran!

Block All Military Aid to Israeli Genocide By Any Means Necessary!

No Electoral Support for Any Pro-Israeli Genocide Politicians or Parties! No Vote for Ethnic Cleansing! No Vote for Genocide!

Victory to the Palestinian Struggle Against Israel and Imperialism By Any Means Necessary!

Victory to the Lebanese Resistance to All Israeli Attacks By Any Means Necessary!

Expose the Full Dangers of Netanyahu’s War Drive: No to Total War in the Middle East!

No to Out-of-Control Slide into the Catastrophe of World War III!

THE MOVEMENT WILL STOP THIS WAR DRIVE BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY!

BAMN: Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration & Immigrant Rights, and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary

ITC: International Trotskyist Committee for the Political Regeneration of theFourth International (ITC)

MOVEMENT FOR JUSTICE BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY

05/10/2024

Victory to the Palestinian Struggle

THE BENGALI YOUTH OF TOWER HAMLETS SCORE THE FIRST VICTORY FOR OUR MOVEMENT AGAINST THE STARMER GOVERNMENT & THEIR PARTNERS – THE METROPOLITAN POLICE!

Bethnal Green Police Station Friday 12th July ’24
ZERO TOLERANCE for Racist police harassment & brutality
Jail the Racist Police Thugs – the only Justice for Tower Hamlets’ Community & Youth
Extend the victory we won on Friday night – When the Police Attack, Don’t Walk on By! Stand up for Our Rights
Defend, Expand & Unite the Mass Movements for a Free Palestine, Immigrant & Refugee Rights & Workers’ Rights
No to Imperialist Wars! No to Genocide!

Our victory came at 4.30AM on Saturday, 13th July. Hundreds of Bangladeshi youth, members of Tower Hamlets’ Muslim community and campaigners against the war & genocide in Palestine had stayed there all night, blockading Bethnal Green police station. Our community was under attack. The movement was under attack. We knew that the brutal, public police attack on Waseem Yusaf, in the heart of Whitechapel, had been an attack on all of us – and at 4.30am we won our immediate goal. Waseem was released without any charge.

Waseem is a public supporter of the pro-Palestinian movement, which is backed by tens of thousands of people in Tower Hamlets and millions of people nationally. On the previous afternoon he had been driving on the main road through Whitechapel with a Palestinian flag in the car and wearing a pro-Palestine shirt. He was stopped by the Metropolitan Police, dragged from the car, viciously beaten up by the police, and arrested.

Many community members did the right thing, deciding ‘don’t walk on by’ when the police attack our community. They stopped and tried to get closer, but were held by other police officers held them. One community member was able to record the attack and post it on social media, and from there it was widely circulated. Their action played a vital part in the victory. There is no need to call for suspension or an “independent investigation.” That video confirms their guilt. They must be jailed for their crime.

A political attack by the police

The police attack on Waseem was a political attack – a deliberate show of force in the heart of one of the biggest Muslim communities in London. It was just a week after the Labour Party’s election victory, a clear sign that very little had changed. In the same period, politically motivated attacks and shut-downs have continued against pro-Palestine action by university students – including at Queen Mary’s University in Tower Hamlets. Some student protesters have been suspended or expelled, and some Muslim students from other countries are threatened with deportation.

The victory in Tower Hamlet must be defended by the same collective action that won it. That method must be spread to all parts of the country and all sections of the growing mass struggles – the mass movement against the genocide in Gaza and the West Bank, the immigrant & refugee rights struggle, the workers’ strikes and the student campaigns.

The Labour Party fears the Mass Movement.

The Labour Party is in government with a large majority of MPs, but this comes after one of its worst elections ever. They are already unpopular, and their crisis could come sooner than it took the Tories.

Under Keir Starmer’s leadership, the Labour Party did not oppose the Tories’ racist, anti-migrant and anti-Muslim policies, and it supported Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza. Labour claims that it will make the racist policies more efficient & effective. That is clear from the comments that Starmer and other ministers have made about deporting more Bangladeshi people and the racist, anti-immigrant slant of their campaign.

Labour is desperate to shut down our mass movement because it fears our power and it fears what we have achieved – the hundreds of youth who were at Bethnal Green police station to win Waseem’s freedom, the thousands of people who have mobilised to stop deportations, a mass strike movement that had huge public support, and the world’s biggest and most frequent demonstrations for a Free Palestine, outside of Palestine itself. As a result, the majority of the British population support or sympathise with the Palestinian people.

We must Fight to Win

The youth who were the real strength at the blockade of Bethnal Green police station and the women (mostly young) who have been the most dynamic force on the demonstrations for a Free Palestinian are the vital forces in this struggle. You will get ‘experienced’ advisors telling you about ‘correct’ procedures, legal processes, approaches to the Labour Party etc. Treat them with scepticism; and whether the advice is useful or not, always remember how the fight to release Waseem was won.

Always remember that our real power is on the streets and in our communities, and that action speaks louder than words.

Our power is when we are on the streets

OUR POWER IS ON THE STREETS: EAST LONDON march 4 Palestine 20th July 2024

We are very happy to learn that East London PSC branches will be marching next week, on the 20th July as part of the national day of action. This has been one of the strongest areas in supporting the Palestinian struggle and the national movement, so a march here will have national significance.

The Movement for Justice has been talking with various groups and activists about the need to step up our action now. We can expect Keir Starmer, Wes Streeting and their backers to increase attempts to shut down the pro-Palestine movement. as they know how strong & determined we are.

We are proposing that the march is from Whitechapel to Stratford (or vice versa) that will go past Queen Mary’s University, since it is so important that we defend the students who are coming under such serious attacks.

Details of the assembly & route should be announced shortly.

Alex
National Organiser,
Movement for Justice By Any Means Necessary.

We Must Build a New Party of the Working Class & Oppressed that is Based on Mass Struggle

No Vote for parties that support imperialist wars

No Vote for parties that are complicit in Israeli genocide

No Vote for parties that deport immigrants and refugees

No Vote for parties that are tied to capitalist profiteers

Victory to the Palestinian Struggle – End All UK Support for Israel

Recognise an Independent Palestinian State on Gaza & the West Bank

Stop & Reverse the Privatisation of Public Services

Strike to Win – Build Rank & File Action Committees to Stop the Sell-Outs

Defend LGBT+ Rights & the Right to Determine one’s own Gender Identity

Fight for Equality for Women, Including Abortion Rights

Build Mass Action to Shut Down Detention Centres & Stop Deportations

Amnesty for All Refugees and Undocumented Immigrants

End Prevent and all forms of Islamophobia

Fight anti-Semitism and all forms of bigotry

Open the Borders – Reverse Brexit

The most important aspect of this week’s General Election is that it signifies the end of the Labour Party as a possible arena of struggle for the working class & oppressed against imperialist wars, exploitation, racism and the rise of fascism. At a time of crisis for the poor and oppressed of the world, Keir Starmer has established a totalitarian regime in the Labour Party that is complicit with Israeli genocide, expels Jewish critics of Israel for ‘anti-semitism,’ and promises to be much tougher on refugees & immigrants than the divided and incompetent Tories.

The mass movement in support of Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party was the final attempt to reverse Tony Blair’s ‘neo-liberal’ policies and turn the party into a mass movement of the Left. The ruling class is relying on Starmer to ensure that nothing like that ever happens again, and he – a former high official of the British state as Director of the Crown Prosecution Service – is ready to do obey.

Starmer and his allies have opposed the strike movement, banned Labour MPs from joining workers’ picket lines, banned constituency Labour Parties from accepting or discussing motions relating to Palestine and opposed the mass movement in support of the Palestinian struggle. The Labour Party bureaucrats operate a round-the-clock ‘Big Brother’ surveillance of the social media of their MPs, candidates and many party officers and members, at least on those who are not 100% ‘on-line.’  On that basis Starmer and his future Chancellor of the Exchequer, former Bank of England economist Rachel Reeves, have established an alliance with a large section of the British capitalists and former Tory donors who have publicly supported and funded his election campaign. He has now been endorsed by the Sunday Times, a right-wing Murdoch paper.

The most urgent task now is to build a new party of a different kind, one based on mass struggle against racism, capitalist exploitation and imperialist wars.

The potential for the new party already exists

This election has been preceded by a nearly three years of radical mass action in Britain: the biggest wave of strikes for 40 years that is still developing; the frequent mass actions to prevent the arrest and deportation of refugees and immigrants; the huge anti-war demonstrations in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle. These movements are represented in this election by a record number of ‘independent’ candidates and new groupings standing in opposition to both main parties, such as (in London) Leanne Mohamad in Ilford North and Noor Jahan Begum in Ilford South.

Among them are a number of left-wingers expelled from the Labour Party, including Jeremy Corbyn in Islington North and Claudia Webbe in Leicester East, and Faiza Shaheen, who is standing as an independent in Chingford & Woodford Green after being dropped at the last minute as Labour candidate because of her continuing support for the Palestinian struggle.

The Revolutionary Internationalist League (RIL) and the Movement for Justice (MFJ) are calling for a vote for those expelled Labour MPs and candidates, for Labour candidates who have shown public support for Palestine or opposition to Starmer’s anti-immigrant rhetoric during the election campaign, notably Bell Ribeiro-Addy in Clapham & Brixton Hill, Diane Abbott in Hackney North & Stoke Newington, and Apsana Begum in Poplar & Limehouse – and for independent candidates who support the Palestinian struggle and oppose the Labour leadership’s support for Israel, especially for those have supported the strike movement.

We support a vote for the Green Party because of its opposition to Labour’s support for Israel, its support for immigrant & refugee rights and Palestinian rights, and its demand for the repeal of Tory legislation that has drastically restricted the right to protest and freedom of speech, and its call for ending the anti-Muslim Prevent scheme.

We support these candidates and groups, not because they agree with all our policies or we agree with all theirs, but because we recognise them as part of the mass movements that have grown in direct opposition to a Labour Party that is dead for any progressive struggles, in Britain or internationally. We are calling on them to come together to build the new, democratic party of struggle.

We are not advocating some new alliance of established Left groups (though not excluding them either) we are arguing for a party that is based on action, that fights to win, unites the various arenas of mass action in a common struggle, and that does not bow before the archaic stupidities of the parliamentary system or the treachery of full-time trade union bureaucrats.

For those reasons we are opposed to any support for George Galloway’s Workers Party of Britain. We are calling on its candidates to disassociate themselves from Galloway and his allies and stand as independents. Galloway is an unsavoury opportunist and a political exhibitionist, who makes totally different ‘pitches’ to different audiences, and whose election manifesto bristles with reactionary positions on women and the family, on gender issues & green politics – and on immigrants and refugees. In a recent interview he was demanding that the Royal Navy should be used to push back cross-Channel refugees. That was the position of Priti Patel and Suella Braverman. The Navy refused their demands.

Getting from ‘Potential’ to the New Party We Must Build

The most important problem facing the candidates listed above is that, however sincere they are and however closely they feel responsible to their immediate communities, they are not accountable to the movements we have built, that are the bases for their electoral success if they win, or for their future role in those movements.

This deficit means that their victories may give them the votes in Parliament needed to get some concessions from a Labour Party government, but we cannot expect them to fight to win. They will rely on Parliamentary manoeuvres that will not succeed in rebuilding the NHS, protect refugees and immigrant communities from racism and discrimination, or end fees for university & college student and reinstate grants for education at every level so that working class and poor youth can stay in school and succeed.

We can take Jeremy Corbyn as an example. He is well known for his pro-working class politics, but he has not called on rank-and-file trade union activists to dump their current union leaderships. It is just ‘not done;’ neither Corbyn or any other MPs see that as part of their political role. Yet it is obvious that the current trade union bureaucrats squandered the strength of the strike movement and sold out their members. To win the forthcoming rounds of strikes and/or negotiations, the existing sell-out leaders who are tied to the Labour Party must be replaced by independent committees of elected rank-and-file militants, directly accountable to their members. Neither Corbyn nor any of the other candidates we are supporting have raised this perspective or called for unified, all-out strikes of the unions to win.

The strike movement has been inspiring and historic, but if it does not win real improvements in wages and working conditions this year, protected by cost-of-living allowances and minimum staffing levels, both of which are needed to prevent inflation and more job losses, we will not only suffer defeats in trade-union terms, we will face a backlash from the small business people, middle- class professionals, and some of our community supporters. Nigel Farage and the fascists will swoop in and promote the lie that only an authoritarian fascist leader can solve the economic decline Britain is experiencing. A new round of anti-immigrant, racist, and bigoted attacks will occur in the streets and in the airwaves. Former Brexit supporters who may be testing out the viability of progressive political solutions, will turn back to the more familiar politics of bigotry, cynicism and hopelessness they held onto for so long.

Only a movement can win those gains. Politicians divorced from popular collective struggles can only posture while they fail to achieve anything more than the individual social work they do in constituency surgeries. That is why we must continue to build our movements, raise the level of our struggle, and consolidate new leaders. If we don’t move forward, we regress. We have to provide the spine for even the best and most sincere politicians we send to Parliament.

Reverse Brexit and Open the Borders

The outgoing Tory party and its leadership were the principal promoters and executors of Brexit – a policy of whipping up racism, xenophobia and immigrant-bashing in order to establish an authoritarian government that would attack workers’ rights & human rights. They secured an election pledge from former prime minister David Cameron to hold a referendum on leaving the European Union and went on to dominate the ‘Leave’ campaign, scoring a narrow victory in the 2016 referendum. That campaign and the aftermath of its victory were a prolonged ‘carnival of reaction’ – a huge rise in racist and fascist attacks (and some murders) along with homophobia and Islamophobia. Even primary school children and their parents were not exempt from their threats.

Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, Liz Truss, Jacob Rees-Mogg, Rishi Sunak and their political cousin Nigel Farage  rank high among the people responsible for those crimes.

Before & after the referendum, the RIL & MFJ argued that Brexit was a racist, anti-immigrant project. Britain’s black, Asian, and Muslim communities knew that perfectly well and mostly voted against it. Every survey at the time and every study since then has demonstrated that anti-immigrant prejudice was by far the principal motivation behind voting for Brexit.

Brexit was a major factor in undermining Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party. While his economic and social policies won tremendous support, and while we oppose his frame-up expulsion by Starmer and support his stand in the current election, we have to be clear that his refusal (along with nearly every Labour MP) to call out Brexit as a racist project was a fatal error. It meant that Labour endorsed Brexit as a ‘democratic’ decision.

It was not as though he had not heard the argument. His close ally on the Left, Diane Abbott, spent nearly 6 months campaigning on the racist character of Brexit and arguing for keeping free movement (which was perfectly possible) before she  was silenced.

The consequence was that the Corbyn leadership ended up making decisions that lost him the support of several Labour Left MPs and alienated a large proportion of his young supporters.    

However, as MFJ argued at the time, that was not the only damaging consequence of Labour’s failure to call out Brexit as a racist project. It left the hard Brexit faction around Boris Johnson unchallenged in its campaign to undermine the Tory prime minister Theresa May. As a result she resigned and Johnson became the Tory leader and prime minister in July 2019 and went on win a large majority in the December.

Once in power they implemented the most extreme version of Brexit, and introduced legislation that massively increased the powers of the state, giving state bodies (police, army, intelligence services etc) the power to authorise or commit crimes in the service of the government. They undermined effective voting rights, especially for the poor and the young, and gave the government rather than independent bodies control over the conduct of elections. A torrent of new laws created ever tighter restrictions on the right to protest and freedom of speech. They tore up the rights of refugees, immigrants and workers.

And they accomplished all that with minimal opposition from the Labour leadership, now in the hands of Keir Starmer.

Brexit is now the non-issue of the election. A majority of people in Britain see Brexit as a disaster that has made them poorer and their lives more difficult, and they would like to reverse the decision. The Tories don’t want to talk about Brexit because it is an embarrassment; Starmer’s Labour Party does not want to talk about it because it would complicate their appeal to anti-immigrant racism.

This issue won’t go away. The RIL and MFJ call for the reversal of Brexit, not because we love the European Union, but because it is essential to defend the basic human right of free movement and the right of workers to go where they need to in order to find employment – the most important right for the class that has to sell its labour power in order to live.

We demand Opening the Borders because that is what millions of people are forced to do by the material, social, political, military and environmental problems they face – problems that the ruling elites of the imperialist countries are responsible for. We are already seeing the alternative to Open Borders; it is a world of despotism and barbarism. We will not tell refugees and migrants to stay where they are until the rich and powerful imperialists learn a modicum of humanity – or agree to establish ‘safe routes.’  

Fascism and resistance

The outgoing Tory government was a regime clearly moving towards fascism, with many ministers having direct links with fascism and with far-right, pro-Trump ‘think-tanks’ in Britain and the USA. The repeated exposure of corruption certainly made that course more difficult, but the principal cause of the divisions and weakness in the Brexit/Tory ranks has been the growth of mass resistance – from the widespread Covid ‘lockdown’ by hundreds of thousands of individuals and families in March 2020 that temporarily forced an unwilling government to fall into line, to the 2-year long strike wave in the public services that had mass public support and created the political climate for the mass anti-war movement in support of the Palestinian struggle. Those developments were ignored, or more often opposed by the Labour leadership.

The threat of fascism has not gone away. The rise of fascism is an international development because everywhere there are ruling classes, or sections of the ruling elites, which are turning to fascism to crush opposition, increase exploitation, and prepare for war with rival states. Fascists are in the governments in the Netherlands and Austria, they are the government in Israel and Italy, Marine Le Pen’s ‘Far Right’ party has come top in the French elections and Trump may be elected President in November. And everywhere the ‘moderate,’ ‘centrist’ or social democratic parties are normalising these developments because they are many times more afraid of the power of the poor and oppressed than they are of the fascists.

Fascist activity and racist & homophobic attacks have already grown already under the Tories, though much less than in other European countries. A Labour government that is tied to a crisis-ridden capitalist class, a Labour government that refuses to meet the real needs of the poor, the workers, the sick and homeless, and the struggling lower middle class could provide ideal conditions for the rapid growth of a fascist movement.

Fighting fascism is not a battle of ideas, it is a matter of self-defence, of defending our mass movement, our unions, and our integrated communities. That will only be effective with political leadership – again, that will only be possible if we build a new party based on the struggles of the mass movements and working class.

The next phase of our struggle, under a Starmer-led Labour government will be more demanding, but we have a sound base to build on. Despite 14 years of Tory dominance, there is less racism now than there was during the last Labour government. Thanks to the continued struggles of the anti-racist, labour, immigrant rights, and anti-war movements, Britain is less divided by race, nationalism and gender identity. Support for Brexit has plummeted. The strike movement to stop the free fall of the British economy and our living standards, and to save the NHS and public services, is readying for a new offensive this autumn. The majority of people in Britain oppose the Israeli government’s genocidal war to end any possibility of a Palestinian state. Britain has had the most consistent and largest anti-war, pro-Palestinian demonstrations and mass actions of any nation outside of the Palestinian struggle in Gaza and the West Bank.

Build & Unite the Mass Movements – Build a New Party of the Workers & Oppressed

03.07.2024

Defend Free Speech on Palestine!

Speak out and pack the public gallery of Tower Hamlets Council meeting and demand they act on our petition against the racist, Islamophobic Prevent policy!

(London 13.01.2024, National march for Palestine)
(London 13.01.2024, National march for Palestine)

STOP THE USE OF PREVENT TO HARASS STUDENTS, WORKERS AND THE COMMUNITY

DEFEND FREE SPEECH AND DEMOCRACY – FREE SPEECH ON PALESTINE: We have a right to speak out & support the Palestinians’ fight against ethnic-cleansing & genocide

STOP THE ATTACKS ON THE MUSLIM COMMUNITY AND ALL SUPPORTERS OF THE PALESTINIAN STRUGGLE

Over the last few months hundreds of Tower Hamlets community members have signed the petition opposing the racist, Islamophobic Prevent programme and demanding the Council takes action.

After mobilising our community in Tower Hamlets, petitioning outside colleges, mosques, and markets for months, with hundreds of community members, especially Muslim community members, signing our petitions, Tower Hamlets Council has placed it on their agenda for this month’s meeting. They have agreed for us to formally present our petition and address the Council on Wednesday. We need everyone to join Movement for Justice (MFJ) at the meeting, fill the public gallery, speak out, and make sure that the Council votes for and takes action on the urgent demands of this petition (see text below).

This petition speaks for the whole of our community and beyond.

        (Peckham, London 02.05.2024 Successful mass action stopping a forced removal of refugees to the Bibby Stockholm barge)       

Last week there were mass actions to support our cross-Channel refugee sisters and brothers fighting against the Tory government’s attempts to displace, detain, and deport them to Rwanda – a policy of death. There is a direct parallel between the support of the Tories and the Labour Party leadership for the Israeli government’s displacement and incarceration of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, and the UK government’s attacks on cross-Channel refugees. In a sense the cross-Channel refugees are Britain’s persecuted ‘Palestinians’.

Uniting the movements that are fighting to defeat Tory support for the Israeli government’s genocidal war on the Palestinians, and our own government’s plans to deport cross-Channel refugees to Rwanda would be a victory for both the Palestinian struggle and the struggle of all refugees.

We need to make sure that Tower Hamlets Council sets a national example of how a local authority can defend the right of its community to fight and speak the plain truth about racism, about anti-Muslim bigotry in the UK, and about the struggle of Palestinians in Gaza and the Occupied West Bank.

Attend the lobby and Council meeting on Wednesday, speak out and make sure our demands are acted on by Tower Hamlets Council.

Below is the text of the petition being discussed and voted on.

Defend Free Speech and Democracy

We the undersigned are petitioning Tower Hamlets’ mayor and council because we have real concerns about the government led Prevent programme as it directly affects the Muslim community in this borough. The experience of Muslims who live, work and study in Tower Hamlets, especially the experience of Muslim young people and their families, demonstrate clearly that Prevent is a racist, Islamophobic policy and a restriction on our right to free speech.

That situation has become more acute because the UK government is giving political and material support to the Israeli government in the conflict that is inflicting death and suffering on the Palestinian population of the Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank.

The people of Tower Hamlets are showing great resilience at this difficult time. Many have demonstrated their support and sympathy for the Palestinian people, but we are still fearful of the consequences. Many of the borough’s Muslim parents are worried that a child’s innocent comment could lead to them being hauled before Prevent. In some situations Muslim community members and parents have come together to resist the threat of Prevent, as happened recently in our neighbouring borough, Waltham Forest, but in most cases we feel too isolated to do that.

At the same time, we know that many of Tower Hamlets educators, social workers etc feel unhappy and compromised by Prevent, regardless of their religion or ethnic identity.

Therefore, we call on Tower Hamlets’ Mayor Lutfur Rahman and Tower Hamlets’ Council to:

Call a meeting and a series of local meetings in Tower Hamlets for members of the community to speak about our experience with Prevent, and publish the findings of such meetings.

06 May 2024