Today's Topics:
1. Greece, ANTI-REPUBLIC DAY ON ANNIVERSARY OF
ASSASSINATION OF ALEXANDER GRIGOROPOULOS
[machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
2. Britain, SOLIDARITY FEDERATION: Sorry, the program of the
Labour Party is just not that radical! (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
3. [Chile] Santiago: 42nd Day of Social Uprising - LIVE THE
IRREDUCIBLE ENEMIES OF POWER! By ANA (pt)
[machine translation]
(a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
4. France, Union Communiste Libertaire AL #299 - Roman: Do not
you hear everywhere the echo of Francis Rissin? (fr, it,
pt)[machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
5. anarchist communist group ACG: The revolt in Iran... and
Iraq and Lebanon (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
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Message: 1
The # 1 risk to the state and capital -- (a confession & a commitment) ---- Well, yes, we admit it. We are the # 1 risk to the state and
capital. Although our good manners and - most of all - our modesty would not allow us to accept it so generously under other circumstances,
at this stage, after all this agonizing effort on the part of the government, we cannot hide behind it. our finger. We're not going to get
them crazy people ... ---- Well, yes, we are. The greatest threat to the Greek state, whose (like every other) historical role is to
safeguard the interests of capital, that is, the interests of those who earn by exploiting the labor of those who have no other way of
survival than to sell - often in derogatory terms - their workforce. And, to prevent any misunderstanding, to clarify that we do not
naturally mean "we" as a collective, nor "we" as anarchist federation, nor even "we", in general, as anarchist / antisocial. No. Some
hundreds or thousands of people, however determined and daring they are, are very unlikely to be able to pose such a serious threat on their
own. The real danger for detainees is of course elsewhere.
When the suggestion you make is that of the militant and ruthless self-organization of the exploited and the oppressed in an anti-capitalist
and anti-state direction, then you are obviously a potential threat to the state and the bosses. But when your suggestion gets fleshed out,
socialized and massively appropriated, not because you just say good-bye to the world, but because this way of struggle turns out to work in
the end, when applied in practice, then this potential and theoretical threat is starting to become material and real for the regime. In the
face of this threat, the real threat, we have played a few hundred and thousands, one - in our humble opinion - not so negligible in recent
years.
Well, yes, we admit it. We don't let anything fall down. The anarchist / antiauthoritarian space may have been primarily focused on militant
anti-repressive and anti-fascist movements (extremely crucial spikes undoubtedly, as it has been proven over time), but in the last decade
the fan has been open to others. participating in or creating every possible and unlikely race process. From uneducated and militant trade
unionism to schemes and initiatives in schools and universities and from grassroots and work groups to workplaces, from horizontal
self-organization to neighborhood assemblies, from self-managed (livelihood or non-business) activities of nature, from occupying abandoned
buildings and repairing them to accommodate race procedures, self-training processes, libraries, events, concerts, community kitchens and
much more, while at the same time providing a solution to the housing problem faced by locals and immigrants, the promotion of transnational
solidarity, anti-war mobilizations and anti-militant actions, through solidarity and refugee / migrant movements, solidarity and defense
movements political prisoners or prisoners seeking and fighting, movements against racism, nationalism, sexism and patriarchy, movements
against the mafia, against fascist mobilizations or attacks, against employers' arbitrariness, against the abolition of the Sunday holiday
and the auctions of the first house, against privatization, against bills and decisions that further underestimate our living conditions,
against repression, police violence and state killings. We could continue filling the entire page. And behind each separate "theme" there
are texts, marches, conflicts, actions, posters, brochures, events etc, and often there are similar costs, namely arrests, courts,
penalties, cop injuries, boss redundancies, etc. We could continue filling the entire page. And behind each separate "theme" there are
texts, marches, conflicts, actions, posters, brochures, events etc, and often there are similar costs, namely arrests, courts, penalties,
cop injuries, boss redundancies, etc. We could continue filling the entire page. And behind each separate "theme" there are texts, marches,
conflicts, actions, posters, brochures, events etc, and often there are similar costs, namely arrests, courts, penalties, cop injuries, boss
redundancies, etc.
Until the tumultuous years of SYRIZA's rule, in which the social frustration and resignation that followed the abolition of "hope" led to
unprecedented ebb and flow of class / social struggles, we were among those - albeit unbelievably - partisanship. they did not miss an
opportunity to recall their uncompromising attitude and to cultivate, with whatever forces they might, the most favorable conditions for the
reshaping of the racing procedures. The adoption of the memorandum and the insurance bill by SYRIZA naturally found us on the streets,
finding us in strikes, marches and clashes. The continuation of the same inhumane anti-immigration policy has found us once again raising
embankments in defense of refugees / immigrants. And so on. That is, we were - to the best of our abilities - where we needed to be. That's
why, after all, we kept counting hits. The squadron evacuations were not rare on SYRIZA, neither the arrests of protesters, nor the police
violence (remember that after the No Border Festival in Thessaloniki, three town squads were evacuated, with this orphanage building at the
Orphanagehouse demolished!). Only then did the government opt for a more "underground" management, without going out and shouting it proudly
at the television windows, like the current one. But the work was done well then, with the state demonstrating its continuity in repressing
struggling sections of society. The squadron evacuations were not rare on SYRIZA, neither the arrests of protesters, nor the police violence
(remember that after the No Border Festival in Thessaloniki, three town squads were evacuated, with this orphanage building at the
Orphanagehouse demolished!). Only then did the government opt for a more "underground" management, without going out and shouting it proudly
at the television windows, like the current one. But the work was done well then, with the state demonstrating its continuity in repressing
struggling sections of society. The squadron evacuations were not rare on SYRIZA, neither the arrests of protesters, nor the police violence
(remember that after the No Border Festival in Thessaloniki, three town squads were evacuated, with this orphanage building at the
Orphanagehouse demolished!). Only then did the government opt for a more "underground" management, without going out and shouting it proudly
at the television windows, like the current one. But the work was done well then, with the state demonstrating its continuity in repressing
struggling sections of society. with the building of this orphanage in Tuba where refugee families were to be demolished!). Only then did
the government opt for a more "underground" management, without going out and shouting it proudly at the television windows, like the
current one. But the work was done well then, with the state demonstrating its continuity in repressing struggling sections of society. with
the building of this orphanage in Tuba where refugee families were to be demolished!). Only then did the government opt for a more
"underground" management, without going out and shouting it proudly at the television windows, like the current one. But the work was done
well then, with the state demonstrating its continuity in repressing struggling sections of society.
It is not surprising that the ND government chooses to attack the anarchist / antisocial area now, but also more broadly in every living
struggle process, as the fact that class / social struggles are at a historically low level after the SYRIZA rule makes us obviously
vulnerable. . No particular acumen is required to notice that along with anti-Nazi occupations and "anarchist Exarchia" any other fighting
process or movement is hit. From the MAT attacks on students of the ASOEE who attempted to break the ban to hold a general assembly, to
demonstrators after the end of the Polytechnic's massive march, to students demonstrating in Kavouri, where their planned meeting was being
held, until the abolition of university asylum, the passage of anti-union law that makes strike declarations virtually impossible, and the
intention to abolish or restrict marches in the center of cities, the message the government sends to the world of struggle is clear:
"Whoever lifts his head, we will break him". It is not, of course, a vendetta with the anarchists, no matter how eagerly they try to present
it simply as a concealment of their true aims, but a vendetta with everything in a society that has the potential and the potential for
overcoming or even breaking it. existing balance of forces. With everything that opposes the existing oppression and exploitation treaty and
is not afraid to go out and fight against it. the passage of anti-union law that makes strike declarations virtually impossible and the
intention to abolish or restrict marches in the center of cities, the message the government sends to the world of struggle is clear:
"whoever raises his head will we break it ". It is not, of course, a vendetta with the anarchists, no matter how eagerly they try to present
it simply as a concealment of their true aims, but a vendetta with everything in a society that has the potential and the potential for
overcoming or even breaking it. existing balance of forces. With everything that opposes the existing oppression and exploitation treaty and
is not afraid to go out and fight against it. the passage of anti-union law that makes strike declarations virtually impossible and the
intention to abolish or restrict marches in the center of cities, the message the government sends to the world of struggle is clear:
"whoever raises his head will we break it ". It is not, of course, a vendetta with the anarchists, no matter how eagerly they try to present
it simply as a concealment of their true aims, but a vendetta with everything in a society that has the potential and the potential for
overcoming or even breaking it. existing balance of forces. With everything that opposes the existing oppression and exploitation treaty and
is not afraid to go out and fight against it.
Unless there is anyone who seriously thinks that all this donation is really done for some broken sidewalks or glazed places and for
demonstrators' clashes with repressive forces on the anniversary marches ... No, in our opinion it is not. What they are afraid of is that
these conflicts, from limited and decadent, become massive and unpredictable, as was the case, for example. student mobilization against the
abolition of Article 16 in '06 -'07 or the unprecedented extent; the duration and intensity of the uprising that followed the assassination
of 15-year-old Alexandros Grigoropoulos by the Cork Corps in December '08, or the massive and clashing strikes and anti-government
demonstrations that pitted the anti-Mafia or '12 of Paul Fyssa's assassination by the neo-Nazis at Golden Dawn in '13. All the events that
cost and terrified them, most of which - let's not forget - were ruled by the ND! That is to say, they fear that class and social struggles
will become massive and radicalized, owning a range of practices that are not disciplined or compatible with the laws and frameworks imposed
by the bosses through their cops and judges (as it seemed for a while before the bottom-line signed their conviction, leaving their hopes on
Syriza's adventurers. In short, they try to extinguish the flame before it can again believe enough that there can be a fire. Because causes
and causes are already abundant and the next time they will grow rapidly, that's for sure.
A few days ago, this gang - held by vigilante ministers like Voridis, a former tsunami leader of dictator Papadopoulos' youth and a current
champion in colotuba (see "I have never been public" his admiration for the Colonel's junta and has stated that there were no dead in the
riot at the Polytechnic (he is wildly remembered, in the Novartis scandal), but also sadly downplayed visions. such as Deputy Foreign
Minister Domna Michaelidou, who had stated that "the sanctification of the anti-dictatorial struggle has taken on a dimension of collective
mental illness", came out and said, through Kouli's mouth,
A few days later, the same gang that, at Karamanlis, approved a 28 billion-euro bank guarantee package for Samaras, voted for the 2nd
memorandum which was a real gimmick for workers, as it envisaged extreme austerity, wildly aggressive measures. in the public sector and
wage slashing, while Kouli has already - within a few months - already voted to amend the penal code to "defrost" (even retrospectively) the
bank accounts of suspected individuals a criminal fraud and money laundering activities (commonly known as money laundering, fraud, usury
and other such "excellent" occupations) while preparing to cut almost all social benefits, such that, as everyone knows gang, she dances at
the pace whistled at her by big bosses, while her boss' sow is tucked away in the Siemens scandal, so, by the mouth of Michalis Chrysochoid,
this ridiculous man who had never received a live television broadcast read the memorandum he had just voted, gave a 15-day deadline for
immigrants / refugees and anarchist / antisocial collectives housed in occupied areas to voluntarily leave them - a deadline that ends at
random automatically December 6, the anniversary of that murder of Alexandros Grigoropoulos.
It is a field of assessments to what extent the ruthlessness of the government in its attempt to impose on society the "Law and Order"
doctrine is the result of a vengeful revenge on the world of war and what is a planned television production with blood and fire, aimed at
rallying the conservative part of society in disgrace, which began to disagree with the management of the "refugee" while at the same time
distracting public attention from corruption issues Like the Novartis scandal or the unimaginable Noor1 scandal. To what extent is this a
personal project of the ambitious man who serves as Minister of Repression (who recently saw his chair shake and is now trying to play it a
soldier, and what is the policy set by the "serious Golden Dawn" band within the government? What is the point of the government's rampage
and from where does the rampage of cops continue on its own?
The sure thing is that they want to unravel the thorn in their sides now, who believe that it "gets" them, before they find themselves back
on the wall. And that seems to be trying to do it by provoking intense and jittery reactions on our part with their deliberately provocative
choices.
After all, there has long been a coordinated campaign of targeting and "criminalizing" both anarchists / anti-commissioners and immigrants /
refugees, orchestrated by the government and executed by the ever-eager media regimes, in which they do not as the greatest threat to Greek
society and the greatest obstacles to its prosperity. How many times have we not seen the latest news in ELAS (Hollywood-style) news, in
which armored hooded cops inflict refugee / migrant seizures to find families and playgrounds or playgrounds , like the one in the ASOEE, to
find helmets, fire extinguishers, flags with flags and empty bottles (heavy armor corresponding to the Syrian army under the imminent Domna
Michaelides). All of this is told by people with the above resumes and credentials, who voted for memos - some without even reading them -
praising the junta, chasing people with axes, who are mired in corruption and scandals, which they ran with the power to serve the big mafia
and the big shark, and now they are preparing new measures to further devalue our lives ...
If these are our enemies, if they chase us, if they see us as the biggest threat to their business, then we have done something
right for so long, then we should feel - and feel! - proud of our choices . So we promise them that we will continue to fight with all our
might, for the day when the hell on earth will send one and this good barbaric murderous system and its rotten staff to the dustbin of
history, building a society of equality, solidarity and freedom, without wars, exploitation and oppression. And that we admit is a commitment.
Why, as the poet says (with a little paraphrase):
"And what you didn't do to bury us / but you forgot we were seeds"
THIS STEP BACK
SUPPORT CAPITALS AS A PART OF CLASSICAL AND SOCIAL GAMES
AGAINST THE TERRORIST STATES AND THE CAPITAL
NEIGHBORHOOD SOLIDARITY NEIGHBORHOODS IN DESTROYED AREAS:
THURSDAY 3/12
at 18:00 in the Labor Center Park of Thessaloniki
THURSDAY 5/12,
at 18:00, at the Toumba Cultural Center
ANTI-REPUBLIC ON THE DAY OF THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE KILLING OF ALEXANDER GRIGOROPOULOS:
PREPARATION 6/12
at 18:00, in Kamara
Thessaloniki Freedom Initiative - member of the Anarchist Federation
lib_thess@hotmail.com
http://www.libertasalonica.wordpress.com
https://libertasalonica.wordpress.com/2019/12/03
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Message: 2
Given all the hype emanating from much of the left about the wonders of the Labour Manifesto, it is hard not to get carried away. After
watching the latest uplifting interview with Labor's John Mcdonnell you can suddenly find yourself unconsciously humming "oh Jeramy Corbyn"
as you set about washing the dishes. Given all this hype, it is perhaps then worth having a bit of a reality check and assessing what the
Labour Party is actually promising should they get elected. ---- Labour is promising to increase overall public spending from the current
level of 38% of national income to 43.3%. Though billed as almost revolutionary, this increase is fairly moderate when compared with much of
Europe, for example, in Sweden public spending amounts to 48.4% of national income, Italy 48.8% and France a wapping 55.7%.
Similarly, Labour's plans to put workers on boards and renationalise, water, rail, mail and energy networks will only bring the UK in line
with what already takes place across Europe and much of the world. Nor is Labors proposals for a 50% tax rate for those at the top of the
income scale that radical when compared with taxes on UK higher earners in the past. For example, the tax on top earners was 90% through the
1950s and 60s, rising to 98% in 1974.
The fact that Labour's tax and spend proposals are pretty modest is reflected in the parties plans on welfare spending. According to the
Institute for Fiscal Studies, Labour's programme would only see a quarter of the cuts imposed during the last 10 years reversed. Hardly the
break with austerity lorded by Labour. But more worryingly Labour's failure to reverse cuts could, in effect, "normalise" or "bake in"
austerity making the current low levels of welfare spending a permanent fixture in the UK.
Behind the hyperbowl then, much of the labour programme is pretty standard social democratic stuff. It may seem attractive when compared
with that obnoxious blob of an individual Boris Johnson but it would only steer the UK economy back to a more European style mixed economy
at best. As such Labour's aim is to save British capitalism rather than to end it. The neo-liberalist free market model has failed, as even
the likes of the IMF are now begrudgingly admitting and Labour is offering a slightly more viable alternative.
The answer however does not lie in trying to nudge the uk economy back to the centre ground of Europe, let's face it, European social
democracy is hardly thriving in the face of globalization. Rather we need to organise a radical grassroots movement that can challenge the
failing of capitalism directly. When it comes to saving the planet, rather than the tired, worn out ideas of social democracy, give me
Extinction Rebellion everytime.
http://www.solfed.org.uk/manchester/sorry-the-program-of-the-labour-party-is-just-not-that-radical
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Message: 3
"We are facing a powerful and ruthless enemy who respects nothing or no one. That doesn't respect the lives of humans, that doesn't respect
our heroes. " The sentence is repeated several times by the President of the Republic, this time in a previous action of the police. ----
FEAR is one of the most powerful weapons in power, so they continue to promote a climate of paranoia to demobilize and divide the oppressed.
---- The state redoubled its efforts to pass its "anti-hooded law." Piñera points to anarchists, the Barras Bravas and drug traffickers as a
coordinated triad to unleash violence by trying to mix water and oil, but this is chemically impossible. ---- The communication plan is to
exceed the looting of small stores, offering a great journalistic coverage. They hit the owners' tears key to the point of exhaustion to
heighten the drama, that is, the capitalist press releases a powerful emotional charge to delegitimize the Social Uprising.
There is an obvious complicity (by action or omission) between police, "domestic" and traffickers, individuals without codes who are not
interested in those who undermine their actions.
Undoubtedly, private property is part of what we want to destroy, but today our goals are full of strategic symbolism. If the attack on any
location needs explanation, it is not symbolic enough.
An interim solution would be "self-defense committees," but our inexperience and ineffectiveness in these practices paves the way for the
"yellow vests" that are beginning to arm themselves with an undeniable fascistoid breath. "May the militias return to the streets!" Is the
speech repeated by lovers of the neoliberal system, although in their pockets money has always shone for its absence.
The sad reality is that capitalism is so internalized in a percentage of the oppressed and exploited that commodity and its places of supply
are more important than the lives of other beings. Work, money, and consumption are a superior good, well over a hundred people with
mutilated eyes.
But another part of the population has already realized the state plan and denounces it every time it has the opportunity on television,
bothering every sovereign live.
Personally, I don't remember how many times I cried watching videos of shot or eyeless teenagers. I do not remember a day without the
harrowing feeling of knowing that somewhere in Chile someone is suffering from police brutality or that within a police station they are
torturing and raping.
On the seventh Friday of the Uprising, and after two days with low adherence, "Dignity Square" refilled and the feminist performance "A
rapist in his path" was massively performed in zone zero. Performance expands nationally, globally and goes viral on social networks. So
much that it can overshadow the government's discourse of fear. A giant banner opens asking for the resignation of Piñera and Minister of
Women and Gender Equality Isabel Plá.
Strangers ignite the statue of the "Black Matapacos", icon of the Uprising. At their foundations, protesters build another with flowers.
Clashes between footmen and hooded people continue with many fireworks. In Concepción, police use bombs of moral effect that disorient
because of the flashes of light they emit when activated, and the loud noise of the explosion temporarily affects hearing. In the same
region, the stage of the Rally World Cup is canceled.
Scotiabank's workers' union and customers put pressure on the bank and fire manager Antonio Benvenuto, who beat protesters at La Dehesa Mall.
The Health Minister is scolded and his car scratched in a hospital, he had to be protected by the police. Minister Plá was also booed by
protesters.
A protester is arrested in Vina del Mar for carrying and dropping Molotov bombs, he is investigated for possession of explosive material.
Yesterday there was a concentration in solidarity with the prisoners of the social war on the outskirts of the (in) justice center. Police
protected and closed the site.
You feel tired, but we don't give up.
May insurrectionary propaganda remain present at every barricade!
ICEM THE REVOLUTIONARY FLAG!
NT
Related Content:
https://noticiasanarquistas.noblogs.org/post/2019/11/29/chile-santiago-40o-dia-de-revolta-social/
anarchist news agency-ana
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Message: 4
For years, it has been said, we hear it everywhere, France is bad. But suddenly a name arises, announced by mysterious posters stuck
everywhere: Francis Rissin. ---- A providential man, the long-awaited leader, the figure of a strong man who has always fascinated the
French. The country needs change, revolt is rife in the countryside, but are we sure that this incarnation of all national hopes is not a
kind of Frankenstein monster ? ---- " The French loved me as we love a mother, but they also feared me as a tyrant is feared, and I think
it was pretty much like the ideal conditions for keeping power for a long time, according to the old strategists. " ---- Martin Mongin
offers us a first elusive novel, literary but also deeply political. Eleven voices for eleven chapters to try to understand who is Francis
Rissin. Are we really going to find out? Whenever we think we are getting the best of new information, a new story will destabilize us.
Eleven voices and eleven styles, eleven literary genres ranging from the polar to the police report to the diary ...
Tusitala regales us once again with a novel of rare strength and originality. Strange and addictive, it is closed with more questions than
answers, but is not it the role of (good) literature?
Tatiana (UCL Naoned)
Martin Mongin, François Rissin , ed. Tusitala, April 2019, 616 pages, 22 euros
https://www.unioncommunistelibertaire.org/?Roman-N-entendez-vous-pas-partout-l-echo-de-Francis-Rissin
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Message: 5
After the uprisings in Lebanon and Iraq, unrest has spread to Iran. ---- The unrest was sparked by rises in the price of petrol.
Demonstrations took place in a hundred cities and towns and roadblocks were thrown up. This began on 19th November and increased in strength
over the next week. ---- The regime's economic committee issued a statement that reduced the allowance of petrol to 60 litres at 15,000
rials per month (15,000 rials= 27p) as opposed to the previous quota of 250 litres at 10,000 rials per month. In addition an extra litre
would cost 30,000 rials (55p.). ---- In response the regime suspended the internet in Iran after hundreds of videos showing large
demonstrations, roadblocks and pictures of regime leader Ayatollah Khameini being set alight, as well as demonstrators being shot at close
range. Khameini delivered a nationwide address supporting the price rise. He blamed the unrest on supporters of the son of the deposed Shah
and on interference from the West.
Tens of thousands took part in the demonstrations, and the regime was forced to admit that people had "the right to give voice to their
opposition". It also admitted that twelve people had been killed during the unrest. Reports on social media before the shutdown claimed as
many as 200 had been killed by the regime forces. The Fars News Agency declared that 87,400 people had taken part in demonstrations and that
"more than 100 bank branches and 57 big stores had been torched or ransacked. Most of those who took part appear to be from the poorer
sections of Iranian society.
The petrol price rise was a catalyst for the growing anger at years of austerity, mass unemployment, corruption and the widening gap between
the rich and the poor. The regime was panicked into paying subsidies into people's bank accounts, in what are promised to be monthly payments.
More recently the regime has been forced to admit that 200,000 people took part in demonstrations and that 731 bank branches were set on
fire, and that 50 military and police stations and barracks were attacked. Some of the most intense unrest was in poor neighbourhoods in the
capital, Teheran. The demonstrations were broken up by regime forces using live ammunition and tear gas, it was admitted but there was a
reluctance to reveal how many had been killed or injured. An attempt to seize the headquarters of the State broadcasters, seen widely as a
lying mouthpiece of the regime, were foiled.
The Interior Minister Rahmani-Fazli accused the demonstrators of being hooligans, with 10 to 20 per cent of them having criminal records. We
have reported on previous unrest in Iran, but the latest revolts point to mass opposition to the regime, itself split between so called
"moderates" and hardliners, and indeed the increasing fragility of that regime. As elsewhere in the Middle East, there is increasing anger
among the masses against deteriorating social conditions. The region has long been a powder keg, and now social explosions are beginning to
shake the ruling regimes there.
Meanwhile in Iraq, demonstrations have continued, with security forces killing 27 protestors in different parts of the country. The Iranian
consulate in Najaf was attacked and burnt down, the second attack on an Iranian consulate in a month. After the first wave of unrest in Iraq
which resulted in 149 people killed by security forces, the Iraqi Prime Minister promised reforms. However, demonstrators felt that their
demands were not being met and returned to the streets in force in late October. So far at least 350 people have died in two months of
unrest. As well as similar social conditions to Iran and Lebanon, there is anger at the intervention of the Iranian regime in Iraq.
Unrest continues in Lebanon, too. Members of the Shiite Hezbollah and Amal movements attacked demonstrators in Beirut. Large crowds have
assembled chanting "For Revolution" and the increasingly secularised youth have taken an active part in the unrest, opposing themselves to
all the different politico-religious factions, be they Shiite, Christian or Druze. The Prime Minister Hariri was forced to resign on October
29th, but the President Aoun has been so far unsuccessful in forming a new government.
This is a unfolding revolution that is decentralised, that increasingly rejects sectarianism and is determined in its moves to overthrow the
old regime. What happens in Lebanon, and indeed in Iran and Iraq are immensely important for the push towards social change across the
planet. We salute those in the Middle East who have continued their movements, despite police and military violence, killings and beatings,
fake news, and attempts to divide and rule along sectarian lines.
https://www.anarchistcommunism.org/2019/12/01/the-revolt-in-iran-and-iraq-and-lebanon/
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