On this month’s edition of Floating Anarchy (The SUWA Show), Dr Cam and I talk to Owen Bennett about the recently-established Australian Unemployment Union and to Rafael Taylor about the situation in Kobanê and the Rojava revolution.
Tune in this Friday at 5.30pm on 855AM or livestreaming at 3CR.
Links:
In Defence Of #Anarchism: Tearing Down The Links To The Butchers Of #ISIL [New Matilda], October 21, 2014 | Democracy Now!’s coverage related to the self-described militant group, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). | Kobane: the struggle of Kurdish women against Islamic State, Necla Acik, Open Democracy, October 22, 2014 | The Rojava Report: News from the Revolution in Rojava and Wider Kurdistan | The new PKK: unleashing a social revolution in Kurdistan, Rafael Taylor, ROARMAG, August 17, 2014 | Kurdish Experiment in Radical Decentralism and Why Kobani Must Be Saved, Jim Schumacher and Debbie Bookchin, Huffington Post, October 21, 2014 | Urgent call for global action for Kobanê, Firatnews, October 21, 2014.
Australian Unemployment Union | Australian unemployment union wants to represent the out of work, Ben Schneiders, The Age, October 18, 2014 | Unemployed resist welfare cuts, Pas Forgione, Green Left Weekly, August 23, 2014 | Dole bludgers, tax payers and the new right: constructing discourses of welfare in 1970s Australia (Verity Archer), February 12, 2010 | The Dole Army : “If it wasn’t real, it would almost be comical.”, January 3, 2010.
Ireland, Anarchist WSM International Secretariat on the defence of Kobane
The WSM considers the struggle for Kobane and the autonomous zones of Rojava to be crucial for the development of a political alternative for the region. We view Daesh as the toxic excrescence of the results of global and regional imperialist intervention in Syria and Iraq. —- On the one hand this has taken the form of the US 2003 invasion of Iraq, and its ever more bankrupt policy since of funding corrupt clientelist hirelings, the infamous “moderate militias”. The problem with such “non-ideological” forces, hired for their compliance with American views and their hostility to ideological opponents of US imperialism in the area, is that they are a paper tiger. Shortly before his assassination, Ahrar al-Sham leader Hassan Aboud, said of the Iraq army’s rout by Daesh was “because the army has no military ideology,”.
In contrast to US and Western blind search for “moderate militias”, the regional imperialisms of the AKP-led Turkish state, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE, have been happy to fund and support forces fuelled by the negative ideology of sectarian hatred. While each, in their competition with the others, had their own favourite brigades, the combined effect of their open gates to money and weapons to all sectarian jihadists, whether Ikhwanite or Salafist, was the nourishment that allowed Daesh to grow from a marginalised Iraqi guerilla to an internationally recruited threat across Mesopotamia and the Levant.
Today in Kobane two strong ideologies confront each other. One them, the bastard love-child of imperialism, celebrating slavery and sectarian totalitarianism, the other fighting for the ideals of autonomy and freedom. In such a confrontation it is no surprise that Turkey and its Western allies have decided that the most threatening of these two ideologies is the idea of freedom. The WSM condemns utterly the brutal actions of the AKP regime in blockading Kobane, while allowing reinforcements and weapons through to Daesh. We condemn further this morning’s strikes by the Turkish air force against alleged PKK positions in Daglica. We support the struggle of YPG/YPJ volunteers in Kobane and Rojava and that of Turkish Kurds against the oppression of the Turkish state.
The experience of Rojava in beginning the implementation of the KCK’s ideology of Democratic Confederalism is in our opinion as significant for the development of political alternatives in the Middle East as the earlier experience of the Zapatistas was for Central and South America. If political movements like the KCK, and the Zapatistas before them, have moved from an authoritarian left position towards more libertarian politics, it is not because anarchism in the 21st century is playing the role of the most powerful and prestigious alternative to reformism and social-democracy, as the Bolsheviks once did in the wake of 1917. Rather it is because that anarchism is not a brand but a toolkit of principles and practices for the self-liberation of the oppressed and exploited. We see it as our duty to express our solidarity with Rojava and the kurdish movement, not because they have ideologicaly made a step in our direction, but because they represent hope in this region and because they are the oppressed fighting the oppressors and whatever may be the imperfections of their process we will stand in solidarity.
Note – this statement ‘WSM International Secretariat on the defence of Kobane’ arose from a request made to us by Devrimci AnarÅist Faaliyet for a short piece giving our perspective for inclusion in a publication they will be distributing in Kurdish areas of the Turkish state (and we hope in Kobane once ISIS have been driven back and out of sight).
Update: We’d like to apologise for the use of the patriarchal & patrilineal term ‘bastard love child’ in the statement – we really, really should have caught that at the editing stage!
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