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SWP -a warning from the south

a socialist | 11.11.2001 23:56

The Socialist Workers Party and "Internationalism

By Miriam Colque


Background - Bolivia and the struggle against water privatisation

Bolivia, like all other “third world” countries, has come under pressure from the World Bank and other global financial institutions, to privatise its public utilities. It has privatised oil and gas pipelines, airline, railways and electricity supply. The result has been higher prices and attacks on working conditions. Popular opposition came to a head when the water system of Cochabamba (worth millions) was sold for a down payment of $20,000.

The lucky winner, or so it thought, was International Water Limited (IWL), a British- based consortium, with US-based Bechtel corporation having a 50 per cent stake. The contract had secret clauses and a guaranteed rate of return of 16 per cent. On purchase, IWL increased water rates by as much as 300 per cent. In Bolivia the minimum wage is $100 per month and some families saw their monthly water bill soar past $20.

The people of Cochabamba were having none of this. A coalition of labour, human rights and community activists built an alliance (La Coordinadora) and brought the city to a halt for four days by blockading roads and shutting down the transport system. Over 100,000 people were involved in the struggle which attracted support from 40km around Cochabamba. The government promised a price reduction, did not deliver it and a peaceful march took place on 4 March 2000 to the city's central plaza.

The government's response was to arrest the leaders in night raids, shut down the radio and put the army on the streets, firing against the demonstrators. Two days of conflict saw 175 injured, but the people of Cochabamba stood their ground. The Bolivian government declared a state of emergency but the strikes continued and the government was finally forced to nullify the water contract in April 2000.

It is worth noting that the President was no other than Hugo Banzer, a notorious "former" dictator, then supposedly sanitised by having been elected. Also, Bolivia is suffering from US-led attempts to suppress coca leaf production in its "war against drugs". Coca leaves have been used for centuries for the Quechua and Aymara people for medicine, rituals and means of staving off hunger. Conventional cash crops do not pay enough for the poor farmers to support their families, so the world economy is keeping the majority of Bolivia's population in poverty.

This is the background to the recent visit by Oscar Olivera to Britain as a "guest" of the SWP. Oscar Olivera is a union leader and played a central role in the Coordinadora. One might have thought that this would have been a golden opportunity to bring the lessons of the struggle in Cochabamba to the trades unions in Britain which are being faced by PFI (Private Finance Initiative) and PPP (Private Public Partnership) and forge truly international links between workers



Oscar Olivera's visit and the SWP

He arrived in Britain on 29.9.01 having been contacted by an SWP member who had visited Bolivia some time earlier. He spent most of his time here doing the rounds of SWP branch meetings and some badly attended public meetings organised by the SWP. His contact with the London-based Latin American community was almost zero. This community has a large number of very politically minded members with potentially valuable international links. It was ignored by the SWP.

I was informed of Oscar Olivera's visit and went to meet him at one of the SWP-organised public meetings at the Ponana Theatre in Hammersmith. Next day it was arranged with him to attend a meeting in Spanish organised by Latin American organisations in solidarity with Bolivia at the Conway Hall on Saturday 6.10.01. On Wednesday 3 Oct, the Bolivian SWP member claimed it was “a crazy idea to organise a meeting for that Saturday night and at such short notice. One needed at least two months to organise a meeting and one month to advertise in the Latin American paper, and it would be a shame to bring along comrade Olivera to an audience of only one or two people”. They offered and gave no support to our efforts.

I mobilised numerous contacts in the Latin American community in just a few days and set up the meeting. Three days before the meeting I discovered an SWP leaflet advertising our meeting seemingly under its own auspices. On Friday 5 Oct. I remonstrated twice with the SWP and at the end they said that it had been a "mistake" and they do not work with Latin Americans (politically) because we were apathetic. On Saturday 6 Oct. on arrival at the hall I found the SWP in attendance, with a box of videos (30 copies of ‘The Water is ours, damn it’), setting up a bookstall inside the room and still seeking to hijack the meeting. They were told in no uncertain terms that it was not their meeting and they had no rights to run it. They persisted and even suggested that the chair of the meeting be elected. This was rejected. Lastly, I asked where the proceeds of the video sales went and I was told that it went towards the cost of leaflets, propaganda, etc. and in less than a second they disappeared with the videos. They returned defiantly and wanted to lecture us on issues as racism, asylum seekers, etc. I told them that everyone in the audience would be able to teach them about it as we were the ones who in real life suffered intimidation, persecution, imprisonment, torture, exile, racism, etc. They were told to come and learn from us and stop playing ‘as revolutionaries’, respect us, and stop showing off their ‘great pundits, great masters’ attitude.

Oscar Olivera gave a well received talk to over forty people from: Perú, Colombia, Chile, México, Argentina, Bolivia, France, Spain, Cyprus, etc. The following organisations were represented: Campaign against Plan Colombia; Association of Latin American Artists, Poets and Writers in London; International Human Rights Project – Chile; Latin American Women Rights Service – LAWRS; Golden Years – 3rd Age Project; some members of the Association of Relatives of the Disappeared and many other individuals. We had a mixed audience from children, teenagers, adults and the elderly, not just young professional activists.


During Oscar’s stay in London the SWP were selling a video "El Agua es Nuestra - Carajo!" (The water is ours Damn it!) at £15.00 each. This was produced by Sheila Franklin and 1 World Production. (The SWP refused to sell me a copy!) Later on we learnt that an SWP member had contacted 1 World about the video months ago and had been sent some terms and price sale for distribution in the UK, but 1 World Production had never heard back from her. Presumably they had obtained the video in Bolivia, but 1 World was unaware that the SWP were selling copies. Where had the SWP obtained the copies? Had they made them themselves?

Conclusion

The SWP, having made contact with Oscar Olivera, a member of a key struggle in Bolivia, brought him over to Britain, monopolised his time (to the extent he had little time to rest between meetings and was unable even to speak by phone privately), he had at all times SWP members like bodyguards who used him as their "property" while in Britain. They failed to extend contacts with the British trade union movement and with the Latin American community. Furthermore, they looked down on us. They seem to have appropriated a video, possibly violating copyright law and withholding finance from the campaigning organisation that produced it.

They have displayed the arrogance of a Euro-centric sectarian organisation. They have demonstrated that their view of these bitter and dangerous struggles taking place in the so-called Third World are merely grist to their propaganda mill. Never mind international solidarity of the oppressed masses, just get some people to a few meetings, apply your take over tactic, sell more papers and try to bump up the party membership a bit!

Workers of the World Unite! You have not only your chains to lose, but also the many self-proclaimed "leaderships" that masquerade as international revolutionaries.


-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*

a socialist

Comments

Hide the following 11 comments

Can't even sign a petition

12.11.2001 09:16

Furthermore, the SWP is prone to stalking. In Ireland you cannot sign a petition without someone contacting you over and over and over and over again. Same old jargon, do you want to join the SWP? When your answer is no, you gotta listen to the same old shite, the SWP is for workers power from below, blah, blah, blah. My answer is still no! Well why is that? Well because i dont agree with your policies. So the bullshit continues, WE are the revolutionaries we will stop capitalism, we will get lots of members, young kids who's only direction into left wing politics have been RATM, we will sell them stories of CHE and LENIN, we will bullshit, we will walk around in the pissing rain holding placards, we wont engage in direct action, because that might piss off our friends in power. My reaction! Fuck off i'm not interested, CLICK! Down goes the fone!

Anarcho-Syndicalist


Don't worry

12.11.2001 11:20

Don't concern yourself too much about what the SWP might or might not do, with regards to the Latin American community here. They haven't had many forrays into the politics of the region, so maybe it's a good thing they actually listened to a Latin American activist.
Perhaps a criticism that could be lodged against the Latin America-related political activism in the UK is its lack of cohesion and organisation. There are four groups I know of campaigning against Plan Colombia, but they don't seem to co-ordinate with each other or with related groups, such as those campaigning for indigenous people or against the coca-eradication in Bolivia. People come up with great ideas and form their own little atomised groups. There isn't really an excuse for this, since there are ways of getting in touch with one another through places like the Latin American Bureau. This is surprising since it is not so much the case with African and South Asian activists - perhaps because there are fewer Latin Americans in this country.
Instead of chastising the SWP (perhaps they needed to be told off for interfering), perhaps we should all consider working together on Latin American issues. I can see you've gone some way to achieve this, by involving a broader range of groups. This can be built on.

Daniel Brett
mail e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk


mi5

12.11.2001 11:59

seems there is good evidence that SWP higher echelons contain MI5-connected people. there are some good people lower down, but they have no real democratic input to the organisation and are hence being used cynically from above. they need to know this, and if they care about the real movement for real change and global justice, take their energies elsewhere instead of helping SWP through GR undermine the non-violent direct actions that make this movement effective.

In this context i think it very important Dan that we don't feel we have to work together with anyone who mouths the same issues - that's the sort of line Bush spins: you're with us or against us etc. - and as we all know it's bullshit when he says it, so it probably is when SWP etc say it too...

Nobody's posted the schnews rant 'Monopolise Resistance' on indymedia for a while but the issues therein remain fundamental (check www.schnews.org.uk).

and to any SWPers about to write on here that we are all too concerned with sectarian attacks to do anything useful -how useful is your alienating most of the people who built this movement with your efforts to 'unite' it? answer your critics honestly and meaningfully, evict the MI5ers, work with other groups as equals or not at all, and stop doing stuff like tha story above and listed by schnews. then the useful stuff the rest of us try to do won't be so undermined by you, and we won't have to spend our energies on defusing elements of the establishment's co-opting and wrecking tactics...

ta

z


Misunderstanding

12.11.2001 14:22

I never said that everyone should unite around one organisation or a single agenda. I was talking of the need of organisations with similar interests to co-ordinate activities to make a wider impact. Networks are what help create big actions, like Seattle and Genoa.

Daniel Brett
mail e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk


What a bunch of self indulgent plonkers

12.11.2001 15:31

Here we go again. Moaning and groaning and bitching about each other. This is the only Indymedia site that has this kind of internecine tripe on it. Typical of the small-minded, hole in the corner, Brit left--and it even seems to affect exiles living here too. Must be catching.

So the SWP is less than perfect is it? Well I never. Most left organisations have probably been infiltrated by the state, including the Anarchists, and the anti-globalisation movement itself. And the penetration of bourgeois ideology into the organised left is inevitable also, given the lop-sided balance of forces that exists between the propaganda resources of the right and the left. So what's new? As ever, the task of genuine socialists is to patiently oppose this ideological and physical penetration in ALL the organsiations of the left. Why single out the SWP on this issue? Why not the Anarchists (Genoa!)? Look who's calling the kettle black.

All this attention given to attacking the SWP on Indymedia indicates that the Anarchists really do feel threatened by this organisation. Otherwise, why spend so much time doing it? Perhaps they fear that SWP's energy is upstaging them? Contrary to your ignorant assertions above, the reality is that the SWP's current success is down to its more co-operative approach to the rest of the left and its energy in building the anti-war movement. Occasional sectarian abberations from this trajectory are probably inevitable. They result from the fact that some within the SWP are not happy with the move away from sectarian self-isolation. But the pro-cooperation Calinicos trend appears to be winning through. The SWP still has some way to go to achieve a genuinely Leninist, democratic centralist, internal regime that allows permanent oppositional groupings to exist within the party--as it did in the Fourth International in Trotsky's day. Read the real history of the Trotskyist movement, don't accept Anarchist fairy tales about this. By contrast, the absence of democratic centralism in Anarchist groups means that they are run by self-perpetuating cliques with no mechanism to bring them to account.

I prefer the SWP any day to the Anarchist cliques--a collection of middle class brats playing at politics. They will probably all be stockbrokers in 10 years time.

Jed


okay I give up!

12.11.2001 16:18

First off there's a post calling on the SWP to "evict the MI5ers". Hey, good idea! "Right, put your hand up if you're an MI5 agent.. you, Bill? off you go then!"

Then Jed tells us we must stop being self-indulgent and sectarian, and illustrates his alternative approach by calling anarchists "middle class brats".

I'm at a loss. It's beyond parody. I retire!

a nonny mouse


Co-operative?

12.11.2001 19:38

I wouldn't usually waste my time commenting on an organisation as sectarian and dishonest as the SWP - but Jed's claim that the SWP has a good record of co-operation on the left is bollocks. In South Wales, the SWP is basically using the Welsh Socialist Alliance as an electoral front. It wasn't long after the Swappies joined before they started using the usual tactics of swamping meetings so that they could manipulate things their own way.

I have nothing against English people but if you want to see what the SWP is really about come to sunny South Wales and watch the SWP's anglocentric, Imperialist bias at work.
The overwhelming majority of the SWPs members in South Wales are English and Middle class (the accents give it away) and they are overwhelmingly opposed to the anti-imperialist struggle in South Wales (with a few honourable exceptions). They hijack community campaigns and then drop them when the next fashionable issue pops up. They have no respect for the Welsh identity, and the line they have basically pushed is to try and make the WSA into part of the Socialist Alliance of England.

I've got great respect for Greens and Anarchists. In my experience they have a much more sympathetic approach to the whole issue of Welsh identity- perhaps because their whole philosophy isn't based around one of power, centralist control, and head counting.

As a member of Cymru Goch - the Welsh Socialists - we entered into an alliance with parties like the SWP, and the Socialists Party - in good faith, I had little experience of dealing with these parties and the experince has been disillusioning. I am no longer willing to work with the SWP in South Wales, which is slowly collapsing anyway as many of its' members are sick of being bullied by London. Nothing about it's treatment of this Bolivian surprises me.

Solidarity to all true libertarians.

Jim
mail e-mail: serengoch@hotmail.com


Am I bad?

12.11.2001 22:04

Jim: I pissed off with this prejudiced inverted snobbery bullshit. Hey, I'm white, middle-class, male, English and I've been to university and got a couple of degrees. So does that make be bad? Does that make what I say irrelevant? Does it mean I'm to be banned or censored at any meeting where there might be women, Asians, 'workers' (I work a fucking 50 hour week, I don't know why I'm not working-class just because I sit behind a desk) or even the poor oppressed Welsh?
You're not offering a critique of anything, you just despise people 'not of your kind' which takes the place of anything constructive you could say. You're one step away from being a fascist.

Daniel Brett
mail e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk


oh dear

12.11.2001 23:57

no need to get like that!
some people know quite well who the mi5ers have been in swp senior cliques. probably some know now, or they could be fairly easily identified through their moves.
just cos there's a major problem with swp that keeps coming up doesn't mean that everyone else is perfect. just means swp tactics are a real problem for a lot of people. including for a lot of socialists as well as anarchists and all sorts of other people too.
that's all. we're all equal humans... looking for a decent society. let's not dominate, insult, or demonise each other, eh?

z


SWP always get's high No of comments

13.11.2001 18:05

Seems that if the SWP is on the agenda there will always be a lot of comments. It's a bit T:D arse but i often plough through to see what is being said.
I think that free debate is important, types like Jed who want to slag people off, while making basically unsustantiated comment. what does he mean by anarchists in genova, and calling ther kettle black, ???

Some one mentions M15 and links to the SWP.
M15 and M16 have run smear campaigns against the labour party
from day one, they certainly plotted against Wilson and might even have bumped of Hugh Gaitskill, they then plotted against Heath and were instrumental in bringing Thatcher to power.
Most of the top dogs in M15 and M16 were traditionally supporters of the Tories. my bet is that Blair is the first Labour prime minster to have the full support of the intelligence agencies. But M15 needs to find something for it's staff to do, the SWP would seem to be filling the left of centre spot vacated by the labour party when it moved to the right and occupied the place of the tories.
I would have thought that M15's dirty tricks department would be let lose on the SWP, if not perhaps the previous poster was right and they have infiltrated therefore in some way control the SWP. then they have plenty of time to carry out operations against anti capitalists anarchists ect ect .

one thing for sure it would be intresting to open a file on the spooks.

look alike


Method and approach of the SWP

20.11.2001 01:21

The SWP are a party that continually are flitting from campaign to campaign, from ultra left soundings to oppurtunism. In fact they are quite reformist at heart, they have no faith in the working class, this is shown in their lack of any support amongst the working class. The SWP are continually on a mission to 'recruit' & 'sell papers'.Their internal party structures are a lot to be desired, it is simply run from the top down with a complete lack of democracy. This is also evident in their cover groups such as the Irish Anti War Movement and Globalise Resistance. They are impossible to work with for any length of time at a campaign, due to their habit of dropping of things to go to the latest campaign. Just look at the War, to take up the war work they dropped loads of other campaigns such as bin tax and anti globalisation. As a result the Globalise Resistance movement could be dying out.
Come any revolutionary situation they will be all over the place, they simply have no systematic method of approach

Bob Smith