Author Archives: jillian

Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice

The timing of this instructive and challenging critique of organized labor could not have been better. All around the country workers are crying out for organization and power. For many reasons, all examined in this work, the splintered labor movement has not been able to overcome decades of collusion with the corporations and what has objectively been a surrender to big business. Brothers Fletcher and Gapasin offer solutions. The entire labor movement, but especially Black working class activists need to engage these arguments as they reassert themselves in the trade union and Black Liberation movements.
What others are saying:

Bill Fletcher and Fernando Gapasin have put together a hard-hitting analysis of the crisis facing organized labor. But this is not just something for people involved in unions. If we are to build a movement for social justice then we must confront the issues that they are raising.”—Danny Glover

“This is an extraordinarily important and provocative reflection on the limitations of self-reform and reinvention within the American labor movement. The authors provide readers with a unique first-hand view of internal debates, personalities, and decision-making processes but also use their intimate knowledge of union culture and carefully narrated case studies to transcend mere stone-throwing. This book is unlikely to be matched by any other journalistic account or memoir…. A landmark in all debates about ‘what next’ for labor.”—Mike Davis, author of Prisoners of the American Dream

“There are few writers and activists whom I would rather read on the recent past, the present and the future of the labor movement than Fernando Gapasin and William Fletcher. This is an especially accessible and balanced exploration of recent efforts at community unionism, international solidarity, coalition with nonunion workers and empowerment of immigrants. Above all this is far and away the best argument for the importance of central labor unions that I have read.”—David R. Roediger, author of Working Toward Whiteness

“This is a very valuable work, well-written and useful to union activists and students of working-class life and history alike. Fletcher and Gapasin have performed a public service of high quality by bringing into the national conversation an enlightened focus on labor and its relation to other sectors of the population, seeking to reinvigorate and enlarge our democracy. This book is ‘a star to steer by’ as we move through troubled waters in a dark time, confident that in our substantive unity of purpose, we can and shall overcome.”—Jack O’Dell, former associate editor, Freedomways magazine

http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/11121.php

RIP Sister Njeri Alghanee: Reparations Leader Joins the Ancestors

NjeriIn a tragic accident on June 24, Njeri Alghanee, and her son were involved in an accident that claimed her life and injured her son. As president of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (NCOBRA), she was returning to Atlanta from the US Social Forum in Detroit. She was scheduled to be in New Orleans the following day for the NCOBRA National Conference. She was an important actor in the national and international reparations movements as well as bedrock of the Black community in Atlanta, serving in many positions, including that of talk show host on radio station WRFG where she was known on air as Sister Courage. Her life was commemorated in Atlanta on July 3 by hundreds at event that lasted for 5 hours.

Following is a brief statement issued by the Black Left Unity Network upon hearing of her death.

Sister, Soldier, Comrade Njeri,

We honor you today for all of your yesterdays; and for your spirit of struggle that will contribute to our victory of reparations and liberation for tomorrow. For being the bright shining star and energy that you always brought to the deliberations of our people, struggling to find answers that will move us closer to transforming society in the interest of all humanity.

Moving from one venue of struggle to another; you were taken from us too soon comrade! This sends a strong and earth shaking message, that there needs to be more of us, doing the work of liberation that too few of us disproportionately carry on our shoulders.
Sister Njeri, we will never forget you. As we start our meetings in the Black Left Unity Network we will call your name – Njeri! As we forge ahead to build Black left unity and the regroupment of the Black liberation movement, we will do so in your uplifting spirit.
Take your rest comrade Njeri! And always know that your life of struggle was not in vain.

Black Left Unity Network
July 2, 2010

Farm Labor Committee Rally at Reynolds American Board Meeting

Thousands march in Haiti demanding Preval Resignation and Aristide’s return

By Kim Ives (from haitilibete.com)

Haiti Demo June 1On May 25, thousands again marched through the capital to demand Préval’s resignation, Aristide’s return and an end to the military occupation

The President of Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) announced on May 24 that presidential and parliamentary elections would be held on Nov. 28, 2010, the Constitutionally prescribed date. “The CEP is up to the task of organizing general elections in the country,” said Gaillot Dorsinvil, who is also the Handicapped Sector’s representative on the nine member council, handpicked by President René Préval. But tens of thousands of Haitians don’t agree and have been demonstrating in streets around the country in recent weeks to demand, not just a new CEP, but Préval’s resignation.

“Nobody has confi dence in Préval or his CEP to organize credible elections,” said Evans Paul, a leader of the Convention for Democratic Unity (KID) party and the political platform Alternative. Both groups, along with a number of other right-wing politicians and parties which supported the 2004 coup d’état against former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, have joined in an unlikely alliance with popular organizations at the base of Aristide’s party, the Lavalas Family. The alliance, called Heads Together of Popular Organizations (Tèt Kole Òganizasyon Popilè yo), has held three massive demonstrations of many thousands in the capital on May 10 May 17, and May 25, all calling for Préval’s resignation, Aristide’s return from exile in South Africa, and repeal of the “state of emergency law” that puts a foreigndominated council in charge of Haiti’s reconstruction, among other demands.

Nobody is more distrustful of Préval’s electoral supervision than Lavalas militants, who saw their party, Haiti’s largest, disqualifi ed last November by Dorsinvil’s CEP from parliamentary elections that were to have been held on Feb. 28, 2010. Radio Solidarité broadcast a long telephone interview with Aristide, in South Africa, on Nov. 25, 2010, the day after the CEP’s decision, asking for the Lavalas Family’s electoral inclusion and a passport for him to return home (see Haïti Liberté, Vol.3, No.20, 12/2/2009). Neither request was ever honored.

Fourteen other parties were also disqualifi ed. The Feb. 28 polling was cancelled after the Jan. 12 earthquake. A previous Préval-appointed CEP, containing fi ve members of the current one, also disqualifi ed the Lavalas Family from parliamentary elections held in April and June 2009. Those elections were massively boycotted, with less than 5% of voters turning out. On May 25, thousands of demonstrators, starting from three different locations, converged on the crumbled National Palace for the third time in two weeks. Lavalas marchers left from La Saline’s St. Jean Bosco, where Father Aristide used to preach, and St. Pierre Place in Pétionville, while organizations of “reformed” coup supporters, traditional political parties, and former “student” activists like Hervé Saintilus, stepped off from Jérémie Place, near Carrefour-Feuilles

Under grey and rainy skies, the demonstration was spirited but peaceful, although barricades to prevent marchers from demonstrating in front of the Palace were swept away by the crowd, which fi lled the broad street between the Palace fence and the earthquake victims’ tents on Toussaint Louverture Place.

With the announcement of elections, some politicians have stepped back from the anti-Préval mobilization. Sweatshop owner Charles Henri Baker, a former presidential candidate and the number two of the Group of 184, a procoup front in 2004, turned out for the May 17 march but dropped out from May 25. Other pro-coup politicians, hungry for elections, are expected to follow suit. A number of popular organizations support the mobilization but are extremely suspicious of the formerly pro-coup politicians’ involvement.

“We must not repeat the experiences of 1986 and 2004, where the big embassies replaced the fallen chief of state with the complicity of unscrupulous politicians,” warned the Democratic Popular Movement (MODEP) in a declaration. “In 1986, after Duvalier fell, the U.S. imperialists replaced Jean-Claude Duvalier with General [Henri] Namphy. In 2004, the U.S. and France were running the show. In both cases, the sneaky politicians and the bourgeoisie agreed to play in the imperialist’s dirty game. Today, we must learn our lesson and not be duped again. We should be alert for the doublecross, and we should join forces with those whose politics resemble our own.”

Meanwhile, on May 24, Brazilian soldiers of the UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH), the military occupation force, drove three military vehicles into the State University’s Ethnology College to arrest an outspoken anti-occupation student, Frantz Mathieu Junior. The soldiers’ illegal entry onto inviolable school grounds unleashed a fi restorm. Enraged students poured into the streets around the school, burning one vehicle and smashing the windshields of several others.

“Today, Préval has sent MINUSTAH troops to provoke us this afternoon,” one student demonstrator told Haïti Liberté. “Now we students are standing up to call for Préval’s removal, and the occupation forces must leave!”

In response, MINUSTAH troops fi red rubber bullets, pepper spray, and large amounts of teargas, affl icting not only student demonstrators but patients in the nearby General Hospital and the whole Champ de Mars area. CNN reported that it was “one of the most serious confrontations since the quake.” The UN apologized for breaching the University’s grounds on May 25.

A similar MINUSTAH crackdown occurred on May 18 in Cité Soleil, in the area of Simon-Pele. Brazilian troops began fi ring their automatic weapons in all directions. Rosemond Aristide, the division inspector in charge of the Cité Soleil police station, was in a police vehicle but had to take cover. When he called offi cers under his command to come assist him, the Brazilian troops aimed their weapons at the Haitian policemen, forcing them to retreat, Rosemond Aristide said. The Brazilian soldiers arrested Aristide’s family members who were riding in his vehicle. The MINUSTAH troops said they had received orders to search all vehicles, including Haitian police cars.

The elections are also seen as occupation tarnished. Tellingly, Edmond Mulet, MINUSTAH’s civilian chief, while visiting the Central Plateau over the weekend, announced the Nov. 28 elections before CEP President Dorsinville. The Haitian people took note of the diplomatic gaff.

At both Monday’s student demonstration and Tuesday’s mass march, the most ubiquitous slogan after “Down with Préval!” was “Down with occupation!” Now the rains have begun in earnest and most earthquake homeless still remain under tarps and tents. Desperation and anger are at all time highs. Resentment over last year’s electoral fi ascos still runs deep. Major anti-Préval and anti-occupation demonstrations are planned for May 27 and June 1. If the mass mobilization does intensify and rock Préval’s power, May 18 and May 24 could prove to be just foretastes of the confrontations to come between UN occupation troops and the Haitian people.

Haïti Liberté Vol. 3 No. 34 • Du 10 au 16 mars 2010

Obama Administration Must Demand Israeli Accountability on Gaza Flotilla Raid

gazaflotilla

For Immediate Release
June 1, 2010
Contact: Ajamu Baraka, 404.588.9761
http://www.ushrnetwork.org/

The US Human Rights Network today condemned Israel’s illegal assault on the Gaza flotilla in international waters and called on the Obama administration to demand that Israel release those arrested, provide medical care to the wounded, ensure that all humanitarian aid and supplies reach Gaza, and prosecute all those responsible. “Israel’s decision to attack a humanitarian mission showed a complete disregard for human rights and the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza,” said USHRN Executive Director Ajamu Baraka. “The Obama administration should not stand by and treat Israel’s crimes as business as usual”

The flotilla raid, which resulted in at least nine civilian deaths and the detention of almost 700 activists from more than 50 nations, including 13 Americans, has sparked global outrage. Heads of state from around the world have decried the commando-style raid. United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, expressed “shock at reports that humanitarian aid was met with violence.” Criticism has also been voiced within Israel: Former Israeli Ambassador to Turkey Alon Liel called the raid a “disaster” and a “terrible mistake” with significant potential consequences.

The United States response to the raid, however, has been grossly inadequate. President Obama issued a one-paragraph statement yesterday regretting the loss of life and urging that “all the facts and circumstances” around the events come to light “as quickly as possible.” Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu canceled a trip to Washington scheduled for today.

The U.N. has called for an impartial inquiry into the events, but the implication in the President’s statement is that the U.S. will sit on the sidelines while others pursue the matter. This appears consistent with the administration’s inability or unwillingness to apply diplomatic pressure on Israel in recent months to advance the Middle East peace process. But given the administration’s stated commitments to human rights principles, the President’s best if not only viable option in this case is to stop tiptoeing around political landmines and insist without further ambiguity that such blatant contempt for human rights be addressed without delay.