Saturday, January 22, 2011

Revolutionary awakening of the Maghreb

COMMENT: Revolutionary awakening of the Maghreb — Lal Khan


In a period where so much cynicism and despair reigns within the
higher levels of society, the events in Tunisia have once again
demonstrated that we are in an epoch of sharp turns and sudden
changes. Wars and revolutions are the order of the day


On Friday, January 14, the revolutionary upsurge of the oppressed
masses in Tunisia made history. Such was the intensity of the mass
revolt that the autocratic and corrupt ruler Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali
had to scurry to the nearest airport to flee the country he had
despotically ruled over for 23 years. After being refused entry by his
'friend' Sarkozy, he was finally accepted by the Saudi monarchy. How
apt this was!
The movement had evolved from localised social protests into a
countrywide upheaval that defied repression. And the state could do
nothing to stop this revolutionary storm that lashed across the
country and jolted the regimes from Rabat to Riyadh.
The mainstream media once again rushed in with its own absurd
definition of this uprising by calling it a 'Jasmine Revolution'. In
the last few decades, they have been giving various colours to
revolutionary movements to conceal the real essence of these revolts,
where the masses were striving for a socio-economic transformation and
to emancipate themselves from the exploitation and drudgery of this
decaying capitalist system.
Not just the right-wing media, but also the ex-leftists and
'progressives' are so deeply imbued with cynicism and demoralisation
that they refuse to recognise a revolutionary situation even when it
is glaringly evident, right in front of their eyes. Along with the
bourgeois press and the media, these intellectuals had written off the
class struggle and revolution. In fact, they had capitulated to
Fukuyama's reactionary theory of 'the end of history'.
While the 2008 economic meltdown and the biggest financial crash since
1929 has exposed the obsolete and redundant condition of capitalist
economics, the general crisis that is ravaging society has had a
disastrous impact on the intelligence of the bourgeois intellectuals
and their so-called experts.
As late as January 6, 2011, the most touted mouthpiece of the
bourgeoisie internationally, The Economist, had this to say on the
prospects of the regime in Tunisia: "Tunisia's troubles are unlikely
to unseat the 74 year-old president or even to jolt his model of
autarchy." It is not just a question of the intellectual decline of
the ruling elite's ideologues. There has also been a steep fall in the
confidence of the political leaders of a system in terminal decay.
In a period where so much cynicism and despair reigns within the
higher levels of society, the events in Tunisia have once again
demonstrated that we are in an epoch of sharp turns and sudden
changes. Wars and revolutions are the order of the day. The extreme
crisis of society, with price hike, unemployment, corruption,
exploitation, poverty and misery that keep on piling up, reaches a
point where one 'accidental' incident can spark off a revolt such as
the one we are witnessing in Tunisia. The social and economic woes
ultimately found a political expression.
Two very important features were witnessed in these stormy events.
First, there were reports of fraternisation between the army and the
people. In some cases the army was protecting the demonstrators
against the police force. This was the reason why the army was
withdrawn from the streets of the capital and replaced by the police.
When the mass demonstration reached the presidential palace, the
people and the soldiers embraced. This is a typical characteristic of
a social revolution.
The second salient aspect of this upheaval is the absence of Islamic
fundamentalism in the movement. The young women who clashed with the
forces of the state did not wear burqa. In a demonstration on January
15, an old Tunisian woman said to a reporter, "Have you seen men with
long beards at our demonstrations? No! Because we do not need those
people to liberate ourselves."
In his analysis of the situation in Tunisia, renowned Marxist Alan
Woods wrote, "It is very important to stress that this is the first
time that an Arab dictator has been overthrown by the people
themselves without outside intervention. This represents a decisive
break with a fatalistic view that has unfortunately become widespread
in the Arab world that says: 'yes there have been many struggles but
we were always defeated'." The main slogan of the movement around
these historic events in and outside Tunisia is, "Yes we can!"

However, the situation is not unique to Tunisia. Most of the Arab
world and the humanity beyond are suffering from the pains inflicted
by the escalating crisis that has beset capitalism on a world scale
and refuses to retreat. A joint study by the Arab League and the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) indicates that in most
Arab countries young people constitute over 50 percent of the
unemployed, the highest rate in the world. The same report puts the
poverty rate at up to 40 percent on average, which means that nearly
140 million Arabs continue to live below the poverty line. Worse
still, the report noted that the region has seen no decrease in the
rate of poverty in the last 20 years. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) said that, with the current very high unemployment rates, the
region needs to create close to 100 million new jobs by 2020.

That explains why there is a simmering revolt throughout the Arab
world. The stalemate in the liberation struggle and the miserable
conditions of the masses in Palestine has further exacerbated the
social contradictions and political tensions in the Middle East. The
tremors of the volcanic eruptions in Tunisia are already spreading
fast. A BBC Arab affairs analyst, Magdi Abdel Hadi, was quoted as
saying: "Mr Ben Ali's demise may rattle the entire post-colonial order
in North Africa and the wider Arab world."

The artificial frontiers established by imperialism in the last
century are in fact very fragile. Social protests and demonstrations
have started to erupt in Algeria, Morocco, Jordan and Yemen. Egypt is
already teetering on the edge. In Yemen the demonstrators were wearing
Che Guevara caps and badges.

As we write, powerful demonstrations are raging on. The masses are
calling the interim government a sham. The imperialists are worried
and trying to defuse the uprising by setting up a façade of democracy,
which will of course be of the elite and continue to serve the
interests of their masters. Unless a revolutionary party manages to
put itself at the head of the revolution, this marvellous
revolutionary uprising in the long run will sooner or later recede.
But the manner in which it has erupted has surprised the world.
Another revolutionary movement in the region can erupt with a
Bolshevik leadership and win a socialist victory, leading to a
socialist federation of the peoples of the Middle East.

The writer is the editor of Asian Marxist Review and International
Secretary of Pakistan Trade Union Defence Campaign. He can be reached
at ptudc@hotmail.com

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