Sunday, December 22, 2024

SMOKERS’ CORNER: THE MYTH OF 'WESTERNISATION'
Published December 22, 2024
DAWN

Illustration by Abro

In the April 1968 edition of a now defunct English daily, Business Post, one Yaqoob Sultan wrote an article in which he described a conversation he had had with a member of an Islamist political party. Sultan identified himself as a progressive student activist who was involved in the time’s protest movement against the Gen Ayub Khan dictatorship.

Sultan wrote that, when he met the Islamist at a wedding reception in Karachi, the Islamist told him that he (Sultan) and his like were ‘puppets of communist forces’ that were being used to destroy Islam in Pakistan. He then went on to admonish the ‘liberals’ as well, who he accused of being navigated by Western powers to promote secularism in the country. Sultan wrote that he retaliated by calling his accuser a hypocrite, because “Islamic [sic] parties were clearly being funded by the US to work against progressive forces.”

I stumbled upon this pithy piece 50 years later, during a research project in 2018. I found it rather interesting because whereas the accusation like the one made by the writer of the article became somewhat common in progressive/leftist circles, most people could not get their heads around it.

After all, how could those who were always raging against ‘Westernisation’ and secularism ever be supported by the US? Yet, there is now enough evidence to suggest that the US (as well as the UK) were doing just that.

The notion that the West has tried to impose Westernisation and secularism in Muslim regions in the past few decades is largely flawed. In fact, the West has done everything it could to ‘Islamise’ and, in some cases, radicalise the populations of these regions for specific geopolitical purposes

During the Cold War, Western powers, led by the US, cultivated Islamist outfits in Muslim-majority regions — especially in nation-states where progressive variants of Muslim nationalism were popular. The ideologues of these variants found more traction in striking strategic partnerships with communist countries, such as the erstwhile Soviet Union and China. Consequently, those helming these nation-states often sidelined and even repressed the Islamists.

As a result, the Islamists were quietly receptive to clandestine gestures of support offered to them by intelligence agencies in the US and UK. Both looked to destabilise Muslim regions that were either in the Soviet orbit or even tilting towards it.

This was before the anti-Soviet insurgency that broke out in Afghanistan in the 1980s, during which the US and UK further evolved the nature of their actions in this regard from being covert to overt. The influence and money of oil-rich Saudi Arabia were used to launch various social and cultural projects to ‘Islamise’ many Muslim-majority countries, as a way to induce perceptions of the Soviet Union as an atheistic force out to destroy Islam.

Additionally, moderate and progressive Muslim nationalists were demonised as ‘fake Muslims’ who were inherently secular and heretical. Ironically, though, Islamist outfits that were benefiting from these manoeuvres, continued to portray themselves as anti-West. But till the early 1990s at least, they were busy launching verbal and armed attacks against left-leaning and so-called ‘fake’ and ‘Westernised’ Muslims, rather than on the West.

The factions of the Islamist organisation Muslim Brotherhood, from which the Islamist Palestinian organisation Hamas emerged in 1987, put more effort attacking ‘secular’ anti-Israeli Palestinian groups than they did Israel. Attacks against Israel came later. In fact, in 1979, the Al-Mujamma al-Islami, the core organisation from which Hamas sprouted, was recognised as a “legitimate Palestinian organisation” by Israel, as opposed to the ‘secular’/left-leaning Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO).

In 2019, the reformist Saudi Prince Muhammad bin Salman was quoted as saying that the Saudi-funded spread of radical and stringent versions of Islam was the result of Western countries asking Riyadh to help counter the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

This became an open secret in 2020 when the British government declassified many secret documents related to the Information Research Department (IRD) — a now defunct division of the UK Foreign Office. According to a February 2020 report in The Middle East Eye, the documents demonstrate that IRD ran covert campaigns in multiple Muslim-majority regions during the height of the Cold War, establishing contacts with Islamist organisations and funding newspapers and radio stations in the Muslim world.



IRD also arranged for articles to be inserted in magazines published by Al-Azhar University in Cairo, to ensure that every student left the university a resolute opponent of communism. Those who were to be influenced through these projects were young people, women, trade unions, teachers’ organisations and the armed forces.

Indeed, such ploys — especially between the late 1960s and late 1980s — by British and American governments (with the help of Saudi Arabia), did succeed in ‘Islamising’ large segments of societies in many Muslim-majority regions, successfully developing a distaste in these societies not only for communism, but even for moderate forms of progressive politics.

It was only a matter of time that even more militant expressions emerged from within these societies. After the Soviet Union’s fall in 1991, these then turned their attention towards destroying the ‘infidel West’ that was once their most trusted ally and had helped them cleanse their societies from communists, ‘fake Muslims’ and secularists.

In 2011, the then US secretary of state Hillary Clinton claimed that the US had learned its lesson after 9/11 and would be more careful in choosing who to support. Yet, from the time of the tragic 9/11 episode, the US and its European allies unleashed hardened Islamist militant groups against ‘old enemies’ in Iraq, Libya and Syria.

It is true that all three were being run by tyrants. However, their departure did not see the entry of fluffy democrats, but Islamist groups with fantasies of establishing totalitarian regimes; fantasies originally stuffed in their heads by conduits of US and UK intelligence agencies during the Cold War. It is interesting to recall that Ahmed Sharaa aka Abu Mohammad al-Julani, the current head of Hayat Tahrir al-Shaam, the group leading the ouster of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, was once part of Al Qaeda and was held in US prisons for five years before being let go and helping establish what would later become ISIS or the so-called ‘Islamic State’.

From the late 1960s onwards, there was no attempt as such made by Western powers to ‘Westernise’ and secularise Muslim countries. Quite the contrary. It is thus largely incorrect and a myth that the West (especially in the last five decades) has tried to impose Westernisation and secularism in Muslim regions. The truth is, it did everything it could to not only ‘Islamise’ the populations of these regions but, on various occasions, to radicalise them for specific geopolitical purposes.

The West was one of the most prominent sources of the theocratic enlightenment that Islamists claim to have, as opposed to those they think are ignorant outcomes of Westernisation.

Published in Dawn, EOS, December 22nd, 2024

CROWDFUNDER APPEAL Help send equipment to Ukrainian rescue workers

 

CROWDFUNDER APPEAL
Help send equipment

to Ukrainian rescue workers

The Ukraine Solidarity Campaign is collecting money for equipment and PPE for the 10th Mining Rescue Squad for their rescue and firefighting work.

The appeal closes at midnight on Sunday 22 December. Rush your donations to help save Ukrainian lives.

 
 

News and analysis

Impact of the War in Ukraine on Education and Neoliberal Reforms. Read here the analysis by Sotsyalinyi Rukh

Ukraine Solidarity Campaign meets Defence Committee Chair Tan Dhesi MP. The USC delegation put a list of key actions Labour can take in order to support Ukraine’s struggle against Russian aggression, from a military, human rights, and workers’ rights perspective. Read here the report of the meeting.

USC aid delegation to Kirovohrad and Donbas regions of UkraineWatch here the video the visit to deliver two vehicles and special equipment, tools, and personal protective. Read here the report of visit on the TUC website.

Do a majority of Ukrainians want Ukraine to stop fighting? This analysis by

Sacha Ismail argues that weariness is not the same as willingness to surrender.

Resistance and social movement in a country at war: Read here the brief diary of a trip to Ukraine by Catarina Martins, Left Bloc MEP from Portugal.

Ukraine Feminist Workshop demonstrates in Lviv to set the terms of military serviceRead the report here.

Groups of Resistance: Oleksandr Kitral reports here how Ukrainians protect their Interests from the ‘Arbitrariness from Above’

 

Useful links

European Network for Solidarity with Ukraine >>> https://ukraine-solidarity.eu/

Sotsialnyi Rukh (Ukraine) >>> https://www.facebook.com/social.ruh/

Ukraine Information Group >>> https://ukraine-solidarity.org/

Ukraine Solidarity Campaign Scotland >>> https://www.facebook.com/groups/804453764446657

Commons, journal of social criticism >>> https://commons.com.ua/en/

SD Platform >>> https://sdplatform.org.ua/main/en

Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Ukraine  >>> https://kvpu.org.ua/en/

Federation of Trade Unions of Ukraine >>> https://www.fpsu.org.ua/

 

Follow the Ukraine Solidarity Campaign on Twitter and Facebook. Just click on the buttons below.

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Colombian president Petro condemns killing of Kurdish journalists Bilgin and DaÅŸtan



ANF
NEWS DESK
Saturday, 21 December 2024, 

Colombian president Gustavo Petro condemned the killing of Kurdish journalists Cihan Bilgin and Nazım Daştan.

The president reposted a statement from the Coalition for Women in Journalism on X and wrote: "In present-day Syria, a free Kurdish journalist has been murdered.

I ask the heads of state of Russia, Iran, Turkey, Israel and the United States to stop the division of Syria.

They are heading towards a new genocide. The genocide of the Kurdish people. The genocide of the Palestinian people was not enough.

Syria must continue to be a republic, based on its national and ethnic diversity and on the profound autonomy of its diversity.

If free elections are required for countries in the world, let them be held in Syria. The Syrian people have the right to self-determination. The Syrian people must be allowed to hold free elections to define their future.

As I have done in the past, from this distant Colombia in the Middle East, I ask the governments and peoples of the world to care for and support the Kurdish people in Syria, the same people who, with their armed women and their democracy, knew how to stop the fundamentalist fascism of the Islamic State of the Levant."

Istanbul Bar Association demands investigation for murdered journalists

Stating that targeting journalists in conflict zones is a violation of international conventions, Istanbul Bar Association demanded an effective investigation into the incident and announced that they will follow the process.



ANF
ISTANBUL
Saturday, 21 December 2024,

The Istanbul Bar Association made a statement on journalists Cihan Bilgin and Nazım Daştan, who were killed in a Turkish UCAV attack in northern Syria.

The statement emphasised that the targeting of journalists in conflict zones is a violation of International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Convention and said: “Moreover, the targeting of civilians who are not parties to the war is expressed as one of the war crimes in Article 8/2/b/ii of the Rome Statute. Therefore, the rules regarding the protection of journalists working in armed conflict zones are within the scope of International Humanitarian Law. Again, during the press statement to be held in ÅžiÅŸhane Square regarding the aforementioned incident, four members of our Bar Association, two law faculty students and dozens of journalists were detained.”

The statement continued: “It is unacceptable that members of the press and our colleagues who are exercising their constitutional rights and mourning for their colleagues are detained while an immediate investigation into this incident, which violates international law, should be launched and those responsible should be held to account. We demand an effective investigation into the killing of two members of the press and the immediate release of those who were detained after making a press statement exercising their constitutional rights, and we respectfully announce to the public that we will follow the process.”

Several people, including journalists, detained in police attack on demo for murdered journalists

Istanbul police attacked a demonstration for murdered journalists Nazım Daştan and Cihan Bilgin and detained many journalists, party and institution representatives.



ANF
ISTANBUL
Saturday, 21 December 2024, 

Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG), Mesopotamia Women Journalists Association (MKG) and DİSK Basın-İş promoted a demonstration at Şişhane Square in Istanbul to make a press statement for Kurdish journalists Nazım Daştan and Cihan Bilgin who were killed by Turkish drones in Rojava on Thursday. Representatives of many political parties and civil society organisations took part in the action.

While the police blockaded the area, the crowd protested the obstruction, chanting “Free press cannot be silenced”. A number of people were taken into custody during the crackdown.

The detained journalists are as follows: Rozerin Gültekin, Ferhat Sezgin, Melik Çelik, Pınar Gayıp, Enes Sezgin, Osman Akın, Hayri Tunç, Yadigar Aygün, Serpil Ünal, Zeynep Kuray, Mustafa Subaşı, Saliha Aras, Gülistan Dursun, Elif Bayburt, Umut Taştan and Rojdan Erez.

The detained politicians, lawyers and representatives of civil society organisations are as follows: Dilek Başalan and Newroz Ünverdi from Women's Time Association, Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) Istanbul Provincial Executives Samet Ayas and Haci Ugiş, DEM Party Bayrampaşa District Co-Chair Ramazan Yavuz, DEM Party Esenler District Co-Chair Mehmet Önal, DEM Party Ümraniye District Co-Chair Ayten Bingöl and Serbülent Çiçek, Fethiye Kaçmaz, Fesih İlhan, Selin Top, Feride Eralp, Rüya Kurtuluş, Newroz Tuğçe Özçelik, lawyer Sidar Perçin.
‘March for a democratic solution and freedom’ in Ankara: End the isolation of Abdullah Öcalan

An alliance of political parties and civil society organisations demanded a democratic solution to the Kurdish question and an end to the isolation of Abdullah Öcalan in front of the parliament in Ankara.


ANF
ANKARA
Friday, 20 December 2024, 17:34


The ‘Platform of Democratic Institutions’ called for the release of Abdullah Öcalan and a political solution to the Kurdish question in Ankara. The alliance of political parties and civil society organisations set out on Monday in Amed (tr. Diyarbakir) for a ‘march for a democratic solution and freedom’ on their route in Urfa, Antep, Adana and Mersin, where they once again demanded a solution to the Kurdish question through dialogue and the inclusion of the imprisoned PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan in the talks.

Hundreds of people, including several MPs from the DBP and DEM Party, took part in the action in front of the Turkish parliament on Friday.

On behalf of the platform, DBP co-chair Çiğdem Kılıçgün Uçar stated that Öcalan had been isolated since the government unilaterally ended efforts to find a democratic solution. At the same time, she said, Turkey developed into an increasingly authoritarian state. The social polarisation also has its origins in the isolation on the prison island of Imrali, said the Kurdish politician and pointed out that the Parliament is faced with the historic task of ending the isolation and taking responsibility for a negotiated solution to the Kurdish issue and democratisation of Turkey.

“Remaining silent against absolute isolation means endorsing unlawfulness, war and the move away from democracy. Today, to oppose isolation is to oppose unlawfulness and to defend peace and democracy. No one should forget that social reconciliation and peace are based on ensuring fundamental rights and freedoms. Intellectuals, writers and scientists face a historic responsibility for the democratic coexistence of the peoples of Turkey. Regardless of one's opinion, it is our common denominator to demand the application of the law. Against the absolute isolation in which this common denominator is openly and flagrantly violated, everyone should use their pen and speak out,” Uçar stated.

Speaking after, Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) co-chair Tuncer Bakırhan condemned the deadly Turkish attack that claimed the lives of Kurdish journalists Nazım DaÅŸtan and Cihan Bilgin in northern Syria.

“Following the declaration and campaign for a democratic solution to the Kurdish question initiated by Turkish intellectuals in Istanbul, politicians, labour organisations, prisoners' families and our peoples in the region started a march from Amed and arrived in Ankara today. I congratulate my fellow marchers who set out on the road for a democratic solution. They are determinedly defending peace in Turkey and a democratic solution. I hope that the peoples and labourers of Turkey will see this as a responsibility in the coming days. I am sure that they will join the struggle to create a country where peace, democracy and freedoms prevail,” Bakırhan said.

The DEM Party co-chair pointed out that: “In the last century, the state and the government tried many ways and methods, but failed. At the stage we have reached, 25-30 million Kurds want to use their democratic rights and laws arising from being Kurdish. Together, we can open the door to a process that accepts Kurds and enables them to live as equal citizens on a democratic basis instead of the policies of ignoring and denial that have been going on for a century. More recently, the statements made by MP Ömer Öcalan after visiting Mr Abdullah Öcalan in Ä°mralı really excited us like the intellectuals and the marchers of democracy and freedom from the region. Mr Öcalan said ‘I am here for a democratic solution to the Kurdish question if a political ground is formed. I have the will’. Here we appeal to the government, which has been implementing policies of denial for a hundred years. The isolation must end.”

Bakırhan said that the isolation must end and added, “We would like to ask the government. Mr Öcalan says ‘I am ready’. What are you doing? This issue cannot be solved with UCAVs and drones in Rojava. This problem cannot be solved by ignoring the status that Rojava peoples have won with their hard work and lives. This issue can be solved through dialogue and negotiation. In the world, these problems have been solved in similar ways and methods. This is best known by this government and those who govern the state. Now is the time to solve this problem. Unlock Ä°mralı. Let the peoples of Turkey hear, talk and discuss the democratic words and road map of Ä°mralı. Do not waste the energy, economy and youth of this country on this endless and fruitless conflict, tension and war. There are Kurds in this country. They do not disappear by saying they do not exist, they do not disappear by putting them in prisons, they do not disappear with UAVs and UCAVs. Kurds do not end with saying ‘there are no Kurds’. It is necessary to finally accept this truth.”



HDK (Peoples’ Democratic Congress) Co-Spokesperson Meral Danış BeÅŸtaÅŸ started her speech by commemorating Nazım TaÅŸtan and Cihan Bilgin who were murdered in a Turkish aerial attack in Rojava. “They were two very valuable journalists who, just like the press members here, served the public, pursued the truth and followed the news moment by moment, and UCAVs killed them. We are faced with a reality that kills journalists intentionally and deliberately. In the person of Cihan and Nazım, I commemorate with respect and gratitude all the journalists who have lost their lives in the years of journalism, who have paid a great price for this cause and who are not with us now. Journalists are not people to be killed. On the contrary, paving the way for them and bringing the peoples and society together with the truth is the biggest task in front of them and us. The mainstream media continues to manipulate and mislead the public day and night, creating perceptions. They do not objectively present the reality of war, the Kurdish issue, the isolation issue, or the events in Rojava.”

Meral Danış BeÅŸtaÅŸ said that the ‘March for Democratic Solution and Freedom’ should be heard by 85 million people and added: “It is the demands of this march that will bring Turkey to the light, that will make Turkey breathe a sigh of relief. Mr Öcalan is a political actor who defends the peoples of Turkey and he is being kept under absolute isolation. He defends the peoples, he defends a democratic solution for the peoples. For this cause, he is waging a great struggle to find a solution with great patience, resistance and faith despite absolute isolation.”

BeÅŸtaÅŸ concluded: “The gates of Imrali Island prison must be opened wide. Abdullah Öcalan must regain his freedom. He must be free, the time has already come. In the current conjuncture, the discussions about the lifting of the absolute isolation in Turkey and the collapse of the Baath regime in Syria, the attacks launched against Rojava and the evaluations here are directly intertwined. The peoples living in Rojava have implemented their own solution model. The only solution model of the peoples in today's world is the Rojava example. Those who set their eyes on Rojava are also those who maintain this absolute isolation and prevent a democratic solution. Every UCAV attacking Rojava, every bullet fired and every bomb dropped there directly prevents the solution and democratisation in Turkey, and is a barrier.”

Activists from Geneva take over Freedom for Öcalan Vigil in Strasbourg

The Freedom for Öcalan Vigil was taken over in its 652nd week by a group of activists from Geneva.


ANF
STRASBOURG
Saturday, 21 December 2024, 12:06

The Freedom for Öcalan Vigil began on 12 June 2012, in Strasbourg, to demand the physical freedom of Kurdish People’s Leader Abdullah Öcalan. The vigil has now entered its 652nd week.

Each week, the vigil is carried on by Kurdish activists and their friends from across Europe. This week, the vigil was taken over by four Kurdish activists from Geneva: Nurettin Turgut, Hasan Inci, Ramazan Kızılkurt, and Rıza Çetinkaya.

Nurettin Turgut, who is also a regular participant in sit-in protests held for Öcalan in Geneva and one of the 34 members of the "Democratic Solution and Peace Group" who responded to Öcalan’s call and went to Turkey in 2009, underlined the extraordinary period Kurds are going through.

He said: "We have taken over the vigil at a time when attacks against the Kurdish people are intensifying across all four parts of Kurdistan. The occupying Turkish state is especially targeting Rojava with its assaults. For centuries, we have known that the Turkish state sees its existence tied to the destruction of the Kurdish people. But we have resisted for a century, and now we see that the Freedom Movement is nearing its goal. Just as the enemy sees its existence in our destruction, we say no. We will not accept this. We exist, and we will continue to exist."

Turgut condemned the assassination of journalists Nazım DaÅŸtan and Cihan Bilgin by the Turkish state. The two journalists were reporting about the attacks in Northern and Eastern Syria and the people’s resistance. "We will not bow to the occupiers. – Turgut said - On the contrary, we will succeed. Because we are right, we are a legitimate force, and we will bring this cause to victory. We will not allow you to destroy the achievements that have been made in Rojava through 45 years of hard work."

Turgut called on everyone to protect Rojava’s gains, regardless of party or ideological differences: "We need unity," he said.