-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Dec. 27, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

AT EUROPOEAN SUMMIT:
WORKERS, ANTI-CAPIALISTS STAGE LARGE PROTESTS

By John Catalinotto

Fifteen European prime ministers met at a castle in the
Laeken neighborhood of Brussels Dec. 14-16. They were
determined to unite Europe on the basis of strengthening
capitalism and reducing social services, while establishing
a common police force and a Reaction Force" for military
interventions.

In response, some 80,000 workers demonstrated for social
justice on Dec. 13. The next day another 20,000 people,
saying "another Europe is possible," called for an end to
the war on Afghanistan.

Many in the media, including the Dec. 14 Wall Street
Journal, took note that these actions showed the anti-
globalization movement in Europe is still very much alive.
It had been quiet for a few months after Sept. 11, but was
now taking up where it left off after the Genoa summit in
July.

The coming World Economic Forum protests on Feb. 2 in New
York will show if this spirit of struggle has also reached
the U.S. movement.

On Dec. 13, labor unions led the protests, bringing upwards
of 80,000 workers and supporters into the streets. According
to reporter Herwig Lerouge in the Belgian weekly newspaper
Solidaire, there was a strong difference between what the
union leadership asked for and what the rank-and-file
workers demanded.

The official slogans were, "More Europe: We are Europe" and
"For a more social Europe," which means accepting a
capitalist Europe but asking for a few more social benefits.
The slogan carried by most workers said, "We don't want that
Europe," that is, they reject a European Union ruled by the
capitalists.

Tens of thousands of French, Portuguese, German, Greek,
Swedish, Italian, Spanish, Luxemburg, Irish, Turkish and
British workers, as well as unionists from Poland, Slovakia,
the Czech Republic and Slovenia in Eastern Europe, showed
they had a common enemy in Brussels--the headquarters of the
European Union.

The move by the European capitalist governments to unite
does not simply mean removing borders among peoples and
easing economic and social contacts. It aims at
strengthening the capitalist corporations relative to the
workers. It aims at reducing social benefits to the lowest
common denominator.

It means increased unemployment as nationalized industries
are sold off, as recently happened with Sabena Airlines in
Belgium. It means a more U.S.-type social system, with fewer
benefits and guarantees for workers and a greater gap
between rich and poor.

That's why the move to strengthen the European Union has
aroused such anger and opposition among the European working
class, from Turkey to Portugal.

ANTI-CAPITALIST CONTENT

European communists and anti-imperialists had chosen the
following day, Dec. 14, to target a Europe dominated by
capitalists. The Workers Party of Belgium, a leading
communist organization in the country, had formed an
international coalition to build for what it called the D14
protest.

This protest had a strong anti-capitalist character and
included many banners protesting the aggression against
Afghanistan led by the U.S. and Britain.

According to Lerouge, the majority of the demonstrators
gathered behind the platform of D14. This included a large
contingent from the Workers Party of Belgium. Many youths
wore sweatshirts with the slogan "Chénge-the-World,"
incorporating the name of the late revolutionary Che
Guevara. The Brussels newspaper De Morgen said this
sweatshirt is slowly becoming the symbol of the anti-
globalization movement.

Many communist parties from abroad were represented,
including the two most active communist groups from Turkey,
the New Communist Party of the Netherlands, and Greek,
Italian, German and Spanish communists, notes Lerouge. The
Socialist Workers Party of Britain, which has recently been
active in the anti-war movement, had a contingent. The anti-
globalization group ATTAC-Europe also was part of the
demonstration.

Using some attacks on property by elements within the march
as justification, police assaulted a large section of the
marchers. The cops trapped about 1,000 people, fired an icy
blast from a water cannon at them and arrested dozens of
protesters.

The main significance of the march, however, was political.
The slogans were even noted by Louis Michel, a Belgian
foreign minister who is currently president of the European
Union. "It is astonishing," said Michel, "to see that so
many young people are wearing Ché and Marx during the
demonstrations. It is not good that they see communism as an
alternative to the democratic EU. But it is understandable
because they have no experience of what communism was. More
education must be done to reverse their wrong ideas."

This capitalist minister's worst nightmare is a sign of hope
for the working class of Europe and the world.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)






------------------
This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service.
To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send administrative queries to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Reply via email to