------------------------------------------------------
REGISTER NOW for 2nd Asia Pacific International
Solidarity Conference, Easter 2002 @ SYDNEY BOYS HIGH
SCHOOL, SURRY HILLS, SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
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APISC, PO Box 515, Broadway 2007, Australia.
Phone: (61-2-)(02-) 9690-1230
Fax:   (61-2-)(02-) 9690-1381
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.global-revolt.org/
------------------------------------------------------

Dear all,

An exciting gathering for the left will be happening this year in 
Sydney. Following on from the first Asia Pacific International 
Solidarity Conference held in 1998, a second will be held on Easter from 
March 29 - April 1 at Sydney Boys High School in Surry Hills, with the 
opening solidarity rally and public meeting on thursday, March 28 at 
7.00 pm. The theme is:

Global Revolt, Global Links. End war, racism, world poverty: a 
conference of global solidarity.

We are making an urgent appeal for registrations. We need some initial 
cash flow and to get an idea of who might be attending. With over 700 
attending the last conference it is going to be a mammoth task.

The emergence of the movement against corporate globalisation, and the 
rapid response campaign against the US "war against terrorism", makes 
this a unique opportunity for left activists to discuss the situation we 
face and the ways forward. This is the gathering of the key movements 
and campaigns that are reshaping politics in Australia and much of the 
world today.

Over 75 international guests have already confirmed, including: Dita 
Sari, People's Democratic party in Indonesia, former political prisoner 
and labour leader; Farooq Tariq, Labour Party Pakistan, a party 
courageously waging a campaign against he US war and religious 
fundamentalism; representatives from the independence movements in Aceh 
and West Papua; Alaine Krivine, French Revolutionary Communist League 
(LCR); Boris Kagarlitsky, Russian Marxist activist and author; Alex 
Callinicos, British Marxist intellectual from the Socialist Workers 
Party; others from PNG, the New Zealand Alliance, Scottish Socialist 
Party, Socialist Party of Timor, Zimbabwe International Socialist 
Organisation, US ISO, Philippines, India, South Korea, Burma, Malaysia, 
Bangladesh, Iraq, Iran, Nepal, Turkey, Portugal, Mauritius, South 
Africa, Argentina and Cuban Communist Party.

Attached below is the conference call and initial agenda. You can check 
out the latest on international guests and the agenda at 
http://www.global-revolt.org . You can also register online at this 
address. If you would like to give a workshop then please send an 
abstract and your details to the conference organising committee.

Contact details:
APISC, PO Box 515, Broadway, NSW 2007, AUSTRALIA.
Phone: (+61-2-)(02-) 9690 1230 - Fax: -9690 1381 -
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] .

If you can help out with organising or building the conference in any 
way then please get back to us:
Can you take some leaflets and posters?
Do you have a mail-out we can put stuff in?
Can you pass on this email?

Email Marina at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED] if 
you can do anything in this regard.

Thanks and solidarity,

Marina Carman

===========================================================

The agenda is currently being drafted, with a variety of topics and 
issues in mind.

They include, among others:

State of the popular movements--a global round-up with panels on Europe, 
Asia, Africa, Latin America, North America

Another American century? The future of US hegemony

State of the Third World: the end of "economic miracles"

In the belly of the beasts: the struggle in the US, Britain and Europe

The contours of resistance: fightback on two fronts, in imperialist 
countries and the Third World

Linking movements, linking solutions: campaigns, movements and political 
power

Global links and the struggle against war, racism and world poverty

The war on Afghanistan and the threat to South Asia

War, racism, world poverty: what place for the labour movement?

The global offensive on the environment

The debt war

Overhaul or overthrow? What to do with the international financial 
institutions

Racism versus solidarity in Australian politics

East Asia since the 1997-8 financial crisis

The coming revolution in the Indonesian archipelago

East Timor: an Australian neo-colony?

Australia's imperial ambitions in the western Pacific

Cuba and the struggle against neoliberal globalisation

Comparative experiences of socialist regroupment and alliance-building

The new electoral opportunities for the revolutionary left

The future of the European Union: a left perspective

Renewal of the European radical left

New opportunities for the US socialist movement

===========================================================

A Call to Participate

A new spirit of resistance, renewal and cooperation is alive among the 
left around the world... Even in the face of the September 11 tragedy - 
a cruel act that has nothing to do with the struggle for a better world 
- the international left has been galvanising against Bush and Blair's 
hypocritical exploitation of the tragedy for their own terror on the 
Afghan people. Even before the bombs began raining down, thousands 
mobilised across the world to voice their opposition. These multiplied 
once the war began.

The anti-capitalist left has been at the forefront of many of these 
mobilisations. This follows a decade of rethinking and reorganisation by 
the left in many countries, which has been greatly invigourated by the 
global movement against neoliberal globalisation since Seattle 1999, 
culminating in the upheaval in Genoa this July. Certainly the capitalist 
neoliberal offensive of the last 25 years has inflicted heavy defeats on 
the working class internationally; certainly the social and political 
universe has changed a lot during the course of the 20th century; and 
certainly many who used to be on the left have given up the struggle.

But after the wave of confusion and despair following the collapse of 
the Soviet Union popular movements have been fighting back, reflecting 
the stubborn reality that the diseases of capitalism are more alive than 
ever, as is the need for a fundamentally different way of organising 
society-socialism. North and South people continue to rise up-against 
imperialist war, Third World debt, against the devastation of our 
environment, against the deepening exploitation of women, against the 
denial of national rights and the marginalisation of indigenous peoples, 
against rural poverty and landlessness.

 From Seattle to Washington, Melbourne to Quebec City, Prague to Nice to 
Genoa, the explosive protest movement against neoliberal globalisation 
as shaken the confidence of the world's rulers. Here in Australia the 
September 11-13, 2000 blockade of the World Economic Forum in Melbourne 
sparked a new mood of hope and enthusiasm on the left. The May 1 
blockades of stock exchanges in eight Australian cities followed it up. 
Then the planned October mobilisations against the Commonwealth Business 
Forum and Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting were, following the 
latter's cancellation, seamlessly converted into people's marches 
against war and racism.

Against this promising background new left parties and alliances are 
developing and new links - national and international - are being 
developed between parties with very different traditions. The radical 
left is rebuilding on new foundations.

Asia Pacific

These trends have been strongly felt in the Asia Pacific region. New 
parties have been formed, like the Peoples Democratic Party in 
Indonesia, the Power of the Working Class and Socialist Party in South 
Korea, and the Socialist Party of East Timor. The left in the 
Philippines continues a process of clarification and recomposition. The 
Labour Party Pakistan grows and draws working class leaders together in 
its ranks. The LPP is currently organising a very courageous struggle 
against both the US war and the religious fundamentalist gangs. On 
October 15, they led an anti-war demonstration of 1000 - nearly half of 
them women - which was shut down by the military. On November 6, the 
party took an active part - mobilising 12 busloads of orkers - in a 
peace rally of over 8000 in Rawalpindi, organised by the Alliance of 
Peace and Justice, which includes the LPP. In India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, 
Japan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Australia and other 
countries, parties coming from very different traditions - Maoist, 
Trotskyist, traditional Communist - have developed comradely 
collaboration and discussion. These processes became regional with the 
successful first Asia Pacific Solidarity Conference (Sydney, April 
1998), which was attended by more than 750 people, including 67 
representatives from non-Australian left parties and organisations. The 
Marxism 2000 Conference (Sydney, January 2000), the Socialism 21 
Conference (Kathmandu, November 2000) continued the trend. And the first 
left conference in Indonesia for more than 35 years--the Asia Pacific 
Peoples' Solidarity Conference in Jakarta, in June 2001 - made a 
valuable contribution to regional collaboration in spite of its 
disruption by police and right-wing militia.

A similar spirit of searching for new ways of working together exists in 
Europe and Latin America. In Europe, left alliances and new parties have 
grown in Portugal, Denmark, France, Italy and Turkey. The militant 
alternative being built by the Scottish Socialist Party and the British 
Socialist Alliance marks the strongest effort by the left there since 
1945. Anti-capitalist left parties from many different traditions are 
starting to meet on a Europe-wide basis.

The ten-year experience of the S�o Paulo Forum, the insurgent Zapatista 
movement and Porto Alegre's 15,000-strong World Social Forum (January 
2001) all indicate the strong desire for new forms of resistance. They 
also underscore the ever-urgent need for a resolute fight against 
imperialism and its international institutions, and for a revolutionary
transformation of society. At the same time, despite Washington's 
increasingly desperate efforts to discredit and crush it, revolutionary 
Cuba still stands as an inspiration for all peoples' struggles. The 
victory in the Elian Gonz�lez case and the Cuban people's ongoing 
mobilisations against the US blockade, the Free Trade Area of the 
Americas and Third World debt have strengthened the position of all of 
us who are resisting the system.

Issues and debates

The conference agenda will be wide-ranging. At its centre will be 
discussion of what political demands to press in the developing movement 
against neo-liberal globalisation and how to escalate the struggle 
against its military offshoot - the global imperialist "war against 
terrorism". How to maintain the momentum? Around what demands and 
alternatives? For example, the demand to abolish the WTO, World Bank and 
IMF has greater support than ever, even among many previously reticent 
NGOs. More people demand unconditional cancellation of the Third World 
debt. And how exactly can preferential trade treatment for the Third 
World be won? What role should the UN have in achieving international 
justice? Such are the core issues.

Another theme will be internationalist solidarity versus narrow 
nationalism. Fighting the dead-end of chauvinist protectionism has been 
a hard battle in Australia, where, as in all privileged imperialist 
countries, it's been the scourge of the trade unions and labour movement 
politics. Another unavoidable question for the movement - which so far 
has been rather ignored - is how to go beyond capitalism, beyond the new 
Cold War of a world for or against terrorism painted by Bush and Blair. 
The thorny question of socialism. At times this issue appears disguised 
as a debate over the very right of socialist parties to be part of the 
united front of resistance and to put their viewpoint within the 
movement. However, if left parties are excluded, it's practically 
impossible to lift the movement's field of vision beyond demands on, and 
reforms to, capitalist states and institutions.

The conference will devote many plenaries and workshops to aspects of 
building socialist parties in today's conditions. What sort of socialist 
renewal, regroupment and alliances are possible and desirable? What sort 
of party is needed? Should it be on a broadly anti-capitalist basis or 
do we need revolutionary Marxist parties right away? How should parties 
relate to the different networks and spheres of struggle? What sort of 
relations should exist between different national parties? How 
structured an  international network should we aim for? How can contact 
and collaboration between parties coming from different traditions and 
different continents be improved?

Contact us

We are calling for international sponsors and partners in this important 
conference. If your party, union, social movement or community 
organisation can attend, contact us as soon as possible so your input 
can be added in. If you would like to present a paper or workshop, let 
us know now so we can plan and advertise the agenda well in advance. If 
you look to build a more powerful and effective movement against the 
scourge of neoliberal globalisation and imperialist war, if you look to 
strengthen the struggle for the anti-capitalist and socialist cause, you 
should not miss the 2nd Asia Pacific International Solidarity Conference.

The conference is being organised by the Asia Pacific Institute for 
Democratisation and Development. The conference secretariat in Australia 
is presently based in the national office of the Democratic Socialists, 
who will also be participants at the conference.

Email us or write to:
APISC, PO Box 515, Broadway 2007, Australia.
Phone: (61-2-)(02-) 9690-1230
Fax:   (61-2-)(02-) 9690-1381
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.global-revolt.org/


2nd Asia Pacific International Solidarity Conference:
March 29 - April 1, 2002
SYDNEY BOYS HIGH SCHOOL, SURRY HILLS, SYDNEY,
AUSTRALIA

GLOBAL REVOLT ? GLOBAL LINKS
End war, racism, world poverty: a conference of global solidarity


SPECIAL EVENTS

Thursday, March 28, 7.00 pm: Opening solidarity rally and public meeting

Friday, March 29: Welcome BBQ for international guests

Saturday, March 30: Solidarity Dinner - good food, great speakers and a 
toast to global unity

Sunday, March 31: World Culture Night - music, song and performance in a 
spirit of international solidarity




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