Lindsey oil workers’ victory in Britain


Striking Lindsey workers' meeting

From British weekly Socialist Worker:

Victory at Lindsey shows how to fight

Construction workers have won their dispute at the Lindsey Oil Refinery in Lincolnshire. An immediate walkout when job cuts were announced, backed up by thousands of workers striking at other sites, has won a huge victory.

Early reports suggest that the deal means:

* All 647 Lindsey workers who walked out in solidarity to be reinstated to their jobs
* No victimisations for anyone across Britain who struck in support of Lindsey
* The 51 workers who were sacked – which sparked the walkouts – will be re-employed

Of course strikers must stay vigilant to make sure that these demands are carried through everywhere. And if there are any victimisations then nobody should go back.

But let’s be clear – this is a tremendous victory, won by the most militant methods.

See also here. And here. And here.

Shell against Irish environment


This video from Ireland is called Shell to Sea swimmers arrested in Broadhaven Bay, 24th June 2009.

From British daily The Morning Star:

Glengad gets ready for war

Friday 26 June 2009

Residents of the coastal village of Glengad in Ireland have complained that their “parish is on lockdown” after 300 Garda officers and Shell security guards poured in to police the construction of a bitterly disputed gas pipeline.

The arrival of the world’s largest pipelaying ship, the Solitaire, outside Broadhaven Bay has sparked fears of a repeat of sea and land clashes which prevented a similar attempt to complete work on the 50-mile pipeline to the Corrib gas field in the Atlantic last year.

Anti-pipeline protesters have vowed to disrupt the Solitude’s work and 23 have already been arrested this month, some while laying fishnets in the bay or swimming to other vessels involved in the project.

Police reported yesterday that 50 protesters gathered overnight at the beach.

John Monaghan of the Pobal Chill Chomain community organisation, which is opposed to the pipeline being brought ashore, said that residents were preparing for a stand-off.

“It seems now like our parish is in lockdown,” Mr Monaghan said, adding: “I’m sure that’s going to lead to trouble later if they’re going to restrict people’s freedom of movement.”

One Glengad fisherman was arrested on Thursday under the Public Order Act on suspicion of entering an exclusion zone thrown up by Shell around the works.

And a man in his 20s and an 18-year-old woman were arrested on Wednesday under the Public Order Act after swimming into the bay to protest.

Campaigners, who say that the exclusion zone has no legal basis, reported that another fisherman, Pat O’Donnell – whose boat was sunk just weeks ago in mysterious circumstances – was injured and hospitalised after an altercation.

While Shell holds a foreshore licence for the offshore pipe-laying work, Mr O’Donnell, who has 3,000 crab pots in the bay and holds a fishing licence, refuses to remove his pots.

He stressed that he had “no wish for any conflict with Shell” but has asked the corporation to “demonstrate its lawful authority to remove his gear.”

Earlier this month, Mr O’Donnell’s boat was sunk after an alleged boarding by four men, two of whom held Mr O’Donnell and crewman Martin McDonnell in the wheelhouse.

Wikileaks Cable regarding Corrib: here.

New report from environmental groups exposes Shell’s anti-climate lobbying activities: here.

Shell blamed over ‘cover-up’ of Nigeria’s 2000 oil spills: here.

Joschka Fischer and the Caspian sea Nabucco pipeline: here.

Asians stop eating shark fin soup


From the Edmonton Journal in Canada:

Young Asians saying no to shark fin soup

Consumption of delicacy drops as wildlife conservation movement gains momentum

By Ralph Jennings and Cheong Kah Shin, Reuters

April 12, 2009

Singaporean groom Han Songguang took his campaign to stop consumption of one of Asia’s top delicacies to a new level when he placed postcards of a dead shark on each guest’s seat at his own wedding banquet.

Instead of shark’s fin soup, a must at many ethnic Chinese wedding banquets, Han offered his guests lobster soup.

“If we can do our part to save X number of sharks … why not?” said Han, a geography teacher, who married a diving enthusiast in December.

Wildlife conservationists, who have long railed against the popularity of shark fin soup, are finally seeing signs that consumption is dropping as young Asians become aware of the environmental impact of this much-prized dish.

Added to that is the global financial crisis, which is causing Asians to tighten their belts and either cut down on visits to restaurants or order more frugally from menus.

A symbol of wealth and status in Chinese culture, shark fin soup has long been an essential part of banquet celebrations for weddings and to welcome the Lunar New Year.

Until recently, only the rich could afford the soup. But demand has soared in recent years, hand-in-hand with rising affluence in East Asia. The quantity of shark fins demanded, around 800,000 metric tonnes a year, has caused a sharp decline in shark numbers. About 20 per cent of all shark species are now endangered.

Wildlife conservationists also decry the killing of sharks through “finning,” whereby the fins are cut off and the live shark is tossed back into the sea. Unable to swim properly, the shark suffocates or is killed by predators.

“Today we have incredible access to information. It has become much harder to say, ‘I didn’t know,’ ” said Glenn Sant, marine program leader of the British wildlife group Traffic.

He urged young Asians to take a stand and say: ” ‘It shouldn’t be an insult not to put shark fin on our wedding menu.’ ”

Despite efforts to ban “finning,” environmentalists say it is still carried out across the region as fishermen want the valuable fin but don’t want to store the rest of the shark, as its flesh fetches low prices at fish markets.

As young Asians such as Han take a stand against shark fin soup, environmentalists hope for a long-term drop in consumption.

Still, there is a robust market of older consumers who demand the soup at auspicious events.

“Students and people in their 20s wouldn’t go to a shark eatery, and $15 for a dish is no cheap price,” said Joyce Wu, program officer with Traffic.

Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and China, including Hong Kong, are all major shark fin consumers, according to a Traffic report. Trade in shark products was worth $310 million US in 2005, with fins 40 per cent of the total, the report says.

Those numbers are coming down as younger consumers eschew the delicacy of their parents.

Worldwide shark consumption dropped from a peak of 897,000 metric tonnes in 2003 to 758,000 in 2006, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. Fins make up an increasingly small percentage of the total, Traffic says.

Sharks live a long time, said Yvonne Sadovy, a biology professor at the University of Hong Kong. “They have a low reproductive rate. In in other words, they produce just a few young every year or every few years. So you just can’t take a lot.”

Tastes have changed along with awareness for young Asians. Shang-kuan Liang-chi, a National Taiwan University student who has tried the crunchy jelly-like dish twice at formal events, prefers other food and avoids a shark fin restaurant near campus. “University students never go in there,” he said.

Even chefs are hoping to turn the tide. At Singapore’s Annual Chefs’ Association dinner, shark fin traditionally served at the occasion was taken off the menu.

“It is much harder to stop serving shark’s fin in our restaurants, as the consumers still demand it,” said Otto Weibel, a food manager at one of Singapore’s top hotels. “However, in our personal capacity, we can make a stand.”

Global entertainment giant Disney bowed to pressure from animal rights activists and took the delicacy off its menu when it opened Hong Kong Disneyland in 2005.

A ban on shark finning in UK waters is to be introduced by the government, ministers will announce this week. The practice, which involves slicing fins from sharks at sea and dumping their bodies overboard – often while still alive – has been heavily criticised by campaigners and blamed for pushing many shark species to the brink of extinction: here.

Interview: Saving wild China: here.

Fish on the menu of early Asian Homo sapiens: here.

Singer PJ Harvey and war


By Hiram Lee in the USA:

PJ Harvey and John Parish in concert

26 June 2009

In 1996, British singer-songwriter PJ Harvey collaborated on an album with composer and multi-instrumentalist John Parish. The work, Dance Hall at Louse Point, stands out as one of the most interesting, challenging, and emotionally rich of Harvey’s career. While Harvey and Parish have continued to collaborate since that time, no new recordings have been released under both their names until a new album this year, A Woman a Man Walked By.

This writer recently had the opportunity to see Harvey and Parish perform in Covington, Kentucky, a small city just across the Ohio River from Cincinnati. It was a remarkable concert, with both Harvey and Parish setting aside more popular works from their careers as solo artists in favor of those songs the two had composed together on Dance Hall and A Woman a Man Walked By. Harvey’s voice was in fine form, as was Parish and his band. …

Among the most “human” songs from the new album and of those performed that night in Covington was “The Soldiers,” most of which featured only Harvey’s voice and Parish on ukulele. The lyrics are haunting and unsettling: “I imagine a dream in which I’m a soldier and I’m walking on the faces of dead women and everyone I’ve left behind me.” Following the nightmare described, the narrator begs to be set free from such disturbing conditions: “Send me home restless, send me home damaged, send me home dispossessed, send me home damaged and wanting.”

During certain parts of the song, Harvey would raise herself up and down on one foot as though marching in place, one of several occasions on which she used physical movement to add to the stories and emotions communicated by her songs. Parish’s fragile accompaniment on ukulele was the perfect answer to the lyrics and vice versa.

In many ways, “The Soldiers” found a companion piece in “Civil War Correspondent,” taken from Dance Hall at Louse Point. In this song, the “correspondent” sings: “Words leave my heart dry, words can’t save life, love has no place here, no joy, no tears.” And in the chorus: “I shout but he don’t hear. I put down on a page, ‘Darling spare me your tears, just send me the light of day.’”

Both songs contain an ambiguity: is Harvey singing directly of someone who has experienced war, or is she using that experience as a metaphor for someone who is struggling with his or her own life, love and loss? The use of war imagery is interesting. One gets a sense that whatever personal struggles may be involved, they are connected to the world in some intimate way, a way in which Harvey is perhaps only just able to grasp.

One finds a similar device in other songs from the new album, in which personal relationships have a connection to places, times, something in the air, etc. “Leaving California,” a perfect example of this, was another of the more exceptional songs performed in Covington. Using her falsetto range, something Harvey has more regularly featured in her recent work, she sang, “No one but me is walking under palms that give no shade. I’m leaving you today.” And later: “Oh, give me some shade, Oh, England, come soon. How could I have believed that I could live and breathe in you?” “California killed me,” she adds finally, with frailty.

Is it someone in California, California itself, or both that has left the song’s narrator so demoralized? One feels it is all woven together.

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Economic crisis


The regulations for financial markets agreed by the European heads of state and government at their conference a week ago in Brussels are even weaker than the noncommittal regulations adopted by the US: here.

This video from the USA is called Equality California Protest of Budget cuts to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programs 6/10/09.

Residents of the Imperial Valley in southern California face some of the worst social conditions in the US. With a population of around 50,000 people, El Centro, the region’s major town, registered an official unemployment rate of 26.9 percent as of April 2009: here.

This video from Canada says about itself:

A conversation with Windsor municipal workers

As they enter their 11th week on strike, two strikers talk to Jerry White of the World Socialist Web Site.

USA: Risk of Major Social Upheaval Likely if Bank Bonanza Continues: here.

Britain: Top bosses at Network Rail (NR) are to receive huge bonuses despite the company being criticised over delays on the London to Scotland West Coast line, it has been announced: here.

Iranian workers’ demands


From News from the struggles in Iran blog:

Message from Iranian Workers Free Trade Union

23 June 2009

Forty-eight days have passed since the suppression and arrest of workers’ gathering on International Labour Day – May Day. During this time our country has witnessed important events and we witness widespread and amazing changes in the social movement.

During their televised debates the presidential candidates repeatedly accused each other of violating citizens’ rights, embezzlement, theft, mismanagement, and incompetence. But none of them had any objection to the laws that have allowed the disastrous events affecting the majority of the population. None of them had any objection to legislation that takes away a worker’s right to strike, sets his wages at a quarter of what is the government’s poverty line, takes away the workers right to set up their own organisations, allows mass lay-offs, forces workers to sign blank contracts a one-month temporary contract .

The presidential candidates failed to take up issues regarding freedom of speech, the right to choose one’s dress, and hundreds of other inhuman laws that today govern our society. When they raise any issue it was in a superficial way, every one of them attempted to clear himself and accuse the others, as if his opponent had been more strict than himself. In all those debates, clearly and in confronting each other, the candidates themselves proved that they accept all the current laws and conditions and that their only quarrel is on who should be in power.

Therefore, we workers, under the present conditions, when social protests have taken the form of a mass and a huge movement has come on the scene to achieve its demands, see it as our right to put forward the demands of fellow workers and to raise our banner. These demands are as follows:

1. Immediate increase in the minimum wage to over 1 million tomans [$1010] a month.
2. An end to temporary contracts and new forms of work contracts.
3. The disbanding of the Labour House and the Islamic Labour Councils as government organisations in the factories and workshops, and the setting up of shoras [councils] and other workers’ organisations independent from the government.
4. Immediate payment of workers’ unpaid wages without any excuses.
5. An end to laying-off workers and payment of adequate unemployment insurance to all unemployed workers.
6. The immediate release of all political prisoners including the workers arrested on May Day, Jafar Azimzadeh, Gholamreza Khani, Said Yuzi, Said Rostami, Mehdi Farahi-Shandiz, Kaveh Mozafari, Mansour Osanloo and Ebrahim Madadi, and an end to surveillance and harassment of workers and labour leaders.
7. The right to strike, protest, assemble and the freedom of speech and the press are the workers’ absolute right.
8. An end to sexual discrimination, child labour and the sacking of foreign workers.

Workers! Today we have a duty to intervene, to pose our demands independently and by relying on our own united strength, together with other sections of society, to work towards achieving our human rights.

The Free Trade Union of Iranian Workers

Iran, the media and the World Socialist Web Site: here.

Trade unionists and campaigners have protested outside the Iranian embassy in London in opposition to the Ahmadinejad government’s brutal treatment of union activists.

Iran and public opinion: here. Letters on Iran and the US media: here. McCain and Iran: here.

The Obama administration has responded to Iranian allegations of manipulating opposition protests inside the country with flat denials. However, there is considerable evidence of extensive US operations against Iran, spanning a range of diplomatic, intelligence and military activities: here.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s threat to arm the neighbors of Iran and target the country with nuclear missiles marks an escalation of US pressure on Tehran designed to influence the bitter internal struggle within the clerical regime: here.

The international communist movement slammed Tehran on Wednesday over its bloody post-election crackdown, while rejecting Western efforts to exploit the crisis as an excuse for “humanitarian intervention”: here.

Michael Jackson ‘dies’


This music video is called Michael Jackson – Never Can Say Goodbye (Hermit Crab Remix).

From Al Jazeera:

Friday, June 26, 2009

Singer Michael Jackson ‘dies’

Pop singer Michael Jackson has died after being found unconscious at his home in Los Angeles, US media reports say.

Paramedics were sent to Jackson‘s home in the Bel-Air area of the city on Thursday at 12.21pm (2021 GMT), but they were unable to revive him, the Los Angeles Times reported.

“Pop star Michael Jackson was pronounced dead by doctors this afternoon after arriving at a hospital in a deep coma, city and law enforcement sources told The Times,” the newspaper reported on its website.

The UCLA medical centre has not confirmed that Jackson has died, but the Associated Press reported that a person with “knowledge of the situation” had told them that the singer had died in hospital.

The news comes four months after Jackson, 50, announced that he was to perform a series of 50 shows in London in July.

The shows were seen as the beginning of a public comeback by Jackson, who had spent recent years countering a series of damaging allegations about his private life, none of which were proved in court.

See also here. And here. And here.

Michael Jackson: We span, shuffled and combed our hair up high – to be like the boy on Bandstand: here.

Michael Jackson earns $1bn since death: here.

Fossil piranha teeth discoveries


From the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center:

New fossil tells how piranhas got their teeth

June 25th, 2009

How did piranhas — the legendary freshwater fish with the razor bite — get their telltale teeth? Researchers from Argentina, the United States and Venezuela have uncovered the jawbone of a striking transitional fossil that sheds light on this question. Named Megapiranha paranensis, this previously unknown fossil fish bridges the evolutionary gap between flesh-eating piranhas and their plant-eating cousins.

Present-day piranhas have a single row of triangular teeth, like the blade on a saw, explained the researchers. But their closest relatives — a group of fishes commonly known as pacus — have two rows of square teeth, presumably for crushing fruits and seeds. “In modern piranhas the teeth are arranged in a single file,” said Wasila Dahdul, a visiting scientist at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center in North Carolina. “But in the relatives of piranhas — which tend to be herbivorous fishes —the teeth are in two rows,” said Dahdul.

Megapiranha shows an intermediate pattern: it’s teeth are arranged in a zig-zag row. This suggests that the two rows in pacus were compressed to form a single row in piranhas. “It almost looks like the teeth are migrating from the second row into the first row,” said John Lundberg, curator at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia and a co-author of the study.

If this is so, Megapiranha may be an intermediate step in the long process that produced the piranha’s distinctive bite. To find out where Megapiranha falls in the evolutionary tree for these fishes, Dahdul examined hundreds of specimens of modern piranhas and their relatives. “What’s cool about this group of fish is their teeth have really distinctive features. A single tooth can tell you a lot about what species it is and what other fishes they’re related to,” said Dahdul. Her phylogenetic analysis confirms their hunch — Megapiranha seems to fit between piranhas and pacus in the fish family tree.

The Megapiranha fossil was originally collected in a riverside cliff in northeastern Argentina in the early 1900s, but remained unstudied until paleontologist Alberto Cione of Argentina’s La Plata Museum rediscovered the startling specimen —an upper jaw with three unusually large and pointed teeth — in the 1980s in a museum drawer.

Cione’s find suggests that Megapiranha lived between 8-10 million years ago in a South American river system known as the Paraná. But you wouldn’t want to meet one today. If the jawbone of this fossil is any indication, Megapiranha was a big fish. By comparing the teeth and jaw to the same bones in present-day species, the researchers estimate that Megapiranha was up to 1 meter (3 feet) in length. That’s at least four times as long as modern piranhas. Although no one is sure what Megapiranha ate, it probably had a diverse diet, said Cione.

Other riddles remain, however. “Piranhas have six teeth, but Megapiranha had seven,” said Dahdul. “So what happened to the seventh tooth?”

“One of the teeth may have been lost,” said Lundberg. “Or two of the original seven may have fused together over evolutionary time. It’s an unanswered question. Maybe someday we’ll find out.”

The team’s findings were published in the June 2009 issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

More information: Cione, A., W. Dahdul, J. Lundberg, and A. Machado-Allison. (2009). “Megapiranha paranensis, a new genus and species of Serrasalmidae (Characiformes, Teleostei) from the upper Miocene of Argentina.” Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 29(2): 350-358.