Resistance in Iraq - The Difficult
Peace
The multiple suicide bombings that took place during Ashura and
claimed over 140 lives in some of Iraq's main cities indicate that
while the war is over, the peace is far from settled. In the previous
issue of Red & Black Notes, we
reported on the US's intentions to remake the former Ba'ath party
fiefdom into a pliant free-market economy. Amongst the imperialist
powers, the only squeaks of protest have been from those powers, such
as Canada, which have so been shut out of the lucrative process.
Yet, there are other forces that are challenging, if on a minor
level, the US for control of Iraq. The US has been quick to label the
suicide bombings and attacks on US military and civilian targets as
the work of the old regime, Al-Qaeda or both. However, as the
bourgeois press is now starting to notice, the Islamic
fundamentalists are starting to show their strength. While the
overwhelming majority of people in Iraq are Muslim, Saddam Hussein
maintained a strong secular tilt in the country, if only because he
feared that organized religion could become a pole of opposition.
With Hussein gone, the Islamists are on the march. A front-page
article in the Toronto Globe and Mail on February 27, 2004 noted that
in Basra, once the most liberal of Iraqi cities, shops selling
alcohol, videotapes and even music, as well as their customers are
regular targets for the fundamentalists. Last week, a woman was
killed outside a video shop in an apparently random assassination.
But it is not just Basra. In Baghdad on February 17, three liquor
stores in the centre of the city were the targets of explosions
damaging the stores, and injuring employees and customers alike.
While the religious forces are not supposed to be armed, it is common
knowledge that many of the Islamic militants operate armed militias
to further their goal of "educating" people about Islam. As one store
owner commented "It was better under Saddam Hussein. Nowadays you can
expect anyone to come in and kill you."
But while the bourgeois press has belatedly discovered the threat
from the Islamists, so far unreported has been the wave of strikes
and workers' resistance to both the old order, the Islamists and the
US powers. The following is a small sample of strikes and workers'
resistance:
· On January 11 and 12, hundreds of unemployed workers
protested in Kut. On January 13, several people were injured after
clashes with police. Other demonstrations of the unemployed occurred
in Basra and Imra on the same days.
· On January 15, workers at Leather Industries Incorporation
expelled the former Ba'ath party general manager of their factory
after the management had tried to prevent the workers' efforts to
organize.
· On January 31, workers at North Gas Company in Kirkuk
struck for higher wages and the removal of the factory's Ba'ath
administrators.
· Also in January, workers at al-Nasir Cigarettes struck for
higher wages and for new job classifications.
· At the beginning of February workers at Southern Oil
Company won a three-month struggle for higher wages.
In Iraq today there is a 70% unemployment rate, and huge numbers
of wage violations. The solution proposed by the Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA) is to privatize the bulk of the existing
state enterprises, and assume that the non-existent free market will
correct the imbalances. Clearly the Iraqi working class has been
unwilling to wait for the 'invisible hand' to work its magic. The
richest irony in the entire situation has been that the CPA has
banned workers' representatives in former state enterprises since a
law passed by the Ba'ath party in 1987 forbids them. As one US
observer put it: "Unbelievable, they found a Saddam law they
like."
The Iraqi working class has a long tradition of militant struggle,
against both the Ba'ath party and their allies, and fundamentalist
religious forces. This battle is far from over.
Much of the information in this article was taken from
publications published by Iraqi groups and organizations:
The Union of Unemployed in
Iraq claims 130,000 members across seven provinces in Iraq
The
Worker-communist Party of Iraq publishes Forward every two
weeks.
Red & Black Notes takes no responsibility for the political
positions of these organizations and has disagreements with both,
particularly with their advocacy of the union form and for putting
forward such demands as "For a Progressive Labour Law." However, they
both provide useful sources of information on events in Iraq
unavailable elsewhere.
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