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WSWS : News
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: Germany
Berlin: 40,000 demonstrate to defend education and social
programs
By our correspondents
15 December 2003
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Student protests, which have been taking place for a number
of weeks in Germany, reached a high point Saturday with the biggest
demonstration so far by an estimated 40,000 students in Berlin
(organisers put the crowd at 50,000). In addition to students
from Berlins three main universities, the protest was joined
for the first time by representatives of other welfare activist
groups and trade unions. In the event, the participation of the
trade unions was very limited.

The Berlin demonstration was held under the slogan Against
the dismantling of education and the theft of the welfare state,
with students and other protesters travelling from cities and
towns in the adjoining states of Brandenburg, Lower Saxony, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
and Schleswig-Holstein. Many placards and banners warned of the
dangers of an education system aimed at encouraging an educational
elite and called for a redistribution of income to benefit the
socially disadvantaged.
The protest in Berlin corresponded with other demonstrations
throughout Germany and Europe. In Frankfurt am Main, 10,000 participated
in demonstrations Saturday; in the East German city of Leipzig,
over 20,000 took part. The extent of the demonstrations Saturday
made clear that what had begun as a local protest in Berlin has
now grown into a national movement for the defence of the right
to education. Protests against attacks on education also took
place in other European countries, notably France and Italy.
Berlin has witnessed a radicalisation of student protests over
the past weeks with a series of occupations of the offices of
political partiesin particular the SPD (German Social Democratic
Party) and PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism), which together
constitute the Berlin coalition government. Last week, students
also occupied the Berlin offices of the giant Bertelsmann publishing
company after members of the firms executive had expressed
their sympathy with some of the education policies favoured by
the Berlin Senate.
The aim of Saturdays demonstration was to bring together
students with other social layers that are affected by spending
cutsschool students, families and the unemployed. Statistics
demonstrate that sympathy with the students is high. According
to one recent opinion poll, 83 percent of the population in Berlin
approved of protest action to defend public education.
The main segment of the demonstration set off from the citys
Brandenburg Gate, where initially just 5,000 had gathered. As
the demonstration arrived at the central meeting place, it had
swelled to over 40,000. The trade union section of the march,
which assembled at Potsdam Square, consisted of only a few hundred.
The low level of attendance at the demonstration was in line with
the policy of German trade unions to halt and sabotage any effective
protest action against the national governments programme
of social cutsthe so-called Agenda 2010.
A member of the IG Bau miners union attending the Berlin
demonstration told the WSWS that apart from a few unemployed persons,
there was virtually no effort made to secure a proper attendance
by trade unionists. He asserted that this was bound up with the
current collaboration between the government and trade unions,
which are eager to participate in joint discussions over the proposed
cuts.
The concluding rally
A number of speakers from various organisations that had issued
calls for the demonstration addressed the final rally at the Alexanderplatz.
All of the speakers emphasised the necessity of uniting students
with other social layers affected by welfare cuts, but refrained
from offering any other broader perspective to defend educational
gains, many of which were first introduced in the 1970s. The spokesman
for the teachers and lecturers union (GEW) sought to adopt the
same language used by the Berlin Senate to justify its cuts. The
GEW speaker complained that politicians were not doing enough
to invest in Germanys future and secure the countrys
position as a leading economic power.
The speaker treated the actions undertaken by politicians in
Berlin and nationwide as a mistake arising from policies that
were unreasonable and not properly thought through. He carefully
ignored the fact that the shift towards higher education for a
small privileged elite, with the majority of the population condemned
to a basic schooling, is entirely in line with the demands of
big business. Based on the prognosis that those in power were
being unreasonable, the speaker justified what amounts to a thoroughly
harmless and ineffective perspectiveincreased pressure on
establishment politicians to make them more reasonable.
Mistrust on the part of demonstrators
Official speakers at the rally expressed considerable confidence
in being able to win the ear of politicians and celebrated as
a success the fact that the Berlin senator for scientific affairs,
Thomas Flierl (PDS), had promised at a recent conference of his
party to reconsider the introduction of so-called study accounts.
Speakers also expressed the hope that the SPD would come to its
senses. However, demonstrators themselves were more sceptical
and few were convinced that it would be possible to sway the Senate.
In an interview with the WSWS, Anika, 22, a student of linguistics
at the Free University, said: The protest will not change
anything. The politicians are just playing for time. She
nevertheless saw the necessity to take part in the demonstrations:
The protest should make clear to the public the extent of
the cuts being carried out in the universities. Existing conditions
are already catastrophic. She said she was disappointed
by the Berlin Senate. I think many students voted for Wowereit
(Berlin mayor, SPD) and now feel let down. As for the PDS, I did
not expect anything from them in the first place.
Jakob, 22, expressed a similar negative view of the Berlin
council: One can only shake ones head over the PDS.
Jakob studies at the citys Technical University and fears
a worsening of conditions. At the moment it is not too bad,
but where will it all end? Jakob articulated his anger at
the form taken by spending cuts: Cuts are being made at
the wrong end. The politicians have money to spend when it comes
to bailing out a bank or raising incomes for top-flight earners,
but in the meantime education is suffering more and more. One
has to demonstrate that the majority of the electorate is against
the cuts. It is not just an issue for Berlin, but for the country
as a whole.
Werner, an author and director, also took part in the Berlin
protest. The demonstration is important because it is necessary
to make clear the extent of the problem, he said. I
have no illusion that the Senate will reverse its course. They
will only press ahead with similar policies. It is a national
government that is intent on pursuing a free-market political
course and demonstrating that it is finally a force to be reckoned
with in the world by sending its military around the globe. It
represents a very dangerous lurch to the right. The savings made
in education are then swallowed up by increased financing of armaments.
What is taking place here is an abomination! declared
André, who is studying at the Humboldt University. I
have followed the discussion in the senate and what has taken
place is just electoral manoeuvring. André was also
critical of the Green Party, which is currently excluded from
the Berlin coalition. They are responsible for introducing
study accounts in other German states. He also saw the roots
of the attack on education in the governments free-market
course: There is a huge amount of privatisation talking
place and concessions made to the employers. For such policies,
the government needs money and so they undertake an offensive
against those reckoned to be unable to defend themselvesworkers,
students, etc.
Members and supporters of the WSWS distributed over a thousand
leaflets at the demonstration and
set up a literature table. The leaflet called for attendance at
a meeting at the Humboldt University on December 18, titled Education
is a fundamental rightnot a commodity.
See Also:
Student protests at Berlin universities
[5 December 2003]
100,000 demonstrate in Berlin
against Schröders Agenda 2010
[4 November 2003]
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