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WSWS : News
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WSWS holds public meetings in Australia on Asian tsunami disaster
By Laura Tiernan
8 February 2005
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The World Socialist Web Site held two successful
public meetings in Australia during the past week to discuss the
global political issues raised by the Asian tsunami. Wije Dias,
general secretary of the Socialist Equality Party of Sri Lanka,
addressed the meetings in Sydney and Melbourne, and was joined
in Sydney by WSWS International Editorial Board chairman David
North.
Chairing the meeting in Sydney, SEP national secretary Nick
Beams noted that broad sections of the population in every country
had responded with concern to the tragic events of December 26a
stark contrast to the politicians representing the major powers,
who had offered paltry and insulting terms of assistance to the
hundreds of thousands of victims, revealing in the process their
complete indifference and contempt for the masses. Beams said
the most crucial task confronting the working class was to discuss
the historical and political issues raised by the disaster and
on that basis to elaborate a political alternative for the international
working class.
Addressing the Sydney meeting, WSWS International Editorial
Board member Peter Symonds pointed to the absence of a tsunami
warning system in the Indian Ocean, and demonstrated how the huge
death toll from Decembers tsunami was entirely preventable.
In the Pacific Ocean, a hi-tech warning system had been in place
since the early 1960s, capable of rapidly analysing the
data and on the basis of computer modelling to issue warnings
to areas likely to be hit.
A good example of current technological capacity was the system
in Japan: Some 3,500 earthquake sensors and 180 seismic
stations across the country are connected to a network of tidal
stations and 80 deep-sea sensors and 24-hour monitoring. A computer
program loaded with the results of 100,000 simulations checks
the chances of a tsunami and sends out warnings within three to
five minutes. Alerts are immediately flashed on TVs and emergency
authorities are notified by both landline and backup satellite
communication. A series of huge breakwaters and floodgates has
been built to protect major harbours and installations.
None of this exists in the Indian Ocean even though scientists
have repeatedly advised about the dangers and urged the construction
of a tsunami warning system. As a result, the populations around
the coastlines of the Bay of Bengal were caught completely unprepared.
The main speaker, Wije Dias, provided a detailed political
overview of the impact of the tsunami on the island nation of
Sri Lanka where more than 40,000 people had lost their lives.
(His full report will be published tomorrow.)
In opening his Sydney address, Dias noted that February 4 was
the 57th anniversary of Sri Lankas so-called independence
from British colonial rule. Yet the devastating effects of the
tsunami underscored the countrys economic backwardness,
its continued economic and political subordination to the great
powers and the conditions of abject poverty faced by the workers
and oppressed masses throughout the island.
Dias outlined a principled Marxist response to the tsunami
disaster, including the partys attitude to humanitarian
relief efforts: We appreciate their work tremendously. However,
our main task is to provide the perspective and the program to
overcome the drudgery and oppressive social and political conditions
that keep the masses enslaved under the moribund capitalist system.
As to relief work, we must develop the awareness among the working
people that it is the responsibility of the state and the government
to provide for the needs of those who are hit by the tsunami.
He elaborated a series of demands, including the immediate
allocation of land and houses to all those displaced, monetary
compensation to the victims for their loss of income, and a public
works program to rebuild all hospitals, schools, roads and communications
systems. The funds must be made available by transferring
the money allocated to the war effort and taxing the rich in proportion
to the extent of their wealth.
The final speaker in Sydney was WSWS IEB chairman David North.
A great deal has been said about the powerful force of the
tsunami: leaping across nations, bringing death and destruction,
and that one can only shrug ones shoulders in despair and
say thats fate. North rejected the retrograde
ideological outlook implicit in such conceptions.
It was necessary, North insisted, to restate the foundations
and basic conceptions of the socialist movement. He recalled
that in the first half of the twentieth century, the dustbowl
conditions which existed in the United States were answered through
vast public works programs. There was a confidence that
the means existed to overcome these problems: that where droughts
and deserts had existed, irrigation systems could be created.
North said the visionaries of the socialist movement argued
and believed that man had the capacity to utilise science in a
manner which would transform the planet. In these conceptions
the socialists were basing themselves on the intellectual spirit
initiated, not only in the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century,
but even further back, in the Renaissance, which began in the
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. So why should we really be
arguing these points today? The reality is that man has the power
and the capacity to deal with all of these problems. The great
obstacles to their resolution lie not in nature, but in society.
A tsunami, North pointed out, is only a qualitative
intensification of the disasters which take place day after day.
How many thousands of people die each day from AIDS in Africa?
How many thousands of young people die throughout the world each
day because they dont have access to clean water and die
of dysentery and other primitive diseases which should have been
abolished long ago?
The speaker concluded with a defence of socialism against all
forms of irrationality and the blind pursuit of personal wealth,
When the media mouthpieces for big business proclaim that
socialism is dead, what are they actually saying? They are saying
it is absurd to believe that there is any alternative to principles
of social organisation based upon the private accumulation of
wealth and the pursuit of profit. There is no alternative to that.
You cant even think about it. Its impossible. And
in proclaiming the death of socialism theyre proclaiming
the death of the principle that social planning, the utilisation
of reason, of intellect, of science, to conquer all forms of irrationality
in our social existence, is inconceivable. Socialism is about
the utilisation of science, of mans insight into the laws
of nature and human development, to harness all the forces of
nature and of mans ingenuity, to create a society of true
equality, which is the other great principle of the socialist
movement.
At both meetings, audience members addressed a series of questions
to Dias concerning the effects of the tsunami, the nature and
purpose of aid money donated by the major powers and the perspective
of the Socialist Equality Party.
In reply to an audience member who asked whether natural disasters
could assist the revolutionary mobilisation of the working class,
Dias referred to Leon Trotskys book The Young Lenin,
which reviews an early political dispute between Lenin and
various Russian radicals and populists. One such radical, Vodovozov,
claimed Lenin failed to participate in relief efforts along with
the populists because he believed the famine was fulfilling a
progressive historical mission, laying the foundation for Russias
industrialisation.
Trotsky replied: Vodovozovs reminiscences on the
subject represent not so much Ulyanovs [Lenins] views
as their distorted reflection in the minds of liberals and populists.
The idea that ruination and decimation of the peasants could promote
industrialisation of the country is too absurd in itself. The
ruined peasants became paupers, not proletarians, the famine fed
the parasitic not the progressive trends of the economy. The very
tendentiousness of Vodovozovs story however, gives a fair
idea of the heated atmosphere of those old controversies.
Marxists never believe that out of devastation, revolution
can emerge, Dias explained. But such devastation had led the masses
to look more directly at the nature of the rule they were living
under. In such a situation the task of the Marxists is to
analyse and explain to the masses that there exists a socialist
alternative to this decadent capitalist system. Only through that
intervention can the consciousness of the working class and oppressed
masses reach up to the level of forming their own state power.
The meetings raised collections of more than $1,000 to assist
in the development of the work of the SEP and the WSWS in Sri
Lanka.
See Also:
SEP meeting in Sri Lanka explains social
roots of tsunami disaster
[7 February 2005]
The social roots of the tsunami
disaster
[22 January 2005]
The Asian tsunami: why there
were no warnings
[3 January 2005]
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