Monday, December 17, 2012
Kazakhstan dictatorship
Free all political prisoners!
Kazakhstan is a one man dictatorship. Workers across the
country are paid starvation wages whilst a tiny minority become fabulously
wealthy. When people stand up for their social, human, workers rights, they
face vicious repression. Kazakhstan is constantly ranked amongst the lowest in
the world for press freedom, human rights, but amongst the highest for
corruption and embezzlement. Tony Blair has acted as an apologist for this
regime, speaking on its behalf many times.
But this has not stopped people fighting back. The
repression is met with a heroic fighback by many in Kazakhstan. Kazakh
president Nazarbayev is preparing the way to become the next Mubarrak or Ben
Ali.
Aron Atabek
Aron Atabek, a poet and dissident, has been imprisoned for 5 years now for supporting the struggle of residents of Shanrak. They were evicted with no offer of alternative accommodation. For the ‘crime’ of helping in negotiations with the authorities and the residents, Aron was sentenced to 18 years. He has been in solitary confinement for 2 years, denied access to his family. This is illegal under international law. We demand his immediate release, along with all those imprisoned as a result of the Shanrak struggle.
Aron Atabek, a poet and dissident, has been imprisoned for 5 years now for supporting the struggle of residents of Shanrak. They were evicted with no offer of alternative accommodation. For the ‘crime’ of helping in negotiations with the authorities and the residents, Aron was sentenced to 18 years. He has been in solitary confinement for 2 years, denied access to his family. This is illegal under international law. We demand his immediate release, along with all those imprisoned as a result of the Shanrak struggle.
Vadim Kuramshin
Human rights activist and lawyer Vadim Kuramshin has recently been sentenced for 12 years in a retrial, after a jury threw out the charges a few months earlier. Getting rid of all pretense of a fair trial, neither Vadim nor his representatives were not allowed to attend.
Human rights activist and lawyer Vadim Kuramshin has recently been sentenced for 12 years in a retrial, after a jury threw out the charges a few months earlier. Getting rid of all pretense of a fair trial, neither Vadim nor his representatives were not allowed to attend.
Vadim is in prison simply because he is a throrn in the side
of the regime, highlighting the many human rights abuses that occur throughout
Kazakhstan. For more details on the campaign for Vadim, see our website below.
Who are Campaign Kazakhstan?
Campaign Kazakhstan fights for democratic, social and workers’ rights in Kazakhstan. Through its campaigning material and its web-site, it highlights the conditions facing workers there and organises international solidarity. Many trade union branches and human rights groups have supported Campaign Kazakhstan internationally. Paul Murphy MEP has raised the campaign’s demands in the European Parliament. Jeremy Corbyn MP, Alan Meale MP and Billy Bragg have all supported the campaign.
Campaign Kazakhstan fights for democratic, social and workers’ rights in Kazakhstan. Through its campaigning material and its web-site, it highlights the conditions facing workers there and organises international solidarity. Many trade union branches and human rights groups have supported Campaign Kazakhstan internationally. Paul Murphy MEP has raised the campaign’s demands in the European Parliament. Jeremy Corbyn MP, Alan Meale MP and Billy Bragg have all supported the campaign.
Campaign Kazakhstan appeals to human rights and press
freedom organisations, trade unionists and all those who support democratic,
social, worker and political rights in Kazakhstan to:
a) Add their names to the list of sponsors and supporters of
the campaign
b) Send letters of protest about the denial of democratic rights in Kazakhstan
c) Spread the word about the situation in Kazakhstan
d) Join protests, lobbies and other campaigns
e) Make a donation through the website and ask your colleagues, family and friends to do the same
b) Send letters of protest about the denial of democratic rights in Kazakhstan
c) Spread the word about the situation in Kazakhstan
d) Join protests, lobbies and other campaigns
e) Make a donation through the website and ask your colleagues, family and friends to do the same
_____
Counterpunch
December 13, 2012
The World Bank Brings Nazarbayev University to Kazakhstan
by Allen Ruff and Steve Horn
A year ago, on Dec. 15, 2011, Kazakhstan state
security forces opened fire with U.S.-supplied weapons on oil workers on
strike since the preceding May for increased wages and better
conditions in the Caspian Sea company town of Zhanaozen. According to the
official count, 15 workers died and upwards of 70 were wounded. Unofficial
accounts reported much higher number of casualties.
Several hundred miles to the east in the capital, Astana, business went
on as usual that day for the Western faculty members and administrators at the
recently built multi-billion dollar Nazarbayev University, a joint venture
involving the country’s authoritarian regime, the World Bank, and a number of
major, primarily US “partnering” universities. This is the first of a
three-part series, stimulated by news of the “Zhanaozen Massacre” and initial word of “global university”
dealings in Kazakhstan.
Part One
A number of prestigious, primarily U.S.-based universities
are quietly working with the authoritarian regime in Kazakhstan under the
dictatorial rule of the country’s “Leader for Life,”
Nursultan Nazarbayev.
In a project largely shaped and brokered by the World Bank
in 2009 and 2010, the regime sealed deals with some ten major U.S. and
British universities and scientific research institutes. They’ve been tasked to
design and guide the specialized colleges at the country’s newly constructed
showcase university.
As a result, scores of academics have flocked to the
resource rich, strategically located country four times the size of Texas. They
remain there despite the fact that every major international human rights
monitor has cited the Nazarbayev regime for its continuing abuse of civil
liberties and basic freedoms.
Kazakhstan now serves as a key hub for the application of
the World Bank’s “knowledge bank” agenda, a vivid case study of the
far-reaching nature of a corporate – and by extension, imperial – higher
education agenda. . . .
Read the rest of the article here.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
the renunciation of ethical autonomy
This brings us to the necessity of Fall: what the Kantian
link between dependence and autonomy amounts to is that Fall is unavoidable, a
necessary step in the moral progress of man. That is to say, in precise Kantian
terms: "Fall" is the very renunciation of my radical ethical
autonomy; it occurs when I take refuge in a heteronomous Law, in a Law which is
experience as imposed on me from the outside, i.e., the finitude in which I
search for a support to avoid the dizziness of freedom is the finitude of the
external-heteronomous Law itself. Therein resides the difficulty of being a
Kantian. Every parent knows that the child’s provocations, wild and
"transgressive" as they may appear, ultimately conceal and express a
demand, addressed at the figure of authority, to set a firm limit, to draw a
line which means "This far and no further!", thus enabling the child
to achieve a clear mapping of what is possible and what is not possible. (And
does the same not go also for hysteric’s provocations?) This, precisely, is
what the analyst refuses to do, and this is what makes him so traumatic –
paradoxically, it is the setting of a firm limit which is liberating, and it is
the very absence of a firm limit which is experienced as suffocating. THIS is
why the Kantian autonomy of the subject is so difficult – its implication is
precisely that there is nobody outside, no external agent of "natural
authority", who can do the job for me and set me my limit, that I myself
have to pose a limit to my natural "unruliness." Although Kant famously
wrote that man is an animal which needs a master, this should not deceive us:
what Kant aims at is not the philosophical commonplace according to which, in
contrast to animals whose behavioural patterns are grounded in their inherited
instincts, man lacks such firm coordinates which, therefore, have to be imposed
on him from the outside, through a cultural authority; Kant’s true aim is
rather to point out how the very need of an external master is a deceptive
lure: man needs a master in order to conceal from himself the deadlock of his
own difficult freedom and self-responsibility. In this precise sense, a truly
enlightened "mature" human being is a subject who no longer needs a
master, who can fully assume the heavy burden of defining his own limitations.
This basic Kantian (and also Hegelian) lesson was put very clearly by
Chesterton: "Every act of will is an act of self-limitation. To desire
action is to desire limitation. In that sense every act is an act of
self-sacrifice."
(Slavoj Žižek, “Cogito, Madness and Religion: Derrida,
Foucault and then Lacan,” http://www.lacan.com/zizforest.html,
Lacan.com 2007; accessed 3/12/2012. The Chesterton quote is from Orthodoxy,
FQ Publishing, 2004. The passage is also found in Mythology,
Madness, and Laughter: Subjectivity in German Idealism; Markus Gabriel and
Slavoj Žižek, Continuum 2009, p. 98.)
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)