Internet Statement 2005-76
Oct. 2, 2005 After many days during which the civilian population in Iraq was hit by one massacre after another, the continuation could be seen yesterday in a grave Islamistic attack, which hit Bali for the second time after 2002 and at first glance seems to be directed against tourists on this well-known island. Here, too, it pays, however, to throw light on the social development in Indonesia. It has to be questioned what the actual goals of such a butchery might be. Again Islamistic organisations connected to ominous international "networks" are almost certainly the perpetrators of such an attack. It happens, though, in a social framework rocked by heavy unrest itself. Today's Indonesia is also a large producer of industrial and agricultural products, as well as of diverse raw materials. After China it is one of the countries which provide the majority of the working force in manufacturing and agriculture. As a country of 240 millions of inhabitants it has tremendous weight. It belongs to those Islamic nations whose production of oil comes only to a small part of the national product, whereas the agricultural and industrial production plays a large role for Indonesia. Although it is a member of OPEC, Indonesia has meanwhile become a net importer of oil. Towards the end of the nineties it came to a general upsurge of the mass movement, the first large movement after the annihilation campaign, which had been led against the communist party and movement, also after provocations, under Suharto in 1965-66. Time and again there were diversionary political manoeuvres. In 1998 there were instigations against the Chinese minority as the "responsibles" for the economic crisis. But also by attacks against Bali, where Hinduism and Buddhism are the main religions, with its extensive tourism, the masterminds of these attacks hope to divert. These attacks are directed against the struggle for social emancipation as well as against efforts to preserve the elbowroom versus the US and the regional allies as Australia. The explosion of growth in Asia during the past 30 years, in particular the growth and the concentration of the world's production in China as well as in some other states as Thailand, Korea, India and Indonesia itself, too, has led to scarcity of raw materials and a surge of prices, as is known. Those nations whose predominant products are oil, natural gas and some other raw materials, are on the winning side, whereas those who are predominantly producing nations have to pay the bill. Incidentally, 30 years of retardation of the development of nuclear energy have created the correspondent gap. As for the technical development, it would have been possible to create by nuclear energy very large energy fundaments in many countries, and to enhance their autonomy by developing enrichment plants etc. But already at the first nuclear power plant which a nation wanted, there was, as a rule, headwind from the US, and when a nation wanted more than one, then the US and in earlier times temporarily also the Soviet Union started speaking words of pressure and material blackmail. Today, at any rate, the hunger for oil and natural gas affects the global economy tremendously. And it is exactly Indonesia in which according to the available informations large demonstrations against hikes in energy prices took place. In a report by the "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" of Sept. 29, 2005, it is said, for example:
In many Asian countries the energy prices are supported by public subventions, the possibility of which, however, is limited by the budget situation, and if there are additional burdens as now by the resolutely heightened oil prices, this system breaks down. The consequence are demonstrations, precisely also e.g. in Indonesia
And this hits those parts of the population above all, which push the industrial development also in the middle sector.
as the "FAZ" worries.
These conflicts are on the agenda in Indonesia as well as in other countries, and to a certain degree the governments are passing on to the outside this pressure coming across them from inside. So the analysis of the FAZ quite consequently leads to words of the Indian finance minister Palaniappan Chidambaram, who spoke of "outrageous oil prices".
Now this is certainly the FAZ's typical wish-wash, imputing wrong finger-pointing here. In fact there are downright beneficiaries of the "politics of soil", which has been predominant for decades, politics which attributes a central role to the exploitation of the ground in the form of fuels, above all oil, which operates deliberately with the increases of energy prices and the blockade of all ways which make countries independent from this extortion. Several social forces, as for example the big Anglo-Saxon oil monopolies as well as countries like Russia or the important oil producing countries of the Arab peninsula are cashing in tremendously on this catastrophic international development. It is just right if nations like India or Indonesia knock at the door, saying that this pressure against the predominantly producing countries is unjust and must be cured.
How, then, is such an attack to be qualified which hits into the thick
of the social life of a country which is rocked by these turbulences,
as is Indonesia? It has the consequences which are known from such "terror"-operations:
the inner police regime is enforced, all forces tending to unrest are
taken under control, the demonstrations are fought and the public life
distracted. The attention must be turned to these social questions, they must be discussed, whereas the dirty criminal attacks with their diverse aspects of impeding the social struggle in a country and upon the international level must be debunked. The whole Islamistic terror is a means of reaction in all countries. It plays, in the most different facets, into the hands of the hardest suppressive and belligerent manoeuvres of imperialism and its local allies. Editorial staff of Neue Einheit - hd
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Iraq:
Some
Points About Military Principles - Suicide Attacks What is understood
by the movement against anti-Islam hostility? On
the character of the political activities of the so-called Anti-imperialistic
Coordination (AIC)
- About the influences on Iraq solidarity Hostage-taking
in Beslan: Islamistic barbarism and imperialist backgrounds
Important
Quotes Bin Ladin, ties of islamists towards CIA and others Something about terrorism and state terrorism
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