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Free the boys!

How teenage boys from war-torn Sudan end up serving life sentences in Greek prisons


23/12/2025

On the popular tourism island of Crete lies the ancient city of Chania. Inhabited since the Neolithic era, it is steeped in history with its pastel-coloured Venetian townhouses and Ottoman mosques. Revered for its rich history, white sandy beaches and Mediterranean cuisine, it’s considered the most beautiful city on the island and a top holiday destination.

Behind the façade of a dream-like escape from reality for European tourists lies an altogether different reality for the approximately 300 Sudanese refugees held in detention centres across Greece, facing life sentences in prison for crossing the Mediterranean to seek safety on European shores.

In recent weeks, the court in Chania has handed down several egregious sentences. On 1 December 2025, a 26-year-old looking for asylum received, after just minutes of the hearing, 335 years in prison and a fine of €200,000. The next sentence that the court handed down was 200 years.

Support groups de:criminalize, 50 out of Many, Mataris Sudan Solidarity Committee and Border Violence Monitoring Network, are among the few reporting on this violation of the United Nations’ 1951 Refugee Convention and raising awareness for the, oftentimes still underage, Sudanese boys facing life sentences in prison.

The exorbitant sentences are not unusual for the young men and boys seeking refuge in Crete. The refugees fleeing Sudan’s brutal war, surviving dangerous routes through the Sahara, Libya, and the Mediterranean Sea, are being held and sentenced on smuggling charges, for being forced to steer the boat under duress or being held responsible for other small tasks such as handing out water or holding a satellite navigation device.

A young Sudanese man imprisoned in Greece explains: ‘Most of us had no choice—either cooperate or risk our lives at sea.’

Despite their age and vulnerability, the boys are being tried as adults and smugglers. In recent weeks, the support groups reported, a 16-year-old boy was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Under Greek law that came into effect in 2014, anyone steering a boat or appearing to assist in crossings faces charges of smuggling with sentences of up to 25 years per person transported. A 2023 study by Borderline Europe found that:

‘Trials lead to an average prison sentence of 46 years and a fine of 332.209 Euros’ and

‘52% of all convicted people are serving a prison sentence of 15 years to life’.

People imprisoned on smuggling charges now form the second largest group of inmates in Greek prisons.

The lawyer, Spyros Pantazis, defending one of the teenagers held in Greece, says: ‘The very tough anti-smuggling law has been a timeless governmental weapon to minimise illegal immigration. In reality, it is completely useless, only filling up Greek prisons with people who have no record or connection to criminal offences.’

Meanwhile, de:criminalize reports, many of the accused are pressured by the court-appointed lawyers or prosecutors to make a plea deal with little to no knowledge of what that entails or what the consequences are. By signing a confession of guilt in exchange for a reduced sentence, the defendants, many of whom have already spent months or even years in pre-trial detention, forfeit ‘almost all chances of asylum’.

Almost every case in Chania is now settled through a plea deal. Sentences of hundreds of years, of which at least 25 must be served, are often reduced to a uniform 10 years behind bars under the plea deal.

The practice of plea deals, originally introduced to relieve the overburdened Greek legal system of insignificant cases, undermines the right to a fair trial for the Sudanese refugees. The irreversible guilty plea deal means there is no examination of evidence, witnesses or substantive review, nor the chance of appeal. Frequently, their court-appointed lawyers are ill-prepared and only meet shortly before the hearing, if not in the courtroom itself. The defendants have little to no opportunity to understand or reflect on the confession they are signing or the consequences thereof. Oftentimes, they do not have access to a qualified interpreter.

Borderline Europe reports: ‘Arrests and preliminary investigations are riddled with gross human rights violations; including arbitrary arrests, violence and coercion, little to no access to interpretation or legal support as well as problems in accessing the asylum procedure during detention.’

With 84% of cases studied for the 2023 Borderline Europe study resulting in pre-trial detention of an average of 8 months, the relentless violation of their human rights and with the prospect of prison sentences of hundreds of years, these vulnerable young men and boys signing plea deals are a foregone conclusion.

Recently, several defendants have been acquitted on the basis that, according to international law, asylum seekers must not be criminalised for their migration.

De:criminalize states, ‘These rulings make clear that in certain situations—for example, for people from countries with high asylum recognition rates—immediate release is not only theoretically possible but realistic.’

The 1951 Refugee Convention states that: ‘refugees should not be penalised for their illegal entry or stay. This recognises that the seeking of asylum can require refugees to breach immigration rules. Prohibited penalties might include being charged with immigration or criminal offences relating to the seeking of asylum or being arbitrarily detained purely on the basis of seeking asylum’.

Just this week, however, on 17 December 2025 31 defendants stood before the court in Chania facing decades in prison on smuggling charges. None were acquitted, most received 10-year sentences, some longer; ten cases were postponed. Birth certificates indicating that some defendants are minors were not accepted.

Images: Louise Truc.

As militarisation of EU borders increases and criminalisation of search and rescue is implemented, safe and legal routes disappear—the most vulnerable refugees are forced into ever more perilous journeys.

In the Guardian documentary How Europe’s immigration crackdown is fuelling smuggling gangs, Ashifa Kassam investigates whether the EU’s hardline policies are actually enriching the criminal gangs behind the scenes.

In the documentary, she flies over the Mediterranean with Omar El Manfalouti, a pilot at Humanitarian Pilots Initiative, where they encounter a vessel in distress. El Manfalouti explains: ‘People suffer from dehydration, heat-stroke, burns from the fuel, but death comes in many forms unfortunately on this route’

They put out a Mayday call, to little effect.

El Manfalouti states: ‘You have a legal obligation to hand assistance to a boat in distress, to people whose lives are at risk, but that’s not happening. And that’s not happening because states refuse to take over coordination of these cases, so any vessel that might rescue people now is going to get stuck with them.’

Eventually, after several hours, the Mayday call to a nearby oil rig prompts one ship to move towards the boat, before suddenly a boat suspected of belonging to a Libyan militia group speeds up to the vessel in distress to recapture the people, prompting some of the passengers to jump in the water, preferring to die than go back to Libya. The passengers are forced onto the boat and likely escorted back to Libya.

In the documentary, El Manfalouti details: ‘What we see here is a result of a policy. This is not an accident, it doesn’t have to be like that.

‘Ten years ago, this would not have happened. Ten years ago, we had European navies, European coast guards, for example the German navy, Italian navy deploying active assets to get people out of the water. People would not have been exposed to the immediate loss of life for half a day, or a day or even longer. And crucially people would not have been brought to that vicious cycle of smuggling, human trafficking and the Libyan militia system. They would have been brought to a place of safety, extracted from that criminal environment in Libya, and Libyan militias would not have had a chance to cash in twice or thrice on the same human cargo.

‘They are returned to detention camps. There they either die from torture, malnourishment, preventable disease, or they cross again.

‘I think the most important thing that we’re observing is that thousands of people are losing their lives, because of these policy choices, year, after year, after year.

‘There’s a belief in European capitals that what happens at the border can be isolated, can be kept apart from what is happening domestically. But whatever happens in your borderlands, whatever is funded by your own taxpayers’ money, will sooner or later come back to haunt you. And I think we are already seeing this with the rise of the far right across Europe—an erosion of the rule of law. But the EU is in one way or another sustaining these human trafficking networks through its policy choices.’

On the EU side, Frontex, the EU border and coast guard agency, is increasingly linked to arms and security companies on the receiving end of the approximately €2bn budget.

Abolish Frontex points out that large European arms companies such as Airbus, Leonardo and Thales, are the biggest winners, positioning themselves as experts, taking part in advisory bodies and shaping EU border and migration policies and selling equipment and services to ‘combat’ the ‘security threat’ posed by those fleeing war.

Abolish Frontex goes on to point out the irony that these same arms companies export weapons to the very conflict zones people are fleeing.

Frontex and other border security authorities increasingly use autonomous systems for border surveillance. Over the last few years the agency has paid tens of millions of euros to arms companies Airbus, Elbit, Israel Aerospace Industries and Leonardo for providing drone surveillance services in the Mediterranean. This includes the use of so-called ‘killer drones’ which are promoted as ‘battlefield tested’ in wars and repression.’”

Furthermore, Maritime Frontex makes use of so-called border-externalisation operations, whereby third countries act as outpost border guards for the EU, stopping refugees before they ever reach EU shores. This practice directly legitimises and strengthens authoritarian regimes and their security forces.

In addition to the threat of Frontex’s practices, Libyan militia groups and the danger of being on open waters in unseaworthy vessels, the Greek coast guard has also long been accused of breaching international and European law by human rights organisations and NGOs.

On 7 January this year, for the first time, the European Court of Human Rights officially found Greece ‘systematically’ conducted illegal push-backs and ordered it to pay the victim of an illegal push-back conducted in 2019 a sum of €20,000.

The practice of push-backs and so-called ‘drift-backs’, whereby boats carrying refugees are towed further into the Aegean Sea and abandoned there, has been widely documented by NGOs and human rights organisations. The research agency, Forensic Architecture, has found that, between March 2020 and March 2023, the Greek coast guard pushed back 2,010 boats, endangering and risking the lives of some 55,445 people.

The systematic and widespread practise of endangering migrants’ and refugees’ lives again stands in stark contrast to the Geneva Convention, which declares: ‘Importantly, the Convention contains various safeguards against the expulsion of refugees. The principle of non-refoulement is so fundamental that no reservations or derogations may be made to it. It provides that no one shall expel or return (“refouler”) a refugee against his or her will, in any manner whatsoever, to a territory where he or she fears threats to life or freedom.’

With some 117 million forcibly displaced individuals world-wide, the highest number of people in search of safety on record, it is clear that global international security is waning and more people than ever need protecting.

However, the European Commission’s ‘ReArm Europe/Readiness 2030’ plan aims to unlock up to €800bn to incentivise increased defence spending among Member States, while the European Justice and Home Affairs council make amendments to harden European Asylum policies. Europe is demonstrating ‘shrinking political will and financial support for long-term investments in peace’.

Born out of a shared ambition to establish enduring peace after the Second World War, peace was one of the EU ‘s core values. Placed within its broader colonial legacies and resulting global inequalities, this means a truly secure Europe must prioritise inclusive dialogue, long-term conflict resolution, and human security, regardless of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion.

This article is dedicated to Sultan, 19, from Sudan, who died last week during his second attempt at crossing the Mediterranean to seek refuge in Spain. 

25 December 1989: Execution of Nicolae Ceaucescu

This week in working class history

On Christmas Day 1989, Nicolae Ceaușescu, the president of the Socialist Republic of Romania, and his wife Elena were executed by an impromptu firing squad. Events had accelerated at breakneck speed in the previous ten days. After state forces opened fire on protesters against the eviction of a Hungarian pastor in Timișoara, Ceaușescu called a rally in Bucharest to reassert control. The crowd quickly became agitated and started chanting against the regime. The Ceaușescus fled the capital the next day, on December 22, but were quickly apprehended.

The Romanian Revolution, as these events would come to be known, is famous as the only 1989 regime change that involved bloodshed, with an estimated 700 to 1300 deaths. The killings came out of a nebulous violence that has still not been elucidated. More than half of the victims died after Ceaușescu’s capture, in clashes with “terrorists” whose identities remain a mystery.

The opacity of the fighting has led many Romanians to believe that the revolution should rather be considered a coup. That Romania’s post-1989 leaders overwhelmingly came from the nomenklatura has not helped dispel these suspicions. Former communist elites oversaw and profited from the privatization of Romania’s economy. Industries were dismantled and state services discontinued, causing millions to take exploitative jobs in Western Europe.

Despite the post-socialist disaster, there is little to romanticize about Ceaușescu’s Romania. After some early years of relative well-being and liberalization, his presidency became a personalist, tyrannical regime. The natalist abortion ban led to women’s deaths and to children growing up in abusive state orphanages, while the ambition to completely pay off the state’s external debts was successful only at the price of the utter immiseration of Romanians throughout the 1980s.

Today, Ceaușescu’s legacy is still disputed. Those who remember pre-1989 job and housing guarantees see him as the leader of a golden era. Neoliberals see him as a totalitarian devil whose legacy still holds Romania back. Far-right sympathizers, meanwhile, see him as the kind of patriarchal, nationalist authority needed today.

The trial’s recording, broadcast on the day of the execution, shows a confused old couple who cannot comprehend that anyone dares to judge them, but who slowly realize that they are facing their death. 36 years later, the video plays on Romanian TV every December for commentators to litigate political issues by using and abusing Ceaușescu’s ghost.

A life worth living

Obituary, Victor Grossman 11 March, 1928 – 17 December, 2025


20/12/2025

Victor Grossman sits a table with 3 other panelists. The banner hanging from the table is red with white lettering that says "Nothing to lose but" and the rest is cut off. The banner also shows part of Karl Marx's face and a Bernie campaign symbol.

Victor Grossman died on 17th December, 2025. He was 97, and for a long time it felt like he would go on for ever. Phil Butland remembers a comrade and friend.

I first met Victor in 2013, when we were setting up the Berlin Linke Internationals, the forerunner of The Left Berlin. Victor was excited by the idea of uniting International activists both inside and outside die Linke, and introducing German activists to people who had recently been involved in the Arab Spring, Occupy Wall Street, and the occupation of the squares in Spain.

He was particularly interested in developing new activists, attending every meeting which he could, and always being available to talk about his outstanding life, either as a public speaker in a large meeting, or in an informal chat. Well into his 90s, I would still see him at demos, where he would march as far as his ageing body would allow him. He was always keen to talk, and we would regularly march together until he felt unable to go any further and reluctantly went home.

One particular obsession of Victor’s was Sahra Wagenknecht. He adored her for fighting against the party bureaucrats who wanted to sacrifice the party’s opposition to NATO because they had eyes on a coalition government with the SPD or Greens. At the same time, he was deeply concerned about her racist populism. Many of the conversations we had on demos started with him asking me why I thought Sahra had made her latest “mistake.”

Between 2019 and 2023, theleftberlin.com published Victor’s Berlin bulletin—a weekly account to international friends about political developments in Germany.  We stopped doing this after someone created a website for the Bulletin, as there was less need for us to provide what was available elsewhere. But there was also a feeling that Victor was losing his sharpness and starting to repeat himself. I still read the bulletin avidly, though, even after they became less regular.

Principled Opposition

I knew of Victor long before I met him. We were both members of die Linke in Berlin Mitte. We were in different branches, so our paths did not cross regularly, but he would occasionally pop up at a regional meeting making a pithy observation warning us not to trust the leadership. He remained particularly suspicious of a new layer of careerist party leaders, who he felt would just as easily have joined the SPD or the Greens.

At the same time, he was faithfully loyal to the party itself. This was, after all, the man who defected from the USA to the DDR at the height of the Cold War. Victor remained convinced that 1989 was a step backwards in German history. He could argue quite persuasively that following the Second World War, only one half of Germany denazified, as West Germany filled its government posts with former Nazis.

At the same time, he was never uncritical of the East German state or of the party leadership; he did believe that the uprisings in East Berlin in 1953 and Hungary in 1956 were organised by the CIA. By chance he was on a spa treatment in Czechoslovakia in 1968 when Russian tanks invaded to suppress Czech leader Alexander Dubček’s reform package called “socialism with a human face.”

In his autobiography, Victor wrote: “I was still torn. ‘Socialism with a human face’ was a great idea in itself; many of the improvements, especially regarding the humane climate, were desperately needed in East Germany. But behind this facade, I had seen how the country was noticeably sliding to the right, and how left-wing groups who dared to resist this trend were marginalized, even threatened.”

This was the dilemma which Victor continually faced. His belief in the Eastern Bloc was regularly contradicted by facts on the ground. Victor was honest enough to recognise this, but in the absence of any obvious alternative, he preferred the Eastern Bloc to rampant capitalism. Like his hero Berthold Brecht, he insisted that the DDR was the least bad option.

For this reason, Victor absolutely hated the film The Lives of Others, not because it criticised the Stasi but because, he maintained, the Stasi were a joke. Everyone knew who they were, and they didn’t disrupt ordinary life. You may disagree  with his analysis, but it was understandable from a man who was threatened with one year in a US jail because he’d joined some anti-fascist organisations prematurely.

He retained this critical loyalty for the rest of his life. He joined the PDS, and then Die Linke, because where else could a socialist organise? You get the feeling that he felt the same about Die Linke as he did about Eastern Germany. He was fully aware of the Party’s shortcomings, but what was the alternative?.

One subject on which Victor remained particularly intransigent was on the issue of Palestine. As a Jewish socialist, Victor knew that his liberation was bound closely to that of the Palestinians. At a time when very few people on the German Left, and particularly die Linke, were prepared to stand up for Palestine, you could always bank on Victor to speak out, sign an appeal, or support a demo for Palestinian rights.

An extraordinary Life

Victor Grossman was born Stephen Wechsler in New York one year before the World Economic Crisis of 1929. He often humbly boasted that he was the only person ever to hold degrees from both Harvard and the Karl Marx University. As a teenager, he became very active in many Communist and Socialist organisations.

Then, in 1950, he was drafted for the Korean War and sent to train in West Germany.  Before he was sent, he had to sign a statement that he was not a member of a list of named subversive organisations. Although he had indeed joined several of the groups on the list, Victor signed the statement anyway.

One day in 1952, he was called to appear before a military court in Nuremberg. Sensing it was to do with his false statement—which could lead to 1 year in prison—Victor decided to defect. He swam across the Danube and turned himself in to the bemused Soviet army which was occupying that part of Austria. 

After 2 months detention, he moved to East Berlin where he started a new life, first as a factory and railway worker, later as a journalist and a loyal oppositionist. He befriended the actor Dean Reed—another defector from the US—who made a series of East German cowboy films told from the point of view of Native Americans.

Victor published his autobiography Crossing the River in 2014. Despite its English title, the book is in German, although in 2019 he did publish a shorter, English, version—A Socialist Defector: From Harvard to Karl-Marx-Allee.

Despite his many talents, Victor was a modest man. I will miss his perception, his energy, but above all his sense of humour. Victor was a witty man and a born raconteur. We did not agree on everything politically but he was a passionate internationalist who was prepared to argue his case and usually ended up on the right side.

Ingar Solty from the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung adds

I am not the only person to miss Victor’s presence. I asked Ingar Solty from the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung about his memories of Victor. Ingar sent the following text:

“During the late 1940s, early 1950s, with the victory of the Chinese Revolution and the beginning of the Cold War, the example of Victor Grossman shows that not only German socialist and communist survivors of fascism and world war could consider East Germany as the better German state insofar as all the demands of the social democrats and in fact the majority in the West were realized only here: de-nazification, land reform, and the socialization of industry. 

This is why communist artists like Peter Hacks as well as Wolf Biermann moved from West to East. The example of Victor, however, shows that international communists could also be convinced that the GDR was a safe haven for them against the anti-communist witch-hunts of the early 1950s, stretching from the House of Un-American activities in the US to the Adenauer-Erlass in West Germany. 

Victor Grossman then was a key actor with regards to the proletarian internationalism of real socialism. It was Grossman and the Canadian, Perry Friedman, who played a key role with regards to the interculturality connecting the American Folk Revival in the US with the Burg Waldeck festivals in West Germany and the Oktoberklub and hugely influential Singebewegung in the GDR. 

Across the Cold War divide, at the height of bloc confrontation right after the Cuban Missile Crisis, there were socialists in East and West returning to the folk tradition in order to sing against the threat of nuclear warfare, for peace and social justice. Grossman’s radio program in the GDR brought Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Peter Paul and Mary, and Phil Ochs to an East German audience and even to East Berlin itself. It also facilitated the particular internationalism which led to the massive show of solidarity coming from GDR civil society when Angela Davis was imprisoned. 

In this regard, the other America always had a place in a country whose solidarity generally stood with the victims of US and Western imperialism who sought to liberate themselves from it, stretching from the revolutionaries in Cuba to the defenders of socialism in Chile and the ANC in South Africa.”

Salud Victor. The world will be a worse place without you.

The show must go on

Berlin’s high court brands “From the river to the sea” a Hamas slogan, further tarnishing its own judicial image


19/12/2025

Buffy the Vampire Slayer once sang, “Life is a show and we all play our part.” The judge of Berlin’s Higher Court played her part loud and clear, giving judicial voice to Germany’s infamous political Staatsräson.

In November 2023, the German state declared—without evidence—that the international slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” was a Hamas slogan. Since then, German police, especially in Berlin, have used this profoundly ahistorical and ignorant assertion as a pretext to arrest thousands of people. For nearly two years, the prosecutor’s office attempted—largely unsuccessfully—to prosecute dozens of cases in Berlin, with many lower-court judges unequivocally ruling that the slogan is not a Hamas symbol. Nevertheless, prosecutors persisted, searching for a judge who would rule in their favour.

Today, 17 December, after thirteen sessions of a trial riddled with irregularities, and based on the “expert” testimony of an individual whose extreme bias is immediately evident from even a simple, cursory online search, a judge of the Berlin Higher Court declared the slogan to be one of Hamas.

Let us be clear: this trial was not really about “From the river to the sea…”, nor was it about one individual defendant. The entire Palestine solidarity movement was placed on the bench. The German state demonstrated its willingness to undermine its own rule of law in defence of the genocidal state of Israel. The ruling in this highly political trial bore little resemblance to an impartial application of the law. The so-called evidence presented—nine examples of Hamas using the slogan, not even consistently phrased—was flimsy at best. It appears the court was determined to legitimise the ongoing political persecution of the pro-Palestine movement through weak and unconvincing arguments, further damaging the already tarnished image of Germany’s justice system.

The defence team, exceptionally well prepared, played their part too—this time as the voice of reason—warning of the dangerous path Germany is taking. The curtailment of freedom of expression, which directly impacts the right to assembly, has now placed Germany alongside Orbán’s Hungary in the 2025 CIVICUS Monitor. In other words, in just two years of brutal repression of the anti-genocide movement, Germany has moved from an “open” state to a “restricted” one in terms of civil liberties.

This is happening while the German state rearms, expands its military ambitions, grants police ever-growing budgets and impunity, and watches an extreme-right party gain increasing electoral legitimacy. To say that Germany today looks disturbingly retro, uncomfortably reminiscent of the 1930s, would be an understatement.

Yet this time the German state faces one of its most formidable opponents: the international movement for the liberation of Palestine. Germany is facing legal challenges in both national and international courts, criticism from experts and NGOs, and the scrutiny of millions worldwide who have seen its genocidal and racist face. Government institutions are losing credibility domestically daily and making themselves look like fools internationally.

The liberation of Palestine stands as a symbol of the liberation of all peoples from colonial oppression. It also exposes the pretence that Germany has truly learned from its own one-genocide-per-generation past.

The spectacle of this trial will continue. Lawyers will appeal. People will keep taking to the streets to demand an end to collaboration with a genocidal state. Police will continue to arrest them, and prosecutors will continue to prosecute. But eventually, when the highest court rules on “From the river to the sea”, we will see whether the German judiciary is genuinely independent—or merely another follower of the Staatsräson cult.

Red Flag: What we can learn from East Germany is that socialism needs democracy

In his weekly column, Nathaniel Flakin takes another look at the German Democratic Republic


17/12/2025

The German Democratic Republic, swallowed up by its capitalist counterpart 35 years ago, left behind a fascinating legacy. The GDR produced Superfest Glas, virtually unbreakable beer glasses; it used hyperefficient prefab concrete construction to build Marzahn, a district of 160,000 people, in just a decade; it created some spectacular architecture. And almost unimaginable for a German state, the GDR showed solidarity with Palestine and gave material support to anti-colonial movements in Africa

This was all possible because East Germany had a planned economy. Production was not organized around satisfying capital’s endless demand for profits. The GDR thus accomplished things that seem impossible today. As one small example: Cheap unbreakable glasses are incredibly useful — but they are not made today as they are not profitable.

As socialists, we defend degenerated and deformed workers states like the GDR where they still exist, such as in Cuba. We point to how a poor country like the GDR was able to solve the housing crisis with economic planning — where the much wealthier Federal Republic of Germany claims to be completely helpless.

As I argued back in September, however, while a planned economy is a necessary condition of socialism, it is not enough to define a system as socialist. Socialism refers to the transitional stage between capitalism and communism — the term only applies if the working class is taking over the management of society and the state is withering away.

A response to my piece by the Internationale Forschungsstelle DDR, mirrored at Monthly Review, insists that the GDR was socialist — yet it does not offer any definition of socialism. Surely, the comrades do not believe that it’s enough for a government to use this term — otherwise they would have to refer to the bloody neoliberal dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad as socialist too.

Democracy like oxygen

Looking to define socialism, the IFDDR implicitly concedes that democracy is necessary. As the quote, often falsely attributed to Leon Trotsky, goes: “a planned economy requires democracy just as the human body requires oxygen.” So the authors claim that the “D” in GDR was real, and East Germany was in fact democratic. 

They explain that workers in the GDR had a “right to participate in factory management” and that laws were discussed by millions before passage. They even point to the notorious Eingaben system: citizens could write a letter to their representatives, and would get an answer within four weeks.

Notably, they do not mention the most elaborate form of East German democracy: GDR citizens voted for parliamentary bodies every four or five years, at the national, district, and municipal levels. Yet they only had a single list to choose from, and the National Front won between 99.95 and 99.46 percent each time. As election observers noted in 1989, despite only offering one choice, the authorities nonetheless engaged in systematic fraud.

This is not to defend parliamentary democracy, which in capitalist countries is nothing more than a façade for the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. But a Marxist criticism of bourgeois parliaments aims for higher forms of democracy, such as workers’ councils, soviets, and Räte, in which workers elect delegates to bodies that are both executive and legislative, based on the model of the Paris Commune. East Germany’s Stalinists, in contrast, created a pathetically unconvincing copy of bourgeois democracy.

The IFDDR claims that in the GDR, “economic power was … devolved to the working masses,” yet they do not cite any examples of what economic decision making looked like. To name one major policy shift: in 1971, Erich Honecker proclaimed the “Unity of Economic and Social Policies,” which included higher subsidies for consumer goods and increased housing construction, at the expense of heavy industry.

What to do with the surplus is about the most important decision that a socialist society can make. So what percentage of East German workers were in favor of this turn? What percentage were opposed? To claim “99.46 percent” is to spit in the face of the working class. That is obviously not how real decision-making works — not in a strike committee of five workers, and not in a socialist society with 16 million citizens. 

East Germany offered pseudo-democratic mechanisms that modern capitalist politicians are learning to love: “participation,” whereby decisions are made at the top, but atomized individuals are allowed to “participate” by voicing an opinion that then lands in the recycling bin.

I would say, for example, that the Federal Republic’s decades of cuts to the railway system have been terribly undemocratic because this austerity goes against the will of the majority of the population. The IFDDR might respond that everything is fine because the Deutsche Bahn provides suggestion boxes where everyone can give feedback.

Repression

While I am deliberately not focussing on the Ministry of State Security (MfS, better known as the Stasi in the West), it was also an economic decision to build up the largest security apparatus of any country that has ever existed, with 91,015 full-time employees and hundreds of thousands of informants. This bureaucracy was supposedly necessary to protect socialism and prosecute Nazi war criminals — yet it spent enormous resources surveilling workers or harassing critical communists (Rudolf Bahro and Robert Havemann are just two famous examples). The GDR’s pervasive repression against youth cultures did a lot to undermine support for socialism. And again, who decided that this was a good use of society’s resources? Why put money into suppressing Western rock bands, rather than creating better rock bands?

The authors quote Lenin, only to toss out his ideas about the withering away of the state under socialism as a “regression to the utopianism Marx and Engels criticized.” So what did Lenin write about the vast resources invested in the Stasi?

“Naturally, the exploiters are unable to suppress the people without a highly complex machine for performing this task, but the people can suppress the exploiters even with a very simple ‘machine’, almost without a ‘machine’, without a special apparatus, by the simple organization of the armed people (such as the Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies…).”

In other words, a society organized on Leninist lines would rely on self-organization to defend socialism. Who, precisely, decided the GDR should do it otherwise?

John Peet

To close, I would like to quote at length from the hard-to-find autobiography of John Peet. The head of the Reuters bureau in West Berlin, Peet sought asylum in the GDR in 1950 in protest against West German rearmament. For 25 years, he published the fortnightly newsletter German Democratic Report from East Berlin. At the end of his life, looking back at 35 years in the GDR, he was proud that everyone got housing, education, and employment. He pointed to the legalization of abortion and many other accomplishments.

Yet he described the system as one of “benevolent paternalism,” in which “all important decisions” are made by the top leadership of the Socialist Unity Party. Peet commented: “I believe that many of these decisions are wise. But they are arrived at without any public discussion of the pros and cons, and without any proper channel for dissent to be registered.” (Had he not heard of Eingaben?) He concluded:

“I fear the results can only be negative. Since the majority of the population have the feeling that they cannot participate in the decision-making, they tend to withdraw and live their private lives. They march on May Day demonstrations and vote in the single-list parliamentary elections because it is the done thing, but without any particular enthusiasm. There are obviously all sorts of creeping dangers in such a conformist society; for instance, it is almost inevitably the mediocre, the conformists, who get ahead. Karl Marx once said that his favourite motto was ‘De omnibus dubitandum’ — doubt everything. Today in the GDR, the ruling motto would appear to be just the opposite: ‘Father knows best.'” 

Peet spent far longer than the IFDDR defending the East German system, yet even he had to acknowledge that bureaucratic rule was preventing socialism from flourishing. We should study the GDR, which shows that a planned economy offers mind-blowing potential to improve our quality of life — but also that without real proletarian democracy, this potential can be wasted.

Red Flag is a weekly opinion column on Berlin politics that Nathaniel has been writing since 2020. After moving through different homes, it now appears at The Left Berlin.