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 “I observe a huge gap between the activists of Die Linke and the position of the party in general”

Interview with Théo from Berlin Insoumise, whose room booking for a meeting with Flotilla activists was cancelled by Die Linke


21/11/2025

Hi Théo, thanks for talking to us. Could you start by introducing yourself. Who are you?

I’m Théo, an activist at Berlin Insoumise which is the Berlin Section of the French left radical party La France Insoumise.

We’re a section of 200 registered activists, organise monthly events like conferences and debates, and are active in local campaigns. French people settled abroad have designated MPs, Senators, and local councils to the embassies. Our district consists of Germany and 15 other Central European Countries. I am the joint spokesperson of our section for the district.

This week you organised a meeting which was supposed to take place in Karl Liebknecht Haus, centre of Die Linke. What was the meeting about and who was speaking?

We organised a public meeting about the situation in Gaza. Emma Fourreau (one of our MEPs) contacted us because she’s doing a tour of European universities to meet young activists. We, as the local section of the party, decided to use this as an opportunity to give further visibility about the Gaza situation.

Emma participated in the Global Sumud Flotilla this summer, so we thought this could be a great angle. We gathered in total five people: alongside Emma were Adrien, Leslie, and Mahé who are activists of the flotilla and also tried to breach the blockade this summer. The final speaker was Anissa Eprinchard, a Berlin-based activist who created the account @HomoSwipiens.

We discussed the history of flotillas, what happened during the last one, the situation in Gaza and the state of sanctions against Israel.

And yet at the last minute, Die Linke cancelled your room booking? Why did they cancel and when did you hear about the cancellation?

We have built connections with Die Linke for some years now, and started some months ago to use their logistic support for our events. We had asked them to host our public meeting at their headquarters in Karl-Liebknecht-Haus.

They have conference rooms in house, managed by an “external” institution called Tagungszentrum am Rosa Luxemburg Platz, mostly owned by Die Linke. This would have been our third meeting there since August.

At midday on the day of the meeting, we received an email cancelling our reservation even though the room had been booked for more than 10 days already. The cancellation mail said the following:

Der kürzlich öffentlich durch Sie bekannt gemachte Inhalt Ihrer Veranstaltung (siehe Screenshots anbei) weicht erheblich von den uns gegenüber im Zusammenhang mit dem Vertragsabschluss gemachten Angaben ab. Zudem sind mittlerweile Protestveranstaltungen vor unserem Tagungszentrum gegen Ihre Veranstaltung in Aussicht gestellt worden. Beide Tatsachen rechtfertigen u.E. ohne Zweifel den Rücktritt vom Vertragsverhältnis.”

(“The content of your event, which you recently made public (see attached screenshots), deviates significantly from the information provided to us for the contract. Furthermore, protests against your event have now been announced in front of our conference centre. In our opinion, both of these facts claearly justify the termination of the contractual relationship.”)

The screenshot that was sent to us as a “proof” was simply our instagram post communicating about the event, where the Freedom Flotilla was mentioned, and pictures of Emma and Anissa, two of our guests.

Die Linke helped organise the demonstration for Gaza on 27th September. Around the same time, party chair Ines Schwerdtner said that the party had learned from the mistakes it had made by not joining the Palestine movement earlier. Do you think they have learned from their mistakes?

Unfortunately I don’t think so. The email cancelling our event directly came from the Geschäftsführer of the Tagungszentrum, Mathias Höhn, even though we had previously been in touch with other people from their organisation. Mathias Höhn is directly involved in Die Linke and has occupied various party positions.

We see and deeply condemn the fact that to this day, it is still impossible to talk about the Palestinian genocide in Gaza in Germany.

Ferat Koçak, Abgeordnete of Die Linke in Neukölln, tried to intervene in our favour and called directly Herr Höhn, even offering to host our conference under his name, without success. In a statement, Ferat offered support: “It is serious that our sister party La France Insoumise, and in particular MEP Emma Fourreau, has been refused the use of our premises. We need spaces to discuss Palestine”.

I would add that this event was also not organised by an organisation that is absolutely foreign to Die Linke. We’ve been working together for a long time, and sit in the same group at the European Parliament. They basically cancelled an event with one of their comrades and colleagues, Emma Fourreau.

How does this affect the relationship between Berlin Insoumise and Die Linke? At last year’s Left Berlin Summer Camp, Asma Rharmaoui-Claquin (co-speaker of La France Insoumise in this district and parliamentary condidate in the last two elections) said that she couldn’t envisage working with the party because of it’s stance on Palestine. Things seem to have improved since then, and people like Ferat are playing an important role, but has enough changed for you to continue to collaborate?

To clarify Asma’s position, we had stopped working with Die Linke because of their lack of support for the Palestinian cause. With it starting to move internally, we started to collaborate more.

I’ll just speak in my name on your question because we have not discussed it yet with the Berlin comrades. It does come with great disappointment. However, I observe a huge gap between the activists of Die Linke and the position of the party in general.

I meet comrades of various Die Linke sections on a monthly basis to work on digital tools for left radical organisations, and see some openness about the Palestinian topic. We also got support from comrades from Neukölln and Tempelhof Schöneberg. On the day of the meeting, Emma met comrades from Die Linke Jugend who disapproved of the decision to cancel our meeting.

I think it is essential to support comrades there that share our positions and help them move the lines of their party

There are elections in Berlin next year, and there is a reasonable chance of the next Berlin mayor being from Die Linke. As a result, pro-Palestine motions have been withdrawn from conferences in the name of “party unity”. What do you think of this strategy ?

I think that this is a moral failure and a political mistake. There have been 200 breaches of the “ceasefire” in the last month, and people are still being killed in Gaza, while Europe watches without taking any action. The CDU wants to restart delivering weapons to Israel. This genocide is far from over, and we need to stand against it.

Berlin is a city with a left heart and a mixed population. This will not benefit Die Linke.

We are conducting this interview on Thursday 19th November. In 2 days’ time, Palestinian activist Ramsis Kilani is appealing his expulsion from Die Linke. Has Berlin Insoumise discussed this case and what do you think?

We have not discussed his case unfortunately, and I’m afraid I don’t know everything about his exclusion.

Nonetheless, I can only pay tribute to his bravery for deciding to fight his internal party structures and not quit in silence. I hope he wins this appeal and manages to move party lines internally. He stands for a single, secular state, with guaranteed rights for every citizen, of every religion, which is also my personal position.

What’s next for Berlin Insoumise? And if people read this interview and want to get more involved how can they contact you?

First of all, I’d like to thank comrades from other organisations who helped us find a plan B in 2 hours and maintain our event. This proves how important and effective it is for all our radical organisations to stay connected and help each other.

We will keep on doing what we do best: organise events and actions! Most of them are in French but some are also bilingual in French and German.

Funnily enough, the next one is also organised with an organisation of Die Linke: we are organising a conference about the situation and massacres in Sudan with Aurélien Taché, French MP of LFI and Roman Deckert (Sudan expert for the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung).

On January 3rd, we are hosting a conference about our hopes for the 6th French constitution with Pierre-Yves Cadalen, French MP for Brest.

We are also getting ready for our next campaign in June, for the councils to the French embassies.

People can reach us any time on Instagram @BerlinInsoumise or by email contact@berlin-insoumise.org.

Or just come to an event 🙂

Is there anything you’d like to say that we haven’t covered already?

We’ve been consistently supporting the rights of Palestinian lives in France when all other left parties were calling us antisemites. We’re on the right side of history and the whole French Left has finally joined us—too late—after 2 years.

I hope for the same for Germany, and wish success to the comrades in German organisations that are fighting for Palestine.

A representative from Berlin Insoumise will be speaking at the rally in support of Ramsis Kilani’s appeal against his expulsion from Die Linke, on Saturday, 22nd November at 11.30am outside Karl Liebknecht Haus.

The revolution will not be televised

Sudan’s long road to freedom


19/11/2025

A photograph of a street mural depicting Alaa Salah, whose image became a widespread symbol of the Sudanese revolution.

I would like to start this article by honouring the Sudanese revolutionaries, the unsung heroes of Sudan’s long road to freedom and democracy; the victims of the El Fasher massacre, the disappeared, the indigenous, the women, the children, the Kandakas, the Neighbourhood Resistance Committees (NRCs), the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), the Forces for Freedom and Change, the journalists, the doctors, the human rights defenders, the displaced, the boys in Greece and the Sudanese diaspora.

Just days after images captured in space recorded the blood spilled during the El Fasher massacre appeared on smartphones across the world, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), responsible for the atrocities, called for a three-month ceasefire while the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) refuse to accept any deal recognising the RSF as an equal political actor.

The news from the RSF, that many see as tactical deception, will provide little respite for the Sudanese population who have fallen victim to a vicious landgrab of their resource-rich country once again.

‘For any kind of peaceful solution, the RSF has to disarm themselves. What we have seen is that you cannot trust the RSF with weapons. They kill civilians, they rape women. They loot and destroy food and crops,’ says Sudanese analyst Yasir Zaidan.

The war that has been widely and deliberately ignored for over two and a half years—while other more Eurocentric wars have taken centre stage—is the biggest humanitarian crisis of our age.

It has cost an estimated 150,000 people their lives, with some figures suggesting the death toll may be much higher. It has forced 14 million people to leave their homes, has pushed 24 million people into food insecurity and famine, and has left 30 million in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.

The paucity of coverage of the war, global aid cuts, political and ethnic elitism, racism and international interest in the country’s resources have forsaken the Sudanese population and have contributed to global inaction to prevent the escalation that has at long last put Sudan on the agenda.

Despite warnings of possible genocide, the UK opted for the ‘least ambitious’ plan to protect civilians and prevent atrocities due to aid cuts over a year ago. USAID cuts left 80% of emergency kitchens unfunded, forcing 1100 kitchens to close. Although the UK has recently pledged to allocate £120 million in aid, the Independent Commission for Aid Impact reports that aid budget reductions in previous years have damaged relationships with partners and ‘calls for the UK to increase direct funding to local organisations and simplify its complicated compliance procedures to better support Sudanese-led responses’.

To put the urgency of the situation into context, the country blighted by the 30-year dictatorship under Omar Al-Bashir until 2019 already had some 1.1 million refugees and 3 million internally displaced people in September 2021, prior to the start of the war in April 2023. The day the war broke out, telecommunication systems were damaged and still remain unusable for the vast majority of the population. This has contributed to the difficulty of getting information out, exacerbated the logistical challenges of getting aid in and compounded the vulnerability of the civilian population, many of whom feel attacked by both sides—the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF).

A great number of our Sudanese comrades here in Berlin fled Sudan between 2003-2008 when the Arab nomad militia group, the Janjaweed, committed genocide in Darfur. To quell an insurgency by the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army and the Justice and Equality Movement (led by indigenous ethnic groups in Darfur fighting structural inequality and economic marginalisation), the Janjaweed, under the al-Bashir government, killed 200,000–400,000 non-Arab Darfuri people.

As news of the thousands killed by the RSF in El-Fasher in recent weeks reach our shores, reports on social media frequently call for a boycott of the UAE over its support for the RSF militia group through the supply of weapons and mercenaries in exchange for gold.

Meanwhile, other reports accuse the national army—the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF)—of being the other side of the same coin, a claim that has been fiercely refuted by some Sudanese commentators on social media platforms.

So, what happened to the 2019 Sudanese Revolution, who are the RSF and the SAF and how did Sudanese civilians get trapped between them?

After years of economic discontent, ethnic and gender inequality, and decades of conservative Muslim Sharia law, when Omar Al-Bashir announced he was running for an unconstitutional third term, the protest movement organised by the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), an umbrella organization of doctors, lawyers and journalists, started to gather momentum.

A revolution led by women

Following popular protests demanding an end to the 30-year long dictatorship and its sexist and oppressive laws, in which an estimated 70% of protesters were women, the SAF toppled Omar Al-Bashir in a coup d’etat in April 2019.

Sudanese women’s rights activist Asha al-Karib remarked:

The world-admired Sudanese revolution is marked by unprecedented contribution and participation of women throughout the country, including women from all walks of life. The participation of women is not a by chance event, as Sudanese women own a strong history of resistance in the face of dictatorships and patriarchy.

The old guard

The subsequent self-appointed head of state Lieutenant General Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf, having previously served as the Defense Minister and Vice President in the toppled Al-Bashir government, refused to extradite Al-Bashir to the ICC for crimes against humanity and war crimes, leading to continued widespread protests.

The Transitional Military Council (TMC), the military junta that was established on the same day to govern Sudan, was equally denounced by activists. Leading anti-government protesters, the SPA, stated ‘the regime has conducted a military coup to reproduce the same faces and entities that our great people have revolted against,’ continuing ‘those who destroyed the country and killed its people want to appropriate every drop of blood shed by the great people of Sudan during their revolution’.

Auf resigned the following day and on 12 April 2019 Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the former Inspector General for the Al-Bashir army, was announced as head of state.

Al-Burhan formally headed the TMC following the resignation of Auf and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, was appointed the deputy head, promoting the commander of the RSF to a key position in Sudan’s political sphere.

The aforementioned Janjaweed, responsible for up to 400,000 deaths in the Darfur genocide of 2003–2008, is a direct predecessor of the RSF—the new name being a simple rebrand.

The SPA and other democratic opposition groups called for the TMC to step aside in favour of a civilian-led transitional government, resulting in many attempts to disperse sit-in protesters outside the military headquarters in Khartoum. The TMC worked to end the peaceful sit-in with excessive force and violence and several people, including a pregnant woman, were killed.

What followed was a pivotal moment in the fight for democracy and a sign of things to come. In what became known as the Khartoum Massacre, on 3 June 2019, 120 protesters outside the military headquarters in Khartoum were killed and hundreds more went missing, with actual figures concealed with the help of internet blockages and the deployment of brutal military forces across the capital.

Unrelenting protesters took to the streets again on 30 June, finally prompting the international community to pressure the military into sharing power with civilian politicians in August.

Hope on the horizon

The Forces of Freedom and Change, a committee that coordinated the nonviolent resistance movement, and the TMC agreed to a 39-month transition period in July. On 20 August 2019 the FFC-nominated Abdalla Hamdok, who was appointed Prime Minister of Sudan.

The high aspirations for Abdalla Hamdok to bring about democracy in Sudan, however, weren’t to last. Though described as a ‘diplomat, a humble man and a brilliant and disciplined mind’ by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa who agreed to implement a peace deal hailed as an ‘historic achievement’ by the UN Secretary-General António Guterres, the senior Sudan analyst at the International Crisis Group think-tank, Jonas Horner warned, the ‘devil will be in the implementation’.

Horner noted that ‘Sudan’s economy is in freefall and there has been limited international assistance, and none pledged specifically to support the implementation of the [peace] agreement’.

Moreover, researcher Ahmed Soliman stated that offering government jobs to rebel chiefs could ‘lay the foundations for democratic transition and economic reform’. Soliman said: ‘This requires the forces of change to share responsibility for implementing peace above their own interests and will also necessitate a commitment to devolve genuine authority to communities and people at the local level.’

Apparently unable to do so, the RSF committed atrocities across Darfur as a reprisal for the 2019 uprisings and the TMC’s military chiefs ‘undermined and side-stepped’ Hamdok’s leadership.

‘The armed Arab groups—the RSF as well as many less organised militias—have seized lands, livestock, and goods and see these as payment for their military undertakings to the Khartoum regime,’ Eric Reeves, a professor at Smith College and a fellow of the Rift Valley Institute research group told Al Jazeera.

Another coup dashes hope for democracy

And so, it wasn’t long before the Sudanese military under General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan led another coup and took over the government in October 2021.

The majority of the Hamdok cabinet as well as pro-government protesters were detained and the prime minister, who called for the Sudanese to ‘defend their revolution’ was besieged in his home and pressured to support the coup.

The Prime Minister’s Office, along with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Information, refused to recognise a transfer of power to the military. The African Union suspended Sudan’s membership, pending the reinstatement of Hamdok, while Western powers stated they continued to recognise the Hamdok cabinet as the constitutional leader of the transitional government.

The SPA, the FFC and the Sudanese resistance committees refused to cooperate with the military coup organisers, leading further protests and strikes which spanned the country. Security forces retaliated by killing 15 members of the Sudanese resistance committee on 17 November 2021.

On 21 November, Al-Burhan signed an agreement reinstating Hamdok to restore the transition to a civilian government. This was met by fierce opposition from pro-democracy protestors who now refused any deal involving the military.

After two more were killed in pro-democracy protests and the already weak Sudanese economy steeply declined, Hamdok resigned as prime minister in January 2022, dashing hopes for democracy in Sudan.

Two war criminals fighting for supremacy

Oscar Rickett explains both Al-Burhan and Hemedti were fierce, reliable lieutenants of the Al-Bashir regime that had ‘plundered the resources of Sudan for decades’. Fearing a shift of power from the military elite to a civilian-led government, both ‘had to’ carry out the coup in order to cling to power and prevent being investigated and charged with war crimes.

With the prospects of a civilian-led transition to democracy eliminated, Siddig Tower Kafi, a civilian member of the Sovereign Council, commented that ‘it was becoming clear that the plan of Al-Burhan was to restore the old regime of Omar al-Bashir to power.’

And while Al-Burhan sought to centre power back to the elite ethnic groups around Khartoum, Hemedti, a Darfuri Arab, had become the leader of a powerful and brutal paramilitary force and had built a vast business empire. He had taken control of Darfur’s biggest artisanal gold mine in Jebel Amir, and his family company, Al-Gunaid, became Sudan’s largest gold exporter.

Writing for Al Jazeera, Jérôme Tubiana explains:

‘This is not just a war for power between two generals, but rather one between the two heirs of the not-yet-defunct regime: the legitimate and illegitimate sons of one father, at the head of two fundamentally different forces. On one side, an army long headed by officers hailing from Sudan’s ethnic and political centre (the northern Nile Valley); on the other a paramilitary corps that is the latest avatar of Darfur’s Arab militias.’

Arabs and non-Arabs caught in the crossfire of supremacy

Omar, from the capital of Hemedti’s Mahariya tribe, Ghreir, an ‘old Arab settlement and stage post for nomadic camel herders’ where Arabs and non-Arabs long lived side-by-side, explains that the region became the heartland for Janjaweed recruitment in 2003.

Omar and some other members of the Arab tribes rejected joining the Janjaweed and joined the rebels instead. Feeling manipulated by the government and not wanting to be associated with the Janjaweed, he explains how students understood that ‘the government was instrumentalising their communities to kill their non-Arab neighbours.’

When Hemedti, who attended school in Ghreir but dropped out of primary school to become a trader around the age of 8 or 9, rose to the ranks of leader of the RSF in 2013, he continued aggressively recruiting from his own tribe and taking rebel territory.

International vultures and hypocrisy

Foreign interests, extraction and colonialism—spanning over a hundred years, with Anglo-Egyptian control over Sudan spanning from 1899 to 1956—continue to this day.

The complex web of support for the two warring parties, as explained in this article include Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Qatar, Algeria, Libya, the UAE, Turkey, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Russia, China, Chad, and South Sudan, have further complicated peace talks and neglect the interests of Sudanese civilians.

Recent evidence showing UK manufactured weapons have surfaced in Sudan proves the UK’s complicity in the atrocities. In breach of its own arms trade rules the UK continued to sell weapons to the UAE, known for being a diversion hub for weapons to conflict zones.

The UK’s failure to invite any of the principal Sudanese actors or members of civilian society, while inviting the UAE to the ceasefire conference in April, is symptomatic of the wider neocolonial narrative. Such actions make the call for peace by UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy ring hollow:

‘The biggest obstacle is not a lack of funding or texts at the United Nations; it’s lack of political will. Very simply, we have got to persuade the warring parties to protect civilians, to let aid in and across the country, and to put peace first.’

While we all seek to differentiate between the ‘bad guys’ and the ‘good guys’, ultimately the horrors that are unfolding in Darfur reflect the story of centuries of colonialism, supremacy, capitalism and land appropriation.

Silencing the voices of the indigenous, peaceful resistance and of the ancestral owners of the land perpetuates the supremacist violence that has cost so many Sudanese people their lives and loved ones.

Their resilience untold.

Trans Day of Remembrance

On mourning and the need to fight systemic transphobia

20th of November 2025, marks the 26th Trans Day of Remembrance (TDOR). In this day, we honor the memory of the trans people whose lives were lost in acts of anti-trans violence.

The Trans Day of Remembrance was established on the 20th of November 1999 in the United States by Gwendolyn Ann Smith, in the memory of Rita Hester. Rita Hester was a Black trans woman and an active member in the trans community of Boston, providing education around trans issues.

Back then, Gwendoly Ann Smith declared: “Trans Day of Remembrance seeks to highlight the losses we face due to anti-trans bigotry and violence. I am no stranger to the need to fight for our rights, and the right to simply exist is first and foremost. With so many seeking to erase trans people — sometimes in the most brutal ways possible — it is vitally important that those we lose are remembered, and that we continue to fight for justice.

These words still resonate with the situation of trans people 26 years later, then trans people are still exposed to a multifactorial violence, which makes their existence a (political) fight.

Indeed, the Trans Murder Monitoring project reported 281 murders of trans and gender diverse people in the world between October 1 2024 and September 30 2025.  Moreover, this research project has identified, analyzed and reported more than 5000 murders against trans people in the world since 2009, and 118 in Europe. Trans women are even more exposed to this violence: they constituted at least 53% of the murder cases identified by the TGEU. Trans BIPOC were also highly targeted, as they represented at least 73% of the murdered trans people. Moreover, 23% of the murders were identified to be against sex workers. Finally, the data from 2025 reveals that trans activists are becoming a specific target of trans murder.

These numbers are however only the tip of the iceberg, as murder of trans people are highly underreported. This is partly due to the fact that these murders are not categorized as murders of or against trans people, as trans people are often misgendered and their gender not recognized by the state institutions responsible of establishing criminality statistics. Moreover, violence against trans people is also multifaceted and often results in severe mental health consequences, including high rates of suicide among trans people.

Indeed, trans people are exposed, in the public as well as in the private space, to discriminations, harassment, insults, psychological as well as physical and sexual violence. In a survey conducted by the EU Agency for Fundamental rights in 30 European countries among more than 100 000 LGBTQ+ individuals, more than 60% of trans of 51% on non-binary and gender diverse respondents reported having lived discrimination in the past year.

Moreover, 26% of trans women and 23% of trans men declared that they have been attacked in the last five years, while 2 in 3 trans and non-binary respondents declared that they had experienced harassment the year before taking the survey.

However, less than 20% of the respondents declared that they had reported this violence to a state institution.

This is because trans people also face violence from the institutions that are, in the states’ narrative, supposed to help them, for example, the police institution. Moreover, in the study cited previously, more than one third of trans respondents declared that they had experience discrimination from the health care system the year before taking the survey.

The systemic discrimination and violence that trans people are exposed to -whether in the private sphere from family members, in the public sphere, or through state institutions- result in severe mental health consequences and higher suicide rates among trans people. Current research findings estimate that between 18 and 45% of trans young adults and youth have attempted suicide in their lifetime. Moreover, in the survey conducted by the EU Agency for Fundamental rights, more than one in two trans and non-binary respondents declared they have had suicidal thoughts the year before taking the survey.

As already mentioned, numbers on crimes against trans people are lower than the reality. Moreover, this summary does not exhaustively mention the different forms of violence trans people have to face every day. However, it depicts how violent states and societies still are toward trans people, 26 years after the first Day of Trans Remembrance. It is all the more important to acknowledge and remember this systemic violence as anti-trans laws, state-driven persecution, and measures that increasingly aim at the erasure of trans people continue to grow, as illustrated by the in anti-trans legislation in the US, and, for example, the German law project to register trans people and make their data accessible to states authorities.

On this Trans Day of Remembrance, we gather, mourn, and honor the memory of the trans people whose lives were lost in acts of anti-trans violence. Some also consider this day as a day of fight, as being trans is, in fact, an act of resilience and fighting. In Berlin, several events are organized today. Here is a non-exhaustive list of events you can attend to mourn and fight:

  • Berlin, S+U Neukölln. 17:30 à Rally, 18:30 Start of the protest. More infos here.
  • Berlin, Alice-Herz-Platz, 18:00. More infos here.

Note: Time and locations might be subjected to changes, follow news from the organizers to be up to date.

Red Flag: Berlin universities bend the knee for the AfD

In his weekly column, Nathaniel Flakin looks at unprecedented campus repression on the orders of the Far Right.

AFD Universities - Faschismus ist keine alternative

Last Wednesday, student assemblies were scheduled at Berlin’s three main universities. On November 29-30, the far-right party Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) is founding a new youth organization in the city of Gießen. The campus meetings were part of the antifascist mobilization to block the creation of “Generation Deutschland,” as the reactionary youngsters plan to call themselves.

But the same day, the administrations of both the Free University (FU) and the Humboldt University (HU) cancelled the assemblies after receiving complaints from the AfD. The official reasoning: universities are supposed to remain neutral regarding party politics. In the context of Germany’s history—in 1933, universities quickly subordinated themselves to the fascist regime and supported its genocidal policies — this “neutrality” on antifascism is nothing short of astounding.

Only the Technical University (TU) allowed the event to take place—but on the condition that “no statements about party politics” be made, so nothing about the AfD. Hundreds of students gathered and made plans to head to Gießen.

Useful Idiots

This is more than the latest episode in the Rechtsruck, Germany’s seemingly boundless shift to the right. As both an FU alumnus and a historian, I can say this campus repression is unprecedented. Berlin’s universities have always hosted political assemblies, from the 1968 youth rebellion to the 2009 Bildungsstreik (education strike).

University presidents capitulating to far-right pressure is an echo of what’s going on in the United States under Trump. This authoritarian turn on Berlin campuses did not fall from the sky—nor is it a result of the AfD’s influence among students, which thankfully remains vanishingly small. This is a direct product of the violent repression against pro-Palestinian protests. According to retired professor Hajo Funke, who started studying at FU in 1964, this was the worst repression since the university’s founding more than 75 years ago. 

When students peacefully protested against the genocide in Gaza, they were attacked by government ministers and big media. University leaders sent in heavily armed cops, who attacked young people with batons and pepper spray, and then pressed hundreds of charges against their own students. As I’ve reported, numerous Jewish students were also beaten and doxxed in the name of “protecting Jewish students.”

There were some liberals, useful idiots of the Far Right, who thought this assault on academic freedom would be limited to Palestine. But any attack by the state on student protests automatically strengthens authoritarian forces. Thus the supposed “fight against antisemitism” benefits the party of Beatrix von Storch, the granddaughter of Hitler’s finance minister.

Pseudo-Democracy

After the assemblies were banned, the discussion at TU was bewildering: according to multiple comrades, there was little talk about the censorship. Instead, pre-prepared speeches about the mobilization to Gießen were read out—as if students could simply ignore this unprecedented assault on their rights and continue with the agenda.

This is very much the modus operandi of Studis Gegen Rechts (Students Against the Right): While an event may be called an assembly, everything is carefully choreographed, with each speaker chosen and prepared beforehand. Students who wanted to speak about defending democratic rights were consistently “overlooked” by the chair.

The result is not an assembly at all, but a pageant—a simulacrum of direct democracy. It is a method that has been slowly introduced to Berlin over the last decade by self-described “organizers”: young bureaucrats working for Die Linke or the trade union ver.di who are often associated with the post-Trotskyist network Marx21.

The problem with this was visible on Wednesday: a pre-prepared non-assembly is incapable of reacting to new developments—all the speeches “from the floor” had been planned before the bans were announced. Such pseudo-democracy cannot fulfill the task of an assembly: a mass of people discuss and vote on how they are going to act.

The history of Berlin’s student movement shows us what a central role assemblies can play. On April 11, 1968, for example, over 2,000 people gathered in the exact same hall at TU to discuss how to respond to the attempted assassination of student leader Rudi Dutschke. They decided to march to the headquarters of Axel Springer’s far-right media empire, and tens of thousands joined in the Easter Riots. Direct democracy is key to mass action.

To fight the authoritarian turn today, we need the ideas and the energy of every single student. The efforts of even the most intelligent “organizers” will not be enough. We need proletarian democracy, where the masses make their own decisions and carry them out together.

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.

That was Unframe 2025

Photo Gallery of the festival by Laura Steiner


18/11/2025

All photos: (c) Laura Steiner. Reproduced with permission