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“Sudden Death Syndrome” kills Navalny says Russian State

What are the implications of Navalny’s death?


19/02/2024

On Friday anti-Putin oppositionist Alexi Navalny was found dead at the Kharp high security prison near the Arctic to which he had been transported recently in secret.  Russian state authorities claim his death was due to “Sudden Death Syndrome”. His detention since 2021 has been marked by repeated evidence of maltreatment and sleep deprivation constituting slow torture, making his death hardly ‘sudden’ and without prior signals at all.

The Left Berlin discussed Navalny after his poisoning by Putin’s agents, with a spectacular flight to emergency treatment in Charite Berlin. Upon his recovery Navalny exposed in a ‘sting’, the Russian secret services attempt to murder him. He flew back to Moscow, well aware that arrest awaited him:

“Navlany flew back to Russia in January 2021. He fully understood that he would be arrested on a number of somewhat spurious charges. He had in the meantime exposed the secret service attempts to poison him with a taped ‘sting’ telephone call to one of the FSB operatives while posing as an operative. He had also openly goaded Putin. In these very public statements, and in his courting of arrest – Navalny has behaved just like Khodorkovsky did in his day. On January 17 2021 Navalny was arrested. However, in sharp contrast to previous arrests of anti-Putin agitators, there was now a reservoir of heightened, near-organised discontent in the Russian people. Moreover, social media enabled wide-spread demonstrations.” 

Navalny underwent the vindictive attempt to silence him in the form of slow torture. This no doubt led to his death, although his corpse may ultimately reveal more acute violence. As Piotr Sauer reported in the Guardian:

“At the time of his death, Navalny was due to serve a cumulative three decades in prison. It was made clear he would remain in jail as long as Putin remained in power. In jail, Russia’s most famous opposition leader faced some of the worst excesses of the Russian prison system. He said the Kremlin wanted to break him, as a punishment for staying alive. His team feared worse. Navalny went on hunger strike after being denied urgent medical treatment in prison. He said the authorities subjected him to psychological pressure and sleep deprivation, detailing a fellow inmate to wake him every hour on the pretext of making sure he had not escaped.” 

We should grieve for the ill-effects on any progressive anti-Putin movement in Russia. However Navalny’s character as a pro-Western capitalist should not be denied. Even so, his defiance had mobilised a wide movement:

“While Navalny is offensively anti-immigrant, anti-Chechen, and is supported by Western capitalism, he has undoubtedly been a major part of a wide grass-roots democratic movement. Critical support for his ‘Smart Voting’ movement as a first step to rebuilding a socialist movement is the only way forward for progressives inside Russia.” 

His death is not unmourned in Russia, with many courting arrest:

“At least 359 people have now been arrested at rallies in memory of the late Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny. This would be the largest wave of arrests in Russia since the arrest of more than 1,300 people during demonstrations against the partial mobilization for the Ukrainian war in September 2022. A number of people were arrested, especially in Saint Petersburg and Moscow, as the civil rights platform  Online-Bürgerrechtsplattform OVD-Info  announced. In total there were arrests in 32 Russian cities.” 

The body count as consequence of the Russian army invading Ukraine continues to rise. Guarding his rear, Putin has suppressed more dissidents who might become a focus against him – whether  from right-wing, center, or left-wing. 

For example the right-winger,  oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin. Previously we noted his similarity to “Coriolanus. Similar to that Roman general in an arrogant hubris fueling a spectacular change of direction, he now only awaits his own murder” (Kumar, The Left Berlin 27/06/23).

Indeed Progozhin’s murder duly came. More recently other Putinite-suppressions silenced the centre. Putin removed the potential candidacy of Nadezhdin in the forthcoming elections. This removed a significant, but largely symbolic challenge:

“Russia’s election commission has rejected anti-war challenger Boris Nadezhdin as a candidate in next month’s presidential vote. Mr Nadezhdin has been relatively critical of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale war in Ukraine when few dissenting voices have been tolerated in Russia. Election authorities claimed more than 15% of the signatures he submitted with his candidate application were flawed… The Central Election Commission said that of the 105,000 signatures submitted by Mr Nadezhdin, more than 9,000 were invalid. They cited a variety of violations. That left 95,587 names, meaning he was just short of the 100,000 required signatures to register as a candidate, commission member Andrei Shutov said.” 

It might not be irrelevant that even from the Arctic, “Navalny had called for a nationwide protest on the day of the March presidential election and for voters to gather at the polls at noon as a sign of dissent against Putin(Catherine Belton Washington Post , Feb 17, 2024. ).

From the left-wing Putin removed the potential ‘socialist’ force of Boris Kargalitsky:

“Leading left-wing Russian thinker Boris Kagarlitsky is facing up to seven years in prison on charges of “justifying terrorism” even though it is clear to everyone – including supporters of Vladimir Putin and his aggression in Ukraine – that he was arrested for his anti-war views. Kagarlitsky is perhaps the most prominent Marxist thinker in the post-Soviet space… he was arrested on 25 July after stating in a social media post that the attack on Russia’s Crimean Bridge in October 2022, believed to be the work of Ukraine, was understandable “from a military point of view”. His case is just one of hundreds of police investigations into anti-war Russians.”

Navalny’s death further prolongs the Russian imperialist aggression into Ukraine. Members of the United Communist Party in some Russian ‘communist parties’ openly repudiate their own leadership for refusing to condemn imperialist war of Russia’s.  Meanwhile the USA and Western imperialist powers try to lever Navalny’s death into ensuring further funds to Ukraine.

Despite the risk to themselves, the war continues to arouse many Russians into confronting Putin’s state. While no clear leadership or formal movement has yet to emerge – it will. 

“It’s So Berlin!” 5: Soli-Ceasefire

The fifth instalment in our series of photographs and cartoons about Berlin and Palestine.


17/02/2024

Following last week’s contribution “Shit”, here is the latest in the series of works by Berlin-based Palestinian artists Rasha Al Jundi and Michael Jabareen.

Photo: Rasja Al-Jundi

 

Cartoon Michael Jabareen

Since day one of the the 2023 genocide in occupied Palestine, white washed narratives, slogans and actions went viral. As we worked on this image, we were aware of the planned mass pro-Palestine demonstration in Berlin, which was preceded by many similar demos. Solidarity actions have been well recognised and commended. However, did some people go to demonstrate to clear their conscious, perhaps release some rage and then… go rave? Yes this happened. Were some calling for a “ceasefire”, simply to go back to their “normal lives” while Palestinians’ slow death becomes a footnote on mainstream and social media? Yes they were. We do not believe in holding back or non-confrontational discussions.

In this image, the abandoned item is a black board with a drawing of a naked female body.

Titled “Soli-Ceasefire”, it features a stereotypical scene from “soli-parties” (“Soli” stands for “solidarity”). According to the widely-used slogan, solidarity is a verb, but what kind of action does one take part in to show it? The types of actions and words matter and they’ve always have done. This has not been a time to call for “rosy peace” or a “humanitarian ceasefire”. This is the time to call for an end to the genocide, an end to the whole settler occupation, an end to the normalised daily slaughter, torture and imprisonment of Palestinians. A complete end of what the Zionist entity embodies in its whole entirety.

The end goal of our demands and our narrative must not get washed down. A simple call for a “ceasefire” means that our armed resistance must stop. It means a little pause while Palestinians continue to get killed due to hunger, thirst, disease, torture and daily raids. It basically does not mean anything to the native owners of the land.

Shut it down, don’t rave about it.

Image taken after a pro-Palestinian demonstration in Kreuzberg, Berlin (2023).

Police Brutality at Palestine Solidarity Sit-in

Statement by Jewish activist arrested outside Springer Building

On Wednesday, I participated in a peaceful sit-in outside the Axel Springer building in response to a Zionist propaganda event sponsored by The Jerusalem Post and Die Welt. A few hundred folks came, we held speeches, chanted and were loud and visible in our unequivocal support for Gaza and Palestine.

I gave a brief speech in which I made it clear that the equating of Judaism and Zionism is truly antisemitic, not to mention the instrumentalizing of Jewish identity to justify the occupation, ethnic cleansing and genocide of Palestinians. A comrade later told me that she heard the police, who at that point wanted to approach me, say “not now, we’ll do it later.”

After an hour or so, the police began violently dragging protestors out of the crowd and hurling them to the sidelines in order to break up the demo. They approached me and the group I was sitting with and attacked us. One cop started to choke my wife Rebekka, who was momentarily unable to breathe, before dragging her away by her feet and brutally arresting me and several others.

After my arrest and on the way to the police van, I said that I am not a native German speaker as a result of my German-Jewish relatives being driven out of Germany and given the legal nature of the matter, I would like to interact in English. The police refused to speak English to me or provide me with a translator, rolling their eyes, goading me and telling me I understood them. I was harassed about what I was doing in Germany and why I had come here, to which I replied that my grandmother was a German-Jewish Holocaust survivor (as I had already said in my speech) and Berlin is my home. Additionally, they spitefully and repeatedly referred to my wife as my “girlfriend” or “friend” despite being corrected upwards of 20 times between the two of us.

We were driven around the city to multiple police stations before ending up at the Gesa (GefangenenSammelstelle) in Spandau, where we were held in custody for hours in separate cells, not allowed to contact a lawyer or make any calls. We were not told where we had been taken.

If you are curious about what real antisemitism looks like, look no further than the German state, police and media interacting with Jewish people in Berlin in 2024. To this day, Germany boasts of the best, most premium antisemitism the world has to offer, while disguising it with their empty, meaningless narrative about memory culture and atonement.

The state-sanctioned violence towards me, my comrades and the entire Palestine solidarity movement is an intimidation tactic. It is a distraction. It is an attempt to silence us and wear us down. What they still haven’t managed to understand is not only that we will not be intimidated, distracted or silenced, but that each and every time they try, they only fuel our fire for liberation more strongly.

All eyes on Rafah. End Zionism. Free Palestine.

This text originally appeared on Rachael’s Instagram account. Follow her at https://www.instagram.com/solarbagel/

 

 

 

 

 

All photos: https://www.instagram.com/egultekin_

 

Can’t you even get a coffee in Germany without Nazi connections?

Backwerk has a founder who apparently supports far-right structures. This isn’t an isolated case


16/02/2024

Backwerk runs hundreds of bakeries across Germany and neighboring countries – a McDonaldization of the beloved German Bäckerei. And it really is convenient! As you would expect, Backwerk is controlled by a faceless corporate structure: It was bought by the the Swiss holding company Valora in 2017, which was in turn bought by the Mexican beverage conglomerate FEMSA in 2022.

The bakery chain has been in the news recently, and not because of bread. The company was founded by Hans-Christian Limmer – he didn’t open the first location, but like Ray Kroc of McDonald’s fame, he turned single locations into an empire. Limmer sold his shares in Backwerk in 2013 for an estimated 100 million euros.

Limmer is not just a serial entrepreneur in the food service industry, but apparently also a supporter of right-wing structures: Last November, he invited an elite group of right-wing politicians to an exclusive Potsdam hotel to discuss “remigration” with the right-wing extremist Martin Sellner. In a statement to the business newspaper Handelsblatt, Limmer claimed that he signed the invitation without looking into the speakers. He didn’t attend the meeting and later distanced himself from the content of the meeting in which he had “played no role” in the planning.

According to Wikipedia, Limmer grew up in a household full of Holocaust deniers and Nazis. He has been involved in the right-wing extremist association Gedächtnisstätte which aims to build a private memorial for German victims of the Second World War.

Limmer is no longer an investor in Backwerk, and his new company, the burger chain Hans im Glück, asked him to leave when reports of the Potsdam meeting went public. So, if you buy a coffee or a burger, you don’t need to worry about directly supporting fascism.

Yet Limmer is no outlier. What happens when you get a yogurt drink from Müllermilch? I had never tried one before because of persistent rumors this would support the Nazi party NPD. I had never seen any evidence. In November of last year, however, Handesblatt revealed that Theo Müller was meeting regularly with Alice Weidel, the head of the far-right party AfD. This was about the same time that one of Weidel’s top advisors was talking with Sellner about deporting millions of people.

This list could continue. I’ve written before about how realty speculators have an affinity for the Far Right. Some of the richest capitalist dynasties in Germany today are the heirs of Nazi war criminals who supported Hitler. But the problem isn’t just with German oligarchs, either. Elon Musk spreads antisemitic conspiracy theories and uses his vast wealth to help Nazis get their message out.

There is something about billionaires, amassing vast power without any democratic legitimacy, that makes them incline toward a Nietzschean world view. Especially if all that money is inherited, the benefactors almost need to believe a select few are born to rule and the rest of us can only serve. It’s no coincidence that so few billionaires donate money to advance the cause of proletarian revolution. As one author put it, the ultra-rich are ultra-conservative.

In the last month, hundreds of thousands of people have been taking the streets to protest against the AfD. That’s great. If only racism were limited to that one party! The government (SPD, Greens, and FDP) is calling for more deportations. The opposition (CDU) is trying to outdo them with racist agitation. While the AfD is getting all the flak for the Potsdam meeting, there were as many CDU members present to listen to Sellner. The owner of the hotel is a local CDU official. There was an unsurprisingly large number of ‘entrepreneurs’, i.e. capitalists.

Some people suggest a boycott. But the only way to prevent capitalists from supporting right-wing politics is to put their wealth under democratic control. Expropriation would protect democracy.

This is a mirror of Nathaniel’s article which originally appeared in his Neues Deutschland Red Flag column.

Four Years since the Hanau Massacre

As the anniversary of the racist terror attack approaches, serious questions remain unanswered and the far-right continues to surge


14/02/2024

On February 19, 2020 nine people were shot and killed by a neo-Nazi in the German city of Hanau: Ferhat Unvar, Hamza Kurtović, Said Nesar Hashemi, Vili-Viorel Păun, Mercedes Kierpacz, Kaloyan Velkov, Fatih Saraçoğlu, Sedat Gürbüz and Gökhan Gülteki.

The perpetrator had expressed extreme hatred of foreigners, women, muslims, and jews in posts online. He carefully chose the locations, a shisha bar and a betting shop, to target people with a migration background, who he believed should be ‘completely exterminated’ from Germany.

Deadly Failings

In the four years since the attack a series of investigations has uncovered major failings in the authorities’ response. Initiative 19. Februar Hanau, a group representing survivors and victims’ families, has questioned why after identifying the perpetrator, it took the police five hours to arrive at his nearby home. And why, after they finally did arrive outside the house, they claimed not to hear gunshots when the perpetrator shot his mother and then himself.

There are many more serious questions. The perpetrator was known to the police but never had his gun licences revoked. Emergency calls on the night went unanswered. Families were not properly informed of their relatives’ deaths, and autopsies were performed without their permission. They have subsequently faced countless indignities including delays in financial support and continued racist harassment from the perpetrator’s father.

A year later it was revealed that 13 of the police officers working in Hanau that night had been subsequently suspended for being part of racist, far-right group chats.

We can never know to what extent far-right sympathies combined with institutional discrimination, incompetence and apathy determined the course of what happened that night, and the response that followed but as Dimitra Andritsou from research collective Forensis, summarised: “Much like the shots around the perpetrator’s house, the state’s refusal to hear — on the night of the crime, and for many years afterwards — is a political choice, and indicative of deeply entrenched racist structures within the German state.”

Dangerous Rhetoric

Despite the shock and outrage expressed by German politicians and media outlets at the time, there has been a continual normalisation of extreme right-wing views in the years since the attack. Mainstream parties, including the governing Social Democrats, have increasingly taken on xenophobic talking points. In October chancellor Olaf Scholz appeared on the front cover of magazine Der Spiegel alongside a quote from his interview: “We must finally deport people on a large scale”. As austerity policies begin to take hold, and the German economy dips into recession, the ground is ripe for scapegoating immigrants and other minority groups.

The far-right, anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD), some of whose leading members have called for an end to commemoration of the holocaust, has been comfortably polling as the second most popular party, at around 20% for months now. The opposition CDU has also begun to break the long held taboo of cooperation with the AfD, voting with them on both a local and state level.

The past decades have seen dozens of neo-Nazi attacks and murders in Germany, and these incidents are on the rise. There have also been numerous revelations of far-right networks made up of police and members of the military. Like the families of Hanau, many of the targets of these terror attacks have experienced a serious mishandling of their cases by authorities.

The recent revelations of a meeting between senior AfD members, business leaders and neo-Nazi groups to plan large-scale deportations of immigrants have been met with huge protests across Germany. There has also been widespread condemnation from mainstream parties. But these statements feel hollow when politicians readily take on anti-immigration talking points and have made few serious attempts to tackle structural racism. Lip service is paid but policies and language often tell a different story.

Memorial Events

There are many events planned in the coming days across Germany to commemorate the nine who lost their lives in Hanau and to call for serious action on structural racism and extremist groups. A statement from Initiative 19. Februar has called for people to come together, support each other, and to demand proper investigations into right-wing murders and violence.

In Hanau a memorial demonstration will take place on Saturday 17th February at 14:00.

In Berlin there are two events planned on Monday 19th February:

oplatz4hanau

17:00 – 19:00 at Oranienplatz, Kreuzberg. More information here.

Vier Jahre Hanau – Die Konsequenz ist Widerstand

Memorial at 17:30 and march at 19:00 starting at S-Bahn Sonnenalle, Neukölln. More information here.