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Call for Solidarity

Threat of Greek prison for the “crime” of fleeing Gaza


21/01/2026

Palestinian refugees among the victims of criminalization of asylum seekers in Greece

On Wednesday, 21st January, Ziad from Gaza will face a 25-years-long sentence in a court on Rhodes, Greece. He is one of the many asylum seekers criminalised by the Greek state – with EU’s full complicity – as a “smuggler”.

“I managed to leave Gaza for Egypt, and then to Turkey. I did my best there to obtain residency and family reunification, but I was unsuccessful. So, I continued my journey towards Europe, searching for safety for my family.” – writes Ziad in his statement.

In August 2024, he managed to reach Rhodes Island on a rubber boat together with other desperate people seeking safety. Once apprehended by Greek coast guard, he was accused of having held the rudder and put in pre-trial detention in a criminal prison in Athens. He has spent the last 17 months there. The day after tomorrow, he will face trial back on Rhodes, in which he can be sentenced to 25 years of prison for “smuggling”.

The government in Athens – as part of its migration deterrence policy – has been practicing criminalization of those fleeing wars, conflicts, the genocide, as well as extreme poverty and lack of any future at home. Upon their arrival “to safety”, a few random persons from every boat reaching Greek shores are arrested – usually without any evidence, access to translation or legal counsel – and put in prison.

Months and years pass. When a trial finally takes place, people are often offered a plea bargain (a plea deal) – an arrangement between prosecutor and defendant, in which the defendant pleads guilty in exchange for a more lenient sentence. Some of the criminalised in Greece accept it in fear that the “evidence” produced against them will condemn to the maximum punishment – 25 years of prison. Ziad has decided not to go down this way and face his destiny instead.

“From the moment I arrived in Europe, instead of finding justice, I was subjected to the greatest injustice. I was accused of a crime I did not commit and imprisoned. Every day in prison feels like a year, and I live in constant fear and anxiety for my family, whom I left behind under bombardment and suffering in Gaza.” – writes Ziad.

Ziad’s story is heart-breaking from its start. Back in Gaza, his eldest daughter fell sick and needed medical treatment not available there. Ziad was fighting to get her out of Gaza, but the Israeli regime did not allow it. She passed away in pain. He buried her and decided to leave to secure a better future for his remaining two daughters and his wife. He succeeded after months of trying – just days before the outbreak of the genocide.

“I visited Ziad in the prison in Athens. I have never met him before. He is a short, solid man in his 30s. He looks older than his age. A very gentle and calm person, a kind heart. He was smiling sadly in integrity and dignity as we exchanged about his upcoming trial” – says Eirini, an activist who has been supporting criminalised asylum seekers as part of Alma Community and ’50 out of many’ Initiative.

Greece’s law makes facilitating unauthorised entry a felony resulting in a ten-year prison sentence, with up to an additional 15 years for each person transported whose life was allegedly endangered. These measures “against” smuggling are in fact targeting those they claim to protect as great majority of the accused are people on the move.

Some of them steered or navigated a boat – for a short while or a whole journey – because they were coerced to it or simply to get themselves and others out of danger. In the absence of legal pathways of arriving and seeking asylum in the EU, driving a boat to Europe is an act of despair and an act of solidarity: no driver, no survivor.

“Ziad has been locked for 17 months. It is enough time to understand the reality. He is not in denial of the risk he will face on Wednesday” – continues Eirini. “Ziad is an asylum seeker from Gaza who wanted to find safety for his family. He should have never been criminalised”.

Ziad’s wife and two daughters remain in Gaza – they live in a tent in harsh winter conditions. Only a few days ago their tent collapsed on them.

To attend the trial or to support otherwise please contact: 50outofmany@gmail.com

Supporting groups:

Digital socialism or extinction

The Lesson of Venezuela and the Conflict of Capitalism in its Most Ferocious Phase


20/01/2026

In the dawn of an ordinary day at the beginning of January 2026, the world awoke to shocking news: a brutal U.S. military aggression and the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife in a complex operation executed with supreme military and intelligence precision. Despite the direct military attack and intensive bombardment, the operation relied heavily on a massive employment of digital technology (as reported by Defense One, NBC News, and Just Security). Media coverage focused on political aspects without real attention to the pivotal role played by advanced technology. It was not just a traditional military intervention, but rather a comprehensive digital war that preceded the arrest by long months of planning and monitoring.

Before continuing, I would like to point out my reservation regarding the policies of the Maduro regime in suppressing dissenters, restricting freedoms, and tightening the grip on leftists and labor unions. Our critique of American capitalist intervention and the use of technology as a weapon for hegemony does not mean justifying the repressive practices of the Maduro regime against progressive forces and the labor movement. What we are highlighting here is the technological and strategic lesson that this incident provides to all leftist and progressive movements.

In this operation, the most advanced American satellite surveillance systems were used to track the movements of the Venezuelan leadership via satellites. Big data analysis extended to drawing accurate maps of government communication networks with all their complexities. The hacking of electronic systems was precisely planned to disable them at the decisive moment, making the Venezuelan leadership completely isolated from its bases. The employment of advanced digital techniques in analyzing millions of calls and messages was not just traditional espionage, but rather a complex operation to pinpoint the locations of leaders accurately and predict their next moves. The programmed manipulation of media and social media networks was an organized campaign to shape public opinion in favor of the intervention, and to portray the operation as “liberation”, not an aggression against the sovereignty of an independent state.

These are not scenarios from science fiction movies, but a documented reality we live today. The U.S. National Security Agency possesses the PRISM program, which was revealed by Edward Snowden and which monitors global communications without discrimination. Companies like Palantir Technologies provide highly advanced data analysis systems to the American intelligence establishment. The capitalist technological system today is capable of comprehensive surveillance and systematic tracking of political movements and political actors. The most dangerous thing is that there are many digital technologies and weapons that are still within secrecy, as was the case with the internet itself, which was not revealed to the public until years after its military and security use.

Technology as a Tool for Capitalist Control and Hegemony

What happened in Venezuela is not an isolated incident. It is an essential part of a comprehensive digital capitalist strategy that we have seen repeated in many places in the world. The clearest lesson from the incident of Maduro’s arrest is that capitalism in its current stage no longer relies only on traditional military force. It has developed a complex digital system capable of penetrating geographical borders, monitoring individuals and groups with amazing accuracy, and manipulating information and shaping public consciousness in ways that were not possible in any previous era. It is an invisible war, its battles take place in cyberspace and data servers, having proven more effective and less expensive than bombs and planes.

This reality poses a fateful question to the forces of the Left: how can liberation movements that still rely on traditional meetings, distributing paper leaflets, using unencrypted phones, and harnessing the internet in a primitive way, face a digital capitalist system with this level of development? The answer is clear and painful: it cannot, unless it decides to enter seriously and strategically into the technological field, not as passive consumers of capitalist technology, but as developers and innovators of independent digital alternatives that protect the struggle from penetration and suppression.

What we are witnessing today is a reproduction of historical class exploitation by more advanced and hidden means. This exploitation is no longer confined to factories or farms, it has extended to include the digital space itself. The algorithms of digital companies exploit manual and intellectual workers in ways more cruel than any human manager. These algorithms determine wages based on supply and demand at every moment, impose exhausting working hours without regard for health or family status, and issue automatic penalties without the possibility of appeal.

In the field of consciousness: the algorithms of giant platforms are used to shape the consciousness of billions of people. These algorithms systematically promote the ideology of capitalist consumption and the culture of individualism, while fighting leftist and progressive content through techniques of “reach reduction” and “shadow banning.” The consciousness of millions of young generations is shaped not through reading and critical thinking, but through algorithms that decide what they see and what they do not see.

In the field of surveillance and control: digital technologies are used today to deepen political and social control in ways that were not previously possible. Recognition and analysis systems allow tracking political activists and monitoring their behavior and networks with high accuracy. These technologies are exported to authoritarian regimes, transforming digital and public space into a permanent field of surveillance.

The Historical Stake for the Left, Toward a Liberatory Digital Revolution

The technological factor is no longer just a secondary addition in the Left’s battle against capitalism. It has become an essential condition for survival, effectiveness, and influence. Facing this reality cannot be limited to criticism, but requires specific positions and policies, transcending the exposure of capitalist hegemony to working on dismantling it and redirecting technology toward serving the general masses. Developing leftist capabilities in the technical field is a vital necessity no less important than developing political and organizational capabilities. Just as the forces of the Left cannot rely on capitalist media and seek to build their independent media, they must also work on building their independent technological alternatives, whether in social networks or digital tools and others.

What the current digital revolution reveals is that we live in a historical moment in which the contradictions between the massive development of the productive forces and capitalist social relations, which are no longer capable of containing this development, become clear. The struggle in digital space must transform into an organic extension of the socialist struggle on the ground, and not just a separate arena. Linking the technological struggle and the class struggle is essential, because digital hegemony is just an extension of the hegemony of capital.

The possible solution now is to develop open-source, transparent systems, managed democratically with societal controls, in addition to pushing toward enacting international laws that regulate the work of digital technology and ensure its service to society as a whole. But this is not enough. The radical solution is building real leftist technological alternatives with progressive orientations and societal ownership, through which this technology is snatched from the grip of the market, and employed in dismantling relations of exploitation, and contributing to building a new, more just and humane society.

The Left’s use of current digital technology must be accurate, deliberate, and cautious. Applications developed within a capitalist environment cannot be trusted without deep critical awareness. Extreme caution must be taken when dealing with sensitive data and information, for the unstudied exploitation of these tools may lead to a security breach or information leak that exposes leftist organizations to danger. Therefore, it is necessary to develop advanced digital security protocols, adopt more independent open-source applications, and train members on digital security practices.

The Decisive Historical Moment for the Left

While what happened with Maduro is not a singular event, it is a sharp warning to all progressive regimes and leftist movements in the world. It is a practical announcement that the digital battle has turned into a central arena of class struggle. What happened in Venezuela reveals that digital capitalism has come to rely on technical vulnerabilities that grant it the possibility of influencing the stability of progressive regimes, attempting to paralyze their leaderships, and betting on engineering the consciousness of their societies digitally. The danger does not affect Venezuela alone, but it could extend to threaten every leftist and progressive experience. We are in front of a new stage of class struggle, in which technology and artificial intelligence are used as a strategic weapon to strike leftist movements in their cradle. The global socialist struggle today is directly targeted by digital penetration, comprehensive surveillance, and the prior drying up of any potential revolutionary act.

The basic question: Are we, as leftist and progressive forces, really ready to fight this digital war? Do we have the courage to rebuild the Left intellectually, organizationally, and technically? Are we ready to overcome fragmentation and division, and understand that the fate of every progressive experience has become linked with the fate of others? The historical moment does not forgive, and digital capitalism does not wait for our hesitation. Either we engage with awareness and struggle in this battle, and reformulate an alternative socialist project capable of facing the digital age, or we are left on the margins of history. Accepting the latter fate is inevitable extinction. The true historical stake for the liberation project is that it transforms into a digital project with awareness and organization.

Digital technical knowledge must become an integral part of contemporary leftist culture, and here the vital role of youth emerges as a vanguard for this transformation. We must build leftist technical cadres, investing the energies of young generations in developing alternative digital tools, and social networks that are not subject to the algorithms of capital. We must understand the programming code as we understand the political text.

This effort requires coordination and common action globally through building digital internationals and alliances whose goal is to develop the digital struggle of the Left in the whole world. Building these independent technological alternatives is fraught with dilemmas: the dilemma of depending on knowledge developed in the bosom of the capitalist system itself, the dilemma of the massive resources required, and the dilemma of coordination between feuding leftist forces. Therefore, this project must be a strategic tactic that starts from the critical use of available tools, building technical solidarity networks, and striving to develop an alternative core in the spaces provided by open-source technology, with the recognition that it is a long-term cumulative project.

The Left that had the noted role in promoting freedoms, equality, and justice can overcome this current state. Let this digital battle be a moment of new birth for an electronic digital Left merged with field struggle, more daring and radical and scientific. The battle for control over digital technology is not a technical battle only, but a battle for the future of humanity itself. Digital socialism, in this sense, is not a choice among choices. It is the existential condition for the survival of the socialist project itself in the twenty-first century.

Australian literary festival collapses after axing Palestinian author

McCarthyite censorship leads 180 writers to withdraw from Adelaide Writers’ Week


19/01/2026

A fortnight ago, Australia’s biggest literary festival rescinded its invitation to Palestinian Australian author and academic Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah. In the time since, the furore of anti-authoritarian outrage and a successful boycotting campaign has made this year’s Adelaide Writers’ Week untenable.

The Adelaide Festival board, which oversees the Writers’ Week, justified their decision with a statement on 8 January citing ‘cultural sensitivity’ at a time ‘so soon after Bondi’. Their vague reference to ‘her previous statements’ egregiously associates the writer’s criticism of Israel’s genocide with the horrific Bondi massacre. 

Abdel-Fattah slammed the board for this ‘despicable’ conflation, condemning her removal from the program as a ‘blatant and shameless act of anti-Palestinian racism and censorship.’

Since the ISIS-inspired attack on a Hanukkah celebration late last year, right-wing politicians, alongside the capitalist class and their media empires, have gone on the offensive. Well before the motivations of the gunmen were revealed, they seized on the tragedy to assail immigration and slander the Palestine solidarity movement. 

The ruling Australian Labor Party capitulated to the onslaught. Their state government in New South Wales—which encompasses Sydney’s Bondi Beach—immediately introduced an omnibus bill of repression. It allows the authorisation of all public assemblies to be banned for up to three months following a declared terrorist incident. The legislation is an effective ban on all protests, allowing police to arrest participants for obstructing traffic and to ‘move on’ those obstructing pedestrians. 

Moreover, Labor has proposed extensive federal hate speech laws that dangerously lower the threshold for offence to potentially criminalise criticism of Israel. Organisations can be designated as hateful and banned without procedural fairness, and visa applications can be denied for supporting the aims of such a group. 

The Right in Australia have for years looked with envy at countries like Germany and the UK, where the brutalisation of Palestine solidarity protests is the norm, where activists opposing genocide are unjustly jailed under terrorism legislation, and where false charges of antisemitism are used to ruin the academic prospects and careers of anyone who dares speak up for humanity. The Bondi massacre has finally given them the confidence to go on the offensive.

It is within this context that Abdel-Fattah was axed from the Adelaide Writers’ Week program. Nick Feik, writing at independent news site Crikey, indeed points out that the campaign against Abdel-Fattah’s appearance by Zionist lobbyists and politicians preceded the Bondi massacre by months. Bondi became the ‘convenient, even opportunistic justification,’ Feik writes.

If anything, this makes the resistance to Abdel-Fattah’s disinvitation all the more heartening. After five days and more than 180 resignations, the Writers’ Week director, Louise Adler, born to Jewish Holocaust survivors, herself resigned via a brilliant op-ed in the Guardian Australia. She writes:

‘In the aftermath of the Bondi atrocity, state and federal governments have rushed to mollify the “we told you so” posse. With alarming insouciance protests are being outlawed, free speech is being constrained and politicians are rushing through processes to ban phrases and slogans.

‘Now religious leaders are to be policed, universities monitored, the public broadcaster scrutinised and the arts starved. Are you or have you ever been a critic of Israel? Joe McCarthy would be cheering on the inheritors of his tactics.’

Since the collapse of Adelaide Writers’ Week, the Adelaide Festival board has been renewed to save face. On 15 January, it issued an apology to Abdel-Fattah. ‘Intellectual and artistic freedom is a powerful human right,’ it stated. ‘Our goal is to uphold it, and in this instance Adelaide Festival Corporation fell well short.’

It is a shame that this free of charge, open-air writers’ festival cannot proceed in 2026 due to the Adelaide Festival board’s extreme authoritarian overreach. However, the mass backlash shows that silencing the movement that generated the largest anti-war protest in Australia’s history will be no easy task. It is a win for the Palestine solidarity movement here, one of the largest in the world, in an increasingly repressive climate.

With war criminal Isaac Herzog, president of Israel, set to arrive in Australia at an unknown date in the near future, the fightback to this new McCarthyite era has only just begun.

Power and powerlessness

What next, after Gaza broke the art world?


17/01/2026

Graffiti eye with red and green iris. There is a huge gash cutting right through the eye and showing view of something on the other side of the wall.

At the end of 2025, three articles once again articulated—from different perspectives—the silence and failure of political discourse in the art scene. David Velasco, long-time editor-in-chief of Artforum, the US “North Star” of art criticism, reflected on and recapitulated the past two years of “division, fear, and silence” in Equator, the British online magazine for politics, culture, and art. In October 2023, a few weeks after the Hamas attack in Israel and the publication of a letter of solidarity on the Artforum website signed by more than 8,000 people calling for Palestinian liberation and a ceasefire, Velasco was fired without notice. Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, who had been director of Berlin’s Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW) for just ten months at the time, summed up shortly before Christmas that he did not want to get drawn into political debates, but rather “talk about humanity in the coming years and decades, perhaps for the rest of my life […] so back to those Christian values we always talk about.” A few weeks earlier, Berlin-based artist and activist Adam Broomberg had published a scathing critique of the “Global Fascism” exhibition at the HKW.

At the end of his essay, Velasco writes that he has spent the last two years in an “unofficial hiatus” from the official art world. His final sentences: “It’s increasingly hard to care about the fate of an art world narcotised by money and self-regard. We had a chance to at least try and make a difference. We had a chance to not sell ourselves out. We had a chance, and we blew it. This did not end well, and still we can choose to begin again, tilting—collectively, contingently—toward the pitch of liberation.” He does not elaborate on his optimism. I would like to share it, because capitulating to the power of the market and the violence of power has also mentally catapulted me out of a “scene” that I always wanted to understand as a left-liberal seeking a self-critical public sphere. This basic trust in a shared world, which uses artistic work to address the dilemma of subjectification and subjugation, of deviation and form, has been shattered. Definitively after October 7, 2023. In recent decades, during which I was involved in the art world as a writer, researcher, and curator, there have been various phases in which momentous political events—such as the imposition of martial law in Poland in 1981, the first Iraq War in 1990, the Tiananmen Square massacre and the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and the crushing of the so-called Arab Spring after 2011—during which I was unable to find the peace of mind to turn my attention to individual works. But art also participated in all these events, albeit with a delay. Without the work of artists, the discussion about the colonial basis of power in the Western world would probably have remained confined to academic circles in Europe for a long time. In this very world, there is now—once again—talk of the “end of the West,” of democracy, of the transatlantic alliance. In 2003, an important congress was held at the HKW: “Former West” (March 18-24). From the flyer: “Although the events of 1989 shook the world to its foundations, the West stubbornly clung to the fiction of its own superiority. Former West examines how contemporary art can unhinge this fiction and at the same time rethink the future.” The fiction is gone. Which art points to the future?

In his text, Velasco reconstructs how—not so much why—Gaza broke the art world. The means and methods were repressive: staff dismissals, cancellations of exhibitions and award ceremonies, criminalization, and legal prosecutions. In the context of art, it was (almost) always just about language and images—not about violence, sabotage, or self-interest. It was about words and works demanding justice for Palestinians (including the right to mourn) and an end to Israel’s internationally supported armed violence, which killed tens of thousands of Palestinians in a very short time. In the “cultural nation” of Germany, “reasons of state” became a tool to intimidate and silence criticism of Israeli policy (see archiveofsilence.org). According to Velasco, grandiosity “is one of the art world’s key features, the soil for its spectacular financialisation—its unparalleled ability to transform radicalism into capital. This grandiosity was inflected in much of the bright and lofty material that we published. The stakes were high; we believed we were writing history, and we often were.” During the crackdown on the Gaza protests, it was the collectors, galleries, and institutions that demanded ‘calm,’ not the artists. “Some collectors are calling up individual artists who signed, threatening to sell off their works or stonewall exhibitions by refusing to lend to museums. […] I am aware that much of the sentiment is divided by class: the letters’ signatories are mostly artists, the letters’ detractors are mostly their dealers and collectors. This is not a new rift in the art world, but Palestine seems to have deepened it beyond repair.”

What was striking in Germany after the Hamas massacre and the subsequent sanctioning of Palestinian solidarity was the role of curators and directors of art institutions, who positioned themselves hierarchically and firmly above the “opinion” of artists. Velasco highlights a prime example of this: Klaus Biesenbach’s distancing speech at the opening of Nan Goldin’s exhibition at the Neue Nationalgalerie. In the spring of 2024, however, two artists, Bank Cenetoglu and Pirvi Takala, confidently canceled their exhibitions at the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein because, in their opinion, its director did not distance himself clearly enough from Israel’s war policy. No artists, no exhibitions. Marius Babias then published a cryptic statement: “We are seeing increasing attempts to instrumentalize conflicts for personal agendas and reject the adoption of predetermined political positions.” It becomes apparent in that and his interview with the Berliner Zeitung, that his understanding of art is as the pure language of the works versus a political language and which politics lies behind this idea. “For us, the artwork is in the foreground; the messages should be codified in it.” (Spiegel) It is about the detachment of the work from everything: from the author, from an external artistic public, in principle also from its time, in order to propagate concepts such as autonomy, independence, and institutional self-determination—but only within the framework of the White Cube. This is the place where art is negotiated and nothing else. The institution exists precisely to maintain this fiction. To the point of self-appeasement, when Babias says: “In practice, the Bundestag’s resolution on the BDS is irrelevant to us. That was and is symbolic politics. […] We deliberately did not sign GG 5.3.1, like many other institutions. As it now turns out, the initiative further politicized the debate and polarized the arts instead of defusing it. […] The anti-discrimination clause in its originally proposed form would have had just as little impact on us as an institution as the BDS resolution.” One can only hope that such wishful thinking will not be followed by a rude awakening… Babias’ concept of art refers to the Enlightenment and fascism, mentions postcolonial discussions, but does not mention that all of this could also have an impact on the concept of art, the art system—if it were not immediately absorbed by the cunning of capital (see Velasco). Curators are a new profession that cultivates and encloses art. Previously, only art historians held leading positions. 

The Berlin art bubble is international. Many artists who live here have fled repressive and violent regimes. Many also refer to the knowledge and experiences of non-Western and indigenous practices in their art. Why is criticism of “our art system” not becoming louder and more radical? I often recall a conversation I had with London-based Roma artist and curator Daniel Baker in 2020 on the occasion of the FUTUROMA exhibition in the Venice Biennale program. The exhibition attempted to transfer the impulse of Afrofuturism—namely, to retell history from a subject position—to the discriminated community of GRT (Gypsy Roma and Traveller). Among other things, he said: “The idea of a closer connection between the practices of art and life also has implications for reclaiming art from the privileged arena of the museum and an art world focused on market interests and knowledge hierarchies—on a separation of intellectual, cultural, and financial capital.

“You live in Florence, the birthplace of autonomous art, and encounter the meaning, power, and joys conveyed by Renaissance artworks on a daily basis. At their core, however, these objects remain instruments of the power of the state and the church. The audience is convinced of the transcendental nature of art, of its beauty and skill, which serve to promote ideas and narratives that point away from everyday life and toward the deeply spiritual and intellectual. This model of separation is how the modern museum is still understood, and from my perspective, there seems to be little appetite for approaching things differently.”

Returning to Ndikung’s interview with Deutschlankfunk, he suggests that he can work freely as a curator without taking a position in political debates: “My only position is humanity. I will not compromise. […] I don’t care who is holding the gun. That’s why I won’t get drawn into this debate. And my job is to keep the spaces open, to keep the art spaces open. People from Palestine, from Israel, from Syria, from Haiti, from Myanmar, and elsewhere will always have a place in [the HKW] to present their artwork.” That sounds confident, as if it were possible to stay away from power constellations, even to free oneself from them, even when working within them. 

In his aforementioned text about the “Global Fascism” exhibition at the HKW, Broomberg mentions the necessary, subtle “anticipatory obedience” of a state institution in its concrete exhibition policy, and reminds us that its director also had to clearly distance himself from BDS before taking office. In 2014, Ndikung allegedly wrote on Facebook: “You will pay millions for every drop of blood in GAZA! Palestine must be free […] come rain or shine!” and signed the open letter from the “Initiative GG 5.3 Weltoffenheit” (Initiative GG 5.3 Cosmopolitanism), followed in 2021 by the open letter “Palestine Speaks,” which called on the German government, among others, to withdraw its support for Israel. Yet in the 2025 interview, Ndikung speaks for “humanity.” Meanwhile, Broomberg criticizes how “Not one work in the [Global Fascism] exhibition acknowledges the world burning just beyond the door.” The only Palestinian artist in the exhibition is represented with a work from 1974, which is described in the exhibition guide as “a possible allegory about the burden of Palestinian existence under occupation.” Broomberg’s bitter conclusion: “What were once our most progressive institutions and artists have become instruments of that silence, helping the genocide to proceed politely. When an institution reaches this level of corruption, it neutralizes any political potential of the art it shelters. Every work becomes a prop in the pretense of inclusion, queerness, Indigeneity, and postcolonialism. This theater serves the institution’s simulation of anti-fascism. […] The fact that these institutions—apparently in full seriousness—engage with ‘global fascisms’ while blithely enabling it at home is salt in the wound of the German cultural scene’s demise.”

In public institutions, one can assume a direct relationship of dependency between management and the state, i.e., obedience. In so-called “grassroots democratic” institutions such as the numerous German art associations, power is exercised through the rules of representative democracy: the members elect a board of directors. And this board is usually not made up of artists and citizens, but of potential sponsors (savings bank directors, private patrons, collectors). On the surface, it is often said that they alone are in a position to personally absorb the financial risk of failure—although this has long since become an industry for insurance companies. I never wanted to work in “powerful” institutions, perhaps because I took the pressure to represent too seriously. But in both art associations where I worked as director, I learned how fragile the protection of artistic freedom is. When I wanted to exhibit Hans Peter Feldmann’s cycle “Die Toten” (The Dead) at the Badischer Kunstverein 25 years ago (the independent book publication was already available), the board blocked the exhibition preparations and invitations could not be sent out. The work “Die Toten” documents, used previously published media images: 100 people who died between 1967 and 1993 in connection with the RAF—victims of the RAF as well as RAF members. After extensive discussions, in which Feldmann also participated with written statements, the conflict finally culminated in a meeting at City Hall and the question: Is the art association free in its work or should it be closed down? The conflict did not escalate further, the exhibition took place, and the art association was able to continue its work. However, if the representation of artists in art associations becomes too strong structurally—precisely as association members—this is often stopped, off the record, of course, as happened in the second association I headed. A tacit agreement then prevails between the financial backers (in this case, the state) and the board: it is better to remain among ourselves and retain control. There would be much to discuss…

Who decides what is permitted and in whose name? Is the political sphere limited to “state and civil society representatives, parliaments, global courts, organizations such as the United Nations or the UN Security Council,” as Babias told the Berliner Zeitung? It is not the controversy over “autonomous” art and activism that is decisive, but the recognition of power over (artistic) publics.

Now, at the latest, after Gaza broke the art world (Velasco), the upcoming discussion should be devoted to a retelling of recent art history and to searching for infrastructural relationships that can give space to the intimacy and intellectuality, the passion and sensuality of art in a self-determined way. It is time for a self-critical assessment: can we in the art scene really still assume that we live in the best of all possible (state-subsidized, highly professionalized) worlds? Can we only fight to preserve our vested interests? Shouldn’t the discussion about inclusion and exclusion concern not only the “others,” but above all our own systemic narrative? What trap have we fallen into? What went wrong? Do we also work with double standards and hypocrisy? Should we re-read and reinterpret our own past, that of the so-called rehabilitation of modernism after fascism and during the Cold War—as was done, at least retrospectively and to some extent, with Documenta2?

  1. The GG 5.3 Weltoffenheit initiative was an appeal in 2020 by numerous public cultural and scientific institutions in Germany, which spoke out in favor of freedom of art and science, research and teaching (Art. 5.3 Basic Law) and commented on the possibility of political abuse of the accusation of anti-Semitism in the BDS resolution of the German Bundestag. ↩︎
  2. Documenta. Art and Politics. German Historical Museum, (June 18, 2021 – January 9, 2022) ↩︎

The Government Cuts, Patagonia Burns 

Amid escalating wildfires, examine the government policies further fueling environmental destruction in Patagonia


16/01/2026

As has been the case for years, the Patagonian region faces its annual wildfire emergency. With each passing year, the toll becomes heavier. Entire provinces and regions are scorched by flames, families left without homes or land, animals burned along the roads, and the unquenchable shadow of real estate and mining speculation looms over the region. Undoubtedly, a significant portion of the responsibility can be attributed to climate change, but it is not the only factor at play. In this article, I will shed light on an issue that unites the two most pressing problems of the ultraliberalism touted by Milei: privatization and wild liberalization—practices intrinsically linked to environmental devastation. Specifically: what do we mean by “real estate and mining speculation”? What are the government’s responsibilities? 

When we talk about real estate and mining speculation, we refer to the measures the government intends to adopt to facilitate the entry of foreign capital by sacrificing the rich natural heritage preserved in these lands. In the government’s political agenda for 2026, the intention to repeal two crucial pieces of legislation regarding these matters is enshrined: the Ley de la Tierra (Land Law, 26.737) and the Ley del Fuego (Fire Law, 26.815). These laws are presented, in the final document drafted by the Consejo de Mayo, as obstacles to foreign investment. It is the Chief of Cabinet, Gabriel Adorni, who states it clearly in an official communiqué: “The prohibition on changing the productive activity of the land for 30 or 60 years after a fire will be eliminated,” concluding that the current measure “directly undermines production.” 

To delve into more detail, the first law sets a 15% cap on the total rural land that can be purchased by foreign agents. With the repeal of this law, this limit is removed, paving the way for unrestricted land sales and rampant real estate speculation. As for the second law, Articles 22 bis and 22 quarter are targeted. The first refers to native or planted forest areas and protected natural zones. It establishes a 60-year period, starting from the extinction of the fire, during which no change in land use or subdivision into smaller plots is allowed. Meanwhile, Article 22  quarter, sets a 30-year limit for all other areas of high ecological vulnerability. This means that no new economic activities (such as construction, cultivation, or industrial projects) can take place in these lands, to avoid further harm to biodiversity and natural resources. The joint repeal of both laws brings disastrous consequences, opening the door to land sales, real estate speculation, and environmental devastation by foreign interests. 

The people on the front lines fighting the fires are labeled heroes by the government. Milei posts on X his solemn thanks: “I want to send a special thank you to all the brigadistas, firefighters, and each of the volunteers,” concluding that there is “nothing more heroic than risking your life to save that of others.” Similarly, Chief of Cabinet Gabriel Adorni, also on X“I want to especially thank the firefighters and all those who risk their lives to save those of Argentinians.” These words, when compared to the measures taken by the government over the years, highlight the full hypocrisy that characterizes Milei’s management. The heroes the president speaks of are the very same ones whose salaries have been cut by more than 50% since December 2023. Today, a firefighter in Argentina struggles to make ends meet, with salaries that do not even reach 500 euros annually and working conditions that are precarious, on the verge of unsustainable. But the cuts haven’t only affected the salaries of those fighting the fires; in 2026, according to data provided by organizations such as FARNthe government plans to cut the budgethttps://farn.org.ar/documentos/ for the National Fire Management Service (SNMF) by 71.6% compared to the previous year (2025). Therefore, aside from the purely political propaganda posts praising the heroism of firefighters, the issue doesn’t seem to be a priority for the government. It’s no surprise that Milei is also one of the most vocal climate change deniers, another key figure in this theater of horrors. 

The government’s line is once again clear: Sell, cut, deny. All of this at the expense of one of the richest natural heritages in the world, considered expendable by the very people who claim to love these lands. Once again, ultraliberalism reveals its enormous destructive force. Even more so when intertwined with the consequences of climate change. Patagonia, however, is not only an enormous natural treasure. With its glaciers, lakes, and rivers, it represents the largest freshwater reserve in the Americas, and one of the largest in the world. Preserving it is the responsibility of all humankind. Selling it to the highest bidder is a crime against humanity.