This is an archive of the former website of the Maoist Internationalist Movement, which was run by the now defunct Maoist Internationalist Party - Amerika. The MIM now consists of many independent cells, many of which have their own indendendent organs both online and off. MIM(Prisons) serves these documents as a service to and reference for the anti-imperialist movement worldwide.
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| xx xx x xx xx xx x x x x x x Issue #17 |
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| x x x x x x x x x x x x 11/05/85 |
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| Newspaper of the Maoist Internationalist Movement |
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S. AFRICA "REFORMS" PRESS
S. AFRICA UPDATE
Saturday, November 2nd, the apartheid regime officially
blacked out news coverage of the Black revolt. Journalists of
all kinds could face a sentence of 10 years or a fine of
$8,000 or both for reporting resistance in the areas of South
Africa that are under martial law. (Detroit Free Press,
11/3/85, p. a1)
The apartheid regime had arrested several journalists
prior to establishing a complete ban on coverage.
The ban on journalists underscores the potency of
international protest against apartheid. That the racists no
longer felt they could afford to publicize their own
repression of the Black resistance proves that the U.S.-
backed white settler regime is not in full control.
The day the journalist ban came down, 100,000 demonstrated
in London for Western sanctions against apartheid.
The death toll in S. Africa's repression over the last 14
months has now topped 850. (Ibid., a13)
MARCOS TO CALL ELECTIONS IN '86
Under pressure from his U.S. sponsors, puppet dictator
Ferdinand Marcos has apparently changed his mind and will
consider elections in 1986. The Philippines President is
viewed by conservatives in the U.S. to be out of touch and
liable to lose the country to communism. Marcos' announcement
followed Sen. Paul Laxalt's visit to the Philippines. Laxalt
is a leading Reagan confidant.
Meanwhile, the U.S. has also threatened to cut off $450
million in military aid over the next five years if Marcos
reinstates Gen. Fabian Ver who is implicated in the Aug. 1983
assassination of bourgeois opposition figure Benigno Aquino.
"'President Marcos said he was honor-bound to take him back
if he [Gen. Ver] was acquitted,' Laxalt said. 'I said, 'For
how much time?' He inititally said, 'One year.' I told him
that would be a problem back here. He said he'd take a second
look at it.'" (Detroit Free Press, 11/3/85, p. a3)
The U.S. Senate is worried that Marcos will lose the
Philippines to neo-Maoist guerrillas, who number 30,000 by
Senate figures. The executive branch is worried that the New
People's Army would kick the U.S. out of Clark Air Force Base
and Subic Bay Naval Base, "the two largest U.S. military
bases abroad." (Ibid.) The Philippines is also considered a
long time political and economic ally thanks to a history of
U.S. intervention to install pro-U.S. regimes.
SEVEN LAYER CAKE
The Pentagon's Star Wars plan envisions seven layers to
the shield that protects the U.S. from Soviet missiles. Each
layer will only allow 20% of Soviet missiles through.
Five companies are working on Star Wars already and
anticipate making further bids for more work. (Detroit Free
Press, 11/3/85, p. a1)
Even if the shield is not perfect, the idea of Star Wars
is to make nuclear war more plausible to public opinion. That
is why it has become critical for scientists in academia to
reject Star Wars for its implausibility and for its
militarist motivations. MIT has rejected all research on Star
Wars as have thousands of scientists in universities across
the country.
At the same time, the conjunction of Star Wars weapons and
others makes a first strike by the U.S. an ever more likely
possibility.
PHILLY POLICE REFUSE TO TESTIFY ON MOVE BOMBING
"Lieut. Frank Powell, who dropped the bomb on the group's
[MOVE'S] house May 13 after a daylong siege, was the first
person to refuse to testify. He invoked his constitutional
right against self-incrimination." (New York Times, Thurs.
10/24/85)
Mayor Wilson Goode went along with the bombing and turned
down the idea of using a crane because at $6,500 the crane
would have cost too much. Why resolve the conflict with such
a low level of repression when we can murder 11 men, women
and children?