Far be it from me to boss people around, but activists who live in Melbourne, Australia should hotfoot it over to the University of Melbourne to protest its sponsorship of the Irrawaddy Literary Festival in Mandalay, Burma on November 3rd to 5th, which is organized by the Burmese junta & Suu Kyi to whitewash the genocide of the Rohingya people. Several from the University will be participating in the festival. The same for anyone near Manchester Metropolitan University in the UK which is also sponsoring the thing.

As Khurram Parvez from Kashmir said about an “apolitical” literary festival India was trying to pull off in Kashmir: “If it does not highlight the pain & truth of Jammu & Kashmir, it’s not apolitical,” & he added that Kashmiris “have a fundamental problem when the show is organised in collaboration with the government, which is aimed at promoting the problematic political agenda of fascist & tyrannical military occupation.” If the Irrawaddy Literary Festival does not highlight the genocide in Arakan state, it’s not a cultural event but a whitewash.

Zionist settlers invading Al-Aqsa compound to harass Palestinian worshippers

Zionist settler at Al Aqsa Oct 9 2017 (Pal Info Center)

Over 300 Israeli settlers entered the Al-Aqsa mosque compound this morning under the protection of Israeli forces. They taunted Palestinian worshippers by dancing, clapping, & singing. Last Thursday, 55 Israeli settlers toured the compound again protected by Israeli forces & attempted to perform prayers, a violation of the agreement between Israel & the Jordanian trust which governs Al-Aqsa because it is a Muslim holy site.

On Thursday, Israeli police also arrested a Palestinian security guard after he stepped in & objected to an Israeli woman soldier assaulting a Palestinian child entering the mosque. The guard was assaulted by Israeli police & border guards during his detention.

Stand with Palestinians by honoring & promoting the cultural & economic boycott of Israel. Buy nothing with barcode beginning 729 & check every label on every product from food to cosmetics to clothing & shoes.

(Photo is screen shot of dancing Israeli from video by Palestine Info Center)

Some racism approaches parody: one nimrod suggested the Rohingya were backward because they didn’t have a space program. As if militarizing the cosmos were a good thing.

Hate & disrespect are the essence of extremist right politics

Ro woman the nationalist didn't want to see naked Oct 8 2017

The dead giveaway of stinking rotten politics permeating the rantings of fascists, Zionists, Assadists, Hindutva & Burmese nationalists & all other debased ideologies: hatred, cynicism, animosity, misanthropy in the form of racism & misogyny. This stunning photo of a Rohingya woman taken in Cox’s Bazar last March was posted by a Burmese nationalist nimrod on a post by Maung Zarni with a demeaning comment about seeing her naked. Hate & disrespect are the essence of such politics. The politics of social transformation are based on the highest regard for human life, a belief in the sacredness of human life. To us she is beautiful beyond words.

(Photo from Reuters)

October 7th marked the 16th year of the US-NATO war & occupation of Afghanistan. Despite the US escalation of forces, there is almost no media coverage of the war & there hasn’t been for years. Photojournalism doesn’t exist, not even of the embedded up the butt of the military kind. Nothing is more imperative than rebuilding the international antiwar movement & reclaiming it from those who support dictatorships rather than freedom struggles against them. Those betrayals have compromised an already weak movement & is one of the greatest political failures of our times. It is not too late to rebuild a movement in defense of the people of Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Iraq, Libya, Somalia.

Have spent the morning contacting the authors (via Facebook & Twitter) who are scheduled to attend the Irrawaddy Literary Festival sponsored by the Burmese military in November. Many of them identify as liberals & even human rights advocates. Some may consider it harassment but to my mind if it isn’t education that will dissuade them from attending, it’s shaming. You don’t get to be part of whitewashing genocide just to peddle books without facing consequences.

If anyone wants to join me: http://www.irrawaddylitfest.com/authors/

Five-part series of Rohingya refugees in India saying who they are, what they want

What does a Rohingya feel when he is told that he is an ‘illegal immigrant’, a ‘security threat’ & ‘unwanted’ in India? What was their life like before they had to run away to save themselves? What does it feel to be reduced to just a statistic? What do the Rohingya feel when they hear the news that they will be deported back to the land where their lives are in danger? In a five-part series, Raqib Hameed Naik speaks to five refugees who had to give up all they owned to attempt a start a new life. Their stories, in the first person, are an attempt to go beyond majoritarian narratives & give them a platform to express their views & opinions.

This is Part One about 27-year-old Mohammad Ismail.

http://twocircles.net/2017oct07/417468.html

Culture is a political battlefield, not neutral territory: the use of literary festivals to whitewash human rights crimes

Ro refugee in boat of Koh Lipe in Andaman sea (Independent) Oct 7 2017

In modern politics, culture is a battlefield, not neutral territory. We’re not just talking rock & roll concerts in Tel Aviv but the literary festivals which are cropping up all over the place, especially in the most oppressive countries. Literary festivals are less intellectual salons where writers get together to schmooze about poetry than market places where writers scout publishers & book sellers. No problem with that unless the gathering is intended as a cultural event to whitewash crimes of the sponsoring regime.

Burma has not missed the uses of a literary festival. In 2013, the Irrawaddy Literary Festival was founded by Jane Heyn, wife of a former British Ambassador to Burma, with Aung San Suu Kyi as its public sponsor. It’s been held every year since & will be held again November 3rd to 5th. It’s received all sorts of prestigious media coverage with blithering about the new openings for writers & the new spirit of democracy in Burma despite the genocidal offensive against the Rohingya during several months of 2012. The sponsorship of the festival speaks more to a whitewash of that genocide than to democracy & free speech in Burma.

The Irrawaddy festival is a UK registered charity claiming to have “entirely philanthropic goals.” It’s partnered with several Burmese businesses but since the entire economy of Burma is run directly by the military or indirectly through minions or relatives of the military, the Burmese junta carrying out the genocide of the Rohingya is the core sponsor of the event. This is made crystal clear by the sponsorship of Max Myanmar Holdings & KBZ Bank, both enterprises directly associated with the highest echelons of the military. Manchester Metropolitan University in the UK & the University of Melbourne, Australia are educational partners in the festival this year. It comes as no surprise that universities would compromise themselves with genocide but hopefully when students at those schools get wind of it, they will rise up with a tremendous clamor to oppose it. The corporate sponsors include British Airways & Coca Cola which has a $200 million investment in Burma. The US embassy in Burma is also a sponsor of the festival this year. So when US officials like Nikki Haley, Mike Pence, & Rex Tillerson make objections to genocide, we know it’s only ceremonial.

The website to the festival boasts that former British diplomat William Hague once said the Irrawaddy festival “achieved more for freedom of speech in one weekend than most of us manage in a lifetime.” Actually Burmese writers haven’t found that to be true since in 2014, 50 poets boycotted it for being too controlled by the military & dominated by writers who collaborated with it.

There’s a lot of rubbish spewed by writers & organizers of these literary festivals to justify attendance in countries with serious human rights violations. Kavita Bhanot, who organizes them in India to earn her living, offered the most sophisticated rationalization: “I don’t believe this is a valid concern for western countries who are themselves violators…of human rights. Such a focus & framing tends to serve the purpose of pathologising & demonising other countries & peoples, often Muslim, often in order to justify imperial aggression.” That would be sophisticated in the sense of sophistry. More colloquially, it’s called a crock.

Kashmiris gave the best response when India tried to organize an “apolitical” literary festival there in 2011. Kashmiri writers boycotted it & political activists excoriated it for feigning to be apolitical in a heavily militarized conflict zone. They forced the thing to cancel. When India again attempted to organize an “apolitical” literary festival in 2015, human rights activist Khurram Parvez laid it out: “If it does not highlight the pain & truth of Jammu & Kashmir, it’s not apolitical. The organisers have claimed that the events are apolitical. We, as Kashmiri stakeholders, have a fundamental problem when the show is organised in collaboration with the government, which is aimed at promoting the problematic political agenda of fascist & tyrannical military occupation. The state requires a true & honest space for literary festivals & other programmes which promote the voices of victims, pain, resistance & those which have been deliberately silenced.” And there you have it when it comes to literary festivals organized by fascists!

The photo is Rohingya refugees on a boat drifting in Thai waters in the Andaman sea. Thai planes are dropping food packages in the sea so that starving refugees have to swim for it. These are the voices being whitewashed by events like the literary festival run by the junta.

(Photo from the Independent)