Transcript Document

TEN YEARS OF ATTACKS ON
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS - THE ROLE
OF LAWYERS
WELCOMING REMARKS FROM ELDH
Bill Bowring
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President, European Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights (ELDH)
International Secretary, Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers, England
Professor of Law, Birkbeck College, University of London;
Barrister at Field Court Chambers, Gray’s Inn - I represent applicants against
Azerbaijan, Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Russia, Spain
Executive Committee and founding member, Bar Human Rights Committee of
England and Wales;
founder and Chair of European Human Rights Advocacy Centre (EHRAC); we
have several hundred cases against Georgia and Russia – staff lawyers in
Chechnya, Moscow and Russian regions
The world 10 years ago
• On 20 July 2001 the Italian police shot dead the student Carlo
Giuliani
• In 2001 capitalism seemed rather secure
• Even 9/11 gave the pretext for invading Afghanistan on 7 October
2001, and the rapid ‘defeat’ of the Taliban
• In Britain, the Labour government elected in 1997 continued
Thatcher’s policies of monetarism and the love-affair with finance capital
• The banking and property booms in Greece, Ireland, Iceland, and
Spain would go on for ever
• US economic and military hegemony seemed impregnable
The context in which attacks on
fundamental rights are intensifying
• 2003 – the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq by the US and
Britain. The US could not defeat the Iraqi people
• 2006 – the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and defeat by Hezbollah
• 2008 – the collapse of Lehmann brothers and the banking crisis:
banks rescued by the state in reckless spending which is now the
source of the ‘deficit’
• 2011 - the collapse of the EU’s monetarist single currency project
• This is the context in which fundamental rights are under attack
across Europe
Why are attacks on fundamental rights
intensifying?
• Don’t talk about “neo-liberalism”, “capitalism” or even “finance
capital”
• Today’s crisis of capital system is nothing new. This is what it always
was: the raging hunger of capital for new opportunities to valorise itself
• Karl Marx wrote:
• “Hitherto, capital has been regarded from its material side as a
simple production process. But, from the side of its formal
specificity, this process is a process of self-valorisation. Selfvalorisation includes preservation of the prior value, as well as its
multiplication.” (Grundrisse, Penguin edition, p.310-311)
• Capital must continually self-valorise, or die
Why are attacks on fundamental rights
intensifying?
• This is capital as an abstract form which feeds on people: correctly
described as a vampire
• Capital cannot be hoarded. It cannot be satisfied simply with everexpanding production of goods, services or intellectual outputs. It must
constantly seek out new areas of human life and human existence to
colonise,
• This process cannot stop, on the contrary it must constantly
accelerate.
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Not just privatisation: wholesale commodification of all spheres,
especially the provisions of services, education, health-care and all
aspects of leisure and cultural activity.
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Everything must have a monetary price, and be put up for sale.
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In the last resort the state must use force: the police and the army
The real nature of the debt crisis
• The so-called debt crisis is nothing of the kind. It has nothing to do
with the individual wickedness or greed of individual capitalists.
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In reality, the banking sector produced an absolutely typical bubble
phenomenon, in which "bundled financial products" or services were
created and sold, even though the only real monetary core was
composed of the mortgages paid by very poor people. Their value was
completely fictitious.
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Enormous individual fortunes were made by charging fees and
commissions on every transaction. In the UK, the scandal of payments
to individual bankers - £ millions.
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In the end the bubble burst, and instead of letting the market do its
job by killing off the financial institutions responsible, states felt
themselves obliged to re-finance the institutions. It is not hard to guess
why.
What is going on?
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What is at stake in Italy and all other EU states is not reducing a debt, but
radically reducing the public sector share of the economy, around 40% in Italy
and other EU states.
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In Britain we are the opposite of Germany: since Thatcher, we have very
little industry.
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A very high proportion of employment is in the public sector.
• We now have a government which is far more extreme in its policies than
anything proposed much less implemented by Thatcher.
• Higher education and the health service are now being prepared for
privatisation.
• The system of Legal Aid, once the best in the world, is now to be destroyed.
• It is already very difficult to go on strike in Britain: there are now calls for
strikes to be prohibited.
• The right to protest is under threat – “kettling”, serious criminal
charges for those almost killed by police
What is to be done?
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Serious resistance to this monetarist onslaught can only come
from organised labour.
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Half a million protestors on the streets of London on 26 March
were organised by the trade unions. The Haldane Society of
Socialist Lawyers was there with its banner.
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On the other hand, the feudal monarchy organised one million
people mainly from southern England, to applaud the royal wedding,
which was a blatantly political event.
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Socialist and democratic lawyers will be fully engaged
defending the right to protest and the right to strike.
Haldane Society on the march