Deadline extended: IUSY’s Student Working Group 2020

What: Student Working Group
When: 27th-29th April
Where: Online meeting platform, ZOOM
Age: 18-35 years
Size: 25-30 people keeping the balance between the regions
Deadline: 25th April 12:00 am (CET time)

Outline

The current COVID-19 situation has made us realise how much a crisis situation that forces governments to declare a state of emergency can influence student’s lives and rights. The Student Working Group 2020 will bring together young activists of IUSY member organisations from all 7 regions, online. The aim of the meeting is to learn on the implications of crisis situations on basic human rights and students rights and enhance student international solidarity. The meeting will offer a platform to discuss how the situation has affected student life in the regions, give space to engage in a dialogue on common struggles and obstacles, and work together to come up with strategies to defend, advocate and campaign for students rights in crisis situations.

Participant’s profile

Please note that the event must be gender-balanced and therefore the selection criteria will follow this premise in order to ensure such balance. Both the IUSY statues and the Global Project require gender balance.

Participants must be able to attend the entire programme of the seminar and be active throughout the year after the meeting. This is due to that the work of the Working Group will be carried out throughout the year in line with the working plan.
It’s preferable that participants have experience in Students issues and are interested in human rights.

All participants must be aged 18-35 years old, with no exceptions.

How to apply

Participants must apply by filling the registration form online https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfwkbzTpv0x5PihJdm-Vx4lyBxEJ3YxA51ZkyCwC429r4H7MA/viewform
Deadline Thursday 23 April 2018.

Online Meeting

The meeting will take place online, through the online platform Zoom. Participants once confirmed their participation, will receive a link and an entry code to the meeting room.

The event will take place during three days and will offer some offline activities as well as reflexion time. We encourage the participants to remain active, engaged and available during the time of the on-going activity.

Dowload the full invitation here

Contact
Ana Ruiz
IUSY Project Manager
iusy@iusy.org / +4369913532970

IUSY’s Statement on COVID-19

EN

Young Socialism in times of coronavirus

The world is facing an unprecedented global crisis these days. The emergence of the coronavirus has provoked an intense political debate among the most important leaders, as well as world intellectuals, making proof that the situation is much more than the disease, but civilizational.

It is a health crisis due to the massive spread of the COVID-19 disease, but it is also a crisis with profound economic and social impacts, given the changes in the flows, exchanges and responses of human groups in the midst of the knowledge society. In a flash, globalization has taken a hit and brought the nation-state, communities and grassroots back as a structuring of responses.

Although all people are exposed to the virus, not all of them are protected in the same way against its threat. The main sources of affectation of this calamity so far are in countries with strong state capacity and consolidated health systems (China, United States and the European Union, mainly), however, the virus has also reached to the global south, where social inequality prevails, as well as the fragility of the State in ensuring rights such as health.

This crisis has put the importance and role of the State at the center of the discussion: not only for the ability to diagnose and care for people infected by the virus through public health systems, but to show that there is still a lot of citizens who do not receive income –or who receive very little money monthly through targeted assistance policies–, and should be isolated in the same way as those who do have the resources to do so. In that, contingency plans to protect formal and popular economy workers, and economic measures to mobilize resources, have been paramount.

In times where the neoliberal project was becoming stronger and more aggressive, the situation has forced us to look back at the result of the social pact called the State. However, it is not enough to recognize its importance, but rather the challenge of asking ourselves widely about what type of State we want to face the challenges of the coming decades, based on experiences like the ones we are going through now.

The threat, however, is not only the pandemic, but the political condition that we will face the day after its end. There is a latent possibility that democracies will degrade to such an extent that their fundamental freedoms will come to the background when problems are imminent, in search of a certain efficiency, peace and order in the countries. Today there is a general interest to protect, valuing solidarity at all levels, but we cannot normalize the toxic effects of the lasting states of constitutional exception.

For this reason, the situation of social isolation that most countries undergo, curfews or compulsory quarantines cannot be an excuse for human rights violations. Local control institutions as well as international authorities must take care that excesses do not occur by the forces of public order and security. At the same time, it is important to keep the bonds strong between countries and not take the pandemic towards to closing borders forever.

Likewise, in this scenario of mass confinement, episodes of gender violence become more latent. We urge governments to take concrete actions to combat this reality, with immediate assistance tools, safe spaces, justice systems enabled for complaints, etc.

In the same way, this interrupted normality cannot lead us to deepen the discrimination against the LGBT community, xenophobic biases towards migrants and the precariousness of disabled people. We must appeal to the robustness of civil society and social movements to confront these fears, their role being essential in times where participation is required.

Consequently, in a previous context where there was a deep questioning of the liberal world order, the left must be vigilant to take note of the disputes expressed in this contingency. We cannot rejoice in the idea of ​​the agony of neoliberalism, when it is not the death of modern capitalism, but one of its possible forms of organization. We need to read this moment with finesse, where more state action, greater solidarity and the extension of protections are requested from those who are vulnerable, as well as authoritarian, militaristic and punitive alerts are heard.

Therefore, we call on the political leaders of the world to join forces to combat this global threat that is COVID-19. This requires that the forces with the greatest weight at the geopolitical level ensure the mobilization of all the necessary resources to protect what is most human, life and the common interest over capital and private interest.

This global problem must find a multilateral response, which enables the prompt reactivation of national economies. Dynamics of financial suffocation and structural adjustment cannot be replicated in peripheral countries, while large injections of resources begin to be channeled into central countries, thus distancing themselves from the phantom of austerity. Likewise, policies of technical, medical and scientific cooperation that reduce the impact of this disease should be deployed with greater intensity, especially in countries with fewer resources and their own capacity to do so.

The fact that this crisis does not end with more human victims or by expanding the already existing marked social inequality is still in our hands. That it is, rather, an opportunity to promote a new civilizational horizon, more just socially, culturally and environmentally, is something that must be our task and vision. Let us recover the importance of the best socialist tradition: the one that thinks from the social organization, with democratic radicalism, in the common good of the people through the actions of the State.

ES

El socialismo joven en tiempos de coronavirus

El mundo se enfrenta en estos días a una crisis global sin precedentes. La irrupción del coronavirus ha provocado un intenso debate político entre las y los más importantes líderes, así también como entre intelectuales mundiales, interviniendo como prueba de que la situación es mucho más que la enfermedad, sino civilizacional.

Es una crisis de carácter sanitaria por el contagio masivo de la enfermedad COVID-19, pero también una crisis con profundos impactos económicos y de carácter social, dadas las alteraciones de los flujos, intercambios y contestaciones de los grupos humanos en plena sociedad del conocimiento. En un instante, la globalización se ha visto afectada y ha traído de vuelta al Estado-nación, las comunidades y las bases como estructuradores de las respuestas.

Si bien todas las personas están expuestas al contagio del virus, no todas ellas están protegidas de la misma manera ante su amenaza. Los principales focos de afectación de esta calamidad hasta el momento se hallan en países con fuerte capacidad estatal y sistemas sanitarios consolidados (China, Estados Unidos y Unión Europea, fundamentalmente), sin embargo, el virus ha llegado también al sur global, en donde prima la inequidad social y la fragilidad del Estado en asegurar derechos como la salud.

Esta crisis ha puesto sobre el centro de la discusión la importancia y el rol del Estado: no solo por la capacidad para diagnosticar y atender a personas contagiadas por el virus a través de los sistemas públicos de salud, sino en evidenciar que aún hay mucha ciudadanía que no percibe ingresos –o que recibe muy poco dinero mensual a través de políticas focalizadas de asistencia–, y deben aislarse del mismo modo que aquellos que sí cuentan con recursos para hacerlo. En eso, los planes de contingencia para proteger a las y los trabajadores formales y de la economía popular, y las medidas económicas para movilizar recursos, han resultado primordiales.

En tiempos en donde el proyecto neoliberal retomaba impulso y se tornaba más agresivo, la contingencia nos ha obligado a volver la mirada sobre el resultado del pacto social llamado Estado. Sin embargo, no basta con el reconocimiento de su importancia, sino con el desafío de preguntarnos ampliamente sobre qué tipo de Estado queremos para afrontar los desafíos de las próximas décadas, a partir de experiencias como las que atravesamos ahora.

La amenaza, sin embargo, no es solo la pandemia, sino la condición politica a la cual nos enfrentaremos el día después de su fin. Está latente la posibilidad de que las democracias se degraden a tal punto que sus libertades fundamentales pasen a segundo plano ante la inminencia de los problemas, en pos de cierta eficiencia, paz y orden en los países. Hoy existe un interés general a proteger, valorando la solidaridad en todos los niveles, pero no podemos normalizar los efectos tóxicos de los estados duraderos de excepción constitucional.

Por ello, la situación de aislamiento social que atraviesan la mayor cantidad de países bajo toques de queda o cuarentenas obligatorias no puede ser excusa para que se vulneren los derechos humanos. Las instituciones de control local así como las instancias internacionales deben cautelar que no ocurran excesos por parte de las fuerzas del orden público y seguridad. Al mismo tiempo, es importante mantener fuertes los lazos entre países y no ocupar la pandemia para decretar el cierre de fronteras para siempre.

Asimismo, en este escenario de confinamiento masivo se hacen más latente los episodios de violencia de género. Instamos a que los gobiernos a que se desplieguen acciones concretas para combatir esta realidad, con herramientas de asistencia inmediata, espacios seguros, sistemas de justicia habilitados para denuncias, etc.

De la misma manera, esta interrumpida normalidad no nos puede llevar a profundizar las discriminaciones a la comunidad LGBT, los sesgos xenófobos hacia migrantes y la precariedad de las personas discapacitadas. Tenemos que apelar a la robustez de la sociedad civil y de los movimientos sociales para enfrentar esos miedos, siendo esencial su rol en tiempos donde la participación es exigida.

En consecuencia, en un contexto previo donde existía un profundo cuestionamiento al orden mundial liberal, las izquierdas debemos estar atentas para tomar nota de las disputas que se expresan en esta contingencia. No nos podemos regocijar con la idea de la agonía del neoliberalismo, cuando ella no es la muerte del capitalismo moderno, sino una de sus posibles formas de organización. Necesitamos leer con fineza este momento, donde se pide más acción del Estado, mayor solidaridad y ampliación de las protecciones a quienes son vulnerables, como también se oyen alertas autoritarias, militaristas y punitivas.

Por lo anterior, llamamos a los líderes políticos del mundo a aunar esfuerzos para combatir esta amenaza global que es el COVID-19. Para ello se requiere que las fuerzas con mayor peso a nivel geopolítico aseguren la movilización de todos los recursos necesarios para proteger lo más humano, la vida y el interés común por sobre el capital y el interés particular.

Este problema global debe encontrar una respuesta multilateral, que posibilite la reactivación pronta de las economías nacionales. No se pueden replicar dinámicas de asfixia financiera y ajuste estructural en países periféricos, mientras en aquellos centrales empiezan a encaminar grandes inyecciones de recursos, distanciándose así del fantasma de la austeridad. Igualmente, deben desplegarse con mayor intensidad políticas de cooperación técnica, médica y científica que reduzcan el impacto de esta enfermedad, sobre todo en países con menores recursos y capacidad propia de hacerlo.

Que esta crisis no termine con más víctimas humanas ni ampliando la marcada desigualdad social ya existente aun está en nuestras manos. Que sea, más bien, una oportunidad para impulsar un nuevo horizonte civilizatorio, más justo social, cultural y ambientalmente, es algo que debe estar nuestro quehacer y visión. Recuperemos la importancia de la mejor tradición socialista: la que piensa desde la organización social, con radicalidad democrática, en el bien común del pueblo por medio del actuar del Estado.

IUSY MC and EC online meeting

IUSY MC and EC online meeting regarding the COVID-19 situation in MENA and EC regions. The call will take place on April 3rd at 19:00 Jerusalem time (18:00 CET) via Zoom Meeting

Below is the link for the meeting:

https://us04web.zoom.us/j/710073790

Meeting ID: 710 073 790

Topics discussed will be:

  1. What are the most recent updates from our countries?
  2. What did the governments do to counter this pandemic?
  3. What measures that took place in your countries can we benefit from?
  4. What did your party or youth organization do to fight the pandemic?
  5. What lessons can be learned?

Please feel free to join the meeting and also to spread it among your members.

IUSY and YES statement on Hungarian Coronavirus Act

With its 2/3 majority, Fidesz passed the Coronavirus Act in the Hungarian Parliament, granting the government unprecedented emergency powers and the most expansive onessince the fall of communism. The new law allows the government to rule by decree for an indefinite period of time. It also introduces a vaguely worded new paragraph to the already existing offence of scaremongering in the Criminal Code.

The coronavirus outbreak has brought pressure on many governments and demands swift and careful action to prevent any further spread of the virus. We understand that necessary measures require temporary & limited restrictions on some of the fundamental rights and freedoms in the name of the collective, but restrictions, should always be proportionate and necessary. A standard which the Hungarian Coronavirus Act manifestly fails to meet. A completely unrestricted mandate to rule by decree is never proportionate nor democratic. No government should get unrestricted power to fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

The adopted new law also introduces prison sentences of up to five years for people thought to be spreading false information that alarms the public or impedes government efforts to protect people. The government will also be allowed to suspend the application of certain laws by decree if necessary and proportional to protect citizens’ health, life, property, rights, and to secure the stability of the economy in connection with the pandemic. Furthermore, no local or national elections or referendums can be held until the end of the state of emergency. These are often uncertain measures, especially for an indefinite period of time which can easily lead to absolute power of Orbán.

We are also surprised that in merely a few hours later, the President of Hungary signed the act into effect, underlining in his statement that the new law is in line with the Fundamental law and does not violate international agreements.

We, young socialists and social democrats, all over the world and in Europe, are alarmed how Orbán is further undermining the democratic principles in Hungary. We, in IUSY and in YES support all necessary measures to fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, but we also stand on the side of our member organisation, Societas Hungary and and all other progressive forces fighting against the erosion of democracy while they continue to fight to protect the fundamental rights of the Hungarian people and Hungarian democracy in these difficult times.

IUSY World Congress (Postponed)

IUSY informs that in the light of COVID-19 and after an official communication from the Government of Panama regarding the suspension of massive international events; the IUSY World Congress is postponed.

We are expecting to communicate to you updated information by 1st of April. 

We thank you for your understanding and we call to all our member organisations to be in solidarity with those in need. Stay safe!

If you have further questions do not hesitate to contact us at congress@iusy.org.

IUSY statement on the situation in the Dominican Republic

[Spanish]

IUSY manifiesta su preocupación por suspensión de elecciones municipales en República Dominicana

Desde la unión internacional de Juventudes socialistas (IUSY por sus siglas en Inglés), manifestamos nuestra preocupación por suspensión de elecciones municipales y hacemos un llamado al respeto de la democracia en República Dominicana, donde se realizarían elecciones municipales y las mismas han sido suspendidas el mismo día de la elección por la Junta Central Electoral.

Es un grave atentado contra el sistema democrático del país caribeño, lo cual generará desconfianza de los electores ante el órgano electoral, donde el 80% de los equipos previstos para esta jornada no funcionarón y donde se esperaba el triunfo del principal partido de oposición, Partido Revolucionario Moderno (PRM).

Hacemos un llamado al respeto del proceso electoral y permitan al pueblo dominicano elegir sus representantes de manera libre y siempre democrática.

[English]

IUSY expresses its concern over suspension of municipal elections in the Dominican Republic

From the International Union of Socialist Youth (IUSY), we express our concern about the suspension of municipal elections and make a call for respect of the democracy in the Dominican Republic, where municipal elections would be held and where they have been suspended the same election day by the Central Electoral Board.

It is a serious attack against the democratic system of the Caribbean country, which will generate distrust of the voters before the electoral body, where 80% of the equipment planned for this day did not work and where the triumph of the main opposition party was being expected, Modern Revolutionary Party (PRM).
We make a call to the respect of the electoral process and allow the Dominican people to choose their representatives freely and always democratically.

IUSY statement on the situation in El Salvador

[Spanish]

IUSY condena acciones contra el parlamento de El Salvador

La Unión Internacional de Juventudes Socialistas (IUSY por sus siglas en inglés) condena las acciones promovidas por el Presidente de El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, contra el parlamento, donde con el uso de las fuerzas militares ha tomado las instalaciones del poder legislativo, promoviendo incluso; un llamado a la violencia y de persecución contra parlamentarios de la oposición.

Hacemos un llamado para que se garantice el respeto de las instituciones democráticas del país centroamericano y exhortamos a todos los actores políticos a establecer un diálogo que permita una solución pacífica.

Las acciones violentas del poder ejecutivo contra el poder legislativo quebrantan el orden constitucional.

[English]

IUSY condemns actions against the parliament of El Salvador

The International Union of Socialist Youth (IUSY) condemns the actions promoted by the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, against the parliament, where with the use of military forces he has taken the facilities of the legislative power, even promoting a call to violence and persecution against parliamentarians from the opposition.

We make a call for the respect of the democratic institutions of the Central American country to be guaranteed and we urge all political actors to establish a dialogue that allows a peaceful solution.

The violent actions of the executive branch against the legislative branch violate the constitutional order.

[French]

L’IUSY condamne les actions contre le parlement du Salvador

L’Union Internationale de la Jeunesse Socialiste (UIJS) condamne les actions promues par le Président du Salvador, Nayib Bukele, contre le parlement, où avec l’utilisation des forces militaires il a pris le contrôle des installations du pouvoir législatif, allant même jusqu’à promouvoir ; un appel à la violence et à la persécution contre les parlementaires de l’opposition.

Nous demandons que le respect des institutions démocratiques de ce pays d’Amérique centrale soit garanti et nous exhortons tous les acteurs politiques à établir un dialogue qui permettra une solution pacifique.

Les actions violentes du pouvoir exécutif contre le pouvoir législatif violent l’ordre constitutionnel.

IUSY and YES Statement on Trump’s “Peace plan”

We are witnessing the latest developments regarding the Middle East conflict, following US President Donald Trump’s so-called “Peace Plan”. This plan promotes unilateral annexations of vast territories in the West Bank by Israel, a crime of aggression under the Rome Statute, while completely ignoring the long occupation of those territories. The consequences of its implementation would be devastating for any real and sustainable peace in the future. Even more so given the fact that this plan surges at a time of non-existing efforts by the Israeli government to promote the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside an Israeli state. On the contrary, it comes after a decade of expansion of the settlement enterprise led by the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The plan put forward by President Trump is a distractive one. While using a two-state solution discourse, Trump’s plan is based on the distorted idea that a peace process can begin with a one-sided annexation of occupied land. This peace-in-disguise will allow Israel’s right extremists to fulfill their vision of permanent presence in the West Bank while de facto depriving the Palestinians’ hopes and dreams for an independent state of their own. We should not be fooled by Trump’s promises – there will be no peace at the end of this process, only two nations bind in an even deadlier conflict, with fewer possibilities to create a reality of peace and prosperity for their peoples. This initiative of a populist right-wing president to save himself from impeachment, and his partner, Benjamin Netanyahu, from three cases of corruption in Israel.

IUSY and YES shall continue to urge the Israeli government to act immediately for this cause. IUSY and YES express dual solidarity with its member organizations both in Israel and Palestine who work persistently in order to establish a large movement of activists who share this vision of peace and justice. The support of socialists from all corners of the globe is essential in the efforts for strengthening this voice within Israel, and in promoting the ability to build a sustainable and just future for both the Israeli and the Palestinian people.

IUSY and YES declare their firm commitment with the fulfilment of the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, including the right to self-determination that has been violated by Israel’s illegal settlement enterprise. Trump’s initiative does nothing but perpetuates the denial of rights while rewarding Israel for systematically violating international law. Peace cannot be an abstract. It composed by justice, equality and the fulfilment of the rights of everyone, in this case, of Israelis, Palestinians and the rest of the region.

IUSY and YES will only support a Peace Process that:

  • Ends the Israeli occupation that began in 1967, including in and around East Jerusalem.
  • Based on a two-state solution, achieved through a direct dialog between the two nations under the international community supervision, as the overriding method to achieve a peace agreement in the Middle East.
  • Sees the establishment of a fully sovereign Palestinian State, with control over its airspace, natural resources and all other attributes of sovereignty.
  • Grants equal political and civil rights for all citizens of Israel and Palestine, including between Jewish and Arab citizens in Israel.
  • Solves all issues based on international law and relevant UN resolutions.

We warn everyone about the dangerous precedents that the Trump Administration is imposing by promoting this plan. Violation of basic principles of International Law, such as the inadmissibility of acquisition of the land through the use of force, could be turned into precedents that will only make it more difficult to secure peace and security elsewhere. This is no longer time for mere statements.

The Presidium of IUSY and YES have decided to launch a campaign in order to help in saving the prospects of a just and lasting peace in the Middle East. This includes:

  • A commitment of all members to work for the immediate recognition of the State of Palestine on the 1967 border.
  • Request from all members to take proactive action against Israel’s settlements and its economic supporters, including by banning settlement products and Calling upon the UN Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet to release the database of companies involved in the Israeli occupation in 1967 lands
  • Promoting visits of our members to support on the ground the progressive forces in Israel and Palestine, including the right to political and civil equality for the Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel and the struggle against the occupation that began in 1967, including in East Jerusalem, the capital of the State of Palestine

We call for the end of the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian people, based on our belief in equality and freedom, and aspire for independence and self-determination of all peoples in the region. We hope to end the rising violence in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian territories and to establish a just, egalitarian and secure space with opportunities for life, development, freedom of speech, peace and solidarity.