217 lines
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217 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
The Pacific and The Bomb
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(orig: Focus on... The Pacific.)
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The 'international community' has gone
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into a frenzy of anti-French xenophobia
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recently over M. Chirac's decision to go
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ahead with 8 more nuclear tests at
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Murora Atoll. But behind the noise is a
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big stink of hypocrisy...
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M. Chirac is the new bogey man of the
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international community we are told. The
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papers are full every day of the international
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condemnations which are coming from the
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EU, Australia, New Zealand and Japan.
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French wine is being poured down the drains
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outside hotels and the London Guardian is
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running the usual French hate articles (15th
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July 1995). Indeed no less than the Japanese
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finance minister is leading the way calling for
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petitions, demonstrations and campaigns as
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'great things to do' and heroically calling on
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us to, 'grandly get on board a ship and stand
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in the way. As a politician, I promise to take
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the lead.' Very kind of him of course and I'm
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sure there will be tea and biscuits but Mr
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Takemura has missed the point. They all have.
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Even those liberal heart throbs Greenpeace
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are happily jumping on the anti-French-one-
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big-issue-bandwagon. The real issue is the
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economic and military reality of the Pacific
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region or, dare I say it, colonialism.
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France used to carry out her nuclear tests in
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the Sahara until those naughty Algerians
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welshed on her. It was then that she diverted
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her attentions down to Tahiti. But the region
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is not just a nuclear playground. Susanna
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Ounei, an activist in the Kanaky
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independence movement (New Caledonia)
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says, 'I am a little surprised that everyone is so
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shocked about the French government's
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decision to resume nuclear tests at Moruroa
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atoll in Tahiti. Pacific islanders know there is
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nothing new about French agencies doing
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whatever they want, whenever they want. We
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never asked the French to colonise our
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countries. We never asked them to set up their
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nuclear testing facilities. The main issue for
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the people of the French colonies of the
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Pacific remains independence'(1). Perhaps not
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surprisingly also is the fact that the French
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State is not too keen on the idea of
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independence for its colonies in the region
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knowing that for the islands in the region to
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develop any degree of autonomy would be
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the one sure way of ensuring the French state
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can't do an Algerian and welsh in turn on any
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climbdown Chancellor Kohl may extract from
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them on this issue. The French State
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recognises the importance of keeping the
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locals in check by means of terror if
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necessary. When, in May 1985, a small
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demonstration against the visit of a French
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nuclear submarine in the region went ahead in
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Noumea the French military murdered in cold
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blood an 18 year old protester.
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THE AUSTRALIAN CONNECTION
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The French capitalists know which side their
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bread is buttered. The New Caledonia area is
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the second largest exporter of nickel in the
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world with about 33% of known reserves (the
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sea may contain up to three times the mineral
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wealth which has been found on land) not to
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mention chrome and cobalt which are both
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important for military purposes. And when
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France wants uranium it's Australia who
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obliges. As Ounei puts it, 'Australia is yelling
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in front of everybody that the French nuclear
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tests must stop, but behind the scenes they are
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reinforcing the position of France by selling
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them uranium. They are the best ally of and
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the warranty for France, as the tests that will
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poison the whole Pacific begin in Tahiti.'
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Australian military officers also recently
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attended French military exercises in the
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region as 'observers' in a 'regional conflict
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scenario'. She may now be shedding crocodile
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tears over M. Chirac's decision but she's at
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one with him on the independence issue as
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shown by her track record in Bougainville
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and her opposition to any form of autonomy
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for the people of East Timor.
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Australia with US backing - another major
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player in the region - takes on the burden of
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pursuing 'Western interests' in the region by
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hosting US military bases and by her military
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alliance with the US through the ANZUS
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treaty. The US is of course an old hand in
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things military. Here she maintains a
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dangerous chemical weapons incinerator on
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Johnston atoll in defiance of Pacific opinion.
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US nuclear-powered and armed warships
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cruise the Pacific. M. Chirac has played into
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her hands on this issue as a short article in The
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Age recently reveals saying that the US
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military are considering the resumption of
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nuclear testing in the light of M. Chirac's
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move. It was explained by an official that
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they have to make sure that they 'will work
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properly on the day'. So forget about
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deterrence and put it in your diary.
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Even when Australia pushed for what was
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laughingly called the South Pacific Nuclear-
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Free Zone Treaty in 1985 she didn't try to
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stop nuclear ship visits, the presence of US
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bases in the region or her Uranium exports.
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However, even this weak brew could not be
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stomached by the UK, US and France who
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declined to give their autographs.
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THE OLD AMERICAN DISORDER HAS
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ARRIVED
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Of course the military set-up compliments the
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economic exploitation of the region. The
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region systematically has its economies prized
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open to the usual stories of the 'free' trade and
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privatisation rather than dealing with the
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needs of the people. Here the Australian
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government proudly boasts that Australian
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companies have 'enormous influence on the
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economies of the Pacific' which is shorthand
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for the fact that she exports five times more,
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mainly manufactured and processed
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foodstuffs, to the region than she imports,
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primarily minerals and raw materials.
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The French also are in on the game with
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7,000,000 square kilometres of the Pacific
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inside her exclusive economic zones. Here
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there are huge investments in the mining and
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tourist industries. France has flooded its
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Pacific possessions with migrants from France
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to outnumber the local inhabitants. This
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policy has been most thorough in Kanaky
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(New Caledonia), where the proportion of
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indigenous people in the island's population
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has declined from 52% in 1951 to 44%
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today. In Tahiti, 30,000 Europeans hold
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down the best paying jobs, while the more
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than 70,000 Maohi people are unemployed or
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hold the lowest paying, unskilled jobs. In
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Tahiti and Kanaky, there is an apartheid-like
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gulf between the rich and poor.
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THE LIBERATORS SELL OUT
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It's not an unfamiliar story of course. Moves
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by the local peoples to try to achieve some
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degree of autonomy have largely failed due to
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the fact that they went down the wrong route
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on this issue. In Kanaky the Kanak Socialist
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National Liberation Front (FLNKS) of the
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1980s proved about as useful to the people as
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it name suggests it would. After a particularly
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unpleasant massacre of Kanaks by French
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troops in the late 80s the FLNKS signed the
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Matignon Accords with the French in 1988
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which included various empty promises.
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Although some opposed the move from within
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the movement many were happy to be
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coopted into the French master plan in return
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for a few crumbs of power and were drawn
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into the administration of FLNKS-run areas.
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Since then France has continued to allow the
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arrival of immigrants, and new investment has
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overwhelmingly favoured the southern
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province where Europeans are concentrated.
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So much for the 'liberation' movement.
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In the final analysis though some form of
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independent development must be achieved
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by the Pacific islanders if they are to avoid
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what is otherwise an inevitable future.
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Radicals in the West would do better to enjoy
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their French wines (if they can afford them)
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and listen carefully to M. Chirac when he
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reiterates time and time again that the
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international community cannot interfere with
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what the French decide to do on their own
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territory. Until the people in the Pacific
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region manage to start setting up the
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structures which may lead to some measure of
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independent development they will not shake
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off the colonial yoke. However, the future
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looks bleak for them to say the least.
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(1) Much of the information for this article comes
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from Green Left Weekly #188 contactable at
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212-979-0471 (USA number) or
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nyt@blythe.org
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-----------------
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FREEDOM -Anarchist fortnightly Vol 56 No 15
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84b, Whitechapel High St.,
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London,
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E1 7QX
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