Source: Jacobin
The left-wing Rødt Party’s support has more than doubled since last September’s election — it’s now sitting at about 10.3 percent. Its eight parliamentarians have been bold antiwar and anti-oligarch participants in the debate and their interventions in the Storting are supported and shaped by antiwar movements on the streets. Jacobin sat down to talk with Alberte Bekkhus, the leader of the party’s youth organization, Rød Ungdom, about solidarity with Ukrainian victims of the conflict, rattling Putin’s wealthy support base, splitting ordinary Russians from the elite, and socialist opposition to war.
We’re also demanding that the government throws all Russian oligarchs out of Norwegian oil and gas. This aims to end the invasion by targeting the circle around Putin, without harming ordinary Russians. It’s a good thing that Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is now under pressure and people are talking about this. But Putin’s Russia hasn’t exactly been a perfect democratic country for the past ten years — and yet we’ve granted them gas and oil exploration licenses and highly lucrative fishing rights during this period. The Norwegian government has prioritized profits over both peoples’ lives and what’s right. We demand higher standards than this.
Our rules around company ownership and transparency also need to change. The last government scandalously set the minimum declaration threshold at 25 percent — so if you own 24 percent of a large company you don’t have to be open about it. Our laws make it easy for rich oligarchs to hide their money here. We’re demanding the tightening of these transparency rules — we need to know which capitalists own what — and not just the Russian ones. This will take us one step closer to a democratic society.
We believe this demand is one of the things that can stop Putin. If there are no soldiers there’s no war. Morale in the Russian army isn’t good — ordinary Russian soldiers need to know they don’t have to participate. Norway can undermine Putin’s war by becoming a safe haven for deserters. This is hugely important to save lives and score an important win against Putin’s war.
The antiwar activists in Russia are amazing. There were huge demonstrations on Sunday — at least forty-five hundred more people were thrown in jail. Why aren’t we concretely talking about how we can support them? We need to contribute to their struggle and organizations with real solidarity between ordinary people. This also relates to our demand about sheltering deserters — not just speaking out against war but concretely helping soldiers to refuse to participate. This needs to happen.
It’s inspiring to see people all over the world stand together in unison against Russia’s invasion. We are against Putin’s war, and we were against the wars in Libya, Iraq, and Afghanistan. I’m very happy now to see both centrists and right-wingers defending international law and standing strong against Russia’s breaches of it. My invitation to them is to be consistent: come to the demonstrations the next time NATO invades a country in the Middle East in breach of international law.
Look at the movement against the war in Vietnam. The two conflicts aren’t the same, of course, but we need a similar kind of global movement. The struggle that is needed can’t just be some critical politicians. It needs to be people throughout the whole world standing together demanding an end to war.
It has to be international and collective. How we gather and organize people is a real question — but we’ve seen it happen before. We know that people organizing on this scale can force change. It’s absolutely possible. We just need to be tough enough to stand strong when it’s difficult, especially when the rhetoric is “war, war, and more war.”
People are understandably afraid — it’s stressful and chaotic. But we’re part of a growing movement inside and outside of Parliament, getting more visible, spreading an anti-capitalist, pro-peace, and pro-equality message, reaching new people everyday. We’re fighting for a socialist future, without war and in tune with the earth. This might seem like an idealistic future, but in the grim establishment vision of “endless war” there’s no future at all.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate