On this day in Indonesian history, the US-backed right-wing dictator Suharto was overthrown by a student-led mass uprising in 1998.
In 1965, CIA-backed General Suharto took power & oversaw the political genocide of up to 2 million Indonesian communists, trade unionists and other leftists, the jailing of 1m more, the banning of Marxism and destroying the largest communist movement outside of the USSR & China.
Fearing a communist revolution, the US, UK and Australia supported Suharto in pushing aside the leftist nationalist Sukarno and establishing a 33-year repressive military dictatorship on the dead bodies of executed communists.
Suharto's regime led a Western-sponsored counter-revolution, effectively ending "the threat" of democracy by demolishing the mass-based political vehicles of the poor and throwing the riches of the country open to foreign investors.
The counter-revolution was so successful that it became a template for anticommunist terror which would be exported abroad, with the slogan "Jakarta Is Coming" appearing in countries like Brazil and Chile.
In 1998, after decades of growing discontent over rising inequality, corruption and other grievances, a financial crisis wrecked the economy triggering strikes, riots and demonstrations across the 13,000 island archipelago.
On 12 May, 6 student protesters at Trisakti University were shot dead by security forces, leading to an escalation. Protests & riots overwhelmed the capital, as the urban poor & working class joined the struggle. After 10 days Suharto was toppled.
A revolutionary situation opened up, but the forces of moderation and reform held back the revolutionary movement whose tradition and organizational structure was decapitated in the 1960s and was only starting to be rebuilt.
Though the uprising of 1998 started a new chapter in the nation's history, Suharto was never brought to justice and many of his cronies stayed in power with many of the structures still intact.
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This week would've marked the 73rd birthday of Burkinabé socialist revolutionary Thomas Sankara. He became the President of Burkina Faso at the age of 33. lasting only 4 years, because he was killed in a military coup, suspected to have had support from the US and France.🧵
Sankara gained the love of his people because of his humble lifestyle, socialist programmes & economic prosperity, but also his confrontation with the national elite, as he stripped power away from them and for challenging Western imperialism and neo-colonialism in the continent.
In those 4 short years he:
• Lowered his salary to $450 a month, limited his possessions to a car, 4 bikes, 3 guitars, a fridge and a broken freezer.
• Sold off the government fleet of Mercedes cars & made the cheapest car in Burkina Faso the official service car.
The Dutch Prime Minister, Mark Rutte, has apologized for slavery and pledged €227 million for "awareness raising" and a slavery museum. The sum is nowhere near the €50 billion in reparations campaigners demand from the Netherlands to address the legacy of the slave trade. 🧵
Adequate reparations are vital to address the modern legacy of the Dutch Transatlantic Slave Trade. The Netherlands’ wealth today is drenched in the blood of enslaved people in its former colonies in West Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean.
Over 600,000 enslaved people produced super profits on Dutch sugar, coffee, cocoa, tobacco and cotton plantations. The wealth of institutions that still exist, like the royal family and the Dutch Central Bank, was born on those plantations.
Today marks the anniversary of one of the worst massacres in modern Latin American history, the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador committed by a right-wing US-trained death squad.
The soldiers killed 1,000 people, almost the entire village of El Mozote. 🧵
The majority of the victims were women, children and the elderly. Soldiers separated the men from the women and children, then they tortured and executed the men in several locations.
The soldiers separated women and older girls from the children, raped them and then executed them with machine guns. Girls as young as 10 were raped. They slit the throats of the children, hanged them from trees & after killing almost the entire population, set the homes on fire.
On #HumanRightsDay, here are a mere handful of atrocities committed by the U.S. in recent memory, for which the victims still have no sight of justice. 🧵
In March 2019, U.S. drones bombed a crowd of civilians in Baghuz, Syria. The drone operators in Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar recognized the crowd of civilians but dropped the bombs anyway, killing over 70 civilians in what was the worst civilian death toll in the war against ISIS.
In 2008, a U.S. airstrike massacred at least 47 civilians, including 39 women & children, who were escorting a bride to her wedding in Haska Meyna, Afghanistan. The bride of the wedding was also killed in the strike. Weeks later, another US attack killed 90 civilians in Azizabad.
On this day in 1984, thousands of people in Bhopal, India, were gassed to death in the pesticide plant of U.S. company Union Carbide (UCC) It remains the worst corporate massacre in history and the victims are still fighting for justice. 🧵
During the night of December 3, 1984, the leakage of 27 tons of toxic chemicals turned the UCC plant in Bhopal into a gas chamber. 3,800 people died instantly, and until today over 22,000 have died due to injuries from the leak. The disaster was entirely preventable.
In its drive to maximize profits, UCC, today owned by Dow – one of the largest chemical producers in the world – cut safety corners and built the plant using untested technology. Aware of the dangers, it wrote them off as an acceptable “business risk”.