World condemns Czech Republic’s ban on Communist Youth Union
By
David Hoskins
Published Oct 28, 2006 12:14 AM
The Czech Republic outlawed
the Communist Youth Union (KSM) earlier this month after an announcement by the
Ministry of Interior ordered the group to disband. The KSM has close ties to the
Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia which controls 13 percent of the seats in
parliament.
The official reason given
for KSM’s ban was its program for the replacement of the private ownership
of the means of production with collective ownership. The government was also
unhappy with KSM’s advocacy of socialist revolution and used this as a
pretext to attack its status as a civic
organization.
The Interior
Ministry’s decision to ban the KSM came a month after the far-right Civic
Democrats (ODS) took power after winning a slim plurality of seats in
June’s parliamentary elections. The ODS is led by Prime Minister Mirek
Topolanek, who has been implicated by the Czech media in several business
scandals. The ODS failed to win a vote of confidence taken in the lower house of
parliament at the beginning of
October.
An international campaign
brought together hundreds of youth and student organizations, trade unions and
political parties to defend the KSM and protest the Ministry of Interior move at
Czech embassies around the world.
A
defiant KSM has vowed to carry forward the struggle “for the rights of the
majority of young people—students, young workers and unemployed—and
for socialism” despite the government ban. The KSM has grown in popularity
in recent months by leading a major campaign against a U.S. proposal to build a
strategic missile base in their country. The ruling ODS supports this
proposal.
The KSM can trace its roots to
the former Communist Party in Czechoslovakia, which held power before the
bourgeois counterrevolution of 1989 dismantled the country’s socialist
system. The subsequent introduction of a market economy has brought on a
constant attack against workers, young and old, who have seen their standard of
living threatened as homelessness and poverty—societal ills eliminated
under the socialist system—have
re-emerged.
Fight Imperialism Stand
Together (FIST) stands in solidarity with the KSM and its struggle to liberate
young workers and students and to defend itself against the attacks of the Czech
government. FIST denounces the actions of the Interior Ministry as an attack on
workers, young people, and students.
FIST is a group of multinational
students and young workers living in the United States who fight for socialism
in that country and around the
world.
The writer is a FIST
organizer. Contact [email protected].
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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