#dhaka

deutschlandfunk@squeet.me

Bangladesch: Hunderte Tote bei Protesten gegen Regierung

Bangladesch - Mittlerweile 300 Tote bei Protesten gegen Regierung

Die Proteste in Bangladesch gegen die Regierung sind erneut eskaliert. 300 Menschen sollen bereits getötet worden sein. Das Land entwickelt sich zur Autokratie.#Asien #Bangladesch #HasinaWajed #Dhaka
Bangladesch: Hunderte Tote bei Protesten gegen Regierung

faab64@diasp.org

The Prime Minister of #Bangladesh fled to India/Protesters occupied the prime minister's office

🔹 informed sources announced the escape of the Prime Minister of Bangladesh to India and announced that the protesters occupied the prime minister's office in #Dhaka.

Local sources published images of the moment the Prime Minister of Bangladesh flee the the Prime Minister's office using a helicopter.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/bangladesh-prime-minister-resigns-flees-country-amid-deadly-protests/ar-AA1ofxtD

Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina re signed and fled the country on Monday, as anti-government protesters marched on the capital to demand she step down after a weekend of violence that left dozens of people dead (over 100 verified ia reported as several dozens aa always with disgusting western medi/Farhad)

#Asia #Revolution #India #StudentProtests #Politics #India

aljazeera@squeet.me

Bangladesh government crackdown: Opposition supporters arrested ahead of election

Bangladesh's government is continuing to crack down on opposition members and supporters, who are calling for Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to resign.It's hap...#2024Bangladeshigeneralelection #AlJazeera #AlJazeeraEnglish #AwamiLeagueparty #BNP #Bangladesh #BangladeshNationalistParty #BangladeshPM #Bangladeshantigovernmentprotests #Bangladeshjatiotabadiainjibiforum #Bangladeshopposition #Dhaka #Elections #KhaledaZia #Politics #Protests #SheikhHasina #bangladeshprotests #bangladeshrally
Bangladesh government crackdown: Opposition supporters arrested ahead of election

dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

"Wherever I work I must understand that place" says Marina Tabassum

image

Marina Tabassum Soane Medal for architecture

Bangladeshi architect Marina Tabassum, who was recently awarded the Soane Medal, explains why she only works in her home country in this exclusive interview.

Tabassum is known for designing buildings that use local materials and aim to improve the lives of low-income people in Bangladesh, where all her projects are based.

"The reason I've never really worked outside Bangladesh is the fact that wherever I work, I must understand that place, it is very important to me," Tabassum told Dezeen in a video call from her studio in Dhaka.

"To go somewhere and build something without having the full knowledge of it makes me quite uncomfortable," she added.

Museum of Independence and Independence Monument by Marina TabassumMarina Tabassum's designed the underground Museum of Independence in Dhaka. Photo is by FM Faruque Abdullah Shawon

As Tabassum feels the need to have a connection to the spaces she designs, she doesn't see any reason to create buildings outside of her home country.

"We have so much to do in Bangladesh, we have a lot of work that's there," she said. "I really do not feel the need to go anywhere else to look for work – we all have our own places to concentrate on."

"In a lifetime there's only so much you can do, so staying focused is probably more important," she continued.

Among her designs in Bangladesh are the country's Museum of Independence and the adjacent Independence Monument, as well as the Aga Khan Award-winning Bait Ur Rouf Mosque.

Architecture is a "social responsibility"

Tabassum grew up in Dhaka, Bangladesh, where she established her studio Marina Tabassum Architects (MTA), which she has led for the past 17 years.

Her childhood in the country has influenced her practice, with a number of her studio's projects aiming to create better homes and lives for people in Bangladesh, which has a high income inequality.

"I come from a country where I've grown up seeing this disparity between the rich and poor, and every single day when I get out of my house, you see this disparity," said Tabassum.

"I don't know about architects in other countries and how they should be doing it, but in my case, I encourage the younger generation of architects to come and work for the people who have no knowledge about architecture," she said.

"I think it's a social responsibility for us, especially in Bangladesh, where we can make our knowledge and our skills available to people which can really help better people's lives and living environment."

Comfort Reverie building by Marina TabassumThe Comfort Reverie building in Dhaka, where MTA is based. Photo is by FM Faruque Abdullah Shawon

With her architecture, Tabassum aims to create appropriate buildings with "a sense of place", something she believes has been lost as architecture has become more homogenous over the past 30 years.

"Every place has a uniqueness that through an evolutionary process has come to a point where it's the geography, the climate, the history, everything comes together and creates something which is very essential of a place," Tabassum said.

"I think especially during the very high-flying capitalist time in the 1990s, and even in the 1980s, where we were just building profusely all over the world in this capitalist endeavour, we lost that idea of uniqueness," she added.

"We are losing the value of the uniqueness of a place"

Tabassum studied at the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, at a school set up by the Texas A&M University, and graduated in the mid-90s – a time when, according to her, architecture was becoming increasingly homogenous.

"When I graduated from architecture in Dhaka, I saw the same thing," she said. "It's just stacks of floors, built very quickly – you just put glass on [buildings], everything is about aluminium and glass and that's it, the building is done. "

"It had no sense of the place and if you see the cities that were growing up during that time in China, or in the UAEs and the Arabian Peninsula, everything echoes that idea of globalisation, where everything is kind of standardised, fast-breed buildings," she added.

"To me, that really felt like we are losing the value of the uniqueness of a place."

Bait Ur Rouf Mosque by Marina TabassumTabassum's Bait Ur Rouf Mosque is made from brick, a material traditionally used in Bangladesh. Photo is by Sandro Di Carlo Darsa

Instead, Tabassum aimed to find her own voice by designing using local materials. Many of her projects, including the Bait Ur Rouf Mosque, are constructed from brick – a common material in Bangladesh.

"I have tended to work with brick because it works with the climate, it ages very gracefully, in my opinion," the architect said.

"Instead of let's say concrete, which is not that great and especially in our weather – we have so much rain that within a few years the concrete ages quite poorly. But brick ages quite beautifully."

"Glass is not able to take enormous heat"

As architecture has become more global, she believes that buildings have also become less adapted to local climates.

"We've always focused on the idea that the building must be climatically appropriate, so that it's not dependent on any kind of artificial means, like air conditioning, only," she said.

"Which you don't see anymore when you have glass buildings because glass is not able to take enormous heat – it just turns into a greenhouse," she added.

"That's what's wrong with the kind of architecture where you take something from a cold country and bring it to a warm country like ours."

Khudi Bari house with high floorsThe Khudi Bari lets owners sleep on a higher level when needed. Photo is by FM Faruque Abdullah Shawon

Among the projects that Tabassum designed specifically for the Bangladeshi climate is Khudi Bari, modular houses that can be moved to help communities survive in Bangladesh's "waterscape," which is increasingly affected by flooding exacerbated by climate change.

"Khudi in Bengali means tiny and Bari is house, so these are really modular houses, especially for the landless," Tabassum explained.

"Bangladesh is all about water – it's a waterscape rather than landscape, there are so many different varieties of water bodies."

[ Marina Tabassum Soane Medal for architecture

Read:

Marina Tabassum wins Soane Medal for architecture

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/11/18/marina-tabassum-wins-soane-medal-architecture-news/)

There are essentially two types of people affected by the flooding in Bangladesh, according to the architect – people whose land is periodically flooded during the rainy season, and people who are continuously on the move because the land is constantly shifting.

The Khudi Bari houses were designed to be of use to both groups.

"Each one is quite different so we're trying to give them different solutions to these kinds of houses," Tabassum said.

"We deliver a modular structure which has two levels, so if you have flooding you can move yourself to the upper deck and save yourself and when the water recedes you can start living your life," she added.

"When you have to move, this is a lightweight flatpack system that you can take down and it's very low-cost, it's about £300 all together."

Khudi Bari house on stiltsThe modular Khudi Bari houses were designed to be disassembled and moved. Photo is by Asif Salman

The homes are built from bamboo and steel in order to make it as easy as possible for people to be able to source the materials and build the houses themselves.

Tabassum hopes to eventually be able to train steelworkers locally to make the steel joints needed for the building, which are currently supplied by the architects.

"We would like to make it in a way so that any steelworker in any location can make it," Tabassum said.

"But the rest of the material people source on their own so they can decide how big their house will be and what accessories it will have – there's a sense of ownership about it, which is important."

Designing for refugee camps requires understanding "definition of beauty"

As well as designing homes for those who have become displaced by flooding – a problem that is likely to increase as the climate crisis continues – Tabassum is also creating architecture for people who have been displaced from their country of origin.

Her studio is working with the World Food Programme to build food distribution centres in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar refugee camps, which house Rohingya refugees from Myanmar.

Designing for the camps, where nearly one million people live, comes with its own unique difficulties and limitations.

"A lot of things are not allowed," Tabassum explained. "You are not allowed to use any permanent materials, everything has to be temporary."

Baharchora aggregation center for the world food programmeThe Baharchora Aggregation Center is one of the buildings created for the World Food Programme. Photo is by Asif Salman

"You cannot build anything beautiful," she added. "So being an architect, you deal with beauty and aesthetics in many ways – it's what we have been taught."

"And now to go against that and design something that is so-called not-beautiful is a challenge, you have to work around that, you need to understand the definition of beauty – what is beauty?"

To create beautiful and practical temporary buildings the studio worked with bamboo, rather than more permanent materials.

"You have a very limited palette of materials but you try to create something out of that," Tabassum said.

[ Inheriting Wetness at Sharjah Architecture Triennial by Marina Tabassum

Read:

Marina Tabassum brings prefabricated Bangladeshi homes to Sharjah

](https://www.dezeen.com/2019/11/14/marina-tabassum-prefabricated-bangladeshi-home-sharjah-architecture-triennial/)

As Tabassum continues working on both her studio's regular projects – it is currently designing a hospital on the outskirts of Dhaka – and its designs for displaced people, she feels that people are at last taking action to help mitigate the climate crisis.

But above all, she believes there now needs to be a focus on collaboration.

"I think it's important to understand that we're living on one single planet, and the north and south are connected in every single way," she said.

"And the majority of the population of the world lives in the Global South. And so it is an enormous responsibility of the north and the south, equally, to come towards a resolution where it is about mitigating our existential crisis."

The main photograph is by Barry MacDonald.

The post "Wherever I work I must understand that place" says Marina Tabassum appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #interviews #architecture #marinatabassum #bangladesh #sustainablearchitecture #dhaka

deutschewelle@squeet.me

Fast 40 Tote bei Brand auf Fähre in Bangladesch | DW | 24.12.2021

Es war vermutlich wieder die Kombination aus Überbelegung und Sicherheitsmängeln, die zu der Katastrophe nahe der Stadt Jhalokathi führte. An Bord der Fähre sollen bis zu 500 Menschen gewesen sein.#Bangladesch #Fähre #Brand #Dhaka
Fast 40 Tote bei Brand auf Fähre in Bangladesch | DW | 24.12.2021

deutschewelle@squeet.me

Mehr als 30 Tote bei Brand auf Fähre in Bangladesch | DW | 24.12.2021

Es war vermutlich wieder die Kombination aus Überbelegung und Sicherheitsmängeln, die zu der Katastrophe nahe der Stadt Jhalokathi führte. An Bord der Fähre sollen bis zu 500 Menschen gewesen sein.#Bangladesch #Fähre #Brand #Dhaka
Mehr als 30 Tote bei Brand auf Fähre in Bangladesch | DW | 24.12.2021

globalmayday@libranet.de

CALL: Starbucks, don’t fund #TigrayGenocide

The following call was originally published by Indigenous Anarchist Federation. The collective Horn Anarchists shared it with the Global May Day list and calls on grassroot organisations worldwide to join the call for a Global Week of Action (May 1 – 7th, 2021):

Since November, Ethiopian federal and allied military forces have carried out a genocidal campaign of political repression in the Tigray region. Indiscriminate bombings, mass executions, rape as a tool of war. Food supplies devastated adding starvation to the arsenal. Refugees are prevented from fleeing these horrors. Communications and outside aid have been cut off.

Outside the region, Tigrayan people have faced escalating discrimination and violence due to their ethnicity. They have lost jobs and had passports canceled. Social media is filled with a cocktail of propaganda standard for modern genocidal regimes: open government hate propaganda mixes cleanly with legions of unquestioning supporters and puppet account networks.

Responding to calls from Tigrayans and other groups facing violent repression from the Ethiopian state, a decentralized, global effort is underway to stop this genocidal conflict. This means building real solidarity, beyond borders and nations.

We must also dismantle the Ethiopian state’s ability to wage this war. One way is to cut into the state’s biggest source of direct funding and foreign currency revenue: coffee. A major buyer around the globe is Starbucks. The corporation regularly engages in direct negotiations with the Ethiopian state, whose direct control of trademark licensing and access to markets puts millions into the government’s coffers. Those in solidarity around the world must take action to cut off this flow while the genocide continues.

A History of Empire

Tigrayan people are not the first to face intense repression within Ethiopia’s empire. The borders of modern Ethiopia are home to dozens of indigenous groups. The formation of central states over thousands of years has brought conflict as the Empires dominant groups have sought to impose their culture more widely. The Ethiopian Empire which resisted most European colonial encroachment in the 19th and 20th century was itself dominated by an ethnic Amharic elite.

The last Emperor Haile Selassie oversaw sometimes brutal attempts to forge an Ethiopian nationalism based on Amharic culture. When he was overthrown in the 1970s, these policies continued and reached new horrors under the following Marxist-Leninist military Derg government.

National Liberation oriented parties and military organizations based in Tigray, Eritrea, Oromia and other regions united to overthrew the Derg by 1991 and established a system of “ethnic federalism.”

Nine states were established on the basis of ethnic self-determination. But a degree of greater equality between ethnic groups did not end ethnic conflict. The inability to represent the messy and overlapping geography of various groups, as well as the numerous groups too small to receive their own region, provided fuel for further conflict. Ethnic conflict became intimately intertwined with political disputes.

The Oromo, the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, have faced systemic discrimination for decades. An Oromo-based party central to overthrowing the Derg was pushed out of the new governing coalition early on. Despite some new autonomy within the ethnic federalist system, discrimination remains widespread, and massive protests have been met with violent reprisals as recently as last year. Many politicized Oromo are today advocate ending the Ethiopian Empire altogether.
Recently, a new governing coalition was formed when the largest Tigrayan party (TPLF) exited the government. The rest of the former coalition merged to form the new Prosperity Party under Abiy Ahmed. The present government seeks to dismantle “ethnic federalism” in favor of a centralized state promoting a unified “Ethiopian” identity. Powerful ethnic-based political parties are a significant obstacle to this goal. To secure victory in its political agenda, Abiy’s government has made all Tigrayan people synonymous with the TPLF political party in the view of the country’s mass media and war machine, launching an all-out struggle against both.

Abiy’s construction of a nationalist base at home has been complimented by his efforts to secure support abroad. In a piece of bitter irony, he was given the Nobel Peace Prize for bringing a decades long conflict with the totalitarian government of neighboring Eritrea to an end. Violent struggle had simmered since Eritrea’s secession from Ethiopia following the collapse of the Derg. The presence of Eritrean political refugees in Tigray and ongoing resentment over the previous war made Abiy’s peace partners an ideal collaborator in genocide. Eritrean ground forces have been responsible for some of the most horrific massacres, plundering, and destruction of the countryside.

Coffee Grows Empire

Any present-day empire building project in Ethiopia needs a fervent nationalist base. Yet in the modern global system, Ethiopia’s empire is but a small and sometimes exploited player. Projecting necessitates extensive foreign capital and support. Drones bombing civilian towns, bullets digging mass graves, media infrastructure to justify it all. This requires cash.

Some of this may come in the form of foreign aid, or the loans neocolonial institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund are currently trying to approve. For the Ethiopian state, though, much of their cash comes from commodity export. King of Ethiopia’s exports is a crop it originated: coffee. A billion US dollars, 30% of the country’s total exports, sent to eighty countries around the world.

The central state has a heavy, lucrative hand in the trade. It manages commodity exchange markets. It carries out direct diplomacy and negotiations with major buyers. The Ethiopian state even holds several international trademarks on the names of notable Ethiopian coffee. Companies selling specialty coffee using these names must pay the government a licensing fee.

Securing this funding pipeline is vital to the Ethiopian state’s functioning.

Take Action

Campaigners against the ongoing genocide in Tigray have called for a boycott of Ethiopian coffee in order to cut into Abiy Ahmed’s war chest. Among the largest and most visible buyers globally is Starbucks. The company purchases tens of millions USD of Ethiopian coffee annually, only a fraction of which makes it directly to farmers. During an ongoing genocide, this money fuels death.

We are calling for a global week of action against Starbucks to demand they cease purchase of Ethiopian coffee while the military occupation of Tigray continues.

From May 1 to May 7 we encourage solidarity in the form of a diversity of tactics from comrades around the world.

What can you do to spread the message about stopping the genocide in Tigray and take direct action against Starbucks?

  • Get a few friends to do some flyering, wheatpasting, graffiti, and/or banner drops.
  • Hold picket lines of stores, perhaps collaborating with workers.
  • You can organize a large march locally, or small autonomous action against a Starbucks store at night.
  • Is your city home to an Ethiopian or Eritrean embassy or consulate? Consider whether you might include it in your action.

If you live in one of many areas around the world with Tigray, Oromo, and other diaspora communities, please reach out. Many major cities have a local community center and have been holding their own protests against the current government’s actions. Look for these events, often on social media, and join in solidarity.

Visit @HornAnarchists on twitter or check out the social media hashtag #TigrayGenocide for further updates.

An Ethopian Anarchist Perspective on Tigray: thefinalstrawradio.noblogs.org

Others: Omna Tigray | Ethiopia Map | Deforestation cirsis | Tigray is being deliberately starved | Health facilities targeted in Tigray

#anarchism #hamburg #anarchismus #bangladesh #Anarchisme #IWW #Gewerkschaft #Syndicalism #1world1struggle #globalmayday #syndikalismus #anarchosyncalism #Dhaka #anarcosindicalismo #gwtuc #sindicalismo #sindicalismorevolucionario

globalmayday@libranet.de

A worker is owed 770€ in wages at a Domino's Pizza branch in Leipzig.
In reaction around 80 comrades rallied in front of the restaurant demanding for missing wages to be paid yesterday.

The rally was called by the FAU Leipzig (Free Workers' Union).
Press release (in German): https://leipzig.fau.org/pm-arbeitskonflikt-zwischen-effekt-gmbh-und-fau-mitglied/

#BesserOrganisieren
#1world1struggle

#anarchism #hamburg #anarchismus #bangladesh #Anarchisme #IWW #Gewerkschaft #Syndicalism #1world1struggle #globalmayday #syndikalismus #anarchosyncalism #Dhaka #anarcosindicalismo #gwtuc #sindicalismo #sindicalismorevolucionario

globalmayday@libranet.de

Call for International Solidarity with Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM) in Myanmar

Dear comrades with the International Confederation of Labour (ICL), the Global May Day network and other emancipatory groups worldwide!

Since February, we, grassroot organisations in Myanmar, have been taking to the streets to resist the military junta, which forced itself back into authoritarian power with a coup after elections in November last year.

The coup has severe consequences for us, among others resulting in a roll-back of liberties achieved in the past few years and decades.

From the start we have been mobilizing inside the factories and shaped the CDM across the country.

We fight for the abolition of the military leadership and its fascist regime as well as a new constitution implementing full federal democracy. All political prisoners must be released immediately!

Workers are facing various forms of repression. Not only is the military shooting at us in the streets, but factory managements are often collaborating with the military, calling them to crack-down on protests and strikes. The resistance against the regime claimed at least 738 lives already. (For more information: aljazeera.com)

The whole situation makes us sad and angry!

We provide support to the workers who lost their job because of their participation in the pro-democracy movement. These include pregnant factory workers and single parent families but also workers who are participating in CDM.

Comrades, let’s increase the pressure on the military junta on all levels together!
We propose that May Day is also used as a day of action to express solidarity with the CDM worldwide.

Here are some things of what you can do:

  • Pressure corporations collaborating with the military Junta, such as Deutsche Post DHL Group (source: justiceformyanmar.org), Total SE (source: asianews.it) and Sinotruk/MAN (source: justiceformyanmar.org).

  • Support workers participating in CDM movements with financial donations:

An overview of different channels can be found here: isupportmyanmar.com.
In case you want to support mutual aid efforts by Food not Bombs Myanmar, please contact asia@icl-cit.org for details.

  • Put pressure on international apparel brands to ensure that all workers in their supply factories are guaranteed the right to take unpaid leave without dismissal. Follow the actions of international brands on Myanmar coup such as: Zara, H&M, Adidas, OBS, Mango and Sioen.

  • Pressure the Singaporean government! “The wealthy island city-state is Myanmar’s biggest foreign investor, overtaking China in 2019 to bring in more than $24 billion of capital through lucrative real estate projects, banking, shipping, sand exports and construction, as well as arms sales.“ (source: vice.com) The governmet owns Temasek Holdings, which combines capital worth more than $230 billion. Temasek Holdings again has the majority of shares of many corporations like Singapore Airlines (56%). Pressuring Singapore Airlines would therefore also put pressure on the government of Singapore.

  • Support the National Unity Government initiative! “Opponents of Myanmar’s junta announced a National Unity Government including ousted members of parliament and leaders of anti-coup protests and ethnic minorities, saying their aim was to end military rule and restore democracy.” (source: reuters.com)

Three fingers in the air – for freedom, for unity, for solidarity!

#Call4InternationalCDMsolidarity
#WhatsHappeningInMyanmar
#1world1struggle

#anarchism #hamburg #anarchismus #bangladesh #Anarchisme #IWW #Gewerkschaft #Syndicalism #1world1struggle #globalmayday #syndikalismus #anarchosyncalism #Dhaka #anarcosindicalismo #gwtuc #sindicalismo #sindicalismorevolucionario

globalmayday@libranet.de

Global May Day 2021 is around the corner. Announce your activities, so that the details can also be published on the website: https://globalmayday.net/2021/04/24/activities-gmd2021/

Contact the Global May Day page or drop a line at the GMD mailing list (lists.riseup.net/www/info/globalmayday).

#GlobalMayDay2021
#1world1struggle

#anarchism #hamburg #anarchismus #bangladesh #Anarchisme #IWW #Gewerkschaft #Syndicalism #1world1struggle #globalmayday #syndikalismus #anarchosyncalism #Dhaka #anarcosindicalismo #gwtuc #sindicalismo #sindicalismorevolucionario

globalmayday@libranet.de

Call for Global May Day 2021

Worldwide we, the wage-related workers, are set in competition to support the
additional value production. Regardless where we live, our gender / sex, nationality, we
are interwoven in the same fight, if we want to or not. Budget cuts in social services,
outsourcing, depressing wages, privatization, increasing costs of living as well as tuition
fees and the destruction of natural recourses are just a few of the symptoms of the
global economic system. A system that is based on exploitation and competition leads to
commercialization of all aspects of our lives. We suffer from growing pressure to
perform, separation, as well as the alienation of our needs and people, which we are
working and living with. Be it at the workplace, university or increasingly even during
childhood and youth. The logic of the market economy and the corresponding nationstate structures require that adaption to the dictate of competitiveness and the valueadded production take priority over the development of emancipatory capabilities.

The introduction of a Universal Basic Income on the global level can be a first
emancipatory step in overcoming wage labor relations.

We do not intend to simply disrupt; we seek to overcome.

Given the transnational nature of the capitalist system, it is necessary for workers to
connect on the global level.
By networking across borders, the global interconnections that shape our local conditions can be made visible. Furthermore it opens up new potentialities and scopes of action within the struggle against exploitation as well as precarious working and living conditions. The bargaining power of workers would increase tremendously, if we were to unite within the same value-added chain.
Especially in times of nationalism and racism, we seek the common struggle and resist
being played off against each other.

For a better life for all – across all borders!

#1world1struggle

Note on Coronavirus epidemic

The world has been going through a serious epidemy of COVID-19 (coronavirus). Like all
crises, the poorest workers are the most affected. Many companies force workers to
keep working, consequently, prohibit the workers’ right of quarantine. Many workers are
being laid off, self-employed workers, street vendors and other workers are without
income. People in refugee camps and homeless people have no access to minimum
sanitary conditions.

We strive for:

1) The right of basic needs to be met for all.
2) Decent sanitary working conditions for all workers.
3) Free access to COVID-19 vaccines for all.
4) The immediate suspension of water, electricity, cooking gas, telephone and
internet bills.
5) The immediate suspension of rents.
Make the rich pay for the crisis!

#1world1struggle

#anarchism #hamburg #anarchismus #bangladesh #Anarchisme #IWW #Gewerkschaft #Syndicalism #1world1struggle #globalmayday #syndikalismus #anarchosyncalism #Dhaka #anarcosindicalismo #gwtuc #sindicalismo #sindicalismorevolucionario #UnitedAgainstTheDragon #DragonSweater