Welcome to the Second Edition of the Revolutionary Student Union’s Weekly News Bulletin!
Every Monday, we bring you essential updates on national and international struggles that matter to students and workers alike. From campus protests and labor strikes to global movements against imperialism and exploitation, we report on the stories the capitalist media buries or distorts. This bulletin exists to mobilize, organize, and politicize. Whether you’re new to revolutionary politics or a committed organizer, we’re building this together, week by week, struggle by struggle. Let’s stay grounded in the truth, sharpen our tools of analysis, and fight to win.
Students—let’s build power, not illusions!

Chapter Spotlight: New York City

The Anti-Imperialist Student Front at CUNY is calling on all revolutionary, student, worker, and community organizations in the Tristate area to unite and organize alongside us for a militant and revolutionary May Day march. In this moment of deepening repression, on our campuses, in our workplaces, and across the world, we believe it is urgent to come together under a common banner of struggle.

May 1st must not be reduced to a celebration. It is a day of resistance. At CUNY and around the country, workers are exploited, international students are targeted, and the university administration collaborates with the same capitalist and imperialist forces waging war abroad. Liberal handouts and NGO pacification of May Day cannot confront this system, we need mass independent organization and revolutionary struggle.

We’re building a student-worker front for May Day—a march that:

•Stands against the exploitation of workers and students at CUNY

•Opposes deportations, fascism, and state repression

•Denounces all forms of imperialist war and Zionist occupation

•Fights for socialism, internationalism, and working-class power

We are asking for mass formations and organizations around the Tristate area to endorse this call, help organize, mobilize your base, and join us in building this march. Let’s make this May Day a real step forward for revolutionary unity on and off campus. If you’re interested in joining together on this effort please email AISF.CUNY@proton.me

Forward together, not one step back.

— Anti-Imperialist Student Front at CUNY

National News

Headline 1

Idaho: Boricua Youth Shot and Killed by Police in Idaho

Victor Perez, an autistic, nonverbal 17 year old nationally-oppressed (Afro-Ta) youth with cerebral palsy from Pocatello, Idaho was martyred Saturday after his family made the heartbreaking decision to take him off life support after seven days since being critically shot by Idaho pigs outside of his home on April 5th. On that day, he and his family were holding a family barbecue, and during this barbecue he ended up finding a large kitchen knife belonging to his family. 911 was called from neighbors close with the Perez family, as it was thought Perez was drunk and chasing someone around in a yard with the knife, when in actuality, his disabilities left him with a staggered gait while walking that made it appear as if he was somehow attempting to inflict harm on someone. Four local pigs (as of 4/14, their names have not yet been released in the capitalist news outlets) showed up at the Perez household and ordered him to drop the knife, and when Perez began stumbling with his gait towards them, he was shot multiple times from the other side of a chain link fence, with nine bullets hitting him. He ended up in a coma immediately after being shot, as doctors also amputated his right leg. The pigs made no genuine effort to de-escalate (at all anyway) as they began shooting at Perez 12 seconds after their arrival, only for them to receive “administrative leave.” Tested and declared to be clinically brain dead Friday, he was taken off life support and passed away. Angered, Pocatello’s citizens and mayor held a vigil for Victor Perez on Saturday, expressing their dissent against the pigs for purposely not caring to know the situation and purporting that Perez “jumped the fence” towards the pigs, which was outright false. Perez’s martyrdom is one of many in the onslaught of violence against (especially disabled) nationally-oppressed children and youth by the capitalists’ police, as part of the growing fascist offensive by the decaying capitalist-imperialist/settler-colonial U.S. As Perez was Boricua, his death is a reminder of the colonial-imperialist occupation of Puerto Rico by the U.S. since 1898, as Puerto Rican youth from the island are systematically displaced by the Yankee forces mainland and have countless atrocities inflicted on them within the beast itself. From the Ponce massacre of 1937 to the recent murder of Victor Perez, fascism’s offensive against our young disabled and nationally-oppressed siblings cannot be met with the same lackadaisical response by the politicians and puppets of the U.S. empire, against the poor, proletarian, young Boricua masses, on the island and in the mainland. 

National: At Least 500 Student Visas Revoked Leading to Self Deportations. 

Since the Trump administration and university administrations have begun a joint wave of deportations and visa revocations, around 500 known students across the country have had their visas revoked. This has led many to self-deport, uprooting their livelihoods and life trajectories at random. The revocations appear to be at random, with some for presence in the Pro-Palestine movement, and others for minor traffic violations years ago. Self-deportations and the fear that many students without citizenship must be met with a combative response through organized collective action. Campaigns and initiatives to defend our most vulnerable must be started up and intensified. With over 1,000,000 international students studying in the U.S, the concern over if this will continue, and at what rate heightens. 

Michigan: Suspended From Work For Supporting Palestine at UM.

At the University of Michigan, multiple part-time student workers, and one full-time worker received suspended from their job this past week, with the University HR department citing presence at a Pro-Palestinian demonstration months prior. While the part-time students remain in suspension, the full-time employee has since been terminated from their job, receiving the harshest disciplinary measure despite them being in good standing with their employing unit. This demonstrates the continued counter-offensive of University administrations that is striking at a time when the student movement is weak. Deportations, Visa revocations, and job terminations are harsh life-changing forms of repression that weaken the movement. More than ever it is important to defend our fellow students to the fullest extent. 

California: Stanford Protestors Charged With Conspiracy For Supporting Palestine. 

This past week 12 Pro-Palestine protesters at Stanford University were charged with felony vandalism, alleging they partook in a occupation of the school’s president’s office. This comes as no surprise as Stanford is one of the institutions threatened with the cutting of federal funding should they not address “antisemitism” and “intimidation of jewish students” on campus. In a clear effort to retain federal funding and remain in good standing with the executive branch of the government, Stanford has initiated these politically charged legal proceedings. This highlights the way repression can be easily passed down upon progressive movements, and how we in the student movement must pay close attention to changes in the objective situation of our country in order to best adapt to developments like these.  

New York City: Trump Repression Targets Another Palestinian Student Organizer From Columbia University.

Mohsen Mahdawi, a Palestinian refugee and student at Columbia University, has been arrested by HSI agents during his citizenship appointment in Vermont. Mahdawi, a green card holder and vocal organizer for Palestinian liberation, grew up under occupation in a West Bank refugee camp, shaped by the the Second Intifada and the murder of his best friend by Israeli soldiers. Now, in the heart of the empire, the U.S. targets him for his political commitments. This is not random, it is repression. It is retaliation. It is the criminalization of the Palestinian struggle and those who dare to support it from within U.S. universities. Revolutionary students must not be silent. Mahdawi’s arrest is a warning to all who stand with the oppressed: the imperialist state will come for you. But we will not back down. We demand his immediate release. We demand an end to the war on student dissent. Free Mohsen Mahdawi!

New York City: Visas Revoked at CUNY, Defend the Students.

The Trump Administration has escalated its war on student dissent by revoking the visas of 17 international students at the City University of New York. This is apart of a broader campaign to criminalize resistance and crush the growing student movement against Zionism, imperialism, and capitalist exploitation. As CUNY deepens its complicity, partnering with law enforcement, ICE, and war profiteers, it leaves immigrant and international students vulnerable to state violence. This is retaliation for organizing. This is political repression. And it demands a militant, organized response. Revolutionary students must stand together: defend our classmates, defend our movement, and fight for a university that serves the people, not US imperialism!

International News Headlines.

Headline 1 (Africa) 

Mozambique: April 7: Honoring Josina Machel—Fighter for Women’s Emancipation and Socialist Revolution

On April 7, the people of Mozambique and revolutionaries across Africa and the world honor the life of Josina Machel, a militant leader who dedicated her youth to national liberation and the emancipation of women through people’s war. Joining FRELIMO at just 18, she broke with tradition and defied colonial gender roles—becoming a political educator, frontline combatant, and organizer of the masses.

Machel was appointed head of FRELIMO’s Women’s Section and Department of Social Affairs, where she led efforts to mobilize women not as support but as combatants and builders of the new society. In liberated zones of northern Mozambique, she helped establish schools, child care centers, and social infrastructure—laying the foundation for a New Democratic society.

Her 1969 marriage to Samora Machel, future leader of the Mozambican revolution, symbolized the unity of two revolutionary paths. Though she died in 1971 at just 25, Josina’s example lives on in every struggle waged for women’s full participation in revolutionary war and socialist construction.

Comrade Josina Machel: Martyr of People’s War, Builder of New Society. The fight for women’s emancipation and national liberation continues!

Headline 2 (Asia)

Turkey: Youth Will Break This Blockade: A Call to Resistance from the Youth Movement

In a recent statement published by Yeni Demokrasi on 04/05/2025, the youth movement in Turkey called for resistance against the growing climate of repression, exploitation, and state control. The statement highlights how universities are being turned into profit-driven institutions, the housing crisis is worsening, and young people are increasingly left with no future under the current system.

Criticizing police violence, state repression, and the erosion of academic freedom, the statement declares that the ongoing blockade on youth will only be broken through united and organized struggle. “Youth will not stay silent in the face of this blockade,” the movement emphasized, urging revolutionary, democratic, and patriotic youth to expand collective resistance.

Amid deepening economic crisis and rising unemployment, the youth are left without solutions, the statement says. It argues that the answer cannot be found within the limits of the current system, but in building an alternative beyond it. The youth, as both the present and future, must take charge of creating a different society. The declaration ends with a bold message: “Youth is rising against those who are stealing our future.”

Headline 3 (The Americas)

Brazil: UFBA Students Protest Landowner Violence, Support Agrarian Revolution

On March 28, 2025, students at the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA) staged a protest at the São Lázaro University Restaurant, denouncing violence against indigenous communities and expressing support for the Agrarian Revolution. Displaying a red banner reading “War on Bolsonarist Paramilitary Hordes! Long Live the Agrarian Revolution! Long Live Popular Democracy!”, the students condemned attacks on the Pataxó and Pataxó Hãhãhãe peoples in southern Bahia. These operations resulted in 25 disappearances and 14 arrests across at least five villages.​ A Nova Democracia 

The protesters highlighted the collaboration between far-right landowner groups, such as “Invasão Zero” and “União Agro Bahia,” and the state government under Governor Jerônimo Rodrigues (PT). They criticized the use of state police forces to repress rural populations, alleging ties between law enforcement and landowners’ hired gunmen.​

Citing examples of resistance, including the Avá-Guarani in Paraná, the Guarani-Kaiowá in Mato Grosso do Sul, and settlers in Barro Branco, Pernambuco, who repelled 50 gunmen, the students emphasized the role of universities in amplifying the struggles of peasants, indigenous peoples, and quilombolas for land rights. They distributed pamphlets detailing the police operations and received widespread support from fellow students eager to contribute to the cause.

The Americas

Brazil: 1: Far-Right Group Invades UNB Classroom, Students Respond with Protest

According to a report by A Nova Democracia, a group of far-right activists invaded a classroom at the University of Brasília (UNB) during a sociology course, interrupting the lecture and attempting to intimidate both the professor and students. The intrusion was part of a broader campaign by the group to surveil and attack what they consider “leftist indoctrination” in universities.

The students immediately denounced the act as a clear attack on academic freedom and democratic rights. In response, they organized a protest on campus, rejecting the presence of fascist forces in educational spaces. The report emphasizes that such invasions are not isolated incidents, but part of a coordinated effort to suppress critical thinking and political expression within Brazilian universities.

The student movement at UNB called for unity and vigilance, highlighting the importance of defending public education and protecting spaces of learning from authoritarian threats. They affirmed their commitment to resistance, vowing not to be silenced by fear or intimidation. The incident has sparked broader discussions about the rise of far-right tactics and the urgent need for solidarity among students, educators, and progressive movements across the country.

2: Students Defend Public Education Amid Privatization and Austerity

In the editorial of Jornal Estudantes do Povo No. 23, published on March 27, the  MEPR denounces the continued dismantling and privatization of public education in Brazil. The piece criticizes the federal government—particularly under President Lula—for failing to fulfill promises made during the 2022 elections regarding the end of austerity and increased investment in education.

Instead, the government maintained fiscal constraints, cutting university and school budgets while repressing student protests. The implementation of the “Novo Ensino Médio” reform in 2023, which narrowed access to comprehensive education, sparked national mobilizations. Rather than repealing the reform, the government promoted “public consultations” to defuse student occupations and discontent.

In 2024, the crisis deepened with the Fiscal Framework Law and growing reliance on Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs), further commodifying education. The editorial highlights the BNDES’s role in financing these partnerships, viewing it as a betrayal of public interests.

Amid these attacks, students and workers responded with resistance, including a 57-day occupation at the State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ). The editorial concludes by calling for combative, independent student organizing against privatization and in defense of truly public, free, and people-oriented education.

3: UnB Students Protest Against Green Chickens in Solidarity with Palestine

From the report of MEPR, On the morning of April 8, 2025, students at the University of Brasília (UnB) held a symbolic protest against police repression and in solidarity with Palestine. During the demonstration, organized by the Correnteza Movement and other student groups, green-painted chickens were released on campus as a direct critique of the Military Police—popularly known as “green chickens”—and their presence in public universities.

The action drew attention from the academic community and gained traction on social media. Posters with phrases like “Cops out of universities” and “Long live Palestinian resistance” accompanied the demonstration. According to the organizers, the act aimed to denounce the growing militarization of educational spaces and to take a stand against the ongoing genocide in Palestine.

Students also expressed their rejection of the Brazilian government’s support for Israel and demanded an end to cooperation between educational institutions and the armed forces. The protest is part of a broader wave of student mobilizations in defense of university autonomy, the Palestinian cause, and against police repression in learning environments.

The demonstration reinforces the role of students as active political agents in the struggle for justice and the sovereignty of peoples.

Columbia: Colombian Peasants Face Armed Harassment Amid Land Struggles in Cesar

On April 2, 2025, ​Nueva Democracia reported that peasants occupying land in the Cesar department of Colombia are under siege by armed civilians allegedly acting on behalf of local landowners. These individuals, associated with the “Brigadas de Solidaridad Ganadera” (Livestock Solidarity Brigades) and linked to the Colombian Federation of Cattlemen (Fedegan), have been accused of threatening and stigmatizing the peasants. The report suggests coordination between these groups, the national army, police forces, and plainclothes individuals to intimidate and potentially displace the land occupants.

The peasants involved in these land occupations are advocating for agrarian reform and the redistribution of land, challenging the longstanding dominance of large landowners in the region. Despite the peaceful nature of their protest, they face significant threats, including the possibility of forced eviction or violence. The article highlights the broader issue of land inequality in Colombia and the risks faced by those who confront entrenched landholding interests.​

This situation underscores the ongoing tensions in Colombia’s rural areas, where efforts to address land distribution are met with resistance from powerful agricultural interests. The report calls attention to the need for protective measures for peasants and a reevaluation of land policies to ensure equitable access and prevent further conflicts.

Europe

Finland: “School Shopping” in Finland Mirrors U.S. Racial-Class Segregation in Education

A recent article from Punalippu exposes the growing phenomenon of “school shopping” in Helsinki—not as a neutral parental choice, but as a sharp expression of class warfare within education. Much like in the United States, where school district lines, charter schools, and “gifted” programs serve to reinforce racial and class hierarchies, Finland’s so-called “specialized” school classes act as a gateway for the privileged to separate themselves from the immigrant and working-class youth.

As Finnish political parties like the SDP and the National Coalition push elite-track education under the banner of “quality,” they promote systems eerily similar to those in the U.S., where standardized testing, academic tracking, and selective admissions function to exclude poor and nonwhite students. The result: a two-tiered school system where wealthy, often white families secure access to better-funded, calmer, and academically rigorous environments—while regular classrooms, filled disproportionately with immigrant and proletarian youth, are stigmatized as chaotic, underperforming, and deficient.

This is not just an issue of language or resources—it’s a political project. In both Finland and the U.S., the ruling class uses education to stratify the working class: offering stability and prestige to a small labor aristocracy, while throwing the rest into conditions of neglect, surveillance, and failure. Blaming immigrant or Black students for systemic inequalities allows the capitalist state to deepen divisions and justify repression.

The article calls for something we must echo here: an end to educational apartheid, equal access for all students, and the abolition of schooling as a tool of racial-class segregation. Only through class unity and revolutionary struggle can we dismantle the school systems that serve empire and rebuild education to serve the people.

Ireland: Republican Anti-NATO Protest Violently Dispersed in Dublin

On April 4, 2025, Anti Imperialist Action Ireland organized a protest at the Belgian Embassy in Dublin, highlighting opposition to NATO’s presence in Ireland and expressing solidarity with Palestinian resistance. Protesters scaled the embassy’s fence, positioned themselves at the main entrance, and displayed flags and banners. The Belgian Embassy serves as NATO’s liaison office in Ireland. 

The Gardaí (Irish police) responded swiftly, employing aggressive tactics including close  -range pepper spraying, physical tackles, and pressure point techniques. In a particularly severe incident, an officer applied significant force to a protester’s pinned leg, resulting in an ankle fracture. The protesters remained linked arm-in-arm, asserting their right to oppose NATO’s presence.

This demonstration underscores the ongoing tensions surrounding Ireland’s stance on NATO, reflecting broader debates about national sovereignty and foreign military influence. The use of force by the Gardaí has intensified discussions on the balance between maintaining public order and respecting citizens’ rights to peaceful protest.

Germany: Germany’s Depression, Industrial Decline and Structural Crisis

Germany has been in a prolonged economic downturn for the past three years, with a deepening industrial decline at its core. By the end of 2024, the number of industrial workers fell to 5.5 million—down 68,000 jobs (1.2%) from the previous year. Key sectors were hit hardest: electrical equipment manufacturing dropped by 3.6%, metal products by 2.9%, plastics and automotive industries by 2.4% each. Even the machinery sector, Germany’s largest, saw a 1.2% decrease.

Long-term trends show a sharp decline: since 2018, the automotive industry has lost 8.7% of its jobs, equivalent to 73,000 positions. Metal production has fallen by 6.1% since 2014. While some describe this as deindustrialization, others emphasize the role of global power shifts—especially U.S. and Chinese policies aimed at strengthening their own industries.

Over 100 economic associations have issued warnings, demanding serious reforms and criticizing political inaction. They advocate for measures like an industrial electricity price to stabilize the sector. Meanwhile, monopolies push for more subsidies, blaming the government while preparing to offload the crisis onto the working class.

This situation reflects a broader structural crisis of German imperialism—marked by job losses, offshoring, and growing pressure on workers.

Resources from Dem Volke Dienen: https://demvolkedienen.org/index.php/de/t-brd/9044-deutschland-s-depression 

Spain: Revolutionary Committees Mobilize for Housing Struggle

On April 5, Revolutionary Committees in Madrid, València, and Albacete joined tens of thousands across Spain in militant demonstrations for housing rights. In Madrid, over 100,000 marched as leaflets denounced the profiteering of banks like Santander and BBVA, which reaped massive gains in 2024 while workers were pushed into housing insecurity.

In València, comrades marched from the Benimaclet neighborhood under the banner “Combat and Resist,” echoing slogans like “The struggle is in the neighborhoods, not in parliament.” In Albacete’s working-class Franciscanos district, hundreds gathered, where the Committee raised consciousness around the structural roots of the crisis.

Across all fronts, Revolutionary Committees emphasized that only organized, combative struggle—not electoral illusions—can secure housing for the working class and defeat the capitalist forces that deny it.

Resources from Servir Al Pueblo: https://serviralpuebloperiodico.wordpress.com/2025/04/07/comites-revolucionarios-manifestaciones-del-5a-por-la-vivienda/ 

The Asias

Myanmar: Myanmar Earthquake: Catastrophe Amid Counterinsurgency

On March 28, a devastating earthquake struck Myanmar, killing over 3,000 people and flattening homes and infrastructure across the country and into neighboring Thailand. Yet even amid mass death, the military junta escalated its war on the people—firing on humanitarian convoys and continuing attacks on resistance strongholds. A temporary ceasefire was only declared under armed pressure from rebel forces.

The quake has deepened the humanitarian crisis spawned by the junta’s 2021 coup. Displaced urban populations and collapsing health infrastructure have worsened the toll. The regime has appealed for international aid, which powers like China, Russia, and the U.S. quickly offered—not out of solidarity, but to strengthen ties with the military regime. This so-called “aid” is thinly veiled imperialist maneuvering.

Africa

Lesotho: Garment Workers Face Catastrophe as U.S. Tariffs Slash Jobs—Imperialism Cannot Develop Africa

Lesotho’s garment industry, the backbone of its fragile economy, is on the brink of collapse. A brutal 50% tariff imposed by former U.S. President Donald Trump—the highest among 60 targeted countries—has devastated export prospects under the now-crumbling African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). Over 30,000 garment workers, overwhelmingly women, now face the threat of unemployment and a forced return to rural poverty.

AGOA was never true aid—it was a colonial leash. It allowed limited tariff-free exports while locking African nations into dependency, low-wage labor, and resource extraction for imperialist markets. The abrupt withdrawal of even these crumbs exposes the real nature of U.S. “development” policy: conditional, extractive, and disposable.

The garment sector in Lesotho—dominated by Chinese and Taiwanese capital—operates under a comprador capitalist model, where local elites and foreign investors exploit cheap labor for U.S. brands. Workers like Makhotso Moeti, who have spent years on assembly lines for poverty wages, are now being cast aside by the global capitalist system that pretends to uplift while it robs.

This crisis must be a wake-up call. Lesotho’s future cannot depend on the whims of U.S. presidents or imperialist trade policy. Only a New Democratic and socialist path, rooted in worker control, land reform, and collective ownership of production, can free the country from the tyranny of external markets. We must reject false “opportunities” that bind Africa to underdevelopment and embrace a revolutionary path that centers the needs of the people, not profit.

Côte d’Ivoire: Teachers Strike, Union Leader Imprisoned – Workers Must Lead the New Democratic Revolution.

In early April, education workers across Côte d’Ivoire rose up in strike action demanding long-overdue incentive bonuses and recognition of basic union rights. While the regime scrambled to contain the disruption by forcing negotiations, it simultaneously escalated repression—sentencing union leader Ghislain Duggary Assy to two years in prison for legally organizing the strike. This is a direct attack on the right to strike and a warning shot at all labor resistance in the country.

This struggle reflects the broader reality of neocolonialism in West Africa. Despite decades of supposed “independence,” the Ivorian state continues to function as an enforcer of French and global imperialist interests, channeling profits to foreign capital while schools rot and teachers starve. The strike is not just about wages—it’s about power. It reveals the urgency of constructing a New Democratic Revolution, where workers and peasants take hold of political and economic power through mass organization, militant class struggle, and the expulsion of imperialist domination.

We stand in full solidarity with Ivorian education workers. The road to socialism in Africa begins with revolutionary struggle against comprador regimes and their foreign masters. Free Ghislain Assy! Long live the workers’ resistance!​

Sudan: RSF Massacres in Darfur—Imperialism Feeds Genocide, the Masses Must Rise

On April 12–13, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) committed a horrific massacre at the Zamzam refugee camp in North Darfur, killing hundreds, mostly women and children. This atrocity, one of many in the Sudanese civil war, is not a tragic exception—it is the logical outcome of a political system built on imperialist puppetry, comprador militarism, and ethnic division.

The Sudanese people have been made to choose between two factions of a brutal elite—both armed and trained through decades of foreign intervention, both seeking to maintain their grip over land, oil, and labor. Meanwhile, the masses starve, flee, and bury their children.

But Sudan’s history is also one of resistance—from anti-colonial uprisings to recent popular revolts in Khartoum. The path forward is not to appeal to the UN or imperialist NGOs—it is to build armed, democratic organizations of the people in the countryside and cities, forming the embryo of a New Democratic state rooted in the power of the poor and oppressed. The goal is not “peace” with warlords—it is revolutionary transformation.

South Africa: Rage Against Gender Violence Points to Need for Revolution.

In early April, South Africans flooded the streets after the brutal rape of 7-year-old “Cwecwe” in a school bathroom. The case—heartbreaking and enraging—has become a flashpoint in a country where gender-based violence is an epidemic, and the state’s promises to protect the people have collapsed into farce.

This crisis cannot be separated from the broader structure of South African capitalism: the apartheid economy was never dismantled, only rebranded. Mass unemployment, urban decay, state corruption, and cultural degradation have created a violent social order—one where women and children bear the brunt of daily brutality.

But the people are fighting back. From township assemblies to street protests, from student mobilizations to community patrols, a new wave of struggle is emerging—one that must go beyond outrage and demand a complete break from the capitalist system. Gender liberation in South Africa cannot come from court reforms or better laws alone—it must be fought for through socialist revolution, with women at the forefront of mass organizing, political education, and the creation of revolutionary culture.

The New Democracy must smash patriarchy, root and branch, as part of a total transformation of society.

Across Africa, a single truth becomes clear: capitalism, colonial borders, and comprador regimes offer nothing but death, repression, and misery. The future of Africa lies in New Democracy and socialism—fought for by the working class, poor peasants, women, and youth united against imperialism. From Darfur to Abidjan to Johannesburg: the struggle is one. Revolution is the only way forward.

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