PARIS — Representatives of Be aunist Parties from Eu- oe. Pe's capitalist countries held ; iecrence here on May 15 nit representatives of the Com- 4 Beast Party of Germany, the Scialist Unity Party of West erlin, the Communist Party of gaan the Communist Party is elgium, the Communist Par- Y of Denmark, the Communist hee of Spain, the Communist arty of Finland, the French a Peaunist Party, the Commu- = Party of Britain, the Com- _ ‘Uunist Party of Greece, the eunist Party of Ireland, the alian Communist Party, the Ommunist Party of Luxemburg, a Portuguese Communist Par- Y, the San: Marino Communist __\Sts of Sweden, and the Swiss arty of Labor. 5 foll © conference adopted the Owing decisions: a to strengthen political, mor- Feed material support to the eee, of Indochina who are ; Gucting a heroic struggle peamst American imperialism’s 88ression; full to demand the immediate, a and unconditional with- | «Wal of American troops from conte, Vietnam and from all puitries of Indochina; bro to increase the pressure r ught by the masses to bear an the governments of their f Peaecc so as to make them 4. Sion €mn the American aggres- ae conference approved an | aa to the peoples of capital- , the countries of Europe, urging i M to \be vigilant. American em, the appeal says, ex- Pi S Its aggressive war in Cam- and throughout the Indo- Eves peninsula. It intensifies in: Stations, killings and suffer- ae causes a serious aggra- nor n of the international situa- the ne, appeal strongly condemns and j S. government’s actions ;,_ !ts claim to play the role of €tnational gendarme. we Cambodia, just as in Viet- ren American attempts to com- Sate for previous defeats by West Furope Communists | adopt joint peace plan ‘expanding the war are doomed atty, the Left Party-Commun-: to failure,” the document says. “Victory will be scored by the peoples rallied in common strug- gle and having the support of the Soviet Union and other so- cialist countries of the working class, the forces of peace and liberation.” This war can be immediately stopped, the appeal says. Propo- sals made by the peoples of Indo- china allow to accomplish this. “At a time when imperialism’s aggressiveness expands and the freedom of the peoples and peace are at stake, the Communist Parties of the capitalist countries | of Europe are convinced that joint actions by all Communists and Workers’ Parties will facili- tate a victorious unification of all anti-imperialist forces,” the appeal says. The participants in the confer- ence addressed a letter to the Vietnam Workers’ Party, to the National Liberation South Vietnam, Front of Laos and the National Front of ~ the Patriotic , Million new jobs needed now! Communist Party urges united campaign to compel change in government line By JOHN WEIR Profit-greedy Canadian and U.S. mo- nopolists and their Trudeau Govern- ment are pushing Canada into econo- mic crisis, mass unemployment, reduced living standards, repression and war. United Front of Cambodia. The 4 c letter says that fulfilling their in- ternationalist duty, the Commu- nist Parties of Europe’s capital- ist countries make an active con- tribution to the struggle on its new stage against the common enemy — American imperialism. The participants in the confer- ence report on plans to hold meetings in the capitals and big cities of European capitalist countries under the slogans: “Stop imperialist aggressions!”, “Americans out of Indochina!”, “Independence to the peoples of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia!”, “Peace in the whole world!” The communique published by the conference~points out that the fraternal Parties of Cyprus and Norway could not send their delegates but -had announced their support for the idea to hold the conference. The German Communist Party informed about its full consent with the » conference and expressed regret that it could not participate in its work. The Communist Party of Holland was represented at the conference by an observer. ‘ watchers,” supporting a “nihilistic cause, who % * x % thy Commander Andrian Nikolayev (right) and Flight Engineer Vitaly }evastyanov went into their second week in orbit on Soviet spaceship joyuz-9 as our paper went to press. This is Cosmonaut Nikolayev’s econd flight into Cosmos. The flight is primarily designed to test the nfluence of long sojourn in space on the human body and also arious scientific experiments connected with preparing new steps n the mastery of the Universe. i: % “ at 1 CHIEF BACKS REPRESSION WASHINGTON — J. Edgar Hoover, FBI chiew, has put the Nixon administralion’s stamp of approval on police actions against the ghettoes and university youth. He developed a large part of an art- icle in the June issue of the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin to an attack on civilian review boards and on proposals designed to pre- vent police killings on the campuses. : He denounced supporters of civilian review boards as “police- “have no place in our society.” He described the civilian review boards, to which victims of police terror could appeal, as “sidewalk kangaroo courts made up of militants and malcontents.” Hoover denounced opposition to police shoot-to-kill operations on campuses as “half-baked.” SOMALIA BLASTS U.S.-WEST GERMAN AID CUT-OFF MOGADISCIO — Mohammed Said Barre, President of the Su- preme Revolutionary Council of Somalia, in a nation-wide radio Broadcast, said the U.S. and West Germany ‘had cut off all aid to his country because “they need a puppet regime which would serve their interests.” Somalia, an African republic on the “horn’” of East Africa with a population of about three million, recently national- ized foreign-owned banks, oil companies and other imperialist hold- ings in the country. Barre said the U.S. and West Germmran ambassadors had come to him and told him about the aid cut-off. The reason they gave were that Somalia had recognized the German Democratic Repub- lic and that Somali flag ships were carrying cargoes to the Demo- cratic Republic of Vietnam. The Somali president replied that French, British, Japanese and other ships carry cargoes to the DRV, but that the U.S. still main- tained good relations with these countries. On the GDR, he said Somalia, as a neutralist country, would establish relations with anv country which desired them. PACIFIC TRIBUNE—FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1970- Poge 5 The Communist Party of Canada has issued an appeal for a united people’s counter-offensive with the central de- mand to create one millian new jobs in a dynamically growing, forward-look- ing Canada. Meeting in Toronto on June 6-8, the Central Committee of the Party projected a concerted campaign to compel the Gov- ernment and its Big Business bosses to retreat from their at- tack on the working people of ‘our country and compel policies of advance instead of reces- sion, confidence ~in place of despair, peace instead of war, democratic progress in place of increasing Oppression and reac- tion. One million new jobs are needed now to provide useful work for all those that have been thrown out of employment and the young people now enter- ing the labor market — and Can- ada has all the resources to ful- fill this task. The world needs our farm produce — and mar- kets can be obtained, saving our farmers from _ ruination. What is wanted is all-in unity in action, first of all of the. labor and farm movements, to impose a change of policy on the part of the Government and the capi- talist monopolies. In his report on behalf of the Central Executive, Party Leader William Kashtan noted that we are in a new stage of develop- ment, where the offensive of state-monopoly capitalism has assumed what one union leader called “open war on labor”. Their jobs are taken from work- ers, their farming operation de- nied the farmers, with measures for regulation being imposed, “planning to keep profits’. This opens up the front of struggle for the people, Mr. Kashtan said, where economic struggles are now political struggles. And this challenges all forward-looking sections of the Canadian people to mount the figh.-back ‘on a_ higher plane. (See pages 6, 7 and 8 for excerpts from W. Kashtan’s re- port and other C.C. meeting ma- terial, more will be printed in our next issue.) The Central Committee adopt- ed a Call to the Canadia™ people to “united in mass actions for new policies of peace and full ~employment”. It also adopted a resolution pledging full support and cooperation with all organi- zations, groups and individuals in the OUTNOW petition cam- paign to compel the immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina. Special resolutions urged full support to embattled postal workers and B.C. labor. Don Currie delivered the re- port on organization. All issues were subjected to sharp debate, at the end of which the report and documents were adopted by unanimous vote.