General Assembly disrupted as commies orchestrate "Hulstro-Mikuni protest" against HulstriaA series of communist delegates from the
Communist League of Terra stand up to denounce the Hulstrian Ambassador, Otto Zunke, for his government's continuing human rights abuses, particularly the oppression of communists, and also calling for international support for Comrade X and the underground communist resistance. They pointedly deliver their speeches entirely in the
Hulstro-Mikun language, which is
banned in Hulstria. The rendition of Hulstro-Mikuni most of the speakers come out with is rather garbled, since most of them do not speak the language fluently, but in the event this does not matter too much, since the World Congress's excellent translators are able to grasp the gist of what they are trying to say and provide appropriate translations.
In the next stage of the protest, the communists start singing
The Internationale in Hulstro-Mikuni, although the presiding officers manage to silence them after they have finished the second verse.
Sute ōfu ābaitā auzu dēnemu sukuramā Sute ōfu
Araizu i~ē purizunozu Obu u~onto
Fō rīzon in ribōruto nau sandāzu
Ando atto rāsuto enzu zā ēji Obu kyanto.
Au~ē u~izu ōru yō sūpasutishonzu
Sābairu mashizu araizu araizu.
U~īru chēnji hensufōsu zā ōrudo toradishon
Ando supān zā dasuto tā u~in zā puraizu.
Sō komurēdozu Komu rarī
Ando zā rāsuto faito Retto asu fēsu
Zā intanashonāru yūnaitsu zā hyūman rēsu.
Luthori (OOC: English) version
Arise ye workers from your slumbers
Arise ye prisoners of want
For reason in revolt now thunders
And at last ends the age of cant.
Away with all your superstitions
Servile masses arise, arise
We’ll change henceforth the old tradition
And spurn the dust to win the prize.
So comrades, come rally
And the last fight let us face
The Internationale unites the human race.
Gisela Guttmacher, the General Secretary of the Communist League of Terra, then stands up again to try to make a speech asking the nations of Terra to change their national anthems into the Hulstro-Mikun language "as a mark of solidarity with the victims of the Hulstrian tyranny", but the presiding officers prevent her from going on for any longer, saying she and her delegation have "been heard enough here for one day".