Challenges for hemispheric emancipation
24/05/2002
- Opinión
JUBILEE SOUTH/AMERICAS
DECLARATION ON DEBT, THE FTAA, AND MILITARIZATION
CHALLENGES FOR HEMISPHERIC EMANCIPATION
Quito, May 25, 2002
1. Our campaign "Yes to Sovereignty and Life, No to the FTAA",
understands the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) to be a strategy
for resolving the problem of overproduction in the United States.
Structural adjustment, privatizations, trade liberalization,
unconditional openness for foreign investments, patents, etc., are
different ways to:
a) Reorient surplus products in the United States to the countries of
the periphery;
b) Subordinate all the geo-economic spaces of the continent to U.S.
based transnational capital; and
c) Create a regional block, dominated by the United States, that is
capable of confronting competition from the European Union and the
Asian block in the dispute for global economic, geopolitical and
cultural hegemony.
For the countries of the periphery in the Americas, the FTAA represents
a plan to appropriate, via both production and commercialization, the
surpluses generated by our peoples. It seeks to reduce us definitively
to the role of consumers of the goods produced in the North and
suppliers of natural resources, primary goods or low value-added
manufactured goods. The FTAA is rooted in a philosophy of integration
based on the maximization of inequalities, superexploitation, and the
productive and commercial annexation of our countries to the empire.
2. The Debt also fulfills a role of appropriation of the surpluses in
our countries via financial channels. Over indebtedness is a mechanism
of exploitation that forms part of the legacy of the colonial conquest,
subordinating the countries of the periphery through a permanent
hemorrhaging of their capitals, natural resources, and production. The
debt, amply repaid many times over, has converted the continent into a
net exporter of capitals. This phenomenon is even more serious if we
analyze it in relation to the unequal terms of trade and the flows of
profit repatriation to the headquarters of the transnational
corporations. The schemes of interest capitalization, the payment of
interest on interest, and the chronic trade deficit of Latin America
and the Caribbean give rise to the vicious circle of "the more you pay,
the more you owe", and reduce debtor governments to submission in the
face of the conditionalities imposed by the creditors. Among them, the
compression of public spending in order to make possible the payment of
interest, provoking an unsustainable deterioration in our economies,
the quality of life of our peoples, and our ecosystems. The IMF charges
a stiff price for its loans, and it benefits from an important volume
of the flow of liquidity transfers. It is a factor in the
decapitalization and the loss of sovereignty of our countries.
The unpayable nature of most of the debt of Latin America and the
Caribbean should be analyzed in relation to its illegitimacy, and
urgent measures demanded in order to stop the hemorrhaging and
revitalize our economies. The settling of the historical, social, and
ecological debt due to our peoples poses the moral challenge of
reparations. Finally, the debt fulfills an essentially political
function of transferring the power of decision over economic policy to
the governments of the creditor countries and their multilateral
puppets.
3. Militarization, at the same time, functions as an armed guarantee
of:
a) the hemispheric and global hegemony of the United States, and
b) the perpetuation of the model of structural concentration and
exclusion, directed by the United States.
The ideology of terror and war is at the root of the expansion of
military bases in Latin America and the Caribbean, the rise in military
and police spending, and the broadening of intelligence services, and
the gathering of information on the popular movements and those who
oppose the imperial order. The intensification of repression takes
place in an atmosphere of growing criminalization of social movements.
4. The FTAA, overindebtedness, and militarization are three
complementary strategic axes of a single project of expansion and
consolidation of the U.S. empire. All three are at the service of
objectives which can be summarized in the monetary subordination of the
continent to the United States' dollar, the plunder, control and
usufruct of our natural and genetic resources and our wealth by the
transnational corporations, the productive and commercial annexation of
our economies, and geopolitical dominion over the continent that
converts our rights to self-determination and national and popular
sovereignty into things of the past.
Our campaign seeks to build from this systemic and strategic vision of
the contemporary challenge to pose as a paradigm the urgent necessity
of a complete break with the present system of domination, an
integration and a globalization based on the values of respect for the
cultural and national diversity of peoples and collaboration and
solidarity among them. We propose not only to denounce and struggle
against the imperial project expressed in the FTAA, the debt, and
growing militarization, but also to build concrete alternative forms of
integration based on the right of peoples to their own development as
well as new models of development which are respectful of the
environment, based on gender equity and respect for human rights, and
capable of guaranteeing a dignified human existence for all in an
atmosphere of justice, fraternity, and peace.
Yes to Life and Popular Sovereignty
Stop the FTAA - Cancel the Debt
No to Militarization
Another America is Possible!
With the participation of representatives of member movements and
campaigns in: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Haiti, and Venezuela
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/106088?language=en
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- Head international fact-finding and solidarity mission to Haiti 31/03/2005
- Human Rights Day 2004: Delegates of thirteen countries demand external debt cancellation 29/11/2004
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