From Florence to Porto Alegre Via Hyderabad: A Year in the Life of the World Social Forum
16/01/2003
- Opinión
On January 23-28, thousands of people from all over the world will
converge on Porto Alegre, Brazil. The pilgrims will include African
landless peasants, Filipino trade unionists, Palestinian liberation
fighters, indigenous people from all over Latin America, and large
delegations of civil society activists from India, North America, and
Europe. The occasion is the World Social Forum (WSF).
This year's gathering, the third in a row in this city of 1.3 million,
acquires special significance owing to the recent resounding victory of
Luis Inacio da Silva, better known as Lula, in Brazil's presidential
elections. Lula is the prime mover of the Workers' Party (PT), one of
the organizational mainstays of the WSF.
The WSF or "Porto Alegre process," as it is also called, has become the
prime organizational expression of a surging movement against
corporate-driven globalization. Since the events of September 11,
2001, it has also acquired a strong anti-war dimension, and opposition
to the US design to launch a war on Iraq is expected to dominate this
year's proceedings.
The Porto Alegre phenomenon has had its share of critics, even among
progressives. One prominent American intellectual has characterized it
as a gathering mainly of people who want to "reform" globalization.
Another has blasted it as a forum dominated intellectually and
politically by Northern political and social movements.
FUNCTIONS OF THE WSF
These criticisms have not, however, deterred the WSF from drawing
widespread adherence globally. This year, some 100, 000 people are
expected to show up, up from 75,000 in 2002 and 15,000 in 2001.
Perhaps, the reason is that it fulfills three indispensable functions
for the anti-globalization movement.
First, it represents a space-both physical and temporal-for this diverse
movement to meet, to network, and, quite simply, to feel and affirm
itself.
Second, it is a retreat during which the movement gathers its energies
and charts the directions of its continuing drive to confront and roll
back the processes, institutions, and structures of global capitalism.
Third, Porto Alegre provides a site and space for the movement to
elaborate, discuss, and debate the vision, values, and institutions of
an alternative world order.
PRELUDE: THE ESF AND ASF
2002 was marked by an expansion and deepening of the WSF. Indeed, this
year's meeting will be the culminating point of an exciting year-long
global process. A number of cities, including Buenos Aires and Caracas,
have held Porto Alegre-style social forums. It was, however, the
regional social forums that were the exciting innovation of the year.
The European Social Forum (ESF), held in Florence, Italy, on November 6-
9, 2002, drew over 40,000 people, more than three times the expected
number. Even more amazing was the ESF-sponsored million-person march on
9 November against the planned US war on Iraq, which took place with not
one of the incidents of mass violence that scare mongers like Italian
journalist Oriana Fallaci had predicted.
Equally impressive was the recently concluded Asian Social Forum (ASF)
that took place in the historic city of Hyderabad, India, from January 2
to 7, which drew over 14,400 registered participants, mostly from the
host country, though there was representation from 41 other countries.
The atmosphere was electric from the first day of the event. During
almost every minute of the five-day marathon, drumbeats and chants of
mini-rallies filled the air at the Nizam College grounds, the main site
of the conference. There, and in around 40 other sites throughout the
city, 18 conferences and plenary events, 178 seminars and workshops, a
youth camp, and scores of cultural presentations took place. Topics
included resistance to the World Trade Organization (WTO), Dalit
(outcaste) rights, the threat of fundamentalist movements, women's
empowerment, food sovereignty, big dams, the Palestinian struggle,
natural resource theft, and alternative economics.
Militant struggle against militarism was the note on which the peoples'
gathering began, with Nora de Cortinas, co-founder of the Argentine
human rights group Madres de Plaza de Mayo, telling the opening plenary
on January 2 that "We must not allow the US to launch its war on Iraq."
Opposition to the "venom of communal hatred" was emphasized by Mehda
Patkar, head of the National Alliance of Peoples' Movements, who called
for the formation of a broad people's coalition against the government-
supported fundamentalist forces responsible for the recent slaughter of
over 2000 Muslims in Gujarat state.
Resistance to globalization was the clarion call of former President of
India K.R. Narayanan at the outdoor rally closing the event. "We want
the world to be one but not globalized, ruled by one country," he
stated. "The world is pluralistic and will remain so." Narayanan
characterized the "voice being raised at the ASF" as a "voice for human
rights, against violence, and against imperialism, and it is only right
that it has come from India because it was India that sounded the death
knell for an empire on which the sun was never supposed to set."
As was the case with the ESF, the ASF had its share of logistical
mishaps like non-functioning sound systems and workshop sites that took
hours to find. Like the ESF, too, the ASF had its share of friction
among the groups that put it together. The ASF was stitched together in
less than a year by what noted Indian activist Minar Pimple
characterized as a coalition that was "one third Gandhian socialists,
one third left political parties, and one third independent
organizations and individuals."
Given the fragmentation of the progressive movement in both Europe and
Asia, however, that the ASF and ESF came together magnificently in the
end was a stunning achievement. ASF participant Nancy Gaikwad of the
Oppressed People's Movement summed up many people's feelings when she
said, "This is the first time in a long, long time that this has
happened in India, for people from different political streams to be
able to work together on a common platform."
TOWARDS UNITY?
Indeed, one of the main reasons the Porto Alegre process is gaining
such momentum is precisely that is provides a venue where movements and
organizations can find ways of working together despite their
differences. While the usual ultra-leftist groups remain defiantly
outside it, the Porto Alegre process in Brazil, Europe, and India has
brought to the forefront the common values and aspirations of a variety
of political traditions and tendencies. The Porto Alegre process may be
the main expression of the coming together of a movement that has been
wandering for a long time in the wilderness of fragmentation and
competition. The pendulum, in other words, may now be swinging to the
side of unity, driven by the sense that in an increasingly deadly
struggle against unilateralist militarization and aggressive corporate
globalization, movements have no choice but to hang together, or they
will hang separately.
PORTO ALEGRE AND LULA
As thousands of people converge on Porto Alegre in the coming week,
there is another development that is equally significant. Since
Seattle, the anti-corporate globalization movement has attained a
critical mass globally, in the sense that its ability to assemble forces
at significant junctures, such as the December 1999 Seattle WTO
ministerial and the July 2001 Genoa meeting of the Group of Eight,
enabled it to impact on international developments and acquire a high
ideological and political profile globally. Yet being a global actor did
not necessarily translate into being a significant actor at the national
level, where traditional elites and parties continued to be in a
commanding position. Over the last year, however, the movement has
achieved a decisive majority at the national level in a number of
countries, most of them in Latin America.
Not only has espousal of neoliberal policies been a surefire path to
electoral disaster, but political parties or movements promoting anti-
globalization policies have achieved electoral power in Ecuador and
Brazil, joining the Hugo Chavez government in Venezuela at the forefront
of the regional anti-neoliberal struggle. Perhaps most inspiring is the
case of Luis Inacio da Silva, or Lula, in Brazil, who won 63 per cent of
the presidential vote last October. Lula is the prime figure in the
Workers' Party (PT) and, as everyone knows, the Workers' Party is the
main pillar of the WSF.
Not surprisingly, many of those trekking to Porto Alegre this year will
be coming with one question uppermost in their mind: What can the
victory of Lula and the PT teach us about coming to power in our
countries?
Many personalities of the international progressive movement are slated
to come to Porto Alegre. By far the most interesting, most popular,
and most sought after will be Lula, the personification of the new Latin
American left. And this year's meeting will be, in many ways, a
celebration of a movement that, by achieving a remarkable measure of
political unity amidst diversity, has changed the face of Brazilian
politics.
*Walden Bello is professor of sociology and public administration at the
University of the Philippines and executive director of the Bangkok-
based Focus on the Global South.
** Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
This article was written for Interpress Service [IPS] on January 14,
2003. Copyright by IPS. Special permission to reproduce it was given
to Focus on Trade.
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A great movement is born:
Global Justice Movement Finds Fertile Ground at the Asia Social Forum
By Praful Bidwai*
The just-concluded Asian Social Forum (ASF) saw a unique confluence of
grassroots social movements, people's organisations and radical NGOs
which interrogate globalisation and counterpose equality, human rights
and justice to the shop-worn agendas of transnational big business.
Even for a city of contrasts (consider Nizamshahi or information
technology vs abject poverty or child labour), what Hyderabad witnessed
this past week was unparalleled: on the one hand, a 'global partnership'
summit of the Confederation of Indian Industry caucusing in a five-star
hotel; and on the other, the Asian Social Forum, with 15,000 activists
from all over the continent celebrating the spirit of solidarity in the
Nizam College grounds.
The first event was dominated by a select group of dark-suited business
potentates, foreign officials and Indian ministers from L.K. Advani
downwards. The second was a riot of colours and a melange: of grassroots
campaigners on livelihood issues and human rights, environmentalists and
feminists, trade unionists and seed-conserving peasants, people's
science-movement and healthcare activists, peaceniks and anti-
displacement campaigners, writers and social scientists, radical
theatre-people and filmmakers.
The first group came from leading corporations in India and the West,
known for their successful brands and fat profit-lines; the second from
the North-east, Asia and Afghanistan, Palestine and Pakistan, Sri Lanka
and Southeast Asia, as well as India. It comprised people known for
their work against foreign military bases and occupation, for freedom
from debt, for the right to food and free speech, for human security.
It is a telling commentary that when 400 volunteers from the second
group peacefully picketed the venue of the first, they were arrested by
the police of India's most business and IT-savvy chief minister.
The ASF began with a plenary addressed by firebrand activist Medha
Patkar and ended with one presided over by former President K.R.
Narayanan. Between the two were eight major conferences, 160 seminars,
164 workshops, scores of cultural events - and countless processions,
demonstrations and tableaux. This sums up the awesome range and scope
of the ASF and its rainbow- coalition character better than anything
else.
The common theme running through these was grassroots democracy, the
fight against exclusion, the imperatives of equality, global justice,
human emancipation and people-(not profit)-centred development. In one
line, the message was: the anti-globalisation movement is here, and for
real!
The ASF is part of the great global justice movement that began at
Seattle in 1999, and took an organised expression through the World
Social Forum's meetings in Porto Alegre, Brazil, with the slogan
"Another world is possible!"
The global justice movement is one of the most spectacular mass
mobilisations of our times. The WSF is a powerful forum of interaction
between social activists and the liberal-progressive intelligentsia. The
movement has shaken the leaders of global capital and its managerial
institutions (the World Bank, IMF, G-8, OECD, etc).
But the ASF's own roots lie in the Asian soil, in the numerous
movements which have grown over the past quarter-century or more in the
continent - for survival with dignity, for peace, gender equality,
decentralisation, for direct democracy, Dalit rights, for ecologically
sound development and social liberation. These movements have reshaped
societies from South Korea to Nepal, geopolitics from the Persian Gulf
to the Malacca Straits and development policies from Japan to the
Philippines.
India occupies a special place here. As the great historian E.P.
Thompson would say, India has witnessed an avalanche of people's
movements and civil society initiatives like few other countries have.
India is also the site of especially lively, organic, two-way
interaction between popular movements and the radical intelligentsia.
However, there was a disproportionate number of Indians at this 'Asian'
event: only 780 of the 14,426 registered participants came from abroad.
One reason for this is that New Delhi cussedly delayed granting visas to
hundreds of delegates. The worst example of this was the systematic
deletion (by [Deputy Prime Minister] Advani himself) of well-known
Pakistani activists' names from the almost- approved list, including
Asma Jehangir, Pervez Hoodbhoy, I.A. Rahman and A.H. Nayyar. Ironically,
they happen to be among the staunchest and best-known critics of
Islamabad's hawkish policies - a point that couldn't have been missed by
New Delhi's own hawks!
A valid criticism of the ASF programme is that it was far too India- (or
India-Pakistan) -centric. Another is that the ASF workshops were so
physically dispersed (which Indian city can accommodate 15,000 people in
multiple conference centres located close to one another?) as to lack
connectedness and a centre of gravity. Yet, the ASF was a tremendous
learning process.
It is hard to summarise the rich diversity of its deliberations -
stretching from the sharing of experiences of different struggles
against neoliberal economics and privatisation of natural resources, and
for the defence of livelihoods, to drawing up alternative perspectives
and programmes.
The ASF uniquely offered four platforms: the first-ever large-scale
interaction between India's established mass organisations and its 'New
Social Movements', a dialogue between them and movements from the rest
of Asia, a forum to evolve common analysis and strategy, and a high-
energy cultural intercourse that took on the appearance of a gigantic
mela, a week-long festival celebrating some of the greatest causes of
our times.
The ASF was a landmark event, an exhilarating beginning. It needs to be
followed up - both through further dissemination of its core-ideas to
grassroots levels, and laterally, through replication elsewhere, even as
the Porto Alegre process maintains its own integrity and distinct
identity. One sign of a great social movement is the variety of messages
and appeals it contains, and the many organisational forms it can
assume. Going by that criterion, the movement against unequal
globalisation, and for a just world, has a great future - not least in
Asia.
* Praful Bidwai is a prominent Indian journalist, commentator and anti-
nuclear campaigner.
** Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003. This editorial was published
in The Hindustan Times, January 10, 2003
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PURGING PAIN TO FORGE A NEW WORLD
By Herbert V Docena*
HYDERABAD, INDIA - Miyoko Matsubara's breaking voice blared through the
public address speakers. It has been a long journey from Hiroshima to
Hyderabad. At 70, Miyoko has come a long way from 1944 when the bomb was
dropped and she was among the few who survived. Now her voice, wavering
still after countless times of retelling, rose above the dust over Nizam
College grounds where the first Asian Social Forum was camped. She was
crying again.
It was just the first day of the week-long forum. Elsewhere in the city,
other people's voices were breaking. Deena Farhab from Afghanistan was
close to tears as she recounted how the Taliban, the US' mercenaries
during the Afghan war with the Soviet Union, took away, tortured, and
brutally killed her husband. From Rajasthan, Murari talked about how
four of his family members died from starvation.
Others' voices had been hardened. Abdel Jawad Saleh from Palestine
angrily denounced the Israeli state's ill-disguised genocide of his
people. Others spoke for those who could no longer be heard: Jeong Soo
Kim of South Korea demanded, on behalf of the two teenagers who had
been crushed to death by US tanks, for the immediate expulsion of US
bases in Seoul.
Others didn't even have to speak. Nora de Cortinas, one of the founders
of the Madres de Plaza de Mayo, an organization of the mothers of those
who had been abducted and killed by the dictatorial regimes installed by
the United States in Latin America in the 70s, said it all with a scarf
she wore around her head. It was embroidered with her son's name.
It was not just another conference. Over 14,000 Indians and 700 other
people from all over the continent, belonging to around 800
organizations and movements, had gathered in Hyderabad, a city known
throughout India as the place where farmers and weavers had been pushed
beyond the verge and had taken their own lives out of poverty and
despair. It was the Asian leg of the World Social Forum, or what has
been gradually emerging as the organizational embodiment of a massive
global counter-movement against the kind of forces that bind people like
Miyoko, Deena, Abdel, Jeong, and Nora. Its slogan is short, its aim
grand: "Another world is possible."
For six days, the dusty grounds of Nizam College was turned to one big
counseling room. The forum had become a thousand-person therapy session
- an Alcoholics Anonymous-like meeting for Asia's dispossessed. Eight
major conferences, 160 seminars, and 164 workshops gave people more than
enough outlets for pouring their hearts out to people who, to paraphrase
a line from a movie, were there to really listen and not just wait for
their turn to speak.
From Bangladesh to Burma, from Tibet to Thailand, intellectuals,
activists, workers, farmers, rickshaw drivers, artists all came together
to share their woes from as wide a range of problems as structural
adjustment, ecological destruction, foreign interventions, authoritarian
repression, gender violence, caste discrimination, fundamentalist
exclusion...
People need to know that they're not alone. Before they can even
imagine a future, before they can even start debating on the
alternatives, people need to feel connected. In addressing this basic
instinctive need lies the potency - and the necessity - of holding
gatherings like the ASF. By giving people a venue where they can all
figuratively weep together and console each other, the Porto Alegre
process assures people that their suffering is not isolated.
In one conference on caste discrimination and globalization, dalits, or
people who are considered "untouchables" in the Hindu caste system,
shared the stage with the Burakus, a people considered "impure" by
Japanese society. The dalits have probably never heard of the Burakus
and the Burakus probably do not know about dalits. But it surely could
not have escaped them how so strikingly familiar and recognizable the
other's stories were.
You could almost see the Buraku's eyes widen when she heard that in
Nepal, the dalits have been doing nothing else but wash the dishes and
clean the toilets for the upper castes. They are not even allowed to
sell water. How different is that from the Burakus' situation back home
where the only work they're allowed to do is to wash the skin of dead
animals and turn them to leather? You could almost see the dalits
linking arms with the Buraku when they both heard how both of their
governments' are increasingly lifting welfare assistance to them as part
of austerity measures and structural adjustment policies.
By convincing people that there are others out there who have also went
through what they are going through, the Porto Alegre process can
prevent people from retreating into their own little corners in the
world, obsessing about their own parochial concerns, or giving up
altogether because they feel they're too little and there's no way they
can possibly put up a fight. And there, in their isolated remote corners
of withdrawal, they begin to doubt whether their sufferings are in fact
real, whether they're not just exaggerating them, whether it's really as
bad as it seems.
But then they come to Hyderabad. And there, seeing and hearing real
people grieving, they remember that the pangs of hunger was real, the
stigma of society's contempt was real, the unbearable weight on their
chests when they lost their son was real. For by giving people a real
physical space where they can share their experiences, abstract concepts
like "oppression" became real. Previously empty slogans like "American
imperialism" became loaded with meaning. Remote and impersonal
institutions like the World Trade Organization or the International
Monetary Fund became less distant.
Miyoko gave a voice to the horror of nuclear annihilation and to
America's continuing disregard for the plight of innocent civilians
caught in its wars of aggression. The embroidery on Nora's scarf gave a
name to the continuing connivance between Washington and repressive
ruling regimes. Deena gave a face to the US' complicity in the rise of
Islamic fundamentalism.
In the end, it is the sharing of grief -- and hope -- that makes events
like the Asian Social Forum different. The world's CEOs can share their
surefire marketing strategies in their posh convention centers and five-
star hotels. 'Neutral' academics can exchange their latest findings in
conferences in their secluded universities. The world's political and
business elites can have their Davos or Genoa. They can have their
caches of cash and their arsenal of bombs. But Asia's dispossessed -
they will have their Hyderabad and they will have each other.
For somehow, it is pain that keeps us united. Participants in the ASF
may have carried a variety of passports, looked very different from each
other, and espoused clashing ideological orientations and strategies.
But is hunger from Pakistan different from the hunger felt in Palestine?
Is the loss of a child less painful to a Maoist than to a Trotskyist?
Are reformists less terrified of bombs than abolitionists?
In the end, it may yet be this purging of sorrow that will lead to the
forging of that other world which is possible and - because the present
one's share of misery has become unbearable and unacceptable - urgently
necessary. For some, pain is a precondition for optimism: you cannot
hope for something better unless you don't know how much worse it has
actually been. In this sense, the ASF may well have been cathartic. Pain
can lead to surrender, despair, and paralysis. But, through processes
like the WSF, it can also be transformed to hope and translated to
action.
Towards the end of her speech, the breaking voice of Miyoko - 70 years
old, scarred but still fighting - became unwavering. On the final
afternoon of the forum, thousands of delegates filed out of Nizam
College, took to the streets, and gave expression to the abstract word
"solidarity."
A group of psychologists have recently announced that ironically, the
more you protest, the happier you become. The march was proof: what had
at times become a forum of depressing testimonials culminated with a
joyous and festive parade. There was frenzied dancing and rousing
chanting. Grief had turned to euphoria. For those who had previously
felt forlorn and isolated, no sight could have been more comforting than
that throbbing mass - burdened but beaming, and still marching on
determinedly to another world that is possible.
* Herbert V. Docena is a research associate with Focus on the Global
South
** Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
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TWO statements came out of the Asian Social Forum process. The first is
significant because it represents an important political breakthrough in
building alliances between the traditional mass organisations, such as
trade unions, and social movements. Focus on the Global South was
involved in this process. The second statement came out of a parallel
event organised by local and regional groups, also mobilising against
globalisation. Spot the difference (if you can).
STATEMENT OF THE ASIAN SOCIAL MASS & PEOPLES' MOVEMENTS &
ORGANISATIONS 7 January 2003
We, the social, mass and peoples' movements and organisations of Asia
and the Pacific from diverse social, cultural and political backgrounds
have gathered together on 2-7, January 2003 at the Asian Social Forum in
Hyderabad, India. We are gathered here in the ASF to exchange our
experiences and raise our voices against neo-liberal globalisation,
imperialism, militarism, patriarchy and fundamentalism.
We are meeting in Hyderabad, the city that is claimed to be a symbol of
cyber-world in India. But it is also the capital of the state known for
tragic suicides by hundreds of farmers and weavers, besides starvation
deaths, due to the impact of neo-liberal globalization in recent years.
The real history of the state is one of valiant peoples' struggles.
In fact, today the whole of Asia is yet again the center of poverty, war
and intolerance, with the mass of people facing starvation,
impoverishment, displacement, indebtedness, and destruction of
livelihoods.
Imperialism targets Asia with its militarist and economic offensives for
making strategic gains, including the greed for oil. The looming threat
of war on Iraq by the United States of America imperils all of us, who
have witnessed the Gulf War, the bombing of Afghanistan, and the
continuing occupation of Palestine. US political and military
interventions in Asia under its so-called War on Terror - particularly
in South, South East and East Asia - has brought us to the brink of
nuclear war. Meanwhile, all over the region, citizens are kept in check
by un-democratic and draconian laws imposed by colluding regimes. This
has promoted a false discourse on terrorism and security while
systematically marginalising and assaulting people's struggles for
survival, livelihoods, rights, inclusion and self-determination. All
these pressures are generating ever more virulent forms of patriarchy
and the oppression of Asian women.
The impact of capitalism and neo-liberal globalization continues to be
felt across the region and affects the lives of every woman, man, youth
and child. These effects are leading to widespread increases in levels
of poverty and widening gaps between the rich and the poor. It has also
led to the increasing degradation of the environment and ecology
resulting in widespread disease and death threatening the very survival
of the planet. Attacks on the economies of all countries in the region
have lead to total loss of self-reliance, de-industrialization,
privatization and destruction of natural resources of land, water and
forests, and the retreat of labor protections. Agriculture, village and
small scale industries are collapsing due to imports and subsidy cuts.
The promotion of capitalist property rights and indiscriminate
mechanisation by governments and transnational corporations are
destroying people's knowledge, skills and livelihoods. The combined
actions of the World Bank, IMF, ADB, export credit agencies, ODAs and
WTO are willfully and deliberately undermining our economic and
political sovereignty while destroying local and national economies.
Debt continues to be used by the international financial institutions
and donor countries to keep our countries in financial and economic
bondage.
Capitalism and neo-liberal globalization also jeopardize peoples' lives
and accentuate multiple forms of exclusions for the marginalised
sections. The worse affected are women,children, indigenous peoples,
Dalits, ethnic minorities, tribals, unorganised sector and migrant
workers and other socially excluded groups. These have led to the
depression of wages, mass unemployment and price increases making people
more destitute, leading to tragic consequences like increase in child
labor and trafficking in women and childen. Education, child care,
health, transport all get privatised and subsidy cuts result in denial
of services and food security for the poor. Meanwhile, instances of
exclusions include the withdrawal of safety nets and affirmative action,
rise in violence and discrimination against the vulnerable groups,
flattening of social diversities that puts greater pressure on the
minorities to conform to the dominant view and greater incidence of
contrived conflict that pits these groups against one another.
There is a shrinking of democratic space within the nation-states as
neo- liberal globalization with the rise of aggressively fundamentalist,
intolerant and violent articulations of identities and an increase in
the repressive powers of the state and the elites, leading to gross
violation of civic and human rights.
We, therefore, resolve to carry forward and strengthen the solidarity
for resisting imperialist domination. It will be necessary - and we will
strive - in the coming days to include many more social movements into
this process of resistance and to evolve democratic and transparent
processes for coordinating activities and actions.
We believe that not only is Another World Possible but that Another
World is Necessary! We affirm our faith in alternatives based on equity,
social justice, human rights and socialism!
In particular, we resolve to carry forward the campaigns and struggle
and move towards common actions in the following areas:
Resist imperialism - the imminent US attack on Iraq, its escalating
militarist interventions in the region, as well as, its possible
unilateral declaration of war against any country. Specifically, we will
organize a common day of protest action against the war in Iraq. We
demand the total elimination of all nuclear weapons.
Resist the policies and undemocratic structures of neo-liberal
globalization. Specifically, derail the next WTO Ministerial Meeting in
Cancun.
Defend democracy, secular values and people's security.
Oppose religious fundamentalism and communal, ethnic, caste and gender-
based violence.
Assert people's right to work, energy, food, water, land, other natural
resources, education, health and public transport.
Oppose privatization, dis-investment and attack on labor rights.
Move away from development based on foreign capital and mobilize
national resources to support the sustainable and equitable development
of domestic economies and people's lifestyles. Demand the
unconditional cancellation of debt.
* Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
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STATEMENT OF THE PEOPLE'S MOVEMENTS ENCOUNTERS AT THE ASIAN SOCIAL
FORUM
We, the people's movements of Asia have come together in Hyderabad from
3-7 January at the People's Movements Encounters at the Asian Social
Forum. This encounter testifies to the increasing resistance of people
against imperialist globalisation and that a New World is evolving. We
are 35 movements representing Dalits, peasants, workers, women,
Adivasis, indigenous peoples, fisherfolks, urban poor and the
physically and mentally challenged.
Imperialist globalisation led by the G8 and the transnational
corporations (TNCs), facilitated by the WTO and international financial
institutions and supported by national elites, has devastated our lives,
resources and the environment. As a result we are losing our
livelihoods, shelter, land, water, forests and other resources. We have
little or no access to food and employment resulting in hunger,
starvation and famine. We are being displaced. We face unemployment and
bonded form of labour, including forced migration. This has brought
increased vulnerability to exploitation, oppression and subordination of
our people and communities.
Our productive resources and means of production are being monopolised
and concentrated in the hands of the landed elites and a few giant
corporations through corporate agriculture. This form of agriculture is
externally dependent and promotes hazardous technologies including
pesticides and GMOs that threaten health, food safety and the
environment. The dominance of corporate control is further entrenched by
patents on life forms.
Fundamentalism through fascist forces has led to widespread communal
tensions, violence and genocide of communities in Asia. It has eroded
the unity of people, universal beliefs and divided people on the basis
of religion, caste and race.
The US-led War on Terrorism is the continued global economic,
political, social, and cultural domination of the G8 on the world, and
entrenches their control of resources especially oil, gas and uranium.
This war on terrorism is used by the State to violently suppress
people's movements and resistance, and to criminalise and imprison
movement leaders. It is used to dismantle all mechanisms that protect
and promote the universal rights of people. It has also increased
militarisation and the arms trade at the expense of people.
These same imperialist forces with the support of patriarchal
institutions and values are further denying the reproductive and health
rights of women; their land and political rights; and right to housing.
This has increased different forms of violence against women, forced
migration, trafficking, violence against tribal and minorities, and has
reduced their access to justice.
The society we live in is a caste society based on the purity and
impurity concept hence the practice of untouchability prevails in
communities. It has denied the Dalits equal status in society, and land
and political rights. More than ever today the communities and people
are raising their resistance against these imperialist forces and their
lackeys at all levels. Women are resisting the introduction of machines
that displace labour. Women have succeeded in preventing the
construction of dams. Peasants are occupying lands. Dalits are
asserting their rights. Agricultural workers are organising for the
right to work and livelihood. Workers are also driving out
transnational corporations such as Syngenta and Monsanto. Farmers are
practising sustainable agriculture and livelihoods. These are only a
few examples of the diversity of the resistance of Our New World.
No one else can speak for us except we in the people's movements. We
have our victories, our culture, our political agenda and our
aspirations. We have come together here in the People's Movements
Encounters to further strengthen, consolidate and heighten our
resistance within Asia.
We will forward our struggles with greater determination, force and
strength. We therefore:
1. Reject WTO. We will derail WTO at Cancun. Towards this, we will
develop actions and proposals at all levels. As a first step we want WTO
out of food and agriculture and health. There will be a special Global
Day of Protest to derail WTO.
2. Reject TNCs, and we will drive them out of our communities, our
nations and in Asia. The resistance that has already been organized,
will now be further strengthened and consolidated with special focus on
TNCs that promote hazardous technologies particularly Syngenta,
Monsanto, Aventis, Du Pont and Bayer.
3. Assert our people's food sovereignty i.e. the right of people to
decide our own food and agriculture policy, founded on right to land and
productive resources including water, seeds, forests, our knowledge and
skills. We will only achieve food sovereignty when we are free and
independent from all forms of foreign and local domination. We will
take back the Panchami land (land allocated to Dalits by the
government) and other lands and distribute land to the landless and
women. We reject labour replacement technologies. We will expand
sustainable agriculture and promote sustainable livelihoods. We will
have fair prices for agricultural products where Trade will respect the
rights of peoples and assert food sovereignty.
4. Protect and promote the rights, equality and dignity of women. We
reject and resist the culture of violence and torture arising from
repression and subordination, particularly against women. In our
rejection of patriarchal values and institutions, we will strongly
defend and promote reproductive rights and health of women. Land and
other productive resources will be equally distributed to women.
Recognising women's role and contribution in food production and use of
resources, women are equal partners in the struggle.
5. Resist and will destroy Fundamentalist culture, values and forces
through our struggles for democratic rights, equality and freedom. The
discrimination and atrocities on Dalits should be immediately stopped
and the caste system and untouchability practices eradicated with
immediate effect.
6. Strongly oppose the US led war on terrorism. We demand the
immediate withdrawal of US troops placed for the war against Iraq. We
reject state terrorism on our people and demand the immediate release
of all political activists from prison. We also demand transparency and
accountability at all levels on the use of people's money, especially on
arms trade and defence.
Towards this end we will build international solidarity with people's
movements everywhere.
A PEOPLE UNITED WILL NEVER BE DEFEATED
* Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
*************************************************
WSF Social Forum on Palestine "At least they didn't shoot us"
Herbert V. Docena*
Day after Christmas, around three hundred delegates from all over the
world were set to fly to Israel not to celebrate Christ's birth in
Bethlehem but to push for something still struggling to be born - the
free and sovereign state of Palestine. The World Social Forum on
Palestine was to be held - defiantly enough - in Ramallah, one of the
most dangerous places on earth in the last few months.
Organized by the Palestinian NGO network, along with the Arab NGO
Network for Development and other international supporters, it was to be
a symbolic show of solidarity, a daring message that not only Muslims
care about Palestine. People from across the globe, and even from a
country as overloaded with problems as the Philippines, were set to
march on the bloodstained streets of the West Bank and Gaza to protest
Israel's continuing colonization of what remains of Palestine.
But it was not to be. The uninvited guest drove away the guests that the
host invited.
TREATED LIKE ROYALTY IN TEL-AVIV
At the Tel Aviv airport immigration area, after a 20-hour journey from
Manila through Frankfurt, I was led to a small room where I was
interrogated and intimidated by a young police officer who indignantly
told me I could not enter her country. I was not alone. Outside were a
group of dejected-looking men and women, mostly Belgian and one French,
who had just been told to take the first flight out of Israel.
It was a very warm welcome. We were subjected to the most intensive
body search some of us have ever been through and all the pieces of our
luggage were scrutinized with the most prying eyes and the most high-
tech pieces of equipment. Escorted by one police officer each, we were
then led to a detention cell with a small square hole for a window,
three bunker beds, and the cold of winter seeping in from openings on
the wall just below the ceiling. It was only there, in hushed tones,
that we were able to confirm to each other what we had been suspecting:
We were all going to the Palestine forum.
It turns out that the Israel ministry of interior had gotten wind of
what was being planned and had ordered the immigration to thoroughly
check out everyone who was traveling alone and to turn away all those
visiting Israel for reasons other than to celebrate Christ's birth.
Since Palestine is bracketed on both sides by Israel and Jordan the only
way to enter is through Tel Aviv or Amman. Since Jordan has signed a
peace pact with Israel, going through Amman is as risky as going through
Tel Aviv. Delegates who came in groups on Christmas day managed to slip
through; some other groups of Germans and some Spanish delegates had
already been turned back.
At the airport, we were locked up in the detention cell for eleven
hours, guarded intently by an officer outside. When the time to leave
came, we were taken to the plane in a convoy led by a police car. In
Frankfurt after landing, we were shepherded by the German police to
their airport headquarters for another round of questioning. Tel Aviv
apparently sent the Frankfurt police a note saying we were denied entry
because we were illegal workers.
AT LEAST THEY DIDN'T SHOOT US
And yet, despite being detained and driven away, we still felt like we
were given royal treatment by Israel.
At least they offered us lodging for the night. The Israeli military has
demolished scores of Palestinians' dwellings in the occupied
territories, leaving many Palestinians homeless in the dead of winter.
At least they offered us a piece of sandwich each for dinner. With
Israeli tanks on their streets and with curfews enforced by the
soldiers, many Palestinians have often not even been able to go to the
stores to buy food, much less go their schools or their offices to earn
some money by which to buy something to eat.
At least they left us alone in our cell. Amnesty International has
documented thousands of young Palestinian men being rounded up,
imprisoned, and tortured in detention camps. At least, they released us
alive. Almost two thousand Palestinians have been killed since the
latest round of conflict escalated. Of these, around 200 were victims of
"targeted assassination," the official Israeli policy of singling out
and shooting those whom it suspects to be "terrorists." Just on the day
we arrived, the Israeli army shot dead seven Palestinians - including
three unarmed teenagers. There are new areas in Palestine, now slowly
being taken by Israel in a creeping invasion, that Israel has
unilaterally designated as no-go zones for Palestinians. Should
Palestinians stray in these zones, Israeli soldiers are free to shoot
them on sight anytime.
At least - lucky for us who have been spirited away but continuing woe
to the Palestinians who are still there struggling to stay - Israel is
still kinder to its hosts' guests than to its host itself.
Not that the Palestinians have been less than gracious hosts. In 1993,
the Palestinians recognized the existence of the state of Israel - and,
in effect, sympathized with its people's historical affinity with their
land - by virtually bequeathing to them 78% of what was once Palestine.
In other words, their former guests they were now willing to see as
their new neighbors.
All they ask is that they be given back what they lost in Israel's 1967
surprise US-backed attack. If it's not too much, they plead that they be
allowed to establish an independent state with the remaining 22% of
their homeland. And if their former guests don't mind, that they both
conform with UN resolution 1397 which calls for the creation of "a
region where two States, Israel and Palestine, live side by side within
secure and recognized borders."
And if this is still not abusing the hospitality of their former guests,
to please stop killing them. Because they can't help it when- in the
face of Israel's overwhelming military might, funded by the biggest
foreign aid given by the United States to anyone - their children decide
to blow themselves up, to repay the kindness.
*Herbert V. Docena is a research associate with Focus on the Global
South.
** Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
*************************************************
A SPLIT SCREEN IN STRIKE-TORN VENEZUELA
Mark Weisbrot*
This article first appeared in the Washington Post, 12 January 2003
Walking around Caracas late last month during Venezuela's ongoing
protests, I was surprised by what I saw. My expectations had been
shaped by persistent US media coverage of the nationwide strike called
by the opposition, which seeks President Hugo Chavez's ouster. Yet in
most of the city, where poor and working-class people live, there were
few signs of the strike. Streets were crowded with holiday shoppers,
metro trains and buses were running normally, and shops were open for
business. Only in the eastern, wealthier neighborhoods of the capital
were businesses mostly closed.
This is clearly an oil strike, not a "general strike," as it is often
described. At the state-owned oil company, PDVSA, which controls the
industry, management is leading the strike because it is at odds with
the Chavez government. And while Venezuela depends on oil for 80 percent
of its export earnings and half its national budget, the industry's
workers represent a tiny fraction of the labor force. Outside the oil
industry, it is hard to find workers who are actually on strike. Some
have been locked out from their jobs, as business owners -- including
big foreign corporations such as McDonald's and FedEx -- have closed
their doors in support of the opposition.
Most Americans seem to believe that the Chavez government is a
dictatorship, and one of the most repressive governments in Latin
America. But these impressions are false.
Not only was Chavez democratically elected, his government is probably
one of the least repressive in Latin America. This, too, is easy to see
in Caracas. While army troops are deployed to protect Miraflores (the
presidential compound), there is little military or police presence in
most of the capital, which is particularly striking in such a tense and
volatile political situation. No one seems the least bit afraid of the
national government, and despite the seriousness of this latest effort
to topple it, no one has been arrested for political activities.
Chavez has been reluctant to use state power to break the strike,
despite the enormous damage to the economy. In the United States, a
strike of this sort -- one that caused massive damage to the economy, or
one where public or private workers were making political demands --
would be declared illegal. Its participants could be fired, and its
leaders -- if they persisted in the strike -- imprisoned under a court
injunction. In Venezuela, the issue has yet to be decided. The supreme
court last month ordered PDVSA employees back to work until it rules on
the strike's legality.
To anyone who has been in Venezuela lately, opposition charges that
Chavez is "turning the country into a Castro-communist dictatorship" --
repeated so often that millions of Americans apparently now believe them
-- are absurd on their face.
If any leaders have a penchant for dictatorship in Venezuela, it is the
opposition's. On April 12 they carried out a military coup against the
elected government. They installed the head of the business federation
as president and dissolved the legislature and the supreme court, until
mass protests and military officers reversed the coup two days later.
Military officers stand in Altamira Plaza and openly call for another
coup. It is hard to think of another country where this could happen.
The government's efforts to prosecute leaders of the coup were canceled
when the court dismissed the charges in August. Despite the anger of his
supporters, some of whom lost friends and relatives last year during the
two days of the coup government, Chavez respected the decision of the
court..
The opposition controls the private media, and to watch TV in Caracas is
truly an Orwellian experience. The five private TV stations (there is
one state-owned channel) that reach most Venezuelans play continuous
anti-Chavez propaganda. But it is worse than that: They are also
shamelessly dishonest. For example, on Dec. 6 an apparently deranged
gunman fired on a crowd of opposition demonstrators, killing three and
injuring dozens. Although there was no evidence linking the government
to the crime, the television news creators -- armed with footage of
bloody bodies and grieving relatives -- went to work immediately to
convince the public that Chavez was responsible. Soon after the
shooting, they were broadcasting grainy video clips allegedly showing
the assailant attending a pro-Chavez rally.
Now consider how people in Caracas's barrios see the opposition, a view
rarely heard in the United States: Led by representatives of the corrupt
old order, the opposition is trying to overthrow a government that has
won three elections and two referendums since 1998. Its coup failed
partly because hundreds of thousands of people risked their lives by
taking to the streets to defend democracy. So now it is crippling the
economy with an oil strike. The upper classes are simply attempting to
gain through economic sabotage what they could not and -- given the
intense rivalry and hatred among opposition groups and leaders -- still
cannot win at the ballot box.
From the other side of the class divide, the conflict is also seen as a
struggle over who will control and benefit from the nation's oil riches.
Over the last quarter-century PDVSA has swelled to a $50 billion a year
enterprise, while the income of the average Venezuelan has declined and
poverty has increased more than anywhere in Latin America. Billions of
dollars of the oil company's revenue could instead be used to finance
health care and education for millions of Venezuelans.
Now add Washington to the mix: The United States, alone in the
Americas, supported the coup, and before then it increased its financial
support of the opposition. Washington shares PDVSA executives' goals of
increasing oil production, busting OPEC quotas and even selling off the
company to private foreign investors. So it is not surprising that the
whole conflict is seen in much of Latin America as just another case of
Washington trying to overthrow an independent, democratically elected
government.
This view from the barrios seems plausible. The polarization of
Venezuelan society along class and racial lines is apparent in the
demonstrations themselves. The pro-government marches are filled with
poor and working-class people who are noticeably darker -- descendants
of the country's indigenous people and African slaves -- than the more
expensively dressed upper classes of the opposition. Supporters of the
opposition that I spoke with dismissed these differences, insisting that
Chavez's followers were simply "ignorant," and were being manipulated by
a "demagogue."
But for many, Chavez is the best, and possibly last, hope not only for
social and economic betterment, but for democracy itself. At the pro-
government demonstrations, people carry pocket-size copies of the
country's 1999 constitution, and vendors hawk them to the crowds.
Leaders of the various non-governmental organizations that I met with,
who helped draft the constitution, have different reasons for revering
it: women's groups, for example, because of its anti-discrimination
articles; and indigenous leaders because it is the first to recognize
their people's rights. But all see themselves as defending
constitutional democracy and civil liberties against what they describe
as "the threat of fascism" from the opposition.
This threat is very real. Opposition leaders have made no apologies for
the April coup, nor for the arrest and killing of scores of civilians
during the two days of illegal government. They continue to stand up on
television and appeal for another coup -- which, given the depth of
Chavez's support, would have to be bloody in order to hold power.
Where does the U.S. government now stand on the question of democracy
in Venezuela? The Bush administration joined the opposition in taking
advantage of the Dec. 6 shootings to call for early elections, which
would violate the Venezuelan constitution. The administration reversed
itself the next week, but despite paying lip service to the negotiations
mediated by the OAS, it has done nothing to encourage its allies in the
opposition to seek a constitutional or even a peaceful solution.
Sixteen members of Congress sent a letter to Bush last month, asking him
to state clearly that the United States would not have normal diplomatic
relations with a coup-installed government in Venezuela. But despite its
apprehension about disruption of Venezuelan oil supplies on the eve of a
probable war against Iraq, the Bush administration is not yet ready to
give up any of its options for "regime change" in Caracas. And - - not
surprisingly -- neither is the Venezuelan opposition.
* Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, an independent nonpartisan think tank in
Washington.
** Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
*************************************************
"Deglobalization"? Sure, but...
by Patrick Bond
My favorite haunt, Zimbabwe, is the delight of aggressive bourgeois
commentators, one of whom wrote a month ago about that country's
meltdown in the Economist (30 November 2002):
"An interesting economic experiment is being conducted in Zimbabwe. To
the foes of globalisation, President Robert Mugabe's views are
unexceptional. He argues that 'runaway market forces' are leading a
'vicious, all-out assault on the poor'. He decries the modern trend of
'banishing the state from the public sphere for the benefit of big
business.' What sets him apart from other anti-globalisers, however, is
that he has been able to put his ideas into practice."
Aargh. The Economist wants readers to think that Mugabe is a
deglobalizing anti-capitalist, and that the unfolding meltdown
associated with his alleged rejection of the market is the necessary
outcome of the policies those of us in the movement advocate. The
reality is far different, as can be attested by many Harare and Bulawayo
leftwing activists and students subjected to proto-fascist official
brutality for more than a decade.
Perhaps the freshest antidote to Economist logic is Walden Bello's new
book "Deglobalization: Ideas for a New World Economy". I've just added
it to the required reading list for my main political-economic masters
seminar at Wits University this year. Bello's book is part of the worthy
Zed Press series called Global Issues. At 132 pages, it's an easy-
reading companion to his other recent book, "The Future in the Balance"-
-a collection of 20 eloquent essays published in 2001 by Food First, the
San Francisco advocacy NGO that he once directed.
Bello probably needs no introduction; his hectic schedule includes
participation in virtually all confrontations with the global power
structure; a professorship at University of the Philippines; leadership
of a leftwing Filipino political party; and most importantly from the
standpoint of international anti-capitalism, directorship of Focus on
the Global South, a people's movement thinktank based at Chulalongkorn
University in Bangkok (http://www.focusweb.org).
Humble and humorous, Bello--who holds a Princeton doctorate in
sociology--has a long history of social mobilisation. Six months ago,
the New Left Review published an engaging interview that explored his
political trajectory, including an important break with the Communist
Party of the Philippines (http://www.newleftreview.net/NLR25004.shtml).
What are the main arguments for deglobalization? The book opens by
arguing, tightly and persuasively, that the existing world system is
untenable, on several grounds captured by the first chapter's main
subheadings: multilateralism in disarray; the crisis of the neoliberal
order; the corporation under question; the degeneration of liberal
democracy; the specter of global deflation; the rise of the
(anticapitalist) movement; September 11; and "imperial overstretch".
Bello closes the introductory chapter with a hint that "progressive
responses are coming together under the canopy of the Porto Alegre
process"--though here the argument becomes distressingly vague,
particularly in relation to previous traditions of anticapitalism.
Analytically, Bello is influenced by Robert Brenner's two major marxist
studies of intercapitalist competition, resulting systemic overcapacity
and declining profitability: "The Economics of Global Turbulence" in New
Left Review, May/June 1998 and "The Boom and the Bubble" published by
Verso last year. But Bello hesitates to more forcefully ground his anti-
capitalism, beyond the coy signals and codewords.
Instead, Bello's great strength is the lucidity of a largely
institutional critique. Although the second chapter reviews the half-
hearted anti- imperialism of Third World governments through the 1970s
and the subsequent rightwing reaction that has left most Southern
leaders mere lackeys of Washington, it is a journalistic approach. (In
contrast, I had hoped for something approaching the theoretical clarity
that makes, for example, Robert Biel's book "The New Imperialism",
published by Zed in 2000, so rewarding.)
Bello's third chapter adds analyses of the World Bank, IMF and WTO. The
fourth shows how these organizations--and global capitalism more
generally--came to suffer a late 1990s legitimacy crisis. He demolishes
both the actual "vicissitudes of reform" (Chapter Five) and the main
bourgeois proposals for future restructuring of global economic
governance, by commentators ranging from the UN to the Meltzer
Commission to Bretton Woods System revivalists to the recently-
convicted insider trader George Soros (Chapter Six).
Then comes "The alternative: Deglobalization" in Chapter Seven.
Although the book is short, it is sad that only 11 pages carry the
concrete strategic options for the anticapitalist movement, because they
are worthy of amplification. Bello's description--"I am not talking
about withdrawing from the international economy. I am speaking about
reorienting our economies from production for export to production for
the local market"--recalls the way, more than a decade ago, Samir Amin
described his own conception of deglobalization: "Delinking is not
synonymous with autarky, but rather with the subordination of external
relations to the logic of internal development... Delinking implies a
'popular' content, anti-capitalist in the sense of being in conflict
with the dominant capitalism, but permeated with the multiplicity of
divergent interests."
But this begs the question of whether to conceptualise the problem as
one of deep-seated tendencies towards the commodification of everything
under capitalist relations of production, or simply pernicious
globalists and hostile, excessively powerful institutions. Indeed the
weakest possible conception of deglobalization is Bello's suggestion at
the 2002 World Social Forum that, as one option, we seek to reduce
existing neoliberal institutions to "just another set of actors
coexisting with and being checked by other international organizations,
agreements, and regional groupings. These would include such diverse
actors and institutions as UNCTAD, multilateral environmental
agreements, the ILO, the EU, and evolving trade blocs such as Mercosur
in Latin America, SAARC in South Asia, SADC in Southern Africa, and a
revitalized ASEAN in Southeast Asia. More space, more flexibility, more
compromise--these should be the goals of the Southern agenda and the
civil society effort to build a new system of global economic
governance."
Most anyone involved in local struggles in which these institutions play
a role know them to be part of the problem, not the solution, as
currently constituted. Thus Bello has come under sharp criticism from
the left (e.g., Alex Callinicos, Victor Wallis and Ray Kiely), and for
good reason in view of some past and ongoing advocacy gaffes:
* two years ago he advanced the idea that the international Left could
"unite" (sic) with Republicans against the World Bank and IMF--which may
have been merely a mistake in wording (if he meant simple tactical
convergence), but which says volumes about clarity on alliances;
* in "Deglobalization", he suggests "a demand that has potential to
unite a broad front of people is that of converting [the IMF] into a
research agency"--this, after Bello has demolished the IMF, in "The
Future in the Balance", for stupidity and blindness when it came to East
Asia's crisis; and
* he also remarks in passing that deglobalization will entail more
"microcredit schemes such as the Grameen Bank"--perhaps unaware that in
late 2001 the Wall Street Journal wrote that, "To many, Grameen proves
that capitalism can work for the poor as well as the rich" but then had
to unhappily concede how Grameen's recent "steep losses" and unethical
accounting practices had left the international microcredit industry
"alarmed" (in spite of Grameen's more assertive debt collection method:
removing tin roofs from delinquent women's houses).
These may be picky, outdated and largely semantic points. (On
alliances, for instance, Bello and "Future in the Balance" chapter
coauthor Anuradha Mittal blasted the AFL-CIO and some environmentalists
for their "Faustian bargain" with the xenophobic right at the time of
the Chinese accession to permanent normal trading nation status with the
US.)
Indeed, Bello completely convinces me with the more radical components
of the strategy, especially "deconstruction" techniques to defund and
disempower global capitalist institutions. It was, in particular, his
shift towards advocating the abolition of the World Bank in April 2000
that helped most to provide intellectual buttressing for the great
militancy witnessed in that year's Washington and Prague protests.
But for the sake of intra-movement discussions, is there not a more
expansive way to address deglobalization, by departing from dual-
reformist notions of globalized-regulation and utopian-localization
strategies? Would it be so difficult for intellectual leaders like Bello
to mention the prospect of revolution--namely, defense of a takeover and
total transformation of state power, in the manner carried out so often
historically, but so rarely taken to fruition?
Wouldn't nurturing the economy and society of such a radical Third
Worldist state presume the expropriation of key local/national assets
and an immediate rejigging of the local/national economy towards meeting
needs which had not been met previously? Would this revolutionary state
not also automatically reject the World Bank/IMF and WTO, the
French/British water companies, the international property rights
restrictions on medicines, and most other international capitalist
relationships, as a short-medium term strategy? In turn, would this not
require capital controls, default on the odious debts left by previous
regimes, and import/export management (of a very different type than was
practiced under previous bourgeois Third World nationalist regimes)?
Such a project--which is not, as Amin puts it, synonymous with autarky
along the lines of old Albania, Burma or North Korea--will necessitate
breaking economic linkages to the worst forces of global finance,
commerce, investment and capitalist culture. This could be one half of
the future of the idea of deglobalization.
The other half is the struggle to implement "decommodification" at home
by way of transitional demands flowing directly from organic social and
labour struggles. Some of the most exciting in my hometown of
Johannesburg involve the battles over access to electricity, water,
land, housing, food and anti-retroviral drugs--topics for future updates
because with my remaining words I want to testify to applied
deglobalization activities that Bello and the Thai progressive eco-
social movements are engaged in.
When I visited Bangkok a couple of weeks ago, I witnessed the sort of
gathering that should really worry the international and Thai ruling
elites: a seminar in which, as the year drew to a close, 70 invigorated
labour, community, radical environmental, feminist and Trotskyist
activists came together for strategic debate in two languages, hosted by
Focus on the Global South-ironically, located within the country's most
bourgeois university, Chulalongkorn.
The same week, two combative protests unfolded: one was the heightening
of pressure on the ghastly prime minister, Thaksin Shinawatra, by
victims of the infamous Pak Mool dam project. Protesters had occupied
space outside Government House until this week, when they were finally
forced back to the hills by increasing state brutality, divide-and-
conquer strategies, and paramilitary thugs who have destroyed the Pak
Mool peasants' temporary dwellings on two occasions. But the anti-dam
activists certainly seem to have won hearts and minds across Thailand,
and their activism has compelled Thaksin to consider writing off the
hydropower project--though the battle is far from over.
The second was an amazing demonstration on December 20 during a Thai-
Malaysia cabinet meeting at a luxury hotel in the southern town of Hat
Yai. A thousand activists protested an ecologically-damaging Petronas
gas pipeline between the two countries. As they sat down to eat and pray
in an area that Thaksin's main assistant had approved as a green zone,
hundreds were clubbed by the police. Leaders were jailed and several
dozen people (including police) were hospitalized in the ensuing melee.
The Thai Forum of the Poor and Asian Forum for Human Rights and
Development were among groups offering solidarity.
These activists, amongst whom are the tough young staff at Focus
(admirably connected into a variety of struggles across Southeast and
South Asia), look up to Walden Bello for inspiration. Minor cavils
aside, I certainly do too.
* This column originally appeared in ZNet Commentaries, at
http://www.zmag.org. Patrick Bond -- pbond@sn.apc.org -- teaches at the
University of the Witwatersrand, and is author of the recent books
"Against Global Apartheid", "Zimbabwe's Plunge", and "Unsustainable
South Africa".
* Focus on Trade, Number 84, January 2003
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/109140?language=es
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