THE NUMBER OF ACTIVISTS FOR THE GREAT EUROPEAN PROTEST AGAINST GLOBALIZATION, TAKING PLACE IN PRAGUE ON 26.09.2000, IS INCREASING.
Activists Gear Up for Europe's Biggest Anti-Globalisation Protests
By Gumisai Mutume
WASHINGTON, Sep 18 (IPS) p Memories of last year's anti-
globalisation
protests at the World Trade Organisation summit and at the Spring
meetings
of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund will be re-lived on
the
streets of Prague at the end of this month with a series of
demonstrations
against the two Bretton Woods institutions.
The protests, being billed as the biggest anti-globalisation
demonstrations
Europe has ever seen, will climax in what the government expects to
be
violent confrontations on the narrow streets of the Czech capital on
Sep. 26.
Unlike the protests at the annual Spring meetings of the Bank and IMF
in
April, the Prague demonstrations are expected to be more organised
and will
be supported by similar actions in many capitals of the world as the
voices
against corporate globalisation rise.
''Our aim is to amplify, not to speak for, but to amplify the voices
of the
people of global south in places where they are not able to be
present, as
in Prague,'' says Njoki Njoroge Njehu director of the 50 Years is
Enough
Campaign. ''Despite reports to the contrary, the global coalition
against
globalisation is getting stronger.''
The 50 Years is Enough Campaign, a US-based network for economic
justice is
part of the global movement that is organising the Sep.
26 protests during the World Bank and IMF annual meetings.
The Sep. 19-28 meetings are being held amid growing calls from civil
society organisations, trade unions and student movements for a
reform of
the operations of the Bretton Woods institutions and a suspension of
their
policies in developing countries.
The Bank and IMF will bring together more than 18,000 bankers,
finance
ministers and government officials. Some 20,000 protestors are
expected to
crowd the narrow streets of Prague, some demanding wider reforms from
the
Bretton Woods institutions, others, their dissolution.
The international non-governmental groups behind the 50 Years is
Enough
Campaign are pushing seven demands on the Bank and IMF.
These are:
- the cancellation of all debts owed them by poor nations
- an immediate halt to the imposition of economic austerity measures
and
the abandonment of all versions of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) initiative offering relief in exchange for policy reforms
- the acceptance of responsibility for the disastrous impact of the
structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) and other macro- economic
reforms
on the economy of poor countries
- the payment of reparations to people relocated and harmed by large
projects they have funded such as dams
- that the World Bank cease giving advice through the International
Finance
Corporation to advance the goals associated with corporate
globalisation,
advice such as privatisation
- that Bank and IMF officials complicit in abetting corruption be
prosecuted and that the institutions involved provide compensation
for
resources stolen or damaged
- that the future existence, structure and policies of international
financial institutions be determined through a democratic and
transparent
process.
Some 11,000 policemen will be deployed to deal with the 215
demonstrations
that officials have so far been informed of. A further 5,000 military
personnel and special police units will provide backup. The Czech
government has also bought more than 200 new bullet-proof limousines.
In what are seen as attempts to pre-empt and diffuse the protests,
there
are indications that the Bank and IMF will offer developing countries
significant measures easing the conditions for debt relief to double
the
number of qualifying countries by year-end.
The proposals, expected to be announced in Prague, would also
simplify the
requirements for countries that have already qualified under the
enhanced
HIPC,enabling these nations to start using their portion of the 17
billion
dollars in debt relief. The countries that have already qualified
include
Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Honduras, Mauritania,
Mozambique,
Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda.
Bank officials in Washington refused to comment on the details of the
plans.
Rich nations pledged in Cologne, Germany at the G7 summit last year
to
forgive the debts of at least 20 countries by the end of this year.
The
process has, however, been bogged down in red-tape and tough
conditions
linked to structural adjustment programmes.
The pre-requisite for qualifying for the enhanced HIPC initiative is
that
countries draw up highly complex Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers.
Some
countries say they do not have the resources to do so.
It is expected that less stringent conditions would be demanded from
another 14 countries including Cameroon, Chad, Gambia, Guinea,
Guyana,
Guinea-Bissau, Malawi, Nicaragua, Rwanda and Zambia, to enable them
to
qualify within the next three months.
The Bank and Fund meetings are also expected to endorse a series of
new
poverty alleviation programmes, allocate more funds to fighting AIDS
and to
the education and health sectors of poor nations. The World Bank is
also
expected to announce a new low- interest multi-million dollar fund
for poor
nations.
Last week the IMF board agreed to revamp its loan programmes to
shorten the
time countries may hold on to certain loans and to raise interest
rates to
discourage over-use, a condition that has been pushed by the US
treasury.
While the main anti-globalisation demonstrations will be taking place
on
the streets of Prague, mass action will also take place in many major
cities around the world.
''The message is that we demand that the glo will protest genetic
engineering and big international seed monopolies and workers will
rally
against privatisation.
Thea Lee of AFL-CIO, a confederation of US labour unions, says
because
there is a connection between the struggles of workers in developing
countries living under SAPs and workers in industrialised nations,
AFL-CIO
will join the Sep. 26 activities.
''We cannot win at home if we cannot stand for worker's rights around
the
world,'' says Lee.
20/09/2000