Report from Cancun-We are winning
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We Are Winning
By WRITERS BLOC
www.counterpunch.org/cancun09152003.html
By the time news that negotiations inside the WTO had imploded in the face
of an open and unified insurrection by delegates of the global south, the
party was in full swing. Members of the resistance Peasants from South
Africa, Thailand, Central America and Korea with a large crowd of global
justice activists still high from the success of the previous day's grande
manifestation', danced around the fountain. At kilometer zero, the spot
where Lee Kyung Have fell by his own hand just a few days earlier, ecstatic
celebration mixed with memorial, an American hippie drummer joined the
Korean percussionists. Mexican campesinos sported Korean headbands and a
handsome schoolteacher from Seoul stood slightly apart from the joyous
crowd in dark sunglasses and an embroidered ladies indigenous blouse.
With tears in his eyes, the president of Via Campesino recounted the words
of Lee's daughter when he presented her with a bouquet earlier in the
day."My father is not dead," she said. "He lives in the heart of farmers
allover the world". As people gathered around the memorial that had grown
up at the junction, Cancunensas brought their children forward to light
candles at the memorial, passing vehicles honked their horns in support,and
in some of the weeks most surreal images, truckloads of Policia Federal
gave the thumbs up as local cops tied white flags to the antennas of their
cars.
The previous day, thousands of resisters descended on the newly fortified
security barrier near kilometer zero. Like the initial structure, this
fortification was pulverized by the collective action of the demonstration.
A couple of hundred women first massed along the fence and set about it
with heavy bolt cutters. Mountains of wire were cut free and discarded by
supporters as the women went into the 10 foot deep no man's land, thousands
of riot police pressing at the other side. Bolts and chains which locked
the wall together disappeared in a Fordist destruction line, the chains
worn around the necks of the African women as trophies.
During the gradual escalation of militant activity, Media Benjamin, CEO of
Global Exchange, a San Francisco craft's importer and travel agency, was
spotted on the outskirts of the demonstration. Obviously sensing an
opportunity to increase her product visibility, she, like many other NGO
boosters, crawled out from amongst the WTO delegates to rub elbows with the
resistance. Nowhere to be seen at the second assault was the liberal
mouthpiece and parliamentarian, Tom Haydan who outdid the rightwing media
in his assessment that the movement was split by a mythical debate
over'violence' as a tactic. Nothing could be further from the truth. The
notorious black block, the same ones who keep Hayden awake at
night,displayed a sophisticated and mature reading of the situation. They
worked closely with the women at the front in securing the barricade from
nutcases and provocateurs ensuring the success of the day.
Next up, the Koreans. They had spent the morning weaving rope into long
plaits. These were brought forward and attached to the top of the
barricade. The throng lined up, took the three lines in hand and began to
pull in time with the Korean chants of a work gang. During an incredible
three hours, the barricade was destroyed and removed from the road by the
steady collective action of the crowd. It took several turns and minor
adjustments to tear the wall asunder. At one point, when it was about to
tear into two parts for the first time, several journalists and
photographers were gathered inside the collapsing structure. Warnings to
vacate were given and the work teams paused, breaking the tempo of the
operation. Nevertheless, as the steel caved towards the crowd 2
photographers went arse over tit inside as it rolled. Fortunately the work
gangs were attentive enough that the signal went quickly along the line and
these people were saved from grave injury.
The atmosphere was otherworldly as the mammoth structure began to buckle
and sway, the realization began pass through those assembled that this
thing was really coming down. The crowd was silent as the drummers
accompanied the heaves of those on the ropes and the barricade
disintegrated. It was quickly moved from the road onto the median where
youths mounted it for a better view of the front line, now a small open
space between the riot cops, a throng of cameras, the Koreans and the women
of the movement of the global south.
In an unorthodox but tactically genius move, the crowd, flying high on this
tremendous group achievement, which was ready to storm, to riot, to do
almost anything- instead sat down. There was a ceremony and moment of
silence for comrade Lee, and then the electrifying news that not only had a
group of Korean companeros made it into the convention center, but the
group of 21 developing nations had signed a document refusing the proposals
of the U.S.A and E.U. We are winning.
For days militants had infiltrated the "zona hoteleria" and caused
mayhem,blocking traffic, confronting delegates and being chased around by a
bewildered army of private security, conscripts and military policemen. In
one of the weeks more comical actions, a 'reclaim the beach' party was
reported on breathlessly by network correspondents as a demonstration.Video
footage showed bathers bobbing, and waving while fifty odd security guards
stood sweating on the sand scratching their heads. Due obviously to orders
not to sully the image of the WTO with arrests or blood, these spontaneous
demos would routinely end in a negotiated deal whereby the police would
provide air conditioned coaches back to kilometer zero and parties at the
Korean encampment. This is the real Cancun.
On Sunday night at the fiesta around the memorial to Lee, the mood was
triumphant. People from around the world celebrated the death of the WTO
and the life of Kyung Hae Lee. His death had crystallized something very
important. As one Campesino woman put it, he has given us a great gift; he
has reminded us that the policies of the WTO are a matter of life and
death. 9/15/2003
THE GREENS/EFA IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
PRESS RELEASE - Brussels, 15 September 2003
Greens/EFA welcome opportunity to start again
Cancun collapse is a victory for democracy and developing countries
"After the 'Battle of Seattle' and the distraction of Doha, we now
have the Collapse in Cancun," said Caroline Lucas MEP (Greens - UK),
speaking directly from the scene of the failed WTO ministerial
negotiations. "It is barely believable that the EU and US were still
pursuing their one-sided trade agenda right up until the last minute
despite being given vivid notice by the majority of developing
countries, the Green movement and civil society that they were on a
losing track. Their strategy of overloading the agenda with issues
that only benefited the rich North has now been exposed as a
spectacular failure and has helped to de-rail the WTO. The
democratically expressed wishes of the majority of WTO members have
been upheld at last. The challenge now is to build on the new-found
alliances between developing, least developed and emerging economic
nations and to harness their energies to move towards a truly fair
and democratic trading system."
Sounding a note of caution, Caroline Lucas, who is a member of the
Parliament's delegation to Cancun, added: "There is real concern that
the collapse of the talks - precipitated by the refusal of the
Mexican Chair to extend the negotiations any further - has allowed
the US to avoid any commitment on reducing its cotton subsidies. It
overturns an understanding between the EU and the US that America
would need to further reform its Farm Bill."
Paul Lannoye MEP (Ecolo - BE), also a member of the Parliament's
delegation, called for a complete over-haul of the international
trading system. "Today we have seen a seismic shift in the trade
paradigm. We must applaud the courage of the developing countries in
resisting pressure and winning the right to have their voices heard
and their votes counted. The arrogance of the rich North is
staggering. Responding to a request from four of the world's poorest
countries for a fair deal on primary cotton exports, they refused to
move substantially on eliminating subsidies or applying real
anti-dumping rules. It was an insult. The final straw was the North's
insistence on launching negotiations on at least two of the four
'Singapore issues' as though the prior rejection of these proposals
was merely one of the South's negotiating tactics. We have the
opportunity now to start again. The present corporate-driven WTO
structure is in terminal decline - we need to bury it and create an
entirely new system based on the core values of equity, sustainable
development, fair trade, ecological and social justice. Those are the
trade rules of the future."
For more information contact: Hannes Lorenzen, Adviser on Agriculture
and Rural Development Issues, email [email protected], Tel:
+32-2-2843362
Press Service of the Greens/EFA Group
in the European Parliament
Helmut Weixler
Head of Press Office
EUROPEAN FEDERATION OF GREEN PARTIES
European Parliament - room PHS 2C85
rue Wiertz, 1047 Brussels, Belgium
ph: 32 2 284 51 35, fax : 32 2 284 91 35
Email : [email protected]
www.europeangreens.org