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Tens
of thousands of social activists, unionists, and revolutionaries
converged from across the globe, marched through the heart of the
southern port city of Brazil vowing to resist capitalism, envisioning
another world, at the end of the World Social Forum (Jan 26-31).
Young Andre found a way to combine his subversive zeal with enterprise
- he cashed in on the great guerilla leader from Cuba, Che Guevara,
selling hairbands and T-Shirts with the comrade's picture on them
to the leftists at the forum.
Even
Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez, who recently survived a Washington-backed
coup, proudly wore a Che T-Shirt at the closing ceremony. If Che
is immortal for leftists and oppressed Latin Americans, Chavez is
the present hero of revolutionaries in Brazil as he has challenged
US supremacy.
More than a 100,000people from Africa to the Americas, and Australia
to Europe and Asia, attended the forum to counter what they call
the hegemony of the super powers over third world countries, exercised
through the IMF and World Bank. Reminiscent of Manto's stories and
the stereotypes of Indian art cinema, they all toted handwoven cotton
bags.
Thousands
of students from the west preferred to live in makeshift colourful
tents along the banks of the river Guiba that runs through this
city. The area itself was dubbed "World Social Territory."
"Che
brought about a revolution and created history and we are trying
to re-write it," says Michael Greg, a young participant. Social
activists began protesting against the World Economic Forum at Seattle
in 1999 and came up with the idea of a separate forum.
From 2001 onwards, the World Social Forum has coincided with
the World Economic Forum held in Davos. While the World Economic
Forum advocates free trade, social activists oppose it, arguing
that this would only serve to increase the gulf between the rich
and poor. The activists advocate fair trade policies and the cancellation
of multilateral debt.
The
participation of social activists has increased each year, with
current estimates at 120,000 in Porte Alegre. An estimated nine
million dollars were spent on the forum. Over 5,000 organisations
and social movements participated while 2,000 seminars and workshops
were held on topics ranging from health, environment, education
and poverty to militarisation of societies, free trade and foreign
debt.
The activists protested against the US for its role in Iraq while
Bush was presented as the Hitler of the modern era. Indians criticised
the role of the then ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) at the
time of the Gujarat riots and Palestinian women narrated the horrible
experiences of families living under the shadow of Israeli gunships
in the Palestinian-administered areas in Ramallah and the Gaza strip
Palestinian activists say unemployment has risen by 78 per
cent in the Gaza strip since the start of the latest intifada, and
will increase further because of the wall constructed by Israeli
security forces to stop Palestinians from crossing into Israeli
territory. They say around 4,500 people have been killed, 20 per
cent of them children; 550,000 people have been injured and 250,000
have permanent disabilities.
The Israelis have now uprooted over 100 million olive trees,
the main source of livelihood for thousands of Palestinian families,
on the pretext that children would hide behind them and throw stones
at the Israeli forces. This will leave poverty-stricken families
to die of starvation.
Palestinian women face manifold problems. They go through
tremendous mental trauma after losing children, caring for the disabled
and injured, coping with the loss of husbands and other members
of their families. They watch husbands, fathers and others beaten
by security forces and constantly harassed by the Israeli army at
checkpoints.
The Palestinians drew the world's attention to Israel's madrassas
- their public schooling system and academia. They said almost all
settlers are a product of the public school system, where they are
taught that it is their duty to expand Israeli territory and purge
the region of Arabs. They believe their messiah will come back to
them only when 'unclean elements' are driven out and the Zionists
rule the land.
The Palestinians called for an international boycott of Israeli
academia which they term a pillar of the occupation, as well as
of all products made in Israel.
"I have no tears left to cry with. Others dream of what
their children will grow up to be. I pray all day that my children
live, because I know that in all probability they will die,"says
emotionally charged Miriam Ilwaan. "They accuse us of training
suicide bombers, but Israel security forces are themselves the biggest
recruiters of suicide bombers."
"No other nation on earth has struggled against oppression
the way we have. We do not choose to fight, we choose to live. To
choose to live, we have to fight, even if it takes another 100 years,"
says another Palestinian activist, Hanaan Mukatib.
The activists challenged the New World Order in which US
imperialism was seen as intricately connected to capitalism and
condemned as an evil force perpetuating poverty.
Brazilian President, Lula De Salva, who rose to become president
from being a factory worker, launched a campaign to end poverty
from the world and demanded that world leaders join the fight against
this "curse to humanity."
"Undoubtedly the forum has provided a platform for people
to raise their voice, but most people coming here agree with each
other ideologically. The WSP needs to broaden its horizon,"
says Shibesh Chandra Regmi, a leading social activist from Nepal.
"What matters is whether the message is conveyed to the poor
and oppressed people rather than the rest of us debating their issues."
There was a heated debate
on whether or not the World Social Forum should transform itself
into a partisan movement or be an open space. Many argue that the
World Social Forum should adopt a political stand and become more
action-oriented.
The 19 high-profile activists, most of whom are founders of the
WSF and International Committee (IC) members, presented the World
Social Forum with a blueprint aimed at changing the contours of
the forum.
"It's not possible to continue to speak of 'another world is
possible' if we do not make concrete proposals on how to reach this
other world," the document said.
The points include debt cancellation, adoption of the Tobin tax
on financial money transfers, dismantling of tax havens, the promotion
of equitable forms of trade, a guarantee on the sovereignty of a
country's right to not only be able to produce affordable food for
citizens, but also to police its food supply; the implementation
of anti-discrimination polices against minorities and females, and
the democratisation of international organisations, which would
also include moving the United Nations headquarters far south of
its current New York location.
Among the signatories are Argentinian writer and Nobel Peace Prize-winner
Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Portuguese sociologist Bonventura de Souza
Santos, French editor of Le Monde Diplomatique, Bernard Cassen,
Egyptian economist Samir Amin, U.S. sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein
and Pakistani writer Tariq Ali.
"Being an open space is no longer enough. We must de-romanticise
ourselves and professionalise this movement so that it remains relevant,"
said scholar-activist Walden Bello, who is also the executive director
of the Focus on the Global South, adding that over the last two
years the WSF had encountered problems maintaining its momentum.
As a partisan movement, Bello suggested that the WSF should come
up with resolutions, such as a declaration calling for the dissolution
of the World Trade Organisation, World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. "As long as these centralised dinosaurs control
the global economy, we in the South will not have the space to breathe,"
he said. "How can we defeat globalisation and neo-liberalism
if we don't have strategies?"
Portuguese Nobelfor Laureate for literature José Saramago
called for turning the World Social Forum (WSF) into "an instrument
for action" based on concrete proposals and ideas with broad
support, rather than a place of annual pilgrimage by the Left to
engage in debates on "utopias."
Critics of the proposal for the WSF to become a partisan movement
argued that if the Forum took a political stance, it would be much
more open to attack. According to Chico Whitaker, WSF organising
committee member, the WSF cannot be a partisan movement as the forum's
strength lies in its "being an open space where people can
meet." "The WSF is not a movement with common objectives,"
Whitaker said. The WSF should not come up with strategies, as the
forum does not aim at providing solutions. "Strategies should
be formulated by the organisations themselves, not the WSF."
With loud calls for translating ideas and talk into result-oriented
actions, thousands of activists said goodbye to the World Social
Forum, slogans of changing the world still ringing in the air. Andre,
a roadside poster and bookseller who works hard to sell his Che
posters and motorcycle diaries, says, "I am a revolutionary
but realistic as well. That is why I sell these posters. Old comrades
say every revolution stems from idealism but if these revolutionaries
want to change the world they need to be practical as well. We live
in the 21st century and not in Che's romantic days."
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