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Focus On The Corporation
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
The Global Justice Movement: Alive and Kicking
Since September 11, the media have rushed to write obituaries for the
movement against corporate globalization.
Don't believe everything you read.
The movement is alive and kicking.
While media commentators have rushed to bury the global justice movement,
the many strands of the movement against corporate globalization have been
busy organizing, campaigning, lobbying, demonstrating--and, frequently,
winning.
* As the world's trade ministers huddled in Doha, Qatar, last month in an
effort to fashion agreement to launch a new round of World Trade
Organization (WTO) negotiations, activists around the world demonstrated
against the trade organization. In place of a new round of negotiations,
the protesters demanded the WTO's power be curtailed or the institution
abolished altogether.
In the United States, demonstrators hit the streets in Washington DC,
Chicago, Harrisburg, Madison, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco,
Sacramento, Seattle, and other cities.
Even more impressively, protests and meetings were held across the
globe--in Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada (in a
dozen cities), the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany (in
more than two dozen towns), Honduras, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Italy,
Japan, Lebanon, Malaysia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway,
the Philippines, Russia, Slovakia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey and the UK. In Thailand, more than 1,500 farmers,
union members and HIV/AIDS activists called for the WTO to get out of
agriculture and medicines.
* In Doha itself, the campaign to promote access to essential medicines in
poor countries scored a significant victory. Fortified by protests in
recent years from HIV/AIDS activists and a torrent of technical information
from advocacy groups, the developing countries extracted from the rich
countries a pledge that "the TRIPS Agreement [the WTO's intellectual
property agreement] does not and should not prevent Members from taking
measures to protect public health." All WTO countries joined in
"affirm[ing] that the Agreement can and should be interpreted and
implemented in a manner supportive of WTO Members' right to protect public
health and, in particular, to promote access to medicines for all."
This declaration will provide developing countries with the political space
they need to begin introducing generic versions of on-patent medicines,
including drugs to treat HIV/AIDS. Because generics are priced dramatically
below the brand-name companies' products, the result may be that millions
gain access to life-saving treatment they would otherwise be denied.
* On November 13, a coalition of environmental organizations, including
Forest Ethics and the Dogwood Alliance, coordinated a day of action against
Staples, featuring more than 200 demonstrations at Staples stores. The
protesters demanded the company stop selling paper made from endangered
forests and switch to recycled sources.
Staples--which, according to the environmental groups, says that 97 percent
of the paper it sells come from forests--has responded to the Stop Staples
campaign by introducing some recycled paper lines in its stores and
sponsoring America Recycles Day.
The message from activists: "Staples must get out of the business of
destroying forests," says Forest Ethics' Todd Paglia. "Putting a couple new
recycled products on the shelves and buying their way into America Recycles
Day doesn't save forests."
* On November 20, thousands massed in the streets of Ottawa for a militant
demonstration against the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.
Following September 11, the two institutions canceled the meetings they had
scheduled for late September in Washington DC--where they would have been
greeted by tens of thousands of demonstrators demanding open meetings, debt
cancellation for poor countries, an end to structural adjustment, and the
elimination of lending for socially and environmentally dangerous projects,
like oil, mining, gas, and large dams.
When the institutions rescheduled scaled-down meetings with little notice,
activists in Ottawa mobilized on the fly--again showing that the proponents
of corporate globalization that there is nowhere they can hide. When they
meet, the people will take to the streets.
This is just a small sampling of the global justice movement's
accomplishments in the last month.
The tens of thousands who turn out for its major demonstrations are just
the most visible manifestation of a movement that continues to gain
strength. The global justice movement is a majoritarian movement, in the
United States and around the world. There will be more major mobilizations
in the months and years ahead, but there will also be more coordinated
international days of action, more boycotts, more pressure campaigns, more
lobbying--and more victories. Not only does this movement have staying
power, it is going to win.
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor and co-director Essential Action.
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