Third PGA conference (part 2 of 2)

From: Per I. Mathisen (Per.Inge.Mathisen@idi.ntnu.no)
Date: Tue Apr 17 2001 - 13:56:53 MET DST

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    [If you didn't receive the first part of this call for the second
    international conference of PGA, please visit www.agp.org or contact
    pga@agp.org]

    APPENDIX 1: Brief history of Peoples' Global Action
    ###################################################

    PGA has been one of the principal instigators of the new global, radical,
    anticapitalist movement which today is challenging the legitimacy of global
    governance institutions. Demonstrations and 'countersummits' during
    international reunions already have a long tradition. The originality of
    PGA has been to call for Global Days of Action (GDA), local actions all
    around the world during these events, so that the local and daily
    resistance of grass roots movements be recognised as a common and radical
    refusal of the existing economic order and as the real force capable of
    changing the course of history and proposing local alternatives. In less
    than three years, this new movement - by demonstrating in the streets and
    breaking the law - has largely delegitimised WTO/IMF/WB and allowed popular
    organisations to be heard. The NGOs, etc., that had claimed to speak in the
    name of 'civil society' have had to take more radical positions. The WTO,
    IMF and WB have lost important ideological battles and have been obliged to
    slow down their offensive.

    Paradoxically, the growing success of these calls for local mobilisations
    (there were demonstrations in 110 cities around the world during the Global
    Day of Action of September 26, during the IMF/WB assembly in Prague), by
    spurring a new anticapitalist movement in the North, has also multiplied
    the capacity for central mobilisations in the places where the summits of
    global institutions take place. At the epicentre of each GDA there have
    been ever larger and more determined mobilisations. Adopting the
    confrontational perspective and forms of action advocated by PGA, these
    central demonstrations first tarnished and finally seriously perturbed
    various assemblies of the 'empire': in Geneva ('riots' during the 2nd WTO
    summit in May 1998), London (paralysis of the financial centre, June 18,
    1999), Seattle (blockade of the 3rd WTO summit, November 30, 1999) and
    Prague (blockade and hurried adjournment of the IMF/WB assembly, 26
    September 2000).

    That is not to say that these events were directly organised by PGA. That
    would be to misunderstand the originality and the force of a process that
    develops as a network, with more and more connected centres of initiative
    that maintain their complete autonomy and define their own identity. The
    initiative for issuing the calls for action and organising the central
    blockades came each time from an autonomous group that was connected to the
    network (Reclaim the Streets in London, Direct Action Network in Seattle,
    Solidaritŕ-INPEG in Prague, etc), calls that were then relayed by the
    convenors and the rest of the network.

    The idea of PGA has not only created a network capable of coordinated
    action. It has also contributed to triggering a much larger movement. This
    year, no institution of global governance (Climate conference, G8, ASEAN,
    the World Economic Forum, NATO, TABD, etc.) could meet anywhere without a
    coalition of local movements coming together to attack them. As a
    consequence, some of these institutions are starting to face serious
    problems to find a city to meet, since nobody wants to cover the repression
    costs and the damage of public image that they bring with them. This larger
    movement, evolving spontaneously, has assumed some of the functions that
    PGA tried to assure before (see for example the role of the activist
    information network Indymedia). However, within this larger movement, PGA
    continues to offer an essential space for coordination and political
    debate. A common space where questions like these can be discussed: Global
    Days of Action have been an incredible success, but what are their
    limitations? What opportunities have they opened? What kind of
    counter-offensive are they triggering from the side of the state, and how
    can we neutralise it? What is the next step?

    The trepidating history of PGA

    In August 1997, representatives of grassroots movements from the south and
    north of the world met to prepare resistance against the 2nd ministerial
    conference of the WTO (that was going to take place in may 98 in Geneva
    with the objective of commemorating the 50th anniversary of GATT), and to
    develop tools that would give continuity to the communication and
    coordination among those who fight against the WTO and other 'free' trade
    agreements. The meeting took place in El Indiano (Spain) immediately after
    the Second Intercontinental Meeting for Humanity and against Neoliberalism
    organised by the European Zapatista support network. At that meeting the
    idea of PGA as a network-process was born and it was decided to convene a
    conference to create it in Geneva in February 98.

    Over 300 representatives from the grassroots movements of 71 countries and
    all continents met in Geneva from 23 to 25 February for the founding
    conference of the PGA. Teachers on hunger strikes against the privatisation
    of education in Argentina met with women organised in the struggle against
    slave labour in the 'maquilas' in Mexico, Bangladesh, El Salvador and
    Nicaragua; peasants fighting against globalisation in India, the
    Philippines, Brasil, Estonia, Norway, Honduras, France, Spain, Switzerland,
    Senegal, Mozambique, Toga, Peru, Bolivia, Columbia and many other
    countries; Ogonis, Maoris, Mayas, Aymaras and other indigenous peoples
    fighting for their cultural rights and their physical survival; women and
    men fighting against patriarchal societies; students fighting against
    nuclear energy and the repression of strikers in Ukraine and South Korea;
    Canadian postal workers fighting against the privatisation of postal
    services; militant protesters against the business corporations in the
    United States; ecologists, the unemployed, fisherfolk, anti-racists,
    pacifists... This world meeting of men and women working in grassroots
    movements was an incredible experience which gave us energy, hope and
    determination. Despite great material differences, the fights are
    increasingly similar in every part of the global empire, setting the stage
    for a new and stronger sort of solidarity. This conference was a good
    example of this new form of solidarity, since it was made possible largely
    thanks to the social centres and 'alternative' scene in Geneva.

    The first Global Day of Action against 'free' trade took place during the
    G8 Summit in Birmingham and the WTO Ministerial Conference in Geneva, and
    they were a great success: over 65 demonstrations (including one of several
    hundred thousand farmers in India), actions and street parties took place
    all over the world from the 16th to 20th of May in 29 countries; In Geneva
    itself, about 10,000 people mobilised in the biggest demonstration of
    solidarity in many years. Demonstrations and civil disobedience stole the
    media spotlight from the summit despite massive arrests.

    At a meeting of the convenors' committee (Finland, September 98), the
    second conference of the PGA was programmed to take place in India several
    months before the third Ministerial Conference of the WTO in Seattle (USA).
    At this meeting, the convenors also endorsed two other large projects for
    the first half of 1999: the Inter-Continental Caravan for Solidarity and
    Resistance (from 22 May to 20 June) and the Global Day of Action against
    the financial centres on June 18th.

    The Intercontinental Caravan for solidarity and resistance brought together
    in Western Europe 450 representatives of grassroots movements from the
    South and East of the world. The majority came from India (farmers'
    organisations, fisherfolk, the indigenous Adivasis and anti-dam movements).
    There were also representatives of the 'Sem Terra' landless farmers'
    movement of Brazil, Zapatista support groups from Mexico, the landless
    women's movement of Bangladesh, the mothers of Plaza de Mayo from
    Argentina, the Mapuche people of Chile, the Process of Black Communities
    >from Columbia, environmental organisations from the Ukraine, human rights
    organisations from Nepal, etc. The groups that received the Caravan in
    Europe included organisations of the unemployed, groups fighting genetic
    engineering, squatted social centres, feminist organisations, etc., who
    invited the caravan participants to over 12 countries.

    Actions during the Caravan included demonstrations against the headquarters
    of multinational groups such as Novartis, Monsanto, Cargill, Nestlč and
    others; against detention centres for migrants; against the NATO base in
    Aviano (from which they were bombing Serbia, excepting the day when it was
    taken over by the caravan); against the headquarters of institutions such
    as the WTO, NATO, the European Central Bank, the FAO, etc. Direct action
    done during the Caravan included the destruction of two experimental fields
    planted with genetically modified crops and of a the complete collection
    genetically modified rice in a state laboratory, in collaboration with the
    French Peasant Confederation. The Caravan culminated in Cologne for the
    protest against the World Summit on economy, also known as the G8 Summit.

    On June 18th, Global Day of Action against the financial centres, the first
    day of the G8 Summit, more than 50 decentralised actions took place all
    over the world. Movements participating were as diverse as the Chikoko
    Movement of Nigeria (where 10.000 people blocked the Shell building with a
    'carnival of the oppressed'), the Pakistani trade unions (which were
    terribly repressed, the organisers were tortured and charged with treason),
    several social movements of Mexico (who picketed the stock exchange), and a
    wide-ranging group of social movements in London (where 10.000 people took
    over the financial centre and paralysed it the entire day), openly
    demonstrating their refusal of the G8 regime. Such a co-ordinated
    resistance in 41 countries showed that the process of convergence of
    different resistances was gaining strength and speed.

    In August 99 the second PGA conference took place in Bangalore (India).
    This conference changed the character of PGA by broadening the focus of its
    activities. Until then, the identity of PGA had been defined by its
    opposition to neoliberal institutions and treaties. In Bangalore it was
    decided by unanimity to redefine it as anticapitalist network, a space to
    communicate and coordinate globally not only against the treaties and
    institutions that regulate the capitalist development, but also around the
    social and environmental problems that it provokes. The conference also
    showed enthusiasm for the proposals of global action on November 30th 99
    and Mayday 2000.

    Already before the Bangalore conference, when the WTO announced that it
    would hold its 3rd summit in Seattle, various groups from Vancouver to Los
    Angeles (several of which had participated in earlier GDAs and were
    inspired by the success of the demonstration of June 18 in the City of
    London) formed the Direct Action Network (DAN). Adopting the principles of
    PGA, they announced their intention to block the opening of the summit. On
    November 30 1999, 10 000 young activists successfully blocked the 13
    accesses to the summit. Hundreds of trade unionists decided to disobey the
    orders of their reformist bureaucracies and joined the direct actions and
    the civil disobedience. This historical success, that resulted in the
    categorical failure of the WTO conference, gave new hope and determination
    to people all over the world, who thus discovered that there is also
    resistance in the heart of the 'empire'. Simultaneously, demonstrations
    occurred in over 60 different cities around the world.

    For the Assembly of the IMF/WB in Prague, a call for global action and for
    a massive central demonstration on September 26th was distributed by Czech
    organisations which had participated in previous GDAs. The European network
    that was formed by the Inter-Continental Caravan and the PGA convenors of
    each continent seconded this call, which was echoed by demonstrations in
    110 different cities of the world. In Prague, thousands came from as far
    away as Spain, Italy, Norway, Poland, Greece and Turkey. On S26, the
    opening day of the summit, 15 to 20 thousand demonstrators besieged the
    assembly for hours. Delegates attempting to leave were injured and were
    finally evacuated by underground. The second day many preferred to stay in
    the safety of their hotels while the remainder voted to cancel the third
    day of meetings... This victory, won in the face of 11000 police, also
    marked the fall of the Berlin wall for the anticapitalist movement. A new
    generation of activists from the Czech republic, Poland, Hungary, etc. said
    what they thought of their supposed 'free world', ten years after freeing
    themselves from the communist oppression.

    Parallel to these activities, the idea of PGA has materialised itself in
    the development of links between movements, organisations and activists at
    regional level. A regional meeting of Latin-American social movements was
    held in April 2000 in Nicaragua. A South Asian meeting took place in
    Bangladesh in September 2000. A gender workshop and an emergency meeting on
    the Colombia Plan also brought together representatives of Andean and
    Central American movements in November 2000. Regional meetings are soon
    going to be held in Europe (24-25 March 2001 in Milano) and North America
    (1-3 June 2001 in Massachusetts).

    (For more information on PGA activities, see www.agp.org)

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    APPENDIX 2: Convenors of the Third International Conference of PGA
    ##################################################################

    The current composition of the convenors committee is:

    * CONFEUNASSC-CNC (Confederación Única Nacional de Afiliados al Seguro
    Social Campesino - Consejo Nacional Campesino): Ecuatorian peasant movement
    that protagonised several uprisings in a country severely affected by
    neoliberal policies. <ssc-cnc@campesinos-flmgt.org.ec>
    * MJK (Movimiento de la Juventud Kuna): Since decades, one of the
    organisational backbones of the Kuna, an indigenous people of Panama with a
    long history of resistance that won autonomy early in the century.
    <mjkuna@hotmail.com>
    * FNT: Union federation from Nicaragua that includes the Sandinist central
    and other unions. <mujercst@nicarao.org.ni>
    * ONECA/ODECO: Organisation of the descendants of enslaved Africans from
    Central America who created free communities in the rainforests. Part of
    the Afro-American Network, present in almost all Latin American countries.
    <odeco@caribe.hn>
    * Aoteoroa Educators: training branch of the inter-tribal Maori
    independence movement, called Tino-Rangatiratanga. <teanau@tki.org.nz>
    * Krishok Federation: federation of peasants and landless agricultural
    workers from Bangladesh, that has since decades fought against the green
    revolution technologies introduced by the agribusiness and against
    mega-projects of capitalist development. <gbs@bangla.net>
    * MONLAR - Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform from Sri
    Lanka. Has fought for years against the World Bank/IMF policies in that
    country. <monlar@sltnet.lk>
    * Ya Basta!: One of the strongest links in the Zapatista support network,
    also very active in the struggle against NATO imperialism in the Balkans
    and for the rights of illegal immigrants and against GMOs. They have
    participated massively in the recent mobilizations against globalization in
    Europe (Prague, Nice, etc.) <yabasta@tin.it>

    Acting convenors:

    Provisional acting convenors for North America are the Tampa Bay Action
    Group <oneworldnow@att.net> and the Convergence des Luttes
    Anti-Capitalistes from Montreal <clac@tao.ca> and <m205526@er.uqam.ca>; the
    final convenors will be elected when the North American PGA meeting takes
    place. Similarly, Rainbow Keepers <rk@lavrik.ryazan.ru> (a network of
    radical anarcho-ecologist action in Eastern Europe and the former soviet
    republics in Asia) will act as convenors for Eastern Europe and Eurasia.

    There are currently no convenors for Africa and East Asia. This is due to
    problems in the convening process for the 2nd PGA conference, and this
    situation should get corrected at the 3rd conference.

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    APPENDIX 3: PGA Manifesto
    #########################

    (Due to its length, it is not included in the email version of this
    brochure. You can find it in the web page, at www.???????????????)

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    APPENDIX 4: Organisational principles of the Peoples' Global Action (PGA)
    #########################################################################

    1. The PGA is an instrument for co-ordination, not an organisation. Its
    main objectives are:
    (i) Inspiring the greatest possible number of persons and organisations to
    act against corporate domination through non-violent civil disobedience and
    people-oriented constructive actions.
    (ii) Offering an instrument for co-ordination and mutual support at global
    level for those resisting corporate rule and the capitalist development
    paradigm.
    (iii) Giving more international projection to the struggles against
    economic liberalisation and global capitalism.

    2. The organisational philosophy of the PGA is based on decentralisation
    and autonomy. Hence, central structures are minimal.

    3. The PGA has no membership.

    4. The PGA does not have and will not have a juridical personality. It will
    not be legalised or registered in any country. No organisation or person
    represents the PGA, nor does the PGA represent any organisation or person.

    5. There will be conferences of the PGA approximately every two years.
    These conferences will take place about three months before the WTO
    Ministerial Conferences. The functions of these conferences will be:
    (i) Updating the manifesto (if necessary)
    (ii) Advancing in the process of co-ordination at global level of the
    resistance against "free" trade
    (iii) Co-ordinating decentralised actions parallel to the following WTO
    Ministerial Conference

    6. The conferences of the PGA will be convened by a Convenors' Committee
    conformed by representative organisations and movements. The composition of
    this committee must show a regional balance, and a balance regarding the
    areas of work of the organisations and movements that conform it. The local
    organisers will be part of the committee.
    This committee will fulfil the following tasks:
    (i) Determining the programme of the conference
    (ii) Deciding which organisations can send delegates to the conference
    (iii) Deciding about the use of resources; especially, deciding which
    organisations will receive help to pay the travel expenses to attend the
    conference
    (iv) Advising the local organisers in technical and organisational questions
    (v) Interpreting the manifesto if this would be necessary, deciding which
    publications can be printed under the name of the PGA, and deciding about
    the content of the information tools of the PGA (see point 7)
    The committee cannot speak in the name of the PGA.
    In each conference of the PGA the Convenors' Committee of the next
    conference will be elected. The Convenors' Committee must change 100% of
    its membership in each conference. The old Convenors' Committee will choose
    a small group that will act as advisers of the new committee. This advisory
    group will not have decision-making power.

    7. The PGA should have several information tools, including a regular
    bulletin, a web page and other publications, which will be done voluntarily
    by organisations and individuals supportive of the aims of the PGA. Their
    elaboration will take place in a decentralised and rotative manner. Before
    these informative materials appear under the name of the PGA, their
    contents have to be revised by the Convenors' Committee (including the
    modifications of the web page). The committee can make the publication of
    these materials conditional on the modification or removal of part of its
    contents, if these are in conflict with the manifesto of the PGA.

    8. The PGA will not have any resources. The funds needed to pay the
    conferences and the information tools will have to be raised in a
    decentralised way. All the funds raised for the conference will be
    administered by the Convenors' Committee. The publications will have to be
    self-financed. The bulletin will be distributed by a network of
    organisations which will also be responsible for collecting subscription
    fees. Any surplus produced by the subscriptions will be used to send the
    bulletin to organisations that cannot afford paying subscription.

    9. The PGA has a rotative secretariat, which changes every year. Each
    Convenors' Committee will decide where the secretariats will be during
    their two-years term.

    10. The conferences of the PGA will not include the discussion of these
    organisational principles in the programme. If there is a concrete request,
    a discussion group on organisational questions will be formed. This
    discussion group will meet parallel to the programme of the conference, to
    elaborate concrete modification proposals which shall be voted upon in the
    plenary.

    11. The PGA hopes that it will inspire the creation of different platforms
    (both regional and issue-based) against "free" trade and the different
    institutions that promote it. There will not be, however, a relationship of
    pertenence between these platforms and the PGA. The platforms will hence be
    completely autonomous.

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