|
Archives
Groovy stuff to listen to! Audio from the action Sounds from the street The poverty gap in Cancun When you want someone to wipe away the teargas... Stories from Mexico Excellent radio Voices from the Phillipines and India Listen to Vandana Shiva
Interesting weblogs
Powered by
Movable Type 3.2 |
August 29, 2003Cancun preparesI've been here in Cancun for about a week and a half now, working on preparation for our work here. Meanwhile, I've had the fantastic opportunity to settle into life here, and to watch the developments throughout the region toward the WTO meeting. The daily paper (Por Esto!) has a daily countdown toward the start of the meeting. We're down to 12 days now. I haven't picked up today's paper yet, but yesterday's paper stated that about 50,000 protesters are anticipated, arriving from all over Mexico as well as the US, Canada, Europe, and other countries. Alas, one person unable to attend is Jose Bove, the French leader of farmers and an outspoken critic of the WTO. He has been denied permission to leave France to travel to Cancun for the meeting. There is a committee here called the Comite de Bienvenida Cancun, which will facilitate alternative forums and marches in Cancun, working closely with protest groups. In yesterday's paper, there was discussion of some of these groups considering whether to attempt to bring the protest to the site of the WTO ministerial meeting. There will be barricades and multiple security zones manned by police and military units set up to prevent protesters from entering anywhere close to the vicinity of the meeting. The protests are supposed to be held downtown, 9km or more away from the meeting. Apparently, there is consideration of that plan being violated. I expect the police forces will react strongly if that happens. Every day, more fences are erected. Every day, there are more security guards. The convention center now has metal detectors and teams of security workers searching bags of everyone entering the venue. There are security workers in vigilance roles everywhere around, watching for any sign of suspicious activity. In the Sunday paper, there was an article reporting the discovery of hidden cameras and microphones in the Comite de Bienvenida Cancun office. Apparently, various protest groups here are being spied upon. I can only assume that we too are being watched. All of this is fascinating to me, and it makes me wonder if the delegates to the WTO ministerial meeting ever think much about the fact that although they claim to lead the world's trade laws, they find it necessary to erect such massive protection from the very people they claim to lead. Hmmm... My current reading material is "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy", by Greg Palast. Every time I read another chapter, my commitment to our work here only grows more steadfast. The WTO is out of control, and unresponsive to the needs of the very people it seeks to lead. We're here to encourage the WTO to listen! Cheers, - Fred Posted by at August 29, 2003 08:17 PMComments
Walden Bello of Focus on the Global South had this to say to the Mexican government recently : "You should not worry about us, since we come simply to defend our ideas and our rights. You should worry, instead, about defending Mexican sovereignty from the security forces of the United States during the meeting." For more see http://www.alternatives.ca/article775.html We must work for the freedom of evry nation Posted by: Dr. Mahboob Hossain at August 30, 2003 01:56 PM |