[Ccpg] [starhawk] Our report on organizing for Cancun Mexico on September 10-15.
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Sun Aug 17 21:09:31 PDT 2003
The next ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization will take
place in Cancun, Mexico on September 10-15. From the 8th on, a huge
mobilization will greet the meeting with creative protest and visions of
alternatives. The governments involved in the WTO are going into this
meeting with strong disagreements on key areas such as agriculture. Many
of the key elements that derailed the Seattle ministerial are in
placestrong internal divisions, heavy opposition, and, we hopea powerful
presence of resistance in the streets. Below is our report on some of the
preliminary organizing we did last week in Cancun and Mexico City.
If you can come to Cancun, do! Internationals are needed and wanted, and
it will be an incredible opportunity to meet and work with people from the
global south, from students to campesinos.
If you can¹t come to Cancun, consider donating some money to help students
and campesinos from Mexico come. Cancun was chosen because it is isolated,
expensive and inaccessible. Students and campesinos, the major groups
mobilizing, have little money but much courage and determination. Many
would like to come, but can¹t afford to. With support and solidarity from
the north, however, we can mount a large and effective mobilization that
can derail the meeting.
And if this ministerial fails it will be the third failure in a row,
dealing a potentially fatal blow to the organization. The struggle for
global justice will still continue on many fronts, but the tide will have
turned.
You¹ll find information on how to donate money at the end of this report,
as well as information on the organizing and the actions. Thanks for your
support, Starhawk.
Cancun Report:
Lisa Fithian and Starhawk from RANT went to Mexico from July 27 August
7th where we met with organizers and local activists in Cancun and with
campesino organizers in Felipe Carillo Puerto, three hours south. We went
to Mexico City on Aug. 1st and spent the weekend with students at an
encampment focused on the WTO and then attend a three day gathering meeting
of Via Campesino. We also met with lawyers coordinating the legal support
for the September mobilization. Our primary interest was plans for
nonviolent direct action. Here is a quick summary of what we learned:
In Cancun itself:
Cancun is a new city that was created as a tourist center for the Mexican
economy. As such there is no history of social movements or many activist
based organizations. And thus few organizers have much direct action
experience.
The Comite de Bienvenida or the Welcoming Committee in Cancun is focusing
on logistics - finding spaces for camping and the forums as well as
food. They are also working with the global network of NGO¹s called Our
World is Not for Sale in organizing the forums, fair trade fair,
etc. There is more than enough work for what is basically a small group of
people and they have been having trouble locking down specifics. They are
negotiating with the city but there are only so many places for up to
10,000 people to camp.
Another local Cancun group, more youth and arts is emerging and they are
focused on organizing youth and beginning to do outreach and mobilization
in the local community. They are very interested in bring a cultural
component to the streets in the form of puppets, drum processions and so
on. They have a base that hang in the Parque las Palapas which is the
cultural center of Cancun City
Puente de Cancun is a small group of internationals sponsored by Global
Exchange that is 1) providing info bulletins to the world, 2) organizing
the media convergence and 3) serving as a link to internationals.
We felt that a convergence space for organizing and supporting the street
actions is needed, and Mike, who was working with the Puente, was very,
very helpful to us, and is looking into housing/convergence space. We
are fundraising to help cover the costs and people can make donations to
RANT in order to secure one. More info below.
Two of the students from Mexico City are also going down to Cancun this
week and will be on the ground organizing from now on. They both have a
good bit of direct action experience which is great.
Finally on Cancun the criminalization campaign has begun. There were
daily articles about foreign instigators, over 200,000 coming, about folks
bringing explosives and so on. The usual. But this all has a chilling
effect. Also two years ago at the WEF protests the police were pretty
brutal so there is a memory of that and some desire on the part of the
Comite not to see direct actions. All of this is evolving however as it
is clear that there are different sectors with different visions and plans..
Students:
The student activists we worked with are great and inspiring and
experienced, sophisticated organizers. Over the weekend encampment, they
formed a new group, Alianza Global S-9/Global Alliance S-9, to be a
coordinating body for all the groups planning street actions particularly
on the 9th.
They came from numerous groups and several cities and have some clear ideas
about what they would like to see happen. While many want to go it is very
expensive since the whole trip will be about 10 days with bus travel and
all. The students are hoping that international activist will contribute
to help reduce the individual cost thereby allowing more to go.
They are writing a letter and where people can send money, but short of
that RANT is also willing to help get money where it needs to go. (Info below)
Campesinos:
Via Campesino and its related Mexican compesino organizations, (UNORCA
being one of the main ones) are planning to mobilize 5-10,000 people.
Again, numbers depend partly on money. They are organizing their own
forums on the 8th and 9th and then planning a day of action on the 10th
which is the opening day of the Ministerial and the day focused on agriculture.
They are planning actions across the hemisphere to disrupt international
commerce as well as a plan to march to the Convention Center to deliver a
declaration. Their intention is to get inside to read it.
They will march on September 10 and probably support whatever actions take
place on September 9 although it seems unlikely that they will take a major
role in them. The student made a proposal to them and they have a big
meeting soon to make a final determination on their plans.
The rough calendar:
8/30 Festival in Cancun, Student trainings in Mexico Citu
9/1 Convergence Center opens we hope
9/2 Alternative Media-Tech Convergence
9/4 Student busses leave Guadalajara.
9/5 Student busses leave Mexico City.
9/6 Training Weekend, evening assemblies/spokes begin
9/8 Students arrive in Cancun, evening Assembly to plan
actions. Compesino Forums
begins
9/9 WTO delegates begin to arrive. Proposed action day. Actions will
depend on
numbers and logistics, but some powerful ideas are in the works. Compesino
forums begin, NGO Opening Forum.
9/10 Ministerial Opens, focus on agriculture. March and possible
actions by Via
Campesino.
Alternative Trade Fair through the 12th out on the island
9/ 11 Zapatista Encuentro
Dia de la lutoÐmemorials for victims of war and violence, anniversary of
the coup
in Chile as well as 9-11 in U.S., Street processions, offrendas, cacerolazo
(beating pots and pansÐa South American political tradition), and a Chilean
pena
at night are suggestions.
9/12 Services under discussion at ministerial: suggestion to be in the
streets of Cancun
City offering services to peopleÐfree food, water, medical care, etc.
9/13 Mass March against War and Free Trade.
9/ 14 Ministerial Closes, possible Fiesta on the beaches?
9/15 Mexican Independence Day
Other aspects:
Legal: Legal support is being organized by a Mexican human rights
organization. We met with their representatives who seem to have a great
plan. They will aid internationals who have problems with immigration and
provide support for the actions, and they seem to have this base well
covered. A legal Handbook is almost complete that will be translated into
English and put on line on the Comite¹s webpage.
Medical: Various teams of street medics are coming down from the U.S. and
we believe that this, too, will be well covered.
Housing: Campsites for the major moblizations of campesinos and students
are still being negotiated. We have people looking for houses to rent for
groups of internationals and for a convergence space, but don_t yet have
anything confirmed.
Visas: The Mexican government is requiring a special visa for accredited
journalists and delegates who will be entering the Conference Center area,
but we have been told that unaccredited people should just come on a
regular tourist visa. Passports are required for those flying into Mexico.
Weather hot, hot, hot, oppressive or rain, rain, rain. Come
prepared! Mosquitos also can be a problem, so some good nontoxic bug juice
could come in handy.
Theft: Theft is a big problem in Cancun and Mexico City. We recommend an
under-your-shirt money belt for your passport and cash and a wary eye when
on busses, the subway, or in crowds. Don¹t¹ bring anything of real value
or consider insuring it. The Puente House was just broken into and
computer equipment etc stolen.
There are cheap internet café¹s everywhere!
What¹s Needed from Internationals: Being there! Cancun is hard to get to
for a lot of Mexicans, and internationals are needed and welcome in order
to get the numbers we need for a large-scale mobilization. Internationals
present will also change the dynamic with the police the Mexicans believe.
Fundraising: Funding is needed to bring more students and campesinos to
the actions. Anyone who can¹t come is be encouraged to make as big or as
small a donation as possible. RANT will help get the money to Mexican
student organizations or convergence space.
$100 will sponsor one student¹s travel costs to Cancun. We also need money
for supplies for the permaculture projects, art supplies, flyers,
etc. Even small amounts can help.
Tax deductible donations can be made to:
Daughters/Sisters Foundation (Make check out to Daughters/Sisters, earmark
it RANT/CANCUN)
PO Box 4492
Rolling Bay, WA 98061
EIN: 91-188-5041A
OR if you do not need a tax-deduction send money directly to:
Lisa Fithian
1405 Hillmont St.
Austin, TX 78704
Checks made out to RANT and what you want it to go for on the memo line!!!!!
Action Support and Coordination: Experienced people who can help coordinate
actions, run communications, and volunteer as legal observers or to help
staff the legal office will be extremely useful. Spanish may be a
requirement for some roles.
A few links:
Comite de Bienvenida www.cancuncommittee.org
Indymedia Cancun: http://chiapas.mediosindependientes.org/
Mexican Space / NGO¹s http://www.rmalc.org.mx/
Fair Trade
Symposium: http://laneta.apc.org/pipermail/acancun-l/2003June/000176.html
The WTO official web-site (http://www.wto.org/)
Contacts:
Puente de Cancun:--bridge to internationals/organizing media convergence
998 887 9326
noomc at buz.org
Juventude Globallocal Cancun youth/cultural organizing
Hector Rodriguez (52) 998 896 1822
Student organizing:
Alianza Global S-9 ags9 @yahoo.com
Everardo 0445551536067
kapitalbailable at hotmail.com
Legal
Comision de Derechos Humanos y Abogados
C/0Wolf
Cancundh at hotmail.com
Juan Antonio Vega
5523 9992
redtdt at redtdt.org
cancunddhh at hotmail.com
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