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details of events and activities in the
tent!
january 27: trade environment and
sustainability and water events
Partner organizations:
Friends of the Earth International, Council
of Canadians
09:00 – 12:00: Hands of our
Natural Resources! Corporations, trade
liberalization and the commodification of
nature
The World Trade Organization and
other regional and bilateral free trade
agreements are behind an unprecedented
assault on the world's natural resources,
through deals to increase trade in
agricultural products, commodities,
industrial goods and services, and new rules
on foreign direct investment and intellectual
property.
This workshop will give participants an
opportunity to develop a common understanding
of the way in which trade liberalization,
including through regional and bilateral
agreements, impacts on our natural resources.
It will address the way in which the trade
system ensures that transnational
corporations are the main beneficiaries of
increased international trade, while local
communities and Indigenous Peoples are losing
access to their traditional lands, resources
and even knowledge as natural resources
continue to be plundered at unsustainable
rates. Participants will also consider ways
in which joint or parallel campaigns could
begin to address this aspect of trade
liberalization effectively.
•
Invited speakers
include:
Maude Barlow, Council of
Canadians (Canada); Meena Raman, Sahabat Alam
Malaysia; Pedro Avedano, World Forum of Fish
Harvesters and Fishworkers (WFF); Simone
Lovera, Friends of the Earth International;
Tatiana Roa, CENSAT Agua Viva, Colombia;
Thomas Kockerry, World Forum of Fisher
Peoples (WFFP); Tony Tujan, IBON Foundation
(Philippines); and Victor Menotti,
International Forum on Globalisation.
13:00 –
17:30
: defense of water
around the world: reclaiming public
water
Partner organizations:
Blue
Planet Project/Council of Canadians,
Corporate Europe Observatory, REDES,
Sobrevivencia, FoEI
Water is becoming dirtier, scarcer and
costlier for people in many parts of the
world. Big dams, pollution, deforestation,
industrialized agriculture and mining are all
part of the problem, as is inequitable access
to water. International financial
institutions, trade treaties and
multinational water corporations that promote
the privatization of water services are only
decreasing the access of poor people to
water. High-profile privatization failures in
major cities of the South provide ample
evidence that the water needs of the poor
should not be left in the hands of
profit-driven transnational water
corporations.
The time has come to refocus the global
water debate on key questions. The water
seminar will focus on how to improve and
expand public water delivery around the world
and feature presentations on the impacts of
water privatization, success stories of
struggles, the defense of territories of
communities and finally the importance of
working together through international
linkages.
Invited speakers include:
Alberto Muñoz, Argentina; community speaker
from Bolivia; Nila Ardhianie, Indonesia;
Maude Barlow, Council of Canadians; Comisión
Nacional en Defensa del Agua y la Vida,
Uruguay; Oscar Rivas, SOBREVIVENCIA-Paraguay,
and Karin Nansen, REDES-Uruguay, Santiago
Arconada, Venezuela; Helio Maltz, DMAE Porto
Alegre
january 28: biodiversity and
international financial institutions
events
Partner organizations
:
COECOCEIBA, Friends of the Earth
International, Global Forest
09:00 –
12:00
: nature for sale,
part 1
The world's poorest people, especially
women and children, are desperately in need
of safe water and sanitation services.
Experience has shown, however, that the poor
can lose access to these basic services when
profit-oriented transnational water companies
move in. In the same way, Indigenous Peoples
and local communities increasingly find
themselves excluded from forests and other
biologically rich areas they have
traditionally lived in and utilized. These
lands are progressively being handed over to
tourism and private park management
companies. They are also being reserved for a
new breed of company that establishes “carbon
parks” – a new and lucrative avenue intended
to offset the carbon dioxide emissions of
rich fossil fuel addicted consumers in the
North.
Publicly-owned natural resources are being
targeted for privatization and liberalization
by international institutions such as the
World Bank and the World Trade Organization.
Local communities, who have managed these
resources sustainably for generations, stand
to lose out from this privatization process.
This event will outline some of the negative
impacts of the privatization and
commodification of biodiversity and
water.
We are actively resisting this corporate
take-over of nature's wealth. We are fighting
for people's rights - to water, land, seeds
and knowledge.
Invited panelists
for
“Environmental rights and privatization”
include: Tatiana Roa, CENSAT; Nnimmo Bassey,
ERA; Abed El Rahman Tamimi, PENGON •
Invited panelists for “The impacts of Water
Privatization” include: Community testimony
from Uruguay ; Karin Nansen, REDES; Elias
Diaz Peña, SOBREVIVENCIA; Juan Ivan Correa,
ASPROGIC Colombia A debate and open
forum will follow!
13:00 –
17:30
-- nature for sale,
part 2
Invited Panelists
for “The
Impacts of Biodiversity Privatization”
include: Isaac Rojas, COECOCEIBA; Farah Sofa,
WALHI; Ricardo Carrere, World Rainforest
Movement; Javier Baltodano, COECOCEIBA; Jose
Rodriguez, community representative from San
Pedro , Paraguay ; Gerardo Armando, CUT-MG
Brazil; Simone Lovera, FoEI
Invited speaker
for
closing and summing up: Adam Ma´anit, CEO,
Netherlands
january 29: forest and
plantations events
partner organizations:
world rainforest movement and friends of the
earth international
09:00 –
12:00
: forest and
plantations: an essential social issue part
1
The protection of forests constitutes an
urgent need, both for local peoples and for
humanity as a whole. In order to achieve this
aim, the first thing is to identify in each
case the direct and underlying causes that
determine deforestation (as well as the
actors involved) and adopt measures to
address them. At the same time, it is
necessary to identify and assemble all those
who have a real interest in the conservation
of forests. Given the existence of powerful
economic interests that benefit from
deforestation, it will be necessary to
incorporate the largest possible number of
allies (both at the national and
international levels), so as to exert
sufficient pressure to be able to tip the
balance in favor of forest conservation and
peoples.
The workshop called will underscore the
social dimensions of forests and the negative
impacts of deforestation on local peoples'
livelihoods. It will highlight how the
substitution of forests and other diverse
ecosystems by large scale tree mono-crops
impact local communities and their
environments.
The one day workshop will provide a forum
and bring together a number of actors and
activists not only to share experiences and
learn from each other, but to discuss future
cooperation and strategize on possible ways
on how to move forward in addressing the
forest crisis and its potential impacts on
local communities and on different
sectors.
Invited panelists
include: Libia Grueso , Colombia ; Irene
Fernandez, TENAGANITA Malaysia; Jose
Rodriguez, community representative from San
Pedro , Paraguay ; Landless Peasant Movement,
Brazil
13:00 –
18:00 : forest and plantations: an essential
social issue part 2
Invited Panelists
include: Joji
Carino, Tebtebba Foundation. Philippines ;
Victor Menotti, International Forum on
Globalization, USA ; Ashok Choudhary,
National Forum of Forest People and Forest
Workers. India ; Via Campesina
january 30: corporates
events
Partner Organizations:
Greenpeace International, Friends of the
Earth International, Amnesty International,
International Network for Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (ESCR-Net), CORE,
Christian Aid, War on Want, ActionAid
International, FIDH, Corporate Accountability
International, Justicia Global, International
Campaign for Justice in Bhopal, Earthrights
International, FOCO de Argentina,
Observatorio Social de Brasil, Observatorio
de las Transnacionales de PLADES de Perú,
IBASE, Ciro Torres, PIDHH, RAID
09:00 –
10:30
– Corporate
Accountability, p
art 1:
Testimonies
These testimonies will outline ongoing
corporate abuses of human rights and the
environment, highlighting the need for
corporate accountability.
Testimonies include from:
Justicia Global on Alcan in Brazil; Patrick
Naagbantan on the oil and gas industry in
Nigeria; Alirio Uribe, of el Colectivo de
Abogados Jose Alvear Restrepo on Coca-Cola;
Javier Mujica, of Cedal, on the Tractobel
case in Peru ; Patricio Pazmino, of CDES, on
Petrol Companies in the Sarakayu's
territories
10:30 - 12:30
– Corporate Accountability,
p
art 2:
Strategies
Different speakers/facilitators present
multiple strategies to challenge corporate
power and strengthen corporate
accountability. The objective of this seminar
will be to ensure that each different
strategy contributes to the creation of a
global corporate accountability network that
aims to achieve protection and redress for
the victims of corporate abuses.
Economic Campaigning: Greenpeace
International and International Campaign
Justice for Bhopal Corporations exist to make
profits for their shareholders. Convincing
shareholders that a certain environmental or
social activity of a corporation is an
investment risk can therefore sometimes do
wonders, if you are trying to change the
behavior of a corporation. Increasingly, as
Naomi Klein has shown, global corporations
invest in and rely on a global brand to
market themselves. Attacking a brand,
exposing the social and ecological
destruction that lies behind the shine of the
corporate logo, can therefore make
corporations listen to you. We will explore
these strategies further and see where we can
find common ground to hit companies where we
can have the most impact!
Legal strategies: UN Norms—Amnesty
International and International Network for
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(ESCR-Net), CEDHA Argentina, Justicia Global
Brazil, Collectivo de Abogados, Colombia tbc.
A
growing number of businesses operate across
boundaries in ways that exceed the regulatory
capacities of any one national system.
Global standards will help
establish compatible regimes across national
borders that should be respected
wherever a company operates. If
effectively implemented, international Norms could
also offer an independent space for victims
of abuses to file their claims giving them a
voice where there is no effective remedy
at the national level or where
governments prefer to protect
investors' interests over the rights of its
own citizens.
UN Human Rights Norms for Business: the
starting point: What they are – why
they are needed – how can they be used in
relation to specific cases -an
update on the UN Human Rights Commission
process –how can you get engaged in the
campaign to strengthen and use the UN
Norms.
Political: ActionAid International,
Corporate Accountability International,
Building Regional Campaign Coalition, Friends
of the Earth International, CORE, War on Want
and Christian Aid will highlight the debate
and policy discussions on corporate
accountability which have given rise to
sector specific initiatives, coalition
building and strong grassroots work.
Key objectives: information sharing, global
coalition development, building and
maintaining networks of support.
This session will highlight 3 main case
studies:
-
impact of large agri-food giants on
small farmers including solutions linking
the local to the international
-
the tobacco campaign including
boycotts, lobbying and other strategies
employed during this 11 year campaign
-
the use of coalitions and other forms
of collective action to achieve political
change
-
The session will look at the benefits
of various political strategy including
boycotts, political action, effective use
of media, public campaigning, coalition
building, merits of voluntary and mandatory
legislation.
The session will look at ideas on building
coalitions at the national/grassroots level,
share ways of working and identify areas to
campaign for legal reform at the national and
local levels. The session will also seek to
build more cooperation between individual
nationally-based groups by looking at the
challenges faced by previous attempts and
discussing different solutions for different
contexts. Other legal strategies, instruments
and forums may be considered during this
session.
13:30 -
18:30
- Corporate
Accountability, p
art 3:
Actions
This year, we hope to identify collective
days of action, as well as brainstorm on
common activities that could help give focus
and strength to any collective action days in
2005. This session will build on ideas and
potential actions that emerged during the
previous strategy session. Ideally, this will
provide an opportunity for groups to make
connections while publicizing and
strengthening collective actions.
Additionally, persons will have an
opportunity to participate in actions
organized by ActionAid International and
Friends of the Earth International.
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