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SPECIAL REPORTS
-
Tuesday
01
February 2005
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WORLD SOCIAL FORUM:
'Globalising' Porto Alegre
Raúl
Pierri
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil, Jan 31 (IPS)
- An anti-FTAA march and a
series of concerts marked the
culmination this Monday of the
fifth World Social Forum (WSF),
which will be divided from this
point forward into a number of
simultaneous meetings around the
globe.
The giant civil society meet has
taken place annually in this
southern Brazilian city, with
the exception of last year's
fourth WSF, held in Mumbai,
India as a means of more fully
extending its scope to other
regions.
The event has been so successful
that its organisers have decided
to undertake a radical change in
2006, moving beyond Porto Alegre
and holding the largest possible
number of parallel forums in
”key spots around the world.”
”The idea is to take the event
to certain significant regions,
such as Africa, Asia and eastern
Europe,” said Brazilian
sociologist Cándido Grzybowski,
one of the WSF's founders and
organisers.
”It would be important to hold
one of these forums in
Venezuela, because this would
facilitate the participation of
groups in the Caribbean,” he
told IPS.
On Sunday, the WSF Hemispheric
Committee approved the proposal
of Venezuela as one of the host
countries of next year's events,
although the decision still
needs to be ratified by the
International Committee, which
will meet Mar. 31-Apr. 2 in
Paris.
”In any case, it will almost
certainly be approved,” added
Grzybowski.
As for Africa, there is
considerable support for the
candidacy of Morocco, while
South Korea has been discussed
as the venue for an Asian
meeting. There is always the
possibility of holding more than
one forum per continent,
however.
All of the forums would be held
in January 2006 on the same
dates as the World Economic
Forum, the annual gathering of
the international business and
political elite in the Swiss
alpine resort of Davos.
According to the latest official
statistics, over 155,000 people
from 135 countries participated
in this year's WSF in Porto
Alegre, confirming once again
the consistent growth in
participation from year to year
since the first Forum in 2001.
This year's event encompassed
2,500 activities, carried out
with the help of 2,800
volunteers. Every activity was
fully run by the group
responsible for organising it.
”This Forum stood out because
absolutely everything was done
by the participating
organisations themselves, and
because spaces were created for
them to join together and
organise campaigns,” Francisco
”Chico” Whitaker, one of the
prime movers of the Forum since
its inception, and a member of
the International Committee,
told IPS.
Whitaker also highlighted the
decision to adopt 11 key themes,
under which all of the
discussions and events were
grouped, and the creation of a
”proposals mural” where the
initiatives that emerged in each
separate session could be shared
with all of the WSF
participants. During the five
days of activities, a total of
352 ideas were posted.
Whitaker defended the initial
concept of the Forum ”as a
space, not a movement.” In doing
so, he clearly distanced himself
from the public figures who
signed the Porto Alegre
Manifesto, a document listing 12
demands set forth to the
industrialised North, which was
seen by its promoters as a means
of achieving a ”consensus”.
The Manifesto cuts to the heart
of the debate between those who
want to preserve the original
nature of the WSF as a space for
reflection and the exchange of
ideas, and others who believe
that the time has come to move
on to concrete actions.
”Any actions undertaken must
depend on the organisations, not
the Forum,” said Whitaker. ”If a
group of well-known figures
tries to organise an activity,
no one will go. If the
organisations do it, people will
participate. A proposal only
comes to life when it reflects
the will of the people,” he
added.
The Manifesto was signed by
Argentine activist and Nobel
peace laureate Adolfo Pérez
Esquivel and Spanish journalist
Ignacio Ramonet, editor of the
French newspaper Le Monde
Diplomatique, among others.
Grzybowski commented to IPS that
he found the document ”somewhat
contradictory”, because it was
said to be focused on action but
was actually only a list of
ideas. And although he admitted
that he agreed with part of its
content, he said he differed
with the way it was drawn up.
”These are ideas that have
traditionally been espoused by
the Forum, not those of an
enlightened few,” he said.
On Monday morning, some 50,000
people marched through the
'world social territory', as the
organisers of the WSF dubbed the
area where it was held, to
protest the Free Trade Area of
the Americas (FTAA) and defend
”integration with sovereignty”.
The march also issued a call for
worldwide peace demonstrations
on Mar. 19, the second
anniversary of the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq.
In addition, the organisers said
a protest would be held in
November in the Argentine city
of Mar del Plata, which will
host the next Summit of the
Americas.
In the demonstration, Brazilian
leftist groups once again voiced
harsh criticism of President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a
former trade unionist, who they
called a ”traitor”, for his
decision to attend the World
Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, among other
reasons.
Lula's presence on the second
day of the Jan. 26-31 WSF and
that of his Venezuelan
counterpart Hugo Chávez on
Sunday - both of whom were
invited to take part in specific
activities by civil society
organisations - marked a
difference with earlier editions
of the Forum.
The organisers underscored the
significance of presidents
taking part in WSF events.
”This year's Forum was more
political than the previous
ones. There was a great effort
to find the necessary routes to
knock on the doors of
globalisation,” José Luis del
Roio, a member of the WSF
international committee, told
IPS.
Grzybowski agreed. ”It is them
(the presidents) who attend
summits, not us. We need them. I
would have liked (Argentine
President Néstor) Kirchner and
(Spanish Prime Minister José
Luis Rodríguez) Zapatero to have
been here too,” he said.
The activist downplayed fears
that the charismatic,
controversial Chávez and the
deep political divisions in his
country could negatively
influence the independence of
the social forum, if Venezuela
is confirmed as a host country
for the 2006 WSF.
”It's a risk that we also ran
here when the PT (Lula's leftist
Workers' Party) won. But that's
only normal. This is democracy,”
he added. |
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