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WORLD SOCIAL FORUM:
Latin America Longing for
Another World
Gustavo
González
SANTIAGO, (IPS) - The
presidential swearing-in
ceremonies of former guerrilla
Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua and
left-winger Rafael Correa in
Ecuador in the run-up to the 7th
World Social Forum (WSF) are a
graphic illustration of profound
political changes in a Latin
America that longs to see
another world.
Today, Latin America is the
region closest to fulfilling the
emblematic slogan of the WSF,
"Another World Is Possible", in
the light of the wave of
electoral speeches that put
neoliberal globalisation and
U.S. hegemony in the dock in
2006.
However, when the time comes for
these changes to find expression
in terms of more political power
for social movements, analysts
offer a wide range of opinions,
and both sceptics and
enthusiasts often have their own
axe to grind.
Latin American delegations will
probably be the smallest among
the 150,000 activists from over
100 countries expected to arrive
in Nairobi for the first WSF to
be held in Africa from Jan. 20
to 25.
The distance and cost of
reaching the Kenyan capital will
prevent non-governmental
organisations and other groups
representing Latin American
civil society from sending large
numbers of delegates to this 7th
Forum, created as an alternative
to the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland, an annual
meeting of powerful business and
political élites.
However, Latin America will no
doubt be frequently cited in
Nairobi as a concrete example of
popular resistance to the
unipolar world and its dominant
economic model since the early
1990s, after the end of the Cold
War, based on free trade at any
cost, and fiscal balance as a
magic economic management
formula.
Among the political events of
2006, the reelection of
right-winger Álvaro Uribe in
Colombia and the controversial
victory of conservative Felipe
Calderón in Mexico were
victories for candidates
friendly to the U.S. George W.
Bush administration.
Washington could also be glad of
the defeat of nationalist
Ollanta Humala in Perú by social
democrat Alan García, who
nevertheless can claim a place
in the broad regional map of the
centre-left.
Correa and Ortega were the last
left-wing leaders to be elected
in a year that also saw the
reelections of Hugo Chávez in
Venezuela and Luiz Inácio Lula
da Silva in Brazil, the victory
of socialist Michelle Bachelet
over rightwing business owner
Sebastián Pińera, and the
inauguration of indigenous
leader Evo Morales's government
in Bolivia.
In Haiti, the region's poorest
country, René Préval's victory
in the presidential elections in
early 2006 was another setback
for Bush, whose government
backed a coup against
democratically elected president
Jean-Bertrand Aristide in
February 2004.
Heavily weighted to the
centre-left, the South American
political map has included the
Tabaré Vázquez administration in
Uruguay since 2005 and that of
Néstor Kirchner in Argentina
since 2004, while in Paraguay
former bishop Fernando Lugo, an
admirer of Chávez, looks like a
possible winner of the
presidential elections in 2008.
The Venezuelan president leads a
movement towards "21st-century
socialism", and Ortega and
Correa have joined his proposal
for a Bolivarian Alternative for
the Americas (ALBA), a response
to the Initiative for the
Americas launched in 1990 by
then U.S. president George Bush,
father of the current president.
ALBA is also supported by
Presidents Fidel Castro of Cuba
and Morales of Bolivia, while
members of the so-called
"pragmatic left", like Lula da
Silva, helped to sink the Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA),
the flagship of Washington's
policy towards the region since
the 1990s.
Over and beyond categorisations
that would label Lula, Bachelet
and Vázquez as the "pragmatic
left", as against the "radical
left" personified by Chávez,
Morales and now Correa, nearly
all these governments are at
odds with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), as
demonstrated by the presidents
of Brazil and Argentina.
Chávez, Morales and Kirchner are
frequently depicted as the
standard-bearers of
"neo-populism", but according to
French political scientist and
historian Eric Toussaint, Lula,
with his aid programmes for the
poor, is more populist than
Chávez.
The increasingly marked turn to
the left in Latin America has
made it once again a laboratory
for social and political
experiments, where expert
analysts, especially European
ones, produce a wide range of
opinions but have not clarified
the role being played by civil
society movements.
Chávez is a typical example of
these different assessments.
Some call him an "egalitarian
strongman" and praise the
pro-government April 13 Movement
as the catalyst of popular
participation initiatives
through community activities
such as checking drinking water
quality, self-built housing,
provision of basic services and
promoting agrarian reform.
But at the same time the
Venezuelan leader is seen as a "personalist
strongman", who, while
radicalising the Bolivarian
revolution by nationalising
strategic industries, cannot
withstand the temptation of
"indefinite reelection" and a
single party system, which
places him closer to the failed
bureaucracy of "20th century
communism" than to "21st century
socialism."
Shortly before Lula's
reelection, Toni Negri and
Giuseppe Cocco, Italian
theorists of "alternative social
movements", criticised the
"exaggeratedly nationalist"
character of the governments of
Chávez and Morales in an
interview published by Argentine
newspaper Página 12.
In contrast, they praised the
governments of Brazil and
Argentina for their responsible
attitude in confronting the IMF
and the Paris Club (which
reviews and coordinates foreign
debt), and for promoting the
development of social movements
such as trade unions and human
rights organisations.
Negri and Cocco believed it
would be desirable for the two
largest South American
countries, and especially
Brazil, to move closer to ALBA,
so that Lula "may learn from
Bolivarian initiatives", while
the overly nationalistic aspects
of the experiences of Chávez,
and perhaps Evo Morales, might
be watered down.
Dialogue between the new
left-wing governments and social
movements is not easy, as shown
by the conflicts Morales faces
in Bolivia, or the persistent
movement for democratising
education which is a permanent
challenge to Bachelet in Chile.
For now, it can be concluded
that neoliberal globalisation is
facing determined opposition in
Latin America on macroeconomic
issues, and that this opposition
includes demands made by the
"Another World" movement, such
as criticism of free trade and
the need to review foreign debt.
As Correa rightly said in his
inaugural speech as the new
president of Ecuador on Monday,
"the night of neoliberalism is
passing". The challenge now is
for social movements to claim
the dawn.
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