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Alternative Conference in Cancun

by: Jill Richardson

Mon Dec 06, 2010 at 19:12:23 PM PST


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While the nations of the world meet in a luxury resort to accomplish nothing, the people of the world are meeting nearby. And as our national media ignores it, India's national paper is covering it. This alternative forum is called Alternative Global Forum for Life, Environmental and Social Justice and it's being put on by La Via Campesina, the international peasant farmer movement. The major idea coming out of this alternative forum is that the plan to "make a business out of climate change" via carbon markets is bogus.

From their article:

As opposed to the U.N. meeting, which is meant to make a business out of climate change, the Via Campesina Forum is a collective space for people and non-governmental organisations to debate on the crucial issues affecting their communities. No one here has faith in the U.N. meeting yielding any result.

Since November 28, people having been travelling around Mexico, and this Forum is a means of bringing pressure on the government.

"This is not an exclusive matter of the government; the people have to be involved too. The Mexican government is promoting programmes that will help U.S. interests and transnational companies," Mr. Gomez says. Seventy per cent of the Mexican territory is given over to mining, and some 25 per cent in concessions to Canadian companies. All its rivers are polluted, but everything is a business - garbage, water, he says.

The U.S. media has given this alternate forum little coverage. You can find information on Huffington Post, It's Getting Hot in Here, and, of course, Democracy Now. I highly recommend watching or listening to today's show of Democracy Now. They will be in Cancun all week. I also VERY highly recommend reading Ronnie Cummins first person account of Cancun, which he wrote and posted on the Organic Consumers Association site on December 1.

I've posted the latest release from La Via Campesina below.

Jill Richardson :: Alternative Conference in Cancun
News from La Via Campesina

The global forum "For Life, Environmental and Social Justice" has begun

Foil the carbon market plan, says La Via Campesina in Cancún

For further news, videos, photos, see http://www.viacampesina.org

(Cancún, 5 December 2010) One idea dominated the opening and first working day of the global forum "For Life, Environmental and Social Justice", organized by La Via Campesina and its allies at their camp in Cancún: we must foil the carbon markets and the REDD programme which governments intend to legitimize at COP16.

The verdict is that the programme for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) doesn't significantly reduce the emission of greenhouse gases, although it does open the door to the privatization of land, and also rewards polluters, and threatens national sovereignty and the survival of indigenous communities.

Alberto Gómez Flores, representative of La Via Campesina for the North America region, said: "It's a disgrace that the United Nations space intended to tackle climate change has been converted into a platform to legitimize the commercial strategies of transnational corporations."

He added: "Multinationals benefit from an ever increasing number of compensating mechanisms for carbon capture, all of which are only new opportunities for them to grow and consolidate their control over water, land and seeds."

"We denounce the false solution of carbon markets and the fact that numerous governments have reconciled themselves to it and don't seek a compromise with their populations. Our task is to foil the carbon markets. This is why we came", said Gomez.

As for Olegario Carrillo, he insisted in his welcoming message that "we must at least qualify as irresponsible, although many call it criminal, the attitude of those who support these schemes for the privatization-commercialization of the world, its forests and atmosphere, that only bring us closer to the brink every time."

"From here we can see the thick smog of transnational interests hang above Cancún's summit. Rich countries and their satellites try to confer legitimacy on false solutions like REDD," added Carrillo, national leader of UNORCA.

"We have come here to denounce the governments of the world that intend to support these projects behind the backs of their populations," said Magdiel Sánchez, from the National Liberation Movement.

"We have the same message: we don't want the false solutions that COP16 stands for, we don't want REDD, we don't want them to carry on poisoning us with their lies and their false solutions. This is what we said and heard everywhere the caravans stopped, throughout their journey through this country where they bore witness to the environmental and social devastation of Mexico," said Octavio Rosas Landa, from the National Assembly of Those Affected by the Environment.

"COP 16 only seeks to benefit as much as possible from the environmental crisis while people continue to fall ill and to die as a result of these corrupt policies and of the various activities of all these TNCs that are appropriating the air, water, land, forests, seeds, and all of the other common goods which make up the patrimony of humanity," he added.

In this regard, Rosas Landa said that the programmes which the federal government is trying to implement in the country are a fiction, as they will address neither global warming nor the environmental crisis. On the subject of the REDD proposal, he explained that the federal government is trying to control the green areas, which affects the most vulnerable groups.

And so started the global forum "For Life, Environmental and Social Justice", with the participation of about 1,500 people from over 80 organizations from Latin America and elsewhere, around 1,000 of whom travelled with the caravans through 17 states of the Republic of Mexico.

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From what I hear (4.00 / 2)
as lousy and stupid as the official meeting is, the alternative activities are providing for incredible networking between grassroots efforts from around the world.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

luxury resort (4.00 / 2)
There's a luxury resort somewhere in Haiti. It's where Bill Clinton and his good buddies go when they want to talk about fixing Haiti. Splendor, ease, so much air conditioning they're comfortable wearing suits and ties in a Haitian July or August.

Maybe that's what's wrong. Maybe what those blowhards need to do is buy some blue jeans and hoes. Jitney out so a nearby Yucatan Mayan farm. Chop weeds at high noon in July and wonder why it's so damned hot.


i would recommend (4.00 / 2)
having no bathroom or running water
doing laundry by hand in a nearby river
growing their own beans and corn
making tortillas and beans from scratch
eating tortillas and beans for every meal with little else
and having no access to any medicine other than folk remedies and locally obtained plants

Let 'em try that for a few weeks and see how it feels.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


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