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From:
Jane Sarre <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 8 Feb 1999 19:00:10 -0000
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Several (american) listers have been bemoaning the quality of newspapers and
the lack of the truth therein. I guess it depends on what you think the
truth, and what papers you read. For some time this has been my local
paper - its produced weekly, by volunteers, has a massive international
distribution but is given away free, and is used as a source of good
quality, well check, but not always grammatically brilliant (!) news by
among others the Manchester Guardian that somebody reccommended. It
generally provides an interesting an insightful reminder that news has at
least two sides.
Jane


SchNEWS

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 ==========================================================================

WAKE UP! WAKE UP! IT'S YER "HAVEN'T WE GOT ANYTHING BETTER TO DO?"

SchNEWS

Published in Brighton by Justice? - Brighton's Direct Action collective

Issue 200, Friday 5 Febrewery 1999

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SNAPSHOTS OF GLOBAL RESISTANCE

"Only a global alliance of peoples movements can defeat this emerging
globalised monster."
- People's Global Action

Over the past few years the people cheering on Global Capitalism United
have declared victory. With their corporate tentacles all over the world,
the long path of human evolution seems to be reaching a conclusion - the
world as one big 'free' trade shopping centre.

Life in this global village is measured in terms of growth. How much we
consume equals how much we are happy. And what a success it's been. World
trade has increased by twelve times since 1950 and economic growth has
increased fivefold. Forget that more than a billion people live in absolute
deprivation, go to bed hungry each night, and live without the minimum of
adequate shelter and clothing. Forget about our forests being overlogged,
agriculture lands overcropped, grasslands overgrazed, wetlands overdrained,
groundwater's overtapped, seas overfished, and the world polluted with
chemical and radioactive poisons. Forget that we are changing the climate
of the planet. Don't worry because those that write the economic scriptures
reckon that when growth has made people wealthy enough, we will all have
the funds to clean up the damage done by growth!

All of this of course is the economics of the mad-house, but to read the
newspapers, or watch TV you'd be forgiven for thinking that there are no
real voices of dissent to the way our world is being run. Which isn't
surprising really seeing as the business leaders, politicians and media
tycoons are the ones that benefit the most from this global free for all.

Last February SchNEWS went to Geneva for a conference organised by Peoples
Global Action. Here we met people from grass-roots organisations from half
the countries of the world. As we sat down and chatted the reality hit us
that all those struggles in far off places are exactly the same as ours.
That globalisation, progress, free trade, whatever you want to call it,
means misery for millions. We decided that somehow SchNEWS had to make this
murky world sexy and relevant. So to celebrate our two hundredth issue
here's a snap-shot of resistance from around the world, of people fighting
back against the global monster.

"In almost every country today people's solidarity with each other in the
form of vibrant grass-roots organisations enables a form of democracy to
function in spite of and in parallel with oppressive power often dressed up
as democracy. The anarchist Colin Ward called this 'the seed beneath the
snow'."
- John Pilger

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BASTA!

"They are going to have to kill off all of us, and even so, the trees will
continue to be Zapatistas, as will the rocks and dogs."

While the Mexican rich toasting 1994 celebrated their new status as a
"First World" country, thousands of Zapatista freedom-fighters came out of
the jungle and highlands in the previously forgotten state of Chiapas.
Timing their uprising with the first day of NAFTA, the rebels quickly
stripped away the official mask of economic well-being and exposed the
reality of worsening hunger, malnutrition and repression. With agricultural
production shifted to export and animal feeds, the Zapatista army called
the treaty a "death sentence" for the indigenous population.

Hundreds of Zapatista communities have organised themselves into 38
"autonomous municipalities" to regain control from big business, landowners
and the 70-year dictatorship of the ruling party. In these liberated zones,
villages elect their own community representatives, teachers, and
indigenous councils - creating political and social structures firmly
rooted in their Mayan past. The Mexican government continues to wage an
intensive propaganda and military campaign to undermine the Zapatistas and
destroy the autonomous municipalities, failing to comply with the peace
accords it signed in 1996. On March 21st this year, 5000 Zapatista women
and men will travel throughout Mexico as part of a national consultation on
the recognition of the rights of Indian peoples and for an end to the war
of extermination. According to recent communiqués, resistance is stronger
than ever.

For more info: http://www.ezln.org/ and
http://www.flag.blackened.net/revolt/zapatista.html [where?]

Recommended reading: "First World, Ha! Ha! Ha!", E Katzenberger, City
Lights San Francisco, 1995.

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MULTINATIONAL WET DREAMS

Countries that have signed free trade agreements, are now increasingly
finding that erecting any barrier to trade is illegal, and that their
environmental and social laws can be easily brushed aside. Welcome to the
world of the multinationals wet dreams_

The World Trade Organisation - whose president once famously said "we are
writing the constitution of the single global economy" - recently ruled
that the US government ban on shrimps caught in nets without turtle
excluders breached international fair trade rules. 150,000 turtles, an
endangered species, drown each year in shrimping nets so in 1996 America
banned the import of shrimps that were caught without the excluders. The
WTO said it was against free trade. Tough shit, turtles!

In July last year the Government of Canada settled a claim brought by the
Ethyl Corporation of America, the company which gave the world leaded
petrol. The Canadians had imposed a ban on Ethyl's fuel additive, MMT,
which causes nerve deterioration leading to attention deficit and memory
loss in kids. So what? The Ethyl Corporation said it had been mistreated
and took the claim to a tribunal at the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA). Here, a panel whose decision is final, would decide behind closed
doors. There is no right to appeal. The Canadian government, realising its
chances of winning were approximately nil, settled with Ethyl for $13
million, allowed them to resume sales and announced the additive posed "no
health risk".

In Mexico the Metalclad Corporation of Canada has a case before the NAFTA
tribunal in which it claims the State of San Luis Potosi stole its future
profits, after the state closed down a toxic waste facitility that had a
history of contaminating the local water supply. The site is part of an
ecological zone - but what the heck, the Mexicans now face a $90 million
bill.

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INDIA WELCOMES THE WEST

"So-called modern technology has worked against the natural resource-based
community, undermining self-reliance and creating vulnerability through
dependency on pesticides and fertilizers, and on the market. They can't
stand up against the corporate sector. Protests by farmers make the
politicians agitated because, if the farmers rise up, that is 70% of
India's population."
- Medha Patka, 'Alternative Nobel Prize'

In the name of 'development' and 'economic progress', the Indian Government
have welcomed the investment of large corporations in an attempt to compete
in the global economy. Yet this process of rapid modernization is leaving
over half the population dispossessed from their homes and their
subsistence lifestyles, destroying their natural resources and increasing
their dependence on western corporations.

In defiance, rural India has waged a grassroots war of resistance against
globalisation. They are sending out the message world-wide that the people
of India are prepared to fight the corporate re-colonization of their
country by international institutions such as the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) and the International Monetary Fund.

Last year over 50,000 farmers gathered outside the Karnataka state
government offices and spent all day laughing at their policies!

In November, the first test site of Monsanto's genetically modified cotton
was pulled out, piled up then burnt. 'Operation Cremate Monsanto' has
become a popular pastime with Indian farmers, "We send today a very clear
message to all those who have invested in Monsanto in India and abroad:
take your money out now, before we reduce it to ashes."

Mass occupations of dam sites have halted construction, as the schemes are
flooding villages, ruining irrigation and polluting the environment.
Fishing Unions have striked in resistance to the dams and to industrial
over-fishing, taking such diverse actions as mass fasting through to
blockading harbors.

The farmers realize that their struggle is international, that their
resistance is part of a wider struggle against globalisation. This year 500
members of the Karnataka State Farmers Association (KRRS - a movement that
claims a membership of 10 million!) will be visiting Europe to hold
discussions, take part in direct action and to bring their message to the
boardrooms of the companies that are destroying their homeland.

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EXPERTS ON TAP, NOT ON TOP

I looked at the professionals and I was getting angrier and angrier and
angrier and I said 'All you, you're paid at least 25 grand a year to look
after us and you're not doing it.' I said 'Right you're not doing it, we'll
do it ourselves.'
- Mary Smith

It's a familiar story - every now and then the politicians talk about the
next big scheme to re-juvinate our inner-cities, they spout the jargon,
like 'grass-roots', 'bottom-up',' partnership regeneration' but their
actions don't match their words.

Mary Smith was an ordinary working mum on an estate in Bristol when her
house was searched by the police after they'd arrested her son. Drawing up
a hit-list of about twenty people such as the head of social services, head
of police, councillors and headmaster of the local school, she soon
realised. "They were professional people who knew the right answers to the
questions, but they didn't really know what was going on." Convinced she
could do better, she set up a meeting of local mums whose kids were on
drugs. Out of that meeting was born Knowle West Against Drugs which gave
themselves four goals: To get a needle exchange; to educate the people of
Knowle West; to set up a support centre; and to set up a support group for
parents and families. Within a few years all these were achieved.

Then in 1995 a Development Trust appeared waving cash at the estate.
However , the group realised that as soon as the money ran out, the
professionals would be gone and it would be back to square one. Mary
continues "after two years I decided 'enough is enough_they should all go,
all the experts_I asked that they would all go away and leave us alone so
we could learn and make mistakes and grow on our own." They then set about
creating their own sustainable projects, committed to local employment by
local people for local people.

As Mary points out, they want "Experts on tap, not on top!" It is only
local people who know best what the local needs are and have the
determination and self-interest to improve their own back-yards.

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ONTARIA

"At every point Ontario Coalition Against Poverty is looking for the best
way available to engage the enemies of the unemployed, to cause them pain,
to hurt their cash flow, or disrupt their workings and, in this way, force
concessions out of them. We actually demonstrate to people effected by
poverty and social cutbacks that we can make a difference in their lives
and that we can resist in a way that hurts those who attack them. In this
way it is possible to inspire them and offer some hope that mobilizations
is not simply a waste of time."
- Jon Clarke

Learning lessons from the mass unemployed struggles of the 1930's the
Coalition has a developed an effective hands-on approach to welfare
cutbacks. Realising that making a difference actually means defending
people under attack, their Direct Action Casework has led to the occupation
of welfare offices to get harsh and unjust decisions reversed; the
picketing of a welfare managers house whose antics threatened a family with
eviction, and disrupting a senior welfare bureaucrat's business lunch.

Unable to stop work-fare (where you work for your welfare cheque) they have
instead targeted the agencies involved. Officials have admitted that this
has created a 'climate of intimidation' that has deterred agencies from
accepting work fare placements on a large scale.

They have stopped a by-law being passed that would have banned squeegeeing
and panhandling (begging). Took over an empty hospital getting a commitment
from the council to open the facility as a homeless hostel. Demanded a Use
it or Lose it by-law occupying empty buildings and defending squatters
facing eviction, and also defended homeless people forced to sleep in
public parks from being removed by cops. One night, they even held a park
for the homeless through to the morning despite being outnumbered by riot
cops.

The Coalition, by not giving themselves impossible targets, but gaining
lots of small victories, they have increased their numbers becoming a
serious thorn in the side for the authorities. As one activist John Clarke
says "The point is that we are fighting to win and not bothering with the
politics of empty gestures."

Contact: Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, 249 Sherbourne, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. Email: [log in to unmask]

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MOVIMENTO SEM TERRA

The Movimento Sem Terra (MST) is Brazil's largest and most important social
movement, which since 1984 has organised land occupations on a massive
scale. The MST has no membership, anyone who is landless and does something
about it is part of MST. By 1997 there were approximately 50,000 families
illegally squatting 244 tracts of unused land. Once occupied, a judge
(eventually) decides whether to expropriate the land and give it to the
peasants. So far 150,000 families have secured legal title to the land they
have invaded.

In addition to the occupations the group has taken direct action, like a
thousand strong camp outside the offices of the Brazilian government's land
reform agency, and hijacking food trucks to feed landless peasants!

As you would expect this hasn't made them very popular. Over 1,600 peasants
and activists have been killed in land conflicts since 1984 - but only two
convictions have been secured against the killers. In May this year the
Minister of Agrarian Reform, read the names of 40 alleged MST leaders out
on TV. Already two are dead.

However, this has not intimidated them, with up to 50 land invasions a
month!

Movimento Sem Terra, Rua Ministro Godoy, 1484 CEP 05015-900 Sao Paulo,
Brazil.

Messages in Portuguese only please. Visit:
http://www.sanet.com.br/~semterra/

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RECLAIM THE STREETS

On the same day that Reclaim The Streets (RTS) occupied the Head office of
London Underground, tubeworkers fighting plans for privitisation had their
one-day strike called off after management threatened the union with anti
trade union legislation. RTS issued a statement arguing that tube workers
needed to consider their tactics. "Understandably workers often feel that
only by taking legal official action can they be safe. But their only real
safety lies in sticking together. If strikers respect the union laws they
are unlikely to win, that is what the laws are all about." They went on to
point out the highly successful 'unofficial' action by over 700
electricians and plumbers working on the Jubilee extension line (y'know -
the line that has to be ready in time for the Millennium Dome opening...)

Reclaim The Streets, PO Box 9656, London, N4 4JY Tel 0171 281 4621.

Three years ago some workers on the Jubilee Extension set up 'The Shop' a
work-place run union organisation. Because their contract of employment
does not include sick-pay they set up a #2 a week hardship fund to ensure
members received payment during illness. This fund was also used to support
other workers in struggle. Slowly the Shop grew in numbers, so when 100
electricians returned to the surface after working underground to find that
the site had been evacuated and was swarming with fire-fighters, they
refused to work until the fire-alarms were fixed. 12 workers were sacked.
All 500 working for the contractors Drake and Scull went on strike and were
also sacked. Two hundred electricians working for other companies on the
Jubilee line, refused to cross the sacked workers picket line. A week later
all those sacked were reinstated.

'The Shop' is now 500 strong and covers 15 sites in central London. And
while the official electricians union seem to prefer to "talking to
managers rather than to those who pay the wages", the electricians have
shown that by sticking together, by building a strong grass-roots
organisation, by ignoring anti-trade union laws and the union bureaucracy,
they can win and improve working conditions. None of this of course is new.
As their strike bulletin pointed out, they are merely "carrying out the
activities that unions were originally built for." Contact The Shop c/o
AEEU Strike Fund, 249 Thorold Rd., Ilford, Essex, IP1 4HE

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NIGERIA

The people of the Nigerian Niger Delta are showing the way in the fight
against multinationals. The Ogoni are one of the few indigenous people to
have forced a multinational, Shell Oil, out of their lands.

But the trouble for Shell doesn't end there - the Ijaw have so far managed
to cut Nigeria's oil output at times by over a third, and at a recent
meeting they gave multinationals an ultimatum: cease production or face the
consequences.

The Nigerian military reacted with the usual ferocity to this, with
thousands of troops, tanks and even two naval battleships brought into the
Delta. Dozens of people have been killed and hundreds injured while a state
of emergency was declared for several days.

DELTA: News and background on Ogoni, Shell and Nigeria: Box Z, 13 Biddulph
Street, Leicester LE2 1BH, UK.

Tel/fax: +44 116 270 9616 Web: http://www.oneworld.org/delta/

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JUNE 18TH 1999 - TELL YOUR CHILDREN YOU WERE THERE...

In May last year the leaders of the eight most industralised nations of the
world - the "G8" - met in Birmingham. With the aim of a single economic
unit, they hoped their meeting would pass unnoticed and unopposed. This was
not to be - with Reclaim The Street parties taking place in 30 locations in
over 20 different countries, whilst thousands were on the streets in
Hyderabad, India and Brasilia.

This year the G8 will be meeting in Koln, Germany - and this time we will
be taking our action to the heart of the capitalist beast - the financial
and banking districts and the multinational corporation power bases of the
world!

Autonomous, yet co-ordinated, actions will be taking place simultaneously
across the planet. Groups as diverse as Earth First!, Campaign Against the
Arms Trade and Reclaim the Streets will be amongst those in the UK, whilst
Chikoko in Nigeria, Green Action in Israel and the North Sumatra Peasants
Union in Indonesia will be targeting their own financial centres. Actions
as diverse as strikes, pickets, hacktivism, occupations, sabotage, carnival
and blockades will be taking place across the globe - transforming centres
of profit & plunder into sites of protest & pleasure. In the UK there are
plans to transform the City of London_ however, to maximise the potential
of this action we ALL need to begin organising NOW!

Regular open networking meetings are taking place in London each month. On
February 27th there will be a conference for self-education on the global
economy - and global resistance to it. More details from Reclaim The
Streets. More info: http://www.gn.apc.org/june18/ - or join the e-mail
discussion list - [log in to unmask] For international info and contacts
email [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]

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MEANWHILE, BACK IN THE REAL WORLD...

1999 marks five years since the signing of the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) between Canada, Mexico and USA. At the time many people
feared the effects that it would have on jobs and livelihoods.

The defenders of the treaty (including ex-Mexican President Salinas who is
in Ireland, enjoying the wealth accumulated during his period in office)
argued that these fears were unfounded as the result would be a win - win
situation in which Mexico, as the smallest and poorest partner, stood to
benefit the most. In order to get the USA politicians to approve the
treaty, it was argued that rapid growth of the Mexican economy offered the
solution to the "problem" of illegal migration.

But five years on there is a very different story. The beleaguered Mexican
economy is already legendary at international level, as are the increased
levels of poverty, crime, armed uprisings and great fortunes that have been
amassed by a few. However, the story that's hardly ever told is that of
people having to adjust their livelihoods according to the whims of
capitalism.

Take Topeltepec in the mountains of the state of Guerrero. This village of
302 families, have survived a mixed economy involving migrating to work in
the coffee harvest, then moving to a neighbouring state to work in a large
sugar cane plantation. Then when it was time to start planting maize, the
families would return to their village and remain there until harvest, with
a pittance coming in from weaving a locally grown palm. This allowed people
to live a simple but dignified life. Only a few families had relatives that
had gone to the USA, but the majority were happy to stay, as the life in
the village was good and allowed them to live with their traditions and
customs.

Then came mass privatisations carried out in preparation for NAFTA. The
sugar mill was one of over 900 industries to be sold off to the private
sector, and the change for the villagers could not have been more drastic.
Before the privatisation, there was a doctor available to take care of
wounds, many a result of chopping down the sugar cane with a machete. Now-
if anyone is hurt - they have to go all the way to the village, which is
miles away The teacher was fired. The garbage collection has stopped. The
wages fell by over 50% and at the same time a regular sack of food
provisions which used to be given to each family was withdrawn. The last
two factors have devastated the villagers' chances of survival.

The villagers tried to protest and organise themselves into a union, but
those seen as being the leaders were beaten and sacked. The rest were
threatened with losing their jobs if they persisted. At the same time the
rest of the economy was shrinking, thousands of small and medium size
industries had collapsed, unable to compete in the free market. On a visit
to the village last year it was obvious that many had found an alternative:
migration to the USA. However this is extremely expensive, not just because
of the long trip involved, but also the cost of paying for the "coyote"
(name given to those that make a living from taking immigrants across to
the USA) and for the fake IDs that are now needed to work in the USA.

The implications are that many families are now split up most of the year
and in some cases for ever. A young woman had married just as the economy
started to turn sour. Her husband failed to find work and when she got
pregnant decided to go to the USA. He wanted to be able to give his
daughter clothes, food and a chance to be educated. His daughter is just
over 5 years old now and has never met her father. His picture is shown to
her on a regular basis and her mother talks about him. Yet, as time goes by
this becomes harder, since there has been no news since he left. Nobody
knows what happened to him. It could be that he has found a new life in the
USA or that some day he will return... but it is also possible that he is
one of the over 300 that die every year at the hands of the USA immigration
police, whose extreme violence the USA government turns a blind eye to.

These people have not been asked if they wanted to enter the treaty, yet
their livelihoods and for many their lives, have been shattered. They do
not want to migrate to the USA. Their lives before were not easy, but they
could stay together and lead a dignified life, even if in conditions that
'westerners' would find unbearable. The defenders of the treaty say that it
is too early to really evaluate the results, that at least 10 years need to
go by before it can be said if it has been a success or not... 5 more years
of towns like Topiltepec having to endure even harsher economic conditions
and being forced to stand by and watch as livelihoods and lives are
destroyed by decisions taken by distant politicians, where people don't
figure in their economic dreams.

According to the United Nations Human Development Report (1998) the state
subsidized environmentally damaging industrial activities - energy, water,
roads, agriculture - worldwide to the tune of at least $710 billion
(thousand million) every year. To put this in perspective, $710 billion is
14 times what is required to eradicate absolute poverty.

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THE INTER CONTINENTAL CARAVAN

In the run up to the G8 summit, activists from deprived countries across
the globe are coming to tour Europe, uniting North and South in the fight
against corporate power, finance and global free 'trade'. Last May saw
200,000 on the streets of Hyderabad for the global day of actions; in
October Indian Farmers began "Cremate Monsanto"; this Summer they're doing
it over here! The 'Caravan' will be 500 Indians and 100 from other
countries and continents, and they'll reach the UK at the end of May. To
get involved: 07970 896 736.

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AND FINALLY...

   * Corporate Watch, Box E, 111 Magdalen Rd., Oxford, OX4 1RQ Tel: 01865
     791391 Web: http://www.oneworld.org/cw/
   * The Ecologist, Unit 18, Chelsea Wharf, 15 Lots Rd., London, SW10 0QJ
     Tel: 0171 351 3578 Email: [log in to unmask]
   * Do or Die - voices from Earth First!, 6 Tilbury Place, Brighton,
     E.Sussex, BN2 2GY (#2.50)
   * Earth First! Action Update, Cornerstone Resource Centre, 16 Sholebroke
     Avenue, Chapeltown, Leeds, LS7 3HB Web:
     http://www.eco-action.org/efau/
   * Peoples Global Action - Web: http://www.agp.org/
   * New Internationalist, Tower House, Lathkill St., Market Harborough,
     LE16 9EF Tel: 01858 439616 Web: http://www.newint.org/
   * Multinational Monitor - Web: http://www.essential.org/monitor/
   * 'The case Against the Global Economy' edited by Jerry Mander & Edward
     Goldsmith (Sierra Club Books 1996)
   * 'Hidden Agendas' by John Pilger (Vintage 1998)
   * Global Vision - beyond the new world order - Brecher, Childs & Cutler
     (Black Rose Books)

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DISCLAIMER

We're all in the same boat chaps!

But why do we always have to do the fucking rowing?

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Sorry, no SchNEWS next week cos despite some generous donations we are
still really skint_ don't forget benefit techno night this Sat 6th: @
Hobgoblin, London Rd. 8pm.

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