Africa’s time to use
global meet to push trade agenda
By Oduor Ongwen
I have had interviews with media in Kenya before, but
nothing compares to the sessions with the Press in
Finland and Sweden in the last one week. The interest is
simple to understand, but I am still mesmerised. In
January 2007, for the first time, Africa will be hosting
the World Social Forum (WSF) in Nairobi.
This is big news here in Scandinavia. It contrasts
with the mood in Nairobi where both the African Social
Forum Council and the International Committee met for a
whole week and two media houses could only send cub
reporters who asked some intelligible questions then
left in a clear state of confusion.
Nairobi 2007 will happen at a time when globalisation
from above is going through a deep crisis of legitimacy,
largely as a result of the challenges of social
movements and progressive political forces around the
world, who are busy globalising the world from below.
The US is now bogged down in long and bloody war in
Iraq, which it cannot win. The Iraqi resistance seems to
have created a cul de sac for the oil magnates
behind the Bush dynasty. At the political level, the US
and western influence is dwindling around the world as
progressive political forces are gaining more ground in
several developing countries, especially in Latin
America.
Likewise, the institutions of global economic
governance, namely the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), the World Bank and the WTO, are fast and
irreversibly losing their credibility and being
challenged by both national governments and social
forces in Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Indeed, the entire neoliberal system is on the
defensive. The resurgence of South-South cooperation and
solidarity as signified by the emergence of China as a
dominant economic player coupled with the intensified
resistance of social movements will deepen the crisis of
global finance capital. Therefore, Nairobi 2007 must
seek to extend and diversify the frontiers of
resistance, deepen the methodological dimensions of
struggles for justice and dignity and lay the ground for
building an offensive capacity against global
hegemony.
A space of reflection, encounter and debate – a space
for sharing ideas, proposals and experiences – the WSF
in Nairobi must and will bring the unique concerns of
the African agenda and history of resistance against
colonial and post-colonial domination to bear on the
articulation of global strategies and appropriate modes
of struggles on different planes and fronts.
Considering that the WSF will be taking place in
Africa for the first time, it will be important that the
choice of the themes intended for the common spaces
reflect the broader concerns of the global community and
its collective disillusionment with the way a
significant section of its population is being
marginalised by global economic dispensation.
The entailed activities should aim at giving the
required visibility to the methods of presenting the
debates along with the treatment that the themes in
question have so far received on the basis of the
historical process and accumulation of political
experience by the WSF.
Building on the experience of previous WSF in Porto
Alegre, Brazil in 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2005; Mumbai,
India in 2004; and recent polycentric Forums in Bamako,
Caracas and Karachi, the Nairobi Forum should be viewed
as an open, inclusive and democratic space for the
expression not only of peoples’ struggles and resistance
around the world but a platform for proposing peaceful
alternatives to the political, economic and cultural
domination that has characterised this corporate-led
globalisation.
The organised themes will provide the intellectual
platform on which activities synergize, reinforce and
consolidate the campaigns and guarantee a plurality of
political perspectives to bear on a concerted offensive
against the discredited Washington Consensus.
But more importantly, the activities will contain a
visible dimension of dialogue between the WSF process
and the social transformation concerns of African social
movements. The Forum will speak to the worldwide
challenges facing the victims of corporate-led
globalisation and seek to harness the social
mobilisation challenges and capacities of African social
movements in solidarity with counterparts from the rest
of the world.
Such challenges will need to build on, and of
necessity, reflect the unique opportunity for, and
strategic capacities of, the African social movements
to: articulate and elaborate the hot-button challenges
and delineate long-term perspectives in respect to the
pressing challenges facing the continent and its people;
listen to and exchange experiences with other social
movements from the rest of the world; learn from and
seek solidarity with activists who subscribe to the WSF
charter in its broadest implication; enhance their
strategic capacities in constructing alternative social
development paradigms that are capable of guaranteeing
justice, equity and prosperity for all by exploring and
entering the twilight zone of social visioning around
the outlines of a new dispensation; and develop
strategic and political capacity to animate widespread
citizen action against choking debt, unfair terms of
trade and marginalisation of Africa in global
politics.
I am thrilled that this evening in Stockholm and
tomorrow in Uppsala, I will meet and talk to young
people who have formed study circles for the Nairobi WSF
2007. I intend to ask them why they are saving their
meagre stipends from colleges and their parents to come
to Nairobi instead of focusing on the World Cup soccer
extravaganza in Germany.
I will no doubt carry some lessons from these young
idealists to share with our young democrats in Nairobi,
like the Citizens Assembly, Bunge la Mwananchi, Huruma
Social Forum, Nyeri and Nyanza social forums that are
already making another Kenya, another Africa and another
World not only possible, but a reality in our own
lifetime.
http://www.eastandard.net/archives/cl/hm_news/news.php?articleid=1143950495&date=5/4/2006