‘Bamako Appeal’ promotes struggle against market-driven
society
By John Catalinotto
A group of about 80 anti-globalization
intellectuals and political activists, including Marxist
economists and organizers, came together to meet on Jan.
18-19 in Bamako, Mali, just before the polycentric World
Social Forum opened in this city. The gathering, which
was not an official WSF activity but whose invitees also
participated in many WSF discussions, issued a statement
at the end of the meeting: the Bamako Appeal.
The appeal involves promoting
discussion and action on a series of points outlining
major problems for humanity. These include the need to
build a workers’ united front and to struggle against
imperialist domination and U.S. military hegemony; the
problems of peasant societies under threat of
destruction from subsidized competition; democratic
management of media and cultural diversity; and the
struggle against neoliberal and market-driven policies.
One of the Bamako Appeal’s major
goals is to promote solidarity among work ers and
progressives in the imperialist countries and the
peoples’ movements in the oppressed countries. The
appeal says the participants “have expressed their
concern with the task of defining alternate goals of
development, creating a balance of societies, abolishing
exploitation by class, gender, race and caste, and
marking the route to a new relation of forces between
North and South.”
Egyptian economist and head of the
Third World Forum Samir Amin, who is a professor at the
University of Dakar in Mali’s neighbor Senegal, had
called this pre-WSF gathering a “Peoples’ Bandung
Conference” to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1955
conference of non-aligned nations held in Bandung,
Indonesia. Some of the Malian political leaders working
on the WSF hosted and participated in the conference.
They included former Minister of Culture Aminata Traore.
Among the 80 people participating in
the pre-WSF discussions were Bernard Founou-Tchuigoua
and Babacar Diop Buuba, both university professors in
Dakar, Senegal; former member of the European Parliament
Miguel Urbano Rodrigues of Portugal; Chilean political
journalist Marta Harnecker; Lebanese-French editor Leila
Ghanem; and the organizer of the rebelion.org website
Luciano Alzaga.
Also there were Wen Tiejun and Jinhua
Dai of Peking University; editor-in-chief Isobel Monal
of the Cuban magazine “Marx Now”; Brazilian radical
economist Paolo Nakatini and Communist Party of Brazil
representative Jose Reinaldo Car valho; French economist
Remy Herrera; trade-union expert Ingmar Lindberg of
Sweden; Antonio Tujan of the Philippine Institute of
Political Economy; Mamdouh Habashi of the Anti-Globa
lization Egyp tian Group; and John Bellamy Foster,
editor of Monthly Review from the United States.
Ignacio Ramonet of Le Monde Diplo
matique, Bernard Cassen of Attac-France and anti-globalization
author Susan George, who have been closely connected
with all prior major social forums, also spoke.
Along with the invited guests, there
were also some groups of youths from some of the former
French colonies, in particular Senegal, Benin and Togo.
Some of the Cuban medical and other aid workers in Mali
also participated.
To carry out the discussion the
larger group split up into 10 different committees.
These held intense discussions for about three hours
each, five committees at a time. Some of the committees
decided to try to set up permanent watchdog commissions,
such as “imperialism watch” and “ecology watch.”
Alarcon asks for anti-imperialist
actions
Cuban National Assembly President
Ricardo Alarcon took part in the discussions too. He
made some practical suggestions. One was that the Bamako
Appeal have as its goal not simply to set up an anti-imperialist
forum that outlines a program or spreads ideas, but that
it also organize for coordinated anti-imperialist
actions.
The Bamako Appeal does call for some
actions. Among them is support for the March 18-19
worldwide days of anti-occupation demonstrations.
The call says it aims “to reinforce
the movement protesting against war and occupations, as
well as expressing solidarity with the people in fight
in the hot spots of the planet. In this respect, it
would be very important that the world demonstration
against the war in Iraq and the military presence in
Afghanistan envisaged for March 18-19, 2006, coincide
with:
* the prohibition of the use and the
manufacture of the nuclear weapons and destruction of
all the existing arsenals;
* the dismantling of all the military
bases existing outside of national territory, in
particular the base at Guantanamo;
* the immediate closing of all the
prisons of the CIA.”
The appeal also calls for solidarity
with Palestine and for being on guard to stop U.S.
intervention against Venezuela and Bolivia.
In summary, the “Bamako Appeal, built
around the broad themes discussed in subcommittees,
expresses the will to:
(i) Construct an internationalism
joining the peoples of the South and the North who
suffer the ravages engendered by the dictatorship of
financial markets and by the uncontrolled global
deployment of the transnational firms;
(ii) Construct the solidarity of the
peoples of Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas
confronted with challenges of development in the 21st
century;
(iii) Construct a political, economic
and cultural consensus that is an alternative to
militarized and neoliberal globalization and to the
hegemony of the United States and its allies.”
Catalinotto represented the
International Action Center at the pre-WSF meetings.
Source: http://www.workers.org/2006/world/bamako-appeal-0202/
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