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SEPTEMBER 26 CALL TO ACTION

by Peter Grimes

02 September 2000 05:51 UTC




SEPTEMBER 26 CALL TO ACTION

Mark the IMF/WB Annual Meetings September 26:
Localize the Fight for Global Justice!

[Slightly modified from Jobs with Justice call to action. See contact 
information below.]

The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will hold
their  semi-annual joint meeting on September 26, 2000 in Prague,
Czech Republic. The World Bank and the IMF, two of the cornerstones of
the international  financial system, claim to be working to eliminate
poverty, but their real purpose is to force developing nations to
embrace corporate globalization. 

The result is rampant abuse of workers' rights and the environment and
the further impoverishment of the very people the World Bank and IMF
are supposedly there to help.

Tens of thousands will take to the streets in Prague on September 26
to protest these harmful institutions and their advance into Eastern
Europe. In cities across the U.S., coalitions of labor, community,
student and faith-based activists will organize actions against local
targets to highlight the same issues that our sisters and brothers
will be protesting in Prague. Here is what some are planning in the
U.S. on September 26:

* Confront a union-busting employer in your community who is ignoring 
his/her workers' right to organize.
* Protest a local privatization plan in your city.
* Hold a forum on canceling third world debt.
* Target a toxic-waste dumper in your area.
* Leaflet or protest at a Kohl's or Target outlet, to support
sweatshop workers in Nicaragua who are resisting union-busting at the
Chentex and Mil Colores factories.
* Do a leafleting or protest at a store location or corporate
headquarters of some other offensive corporation.
* Do an action at a CitiBank branch to pressure them to stop
purchasing World Bank bonds.

On the occasion of the 55th annual meetings of the governing bodies of
the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, we call for the
immediate suspension of the policies and practices that have caused
widespread poverty and suffering among the world's peoples and damage
to the world's environment. We oppose those policies that have
encouraged the suppression of basic human rights and freedoms,
especially those specific to women, workers and the poor. We assert
the responsibility of these institutions, together with the World
Trade Organization and multi-national corporations, 
for an unjust world economic system.

We issue this call in the name of global justice, in solidarity with
the peoples of the Global South struggling for survival and dignity in
the face of unjust economic policies. We seek to create just
societies, where governments are accountable first and foremost to the
will of their peoples for equitable economic development. Only when
the coercive powers of the international financial institutions are
rescinded can such a society exist. Only when international
institutions are no longer controlled by the wealthiest governments
for the purpose of dictating policy to the poorer ones shall all
peoples and nations be able to forge bonds - economic and 
otherwise - based on mutual respect and their common needs. Only when
the well-being of all, including the most vulnerable people and
ecosystems, is given priority over corporate profits shall we achieve
genuine sustainable development and create a world of justice,
equality and peace.

Endorsing Organizations Include: Jobs with Justice * 50 Years is
Enough Network * International Brotherhood of Teamsters * Witness for
Peace * AFL-CIO * Essential Action * Communications Workers of America
* Center for Economic and Policy Research * Continental Direct Action
Network * United Students Against Sweatshops * Alliance for Global
Justice * Rainforest Action Network * Eighth Day Center for Justice *
Just Act: Youth Action for Global Justice * Global Exchange * Center
for Economic Justice * Nicaragua Network * Campaign for Labor Rights *
Citizens Trade Campaign * United for a Fair Economy * Alliance for
Democracy * Mexico Solidarity Network * The Shalom Center * Pride at
Work AFL-CIO.

Cities Planning Actions Include: Albany, NY * Asheville, NC * Atlanta,
GA * Baltimore, MD * Blacksburg, VA * Bloomington, IN * Boston, MA *
Buffalo, NY * Burlington, VT * Chapel Hill, NC * Chicago, IL *
Cleveland, OH * Dallas, TX * Denver, CO * Detroit, MI * Durham, NC *
Erie, PA * Greenville, SC * Helena, MT * Indianapolis, IN * Ithaca, NY
* Knoxville, TN * Lancaster, PA * Los Angeles, CA * Louisville, KY *
Miami, FL * Nashville, TN * New York, NY * Oakland, CA * Orange
County, CA * Philadelphia, PA * Pittsburgh, PA * Portland, ME *
Portland, OR * Providence, RI * Raleigh, NC * Richmond, VA * 
Salt Lake City, UT * San Diego, CA * San Fernando, CA * San Francisco,
CA * Seattle, WA * Springfield, MA * Syracuse, NY * Trenton, NJ *
Tucson, AZ * Washington, DC * Wilmington, DE.

If you are organizing a local event for September 26 or if you would
like to learn who in your community is organizing an event, contact
Campaign for 
Labor Rights at 202/544-9355 or <CLRDC@afgj.org>.

To receive a September 26 organizing packet, contact Jobs with Justice
at 202/434-1106 or <lmcspedon@yahoo.com>. The Jobs with Justice web
site <www.jwj.org> and the 50 Years Is Enough web site
<www.50years.org> have information on September 26 activities.

Localize the Movement for Global Justice
Issues we can all understand:

UNION BUSTING: A constant IMF/World Bank prescription for countries
where they operate is increasing "labor market flexibility."  In
practice this means opposing increases in the minimum wage, weakening
trade unions and workers' bargaining power and opposing any social
protections that would make workers less willing to work for low
wages.  In the U.S., working people face similar campaigns to erode
their power. Thousands of workers are fired each year by American
employers for joining together to organize unions.

PRIVATIZATION: As a condition of lending money to poor countries, the
World Bank and the IMF often demand that governments privatize
state-run enterprises providing services such as university education,
health care, electricity and water.  In Bolivia last year, the World
Bank encouraged the government to privatize the water system, making
water rates triple and making water unaffordable for many families.
Local labor, student, community and indigenous groups fought back
against the government's plan and reversed the privatization. The
drive for the privatization of health care and social security in the
U.S. reflects the same economic policies here at home.

DEBT: The World Bank and the IMF continue to force poor countries to
pay back their debt despite the fact that many lack the funds to
properly care for their own people. The IMF/World Bank's control of
the debt issue preserves their power to impose unpopular austerity
policies.  Sub-Saharan African countries spend more on debt payment
than on primary education and health care combined.

HEALTH: Debt payments and neoliberal structural adjustment policies
have a negative impact on health in both developing and developed
countries.  In most Sub-Saharan African nations, governments spend
four times as much on debt repayment as on health care, despite the
frighteningly quick spread of HIV and AIDS.  In the U.S., 42 million
Americans are without health care coverage.

ENVIRONMENTAL ABUSE: Policies of the World Bank and the IMF have had a
devastating impact on the environment. After granting Nicaragua a loan
in 1994, the IMF supported the expansion of the logging industry,
causing an increase in Nicaragua's already high rate of deforestation
(370,000 acres/year).  At this rate, the few forests that remain in
Nicaragua will disappear quickly. In the U.S., corporate toxic-waste
dumpers benefit from similar policies.

CORPORATE CONTROL: IMF/ World Bank policies have paved the way for
U.S. corporations to exploit the human and ecological resources of
developing countries.  The WB/IMF encourage "free trade zones," or
"export processing zones," where a countries' tax and labor laws are
suspended to attract foreign corporations. Companies like Nike and the
Gap benefit enormously from such programs. Oil companies like
ExxonMobil have benefitted from World Bank- sponsored pipeline
projects that harm the environment and displace longtime residents.

WORLD BANK BONDS: Universities, faith-based organizations, unions, 
governments and other institutions that we control buy the bonds that 
finance the World Bank.  The World Bank Bonds Boycott is an
international campaign using grassroots economic power to demand an
end to structural adjustment lending and other environmentally and
socially destructive World Bank policies.

WOMEN: Extensive data from around the world show that IMF-imposed
austerity and economic reform programs have stripped many women of
what meager health and education benefits were once available to them.
Women's formal sector unemployment has increased due to IMF-induced
recessions, privatizations and government cutbacks.

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I N D U S T R I A L   W O R K E R S   O F   T H E   W O R L D

                 FOR A WORLD WITHOUT BOSSES
              



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