-Caveat Lector-

==============================================
Protest generation vows to grab reins of power as they prepare for battle of
Prague

Anti-globalisation campaigners attend training camp as bankers and ministers
gather for IMF meeting

By Justin Huggler in Dolni Slivno
The Independent

18 September 2000

The world has a new protest generation, and it has arrived in Prague. As the
city's five-star hotels fill up with the besuited bankers of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, the people who have vowed
to wreck this week's summit and wrest control of the world's economy from
their grip are gathering on a disused farm in the village of Dolni Slivno,
three miles north of the city.

They have come from across the world: not only dreadlocked veterans of
anti-capitalist campaigns, but many who have abandoned highly paid,
white-collar jobs to be here, sleeping in the shell of a wrecked bus, or in
an old barn with holes in the roof, and washing from a communal bucket.
Protest is back, and it is uniting the young from across the social
spectrum.

Unlike the World Trade Organisation (WTO) meeting that protesters ruined in
Seattle last year, the summit opening tomorrow is being held in a country
directly affected by globalisation. Nowhere in the post-communist world has
embraced the global economy as eagerly as the Czech Republic: Prague is full
of McDonald's restaurants and Tesco supermarkets, and thousands of Czech
activists are expected to demonstrate alongside international campaigners
from across Europe and North America. Those at the camp are just a tiny
fraction of those expected to arrive in Prague this week - and, unlike many
who are coming, they are all committed to non-violence.

Chelsea Mozen gave up a well-paid job in Washington DC's local government to
come to Prague. Immaculate in designer clothes, she reels off statistics to
support her case against the World Bank, while behind her a guitar lies
against a sign pointing the way to the "compost toilet".

Scott Codey talks to journalists about the history of nonviolent protest.
His conversation is lucid and educated, full of references to Gandhi and
Martin Luther King. He quotes Gandhi, saying that the protesters are
"walking in truth".

This week Mr Codey and Ms Mozen, clean-cut, well-read Americans, will
probably be tear-gassed and beaten by police for the first time in their
lives, as they form a human chain around the congress centre where the IMF
and WorldBank meetings are being held.

"Being tear-gassed is a sacrifice I'm willing to make," Mr Codey says. "This
is something I feel morally compelled to speak out against." These are the
young people the IMF and the World Bank should be afraid of.

The protesters may look clueless as they practise their human chain, but
they are the proof that the anti-globalisation movement has spread far
beyond the hardline fringe groups who want to tear down the entire economic
order.

They will stand hand-in-hand with veteran campaigners such as Martin Shaw,
an electrician from London who gave up his job to "get out of the capitalist
economy", and now lives in a housing co-operative in London.

But, unlike Mr Shaw, a committed anarchist who says he wants to tear down
the consumer society and live without "interference" from any government, Mr
Codey and Ms Mozen are not revolutionaries: they want to reform the system,
not destroy it.

Ms Mozen says: "We're not saying we don't need a body to govern global
trade. We're saying we want an equitable system, where people can decide for
themselves if they want to grow food, so their children can eat, instead of
coffee beans for export."

This time, it is not all about the sort of street protests that wrecked the
WTO summit in Seattle and humiliated President Bill Clinton last year. The
Initiative against Economic Globalisation, the Czech umbrella group for
NGOs, which set up the training camp and plans to blockade the official
summit, is also holding its own counter-summit this weekend, while the IMF
and World Bank delegates are in town.

The protesters will not only condemn global economic policy, they will set
out their alternative vision. Revisionist academics, including the
sociologist Walden Bello and the Egyptian neo-Marxist economist Said Amin,
will address counter-summit meetings.

Mr Codey says: "We're trying to decentralise power so local communities have
a say in their own lives." He first became interested in the
anti-globalisation movement on a trip to Nicaragua in 1995. "I'd never heard
of the IMF or the World Bank before I went to Nicaragua," he says. "But
every Nicaraguan had. I saw what they had done, how they went in and
decimated the local economy. Thousands were forced into poverty because
instead of growing food they were forced to grow products for the world
economy."

Ms Mozen's story is similar. "I first started to think about these issues
when I studied in Bolivia," she says. "The Bolivian family I was staying
with was adamant I should learn about the IMF and the World Bank. Since I
left there were massive protests on the street where I lived. People were
killed."

Ms Mozen rejoins the human chain of young protesters from all walks of life.
But these are not like the well-equipped demonstrators of Seattle, who came
with gas masks to withstand the tear gas. Sit down if the police charge on
horseback, the instructor tells them.

>From tomorrow, they will face a police force renowned for its hardline
tactics under communism, and with a reputation that has barely improved
since. These young idealists have their ideas sorted out - but are they
ready to face the police on the streets of Prague?


______________________________________________________________________
--
============================
-- CUT OUT THE MIDDLEMEN --
JUST VOTE FOR A CORPORATION
============================

Reply via email to