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----- Original Message ----- 
From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2001 3:33 PM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] GENOA, July 15-21, PRACTICALITIES



SAND IN THE WHEELS (n89)
ATTAC Weekly newsletter - Wednesday 11/07/01
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Content

1- Invitation from ATTAC Italia
No need to RSVP just come, in Genoa. Here is the
presentation of the
different events and general advices.

2- ATTAC will fly and some other news
Already things are starting to be set as far as
demonstrations, places
to be and to stay, conferences and so on. The
Italian movements have
built a wide coordination that is helping to show
unity on front of
the G8. At the border there will be also a
convergence center to help
everyone to pass it and arrive in Genoa on time.

3- Genoa - Unlawful debt or financial crime
against human development.
Not only the debt burden could be morally wrong,
but also unlawful.
Most of the debt crisis, ie the heavy pay-backs to
banks and other
commercial or governmental agencies, is due to two
factors. One being
the forced liberalization "advised" by the
international financial
institutions, the second being corruption and
money laundering
circuits often similar, even the same, that the
official financial
ones.

4- From July the 19th till the 21st, in Genoa,
face to G-7, general
mobilisation!
There is a time to discuss and talk, think, build
proposals and this
time will happen in Genoa. But there is also a
time to mobilize and be
in the streets, a time to show our determination,
our strength, but
also our imagination and our coordination, well
this time too will
happen in Genoa.

5- Know your rights
For those of you that are planning to come to
Genoa, please read this
to be informed on your rights.

6- Another world is possible
So far about sixty Members of the European
Parliament have committed
themselves to set up an international
parliamentary network. It was
launched at Porto Alegre, at the end of the first
parliamentary world
forum last January and it is slowly taking shape.

7- WTO Tidbits
India lists its do's and don'ts for Doha, while
the EU begs to differ
from US proposals. Meanwhile,  Italy's Berlusconi
gets pre-Genoa
jitters - and in Columbia, tragedy momentarily
gives way to farce.




______________________________

1- Invitation from ATTAC Italia
____________________________________________________________

By Iantorno Fiorino Pietro

1. - Report on our meeting with Italian
authorities

Here is a short report on my meeting with the head
of the local police
and with the prefect of Genoa, a meeting at which
I was representing
Attac Italy. No measure will be taken to prevent
participants from
reaching Genoa. We are thus assured that all those
who wish to join us
here will be able to do so.

However, the Italian authorities will check papers
at the borders. It
is thus essential that everybody have his or her
identity card or
passport. We have been officially assured that the
kind of problems
encountered at Ventimiglia (on the occasion of the
Nice meeting) will
not occur again.

Coming by air. The two motorways from the airport
will be closed.
Coming by road. Buses coming from France will be
delayed but should
eventually reach Genoa.

Coming by boat. Genoa harbour will be closed, so
participants coming
by boat will have to get off at Savona or La
Spezia and come by bus or
train.

Coming by train. On our insistence, authorities
have agreed to keep
the Brignole station open, as a consequence all
trains will be
directed to the Brignole station. The other Genoa
railway station,
Principe, lies in the red area and will thus be
closed.

As important delays are likely, it is advisable to
leave 4 to 5 hours
earlier than initially scheduled.

The yellow area (an area that covers the whole
town and in which
demonstrations are forbidden) has been cancelled
to the east. The West
Side of the town is still out of bounds for us
because the local
authorities want to retain a safe way out for
participants in the G8
meeting.

Available areas: The local authorities have agreed
to our organising
forums in the Marassi area (around the stadium).
We are not likely to
be allowed into the stadium but we can use the
field around it. They
have also granted us three fairly large 'green'
areas: Il Calvini, Il
Gentile, and Lo Scorbia. We can also settle in two
schools (Martin
Luther King and il Detoni). We have asked for free
access to an area
in the west called Campi but are still waiting for
an official answer.
We have again asserted that the GSF actions will
be peaceful and
non-violent, but that our end still is to prevent
the G8 meeting from
taking place. We haven't received any answer.
Consequently, we
consider that our encircling the red area and our
investing the yellow
area in the west are legitimate actions. Our main
field of action will
be east and west of this yellow area.

Finally, the head of the police force assured that
no fire weapons
would be used. Italian policemen present at
Gteborg disapproved of
their Swedish colleagues' behaviour and found it
irresponsible. The
head of police reasserted that there were no
amateurs in the Italian
police force, that Italy is a democratic country,
and that a nation
that shoots at demonstrators is not civilised. He
also explained that
the Carabinieri (the army) would not have their
Winchester rifles.

2. - Report on the Genoa Social Forum

The GSF decided not to acknowledge any yellow
area. Actions will not
be directed against people (even if they are
wearing uniforms) or
against material goods. This is a unanimous
decision of the GSF.

We have also asked for demonstrators to be allowed
to invest certain
parts of the red area as a sign that we do not
acknowledge this
forbidden area.

The GSF recalled that it had asked for the summit
to be cancelled,
which was turned down as a result of the
government's political
decision. The GSF's political response is to
confirm the three
demonstrations on 19, 20 and 21 July and not to
acknowledge the red
area. We will not use violence, the sole limit
being legitimate
violence.

 3. -Proposal set forward by Attac Italy

Attac Italy will have had a meeting with all local
committees on 7
July in order to decide on what actions will be
planned on 20 July,
the day set for direct actions. One suggestion is
that on 16 July we
set up a banner on one of the Genoa banks with the
words 'Let's
boycott the World Bank' (in Italian, of course).
If it takes place
this action will be backed by comrades of the
Italian campaign on the
World Bank.

The provisional council of Attac Italy suggests a
number of
'disturbance' actions on the night of 19 July;
they should take place
in front of hotels were delegates, translators and
other people needed
at the G8 meeting will be trying to sleep.

On the day itself (20 July) we are planning a
colourful and festive
demonstration on the perimeter of the red area,
with a virtual
crossing into the forbidden area (ATTAC will fly).
We are thinking
about it. On 21 July, the day of the large
demonstration that brings
all protest movements together, groups will march
in the following
order:

- Workers directly involved in social conflicts
(Mc Do, Lu...) - Third
World Women - A four square with one
representative from each
organisation - 'Debt' Coalition - European
Coalition country by
country - Globalise resistance - Attac - Italian
organisations

Within the Attac representation, we suggest the
following order: first
Attac Tunisia and Attac Brazil, then all the other
Attac groups, with
Attac Italy at the end.

Iantorno Fiorino Pietro


______________________________

2- ATTAC will fly and some other news
____________________________________________________________

By Laurent Jesover

We are approaching the starting date of the Genoa
Social Forum (GSF),
July 15, and already things are getting clearer.
But first let's break
the news: ATTAC has decided to fly.

ATTAC Italia suggested to all the other ATTACs
that are coming from
France, Switzerland and Germany, Spain, Belgium.
even Russia (a full
bus), to fly on the 20th, direct action day. Since
they forbid us to
be heard on the ground, to walk on the ground, to
use our freedom of
speech on the ground, we will take the air. Hot
air balloons, little
planes, soap bubbles, a G8 that will be inflated
afterward because let
's say it, they are full of... air, machineries of
all types that is
able to lift off the ground will be used. And
since sound can fly
also, at the speed of sound someone said, trumpets
and drums, sirens
and honks will be used also. Some surprises are
already awaited, but
let them be surprises for those of you that will
be here. Normally
(but not finally set yet) we will be Piazza Dante
somewhere between
heaven and hell.

After a marathon discussion that started yesterday
and finished at
seven this morning (another one started and
midday) things are getting
a lot better in the sense of showing our
coordination and unity. On
the 20th a common demonstration will start at
01:00pm at the
convergence center down by the sea to go up to
Brignole (the train
station). There, common actions will occur, very
visible and very
noisy. Afterward every group will go to
pre-determined places. The
Tutte Bianche, the Cobas and other groups will go
to the beginning of
the Avenue XX settembre. ATTAC and other groups
will go a bit south to
thematic piazzas, each one of them being devoted
to each group. Groups
that will decorate the fences and die-in in front
of checkpoints will
surround the northwestern part of the Red zone. In
the west there will
be a worker demonstration called by unions.

The demonstration on the 21st will also finish by
common actions in
relation with what will happen on the 20th. As far
as number of people
few tens of thousand are awaited on the 20th and
100 000 or more on
the 21st.

To help people arrive on time some initiatives
will be organized at
every border. But in France, on the highway just
after Nice, a
convergence center will start on the 18th in a
resting area called
Beausoleil. We are asking all the buses and the
cars to stop by in
order to receive information on the border status
and on Genoa itself,
and to be helped to cross the border. Our goal is
to get everyone in.
Italian groups in Imperia will help with lawyers
since the border stop
is in fact in Italian territory and therefore
submitted to Italian
law.

You can find photos and maps on the website
http://attac.org/genes2001
the photos being in the information section and
the maps, depending on
the date, within the description of the events by
dates.

Laurent Jesover. Editor [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More about Genoa http://attac.org/genes2001


______________________________

3- Genoa - Unlawful debt or financial crime
against human
development.
____________________________________________________________

By Arnaud Zacharie

The politico-financial history of the last thirty
years reveals a
worrying correlation between financial crime,
indebtedness and
poverty. In the four corners of the world, various
agents have put in
place a smoothly running system of
decapitalisation resulting in State
bankruptcies and as a consequence the failure of
all public policy
guaranteeing the wellbeing of their peoples. Faced
with this scarcely
encouraging situation, the question remains to be
answered. Will the
twenty-first century eventually see justice
prevail over the
institutionalised accumulating of fraudulent
profits ?

A text-book case: the Argentine

Argentina is known for being one of the IMF 's
(International Monetary
Fund) favourite pupils. Since the '80s the country
has rigorously
applied the Washington experts' letters of
intention. The the
programmes' objective is now well known; freeing
the country from debt
and structurally adjusting it to the global
market, in order to break
decisively with the "reactionary" policies of the
past, responsible
for the debt crisis at the beginning of the '80s

Following neoliberal theory, state power has
accordingly been diluted,
undertakings have been sold to foreign capital,
economic frontiers
opened up to international capital and the
multinationals. Today while
90% of the banks and 40% of industry are in the
hands of international
capital, the country has been in serious recession
since July 1988,
its external debt has increased from 43 to 133
billion dollars between
1983 and 2000, health and education are in
tatters, the average salary
is worth half its 1974 value . The collapse is
dramatic, both
economically and socially. The reason is clear,
though seldom
mentioned; the IMF and successive Argentine
governments have not
answered the real problems but, have , on the
contrary , applied
measures exacerbating them.

Evidence now exists , resulting from a judicial
enquiry over 18 years,
following a legal process initiated back in 1982
by a journalist,
Alejandro Olmos.; the Argentine debt crisis has
its origin in wastage
and fraudulent misuse of funds featuring the
Argentine government, the
IMF, private banks in the North and the American
Federal Reserve. That
is why the Argentine Federal Court has declared
the debt contracted by
the Videla regime"unlawful", as being contrary to
the legislation and
Constitution of the country. The court recommends
Congress to employ
this judgment to negotiate the cancellation of
this execrable debt.

A smoothly running decapitalisation mechanism

In 1976 Videla's military junta took power and set
up a dictatorship
which lasted until 1983.During this period
Argentine external debt was
multiplied by five (increasing from 8 to 43
billion dollars) while the
share of the GNP (gross national product)
attributable to wages sank
from 43% to 22%. The dictatorship was to lead to
the debt crisis and
the official entry of the IMF to take financial
command of the
country, with the results that are well known.

The verdict of the Argentine Tribunal ,195 pages
long, traces the
history of this condition of indebtedness from its
origins. Agents of
various types are featured; on the Argentine side,
the principal roles
are occupied by President Videla, Martinez de la
Hoz ,the Minister of
the Economy sponsored by the Council of Business
Heads, and Domingo
Cavallo, Director of the Central Bank.

Next comes the IMF which since 1976 has been
granting extensive credit
to the Argentine providing Western banks with a
guarantee that the
country is in a favoured position for the
recycling of their surplus
petrodollars. But the IMF's role does not stop
there, because all
through the dictatorship, Dante Simone ,an IMF
staff member, is to be
found in the regime's service. The IMF excuse is
that it had granted
leave to M. Simone and that it was he he who put
himself at the
disposal of the country's Central Bank (p.27 of
the judgment).The Bank
was therfore paying the expert's board and lodging
expenses. It
remains to be discovered who paid his salary and
if his leave was paid
by the IMF.

However that may be, Dante Simone produced a
written report addressed
to Domingo Cavallo of the Argentine Central Bank
(a copy to the IMF
has been found) a report stating that as regards
contracting further
debts there were wide margins before any major
economic danger would
arise (p.31 of the judgment). M. Simone's role was
clearly to seek
extensive but discrete external financing

Such external funds were in any case hardlyl
difficult to find, so
avid were the Western banks to tap into new
markets, gorged as they
were with petrodollars impossible to invest
following the crisis in
the rich countries of the North. The enquiry thus
shows that the
Argentine Central Bank was able to make
discretionary investments with
American banks, this without securing the
agreement of the Minister of
the Economy, but relying on the generous help of
the American Federal
Reserve!

The arrangement between these different lead
players was such that the
bank loans granted to Argentina were never to come
under that
country's control, but were to be directly
diverted by the banks to
tax havens in the name of front- companies. So the
debt did not
benefit the local people but rather the
dictatorial regime and the
banks of the North which provided important
technical financial
support for the passage..

The rest of the funds were squandered in lavish
subsidies to large
groups of Minister Martinez de la Hoz's personal
friends.

In spite of this court judgment, the legislative
power is making no
move. It is continuing the country's
liberalisation , pushed to
extremes, as this was, during the '90s ,by the
successive governments
of Carlos Menem,who, along with four of his former
ministers, is now
being held in custody, for international arms
trafficking during the
first part of his mandate (between 1991 and 1995)!

Rather than employing the judgment to repudiate
the unlawful debt
which is keeping his people and his economy in an
unsustainable
position, President De la Rua has urgently
recalled Domingo Cavallo to
the head of the Ministry of the Economy, the very
man who was governor
of the Central Bank in the time of Videla and
subsequently Carlos
Menem's "Super-Minister" of the Economy during the
nineties before
getting himself swept away in the clean-up after
the 1998 presidential
elections faced with De la Rua!

A well established culture

While a judgment like this has the capacity to
show up the unlawful
character of the Argentinian debt, the fact that
the enquiry lasted 18
years means that those responsible will remain
immume, protected by
prescription covering the facts. The removal of
prescription from
economic crimes is a major juridical objective of
the new century But
it is not the only one..

The mechanism brought to light in Argentina is
unfortunately not an
exception. Mobutu in Zaire, Suharto in Indonesia,
Houphouet-Boigny in
Ivory Coast, Moussa Traore in Mali, Marcos in the
Philippines ,
Pinochet in Chile and others are well known
examples of Chiefs of
State at the head of a financial empire
constructed with the aid of
the banks by the twisted course of tax havens. All
these countries are
burdened today by unsustainable debt and have been
in the neoliberal
hands of the IMF for almost two decades. As for
their peoples, most of
them have lost even the will to go on hoping, to
such an extent has an
already well established culture been reinforced
by the total opening
up of economic frontiers and the abolition of
controls.

One of the most striking examples of this is
Russia which inside a
decade has passed from the hope of democratic
emancipation to
institutionalised plundering.

The facts underlying neoliberal Russia

When the Soviet Union finally collapsed, the local
peoples entertained
an amazing hope of liberation and democratic
freedom. Ten years later
they have passed cruelly from bureaucratic
rationing to a dramatic
drop in their living standards. Once again a band
of influential
agents have united to ceaselessly pillage a state
in course of
disintegration.

The former Vice President of the World Bank,
Joseph Stiglitz, ,
summarises this transition, as follows: concerning
the reforms applied
in Russia;
 "Following the fall of the Berlin Wall, two
schools of thought
emerged concerning Russia's transition to a market
economy. One of
them stressed the importance of institutional
infrastructures in a
market economy and recommended a more gradual
transition towards
market economy. The second school of thought was
composed of
macro-economists whose faith in the market was
absolute. These
economists had no knowledge of history or of the
details of the
Russian economy nor did they believe that they
needed any.The great
strength, and the ultimate weakness of the
economic doctrines relied
on, lies in the fact that that they were - or were
supposed to be -
universal. This universal truth is that shock
therapy works for all
countries on their way to the market economy; the
stronger the dose
(and the more painful the reaction), the more
quickly the change is
effected. Such is their argument. Those who
opposed this course were
not consulted for long. By December 1993 Russia
had experienced ' too
many shocks and too little therapy'.And all these
shocks had
completely failed to bring Russia to a genuine
market economy. The
rapid privatisation imposed on Moscow by the IMF
and the US Treasury
had allowed a small group of oligarchs to take
control of the
country's assets. when the government began to run
short of money for
paying pensions, the oligarchs diverted important
national resources
to Swiss or Cypriot bank accounts. The United
states were implicated
in these obnoxious transactions. In mid-1998 Larry
Summers replaced
Robert Rubin in the post of US Finance Secretary,
He appeared by the
side of Anatoly Chubais, the chief architect of
the Russian
privatisations. In acting thus the United States
appeared to be
allying themselves with the forces responsible for
the impoverishment
of Russia. The US Treasury and the IMF continued
to insist that the
problem did not result from too much therapy but
from too few shocks.
But during the course of the '90s, the Russian
economy continued to
collapse. Whereas only 2% of the population were
living in poverty at
the end of the Soviet period, the 'reforms' saw
the rate of poverty
climb as far as 50%, with more than half of
Russian children living
beneath the poverty threshold. Today Russia is
eaten away by enormous
inequalities and the majority of Russians have
lost faith in the
market economy."

The fraudulent diversion of funds operated by the
Russian oligarchs
since 1993 are estimated at some 130 billion
dollars! Meanwhile the
country's external debt has risen from 60 to 155
billion dollars
between 1990 and 1999, whereas the country's GNP
in 1999 is only 59%
of what it was in 1989. While the people have been
plunged into dire
poverty, a handful of oligarchs have accumulated a
fortune ,entirely
tax free, with the complicity of the Yeltsin
government, Russian and
Western banks and tax havens.

One of the most striking examples is that of
Menatep, during the
Kremlin-gate scandal which erupted in August 1999.
This Russian bank ,
now in liquidation, was, with the collaboration of
the Bank of New
York, to have diverted to tax havens, some 10
billion dollars, partly
derived from IMF loans.

Late in 1997, Menatep opened an account with Cedel
(now renamed
Clearstream), the international clearance room
offering the facility
of opening unpublished accounts (read
"Revelation", Denis Robert and
Ernest Black,2000, Les Arenes). Alongside the Bank
of New York are the
Vice President,in charge of relations with Russia,
and her husband,
the former president of Menatep and representative
of Russia on the
IMF between 1992 and 1995. The agents are in play,
with the complicity
of the Yeltsin administration as back-up, so
decapitalisation can be
put into operation.

On December 31, Boris Yeltsin resigned in favour
of Vladimir Putin.
elected President three months later, after
instigating an
investigation for abuse of power against
Procurator Skuratov who was
holding an inquiry into the diversion of funds
connected with the
Yeltsin clan.

Convergent diagnoses

The globalisation of liberalised financial markets
and the
proliferation of tax havens have facilitated the
means for
decapitalising States worldwide.. Thousands of
billions of dollars are
thus diverted and laundered with total impunity,
all at the expense of
the men and women citizens of the world who have
to suffer the
onslaughts of budgetary austerity.To counter such
a state of affairs
is no easy matter and this for various reasons;

The complicity of the banks; - the diversion
operations call for
complicated technical financial resources which
only the banks
possess; front- companies; off-shore companies,
changes of fiscal and
legal identity, diversification of investments in
complex financial
products etc. Thus while corrupt elites build a
fraudulent financial
empire , they can only do it thanks to the
logistic support of banks
well remunerated for their services.

The speed of carrying out enquiries: - the period
of sequestration
being public and limited to a few months, justice
is constrained to
act with urgency which allows white collar
criminals to respond when
they are sufficiently organised. This was
especially so in the case of
Moussa Traore in Mali ,who at the beginning of the
nineties was able
to alert an ambassador accomplice in Geneva who
armed with a power of
attorney contacted the cantonal bank in Vaud.The
latter was quick to
transfer the funds to other safe places (read
"Africa;Cancel the Debt
to Liberate Development" edited by Arnaud Zacharie
and Eric Toussaint,
2001,p.235)

The powerlessness of justice; - whereas only a few
days are needed to
divert funds along the crooked route to the tax
havens, it takes an
average of two and a half years for a judge to
track down an
operation. In view of this disparity it seems
difficult for justice to
respond effectively to this globalised mechanism
for decapitalisation.

The virtual secrecy surrounding the information; -
while it is easy
for a banker to discover who is the titular owner
of an account and
with what front company or financial set-up etc.,
he is usually silent
when an enquiry is under way. The reason for this
is simple. Diverting
funds is an extremely well remunerated operation
for banks and very
real competition has developed. Moreover, a bank
cooperating with
justice will see its fraudulent clients turning
their backs on it to
the benefit of more "understanding" banks.

The complexity of the procedures; - the fact that
a procedure is
traditionally long and complex (1st instance, 2nd
instance, etc.)
often enables financial criminals to be protected
by prescription
covering the facts

Roads to international financial justice ;

The establishment of international financial
justice has become
essential for States to exist.This involves
juridico-economic changes
at national and international levels. Some roads
should be tried even
though, given the current political situation ,
they may seem
problematic.

The execrable and unlawful debt; it has been seen
in the case of the
Argentine that national enquiries can be made to
determine the
unlawfulness of a country's external debt. Under
international law, a
debt is unlawful when it has been contracted by a
non-democratic
regime, without benefit to the local population
and with the
collaboration of the creditors. Although the
impact of such enquiries
remains limited for the reasons explained above,
they may well
increase citizen awareness thus motivating the
legislative powers to
respond eventually..

The Convention of Rome (1998); when the Rome
Convention has been
ratified by enough States the international penal
court will have a
panel of judges (parquet) at its disposal and one
State will be able
to bring a case against another. Since March 1991,
ECOSOC (Economic
and Social Council) has considered the diversion
of public assets to
be a violation of the Rights of Man. Also, it will
be possible to
prosecute decapitalisation as an international
crime, even if such
prosecutions can be brought only by States and
give no right to civil
law damages ( simply the criminal penalty)

Making clearance companies subject to
international supervision; it
was seen in the Menatep case that the use of
unpublished accounts
offered by an international clearance room such as
Clearstream makes
any diversionary operations even more opaque As
was emphasised in' The
Appeal for International Financial Justice'
launched on 30 May 2001 by
ATTAC in Belgium :
 "While the eruption of financial exchanges might
lead one to believe
there was chaos among the financial floods, in
reality no trace of the
circulation of capital sums, whether legal or not,
has been allowed to
go astray. All the operations are registered on
micro-fiches or optic
disks and kept in the heart of the clearance rooms
and in the archives
of Swift. Thus the movements of funds from banking
and tax havens can
easily be reconstituted a fact which offers the
necessary instruments
for the struggle against financial crime and the
proliferation of tax
havens. On the other hand, left without any real
control, or
controlled by the banks alone, these supranational
bodies can become
purveyers of corruption, financial frauds and
laundering.. This is why
we are asking the national political institutions
to put Swift,
Euroclear and Clearstream under the democratic
control of a
supervisory organisation".

The taxation of international financial
transactions; - the imposition
of a Tobin type tax, a recommendation common to
numerous
organisations, has advantages seldom mentioned .
Such a tax would in
fact entail the transparency and "traceability" of
transactions thus
faciltating their control by public authorities
and by justice.

Finally, taking a more global view, economic
rights must be defended
in the same way as civil and political rights,
especially through the
(1966) Pact relating to economic, social and
cultural rights. This
requires firstly the adoption of a Protocol as
requested in 1993 by
the Vienna Conference and then the ability to try
economic crimes as
crimes against Humanity - by their nature not
subject to prescription.

Arnaud Zacharie is a researcher at CADTM
(Committee for the
Cancellation of Third World Debt))
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Translation: Prudence Dwyer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More about Genoa: http://attac.org/genes2001


______________________________

4- From July the 19th till the 21st, in Genoa,
face to G-7, general
mobilisation!
____________________________________________________________

By ATTAC France

On July the 20th and the 21st the G-7, summit
which gathers the seven
greatest Economies of the world - United States,
Japan, Germany, Great
Britain, France, Italy and Canada, joined by
Russia for the political
part of the discussions-, have a session in Genoa,
on the Italian
coast.

In reaction to this summit, gets ready what will
be for sure the most
important mobilisation ever organised against the
" liberal
globalisation ". In Italy, where Silvio
Berlusconi, one of the world
richest man, just formed its government and just
announced a set of
ultra-liberal measures which will favour the
development of the
precarious jobs, the organisers of the " social
forum of Genoa " are
expecting more than 100 000 demonstrators. In the
other European
countries mobilisation develops and more 10 000
demonstrators are
ready to go.

The debt cancellation and the rejection of the
liberal globalisation

There are many reasons for demonstrating against
this summit. The
heads of states and governments who will be in
Genoa are, indeed, the
first responsible for the implementation of the
liberal measures which
are generically named "Liberal globalisation" That
is: open markets
for goods and services, including to public
services which are
therefore weakened, flexible employment market,
with a quick rise of
job insecurity and social disparities; various
supports for the
transnational corporation, even when they wreck
the environment and
they monopolise the Third World resources, etc.

However, a campaign will be particularly visible,
for it focuses on
G-7 for more than three years on: that is the one
of the coalitions
which demand the cancellation of the of Third
World countries debt. A
debt they already paid several times and which
hampers the economy of
countries which are often the poorest in the
world.

A counter-summit and several demonstrations

In Genoa, the actions will be numerous.

First, there is a counter-summit which, from 15th
till 22sd of July
will be the opportunity for discussing the
consequences of the liberal
globalisation in numerous countries and to
exchange views on the
militant realities and campaigns which develop all
over the world.

The 19th, the first demonstrations will greet, in
its way, the opening
of G-7 emphasising on the foreigners' rights
(refugees, migrant
workers, etc.). The 20th, at the end of the
afternoon, there will be
the peaceful encirclement of the G-7, and on
Saturday the 21st at 1
p.m. there will be the great demonstration which
will be the paramount
of the mobilisation.

ATTAC with numerous associations, the NGO and the
syndicates

Many organisations will be in Genoa. In France, an
unified action
group was set up which gathered, in addition to
ATTAC, several
syndicates (FSU and Union syndicale
"Solidaire"-),the network of the
European protest marches against unemployment,
associations as AC! or
the APEIS, and numerous associations and movements
of young people.

On the scene, ATTAC-France will march with
ATTAC-Italy, which has just
been created, and all the ATTAC which exist in
Europe. This procession
will be next to those of the coalitions for the
cancellation of the
debt of countries of the South, those of the
numerous European and
world delegations and especially the numerous
associative, political
and trade-union Italian forces which will be
present.

Translation Nicolas Wolff, volunteer translator
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
More about Genoa: http://attac.org/genes2001/


______________________________

5- Know your rigths
____________________________________________________________

Know Your Rights: Print this and take it with you

To: Demonstrators planning to go to the Genoa G-8
Summit July 2001

Some people trying to go to the Nice Summit in
December 2000 were
blocked at the border, particularly between France
and Italy and
prevented from travelling.  The Italian Government
has notified that
it will have reinforced security in place for the
G8 Summit. This note
is for those who want to go to Genoa: (a) what are
your rights; (b)
who to contact if you are blocked at the border;
(c) who to contact if
you are arrested at the border or in Italy. The
imposition of border
controls under Schengen does not affect your
rights in Community law
set out here.  Do not be fooled.

If you are a citizen of a European Union State you
have a right to
move freely to Italy whenever you wish.  This
right comes from Article
18 EC Treaty, your rights as a citizen of the
Union; and from Article
49 EC Treaty as a recipient of services in Italy.
The authorities can
only interfere with that right to move (ie stop
you crossing the
border) if they justify their actions in
accordance with EC law
(contained in Directive 64/221). If you are
crossing an EU border into
Italy know:

1. The border official has no right to ask you why
you are travelling
(decision of the European Court of Justice:
Commission v Netherlands
1992);
2. The border official has no right to stop you
travelling unless
he/she can justify this on the basis of you being
a threat to public
policy, public security or public health
(Directive 64/221);
3. The border official can only seek to stop you
travelling on the
basis of public policy of public security on the
basis of your
personal activities - the decision is illegal if
it is based on
general disorder grounds (article 3 Directive
64/221);
4. A private company, the national railway or
other transporter must
also respect your right of free movement;  the
railway company which
blocks your train or the bus company refuses to
carry you is carrying
out an illegal act unless it can justify the
action on the basis of
the Directive;
5. The Italian authorities cannot expel you
without giving you written
notice of why you are being expelled and an
opportunity to appeal
against the decision (Articles 8 & 9 Directive
64/221).

Your remedies: if you are blocked at the border
you need (free) legal
advice quickly.  The European Community Advisory
Service, a
non-governmental organisation based in Brussels
has open a hotline for
your to call to get immediate advice.  It is
linked with a group of
non-governmental organisations in the Member
States which will help
you and provide advice and assistance free of
charge. This hotline and
links have been put in place to help you exercise
your right to
demonstrate. We will advise you on your rights,
and where possible
enter into contact with the authorities on your
behalf and try to get
you admitted to Italy or challenge your
expulsion.  If this is not
possible, if we can, we will take up your case and
seek compensation
for your against the State for a breach of your
rights.

What to do: telephone (English, French, Spanish,
Italian and German):
00 32 2 548 0494 - the ECAS hotline where a lawyer
will advise you
(free) and immediately.  There is more than one
line. If you need more
help and/or to start a court action we will refer
you to a national
association of lawyers who can help you free of
charge.

Have ready: your name and nationality; a contact
address or phone
number; where are you; a short description of what
has happened: ie
where you started your journey, what the mode of
transport is, who has
blocked you; what you have been told by the
official or company. If
you cannot call, email on [EMAIL PROTECTED]

What we will do: we will advise you immediately on
what to do next,
what your rights are, and the likelihood of a
quick solution.  We will
get a national non-governmental organisation to
contact you as soon as
possible with help on national and EU remedies.

What languages:  we have people ready to help you
in: English, French,
German and Italian.

This message is from an alliance of progressive
lawyers associations
across Europe who are working together to protect
the right to
demonstrate in Europe.


______________________________

6- Another world is possible
____________________________________________________________

By the ATTAC committee for European Institutions

At the European Parliament, for the world
parliamentary network

So far about sixty Members of the European
Parliament have committed
themselves to set up an international
parliamentary network. It was
launched at Porto Alegre, at the end of the first
parliamentary world
forum last January and it is slowly taking shape.

You will find enclosed the list of those European
MPs as well as a
copy of the a letter to be sent to national MPs.

The ATTAC committee as well as any other
association that feels
concerned by the development of the world
parliamentary network should
contact their representatives and tell them about
this initiative.

As indicated in the text, the following letter is
essentially intended
for members of national parliaments in Europe. But
it can also be used
for other parts of the world.

The Attac committee for European Institutions
(Attac-EI)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] brings together
European MPs and
international civil servants.

LETTER TO NATIONAL MPs

Strasbourg 18 June 2001

Dear colleague,

As you may already know a forum of MPs was held
within the World
Social Forum that took place at Porto Alegre
(Brazil) last January.
Over 200 MPs and senators from all over the world
were involved.  It
resulted in the adoption of a final Declaration,
the text of which can
be found in the same mail.

Participants in this forum insisted that an
international network be
set up through which MPs and senators could
exchange their views and
opinions and coordinate actions around a number of
issues in
international politics in relation with social and
citizens'
movements. You will find enclosed a list of
European MPs who have
already committed themselves to this innovative
venture.

We would be delighted if you agreed to join the
network and are ready
to meet you if you need any further information.
In this context we
consider that it would be useful to organize
regional poles of MPs  -
which means in our case a European pole. Work
groups on specific
issues could also be set up.

 In collaboration with our Latin American
colleagues who organized the
parliamentary forum at Porto Alegre, we
established contacts with
North America, Africa and Asia.  Thus an
international network could
be ready by the end of 2001.  Another (stronger
and more inclusive)
parliamentary forum could then be held during the
next World Social
Forum that is scheduled to take place again at
Porto Alegre end of
January 2002.

We would very much like to know how you stand,
what suggestions you
might have, what initiatives you'd wish to launch
or on what issues
you'd like to work.

 We look forward to reading you.
 Best regards,

Danielle Auroi, Proinisas De Rossa, Harlem Dsir,
Jean-Maurice
Dehousse, Pernille Frahm, Alain Krivine, Paul
Lannoye, Camilo
Nogueira, Francis Wurtz, European MPs.

You can reply either by writing to one of the MPs
mentioned int he
list or by sending a message to the email address
of the ATTAC
committee for European Institutions:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

LIST of EUROPEAN MPs INVOLVED IN THE SETTING UP OF
A NETWORK

On 27 June 2001 :

Members of the European Parliament: Sylviane
Ainardi, Alekos Alavanos,
Konstantinos Alyssandrakis, Danielle Auroi,
Emmanouil Bakopoulos,
Fausto Bertinotti, Yasmine Boujenah, Andr Brie,
Harlem Dsir,
Guiseppe Di Lello, Marianne Eriksson, Ilda
Figueiredo, Hlne Flautre,
P ernille Frahm, Monica Frassoni, Laura Gonzalez
Alvarez, Heidi
Annelli, Hautala, Pierre Jonckheer, Salvador Jov,
Sylvia-Yvonne
Kaufmann, Efstratios Korakas, Dimitri
Koulourianos, Alain Krivine,
Jean Lambert, Paul Lannoye, Alain Lipietz,
Caroline Lucas, Nelly Maes,
Helmuth Markov, Perdo Marset Campos, Erik Meijer,
Joaquim Miranda,
Hans Modrow, Luisa Morgantini, Mihail
Papayannakis, Joannis Patakis,
Alonso Puerta, Didier-Claude Rod, Camilo Nogueira
Roman, Martine
Roure, Herman Schmid, Elisabeth Schroedter, Inger
Schrling, Esko
Seppanen, Jonas Sjostedt, Bart Staes, Fod Sylla,
Claude Turmes,
Feleknas Uca, Roseline Vachetta, Luigi Vinci,
Francis Wurtz.

Translation: Christine Pagnoulle, volunteer
translator
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


______________________________

7- WTO Tidbits
____________________________________________________________

by the Attac workshop on International Treaties

1) What India wants to be discussed at Doha and
what it emphatically
does not want

A representative of the Indian Trade Ministry has
declared that what
Indians want in Doha is not so much the launch of
a new Round, but
rather negotiations, with a time limit, on the
Uruguay Round (UR)
themes of agriculture and services, a review of
the TRIPs, and
discussion of aspects of the UR implementation,
for instance, the
special and individualized treatment granted to
developing
countries.For India, subjects dealing with the
environment, labour and
investments should in no case be included in WTO
negotiations.  The
representative warned that including measures on
investments and
sanitary and phytosanitary measures would
jeopardize the future of the
WTO.

A negative approach, like setting up non-tariff
obstacles to trade, or
leaving a clumsy mechanism like the DSB to
regulate things, also drew
criticism.

He advised those people in India who were against
India taking part in
the multilateral WTO system to remember the high
price China has had
to pay to re-enter the organization, the social
norms which the US has
successfully imposed  in its bilateral agreements
with Jordan,
Cambodia and Vietnam, and the EU concessions to
the GSP (Generalised
System of Preferences), linked to the obligation
to conform to social
norms.

2) What the EU wants, the US doesn't want

A Round restricted to the theme of market access,
said P. Lamy
recently, would not suffice as a bargaining
counter to sell to public
opinion the concessions made by the EU.  "It won't
hold water", he
said. "Lowering customs duties is a good thing,
but for that we must
come back with a balanced whole."  To illustrate
his meaning, he said,
"For example, I can get acceptance for a drop in
duties on agriculture
if I come back with measures to protect local
brand products."
Furthermore, he regretted that the FTAA (which he
called a "highly
successful public relations operation") might lead
to the development
of norms which would at once exclude non-members,
like the EU, and
bind Latin American countries to these norms.

3) Berlusconi declares himself ready to "welcome"
demonstrators at the
Genoa G8 meeting
     in July

Like the other Heads of State, Mr Berlusconi was
alarmed by the
violent clashes between demonstrators and riot
police in Gteborg.
Fearing that similar clashes, or worse, might
happen again, he
reviewed security measures with his Minister of
the Interior.

Since what particularly worried him was the fact
that his government
might be accused of even the slightest touch of
violence at Genoa, he
chose to take the offensive by declaring that if
there were problems
it would be the "responsibility of the previous
governments".

The choice of Genoa as venue for the meeting goes
back to 1999, under
the Alema government.  But when the vote came up
in Parliament last
year, Berlusconi's centre-right opposition joined
the "yes" votes for
the meeting in Genoa.

Althoug Berlusconi wants to engage in dialogue
with the demonstrators,
he doesn't appear to have the means to soften
things up.  Even in
Parliament, misgivings are noted.  Italian
communists look on the
summit as the meeting of an elitist club
undermining the work of the
UN General Assembly.

4) When Monsanto's Roundup successfully destroys
... the Andean
Indians' fields

Senator Wellstone of Minnesota (Dem.) is a bitter
critic of US
military aid to Columbia.  In an attempt to
convince him that the
aerial spraying would only touch fields of coca,
without harming
subsistence crops, the US Embassy in Bogota wanted
to give him a
demonstration.  Target precision was to be ensured
by satellite
images.  Unfortunately, it didn't turn out quite
like that.  "At the
very start of spraying, the Senator, the US
Ambassador and the
Lt-Colonel of the National Columbian Police, were
totally deluged -
"sauced", in fact - by Round-Up, with possible
danger to their
health."

"Imagine what happens when a high-level Congress
delegation is not
present."

The US has spread tons of Round-Up and Round-Up
Ultra, produced by
Monsanto, during 24 years of the war on drugs in
Columbia.  Monsanto
also produced Agent Orange, the defoliant used in
the Vietnam war.

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