*Inside Report: How ALBA Fought for Humanity in Copenhagen*

December 28, 2009



*Evo Morales: “I have heard many debates in the UN where presidents condemn
climate change but they never say what causes it. We say clearly that it is
caused by capitalism.” *

*By Ron Ridenour *



“Nobel War Prize winner walked in and out of a secret door, and that is the
way capitalism and the United States Empire will end up leaving the planet,
through a secret back door.”



So spoke Venezuela President Hugo Chavez from the plenary podium on the last
afternoon, December 18, of the 12-day long Copenhagen climate conference
(COP15).

“While the conference was a failure, it, at least, led to more consciousness
of what the problem is for all of us. Now starts a new stage of the struggle
for the salvation of humanity, and this is through socialism. Our problem is
not just about climate, but about poverty, misery, unnecessary child deaths,
discrimination and racism-all related to capitalism,” Chavez said at the
Bolivarian Alliance of the Peoples of Latin America (ALBA) press conference
held at the Bella Centre immediately following Chavez’ last remarks at the
plenary.

(ALBA is composed of Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador,
Nicaragua, St. Vincent and Grenadines, and Venezuela. Honduras, also a
member, was not present given the illegal coup d´état against the legitimate
President Manuel Zelaya.)



Bolivia’s President Evo Morales followed Chavez’ remarks by saying:

“Barack Obama said a while ago — the only delegate to walk in and out of the
stage from a concealed door — that he came here not for more words but for
action. Well, then you should act by using the money you are spending for
wars against the peoples of Afghanistan and Iraq, for militarising Colombia
with seven military bases to save lives, to save the planet our Mother
Earth.”

Both presidents, the only heads of state representing eight of the nine ALBA
countries present at COP15, denounced the failure of the Copenhagen
conference in both form and content.



Chavez:

“There are no documents presented for consultation by all. The
responsibility is a lack of political will by a few rich countries,
including the host Denmark, headed by the US Empire.”

Morales:

“There is profound difference between their document [the so-called
`Copenhagen Accord'] and the peoples fighting for humanity and the planet.
This group of friends led by Obama accept that temperatures can increase by
2 degrees Celsius by 2020. This will end the existence of many island
states; it will end our snow-capped mountains. And Obama only seeks to
reduce gas emissions by 50% in 2050. But we want and need 90 to 100%
reduction, in order to save the planet.

“Then they speak of spending crumbs for mitigation and adaptation. The third
theme, which they are only just now debating, is how to set up a system of
controls for monitoring agreements and what sanctions there will be if this
is not done. That is why we want an International Climate Justice Tribunal
that can sanction failure to comply with agreements, so that we can govern
based on balance and achieve real solutions.”



President Morales was referring to one of the five questions — to be
answered yes or no– that he proposes for a global referendum on climate
change. The other four are:

1.    Do you agree with re-establishing harmony with nature, recognising the
rights of Mother Earth?

2.    Do you agree with changing this model of over-consumption and waste
that the capitalist system represents?

3.    Do you agree that developed countries reduce and re-absorb their
domestic greenhouse gas emissions so that the temperature does not rise more
than 1 degree Celsius?

4.    Do you agree with transferring all that is spent on wars to protecting
the planet and allocate a budget for climate change that is bigger than what
is used for defence?



At the press conference, and on various other occasions during the three
days of his attendance, Morales posed the problem and the solution to it
thus:

“The rich countries seek to divide the rest of us … by offering crumbs of
money. Mother Earth can’t be preserved with money alone. Europe’s food
almost entirely depends upon petrol. What happens when there is no petrol?
This dependency on fossil fuel is a threat to humanity, so we have to change
the structures of food. It is a structural problem of two forms of life: one
way of living is the way of over-consumption and waste, the way of luxury,
of egoism and individualism-capitalism. The other way is vivir bien – living
well – food enough for all and living in harmony with others and our Mother
Earth, in solidarity and complementarily.”



At the final press conference — for which I was one of two media consultants
during this two weeks, along with Nick Buxton — for the ALBA countries,
Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Venezuela attended. Cuba’s
vice-president Esteben Lazo said that socialism offers greater protection
for the Earth than does capitalism:

Before our revolution, capitalism had nearly depleted all our forests. We
have focused on replanting and now 20% of the land is covered by forests. We
also educate our school children about ecology, and about the ALBA network.
We are founded on principles of solidarity, of human rights and nature’s
rights.

* *

*Democracy anecdotes *

Nick and I had rushed to put out a media advisory announcing the above press
conference, about which we were informed only 90 minutes before that Morales
would be attending rather than leaving Copenhagen earlier that day as he had
planned. We wrote it in a blink and passed out 200 fliers. At the appointed
time, the press room began to fill with media and delegates from several
countries. Bolivia was the only state, of which I know, that insisted on
allowing anyone to attend our press conferences, in accordance with Morales’
practice of inclusiveness and transparency. The time allotted was 30
minutes.

Morales did not arrive on time, which he usually does. We heard from a top
Bolivian delegate inside the plenary that Evo had just gotten an opportunity
to respond from the floor to the rich countries’ secret document, now
leaked. Fifteen minutes ticked by and he did not arrive.

Another phone call informed us that Chavez would be following Evo and then
they were both coming to the media hall. Oh, no! Chavez never talks briefly.
We would lose the conference time and 100 people present would be
disappointed.

Use the “dead” time, my experience told me. I asked two Indigenous social
movement delegates if they would take the podium and speak, perhaps about
their movements and the five-point referendum. They agreed. I translated for
them. They spoke of how this very act of taking the podium before their
president’s arrival illustrated how democratic the new Plurinational State
of Bolivia actually is. Social movements work hand in glove with the
government and their president — reelected less than two weeks before with a
64% majority.

As the activists were speaking, about their movement and the referendum, in
walked presidents Morales and Chavez followed by the Cuban, Ecuadorian and
Nicaraguan leaders. The activists and I calmly walked off the stage and the
leaders took our seats as we nodded to one another.

Morales’ entourage of ministers and ambassadors took their seats. They are
known to us as Eugenio, Pablo, Roberto, Ivan, Angélica, David, Rene and not
Your Honorable, Excellency, Minister, Ambassador. When speaking with or
about their presidents, most common people call them Evo and Chavez.

On other occasions — such as before 3000 persons at the ALBA People’s
Meeting held in a sports stadium on December 17, where Morales and Chavez
spoke alongside top leaders from Cuba, Ecuador and Nicaragua — the leaders
of the Bolivian and Venezuelan governments thoughtfully thanked their teams
of paid workers and volunteers, and the organisers of political events. They
also praised the activists inside and outside the Bella Centre conference.

They applauded the 100,000 plus demonstrators who mobilised on December 12 —
twice the size of the hitherto largest demonstration ever held in the Banana
Republic of Denmark — and the 1500 activists arrested preventatively, nearly
none of whom had performed an illegal act. Only two handfuls were eventually
charged with any violation. Several hundreds had their hands handcuffed
behind their backs and were forced to sit on the cold ground and asphalt for
up to five hours before being bussed to makeshift cage cells. No water, no
toilet. This is the treatment a “democratic” police state can render
potential “terrorists” under their new terror laws, which they deem to be
necessary to accompany their imperialist wars.

In addition to these demonstrations, there were smaller ones attended by
hundreds or thousand in several parts of the city everyday. Some were
decidedly opposed to capitalism and its wars. I participated in one in front
of the Yankee Embassy of Murder the day before its president was to receive
the so-called Nobel Peace Prize.

* *

*Evo Morales *

Evo Morales, 50, comes from the people’s struggles. He was an amateur soccer
player, a musician, a coco farmer and a union organiser and leader before
entering politics. He is a man of dialogue with his people. I note one
illustration. When he came out of a news conference, the Indian Youth
Climate Network, a group of youth from India, wanted him to hear a song one
of them had written about Bolivia. He stopped to listen to “I wish I was
Bolivian,” sung to the tune of “Homeward Bound” by Simon and Garfunkel.

*“Every day they are stalling and they are saying the same old things again,
**
**But one bright country stands apart,**
**They’re saying things close to my heart,**
**They’ve got a plan with hope in hand,**
**They’re saying c’mon, let’s just start…**
**Bolivia, I wish I was Bolivian…**
**Just one degree temperature rise,**
**300 ppm in the skies,**
**100 per cent emissions down by two thousand forty,**
**Does anyone know the price of waiting?**
**Fighting, hating, procrastinating,**
**My future stands in front of me,**
**While people here make history,**
**I hope and pray that it will be,**
**What the world’s children wish to see,**
**Bolivia,**
**We’ve got to take the boldest steps,**
**There’s work to do; clean up the mess,**
**Bolivia”*

The evening before, Morales attended one of the hundreds of side events
organised by people’s movements and NGOs. This one was about the Indigenous
peoples of the Americas. He spoke briefly giving plenty of time for
questions and comments from the floor. Anyone could speak and there was no
formality or nervousness before the president.

At one point, Evo Morales said that he couldn’t always set in motion all
that we wanted but it would be easier now, given that the Movement Towards
Socialism, the president’s party, had won so overwhelming in the
presidential electoral campaign and also now controls both parliament
houses.

“Politics is a science of serving the people. I live to serve the people.
Participating in politics is part of assuring our dignity, our traditional
way of life. It is my duty to take your message to the heads of state here.
If I make a mistake, let me know so that I can rectify it.

“I don’t think we’ll make progress here. We must organise and mobilise all
the more. Not just climate justice activists, but all of us: workers,
farmers, media people, academics, everybody. That is the answer.”

Following this meeting, several Indigenous people told me that those are not
empty words.

“We always speak out in meetings with the president and we offer criticisms
and make demands. He listens.”

Niels Boel, a writer for the daily Danish newspaper Information had one of
two dozen bilateral interviews with Evo Morales. He wrote:

“As the police fought against demonstrators … the world’s greatest activist,
Bolivia’s President Evo Morales, got off with being chased by the press.”

While he did not go to jail this time, the world’s first Indigenous
president knows what prison and torture are all about. He was so treated
under previous Bolivian presidents doing capitalism’s bidding. As Boel
wrote:

“Solutions for Morales come only from people’s organizations, which can
overcome capitalism.”

And that is why I say this conference was a smashing success. Especially
because of Morales and Chavez’ anti-capitalist dialogue in those few days,
and the many thousands carrying picket signs displayed during the massive
march that damned the greedy economic system (“Change the system, not the
climate”), capitalism is now on the agenda of many more people than in a
long time. Even some of the mass media could not avoid headlining this
message from the two “bad boys.”

“I have heard many debates in the UN where presidents condemn climate change
but they never say — cowardly enough — what causes it. We say clearly that
it is caused by capitalism,” Morales said in closing.

* *

*[Ron Ridenour worked with the ALBA countries' delegation at the Copenhagen
climate talks. He has written widely on Latin America and other political
developments. His website is at
**http://www.ronridenour.com*<http://www.ronridenour.com>
*. This article first appeared atTlaxcala, the network for linguistic
diversity, and is published here with the author's permission.]*

* *

*Post-note: *Some institute calculated that the amount of carbon emissions
from this two-week ordeal was greater than some of the island nations exude
in a year. One of the wastes during this failed non-summit, non-climate
conference was the amount of paper used by 30,000 delegates and 3000
journalists and technicians. The official figures published by the UN even
on the first day stated that 8 million sheets of paper were provided. I
guess that Nick and I used 2000 sheets of paper, which we distributed to let
media people know of our news conferences.



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