sickle_s.gif (30476 bytes) People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)

Vol. XXV

No. 51

December 23,2001


Sao Paulo Forum Opposes Imperialism, Neo-Liberalism

Sitaram Yechury

THE 10th meeting of the Sao Paulo Forum (SPF) met at Havana, the capital city of socialist Cuba from December 4 to 7, 2001, attended by 513 participants from 138 countries. Comrade Fidel Castro attended all the plenary sessions of the meeting, summed up the discussions and outlined the future orientation in a five and a half hours speech that ended in the early hours of December 8.

The Sao Paulo Forum came into existence in 1990 with a meeting of the Left forces from the southern American continent at the city of Sao Paulo in Brazil. Hence its name. During this decade, the SPF has become the focus of anti-imperialist sponsored globalisation in Southern America.

ASSESSING THE OFFENSIVE

In his opening address to the Forum, Polit Bureau member and Head of the International Department of the Communist Party of Cuba, Jose Balaguer, explained the effort made in 1990 by the Left forces in the region to assess the imperialist-neo-liberal offensive in a world situation which was seeing the disintegration of the socialist USSR. The consequent aggravation of world social contradictions, the heaping of greater burdens and miseries on the peoples of the region, motivated the Left forces to continue their efforts at consolidation and coordination, to jointly face the imperialist offensive. During this decade, the Forum has been meeting every year with more forces joining.

The Forum clarifies that it does not assume to be a supra-national political body, and far from negating the role of the Left parties in their respective countries, it emphasises the fact that the final victory against the imperialist offensive will have to be brought about by socialist transformations in individual countries. The declaration of this Havana meeting clearly states this:

"The SPF is a genuine search where forces of Marxist thought coincide with the great contribution made by approaches inspired by liberation theology, democratic radicalism, or a social Left without well-defined ideological enclaves. Nevertheless, although the SPF has no clear socialist definition, and although not all of its member organisations sanctify this goal in their manifestos, there is a general consensus on rejecting the current capitalist order whose fundamental driving force is profit at the expense of social justice. This stance implies progress towards equality between all men and women as a starting point, this being contrary to global tendencies.

"This consensus within the SPF has been articulated in the construction of what we call an `alternative model' to the neo-liberal model which currently dominates globalisation. The latter has taken place under the hegemony of dominant forces and capitalist countries that, since the 1970s, have been guided by neo-liberal concepts, policies and programmes. This makes the process of globalisation exceedingly contradictory and conflictive. On the one hand, scientific and technical advances open up new possibilities and opportunities to reach new levels of progress and development and to solve humanity’s problems; conversely, however, globalisation driven by neo-liberalism and the dominant forces in the world today, is the background against which inequality, polarisation and natural destruction all increase."

CONCRETE EVIDENCE

The Forum began with the intervention of the leaders of four regional groupings of the countries in Southern America – the Caribbean; Central America; the Andean Region; and the Southern Zone. Leader of the Workers’ Party of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, popularly known as Lula, a serious contender for the post of President of Brazil in the 2002 elections, said that ten years ago when the Forum was established, it appeared impossible to oppose imperialist neo-liberalism and globalisation. Today, he said, the four favourites of imperialism -- Mexico, Peru, Argentina and Brazil -- that implemented the IMF agenda with great enthusiasm, find that their economies have collapsed; public assets have been virtually liquidated; national sovereignty negated; and the leading politicians of all these countries facing innumerable corruption charges. None of these countries had any plan to eradicate poverty, illiteracy or unemployment. It is the IMF that is dictating their domestic policies.

Under these conditions, the Forum noted that more and more newer forces are joining this struggle against neo-liberal globalisation. At the same time, in a new world situation, imperialism is drawing up newer strategies for strengthening its domination and exploitation.

Every intervention in the Forum highlighted the fact that the "neo-liberal paradigm" has openly plunged every single country into an all-round crisis. The protests against these are on the rise. The declaration of the Forum noted:

"The continuity of the social protest -- and its radicalisation in some countries -- unfurls in a context of acute socio-economic crises, marked for most of the region by recession, adjustment plans, the slow down of economic growth, foreign indebtedness, and the attempt to strengthen neo-liberal policies (privatisation, deregulation, labour flexibility, etc.) This situation comes with the increase of repressive measures, measures for social control, and the criminalisation of poverty and protest actions.

"The combination of these three processes (social protest, recession and adjustment, repression) has unleashed a series of crises in the political-institutional regimes, situations of non-governance and even of serious democratic setbacks. This shows the shortcomings of the current system for meeting the basic social needs, as well as the growing lack of legitimacy of the ruling elites."

THREE MAJORISSUES

The ascendancy of George Bush to the Presidency of USA was marked by the intensification of this process. The National Missile Defence Programme; the expansion of NATO and its heightened aggression; the blatant patronage provided to Israel -- all are indications of a new imperialist offensive.

The unsustainability of the imperialist globalisation strategy is reflected in the recent global recession that has engulfed all major world capitalist centres. In this background came the terrorist attacks on the United States and the declaration notes:

"The September 11 attacks in the United States undoubtedly alter the international political situation, as this provides them with a new pretext to consider themselves as guardians of the international imperialist system and intensify their role as such. The nature and characteristics of these events, combined with its magnitude in terms of civilian deaths and damage to some of its symbols of power, has created favourable conditions in the United States for its political, media and military machinery to carry out its hegemonic plans with greater impunity."

The Forum highlighted three issues, specific to the region, which, in a way encapsulate the imperialist strategy.

These three developments reflect the imperialist strategy for a comprehensive hegemony -- economic, political and military.

PEOPLE’S RESPONSE

Much of the discussions centred on the growing people's response to such predatory imperialist interventions in the region. The declaration noted:

"The many varied responses of the people faced with the worsening of the social situation in the continent; the increase of class struggle, the demonstrations of civil disobedience and of popular responses, as well as the development of many powerful social movements (trade unions, peasants, indigenous people, women, neighbourhoods, cultural organisations, youth, NGOs, etc.) that act as true coordinators of anti-neo-liberal resistance.

"The advances of Leftist and progressive forces in several countries, in some of which there are real possibilities of their ascension to power in the next few years, will require the Leftist forces to be ready to face what will undoubtedly be the greatest challenge in their history.

"These advances were evidenced in the ascension to power or re-election of Leftist forces in important Latin American cities such as Mexico, Sao Paulo, Porto Alegre, San Salvador, Managua and Montevideo, among others."

While concentrating on the region and the movements in individual countries, the declaration noted that such protests against globalisation have been growing on a global scale.

"As an expression of their rejection of decades of implementation of the neo-liberal globalising strategy, the most varied forces have come together in the world. The mobilisations carried out during the different summits of government leaders and officials of the most powerful countries is a clear sign of this growing rejection (Seattle, Prague, Quebec, Gothenburg, Genoa) and they were most evidenced in the First Social Forum held in Porto Alegre. Thousands of representatives of social, religious and political organisations met there and drew up an agenda expressing their common interests in favour of an alternative globalisation with well defined postulates. Among these we wish to highlight the following:

"It is evident that although this movement `For a Different Globalisation' has achieved some victories, these are due both to a period of resistance and the internal contradictions among those who promote the current globalisation. Therefore, these victories are provisional, since the G-8 governments, the transnationals and the international financial institutions have the means (among these violence) to continue their pressure to impose inhuman conditions on the peoples of the world. However, we are witnessing a new cycle of struggles and alternative proposals, in a context where things are moving fast, in a transformation process that can gain new momentum in the near future, gain a quicker pace, allowing us to advance in overcoming the organisational and programmatic dispersion that continues to mark the anti-neoliberalism movement. It has not yet achieved its own dynamics, which will be gradually attained as the members of the movement gradually gather strength in their countries, giving a supranational character to the national problems arising from their governments' submission to the imperialist globalisation model.

"The articulation between national and global issues, as well as between political and social issues, are important aspects that must be prioritised and that require the political actors to respect the autonomy and independence of the social forces, just as the social organisations must assess the political dimensions of the issues being faced and the importance of joining forces with the political tendencies that share their goals and concerns in the face of the trends and consequences of the phenomena that characterise today's world."

While committed to strengthening such progress, the Forum also devoted much time for an alternative path for Southern America.

ALTERNATIVE PATH

"It is necessary to analyse the path followed since 1990 as regards the establishment of the Sao Paulo Forum as a space for meetings, exchange of experiences and coordination of political initiatives of the progressive and Leftist forces of the continent in the struggle against neo-liberalism and imperialism, and in the search of alternative solutions, for democracy and its improvement, sustainable development and social justice.

"This path involves not only opposing neo-liberalism, but uniting the forces favouring a change as well as proposing and implementing viable alternatives for building a new social model that guarantees growth with equity and social justice. This will require the progressive forces to reach an agreement to achieve a national, democratic, anti-imperialist, people's government.

"After a fruitful decade of the SPF, we now face the challenge of this new stage: to put forward the general lines of the alternative proposal -- that will be implemented in each country according to their national peculiarities and concrete conditions --, and put in practice taking advantage of the accumulation of forces and the experience that the Left has acquired in several countries.

"Broadly speaking we can state that in a large part of Latin America during the 70s and 80s, the social and political struggle focussed on fighting the dictatorships, for democracy and in defense of human rights. These were mobilisations that had common features although responding to each country's specific conditions, in the same way that the kinds of struggle and the political solutions reached were specific.

"The democracy recovered in the 80s, which was consolidated in different degrees, is now seriously threatened in some countries. The socio-economic crisis, the neo-liberal programmes, the loss of sovereignty, the scandalous corruption in the ruling circles, the electoral frauds, the manipulation of the media, and the increase of repression, have put that recovery of democracy in doubt and demand from the Left, the progressive forces and social movements a permanent effort to defend the rights achieved and to improve democracy, particularly through the mechanisms of citizen control of state powers, of the elected representatives, of direct democracy and people's participation.

"The globalising neo-liberal offensive of the 80s and part of the 90s, the collapse of the so-called `real socialism' and the alleged `end of history' proclaimed by Fukuyama, promoted a sort of hopelessness and a retreat in the political struggle. However, the past decade was also one of intense political and social struggle and of an alternative proposal for the left. In Latin America, this was evidenced in the birth, growth and consolidation of the Sao Paulo Forum as the main permanent space for the convergence of the Latin American left and one of the most important international political spheres in the continent."

Crystallising its objectives for future, the declaration states:

"We demand liberty, social justice, material and spiritual progress for all nations, the improvement of the quality of life of all peoples and democratic values, understood in accordance with the sentiments expressed in the core text of the IX Meeting: `Our goal is revolution; a profound transformation in society, achieved through the reaffirmation and recreation of democracy, a crucial element of every alternative project. The need to reformulate, widen and deepen democracy in Latin America and the Caribbean is more apparent every day, which can be brought about through opening new and better participatory channels to all sectors of society, above all those who remain alienated from the decision-making process. A great step forward for a new democracy comes about through gaining political power for the people and by restoring their decision-making ability to the institutions of the nation-state thereby enabling them to fulfill their roles as social mediators. The validity and consolidation of a democratic poltico-institutional system are fundamental for an alternative project. In this, liberty, justice and the effective participation of the population converge simultaneously'."

One of the highlights of this 10th meeting of the Forum was the presence of a large number of delegations from outside the region. The Communist Party of Cuba had invited fraternal Communist Parties from all continents of the world. Senior delegations led by General Secretaries or other leading members from 44 countries participated. Amongst other socialist countries present were delegations from, the People's Republic of China, Socialist Vietnam and Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

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