Statements
of Action
To confront
the neo-liberal policies described above, we have chosen the following
actions based on the above analysis, our discussions in Chicago
and the work currently being done by the organizations represented
in this working group. We consider mechanisms of coordination,
communication and follow-up to be absolutely key, since only those
actions for which a group or an individual takes responsibility
for coordination will realistically be pursued following the conference.
Our first priority will be to strengthen these mechanisms in this
working group.
A. We
will establish relations with rural movement networks already
working on the international level and with the broader campesino
movement in Latin America.
1. Establish
relations with and lend support to the following events and campaigns
of the Via Campesina <http://www.viacampesina.org> and the
Brazilian Landless Workers movement (MST) <http://www.mstbrazil.org/>.
a.
International Day of the Peasant Struggle (April 17). This
date commemorates the assassination of activists of the Brazilian
Landless Workers Movements (MST) by state security forces with
two basic demands: 1) an end to ‘dumping’ of low cost subsidized
agricultural imports and 2) a complete ban on genetically modified
organisms (especially seeds).
b.
The global campaign for Agrarian Reform <http://ns.sdnhon.org.hn/miembros/via/>.
2. Spring
2001 Caravan to Chiapas, El Salvador, Honduras & Nicaragua,
March 25-April 7, 2001 <http://www.ifconews.org/chiapas.html>.
3. Build
relations with the South – North Encounter <http://www.epica.org/advoc.htm>.
4.
Join in the organizing against the Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA) meeting in Quebec City, April 20-22, 2001 <http://www.tradewatch.org/FTAA/ftaahome.html>.
B. Establish
relations with organizations of farmers, farm workers, and poor
communities in the United States.
1. Strengthen
relations with the Kensington Welfare Rights Union (KWRU) <http://www.kwru.org/index.html>
by lending support to two actions:
a. Three
Days of Global Action Against Poverty, August 3-5, 2001.
b. The
March of the Poor, Salt Lake City, Utah, during the 2002 Olympics.
2. Strengthen
relations with organizations working in the rural sector in the
United States such as National
Farmworker Ministries, and those that work in this sector throughout
the hemisphere, such as Food First <http://www.foodfirst.org/>.
3. Support
alternative food systems that stress local buying locally and
fair trading systems.
4. Establish
relations with human rights and environmental networks.
C.
Deepen relations within the Latin American Solidarity Movement
in the United States
1. Strengthen
coordination between LASC working groups and within LASC in general.
2. Mobilize
economic and human resources for the work of LASC.
3. Develop
relations with the North – South Encounter.
D.
Educational and Communications Issues
1. Put a human
face on the suffering caused by neo-liberalism in all of our activities.
2. Make
clear how neo-liberalism and ‘free trade’ function to marginalize
the majority of agriculturalists.
3. Describe
the dangers posed by genetically modified organisms.
4. Describe
and promote alternative food, agricultural and trading systems.
5. Describe
and promote the idea of "sistering" as a mechanism of
establishing permanent relations between peoples that goes beyond
mere tactical alliances.
6. Create
our own communications mechanisms as a working group (a web page
with links to the main LASC page and the working group listserv).