| more updates... 9 September 2003Media Bulletin # 1
  THE WTO SHOULD TAKE A LOOK IN CANCUN’S BACK                     YARD. Puerto Juarez is the oldest settlement in Cancun. Past the                     local fishing boats moored on the stunning white beach, you                     can see the profile of the Hotel Zone where the WTO ministerial                     meeting is about to begin. The contrast is breathtaking. Cancun was created just 33 years ago. Fishers and their families                     have been in Puerto Juarez for about 70 years. Many of the                     traditional families are now being displaced. According to                     the locals, people have no rights and some have no water because                     powerful developers are intent on expelling them from the                     beach so they can build new hotels in a mirror image of the                     Hotel Zone.  Jose Aguillon owns a small beachfront restaurant and fishing                     boat. His was the first stop on the tour of ‘real’                     Cancun organized for journalists by a number of groups including                     Friends of the Earth International and the Polaris Institute                     of Canada, alongside the local organizers of the Comite de                     Bienvenida de Cancun.  Snr Aguillon apologized that “there are few people                     around today, because they are afraid.” A few days ago,                     he had a visit from the local council. They told him that                     his restaurant license would not be renewed. Plain clothed                     officials came to watch over the media tour. There were two likely reasons. First, the authorities want                     to close his restaurant down because poor people gather there.                     They will be unsightly in the proposed new luxury hotel zone.                     Second, Jose Aguillon was prepared to talk to the international                     media about the harsh realities of life for local people in                     Cancun – a truth that would contradict the claim that                     foreign direct investment is essential to create development                     and jobs in poor countries. It would also tarnish the image                     of golden sands, wealth and first world services being lapped                     up by the WTO delegates, journalists and lobbyists who now                     occupy Cancun’s Hotel Zone. Snr Aguillon’s message was simple: “They promised                     tourist development that would help indigenous people, help                     the local people and help the poor people. And we noticed                     at the beginning of the process that that was lies, that wasn’t                     the way it was going to be.” The cruise ships and hotel                     chains are all foreign controlled. Tourists buy an all inclusive                     package, including arts, crafts, restaurants and fishing excursions..                     Foreign investors now control all development in Cancun. Small                     businesses simply cannot survive.  “All the money stays in the hands of the same people.                     That’s what creates the poverty, alcohol, vandalism                     and lack of services. We live day to day. Our livelihoods                     depend on the weather. If the weather is good, we work. If                     not, we can’t. The permits we need to purchase to run                     a business here are too expensive for us and they are turned                     down for reasons we don’t understand and aren’t                     told to us. The point seems to make sure we can’t continue                     to exist.”  “Paradoxically, it has become easier to get permits                     to run the little restaurant and fishing boat than it used                     to be. But it is impossible to compete with the transnational                     companies that are all backed with foreign money.”  “All this started with NAFTA. In 10 years”, he                     said, “there has been no widespread development for                     the people. Foreign investors take all the money back home.                     Some 600 families live in this community. Soon they will have                     no choice but to work for the foreign companies for a pittance,                     putting on white suits, being people’s servants and                     taking orders, or set up small tourist stands.” “People used to be happy”, he said. “Here                     by the shore on the water there used to be thousands of lobsters,                     shrimps and clams. People could live from the sea. Just recently                     a friend was arrested, had his boat confiscated and sent to                     jail because he took seven kilogrammes of shrimp. The people                     of Cancun do not have any part of Cancun for themselves.” Down the road at the port this perverse form of ‘development’                     was also making its mark. A new facility was under construction,                     designed to cater for 200-300 boats. The small operators and                     cooperatives that ran the old port would shortly be redundant.                     The new port building also had an OXXO convenience store and                     a McDonalds, which based on similar experience elsewhere would                     soon displace the small stores in the town. What has this got to do with this week’s WTO ministerial                     meeting? A great deal has been invested in the argument made                     by the IMF, World Bank and WTO that poor countries need foreign                     direct investment. Negotiations on a new agreement to promote                     and protect foreign direct investment are top on the list                     of ‘new issues’ ministers are required to decide                     on. This would see the failed negotiations on a Multilateral                     Agreement on Investment reborn. Already, foreign investors in services such as tourism, fishing,                     restaurants, food stores, hotels, leisure services and ports                     can secure guaranteed rights to set up business and be treated                     at least as favourably as locals under the General Agreement                     on Trade in Services (GATS). The right to regulate can also                     be restricted, if governments have committed those services                     to the GATS rules. New negotiations launched in 2000 require                     governments to make commitments of further services. The European                     Union has asked Mexico for extensive new openings in tourism,                     retail services and environment, including water. The Cancun                     ministerial is expected to set new deadlines for governments                     to table their offers in response to such requests. The water issue is especially sensitive. Numerous World Bank                     loans to Mexico have contained conditions mandating water                     privatization and cost recovery. In 2003 the World Bank approved                     another loan for Mexico to provide infrastructure services,                     including water, for eligible states. Conditions for eligibility                     include economically efficient pricing, self-sufficiency through                     cost recovery, appropriate competition and regulatory frameworks,                     and enhancing the participation of the private sector. 
 The local water company in Cancun, Ondeo, is 50 per cent owned                     by Suez of France, the world’s largest water company.                     Suez is a cornerstone member of the European Forum on Services                     that drives the EU’s position in the GATS negotiations.                     In 2002 it secured the contract for Cancun’s water from                     Azurix, a subsidiary of Enron. Suez claimed that this and                     other Mexican water contracts would earn it US$70 million                     in annual revenue.
 The real meaning of water privatisation was soon evident                     down the road from Snr Aguillon’s restaurant. A pumping                     station provides a relatively clean and reliable water supply                     to local residents. But not to all of them. A stone’s                     throw away from the pumping station lives the family of Snr                     Faustino Gaspar Trinidad. Their house has no water. To have                     it connected they need papers that show they are legal tenants.                     They’ve lived on the land in their own house for many                     years. But they don’t have the paperwork. It got lost                     at the Council. Each time they try to secure new documentation,                     that gets lost too. Sometimes, they say, the tanker drivers                     given them water, out of solidarity. The landowner is billionaire Carlos Hank Gonzales, former                     Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Tourism, and one of                     Mexico’s most influential businessmen implicated in                     the corruption scandals that surrounded former President Salinas.                     His local corporate vehicle Trivasa has been linked to an                     Enron-style corruption scandal. Another of his firms is a                     co-partner with French water company Suez. Snr Hank has flagged the land where the Gaspar family lives                     as the site of a new hotel zone. They were offered 6000 peso                     to move. When they refused, the local authority and landowner                     came with machines to destroy the house. The municipal government                     documented their complaint. But those papers were never served                     and disappeared too. They commented that “Developers                     have big pockets”.  Some of their neighbours have moved. Three years ago 17 fishing                     families were successfully evicted to make way for a hotel                     development and relocated to a remote but beautiful lagoon                     at Rio Manati. This was presented as an opportunity to develop                     their own tourism venture. Accepting the challenge, the families                     have been developing eco-tourism with fresh fish restaurant,                     bird watching, fishing and exploring the rich natural environment                     fed by mangroves. They have invested heavily in equipment                     for tourism and sustainable aquaculture.  Access is a problem - the dirt road would deter all but the                     most determined tourist. So is the absence of electricity,                     although they are working on innovative solar energy strategies.                     Two other threats may spell the death knell for the project,                     and force them to search for another new livelihood.  The first is a rubbish dump two kilometers up the road, right                     next to the mangroves. The dump receives all the refuse from                     Cancun, even though it’s in the separate municipality                     of Mujeres. The 24,000 hotel rooms in Cancun generate as much                     rubbish as the 400,000 people who live in Cancun. The toxins                     from decomposing rubbish leach into the mangroves, polluting                     the lagoon. This, in turn, kills the fish larvae that spawn                     in the lagoon. As guardians for the environment, they explained                     they had been trying to get environmental regulation and restrictions                     on fishing to safeguard an irreplaceable heritage, to no avail.                     That’s not surprising. The dump is owned by the same                     Carlos Hank Gonzales. As vultures circle the tip, our guide                     quips that “we’d would rather have these vultures                     than the ones at the WTO”.  Developers are now eyeing up the site at Rio Manati as a                     commercialised tourist venture, displacing the families’                     livelihoods yet again. In a familiar story, they don’t                     have the formal paperwork to support their ownership of the                     land. It disappeared long ago within the offices of the local                     council. The families are trying to regularize the situation                     so they can’t be removed. Without those documents, developers                     can lay claim to the site. Presumably, if they succeed Snr                     Hank will be involved, and discover a profitable way to resolve                     the pollution threat to the lucrative tourist venture, as                     well as fixing the road and laying on electricity.  To a large extent the North American Free Trade Agreement,                     which covers both services and investment, has already locked                     open the doors of Cancun and its surrounds to foreign capital                     from the US and Canada. Their transnational corporations are                     ‘free’ to operate in a largely unfettered regulatory                     environment. The people whose communities they destroy, whose                     environments they despoil, whose livelihoods they terminate,                     whose self-determination they negate and whose dignity they                     leave in tatters, have no legal right to keep them out. Nor,                     any longer, does the Mexican government. Extending this ‘free trade zone’ to the world                     through the WTO agreements on investment and GATS reduces                     Mexico, and places like Cancun, to a mere playground for those                     transnational corporations and foreign investors that want                     to profit from this stunning location. The contrast between                     a development model designed to promote the profits of the                     world’s transnationals, and one that protects the basic                     rights of people to clean drinking water, fish from their                     oceans, a clean environment, a secure income and protection                     from intimidation, eviction and repression could hardly be                     more stark. From Jane Kelsey in Cancun: email j.kelsey@auckland.ac.nz;                     cellphone 52 998 937 7436
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