| more updates... Peasant farmers show strength in cauldron of grassroots                     politics    John Vidal in CancunWednesday September 10, 2003
 The Guardian
  Representatives of 100 million peasant farmers opened a                     conference yesterday to counter globalisation.  In contrast to a giant nearby Walmart store selling electronicdancing Santas and US-grown rice, and the the air conditioned                     luxury of Cancun's hotel quarter, where the World Trade Organisation                     talks open today, the farmers are meeting in a searingly hot                     indoor badminton court in central Cancun. For the rest of                     the week, this court will be a cauldron of grassroots politics.
  Under pictures of Che Guevara and the early 20th-century                     Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata, speaker after speaker                     prompted loud cheers yesterday from 1,000 standing, singing                     and chanting delegates, mostly by denouncing the WTO as "liars"                     and "thieves".  Two uniformed Walmart workers crossed the road separating                     the superstore and the world's poorest farmers to side squarely                     with the peasants.  "Cancun is a symbol of globalisation, and the growing                     gap between the rich and the poor," said Juan. He works                     on the checkout of Walmart, whose £126bn-a-year turnover                     dwarfs the GDP of many developing countries.  "I feel that Walmart uses people as objects. I'm not                     against it, but in their world, everyone is cheated so people                     do not know the value of anything," said Martin, who                     wore a Walmart jacket sporting a smiley symbol and the message,                     "May I help you?"  "Walmart buys cheap food in Mexico, then they take                     it to the US to be processed and sell it back here,"                     he said.  The alternative meeting will last all week and was augmented                     last night by more than 1,000 Mexican peasant farmers who                     pitched camp opposite the store. By the time the WTO meeting                     closes, the organisers expect up to 10,000 farmers, indigenous                     peoples, fishermen, and the landless of 30 - mainly Latin                     American - countries to arrive.  "Tens of thousands of people from Mexico would be here                     today but they cannot afford to come," said a spokesman                     for Via Campesina, one of the organisers.  Peter Rossett, an analyst with the US-based thinktank Food                     First, said: "This meeting of the people excluded from                     the WTO negotiations but at the sharp end of their policies                     is very significant because it shows the growing strength                     of the world's social movements.  "These movements are growing fast, everywhere. For                     the first time, you have global alliances forming and an emerging                     consensus of small farmers and others around the world."  Mr Rossett believes the centre of opposition to the WTO                     is shifting away from non-government groups, which he says                     are largely unaccountable, to more democratically elected                     grassroots groups.  "What we are seeing now is the emergence of a real                     force which can mobilise people around the world. There is                     a strong sense that a change is happening. Governments in                     developing countries are be coming very aware of what is happening                     and feel increasingly able to turn round and reject the WTO,"                     he said.  Barry Coates, of the World Development Movement, said: "For                     too long, politicians have pretended that opposition to the                     WTO has come from a small group of white, middle-class do-gooders.                     What we are seeing now is emergence of new mass movements                     from across the spectrum of the developing world."  Later this week, the most well-known of all the social movements                     is expected to make a spectacular entrance. The Zapatista                     rebels of nearby Chiapas, who effectively run a third of the                     sprawling state, are expected to exploit the world stage at                     Cancun.  Their presence could have considerable significance. The                     group that took up arms on New Year's day 1994, to coincide                     with the start of the North American free trade agreement                     (Nafta), is widely seen as the first real opposition to unfettered                     free trade and the standard bearer for the developing world's                     protest movement.    |