| more updates... MEXICAN PEASANT LEADERS PLAN CANCUN PROTESTBy John Authers in Cancun and Sara Silver in Mexico City
 Published: September 8 2003 16:50 | Last Updated: September                     8
 2003 16:50
 Mexican peasant leaders are planning a mass demonstration                     against free trade on Wednesday to mark the opening of the                     World Trade Organisation's ministerial meeting in the Caribbean                     resort of Cancun.  Their attempt to reach the convention hall will be the first                     test of elaborate security measures introduced to the city                     in an attempt to avert the violence seen at other meetings                     of global economic policymakers in recent years.  "The objective is to arrive at the convention centre                     and express our disgust with what they are doing there,"                     said Jaime Castillo, of the Popular Civic Front of Puebla,                     one of several peasant organisations co-ordinating the demonstration.                     He said he appreciated that the government had extended the                     organisations a "mark of respect" by providing facilities                     for an alternative International Peasants' Forum in Cancun,                     but added that it was an "emergency" and they had                     to demonstrate to the Mexican government and other ministers                     that their policies were "damaging small producers".  The demonstration in Cancun will be co-ordinated with an                     attempt to blockade the bridge between El Paso, Texas, and                     Ciudad Juarez on the northern border, in what is intended                     as a symbolic protest against the North American Free Trade                     Agreement (Nafta) and the harm it is alleged to have caused                     to Mexican small producers.  Several thousand protesters, mostly from Mexico, have already                     arrived in Cancun, and are living in temporary tents put up                     by the municipal authorities in the town's parks. Organisers                     are hoping for about 20,000 demonstrators tomorrow and the                     city authorities have planned for as many as 50,000 to attend                     the "day of action against globalisation" planned                     for Saturday.  Meetings over the weekend appeared peaceful and good-humoured.                     The areas open to demonstrators are in Cancun's central area,                     well away from the spit of land, more than 20 kilometres long,                     which houses the official delegates in the city's hotel zone.                     Police and troops have already erected barricades across the                     one access road to the hotel zone to try to ensure that protesters                     are not able to attack the conference centre.  Hector de la Cueva of the Mexican Action Network Against                     Free Trade complained of a "two-faced policy" by                     the Mexican government. "They are giving us these facilities,                     although really these facilities haven't been so easy to use,"                     he said. "But they've also strengthened security to make                     sure there are no demonstrators at the so-called kilometre                     zero [the convention centre]."  Global Exchange, one of the organisations attempting to                     co-ordinate the demonstrations, said the protests would be                     "larger, more widespread, and better organized than originally                     anticipated.  "After a slow and somewhat messy build-up over the                     last six months, it seems that the protesters may well surprise                     everyone, including themselves, by upstaging and indeed de-railing                     the WTO!"   |