| The nostrums of economic orthodoxy
have been swallowed by most of the world's major media. But not
all. Sputnik Kilambi looks at how one French newspaper launched
a leading citizens' movement against globalization.
'There is an enormous demand
for
action and for acting
together'
The lively working-class suburb of Saint Denis just
north of Paris is home to the brand-new Stade de France
football stadium as well as the last resting-place of former kings
of France. But the more than 2,000 people whove converged
on the lawns of Saint Denis University today are neither football
fans nor history buffs.
They are here from across France and dozens of other countries
to affirm their belief that the dictatorship of the markets need
not be eternal. There are landless peasants from Latin America,
trade unionists and farmers from Europe, non-governmental organizations
from Asia, ecological groups and co-operatives from Africa, womens
rights campaigners and unregistered immigrants from France.
Theyre all here in response to a call from Attac, a French
citizens association determined to make the world of business
everybodys business. To globalize the movement against globalization.
Attac is the French acronym for the Association for Taxation
of Financial Transactions in Order to Aid Citizens. The
words are taken from the concluding sentence of an editorial published
in the December 1997 edition of the prestigious monthly Le
Monde Diplomatique. Ignacio Ramonets article, Disarming
the markets, was a call to arms against the seemingly uncontrollable
power of international financial institutions.
It triggered an unprecedented response. Le Monde Diplomatique
received thousands of letters in support of a global citizens
movement to push for an international tax on financial speculation
the Tobin Tax. It quickly found tremendous resonance,
says Pierre Rousset, a member of Attacs international working
group.
A year later Attac was 5,000 strong and ready to launch a national
petition there are now more than 130 local committees in
28 municipalities across France, while the Tobin Tax petition
has nearly a million signatures.
Le Monde Diplomatiques international reach was a
powerful catalyst in the rapid spread of Attac to several European
countries as well as Quebec, Brazil and Senegal.
In the past, campaigns against IMF policies and Third World
debt were mostly launched from the South, notes Pierre Rousset.
But now the social fabric is being torn away in the North
and we are all being hit by similar policies imposed by the same
institutions. This has laid the ground for international solidarity
links of a new type.
Attacs strength is that it acts as a meeting point for
social movements and the concerns of individual citizens but trade
unions and the movement of the unemployed also play an important
role.
Trade unions work together in Attac, says Agnes Bertrand
of the Observatory on Globalization, a key group in the successful
mobilization against the Multilateral Agreement on Investment.
This is what gives it a plural character, allowing people
to get involved in a collective campaign, but on an individual
basis.
Attacs campaign has strengthened since Americas retaliation
against Europes ban on beef-with-hormones and, more recently,
the spectacular singling out of McDonalds by radical French
farmers. The huge outcry against the French tyre-maker Michelins
decision to scrap 7,500 jobs after posting record profits is another
indication of how far public opinion has come. Whats
happening is a tremendous exercise in public education,
stresses Agnes Bertrand. There is an enormous demand for
action and for acting together.
Despite growing mainstream support, Attac is aware that official
French economic policy is very much part of the dominant consensus.
Says Attac General Secretary Christophe Agiton: Yes, the
Government expresses concern over certain social or environmental
problems and has taken a strong position on the beef-with-hormones
issue, but on the whole they agree with the US. Only mass mobilization
can change this situation.
The majority of Attac members are not from activist backgrounds
and for many this is the first time theyve had any kind
of involvement. Despite this there is both momentum and creativity.
After a recent meeting in Paris a group of office workers in La
Defence (the Manhattan look-alike business district west of the
city) spontaneously decided to distribute 15,000 leaflets at their
workplaces.
For the recent trade talks in Seattle organizers put together
a nationwide education campaign taking their message to the streets
and into the schools. High-school kids and university students
set up their own Attac groups and plans are underway to introduce
the campaign to the classroom by producing alternative primers
on economic and global issues. There is also a weekly internet
newsletter with analysis and commentary on developments as well
as updates on actions inside France.
The Swiss financial magazine Cash has dismissed Attacs
arguments as tired remakes of debates from the 1970s. But this
ignores the fact that Attac has become a crucial relay point for
citizens campaigns from around the world. The movement is
global in principle and in scope. Should the petition for the
Tobin Tax fall on deaf ears, Attac plans to intensify its campaign
with a mass demonstration in Brussels or Luxembourg this spring.
Cash may yet have to eat its words.
Sputnik Kilambi is
an Indian journalist based in Paris who works for Radio France
International.
Attac website: http://attac.org/france
Belgium E-mail: belgium@attac.org
;
Brazil E-mail: rio@attac.org
;
Quebec E-mail: quebec@attac.org
;
Ireland E-mail: ireland@attac.org
;
Portugal E-mail: portugal@attac.org
;
Senegal E-mail: senegal@attac.org
;
Switzerland E-mail: geneve@attac.org
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