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Anti Capitalist and Globalisation Activities
Bad Global Economic Organisations
World Trade Organisation
Informal position paper of Graffitti on the WTO
Reclaim the World Acitivities
Reclaim the World 2004
This year's RTW :
Saturday 16th October | Freedom Square Valletta | kicks off at 9.00 am
Reclaim the World 2003
Last Year's Reclaim the World Day
Anti McDonald's Day
Anti McDonald's Day 2004
Anti Mc Donald's Day this year!
Anti McDonald's Day 2002
Why Campaign against McDonald's?
Bulleted reasons why to campaign against Mc Donald's
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Reasons to Oppose the World Trade Organization
Moviment Graffitti supports the worldwide out-cry against the World Trade Organisation. It is very unfortunate that the media, including the local one, has focused on sporadic episodes of violence in Seattle and London and has completely ignored the arguments raised by a vast section of global civil-society against the domination of the W.T.O. by corporate and anti democratic interests.
The WTO only serves the interests of multinational corporations
The WTO is not a democratic institution, and yet its policies impact all aspects of society and the planet. The WTO rules are written by and for corporations with inside access to the negotiations. For example, the US Trade Representative relies on its 17 "Industry Sector Advisory Committees" to provide input into trade negotiations. Citizen input by consumer, environmental, human rights and labour organizations is consistently ignored. Even requests for information are denied, and the proceedings are held in secret
The WTO is a stacked court
The WTO's dispute panels, which rule on whether domestic laws are "barriers to trade" and should therefore be abolished, consist of three trade bureaucrats who are not screened for conflict of interests. For example, in the tuna/dolphin case that Mexico filed against the US, which forced the US to repeal its law that barred tuna from being caught by mile-long nets that kill hundreds of thousands of dolphins each year, one of the judges was from a corporate front group that lobbied on behalf of the Mexican government for NAFTA.
The WTO tramples over labour and human rights
The WTO has refused to address the impacts of free trade on labour rights, despite that fact that countries that actively enforce labour rights are disadvantaged by countries that consistently violate international labour conventions. Many developing countries, such as Mexico, contend that labour standards constitute a "barrier to free trade" for countries whose competitive advantage in the global economy is cheap labour. Potential solutions to labour and human rights abuses are blocked by the WTO, which has ruled that it is: 1) illegal for a government to ban a product based on the way it is produced (i.e. with child labour); and 2) governments cannot take into account the behaviour of companies that do business with vicious dictatorships such as Burma.
The WTO is destroying the environment
The WTO is being used by corporations to dismantle hard-won environmental protections, who call them barriers to trade. In 1993 the very first WTO panel ruled that a regulation of the US Clean Air Act, which required both domestic and foreign producers alike to produce cleaner gasoline, was illegal. Recently, the WTO declared illegal a provision of the Endangered Species Act that requires shrimp sold in the US to be caught with an inexpensive device that allows endangered sea turtles to escape. The WTO is currently negotiating an agreement that would eliminate tariffs on wood products, which would increase the demand for timber and escalate deforestation.
The WTO is killing people
The WTO's fierce defence of intellectual property rights-patents copyrights and trademarks-comes at the expense of health and human lives. The organization's support for pharmaceutical companies against governments seeking to protect their people's health has had serious implications for places like sub-Saharan Africa, where 80 percent of the world's new AIDS cases are found. The US government, on behalf of US drug companies, is trying to block developing countries' access to less expensive, generic, life-saving drugs. For example, the South African government has been threatened with a WTO challenge over proposed national health laws that would encourage the use of generic drugs, ban the practice of manufacturers offering economic incentives to doctors who prescribe their products and institute "parallel importing," which allows companies to import drugs from other countries where the drugs are cheaper. The WTO undermines local development and penalizes poor countries. The WTO's "most favoured nation" provisions requires all WTO member countries to treat each other equally and to treat all corporations from these countries equally regardless of their track record. Local policies aimed at rewarding companies who hire local residents, use domestic materials, or adopt environmentally sound practices are essentially illegal under the WTO. Under the WTO rules, developing countries are prohibited from following the same polices that developed countries pursued, such as protecting nascent, domestic industries until they can be internationally competitive.
The WTO is increasing inequality
Free trade is not working for the majority of the world. During a the most recent period of rapid growth in global trade and investment--1960 to 1998--inequality worsened both internationally and within countries. The UN Development Program reports that the richest 20 percent of the world's population consume 86 percent of the world's resources while the poorest 80 percent consume just 14 percent. WTO rules have hastened these trends by opening up countries to foreign investment and thereby making it easier for production to go where the labour is cheapest and most easily exploited and environmental costs are low. This pulls down wages and environmental standards in developed countries that have to compete globally.
The WTO undermines the sovereignty of democratic institutions
By creating a supranational court system that has the power to economically sanction countries to force them to comply with its rulings, the WTO has essentially replaced national governments with an unelected, unaccountable corporate-backed government. For the past nine years, the European Union has banned beef raised with artificial growth hormones. The WTO recently ruled that this public health law is a barrier to trade and should be abolished. The EU has to rollback its ban or pay stiff penalties. Under the WTO, governments can no longer act in the public interest.
The tide is turning against free trade and the WTO!
There is a growing international backlash against the WTO and the process of corporate globalisation over which it presides. Movement-building by coalitions such as People's Global Action against the WTO in Europe and the Citizen's Trade Campaign in the US are growing fast, as public support for corporate-managed free trade dwindles. This is why tens of thousands of people from all walks of life have converged in Seattle from November 29th to December 4th to confront the World Trade Organization head on at its ministerial meeting.
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