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CALL FOR GLOBAL ACTIONS AGAINST
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
SEPTEMBER
14-20, 2006
1. Immediate and 100% cancellation of
multilateral debts as part of the total cancellation of debts claimed from the
South, without externally imposed conditionalities.
2.
Open, transparent and participatory External Audit of the lending operations
and related policies of the International Financial Institutions, beginning
with the World Bank and IMF
3.
Stop the imposition of conditions and the promotion of neoliberal policies and
projects.
a.
In this 50th anniversary year of the International Finance Corporation (IFC),
the IFIs end the promotion of
privatization of public services and the use of public resources to support
private profits.
b.
Stop IFI funding and involvement in environmentally destructive projects
beginning with big dams, oil, gas and mining and implement the major
recommendations of the Extractive Industries Review.
c. Immediately
stop imposing conditions that exacerbate health crises like the AIDS pandemic
and make restitution for past practices such as requiring user fees for public
education and health care services.
For more than sixty years, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank together with their partner regional development banks and export credit agencies, have used international finance capital to exercise control and restructure the societies of the South to serve the interests of global private corporations and the economic and geo-political agenda of the few powerful nations that control these institutions.
The resulting effects on people’s lives, on communities, on the environment, and on the economic as well as political structures in the South have been profound and over the years have generated numerous resistance struggles against these institutions.
Despite well-documented evidence and countless testimonies to the destruction, displacement and dispossession their policies and operations have caused, these institutions persist in legitimizing their role. In recent years they have declared themselves to be champions of “poverty reduction” and “good governance.”
This year, 2006, we pledge to intensify our struggles against these institutions and raise the level of international coordination and concerted action. In particular, we commit to organizing different forms of mobilization and direct action in many countries across the globe during the week of the IMF and WB Annual Meetings, September 14-20, 2006. This will include various activities and actions in the vicinity of their meetings in Singapore.
WE CALL on all people’s organizations, social movements, labor movements, women’s movements, farmers groups, first peoples, religious and cultural groups, community organizations, NGOs, political forces, and all concerned citizens around the world to join us in mounting vigorous actions that will focus the world’s attention on the destruction and human rights violations caused by the IMF and World Bank, the regional development banks, export credit agencies, and the neoliberal global system they enforce.
Our actions will identify issues and articulate demands that reflect the particular impacts of these institutions on each of our countries but will also be united on the following global demands:
1. Immediate and 100%
cancellation of multilateral debts as part of the total cancellation of debts
claimed from the South, without externally imposed conditionalities.
The inhuman and destructive consequences
of debt domination which the international financial institutions play a major
part in perpetuating are evidence against the outrageously deceitful claim of
these institutions that they are working for “poverty reduction” and “financing
for development.”
Debt relief initiatives of international
financial institutions have to date covered only a very small part of the debt
claimed from the South. Worse, these initiatives come with conditions that
undermine the sovereignty of people to determine their own path of development,
have proven harmful to livelihoods and the environment, and keep South economies
tied to the interests of global private profit.
Cancellation of only a small part of the
debt may release some funds that can be used for basic services but does not
free the South from debt bondage. Debt cancellation must be 100%.
And for immediate action, we highlight
the especially urgent cases – most of Africa, Haiti, Nepal, Tsunami-hit
countries and others recently devastated by natural calamities, countries
ravaged by war, societies overwhelmed by
HIV/AIDS, and others experiencing severe social, financial and economic crisis.
We reject the international financial
institutions’ “debt sustainability” framework. There is no level of debt that
is “sustainable” in a global economic system that is founded on domination and
exploitation of the peoples, economies and resources of the South. This framework is a means by which these
institutions justify maintaining the “indebtedness” of Southern countries.
The insistence on their “debt
sustainability framework” is also a refusal to address the more fundamental
question of the illegitimacy of the debt claimed from the South. Peoples of the
South should not be made to pay for illegitimate debts -- debts they have not
benefited from, debts that financed projects that have caused displacement of
communities and damage to the environment, debts wasted on corruption or failed
projects, debts contracted through undemocratic and fraudulent means, debts
with grossly unfair terms and harmful conditions, odious debts incurred by
dictatorships, debt contracted in the
context of exploitative international economic relations, debts for which
peoples of the South have paid many
times over.
Though the financial debts claimed from
the South are of staggering amounts, totaling more than US$2.3 trillion
dollars, the North in fact owes the peoples of the South a far, far greater
debt. It is the historical, economic, social, and ecological debt accumulated
over centuries of plunder and exploitation by North with the collaboration of
Southern elites.
The IMF and the World Bank should bear
the costs of writing off debts owed to them by using the World Bank’s loan loss
provisions (valued at US$3 billion as of June 30, 2005) and retained earnings
(valued at US$27 billion as of June 30, 2005) and IMF gold stocks. With the market
price of gold surpassing US$600 an ounce, the IMF’s 103.4 million ounces of
gold are worth more than US$60 billion, rather than the US$9 billion recorded
on the IMF’s books.
2. Open, transparent and participatory External Audit of the
lending operations and related policies of the International Financial
Institutions, beginning with the World Bank and IMF
Debt campaigns, movements, people’s
organizations, and NGOs are now involved in preparing for and conducting
country-level independent Citizens’ Audits of Debts claimed from South
countries as well as calling on South governments to conduct transparent, open
and participatory Government Audits (e.g. Parliamentary) of these debts. These
audits are aimed at examining the origins and causes of the debt problem,
taking stock of effects and impacts, bringing to light the dubious and
illegitimate character of the debts, identifying responsibility and
accountability, and establishing and strengthening the basis for urgent changes
in national policies on the debt and related issues.
We challenge the international financial
institutions to subject themselves to similar independent audits of the loans
they have released, their lending policies, processes and operations, and the
terms and conditionalities that have accompanied these loans, and take stock of
the effects and impacts. Such audits should look into the culpability and
accountability of these international financial institutions, and asses what
restitution and reparations must be made.
The international financial institutions
have recently been stepping up efforts to portray themselves as champions of
good governance, including the announcement of renewed efforts and strategies
to fight corruption. We challenge these institutions to begin with themselves
and examine how they have been involved in creating and exacerbating the
problem of corruption. External,
independent audits of their loans, lending operations and conditionalities
should include this question. Further, corruption must be seen as a systemic
problem that also involves the private sector, especially transnational
corporations.
3. Stop the imposition of conditions and the promotion of
neoliberal policies and projects.
Through the conditions attached to their
loans and programs, the IMF and World Bank have succeeded in restructuring the
global economy. The widespread use of “structural adjustment programs” from the
early 1980s in countries with significant debt, poverty, and financial problems
has forced most of the South countries’ economic policies to ape those of the
industrialized countries, regardless of how inappropriate those policies may
have been for the countries’ development needs. Because of the imposition of
neo-liberal policies on countries desperate for access to credit, peoples
across the South now confront economies oriented to export production rather
than providing for local markets, devastated manufacturing sectors, a large
percentage of economic actors in foreign hands, valuable public assets
privatized, health and other social sectors crippled by decades of de-funding,
environmental resources devastated by over-exploitation, small farms and
businesses wiped out by denial of credit and subsidies, and massive
unemployment.
Our struggle against debt domination is
waged in large part to win freedom from the conditions that indebted
governments are blackmailed into accepting. For the September 2006 actions we
demand:
a. In this 50th anniversary year of the International
Finance Corporation (IFC), the IFIs end
the promotion of privatization of public services and the use of public
resources to support private profits.
The IMF and especially the World Bank
have been the main drivers in the global push for the privatization of basic
services. They are joined by other financial institutions like regional
development banks and export credit agencies.
The international financial institutions
promote privatization of public services through policy conditions and policy
advice, financing of projects that pave the way for privatization, providing
technical assistance in the preparation of feasibility studies as well as the
process of implementation, and even direct support for private companies taking
over public utilities. The International
Finance Corporation plays a major role in providing risk guarantees as well as
equity assistance for these private companies, and facilitating government
bail-outs of privatized utilities in distress.
The continued emphasis on privatizing
basic services such as water provision – or, when no company is interested in
purchasing the utility, arranging leases and service contracts – and the
“commercialization” of even life-saving agencies such as those managing food
reserves reflects a fixation on markets as the only organizing principle for
economies even in the face of overwhelming contradictory evidence. Failure after failure of water privatizations
in the South has not deterred the IFIs from their mission to wrest assets from
public ownership.
Our message to the IFC and its multilateral
partners is clear: no more public resources for support of private profit.
b. Stop IFI funding and involvement in environmentally
destructive projects beginning with big dams, oil, gas and mining and implement
the major recommendations of the Extractive Industries Review.
The international financial institutions
are also presenting themselves as leading in the fight against climate change
and environmental destruction. However, no amount of clever rhetoric about
stronger commitments and new strategies can hide the fact that many projects
designed, driven and supported by international financial institutions violate
the already watered-down standards and safeguards avowed by these same
institutions and cause massive environmental as well as social problems.
The World Bank is itself a major
ecological debtor, having funded major projects such as hydro-electric dams,
mines, pipelines and petroleum exploration and development projects which have
displaced populations and wrought major environmental damage. The World Bank
has refused to implement major recommendations of its own Extractive Industries
Review including 1) the principle that
communities faced with resource extraction projects must give free, prior and
informed consent, 2) and the phase out of investment in hydrocarbon
extraction projects.
The World Bank’s attempt to claim
leadership on the issue of climate change with the application of its
development of carbon credit trading is another tragic example of market
fundamentalism. Entrusting the precarious future of the world’s climate to the
World Bank’s clever market solutions distracts the major actors from focusing
on the over-consumption that threaten to doom the planet and all who live on
it. Meanwhile, the World Bank Group,
which claims leadership in developing alternative energy, devotes much greater
resources to developing conventional energy sources. Indeed, the World Bank is
the world’s leading financer of projects producing greenhouse gases.
c. Immediately stop imposing conditions
that exacerbate health crises like the AIDS pandemic and make restitution for
past practices such as requiring user fees for public education and health care
services.
IFI policies have aggravated health
crises like the AIDS pandemic in a number of ways. Austerity measures have
constrained health budgets, prevented the hiring of critically needed teachers
and health care workers due to limits on spending for public sector employees,
and kept people out of clinics and children away from schools by insisting on
user fees. The macroeconomic policies the International Financial Institutions
have imposed over the last 25 years – including fiscal austerity, high interest
rates, unilateral trade liberalization and privatization of essential services
- have led to lower growth rates and fewer improvements in social indicators
than had occurred over the two decades between 1960 and 1980.
The IFIs owe an enormous social debt to
countries whose public services have been damaged by their policies. Their
creditors are the women of South countries, who have had to step in to provide
the health care, the food, the teaching, the water, and the other basic goods
and services put out of reach by IFI policies. The World Bank and the IMF
should pay for free primary education and primary health care as a form of
reparations or restitution for the damage their policies have caused.
As we take to the streets and plazas on September 14 to 20, in Singapore
and around the world, we stand united in our call for an end to the destruction
visited upon the South by the IMF, the World Bank, the other multilateral
banks, and the countries that control them.
We call upon activists to tell us about their planned
activities so that we may publicize them, and about the outcomes of their actions.
- INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS:
JUBILEE
SOUTH
COMMITTEE
FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE THIRD WORLD DEBT (CADTM)
WORLD
FORUM OF FISH HARVESTRES AND FIHWORKERS, WFF
SOUTHERN
PEOPLES ECOLOGICAL DEBT CREDITORS ALLIANCE (SPEDCA)
- REGIONAL ORGANISATIONS
AFRICA JUBILEE SOUTH
SOUTHERN AFRICA PEOPLES SOLIDARITY NETWORK (SAPSN)
JUBILEO SUR AMERICAS
CONVERGENCIA DE MOVIMIENTOS DE LOS PUEBLOS DE LAS
AMÉRICAS (COMPA)
JUBILEE
SOUTH – ASIA/PACIFIC MOVEMENT ON DEBT AND DEVELOPMENT (JS-APMDD)
ASIA-PACIFIC
FORUM ON WOMEN, LAW AND DEVELOPMENT (APWLD)
FOCUS
ON THE GLOBAL SOUTH – INDIA, THAILAND AND PHILIPPINES
ASIAN
REGIONAL EXCHANGE FOR NEW ALTERNATIVES (ARENA)
INTERNATIONAL
GENDER AND TRADE NETWORK – ASIA
MIGRANT
FORUM IN ASIA (MFA)
ASIAN
MIGRANT CENTRE (AMC)
SOUTH ASIA ALLIANCE FOR POVERTY ERADICATION (SAAPE)
- COUNTRIES
ANGOLA
LIGA JUBILEU 2000 ANGOLA – LIJUA
ARGENTINA
DIALOGO 2000
AUSTRALIA
FRIENDS
OF THE EARTH
AZERBAIJAN
CENTER
FOR CIVIC INITIATIVES
BANGLADESH
COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT LIBRARY (CDL)
WARBE-Bangladesh
BANGLADESH SRAMAJIBI KENDRA (BSK)
UNNAYAN
ONNESHAN-THE INNOVATORS (CENTRE FOR RESEARCH AND ACTION ON DEVELOPMENT)
DEPARTMENT
OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, UNIVERSITY OF DHAKA, BANGLADESH
BANGLAPRAXIS
UTTARAN
PAANI
COMMITTEE
HAMKURA RIVER ACTION COMMITTEE
AN
ORGANIZATION FOR SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (AOSED)
SAVE
CHARA RIVER CAMPAIGN
BANGLADESH RIVERS NETWORK
LOKOJ INSTITUTE
BELGIUM
CENTRE NATIONAL DE COOPÉRATION AU DÉVELOPPEMENT
(CNCD-11.11.11.)
BELGIUM - Individual
DIRK
VAN DER MAELEN, GROUPLEADER, FLEMISH SOCIALIST OF THE BELGIAN HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
BRAZIL
JUBILEU
BRAZIL
BRAZIL NETWORK ON
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
CAMEROON
CENTRE
FOR PROMOTION OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ALTERNATIVES
CAMBODIA
PARTNERSHIP
FOR DEVELOPMENT IN KAMPUCHEA (PADEK)
CANADA
HALIFAX INITIATIVE COALITION
CHILE
OBSERVATORIO LATINOAMERICANO DE CONFLICTOS
AMBIENTALES - OLCA
COLOMBIA
LIGA MUNDIAL DE MUJERES POR LA PAZ Y LA LIBERTAD
UNIÓN NACIONAL DE EMPLEADOS BANCARIOS
FEDERACIÓN NACIONAL DE SINDICATOS BANCARIOS
CAMPAÑA COLOMBIANA "EN DEUDA CON LOS
DERECHOS"
MESA MUJERES Y ECONOMÍA
CONGO
FORUM SUR LA DETTE EXTÉRIEURE ET LE DÉVELOPPEMENT DU
CONGO (FODEX)
CUBA
CENTRO
MEMORIAL DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. LA HABANA, CUBA
ECUADOR
ACCIÓN ECOLÓGICA
ESPAÑA
ECOLOGISTAS
EN ACCIÓN
FRANCE - Individual
ALEXIS FOSSI A/D FRANCE
HAITI
PLATAFORMA DE POLÍTICAS DE DESARROLLO ALTERNATIVAS
(PAPDA)
HONG KONG
HONG KONG CONFEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS (HKCTU)
DOCUMENTATION
FOR ACTION GROUPS IN ASIA (DAGA)
HONG
KONG CHRISTIAN INDUSTRIAL COMMITTEE
ZI
TENG
INDIA
INDIA SOCIAL ACTION
FORUM (INSAF)
CENTRE
FOR ORGANISATION, RESEARCH & EDUCATION (CORE)
RIVER
BASIN FRIENDS
NATIONAL
CONFEDERATION OF OFFICERS ASSOCIATIONS (NCOA)
NARMADA BACHAO ANDOLAN
NIMAR MALWA KISAN MAZDOOR SANGTHAN
PEOPLE'S
DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION INDIA
CITIZEN'S
CONCERN FOR DAMS AND DEVELOPMENT, MANIPUR (NE INDIA)
BHARAT
GYAN VIGYAN SAMITI (BGVS)
URBAN
RESEARCH CENTRE
TAMILNADU
AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS MOVEMENT (TALM)
HUMAN
RIGHTS- TAMILNADU INITIATIVE
INDIA - Individuals
THOMAS
KOCHERRY
INDONESIA
INTERNATIONAL
NGO FORUM ON INDONESIAN DEVELOPMENT (INFID)
KOALISI
ANTI UTANG (ANTI DEBT COALITION)
WORKING
GROUP ON POWER SECTOR RESTRUCTURING (WGPSR)
JATAM
- MINING ADVOCACY NETWORK
MIGRANT
CARE
INSTITUTE
FOR GLOBAL JUSTICE INDONESIA
PERHIMPUNAN
INDONESIA UNTUK BURUH MIGRAN
BERDAULAT
INDONESIAN
ASSOCIATION FOR SOVEREIGN MIGRANT WORKERS
SOLIDARITAS PEREMPUAN
LEMBAGA BANTUAN HUKUM (LBH) SEMARANG
INDONESIAN
LEGAL AID FOUNDATION BRANCH OF SURABAYA
IRELAND
DEBT
AND DEVELOPMENT COALITION
IVORY COAST - Individuals
SOLANGE
KONÉ, MMF-CI
JAPAN
JUBILEE
KYUSHU ON WORLD DEBT AND
POVERTY
ATTAC
Japan
KENYA
SOLIDARITY
AFRICA NETWORK
KENYA DEBT RELIEF NETWORK
(KENDREN)
MALI
COALITION DES ALTERNATIVES AFRICAINES DETTE ET
DÉVELOPPEMENT (CAD-MALI)
MOZAMBIQUE
ECONOMIC
JUSTICE COALITION
NEPAL
RURAL
RECONSTRUCTION NEPAL (RRN)
WATER
AND ENERGY USERS' FEDERATION
COLLECTIVE
INITIATIVE FOR RESEARCH AND ACTION
ALL
NEPAL WOMEN ASSOCIATION (ANWA)
NETHERLANDS
TRANSNATIONAL INSTITUTE (TNI)
NICARAGUA
CENTRO DE ESTUDIOS INTERNACIONALES
NIGER
RESEAU NATIONAL DETTE ET DEVELOPPEMENT (RNDD)
ONG ECO DÉVELOPPEMENT PARTICIPATIF (ONG-EDP)
NORWAY
INSTITUTE
FOR GLOBAL NETWORKING, INFORMATION AND STUDIES (IGNIS)
PAKISTAN
PAKISTAN FISHERFOLK FORUM (PFF)
PAKISTAN
INSTITUTE OF LABOUR EDUCATION & RESEARCH (PILER)
CREED
ALLIANCE
PAKISTAN KISSAN RABITA COMMITTEE
( PAKISTAN PEASANTS COORDINATION
COMMITTEE)
URBAN
RESOURCE CENTRE
PEOPLE'S
RIGHTS MOVEMENT (PRM)
VINCO
DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION
PHILIPPINES
FREEDOM
FROM DEBT COALITION
INTEGRATED
RURAL DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION
FOUNDATION
FOR MEDIA ALTERNATIVES
PUERTO RICO
FAITH,
ECONOMY AND SOCIETY PROGRAMME, LATIN AMERICAN COUNCIL OF CHURCHES (CLAI)
PROYECTO CARIBEÑO DE JUSTICIA Y PAZ
SENEGAL
FORUM
FOR AFRICA ALTERNATIVES
SOUTH AFRICA
JUBILEE
SOUTH AFRICA
ALTERNATIVE
INFORMATION AND DEVELOPMENT CENTRE (AIDC)
SOUTHERN
AFRICAN CENTRE FOR ECONOMIC JUSTICE
CENTRE
FOR CIVIL SOCIETY ECONOMIC JUSTICE PROJECT, UNIVERSITY OF KWAZULU-NATAL, DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA
SRI
LANKA
MOVEMENT FOR NATIONAL LAND AND AGRICULTURAL REFORM
(MONLAR)
THAILAND
PSI-THAI
AFFILIATES COUNCIL (PTAC)
UGANDA
AFRICAN
WOMEN'S ECONOMIC POLICY NETWORK (AWEPON)
UK
WORLD
DEVELOPMENT MOVEMENT (WDM)
CHRISTIAN
AID (UK AND IRELAND)
URUGUAY
PLATAFORMA DESCAM
USA
JUBILEE USA NETWORK
50 YEARS
IS ENOUGH NETWORK
TRANSNATIONAL
INSTITUTE FOR GRASSROOTS RESEARCH AND ACTION (TIGRA)
THE
OAKLAND INSTITUTE
AFRICA ACTION
CONGREGATION
JUSTICE COMMITTEE, SISTERS OF THE HOLY CROSS
MOBILIZATION
FOR GLOBAL JUSTICE
INDIVIDUAL
PILAR
BLANCO ROLANIA
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