Final Declaration of 2009 World Social Forum meeting in Brazil
Declaration of the Assembly of Social Movements at the World Social Forum
2009
We won’t pay for the crisis. The rich have to pay for it !
Assembly of the Social Movements
5 February 2009
Anti-imperialist, anti-capitalist, feminist, environmentalist and socialist
alternatives are necessary
We the social movements from all over the world came together on the
occasion of the 8th World Social Forum in Belém, Amazonia, where the
peoples have been resisting attempts to usurp Nature, their lands and their
cultures. We are here in Latin America, where over the last decade the
social movements and the indigenous movements have joined forces and
radically question the capitalist system from their cosmovision. Over the
last few years, in Latin America highly radical social struggles have
resulted in the overthrow of neoliberal governments and the empowerment of
governments that have carried out many positive reforms such as the
nationalisation of core sectors of the economy and democratic
constitutional reforms.
In this context the social movements in Latin America have responded
appropriately, deciding to support the positive measures adopted by these
governments while keeping a critical distance. These experiences will be of
help in order to strengthen the peoples’ staunch resistance against the
policies of governments, corporations and banks who shift the burden of the
crisis onto the oppressed. We the social movements of the globe are
currently facing a historic challenge. The international capitalist crisis
manifests itself as detrimental to humankind in various ways: it affects
food, finance, the economy, climate, energy, population migration? and
civilisation itself, as there is also a crisis in international order and
political structures.
We are facing a global crisis which is a direct consequence of the
capitalist system and therefore cannot find a solution within the system.
All the measures that have been taken so far to overcome the crisis merely
aim at socialising losses so as to ensure the survival of a system based on
privatising strategic economic sectors, public services, natural and energy
resources and on the commoditisation of life and the exploitation of labour
and of nature as well as on the transfer of resources from the Periphery to
the Centre and from workers to the capitalist class.
The present system is based on exploitation, competition, promotion of
individual private interests to the detriment of the collective interest,
and the frenzied accumulation of wealth by a handful of rich people. It
results in bloody wars, fuels xenophobia, racism and religious
fundamentalisms; it intensifies the exploitation of women and the
criminalisation of social movements. In the context of the present crisis
the rights of peoples are systematically denied. The Israeli government’s
savage aggression against the Palestinian people is a violation of
International Law and amounts to a war crime, a crime against humanity, and
a symbol of the denial of a people’s rights that can be observed in other
parts of the world. The shameful impunity must be stopped. The social
movements reassert their active support of the struggle of the Palestinian
people as well as of all actions against oppression by peoples worldwide.
In order to overcome the crisis we have to grapple with the root of the
problem and progress as fast as possible towards the construction of a
radical alternative that would do away with the capitalist system and
patriarchal domination. We must work towards a society that meets social
needs and respects nature’s rights as well as supporting democratic
participation in a context of full political freedom. We must see to it
that all international treaties on our indivisible civic, political,
economic, social and cultural rights, both individual and collective, are
implemented.
In this perspective we must contribute to the largest possible popular
mobilisation to enforce a number of urgent measures such as:
- Nationalising the banking sector without compensations and with full
social monitoring,
- Reducing working time without any wage cut,
- Taking measures to ensure food and energy sovereignty
- Stopping wars, withdraw occupation troops and dismantle military foreign
bases
- Acknowledging the peoples’ sovereignty and autonomy ensuring their right
to self-determination
- Guaranteeing rights to land, territory, work, education and health for
all.
- Democratise access to means of communication and knowledge.
The social emancipation process carried by the feminist, environmentalist
and socialist movements in the 21st century aims at liberating society from
capitalist domination of the means of production, communication and
services, achieved by supporting forms of ownership that favour the social
interest: small family freehold, public, cooperative, communal and
collective property.
Such an alternative will necessarily be feminist since it is impossible to
build a society based on social justice and equality of rights when half of
humankind is oppressed and exploited.
Lastly, we commit ourselves to enriching the construction of a society
based on a life lived in harmony with oneself, others and the world around
(“el buen vivir”) by acknowledging the active participation and
contribution of the native peoples.
We, the social movements, are faced with a historic opportunity to develop
emancipatory initiatives on a global scale. Only through the social
struggle of the masses can populations overcome the crisis. In order to
promote this struggle, it is essential to work on consciousness-raising and
mobilisation from the grassroots. The challenge for the social movements is
to achieve a convergence of global mobilisation. It is also to strengthen
our ability to act by supporting the convergence of all movements striving
to withstand oppression and exploitation.
We thus commit ourselves to:
- Launch a Global Week of Action against Capitalism and War from March 28
to April 4, 2009 with: anti-G20 mobilisation on March 28, mobilisation
against war and crisis on March 30, a Day of Solidarity with the
Palestinian People to promote boycott, disinvestment and sanctions against
Israel on March 30, mobilisation for the 60th Anniversary of NATO on April
4, etc.
- Increase occasions for mobilisation through the year: March 8,
International Women Day; April 17, International Day for Food Sovereignty;
May 1, International Workers’ Day; October 12, Global Mobilisation of
Struggle for Mother Earth, against colonisation and commodification of life.
- Schedule an agenda of acts of resistance against the G8 Summit in
Sardinia, the Climate Summit in Copenhagen, the Summit of the Americas in
Trinidad and Tobago, etc.
Through such demands and initiatives we thus respond to the crisis with
radical and emancipatory solutions.
- The International Community and Haiti: Testing the Water or Sinking the Ship?
- UN Peacekeeping Paramilitarism
- Bolivia Debates MINUSTAH Role
- Huge Crowds Meet Hugo Chávez in Port-au-Prince
- Chávez and Venezuela: Duty, not Charity, to Haiti
- Canada's Development Aid as Counterinsurgency Tool
- Cuban Refugees Get Hero's Welcome, Haitian Refugees Turned Away (Editorial)
- Anti-Arms Trade Group Releases Study on Canada's Role in 2004 Coup d'état
- The Tenets of Humanitarian Intervention: Haiti's Malleable Reality
- Haiti: Pain at the Pump Spurs Strike Actions
- Haiti-Dominican Republic: Neighbours, But Not Friends
- Venezuela Endorses ALBA Accord with Haiti
- Canada's Aid to Haiti in Context
- Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper Visits Haiti
- Justice Denied: Haitian Political Prisoners and Canadian Development Dollars
- Haitians Request Support from Venezuela to Eradicate Illiteracy
- If Stones Could Float: The British Press and the Turks and Caicos Boat Disaster
- France's Rama Yade in Haiti: New Face, Same Old Agenda
- AFRICOM: US Military Control of Africa’s Resources
- Haiti: Duvalier Could Face Justice
- Burma and Haiti: Comparing the Canadian Government and Media Response
- Striking While The Irony Is Hot: Acknowledging Haiti’s Aid During the American War of Independence
- Interview with CARICOM Asstistant Secretary-General Colin Granderson
- Chavez Proposes OPEC Sell Oil Cheaper to Poor Countries
- CIA Operation "Pliers" Uncovered in Venezuela
- Human Rights Crusader Michael Ratner: We'll Keep Going After Bush and Cheney When They Leave Office
- Did He Jump or Was He Pushed? Aristide and the 2004 Coup in Haiti
- Delayed Debt Cancellation Will Only Hurt Haiti, New CEPR Paper Finds
- Editorial: National Memory and the Anniversary of the Battle of Vertières
- To Help Haiti Recover, Cancel Its Debt
- Haiti's Debt
- US Policy On Haiti Needs Adjusting, Congresswoman Says
- Philip Agee (1935-2008): Let Us Now Praise an (In)famous Man
- Former Haitian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Harold Bruno, to Pay 76 Million Gourdes for Funds Misappropriation Under the Latortue Regime
- France Falls Out Of Love
- Venezuelan PSUV Drafts Program and Principles
- Haiti and "Overwhelming Strength" in Florida
- ALBA: Creating a Regional Alternative to Neo-liberalism?
- The Militarization of the World's Urban Peripheries
- Préval Asks Bush to Stop Deportations
- Editorial: "Diversity" In The French Government
- From Haiti to Tibet, China's Role in Suppressing Democracy
- Venezuela Sends 364 Tons of Food to Haiti
- US Navy Resurrects 4th Fleet to Police Latin America
- Regional Conflicts and Food Prices in OAS Assembly Agenda
- Models of Coming U.S. Interventions: Iraq or Haiti?
- Cuba, Venezuela to Install Undersea Cable
- Lula Haiti Visit Prompts Protests in Brazil, Mexico and San Francisco
- Land Reforms Averted Food Crisis in Venezuela: Chavez
- Bush Administration Accused of Withholding "Lifesaving" Aid to Haiti
- Editorial: Paul Martin's History of Haiti and Future Plans for Africa
- Bolivia: Social Organisations of The Tropics Decide To Expel USAID From The Chapare
- Rwanda Accuses Top French Officials in 1994 Genocide
- Danny Glover, Haiti, and the Politics of Revolutionary Cinema in Venezuela
- PetroCaribe Rescue
- Former Haitian President Aristide Visits Chavez in South Africa
- Cuba Confronts Global Warming Now: Drought, Hurricanes and Threat of Rising Oceans
- Can Obama See the Grand Canyon? On Presidential Blindness and Economic Catastrophe
- Obama and the Derivatives Merchants
- Over 360 Latin America Experts Call on Obama to Improve U.S.-Latin American Relations
- Ally of CIA and Proconsul McCarry Sentenced to 30 Years
- Slavoj Žižek: Use Your Illusions
- Change Haiti Can Believe In
- Haiti's Top Ten Demands for President Barack Obama
- Final Declaration of 2009 World Social Forum meeting in Brazil
- Commentary: Three Cheers for Chavez
- The Haitian Coup: An Unresolved Injustice After Five Years
- Cuba and Haiti Strengthen Cooperation Relations
- UN tells Aristide party to fight in Haiti election
- Dr Jean-Bertrand Aristide Statement on Earthquake

























