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Conference on People's Foreign Policy 7-8 December 2006, Mumbai
Following two days of discussions at the Conference on People's Foreign Policy on 7-8 December 2006, Mumbai attended by delegates from trade unions, social movements, resistance movements, students organisations, women's organisations from Bangladesh, India, Lebanon, Burma , Nepal, , Pakistan, Palestine, Sri Lanka and regions of Kashmir and Tibet along with academicians and social critics,
We note that:
In the first four decades of independence, India made efforts to chart an economic policy based on the principle of self-reliance. It also acquired a degree of manoeuvrability in foreign policy based on principles of non-alignment;
Following the shift in India's economic policy in favour of an
accelerated neo-liberal agenda since the early 1990s, the foreign
policy has come to be aligned closely with the US while assuming a
misplaced sense of power as a nuclear weapon state and its quest for
emerging as a regional power;
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the world has come to be
dominated by the United States that has extended its domination by
suppressing all forms of resistance to US policy and has following 9/11
sought to divided the world between those 'for us' and 'against us',
directed in substantial measure against the countries and peoples of
West Asia;
India's acceptance of the global domination of the US is reflected in
18 July 2005 agreement on nuclear policy with the US, its recent
conduct in the WTO, cooperation with the US agenda for India on
genetically modified foods, its growing relationship with Israel
including military relations, its complete reversal on its support for
Iran and virtually pulling out of the Indo-Pak-Iran gas pipeline deal
and its willingness to be part of the 'global war against terror';
India's policy in South Asian is based on a principle of domination and
inequality; and as a consequence, continuing to suppress the democratic
aspirations of the people of Kashmir, while it has sought to prove to
the world that Pakistan is a primary site for spawning global terror;
and further claiming to support the democratic aspirations of the
people of Burma, Nepal and Sri Lanka while providing these states with
military, political and financial support to suppress these very
struggles;
Through the deployment of armed forces in Kashmir and the North-East is
to large extent for suppressing the peoples movement, the projected
threat perception along the borders has provided the Indian state with
the rational to justify an enormous defence budget that otherwise
cannot be justified by any acceptable measure of force requirement for
self defence and standards of public spending for a country that is
home to the largest number of the worlds poor;
The Indian foreign policy assessment of a unipolar global order
dominated by the US fails to fully understand or estimate the balance
of power globally of the EU, Russia and China and the perceived lack of
space for an intervention for changing the balance of force by an
independent foreign policy is invalidated by the course adopted by some
countries in Latin America and West Asia where struggles of people has
changed the nature of the foreign policy;
The major victory against Israeli aggression in Lebanon by Hezbollah
led Lebanese National resistance, the strengthening of the National
resistance in Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan and the world wide
opposition and protests against war and occupation is forcing US
imperialism into a defensive position
Foreign policy is very much a reflection and outcome of the policies
pursued by government at home and thus has a direct impact on the daily
lives of citizens.
We believe that foreign policy, like any other policy, must be rooted
in the democratic aspirations of citizens. It must be rooted in
building a society that is based on economic, social and political
equality and is free from all forms of discrimination where people are
free to chart their own destinies without internal or external force or
coercion. Such a policy must seek to defend and advance the right to
independence and self-determination of nations and towards this end
promote a multi-polar world order. Indian foreign policy is out of sync
with these aspirations.
Laying the foundation for such a policy needs us to ground our
aspirations with a sense of realism so that we successfully evolve
strategies for struggles for a people's foreign policy.
We resolve to:
* Secure Global peace by
- Building on equality of nations and respect for human dignity
within countries that eliminates all forms of racism, xenophobia,
religious and social prejudices and demonisation of Muslims and other
peoples
- Global disarmament and denuclearisation
- Securing and sustaining independence, sovereignty and right of development of nations
- Demilitarisation of the society by abrogating all laws that enables
military to intervene in domestic social and political conflict
- All states signing and ratifying the Rome Treaty of the International Criminal Court.
- Supporting Liberation movements and Struggles of Nations against
aggression by the US and its' allies and by other expansionist powers.
- Working for a genuine and just settlement of the Palestinian peoples'
right to self determination and securing the early, complete and
permanent withdrawal of US forces from Iraq
- Initiating Diplomatic and economic sanctions against military regimes
- Abrogating of Indo-US nuclear treaty
* Build a South Asia on the basis of:
- Democracy, Secularism and Social equality by eliminating all forms discrimination
- Peaceful political settlement of peoples' aspirations, including
Kashmiris, Tamil and Baluchis , according to widely accepted
international principles and practice
- Regional framework for peaceful and equitable development of peoples
and nations of this region with resolution of bilateral issues,
including border disputes and where needed renegotiation of bilateral
treaties, on the basis of equality and mutual interest
- Reduce and chanellise defence spending for social development and demilitarise the region including nuclear disarmament.
- Elimination of the US hegemony and domination of imperialist states
* Work towards Alternative Economic Policies based on peoples'
economies for prosperity and increased co-operation and socialisation,
and rejecting those that are anti-people and neo-liberal led market
policies, which enrich a few corporations and countries.
* Ensure Rights of Migrant Workers: Assure migrant workers the security
of movement and right to livelihood, facilitate easy visa and
naturalisation and penalise human trafficking. In particular, provide
mechanism for work permits for South Asian countries and protect
fishing rights of the fisher communities in South Asia in the
territorial waters of the South Asian region.
* Evolve a rational and ecologically sustainable policy on water, energy and pollution.
And affirm the following Plan of Action:
* To build a sustained campaign for a people's foreign policy for
India, holding a series of regional conferences and workshops and
deepen this process by creating commissions for study and drafting
specific policies on:
- Global militarisation and nuclearisation
- labour rights
- social and gender discrimination
- water
- energy
- global environment and climatic change
- Peoples' movement in North-East
- Religious Minorities
- Indigenous people
* To develop a wider alliance with other countries with focus on
people-to-people dialogue of the discriminated and the oppressed and
organise a parallel 'Peoples Conference of South Asian' during the
SAARC meeting in Delhi
* Focus and prioritise solidarity movements in support of the
resistance against the illegal occupations of Iraq and Palestine and
organising a 'West Asia-South Asia Solidarity Conference' in India and
join the international day of action on 9 June 2007 marking the 40th
year of Israel's occupation and control of the West Bank and Gaza
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