ASEAN People's Forum

13-15 December 2008
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

CALL FOR WORKSHOP PROPOSALS
EXTENDED UNTIL 30 OCTOBER 2008
Prior to the 14th ASEAN Summit in Bangkok, civil society organizations and social movements from all over the region will gather together for the ASEAN Peoples' Forum, a People-to People platform to discuss common issues confronting the region, and to articulate and strategize around peoples' aspirations and alternatives for ASEAN and the ASEAN people.

For further information contact: apfthailand@gmail.com or apfthailand@hotmail.com This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

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Group scores Asean charter for lack of migrant labor laws PDF Print E-mail

MANILA, Philippines - A group of civil society organizations have expressed disappointment over the "non-mention" of migrant labor issues in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Charter.

Asked to comment on the charter during ratification hearings by the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations on Thursday, the Solidarity for Asian Peoples' Advocacies (Sapa) Working Group and of the Philippine Working Group on Asean also pointed to a "limited reference" to gender and women's rights, internal conflicts, asylum seekers, and indigenous peoples.

"Missing elements (in the charter) include the non-mention of migrant labor which makes up a substantial portion of labor flows in the region," said Jenina Joy Chavez, who spoke on behalf of the working groups.

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An ASEAN We Can Aspire To? Where is ASEAN Now and Where is it Taking Us? PDF Print E-mail
Focus on the Global South-Philippines Programme and
Freedom from Debt Coalition (FDC)-Cebu
Civil Society Consultation on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)


August 19, 2008 (Tuesday), 9:00AM-5:00PM
Eduardo Aboitiz Development Studies Center (EADSC) Plenary Hall


During the 13th ASEAN Summit in Singapore in November 2007, ASEAN Leaders signed the ASEAN Charter, or what is touted as the Constitution for the regional association.

The ASEAN Charter specifies lines of responsibility and obligations of members, establishes new mechanisms for operations, as well as mandates a revitalized ASEAN Secretariat.





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PRESS RELEASE: Research shows Arroyo administration failing to meet own targets PDF Print E-mail
As Arroyo prepares her state of the nation address on Monday, social analysts have given her poor marks for missing development goals set by the government itself in 2004, with only two years left until the 2010 target.

New studies by the University of the Philippines - Center for Labor Justice (UP CLJ) and the Bangkok and Manila-based policy think tank Focus on the Global South revealed Arroyo's slow progress towards achieving key targets on economic growth, poverty reduction, and job generation.

The Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan (MTPDP), crafted in 2004, expressly aims to generate ten million jobs by 2010, or roughly 1.6 million jobs each year, reduce poverty incidence to below 20%, and accelerate GDP growth to 7-8%.
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Japan Follows Singapore in Dealing with Foreign Activists PDF Print E-mail

By Walden Bello* 

(Sapporo, July 6, 2008) Trade, climate change, skyrocketing oil prices, and debt have been the topics of discussion in the parallel civil society events to the Group of Eight Summit, but the issue that has drawn the greatest attention is the Japanese authorities’ heavy handed approach to security for the official gathering.
 
21,000 police personnel have been deployed to the island of Hokkaido, most of them to the city of Sapporo and nearby Toyako, where the meeting will take place next week.  Large numbers of them, including contingents of riot police dressed up in Darth Vader gear, were stationed along the route of the Peace Walk staged by several thousand protesters on Saturday, July 5.  To show they meant business, police smashed the window of a vehicle and arrested two of its occupants for playing music that they said was interfering with their operations.  One photojournalist and a participant in the demonstration were also apprehended.
 
That same morning, 24 activists were flown back to Korea after being held for over 24 hours at Hokkaido’s Chitose Airport.  Nineteen of them belonged to the international peasant group Via Campesina and four to the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU).   As a result of this action, several events were disrupted, including a symposium on free trade agreements that I was supposed to speak at that had been organized by the Korean trade unionists who had been deported.

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Who's Afraid of the New China? PDF Print E-mail

by Isa Lorenzo

Originally posted at the PCIJ website

NOWHERE are the contradictions in the new China more apparent than in the contrasts between the countryside and Beijing. In the Chinese capital city, the old hutongs (narrow streets) are rapidly being demolished to make way for new high-rise condominiums. The gleaming “bird’s-nest” national stadium designed by a team led by the noted Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron will be the centerpiece of the 2008 Olympic Games this August. A six-lane highway is one of many roads that criss-cross the city.

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