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PEOPLES' GLOBAL ACTION ON MIGRATION, DEVELOPMENT AND HUMAN RIGHTS

22-30 October 2008
Manila Philippines

To read the Global Call to Action, click here
  Go to the registration page


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Climate Justice Conference
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok Thailand

For more information and to download the proceedings, visit the official website

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ON THE MUMBAI TERROR ATTACKS: Supporting the Human Chain in Mumbai on Dec. 10th
India Programme - Press Release

Focus on the Global Southsupports the call for a human chain in Mumbai on 10 December 2008(International Human Rights Day) by the Mumbai for Peace campaign, as apeople’s response to the recent attacks on Mumbai.

The tragic and horrific eventsthat unfolded from 26 November in the city and continued for the next 3 dayswere not the first terror attack on Mumbai, but are by far the most brazen. Theattacks not only took the lives of ordinary people, but also of top securitypersonnel. Among the 195 people reported killed are 20 police officials, twoNational Security Guard (NSG) commandos and 20 foreigners. At least 295 peoplehave been injured, many seriously. The attackers fired indiscriminately atpeople at multiple locations, including the crowded Chhatrapati ShivajiTerminus (CST) station, public roads, and two luxury hotels.   They then holed up with hostagesin these two hotels and a residential building housing Israeli families. TheArmy, Navy and the NSG worked with the local police to finally overpower andshoot the killers.  

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END THE PROXY WAR!: FOCUS’ STATEMENT ON THE SITUATION IN THAILAND
Peace and Security - Press Release
In seizing Suvarnabhumi Airport, the People’s Alliance for Democracy has escalated its mass protest to new heights.   No one would question PAD’s democratic right to employ the method of direct participation in the politics of the country.  Unfortunately, its single-minded goal of ridding the country of any elected government that is known to be in support of ex- Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra is ultimately impossible to achieve, simply because an equally large—if not larger--part of the Thai population strongly holds the exact opposite view.   More importantly, the PAD’s goal amounts to the denial of the same rights of political participation, not just of the opposing groups but of all citizens of Thailand.
Read more...
 
Focus on the Philippines November 2008
Phillippines Programme - Announcements
This month's FOP zeroes in on some critical dimensions, concerns and issues regarding migration. A number of high-level conferences and discussions, including the recently concluded Global Forum on Migration and Development held in Manila, show that migration has shifted from being a temporary stop-gap to a permanent component of the country's development thrust, significantly shaping the economic and sociopolitical landscape of the Philippines. Each year, over a million Filipinos leave the country for temporary work abroad, with Filipino migrants sending home at least $ 12 Billion in remittances, hard earned money that sustains families in the Philippines and 'keeps the economy afloat.' While the scale and contribution of migration is already quite established, there are gaps, consequences and related implications that still need to be fully examined and resolved. Probing the complex terrain of labor migration beyond 'maximizing the development benefits of migration', the articles here pose key questions and offer valuable commentary on important themes that are often relegated to the sidelines of key discussions. The lack of government protection and support to migrant workers, the absence of regulation and the massive gray area left to the market and private agencies, the sociopolitical implications and human rights dimension of migration, and the EU Return Directive are just some of the urgent themes that, for Focus and contributors from Kanlungan Center, Filipino Migrant Organizations in Europe, Migrant Networks in the Philippines, and the Transnational Institute, should be at the center of any debate and dialogue on migration. 

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Articles:

Perspective: Are OFWs falling through the cracks?: Between Unwieldy Regulation and the Middle-Men of Migration
by Julie de los Reyes

Political Round Up: In the Service of Overseas Filipino Workers Kanlungan Center Foundation

Political Round Up
: Did the Global Forum on Migration and Development really address migrants' issues?
by Marylou Malig

Socio Economic Monitor: OFW Deployment and Remittances
by Aya Fabros

JOINT CIVIL SOCIETY DECLARATION ON MIGRATION, DEVELOPMENT AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Submitted to GFMD-Manila, October 2008

OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT MACAPAGAL-ARROYO (On the EU Return Directive)
Nonoi Hacbang and Filipino MIGRANT ORGANIZATIONS IN EUROPE

Where Have All Our Human Rights Gone?: EU MIgration Policy 2008: Response and Resistance
by BRID BRENNAN, TRANSNATIONAL INSTITUTE

FOP FORUM ON CLIMATE JUSTICE: PRELUDE TO POZNAN

A Climate Justice Deal in Copenhagen?
by Isagani R. Serrano, PHILIPPINE RURAL RECONSTRUCTION MOVEMENT, 20 NOVEMBER 2008
 
How to Spend the Honeymoon
Peace and Security - Article
By Walden Bello
From Foreign Policy in Focus, Nov. 8, 2008

It came together spontaneously, the rally at Lafayette Park across from the White House, even before the concession speech by John McCain.  The crowd was multiracial, but the vast majority was white.  And young.  Lustily cheering “O-BA-MA, O-BA-MA,” they were from a generation aching for a reason to hope. These young Americans were responding to Barack Obama’s clarion call to abandon cynicism and the politics of division that Karl Rove and the Republicans had perfected as an art form over the last two decades.
 
The joy of victory – and a decisive one at that – caught up people throughout this vast country in a collective outpouring that for a few hours and probably a few more days will dispel the fears of joblessness and economic collapse that is literally around the corner.  Many overcame the residual racial fears, in the past successfully stoked by the right, to throw in their lot with a 47-year-old African American who offered not so much a detailed program as an earnest promise to toss into the ash-heap of history eight years of doctrinaire free-market policies that had led to the evaporation of their jobs and communities.

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FOCUS ON TRADE: Number 144, October 2008
Focus on Trade - Article
IN THIS ISSUE

The collapse of the global financial system heralds the end - at least for a while - of the fascination with free markets and fancy financial products. The calls for regulation are coming from every quarter, not least from some of the most energetic proponents of neo-liberalism (including Michel Camdessus, Robert Rubin and Martin Wolf, to name just three). With the future of the financial system at stake, more stringent regulation is almost certain - even the Princes of Wall Street realize that "things have to change if they are to stay the same" - and progressive voices should seize the opportunity to put ideas on the table. The first article in this issue "The Global Economic Crisis: An Historic Opportunity for Transformation" lists some ideas about how the global economy could be re-regulated to work for workers, communities and the environment.

The financial crisis has also been seized by trade unions and others as an opportunity to talk about "green jobs" and the "green economy" - a kind of "green Keynesiansim" that will kick start languishing economies, revive the productive sector, create "decent" and useful work, and make a start on reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Barak Obama and Joe Biden, Al Gore, Gordon Brown, and many other European heads of state are talking about green jobs and promising to throw a lot of money in that direction. That's all to the good, but even "green" jobs can co-exist happily in the framework of globalised capitalism, in much the same way that "fair trade" and "ecological" products barely dent the underlying dynamics of the system. In the following two articles in this issue, Tadzio Mueller and Ulrich Brand write about why we should mobilize for the United Nations negotiations on climate change from an anti-neoliberal and anti-imperialist position. For Mueller, the UN summit in Copenhagen in December 2009 offers a Seattle-like moment where the debate on climate change can be shifted just as the protests against the WTO in Seattle in 1999 shifted the debate on globalization. Ulrich Brand also argues for activists and social movement to take up the climate agenda as part and parcel of the struggle against neo-liberalism and neo-imperialism. As he says, although the UNFCCC embodies the political awareness of climate change, this "awareness is framed in specific ways and in line with dominant interests and social forces. It is not independent from neo-liberal and neo-imperial developments."

Finally in this issue, Joseph Purugganan dissects the Japan Philippines free trade agreement, and his autopsy reveals some useful lessons for future campaigns to democratise national trade policy.


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THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS: AN HISTORIC OPPORTUNITY FOR TRANSFORMATION
An initial response to the global economic crisis

THE MOVEMENT IS DEAD, LONG LIVE THE MOVEMENT!
Tadzio Mueller

TOWARDS RADICAL CRITIQUE AND ACTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE POLITICS AND COPENHAGEN 2009
Ulrich Brand

ANATOMY OF A (BAD) TRADE DEAL: HOW THE PHILIPPINES NEGOTIATED THE JPEPA
Joseph Purugganan

Read more...
 
Focus on the Philippines October 2008
Phillippines Programme - Announcements

Dear Readers,

This month's FOP looks at the Meltdown-- how we're affected and how to respond. The issue includes Walden Bello's Primer on the Wall Street Meltdown, analysis and proposals from Prof. Leonor Briones of Social Watch-Philippines, the Freedom from Debt Coalition and groups that participated in the Asia-Europe Peoples' Forum sessions. Also, to continue our Mindanao discussions,  Eric Gutierrez shares an initial article, which probes the link between land issues and escalating conflict in Mindanao.

As months go by, more and more issues crop up, demanding our attention and action. We hope that this issue helps, as we contend with-- and create opportunities for intervention and change in-- yet another such crisis that has global and historical implications.

We look forward to your reflections and propositions: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Perspective
A Primer on the Wall Street Meltdown 
by Walden Bello

Socio-Economic Monitor
Initial Tremors: Investments, Exports, Remittances
by Aya Fabros

Development Brief
Protecting the poor
by Leonor Magtolis Briones

Development Brief
The Global Economic Crisis: An Historic Opportunity for Transformation
An initial response from individuals, social movements and non-governmental Organisations in support of a transitional programme for radical economic transformation Beijing, 15 October 2008

Political Round Up
The Need for a Debt Moratorium: Increasing Fiscal Spending, Ending Fiscal Dictatorship
Freedom from Debt Coalition Statement

Focus on Mindanao
Southern Philippines Conflict: Violence to Intensify as Land and Territorial Disputes Worsen
by Eric Gutierrez

Statements
US Troops Out of Mindanao; Genuine Self-Determination for Moros Now!
 
Focus on India October 2008
India Programme - Announcements
Monthly e-newsletter from Focus on the Global South, India
Content summary:

The world is witnessing a fall of the global capitalism’s nerve center and a reverse process towards nationalization. The U.S. government mega mortgage bailout plan of $700 billion dollar and buying of shares of the leading private banks is a desperate attempt by the Bush Administration to ‘preserve the remnants of free market economy’. Everyone, even those least connected with the ‘Wall Street meltdown’, are wondering what’s really going on in the market? In this issue we are carrying two pieces on what led to the current Wall Street collapse (i) a “primer on the Wall Street Meltdown” in which Dr. Walden Bello has eloquently explained the truth behind this extraordinary event and (ii) an article by Prof. Arun Kumar of Jawaharlal University, New Delhi on “The US Financial Crisis: Collapsing Sand Castles”.

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Contents:

1.     NEWS / ANNOUNCEMENTS
1.a.     Convention against Communalism and Assault on Democracy; October 18, 2008;
    3.30 pm to 7 pm; Mavlankar Auditorium, New Delhi

1.b.     National Convention against Fascism; October 25-26, 2008; New Delhi

2.     STATEMENTS/REPORTS
2.a.     Immediately Halt EU-India FTA Negotiations - Statement of Concern from India, New Delhi; Sept. 21, 2008.
2.b.     Interim Report: Concerned Citizens’ Independent Fact-finding Mission, Kandhamal; September 2008, Orissa
2.c.     Dhule was Burnt; after 40 Years, despite of its glorious tradition of Communal Harmony; By Ambarish Rai & Pratibha Shinde, October 11, 2008

3.     ARTICLES
3.a.     A Primer on the Wall Street Meltdown; By Walden Bello; October 01, 2008
3.b     The US Financial Crisis; Collapsing Sand Castles; By Arun Kumar; Sept. 30, 2008


 
The Global Economic Crisis: An Historic Opportunity for Transformation
Trade Campaign - Statements and Declarations
An initial response from individuals, social movements and non-governmental Organisations in support of a transitional programme for radical economic transformation Beijing, 15 October 2008

Preamble
Taking advantage of the opportunity of so many people from movements gathering in Beijing during the Asia-Europe People’s Forum, the Transnational Institute and Focus on the Global South convened informal nightly meetings between 13 and 15 October 2008. We took stock of the meaning of the unfolding global economic crisis and the opportunity it presents for us to put into the public domain some of the inspiring and feasible alternatives many of us have been working on for decades. This statement represents the collective outcome of our Beijing nights. We, the initial signatories, mean this to be a contribution towards efforts to formulate proposals around which our movements can organise as the basis for a radically different kind of political and economic order. Please sign on to this statement at http://www.casinocrash.org.

Read more...
 
Afterthoughts : A primer on the Wall Street meltdown
Trade Campaign - Article
by Walden Bello*
(Updated 18 October 2008)

Flying into New York, I had the same feeling I had when I arrived in Beirut two years ago, at the height of the Israeli bombing of that city—that of entering a war zone.  The immigration agent, upon learning I taught political economy, commented, “Well, I guess you folks will now be revising all those textbooks?”  The bus driver welcomed passengers with the words, “New York is still here, ladies and gentlemen, but Wall Street has disappeared, like the Twin Towers.”  Even the usually cheerful morning shows feel obligated to begin with the bad news, with one host attributing the bleak events to “the fatcats of Wall Street who turned into pigs.”
Read more...
 
FOCUS ON TRADE: Number 143, September 2008
Focus on Trade - Article
IN THIS ISSUE of Focus on Trade, Chanida Chanyapate and Jacques-chai Chomthongdi shed some much-needed light on the political situation in Thailand, and Herbert Docena looks at why a breakthrough agreement between the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Philippines government unraveled at the last minute. Also writing from the vantage point of Asia, Walden Bello looks at the current financial meltdown with a certain sense of deja vu, and explains why it happened, step-by-step.

ASIA: THE WALL STREET MELTDOWN: THE VIEW FROM ASIA
Walden Bello
 
THAILAND: THE WOULD-BE REVOLUTION
Chanida Chanyapate and Jacques-chai Chomthongdi
 
PHILIPPINES: TOWARDS A MEMORANDUM FOR SELF-DETERMINATION
Herbert Docena

US: WALL STREET MELTDOWN PRIMER
Walden Bello

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ASEAN People's Forum
12-14 December 2008
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

VISIT THE APF WEBSITE

We are glad to invite you to the upcoming ASEAN Peoples' Forum (APF), scheduled to take place December 12 through 14 2008, at Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok. This unique platform of direct People-to-People engagement will take place prior to the 14th ASEAN Summit in Chang Mai, and will provide civil society organizations and social movements from across the region an opportunity to gather to discuss key issues confronting the region, articulate common positions, and develop joint action among civil society actors in Southeast Asia.

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

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Wall Street: The Causes of Collapse
by Walden Bello
Updated: 18 October 2008
Download the Presentation

Waterrr: What's going wrong? How can we set it right?
water
Join the pan-Asian water dialogue between policy makers, water operators, engineers, unions and water rights activists.

Featured Speakers India
B.K. Sinha, IAS, Director General, National Institute of Rural Development
Rajendra Singh, Tarun Bharat Sangh, Rajasthan, Magsaysay Award Winner

Featured Speakers International
Anil Naidoo, Blue Planet Project, Council of Canadians
Saleh Rabi, Director, Palestiniaian Water Training institute, Palestine
Mary Ann Manahan, Focus on Global South, Philippines

Moderator
Arvind Sivramakrishnan, The Hindu and Asian College of Journalism

Open to the public as part of the proceedings of the Asian Water Colloquium on September 26, 2008. 5-30 pm. At the  IC & SR Auditorium, the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras.

If you are unable to participate physically, you can Query the Colloquium online (click here) and track the feedback on www.rightsresearch.org
 
Water: Common Good, Public Management and Alternatives
Securing the Right to Water—Challenges and Solutions in Asia
September 25-27, 2008
IC & SR Hall, Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai, India

organised  by Reclaiming Public Water Network, Focus on Global South, Chennai Host Group: Dept. of HSC, IIT, Madras Water Engineers and Centre for Law, Policy & HR Studies

meeting of activists, public water managers/operators and trade unions focuses on existing and emerging water "alternatives"(to corporate-driven privatization and its various forms).
In particular, the workshop will be a space/venue:

• for understanding and analyzing the water situations in the Asia region, particularly, in terms of alternatives,
• identify common issues and concerns among different water players in the region, and a collective framework on water (as a resource, human right, and common good);
• towards arriving at a common understanding of water alternatives (e.g. to corporate-driven privatization) within the context of democratization (e.g. Public-Public Partnerships);
• to identify possible areas of cooperation among trade unions, civil society groups/water rights advocates, and public utility managers, for collaboration, complementary and concerted action in the region; and
• visit and learn from the democratization experiment being conducted in the Tamil Nadu’s state water board and in the irrigation/agricultural engineering department.

Read more...
 
PEOPLE'S SAARC 2008
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PEOPLE's SAARC 2008: "Towards A South Asian Union"

Read the Call for
People's SAARC 2008
People's SAARC Declaration

Click here to download the Programme Schedule
Visit the People's Spaces Website

INTERNSHIP OPENING AT FOCUS, INDIA
Focus on the Global South - India is accepting applications for internships.
Click here for more details>>
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