[asia-apec 742] Toronto Star Article - APEC

Gatt Watchdog gattwd at corso.ch.planet.gen.nz
Sat Oct 3 08:17:28 JST 1998


The Toronto Star                                       October 1, 1998

Arrogance of the elites the real APEC tale 

	By Naomi Klein         

	Stack the latest document in the Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation
scandal on the pile of papers pointing directly at the Prime Minister's
Office. "PMO has expressed concerns about the security perimeter at (the
University of British Columbia), not so much from a security point of view
but to avoid embarrassment to APEC leaders," reads an E-mail from summit
organizer Robert Vanderloo.
        It's clear the RCMP are intent on pinning the blame for their strong-
        arm tactics on the Prime Minister while the PM would surely like
        nothing more than for the whole affair to be dismissed as the actions
        of a few ham-fisted cops.
        Maybe they're both right. The RCMP may well have been out of control
        and their actions may indeed have violated the protesters' civil
        liberties. But that was, at least, partly as a result of the fact --
        clearly outlined in the documents -- that Ottawa handed the RCMP
        demands that could not be carried out peacefully.
        And what exactly is the acceptable means of preventing "embarrassment
        to APEC leaders?" If the officers looked in their RCMP manuals under
"embarrassment prevention," they would have come up empty since causing
politicians to blush is neither a crime nor a security risk. 
        Those are among the questions that the RCMP public complaints
        commission will be hearing next week as the blame for SprayPEC gets
        batted around in Vancouver. Outside the scope of this commission
        however, is the question of why the bodies advancing global trade --
        from APEC to the World Trade Organization and the International
        Monetary Fund -- are becoming lightning rods for so much global
        discontent.
        Beyond the cries that human rights are being sacrificed at the altar
        of corporate profits, are deeper concerns about the lack of
        transparency and access to these powerful decision-making bodies.
        In the absence of opportunities for meaning public participation
        citizens groups must shout to be heard. As their voices grow louder,
        it takes increasingly forceful measures to make sure they do not
        cause a disturbance -- let alone embarrassment. This is a problem
        faced not only by the RCMP, but by police forces around the world.
        Once upon a time, world leaders could have their meetings in peace.
        Sure, there were a few protesters shouting against nuclear bombs or
        whaling, but the vast majority of labour, human rights and
        environmental activists had their eyes focused exclusively on
        national battles.
        That time has decidedly passed. At the G-8 Summit in Birmingham,
        England last May, 10,000 protesters formed a human chain around the
        city demanding Third World debt relief. Two days later, when the
        leaders travelled to Geneva to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
        World Trade Organization, the caravan of students, farmers and the
        unemployed followed like a long shadow.
        It was this ad hoc global network, connected through a web of
        electronic mail, which generated enough heat over the Multilateral
        Agreement on Investment that its introduction was stalled last April.
        But as public concern about free trade mounts, there has been no
        attempt to create official channels for such grievances to be
        addressed. In the absence of such a response, surveillance of
        activists is stepped up and every legitimate demonstration is regarded
        as a riot waiting to happen.
        For instance, when APEC trade ministers met in New Zealand in July,
        1996, activists organized a small counter-summit. On the night before
        the summit, two secret service officers where caught breaking into and
        rifling though the home of protest organizer Aziz Choudry. His civil
        case is currently under appeal.
        When the leaders' summit was held in Manila in 1997, the police sealed
        all the exits from a parallel anti-APEC conference, preventing a
        planned protest at the summit site. In Geneva last month, police
        raided an anti-MAI seminar and 50 participants were detained without
        charge.
	So, do we have a conspiracy on our hands? I'm afraid it's nothing more
glamorous than the garden variety arrogance of powerful people, accustomed
to the comfort of closed doors, suddenly facing a horde of uninvited
guests. Just ask Sylvia Ostry, Canada's Grande Dame of free trade. 
	"Isn't there some way of monitoring these people?" Ostry asked at a
Toronto seminar last November. It sounded as if she was talking about
busting a ring of Internet child pornographers, but she was actually
referring to politically engaged Canadians who were turning the tide of
public opinion against the MAI. 
        The real question is one which should be leveled at Ostry and other
        free traders who seem to believe that writing the laws of our shared
        global government is a private matter and not our concern: Isn't there
        some way of monitoring these people?





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