[Prec. per data] [Succ. per data] [Prec. per argomento] [Succ. per argomento] [Indice per data] [Indice per argomento]
FW: African Social Forum
- Subject: FW: African Social Forum
- From: pacedifesa <perugia at pacedifesa.org>
- Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2003 15:38:30 +0100
Inoltro per conoscenza. Dalle Nonviolent Peaceforces, fondate lo scorso novembre/dicembre in India. Saluti, Sandro Mazzi CSDC --------------------------------- Centro Studi Difesa Civile - CSDC www.pacedifesa.org Sede operativa Perugia C/o Auoc, Via della Viola, 1 - 06122 Perugia T.fax 075.572.66.41 - perugia at pacedifesa.org ----- Original Message ----- From: John Stewart <mailto:afsc at ecoweb.co.zw> To: npigc <mailto:npigc at yahoogroups.com> ; Young Kim <mailto:ykstorytelling at hotmail.com> ; Tim Wallis <mailto:twallis at peaceworkers.org.uk> ; Renad Qubbaj <mailto:pngonet at p-ol.com> ; Ramu Manivannan <mailto:ramu_manivannan at hotmail.com> ; Rabia Roberts <mailto:rabiaroberts at earthlink.net> ; Phil Ritter <mailto:philr at sonic.net> ; Omar Diop <mailto:omardiop3 at yahoo.fr> ; Michael Pokawa <mailto:michael at nonviolentpeaceforce.org> ; Mel Duncan <mailto:mel at nonviolentpeaceforce.org> ; Lynn Adamson <mailto:ladamson at idirect.com> ; John Stewart <mailto:novasc at ecoweb.co.zw> ; Akihiko Kimijima <mailto:kimijima at elsa.hokkai-s-u.ac.jp> ; Chaiwat Satha Anand <mailto:chaiwatna at yahoo.com> ; Claudia Samayoa <mailto:cvsjrh at intelnet.net.gt> ; Donna Howard <mailto:donna at nonviolentpeaceforce.org> ; Francesco Tullio <mailto:psicosoluzioni at francescotullio.it> ; Gustavo Cabrera <mailto:jeguma at racsa.co.cr> Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 5:13 PM Subject: African Social Forum Dear Colleagues please find attached the draft report on the African social forum working group on Peace, conflict and security note under number 6b the reference to an Africawide consultation, very positively received here any further news on Porto Alegre??? all best wishes from Addis Ababa John ------ End of Forwarded Message Draft African Social Forum: "Another Africa is possible!" Workshop Peace, Conflict and security An Africa with peace and security for all is possible! Economic justice for the people is incompatible with wars and violent conflict! 1. The workshop met on 6 January 2002. The list of participants is attached. The workshop was facilitated by Bakary Fofana (Guinea) and Manal Abdel Halim (Sudan), and rapporteurs were Marie Edith Douzima-Lawson (Central African Republic) and John Stewart (Zimbabwe). 2. The participants heard presentations about conflict, violence and peacemaking in Africa. These included overviews and analyses, descriptions of experiences and situations of war and conflict, and examples of initiatives to prevent, resolve or recover after wars and conflicts. Presentations made on specific cases included the following: Central African Republic, Congo, Angola, Algeria, northern Uganda, South Africa, Togo. [Papers by the presenters will be separately available] 3. It was noted that war or violent conflict has affected every single continental country in Africa; but that peace and security is an essential prerequisite for progress towards dynamic human development so that people's livelihoods and rights are met. It was also recognised that the continuation of conflicts in Africa serves to weaken Africa, and so perpetuates its subservient position in the world economy. Expenditures on weapons have been made at the expense of human security; and such expenditures have also served to enhance Africa's debts. The costs of such conflicts have seldom been realistically counted, and thus accountability in terms of reparations and reconstruction are seldom attributed and followed up. It was also noted that the majority of conflicts in Africa have been intra-national conflicts, which often have effects across borders: and that therefore formal state-level diplomatic processes to resolve such conflicts are often inappropriate. It was clearly stated that civil society and social movements have a significant role to play resolving conflicts and dealing with their effects, but that this has not occurred sufficiently, due to inadequacies in the civil society sector as well as the resistance of states and political actors to accept such intervention. It was further noted that conflict in itself is not negative, and indeed is the motor of social change; but that people's energies and creativity needs to be channelled through strong organisations and movements which can interact and campaign to enable social change to take place without violence. It is particularly important that youth in Africa be enabled to see that their instrumentalisation in violent activities is destructive of their own future. The workshop noted that it was important to plan, carry out and strengthen activities which deal with the various stages and situations of violent conflicts, in particular, the ranges of strategies and actions to prevent and minimise the likelihood of conflicts degenerating into violence; the strategies and activities required to manage, resolve and end conflicts; and the activities for post-conflict reconstruction and the consolidation and maintenance of peace. 4. The workshop recognised the multiple causes and factors of the violent conflicts that have occurred and continue to occur in the continent, including the following: - the crisis of the legitimacy of governance and the weakness of the state; the inadequacies, failures and distortions of the democratic process; the crisis of legitimacy of governments and rulers and the authoritarianism and the denial of human rights practiced in many states; which has been given a new lease of life in the name of the war on terrorism (but which is itself terror); power struggles that have led to coup d'etats, mutinies, rebellions and mobilizations of militias - the weaknesses and institutional crises caused by the imposition of inappropriate and socially destructive policy options through conditionalities for multilateral and bilateral aid and development cooperation - the issues of poverty, wealth divisions, class interests, and the effects of the global economic processes on impoverishment of the African people and their institutions, exacerbating their weaknesses - the power struggles over the control of natural resources and wealth, such as diamonds, and the implications in fuelling the trade in and widespread availability of light weapons - the corruption that has ravaged both the public and private sectors (and to some degree the civil society sector) - the ways in which factors such as ethnicity, religion, unemployment and poverty have been manipulated to mobilize support for violent factional interests - the fragmentation and even antagonisms within civil society and between the social movements, resulting in the ineffectiveness of civil society initiatives, or in worst cases their active participation in the course of conflicts. In this regard it was noted that the phenomenon of state-sponsored civil society is one that needs particular attention - the interplay between internal factors and external factors, both of which need to be taken into account in order to effectively resolve the conflicts - the inappropriateness of many attempts to resolve conflicts including the use of diplomacy and inter-state mechanisms for intra-state conflicts, as well as the frequent absence of women from the peace negotiations processes. In addition, African civil society capacity has usually been overlooked, and work has been carried out by professionals from other parts of the world, with the usual cultural inappropriateness and dislocations. 5. The workshop noted the effects of war on violent conflict which include the following, all of which need to be overcome in post-conflict reconstruction: - economic dislocation and the diversion of capital and resources for non-productive or destructive purposes; including the rendering non-productive of agricultural land due to the presence of landmines, or population displacements, the disruption or destruction of transport, energy and communications infrastructures, and the exacerbation of poverty, marginalisation and the fragility of survival - social and humanitarian costs, of refugee and internally displaced population, the destruction of health, sanitation and education infrastructures and the increase in demand for health and social services by the wounded, amputees, traumatized people, orphans, and the increased demand for health services due to the spread of diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, and the HIV/AIDS epidemic - the culture of impunity, the demoralisation and dispersal of political, judicial and social institutions and the absence of the rule of just laws, and the absense of social regulation mechanisms, which allow for the continuation of violence and armed conflicts 6. Strategies for an alternative Africa were agreed as follows: a) The African Social Forum will set up an Africa-wide monitoring and review mechanism ("observatoire") on the issues of conflict, social tension, wars and militarisation, and strategies for peace-making and the consolidation of peace and security. This will be a research network, comprised of technical experts, researchers and social movement activists, focussing on issues such as the nature, causes and costs of violent conflict, human rights abuses, economic crimes and corruption. It will also be an advocacy and campaigning network, to exert pressure on civil society, governments and other institutions (such as the African Union) for policies and activities to prevent, manage, resolve and deal with the consequences of violent conflicts and wars. It was agreed that this mechanism should operate at national, sub-regional and continental level. It was recognized that initiatives already exist in some countries and some regions which need to be supported and strengthened; it was agreed that an audit of organisations, networks and initiatives working in the field of peace and security will be carried out in order to draw in the potential richness of African capacities. A working committee for the establishment and initial operation of this "observatory" will be established at the Addis Ababa meeting. b) The African Social Forum will facilitate the continued communication and exchanges of perspectives, analyses, experiences and strategies between the participants concerned with conflicts, peace and security. This would have the following objectives: that a common understanding and collective policy may be developed; that expertise may be recognised and drawn on from within Africa; that intra-African solidarity and support, from within civil society and social movements may be expanded and strengthened. In this light the ASF notes that the Nonviolent Peaceforce intends to hold an Africa-wide consultation during 2003, to explore means of strengthening and increasing civilian participation in peacemaking, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and non-violent social change. c) The African Social Forum resolves to take up the following campaigns: - in relation to governance, it affirms the need for constitutionally guaranteed separation of powers, in particular with an independent, credible, and functional judiciary, so that the rule of just laws may operate; and with the effective operation of parliaments as oversight mechanisms for the Executive. At the continental level the ASF resolves to campaign for the establishment of the African Court of Justice, to replace the African Commission on Peoples and Human Rights (and in the interim will campaign to ensure that the Commission shall have the powers to enforce its findings). A key provision for the African Court of Justice shall be its right to enter into investigation and process without the invitations of governments. The ASF recommends that the "peer review mechanism" be built into the founding act of the African Union, and be enforceable both politically through the AU and juridically through the African Court of Justice - in relation to the strengthening of democracy, the ASF resolves to campaign for increased social movement and civil society monitoring of election processes, both nationally and by international exchanges; to strengthen and support citizen and voter education processes and activities. The ASF affirms the need for strong independent and responsible media as necessary for the strengthening of democratic process, and resolves to encourage social movement participation in campaigns for such independent media - in relation to stability and security, the ASF affirms the need of integration for long term stability and security, at both the sub-regional and continental levels. The ASF resolves to campaign for regional integration that is based on the interests and perspectives of socials movements and people's interests, so that regional and continental initiatives for conflict prevention and peace-building are much more effective. In particular, the ASF resolves to facilitate civil society and social movement solidarity and collective initiatives towards policy campaigns at the sub-regional and continental levels. Substantive sectors to be addressed include: the light weapons trade; reduction and redeployment of military budgets; demobilisation and reintegration into civilian society of former combatants; peace education and peace mobilisation initiatives; regionalization of conflict transformation skills and competences training. - in relation to disarmament, the ASF resolves to facilitate the increased participation of social movements and civil society in the campaigns and initiatives to end the arms trade, and in particular the trade in light weapons and small arms that sustains many conflicts in our continent, noting such initiatives as the International Action Network on Small Arms. It further resolves to campaign to develop and support measures to end the corrupt and exploitative use of Africa's natural and mineral resources (whether diamonds and oil, cattle, forests, or medicinal plants) for the waging of wars and the continuation of violent conflicts, through such initiatives as the Kimberly process. Another aspect of the campaign will focus on the reduction of military expenditure by states. - in relation to social and economic conflicts, the ASF resolves to campaign to strengthen non-violent skills within community and popular organisations and social movements, for effective campaigning and for handling disputes through mediation, negotiations and arbitration. Such a campaign will also work to increase the availability of such professional but accountable skills, drawing for training from within Africa's wealth of experience and competence, to be operational at all levels including at the national, regional and continental levels. Indigenous and traditional mechanisms for handling and resolving conflicts shall be recognised and validated by such a campaign. It shall be demanded that the African Union institutionalise and make effective and accountable processes to carry out arbitration, mediation and negotiation activities professionally and dispassionately, and to recognise and support civil society and social movement initiatives in this regard. - n relation to youth and violence, the ASF resolves to campaign for support for activities and initiatives to enable youth to appropriate and develops non-violent skills and skills for social and economic development. A networking of existing initiatives will be carried out with a view to the sharing of experiences and the development of new activities and initiatives. - in relation to human and people's rights, the ASF resolves to campaign to support and strengthen social movement and civil society organisations that defend and protect human rights, in relation to abuses of power, the culture of impunity, torture and organised violence, including through the ratification and operation of international legal conventions and instruments that protect rights (particularly those of workers, rural people, women, children, refugees and displaced people, and other marginalized or vulnerable people.) The campaign shall work to support and strengthen national healing and reconciliation processes, including initiatives for truth, memory, dignity and justice for victims and survivors of violence. - In relation to post-conflict reconstruction, the ASF resolves to campaign for just reparations and appropriate accountability mechanisms so that the human and material destruction caused by the conflict can be repaired and healed, in all countries struggling to recover from wars and violent conflict d) the ASF resolves to campaign to denounce the politics of war and terror practised by the United States and Britain, and more generally the countries of the North, in particular in terms of the so-called war on terror - recognising the link between such militarism and the maintenance of the current exploitative world order which sustains the neo-liberal world economic system. The ASF rejects and refuses the war on Iraq, recognising that it is part of the strategy to control global natural resources. At the same time it denounces the war against the Palestinian people, and calls for a just peace, based on self-determination for the Palestinian people. The African Social Forum resolves to make the following recommendations: I) to social movements and civil society in Africa: that there is urgent need for the social movements and civil society to focus on and develop and strengthen their skills and capacity to participate in activities to prevent the degeneration of social process into armed conflicts by developing skills for non-violence; II) to the African Governments and the African Union: that an Africa-wide treaty be established, with urgency, to ban and eliminate the trade in light weapons from the African continent; and to enforce and implement the International Treaty to Ban Land Mines III) to the African Governments and the African Union: that the African Court of Justice be established with urgency, with effective rights of entry, investigation and enforcement, to protect and defend peoples economic, social and human rights
- Prev by Date: Weekly anb02134.txt #7
- Next by Date: WBM - World Brand Mall
- Previous by thread: Weekly anb02134.txt #7
- Next by thread: WBM - World Brand Mall
- Indice: