FORUM OF "NGOs OF THE SOUTH AND THE CHALLENGES OF GLOBALIZATION"

FINAL DECLARATION

We, delegates of non-governmental organizations, social movements, popular organizations and academic institutions from countries of the so-called South, gathered here in Havana, March 1-3 of the year 2000, as part of the preliminary process of the South Summit, have come together to evaluate the problems related to the phenomenon of globalization, its principal trends and impact on the national economies of our countries, and to discuss the capacity of civil society and the NGOs of our peoples to influence, organize and act under current international conditions.

We agree that a process of globalization carried out on the basis of solidarity, considering human beings to be the central aspect of development, may offer opportunities for technological advance to contribute to development, progress and social welfare. However, when it occurs under the dominion of neo-liberalism, which drastically imposes the blind will of the market, deregulation, and increased and indiscriminate privatization of resources and the national treasures, that ultimately belong to our peoples, it provokes the brutal disintegration and economic and social fragmentation of our countries, with dramatic consequences for the survival of the traditionally most vulnerable and marginalized sectors.

We denounce that the neoliberal policy advocated by transnational capital and international agencies such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank has contributed to the concentration of wealth and the exacerbation of social polarization manifested in the increase of poverty, that today critically affects more than a billion persons throughout the world, who have no possible access to the food needed for survival, to the basic services of health and education, and to social security.

We emphasize just as strongly that these policies attempt to wipe out our cultures and identities, imposing instead cultural assimilation and models that legitimate their own: individualistic, exclusionary and lacking in solidarity.

We note with deep concern the continuing ecological deterioration of our planet and the persistence of barriers that prevent us from achieving sustainable development, above all the lack of political will to establish rigorous protection of the environment against the depredations of irrational economic policies and non-sustainable consumption patterns.

Based on these reflections, we identify the enormous obstacles that the current international economic order, in its various manifestations: financial, commercial and technological, opposes to the right to development and our peoples' aspirations for a just social order.

In consequence, we urge the Heads of State and Government of the countries of the Group of 77, who will meet in Havana next April, in the context of the South Summit, to denounce:

For our part, we, the delegates of this Forum, conscious of the adverse circumstances in which our peoples struggle for their most basic rights, and convinced of the urgent necessity for more active and effective participation of all sectors of civil society: the workers and their trade unions, women, young people, children, elderly, disabled, peasants, native peoples, social researchers and many other organizations and institutions representative of the population, in the processes of discussion and decision-making at the national and international level:

TO GLOBALIZE SOLIDARITY IS NOT JUST A DREAM, IT IS THE ONLY WAY  TO SUCCESSFULLY CONFRONT THE EVILS OF TODAY AND THE CHALLENGES OF TOMORROW.

                                  International Conference Center
Havana, March  3, 2000

 

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