STATEMENT ON PERU AND OTHER PENDING FTAs
The following statement was sent via email to 1,400 people in Congress on Monday November 5th, including all the trade LAs, Chief of Staff, Legislative Directors and Congress people. Congratulations to the grassroots initiative behind this statement, especially to Grassroots Global Justice and folks from across the country gathering on regular conference calls to stop the Peru FTA.
November 5, 2007
Dear Members of Congress:
As the U.S.-Peru Free Trade Agreement (FTA) comes up for a vote this week, please consider the widespread resistance to the trade pact represented in this sign-on letter compiled over just a few days. Our organizations and networks represent millions of people from diverse sectors of society across the United States. Your constituents are demanding that you stop the Peru FTA.
Enough is Enough! No to False "Free Trade"! Yes to Peoples Trade!
Stop the Peru, Panama, Colombia and South Korea Free Trade Agreements
It is clear that only a few are reaping the benefits of "free" trade agreements (FTAs). Over the past two decades FTAs have created a class of super-rich individuals and extremely powerful corporations. They have disrupted the culture and livelihoods of millions of people, forcing many to leave their homes, and driven many into severe poverty.
On a daily basis, the vast majority of people throughout the world are struggling to survive - to make a living from the land, to earn a livable wage, to protect our health and environment, to assure access to water, housing and basic services. The strategies used to deny us these basic human rights are embedded in FTAs.
In fact, there is nothing free about FTAs. Communities and nations are subjected to the will of multi-national corporations, who sack our natural and human resources, eliminate laws that make corporations accountable, and wrest authority from our governments to provide basic services. The vision of George W. Bush and other "free" traders is that private corporations own the seeds and the food that they create, water and the infrastructure that carries it, medicines and the hospitals that administer them. The ultimate goal is not to eliminate poverty, and promote global prosperity and well-being, but to make every aspect of our lives into a source of profit for corporations.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which many of us fought against in 1993, offers a clear example of the destructive power of FTAs.
• When NAFTA took effect in 1994, the Mexican government eliminated price controls to many farmers, while at the same time removed its tariffs on imported corn. This forced Mexican farmers to compete on the global market with giant agricultural corporations based in the U.S. (which are the principal beneficiaries of current U.S. farm policy).
• Millions of Mexican farmers were displaced, forcing them from the land and into low-wage sweatshops along the U.S.-Mexico border. By the beginning of this decade, many of these plants closed, leaving hundreds of thousands of people in the border region with a devastated economy and a poisoned environment.
• Not surprisingly, migration to the United States has skyrocketed in the past 10 years, yet the response of the Bush administration and Congressional leaders in both major parties is to militarize the border, expand the repressive authority of the Homeland Security Administration and conduct a witch-hunt of immigrant workers throughout the U.S.
Now, many of the same irresponsible political leaders are pushing new FTAs with Peru, Colombia, Panama and South Korea. On October 12, George W. Bush declared: ''Now it is the time (sic) to move forward with these pro-growth, pro-democracy agreements." Amazingly, however, as President Bill Clinton did in 1993, Democratic leaders like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi are promoting the trade agreements despite wide-spread public opinion opposing them. In 2006, the Central American Free Trade Agreement passed the U.S. Congress by just one vote. Instead of building political momentum to stop these policies, Democratic leaders are siding with Bush to turn back the clock.
Enough is Enough! We cannot allow politicians to sell out our communities!
• We support trade policies that support human rights, democracy, indigenous sovereignty, food sovereignty, environmental justice, economic justice and the sustainability of the planet.
• We support trade policies that restrict the power of corporations and strengthen the rights of workers and communities.
• We support efforts such as the Peoples Trade Agreement of Bolivia, which promotes policies based on the concepts of "complementarity, cooperation, solidarity, reciprocity, prosperity and the respect for the sovereignty of each country".
• We recognize that communities throughout the world are facing imminent and desperate circumstances. Therefore we cannot compromise our principles. We commit to building a movement to fundamentally alter trade and foreign policies of the U.S. government.
• We oppose the Free Trade Agreements between the United States government and Peru, Panama, Colombia and South Korea, and we urge Congressional representatives to vote "NO".
This statement was endorsed by the following organizations:
50 years is Enough Network (Washington D.C.) ActionAid USA American Agricultural Movement American Corn Growers Association Association for Colombian Sovereignty, (ASOCOL) California Dairy Campaign California Farmers Union Campaign for Labor Rights Center of Concern Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America (CRLN) Colombia Vive, Boston Columban Justice, Peace & Integrity of Creation Office (USA) Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) Community Voices Heard Development GAP Direct Action for Rights and Equality (Providence, RI) Family Farm Defenders Farm Labor Organizing Committee (Toledo, OH) Freedom Socialist Party Global Exchange Grassroots Global Justice Alliance (Los Angeles, CA) Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA Holy Cross International Justice Office Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy International Brotherhood of Teamsters International Labor Rights Forum Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement Korean Americans for Fair Trade Korean-Americans for Peace Labor-Religion Coalition of New York State Latin American Solidarity Committee of Buffalo, NY Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns Mexico-US Solidarity Network Missouri Rural Crisis Center National Alliance of Latin American and Caribbean Communities (NALACC) National Family Farm Coalition National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (Oakland, CA) NETWORK: A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby Nicaragua Network Nicaragua-U.S. Friendship Office NYC People's Referendum on Free Trade Portland Central America Solidarity Committee (PCASC) Quixote Center/Quest for Peace Rural Coalition/Coalición Rural Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur Justice and Peace Office Sisters of the Holy Cross Congregation Justice Committee, Notre Dame, IN Sisters of the Holy Name Justice Network Southwest Workers Union (San Antonio, TX) St. Peter's Housing Committee (San Francsico, CA) Stop Cafta Coalition Student Trade Justice Campaign United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries United Electrical Workers Union (UE) United Students Against Sweatshops (Washington DC) US-El Salvador Sister Cities Network Washington Fair Trade Coalition Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) Witness for Peace World Hunger Year (WHY)