Yes, We Can All Get Along
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil-Social justice
is a lot of work. Especially when its 90
degrees and humid. The World Social
Forum meetings are spread out along
the Guiaba River, at 11 different sites,
each one consisting of a couple of
dozen tents. The sessions last three
hours, and there are about 20
sessions per three-hour block. So,
every three hours I have to choose
among 220 mini-conferences that are
spread out along several kilometers
and take place in plastic tents and
empty port warehouses. Did I mention it's hot and humid?
This morning I decided to spend my time in the tent devoted to
discussions of bauxite mining. Bauxite is the main ingredient in
aluminum, of which the United States is the world's biggest consumer. It
is also dangerous to mine and polluting to the environment, a point that
was driven home by a recent industrial accident in a bauxite refinery
that led to a toxic spill in the Amazon region of Brazil.
What is going on today, in this small tent filled with about 30 people, is
unusual. Three groups that at first glance have conflicting interests-
Brazilian miners, German industrial unions, and American
environmentalists-are attempting to form a coalition. It is easy to see
why these groups' interests would nominally be opposed. The Germans
would be concerned that the lower-wage Brazilians will take their jobs,
and both would resist the American environmentalists, who want to put
limits on their industry.
These differences do exist, but for now, at least, these disparate
organizations see themselves as having a higher purpose, and it involves
working together.
"We think in this age of globalization we can no longer work only in one
country," said Dieter Eich, a representative of the Confederation of
German Trade Unions. "It is not acceptable for German companies that
manufacture in the developing world to use different standards than
they do at home. Why is a Brazilian lung not as protected as a German
one?" His union, the German equivalent of the AFL-CIO, is funding 20
education projects and pro-labor publicity campaigns in Brazil.
Free-trade advocates would dismiss
Eich's concerns as mere rhetoric
designed to protect the German
market. After all, if you raise the
health and environmental standards
of poor countries to those of Europe,
then corporations will not be as
tempted to export jobs overseas.
Manuel Paiva, the president of the
workers union in the Barcarena region
of Brazil where the toxic spill
happened, was not interested in an
ideological debate. "We want to be
sure that the work we do will not harm us," he told the audience. "We
want to discuss how to have a mining industry that is not degrading to
our homes and our land."
According to union leaders, the most pressing issue is a plan by the
aluminum companies-which are dominated by the Brazilian mining firm
CVRD; Hydro, a Norwegian-owned company that is centered in
Germany; and the U.S. aluminum-manufacturing giant Alcoa-to
dramatically ramp up production. That expansion means building dams
to power the energy-intensive refineries.
Dams have long been a concern of the environmental community
because of the ecological devastation and community displacement they
cause, but the anti-dam agenda was not an easy sell for Glenn Switkes,
the Sao Paulo-based representative of the ,
a U.S. environmental organization. While Switkes was pushing for limits
on the mining operations, jobs and health concerns were at the top of
the Brazilian workers' agenda. After listening to his presentation on the
dangers of dams, the union leaders said he should speak directly to the
villages, where they said the mining companies had already made many
attractive promises.
"Meetings like this are great, but this
is a speck in terms of what we need
to do to reach the grass roots. It's a
problem for lots of international
organizations," said Switkes, whose
job is made easier by the fact that he
speaks fluent Portuguese
For the activists, union members,
intellectuals, and other grass-roots
groups, Porto Alegre is a chance to
form their own version of a
multinational corporation or
international agency. While
companies have been operating
across borders and disciplines for
decades, such cooperation between nongovernmental organizations is a
relatively new phenomenon, said Rick Rowden, the Washington, D.C.,
representatives of Action Aid , a European-African aid and advocacy
agency with operations in 40 countries.
"In the 1990s, a lot of cross-linking began to occur. People who had
been working on various issues for decades began to see how their
issues were interrelated," said Rowden, citing as an example the broadspectrum
movements that rose up against the International Monetary
Fund because its policies affected labor, education, health, and
environment.
Eich, the German trade unionist, said that the alliances being formed at
the forum can have powerful and lasting impacts. "For the Brazilian
unions dealing with a German company, they are limited in how much
pressure they can apply. But if the German unions also apply the
pressure, it can have a lot of impact."
Copyright by Samuel Loewenberg and/or the publication in which it first appeared
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