Bulawayo, 15 August- The 2014 People’s Summit opened (14 August 2014) with over two hundred delegates from WoMin, La Via
Campesina Africa, the Rural Women’s Assembly (RWA) and the
People’s Dialogue demanding renewed focus on issues affecting farmers,
rural women and mining impacted communities.
The opening touched on wide ranging issues that SADC needs
to focus on to ensure that the rights of communities are pushed ahead of
those of corporates. Through song, poetry, dance and solidarity
messages the delegates expressed concern on issues of forced relocations
in Zimbabwe’s Marange diamond community,criminalization of political
protests in Swaziland and the Palestine crises.
Women from Marange acted out a drama on forced relocations
and rights abuses experienced in Marange following the discovery of
diamonds, which resulted in the direct flouting of community rights to
prior and informed consent. Since the relocations the community has had
to endure food shortages and loss of their livelihoods, which included
the rearing cattle.
Farai Maguwu in his speech on extractives industries
addressed the plunder of Africa’s natural resources by the Global North
and now the emerging economies like BRICS. He cautioned communities to
closely monitor mining operations and transport systems that are
involved in moving stolen resources out of the region. He further called
for a stronger movement that challenges the power of our post-colonial
governments that have lost interest in defending people’s rights: “it
seems like our former liberators… fought not to replace the system but
to rather replace the former oppressors and occupy the position of power
to enrich themselves”.
Samantha Hargreaves from WoMin warned that the agenda of
value addition and beneficiation of natural resources to retain greater
wealth nationally – the major agenda of the Heads of State summit – is
inadequate. The devastating environmental and social impacts will
continue unchecked and exacerbated by the high levels of energy and
water consumption (and pollution) that accompany the processing and
value addition to raw materials. These costs are mainly borne by peasant
women in the region who have the development solutions we must
recognize and build on.
Mercia Andrews of the Rural Women’s Assembly asked why the
Head of States have not asked the people of the region what issues
concern them. Instead they have gone to the corporates and investment
banks to shape their development priorities. She emphasized the
importance of this gathering of activists from social movements and
grassroots organisations across the region. This represents the sort
ofalternative people-centred African community that is needed to advance
development and ensure solidarity between peoples.
Brid Brennan from the Transnational Institute (TNI) in
Amsterdam spoke about howgovernments are being captured by the interests
of corporates and serving their interests. The Southern African
Permanent People’s Tribunal which organisations in the region are
building will establish a platform where we can expose corporate
interests and collusions with our governments.
Issues of seed sovereignty were also touched upon at length
with Elizabeth Mpofu, thegeneral secretary of La Via Campesina Africa
noting that “Food sovereignty unlike food security is not just about
whether we have food but rather it is about how food is produced, land
ownership and having power to own our own seeds”. Food sovereignty is
being threatened by the corporates that are grabbing our land and water –
“why aren’t they using land and resources in their own countries?”
delegates reminded us that land and seed represent life and hope for the
peoples of the region.
The delegates were reminded to be at the forefront of
movement-building and solidarity to so that we never suffer another
Marange and Marikana. A call to action was made with one delegate
stating that “Now that we know what we know, what is important is to
take appropriate action that betters the lives of the affected
communities otherwise they will lose trust in us as a movement”
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