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Tri-lateral Peace Summit: In the spirit of Zapata
an article by Tony Dominski
THe First Tri-Lateral Peace Summit took place in
February, 2004, at the State University of Puebla, Mexico. Puebla was
an appropriate site for this new peace initiative, having been the
birthplace of the Zapatista revolt of 1911-1912. The spirit of the
Zapatistas permeated the conference. Eighty participants from four
countries, Canada, United States, Mexico and Cuba attended. The Cuban
Peace Movement was the honored guest.
The conference focused on the relationship between peace and justice issues. The discussion resulted in a twelve point agenda:
1) Abolish NAFTA
2) Support the peaceful revolutionary developments in Venezuela
3) Denounce 'Plan Colombia"
4) End military invention in Haiti
5) End the blockade of Cuba, and free the Cuban Five heroes
6)Reject terrorism
7) Remove all foreign troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and insist that the invaders pay for rebuilding the two countries
8) Make Israel comply with all UN resolutions
9) Strengthen the United Nations
10) Implement global disarmament, particularly nuclear weapons
11) Reallocate military spending to basic human needs, such as water, health and education.
The
12th proposal , "support amnesty for undocumented workers in the USA"
was the result of an impassioned presentation on immigrants' rights by
a delegate from the USA. The presentation included a description of the
Immigrant Wokers' Freedom Ride in September 2003, organized by the
AFL-CIO of the US. Additional information about this event may be found
in a
CPNN report.
The
presenter from the US stated that US corporations have encouraged
immigrants to compete with workers already in the US. in order to drive
down wages, avoid providing health benefits, and prevent unionizing by
encouraging anti-immigrant hatred and racism. The presenter concluded
by drawing attention to the fact that an important reason why so many
people leave their homelands is the constant imposition of oligarchies
and colonial policies by both the US and transnational corporations.
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DISCUSSION
Question(s) related to this article:
Should America really protect illegal immigrants?
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OTHER THEMES
LATEST READER COMMENT:
The news report of a merger
between HERE, the Hotel and Restaurant Employees Union and UNITE, the
clothing, textiles and laundry union, is important news for all workers
including illegal immigrants, because these unions are in the forefront
of organizing immigrant workers and assuring their rights.
By
bringing immigrant workers into the trade union movement, these unions
promote worker unity and deny unscrupulous employers the option of
pitting one group of workers against another.
This is a great
step forward for the American labor movement which did not support
union rights for illegal immigrants during the 19th and 20th Centuries.
And, of course, it is a great step forward for immigrant workers at the same time.
The
new union will represent 440,000 active members and more than 400,000
retirees throughout North America. The tentative agreement is
expected to be ratified with a vote by rank-and-file members at a
special joint convention in Chicago in July. . . UNITE and HERE
have collaborated most recently in the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride,
the successful struggle for a fair contract for Yale workers, and in
the current effort to unionize H&M retail and distribution workers.
. .
UNITE historically represents workers in the apparel and
textile industries, and more recently has organized industrial
laundries, distribution centers and workers in light manufacturing.. . ...more.
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This report was posted on May 14, 2004. The moderator is Helen.
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