Alternatives To The APEC Agenda Announced
Details of Alternatives To The APEC Agenda Announced – APEC Monitoring Group
The September Leaders Summit won’t be the only conference in Auckland to focus on APEC. The APEC Monitoring Group today announced details of its forum entitled Alternatives To The APEC Agenda to be held from September 10-12 in Auckland.
Alternatives To The APEC Agenda will bring together a range of prominent local and international critics of the global free market economic model, and will focus on concrete strategies and genuine alternatives to APEC’s free trade and investment agenda. It is supported by GATT Watchdog, the NZ Trade Union Federation, Corso, and the Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa.
“This forum is the culmination of a year-long programme of education and action to expose and oppose APEC’s failed free market, free trade and investment approach,” says Aziz Choudry.
Since it was founded at the 1994 Jakarta APEC Summit, members of the APEC Monitoring Group have participated in parallel NGO and union forums opposed to APEC in Kyoto/Osaka (1995), Manila (1996), Vancouver (1997) and Kuala Lumpur (1998).
The APEC Monitoring Group has held a series of alternative public meetings, forums, rallies and workshops throughout the country to coincide with all the major New Zealand APEC meeting during 1999.
“Unlike the APEC meetings, our forum will not be an extravagant and vacuous gabfest and its main achievements will not be measured in taxpayer-funded pre-election photo opportunities”, said Mr Choudry.
“APEC is in a state of virtual paralysis and will struggle to limp on into the new millennium. But the economic policy package it promotes needs to be taken seriously, especially as it leads into the WTO. One of our primary goals is to help people understand the link between APEC’s goals and the destructive economic policies which have devastated this country and peoples’ lives over the past 15 years, and to promote discussion on alternative policies and strategies to achieve economic, social and Treaty justice.”
The forum ends with a rally against APEC at 4.30 on 12 September, the first day of the Leaders Summit.
Further details are
available on the APEC Monitoring Group’s Website –
Confirmed speakers include:
Moses Havini, representative of
the Bougainville Interim Government; Moana Jackson,
Director of Nga Kaiwhakamarama I Nga Ture (Maori Legal
Service); Annette Sykes, Ngati Pikiao lawyer and Treaty
educator; Antonio Tujan, Executive Director of IBON
Databank, Philippines; Sunera Thobani, Ruth Wynn Woodward
Professor of Womens Studies, Simon Fraser University,
Vancouver, Canada; Rex Varona, Executive Director, Asian
Migrant Centre, Hong Kong; Crispin Beltran, Chairman of
the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) unions, Philippines; Mereana
Pitman, Ngati Kahungunu, Treaty educator; Peter Wills,
biologist and GE activist; Prue Hyman, Associate Professor
of Economics, Victoria University, Wellington; Aziz
Choudry, GATT Watchdog; Radha D’Souza, Asia-Pacific
Workers Solidarity Links; Bill Rosenberg, researcher for
Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa
(CAFCA); Leonie Pihama, Ngati Mahanga/Te Atiawa, Maori
educationalist; Robert Reid, NZ Trade Union Federation
International
Officer ENDS
Professor Jane Kelsey, Auckland University; author of
“Reclaiming the Future”;