Another Europe is Possible

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Another Europe is Possible is a broad based alliance that brought groups and individuals together from all over the Island of Ireland to organise events during the EU presidency. We are now mobilising for this years European Social Forum.


2004 European Social Forum – another world is possible - 14-17 October London. www.fse.esf.org                     Irish mobilisation Another Europe is Possible / Contact Sinead Ni Bhroin 087 6490261 sineadnibhroin@eircom.net


The Call of the Assembly of Social Movements of the 3rd European Social Forum

We come from all the campaigns and social movements, “no vox” organisations, trade unions, human rights organisations, international solidarity organisations, anti-war and peace and feminist movements. We come from every region in Europe to gather in London for the third European Social Forum. We are many, and our strength is our diversity.

Today war represents the harshest and most real face of neo-liberalism. The war and the occupation of Iraq, the occupation of Palestine, the massacre in Chechnya, and the hidden wars in Africa are crushing the future of humanity. The war in Iraq was justified by lies. Today Iraq is humiliated and destroyed. Iraqis are prisoners of war and terror. The occupation brought neither freedom, nor better conditions of life. On the contrary, today the supporters of the thesis of “clash of civilisation” are stronger.

We are fighting for the withdrawal of the occupying troops in Iraq, for an immediate halt to the bombing and for the immediate restitution of sovereignty to the Iraqi people. We support the right of the Iraqi people to resist the occupation.

We support the Palestinian and Israeli movements fighting for a just and lasting peace. Following the judgement of the UN International Court of Justice and the unanimous vote of the European countries in the UN General Assembly we call for an end to the Israeli occupation and the dismantling of the apartheid wall. We call for political and economic sanctions on the Israeli government as long as they continue to violate international law and the human rights of the Palestinian people. For these reasons we will mobilise for the international week of action against the apartheid wall from 9 to 16 November, and for European days of action on December 10 and 11, the anniversary of the UN Declaration on Human Rights.

The destabilisation of global climate poses an unprecedented threat to our children's future and to humanity: We support the call from environmental organisations for international action on climate change in 2005. We support the campaigns against GMOs and for safe agriculture, food and environment.

In February 2005 we will join the actions of protest against the NATO summit in Nice. We oppose the G8’s self-assumed task of global government and neo-liberal policies, and therefore we pledge to mobilise massively on the occasion of the G8 summit in Scotland in July 2005.

We want another Europe, which rejects sexism and violence against women and recognises the right to choose an abortion. We support the international day of mobilisation against violence against women on 25 November and the European initiative. We support mobilisation to celebrate International Women's Day on 8 March. We support the European initiative on 27/28 May in Marseilles proposed by the World March for Women.

The ESF is opposed to all forms of segregated provision for disabled people. In all work about disabled people the ESF supports the principal of ‘Nothing about us without us’. All ESF organisations should actively include disabled people. The ESF opposes all eugenics and fights for the rights to life and full civil rights for disabled people. All ESF events must be fully accessible for disabled people. We recognise that sign language is a basic necessity for the inclusion of Deaf people.

We stand against racism and Fortress Europe and for the rights of migrants and asylum seekers; for freedom of movement; for citizenship of residence and the closing of detention centres. We oppose deportation of migrants. We propose a day of action on 2 April 2005, against racism, for freedom of movement and for the right to stay as an alternative to a Europe based on exclusion and exploitation.

The Assembly of the Social Movements supports the Indymedia global solidarity statement and condemns the seizure of the indymedia servers as an attack on free speech, press freedom, privacy and the right to communicate, and calls for a full investigation in the seizure of the Indymedia Servers.

We express our solidarity to the Greek sailor Giorgos Monastiriotis, who was condemned 3 years and 4 months when he refused to take part in a military mission in the Gulf and thus participate in the war against Iraq. We demand the immediate drop of any charges against him. We express our solidarity to all soldiers of all nationalities who refuse to take part in the occupation and the repression of Iraqi resistance.

At a time when the draft for the European Constitutional treaty is about to be ratified, we must state that the peoples of Europe need to be consulted directly. The draft does not meet our aspirations. This constitution treaty consecrates neo-liberalism as the official doctrine of the EU; it makes competition the basis for European community law, and indeed for all human activity; it completely ignores the objectives of ecologically sustainable society. This constitutional treaty does not grant equal rights, the free movement of people and citizenship for everyone in the country they live in, whatever their nationality; it gives NATO a role in European foreign policy and defence, and pushes for the militarisation of the EU. Finally it puts the market first by marginalising the social sphere, and hence accelerating the destruction of public services.

We are fighting for another Europe. Our mobilisations bring hope of a Europe where job insecurity and unemployment are not part of the agenda. We are fighting for a viable agriculture controlled by the farmers themselves, an agriculture that preserves jobs, and defends the quality of environment and food products as public assets. We want to open Europe to the world, with the right to asylum, free movement of people and citizenship for everyone in the country they live in. We demand real social equality between men and women, and equal pay. Our Europe will respect and promote cultural and linguistic diversity and respect the right of peoples to self-determination and allow all the different peoples of Europe to decide upon their futures democratically. We are struggling for another Europe, which is respectful of workers’ rights and guarantees a decent salary and a high level of social protection. We are struggling against any laws that establish insecurity through new ways of subcontracting work.

We are fighting for a Europe that refuses war, a continent of international solidarity and ecologically sustainable society. We fight for disarmament, against nuclear weapons, and against US and NATO military bases. We support all those who refuse to serve in the military.

We reject the privatisation of public services and common goods like water. We are fighting for human, social, economic, political and environmental rights to defeat and overcome the rule of the market, the logic of profit and the domination of the third world by debt. We refuse the use of “war on terrorism” to attack civil and democratic rights, and to criminalise dissent and social conflict.

The European Social Movement supports the national mobilisation of the Italian movement on 30 October to mark the signing of the European Constitutional Treaty – against war, liberalisation and racism, to get the troops out of Iraq and for another Europe. The European Social Movement supports the national mobilisation in Barcelona against the summit of Zapatero, Chirac and Schroeder on the European constitution in January 2005. We support the mobilisation on November 11, 2004 against the Bolkestein directive.

At a time when the new European Commission shamelessly boasts a high profile of laissez-faire politics, we must start a process of mobilisation in all European countries in order to impose the recognition of both collective and individual social, political, economic, cultural and ecological rights for men and women alike. To enable all the peoples of Europe to join this process, we must build a movement that overrides our differences and groups all the forces of the peoples of Europe ready to be involved in the struggle against European neo-liberalism.

20th March 2005 marks the second anniversary of the start of the war against Iraq. On 22 and 23 March the European Council meets in Brussels. We call for national mobilisations in all European countries. We call for a central demonstration in Brussels on 19 March against war, racism, and against a neo-liberal Europe, against privatisation, against the Bolkestein project and against the attacks on working time; for a Europe of rights and solidarity between the peoples. We call all the social movements and the European trade union movements to take to the streets on this day.


ESF Public Meeting hosted by Another Europe is Possible- Friday 24th September 2004 - A mobilising meeting was held at which Patricia McKenna Green Party, Ailbhe Smith UCD Womens Dept, Rita Fagan St. Michaels House & Chris Nineham ESF Org Comm & Stop the War Coalition.  All speakers talked about the importance of building alliances to create the alternatives needed to tackle head on the various struggles facing our communities. People before Profit, Grassroots Politics, and Solidarity, challenging traditional left politics, creating another world locally & globally were consistent themes running throughout the meeting. All emphasised the vital role that the ESF plays in debating and setting the agenda for creating the alternative world we want. Rita Fagan’s explanation of the fight that St Michaels local authority housing have had with Dublin City Council to rebuild their community here in Dublin & Chris Nineham’s update on how the resistance in Iraq continues to liberate pockets of Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq from it’s illegal US occupiers, made the key message of the ESF all the more powerful. Another world is possible… We don’t have to accept privatisation, racism, inequality or war. So many different organisations, groups, & individuals throughout the country and the world are screaming out for an alternative. By attending the ESF we can share our experiences, debate the alternatives and come home with actions to properly challenge the struggles confidently, with a sense of our own strength and in solidarity with each other.


ACCOMODATION – In looks as if the Millennium Dome in London’s East End may be provided to solve the accommodation difficulties facing the ESF org committee. John Prescott is to give the final sign off and as soon as we have confirmation we will post up details on the site.


REGISTERING -  We are trying to co-ordinate all Irish groups/individuals attending the ESF. Unfortunately as we have to register directly through the UK this is proving a difficulty. If you have registered yourself or your group for the event can you email Sinead at sineadnibhroin@eircom.net or call 087 6490261 so that we can update you on accommodation, events/seminars/workshops of interest and also so we can meet up on our return from the forum to discuss ways that we can work together to implement change here at home.


IRISH SEMINARS - We will shortly be posting up details of seminars & workshops being held by Irish organisations.


TIME TO GO - BUSH OUT - TROOPS OUTThe ESF will be concluded on Sunday with a huge anti-war demonstration through the centre of London. Stop the War Coalition are launching a massive campaign calling for the UK Government to bring the troops home, echoing United for Peace & Justice message at the recent New York anti war demonstration when over 500,000 marched on the streets of New York. Here at home the Irish Anti War Movement will be launching a countrywide campaign to Get US Military out of Shannon. The message is clear, we want this war to end and our Governments need to hear us. The use of Shannon is not a dead issue and the continued occupation of Iraq is illegal and unjust.  www.stopwar.org.uk www.irishantiwar.org


The 3rd European Social Forum (ESF) will take place from the 14th to the 17th of October in Alexandra Palace, London.

The ESF is a giant gathering for everyone opposed to war, racism and corporate power, everyone who wants to see global justice, workers' rights and a sustainable society.

The ESF emerged from the spectacular success of the World Social Forum which opened in Porto Alegre, Brazil in 2001. Its first two gatherings in Florence (2002) and Paris (2003) attracted over 50,000 participants from across Europe and beyond. It is a chance for people from around the world to come together to engage in debate, organise action and build networks to strengthen our movement.

From George Bush’s bloody war against Iraq, the neo-liberal assault of privatisation on public services to the widening of the poverty gap in the global south and the west and the destruction of the environment and climate change, it’s clear that co-ordinated global responses are urgent. The 1st European Social Forum in Florence launched the mobilisations for February 15th 2003, which led to the historic day of global protest against war on Iraq.

At the ESF in London you will have the opportunity to engage in discussion, debate with networks from across the world and bring back initiatives and strategies for action to challenge both the neo-liberal agenda here in Ireland and also globally.

IRISH MOBILISATION

We need to mobilise hundreds of people from Ireland to go to the ESF this year. Only by debating and bringing home the initiatives can we hope to being about real alternatives to war and social injustice. You can help by distributing leaflets or by putting on a local/workplace/school meeting about the ESF (let us know if you need a speaker).

Internationally renowned speakers to address the ESF

A wide-range of internationally renowned speakers has now been confirmed to address the ESF. These include Michael Albert from Znet; Walden Bello from Focus on the Global South; Oronto Douglas, leader of Nigerian groups fighting Shell; Susan George, leading writer against third world debt; Evo Morales from Bolivia; Dr Aleida Guevara – daughter of Che; and leading European Muslim writer Tariq Ramadan.

Over 1,000 organisations involved in proposing seminars and workshops

The ESF have received a massive response to the call for seminars and workshops, with around 900 events proposed by over 1,000 organisations from campaigning organisations and networks, trade unions, the anti-war movement, anti-racist organisations, Non-Governmental Organisations, charities and many more. Another Europe is Possible, The Irish Anti War Movement and other organisations from Ireland will be taking part in these seminars and providing key speakers.

REGISTRATION

All ESF Passes entitle you to entry to all sessions of the four day ESF, 14-17 October. Individuals £30 waged £20 unwaged and students. Organisations £50 to register an organisation and £30 for each delegate. You can pay online at www.fse.esf.org or by cheque sending with your name, address, telephone and email address to ESF, c/o T&G, 218 Green Lanes, London N42HB, Contact 0044 2088095347. If you are unable to register online or with a cheque/postal order please contact Sinéad at 087 6490261.

ACCOMODATION

When you register for ESF 2004 you will get access to discounted hotel and hostel accommodation that has been secured for ESF delegates. Free accommodation is also available, in communal spaces and in people’s homes although this has yet to be distributed and confirmed with the ESF organising committee. Hotels: There is a 15% discount with hotels through www.superbreak.com. Hostels: Cheap hostel beds which you can book directly via the ESF £12-£24 (€19-€38). Camping: £6 www.leevalley.org.uk For general accommodation visit www.visitlondon.com.

GETTING THERE

Fly Dublin to London – AerLingus, British Airways, Air France, BMI, RyanAir Book online or via the phone

Buseswww.eurolines.ie Daily (10am) Overnight (8.15pm) €34/€58 11 hour journey

Ferrywww.irishferries.com Dublin to Holyhead €46/€60 euro 2-3 hour journey


 ANOTHER EUROPE IS POSSIBLE - MAY 1st 2004

MAY 1st 2004 - WELCOME TO ALL

Another Europe is Possible welcomes all immigrants to

this country. We welcome our brothers and sisters from

Eastern Europe into the the new expanded EU. We celebrated this diversity and welcome on May 1st with

a carnival beginging at the central Bank which finished at Phoenix park.

At the same time Bertie Ahern was wining and dining

with the 25 EU heads of state in Farmleigh house. These

leaders are promoting war, racism and the profits of

corporations before the interests of people.

NO TO THE RACIST REFERENDUM

The EU promotes the movement of capital and profit across borders,

while iimmigrants and asylum seekers face harassment and

deportations by the governments of Fortress Europe.

It was hypocritical to call May 1st a day of welcomes when the government was

pushing this racist referendum and deporting asylum seekers

The referendum to deny citizenship to people born in Ireland is a

direct attack on the rights of immigrants and people born in this country

The government is whipping up racism by blaming refugees for

overcrowded hospitals and sponging off weflare and public - but it is the

FF/PD government who is cutting back funding for public serivces and

attacking social welfare recipients. We must unite with our brothers and

sisters from Africa, Eastern Europe to struggle for btter public services .

NO TO EU WARMONGERERS

Blair, Berlusconi and other EU leaders have

actively supported the War on Iraq. Ahern claimed

to oppose the war in Iraq, yet allows the US

military to use Shannon airport.

The EU is developing a European arms industry,

a European army- these developments will

undermine Irish Neutrality

The draft Constitution would advance the

militarisation of the EU

End the EU Euro-Mediterranean Association

Agreement with Israel- solidarity with the

Palestinians

Contact us @ anothereuropeispossible@yahoo.co.uk

www.freewebs.com/anothereuropeispossible 086 1523542

Stop corporate take-over of public services

The EU and Irish government are pushing de-regulation and

privatisation –across all public services. We see this in Ireland in the

sale of public housing, health, education, bin tax, break-up of CIE,

Dublin Bus and Aer Rianta.

ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE-

- where all people are truly welcome and human rights, social rights and workers rights are

a priority

- where money that goes to the military is put instead into socially useful projects

- where public services are properly funded

 

 


Contact Us:

E-mail: anothereuropeispossible@yahoo.co.uk

Phone: 086 1523542

 

Mailing List

A mailing list has been set up for those interested in getting involved with AEIP.  To subscribe to this list send a blank e-mail to Another_europe-subscribe@yahoogroups.com alternatively you can go to the mailing list website http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Another_europe/

 





Another Europe is Possible Statement

ANOTHER EUROPE IS POSSIBLE

PEOPLE NOT PROFIT and PEACE NOT WAR

The Irish Government has the Presidency of the EU from January to June 2004. It will be using its term as EU President to increase the competitiveness of the EU, to press for agreement on the draft EU Constitution, and to improve EU-US relations. We, however plan to highlight and mobilise for a very different type of Europe…

A Europe for public services: not neo-liberalism and privatisation

Increasing competitiveness is part of the ‘Lisbon agenda’. This promotes a neo-liberal agenda of privatisation, de-regulation, reducing taxes on the wealthy, making working conditions worse, cutting back on public spending and prioritising the profit of big business before the needs of ordinary people. It is pushing Irish workers into competition with workers in Eastern Europe, India and China – a de-humanising race to the bottom.

The drive to privatise is coming from the Irish government, the EU and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), a secretive part of the World Trade Organisation which seeks to open up all public services as business opportunities for private companies. We see this in Ireland with the privatisation of Eircom, the plan to break up and privatise Aer Rianta, the de-regulation and breakup of CIE, of An Post, of waste services, and the sale of social housing. Benchmarking and outsourcing in education and health are preparing the ground for the opening of trade in these services. Instead of being able to use public services as a right, we are being turned into consumers – who only get what they can pay for. The winners in the GATS are the transnational service companies. The losers are the service-users – especially women and people on low incomes – and the people who work in the services.

The draft EU Constitution advocates more trade in services. And it would allow the European Commission to negotiate international trade deals in all public services on behalf of all the EU states through the GATS – including health and education – even if a minority of countries were opposed to this.

The EU wants Third World countries to import European goods and services, but is restricting what they can sell in Europe – agricultural products, etc. So European business profits, while Africa goes poor and hungry.

Neo-liberalism undermines environmental protection, such as the use of GM crops and increased car use due to inadequate public transport. And the draft Constitution would continue the EU’s full support for the nuclear industry by incorporating the Euratom Treaty, whereas it merely ‘aims … to promote’ renewable energy.

Another Europe is Possible - where public services meet people’s needs, the environment is a priority, and European workers co-operate with workers around the world - instead of being forced to compete with them.

A Europe for Peace not War

Improving EU-US relations should not mean continuing Irish support for the US/UK-led so-called ‘war on terror’. The Irish Government claims to oppose the war in Iraq, yet allows the US military to use Shannon airport. Meanwhile the draft EU Constitution would oblige all Member states to make civilian and military facilities available to the EU’s common defence; and to improve the military facilities the EU can use. It also has a ‘solidarity clause’ that requires joint action from all Members, which the EU could invoke on the basis of a perceived threat of terrorism – a security blank cheque. The draft Constitution would advance the militarisation of the EU, expand an EU army, and further undermine Irish neutrality.

Another Europe is Possible - where the money that goes to the military is put into socially useful projects and nuclear disarmament is a priority.

A Europe for people: not racism and exclusion

The EU promotes the movement of capital and profit across borders, while immigrants and asylum seekers face harassment and deportations by the governments of Fortress Europe. Making the asylum system even more restrictive is one of the aims of the Irish Presidency. And the draft Constitution would allow the EU to make deals to reject asylum seekers – with the very governments they are trying to escape from. Our government is calling May 1st ‘a day of welcomes’, yet they and the EU are antagonistic to people seeking asylum or work.

As to enlargement, we support access to the EU for any East European state that wants such access, without the imposition of the EU’s neo-liberal conditions – which have led to mass unemployment. We are against the division of Europe along the Polish-Hungarian border on the basis of the EU’s conditions, which some countries may never meet.

 

Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and other countries have huge unemployment and will remain impoverished if excluded from support and trade with the rest of Europe. Human Rights abuses should be the only reason to oppose access to the EU.

The Euro-Mediterranean Association Agreements with countries like Tunisia, Algeria and Israel should not serve to bolster dictatorial or neo-colonial regimes. The Human Rights clauses of these Agreements should be strictly enforced. So far however, the vote of the European Parliament of 10/4 2002 - calling for the suspension of the Agreement with Israel - has not been enforced.

Another Europe is Possible - where Human Rights are a priority and all people are truly welcome.

 

MAY 1st- PEACE NOT WAR AND PEOPLE NOT PROFIT – ANOTHER EUROPE IS POSSIBLE

As the Assembly of the Social Movements in Paris declared in October 2003, we are struggling for another Europe - a Europe where no one is afraid of losing their job. We are fighting for a viable agriculture controlled by the small farmers themselves - an agriculture that defends water, land and seeds as public assets. We want to open Europe to the world - with the right to asylum, free movement of people and citizenship for everyone in the country they live in. We want real equality between men and women. Our Europe will respect cultural diversity and the right of peoples to self- determination - and allow all the different peoples of Europe to decide their future democratically.

The Irish government will spend millions on bringing EU ministers on junkets in their constituencies - if only they could put money as quick into our crumbling schools and hospitals. We are inviting everyone to demonstrate in Dublin on May 1st - the day the government is inviting the EU heads of state to celebrate the enlargement of the EU.  We oppose Blair and others who have Iraqi blood on their hands; and oppose their neo-liberal Europe of privatisation and unemployment.

‘Another Europe is possible’ is a broad based alliance with the aim of bringing groups and individuals together from all over the Island of Ireland to co-ordinate events during the EU presidency and raise awareness of the draft EU Constitution.

Supporters of ‘Another Europe is Possible’ include Sinn Féin, Mick O Rielly (ATGWU), Pat Cahill (ASTI), Barry Nevin (SIPTU Aviation Branch), Brendan Ogle (ATGWU), Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign, NGO Peace Alliance, Patricia McKenna (MEP), Brendan Archibold (Mandate), Des Bonass (DCTU), Andy Storey (UCD Development Studies), Andy McGuiness (SIPTU Construction Branch), John Bisset (Community worker), Campaign against the Bin Tax, Workers Party, Irish Anti-War Movement, Socialist Workers Party, Residents against Racism, Socialist Party, Labour Party members, Globalise Resistance, Galway ‘Another Europe is Possible’, South East Social Forum.

Yes to Irish Neutrality

No to the militarisation of Europe. No to a European Army

 

Yes to a Europe of social rights and workers rights

No to a Europe of privatisation and profit

 

Yes to rights for immigrants and asylum seekers

No to a Europe of racism and deportations

 

United Europe - Yes

Global competition between People - No

Dates of mobilisations

February 20th:  Meeting of the ‘Article133 Committee’ – which proposes services to trade in GATS

March 20th:  Day Against Occupations

April 2/3:  Day of action for a Social Europe – EU Finance Ministers meet in Kildare

MAY 1st:  PEACE NOT WAR AND PEOPLE NOT PROFIT – ANOTHER EUROPE IS POSSIBLE

 

 





 
   

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