All said, we invite you and whoever it may interest, to a public forum;
"A Shadow Across the World"
A public forum on globalisation in Aotearoa, across the Pacific and the world
When: Thursday, 9th of November 6pm-8pm
What: 10 short presentations of five to eight minutes, followed by two short films and followed by drinks and stew at Fordes Front Bench.
Where: Room Arts 716, on the 7th Floor of the Arts Building
University of Auckland, Corner Symonds St & Grafton Rd
Presenters are:
Ingrid Beckers an organiser for the
National Distribution Union and previously with the
Unite! union will talk about community unionism in a time of globalisation. Ingrid will, using her experience from
SuperSizeMyPay.com and the recent lock out of 500 supermarket distribution workers, give reasons why unions must build a community base to challenge and resist the increasingly powerful and flexible multinational corporations.
[ Ten picketers arrested after truck tyres are punctured | McDonald’s Workers Proud to be Union ]
Dr. David Bedggood from the university’s Sociology Department will talk about the recent
struggle of Bolivian miners to take back their mines from multi-national corporations. Bolivian miners have been engaged in vicious class warfare with the mine owners and scabing workers for control of the mines.
[ Redrave ]
Penny Bright, spokesperson for the
Water Pressure Group, will talk about using direct action against the privatisation of water in Auckland city. The Water Pressure Group has for many years been using direct action, including boycott of paying and water reconnections, to disrupt the council's privatisation of water.
[ WPG At Ike’s House | New Zealand water pressure builds | Auckland anti-WTO, anti-water multinational protest ]
Joe Carolan, from the
Workers Charter Movement and a veteran of the
Battle of Genoa (in 2001, 300 000 people marched in Genoa against the G8 and came head to head with violent state repression) will talk about contesting neo-liberalism at world leaders summits and the lessons of past mobilisations.
[ Reports: Belfast with Sunshine- the Battle of Genoa (Part 1) & (Part 2) | THE MOVEMENT OF MOVEMENTS: Reforming, Refusing and Resisting Capitalism in the Global Justice Movement ]
Fala Haulangi, campaign organiser of the
Clean Start campaign for the
Service and Food Workers Union. She will be talking about the effects of globalisation on cleaners and the global campaign that has been started to get wage justice for cleaners. Fala's home of Tuvalu will be the
first casualty of the warm world that corporate globalisation is creating.
Jo McVeagh and
Josephine Newman from
ClimAction will be discussing why Kyoto just isn't good enough, the effects climate change will have on Aotearoa and the Pacific, what people can do to stop climate change, what is being done in Aotearoa to stop climate change.
Mark Muller: Mark is a member of the
Workers Party and was part of a solidarity mission to the Phillipines this year and will talk about the challenges to capitalism in the Phillipines, grassroots movements and the struggle for communism in the country; between resistance and revolution.
[ Interview with Mark ]
Mike Sousa, from the
Dry River Collective, an anarchist group in Tucson, Arizona will outline the mobilisations against the US-Mexican border and the work of activists and organisers in the United Stated to challenge the border and 'Fortress America'.
[ Delete the Border ]
Mike Treen, secretary of the
Unite! union, and spokesperson for
Global Peace and Justice Auckland, will discuss his experiences in a
solidarity delegation to Chavez's Venezuela this year, and the growing mobilisations against capitalism and imperialism that is happening in Venezuela.
Cameron Walker from the
Indonesian Human Rights Committee who will talk about the ongoing colonisation of West Papua and the
links between Freeport mine in Papua and the New Zealand government. [ Freeport mine destruction ‘terrible’ sight from space ]
Omar Hamed from Aotearoa Indymedia,
Aotearoa Radical Youth and a participant of the
'Pacific Youth Festival' 2006 in Tahiti will talk about the emerging framework of regional dominance in the Pacific through neo-liberal trade agreements. Omar will discuss the motives behind Australasia's agenda in the Pacific and offer solutions of how we can 'reel' in our rogue state from continued plunder of the Pacific.
[ A citizen’s guide to an emerging empire ]
Followed by the 13 min film -
Tasi Timor - the film documents the popular protests in Dili, East Timor, in 2004 against Australia's ongoing occupation of the Timor sea and exploitation of the vast oil reserves contained therein.
and the 9 minute film -
The Tide is Turning - a film that documents the 2004 Hikoi against the Foreshore and Seabed Bill.
This forum was organised by Omar Hamed. He can be contacted on omarhamed123(nospam!)gmail.com or 021 150 3597
Omar is leaving for the G20 on the 14th of November, he will be placing daily reports from his experiences at the G20 on the Aotearoa Indymedia Centre, accompanied by photos, audio and video.
More info: www.indymedia.org.nz & www.stopg20.org
Comments
Re: Auckland: Public Forum on Capitalist Globalisation
Deported US peace activist Scott Parkin has encouraged Australians to protest during the G20 meeting of world economic leaders to be held in Melbourne later this month.
www.theage.com.au/news/national/parkin-urges-g20-protests/2006/11/03/1162340038364.html
Re: Auckland: Public Forum on Capitalist Globalisation