Bali — Around 30 leaders of Philippine civil society organizations came to Bali on the occasion of the 9th Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organization to pressure their government to suspend all its commitments to the WTO and other free trade agreements in the aftermath of super typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda.
“It is important to give the Philippines a free hand in addressing the humanitarian crisis,” said Josua Mata, Secretary General of 80,000-strong labor group SENTRO. Mata’s organization suffered 41 deaths of members in the devastated areas, while 100 are still missing and 3,000 have lost their homes. Haiyan claimed more than 5,000 lives in the Philippines.
From Warsaw to Bali, Jubilee South APMDD Coordinator Lidy Nacpil carries forward the call for climate justice. “The flattening of entire towns and cities in Central Visayas as a result of the super typhoon was a wake-up call to governments, including our own, to prioritize the issue of climate crisis.” Jubilee South has been calling for deep cuts in carbon emissions especially by Northern countries.
Only 90 companies are responsible for two-thirds of carbon emissions in the world, according to The Guardian. “The WTO has historically defended corporate interests, against that of the people. We have had enough and call for an end to WTO,” said Jean Enriquez, National Coordinator of the World March of Women. Enriquez came to Bali from a series of relief missions in Central Philippines. “The government could not even coordinate its disaster response, it ought to focus on the recovery of our country instead of committing further to WTO,” added Enriquez.
Joseph Purugganan, campaigner of Focus on the Global South, remarked “The WTO is not interested in curbing emissions and shifting to low-carbon future, because free trade and investment run on OIL and other fossil fuels.”
The leaders are joined by Ana Maria Nemenzo from WomanHealth Philippines, Hazel Cotoner from Center for Migrants Advocacy, Rebecca Miranda of the National Rural Women’s Coalition, and others who are joining actions inside and outside the WTO Convention Center.
You must be logged in to post a comment.