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OUR VIEWPOINT
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Whom do you think you are cheating?
Three important international
forest-related events took place during 2002: the Sixth Conference of
the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity; the World Summit
on Sustainable Development; and the Eighth Conference of the Parties
to the Convention on Climate Change. They were not much use. Beyond
the rhetoric and the commitments agreed on at these and previous meetings,
no positive impact can be noted. On the contrary, every day reality
is showing how the forests continue to be destroyed and monoculture
tree plantations continue to expand to the detriment of forests and
other native ecosystems.
Furthermore, the situation shows
that the countries of the South continue getting poorer and becoming
more indebted, which seems to oblige them to exploit more and more resources
in the hope that they may eventually "develop themselves."
Many of these resources are to be found in forest areas (wood, minerals,
oil, hydroelectric energy, etc.) involving a permanent contradiction
between discourse on forest protection and the action leading to its
destruction.
Additionally, the formal independence
of the governments is increasingly being hampered by the power of multilateral
credit agencies such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank
and the regional "development" banks, which continue to impose
the same cures that have already shown themselves to be worse than the
sickness. To these must be added the increasing power of the World Trade
Organisation and of the transnational corporations.
In this context, it would seem
that there is no solution and that the forests --and the means of survival
of local peoples-- will continue to be destroyed to pay an unredeemable
foreign debt and to achieve a "development" that does not
arrive and that never will. However, this conclusion suffers a basic
fault: it does not consider the active role that the people are taking
on, not only seeking, but also finding solutions. The crisis itself
is encouraging people to seek alternatives at local level and to unite
on a global scale to face a type of "development" that is
leading to social and environmental disaster.
In forest areas, the indigenous
peoples and local communities are demanding --and increasingly conquering--
their right to community forest management. Many successful experiences
already prove that this type of management is not only feasible, but
also socially just and environmentally sound. If we intend to protect
forests and improve the quality of life of their peoples, this is clearly
the path to be taken.
In spite of this, there are
very few governments willing to hand over forest control and management
to the peoples who live there. Beyond the trite technical arguments
on the supposed incapacity of the local population to manage forests,
what is at stake is the economic interest of the national and transnational
actors --supported by political actors and multilateral agencies - who
are not willing to lose unrestricted access to the wealth found in forest
areas.
This is why the governments
resist acknowledging the territorial rights of the people inhabiting
the forests, which implies their right to manage them according to criteria
opposing environmental and social rationale to the maximising exploitation
of economic benefits rationale that has been the standard up to now.
Given the enormous power of these actors, it is essential to make progress
in ways of local, national and international organising and mobilising
to oblige the governments to finally adopt the measures that they resist
adopting but which are necessary to ensure forest conservation and the
welfare of forest inhabitants. These measures necessarily involve accepting
and legalising the right of the communities to forest control and management.
In the context of this struggle,
governments must understand that they are not fooling anyone with their
empty discourse and unfulfilled promises. Ten years have gone by since
they committed themselves at the Earth Summit to adopt measures that
they have still not adopted. Since then millions and millions of dollars
have been spent on unending international meetings and national processes,
with results that cannot be seen anywhere. What is more, retrocession
is much more evident than progress.
The situation was perfectly
defined by a well-known Indian religious leader --Swami Agnivesh-- during
the recent conference of the parties to the Convention on Climate Change
held in New Delhi. At the end of a multitudinous demonstration demanding
solutions to the climate crisis, the authorities reluctantly authorised
entry of a small delegation of its representatives to the Conference
building. Among them was Swami Agnivesh, who --after showing that the
Convention process was not adopting the necessary measures to avoid
climate change-- rebuked the government representatives present, saying,
"Whom do you think you are cheating? You are cheating your children;
you are cheating your grandchildren." The cheating is over. It
is time for solutions and these are to be found at hand.
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