Cochabamba conference targets corporations
By Jennifer Waller
May 16, 2010
I had the opportunity to attend the April 20-22 World People’s
Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in Cochabamba,
Bolivia, where people from all over the world initiated a discussion about
finding real solutions to the climate crisis. During this conference, I
attended an April 21 workshop called “Taking action against corporations
that damage the climate,” which brought up the Water Wars against Bechtel
Corporation.
Evo Morales, the Indigenous president of Bolivia, had called for the
conference. It was appropriately held on the ten-year anniversary of the Water
Wars against Bechtel, which also took place in Cochabamba. President Morales
was a key actor in the Water Wars. At that time he was a leader of the
cocaleros, the coca growers in the Chapare region of the department of
Cochabamba.
The cocaleros were known for fighting against U.S. repression and resisting
the so-called war on drugs, and they joined the water uprising because they
were fighting foreign control in general.
The Water Wars against Bechtel came at a time when foreign companies were
privatizing many Bolivian resources: Before the water they privatized gas, oil,
electricity, and more. When Bechtel came to Bolivia under an assumed name and
tried to privatize the water with the backing of the World Bank, the people had
had enough. From factory workers to farmers to environmentalists, the people of
Cochabamba rose up to drive out the gigantic Bechtel Corporation.
All over the world, water scarcity is swiftly becoming a crisis situation.
The world’s fresh water supply is dwindling, as demand for it increases,
tripling between 1950 and 1990. This situation creates an incredibly lucrative
industry for corporations looking to invest in water.
The World Bank, which already has control of the economies of many indebted
nations in the global South, has also taken the opportunity to get into the
water business. But water is just one example of dwindling natural resources,
and corporate interests are scrambling to gain ownership of all the remaining
supplies. Faced with such a challenge, we can be encouraged by what the people
of Cochabamba did in 2000 as an incredibly important and powerful example of
taking on corporate control of resources.
Water Wars’ veterans take the lead
The facilitator of the April 21 panel was Jim Shultz of the Democracy Center
in Cochabamba, which played an instrumental support role in the Water Wars. The
panelists included Bolivian Water War activist Marcela Olivera, an organizer
from Amazon Watch in Ecuador and an activist from Camp for Climate Action in
Britain.
The panel’s goal was to take advantage of the collective wisdom in the
room and share different strategies and tactics for taking on corporations. The
audience was made up of people from all over the world. At the end of the
presentations, each person in the audience was asked to write on a piece of
paper one idea they had for taking on corporations.
Then we passed them to the person to our left and a few of them were read
aloud. Some of the things we came up with were:
* Interview disgruntled employees of the corporation who may be willing to
disclose insider information that can be used against the corporation.
* Stop drinking Coca-Cola.
* Become educated and smarter consumers and develop an independent press to
help.
* Create discontent among the masses about the heads of the corporation so
that they don’t want to show their faces in public.
* Create community versions and control of the services the corporations
provide so that the people are no longer dependant on corporations, and they
become obsolete.
What happened in that room is a miniature version of what is happening in
people’s social movements around the world. Using the Water Wars and
other similar struggles as our guide, the people must channel our energy into
chasing off the corporations that privatize our local resources and sell them
back to us at exorbitant prices — all the while destroying our habitats
and throwing off the equilibrium our Mother Earth requires to sustain human
life.
Discussions among the world’s big powers at the White House and the
United Nations — and likewise the conference in Copenhagen last December
— have evaded the true structural causes of the crisis we face. They fail
to address the exploitation of Mother Earth at the hands of corporations and
the idea that the natural resources we all require for survival can be
privatized, bought and sold.
On the Cochabamba conference’s final day, Venezuelan President Hugo
Chávez said, “If the hegemony of capitalism continues on this
planet, human life will one day come to an end. For those of you who believe
that’s an exaggeration, one must remember this: The planet lived for
millions of years without the human species.”
The workshop showed one way to start working to overthrow this hegemony, by
coming together as one and brainstorming ideas of ways to channel our anger
into action. Now write down your idea and pass it to the person on your
left.