| CORDILLERA 
          PEASANTS, INDIGENOUS LEADERS, JOIN WTO PROTESTS IN HONG KONG BAGUIO CITY 
            (December 9) — Peasant delegates and indigenous leaders here in 
            the Cordillera region will join the Hongkong protests to the World Trade 
            Organization’s 6th Ministerial Meeting this week amid the pending 
            negotiations on key issues on agriculture, natural resources, services 
            and industrial goods which deadlocked in the 5th Ministerial Meeting in 
            Cancun, Mexico, especially with the protests from developing countries.  Representatives 
            of the Alyansa dagiti Pesante iti Taeng Kordilyera (APIT-TAKO) or Peasant 
            Alliance in the Cordillera Homeland and the Cordillera Peoples Alliance 
            (CPA) will join other delegates worldwide to protest the WTO policies.  In an interview, 
            CPA Secretary General Windel Bolinget said that the WTO’s policies 
            have done more harm than good to the country, especially to agricultural 
            sector with the liberalization of agriculture. 
 APIT TAKO’s Fernando Mangili added that the Gloria Macapagal Arroyo 
            government’s subservience to the WTO’s policies has made her 
            all the more unpopular among the Cordillera peasants.
 “Both 
            the WTO and the GMA should both be junked”, he added. WTO policies 
            have brought about the influx of cheap agricultural products, which has 
            especially affected Cordillera peasants, who cannot compete with the cheap 
            products from abroad, especially with the lack of government subsidy to 
            agriculture.  Cordillera 
            women’s group Innabuyog-Gabriela, along with other women’s 
            organizations worldwide, will also join the protests.  The 
            Doha AgreementAlso up for discussion at the Ministerial is the Doha Development Agenda 
            which includes the mandated review of the Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual 
            Property Rights (TRIPS), the renegotiation of the Agreement on Agriculture 
            (AoA) and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), as well as 
            negotiations on non-agricultural market access (NAMA).
 Protests against 
            the WTO already took place in some parts of the globe prior to the Ministerial, 
            as past WTO agreements only served to strengthen the monopoly power of 
            the world largest corporations, many of which are based in the US. 
 No benefits
 A report by the IBON Databank states that trade liberalization has not 
            benefited the world poorest people, but has driven them deeper into poverty.
 IBON research 
            show that labor conditions and job insecurity have worsened since the 
            country’s membership to the WTO. From 1995 to 2004, 6 firms closed 
            per day, displacing some 164 workers Workers face 
            growing joblessness, job insecurity and worsening labor conditions under 
            the country’s trade liberalization regime and membership to the 
            World Trade Organization (WTO). 
 A Federation of Philippine Industries (FPI) survery reports that among 
            its members, 56 firms closed, displacing 80,319 workers while 29 firms 
            were forced to downsize their workforce resulting in 4,019 jobs lost from 
            1995 to April 2001. This means that during the first seven years of the 
            country’s WTO membership, 32 FPI workers a day lost their jobs because 
            of trade liberalization.
 It can be recalled 
            that The 4th and 5th Ministerials in Seattle and Cancun collapsed due 
          to massive protest from developing countries.*** AT Bengwayan |