| 21 December 2005   WTO Guilty of Numerous Crimes Against Rural 
            Women - Asian Women's Tribunal   Before an audience of 200, a presidium of 6 women judges and 6 strong 
            women witnesses, Ms. Irene Fernandez the head of the presidium and awardee 
            of the 2005 Alternative Nobel Prize read the verdict of the Asia-Pacific 
            Women’s Tribunal Against the World Trade Organization (WTO) as GUILTY 
            of numerous crimes on rural women at 3:30 pm on December 16, 2005 at the 
            Boy’s and Girl’s Club Auditorium in Wanchai, Hong Kong. The Asia-Pacific Women’s Tribunal was organized by the Asia-Pacific 
            Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD), Amihan Philippines) national 
            federation of peasant women in the Philippines) and GABRIELA Philippines 
            (national alliance of women in the Philippines) to give a stronger voice 
            for women in the Asia-Pacific region in presenting their cases against 
            the global trade regime in the 6th ministerial meeting of the WTO held 
            in Hong Kong from December 13-18, 2005. The women’s tribunal is 
            one among the the several actions of women and people’s movements 
            all over the world who came all the way to HK to demonstrate their resistance 
            and call for an an end to the WTO. According to the Ms. Tita Elisa Lubi of APWLD and Gabriela Philippines 
            who served as chief presentor to the tribunal, the WTO proves to be monopoly 
            capital’s most ambitious, far-reaching and wide-ranging scheme for 
            changing neo-colonial policies to serve its greed. Lubi said that WTO 
            already spans 88.0% of the world’s population and 93.2% of the world’s 
            economy. With the addition of 33 of countries which are now observers, 
            the WTO will cover 98.8% of the world’s population and 99.8% of 
            the world’s economy.  Yaowapa Promwong from Ban Jode in the northeast part of Thailand who 
            was the first witness in the tribunal said that the ricefield which used 
            to be a main source of people’s survival in her country is no longer 
            the case. The ricefield has turned to be a commercial center for agri-chemical 
            companies of rich countries like the US and EU in collaboration with the 
            Thai government’s agricutural department to dump first generation 
            seeds, fertilizers`and pesticides. In the introduction phase said Promwong, 
            were given by the government for free. After that, they were bought at 
            expensive price. At the end of each production period, a women peasant 
            cannot recover the expense she had thus ending up bankcrupt. Prongwong 
            emphasized that the entry of Thai government to WTO only meant producing 
            for export which is killed by the entry of cheap agricultural imports.  “WTO destroyed my life, my role in production. I am no longer a 
            seed selector and keeper as the agri-chemical company has stolen this 
            role”, Promwong stressed. A woman worker from Hong Kong who presented her testimony demanded her 
            government not to contract-out or privatize services. She said that government 
            should be the employer. As it is now, being the sole bread winner of the 
            family and earning only a measly amount of HK$4,000.00, she cannot move 
            out to a bigger flat where her family can be more comfortable.  Purevdulam, a herding woman from Mongolia said in her testimony that 
            mining companies both local and foreign, which had been allowed by her 
            government much more when it entered in WTO polluted and killed 800 rivers 
            and 700 lakes. The ecological imbalance from 1998-2001 caused harsh winters. 
            Some 10,000 livestock had been killed because of the climate change and 
            livestock raising is no longer diverse as before. Now, most herding families 
            are raising goats. Mariena Manurung from a fishing community in Indonesia shared about the 
            displacement of fishers from their livelihood because of the domination 
            of foreign fishing trawls numbering about 3 million and price of oil products 
            getting more and more unaffordable to small and medium fishers. Her husband 
            was killed by a foreign fishing trawl and so is left to raise the orphaned 
            family. At leat 9 of fishing women including her have been widowed because 
            their husbands were killed by big or foreign fishing trawls which preventd 
            small local fishers from engaging in this livelihood. The foreign trawls 
            are backed by the Indonesian Navy. Carmen Buena, a poor peasant from Pampanga and national chairperson of 
            Amihan, shared about an increasing number of peasant women from the Philippines 
            being pushed to prostitute themselves to landlords in exchange for a meal 
            of rice.  “This is the extent of poverty among rural women in the Philippines”, 
            Buena illustrated. “This is the price of the Phil. Government entry 
            into WTO-- 7 out of 10 peasant families are landless, 10 pregnant women 
            die daily and the country has become a net food importer”. Shanti of Tamil Nadu, India representing the Association of Dalit Women 
            said that Indian government entry to WTO has prevented them to keep their 
            own seeds. The Indian government as part of its commitment to WTO imposed 
            on Indian farmers to have all seeds certified before these are used or 
            planted. Shanti shared that farmers are fined of 25,000 Indian rupias 
            if caught using uncertified seeds.  “This is theft, this is depriving us of life, this is genocide”,explained 
            Shanti. In the verdict, Irene Fernandez further read that WTO, the governments 
            of the US, EU and Japan and their multinational companies are GUILTY of 
            killing the livelihood of many rural women, of intensifying hunger and 
            poverty among rural women and their communities and subjectd rural women 
            to different forms of violence including forced prostitution, out-migration 
            and sex trafficking. The Asian Women’s Tribunal ordered the WTO to discontinue from 
            being a world trade body and demanded the WTO and the governments of the 
            the US, EU and Japan to compensate the dmages it caused the rural women 
            of Asia. It also demanded the respective governments of Asia to cease 
            from taking orders from the WTO and to heed their people’s call 
            on the negative impacts of the WTO. In celebration to the victory of the women’s tribunal, a women’s 
            march was held from Wanchai to the Convention and Exhibition Center in 
            Causeway Bay where the ministerial meeting is being held. Vernie Yocogan-Diano 
            of Innabuyog and master of ceremonies for the women’s rally said 
            that the tribunal had captured the real situation of rural women all ove 
            the Asia-Pacific region.  “The stories of the 6 women who gave their testimonies are the 
            same stories said by women who are peasants, indigenous, herders, fishers, 
            workers in the Asia-Pacific region. WTO is indeed guilty of numerous crimes 
            against rural women. It has only intensified hunger, poverty and has driven 
            rural women to forced prostitution and migration even to foreign lands 
            thus the urgent call is to junk this global trade body”, summarized 
            Diano in the rally program. The women marched with them a 25 feet by 50 feet patches of women’s 
            resistance bearing slogans against WTO in different languages. The march-rally 
            was participated in by about a thousand women and support groupsa with 
            thousands of by-standers who clapped and cheered while the marchers stopped 
            for short programs.  Representatives of the women contingent led by Irene Fernandez submitted 
            to the ministerial meeting the verdict of the Asian Women’s Tribunal 
            after a long negotiation with the police.  Reference: Vernie Yocogan-DianoSecretary-general
 Innabuyog-Gabriela Cordillera
 |