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Water

Fixing Our Water Crisis Can't Be Done by the Corporations that Are Exacerbating It

By Jeff Conant, AlterNet. Posted April 2, 2009.


If we learned anything from the World Water Forum it should be that the privatization model has failed and a grassroots movement is needed.
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As the Fifth World Water Forum ended recently in Istanbul, a number of stories came out, each of which might have emerged as the main water story of the week. But in fact, to see the most important story of the Forum you have to look beyond the Forum itself. Here's what happened.

Father Miguel d'Escoto, President of the UN General Assembly, and an outspoken critic of water privatization, had requested a public audience at the Forum -- which presents the appearance of a UN event -- but was denied; in response, Maude Barlow, his Senior Advisor on Water, delivered a statement from him to the alternative, People's Water Forum, where 600 global water rights activists had gathered in an unsanctioned popular event. In this statement, Father Miguel provides a serious critique of the World Water Council and calls upon member states of the UN to implement a process leading to a legitimate global water forum under the auspices of the United Nations.

But a story about the UN General Assembly President being excluded from speaking at the World Water Forum, and his advisor speaking instead to the grassroots forum to ask that the UN step in to replace the World Water Council, this is not the main story. After all, everyone knows that nobody listens to the UN.

The Forum grounds were protected by an enormous security apparatus, both inside and out, which was frequently invoked to suppress dissent. A street demonstration on the opening day turned into a police riot, with 26 Turkish activists arrested and three severely wounded. Payal Parekh and Ann-Kathrin Schneider of the anti-dam NGO International Rivers were arrested for unfurling a banner during the Forum's inaugural speeches, and were summarily deported. There were several reported occurrences of water rights activists being physically removed from Forum sessions. In a particularly odious example of surveillance, Norwegian journalist Rolf Hanssen witnessed police in the Forum Press Center collecting information from the computers used by media covering the event.

But a story about Turkish police colluding with the World Water Council to maintain order and control dissenting voices, this is not the main story. Turkey is, after all, a police state, and the World Water Forum is, in any case, a private affair.

The Forum's Ministerial process -- a series of roundtable discussions among government ministries with the goal of developing a unifying statement -- appeared to be tightly controlled by the Water Forum's governing body, and resulted in a highly contested final declaration, declaring water a basic need, but leaving out the question of water as a human right. Renee Orellana, Bolivia's Minister of Water and the Environment, pointed out that the statement also failed to address climate change, collective rights, the possibility of community-control of water resources, and indigenous peoples. The Ministries of Bolivia and Venezuela spearheaded an alternative statement, and in the chaos of the final moments of the closing session, 24 governments signed their statement on the right to water and 16 called for the United Nations to take over the Forum in order to promote a democratic water future.

Though it may appear (and may, in fact, be) merely symbolic, the right to water is seen by advocates as crucial to promoting democratic, accountable, transparent water governance. But the courage of a handful of southern-country governments to fly in the face of the World Water Council and build a responsible alternative to the Council's corporate agenda, this is not the main story.

If we were to seek a water story of the week with a slight tragicomic edge, perhaps we could point to the World Water Forum's "VIP toilet problem:" as Maude Barlow and Food and Water Watch's Wenonah Hauter sought the nearest restroom after attending a Forum session, they were rebuffed by security, and told that there were VIP washrooms and common washrooms. If we were to go with this story, we would focus on its metaphoric aspect: the fact that inequitable access to water and sanitation is not merely symbolic of the divide between the wealthy nations of the North and the impoverished nations of the South, but is in fact one of the root causes of this divide. But this isn't a story, because nobody really cares about the 2.6 or so billion people without access to the global VIP washroom.


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See more stories tagged with: water, water privatization, water crisis, water shortage, maude barlow, world water forum

Jeff Conant is the International Research and Communications Coordinator for Food and Water Watch.

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View:
Look to your left. "The Global Water Crises [sic] Presents a Tremendous Opportunity for Investors"
Posted by: Beck on Apr 3, 2009 5:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Thank you........
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Apr 3, 2009 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While many Americans have bought into the whole "bottled water" is better thing, I don't think that people actually view water as something that they should be concerned with, especially in America! I believe that all of this is intertwined - the corporate take-over of America as they push for more and more privatization. The "too big to fail" banks, the energy companies, the water utilities - at some level they are supposed to work for the public interest, but they do not! Even as "services" become more costly, there are reports of lead, arsenic, fecal matter that "happened to get into the system"!

Far from being "just a few bad apples", the whole barrel is rotten to the core, and cannot nor should not be trusted to "govern" themselves. Water being the most necessary and basic for survival is too precious a commodity to continue to allow the corporate elite to continue with their authoritarian control over it all! The time really has come for people of good will to stand up and demand their/our rights - because the old saying "power will never concede anything without a demand" - is as true now as it ever was!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

excellent article
Posted by: dongarb on Apr 3, 2009 9:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was really well written, I love the form of this story, the things that could have been the big story but were not, then finally the big wrap up. One can clearly see the passion and the disgust felt by a real human towards the sociopathic elite whose greed, evil and stupidity are destroying everything in this world.

If a sociopathic driver cut in front of you or grabbed your parking spot you would recognize them for what they are in seconds. Yet when they steal presidential elections, tell lies on tv, shoot senators in the face with a shotgun or steal tax payer dollars by the trillions, right out in the open, people have a hard time seeing them for what they are. Weird eh?

Ordinary people don't launch ad campaigns aimed at teenaged smokers, dump poison into the food supply, invent factory farms or blow up their own steel frame buildings full of people inside. Narcissans, sociopaths, psychopaths and their quasi human followers (Renfields) do all this and more, even when they already have millions in the bank.

Wake up people, the sociopaths have ruled the human race for the last 40 centuries, let's make this one their last.

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A THOUGHTFUL AMERICAN
Posted by: foxxx on Apr 3, 2009 5:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IN MY OPINION FOR ANYONE AND EVERYONE AT OR NEAR SEA LEVEL. MY URL==SOLUTIONS= http://www.inventube.com/ooojay/blog/ IF EACH STATE OR COUNTRY MADE A CHANNEL 75 FEET DEEP AND 100 FEET WIDE FROM THE OCEAN THROUGH THEIR COUNTRY AND YOU FOLLOW MY SOLUTION INSTRUCTIONS, YOU WILL HAVE MADE FRESHWATER FROM SALTWATER. ALSO GET FISH FOOD INCASE YOU GET HUNGRY, BUT PUT A STEEL NET SO THE SHARKS, ETC. DONT GET HUNGRY. ALSO IT STOPS UNWANTED VESSELS. ABOVE SEA LEVEL PLASTIC PIPES AND PUMPS CAN SEND THE WATER UPWARD. HAVE A NICE DAY. MIKE

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Maude Barlows involvement is questionable.
Posted by: dbaker on Apr 3, 2009 8:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If she realy cared she would assist in ending the discharges of sewage into water.As she has been aware of the solution for quite some time.

Dennis Baker
dennisbaker2003@hotmail.com
RE : The solution to climate change.
( human excrement + nuclear waste = hydrogen )
The USA discharges Trillions of tons of sewage annually, sufficient quantity to sustain electrical generation requirements of the USA.
Redirecting existing sewage systems to containment facilities would be a considerable infrastructure modification project.
It is the intense radiation that causes the conversion of organic material into hydrogen, therefore what some would consider the most dangerous waste because of its radiation would be the best for this utilization.
I believe the combination of clean water and clean air, will increase the life expectance of humans.
yours sincerely
Dennis Baker

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OUR OCEANS ARE FILLING UP WITH MILLIONS OF TONS OF PLASTIC
Posted by: cori on Apr 6, 2009 8:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a sea of plastic of all shapes and sizes filling up our oceans. Tens pf millions of tone of it. There is now more plastic in the ocean then Plankton. Our oceans are dying, fish and birds are dying. Plankton is a major sourece of oxygen on our planet and is essential to sustaining the food chain. Scientists have found plastic particals in every part of our seas. If we do not place pressure on our representatives to create plastics that are biodegradable this along with Globsl warming will destroy us. Per haps it is already too late. There should be international laws banning non biodegradable packaging. It is a matter of life and death.

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