[Gipfelsoli Newsletter] Hokkaido

International Newsletter gipfelsoli-int at lists.nadir.org
Wed Jul 9 23:21:57 CEST 2008


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Final statement by international activists

[Media G8way]

Press Release July 9th 2008

    * Hundreds join Ainu march
    * International Activists Call for Support for Japanese Prisoners

Today, in the concluding event of ten days of G8 protests, hundreds of activists
from three protest camps marched in a demonstration organized by the Ainu, a
disenfranchised indigenous population of Hokkaido, the island where the G8
summit is being held. The march was surrounded by several rows of police the
entire time. Protesters were holding signs in English and Japanese saying “No
G8”, and “Japan is a police state”.

“The Japanese government’s policies towards the Ainu are symbolic of the G8’s
policies of dominance and oppression throughout the world”, said Japanese
organizers.

“At some point, my friend and I, frustrated with the police, went across the
street where there was a sign welcoming participants to the G8 summit. We
started breaking and tearing it,” says Jone, a US activist. “Police held us and
tried to arrest us, but other demonstrators came to help and manged to take us
away from the police.”

At 16:00, the following statement, made by international activists from Toyoura
camp, was made public in a press conference:

„Three of our friends were arrested on July 5th and have been in state custody
for four days. The Japanese criminal justice system allows for inhumane
treatment of prisoners. Those detained can be held for 23 days without
prosecution, and their families harassed. Furthermore, the Japanese legal
system imposes collective punishment; organizers can be punished for activities
that others did. Within jail, prisoners` physical movements are greatly
restricted: they must ask permission to lie down, sit up, etc. In many other
countries, this treatment would be considered torture. The only way for the
eight heads of state to maintain their undemocratic and unaccountable control
over the world`s six billion people is through force. The oppressive policies
of the Japanese state clearly illustrate this.

We call on people around the world to show solidarity with the three anti-G8
Japanese prisoners. Demonstrate in front of your Japanese embassies. Help fund
legal suppport for the prisoners. Come next year to protest the G8 in Italy, to
make sure oppression does not silence our voices“.


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The detainees in Sapporo

Summary extracted from http://www.anticapitalistas.net

Just released information about the detainees at the Sapporo demonstration

4 people were detained during the anti-G8 demo on 5 July in Saporro, even though
the demonstration was authorized, peaceful. The only property destruction was
carried out by the police.

A Reuters camera operator was detained and charged with kicking a police officer

[...]

while a line of riot cops was preventing jouirnalists from getting close to the
demonstrations. The second arrested was an activist who was djing from a
loudspeaker wagon

[...]

The other two arrests happened when the police attacked the authorized
loudspeaker wagon. [...]

The three activists detained where charged with “violating traffic laws and the
special orders for the demonstrations in Sapporo” as well as “obstructing
police work”.

The journalist was released on Monday at 7 pm but the other three arrested who
went to the judge on Tuesday morning who ordered an extension of their
detention for ten more days as “protective custody.” This practice has been
widely criticized by human rights organizations as they are continuing to be
held in custody at the hands of the police, are assumed to be subject to
constant long interrogations well into the night, having to remain in a
kneeling position for a lengthy amount of time. It is also common that during
such arrests, the police register the domicile of the detained persons and
their families, regardless of how this information is relevant to their
activities, which can lead to additional charges. In addition, this type of
arrest could be prolonged for yet another ten days, as the maximum period of
detention in Japan is 23 days. [...]

An appeal has been sent out for international support by organizing
demonstrations in front of the Japanese embassy in your country on July 12 to
mark a week since the first arrests.

Source: Media G8way


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International call for solidarity actions against G8 repressions

Free Arrests! Protest against police state & capitalist summit!

Take simultaneous actions on Saturday 12th July.

watch a video record: http://rootless.org/noG8/Declare_Independence.m4v

3 of our friends unjustly arrested at the demonstration against G8 summit on 5th
July. One of the arrested is actually an indymedia activist who is organizing
sound actions and a member of G8 Media Network which is organized by non-profit
and non-govermental various grassroots media. The exerciser of overwhelming
violence was the police. For instance, they stopped the track forcely, broke
the window with policeman’s club etc, and dragged out the driver while hanging
him. This situation was exposed as Japanese police brutality again, reported by
independent media.

While most of Japanese media coverage focusing around the summit, one of
homeless activists in Osaka had quietly, unfairly arrested on 4th. Alleged that
his mobile phone ownership and user was different in name. Even though his group
from Osaka had been planned to come and join the poverty & labour unit of couter
G8 Action Network but they cannot in order to resucue him just after the
liberation of another one who was also arrested by tiny bureaucratic mistake
last month. All of them are unreasonably trivial things. Suppression of
dissent, obviously.

We denounce suppression to the sound demonstration and homeless activists by the
police, and demand immediate releasing of all. On 12th July, simultaneous
protest actions will be taken 3pm in Sapporo, Tokyo, Osaka, etc. against police
capitalism. Call for international solidarity! Take actions simultaneously!
Protest against unjust arrests, police violence and capitalist summit.

July5th Relief Association for Sapporo Sound Demonstration
in solidarity with indymedia japan.

j5solidarity (at) riseup.net
j5solidarity.blog116.fc2.com/

tv.g8medianetwork.org/
japan.indymedia.org/newswire/display/4602/
japan.indymedia.org/newswire/display/4604/

Source: http://japan.indymedia.org/newswire/display/4617/index.php


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Civil Society’s Choice at the G8 Summit: The Road of Genoa or the Road of
Gleneagles?

(Speech at the opening plenary of the People’s Summit, Sapporo Convention
Center, Hokkaido, Japan, July 6, 2008.)

By Walden Bello

The Group of Eight came into being in 1975 as the G7 at a time that the world
was embroiled in deep economic crisis, much like today. Its main aim was to
coordinate the macroeconomic policies of the rich countries at a time of
stagflation as well as to forge a common strategy vis-a-vis the developing
world, which had loosened its political and economic dependency on the First
World during the heady days of decolonization, national liberation struggles,
and the emergence of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
as an economic power.

The G7 were not successful in coordinating their policies, with the US under
Ronald Reagan aggressively pursuing a cheap dollar policy that brought on
recession in Germany and Japan. They did, however, come together in a united
front against the developing countries, putting their weight behind the
neoliberal structural adjustment policies imposed by the World Bank and IMF on
more than 90 developing and transition (post-socialist) economies. The
structural adjustment programs rolled back the economic gains achieved by the
South in the 1950’s and 1960’s.

In the 1990’s, the G7 became the main promoters of corporate-driven
globalization, for which the road had been paved by the radical deregulation,
radical liberalization, and radical privatization that took place in developing
countries under structural adjustment. The G7 also provided strong support for
the World Trade Organization (WTO) as the main agency for the process global
trade and investment liberalization demanded by their corporations.

The late 1990’s, however, brought about, not the increasing prosperity for all
promised by neoliberal, pro-market policies but rising absolute poverty,
increasing inequality, and the consolidation of economic stagnation in the
South. The collapse of the third ministerial of the WTO in Seattle in December
1999 marked the achievement of a critical mass by the forces of opposition
created by the contradictions of globalization.

With the realities of globalization exposed, the summits of the G7—now G8 with
the incorporation of Russia—became a lightning rod for the rising global
opposition. At the G8 Summit in Genoa in June 2001, three hundred thousand
people came together under the uncompromising program of “No to the G8.” The
battle lines were clearly drawn, with the Italian police or carabineri
contributing immensely to polarization by erupting in a riot that took the life
of one activist and injured scores of others.

Elements within the G8 realized that the image of being a hegemonic directorate
of globalization was not good for the future of the body. Led by the New Labor
government of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown in Britain, the G8 underwent a
facelift. A new discourse was forged, the key substantive elements of which
were debt forgiveness for the poorest countries, the raising of aid levels to
0.7 per cent of the GDP of the G8 countries, a massive aid package for Africa,
making trade serve development, and tackling climate change. The new watchwords
when it came to process were “partnership,” “consultation,” “global social
integration,” and the “millennium development goals.” The battle was for the
soul of global civil society. The high point of this new look was the
Gleneagles Summit in 2005, which was choreographed by an alliance between the
Labor Government, entertainment superstars Bob Geldof and Bono, and influential
British NGO’s. Several hundred thousand people who journeyed to Scotland found
themselves manipulated into becoming a chorus for the glittering Aid for Africa
concerts that were staged simultaneously in different parts of the globe.

By the time 2007 came along, the glitter was gone. The idea of global civil
society partnering with the G8 had soured as none of the G8 governments reached
the 0.7 of GDP target, aid to Africa fell short of the $20 billion promised at
Gleneagles, the “Doha Development Round” had become a big joke, and serious
action on climate was nowhere to be seen. Instead, the G8 communique at the
Heiligendamm or Rostock Summit emphasized techno-fixes for climate change,
lectured developing countries about not restricting investment by transnational
corporations, and issued a thinly veiled warning about China getting
preferential access to raw materials in Africa. Under the leadership of civil
society in Germany, militant denunciation and confrontation of the G8 was the
preferred civil society response, with thousands of demonstrators trying to
penetrate the site of the leaders’ meeting to shut it down. With the dominant
cry being “G8—Get out of the way,” the Heiligendamm protests retrieved the
militant tradition of Genoa that had been suppressed at Gleneagles.

So we come to the G8 Summit here in Hokkaido, Japan. We have not only in Bush,
Sarkozy, Brown, and Fukuda a group of discredited leaders with very low ratings
at the polls in their own countries. We have as well a G8 that is, more than
ever, lacking in legitimacy as the typhoon unleashed by the project of
globalization that it has promoted is wracking the globe in the form of the
simultaneous crises of skyrocketing oil prices, rising food prices, global
financial collapse, and worsening climate change. Against this backdrop,
Japanese and Asian social movements are faced with the choice of taking either
the Road of Genoa or the Road of Gleneagles—that is, to deepen the G8’s crisis
of legitimacy or, as in Gleneagles, to salvage the G8 once again. The greatest
gift that the Japanese movement can give to global civil society is by leading
the struggle to make the Hokkaido Summit the final summit of the G8.

* Walden Bello is president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition and senior
analyst of Focus on the Global South.

Source: email



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