Click here to return to "Activist Corner"
April 10, 2000
Washington, D.C. -- As the World Bank braces for mass
protests in the streets
of Washington, D.C., one attack is being launched from an
unexpected quarter --
the financial markets.
The World Bank raises 80% of its funds through bonds
which are sold to
investors on private capital markets. Today is the public launch
of a boycott
against World Bank bonds, which is being organized in eleven
countries,
including South Africa, Ecuador, and Pakistan. Beverly Bell,
Director of the
Center for Economic Justice said, "The fact that labor
unions, churches, universities,
and municipalities own these bonds gives ordinary citizens the
opportunity to
take power away from this destructive institution."
"When investors realize that their money is being
used to damage the environment,
destroy indigenous communities and trample human rights, they
will move their
investments to less controversial projects," says Neil
Tangri of Washington, D.C.-based
Essential Action. Even before the campaign's official launch,
several socially responsible
investment firms (including Trillium Assets Management of Boston
and Progressive Assets
Management of New York) have pledged not to buy World Bank Bonds.
In addition,
the city of Berkeley, California and Local 9423 of the
Communications Workers
of America in San Jose, California have passed resolutions to
boycott the future
purchase of World Bank bonds. Similar resolutions have been
initiated in communities
and institutions throughout the United States.
"We need to break the power of the World Bank
over developing countries, as the
divestment movement helped break the power of the Apartheid
regime over South
Africa; this is why we support the boycott of World Bank
bonds," said Dennis
Brutus, a Patron of Jubilee 2000 South Africa and former South
African political
prisoner.
"Berkeley was the first city to boycott companies
which did business in South Africa
. We led the way in going after corporations which are doing
business in Nigeria
and Burma. Today we are proud to speak out against environmental
degradation
and other destruction caused by the World Bank with a similar
action," said Pratap
Chatterjee, a member of the Community Environmental Commission of
the City of Berkeley.
Kevin Danaher of Global Exchange, the San Francisco
based human rights organization
said: "We aim to go after the World Bank's Achilles' heel,
which is its public reputation.
The World Bank has come under increasing criticism for its record
on poverty reduction,
human rights and the environment."
The bond boycott is only one of multiple initiatives
against the IMF and World Bank,
many of which will be launched in this week's protests in
Washington, DC. Also,
the Meltzer Commission of the U.S. Congress recently proposed
strictly curtailing
the Bank's functions and influence.
Dr. Vineeta Gupta, a medical doctor based in Punjab,
India and one of the organizers
of the boycott, was blunt. "The World Bank is subjugating
our economic and social
independence. It's time that we shut the Bank down, and this
boycott is a great start."
To arrange interviews with members of the boycott
coalition,
contact: Neil Watkins (202-822-1180 x208, cell: 202-210-3241) or
Neil Tangri (202-387-8030, cell: 301-602-7653)
How to get involved
How
to Pass a World Bank Boycott Resolution World Bank Bond Boycott Resolution Passed by Berkeley City Council More ideas and suggestions... |