NAFTA, FTAA, CAFTA, AFTA = FEMICIDE, GENOCIDE AND ECOCIDE

Posted on Sunday, December 05 at 13:23 by Milton

The systematic sexual brutalization of women and girls from Sierra Leone to Iraq, Pakistan to Guatemala, Dafur to Colombia, Edmonton to Juarez, The Congo to Chile, Spokane to Afghanistan, The Phillipines to China, Mumbai to San Diego has forced FEMICIDE out of the global closet of taboos. The scope and seriousness of targeting women and girls in horrific ways; rape, forced impregnation, trafficking, torture, sexual mutilation, honor killings and murder, illustrates the failure of truly integrating equality into the fabric of resistance not to mention the overall exclusion by societies and governments of women from dialog that impacts their lives.

Women who dare voice the reality they face as individuals or as communities, risk being lableled as "man haters", "divisive", "having problmes with men" or being killed. This has been the case in Juarez and Chihuahua, Mexico where women who speak out against the decade long unsolved serial torture murders of over 400 young women and over 4000 more missing are beaten and killed as well. Police are accused of beating and dismembering Lucha of Chimpimpin, a woman sent by her sisters who had organized against rape and violence there to Juarez to heed the call to stop and solve these heinous crimes.

In Colombia, the horrific nature of torture, rapes and murders of women and girls has led the United Nations High Commission on Refugees to compare the situation to that of the similar gender specific attacks against thousands (possibly millions) of women in Sierra Leone, The Congo and Dafur. 3 women who addressed violence women are subjected to as Internally Displaced Persons in Colombia, Marta Cecilia Aguirre, Francis Giron Quilindo and Esperanza Amaris Miranda, have been murdered by armed groups.

As an American woman who has been standing against rape, battering and murder of women for over 25 years, i first encountered the repercussions of such a position among my own friends and family.

I am familiar with how even activist men balk at addressing violence against women prefering to compare the abuse men suffer at the hands of women rather than look at the immensity of this problem. For starters, it is a form of silencing to attempt to compare the manipulative, dishonest, greedy or slanderous behaviors attributed to abusive women to that of rape and murder. In the U.S., 85% of violent acts are carried out by men. The increase of violent acts by women is atrributed to their increased militarization. THE MILITARY IS A MAJOR FACTOR IN FURTHERING PHYSICAL ABUSE IN AMERICAN FAMILIES!

In the rest of the world 97% of violent acts are carried out by men. This is also the case for rape. Nearly half the women i know have been either raped or battered or both. I know of no man in my personal experience raped by a woman. I do know men raped by men.

Women who are in the military are raped by their fellow combatants whether it is a girl soldier in Sierra Leone or a U.S. female soldier who cannot get the Army to provide her with an abortion.

Women soliders in Colombia are beaten, mutilated, have their heads shaved for wearing cropped tops, low slung jeans and shorts. Personally, as i hear of more and more abuses by "resistance" groups in Colombia, i wonder who they are fighting for.

FARC kills Indigenous peoples and peasants as well as the murders of 3 American activists, 2 Indigenous, in 1999. I may need some serious educating, but so far i have yet to come across any information that indicates an armed force of the caliber of the Zapatistas in Chiapas.

There is a growing nonviolent resistance movement in Colombia led by Indigenous peoples and women's groups such as Ruta Pacifica. These are the people who have united to include each others struggles in a way that seems to be missing from FARC's approach.

Femicide is nothing new. What is different is the alarming wide spread occurance and it's primary place in war zones. What also is alarming is the failure of peace and justice movements to place it in the center of protest focus as it is the gateway to complete genocide and ecocide. Targeting women and girls pulls the rug out of future survival profoundly. This failure also highlights the glaring absence of equality that continues to burden activism still subjected to Euro patriarchal heirarchy even among those who claim consensus as the great equalizer.

Unless deep authentic alliance building is prioritized, the trust so essential to healthy community will not have a chance. Uprooting systemic power over behaviors are essential to a successful revolt to global fascism. The solution must be as inclusive to all involved as the Zapatista struggle has been. Nowhere else has there emerged such a movement for the future that so incorporates methods encouraging women to actively shape their own lives and participate with full partnership.

The Indigenous Council that gives final approval to Zapatista decisions begs consideration. Tools that unify must be implemented. All people, men and women, must realize that insuring the well being and safety of women and children will also enhance the lives of men. It is in the interest of oppressors to destablize loving and supportive relationships keeping us from realizing our full potential.

The call made by the Zapatistas to the civilians of the world to form communities of resistance needs to be taken very seriously. I see no other way out of the mess we are in here in the most powerful country with the most privileged people on the planet even under growing deprivation and militarization. But we must move fast with the greatest of courage and tenacity. We must live what we dream NOW with all our hearts. Only then can we hope to put an end to Free Trade Fascism and it's attendent femicide, genocide and ecocide.

In peaceful struggle,

swaneagle harijan

This e-mail was brought to you through the LegacyofColonialism Forum e-mail list. (Web Ref. Legacy of Colonialism ).

For a description of the main aims and remit for this list, see below. The LegacyofColonialism Forum e-mail list is for activists, NGOs, social-justice/reparation/drop-the-debt campaigners, members of land-rights movements, researchers and grassroot development workers all over the world, to assist the formation of an international network to share information regarding how the North's capitalist domination (led by the USA) is sustained by the imperialism and economic fraud of global institutions (eg. the WTO, IMF & World Bank) and the debt-based money system.

The co-ordinators of this list - The Land is Ours (UK), Peace & Human Rights Trust (UK) & the IMF/WB Wanted for Fraud Campaign (based primarily in the UK) - assert within this analysis that debt cancellation is the neccessary first-step before attempting to undo the in-built corruption at-the-heart of the world economic system which is fraudulent money creation by privatised banks.

The Land is Ours also suggest that debt-cancellation could be married to the moral imperative of reparation for the crimes of slavery & colonialism, providing compensation for self-determination on the widest possible scale.

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Comments

  1. Mon Dec 06, 2004 2:42 am
    I think the focus all along has been on loss of Western livlihood and the loss of indigenous peoples lives and the responsibility that these trade agreements and the money managers have played has gone unnoticed. Thank you for this link Milton.

    ---
    "Yeah, well, [Mr. President] we used all five fingers because that's the way our mittens are made." Antonia Zerbisias

  2. Mon Dec 06, 2004 3:35 am
    Criticizing wooly-headed thinking and plain ignorance is a noble calling. "If a man moveth in darkness, lend a light that he not falleth."

  3. Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:19 am
    The more I here Dubya speak, the more I think he was born with a few extra fingers.

    ---
    Dave Ruston

  4. Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:52 am
    If a 13 year old girl gets her skull crushed in by rocks because she was impregnated by her 15 year old brother - most normal people would think that the people who do such things are the real enemies of females - and would try to free women from such brutality.

    Well - that is a court imposed sentence sanctioned by the government of Iran - the same gov't that is desperately trying to stop elections in Iraq by sending in waves of suicide bombers.

    Democratization is the answer to brutality, and unfortunately it doesn't seem to develop on its own because dictators and warlords are only too happy to oppress their 'fellow countrymen'. Fortunately for the world, the US and a few brave allies are willing to do the hard work for democracy - unlike 'social activists' comfortably seated in Canada.

  5. Mon Dec 06, 2004 6:04 am
    No nation has supported more dictatorships than the US. Get an education in reality.

    Current short list of dictatorships/brutal governments supported by US:
    Saudi Arabia
    Quwait
    Oman
    Uzbekistan
    Egypt
    Jordan
    Pakistan
    Morocco

    Let us not forget some past bad guys:
    Shah of Iran
    Saddam Hussein
    Gen. Augusto Pinochet
    Gen. Jorge Rafael Videla
    Suharto
    Papa Doc, Baby Doc
    and rightwing death squads in numerous South American countries.

    So when people read the ridiculous statements like the poster above, remember history and reality. Dogma is all they have, its all they cling to. They keep repeating this claim about bringing democracy. It's a bold faced lie, and they are only fooling themselves.

  6. Mon Dec 06, 2004 1:11 pm
    Alas, the world isn't as one would like. Just to take the Middle East nations listed above, their governments sprang from authoritarian cultures rooted in antiquity or were imposed by European colonialism. Great states must have relations with them because that is how things are. I don't think the previous poster calls for their overthrow, though perhaps he is. But I ask him to remember how impossible it proved to get the corrupt UN to go along with changing the regime of the worst, Iraq. Canada, of course, is never helpful. It's warm and comfortable on the sidelines, and the view for second guessing is unparalleled.

  7. Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:36 pm
    Comment deleted Jerry Jay. Offtopic is pretty obvious when you reply to 'me' when I haven't even posted in this thread yet.



    ---
    "If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill

  8. Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:38 pm
    Why exactly, do regimes need changing? Who asked the UN or the US to do this?



    ---
    "If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill

  9. Mon Dec 06, 2004 5:42 pm
    Saddam Hussein attacked two countries and financially supported suicide bombers in other countries - if he only killed Iraqis then one could argue that because there is a line on a map and he's inside it, he can kill whoever he wants because it's just a part of Iraqi 'culture' or some such excuse. But when he is actively working towards threatening the lives of millions of people - he had to go. Why is that so hard for some people to understand?

  10. Mon Dec 06, 2004 5:44 pm
    Yer bee-oot-ee-full JJ!
    Keep up the good werk I can re-late eggsaktilly to wut yer tockin

  11. by avatar Jesse
    Mon Dec 06, 2004 5:45 pm
    <blockquote>Great states must have relations with them because that is how things are.</blockquote> <p> Sorry, but the US has more than 'relations' with the abovelisted nations. In many cases, the US has helped to get those dictators into power, usually by providing military equipment and operatives. </p><p> And claiming that something is okay because that's just "how things are" is how we end up with such atrocities. The Great and Powerful United States wouldn't exist if the founding fathers didn't rebel against the British because imperialism was the norm. You can't have progress unless you change how things are. </p><p>---<br>Jesse <br />

  12. Mon Dec 06, 2004 5:47 pm
    A very fine article. It cannot be stressed enough that "free trade" is a fraud. What it is in reality is neo-mercantalism - the deck is stacked in favor of the corporations. Real free trade wouldn't be a bad idea, cept it's never existed and it wont because capitalism is built with bricks of statism. Remember folks,free market capitalism is an oxymoron!

  13. Mon Dec 06, 2004 7:59 pm
    That's a convenient historical perspective to use, but you probably ignore the historical fact that in all those countries listed above, the Soviet Union was using any means necessary to try and make them colonies.

    It was dirty 'realpolitik' but what choice did the Americans or the West have but to try and get those countries on our side? We should have taken the moral high road and starved before letting Western Europe get invaded?

    Westerners had to show only enough support for those countries so that they wouldn't fall under the brutality of socialism and the entire world is fortunate for that today.

  14. Mon Dec 06, 2004 8:44 pm
    Another rightwing dogma line - the communists did it, so we did too. If we didn't we would all be communist.

    Yep more dogma not backed by any rational fact or substance.

    Trade agreements are there to support the already wealthy. Industrialized nations enjoy their status because they have raped and pillaged the less fortunate for hundreds of years, and it continues to this day under the guise of 'free markets'. Capitalists and their useful idiots will protect it with whatever lines or lies they can devise and hope to foist off on the masses. They fool nobody but themselves. The third world is awake and alive, listening and not taking crap no more. Osama is just the start of a rebellion against the capitalist - imperialist structure in the West.



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