for spiders only OneWorld UK > News > Archives:Opinion and Analysis Archive skip to main content
Logo_ Go to OneWorld.net homepage
Search for
NEWS IN DEPTH PARTNERS GET INVOLVED OUR NETWORK
17 May 2008
Adopt-A-Page

A Time for People Power

Some 20,000-30,000 people were in New York's Central Park Saturday to support peace in Darfur.
Some 20,000-30,000 people were in New York's Central Park Saturday to support peace in Darfur. © Liana Grey / Independent Media Center

Iraq and Darfur are the hot-button issues bringing regular people onto the streets and into the headlines this week while a renewed effort to "Make Poverty History" is gearing up to demand governments attack the root causes of strife and deprivation around the world.

Some attribute the rise of citizen action to the organizing potential of the Internet. Others may point to the energizing effect of a polarized economic and geopolitical landscape, with gaps growing ever wider between the haves and the have nots and between the war and diplomacy camps.

Perhaps there's simply a growing discord between the wishes of regular people and the actions of their elected leaders.

Whatever the reason, the world has certainly seen an upsurge of citizen action in recent years, and the demonstrations of the past week show that since the mid-year holidays have now passed, regular people are coming back out in force to demand their governments respect and act on the values they hold dear.

Anti-Iraq-war activists are protesting President Bush's speech at the United Nations on Tuesday as a prelude to a week of U.S. actions to support a ''Declaration of Peace.'' Demonstrators are ratcheting up the heat on their leaders in Congress to set a timetable for the end of the U.S. occupation in Iraq, hoping to raise the political stakes ahead of upcoming elections.

The weekend saw hundreds of thousands of people in cities and towns all over the world demand international action to stop what many believe is an unfolding genocide in Sudan. Semantics aside--genocide or not--hundreds of thousands have died in the region and millions have been forced to live in refugee camps. Activists took to the streets this Sunday to tell their governments it's time to get behind the United Nations and African Union peacekeeping forces to help return stability and normalcy to millions of innocent Darfuris.

And amid all the higher-profile posturing about conflict and peace, a global month-long campaign of hope launched Saturday as well. The ''Stand Up Against Poverty'' campaign is being coordinated by the Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP).

"During the Month of Mobilization millions of people across the world will Stand Up Against Poverty with GCAP to send a strong message to world leaders, decision makers, and the general public that we are still committed to ending poverty," the group sais.

The efforts will crescendo on October 17, the International Day for the Elimination of Poverty, with coordinated actions in nearly every country of the world.

----------------------------------------------

To find out what's happening in your country during the month-long "Stand Up" campaign, check the GCAP Web site, while the Millennium Campaign has info on the related effort to break the Guinness World Record for the largest-ever coordinated campaign to stand up against poverty (October 15-16).

For background on citizen-driven anti-poverty efforts, check out the Perspectives edition entitled "Are We Making Poverty History?"

To stay informed about U.S. efforts to stop the genocide in Darfur, check in from time to time with the Washington, DC-based campaigning group Africa Action.

And for OneWorld's continuing coverage on Iraq, bookmark or RSS our Latest Coverage page.

User comments


RSS  |  Subscribe


ANALYSIS/OPINION
Throne of arms
Dick Olver and the BAE Board should ask themselves whether it is possible to be an ethical company and operate in the arms business, argues Andrew Feinstein.

Related topics/regions: [United Kingdom] [Ethics & value systems] [Corruption & transparency] [Corporations]
Image: Throne of arms © Gabrielle Hamm
Why do some people continue to hold Rachel Carson responsible for millions of malaria deaths, ask John Quiggin and Tim Lambert.
From Prospect magazine
Related topics/regions: [United States] [Malaria] [Agriculture]
The aviation industry is exempt from the Kyoto protocol
A study by the world's leading experts has revealed that airlines are pumping 20 per cent more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than estimates suggest.
From: The Independent
Image: The aviation industry is exempt from the Kyoto protocol
President Bush asked last week that the United States give $770 million in emergency food aid to afflicted regions, but this only amounts to an imperfect first step to confront the global food crisis, says economist Arvind Subramanian.
From: Center for Global Development
Related topics/regions: [Japan] [United States] [Aid] [Emergency relief] [Food] [Governance]
Chinese flag in front of Tibet's Potala Palace
The West is projecting not only its own spiritual fantasies on Tibet, but its own economic fears on China, imagining a power struggle quite different from that which has actually happened in Tibet. We have to learn to look at Tibet as it is – and China too, says Slavoj Zizek.
From: Le Monde Diplomatique/ Il Manifesto
Related topics/regions: [Tibet] [China] [Geopolitics]
Image: Chinese flag in front of Tibet's Potala Palace © Tibet Information Network
RSS