
![]() January-February 2000: Nonviolence Rules The Week the WTO Stood Still by Geov Parrish Democracy in the Streets by Chris Ney Scenes from the Streets of Seattle Activist News: International YouthPeace Week Activist Reviews Letters Homepages: War Resisters League Nonviolent Activist | |||
Nonviolence Rules
For five years, in the name of world commerce, the World Trade Organization, the international treaty group that regulatesor rather, de-regulatesworld trade, has quietly protected the rights of corporations worldwide to operate sweatshops (often with the aid of repressive regimes), to poison our food, to pollute air, water and land and to push endangered species over the brink of extinction. But when delegates from the 135 WTO member-nations tried to meet in Seattle from November 30 to December 3, to their surpriseand to the surprise of a watching worlda broad array of protesters turned up in Seattle as well. On November 30, the opening day of the meeting, tens of thousands of environmental, labor, human rights and religious activists joyously and nonviolently blockaded the meeting site, while some 40,000 U.S. labor union members attended a city-licensed anti-WTO march and rally; during the same day, a small band of protesters who rejected nonviolence rampaged through the street near the meeting site, breaking windows and damaging property.
Seattle police moved against some blockaders with tear gas and pepper spray but with few arrests. With the property damage as an excuse, however, the city went all out, declaring a curfew and a no-protest zone and arresting hundreds of demonstrators the next day. But rather than suppressing the protests, the arrests merely changed their character, and demonstrations both against the WTO and in solidarity with arrestees went on for the rest of the week. Thanks to months of careful planning, wide-ranging outreach and the extraordinary (if uneasy) coalition of activists in different causes, the WTO was completely prevented from holding its opening meetings. When President Clinton arrived December 1, he may have precipitated a WTO crisis by admitting that the organization should take the unions objections into account.
The Seattle protests were a high point of what was already
a good season for U.S. activism. Among other events, Octobers March of the
Americas drew hundreds to its five-state protest against so-called welfare reform
(a month later march organizer Cheri Honkala of the Kensington Welfare Rights
Union was arrested at the WTO protests); Novembers School of the Americas
Watch action once again doubled the number of people opposing the United States
infamous school for assassins in Georgia. So as we turn the calendar page over
for this much-hyped New Year, the Nonviolent Activist devotes this first 2000
issue to a look at nonviolence USA today. |
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Last updated January 11, 2000.