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Weekly Worker 537 Thursday July 15 2004
European Social Forum
www.fse-esf.org
Down the plughole?
Unless you are a member of the increasingly embourgeoisified Socialist
Action, £40,000 is a lot of money. Incredibly this sum is
rumoured to have been allotted to the development of the European
Social Forums website, so is this the case of money well spent
or an exercise in how to throw cash down the drain?
If true, he reason for such a huge expenditure is not immediately
apparent - though it has to be said that no official budget has
so far been seen by any ESF activist, so for all we know, the site
might have cost even more. Other than the slightly skew-whiff ESF
logo, it appears as a dull, text-based effort (hardly indicative
of the rainbow coalition of social movements from which the ESF
is supposedly constituted). This is the theme which the About
the ESF statement begins with, before launching into a list
of topics around which forum activities will be organised. This
is followed by a number of introductory links.
The first is the pretty unobjectionable ESF info pack, which points
applicants for seminars and the Babel translation service in the
right direction. As ever, it is what is not said that is most revealing.
The UK organising committee statement is the same old vacuous nod
to trade unions, social movements, organisations, networks,
and local social forums that we have come to expect from ESF
documents over the last few years. However, regular readers of the
Weekly Worker will note that the actual organising of the ESF is
being arranged by the Greater London Authority (local government)
and the Socialist Workers Party - bodies far removed from movements
and networks. So why not be open about who is setting
the ESF up?
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Comrades seeking answers will find them in point nine of the Charter
of principles of the World Social Forum, of which the ESF
is part. This now infamous document states that neither party
representations nor military organisations shall participate in
the forum. It goes on to add that government leaders
and members of legislatures
may be invited to participate
in a personal capacity. So that explains why the SWP and Socialist
Action are happy to hide behind numerous front groups, without caring
about how absurd these antics actually are. Also, I assume the statements
fudge around the question of governmental participation in social
forum processes is recognition that the movements of civil
society will not always be capable of organising an ESF without
the involvement of some levels of the state. While this is the case
where Octobers meeting is concerned, do not expect any acknowledgement
of it.
The rest of the statement of principles is clearly informed by ideas
current on the postmodern academic left, and consequently is of
limited use to even the most reform-minded single-issue activist.
While the existence of the WSF (and therefore the ESF) as an
open meeting place for reflective thinking, democratic debate of
ideas, formulation of proposals, free exchange of experiences and
interlinking for effective action is to be welcomed, the WSF
hobbles itself by refusing to become a locus of power to be
disputed by the participants in its meetings. Is the WSF scared
of its own shadow? One has to wonder what authority the organising
committee and international council have to tightly circumscribe
the development of the WSF movement, given that their statement
rules out the possibility of anyone doing anything. It is high time
this document was filed away in favour of something more pro-active.
The other section of the site of political interest has to be Minutes
of meetings. These are grouped under Organising committee,
NGO, European assembly, Coordinating
committee and Programme sub-committee headings.
The most recent addition is from June 24, and whitewash seems the
most appropriate description. These minutes are strictly business,
noting the odd concern here and there: structures for meetings and
the like. The only clue that not all is rosy in the coordinating
committee garden is that apparently some unspecified participants
engaged in aggressive and abusive heckling at the recent
Berlin meeting. Perhaps the minute compiler should look again at
the WSF charter and ask themselves whether the efforts of the UK
organisers really facilitate reflective thinking and
democratic debate.
Overall this site is far from impressive, given the resources available.
In fact, its very basic design and lack of interesting features
begs the question: where has the money gone? Yes, there are hidden
costs: I would imagine any web design team worth its salt would
have purchased enough bandwidth so the site does not crash when
it gets busy. But all the translations, for example, will be done
for free by volunteers. This layout would not amount to £2,000,
let alone the rumoured £40,000. Someone has got some serious
explaining to do.
Phil Hamilton
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