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A massive display of police power did not deter thousands of union
members as they marched through downtown Miami to protest the
creation of a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). Hundreds of
Machinists Union members, retirees and the entire IAM Executive
Council took part in the two-day demonstration against job-killing
trade deals.
For 48 tense hours,
helicopter gunships hovered over downtown Miami where 15,000 police
confronted union members, retirees and community leaders opposed to the
Bush administration’s attempt to create the Free Trade Area of the
Americas (FTAA).
What began as a series of forums, rallies and a dramatic march to
protest jobs lost from unfair trade deals, ended with a police showdown
that included volleys of tear gas and rubber bullets fired into crowds
of bystanders and peaceful demonstrators.
“The sight of battle-clad robocops leveling shotguns at 80-year old
retirees will stay with me for the rest of my days,” said International
President Tom Buffenbarger, who led a delegation of 500 IAM members and
the entire Executive Council during the solidarity march alongside union
members from across the U.S.
The coalition of international unions traveled to Miami keenly aware of
how communications and transportation technology can be used by
multinational corporations to strip entire industries from their native
lands and relocated anywhere on the planet.
“Ten years experience with the North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA)
provided us with overwhelming evidence that trade accords brokered on
behalf of multinational corporations represent a grave threat to
workers’ jobs, the environment and the institutions of democracy,” said
Buffenbarger. “The body count in jobs lost and lives destroyed from
NAFTA is just staggering.”
If approved, the FTAA would lift tariffs from 34 countries with a total
population of 800 million. The resulting hemispheric free trade zone
would stretch from Argentina to Alaska and transfer enormous power from
democratic governments to global corporations. Under NAFTA, the template
for the FTAA, global investors have skirted child labor laws and
successfully challenged public-interest laws designed to protect food
and air quality.
The threat posed by the FTAA to the nation’s remaining manufacturing
jobs provided community activists with compelling reasons to oppose its
creation. During a workers’ forum in Miami with labor representatives
from the U.S., Mexico and Central America, IAM Local 2063 President Dave
Bevard described the slow death of his hometown of Galesburg, IL
following the decision by Maytag to move production to Reynosa, Mexico.
“A good and decent way of life will end as thousands of workers in
Galesburg and nearby counties lose their jobs,” said Bevard. “And
Galesburg is not alone.”
According to the Economic Policy Institute, U.S. communities lost
879,280 jobs as a direct result of NAFTA. Additionally, for every
manufacturing job lost, up to four additional jobs vanish in the
regional economic contraction that follows.
While the events in Miami produced a steely resolve among the activists
who attended, the best that trade ministers from 34 countries could
generate was a lukewarm resolution allowing individual countries to
sidestep the broader scope of the agreement sought by the U.S. |