Dr. Brewer is
attending the WSF forum in Nairobi, Kenya as a news
correspondent for BlackCommentator.com. She will be reporting
on events at
the WSF exclusively for BC. Not only is another world possible, but necessary for Africa.
This is the general sentiment expressed by a delegate to the World
Social Forum, a long time Black activist from the U.S. So as the
7th World Social Forum officially opened in Nairobi, Kenya on January
20, 2007 it appears that many of the attendees have been feeling
the same way. Indeed, the forum in Kenya has not been a straightforward
or easy proposition. In fact, the historic opening march was much
smaller in numbers in comparison to the people rich event which
earmarking earlier forums in Caracas, Venezuela and Porte Alegre,
Brazil. Rather than thousands, hundreds led the march in Nairobi.
Many delegates were not able to find the march site which ultimately
began at Uhuru Park inside of Nairobi. Security kept others away.
Diverting people from the march bore the hand of the Kenyan state,
according to a number of the delegates.
Nonetheless, the march did occur and the key speaker in the opening
march was former Zambia president, Dr. Kenneth Kaunda. He called
for the self-determination
of African peoples, urging the end to "all forms of exploitation of person
by person in any shape or form." Neo-colonalism must be rejected on the
continent, Kaunda asserted.
Security presence throughout the city and the Forum is
thick. Global corporations such as Coke have also inserted
themselves into the space of the WSF. The incredible
wealth divide in the country is evident. About 60 percent of the Kenyan population
of approximately 30 million live on about $250.00 a year. On the other hand,
an elite lives lavishly. In this context, the struggle space is papable.
Youth from the slums of Nairobi have organized a visible
forum presence, as have
women from the country and the continent. The now world famous Greenbelt
Movement, founded by Nobel Laureate, Wangari Mathai,
and sustained by poor rural Kenyan
women, planting trees for economic and environmental sustainability, has
gotten a good deal of press. Nobel Laureate, Wangari
Mathai appeared on Tuesday morning
with other women Nobel Laureates to push a new project for global change,
the Nobel Initiative, given visibility by the few women
Nobel Laureates in the
world.
While there have been a number of logistical glitches,
the mood of the approximately 50,000 attendees and delegates
is high. The critique of global
capital, free
trade rules that favor corporations, and neoliberalism in general remains
pervasive. Neoliberalism, a set of policies marked by privatization,
the elimination of
social supports, and the opening up of so-called free markets to capital
has been pointedly singled out in panels, workshops, and discussions.
The WSF ends
on January 25. BC Editorial Board Member, Dr. Rose Brewer,
PhD, is a professor of African American/African Studies at the
University of Minnesota and a leader of the Black Radical Congress. Click
here to contact Dr. Brewer. |