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tuesday 21 january
business breaks promise to clean-up
act.
multinationals to share fondue with world
leaders at world economic forum In davos
Business leaders, politicians and the rich
converge on the Swiss ski resort of Davos
next week (23 January) for the World Economic
Forum (WEF) - the annual gathering of the
powerful which plays an important role in
discussions of world economic and social
policy.
But the meeting takes place amidst growing
criticism of corporate greenwash. Despite a
high profile pledge made a year ago at the
WEF in New York, WEF corporations have
already demonstrated their unwillingness to
embrace sustainability if it gets in the way
of more profits. Friends of the Earth is
highlighting cases of bad practices in the
year since WEF 2002 [1].
The international environmental network
will call on world leaders attending the WEF
to act to establish rules for big business
and rights for citizens affected by bad
business practice, rather than accept more
greenwash promises. Friends of the Earth and
a coalition of organisations is holding a
counter-conference called the Public Eye on
Davos, which will cast a critical eye on the
WEF agenda [2].
Last year the WEF moved abruptly to New
York - reportedly because of security
concerns in the Alpine location. The Swiss
government has attracted the Forum back to
Davos, but security is expected to be
intense. In previous years, attendees have
been enclosed in a ring of steel, with all
access to Davos cut off. This year for the
first time in Swiss history airspace is to be
closed over Davos during the WEF and the
Swiss military will be there in force. But
following criticism of the unsubtle clampdown
on protests in 2001, there is a permitted
public protest expected on Saturday 25th
January.
Friends of the Earth will be seeking out
politicians at the WEF to ask them for new
international commitments on rights for
citizens and communities to protect them from
bad practices.
The invited "community of top decision
makers² - including senior business leaders
from corporations such as Nestle; Shell,
Vivendi Universal, British American Tobacco,
BP, Nike and Tyumen Oil (involved in the
Prestige disaster) - will benefit from "a
unique club atmosphere² [3] to talk to world
leaders about the way forward for the
world.
Previous WEF meetings have paved the way
for the creation of the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) and North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) - both of which have
been severely criticised for contributing to
global inequality through their damaging
impacts on poor communities.
While the WEF guests hold private
discussions, representatives from
non-governmental organisations, including
Friends of the Earth International, and
representatives from developing and developed
countries will present an alternative vision
in a public forum, just a few blocks away.
The Public Eye on Davos International
Conference takes place from Thursday 23rd
January until Monday 27th January - with all
sessions open to the public and the press.
The WEF, which is funded by contributions
from the world's foremost 1000 companies,
used its 2002 appearance in New York to
exploit the memory of the September 11
tragedy while promoting its usual agenda:
that the "alliance between the world's
largest trading partners today is more
important than ever². It called for an end to
political posturing and regulatory
divergence, which stand as a barrier to free
trade [4].
Friends of the Earth challenged the
corporations at last year¹s Forum to support
civil society calls for binding international
rules on multinationals under the UN. The
issue was a major feature of the Johannesburg
World Summit on Sustainable Development in
August 2002. Friends of the Earth wrote to
all the chief executives at the Forum and
will reveal their responses during this
year¹s event.
Tony Juniper, vice chair of Friends of the
Earth International, said: "The World
Economic Forum's slogan this year is
ŒBuilding Trust¹ yet many of its participants
are chief executives of the companies
responsible for the very worst ravages of
corporate globalisation. It is a bitter irony
that many people cannot swallow. How can
Galician fisherfolk trust the corporations
which participate in the WEF that have
damaged their environment and
livelihoods?
"If politicians at the World Economic
Forum are serious about improving the state
of the world, they should accept Friends of
the Earth International's challenge and
support a global regime to curb corporate
power, with guaranteed rights for citizens
and communities, and protection for the
environment where we all live. We will also
ask politicians to call the bluff on
corporate greenwash.²
Friends of the Earth International will
have spokespeople available in Davos
throughout the meeting.
Updates will also be available at
www.foe.co.uk/campaigns/corporates/
.
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