financial fools day
Campaign organizations denounce the EU's continuing contribution to the financial crisis.
On April Fools day 2009 Brussels-based environment, development,
farming and transparency campaign organizations denounced the EU's
continuing contribution to the financial crisis and the limited
solutions it advocated at the G20 with a theatre spectacle in front
of the European Council.
Politicians and citizens battled their way out of the financial
crisis, to the backdrop of a stock-exchange on stilts - all part of
"Financial Fools Day", a global day of action on the eve of the G20 meeting in London.
Alex Wilks from the European Network on Debt and Development said:
"The ostrich approach to regulation -- put your head in the sand and
hope for the best -- has been exposed as a sham, as many protesters
have said for years. European companies and governments bear a big
responsibility for the current crisis. Yet EU proposals for the G20
offer little for ordinary citizens in Europe, and the pledges for the
world's poorer regions to be announced tomorrow will be a mere drop in
the ocean compared to the dramatic impact of the crisis."
Friends of the Earth Europe and the other groups involved are concerned that European governments are bailing out the
banks responsible for the crisis without demanding significant
regulatory concessions in exchange. European governments are
relying on the advice of controversial bankers, continuing to promote
further financial services liberalization in trade negotiations, and
failing to regulate European-based hedge funds.
Developing countries
are being hard hit by the financial and economic crisis, but are being
given no additional support by European governments.
Paul de Clerck from Friends of the Earth Europe said:
"We are witnessing not just a financial crisis, but a global systemic
crisis with environmental, social, economic and democratic dimensions.
Banks need to be held fully accountable for the impacts they have on
the environment, food prices, destruction of biodiversity, climate
change. To tackle this crisis we need a radical departure from the
current economic and social model."

