People's SAARC Declaration
Justice, Peace and Democracy
25th March 2007
Kathmandu, Nepal
We, the participants
of people's SAARC from Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal,
Pakistan and Sri Lanka met from 23rd to 25th March 2007 at Kathmandu
to affirm our commitment to justice, peace and democracy in the
region. We also affirm and commit ourselves to the vision of an
alternative political, social, economic and cultural system in
the region that will do away with all distinctions and discriminations
of gender, caste, religion, language and ethnicity; lead to a
situation free from exploitation and oppression; inaugurate a
climate in which each individual will have the opportunity, in
concert with the collectivity; realise the full development of
her or his human potential; restore the balance and harmony with
nature; liquidate the artificial and human barriers that divide
lands, collectivities and minds; and transcend all boundaries.
Such a South Asia must be the goal of the people of this region
and of their solidarity.
Shared socio-cultural
history of the region
We, the people of South Asia, not only share
a contiguous geographical space but also a social and cultural
history that shapes our life styles, belief systems, cultural
particularities, material practices and social relationships.
Our natural environments are related, interdependent, and form
elements of a common eco-system. There is a similarity in our
life practices. Our belief systems and cultural practices have
been influenced by each other which exhibit distinct similarities.
On the other hand, the unique diversity of our region in all aspects
has enriched the common heritage, and we celebrate a sustained
history of mutual respect for one another.
However, we also recognize the reality that the ruling elites
in the post colonial period within our respective countries, have
kept the people of our region apart through the creation of walls
of suspicion, hostility, intolerance, dis- and mis-information
and the prevention of interaction amongst the people, in order
to maintain their status-quo over their societies. Whilst recognizing
the existence of the identities and natural boundaries of the
people in the region, we note with concern that one of the mechanisms
for the creation of spurious consent and fraudulent legitimisation
for the rule of the ruling class and systems of oppression and
exploitation is due to the constant creation of suspicion and
fear among neighbours leading to constant insecurity over the
national security and hence to militarization. This system also
creates ideal conditions for the advancement of paranoia, war
hysteria, militarization, proliferation of nuclear weapons and
dominance of the armed security forces along with an ultra- nationalist
ideology, which self-righteously curbs democratic debate and dissent
on many vital issues.
The formation of SAARC was welcomed by the people
across the region, as it aroused the hopes and aspirations amongst
them for a better South Asia and the hope that SAARC would enhance
people-to-people linkages, free flow of people across the borders
of the region and mutual cooperation amongst people to build a
strong, vibrant societies as well as create a new era of prosperity;
of a qualitatively more humane, egalitarian, secular (promoting
religious harmony, respecting each others religious and cultural
beliefs), democratic, ecologically balanced, socially just and
sustainable societies hitherto unknown in the region.
The Present Predicament
However, contrary to expectations, the official
SAARC failed to fulfil the promised goals of a better South Asia.
Instead economic policies pursued by ruling classes and parties
of the region created conditions of exclusion and marginalisation,
denial of rights, justice and democratic freedom in different
countries of the region.
As a result, South Asia and its people stand
at a very testing and critical crossroad in the history of the
region. The logic and thrust of the policies and programmes of
SAARC have failed to address the issue of sovereignty of the people,
including their economic, social and cultural rights.
The present crisis calls for a new response.
The globalisation of South Asia and its people, buttressed by
the Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP), spells doom on the economic
front; presents a threat even to the existing democracy and unleashes
the demon of communalism and fundamentalist intolerance; increases
disparity and discrimination; erodes livelihood opportunities;
withdraws existing services and facilities, and instead encourages
militarization and gender violence; and brings forth social and
cultural deprivation. This process further reinforces and reconstitutes
exploitative and oppressive structures in newer and newer forms.
Finally, it breaks up the social cohesion by the degradation of
the human spirit. All this is, of course, in the name of progress,
development, modernisation and reform.
Changing Politics
of the Region
- The states seek to control and contain all
potential or actual discontent through strict regulation and
use of naked force. The actual solutions vary depending on specific
situations. From monarchic or military dictatorships to exercise
of dictatorial power under the guise of democracy and to 'functioning'
formal democracies, all variations exist in the region. In substance,
the regimes severely restrict the rights of the people, particularly
through modifications of labour laws and limits on legitimate
protests in words and action.
- The rulers direct popular wrath against soft
false enemies. Chauvinism, nationalism, and fundamentalism thus
flourish under covert or overt state/ruling class patronage.
Border conflicts, national chauvinism, ethnic strife, religious
fundamentalism, or revivalism thus dominate politics. The major
causality is of course democracy - in concept, institution or
practice.
- The state as an instrument for the peaceful
resolution of various forms of social conflict remains fragile
as political institutions have been robbed of their relevance
and there grows the danger of the whole normative framework
of democracy becoming undermined. Ironically, while the state
has abdicated its social responsibility, it has equipped itself
with draconian powers of control, legal or extra legal, which
aim to curtail people's rights of movements and legitimate forms
of organisation and protest.
Our system has constructed political, constitutional,
administrative and developmental mechanisms in a manner that denies
the masses the rightful access to the instruments necessary for
realising these rights. The parliamentary, democratic processes
in one way has provided a space for legitimate social action but,
on the other hand, the system has exploited each and every situation
of crisis and has taken away these democratic rights of the masses
and imposed the laws and rules that in reality have spelt a flagrant
violation of the spirit of people, of their own constitution and
the commitment to uphold the principles of human rights. These
laws have empowered security forces to arrest citizens without
warrants and detain them without trial for long periods. Torture,
custodial rape and extra-judicial killings have become common
occurrences.
Neo-liberal growth
model and marginalization and exclusion
The last three decades of this century have
witnessed an unprecedented neo-liberal growth model that has severely
and even violently restructured the region's economic policies
and cultural life of the people. Inequality and exclusion are
not merely the extravagant outcomes but the results of systematic
distortion of the system which have been put forth again to form
the very logic of the new paradigm for sustaining the growth and
permanence of the system. The growing economic power of TNCs and
MNCs and the role of international financial institutions, as
well as unequal and unfair trade relations under the WTO regime
have resulted in severe erosion of our sovereignty, means of livelihood,
agriculture and destruction of natural resources.
Agriculture
Agriculture along with related activities is
the main stay for millions of people in South Asia. A vast majority
of the population of almost all countries in the region survive
on subsistence and small scale agriculture. The current economic
trends have plunged agriculture into a crisis and particularly
the cultivating peasantry is in deep distress. Corporate logic,
single cash crops, dependence of corporate seeds, fertilisers,
and pesticides as well as vulnerability to vagaries of the market
has made agriculture cash intensive. This has pushed the cultivating
peasant into a debt trap that often becomes a death trap. Millions
are forced to sell off their land and become urban destitute in
search of any means of livelihood. The forcible acquisition of
land of the peasants in the name of development compounds this
problem. The increased over-urbanisation in South Asia is an indicator
of agrarian destitution and transfer of the poor from the countryside
to the cities.
Dangerous Moves
The governments of the north and south - including
those of South Asia inspired by the strange logic of their multilateral
donor's indulgement in policies and moves - all in the name of
progress and development - have increased the stranglehold of
capital and large corporations over the people and their lives.
These grandiose schemes seriously undermine the living standards
and livelihoods of the people. The achievements so far of so called
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in South Asia are minimal,
hence there is a strong doubt that majority of these goals will
be achieved by the set date line of 2015. Moreover, the livelihood
needs of the people are urgent and need to be addressed with an
urgent action, so it is ridiculous to ask people to wait until
2015. Also the MDGs have failed to take into account the gender
dimensions of poverty. We therefore, fear that these may prove
to be the essential mechanisms to pave the way for an entry of
private capital into all sectors including public services and
supply of essential commodities rather than addressing the fundamental
needs of the marginalised group of people.
While we laud and support all voluntary free
exchange between the people of the region, we are very suspicious
of market driven and dominated mechanisms like the South Asia
Free Trade Area that may further exacerbate the inequalities and
disparities in the region and in turn intensify poverty.
The SAARC states should first give an honest
account of their achievements in the fields on which they have
made public commitments, for example reduction in poverty.
Gender Justice
Women in South Asia are particularly the victims
of all kinds of oppression, exploitation, and violence that are
now a feature of this region. Traditions as well as modern forms
of patriarchy have pushed the women into virtual servitude in
various forms. Violence is perpetrated against them in various
ways and forms. We believe that all actions and struggles for
democracy, justice and peace will have to put women in the centre
of their thinking. None of these can be achieved unless gender
equity and justice is simultaneously achieved.
We affirm;
- The participants are unanimous that today's
economic globalization is unequal, inequality enhancing, socially
unjust and disruptive. It must be firmly resisted; as it represents
the triumph of corporate capitalism which totally restructures
the economic, social and cultural life of the people in the
region. We resist the dominance of financial capital which imperils
the world's monetary equilibrium. It transforms states into
mafias. It proliferates hidden sources of capital accumulation
such as trafficking, arms race and child slavery. It is time
to refuse the dictatorship of money.
- We shall unitedly work to develop and strengthen
people based governance systems from grassroots to national
and regional levels. We also affirm that organic and sustainable
agriculture is an imperative for food security at the household,
local and national levels based on the age-old practices and
knowledge systems of our ancestors.
- We also commit ourselves to conserve biodiversity,
land, water and marine ecosystems and marine life and simultaneously
resist the intellectual property rights imposed by the northern
countries as a mechanism to take away the living resources of
the people of the South. We also commit ourselves to reduce
the hostilities and tension in the region which can release
critical energies and scarce resources towards the betterment
of the living conditions of the masses in the region.
- We the people of South Asia, unitedly in
solidarity declare that we are not enemies of each other, that
we do not want war against each other, that we do not want to
be armed into starvation. We further call upon all the governments
of different countries in the region to cease all covert and
overt hostilities, to resolve all disputes through amicable
dialogue to immediately reduce tensions, to decrease the militarization
of the borders and to take urgent steps to bring about total
disarmament in the region.
We demand the following immediately;
- Ensure (barrier) free mobility of people
across the region by guaranteeing the notion of visa free South
Asia;
- Strengthen and institutionalise democracy,
human rights and justice and proportional participation of women
at all level of state and civil society institutions.;
- Demilitarise and denuclearize the states
and its machineries;
- Promote communal harmony within and between
communities, societies and states;
- Combat religious, ethnic and gender based
violence and outlaw all types of fundamentalism;
- Address environmental sustainability as
an urgent priority;
- Protect biodiversity, water, forests, fisheries
and other natural resources from which the majority of the people
derive their livelihood; protectindigenous community wisdom;
- Guarantee women's rights to be free from
all kinds of discrimination and live a life without any form
of violence;
- Guarantee sovereign rights of the people
for food;
- Respect independence of all judiciary and
judicial systems;
- Solve the issues of refugees and IDPs; support
just struggle of Bhutanese refugees;
- Respect the right to information and promote
free media;
- Promote gender equality in all spheres -
economic, social, political and cultural; Make provision for
at least 50% reservation to women in allpolitical, social and
economic spheres of the society;
- Make firm commitments regarding state obligations
to provide health, education and basic needs; considering women's
right to their body, sexuality and reproduction and make special
provision for women's access to health care from women's perspective;
- Stop free trade model that has been responsible
for increasing poverty, trafficking of human beings, food insecurity
and environmental destruction in the region;
- Freeze defence budget and cut it at least
by 10%. This amount should be diverted to social development.
We realize that the lavish spending on weapons by poor South
Asian countries is one of the major causes of rampant poverty
in the region. We also demand that India and Pakistan stop arms
race and give up nuclear weapons which pose great threat to
1.5 billion inhabitants of this peaceful region;
- Globalisation has resulted in eroding labour
rights; we demand SAARC states to ensure enforcement of Core
Labour Rights at work places including Special Economic Zones
(SEZs) and informal sector of work;
- Stop using state force against their own
citizens in the name of so called war on terror and stop operating
as agents of America by allowing land to be used as military
bases;
- Declare 2007-2017 as SAARC Dalits rights
decade with enactment of concrete Acts, policies, programme
and action plans;
- Formulate separate policies for Himalayan
and mountainous regions because of regional specificity and
ecological sensitivity of this region;
- Broaden the definition of violence against
women (VAW) and provide justice to victims of all forms of violence.
VAW is not only limited to physical or mental violence, but
also all forms of discriminatory practices against women;
- Ban use of genetically modified seeds and
organisms. Urgent action is needed to save the genetic contamination
of the vast biodiversity of the SAARC region;
- Stop commercialisation of basic education;
ensure right to education for all; treat equally to all students
in terms of fee payment (e.g., applicable fees should not be
charged in US$ irrespective to the country of origin of the
student in the SAARC region;
- Ensure rights of the children; include child
rights in school curricula and declare children as Zones of
Peace;
- Promote religious co-existence, cooperation
and harmony among and between the communities of the region;
- Recognize labour as one of the important
resources of the region and provision of Labour Advisory Committee
with the involvement of trade unions as a formal recognized
body in SAARC;
- Respect and recognize the identity of South
Asian Indigenous Peoples and ensure their social, political,
economic and cultural rights in the constitution;
- Free the region from all forms of bonded
labour system;
- Review present SAARC Convention on trafficking
in women and children for prostitution and reformulate it from
Human Rights perspective by broadening its definition on trafficking
which can encompass trafficking for all purposes, and adding
provisions which can protect rights of trafficked persons to
have access to justice, voluntary return home and fund for appropriate
support and care;
- We urge our Governments to Protect Rights
of Migrants workers and their families by signing UN CONVENTION
ON MIGRANT WORKERS AND RIGHTS OF THEIR FAMILIES 1990;
- End HIV and AIDS related stigma and discrimination
at all levels by introducing and implementing progressive HIV
and AIDS legislation to protect the rights of people living
with HIV&AIDS;
- Guarantee the free access of HIV & AIDS
related medicines including ART for people living with HIV &
AIDS with their meaningful participation and representation
at all levels of decision making process both in state and non-state
domains;
- Ensure the focused
intervention of SAARC on HIV & AIDS;
- Ratify the Convention
on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities" (CRPD 2006)
by all the countries of SAARC as state party; and
- Ensure effective implementation and monitoring
of CRPD 2006 so that persons with disabilities are truly liberated
from being among the poorest of the poor, and at the extreme
end of isolation, exclusion and all forms of discrimination.
This is expected to ensure full and effective enjoyment of human
rights, fundamental freedoms and social development on an equal
basis with others as per UN standard.
The delegates also met
in specific thematic workshops to discuss issues of vital concern
to the people of the region. The resolutions, declarations, and
demands of these thematic workshops that deal with specific sectors,
areas, and concerns form the Annexure to this Declaration.
We conclude this
declaration by;
- Expressing our solidarity with the people
of Nepal in their struggle for realising loktantra and further
strengthen and defend the gains of pro-democracy movement. We
also call upon all the democratic forces in the region to extend
all possible support to strengthen democratic movement in Nepal;
- Expressing our concerns of the present predicament
of the peace process in Sri Lanka, and vehemently request the
parties to recommence negotiations and end armed hostility forthwith;
- We warn from the topmost range of the
world 'the Himalayan Mountains' that the people of the region
are sovereign and they are independent to decide the way they
like.
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