The leaders of the G20 countries, along with their central bank governors, the IMF, World Bank and the EU will be in Toronto in five weeks, on June 26-27, 2010. That’s nearly 20,000 delegates, 15,000 armed police and 5,000 media personnel all descending to make it a very hot June weekend, indeed.

Pride Toronto has been moved from its original location but the tourists will also be here, as will thousands of protestors, activists and delegates. The real question is: will Toronto’s residents and long-term social movements join them?

“Absolutely. Our people are hungry, they are jobless, we have few schools and lesser social services — all these attacks are a direct result of the G20 policies and we will protest against them,” says Sabrina Gopaul, an organizer with LIFEMovement and Jane and Finch Action Against Poverty.

“We have real community solutions on how to take care of each other, have good food, create economic opportunities and we will make sure that those are seen, heard and shared.”

The first G6 summit took place in 1975, following a smaller meeting organized by the United States the previous year, 1974. In attendance were France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. This was at the time of the so-called oil crisis where oil-rich states increased the price of oil in an unsettled global economy, causing tremors in the hallways of power across Europe and North America. Canada joined in 1976 and Russia joined in 1997.

Primary on the G7/8 leaders’ agenda is always international trade and relations between the once-colonizers and the colonized (the developed and the underdeveloped). In asserting their own security, the protection of energy resources is also at the forefront of the planning. Another interest for the G7/8 is that of creating a consensus on labour practices and access to environmental resources. In short, the decisions that emerge at the G7/8 meetings, some formally in the Summit Declaration, and the many others in side-conversations, impact how people live, how they work, and the state of world in which they live and work.

The G20 summit, established in 1999, was initially a meeting of the state bank governors and financial ministers of emerging powers and the G8, firmly entrenched within the International Monetary Fund-World Bank alliance (the so-called Bretton Woods sisters).

The G20 is comprised of the G8 as well as Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Korea, and Turkey and European Union members. In November 2008, under the weight of another financial crisis, George W. Bush hosted the first full G20 summit, where the leaders of the countries joined their finance ministers and central bank governors as well as representatives from IMF and World Bank. The G20’s one policy focus is maintaining global financial stability. In other words, the ongoing economic, military and financial dominance of the richest states — and by extrapolation, their corporations.

“The G8 is saving the banks while ignoring lives,” said David McNally, professor of political science at York University, noting the group’s failure to meet the 2005 Gleneagles aid commitments. “Two years after promising $20 billion to deal with the world food crisis — a pittance compared to what they have put into banks — the G8 has delivered only one-tenth of what it pledged.”

Resistance to the G8/G20 has been manifold, taking various shapes and strategies. Organizations such as Make Poverty History and the Ottawa based “At the Table Campaign” have tried to influence the G8, hoping that they could be lobbied in to taking on people’s concerns.

Stephen Lewis, in a recently released statement, called on summit leaders to live up to their UN Millennium Goals and the promise to halve poverty by 2015. “This is an historic moment for Canada. We are in a position to lead the world in resolving one of the great moral issues of our time.”

“We’re calling for a breakthrough plan to tackle climate change,” said Zoë Caron of WWF-Canada. “The choice is clear for the G8 this June: lead us forward in this transformation to a clean green economy.”

Others disagree, insisting that the G20 has no business meeting at all.

“The G20 and G8 are meetings of the very people promoting war and environmental destruction around the world. They push people out of their homes and off their land; force many to migrate and to work in dangerous, [temporary] jobs,” says Mohan Mishra of grassroots organization No One Is Illegal – Toronto, which is involved in planning demonstrations in June.

“These people should not be meeting to make undemocratic decisions about our lives. People in our communities know what we need and are working to make sure that we create the world we wish to live in, the G20 leaders are simply in the way”.

Though much of the debate in the corporate media has focused on security threats, fences, the moving of weddings, consistently typecasting the mobilizations as the protestors pitted against the cops — conversations on the ground are markedly different.

“Since Seattle in 2001, when the anti-globalization movement had its coming out party, many have questioned the lack of participation of community groups and ongoing campaigns in large mobilizations,” explains Lesley Wood, an organizer with the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty and a sociologist studying large mobilizations for over a decade.

“People doing anti-police brutality work, organizing in housing, growing food, fighting for childcare have sometimes struggled to connect their local struggles with one-time circuses that come through their city”.

As Wood agrees, Toronto is seeing a coalescing of social movements and as June comes closer, participation from community groups in Toronto has greatly increased.

“Having seen the bruised faces of our mothers; the broken legs of our youth; the public humiliation of our neighbours; summer curfews and the militarization of our schools, our communities are constantly reminded that law enforcement does not solve crime it sustains it; just like military efforts around the world do not create peace, they destroy it,” says Greg Walsh, an activist in the Jane and Finch community who sees resistance to the G20 as part of his everyday work.

“Whether it was the G8’s complacency during Israel’s brutal 33-day war on the people of Lebanon in the summer of 2006, or its enthusiastic support for the more recent slaughter in Gaza in January 2009 — the G8 has repeatedly shown its willingness to continue criminalizing any expression of Palestinian self-determination while financing, arming and applauding the apartheid state of Israel,” says Kole Kilibirada from the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid, which is building a local and global boycott and divestment campaign against the government of Israel.

“Our local issues are connected to global ones,” says Pragash Pio, a Tamil community organizer and Canadian HART activist in Toronto.

“Many people in our community are sending money home to assist their families, rebuild homes and lives and as a result impoverishing themselves. Things like the War on Terror paradigm which is really a war on racialized and Diaspora people is interfering with everyday lives here and elsewhere.”

“People understand that it’s not just local levels of apartheid, the G8/G20 is the coordinating committee of global apartheid, they make us refugees, they attack us, they are the systemic side of injustice and must be resisted”, he adds.

Considering that G8 is meeting on the traditional grounds of the Six Nations Confederacy, the G20 on lands presently hosted by the Mississaugas, and that the G8/G20 leaders assert neo-colonial relations on most of the six billion people of the world, much of the opposition organizing for the convergence is under an anti-colonial umbrella.

Clayton Thomas-Mueller of the Indigenous Environmental Network and part of Defenders of the Land that is organizing a Day of Action for Indigenous Sovereignty explains: “Here in Canada, indigenous people have been dealing with the effects of globalization and neo liberal economic policies for some time, all of which have had a tremendously negative effect on our sovereignty and ecology.

“This can best be described through the crown jewel of US energy and security policy, the Alberta tar sands. Access to the tar sands is being enabled by massive free trade-driven development such as the Pacific Gateway initiative and the Atlantic Gateway initiative, both of which mean the development of superports, highways, pipelines, railways providing the transportation of resources such as the synthetic crude much easier to be accessed by G8 members, most specifically the United States. The effects of these kinds of development have devastating impacts on indigenous people across the continent of North America.”

Kimia Ghomeshi, national youth climate and G20 organizer at the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition, says: “The G8/G20 are indebted to the global south, displaced migrants and indigenous peoples everywhere for creating and furthering the climate crisis. This is a global catastrophe that will not go away through mere lifestyle changes like riding bikes or changing light bulbs. It requires a complete transformation away from the global capitalist system that justifies the ravaging of our lands and exploitation of our communities.”

Sultana Jahangir of the South Asian Women’s Rights Organization based in Victoria Park in Scarborough says international capitalism displaces people from all over the world by economical, military and environmental aggression.

“In Bangladesh, three million people [have been] displace[d] and our homeland has become the biggest human exporter in 2009,” she says.

“Canadian government traffic and displace people to exploit them. They bring migrant women and totally marginalize them. They are forced to live in margin of society in either low-paid job or as baby machines. We immigrant women demand the rich to stop marginalize us and demand to provide childcare, health, education, housing and all services.”

Andrew Mindszenthy is a member of DAMN 2025, a radical cross-disability coalition that is mobilizing against the G8/G20.

“Canada segregates disabled people with more than pervasive physical barriers: we are impoverished by Canada’s ‘social assistance’; denied at its international borders; confined in its institutions and prisons; ostracized by social isolation; and largely excluded even from social movements,” he says.

“DAMN 2025 is allying with other oppressed groups to resist the G8/G20’s agenda of making the rich richer on the backs of poor people around the world.”

Unlike many of the convergences of the past, this June might just see a real community-based mobilization against the G8/G20 that puts forwards its own campaigns for local lives while pushing for global transformation. Naysayers will remain, of course, but it seems that a real grounded local and global movement is emerging in Canada.

A People’s Summit is being planned from June 18-20, 2010, that will be a social forum-style conference bringing together community groups, NGOs, labor unions, faith groups and others to educate and be agitated.

Following the People’s Summit, actions and demonstrations are taking place across Toronto, which are being organized by different networks. These include a demonstration for Indigenous Sovereignty and Self-Determination on June 24, and a massive mobilization by Community Groups on June 25th calling for ‘Justice For Our Communities’. It will focus on many of the issues outlined above.

A labour march and anti-colonial, anti-capitalist actions are also planned on June 26th and June 27th. Details of all events can be found on Toronto Community Mobilization Network’s website which is the body coordinating and supporting many of the actions taking place between June 21-27, 2010.

To learn more about the G8 and G20, visit here, here, and here.

Syed Hussan is a writer and organizer for migrant justice and in defence of indigenous sovereignty. He is involved with many movements for justice in Toronto, and is building a network of people of color, indigenous people, disAbled folks, queer folks, women, poor and working class people on the streets of Toronto in June 2010. He is involved with the Toronto Community Mobilization Network and the Justice For Our Communities demonstration.

 

Syed Hussan

Syed Hussan is an organizer and writer in Toronto working with undocumented and migrant people, in defense of Indigenous sovereignty, and against counter intuitive programs like war and capitalism....

Cathryn Atkinson

Cathryn Atkinson is the former News and Features Editor for rabble.ca. Her career spans more than 25 years in Canada and Britain, where she lived from 1988 to 2003. Cathryn has won five awards...