WATER IS LIFE
A CIVIL SOCIETY WORLD WATER VISION FOR ACTION
The signatory groups to this Civil Society World Water Vision for
Action reject the founding principles of the World Water Council Vision
Statement which was adopted at the 2nd World Water Forum in The Hague
and which underlie the policies and plans for the 3rd World Water
Forum in March 2003, for the following reasons:
- The Vision proposes a model for water management that relinquishes
all control over water resources to the private sector through
commercialization, privatization, and large-scale development;
- It prioritizes water use for large-scale industrial agriculture
at the expense of small-scale, communal, and traditional practices
of indigenous and peasant peoples;
- It promotes the expansion of genetically modified seeds for
the purpose of "economizing" water use, thereby threatening
the biodiversity and cultural integrity of the planet and its
peoples;
- The World Water Council is an unrepresentative and undemocratic
body that derives its influence from an exclusive membership of
international financial institutions, large multinational water
corporations, and non-governmental organizations tied to these
interests;
- The WWC and its Vision proclaim to have achieved a "consensus"
on the future of the world's water without any consultation, discussion,
or approval by grassroots organizations that represent the peoples
of the world.
This model is being standardized globally, thereby destroying the
diversity of water ecosystems and the peoples who rely on them,
and will lead to the cartelization of the world's freshwater resources,
ecological devastation, and the death of millions, perhaps billions,
of the world's people.
Water belongs to the earth and all species for all time. It is an
inalienable human right and a public trust to be protected and nurtured
by all peoples, communities and nations, and the bodies that represent
them at the local, state, and international level. Based on these
unwavering principles, we make the following
claims:
Water is not a commodity and must not be left to the whims of the
market because no person or entity has the right to profit from
it.
Water must not, therefore, be commodified, privatized, traded or
exported for commercial gain. Water must be excluded as a "good",
a "service" and an "investment" in all international,
regional and
bilateral trade agreements.
Every human being has the right to clean water. We demand that governments
of the world substantially increase spending on clean water and
sanitation for poor people with little or no access. We affirm that
by reducing current astronomical levels of military spending that
clean and safe water can be provided for every living person on
this planet. We maintain that debt cancellation is essential for
water security in poor countries, and demand that privatization
cease to be used as a condition on international lending.
We proclaim that the key to the sustainable provision of water for
life is the maintenance and protection of the ecological integrity
of all ecosystems. We call for the adoption and implementation of
a restoration agenda for the rehabilitation of degraded ecosystems.
Further, we proclaim that a water-secure future is incompatible
with industrial farming and the monopoly control of food and seeds
by a small number of corporations. We support the goal of self-reliance
in food production. We also consider large-scale water development
projects such as mega-dams to be ecologically and socially unsustainable.
As such, a water-secure future is dependent upon the acknowledgement,
respect, and protection of the rights of indigenous, peasant, and
fisher peoples and their traditional knowledge. We insist that the
voices of these groups and of women around the world be given a
central place in water management issues, as these are the communities
most affected by water insecurity.
Water, as a public trust and an inalienable human right, must be
controlled by the peoples and communities that rely on it for their
lives and livelihoods. The management of water services must not
only remain in public hands, but must be revitalized and strengthened
to make community and worker participation central in
order to democratize decision-making processes and ensure transparency
and accountability. This participation must be extended to the state,
regional, and international level in all decisions pertaining to
water resources. Furthermore, all water resource development projects
must be based on respect for the
rights of affected communities and must provide full and meaningful
participation in decision-making.
Finally, we proclaim that the management and protection of the world's
water resources must absolutely be based on the principles of justice,
solidarity, reciprocity, equity, diversity, and sustainability,
because water is a human right. As stated in the Porto Alegre Declaration
of 2002, we call upon all legislators and parliamentarians to take
the necessary steps to encode this vision. Furthermore, in opposition
to the 3rd World Water Forum meeting in Kyoto, water activists are
gathering together in water social forums* in Florence, Italy; Sao
Paulo, Brazil; Accra, Ghana; New York City, USA; and New Delhi,
India, which will coalesce in an alternative worldwide assembly
on the future of water.
*The forums are as follows:
1st People World Water Forum; Florence, Italy (March 21-22) Social
Water Forum (March 16-23) African Conference on Water; Accra, Ghana
(date to be determined) Water Water Conference and Festival; New
York City (March 16 - 23) Peoples' National Water Forum; New Delhi,
India (March 15-16)
http://www.citizen.org/cmep/Water/
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