Showing posts with label SPP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SPP. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2008

THE SELLING OF NATIONAL INSECURITIES

Under the rhetoric of "protecting citizens"; governments, international bodies, and the corporate sector are rapidly intensifying security, surveillance and anti-terror regimes at the national and global levels.

In light of the next SPP Summit in New Orleans in April 2008, join us for a free public forum including SHORT FILMS and SPEAKERS to find out about these developments and what you can do to challenge this expanding industrial-complex.

+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
Sunday April 27
Films and Speakers from 6-7:30 pm
Followed by Discussion 7:30-8:30 pm
YWCA (733 Beatty Street, corner W. Georgia)
1 block from Stadium Skyrain Station
+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+

SHORT FILMS...
"From Evacuation to Eviction" on the neoliberal agenda post-Katrina and "Blackwater: Private Mercaneries from Iraq to New Orleans" on security profiteering.

SPEAKERS...

  • Introduction by Cynthia Oka: Cynthia is an anti-colonial no-border activist and a Political Science student.
  • Jon Elmer on "Global integration of national security and military policies". Jon is a researcher, writer, and photojournalist specializing in the Middle East, including Palestine, Lebanon, and Afghanistan.
  • Hari Sharma on "The War on Terror Security Industrial Complex: Imperial Crusading, Criminalization, and Profiteering". Hari is Professor Emeritus of Sociology of SFU and President of South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy.
  • Harsha Walia: "North American consequences of a post 9/11 Security agenda leading to 2010". Harsha Walia is a local organizer, writer, and researcher.

AND SOME GREAT SPOKEN WORD by Hari Alluri: anti racist spoken word artist and activist.


Did you know that:

- In Canada, over $25 billion has been spent on security measures since 9/11?

- There are currently over 50 US employees and agents including from Homeland Security and FBI stationed in Vancouver?

- As part of the Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement, a series of joint military exercises will be held in advance of the 2010 Olympics?

- A future world wide "Smart Cards" system is being tested on the Mohawk and Cree communities?

- A $ 3.2 million maximum security prison "Guantanamo North" was built in Ontario to detain Muslim detainees on secret evidence?

- Canada and Israel recently signed a pact to coordinate security and anti-terror activities?

- There is a well-coordinated and growing network of global surveillance that has become one of the most lucrative global markets?

Saturday, September 1, 2007

CCPA OPED:

Why we should worry about the Montebello talks
By Bruce Campbell, Executive Director
Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives


The term SPP is likely to draw blank stares from most Canadians, though hopefully that will change after recent summit of North American Leaders -- George Bush, Felipe Calderon and Stephen Harper -- in Montebello Quebec. The North American Security and Prosperity Partnership (that's what SPP stands for) was launched by the three NAFTA countries in March 2005. This is their third meeting and the first held in Canada.

The SPP is the successor to the 1994 NAFTA, the next stage on the path to fully integrate the North American economy along the lines advocated by business and political elites. It is a NAFTA-plus initiative but with several differences. First, the SPP fuses economic integration and security integration, reflecting the reality of the post-September 11 US security paradigm. Second, unlike NAFTA, the SPP it is not a treaty; it is an executive-to-executive agreement. It requires no legislative change, hence minimal parliamentary involvement, and thus is proceeding largely out of the public eye. Civil society organizations are excluded. But business, remarkably, has secured a privileged place for itself at the SPP table, with the creation a year ago of the NACC (The North American Competitiveness Council). The NACC gives big business a hand on the wheel driving the SPP agenda. Thirdly, the SPP is an umbrella for a dizzying array of projects: some appear benign and others disturbing. However, because the public reporting on SPP initiatives is so devoid of substance it is difficult to figure out which is which.

Here are three of the 300 SPP initiatives that raise alarm bells for me.

Passenger "no fly" lists: In June, Canada's "no-fly" list came into effect, part of a broader agenda of security measures negotiated under the SPP. The list is rife with potential for abuse--blacklisting innocent people, racial profiling, invasion of privacy, use of false information and faulty criteria for judging high risk travelers--to name a few. Canada's list will almost certainly merge with the much larger US "no-fly" list, with major negative implications for civil liberties. The Arar Commission found that the RCMP, through its intelligence sharing practices, was complicit in the rendition and torture of Canadian citizens in violation of international law. Maher Arar has still not been taken off the US terrorist watch list.
The Commission recommended a strong review mechanism to protect against civil liberties and racial profiling abuses. There is no evidence that these issues are being addressed under the SPP. As far as we know, the potential for continued Canadian complicity is still there. The US remains a rogue state, which has systematically violated the Geneva conventions on torture and rendition, recently codifying these practices in the notorious Military Commissions Act. The Harper government has not raised its voice publicly against US abuses. What it is it doing at the SPP table?

Domestic processing of oil: Energy security, especially oil, is a top priority for the United States, and the Harper government is eager to oblige by facilitating the rapid expansion Alberta oilsands production for export south. This raises huge environmental and Canadian energy security issues. But set these aside for the moment. Among the energy accomplishments cited by the Leaders at their 2006 meeting, was a pipeline agreement that would lead, they said, to a uniform regulatory approach for cross border pipelines. Recently the three energy ministers met to prepare for the Montebello meeting. They talked about cutting red tape (read deregulation) for various planned pipelines that would take tar sands bitumen to US for processing.

This comes as the National Energy Board is holding hearings on the first of these proposals, the Keystone pipeline. US multinational ConocoPhillips, a partner in the project, is investing billions in upgrading refineries in the United States to process the raw bitumen. The Communications Energy and Paperworkers union has produced studies showing that 18,000 jobs--that would otherwise be created by processing in Canada--will go south. And other studies show that it would would discourage future investment in Canadian upgrading facilities. Will the National Energy Board include employment, investment and domestic value-added criteria in its evaluation of the Keystone pipeline? Will an SPP agreement prevent these issues from being considered? Will we ever know?

Regulatory harmonization: or regulatory cooperation as it is euphemistically called, is another top priority for business. Leaders have asked their officials to complete a "regulatory framework agreement" in time for the Montebello meeting. This will set the guidelines for many SPP initiatives. It is unlikely that we will see the full framework agreement, and even less so that we will see how it is applied in specific circumstances. Critics believe the government is preparing to weaken Canadian health, safety and environmental regulations and standards in the name of trade. Let's take the example of food safety. The SPP's business council (the NACC) called for the harmonization of Canadian and US lists of toxic substances, which are preventing some US products from being sold in Canada. We also know that an SPP committee is working to resolve differences in pesticide maximum residue limits. But will we ever know the outcome of these negotiations?

In this case, we do know now thanks to an astute Ottawa Citizen reporter, who discovered that the Canadian government is in fact planning under the SPP to relax its requirements on pesticide residues on fruits and vegetable entering from the US. Some 40% of the pesticides Canada regulates have stricter limits than US regulations. The US sees them as trade barriers and wants at list of priority pesticides to be relaxed. With the Bush administration aggressively dismantling its own regulatory systems, this harmonization concession amounts to Canada importing US deregulation. Will this be the norm or the exception?

The final difference from NAFTA is that the SPP is not a "grand bargain" initiative. It is an incremental process (many steps) with no explicit vision such as big business lobbyist Tom d'Aquino's North American Community. Each step may, or may not by itself have significant consequences for Canadian policy flexibility. But cumulatively, the negative overall impact on Canadian sovereignty and democracy will be huge. Business' desire for a seamless continental market requires uniformity across a broad range of policies and regulations. And guess what countries will do the harmonizing!

The key danger is this: SPP agreements progressively shrink Canada's room to maneuver in key policy areas. This is political integration by stealth--something that deep integration proponents vigorously deny. The result is that Canadian sovereignty and democracy overtime become increasingly hollow.

Bruce Campbell is the CCPA's Executive Director.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Report back from Montebello

"Protests like the one at Montebello are essential to a healthy democracy. Bush, Harper and their cronies should think twice before assuming they will get away with fooling the people."

by Kim Elliott and Libby Davies
August 22, 2007
Rabble News


On August 20, we were in Montebello, Quebec to voice our opposition to the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), and to the secret meetings and agenda set by Stephen Harper, George W. Bush and Felipe Calderón. Hundreds of community, labour, student and peace activists converged next to the huge, metal security fence circling the resort, patrolled by a massive show of police and security officers.

Read the rest here.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Stop the SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership)

First, an email from Don Grayston, retired SFU professor:

Friends,

I waited until today to send out this message, because I didn't want to spoil your long weekend. It concerns the SPP, the so-called "Security and Prosperity Partnership," which has been cooked up by a group of CEOs in concert with cabinet ministers from Canada, the United States and Mexico. If not beaten back, it will lead to the formation, in effect, of the United States of North America, in which Canada will be very much a junior partner, if partner is even the right word.

If there is not massive public resistance to this project, I very much fear that we will awake one bright morning in the near future to find ourselves in a social context which it would not be an exaggeration to call fascist. As I understand fascism, it involves the union of rightist political elements with rightist economic sectors. I debated with myself about using the word "fascist"--which I do use in its ordinary meaning--and have decided that it is not too strong for what may happen.

The heads of government of the three countries (Harper, Bush, Calderon) will be meeting in Montebello, Québec, August 20-21 to move the SPP forward. As the articles in the attachment accompanying this email will tell you, the RCMP and the Sûreté du Québec on their own cannot be trusted, it seems, to provide security on Canadian soil to the satisfaction of the U.S. delegation; and therefore ... wait for it ... the U.S. Army will be in charge of security. I hope that you are as outraged at this as I am.

So what can we do? In a number of places across Canada, there will be protests on August 20. I plan to be part of the protest in Vancouver that day, at 3.00 pm at Canada Place. Check your local information sources to find out about demonstrations in your own area.

The first article in the attachment is short, the second is long. For your own sake, to say nothing of that of your children, friends and loved ones, I ask you to make the time to sit down and read both of them. If you do, I will be amazed if you do not feel as I do, that this is a time--dammit, why did they have to have their meeting in the summer!!!--for personal response.

Yesterday I attended a fundraiser for Joyce Murray in Quadra riding (near UBC), at which Michael Ignatieff, deputy leader of the federal Liberal Party, was speaking. I took the opportunity to ask him about the SPP. He said that he shared my concern, and that Stéphane Dion, the Liberal party leader, is calling together a group of MPs to strategize about how to respond to the challenge that the SPP represents. I will be paying close attention to see whether or not and to what extent this happens; and I encourage those of you who support other political parties to make sure that your party knows about this issue and that it plans to respond, or, to speak more directly, to raise an almighty stink.

Happy to have your feedback on this matter. All good things to you meantime.

O Canada!

Donald Grayston

Article 1: Military To Crackdown On North American Union Protesters

Article 2: The Militarization and Annexation of North America


Other Resources:


Here is a listing of all the Stop SPP events happening across the country and in and around Montebello, Quebec. Fact sheets for the National Day of Action can be downloaded here.

The federal Green Party is also getting involved. Sign their petition here. The Greens will also be hosting a SPP Counter Summit:
Green Party of Canada Counter Summit

When: August 20th, 9 am – 5 pm

Where: St. Paul University, 223 Main Street, Ottawa. Room 203, Guigues Hall.

Registration is free but we suggest bringing a brown-bag lunch.

Speakers will include Green Party leader Elizabeth May, International Trade critic Dr. Janet Eaton and Ralph Pentland, former director of water planning and management with the Canadian Department of the Environment. Members of the Green Party of the US will be on hand to offer their support.

Click here to view the full agenda.

For more information, please contact the Green Party at 1-866-868-3447.

To learn more about the SPP, click here.