Declaration on Water and the WTO

On August 21-22, 2003 organizations and movements from Argentina, Chile,Uruguay, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras,Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Canada, and the  United States, gathered in San Salvador to exchange strategies and experiences in the struggle to defend the right to water. 

The conference culminated in the formation of an Inter-American network on the right to water, VIDA (Inter-American Vigilance for the Defense and Right to Water) Network. 

Below is the declaration emanating from the gathering and a list of participants.

For U.S.-based organizations, if you would like more information about the VIDA network, contact Sara Grusky at sgrusky@citizen.org or at (202) 454-5133.

Declaration of San Salvador for the Defence and Right to Water

We, social organizations and movements, meeting in the city of San Salvador during August 21-22, 2003, from Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Canada, and United States, wish to make known our total rejection of the privatization of water resources and public water services in our countries and in the region, and denounce that these processes are being encouraged, financed and promoted by multinational corporations, international financial institutions, multilateral trade organisms and governments.

Considering that the problem has deep implications and negative effects on the environment, health, sovereignty, the economy, and the dignity of our people, WE DECLARE THAT:

1. Management of water resources should be based on fundamental principles such as social, sustainable and universal justice.

2. Water is a public good and a fundamental and unalienable human right that should be protected and promoted by all of us who inhabit the planet, by communities and by nations.

3. Water is not a commodity and no one or no entity has the right to profit from it; thus water must not be privatized, sold nor exported.

4. Water conservation is a universal responsibility. 

Water must be protected from all contaminating human activities, especially mining and industrial and agro-industrial processes.  Protection of ecological systems and integral management of water is a must, in order to guarantee the right to a health environment.

5. Water must be totally excluded from the WTO, FTAA and FTA negotiations, and must not be considered a "commodity", "service" or "investment" in any international, regional or bilateral agreement.  We therefore denounce, reject and will mobilize against attempts to include it in negotiations in the upcoming WTO summit in Cancún.

6. Large-scale water development projects are being implemented, such as mega-dams, that are both ecologically and socially unsustainable.

Therefore alternatives must be sought that respect the rights of persons and communities, promote and protect the environment, and are undertaken with full social participation.

7. Recognizing the existing inequality between men and women in the access, management and rights with respect to water resources and drinking water, policies and practices should be developed that eliminate these inequities.

8. A future with a secure access to water depends on the recognition, respect and protection of the rights of indigenous, campesino and fishing peoples, and also of their traditional knowledge.

9. We reject the strategy being promoted by international financial institutions, multilateral trade organizations and national governments, among others, that encourages governments to forego their obligation to offer various water-related services in an efficient manner.  We demand that public water systems be protected, revitalized and strengthened so as to improve levels of quality and efficiency.  The participation of workers from the community should be promoted, in order to democratize the decision-making process, guaranteeing transparency and accountability through social control.

10. In the case of communal, urban and rural water systems, public policies should be drawn up and enacted that support development and economic, social, and environmental sustainability, respecting the autonomy and rights of communities.

11. We reject the conditions being imposed by international financial institutions in order to lend funds for water management, violating the sovereignty of our peoples.

 

Convinced as we are that only by social organizing and mobilizing we will be able to guarantee the effective defence of our right to water, in the face of the water-resource privatization threat, we commit ourselves to strengthening and widening social resistance against these privatization processes, and for which reason WE HEREBY AGREE:

1.- The constitution of the VIDA (Inter-American Vigilance for the Defence and Right to Water) Network, and the naming of a Liaison Commission temporarily headed by organizations from Brazil, Bolivia, Canada, Dominican Republic, United States, Costa Rica and El Salvador.

2.- Among initial activities of VIDA Network will be the launching of a continental campaign called "No to the Privatization of Water.  We Want a Public Management Scheme with Social Participation ".

San Salvador, August 22, 2003

 

International organizations:

Alianza Cívica Chiapas, México

Asociación de Servicios Municipales de Saneamiento, Brasil

Asociación de Consumidores de Masaya, Nicaragua

Bloque Popular, Honduras Comisión AGUA Y VIDA,  Uruguay

Consejo de Canadienses, Canadá Centro del Agua del Trópico

Húmedo para América Latina y El Caribe,  Panamá

Coordinadora por la Defensa del Agua y la Vida, Bolivia

Comité de Servicio de los Amigos, Nicaragua

Consumers International, Oficina Regional para América Latina y el

Caribe

Encuentro Popular, Costa Rica

Federación Nacional de Asociaciones de Consumidores y Usuarios,

Costa Rica

Fundación por los Derechos del Consumidor, República

Dominicana

Fundación SOLON, Bolivia

Frente Petenero Contra las Represas, Guatemala

Federación Nacional de Trabajadores del Agua Potable y

Alcantarillado,Perú

Fundación del Consumidor y Usuario de Panamá

Internacional de Servicios Públicos, Oficina Regional para

Centroamérica y el Caribe

Instituto Polaris, Canadá

Instituto de Ecología Política, Chile

Liga para la Defensa del Consumidor, Nicaragua

Movimiento Contra las Represas en Jinotega,  Nicaragua

Public Citizen, Estados Unidos

Red Ciudadana del Agua, México

Red Nacional de Consumidores de Nicaragua

Sindicato de Trabajadores de la Empresa Estatal de Agua,

Honduras

Unión de Usuarios y Consumidores, Argentina

 

 

Salvadorean Organizations:

Asociación de Organismos de Cuenca del Lago de Ilopango

Agencia de Desarrollo Microregional de los Municipios de Ilopango,

Soyapango y San Martín

Asociación de Mujeres por la Dignidad y la Vida, Las Dignas

Asociación Comunal de Salud, Agua y Medio Ambiente

Asociación de Ayuda Humanitaria, Pro vida

Asociación de Trabajadores del Arte y la Cultura

Centro para la Defensa del Consumidor

Comisión de Derechos Humanos de El Salvador

Consejo Coordinador de Comunidades

Fundación Maquilishuatl

Fundación Salvadoreña para la Promoción Social y el Desarrollo

Económico

Fundación para el Desarrollo de El Salvador

Fundación Salvadoreña para la Reconstrucción y el Desarrollo

Fundación Río LempaFundación para el Estudio y la Aplicación del

Derecho

Iglesia Bautista Enmanuel

Movimiento de Mujeres "Melida Anaya Montes"

Procuraduría para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos

Red de Consumidores en Acción

Red Sinti Techan

Sindicato de Empresa de Trabajadores de ANDA Unidad Ecológica Salvadoreña.