By MARK JOHNSON,
Associated Press Writer
MEXICO CITY (AP)-The first day of a
summit on the world's water crisis ended
with rage and frustration as police blocked
the path of some 10,000 demonstrators
who said their lands or livelihoods were
threatened by water policies.
Police stopped the massive march
late Thursday about a mile from the convention
center where representatives of
some 130 nations were attending the 4th
World Water Forum in Mexico City. No
major incidents were reported.
The forum pledged to focus on the
world's poor, many of whom live on less
than 2-1/2 gallons of water per day-
one-thirtieth of the daily usage in some
developed nations. But protesters said the
conference represented big corporations
interested in running water systems for
profit.
Demonstrators came from the ranks
of those who live daily with sewage pollution,
including Mexican Indians whose
water is being diverted to supply big cities
and farmers whose lands are scheduled
to be flooded by hydroelectric projects.
"You feel rage, you feel sadness,"
said Delfino Garcia Velazquez, a construction
worker from the town of Tecamac
on the outskirts of Mexico City,
where tens of thousands of new housing
units have sprung up in the last few years.
Officials took over Tecamac's formerly
community-managed water supply
-already over-stretched-to supply the
new developments.
"We just want to have a say over our
own water and manage it ourselves, like
we always have," Garcia Velazquez said.
Local initiatives and community-level
projects to supply, conserve and treat
water were supposed to be at the heart of
the water summit, but the larger, international
dimensions of the problem often
overshadowed that.
The forum heard a proposal for an
international peacekeeping force to deal
with future conflicts over water, as well as
a call for massive donations to rebuild
water systems in poor nations, in part to
keep people from migrating to richer
nations.
"A lot of poor people are leaving their
countries to go to rich countries," said
Loic Fauchon, president of the non-governmental
group the World Water Council.
"Isn't it preferable, isn't it cheaper, to
pay so that these people have water, sewage,
energy, to keep open the possibility for
them to stay in their (own) countries?"
He suggested the creation of a peacekeeping
force-modeled after the U.N.
"blue helmets"-to intervene in water
conflicts, but said "we don't want to override
national governments, we just need a
force that will take over."
Mexico is no stranger to clashes over
water. In 2004, armed Mazahua Indians
took over a treatment plant and cut off
part of the capital's supply to protest
water extraction from their land.
Forum organizers said they weren't
pushing privatization, but rather better
water management.
"Nobody is talking about privatizing
a resource that is something inalienable,
sovereign," said Mexico's Environment
Secretary, Jose Luis Luege. Still, he said
he strongly supported granting water
concessions to private firms.
That appeared unlikely to appease
many demonstrators.
"We don't want privatization because
it will only serve as a business for someone,"
said Cristina Hernandez, a 36-yearold
housewife. "Services get more expensive
with privatization, but not better."
Hernandez said she lives on Mexico
City's northern outskirts near a lake that
fills regularly with sewage from the
metropolis. She said fish are dying and
brownish green foam is forming on top
of the lake, even as new housing developments
continue to sprout up around it.
Asked if she thought the water forum
would solve any of these problems, Hernandez
said, "I don't have faith in any
officials anymore."
Source: AP-AP Wire Service
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