For the third time since 2004, we will hold the Enlazando Alternativas 3 (EA3) encounter in
May 2008 in Lima, Peru, sponsored by various social movements and non-governmental
organizations in Europe and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). This gathering is a
Summit of the Peoples of both continents. It will coincide with the Fifth Summit of Heads of
State and Government of LAC and the EU, the highest political meeting of governments of the
two regions. The bi-regional political framework in which both events will take place is, without
doubt, crucial for the future of our peoples.
In LAC, the social movements that include indigenous communities, farmers, trade unionists,
migrant organisations, youth, women, communities of African descent, defenders of the
environment and other organisations in various countries have succeeded in stopping the
(worst) effects of the economic and social policies implemented throughout the 1990s, known
as the Washington Consensus, which led to crises, poverty and the privatisation and
transnationalisation of our societies.
In recent years, the range of social movements in Latin America has been strengthened in
many ways while promoting various alternative experiences. This is reflected in the
mobilisations by farmer movements for food sovereignty, by original (indigenous) peoples in
defence of territory and resources, by workers for a decent wage and social rights, by women,
demonstrations against impunity and mobilisations by Latin American emigrants in the United
States for the recognition of their rights. As a result, in various countries, political
representatives identified with the desire for social change have won public office. A new front
has recently opened up to combat the criminalisation of these struggles by some governments
in the region.
In the European Union, the situation is marked by a generalised attack on the rights and
achievements - economic, political, social and environmental - that the peoples of the “Old
World” won during years of struggle.
The spearhead of this offensive is the strategy promoted by big capital (transnationals,
financial capital and the European governments), reflected initially in the “Constitutional Treaty
of the EU” — defeated in 2005 as a result of the referendum in France and Holland — and now
in the “Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union” and the guidelines of the “Lisbon
Agenda”.
It is also reflected in the EU Strategy called “Global Europe: Competing in the World,” which
combines an aggressive foreign trade agenda with a domestic market offensive to make
European corporations more competitive at the expense of the people and the environment in
Europe and the global South.
In the face of this offensive, social movements and grassroots organisations have organised
various forms of resistance, as reflected in the struggles against the Bolkestein directive, which
poses a particular threat to public services and labour rights, the mobilisations against war, the
growth of militarism, climate change and Fortress Europe that seeks to close the door to
immigrants. Mobilisations against precarious employment and social exclusion, which have
been on the rise throughout Europe, deserve special mention.
The peoples of Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean are being affected by so-called global
capitalism, which is especially reflected in the proliferation of free trade agreements and the
liberalisation of investments, which are tools for expanding the privileges of capital over the
rights of the people. The Europe of capital and its governments thus foster a policy aimed at
the reconquest of Latin America, just when the countries of the region are marking two
centuries since the beginning of their struggles for independence.
The EU is negotiating new trade and investment protection agreements, under the guise of
economic association and cooperation agreements with the Andean Community of Nations,
Central America and the Caribbean. It also wants to renew negotiations with MERCOSUR. By
those means, it seeks to expand the dominion of its transnationals, as it has already done with
Mexico and Chile.
For these reasons, as we did in Guadalajara, Mexico (2004), and Vienna, Austria (2006), we
are constructing a new convergences of solidarity among the peoples of Latin America, the
Caribbean and Europe to create a political space and bi-regional mobilisation that unites the
struggles that are under way, emerging grassroots resistance movements and alternative
visions, while revealing social discontent as a public form of grassroots pressure. We resist,
and we join forces with other movements that seek to defeat the neoliberal policies that have
been implemented on both continents.
We propose the creation of an agenda of common plans and alternatives based on the
proposals presented by social movements. We seek to attract broad-based grassroots
participation to disseminate information about the issues that will be discussed at the official
Summit and raise a critical voice.
In Lima in May 2008, we will not only create opportunities for critical analysis of relationships
between the EU and ALC, including the association agreements, the behaviour of
multinationals, militarism and the criminalisation of social movements on both continents, but
there will also be a People’s Tribunal to judge the power system of the European
transnationals, both in Latin America and the Caribbean and in the EU.
The undersigned organisers of the Summit of the Peoples “Enlazando Alternativas 3” invite all
who identify with social movements and civil society networks to come to Lima to participate
actively and with solidarity in debate about a new bi-regional alliance based on human rights,
the self-determination of peoples, participatory democracy, social justice and peace.
For more information about the Summit of the Peoples in Lima, see: