---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 20:54:23 -0500
From: Any Mouse
the regional convergence towards Quebec is audible...
----- Original Message -----
From: "moose" <moose000@earthlink.net>
To: "* Anti IMF" <antiimf2000@yahoogroups.com>; "* AAC" <aac@lists.tao.ca>; "*
Yaba East" <yabastaeast@topica.com>; "* Bay Area DAN"
<bayareadan@yahoogroups.com>; "* Buffalo FTAA"
<a20buffalo-subscribe@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2001 1:38 PM
Subject: Opening the Border for FTAA
Opening the Border for FTAA
by CARLYN ZWARENSTEIN 11:27am Tue Mar 20 '01
Americans coming north to protest free trade
talks in Quebec City next month will find the
border open, if Shawn Brant has his way.
A Mohawk from the community of Tyendinaga and an
organizer with the
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP), Brant will take
part in a plan to
open the international border near Cornwall, Ont., on the
weekend of the
Free Trade Agreement of the Americas talks in Quebec City
(April 20-22).The
border cuts through the Mohawk territory of Akwesasne, which
overlaps
Ontario, Quebec and the United States.
"My motivation is to assert and reinforce the
sovereign integrity
of Mohawk people within the Mohawk nation and to bring the
organizing
bodies together so we can stand and fight in preparation for
the fall," he
says, referring to a series of actions with which OCAP and
allied groups
plan to confront the Ontario government. "We will engage in
attacks against
the provincial economy, the provincial infrastructure. We
will shut down
highways, roadways, bridges until this government is brought
to its knees."
As Brant describes it, people will assemble in
Cornwall on April 19
and then move into Akwesasne, while supporters from the US
will gather on
the American side of the border. And then?
"The Mohawks of Akwesasne will have pre-secured the
bridge," says
Brant, though he is reluctant to go into details. "That's
probably
something that wouldn't be best to publish, tactically," he
says. "We are
preparing for every possible scenario. Certainly an
aggressive stand by the
state would not stop us from pursuing our objective -- we'll
respond to
force with force and to opposition with opposition."
Meanwhile, OCAP is forming networks with Mohawk
communities in the
area. A recent OCAP tour raised interest among Oneida,
Cayuga and Seneca
communities south of the border.
The action has been endorsed by the Cornwall Labour
Council (CLC),
the Kingston-based People's Community Union (PCU) and
members of the Mohawk
communities of Akwesasne and Kahnawake. The CLC has sent
letters to the
elected leadership in Akwesasne, requesting their support.
Brant maintains that although some members of the
Akwesasne Mohawk
community may oppose a potentially explosive action, none
oppose opening
the border. "The border is a barrier to community life in
Akwesasne," says
Brant, who must submit to car searches and ID checks at
Customs in order to
visit relatives who live in the same Mohawk territory, but
across the
border. "It is the right of the Mohawk nation to determine
who can cross
the border," he adds.
According to Darren Bonaparte, the Akwesasne author
of A Line on a
Map: A Mohawk Perspective on the International Border at
Akwesasne, the
Mohawks have had a love-hate relationship with the border
over the years.
During Prohibition it provided opportunity for illegal
profit through
alcohol trading, and more recently cigarettes and foreign
nationals have
illicitly traveled north and south, respectively.
The border action was news to Canada Customs
spokesperson Collette
Gentes-Hawn. "Have we been officially notified?" she asks.
Still, she's not
surprised. "This wouldn't be the first time there are
demonstrations on
this bridge," she adds, noting that a court case relating to
the border is
outstanding. The case, launched by Grand Chief Mike Mitchell
and the Mohawk
Council, alleges that the feds knew about cigarette
smuggling across the
border, but used the Mohawks as scapegoats rather than
acting against the
tobacco industry.
According to Brant, the action is really about the
free-trade-friendly policies of the Ontario government,
which are of
concern to poor people and First Nations alike: "[Free
trade] does
everything to help corporations, and absolutely shit to help
people in
poverty."