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Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development - ZIMCODD



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Derniers articles :

Le CADTM appelle à la mise en place d’audits de la dette pour lutter contre les fonds vautours - CADTM - 28 octobre 2007
2 ans après Gleneagles les promesses non tenues sur la dette et les fonds vautours sapent l’accord du G8 - 8 juin 2007
Stop Vulture Debt Bondage - Jubilee South - March 2007
Des cadavres dans le placard - 9 février 2007
Skeletons in the Cupboard: Illegitimate Debt Claims of the G7 - 9 February 2007
Déclaration sur la dette, Forum social de Nairobi, Kenya - 24 janvier 2007
Declaration On Debt, World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya - 24 January 2007
New and old loans in Africa - what role for Parliamentarians? - 8 December 2006
Le CADTM salue l’initiative de la Norvège sur la dette et demande à tous les créanciers d’aller encore plus loin - CADTM - 12 octobre 2006
CADTM applauds Norway’s initiative concerning the cancellation of odious debt and calls on all creditor countries to go even further - CADTM - 12 October 2006
Pour l’annulation de la dette odieuse - Plate-forme française Dette & Développement - 23 juin 2006
One Year On from Gleneagles, Civil Society Calls on the African Union to Hold G8 to its promises - AFRODAD - 20 June 2006


Voir également :


Sommets du G8 - G20 : Déclaration Finale du Forum des Peuples de Niono
République démocratique du Congo : Appel à une mobilisation citoyenne contre le néolibéralisme pour un Congo juste, prospère et fort
Mali : Déclaration des journées d’activités populaires contre le G8 de Deauville
Togo : Annulation de la dette du Togo par la France
Sommets du G8 - G20 : Les peuples d’abord, pas la finance
Forum social mondial de Tunis - mars 2013 : Déclaration de l’assemblée des mouvements sociaux
Luttes des femmes : Déclaration finale du Forum des luttes féministes africaines
République démocratique du Congo : Le CADTM exige l’annulation immédiate de la dette de la République démocratique du Congo et la suppression du Club de Paris
République démocratique du Congo : L’annulation de la dette congolaise doit bénéficier aux populations locales !
Forum social mondial de Tunis - mars 2013 : Déclaration finale du 8ème Forum des peuples de Bandiagara au Mali
Zimbabwe : Stakeholders Call for an Official Audit of Zimbabwe’s External Debt
Crise financière : Principales recommandations de la Société Civile
Crise financière : Civil Society Key Recommendations
Zimbabwe : ZCTU and COSATU statement on crisis in Zimbabwe
République démocratique du Congo : Pour le CADTM, la RD Congo doit suspendre immédiatement le remboursement de la dette pour faire face à la crise économique mondiale


Site(s) web :

Comité pour l’annulation de la dette du Tiers monde (CADTM) :
Jubilee South :
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD) :
Odious Debts :
Ecological Debt :
International NGO Campaign on Export Credit Agencies (ECA Watch) :
Observatoire international de la dette :
Plate-forme française Dette & Développement :
Dette odieuse :
Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) :
Alternative Information and Development Centre (AIDC) :
Apartheid Debt and Reparations Campaign :
Coalition des Alternatives Africaines Dette et Développement (CAD Mali) :
Jubilee Zambia :
Uganda Debt Network :
Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (Zimcodd) :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Un vautour peut en cacher un autre - Ou comment nos lois encouragent les prédateurs des pays pauvres endettés. Un rapport de la Plate-forme Dette & Développement et du CNCD - 19 May 2009 (PDF - 4.4 Mb)
Dette odieuse : à qui a profité la dette des pays du Sud ? - Une brochure de la plate-forme française Dette & Développement - 2 January 2008 (PDF - 2 Mb)
Skeletons in the Cupboard: Illegitimate Debt Claims of the G7 - By Eurodad - 9 February 2007 (PDF - 727.9 kb)
Enough is enough: The debt repudiation option - A report by Christian Aid - 16 January 2007 (PDF - 834.9 kb)
Menons l’enquête sur la dette ! - Un manuel pour des audits de la dette du Tiers Monde proposé par le CETIM et le CADTM - 4 December 2006 (PDF - 1 Mb)
La Loi des créanciers contre les droits des citoyens - rapport de la plate forme française "Dette & Développement" - 23 June 2006 (PDF - 1020.1 kb)
We are the creditors! - Jubilee South’s Response to the G8 Debt Proposal - 30 July 2005 (PDF - 322.2 kb)
Détails machiavéliques : les implications de la propositions du G7 sur la dette - Briefing d’EURODAD aux ONG - 28 June 2005 (PDF - 141.2 kb)

International Jubilee 2000 Conference held in Bamako
Bamako Declaration
Mali, 21-23 April, 2001

April 2001


We, the representatives of Jubilee 2000 campaigns from Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe, have met here in Bamako to consider the future of the international Jubilee 2000 campaign. We have evaluated, assessed and analysed our campaigns of the last five years, and heard in detail of the work, the stories and challenges facing campaigners in 27 countries, in different continents.

We are proud of our achievements, but we are also conscious of how much more there is to be done. We have demonstrated that ordinary people, uniting in solidarity locally, nationally and across borders and continents, are able to transform their own circumstances; to transform public opinion and to influence governments and powerful financial institutions. As a result of our campaign, the IMF, the World Bank and the Paris Club, have been forced first, to address the question of debt, and second, to give some concessions to a small group of the poorest countries. As a result of our campaigning, some debtor governments will be transferring reduced debt payments to rich creditors in the west, and these governments will therefore have additional resources for use in social programmes for their people. We note that in Mali itself, before our campaign; the government would have been paying $105 million a year in debt service; but will now pay S64 million in debt service, releasing about $40 million which the Malian Government may choose to use on social programmes, in partnership with civil society.

However, we also know that Mali’s debt payments are about to rise again, thanks to unfair terms of trade caused by the fall in cotton prices and the rise in oil prices.

Creditors have taken the opportunity of our campaign to mislead the public and intensify the extraction and transfer of wealth from poor countries to rich countries. They have done this through the liberalisation of the economy, deteriorating terms of trade, and through the privatisation of assets by foreigners. As a consequence, e.g. in Mali, the debt will very soon increase to become unsustainable, even on World Bank definitions.

Secondly, creditors, like the World Bank and the IMF, have used our campaign to raise resources from western taxpayers for their own enrichment.

This means that the challenge of liberating the debtor nations from foreign exploitation and domination; and from the clutches of OECD creditor cartels’like that of the Paris Club, tlie IMF and the World Bank is even greater.

After deep reflection and consideration we have agreed a common vision -formulated in the Statement of the Jubilee International Movement for Economic and Social Justice Statement (JMI). At the heart of our vision is our determination to globalise hope. To commit ourselves to the transformation of the current globalisation model. We want to participate in the design of economic systems that will include, not exclude, the already dispossessed. We want to develop inclusive, transparent, participative and accountable economic systems that are ethical; based on social and economic justice; social equity and environmental sustainability. Economic systems that will allow our communities, societies and nations to develop on their own terms, democratically, without foreign domination and exploitation.

This envisioning of our hopes, aspirations and goals, has led us to agree and resolve on a bold step: to transform ourselves from a specific campaign for debt cancellation, and into a democratic, global, social movement- for transformation of the economic system and for global justice.

For this reason we resolved to organise ourselves as an international movement for the next stage in our common struggle. We resolved to build the Jubilee International Movement for Economic and Social Justice. (JMI).

This Bamako Conference has reflected our diversity, both culturally, linguistically, organisationally, politically and socially; but also our overwhelming unity. We are proud of this, and the warmth, generosity and hospitality of our hosts, the Malian Jubilee 3000 campaign, has helped us to celebrate our diversity - in unity. We have resolved that the defining element of our movement will be our unity.

We have resolved to give life to our movement, knowing full well that this will be difficult and complex. We will develop our organisation with great caution, recognising that many movements have been shipwrecked by a rapid congealing of organisational forms. United by our common vision, we will carefully, after full consultation, set out to devise new, democratic, transparent and appropriate organisational forms, making full use of modern technology.

We have resolved to develop structures that will be rooted in the following principles:

- that they should be transparent, democratic and accountable to the movement as a whole;

- that they should be inclusive;

- that they should be representative of all countries and regions;

- that they should allow for the autonomy of national campaigns and movements; respecting the diversity and particularities of each, within the general, agreed goals and objectives of the movement;

- that they should sustain our collective, and united effort;

- that they should provide for the exchange of information and for effective communication between all of us.

- that they should be transparent, democratic and accountable to the movement as a whole;

- that they should be inclusive;

- that they should be representative of all countries and regions;

- that they should allow for the autonomy of national campaigns and movements; respecting the diversity and particularities of each, within the general, agreed goals and objectives of the movement;

- that they should sustain our collective, and united effort;

- that they should provide for the exchange of information and for effective communication between all of us.

We have resolved in principle to meet regularly, as an international movement.

We have resolved to establish a clearing house for the exchange of information and communication.

We have resolved to establish a Steering Group, made up of two elected representatives from each of the four regions represented at this conference: Africa, Latin America, Asia and Europe. The following were elected to this group:

Africa: Akato Ampaw - Ghana Jubilee 2000 campaign / Hemsing Hurrynag - Mauritius, Indian Ocean Islands Jubilee 2000 campaign.

Asia: Francisco Pasquale - Forum for Economic Justice, Philippines Aftab / Mughal - Pakistan Freedom from Debt Coalition

Latin America: Ricardo Verastegui - Peru Jubilee 2000 campaign / Francisco Machado - Honduras Jubilee 2000 campaign

Europe: Two delegates to be decided after consultation with other European campaigns.





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