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SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 2006   


POLITICISATION VS "PURITY" DEBATE COMES TO A HEAD
Humberto Márquez

CARACAS, Jan 28 (IPS) - Politics, especially party politics, on which representative democracy is based, is in crisis. But not even the social movements brought together under the umbrella of the World Social Forum (WSF) are doing enough to respond to the demands of the societies in which they are active.


This debate has cut through the discussions on other issues addressed by the seminars, workshops and panels at the sixth WSF, which opened on Tuesday and ends Sunday in Caracas.

This year's annual WSF civil society gathering was polycentric, with a Forum held in Bamako, Mali last week and another scheduled for late March in the city of Karachi in southern Pakistan.

"This is a political forum. The participating organisations take a political approach to the world and to their presence in it," social science professor Edgardo Lander, a member of the Venezuelan WSF organising committee, told IPS.

As seen in Latin America, "politics is in crisis, and that has to do with the lack of representation of the people by their elected officials, who tend to represent themselves more than the interests of society in this region," said Pedro Santana with the Colombian organisation Vía Ciudadana.

"It is in response to that crisis of representativity that social movements emerge, like feminism, environmentalism, ethnic movements, or groups that fight discrimination," said Santana.

In some cases, "these movements voice their grievances and demand solutions directly from the state itself, since the political class ignores them," he said.

Juan Carlos Monedero with the Complutense Institute of International Studies, in Spain, said "the divorce between political parties and social movements is similar to the one between reform and revolution, and bogged down transformational thinking throughout the entire 20th century."

In Monedero's view, "political parties are a necessary evil, and social movements arise for noble purposes but are short-lived and corruptible."

"Today, political parties behave like cartels, although the name sounds ugly, because there are rules of the game, and those who do not stick to them are pushed out," he added.

Monedero pointed to the loss of the traditional functions of political parties, which he said no longer play a role of helping to build political and social values, and do not inform the citizens, but use the media as a tool to maintain support for the cartel.

As an example of the complexity of the exercise of democracy, he noted that while only 25 percent of voters took part in Venezuela's December legislative elections, a regional annual poll known as the Latinobarómetro found that Venezuela is the country with the highest level of confidence in the democratic system, with 70 percent of respondents saying they trusted the system.

In the view of Roberto Savio, founder and president emeritus of the Inter Press Service (IPS) international news agency and a member of the WSF international committee, "In Latin America there is a divide between political institutions and civil society, and to close it, civil society must focus on concrete agendas."

This is because, in his view, "the region experiences a swing of the pendulum from the right to the left approximately every ten years, and different policies are established in each decade. Civil society should take advantage of the present years," in which there is a clear inclination towards social concerns.

According to Lilian Celiberti of the Uruguayan women's rights organisation Articulación Femenista Marco Sur, "the political parties have a responsibility to incorporate the demands and struggles of social movements, and it is important for governments to create mechanisms for participation that can translate these demands into public policies."

In addition to the relationship between civil society and political parties, the participants in the Caracas session of the WSF - some 70,000 people representing 2,200 organisations - have also devoted considerable discussion to the politicisation of this annual event, and its potential conversion into a launching pad for political action.

Addressing around 15,000 Forum p

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