Show Menu
Brasil de Fato
PORTUGUESE
Listen to BdF Radio
  • Support
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • |
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Show Menu
Brasil de Fato
  • Support
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • |
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture
Show Menu
Listen to BdF Radio
No Result
View All Result
Brasil de Fato
Home English

Integration

“Peoples’ BRICS” to be held concurrently with BRICS Summit in November

People’s movements, unions, and parties will debate common issues between Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa

29.Oct.2019 às 18h52
Updated on 01.Feb.2020 às 18h52
São Paulo
Redação
Researchers and activists from five countries will debate about imperialism, economic and political crisis, solidarity, and integration

Researchers and activists from five countries will debate about imperialism, economic and political crisis, solidarity, and integration - Handout

People’s movements, labor unions, and political parties from the five countries that are members of the BRICS — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — will gather in Brasília, capital of Brazil, on Nov. 11 and 12 for the Peoples’ BRICS.

The event was planned to happen concurrently with the BRICS Summit, in which government representatives will meet two days later, also in the capital of Brazil.

Researchers and political activists from the five countries will debate about topics such as imperialism, economic and political crisis, international solidarity, and the integration between the peoples.

Approximately 300 people are expected to attend the event. Confirmed participants include representatives of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA); the Safai Karmachari Andolan, an Indian movement of Dalits (a group that is considered to be untouchable and often subjected to brutal violence in Indian society’s caste system); and the Russian Academy of Sciences.

João Pedro Stedile, from the national board of Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement (MST), a co-organizer of the Peoples’ BRICS, supports that the official summit between governments, which will be held on Nov. 13 and 14, is superficial.

“The BRICS Summit will gather governments and presidents. We fear that their agendas will be nothing more than trade agreements and financial talks for projects to be funded by the BRICS bank,” Stedile says.

“The BRICS were proposed as a regional association aiming exactly to expose the imperialism of the United States, of the economic domination, of the dollar, and of the manipulation of other international organizations, such as the IMF [International Monetary Fund], the World Bank, and the WTO [World Trade Organization],” the Brazilian landless leader adds, pointing out the goals established when the BRICS were first established.

The organizers of the “Peoples’ BRICS” are also concerned about how ultraconservative forces have been advancing in countries such as Brazil and India, which poses new common challenges, including to stop foreign interests from impacting election processes through the media and social media.

“Brazil and India have right-wing governments characterized as neo-fascist governments. Brazil’s government is completely subservient to the interests of the United States government. Meanwhile, India has contradictions with the US government, even though it is right-wing on a domestic level,” Stedile argues. “The South African government is neo-developmentalist, but under conditions in which the economic and social apartheid remains. Next to Brazil, these are the most socially unequal countries, with the widest wealth gap.”

Nalu Faria, from Brazil’s national board of the World March of Women, points out that one of the biggest challenges is to pursue international unity as the working class in the five countries have been struggling with setbacks. “The geopolitical dispute has changed in the world. And we, as the people, have to be closely associated with each other in order to put our demands and our sovereignty first,” she says.

“It’s our strength as the organized people that will, in this geopolitical dispute, guarantee or build this sense of change that is able to dismantle all this system of oppression, exploitation, discrimination. We want to forge the struggle from an anti-capitalist perspective, understanding that capitalism is a patriarchal, racist, LGBT-phobic, nature-depredating model,” Faria adds.

Make sure to stay tuned as Brasil de Fato will have a special coverage of the Peoples’ BRICS Summit on Nov. 11 and 12 in Brasília.

Check out the Peoples’ BRICS Summit schedule:

Nov. 11, 2019 — Monday

Discussion 1: Imperialism, International Geopolitics, Role of BRICS and the People

Discussion 2: Economic, Social and Environmental Crisis and Development Alternatives from the People

Nov. 12, 2019 — Tuesday

Discussion 3: International Political Crises and People’s Struggles

Discussion 4: Challenges of Internationalism, Solidarity and the Integration of Peoples

Edited by: Camila Maciel
Read in:
Spanish | Portuguese
loader
BdF Newsletter
I have read and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

More News

"Thanks, Pepe!"

In silence and holding hands on Montevideo streets, Uruguayans say goodbye to former president Mujica

NAKBA DAY

Israel’s Crimes in the West Bank

PUTIN AND IBRAHIM

‘Terrorism we are witnessing today comes from imperialism’, Burkina Faso’s President Ibrahim Traoré tells Putin

Shared future

If it depends on my government, our relationship will be indestructible, says Lula in China

Lula in China

As Lula visits Beijing, the Brazilian gov’t announces Chinese investment worth US$ 4,76 bi

Healthy food

MST’s Agrarian Reform Fair welcomed 300,000 people in Brazil

All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced, provided it is not altered and proper credit is given.

No Result
View All Result
  • Support
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture

All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced, provided it is not altered and proper credit is given.