Honolulu, Hawai'i – As President Obama sought to make headway on the first significant Free Trade Agreement since NAFTA, a week of demonstrations protested the move.
The Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit kicked off on Tuesday, November 8 and runs through Sunday, November 13, 2011.
Numerous actions have been protesting the APEC summit. And not only here in Honolulu.
The summit brings together 21 Pacific Rim economies. Currently, the United States is seeking to pave the way for a Free Trade Agreement of the Asia Pacific region.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), an agreement to liberalize the economies of the Asia-Pacific region, is its first incarnation. Signed in 2005 and implemented in 2006, the TPP includes Brunei, Chile, New Zealand and Singapore.
Australia, Malaysia, Peru, United States and Vietnam are negotiating to join.
On Friday, Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda announced interest in joining.
Memories of the 1997 Economic Meltdown in Southeast Asia
In response to Prime Minister Noda's decision, 6000 protestors demonstrated against the TPP in Tokyo.
Joining the TPP would deeply impact farmers, particularly rice and wheat farmers, since a free trade agreement would erase the tariffs on imported grains, allowing Australia, the United States and Vietnam to import cheaper grain.
The 1997 Asian financial crisis is seared into the minds of farmers of the region. Countries most effected were Indonesia, South Korea and Thailand, as well as Japan, Laos, Malaysia, and the Philippines.
As the economies of these countries melted down, the IMF offered loans. These funds were typically tied to neoliberal realignments of economy. Abolishing tariffs on imports forms one part of such an economic integration.
Under this system, local farmers would not be able to compete with cheap imported grain.
Thus, the current free trade agreements under discussion are already meeting with strong resistance throughout the region.
De-Occupy Honolulu
In solidarity with Occupy Wall Street and "with the people of occupied lands everywhere," Occupy Honolulu movement has been underway since Saturday, October 8.
http://www.deoccupyhonolulu.org/
Reflecting local politics, the first general assembly kicked off with a heated discussion about the very name of the movement: occupy? (in solidarity with Wall Street); de-occupy? (to reflect local positions on sovereignty rights); or re-occupy?
Occupy Honolu established an encampment in Thomas Park to settle in overnight last Saturday, November 5, 2011. Eight persons were arrested. Since then, Occupy Honolulu
has re-occupied the park.
Honolulu Police Department threatens to evict them, arguing that the park closes at 10:00 pm and the protestors do not have the right to stay beyond that time.
Insisting on their first amendment rights, the encampment continues to occupy Thomas Park in downtown Honolulu.
Megan Brooker with De-Occupy Honolulu said "20 to 25 people stayed on last night. We are joining the march this afternoon and then heading back to the encampment, which is in Thomas Park across from the Honolulu Academy of Arts, where an APEC related event will take place tonight. So we plan to protest that and camp out."
APEC attendees have been invited to a cultural reception at the Honolulu Academy of Arts to take place this evening from 7:00-10:00 pm.
Iolani Palace
On Monday, twenty-two persons calling itself "Aupuni O Ko Hawaii Pae Aina" (Hawaiian Kingdom Government) were arrested at a sovereignty rights protest at Iolani Palace.
On Sunday evening, the Native Hawaiian group had locked the gates surrounding the palace grounds and occupied the area.
Iolani Palace is the only royal palace used as an official residence by a reigning monarch. It served in this capacity until the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai'i in 1893.
On Monday, after the group was arrested, Governor Abercrombie announced that the Iolani Palace would be closed during the APEC summit, as a security precaution, and would re-open on Tuesday November 15.
The decision was made without consulting the Iolani Palace managers. Many are not pleased.
Kippen de Alba Chu, Executive Director of Iolani Palace, said the palace "had to issue apologies to the delegations of China, Indonesia, Mexico, Peru, Taiwan and the U.S. Department of Commerce, all of whom had planned special visits to the historical site for high-ranking officials."
As Lorenz Gonschor, Ph.D. student in Department of Political Science at UHM, focusing on Hawaiian history, put it, "precisely the closure of the palace would have provided the ideal security conditions for a tour by high-ranking delegates. The palace is one of the most
important sites documenting the history and annexation of Hawai'i."
Many of the countries, who are members of APEC, previously had diplomatic relations with the independent nation and royalty of Hawai'i, and underscored this
history explicitly in their request to be able to visit the Iolani Palace.
Whose Security?
Tuesday, the summit's kickoff was greeted by a demonstration of around 100 persons that proceeded from the Old Stadium Park to the Convention Center.
The demonstration protested the killing of 23 year-old local resident Kollin Eldert by State Department special agent Christopher Deedy, who was part of a special task force brought into Honolulu by to provide security.
The fatal shooting took place Sunday, November 6, the weekend before the APEC summit kicked off.
Deedy has been put on administrative leave and is scheduled to face trial after APEC concludes, on November 17.
Human Rights
In conjunction with a march this afternoon, members of the Vietnamese-American community in Hawai'i have gathered to raise public awareness of human rights
violations in Vietnam.
In particular, they seek the repeal or revision of article 88, which prohibits "writings against the Socialist state." The protestors argue that it is "frequently used to arrest and detain peaceful bloggers and democracy activists."
They also demand revision of article 79, which prohibits "carrying out activities aimed at overthrowing the people's administration." Being charged with violating
article 79 is punishable with death.
Beach Heat
This morning, demonstrators protested APEC with a jog along the beach, in bikinis and carrying protest banners. (http://www.flickr.com/photos/civilbeat/6337978311/in/set-72157627988580397/)
Street Heat
Saturday afternoon, demonstrators marched against APEC. Hundreds gathered and walked about 1.5 miles to the Hale Koa Hotel, where heads of state were due to arrive for dinner.
The protesters yelled "we are the 99%," and "No Aloha APEC," as secret service men and police officers teemed and videotaped the action.
Signs read "Robin Hood was right" and "I need a bail out."
The action proceeded peacefully. After about 20 to 30 minutes of cheering, dancing and chanting at the chain link fence that barricaded the Hale Koa Hotel, the demonstrators continued to Old Stadium Park and to the Occupy Honolulu encampment at Thomas Park.
Tina Gerhardt is an independent journalist and academic, who reports on international summits and climate negotiations, climate policy, and related direct actions. Her work has appeared in Alternet, Earth Island Journal, Environment News Service, Grist, The Huffington Post, In These Times, The Progressive, The Nation, and Salon.com. She has appeared on the Laura Flanders' Show on GRIT tv; Pacifica Stations KPFA's Against the Grain, KPFK's Sojourner Truth and WBAI's Wake Up Call; and the National Radio Project.
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