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I n L a t i n A m e r i c
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Not Ripe for Green Parties |
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B
y D i e g o
C e v a l l o s
Joining forces with the conservative candidate in Mexico's presidential
race was the most fortunate decision in the history of the country's only
environmental party.
MEXICO CITY - As an ally of victorious presidential candidate Vicente
Fox, the only ''green'' political party in Mexico won a slice of power,
but most of Latin America's environmentally based parties are far from
matching such a feat.
Green parties in the region operate in the political periphery and their
record reads like a list of failures, winning them criticisms from non-governmental
environmental groups.
Far from the media spotlight, they meet periodically under the aegis of
the Federation of Green Parties of the Americas, created in 1997, and
claim they are the only organisations prepared and ready to solve the
region's environmental problems.
The
Federation's next conference is slated for September in Peru and the organisers
say parties from 15 countries will attend. But the evidence shows that
many of them do not yet hold official party status.
Research
by Tierramérica revealed that Mexico and Brazil are two of the few Latin
American countries where green parties have parliamentary representation
or hold office in municipal or regional governments.
Mexico has the 'Partido Verde Ecologista' (Ecologist Green Party), which
allied itself with the conservative National Action Party (PAN), supporting
Vicente Fox in the July 2 presidential elections.
The 'Partido Verde do Brasil' (Green Party of Brazil), meanwhile, despite
its marginal presence, has the support of some famous personalities, such
as singer Gilberto Gil. Like Mexico's Verde Ecologista, it was founded
in 1986.
The Chilean Green Party, created in 1988, nearly disappeared after failing
to win the minimum votes necessary to continue in national elections,
though it later regrouped and joined the Humanist Party.
In Peru, the 'Alternativa Verde' (Green Alternative), founded in 1997,
has not yet obtained electoral status because its members have not been
able to collect the required number of signatures from the electorate.
Uruguay has two environmentally-leaning parties, the 'Etoecologista' (Etho-Ecologist)
party, created in 1988, and the 'Partido del Sol' (Party of the Sun),
in 1994. Neither has won formal political representation in elections.
Many activists and groups that carry the ecologist flag in Latin America
have opted to join forces with other established parties or to keep a
low profile, like Colombia's 'Acción Ecológica' (Ecological Action).
In Argentina, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Paraguay, green political
parties simply do not exist.
'''The environmental political organisations seek to constitute a humanity
that is able to coexist in harmony with nature, based on the principles
of love, justice and liberty,'' according to the Federation of Green Parties
of the Americas.
Their objective is ''the creation of an ecological society that integrates
the various economic, social, political and cultural spheres,'' say the
Federation's documents.
Unlike their European counterparts, green parties in Latin America have
not been able to get very far off the ground.
Some,
like Mexico's Verde Ecologista, founder of the Federation of Green Parties
of the Americas, lack environmental knowledge or are based on individual
interests, according to the international environmental organisation Greenpeace.
The Mexican party, thanks to the decision to join Fox's Alliance for Change,
now holds 15 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (out of 500), and five in
the Senate (of 128), compared to just seven and four, respectively, in
the outgoing legislature.
Jorge González, party president, is confident that Verde Ecologista support
for Fox will open a ''natural'' space in the government to take office
in December, which for the first time in 71 years will not be in the hands
of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
González
hopes to be named environmental secretary (minister), but Greenpeace cautions
that his designation to the post would be a mistake. The international
organisation says González and his party's members lack expertise in environmental
issues.
The leader of the Mexican green party, who some party members accuse of
opportunism and nepotism, did poorly in answering a questionnaire on environmental
issues published in July by 'Milenio' newspaper.
The green party was founded on the central pillar of ''love'' and has
consistently been out of the loop in the debates non-governmental environmental
groups fight to put on the public agenda.
But now it has won a space in power and its leaders promise that from
the parliamentary political trenches they will advocate for a better environment,
based on the strength of love, ''the driving force of Mexico's Green Ecologist
Party.''
In South America, meanwhile, the Green Party of Brazil has just one representative
in the national Congress of 513 deputies and 81 senators. In 1998, the
party ran a candidate for the presidency, winning 0.31 percent of the
valid votes cast.
The
Green Party ''is still a project, a party in the making,'' says Domingos
Fernandes, one of the group's leaders.
But political scientist Jairo Nicolau states that the Green Party of Brazil
is ''nearly non-existent'' and ''very fragile,'' winning party status
only "'thanks to the generosity of the country's electoral laws.''
Wielding
some influence in cities like Rio de Janeiro, where its activists hold
office in the municipal environmental secretariat, but lacking much political
weight, Brazil's Green Party has not been able to penetrate the higher
spheres of governmental political activity.
In other countries the situation of environmental parties is even dimmer.
The Green Party in Chile was founded more than a decade ago as ''the first
eco-pacifist party in Latin America''.
One
year later, it lost its place on the electoral roles because neither of
its two candidates was elected and the party received less than five percent
of the votes cast.
To
avoid disappearing altogether, it joined the Chilean Humanist Party, which
has also failed to win parliamentary representation.
In Peru, the Green Alternative attempted last year to win admission into
the National Registry of Political Organisations, but was only able to
gather 125,000 of the 500,000 signatures the country's laws require for
party status.
Because they were ready to enter the political sphere in whatever way
possible, the Peruvian greens allied themselves with the Solidarity Movement,
which has formal party status. Its presidential candidate, Luis Castañeda,
agreed to add the environmentalists' principles and objectives to his
electoral platform.
'''It was a frustrating experience. We ended with the conviction that
the traditional politicians, whether they are leaders of parties or of
movements, not only lack environmental awareness, but they are willing
to betray it if necessary,'' said Green Alternative president, Alex González.
Green Alternative contributed 76,000 dollars and several vehicles to the
Solidarity Movement's campaign for the presidential elections last April,
González said.
In
exchange, ''they promised to give us spots on the ballots for parliamentary
candidates, but when we complained because they did not include ecological
issues in the campaign, they said they had no obligation to us,'' the
green party leader stated.
Green
Alternative and other environmental parties will discuss their future
during the September conference in Peru. The groups planning to attend
come from Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico,
Nicaragua and the host country, as well as from other regions, including
Canada, France, Morocco, Nigeria and the United States.
Copyright © 2000 Tierramérica.
Todos los Derechos Reservados
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Jorge González Torres,
president of Mexico's Ecologist Green Party,
at a recent rally
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