LONDON - Nelson Mandela, 86, needed no support when he
walked up to address thousands at Trafalgar Square in London Thursday. He
had the support of a cheering crowd, and of one of the most powerful
movements ever to gather against world poverty.
Mandela spoke at Trafalgar Square -- London's traditional venue for
people to make a political statement -- on the eve of the meeting Friday
and Saturday of finance ministers from the G7 countries (the United
States, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan). He was
carrying a message for that meeting, and succeeded before it began.

Former President of South Africa Nelson Mandela addresses crowds gathered in Trafalgar Square in London February 3, 2005. South African democracy icon Mandela challenged rich nations on Thursday to help end the misery of the world's poorest millions. REUTERS/Kieran Doherty
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Steps to counter poverty are already set to dominate the G7 meeting.
Traditionally G7 finance ministers are more given to talk of exchange
rates and macro multinational issues.
What Mandela says counts, and behind Mandela spoke about 220 British
civil society groups who invited him to the Trafalgar Square rally. The
British groups came together late last year in a campaign 'Make Poverty
History'.
''Many of us realized that 2005 is going to be an important year to
campaign against poverty,'' Lysbeth Holdoway from Oxfam who has been
working with the Make Poverty History campaign told IPS Thursday. This
year Britain has presidency of G8 (which includes also Russia) and will
have presidency of the European Union (EU) in the second half of the year.
''So we have come together this year in UK and around the world to put
pressure on governments to act,'' she said. The British movement is tied
internationally into the Global Campaign for Action Against Poverty.
Mandela was invited to Trafalgar Square ''because he is such an important
leader, and we know that if he came people would have to take action,''
Holdoway said.
The immediate result was that civil society, backed by all major trade
unions and the Church of England, has managed at least in substantial
measure to set the agenda for a G7 finance ministers' meeting.
''As you know, I recently formally announced my retirement from public
life and should really not be here,'' Mandela said. ''However, as long as
poverty, injustice and gross inequality persist in our world, none of us
can truly rest.''
Mandela linked the new civil society campaign with his own campaign
against apartheid. ''The Global Campaign for Action Against Poverty can
take its place as a public movement alongside the movement to abolish
slavery and the international solidarity against apartheid,'' he said.
Mandela told the wildly cheering crowd: ''I can never thank the people of
Britain enough for their support through those days of the struggle
against apartheid. . . . Through your will and passion, you assisted in
consigning that evil system forever to history. But in this new century,
millions of people in the world's poorest countries remain imprisoned,
enslaved, and in chains. They are trapped in the prison of poverty. It is
time to set them free.''
There was more than emotion to Mandela's appeal. ''The steps that are
needed from the developed nations are clear,'' he said. ''The first is
ensuring trade justice. The second is an end to the debt crisis for the
poorest countries. The third is to deliver much more aid and make sure it
is of the highest quality.''
Mandela said finally: ''I say to all those (G7) leaders: do not look the
other way; do not hesitate. Recognize that the world is hungry for
action, not words. Act with courage and vision.'' Mandela was due to take
his message directly to the ministers at a meeting with them Friday.
The task will not be easy, Mandela said. ''But not to do this would be a
crime against humanity, against which I ask all humanity now to rise up.''
The Mandela-civil society cocktail was made considerably stronger with
support from Britain's chancellor of the exchequer (finance minister)
Gordon Brown. Brown wants the ministers to extend a freeze on debt
repayment by the tsunami-hit countries, and to take decisions to write
off the debt of the poorest nations.
At the least Brown wants about 40 billion dollars owed by the poorest
countries, most of them in Africa, to be completely written off. He is
also looking for radical decisions on more fair trade rules and for a
doubling of developmental aid.
Members of the Make Poverty History campaign point out that 2.8 billion
people around the world live in poverty, and that 30,000 die from poverty-
related causes every day.
Britain last hosted the G8 meeting in Birmingham in 1998. An estimated
70,000 people came together then to form a human chain around the city
center to demand cancellation of unpayable debt.
This time the civil society groups who brought those people together are
a stronger force -- with stronger allies.
© Copyright 2005 IPS - Inter Press Service
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