http://www.nytimes.com/2001/01/25/business/25DAVO.html [pics/links]

January 25, 2001 

Davos Forum Is Braced for Round of Protests

By ELIZABETH OLSON

GENEVA, Jan. 24 — The World Economic Forum, the annual gathering of heads of 
state, senior political figures and business leaders, is opening on Thursday 
in Davos, the secluded ski resort in eastern Switzerland. And the threat of 
disruptions hangs in the Alpine air, as antiglobalization protesters promise to 
take their competing world vision to the streets.

In contrast to last year, when President Clinton spoke, no senior figures in 
the Bush administration are to attend the forum, though the advance roster 
includes the secretary of state of Florida, Katherine Harris, fresh from 
appearing before a federal commission reviewing her stewardship of the state's
election process, as well as Gov. George E. Pataki of New York and other 
governors. 

In all, about 3,200 guests are expected for the 315 speeches, round tables and 
seminars exploring this year's themes of sustaining world economic growth and 
bridging divisions between haves and have-nots.

Five minutes away at a clinic for asthma patients, a counterconference, Public 
Eye on Davos, is also set. It has been convened by a coalition of nongovernment 
organizations, including Friends of the Earth, and is to involve some of the 
participants attending the forum.

And a large number of antiglobalization protesters are expected to converge on 
Davos, too, despite its remote location. Local courts have rebuffed efforts to 
forbid protests entirely, so the police are bracing for an onslaught and 
planning to deploy 600 officers from all parts of Switzerland and 
Liechtenstein.

Anti-WTO Coordination, a group based in Bern that is planning a demonstration 
on Saturday, has rejected the idea of dialogue or cooperation with the forum, 
even after last year's clashes on the streets of Davos in which shops and 
vehicles were damaged. "The violence comes from the W.E.F. and its guests and 
their dangerous policies, such as sweatshops in Mexico and building dams," 
said Simone Brunner, a spokesman for the group. "We don't want to improve 
them; we want to stop them."

Organizers of the forum dismissed the threats. "It's like bees to honey," said 
the forum's managing director, Claude Smadja. "Every high-profile international 
event attracts activists and professional troublemakers of all kinds."

Nonetheless, the organizers are treading cautiously.

The forum underwent a shake-up last year, reorganizing to try to translate talk 
into action through initiatives like a council on corporate governance in 
Russia, start-up aid for a Balkan customs union and youth job programs in the 
Middle East, all of which will be discussed this year.

To its critics, these claims for an expanded role — made, they say, by 
nonelected, unaccountable people operating behind closed doors — are 
troublesome, particularly because the forum has been controlled almost 
completely for three decades by one man, Klaus Schwab, a Swiss business
professor. "The forum is trying to privatize decision-making processes to 
allow business interests to affect public priorities," said Jolanda Piniel, a 
spokeswoman for Public Eye on Davos.

Responding to such criticism, the forum has this year invited delegates from 
unions and an array of nongovernment organizations. But Davos enthusiasts say 
the criticisms miss the point of the forum. Dr. Peter Piot, executive director 
of the United Nations program on AIDS, said the forum had helped his program 
"identify and begin working with potential partners from the corporate sector" 
at a time when corporations were slow to grapple with H.I.V.

The forum will also seek to expand its audience this year by offering live 
Internet broadcasts of selected sessions and news conferences, along with 
edited session transcripts and other materials on its Web site, 
www.weforum.org. The counterconference's site is www.davos2001.ch.

Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company

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