People from all over Canada and around the world came together at Ryerson University in Toronto to hold their own summit this past weekend.

The People’s Summit, an open membership forum set up as a grassroots alternative to the G8 and G20 meetings, aimed to be a place to “debate, discuss and learn about the issues that really matter to people the world over,” according to the Summit’s Program.

The opening night of People’s Summit saw hundreds of people attend a launch event entitled: “Stories and Solution from the North and South” held at the Carlu theatre in downtown Toronto.

Speakers included Lorena Aguilar, Dorthy Ngoma, Ambet Yuson, Jessica Yee, Maude Barlow, Robert Lovelace, and Victor Baez, placing everything from the Cochabamba climate summit, to critiques of the Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement, to condemnations of the arrival of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, on the table.

Over 100 groups presented at over 100 workshops between June 18th and June 20th on topics ranging from the Economics of the Canada-EU Free Trade Agreement and Women in Politics to Building Coalitions and Activism in the Attawapiskat Nation.

Marya Folinsbee, a coordinator for the Summit, says that a lot of the impacts from the People’s Summit are intangible. “A lot of the participants tell me that the relationships they build...are helpful. There’s lot of ideas being advanced [at the summit] like the financial transaction tax,” she said. The tax, also known as the Robin Hood tax, has been rejected by the G20 with strong opposition coming from the US and Canada.

The cost of the People's Summit was equivalent to six seconds of the funding allocated for the G8/G20 Summits.

What they said

Maude Barlow, National Chairperson of the Council of Canadians

Barlow discussed the need for a Tobin Tax on Financial Speculation, the need to tackle climate change, new trade agreements being pushed with the European Union and past victories social movements have had at summits.  She talked about her experiences at the Cochabamba summit in Bolivia with 35,000 people attending and how the right to water was introduced recently at G77 meetings.  Barlow also spoke of new and recent amendments made to the Fisheries Act which will allow mining companies to use healthy lakes as tailing ponds.
Best Quote"The G8 and G20 should be abolished and replaced by a democratic process."

Robert Lovelace, Adjunct Professor at Queen's University in the Department of Global Development Studies

Lovelace spent 3 1/2 months in jail for stopping uranium exploration and mining on the  Ardoch Algonquin homeland.  He said that direct action is necessary to defend against what he believes is the root cause of environmental exploitation: Colonialism.  He spoke out against the Boreal Forest Agreement emphasized that direct action was 'key' to the success the Ardoch Algonquin had against exploitation.
Best Quote: "When I was in Cochabamba there was a little sign that I saw that gave me hope.  That sign said "Another World is Possible."

Victor Baez, General Secretary of the Trade Union Confederation of the Americas

Baez spoke of similarities between Canadian and American foreign policy.  He highlighted how the President of Columbia, Alvaro Uribe, under fire for human rights violations in his country including the public murder of 45 trade union activists last year, will be attending the G8 to sign a free trade pact with Canada.  He also spoke how austerity measures are being planned at the G20 Summits with the IMF giving loans and bailout packages with the express intent of attacking the Social Welfare states in Europe.
Best Quote: "Harper very much misses his friend, Bush."

Article courtesy of Geordie Gwalgen Dent, Toronto Media Co-op