Last week the Italian Water Movements Forum (Forum)
celebrated the anniversary of the victory
in the 2011 referenda against water privatisation by giving great emphasis
to news coming from Chile: the halt by the Chilean government to the Hydro Aysen hydropower project.
The project consists of five big dams to be built along two rivers in the Patagonia
region by an international consortium led by the Italian government owned company
Enel. This emphasis on foreign policy issues does not arise from the fact that
in contemporary Italy there has been nothing to celebrate after and beyond the
2011 referendum. On the contrary “la
lotta continua” and is still very active both at national and local level,
with the struggle for “water as human right and commons” becoming a
paradigmatic battle for democracy and against the commodification of human
life, inspiring also other social mobilisations around the commons. In this
guest post, Emanuele Fantini
discusses the struggles of the Italian water movement with a particular
emphasis on the role played by Catholic groups.