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WASHINGTON (AFP) - Several hundred anti-globalization protesters took to the streets of Washington to confront the annual spring meeting of the World Bank (news - web sites) and International Monetary Fund (news - web sites) (IMF). "Open your meetings to the public and to the media," demanded speaker Njoki Njehu of Kenya. "You continue to use debt as a tool of domination and control." While the IMF and World Bank were discussing calls to write off post-war Iraq (news - web sites)'s debt of 127 billion dollars, other countries are staggering under debts "passed on by dictators," Njehu said, pointing to Brazil, Argentina and Chile. The organizers charge that deregulation, international lending practices and the IMF's structural adjustment programs increase poverty by trapping poor countries in a perpetual cycle of debt dependence and backwardness. A seven-year initiative to cut the debt of the poorest countries has so far agreed on relief amounting to 40 billion dollars in 26 countries, the World Bank said Sunday. The anti-globalization movement joined forces with peace activists for Sunday's protest, which highlighted US military intervention as well as economic exploitation in Latin America. "It's all the same, it's opposition to both military and economic imperialism," said protester Sue Daniels. The Latin America Solidarity Coalition (LASC) charted a route past the offices of Taco Bell and Occidental Petroleum, accused with other trans- national corporations of promoting inhumane labor conditions and collaborating with paramilitary forces seeking to bust unions. Romeo Ramirez, a tomato picker in Florida, was among many protesters calling for a boycott of the fast-food chain Taco Bell, which buys tomatoes from agribusinesses that pay pickers by the bucket at a rate that has not changed in 20 years. "Consumers are beginning to realize why Taco Bell's food is so cheap," Ramirez said. "Now students don't want fast food, they want fair food." The marchers' "tour of shame" also took them past the US Trade Representative and the Inter-American Development Bank, both accused of perpetuating policies that hurt poor countries. A central plank of the LASC's anti-globalization action is opposition to the Free Trade Area of the Americas, which activists say reinforces unfair trade advantages enjoyed by the United States. LASC is also fighting for the closure of a school run by the US military in Fort Benning, Georgia, which is accused of teaching repressive techniques, including torture, to military students attending from Latin American countries. Congress voted to shut down the School of the Americas in 2000, but it immediately reopened at the same site under a new name, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHISC). Several of the marchers had served jail terms or were facing prison for taking part in protests held every November at WHISC, which activist Charity Ryerson described as "the enforcing wing of the IMF and the World Bank." She charged that WHISC graduates carried out brutal "social cleansing" operations to quell grassroots activism in Colombia. "We need monitoring of all military training," Ryerson said. "The first terrorism that we must fight is the terrorism we promote in our own country." John Smihula, who directed and produced a just-released documentary about the WHISC entitled "Hidden in Plain Sight," told AFP: "In every Latin American nation to some extent in the last 50 years, we've been involved in all sorts of atrocities, human rights abuses, disappearances. "The United States has been deeply involved in the affairs of Latin America for a very long time, and most US citizens know very little about this," he said.