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Remarks delivered at the RESULTS Educational Fund annual conference
Stephen
Lewis
June
12, 2007
http://www.stephenlewisfoundation.org/news_item.cfm?news=1900
Let me take
a hard look at the issues arising from the G8. Everyone is aware
of the solemn promises that were made at Gleneagles in July of 2005.
They followed in the wake of Tony Blair's Commission on Africa,
with all of the attendant triumphalism, and it seemed to promise
a new dawn for the African continent. In particular, they promised
a breakthrough in addressing the pandemic of HIV/AIDS.
The two centerpieces
of Gleneagles are etched in everyone's memory:
1. foreign aid
(Official Development Assistance) to Africa would double from $25
billion a year to $50 billion a year by 2010.
2. Equally,
by 2010, the G8 pledged to do everything in its power to achieve
universal access to treatment for those who need it.
Bob Geldoff
in one of his more memorable spasms of hyperbole gave the G8 "ten
out of ten". Some of us never believed Gleneagles for a moment.
The fundamental dishonesty of the pledges came to light just two
months later, in September of 2005, when the G8 countries at a pledging
conference for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
fell billions short of their commitments. You have to wonder how
western leaders can be so stunningly cavalier about the lives of
millions of people, the great majority of them in Africa.
Fast forward,
then, to 2007 and the G8 Summit just completed in Germany. In the
weeks prior to the Summit itself, quite predictably a number of
groups and institutions took stock of the extent to which the promises
at Gleneagles had been honoured. Every single assessment found a
staggering shortfall.
The first was
the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the OECD, one of the
most authoritative vehicle for expert western analysis. It found
that, incredibly enough, Official Development Assistance had actually
declined internationally between 2005 and 2006, and for Africa the
verdict was virtual stagnation. This finding by the DAC, shocking
though it seemed, was given the stamp of accuracy by the very group
that was established by Tony Blair at the time of Gleneagles to
monitor progress. It's chaired by Kofi Annan, and has a membership
comprising a number of celebrated figures from Michel Camdessus
to Graça Machel to Bob Geldoff himself. They did an analysis
of the aftermath of Gleneagles and came to the same conclusion as
that of the OECD. Geldoff on this occasion used the word "grotesque
'to describe the behaviour of the G8.
Then, in addition
to those two definitive commentaries, Bono weighed in with his advocacy
group, 'DATA' whose findings were every bit as damning as the others.
It seemed implausible to most of the world (and I deliberately exclude
myself because I've put in writing my complete skepticism of the
G8 process)- that after the absolute commitments of Gleneagles,
everything could go so lamentably off course. But one learns, painfully,
that the betrayal of Africa is almost a matter of principle for
the G8.
With that in
mind, no one should have imagined significant progress in Germany
this year. The good intentions that flowed from President Merkel
were no different in tone and content from those which preceded
Gleneagles. People were willing to give her the benefit of the doubt,
in part because of George Bush's announcement, just ten days before
the Summit, that he would recommend a doubling of his original PEPFAR
pledge, from $15Billion to $30 Billion over the five years from
2009-2013. The pledge was greeted with the uncritical applause of
a compliant media, completely failing to grasp, as the Global AIDS
Alliance immediately pointed out, that PEPFAR had already reached
over $5.4 Billion for 2007, and would probably exceed that sum in
2008.
Since that's
the case, it means that the new $30 Billion dollar total, divided
by five years, will amount to a real increase of only several hundred
million each year (if that). Worse, there was no recognition of
the fact that the minimum amount that the President should have
announced - measured against the United States share of world GDP
- was $50 Billion over the five year period, and even then, a shortfall
would almost certainly result.
However, the
heady use of the deceptive PEPFAR figures (and this is to say nothing
of the continued preposterous 'abstinence' clauses, and the continued
underfunding of the Global Fund), seemed to proffer hope that the
G8 would somehow restore its credibility. Well, we really have our
work cut out for us. What actually happened in Germany is deeply,
deeply troubling, and it's worthy of every piece of scorn that can
be heaped upon it. The G8 communiqué is deficient in so many
ways: fundamentally, it's intellectually dishonest and riddled with
arithmetic sleight-of-hand. It's hard to know where to begin, but
let me at least take a crack in five areas.
1. The text
says: "A vigorous impetus seems necessary to ensure that Africa
will meet the Millennium Development Goals". I shudder at this
piece of shameless dishonesty. They have no intention of providing
such an impetus: without it, the G8 well knows that all the statistical
evidence shows that Africa cannot reach the MDGs . that poverty
and disease and conflict are too deeply ingrained to be reversed
by 2015. Why go through this abysmal charade of words without meaning?
2. The text
says "Trade is a key engine of growth for Africa." And
except for some fatuous gobbledegook about how the G8 will help
African exports, the trade section is empty of meaning. Contrast
Germany with what was said at Gleneagles: "An ambitious and
balanced conclusion to the DOHA round is the best way to make trade
work for Africa. The Hong Kong Ministerial in December (2005) will
be a critical step towards a successful outcome of DOHA in 2006.
The World Bank estimates that implementing the negotiations could
lift 140 million people out of poverty."
DOHA has totally
disappeared from this year's G8 communiqué. But the rub is
that it should never have been in Gleneagles. The G8 knew in July
of 2005 that DOHA was dead. But they were prepared to toy with the
rhetoric of 140 million people to fatten their text. Where Africa
is concerned, the G8 is a consortium of fabrication.
3. After describing the carnage of the pandemic which, they point
out, apart from the suffering is "causing massive impacts on
the economic and social development of the countries concerned",
they make their infamous commitment of $60 billion "over the
coming years".
Now what in
heaven's name is that supposed to mean? In the inelegant language
of diplomacy gone wrong, those are called "weasel words".
They're meant to convey everything and nothing. No group of counties,
let alone countries with the manipulative sophistication of the
G8, would use that language unless they were looking for a way out.
Some commentators are working on the assumption that the language
really means the same five years encompassed by the new PEPFAR initiative.
I have a message for the trusting naiveté which that suggestion
reveals: if they meant five years, they would have said five years.
The promise
of Gleneagles was an extra $25 Billion a year by 2010, with increases
every year thereafter, not $60 Billion "over the coming years."
Worse, most of the $60 Billion isn't even new money: it encompasses
the $30 Billion just announced by George Bush, plus additional Billions
already announced by other G8 countries. To be sure, the original
pledge for 2010 is again repeated, but we already know the worth
of those words. According to UNAIDS, we'll need $18 Billion this
year, $22 Billion next year, $30 billion by 2010, with the dollar
figures rising after that. The shortfall is astronomic. What in
the world will happen to the millions of Africans, struggling with
AIDS, for whom the resources are the difference between life and
death, let alone the millions upon millions of orphans for whom
any kind of life is compromised?
Allow me a juxtaposition.
According to all estimates, including those of the Congressional
Research Service of the United States, enhanced by data from the
other troop contributors, the G8 countries are spending at least
$120 Billion each year to fight the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The same countries can't even guarantee a paltry total of $60 Billion
over an unknown number of years to fight a pandemic that has taken
25 million lives and has 40 million people in its grip. I keep asking,
what has happened to the world's moral anchor?
4. All of this
is crucial, of course, because what hangs in the balance is universal
access to treatment by the year 2010. What is ominously instructive
in this instance is to compare the language of 2005 with that of
2007.
In Gleneagles,
the text read: "Implement a package for HIV prevention, treatment
and care, with the aim of as close as possible to universal access
to treatment for all those who need it by 2010." In Germany,
the text reads "The G8 countries will scale up their efforts
to contribute towards the goal of universal access by 2010".
Two years ago, we were getting 'as close as possible' to universal
access; now we're 'scaling up our efforts to contribute' to universal
access. Language is everything. The current language is frighteningly
ambiguous. And it's not helped by throwing the figure of five million
people into the text, when it has become clear, according to UNAIDS,
that the numbers requiring treatment by 2010 will be significantly
higher.
It is simply
unconscionable for the G8 to be so recklessly cavalier about human
life. They have it within their grasp to guarantee full universal
access by 2010; if they wanted it to happen, it would happen. They
similarly have it within their capacity to guarantee every penny
required by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
but instead they merely acknowledge the financial targets which
the Global Fund has recently set.
In a highly
provocative fashion, the G8 is challenging all of us: we, collectively,
have to find a way to force the G8's hand, to pummel them into sanity.
In the annals of social change, it's rare that advocacy has confronted
such an adversary.
5. There remains,
however, one other aspect of the communiqué that requires
further elaboration. The text offers obligatory obeisance to the
vulnerability of women. And the language is pointed and strong.
But nowhere - and this is frankly astonishing - nowhere is there
mention of the prospective international agency for women, actively
under discussion at the United Nations, as a vehicle to make a significant
dent on the pandemic. Why? In the final analysis, probably because
it would cost money. The deliberate omission of the most significant
initiative on behalf of women to emerge in the multilateral system
. an initiative proposed with representation from five of the G8
countries, shows the pro forma quality of the paragraphs addressing
the desperate dilemma of women and girls.
And that reality
lies at the heart of what we're dealing with. For some inexplicable
reason, the G8 is not prepared to provide the resources to subdue
the pandemic in Africa. That leaves all of us as advocates with
a difficult question of strategy.
There's no
use denying that we failed in Germany. At Gleneagles we were left
with the illusion of progress; post-Germany no illusions remain.
All of the concerted eleventh hour lobbying, all of the celebrity
pressure at the highest levels failed to move the G8 to decent and
tenable positions. That's the simple reality of it.
So what do we
do? Well, let me first suggest what we don't do. We don't issue
the kind of congratulatory statement that came from UNAIDS in the
immediate wake of the G8 in Germany: "UNAIDS . welcomes G8
leaders affirmation of their commitment to work towards the goal
of universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support
by 2010, and UNAIDS also applauds - [applauds!] - the G8 announcement
of a projected $US 60 billion in investment .". It just doesn't
ring true, and everyone knows it. It smacks of currying favour,
of appeasement, of polishing disappointment with the anxious gloss
of the supplicant.
For several
years now, I've felt that the UN always overdoes this sort of thing:
strewing rose petals in the path of the donors to keep them happy.
It doesn't work. It has to stop. It's based on the mistaken assumption
that if you bend over backwards, it will improve your posture. It's
time to stop posturing. For all of us, in this grand coalition of
civil society, it's necessary, I think, to take a much tougher road.
And to choose our targets carefully. There is hope in the offing.
It seems to
me that there are five countries we should target.
First, Japan,
because they host the next G8 and because they show the possibility
of approximating their financial promises. Second, Germany, because
President Merkel provided twitches of enlightenment, albeit the
dollars were deficient. Third, France, because the appointment of
Bernard Kouchner as Foreign Minister augers well for humanitarian
imperatives. Fourth, the United Kingdom, because Gordon Brown has
shown more conscience and commitment on the issues of poverty, disease
and Africa than the rest of the G8 leadership put together. And
finally, the United States, because a decisive election is coming,
and whether or not there is a change in Administration, there must
be a dramatic new impetus in public policy.
That's why the
work of RESULTS is indispensable. You understand the meaning of
the grass-roots and grass-roots communication. You recognize, almost
intuitively, that advocacy is a full-time job . it never ends .
and what is needed is a powerful social movement to provide awareness
on the one hand, and political pressure on the other. Nor should
that pressure be directed solely at the ultimate leader, or the
putative Presidential candidates, of whichever party. We've tried
that, and we can continue to gnaw at that particular political bone.
But we must also apply pressure at every political level in every
country, building a formidable coalition in the process.
You have people
of tremendous experience to draw upon. You have all of the Millennium
Development Goals to keep you on fire. You have millions of lives,
hanging by a thread, begging for your intervention. The problem
with the G8, it seems to me, is its congenital divorce from reality.
We're part of an era where human life is devalued. Just look at
Iraq, just look at Darfur, just look at HIV/AIDS. The international
community has lost its bearings. When that happens, the human dimension
slides into obscurity. The grandmother who buries her children,
the orphan who weeps through the night, the women scarred forever
by sexual violence, they recede into the mists of statistical calculation.
We dehumanize them, their faces blurred, their identities lost.
It's a terrible
thing we do to the uprooted and disinherited of the earth. Together,
we must bring it to an end.
*Mr. Lewis is
the former United Nations Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa.
AIDS-Free World is a new international AIDS advocacy organization.
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