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,
Nothing
short of a paradigm shift will radically alter the plight of the poor
Thomas
Deve
Extracted from
Pambazuka News 214
July 06, 2005
http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=28862
Expect sugar-coated
statements and hot air from G8 leaders, says Thomas Deve, who discusses
various mobilizations to injustices including the World Social Forum and
Global Call to Action Against Poverty. The greatest asset for mobilization
in Africa, he says, is the testimony poor communities, unemployed youths,
women, children and the marginalized can make on how market based dogmas
and principles have unleashed untold suffering in Africa.
Once upon a time, most of us used to fancy witty statements from "Red"
literature like the Communist Manifesto and highlighted the primacy of
social action that was necessary to confront Bourgeois institutions. We
all accepted that the executive of a modern state was nothing but a committee
for managing the day-to-day affairs of the bourgeoisie, hence the need
to study contradictions in society triggered by industrialisation and
control over key means of production and people's welfare. The state was
correctly portrayed as an arena of struggle, hence the desire to work
towards a dictatorship of the proletariat and trigger the withering of
the state as a precondition for an egalitarian society. The consensus
was on the need for ideological clarity, good arguments and the passion
to ignite citizens of the world to belong to movements and organisations
seeking to build alternatives to capitalist societies.
With all roads leading to Gleneagles this coming week, a great opportunity
is presented which demands that we audit our analytical arsenals and state
of mobilisation, and review levels of solidarity which we have shown in
struggling against bodies of thought and action giving legitimacy to the
G8. Many questions do arise. For example, are there any future scenarios
we can project on how the G8 has positioned itself, taking into account
that vocal constituencies are telling it that: "Efforts to tackle poverty
and sustainable development, as pledged in the UN Millennium Declaration,
are grossly inadequate. Governments too often fail to address the needs
of their citizens. Aid from rich countries is inadequate in both quality
and quantity, and promises of debt cancellation have not materialized.
Rich countries have yet to act on their repeated pledges to tackle unfair
trade practices."
On our part, will those who have spent their time organising against the
G8 take to the streets, issue petitions, position papers and other related
actions we have witnessed in the past? If we borrow insights from the
struggles of the past and positive passions that used to be triggered
by the "Red" experience and questions in my opening remarks, it is clear
that the G8 experts and strategists are not sleeping. They recognise that
millions of people the world over are not accessing basic necessities
in a sustainable manner that will allow the rich to sleep quietly. There
is consensus that the G8 is a cabal of the world's richest countries that
has overseen the world economy during the debt crisis; introduced aid
conditions that forced recipient countries to liberalise, and developed
unfair trade rules.
In order for the harmful effects to be redressed, these countries have
to be part of the solution, and the time to act is now. Gaps of inequality
are increasing and restlessness has increased in both camps of the poor
and the rich. Those organising against the G8 have grown in numbers and
have visible movements on the ground whose demands are now much more focussed
and coordinated globally to such an extent that the rich and powerful
have to be seen responding to their demands.
It is this realisation and growing awareness on the dynamics of modern
poverty which has led the G8 to move a bit on calls for debt cancellation,
more and better aid, and enhance dialogue on global partnerships targeting
unfair trade rules. Damning statistics are being churned out everyday
on how bad the situation is and all these cannot be ignored when we confront
Gleneagles. It has been argued repeatedly that one third of deaths - some
18 million people a year or 50,000 per day - are due to poverty-related
causes. This amounts to at least 270 million people since 1990, the majority
being women and children, and roughly equal to the population of the United
States. No less than 535 million still subsist on levels way below the
poverty line - earning less than US$1 a day. Almost 185 million people
are unemployed and half of these are young people between 15-24 years
of age. For every US$1 in grant aid to developing countries, more than
US$13 are taken out in debt repayments. For every three seconds that pass
in 2005 without action, one more child will die from poverty. That is
at least 30 000 children and at most, 50 000 people who will lose their
lives from preventable causes. And finally, 245 million children between
the ages of 5 and 17 continue to be forced to work (one in six of the
world's children).
Poverty is not a given. 50 000 people dying a day from poverty is not
acceptable and these telling statistics have inspired many people to continue
fighting until figures of this nature are a relic of history rather than
the reality of today. It is the situation of real people behind these
statistics that has led many of us to use the white-arm band for example,
and express our readiness to rededicate energy towards heightened awareness
on the need to challenge systems and values of domination that cause this
state of affairs. We still put on red T-shirts and feel that value has
been added to critical consciousness building as was the case in the mid
70s when we went to a 200 litre fuel containers and tore out the black
rubber lining on the lids meant to keep it air tight, proceeded to use
them as wrist bangles for proudly proclaiming "Black power" as enounced
in the then dominant Black consciousness philosophies of the time.
Back to the G8, our account would be incomplete if we do not acknowledge
the role of the World Social Forum (WSF) in bringing together movements
that have clearly put forward anti-capitalist struggles at the heart of
how they challenge the G8. WSF processes have given some ideological coherence
and clarity to many movements as they are proclaiming that "Our world
is not for sale" and "Another world is possible." The above calls and
pronouncements motivated one of the strongest voices challenging the hegemony
of the G8. It is not a far fry from the truth, that since January 2005,
most of these voices have coalesced around the "The Global Call to Action
against Poverty"(GCAP), which has been described as a fast-growing coalition
of millions of people and organisations united in the belief that 2005
offers an unprecedented opportunity for change.
It has simple demands:
- Increased aid from
the G7 countries to 0.7% of GNI.
- More and better
aid.
- The removal of
trade barriers and unfair trade practices that inhibit the development
of the poorer economies.
- There should be
more trade justice.
- Debt cancellation
for countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America
- Maximisation of
efforts to eliminate poverty and achieve the Millennium Development
Goals and more in a way which is sustainable, and implemented in a way
that is democratic, transparent and accountable to citizens.
GCAP, whose organisations
and movements are active in over 70 countries and boasts at least 150
million supporters, is organised around charities, trade unions and women's
groups, to non-governmental and religious movements that span every culture
across the world. Not all its constituencies are for radical reform and
revolution, but feel good to lend their weight behind a campaign ready
to push more vigorously for unconditional debt cancellation for developing
countries for example. Not all in GCAP will say "Smash the WTO", but they
are there to make sure that the slogan "One struggle with many fronts!"
becomes a reality and meaningful, hence one of the action moments targeted
is the Hong Kong WTO December ministerial.
Its diversity is testament to the strength of the movement and billed
as one of the world's largest anti-poverty coalitions. It is a strong
voice that cannot be ignored as has been shown by the latest coverage
it is getting from corporate media that has largely concentrated on GCAP
symbols and placing less emphasis on the nature of its demands.
For us in Africa, our greatest asset is the testimony poor communities,
unemployed youths, women, children and the marginalized can make on how
market based dogmas and principles have unleashed untold suffering in
our part of the globe. We have incontrovertible evidence that liberalisation
has led to loss of meaningful access to basic social services. Privatisation
instigated by market-based public sector reform processes has rendered
many services unaffordable for the majority of our citizens. Conditionalities
attached to some reform processes spearheaded by institutions that function
as extensions of the G8 have emasculated the State in developing countries,
leaving it with very little flexibility when it comes to policy options
that are pro-poor and defending its people against offensive interests
spreading fast via corporate driven globalisation.
In this respect, nothing short of a paradigm shift will radically alter
the plight of the poor. We have acknowledged that new languages will be
adopted to reify what is happening and pacify the struggling masses through
participatory processes like Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs)
and HIPC initiatives, but the essence of solutions underpinning dialogue
in the G8 still reinforce market driven fundamentalism despite overwhelming
evidence that it is a fundamentally flawed world outlook when it comes
to redressing poverty related inequities be-devilling the world. The G8
on its part will produce pronouncements sugar-coated with hot air and
radical rhetoric but not good enough to stop the other wave - rooted in
brimstone and fire and occasioned by real lived poverty experiences that
can only be ended by meaningful social and economic justice.
* Thomas Deve (Thomas@mwengo.org.zw)
coordinates the Economic Policy Project at MWENGO (www.mwengo.org),
an organisation whose mission is to nurture a community of values by strengthening
and mobilising African human resources in support of organisations fighting
for social justice.
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