THE G8 SUMMIT: A FRAUD AND A CIRCUS
By John Pilger
The front page of the London Observer on 12 June announced, "55 billion dollar
Africa debt deal 'a victory for millions'." The "victory for millions" is a
quotation of Bob Geldof, who said, "Tomorrow 280 million Africans will wake up
for the first time in their lives without owing you or me a penny...". The
nonsense of this would be breathtaking if the reader's breath had not already
been extracted by the unrelenting sophistry of Geldof, Bono, Blair, the
Observer et al.
Africa's imperial plunder and tragedy have been turned into a circus for the
benefit of the so-called G8 leaders due in Scotland next month and those of us
willing to be distracted by the barkers of the circus: the establishment media
and its "celebrities". The illusion of an anti establishment crusade led by
pop stars - a cultivated, controlling image of rebellion - serves to dilute a
great political movement of anger. In summit after summit, not a single
significant "promise" of the G8 has been kept, and the "victory for millions"
is no different. It is a fraud - actually a setback to reducing poverty in
Africa. Entirely conditional on vicious, discredited economic programmes
imposed by the World Bank and the IMF, the "package" will ensure that the
"chosen" countries slip deeper into poverty.
Is it any surprise that this is backed by Blair and his treasurer, Gordon
Brown, and George Bush; even the White House calls it a "milestone"? For them,
it is an important facade, held up by the famous and the naive and the inane.
Having effused about Blair, Geldof describes Bush as "passionate and sincere"
about ending poverty. Bono has called Blair and Brown "the John and Paul of
the global development stage". Behind this front, rapacious power can
"re-order" the lives of millions in favour of totalitarian corporations and
their control of the world's resources.
There is no conspiracy; the goal is no secret. Gordon Brown spells it out in
speech after speech, which liberal journalists choose to ignore, preferring
the Treasury spun version. The G8 communique announcing the "victory for
millions" is unequivocal. Under a section headed "G8 proposals for HIPC debt
cancellation", it says that debt relief to poor countries will be granted only
if they are shown "adjusting their gross assistance flows by the amount
given": in other words, their aid will be reduced by the same amount as the
debt relief. So they gain nothing. Paragraph Two states that "it is essential"
that poor countries "boost private sector development" and ensure "the
elimination of impediments to private investment, both domestic and foreign".
The "55 billion" claimed by the Observer comes down, at most, to 1 billion
spread over 18 countries. This will almost certainly be halved - providing
less than six days' worth of debt payments - because Blair and Brown want the
IMF to pay its share of the "relief" by revaluing its vast stock of gold, and
passionate and sincere Bush has said no. The first unmentionable is that the
gold was plundered originally from Africa. The second unmentionable is that
debt payments are due to rise sharply from next year, more than doubling by
2015. This will mean not "victory for millions", but death for millions.
At present, for every 1 dollar of "aid" to Africa, 3 dollars are taken out by
western banks, institutions and governments, and that does not account for the
repatriated profit of transnational corporations. Take the Congo. Thirty-two
corporations, all of them based in G8 countries, dominate the exploitation of
this deeply impoverished, minerals-rich country, where millions have died in
the "cause" of 200 years of imperialism. In the Cote d'Ivoire, three G8
companies control 95 per cent of the processing and export of cocoa: the main
resource. The profits of Unilever, a British company long in Africa, are a
third larger than Mozambique's GDP. One American company, Monsanto - of
genetic engineering notoriety - controls 52 per cent of the maize seed in
South Africa, that country's staple food.
Blair could not give two flying faeces for the people of Africa. Ian Taylor at
the University of St Andrews used the Freedom of Information Act to learn that
while Blair was declaiming his desire to "make poverty history", he was
secretly cutting the government's Africa desk officers and staff. At the same
time, his "department for international development" was forcing, by the back
door, privatisation of water supply in Ghana for the benefit of British
investors. This ministry lives by the dictates of its "Business Partnership
Unit", which is devoted to finding "ways in which DfID can improve the
enabling environment for productive investment overseas and... contribute to
the operation of the financial sector".
Poverty reduction? Of course not. A charade promotes the modern imperial
ideology known as neoliberalism, yet it is almost never reported that way and
the connections are seldom made. In the issue of the Observer announcing
"victory for millions" was a secondary news item that British arms sales to
Africa had passed 1 billion. One British arms client is Malawi, which pays out
more on the interest on its debt than its entire health budget, despite the
fact that 15 per cent of its population has HIV. Gordon Brown likes to use
Malawi as example of why "we should make poverty history", yet Malawi will not
receive a penny of the "victory for millions" relief.
The charade is a gift for Blair, who will try anything to persuade the public
to "move on" from the third unmentionable: his part in the greatest political
scandal of the modern era, his crime in Iraq. Although essentially an
opportunist, as his lying demonstrates, he presents himself as a Kiplingesque
imperialist. His "vision for Africa" is as patronising and exploitative as a
stage full of white pop stars (with black tokens now added). His messianic
references to "shaking the kaleidoscope" of societies about which he
understands little and "watching the pieces fall" has translated into seven
violent interventions abroad, more than any British prime minister for half a
century. Bob Geldof, an Irishman at his court, duly knighted, says nothing
about this.
The protesters going to the G8 summit at Gleneagles ought not to allow
themselves to be distracted by these games. If inspiration is needed, along
with evidence that direct action can work, they should look to Latin America's
mighty popular movements against total locura capitalista (total capitalist
folly). They should look to Bolivia, the poorest country in Latin America,
where an indigenous movement has Blair's and Bush's corporate friends on the
run, and Venezuela, the only country in the world where oil revenue has been
diverted for the benefit of the majority, and Uruguay and Argentina, Ecuador
and Peru, and Brazil's great landless people's movement. Across the continent,
ordinary people are standing up to the old Washington-sponsored order. "Que se
vayan todos!" (Out with them all!) say the crowds in the streets.
Much of the propaganda that passes for news in our own society is given to
immobilising and pacifying people and diverting them from the idea that they
can confront power. The current babble about Europe, of which no reporter
makes sense, is part of this; yet the French and Dutch "no" votes are part of
the same movement as in Latin America, returning democracy to its true home:
that of power accountable to the people, not to the "free market" or the war
policies of rampant bullies. And this is just a beginning.
Hidden Agendas. Films and writings of John Pilger
http://pilger.carlton.com/print
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© = Copyright is © ECOTERRA Intl. 2005 - all rights reserved
John Pilger's exposes are not just limited to the clandestine operations of
international governments. Not even his own profession can escape the same
ruthless treatment as many a Western politician. In this section, taken from a
chapter of his most recent book Hidden Agendas, Pilger unveils how editorial
content is often governed by the immoral motives of media moguls and how those
distorted truths can have devastating effects of the lives of everyday people.
http://pilger.carlton.com/media
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