DRC: The Cost of War

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS

Stephanie Kale

KIGALI, Nov 8 (IPS) – War is expensive. The costs include not only the millions of dollars spent on military equipment and maintaining an army, but the financial and psychological toll it takes on the everyday lives of people caught in the crossfire.

When fighting takes place where civilians live, as it is in the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, farming, housing, health care, businesses and education are all interrupted in armed conflict, and the long-term effects in the North Kivu region have been devastating.

Ten year-old Immacule arrived at Kibati refugee camp 12 kilometres north of Goma on Oct. 27 after her family fled their village fearing attacks by Tutsi-led rebels.

She said she misses going to school. ”I want the government to find peace for us so that I can return home and go back to school.”

Since fighting resumed in August between the rebel National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP) and the Congolese army, 250,000 people have been displaced in the North Kivu Region.
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POLITICS-US: Can Naturalised Citizens Tip the Balance?

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, November 04, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Nuzhat Naoreen

The Korean-American civic group YKASEC says it has registered more than 26,000 people to vote since 2004.

NEW YORK, Nov 3 (IPS) – Juan Carlos Jimenez had already lived legally in the United States for nearly 40 years when he became a citizen in October, at 44. He joined hundreds of other immigrants at a New York courthouse to take his oath.

“It’s the only reason I became a citizen — to vote in this election,” said Jimenez, who was born in Colombia.

The Iraq war and the foundering economy made him want to vote for the first time.

“There’s just too much at stake now,” he said.

Issues like the war, the economy, and failed immigration reform are expected to drive many first-time immigrant voters like Jimenez to the polls this year, in greater numbers than before.
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AFGHANISTAN: ‘If Talks With Taliban Bring Peace, I’ll Support It’

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by Anand Gopal

KABUL, Nov 3 (IPS) – Western officials are increasingly turning to new strategies in an effort to stabilise Afghanistan and defeat the insurgency here, according to U.S. and Afghan officials. The various initiatives — from negotiating with the Taliban to arming tribal militias — have differing degrees of support from Afghans.

Violence has reached record levels this year and Afghanistan is now considered a deadlier battlefield than Iraq. Insurgents are able to operate openly in areas close to the capital and the central government’s popularity is at the lowest point in its history. The situation is prompting a number of strategy reviews in Washington as the U.S. prepares for possible strategic shifts after the next president takes office.

Some officials are quietly considering a plan to arm tribal groups, in a move reminiscent to the American strategy in Iraq that is credited with decreasing violence there. ”We are seriously looking into using tribes and local communities to provide security,” says an American intelligence officer with the international forces.
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THE INDIAN JIHADI NET

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR—PAPER NO. 465

Global News Blog – Global Geopolitics Net
Monday, November 03, 2008

Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org

B.RAMAN

The number of fatalities in the serial explosions in Assam on the forenoon of October 30,2008, has since gone up to 75, with the death of some of the injured in the hospitals. Another about 300 persons are undergoing treatment in the hospitals and some of them are stated to be in a serious condition.

2. According to the Police, there was a total of nine blasts timed to take place in four different cities or towns in the State between 11 and 11-30 AM.The most devastating in terms of casualties (35 killed), property damage and psychological effect on the people were the three in Guwahati, the Capital. In all these three cases, the improvised explosive device (IED) was kept in the boot of cars. The use of the boot of a car for keeping the explosives enabled the perpetrators to keep more explosive material than one could in a bicycle or in a tiffin box. In the Ahmedabad blasts of July,26,2008, the explosive device was kept in a car in the incident near a local hospital. Motor-vehicle- borne IEDs also cause more casualties due to the splinter effect and large fires, which have a traumatic effect on the local population. Many who rang me up after the Guwahati explosions remarked that the scene with cars burning reminded them of what they had been seeing on the TV about similar incidents in Baghdad. This kind of trauma one did not witness during the earlier serial explosions in three towns of Uttar Pradesh in November last year, in Jaipur in May,2008, in Bangalore and Ahmedabad in July, in New Delhi in September and in Agartala in October. The three cars had been kept parked with the IED near a vegetable and fruit market at Ganeshguri below a fly-over, in front of the office of the Kamrup Deputy Commissioner, and near a police station in the Fancy Bazaar. The Ganeshguri area is near the high security complex of the capital.
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Time to address trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, November 03, 2008

© Copyright 2008 Malladi Rama Rao. All rights reserved.
Sunday, November 02, 2008

By Malladi Rama Rao

What a spat it was? It had turned upside down the logic of campaign journalists on either side of the Palk Strait. No surprise, therefore, all those in Colombo who have been painting a doomsday scenario of sorts between Chennai and Delhi have egg on their face and are groping for new theories to brazen out their jingoism that made the mistake of once again pitting the Sinhalese against the Tamils. Post-Basil mission to Delhi, the egg heads must realise that neither righteous indignation which is on display in abundance nor an orchestrated media campaign, for a few brownie points, which shows no let up, is a substitute for good governance, which is the only way to end the years of trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils.

Some commentators have termed India’s Sri Lanka policy as a farce. Some others have branded as tamasha DMK patriarch Muthavel Karunanidhi’s politics of ultimatum. Both schools of thought felt that Delhi and Chennai were trying to have the cake and eat it in their own way. Expecting Karunanidhi to reduce Manmohan Singh government to a minority just five-six months ahead of a general election, these critics had gone to the town declaring that Delhi was caught between the devil and the deep sea. They have obviously failed to understand, much less care to read, the fine print on coalition dharma. And also how adroitly the old Dravidian fox was outmanoeuvring his arch rivals – Jayalalithaa Jayaram of AIADMK and trusted follower turned political foe V Gopalaswamy alias Vaiko.

Karunanidhi had split Vaiko’s MDMK a couple of months ago. Now by regaining the Tamil centre space, he has marginalised the likes of Vaiko who are the ardent campaigners of LTTE. The icing on the cakes, as DMK faithful see it, is the arrest of Vaiko on charges of sedition and anti-national activities. The arrest should have come as a surprise to the India-baiters in Colombo.

Needless to say, these worthies have not understood the dynamics of democracy and the contours of an administration that swears by the Constitution in India. If they have any doubt they should listen to the recording of Pranab-Karunanidhi joint press conference in Chennai last Sunday.

Said Karunanidhi: “This issue (ethnic issue in SL) has been going on for 40-years; we cannot expect it to be resolved in four days”. Pranab Mukherjee, on his part, put the record straight saying India stands for countering terrorism with resolve. Put differently, it means India will do nothing to reduce the momentum of the SLA operations in Kilinochchi. .

Firstly, Pranab rejected the demand voiced by a section of TN politicians for withdrawal of non-lethal military support to the SLA like supply of radars and technical and personnel backup to keep operational these anti-aircraft radars. Secondly, he reasoned that the ‘help’ is in India’s interest. “Because, given the position of the Indian and Sri Lankan coastlines, the radar that was given would cover vital installations in Indian areas as well”, the Indian minister told a questioner, certainly as much to the delight as surprise of his SL friends.

There is substance, therefore, in the contention that the latest low in India-Sri Lanka relations is not because of any misunderstanding between Delhi and Chennai but because of forked tongues in Colombo. Consider these two facts – one about fishermen and the other about humanitarian aid.

The Basil mission to New Delhi has put in place some practical arrangements to deal with bona fide Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL). GOSL will designate sensitive areas along the Lankan coastline. These areas will be out of bounds for Indian fishing vessels. “Further, there will be no firing on Indian vessels. Indian fishing vessels will carry a valid registration or permit and the fishermen will have on person valid identity cards issued by the government of Tamil Nadu,”, a joint statement on fishing arrangements released on Oct 26 at the end of BR talks with the Indian foreign minister, said.

The fishermen issue has been a principal concern of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and most law makers from the state cutting across party-lines. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh took up the issue personally two months back with President Rajapaksa on the sidelines of SAARC summit. These concerns have been met with more firings on the Indian fishermen. Undoubtedly, the latest agreement is the most practical way of dealing with what happens when illiterate fishermen cross the maritime boundary line. On its part the TN government is taking steps to equip fishing vessels with satellite based equipment to indicate their exact location on the high seas.

The Sri Lanka Navy has used the moral right to prevent pro-LTTE Indians from Tamil Nadu from assisting the Tigers with material that could be used in the war against Sri Lanka –batteries that can power improvised explosive devices, ball-bearings to add lethality, petrol, oil and lubricants and small arms and ammunition—to be indiscriminate and vindictive in its actions against the fisher folk. The proposed system of licenses would induce an element of inspection that would give the fishermen an opportunity to explain their presence and thus avoid being killed instantly on being sighted by the Sri Lanka Navy. So, there is room for optimism that there will be no ‘a flare up’ near Katchiativu. It will certainly lead to a cooling of political temperature in the State.

During Basil-Pranab talks, India had offered to send humanitarian aid – 800 tonnes of relief material- through the Red Cross as a gesture of goodwill. President Rajapaksa welcomed the Indian decision and also appreciated Tamilnadu’s offer to make an additional contribution to ‘this humanitarian endeavour’.

But his Essential Services Chief S. Divaratne doesn’t appear to share President’s enthusiasm. In fact, he shares the indignation expressed by a section of the Lankan leadership which sees in the Indian food aid a repeat of food air drop in 1987. “Sri Lanka is not an African state in need of food. We can even feed the poor people of India, if need be”, he told the media. His remarks are not contradicted till date. He also went on to add: The government has buffer food stocks in Kilinochchi and Mulaithivu with a surplus of rice in the Wanni. Even anti malaria drugs, medicines are constantly reaching the Wanni”.

Basic thrust of Basil-Pranab agreement and President Rajapaksa’s exclusives to select Indian dailies is that civilians would be spared in the course of Wanni war. But even before the ink on the Delhi agreement dried, three Tamillians – one of them a 50-year –old mother of three, living in the conflict zone were wounded in SLAF strafing of two civilian settlements in Kilinochchi and Paranthan. The victims belong to the ever increasing tribe of internally displaced persons from Mannar and Kilinochchi. A school with some 750 students was just 750 meters from the bombed site. This incident could be one of those hazards in a military operation but doesn’t help improve confidence levels.

At this point in SL history, who pushed whom to war is not material. What is germane is, as some SL commentators have also noted, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while professing full commitment to political package, has allowed the Sinhala extremists to set an agenda that allows only for a military solution. Defeating the Tigers militarily may not be big deal. The war may at the best drag on for a few days or months; the army and air force have to work to a plan jointly and without indulging in their own games. But how is the government to control the large Tamil-speaking areas in the north that have been under LTTE domination for a decade or more. There is no plan in evidence.

Yes, the President promises that he himself will take charge of the political process and see it through politically. But he makes it clear that the current military operations are required to ‘free our own Tamil brothers and sisters from the cruel grip of terror and implement a just and enduring political solution based on the four ‘Ds’ — Demilitarisation, Democratisation, Development, and Devolution’. He also asserts that his first priority is Demilitarisation. “Without demilitarisation first, you won’t be able to achieve anything. No democratisation, no development, no devolution. It is useless to give them devolution when they are not ready to accept it or you can’t implement it”, the President told N Ram of The Hindu.

This assertion puts a fresh question mark on the future course of events promised by President’s emissary, Basil Rajapaksa to his interlocutors in Delhi. More over, the LTTE appears to demonstrate its ability to strike even when it has been hurt very badly. As the Stratfor experts say in their forecast, the Tigers will make a stronger attempt to carry out attacks inside Colombo ‘in an attempt to prove to their constituency that they are still viable’. From a military point, that is bad news. Also from a political point. Because it will give fresh lease to the Sinhala chauvinism and deepen the Faultlines further.

Ethnic SL Tamil diaspora has enormous financial and political clout; it is numerous in crucial Western countries. And they can provide the muscle to the LTTE for decades irrespective of the outcome of today’s military campaign. If the diaspora is to be checkmated and LTTE is to be given a knockout blow, MR, as President Mahinda Rajapaksa is addressed by his close circle, should look into the causes of anger of the Tamils with the Sinhala state with a sense of urgency and commitment. Rhetoric offers no solution. Certainly not banking on State created quislings like TMVP who have neither the reach nor vision.

PERU: Free Trade Opens Environmental Window

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, November 01, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Milagros Salazar* – Tierramérica

LIMA, Nov 1 (IPS) – Legislative decree 1090, which modifies Peru’s forest policy, is worrying U.S. trade authorities because it contravenes environmental clauses of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that is to enter force between the two countries in January 2009.

The decree, which in June amended the Forestry and Wildlife Act, leaves 45 million hectares — or 60 percent of Peru’s jungles — out of the Forestry Heritage protection system — a step that runs counter to the FTA forestry annex.

That was one of the 10 observations made by the Office of the U.S Trade Representative, Susan Schwab, in a meeting with delegates of the Peruvian government earlier this month in Washington, according to Sandro Chávez, president of the non-governmental Ecological Forum (Foro Ecológico).
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FINANCE: NGOs Call for Radical Reforms as IMF Offers New Loans

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, Oct 29 (IPS) – Two weeks before U.S. President George W. Bush hosts an economic summit to address the six-week-old financial crisis that has wreaked havoc on the world’s capital and stock markets, a coalition of nearly 600 non-governmental organisations (NGOs) from 88 countries is calling for a ”fundamental and far-reaching transformation on the international financial and economic system.”

In a statement released Wednesday, the groups demanded that the upcoming Group of 20 meeting Nov. 15 here to the way for a much broader and more inclusive reform effort in which all of the world’s governments and international civil society should participate.

”It is of course imperative to agree on immediate measures to address the crisis, and we emphasise that priority must be given to responses to the impacts on ordinary employees and workers, low-income households, pensioners and other extremely vulnerable sectors,” according to the statement that was signed by Friends of the Earth, ActionAid, and Social Watch, among other international groups.

”But we are deeply concerned that the proposed meetings will be carried out in a rushed and non-inclusive manner, and, as a result, not address the comprehensive range of changes needed, nor fairly allocate their burden,” it said.

The groups, which also included Civicus, the European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD), and Jubilee, decried what they called a ”double standard” by which wealthy western governments, in dealing with the crisis, were currently engaged in the kind of government intervention that western-dominated institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had forbidden their poor-country borrowers.

”The double standard is not only unacceptable, but it also signals the demise of free-market fundamentalism,” the statement said. ”The international financial system, its architecture and its institutions must be completely rethought.”

The statement comes on the eve of the first meeting of a U.N. task force set up by Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon and chaired by Economics Nobel Laureate and former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz to make recommendations about how to cope with the ongoing crisis.

It also comes as the IMF announced the creation of the a new lending arm, the Short-Term Liquidity Facility (SLF), that will have the authority to lend up to five times a borrowing country’s quota to help it overcome temporary liquidity problems in global capital markets.

”Exceptional times call for an exceptional response,” said the IMF’s managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. ”The Fund is responding quickly and flexibly to requests for financing. We are offering some countries substantial resources on an expedited basis, with conditions based only on measures absolutely necessary to get past the crisis and to restore a viable external position.”

Creation of the SLF, which is similar to the Contingent Credit Line facility created by the IMF during the Asian crisis of 1997-98, has been considered urgent over the last couple of weeks as it became clear that the credit crisis that began with the collapse of Lehman Brothers investment firm last month was rapidly spreading to emerging markets and poor countries whose economies are dependent on commodity exports.

Still, critics have warned that, given the growing line of countries, starting with Iceland, Ukraine, and Hungary and Pakistan, in desperate need of the estimated 250 billion dollars the IMF has available, the SLF may not be sufficient to keep up with demand.

Thus, Strauss-Kahn made a point of welcoming Wednesday’s announcement by the U.S. Federal Reserve and the central banks of Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, and Singapore to set up swap lines of up to 30 billion dollars to boost liquidity in emerging markets. Similar lines have already been set up between the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank and with the central banks of the Australia and New Zealand.

The Nov. 15 G-20 summit at the National Building Museum will include the leaders of the major industrialised countries and emerging markets, such as China, India, Brazil, and Mexico. It has been billed by some European leaders, notably British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, as a ”new Bretton Woods”, a reference to the New Hampshire resort where in 1944 U.S. and British finance officials laid the groundwork for the post-World War II western-dominated economic order overseen by the IMF and the World Bank.

Bush, who will be a lame duck when the summit convenes, is expected to oppose any moves that could result in big changes in the way those two agencies are run, particularly given the disproportionate voting power Washington — including the ability to veto any major policy changes — enjoys on their governing boards. The Europeans, who also exercise disproportionate power on the boards, appear to be more favourably inclined toward reform.

”There is no doubt that these institutions need reform when Belgium has the same amount of votes as China,” noted Louis Belanger of Oxfam International.

It has been through the combined voting power of the U.S. and other western industrialised powers that the Bank and the IMF have imposed the so-called ”Washington Consensus” — policies that require borrowing countries to implement neo-liberal, ”market-friendly” policies and reduce the role of government in their economies — over the last 30 years.

Grassroots and many international NGOs have long claimed that these policies have mainly benefited western-based multi-national corporations, often to the detriment of the poorest and most vulnerable populations in borrowing countries whose governments were forced to cut their budgets and adopt austerity measures recommended by the Bank and the IMF.

To them, the response to current crisis in both North America and Europe demonstrates the bankruptcy of both the ”Washington Consensus” and the agencies that enforced it.

”To stave off regional and global recessions and restore stability and confidence in the market, northern governments are pursuing a massive and unprecedented program of government intervention, nationalising banks, injecting massive subsidies into ailing institutions and re-regulating their financial sectors,” they said.

These measures stand ”in direct contrast to the austere neo-liberal policies pressed on developing countries by the World Bank, the IMF, and developed countries for the past thirty years.”

”These policies have failed spectacularly,” said Vitalis Meja, coordinator for the African Forum & Network on Debt and Development (Afrodad). ”And now, the response is to bring 20 governments to Washington for a new ‘Washington Consensus’.”

Writing in the Financial Times Wednesday, financier and philanthropist George Soros noted that, ”The so-called Washington consensus imposed strict market discipline on other countries but the U.S. was exempt from it.”

In the NGOs’ view, any attempted reform of the current system should best be pursued under auspices of the United Nations where each country has a vote.

”Since the impacts are likely to be the greatest on the poorest people, and in emerging economies and developing countries,” noted Lidy Nacpil of Jubilee South — Asia/Pacific Movement on Debt and Development, ”shouldn’t all countries — governments and peoples — have a say, not just those responsible for this crisis?”

”Any attempt by the most powerful countries to stitch up a deal with no public consultation and no involvement of the majority of the world’s countries through an inclusive process will only further undermine public trust and confidence,” added Roberto Bissio of Social Watch.

POLITICS: U.S. Cutoff Threat Unlikely to Save Iraq Troop Pact

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by Gareth Porter*

WASHINGTON, Oct 29 (IPS) – The threat by the George W. Bush administration last week to withdraw all economic and military support from the Iraqi government if it does not accept the U.S.-Iraq status of forces agreement has raised the stakes in the political-diplomatic struggle over the issue.

However, most Iraqi politicians are now so averse to any formal legitimisation of the U.S. military presence — and particularly of extraterritorial legal rights over U.S. troops in the country — that even that threat is unlikely to save the pact.

For most Iraqis the agreement is all too reminiscent of the unequal security agreement that gave military rights to British imperialism in Iraq from 1930 to 1958. The symbolism of foreign domination inherent in that historical parallel makes it risky for political party leaders and members of parliament to be seen as going along with any agreement that provides special privileges to the United States.

In a move reflecting a new sense of desperation that has overtaken U.S. officials, Gen. Ray Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, warned Iraqi officials that they would lose a total of 16 billion dollars in assistance for the economy and Iraqi security forces unless the agreement is approved by parliament, according to a story by McClatchy newspapers reporter Leil Fadel Sunday.
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EGYPT: Ruling Party in Free Fall

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Adam Morrow and Khaled Moussa al-Omrani

CAIRO, Oct 29 (IPS) – A high-ranking member of Egypt’s ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) is facing trial on charges of arranging the murder of a Lebanese pop singer. The case, along with a host of other public grievances, has badly tarnished the NDP’s reputation ahead of an upcoming party conference.

”On the eve of its annual party congress, popular perceptions of the NDP have never been worse,” Amr Hashem Rabie, expert on Egyptian party politics at the semi-official Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies told IPS.

On Oct. 18, construction magnate Hisham Talaat Moustafa, a member of the NDP’s powerful Policies Committee, pleaded not guilty to accusations that he financed the killing of Lebanese pop singer Suzanne Tamim, found brutally murdered in her Dubai apartment three months ago. Fellow defendant Mohsen Al-Sukkary — a former police officer charged with carrying out the crime in return for a two-million dollar payoff — also pleaded not guilty.
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POLITICS: Thai Tensions Form Apt Backdrop for ASEAN Meet

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, October 28, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Oct 28 (IPS) – The decision by Thai government to shift the venue of a regional summit from Bangkok to the northern city of Chiang Mai points to an administration unsure of its place in the country’s capital.

Prime Minster Somchai Wongsawat announced the move during a weekend visit to the country’s second largest city, which nestles in the hilly region close to the Burmese border. The Association of South-east Asian Nations (ASEAN) leaders’ meeting will run there from Dec. 15-18.

‘’The main reason for the change was the government’s worry that the continuing protests led by the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) could cause trouble for the event,” the ‘Bangkok Post’ reported on Monday, quoting an unnamed foreign ministry source.

It is a decision that is winning little praise from some former diplomats, given what a change of venue implies. ‘’This is the government’s admission of its weaknesses and that it is not in control,” Kasit Piromya, a former Thai ambassador to the United States, told IPS. ‘’It is the government that runs the country, yet we see that they are not in charge.”
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