VIETNAM: Prosperity Tough on Trash Collectors

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

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

Helen Clark

HANOI, Nov 3 (IPS) – As the expendable income of households in Hanoi increases, so does the amount of refuse generated. This is taking a toll on the city’s predominantly female force of garbage collectors, as well as the environment.

A green truck idles on a street beside one of Hanoi’s largest beer halls, Hoa Vien, popular with the capital’s movers and shakers. In the twilight, women in khaki overalls and blue helmets push heavy trolleys, piled high with refuse, into a line behind it.

”I don’t get days off,” Tram, 33, tells IPS. ”Any celebration, I work more because there’s more garbage to collect. It’s always busy; I don’t even get Tet off.” Tet is Lunar New Year and the most important holiday in the Vietnamese calendar.

Tram has been collecting the city’s garbage for 14 years, and says things have become harder in recent years. There is far more to pick up, whilst wages have remained the same — between 1.5 million VND — 1.9 million VND (90 – 115 US dollars) each month.
[Read more...]

ECONOMY-MAURITIUS: Textile Manufacturing Goes Green and Clean

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

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

Nasseem Ackbarally

PORT LOUIS, Nov 1 (IPS) – ‘‘The cost of production is high in Mauritius as we are far away from our main markets. Our island is so small that at times our clients do forget us. We no longer benefit from any trade preferences. We don’t have any natural resources but we have plenty of sunshine and wind and we have decided to use these resources.”

These are the thoughts that Kendall Tang, director of Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, a factory at La Tour Koenig south of the capital, shared with European buyers recently.

They visited his factory before attending the International Textile Manufacturers Federation’s (ITMF) conference on the theme of a greener and a more sustainable textile industry last month.

Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, or RT Knits as it is known, has devised a new strategy based on green production to reduce its costs of production and to improve its work environment. The company is betting on the availability of the sunshine and the stable direction of the wind 10 out of 12 months yearly.
[Read more...]

HAITI: Activists Urge World Bank to Erase Crippling Debt

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 31, 2008

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

Nergui Manalsuren

UNITED NATIONS, Oct 31 (IPS) – On a recent visit to the hurricane-ravaged island of Haiti, World Bank President Robert Zoellick declared that 500 million dollars of Haiti’s 1.7-billion-dollar foreign debt had been cancelled, and the rest would be soon be written off as well.

However, Haitian and international civil society groups say that his comments were misleading. None of the debt has actually been forgiven yet, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and bank just this month delayed Haiti’s entrance into the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative (HIPC) — a condition for debt relief — by six months.

Dan Beeton, an analyst at the Washington-based Centre for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), said that he hopes that Haiti’s debt cancellation will be expedited, and that the World Bank and IMF, along with creditors France and the U.S., will cancel the debt without requiring Haiti to ”jump through more hoops”.

”However,” he said, ”the institution that has really power to make this happen is the U.S. Treasury Department.”
[Read more...]

FINANCE: Revolt Against ”Elite Clubs” Grows at U.N.

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 30, 2008

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

Wolfgang Kerler

UNITED NATIONS, Oct 30 (IPS) – U.N. member states and economists challenged the neo-liberal policies of market deregulation that have long been promoted by powerful global financial institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), and called Thursday for a new, more inclusive global financial architecture.

Nobel Prize-winning U.S. economist Joseph Stiglitz stressed that ”the current economic crisis should provide an opportunity to reassess global economic arrangements and prevalent economic doctrines”, as he spoke at a panel on the ongoing global financial crisis, held by the U.N. General Assembly on Thursday.

Stiglitz is supposed to head a new U.N. task force of experts to undertake a review of the international financial system — including its major institutions — and to make proposals for how a more stable global economic order could be achieved. Other members of the task force are to be announced in the near future.
[Read more...]

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.

ECONOMY: EU Involvement in DRC Mining Project Draws Protest

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

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

Michael Deibert

LONDON, Oct 28 (IPS) – The involvement of the European Union in a mining project in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has drawn a chorus of protest from local and international human rights advocates. They say the project is rife with problems relating to transparency and accountability.

Located some 175 km north-west of the DRC city of Lubumbashi in Katanga province, the Tenke Fungurume vein is thought to be one of the largest unexploited seams of copper and cobalt in the world.

It has proven alluring to mining companies in recent years as the DRC attempts to extract itself from a civil war during which some six million people have died.

Mining of this resource has fallen to Tenke Fungurume Mining SARL (TFM), a joint concern combining Gécamines, Congo’s state mining concern, with Lundin, a Swedish mining company, and the U.S.-based mining concern Phelps Dodge.

The latter merged with gold-and-copper giant Freeport-McMoran in 2007 and has since become Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc.

After construction on the Tenke mining facility commenced in 2007, the European Investment Bank (EIB), the investment arm of the European Union, agreed that same year to help finance the project with a loan of 100 million euros.

It regarded the project as ‘‘highly significant from an economic and developmental point of view” and that ‘‘environmental and social issues (connected with the project) have been subjected to careful in-depth analysisà”

However, the EIB’s move has been criticised both by international bodies, such as the Paris-based Les Amis de la Terre (Friends of the Earth), as well as local organisations in the DRC, such as Action Contre l’Impunité pour les Droits Humains (Action against impunity towards human rights).

‘‘The EIB seems totally unaware of what was going on during the signing of the (Tenke) contract and their assessment seems purely financial,” says Anne-Sophie Simpere, a campaigner for the reform of international financial institutions working with Les Amis de la Terre.

‘‘We feel that they shouldn’t finance that kind of extractive industry project in Africa until they have experienced staff to assess it.” Objections to the project have ranged from what groups say was an inadequate consultative process (the use of French language documents to explain the Tenke endeavour to a largely-illiterate, Swahili-speaking population) to the displacement of local residents from towns such as Mulumbu to make way for mining activities before replacement housing had been built for them, rendering them essentially homeless.

Perhaps even more controversial, in June 2005 the Lutundula Commission concluded that Lundin Holdings made its first payment towards the Tenke concession – totalling nearly 50 million dollars – in 1997. This was a year after it had gained the concession in what was viewed as a largely non-competitive bidding process.

The Lutundula commission consists of Congolese parliamentarians charged with investigating business contracts signed during DRC’s civil war.

The deposit, the commission discovered, was paid into the account of Rwanda-based Comiex Limited, a company partly owned by Laurent-Désiré Kabila, the Congolese rebel leader who had just seized power in the DRC after ousting long-time dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.

Kabila was assassinated by one of his own bodyguards in 2001 and his son, Joseph Kabila, the DRC’s current president, assumed the office that he holds today.

Recently, the Congolese government completed a further year-long review of 61 mining contracts in the country, the results of which have not yet been officially announced. Lubin and Freeport-McMoran are among those whose contracts are being reassessed.

Requests for comment by Lundin Holdings went unanswered. The EIB, for its part, takes a more circumspect view of the situation, and points to the fact that the disbursement of the loan has been put on hold pending the outcome of the mining review.

‘‘The EIB is aware that a review of the mining projects in the DRC has been published, and an independent commission established to renegotiate the mining contracts,” says Una Clifford, a press officer with the EIB.

‘‘The EIB’s discussions with the project sponsor have been suspended pending clarity on the final outcome of the work undertaken by the independent commission.

”The EIB has conditionally approved a loan of 100 million euros for Tenke (but) this loan will not be signed until the bank receives the final go-ahead from the DRC government.”

The Tenke controversy is illustrative of the discomforting ways that commerce and political patronage frequently intersect in foreign companies’ involvement in the DRC.

South Africa’s AngloGold Ashanti mining company has come under fire for links with and payments made to the Front Nationaliste et Intégrationniste (FNI), one of several ethnically-based militias that helped turn the eastern Congolese region of Ituri into a killing field earlier this decade in a conflict that claimed at least 60,000 lives.

One former leader of the FNI, Mathieu Ngudjolo, is currently awaiting trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Another, Floribert Njabu, is currently in detention in the DRC’s capital of Kinshasa.

For its part, the Australian company Anvil Mining, the leading copper producer in the DRC, has been accused by human rights organisations and investigators for the United Nations peacekeeping mission of having provided logistical support to the Congolese army during their siege of the town of Kilwa. At least 73 people were killed in that town, which is in Katanga province.

DEVELOPMENT: Bretton Woods II: New Lifeline for Ailing Giants

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

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

Analysis by John Vandaele*

BRUSSELS, Oct 28 (IPS) – Europe, by way of the hyperactive French President Nicolas Sarkozy, demands a Bretton Woods II, that is, a major shake-up of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. This is as much a rescue operation for two organisations that have lost muscle as a call for a new financial architecture.

Up until mid-October 2008 the IMF, the world’s most important financial institution, did not play a role in the unfolding credit crisis. The G7 (the seven industrialised nations, the United States, Canada, France, Britain, Germany, Italy and Japan) had given the task to make recommendations to the Financial Stability Forum dominated by the G7 countries, effectively bypassing the Fund.

Also, the IMF proved powerless in prevention of the crisis. For years the Fund deplored the rising macro-economic imbalance between China and the U.S., which lies at the heart of the current crisis. The IMF had to do this because article 1 of its charter says one of the purposes of the IMF is ”to shorten the duration and lessen the degree of disequilibrium in the international balances of payments of members.” But the Fund simply has no real power over countries such as the U.S. or China.
[Read more...]

DEVELOPMENT: Democracy Comes to World Institutions, Slowly

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

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

Analysis by John Vandaele*

AMSTERDAM, Oct 27 (IPS) – Power and democracy don’t go together well in global governance. The most powerful global institutions are the least democratic, but things are changing. Slowly.

Can a global institution be democratic if countries such as Belgium or the Netherlands with 10 or 16 million inhabitants have more power inside that institution than, say India with 1.1 billion? Can a global institution be democratic if the elected representatives of states are barely able to control what is being said in their name in that institution? These are pivotal questions to determine the legitimacy of international institutions.

My research has shown that the most powerful international institutions tend to have the worst democratic credentials: the power distribution among countries is more unequal, and the transparency, and hence democratic control, is worse.
[Read more...]

ECONOMY: Civil Society Has Something to Say

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

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

Gustavo Capdevila

GENEVA, Oct 27 (IPS) – Governments cannot deal with the current financial crisis on their own, and need the support of the people they govern, which is ”best translated by the opinions of the civil society movement,” said Werner H. Schleiffer, executive coordinator of CONGO, the global umbrella of NGOs with consultative status with the United Nations.

The responsibility of striving for solutions lies with governments ”because the market forces have demonstrated that they cannot solve the issues,” said Schleiffer. ”But governments do not have sufficient strength on their own, and must take into account ”the thinking of their own people as translated by civil society movements,” he argued.

CONGO, which is made up of national, regional and international non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), is ”a bridge, a two-way stream vis-a-vis civil society and vis-a-vis the U.N.,” he explained.

On Monday and Tuesday, CONGO is debating the global financial meltdown and its effects on the real economy in Geneva at the Civil Society Development Forum (CSDF) 2008. The meeting is also discussing other critical questions facing the international community, like the global food crisis and the questions of food sovereignty and sustainability, as well as the links between human rights and development.

At a previous CSDF, held Jun. 27-29 in New York, CONGO already discussed the incipient financial crisis.

The final statement adopted in New York referred to the ”global financial turmoil and uncertainty,” but only after highlighting the threats posed by the food crisis and environmental risks.

However, in its analysis of the food crisis, the New York CSDF document states that ”We note the pervasive role of international financial institutions in influencing national development strategies. We urge these institutions to redesign their strategies with a view to assisting countries in defining their priorities at home by using home-grown expertise and products of these countries.”

The document also says the World Trade Organisation’s ”role in negotiations on agricultural matters should be re-examined.”

But ”since June, the food crisis, the energy crisis and the financial crisis have taken on such great proportions, that couldn’t be anticipated in June,” Schleiffer told IPS.

The first policy level discussion at the U.N. General Assembly in September also ”indicated very clearly that these topics are very high on the agenda of the General Assembly,” he added.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon himself ”even spoke about an emergency development,” indicating that these topics deserve very careful discussion in the future, said Schleiffer.

”These crises will not go away overnight. But they cannot be attacked without having civil society on board. The U.N. and the member governments cannot handle it on their own,” said the head of CONGO in Geneva. ”They need strong and determined input by civil society.”

To that end, ”our members of the board, in consultation with our organisations, agreed that we should continue these discussions on these topics and come up with further concrete recommendations” at the two-day meeting in Geneva, said Schleiffer.

The questions of the food crisis, food sustainability and sovereignty are being discussed in-depth, he said, adding that the latter issue ”is very important to our member organisations.”

”The other issue, the nexus between human rights and development, will also come up further, especially when we look at the issue of speculative movements that distort market mechanisms and are very much against the people, particularly people living in the (developing) South,” said Schleiffer.

”We are much inclined to see the consequences of these crises on our daily lives in the North, but the ones that really suffer, and suffer enormously, are (the people) of the South. Much more than we do,” he added.

Delegates from key civil society movements from Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Asia were thus invited to participate in the two-day meeting in Geneva, which was made possible by financial support from the Swiss government, he said.

CONGO officials were encouraged by the results of their participation in the High Level Segment, an annual ECOSOC session held alternatively in New York and Geneva that is like a kind of ”parliamentary” session of the U.N. system for dealing with economic and social issues, said Schleiffer.

At that session, ”we had the opportunity to speak more than ever before. It was unprecedented, between our CONGO statements on behalf of civil society and statements by organisationsàunder our umbrella, all together we had something like half an hour of speaking time, which is unique when you think that depending on the sessions, you only have one or two minutes to speak. That was quite an accomplishment.”

Another encouraging factor was the level of approval from the U.N. Secretariat and government representatives received by CONGO’s outcome document, which was circulated to the member governments as an official ECOSOC document, he said.

The declaration that came out of the ECOSOC High Level Segment, which will go into its report to the General Assembly, showed a ”really amazingàcongruence in wording” with the CONGO outcome document, said Schleiffer.

The two-day CSDF meeting was opened Monday by the president of CONGO, Liberato Bautista, of the United States, and will be closed Tuesday by the body’s first vice president, Italian trade unionist Anna Biondi, who represents the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).

DEVELOPMENT: Poor Hit by Recession and Tax Havens

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

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

David Cronin

BRUSSELS, Oct 27 (IPS) – With signs of a recession preoccupying policy-makers in industrialised countries, prospects for the success of an international conference on providing finance to the world’s poor do not appear high.

The United Nations sponsored event, beginning next month in the Qatari capital Doha, comes at a time when many governments, particularly in Europe, are reassessing commitments they have made to improve the lot of the most vulnerable.

Some of the European Union’s largest member states have recently deemed the EU’s plans to combat climate change, a phenomenon that affects poor countries disproportionately, too costly given the changing economic circumstances. Foreign aid budgets, already shrinking, are likely to suffer because of the same rationale.

Although the EU has been credited by many anti-poverty activists with playing a constructive role during a related conference on improving the effectiveness of development aid in Accra, Ghana, in September, the same campaigners feel that the bloc’s preparations for Doha leave much to be desired.
[Read more...]