MEXICO: Oil Reforms Leave State in the Red

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

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

Diego Cevallos

MEXICO CITY, Oct 29 (IPS) – The oil industry reforms approved by the Mexican Congress and applauded by the government and most of the country’s parties, with the exception of factions on the left and part of the business community, will deprive the state of a source of funding that currently finances 40 percent of the public budget.

”Good for the oil industry, which will now have more funds, but the lack of an alternative source of financing for the state is very worrisome,” Roberto Gutiérrez, an expert on energy issues at the Autonomous Metropolitan University (UAM), told IPS.

From 2009 to 2016, the flow of funds from the state oil monopoly PEMEX to the state coffers will gradually be reduced, according to the reforms approved Tuesday by the lower house of Congress after six months of heated debate. (They passed the Senate last week).

The hope is that by increasing the proportion of revenues left in the hands of the oil company, Pemex will improve its performance, which has been undermined by a lack of funds and up-to-date technology, while output has steadily fallen and reserves have shrunk (according to official figures they will last less than nine years).
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EAST AFRICA: Trade Opportunities Turn Out To Be Death Traps

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

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

Wambi Michael

KAMPALA, Oct 28 (IPS) – New trade opportunities after 20 years of fighting in Southern Sudan have turned out to be death traps for traders because of violence and physical intimidation by the military and civilians alike.

More than 100 trucks and buses from Uganda pass daily through the border at Nimule to Southern Sudan, carrying foodstuffs, construction materials, groceries and beverages from Uganda and Kenya.

The trade has largely been profitable since the Sudanese civil war ended in 2005 but traders are now threatening to pull out of Sudan, complaining about extreme violence, intimidation from the military and civilians and unfair ‘‘duties”.

Some female traders have allegedly been raped while others have lost their lives.
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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.
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LABOUR-MALAYSIA: Recession to Hit Migrant Workers Hard

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

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

Baradan Kuppusamy

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 28 (IPS) – As recession looms large on the horizon, migrant workers like 27-year-old Kumar Palanisamy from Chennai in India are the first on the chopping block.

”My employer told me I have a job up to December…after that nobody knows,” said Kumar who works as a production operator with a furniture manufacturer exporting to the United States and China.

”I don’t want to lose my job or get deported,” he said, eyes brimming with tears. ”I have a family to support and a Rs 40,000 (800 US dollars) debt to settle.”

It is a time of great unease for Malaysia’s estimated 3.5 million legal and illegal, low-paid foreign workers who face a dreadful future in an unfriendly country as a global financial meltdown begins to take effect.

It does not help that neighbouring Singapore, already in recession, is expected to retrench workers and some 300,000 Malaysians working there have suddenly become vulnerable.

The government has already formed a special task force that will find ways to accommodate retrenched Malaysians returning not only from Singapore but also Taiwan, Japan and the Middle East.

”The foreign workers are at the lowest rungs of the scale and already vulnerable. It is now a question of how soon recession will hit the country,” labour leader Siva Nathan told IPS. ”When that happens, the migrant workers will be the first to go,” he said.

Already there are signs of an official toughening of the attitudes against migrant workers, 2.2 million of whom are documented while the rest are considered ”illegal immigrants.”

Malaysia’s notorious ‘RELA’, an untrained and voluntary uniformed body, is already stepping up raids across the country to arrest undocumented workers and deport them.

Immigration authorities have issued warnings that Malaysians found harbouring or renting premises to ”illegal immigrants” would be fined or jailed, a move that is likely to unload hundreds and thousands of undocumented migrant workers now living in ”rabbit warren” housing in shanty towns.

”They would be homeless and out in the open, and easily rounded up,” said a senior RELA officer on condition of anonymity. ”We are sympathetic, but we have received our ordersàthe rule now is jobs are first for locals. We have to protect ourselves now as mass layoffs are possible with the world economy taking such a big hit.”

Malaysia’s deputy prime minister Najib Razak, who is set to take over as prime minister from Abdullah Badawi in March 2009, is already gearing the government to tighten belts and save as many jobs as possible for the locals.

Razak said while the economy is likely to grow by five percent in 2008, growth in 2009 is expected to nosedive as the economies of U.S., Europe and East Asia contract or even go into recession.

He told parliament, last week, that the government was taking steps to reduce the number of foreign workers by 400,000 a year from now until 2010.

Almost 26 percent of Malaysia’s trade is with the U.S. and a key area is electronics where order books are beginning to shrink, manufacturers said.

External demand for electrical and electronic goods in particular will weaken significantly in 2009 when Malaysia’s key export markets, the U.S. and Europe, are predicted to be in recession, finance ministry officials said.

A cutback in production by giants Sony and Samsung means a drop in electronic chip production and eventual closure of plants and loss of jobs.

”There is all round fear among the 13 million-strong labour force,” said Irene Fernandez, executive director of TENAGANITA, a rights NGO helping to protect migrant workers from exploitation. ”However, migrant workers are the most vulnerable and they live and work in a society very unfriendly to foreigners,” she told IPS.

”The laws, rules, regulations and practices and official attitudes are all unfriendly,” she said. ”If the economy woes worsen the environment can turn hostile.”

Malaysia’s trade unions, while expressing sympathy for migrant workers, are moving in fast to protect jobs for local workers and those returning home after losing their jobs overseas.

”It is unfortunate but we have to defend our jobs, our rice bowls,” said Sinnapan Arumugam, a worksite supervisor and union leader in a manufacturing factory in Bayan Lepas industrial hub in northern Penang state.

”This is the case under the lawàlocals come first,” he told IPS referring to Malaysian labour laws that state that in the event of retrenchment local workers are the last to be axed.

Annually migrant workers — mostly in the plantations, manufacturing, construction and service sectors — remit home an estimated RM18 billion (five billion US dollars) to their families across Asia, keeping them in relative comfort.

The majority of the migrant workers are from neighbouring Indonesia while the rest come from Bangladesh, India, and Nepal and most recently from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. They are driven to migrate by poverty in their home countries.

The Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers estimated that the ”casual workers” or illegal migrants in local parlance are the most vulnerable in the impending slowdown and recession.

”There has been a huge increase in foreign casual workers in recent years and they would be the most affected,” federation president Yong Poh Kan told local newspapers.

Labour experts and rights activists say it is important for the authorities to plan how to handle the crisis in an intelligent and humanitarian manner to ensure that foreign workers are not just bundled into ships and deported.

”Without the foreign labour we would not have been able to develop so rapidly,” said Fernandez. ”We cannot just use and discard them as we like.”

”There is an urgent need to develop a comprehensive policy that is respectful and humanitarian with payment of adequate retrenchment and other benefits,” she added.

ECONOMY: Spain Fights Exclusion from Crisis Summit

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

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

José Antonio Gurriarán

MADRID, Oct 27 (IPS) – The Spanish government is taking strong diplomatic actions, calling on its fellow members of the European Union, Latin American leaders, Asian nations and even the United States presidential candidates, with the aim of not being left out of the financial anti-crisis summit scheduled for Nov. 15 in Washington.

Spain was not included in U.S. President George W. Bush’s invitation to the governments of the world’s leading economies and the larger emerging countries from the developing South — a decision seen by Spain as a veto against the socialist government of José Luís Rodríguez Zapatero.

Although no one in the White House admits or has even implied it, the Zapatero administration as well as the rightwing opposition and the vast majority of Spain’s citizens are convinced that this is Bush’s way of retaliating against Zapatero’s decision to withdraw the country’s troops from the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, as soon as the socialist prime minister took office in 2004.
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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.
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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).

EU courts Asia, banks on China

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, October 27, 2008

© Copyright 2008 Susenjit Guha. All rights reserved.

By Susenjit Guha

European Commission President Jose Barroso, who is also a former prime minister of Portugal, urged China, India and Japan to “be on board” at the Asia-Europe Meeting in Beijing over the weekend. “It’s very simple: we sink together or we swim together,” he said. Apparently exasperated at Europe’s traditional ties with the United States, he seemed eager for a new alliance. The need for a paradigm shift has come, to tackle the worst financial crisis to hit the globe in 70 years.

At the meeting of 40 leaders in Beijing, climate change and food security concerns were overshadowed by news of a continuing bloodbath of global stocks. Barosso urged countries to resist calls for economic nationalism and protectionism that would only hurt prospects for a recovery, and underlined the need to regulate the world’s markets.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel wanted more transparent markets, stricter supervision and closer international cooperation. French President Nicolas Sarkozy wanted more radical change, seeking to rewrite the rulebook for international capitalism at next month’s meeting of world leaders in Washington. He asked for assistance from Asian governments.

The International Monetary Fund failed to provide advance warning of the impending implosion in the financial markets, and has been slow at responding to requests from affected nations.

Laissez-faire has proved to be grossly unfair, as the Wall Street meltdown is not only melting the tar on Main Street, freeways and country roads in the United States, but has clogged narrow streets and roundabouts in teeming Asia as well.

And why is the European Union worried? European capitals are in the grip of Obamania, hoping for a real change in the United States – and the way it is perceived around the world – with the presumed election of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama next month. But Obamania does not guarantee European support for more troops for NATO engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq. Displeasure in Europe over U.S. unilateralism has been ratcheted up by the conduct of reckless financial institutions.

Positioned between the United States and the neighboring landmass of Asia, Europe needs to build bridges with the continent of the 21st century, Asia. As Barosso stressed at the ASEM meeting in Beijing, “We represent three-fifths of the world’s population and produce half of global GDP. Our combined action can and should make a real difference.”

Who other than China – even though Japan and India, the new kid on the block, were present – should take the lead in finding a solution to this crisis? With nearly US$2 trillion in currency reserves – more than Canada’s GDP – China is best positioned to step in. As Kim Eun Mee, professor of international studies at Ewha Women’s University in Seoul, South Korea, stressed, “Other ASEM nations have been calling for China to take a more leading role … to mediate a consensus among ASEM nations.”

Ahead of the Washington talks on Nov.15, China is being asked to ease its restrictions on banking, to prop up the strong yuan and to build a US$350 billion reserve firewall to protect the region’s currencies. Thailand wants this, and Citigroup Vice-President William Rhodes reiterated in the Financial Times that China was indispensable in solving this crisis.

But China’s leaders are wary of assuming so much responsibility at this stage of their country’s development, stressing that their first priority is raising the living standards of their own people.

Before the ASEM began, China, Japan and South Korea, along with 10 Southeast Asian nations, pledged a US$80 billion chest to stave off currency speculators, but no date was set for the launch of this fund.

The toxic sub-prime loan disaster has not hit China directly, but for the first time in five years growth has fallen to 9 percent as inflation creeps up. Exports, pivotal to China’s economic surge, will be affected as the U.S. and European economies continue to reel.

World leaders did their best to soften China up and bring Asia on board in an effort to introduce financial reforms at the Washington summit that would tackle the root causes of the crisis.

But judging by a commentary in the official newspaper, the People’s Daily, by Shi Jianxun, a professor at Shanghai’s Tongji University, not everyone in China was impressed. Shi stopped

short of explaining how a non-convertible yuan could help, but said the euro, British pound, Japanese yen and Chinese yuan should be the currencies used for trade between the European Union and Asia. He demanded a boycott of the U.S. dollar, lambasting the United States for protecting its own interests while other countries’ wealth drained away.

Awarding the Sakharov Prize for the defense of human rights to jailed Chinese dissident Hu Jia one day before the Beijing summit was meant to remind the Asian dragon that Europe will continue to play the rights card, even if it has to court the dragon’s wealth.

Asia does not have even an EU-style semblance of solidarity, which may mean the various Asian governments will adopt different views on tackling the crisis, rather than uniting behind a European initiative. Of course, China will have its own way of doing business, taking the best and the worst of all worlds.

Time will tell if the overtures of a humane capitalistic Europe will be able to smother China, which cannot escape this financial crisis in the long run.

About the Author:

Susenjit Guha is a writer and journalist based in Kolkata, India. He contributes a weekly commentary and analysis for UPI Asia and has written on Indian and global political issues for such online publications as Online Opinion (Australia) and Foreign Policy in Focus (USA) and M.J Akbar (India).

Image Source:
Wikimedia Commons
Author: Dmitry Fironov

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...]