Already
some aspects of the post-tsunami relief measures in
some of the worst affected areas like Aceh in Indonesia
are adding to the continuing nightmare of local residents.
The ability of international elites to turn every
situation, no matter how tragic or desperate, to their
own advantage, is of course legendary. Nevertheless,
it still manages to shock and surprise when man-made
or natural disasters quickly become arenas for reaping
superprofits for international business, and are used
to penetrate markets when they are particularly weakened.
The newest name of the game is of course "reconstruction",
that useful all-encompassing term that covers the
gold rush of private investors, international consultants
and businesses that is now standard in countries and
regions affected by civil war, military occupation
(imperialist or otherwise) and natural calamities.
It is not only a question of the profits that are
to be made through increased expenditures required
for rebuilding broken infrastructure, or through prising
open new markets when domestic production systems
have collapsed. The best thing about such reconstruction
is that it can bathe such profit-making in a hallowed
glow of virtue, and be portrayed as an example of
the nobility and generosity of those involved.
Typically, genuine aid – that is untied grants that
go directly to helping the people affected – form
a small and even minuscule part of the billions that
are usually projected as "aid". Most of the money
comes in the form of loans or tied grants, or sometimes
aid in kind (such as food) that does no more than
get rid of surpluses in sending countries. Sometimes,
even such aid is not forthcoming in the quantities
that are originally promised. Afghanistan, for example,
has received only a fraction of the money that was
promised after the puppet regime of Hamid Karzai was
first set up. Even the devastation cause by the recent
tsunami, which has generated unprecedented private
donations across the world, has not been sufficient
to make either governments or international organisations
actually provide the resources that have already pledged
for relief. Debt relief packages have been limited
even after this extreme calamity. And aid – even in
the form of grants - is typically tied to oppressive
policy conditionalities that add to the problems of
the countries concerned.
But even when such money does flow, the problem is
almost more because of how it is spent. A large proportion
goes to the international consultants and other elements
of the "development industry" who have now shifted
their expertise to "post-crisis" and "post-conflict"
situations that have become the order of the day.
By now a number of countries have been exposed to
this, whereby the people concerned become poorer and
their existence becomes even more difficult, but the
aid industry and its participants are further enriched.
Further, the paradigm within which resources for reconstruction
are provided remains one which forces marketist policies
upon the people, removes various kinds of state protection,
and encourages the privatisation of people's assets
controlled by the state, both productive assets and
natural resources.
A recent issue (Number 107) of "Focus on Trade",
the e-journal brought out by Focus on the Global South,
(www.focusweb.org)
brings out these issues very clearly. As Shalmali
Guttal points out in her article: "The fundamental
tenets of concurrent reconstruction programmes are
derived from neo-liberal ideology and emphasise rapid
integration of domestic markets into the global market-place,
free flow of capital, privatisation, deregulation
and an overall reorientation of governmental responsibilities
towards protecting and facilitating free market conditions
for creating profit, much of which is expropriated
by private sector actors from outside the country
and consolidated by national elites. Although the
fine print of the reconstruction model applied in
each country might vary here and there, the overall
systems and structures that the model defines are
the same, regardless of the differing histories and
economic and political contexts of the affected countries."
Countries as varied and geographically distant as
Haiti, Cambodia, East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq, Nicaragua
and El Salvador, all show the dismal effects of this
determined benevolence of external powers, which succeeds
in destroying local institutions, creating cultures
of corruption and dependency and undermining democracy.
These features are then used to describe the governments
in the concerned countries as "failed states", which
naturally require further external intervention.
A similar process may now be playing out in some of
the regions most affected by the tsunami disaster.
Consider Banda Aceh in Indonesia, which took the brunt
of the devastation. The current estimate of those
killed by the tsunami and its after-effects in Aceh
province alone is more than 150,000, but the crisis
of the survivors is possible of even greater magnitude.
The situation of fisherfolk is the worst: the FAO
estimates that two thirds of fishermen have been killed
and around 70 per cent of fishing boats have been
destroyed. The loss of livelihood is aggravated by
the continued operation of large fishing trawlers
that continue to operate in the area, depleting the
fish reserves. Yet the planned reconstruction does
not take account of the potential loss of future livelihood
for thw affected fisher families.
Meanwhile, agriculture in Aceh province has been less
badly affected, and peasant production in the area
has already revived, despite the impact of the tsunami
on local soil qualities. However, local farmers are
now threatened by another problem: the aid pouring
in as imported food, which is likely to cause harvest
prices to crash. Prior to the tsunami, the province
of Aceh exported rice, and Indonesia as a whole has
just managed to become self-sufficient in rice production
after a period of difficult dependence upon rice imports
with very large import bills. This is why rice imports
were banned in Indonesia, to protect domestic farmers
and allow local production to continue now that self-sufficiency
has been achieved once again.
Obviously, provision of food to the displaced population
is an essential priority for immediate relief. But
the aid programme could have – and should have – relied
entirely upon locally produced food for local distribution,
or at most food coming form other parts of Indonesia.
But according to Indra Lubis and Isabelle Delforge
in their article in Focus on Trade No 107, some imported
rice has already made its way into the country and
more is expected. In early January 2005, the US embassy
in Indonesia asked the Ministry of Agriculture for
a license to import rice for food aid. Clearly, this
particular crisis will become one more means to prise
open another market for the major US-based agribusinesses,
using the medium of food aid.
So the small peasants of Aceh are soon going to hit
by the next (this time man-made) disaster, under the
approving eye of the international community which
will no doubt applaud the sense of social responsibility
displayed by the corporates concerned, since some
them may even have donated some part of the food thus
being imported.
Increasingly, it is becoming evident that in the avaricious
early years of the 21st century, for many countries
that have experienced violent conflict or natural
calamities, there is no way out of the misery. All
too often, the physical violence of conflict situations
or of disasters is replaced by economic violence upon
the people of the country. The latter may be even
more damaging, because of the adverse long-term implications
for growth, for livelihoods and sovereignty over resources
and lives, and because of the insulting insistence
that all this is being done for their own good.
March 8, 2005.
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