18 March 2003
ANGEL OF DEATH LINGERS ON/UNITING FOR PEACE
Britain's Development Minister Clare Short has today executed "one of the most breathtaking about turns in recent political history". (item 1)
Short has long hinted that she might resign if Britain helped the US to invade Iraq. She made clear that she was against such an attack without a second UN resolution and publicly declared her intention of resigning if the prime minister proceeded down a path that she labelled "reckless".
But now that Blair has embarked on just such a course, Short has said she will be staying in the government and voting for war.
If this suggests a Minister whose integrity and consistency of judgement cannot be trusted when it comes to the big issues, then this will come as no surprise to those who have been following her role in relation to plans for the mass industrialisation of agriculture, and the use of GM crops, in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh - plans that look set to displace and impoverish some 20 million people.
Almost a year ago George Monbiot described her as the "Angel of Death" for her support for a scheme that her own advisors had warned had "major failings", threatened the food security of the poor, and offered no plans for "providing alternative income for those displaced". (item 2)
For someone prepared to countenance the destruction of 20 million lives in the name of "progress", abandoning any semblance of integrity or reason in order to support Bush's war on Iraq may not have been so difficult. Some have more courage. More than 30 million people have been out in the streets to say "No" to this war. More than half the Security Council, given a chance, would say "No" to this war, as would the overwhelming majority of the UN General Assembly.
See item 3 on how you can petition your Ambassador at the United Nations to have the the UN General Assembly address the impasses at the Security Council that has been created by the US, Britain and Spain.
1.Short's career agony - She will never again be trusted...
2.ANGEL OF DEATH by George Monbiot
3.URGENT appeal to let the voices of the world be heard - Uniting for
Peace
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1.Short's career agony
By Nick Assinder
BBC News Online political correspondent
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2859809.stm
...Whatever her motives - and personal ambition can not be ruled out - she runs the risk of being seen by some as a busted flush.
She has lost a huge amount of her credibility with backbenchers, even those who were once her greatest supporters.
Even if she becomes a minister in a Gordon Brown-led party - and that is still in the realm of fantasy politics - she will have no discernible constituency.
No guarantees
She will never again be trusted to take rational decisions and then stick to them.
Her agonising stands alongside Robin Cook's masterly resignation which left him with his credibility, integrity and standing vastly enhanced. And, of course, there are never any guarantees or even any gratitude in politics.
A victorious and, as a result, all-powerful Tony Blair could still dump her once this is all over and done with.
The astonishment at his refusal to sack her over her original outburst has now turned into admiration at the way he has completely neutralised her as a political force.
***
2.ANGEL OF DEATH
George Monbiot
The Guardian, Tuesday April 2, 2002
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,5673,677465,00.html
Clare Short is backing a plan which will impoverish 20 million people in India. Why?
Clare Short is a paradoxical figure. She has hinted that she might resign if Britain helps the US to invade Iraq. She has bravely blocked the aid money which would have been spent on a useless British air-traffic system due to have been deployed, at great expense, in Tanzania. Her picture appears on the cover of this week's New Statesman magazine clutching a diminutive Tony Blair, whom, we are told, she is "cutting down to size". The development secretary is widely portrayed, as the Sunday Times puts it, as "the cabinet's leftwing conscience". Yet many of those she claims to be helping regard her as the angel of death.
For the past fortnight, a delegation of Indian farmers has been travelling around Britain, raising support for their campaign to prevent Clare Short from destroying their lives. Britain's Department for International Development (DFID) has promised GBP65m to the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, to help implement a programme which the state government claims will "totally eradicate poverty". The people it affects say it is more likely to eradicate the poor.
The scheme envisages the "rationalisation" of farming in Andhra Pradesh. Small farms will be consolidated into large ones, bullocks will give way to tractors and combine harvesters, traditional seed varieties will be replaced by genetically modified crops. Some 20 million people will lose their land or their jobs on the land.
Last month, a "citizens' jury", composed of people drawn from the social groups the scheme is supposed to help, rejected the project unanimously. Last year, the Guardian obtained a leaked copy of an internal DFID report, which warned that the scheme suffered from "major failings", threatened the food security of the poor, and offered no plans for "providing alternative income for those displaced". Yet the "cabinet's leftwing conscience" continues to back it.
So why should the minister who claims to put the lives of the poor above all other considerations and who is prepared, when necessary, to take a principled stand have decided to support a scheme which her own department says is "confused", "unfocused" and "inconsistent"? There are several possible explanations.
The first is that she genuinely believes development of this kind can help the poor and feed the starving. The government of Andhra Pradesh says it will increase food production and enhance exports by switching from traditional peasant farming to biotechnology and industrial monoculture. But the problem with relying on new technology to solve hunger is that the technology generally resides in the hands of those who are not hungry. The companies producing genetically engineered crops, for example, have spent billions of dollars buying up seed banks, altering their contents, then advertising and distributing their new products. They did not spend those dollars to reap rupees. The cultivation of these crops must attract hard currencies to be viable.
This is why, despite all their bombast about feeding the world, the biotech companies have put so much of their effort into developing animal feed. The feed market in the rich world is enormous, and expected to grow by between 30% and 50% in the next 20 years. Millions of acres in the poor world are now devoted to growing grain for pigs, chickens and cattle; in other words, the fat are becoming fatter, with the result that the thin become thinner. Clare Short herself has observed that "those who focus their efforts simply on increasing agricultural production must be under no illusions that they will therefore help the poor to obtain food".
The government of Andhra Pradesh would argue that by selling crops for hard currency, it can obtain the money necessary to raise living standards and feed the starving. But this vision relies on a "trickle-down" theory of economics which even the World Bank has stopped promoting. It is particularly inappropriate where new agricultural technologies are concerned. The biotech companies, for example, have gone to great lengths to ensure that the profits stay in their own hands, patenting crops and the technologies associated with them, and designing seeds which cannot reproduce. Food, land and the wealth arising from them are all removed from circulation in the local economy, and shifted instead between the foreign corporations and the new landlords, who in some cases are one and the same.
Already people leaving the countryside in Andhra Pradesh have nothing
to go to: private-sector employment is declining and the state has stopped
recruiting. When the unemployed are joined by a further 20 million, almost
everyone's prospects are likely to decline. The state government appears
to be proceeding on the grounds that enclosures lead to industrial revolutions:
a kind of doctrine of historical signatures.
The second possible explanation for Clare Short's support for this
scheme is that, like everyone else in the cabinet, she has succumbed to
corporate pressure and the neo-liberal ideology associated with it. Her
enthusiasm for corporate protectionism in the form of global intellectual
property rights suggests that this is at least partly true. It is also
clear that governments tend to club together against their people. Short's
deputy, Hilary Benn, recently made the extraordinary assertion that "the
future is a matter of political will and choice, and only governments have
both the legitimacy and the opportunity to exercise that will". Development
policy, in Britain and elsewhere, has often been a matter of brokerage
between global elites, at the expense of everyone else. But this doesn't
really answer the question. Why has she aligned herself with power against
the people of India, but not against the people of Iraq or Tanzania?
One of the few consistent themes in Clare Short's speeches and public statements is her visceral loathing of environmentalists. While making the appropriate noises about "sustainability", she is furiously dismissive of those who seek to promote it. Environmental protesters, she has claimed, are white, privileged people, opposed to the interests of the poor. She appears to see her battle with the greens as the last outlet for a class war she is no longer permitted to fight on any other front.
Though the great majority of the world's environmentalists live in poor nations, and though environmental destruction - as her own department acknowledges - hits the poor hardest, environmentalism is still perceived by many people as the preserve of toffs and proto-fascists. Indeed, in its early days as an acknowledged movement in the west, it was. But, now led by the poor world, it has come to represent the very opposite interests to those it championed in the 1930s. Clare Short, however, still appears to see the greens in the rich world as class enemies, while not seeing the greens in the poor world at all.
This formulation provides the necessary cover for her abandonment of the socialist principles she once defended, and her support for corporations and governments against the people. The development secretary's outdated worldview permits the destruction of 20 million lives.
***
3.URGENT appeal to let the voices of the world be heard.
The leaders of the most powerful nations on Earth have failed us. The Security Council has failed us. The world stands on the brink of war.
If ever there was a need for the United Nations to rise to the challenge it was conceived to meet, now is that time.
Through a little-used mechanism known as Resolution 377A, the "Uniting for Peace" resolution, the General Assembly may be the last hope for disarming Iraq peaceably and stopping the US war machine.
You can write to your UN ambassador to support this resolution from here:
http://act.greenpeace.org/aas/e?a=ufp&s=amb_s
The Uniting for Peace resolution empowers the General Assembly to meet in emergency session to address acts of aggression or a breach of the peace when the Security Council has been unable to act. Its was first used to bring about a cease-fire in the Suez crisis of 1950, forcing Britain and France to withdraw from Egypt within a week, even after they had vetoed calls for a cease-fire in the Security Council. It's been used ten times since then, most often at the request of the United States.
If you believe, as we do, that the very future of the world, and of the United Nations, is being put at risk in the name of a pre-emptive war, please join the call for the UN General Assembly to respond. Ask that the Uniting for Peace resolution be invoked, that the war on Iraq be condemned, and that peaceable means of disarming Iraq be sought.
The next hours may provide our last chance to change a dangerous course in history. The United Nations must not allow a world order based on multilateralism to be replaced with one in which the mightiest and richest make the rules.
You can read more here:
http://www.greenpeace.org/international_en/news/details?item_id=179491
and, again, you can write to your UN ambassador to support this resolution from here:
http://act.greenpeace.org/aas/e?a=ufp&s=amb_s
Visit the No War website for more news:
http://nowar.greenpeace.org
Please take a few minutes to act now.
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