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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2006-03/06bond.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
Wolfowitz's 'anti-corruption' hoax March 07, 2006
By Patrick Bond

A few weeks ago, Colin Powell's former chief of staff in the State Department,
Lawrence Wilkerson, revealed to a PBS NOW audience something we all knew
anyway about Saddam Hussein's weapons arsenal: 'I participated in a hoax on
the American people, the international community, and the United Nations
Security Council.'

A chief planner of that hoax was Paul Wolfowitz. Is he now carrying out
another - telling the world that he's ridding the Third World of corruption?

'I would certainly counsel Paul Wolfowitz to put himself in the hands of the
professionals who run the World Bank's external-relations department: he needs
an extreme makeover,' former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff advised
shortly after his appointment last April.

He got one. By September, a Los Angeles Times editorial remarked, 'Wolfowitz's
most valuable contribution to date may simply be his role as a cheerleader.
Amid an agency and a US public that is cynical about the value of foreign aid,
Wolfowitz has continually pointed out that things are changing for the better
in Africa and that the world's contributions are making a difference.'

Commentator Ariana Huffington observed last November, 'Talk about your Extreme
Political Makeover. Wolfie has gone from war hawk to the second coming of
Mother Teresa - all without having to make any kind of redemptive pit stop in
political purgatory or having to apologize for being so wrong about Iraq.'

Added Washington Post journalist Dana Milbank in December: 'Being Wolfie means
not having to say you're sorry. Since taking the World Bank job six months ago
he has found a second act. He has toured sub-Saharan Africa, danced with the
natives in a poor Indian village, badgered the United States to make firmer
foreign aid commitments and cuddled up to the likes of Bono and George Clooney.'

There is no question that Wolfowitz quickly learned to talk 'left' about
unfair trade subsidies, meagre US aid and corruption. Whether this was merely
superficial rhetoric, veiling the sinister agenda of the petro-military
complex, would soon be tested.

Last August in Ecuador, the centrist government employed a Keynesian finance
minister, Rafael Correa, who renewed Ecuador's long-standing $75 million
tax-avoidance complaint against Occidental Petroleum. In addition, a new
Ecuadoran law aimed to redirect 20% of an oil fund towards social needs and
10% for national development in science and technology, instead of debt
servicing to foreign banks. (The windfall from the oil price rise from
$18/barrel when the fund was set up, to $70/barrel in 2005, was being
funnelled to Ecuador's creditors.)

Correa aimed to rescind Occidental's control of the oilfields, as the original
contract allowed for under conditions of non-performance. But next door to
Ecuador, in Colombia, Wolfowitz had helped Occidental defend one of the most
productive oil fields in the world, Cano Limon, whose pipeline runs through
jungle adjacent to guerrilla controlled territory. The Pentagon established a
Colombian 'Pipeline Brigade' with a $150 million grant arranged by Wolfowitz
when he was the second-ranking military official.

A senior financier explained in MRzine: 'Wolfowitz's decision provoked a
crisis in the government of president Alfredo Palacio who, especially with a
weak government, has indicated his reluctance to confront the United States.
After discussions with the president, finance minister Correa was obliged to
resign and the head of the national petroleum company has been sacked. The new
head of the petroleum company, Luis Roman, held the same post in the 1990s and
helped Occidental into its current position. In fact, he is a supporter of
further privatizing the oil fields.'

A few months later, a seemingly opposite case arose in Africa, namely a
redirection of the controversial Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline's funds away from
social programmes into the military. As leader of the country tied with
Bangladesh for most corrupt in the world (according to Transparency
International), Chad's authoritarian president Edriss Déby and the country's
parliament amended a 1999 petroleum revenue management law last December in
spite of warnings by Wolfowitz.

Bank cofinancing of the $3.7 billion pipeline was the target of a long-running
international campaign by community, human rights and environmental groups on
grounds it would simply empower the Déby regime, not the people. In 1999, the
Bank had responded with revenue legislation to mitigate these concerns.

Hence Déby's 2005 amendment triggered Wolfowitz to withhold any new loans and
grants and halt disbursement of $124 million in International Development
Association monies. A local group, the Chadian Association for the Promotion
and Defence of Human Rights, endorsed Bank sanctions because 'new money would
mainly be used for military purposes and increasing repression of the Chadian
people. But we regret that the Bank did not listen to the warnings of civil
society organisations earlier.'

Indeed, as the Bretton Woods Project records, 'Local authorities and the
military are known to extort money from villagers when they receive cash
compensation from the oil companies. Chadian human rights organisations report
that human rights activists trying to defend local peoples' rights often
receive death threats and have to flee the region. Pollution is taking a toll
on the health and crops of some of the poorest people on earth, but none of
the project sponsors are even studying it, let alone resolving the problems.'

Surprisingly perhaps, this case of petro-military alignment was resolved -
temporarily - against the World Bank's allies in a repressive regime and
multinational oil corporations. Wolfowitz apparently required a dose of public
credibility in what was Africa's highest-profile financing dispute. Cynics
might add, on the other hand, that the other crucial function of the clampdown
was to impose Bank discipline on an errant country, in the process sending a
tough lesson to others, that they must obey Washington's orders.

Likewise, the same conflict of objectives arose in Ethiopia and Kenya late
last year. In the former, Africa's second most populous country and the
world's seventh-poorest, donors announced the suspension of $375 million
budget support following severe state repression including a massacre of
opposition political protesters and mass arrests. Although this threatened to
wipe out fully a third of the country's budget, and although president Meles
Zenawi - an ex-Marxist ex-guerrilla - was a favourite of the neoliberals, the
Bank complied.

In Kenya, a corruption scandal debilitated Mwai Kibaki's government, and by
January Wolfowitz again suspended financing, in this case $261 million, over
half of which had been approved by the Bank's board just a few days earlier.
The motive here, transparently, was the need to urgently save face, given that
the main Kenyan corruption investigator, John Githongo, had fled to Oxford to
release his investigative report from the safety of distance.

Former British ambassador to Kenya Edward Clay accused Wolfowitz of 'blind and
offensive blundering' for initially providing the loan to Nairobi, a solid
ally of Washington/London against Islam. So the temporary retraction of Bank
funds earmarked for Kenya probably reflects the lender's embarrassment, at the
very time Wolfowitz was trying to shake out the Bank of officials implicated
in various other scandals.

For example, India saw $800 million in health-related loans delayed due to
corruption, and Argentina was also penalised recently. And in the Republic of
Congo-Brazzaville, revelations emerged in early February that president Denis
Sassou-Nguesso and an entourage of 50 people spent $300,000 for an eight-day
stay at the New York Crowne Plaza last September, including $8,500/night for a
luxury three-storey hotel suite. After an intervention by an NGO, Global
Witness, following a vulture fund's whistle-blowing on these expenditures,
Wolfowitz cut debt relief to Sassou-Nguesso. (The vulture fund had bought
Congo debt cheap and wanted the funds directed to its own hedonistic New York
expenditures instead.)

One such incident appears just too challenging for Wolfowitz. The Bank's
Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency made a $13.3 million political risk
insurance investment in the DRC's Katanga province just before an October 2004
massacre. The lucrative Dikulushi Copper-Silver Mining Project, run by the
Australian firm Anvil Mining, was given Bank support in spite of intense
social unrest in the country. Indeed, DRC armed forces killed 100 people
during the suppression of a rebellion by the Mayi-Mayi militia in Kilwa, and
the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported that the firm's trucks moved
troops to the site of the killings and then moved corpses out.

Although company headquarters denied knowledge of an Anvil role in the
massacre, critics in the DRC and watchdog agencies assume that a subsequent
Bank investigation would reveal corporate connivance. With Wolfowitz still
reluctant to disclose the facts five months after receiving the document,
Nikki Reisch of the Bank Information Centre remarked: 'Stalling the release of
the report only gives the impression that the Bank Group has something to
hide. It seems strange that an audit of such a high-profile and controversial
project would be kept secret.'

Meanwhile in a country Wolfowitz knows far better, Iraq, the Bank and IMF
argued to the new government in late 2004 that the world's second-largest oil
reserves be exploited by multinational companies through a very unusual
arrangement, production sharing agreements, which amounted to a privatisation
process. Other IMF conditionality began to bite last December, as a $685
million stand-by credit was advanced to Baghdad on four conditions: cutting
public subsidies especially on fuel (the cheapest in the world); restructuring
Iraq's external debt; strengthening administrative capacity, including
statistical reporting; and restructuring Iraq's two state-owned banks. When
Baghdad raised petrol and diesel prices by up to 200%, riots ensued and the
oil minister was compelled to resign in protest.

With these diverse examples, what can we conclude about the dire state of
international financial governance? Wolfowitz cannot be trusted, and although
his minor anti-corruption sweep is causing staff anxiety, there is no
indication that deeper-rooted problems at the Bank will surface, through, for
example, whistleblower protection that is now being widely called for by
watchdog groups: http://www.bicusa.org/bicusa/issues/world_bank/2640.php

As Charles Abugre of Christian Aid wrote in Pambazuka recently, 'To monitor
compliance often requires even greater involvement and power of donors in
domestic governance. It is like saying that new forms of colonisation are
acceptable on human rights grounds. This is dangerous. Yet, there are cases
where human rights abuses, dictatorship and corruption are at such a level
that the impact of debt relief and aid will be to strengthen repression and
enrich a few than promote development.'

Under present circumstances, many will not agree with Abugre's proposed
solution: a trust fund for debt relief grants to be run by the African Union
(which this year is chaired by none other than the despot Sassou-Nguesso).

Dennis Brutus from Jubilee South Africa is in town to launch his fantastic new
book, Poetry and Protest (Haymarket Books and UKZN Press). As I talk this
dilemma over with him, he offers a very simple proposition: 'It seems to me
that both the IMF and Bank are inherently corrupt institutions, because they
systematically transfer the wealth of poor countries to the North. While they
are asking their clients - dictators and other ruling elites - to clean up
their act, our job is still is to demand the abolition of this much more
broadly corrupt system.'

This is not theory, Brutus reminds: 'The World Bank Bonds Boycott is still
going strong' (http://www.worldbankboycott.org)

But what do you do if you're in Nairobi or Brazzaville or Harare, then? Would
it help to have Kibaki or Sassou-Nguesso or Robert Mugabe - who just caused a
massive inflation spurt by repaying the IMF long-overdue debt - even more
under Washington's thumb?

Brutus replies: 'Each case is different. Ask the progressive movements in
those countries, and take the lead from them! Unless you have the mass of the
citizens participating in the debate over resource inflows and outflows, you
will just see elites being legitimised and empowered. We had this enormously
instructive participatory-budgeting example from the Porto Alegre
municipality. Limited and truncated as it was, it nevertheless gave a sense of
the way we will want to control resources and stop corruption in the future,
in Africa and everywhere else.'

 (Patrick Bond's forthcoming title from Zed Books and UKZN Press is Looting
Africa: The Economics of Exploitation.)
------- End of Forwarded Message -------


---
TCB'n,
Noah

"The foundation of all mental illness is the unwillingness to experience
legitimate suffering."
        - Carl Jung

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