From: Bob Olsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2001 19:28:21 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: IMF stops debt relief for Nicaragua in the midst of crisis


SJC - Social Justice Committee
Comit� pour la justice sociale
1857 Maisonneuve West, suite 320  Montreal, Quebec, Canada,  H3H 1J9
tel: 514-933-6797    fax: 514-933-9517    e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.s-j-c.net

Canada / Central America and Mexico URGENT ACTION NETWORK

IMF ** URGENT ACTION ** IMF ** URGENT ACTION ** IMF ** URGENT ACTION ** IMF

October 12, 2001                                        # 974

International Monetary Fund (IMF) tells starving Nicaraguans to tighten
their belts, cuts off debt relief.
SJC asks for support in denouncing IMF behaviour.

Dear Friends,

We are asking you to respond to this situation, even if you usually
respond only to Urgent Actions on other countries.  We believe that the
actions of the international financial institutions are so pervasive that
we must be concerned with this latest example of their disregard for the
human side of economics.

The Social Justice Committee asks people to express their dismay that the
IMF has stopped the debt relief program for Nicaragua in the midst of
crisis. Here is a quick summary, with more information below:

There has been widespread, worsening hunger in Nicaragua since the
beginning of the year, with flooding, drought, and collapsing coffee
prices hitting the country with a series of devastating blows. A
million-and-a-half Central Americans are suffering from hunger following
the three-month drought. Floods on Nicaragua's Atlantic coast destroyed
crops of rice, corn, yucca, and bananas, with some 1,400 families now
eating the seeds that they used to give to pigs that were swept away by
the floods. Their children dying of hunger, 10,000 families have left the
coffee plantations where they lived, worked, and grew some of their food,
because of the collapse of coffee prices.

Despite the situation of the country, the IMF continues to demand that the
Nicaraguan government slash spending, pull money out of circulation, and
privatize public utilities. IMF documents released October 2 show that IMF
staff have decided that Nicaragua has failed to comply with these demands,
and the institution has suspended Nicaragua's debt relief program
indefinitely.

This means debt cancellation by rich countries is put on hold by the IMF
decision. (Note: Canada is not owed money by Nicaragua.)

The IMF is refusing to negotiate new support until conditions are met.
Without an IMF agreement, development assistance from other sources is
endangered.

Please write and ask that Canada argue vigorously at the IMF to restore
the debt reduction program for Nicaragua, and de-link IMF structural
adjustment conditions from the HIPC program.

["HIPC" is the program of debt reduction for the Heavily Indebted Poor
Countries. All debt relief in this program is conditional on following IMF
structural adjustment demands; about 1/3 of countries are falling behind
schedule because of this.]

Please write to:

Ian Bennett
IMF Executive Director representing Canada
fax 202-623-4712
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Howard Brown
International Trade and Finance Branch, Dept. of Finance
Fax (613) 943-0279
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hon. Paul Martin
Minister of Finance
fax 613 947 4442
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Please send a copy to your Member of Parliament.

Please also share your concerns with other Canadians by sending copy of
your messages to
local and national media (newspapers, radio), and/or by passing on this
information to your community groups.

If possible, please send us a copy of your messages.

-------------------------------------

Supplemental information:


 From the IMF "Article IV" consultation staff report, released 2 Oct:

"Because of recent slippages in the implementation of macroeconomic and
structural policies, the establishment of a satisfactory track record is
needed before the resumption of Fund assistance under the PRGF." [PRGF is
the IMF's "Poverty Reduction Strategy Program", the new name for the
Structural Adjustment Facility]

"In addition to public expenditures restraint... implementation of a tight
monetary policy would be crucial... proceed vigorously with public sector
reforms... deepen trade liberalization"


 From the IMF "Article IV" consultation Public Information Notice October
 2: (reporting on IMF Board of Directors discussions)

"Directors emphasized the importance of establishing a track record in
policy implementation as a necessary element for continued support for
HIPC and PRGF participation... They stressed that the authorities should
stand ready to further restrain government expenditure."


 From the Nicaraguan government's Letter of Intent Aug 27 2001:

"The fiscal stance remained weak in the first half of 2001 mainly because
of high expenditures associated with wage increases (teachers, nurses, and
police)" plus bank resolutions, elections costs, and other domestic
capital outlays.


The SJC has been in touch with the Canadian office at the IMF, which
confirmed that the HIPC debt relief program has indeed been stopped
indefinitely. This means that debt cancellation by creditor countries is
also now on hold, until the IMF allows it to proceed.


 From a USAID update 10 Oct. 2001
 www.usaid.gov/press/releases/2001/fs011010_2.html

"Persistent dry conditions have caused serious crop damage and severe
transitory food insecurity in Central America. According to the United
Nations, drought conditions affecting Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador,
and Guatemala have created the worst crisis to hit the region since
Hurricane Mitch in 1998."

"Central America is an area prone to natural disasters, as evidenced in
recent years by such devastating calamities as Hurricane Mitch and the
earthquakes in El Salvador. In addition, nearly two years of unrelenting
dry conditions affecting Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala
have reduced domestic food production, spurring an increase in internal
and external migrations. Economic conditions have worsened at the same
time, with low international coffee prices putting coffee farmers out of
work and eliminating employment opportunities for many small farmers and
landless poor. Emerging evidence from Guatemala indicates that levels of
under-nutrition among children under five - already among the highest in
the Western Hemisphere - are increasing. Decreased tax revenues resulting
from the decline in coffee prices, and the general economic deceleration,
which is linked to the economic slowdown in the United States, have
limited the ability of national and local governments to respond to these
problems."

"The Ministry of Agriculture has updated its estimate of losses of basic
grains due to the drought. The new estimate is that 20.7 percent of basic
grain crops were lost, compared to the 18.2 percent estimate in July,
representing an increase from 63,466 hectares to 72,639 hectares.
Assessments conducted by OFDA and USAID/Nicaragua from September 16 - 19,
and by USAID on September 22 - 23 to the municipalities of El Viejo,
Villanueva, Puerto Morazan, and Chinandega, in the Department of
Chinandega confirmed that people in the area had very little food, the
grain storage facilities were empty, and that there had been a near total
crop loss in the Spring planting cycle. One of the most disadvantaged
groups identified by USAID is landless farmers, who comprise between 10
and 20 percent of the rural population. These farmers are completely
dependent on employment opportunities generated by other farmers and are
among the poorest of the already highly vulnerable rural population."


 From Envio magazine, August 2001
 www.uca.edu.ni/publicaciones/revistas/envio/2001/eng/august/coyuntura.htm

"By early August, the World Food Programme (WFP) was reporting that a
drought had affected some 1.4 million people in the region, a million of
them in Honduras, and that well over half of this number were suffering
near-total crop losses and critical food shortages. Suddenly, starvation
and humanitarian aid-two disquieting words that recall recent African
tragedies-were overshadowing the election campaign in Nicaraguan public
awareness.

The US government earmarked US$6 million in food aid to be distributed
through Nicaragua's NGOs-bypassing the government. WFP began distributing
rations of maize, cooking oil and fortified cereal to Nicaragua's hungry
as well as seeds to 40,000 small producers affected by the drought. It has
been forced to make an urgent call to donor nations since it only has
enough supplies to help half of those in the direst need region-wide make
it through the next harvest.

In July, the United Nations Development Program released its Human
Development Report for 2001, which documents that one in every three
Nicaraguans is undernourished. This figure-the worst in Central
America-combined with the country's high infant malnutrition indices
demonstrate that hunger not only exists right now but is chronic, and is
putting the country's future at risk. Among the 162 countries analyzed,
Nicaragua is in 106th place.

Coffee crisis

The WFP described Nicaragua, where starvation threatened an estimated
32,600 families, as the most complex case in Central America because it is
caused by three separate factors: the coffee crisis in the north-central
area, the drought in the north and northwest and, perversely, flooding due
to non-stop rains on the Caribbean side of the country. In all cases, the
few grain reserves that peasant farmers had once set aside for either
eating or the next planting cycle are gone. Two years of drought from El
Ni�o, followed by Hurricane Mitch, followed by two more years of drought
have seen to that.

The roughly 10,000 Nicaraguan families that WFP estimates are affected by
the coffee crisis have no work and thus no wages with which to buy food.
Their starvation has nothing to do with the production of foodstuffs or
any rise in food prices, but with an absolute lack of income. Their
problem is aggravated by the fact that they have also had to abandon their
former living quarters on farms that no longer produce coffee or plant
basic grains for the workers, and where even the fruit on the trees has
been stripped and devoured. The exodus to the city by some of these
families-even if there they are living in indigence-is justified.

Drought on top of dryness

WFP calculates that another 22,000 families are starving because of the
drought in 47 municipalities of the dry zones in the western, northern and
central regions of the country. Surveys show that between half and all of
the first-cycle planting of maize and beans-the peasants' daily staple-has
been lost together with other crops in these municipalities, while the
livestock herds have also been severely damaged. Lacking job alternatives,
these subsistence farmers literally have nothing to eat."


ocial Justice Committee (Canada)
1857 de Maisonneuve Ouest - suite 320, Montreal, QC, Canada, H3H 1J9
ph: (514) 933 6797 - fax: (514) 933 9517 - e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - web-site:
http://www.s-j-c.net



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Gloria Pereira-Papenburg
Social Justice Committee (Canada)
1857 de Maisonneuve Ouest, suite 320, Montreal, Canada, H3H 1J9
phone: (514) 933 6797
fax: (514) 933 9517
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web-site: http://www.s-j-c.net

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Carol Phillips,
Director, International Department,
Canadian Auto Workers Union,
Phone - 416 497-4110
Fax - 416 495-6554




  ............................................
  Bob Olsen   Toronto   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]

             Capitalism is war
  ............................................




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