When Wolfowitz was ambassador to Indonesia, "he never showed interest
in issues regarding democratisation or respect of human rights".
- Abdul Hakim Garuda Nusantara

Jadi, secara "demokratis" Amerika memang berhasil memilih musang buat
jaga kandang ayam.


---

US Bank or World Bank?
Alex W

Most people would be horrified if they went to vote and only saw one
name on the ballot-paper. Yet this is exactly the principle behind the
selection process for the world's most powerful development
organisation, the World Bank.

Last week the United States government nominated Paul Wolfowitz for
World Bank president. The other 183 countries that are part of the
Bank are in the position of the voters described above: they are
supposed to vote Wolfowitz.

Perhaps conscious that both the process and the candidate are
difficult to justify, US President, George W Bush got on the phone to
the other G7 leaders this week to twist their arms to accept his man.

It's not just radical protesters who disagree with the choice. The
Financial Times said sending Wolfowitz to the World Bank was putting
the "fox in charge of the chicken coop", while German development
minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul understatedly asserted: "enthusiasm
in old Europe is not exactly overwhelming."

Contesting Wolfowitz

Wolfowitz carries heavy political baggage. He is one of the architects
of the controversial neo-conservative policy that urges pre-emptive
strikes on other nations. As the American deputy secretary of defence
he was one of the fiercest advocates for the Iraq war. He made
incorrect projections to Congress about how many troops would be
needed and what the costs of reconstruction would be.

It is not clear whether Wolfowitz's public statements were impaired by
ideology or not. But as head of the World Bank he would frequently be
called upon to make economic forecasts and funding estimates. How is
the world to trust him?

Two British members of parliament, David Drew (Labour) and Andrew
George (Liberal Democrats) tabled a motion arguing that, "as one of
the architects of the invasion of Iraq, he is uniquely unsuitable to
negotiate with the world's poorest countries; he has no history
whatsoever of demonstrating any understanding of the needs of those
countries."

Real concerns

During the cold war, the World Bank used to reward allies of the US
like Indonesia (under Suharto) where Wolfowitz was ambassador from
1986-89, and Zaire (under Joseph Mobuto) where there was little or no
real chance of the loans being used to assist poorer citizens. To this
day, these and many other countries are still repaying those debts.

It is a great concern that a Wolfowitz-led World Bank might again try
to allocate aid according to the US government's views on "good
countries" and "bad countries". Bank staff have voiced fears that
their credibility will be dramatically reduced. And former chief
economist of the World Bank, Joseph Stiglitz, predicts street violence
will accompany Bank country missions everywhere.

The Iraq experience does not bode well for what Wolfowitz's economic
policy approaches would be. Mohammad Al-Sayed Said of the Al-Ahram
Centre For Political And Strategic Studies in Egypt said he expected
Wolfowitz to bring "an ultra-right wing philosophy based on imposing a
fully free market with no adequate concern for the poor and basically
a monetarist policy".

Break with the past

Wolfowitz's interest in democratisation is not as solid or consistent
as he would have us believe. According to Abdul Hakim Garuda
Nusantara, head of the National Human Rights Commission in Indonesia,
when Wolfowitz was ambassador to Indonesia, "he never showed interest
in issues regarding democratisation or respect of human rights".

Even if the European and other governments concede to Bush's push for
Wolfowitz as World Bank president, as it seems they will on the
condition that they get to choose the deputy, the fight will not end
there. While the World Bank president does have a strong say in the
institution, the resident board can block bad policies, projects and
initiatives. And civil society groups - north, south, east and west -
will be redoubling their efforts to challenge and check the Bank from
the outside.

Next time a World Bank president is sought, world governments must
insist on a selection process at least as open and transparent as the
one that Kofi Annan announced this week for the United Nations
Development Programme. The current process, which as Jesse Jackson has
said "freezes out most of the world", is farcical and unworthy of an
organisation which claims to represent democracy and equality around
the world.





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