My name is Wambui for OISE University of Toronto. In the context of the
ongoing World Bank initiated discussions on globalization, I thought this
would quite pertinent for discussants to ponder on. Is this really
happening?

Peasants and small farmers had to buy permits
       to gather rainwater on their property.



 TORONTO GLOBE AND MAIL

 The World Bank must realize water is a basic human right

 MAUDE BARLOW

 Tuesday, May 9, 2000

 Several years ago, Ismail Serageldin,
 vice-president of the World Bank, said that
 the wars of the 21st century will be about
 water. He was referring to the fact that the
 world is running out of fresh water sources at
 an alarming rate and that conflict over what
 remains will be invevitable.

 To respond to the crisis, the World Bank has
 recently adopted a policy of water
 privatization and full-cost water pricing. This
 policy is causing great distress in many Third
 World countries, which fear that their citizens
 will not be able to afford for-profit water.
 Ironically, this policy has also created the first
 of the "water wars" Mr. Serageldin predicted,
 the bloody civil unrest that plagued Bolivia in
 recent weeks.

 Two years ago, the World Bank (whose
 official attends Bolivian government cabinet
 meetings as a full participant) refused to
 guarantee a $25-million (U.S.) loan to
 refinance water services in Cochabamba,
 Bolivia's third-largest city, unless the
 government sold the public water system to
 the private sector and passed the costs on to
 consumers. Only one bid was considered, and
 the utility was turned over to a subsidiary of a
 conglomerate led by Bechtel, the giant
 engineering company implicated in the
 infamous Three Gorges Dam in China, which
 has caused the forced relocation of 1.3 million
 people.

 In January, 1999, before the company had
 even hung up its shingle, it announced the
 doubling of water prices. For most Bolivians,
 this meant that water would now cost more
 than food; for those on minimum wage or
 unemployed, water bills suddenly accounted
 for close to half their monthly budgets. To add
 insult, the World Bank granted absolute
 monopolies to private water concessionaires,
 announced its support for full-cost water
 pricing, pegged the cost of water to the
 American dollar and declared that none of its
 loan could be used to subsidize the poor for
 water services. All water, even from
 community wells, required permits to access,
 and peasants and small farmers even had to
 buy permits to gather rainwater on their
 property.

 The selling off of public enterprises such as
 transportation, electrical utilities and education
 to foreign corporations has caused a heated
 economic debate in Bolivia. But suddenly,
 debate turned to protest, and thousands took
 to the streets. A general strike and
 transportation stoppage brought the city to a
 standstill. Polls showed that 90 per cent of the
 public wanted Bechtel turfed out. Police
 reacted to peaceful demonstrations with
 violence and arrests.

 In early April, President Hugo Banzer, a
 Pinochet-type dictator during much of the
 1970s, declared martial law. Activists were
 arrested in the night; radio and television
 programs were shut down in mid-program. A
 17-year-old-boy was killed by police with a
 gunshot to the face during a demonstration.

 This is a story unfolding in many parts of the
 world. Just as the human race is beginning to
 come to terms with the awesome dimensions
 of the looming freshwater crisis, a handful of
 transnational corporations, backed by the
 World Bank, are moving in on Third World
 countries and, in the name of human charity,
 commodifying their water for profit.

 The partnership between the World Bank and
 transnational corporations is not at all subtle.
 In March, almost 5,000 people gathered in
 The Hague for the second World Water
 Forum. Officially sponsored by the United
 Nations and the World Bank, the forum was
 openly dominated by a handful of huge water
 and food corporations.

 The Forum was dedicated from the beginning
 to using the growing world water crisis to
 promote acceptance of the corporate control
 of water. A key dispute was whether water
 should be considered a "human right" or a
 "human need." This was not a semantic
 exercise. If water is a human need, it can be
 supplied by corporations. It is hard to make a
 profit on a human right. Distressingly, the
 governments attending, including Canada,
 sided with the World Bank and declared
 water a human need. Distressingly as well, the
 Canadian International Development Agency
 (CIDA) gave close to $600,000 and full
 support.

 The privatization of municipal water services
 has a terrible record that is well documented.
 Customer rates are doubled or tripled;
 corporate profits rise as much as 700 per
 cent; corruption and bribery are rampant;
 water quality standards drop, sometimes
 dramatically; overuse is promoted to make
 money; customers who can't pay are cut off.
 In France, both water giants Vivendi and
 Suez-Lyonnaise des Eaux have been
 repeatedly cited for corruption. When water
 was privatized in Great Britain, water meters
 were installed in homes and company
 employees shut off service to many thousands
 of customers who could not pay their full
 water bills. When privatization hits the Third
 World, those who can't pay will die.

 The Bolivia story has a happy ending (for
 now). By the hundreds of thousands,
 Bolivians marched to Cochabamba in a
 showdown with the government. On April 10,
 they won. The Bolivian government kicked
 Bechtel out of the country and revoked its
 water-privatization legislation.

 Oscar Olivera, the humble Bolivian shoe
 maker who led the fight, brought his message
 to a Washington rally during the recent
 IMF/World Bank meetings. He said that if
 water is privatized and commodified for profit,
 it will never reach the people who need it but
 serve only to make a handful of water
 corporations very rich.

 There is no way to overstate the crisis of fresh
 water facing the world today. No piecemeal
 solution will prevent the collapse of whole
 societies and ecosystems. A radical rethinking
 of our values, priorities and political systems is
 urgent and still possible. Water belongs to the
 Earth and all species; no one must be allowed
 to expropriate it for profit. Where will Canada
 stand?

       ........

  Maude Barlow is the national chairwoman
  of The Council of Canadians and the
  author of Blue Gold, The Global Water
  Crisis and the Commodification of the
  World's Water Supply.


  Copyright � 2000 Globe Interactive

  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/hubs/national.html



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