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Live 8--a political fraud on behalf of imperialism
Statement by the Socialist Equality Party (Britain)
1 July 2005
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The following leaflet is being
distributed by supporters of the Socialist Equality Party at the
Make Poverty History rally in Edinburgh on July 2,
which precedes the Live 8 concert in the city.
Live 8 is staging concerts in London, Edinburgh, Paris,
Berlin, Rome, Philadelphia, Barrie, Tokyo, Johannesburg and Moscow
as part of a series of events preceding the G8 summit of major
industrial nations, which will take place July 6-8 in Scotland.
Live 8 is focusing on the problem of poverty in Africa.
The Live 8 events, which are the focus of the Make Poverty
History campaign, are perpetrating a political fraud against
all those genuinely seeking to overcome the terrible hardship
facing the poor of Africa. The organizers and spokesmen seek not
only to provide a mask of humanitarian concern to British Prime
Minister Tony Blair and US President George W. Bush, but to legitimize
the designs of the imperialist powers on Africa.
Live 8 amounts to a multimillion-dollar propaganda campaign
on behalf of Blair and Bush at a time when both are anxious to
put political distance between themselves and an occupation of
Iraq that is proving to be a political disaster. All the leaders
of the major powers will be happy that the hostile protests that
have greeted previous G8 summits have been replaced by such a
humble petition.
Some of those backing the appeal to the supposed largesse of
the leaders of the major powers gathering in Edinburgh on July
6-8 claim that whereas Iraq was an example of power and wealth
being used for reactionary ends, public pressure can force world
leaders to act in the cause of progress. This is sophistry. Imperialisms
plans for Africa are not in contradiction to its offensive in
the Middle East, but rather part of the same geopolitical strategy.
Blair and Bush have rightly earned the hatred of many millions
for their warmongering in the Middle East and attacks on social
and democratic rights at home. But Bob Geldof, U2 frontman Bono
and the coalition of non-governmental organisations and church
groups that comprise Make Poverty History now ask
us to believe that they can be won over to the cause of the poor
and oppressed.
They are seeking to exclude any hint of genuine protest at
the Live 8 events. A manager of one of the bands performing in
the concert in London told the Telegraph newspaper that
artists were being instructed by Geldof not to criticise Bush.
This is because the concerts have been organized with the express
aim of winning popular support for the Commission for Africa proposals
drawn up by Blair and Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown,
in which Geldof participated. For the same reason, Brown is being
given pride of place at the Make Poverty History rally
in Edinburgh on July 2.
Returning the favour, Geldof and Bono have been invited to
attend the G8 summit. Almost every utterance made by the pair
portrays Blair and Bush as the potential saviours of Africa, whilst
keeping silent on their war against Iraq. Bono described Blair
and Brown as the John [Lennon] and Paul [McCartney] of the
global development stage, and has said that if Bush in
his second term is as bold in his commitments to Africa as he
was in the first term, he indeed deserves a place in history in
turning the fate of that continent around.
Geldof hailed the pre-summit announcement that there would
be a debt forgiveness package for some countries in sub-Saharan
Africa as a victory for millions, claiming, Tomorrow
280 million Africans will wake up for the first time in their
lives without owing you or me a penny.
What nonsense! In the first instance, Africas poor do
not owe you and me anything. Their debts are to major
corporations, financial institutions, imperialist governments
and multilateral organisations such as the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. None of these contemplate any measures
to seriously alleviate Africas plight because they are intent
on perpetuating the exploitation of the continent.
The June 11 G8 agreement covers just 18 countries that have
fulfilled the pro-market criteria set down under the Highly Indebted
Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC), and accounts for at most $1.5
billion per annum in repayments, and possibly only half that amount.
The move is largely aimed at staving off criticisms of the major
nations failure to honour other commitments on aid.
Whatever is given must be offset by a corresponding cut in
aid to the poor countries, meaning that, in reality, they will
get nothing extra. And to qualify, they must continue to boost
private sector development and eliminate all impediments
to private investment, both domestic and foreign.
Compared with the announced sum of $40 billion in debt forgiveness
over 10 years, sub-Saharan Africa alone has $230 billion in external
debt, and the so-called developing countries owe a
combined total of $2.4 trillion. For every $1 of aid officially
provided to Africa, $3 are extracted by the Western banks, institutions
and governments. And far more is plundered by the transnational
corporations who operate there.
The political leaders in Washington, London, Berlin, Paris,
Rome, Ottawa, Tokyo and Moscow can no more be persuaded to act
altruistically towards Africa than they can jump out of their
own skins. They are the representatives of financial elites whose
interests are diametrically opposed to those of working people
everywhere.
The massive levels of debt that afflict the worlds poorest
countries have the same essential cause as their economic backwardness.
The countries in which capitalism first emerged in Europe, America
and Japan were able to use their economic and military might to
exploit the markets and resources of the entire world. These imperialist
powers still look on Africa, Asia and South America as a source
of valuable raw materials and markets for finished products. They
cannot tolerate the development of domestic competition in these
regions, or any genuine expression of democracy for the oppressed
masses.
The ruling elites in the economically backward countries depend
on their relations with the major powers and giant corporations
for their privileged position. In return, they are charged with
imposing the dictates of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund on the working class and peasantry to ensure that
oil, minerals, agricultural produce and other essential raw materials
find their way to the advanced countries or to production facilities
set up by the transnational corporations.
The forms in which imperialism has exercised its dominance
over the underdeveloped countries have undergone certain changes,
but the fundamental economic and social relationship between oppressor
and oppressed nations remains the same.
In the nineteenth century, the subjugation and exploitation
of Africa were achieved through colonialism and occupation, as
the world was carved up between the rival imperialist states.
The mass anti-colonial movements that developed in the
aftermath of the Second World War, together with the Cold War
between the United States and the Soviet Union, forced the major
powers to retreat from direct colonial forms of rule, as the winds
of change swept Africa.
But the regimes established under the leadership of the national
bourgeoisie remained subordinate to the great powers both economically
and politically. Not only did they require access to a global
market for their goods, rendering their nationalist policies of
import substitution impotent, they were hostile to any development
of an independent movement in the working class that could threaten
their own rule.
The collapse of the USSR has led to a resurgence of neo-colonialism.
The Bush administration has spearheaded this turn, seeking to
impose Americas unchallenged hegemony by forceas epitomised
by the bloody conquest of Iraq.
What is now taking place is a renewed scramble for Africa.
At stake is the struggle for control of vital mineral and oil
reserves, as well as other raw materials and markets, as a component
part of a global struggle for hegemony between the major powers.
That is why all aid and debt relief is tied in with demands for
free access to domestic markets by the global corporations.
As in Iraq, access to oil is a primary concern of Bush, Blair,
et al. Africa contains 7.2 percent of the worlds proven
reserves of oil, more than the proven reserves of North America
or the former Soviet Union.
Sub-Saharan Africas crude oil production exceeded 4 million
barrels a day in 2000 and accounts for 16 percent of US oil imports.
The importance of Africas oil in Washingtons strategic
planning was the subject of a January 2002 seminar entitled, African
OilA Priority for US National Security and African Development.
In the Victorian era, there was no shortage of supposedly enlightened
people who justified colonialism as taking up the white
mans burden to civilise the dark continent.
Their modern-day equivalents are the liberals and celebrities
who glorify paltry aid initiatives based on pro-market conditionalities
and the demand that governments pursue pro-Western policies in
the name of transparency and democracy.
The real allies of the workers and peasants of Africa are not
to be found in the opulent environs of the G8 summit in Gleneagles,
but amongst the working class in Britain, Europe, Asia and the
Americas. Hope for the future of Africa and all the oppressed
peoples of the world will not come through aid packages, or even
forlorn appeals for fair trade. It depends on the
building of an anti-imperialist, internationalist and socialist
movement, dedicated to replacing the profit system that is the
source of class oppression and want with planned production to
meet the needs of all. This is the alternative fought for by the
Socialist Equality Party and the World Socialist Web Site.
See Also:
G8 agrees to paltry debt forgiveness
package
[15 June 2005]
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