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Asian tsunami: the New Zealand governments pathetic
record
By John Braddock
4 March 2005
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Following her meeting with Australian Prime Minister John Howard
last month, New Zealand leader Helen Clark announced that her
Labour government would scale back its aid commitment to the tsunami-hit
region in the Indonesian province of Aceh. A 32-member Defence
Force medical team and an Air Force Hercules transport aircraft
will be withdrawn in line with a similar move by Australia.
Clark said that New Zealand was cutting back its aid because
the relief phrase was ending and the Indonesian government
wanted foreign troops out of the country. The announcement coincided
with official warnings by both prime ministers of possible terrorist
attacks against foreign aid workers in Indonesia. While Clark
said the withdrawal was completely unconnected, she
nevertheless gave credence to the threats despite the fact that
the Indonesian and US governments dismissed the warnings.
Whatever the exact reason, the Labour governments decision
to wind up its limited aid effort stands in sharp contrast to
the needs of the tsunami victims. An estimated 400,000 have been
left homeless and many of those are still living in desperate
conditions without basic shelter, food, clean water or medical
care. The lack of concern for the victims underscores the mixture
of hypocrisy, self-interest and political calculation that has
characterised the Clark governments response to the disaster
right from the start.
Clarks main announcement of aid came on January 18, more
than three weeks after the December 26 calamity. The government
decided to boost its aid package to the tsunami reconstruction
appeal to $NZ68 million (about $US50 million). Clark boasted at
the time that the grant was the countrys biggest-ever relief
commitment and a sign that New Zealand was prepared to make a
commitment to Asia in bad times as well as the good.
According to Clark, New Zealands small size meant that
the country could not be a decisive factor in the international
relief response. Nonetheless, she said, we wanted to do
our bit. While the announcement was lauded in the press
as putting New Zealand in the top 10 donor countries
relative to population, it was as cynical as, and even more belated
than, the response of the US, Australia and other powers. It came
two days after a national day of mourning, also designed to cover
up Labours pitiful earlier reaction.
In the immediate aftermath of the tsunami, the government had
offered a derisory package of less than $NZ5 million. After waiting
to see what other countries would do, it decided in early January
to double the figureto $10 million, including $5 million
in dollar-for-dollar funding to match private fundraising. A significant
factor in the niggardly response was undoubtedly the relatively
low numbers of New Zealanders involvedjust five are known
to have died.
The governments miserliness was quickly exposed by donations
from ordinary citizens. In the first fortnight alone, New Zealanders
contributed $8.5 millionthe largest ever single international
relief campaign. In the second week, the tally rose at a rate
of $1 million a day. The Catholic aid agency Caritas, which had
raised $317,000, said the speed and the size of the donations
was phenomenal. The Red Cross, Oxfam, and Christian
World Service all topped previous best collections, with $4.5
million, $750,000, and $250,000 respectively.
The stark contrast between the governments indifference
and the outpouring of sympathy of ordinary working people set
off alarm bells in ruling circles. Opposition leader Don Brash,
a former Reserve Bank governor notorious for advocating reduced
public spending, criticised the government for being stingy
and its slow response as a national embarrassment.
An editorial in the New Zealand Herald warned that the
international reaction had been unprecedented and
that New Zealand must surely align itself fully with that
response.
When Clark attended the emergency tsunami summit in Jakarta,
her governments aid package still languished at $10 million.
Clark was more intent in calculating how the interests of New
Zealand capitalism could best be served. She declared that a
greater sense of regional solidarity with South East Asia
could be a positive aspect to the disaster. I
think increasingly there is a willingness to see New Zealand and
Australia as part of the broader region. I am honoured that we
got the invitation [to the conference]. I think it is very significant,
she said.
Clarks response is entirely in character with the history
of New Zealand in the regionthat of a second-rate imperialist
power, acting in support of its principal allies and trading partners,
Australia and the USA. While New Zealands interests have
not always coincided with the two larger powers, it has, particularly
in the recent period, invariably backed their imperialist ventures.
Clark and her government vigorously supported the Australian-led
interventions in East Timor and the Solomon Islands. Like Australia
and the US, New Zealand, after its initial lack of interest, seized
on the tsunami disaster to forge closer ties in the region, particularly
with Indonesia.
Labours response reflected the attitude of layers of
business who regarded the tsunami as a useful means for raising
their corporate profile. In the course of a media discussion on
societal marketing, one Victoria University lecturer
declared that there was no longer any such thing as philanthropy
for the sake of it. Corporate philosophy could best be described
as strategic giving to improve a firms strategic position,
he said.
After finally upping aid to $68 million, Clark declared her
governments package to be generous. Opposition
parties joined in saying it was now credible. In fact,
it was neither. A week earlier, newspapers were confidently forecasting
the governments pledge would top $100 million. The final
figure included the initial $10 million and $20 million to be
handed out over the next three years.
Had it chosen to do so, the government had the resources to
increase the commitment many times over. During its five years
in office, Labour has returned a series of record budget surpluses.
Last year, for instance, the surplus was $6.6 billion, and the
forecast for the current year is running even higher at $7.4 billion.
There was no shortage of cash in its coffers.
Labours response to the plight of the impoverished tsunami
victims in Asia is a mirror image of its attitude towards the
New Zealand working class. The successive budget surpluses are
a product of Labours cutbacks to essential social services
such as education and health in order to create a favourable climate
for business investors. Inevitably those who have been hardest
hit have been the poorest and most vulnerable sections of society.
Having first ignored the disaster, Labour then sought to capitalise
on the tragedy that claimed the lives of at least 300,000 people.
Now that the subsequent humanitarian crisis is out of the headlines,
Clark has effectively washed her hands of the issue, despite the
continuing suffering of tens of thousands of victims. All of this
speaks volumes for Labours contempt and indifference for
the plight of the impoverished masses of Asia.
See Also:
The social roots of the tsunami
disaster
[22 January 2005]
The Asian tsunami: why there
were no warnings
[3 January 2005]
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