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subcontinent
Crisis in South Asia reflected in Colombo summit
By our correspondent
4 August 1998
Dashing the hopes that tensions between the regimes of India
and Pakistan could be defused through regional discussions, the
conference of heads of state of the South Asian Association for
Regional Cooperation (SAARC), held in Sri Lankan capital, Colombo,
on July 29-31, ended with the gap between the two states widening.
Indian Prime Minister Behari Vajpayee rudely brushed aside
the proposal of his Pakistani counterpart, Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif, to the opening session of the SAARC conference for the
convening of a South Asian Security and Development Conference
to discuss issues on security and economic arrangements. Vajpayee
said: "Differences should be resolved, in a rational manner,
through bilateral negotiations." His insistence on a bilateral
approach clearly ruled out regional discussions on conflicting
political issues between the countries.
The remark by Vajpayee that "In fact SAARC reminds us
that we should seek what unites us and not dwell upon our divisions"
was a direct reply to Sharif, who had stated: "The primary
reason for the failure of SAARC to live up to its promise lies
in the fact that it excludes the discussions of political problems."
Informal discussions held by the two leaders, outside of the
conference, also ended in total failure. When asked by a journalist
what the outcome of these talks was, Sharif said bluntly, "zero."
So much for the cooperation between the two main capitalist
regimes in the region, which are equally whipping up national
chauvinism at home, particularly after the nuclear bomb testing
on either side of the border, as a means of diverting and drowning
the growing mass hostility towards the ruling classes.
Even the day before the conference began, on July 28, Sri Lankan
Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadiragammar pleaded ignorance of a
proposal for the setting up of a regional security council. His
pretended ignorance only revealed his fear of antagonizing the
Bharatiya Janata Party government in India, and its concern that
the BJP regime, which came to power on an appeal to Hindu chauvinism,
might again demand a hand in the "settlement" of the
Sri Lankan racist war against the Tamil minority.
As the newly elected chairperson of the SAARC, Sri Lankan President
Chandrika Kumaratunga had only this much to say about Pakistan's
proposal: "The organization would take serious note of this."
Apart from Vajpayee, Sharif and Kumaratunga, the other heads
of state and government at the Colombo conference were the prime
ministers of Bangladesh and Nepal, Sheik Hasina and Girija Prasad
Koirala, the president of the Maldives, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom,
and the recently elected head of state of Bhutan, Lyonpo Jigmi
Yoeser.
The annual meetings of the heads of states of the region under
the banner of SAARC began in 1985. According to the former schedule
the hosting of this year's conference and the group's chairmanship
was due to go to Nepal. Sri Lankan President Kumaratunga successfully
maneuvered to get that privilege herself in order to boost her
crumbling political image in the country.
While the Sri Lankan government launched a massive propaganda
campaign around the conference, it also mobilized the biggest
ever security operations in the city of Colombo, in the guise
of "preventing a terrorist attack." Over 6,000 policemen,
in addition to a large number of soldiers, were deployed in the
city streets to man checkpoints and patrol and guard summit meeting
places and visitors.
City residents were warned not to entertain any visitors in
their homes during the days of the SAARC conference. This intimidation
campaign was directed mainly against the Tamil minority people
in the city and suburbs. Hundreds of Tamil youths were arrested
and detained in advance. In line with the militarisation of the
regime, the armed forces were given an opportunity for a test
run of a military siege of the city.
When the SAARC was formally launched in 1985, at a conference
in Dhaka in Bangladesh, it was announced that the aim of the organization
was the alleviation of poverty and promotion of social welfare
of the masses by working out economic and social development programs
through cooperation of the member countries. After thirteen years,
this same hollow rhetoric was reiterated at this 10th SAARC summit.
The Sri Lankan foreign minister said the main topic of this
year's conference was cooperation between countries under conditions
of the globalisation of economic affairs. Social conditions in
South Asia which gradually deteriorated over the past five decades
have worsened rapidly since the ruling classes decided to do away
with tariff barriers and create even more favorable conditions
for international capital.
Report on social crisis
This is what the Group of Eminent Persons appointed
at the conference last year in Male to assess the progress of
the SAARC had to say in their report: "There has been a perceptible
dis-juncture between SAARC decisions and their implementation."
Out of the 960 million people of India, 400 million live under
the poverty line. Forty eight percent are illiterate, 250 children
and young women are forced into prostitution each day for the
lack of any other means of living. Fifty three percent of children
under five years old are malnourished and 35 million out of 100
million children are in abject poverty and have no prospect of
schooling. Only 21 percent of the population have basic amenities
such as safe drinking water. The per capita income is US$387.
In Pakistan, 62.2 percent of the people cannot read or write--75.6
percent of these are females. Life expectancy is 58 years and
the per capita income is $495.
In Bangladesh, 35.6 percent of the labor force are unemployed
and 63 percent of the population cannot read or write. According
to one report, every year nearly 200,000 women and children are
smuggled out of the country to be sold into slavery or prostitution.
The per capita income is $283.
In Nepal, the situation is even worse. Sixty percent of the
population lives under poverty line. Some 72.5 percent cannot
read or write. The per capita income is $225.
Forty six percent of Bhutan's people are illiterate. Life expectancy
isonly 52 years. The per capita income according to official records
is $ 435, but according to another report, it is only $73.
In Sri Lanka, according to 1997 statistics the top 20% of the
population receives 49.93% of national income and the 40 percent
in the lowest income group receives only 15.32%. The island has
the world's highest suicide rate, 52 for each 100,000 people,
and the main reason is poverty. The per capita income is $760.
In the Maldive Islands, the per capita income is $1,080. Although
the per capita income is higher than the rest of the countries
of the region, bourgeois economists and politicians highlight
these statistics only to cover up the unbearable social inequalities
that exist there, as in all the South Asian countries. The regime
in the Maldives maintains a one-party system of rule to prevent
all avenues of political expression in opposition to the regime.
Failure of bourgeois nationalism
None of the bourgeois regimes that came to power in the region
since formal independence from colonial rule have been able to
solve any social question. If there were some gains made in the
living standards of workers and oppressed, they were accomplished
only through self-sacrificing struggles of the masses during the
period of the post-World War II boom in world capitalism. These
"national" bourgeois regimes not only failed to carry
out the democratic tasks accomplished by the bourgeoisie in the
advanced capitalist countries--national unification, the liquidation
of feudal or caste barriers--they made political appeals aimed
at further dividing the masses on religious, racial and caste
lines.
Their nationalist economic programs were shattered as the globalisation
process became the dominant force of the world economy. Now the
bourgeoisie of every country has embraced the policies of "open
economy" and integration into the global market. When the
Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga addressed the opening
session of the conference, she spoke for all SAARC leaders, when
she said: "Splendid isolation is no answer to globalisation.
The cautious, tentative attitude to external linkages which characterized
SAARC in its earlier years is neither necessary nor viable."
Behind the hollow rhetoric of regional cooperation in economic
development, looms the effects of the recent economic crash in
South East Asian countries. At the beginning of this year nationalist
economic pundits were assuring the public that the economies in
South Asia would not be adversely effected since the "economic
fundamentals" here were right and sound. But they were proved
wrong within a few weeks.
Added to the crisis faced by India and Pakistan were the economic
sanctions imposed by Clinton administration in the United States
after the nuclear tests in May. Pakistan has almost reached the
point in defaulting on its debt servicing.While the country owed
US$800 million due to be paid by the end of July, Pakistan's total
foreign exchange reserves had sunk to US$600 million by the beginning
of the month. Prime Minister Sharif turned not to the equally
poor countries in the South Asian region but traveled, begging
bowl in hand, to the Arab countries, making a communal appeal
based on Islam. Even so, only Kuwait came forward to offer a fraction
of what Pakistan owed to foreign banks.
The banner of SAARC was used by the Indian government to remove
2,000 items from of the country's list of goods subject to import
restrictions. This will help the transnational corporations to
flood the Indian market with cheap goods, sending the already
"sick industries" within its borders to the wall. The
economic and social crisis faced by the countries of Association
of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) will not and cannot be avoided
in SAARC countries under conditions of a globalised economy.
Expressing the fears that are entertained by the ruling classes,
the Sri Lankan President added in her opening report: "Economies
seemingly stronger than those of South Asia have faltered and
thedebate continues on the causes and consequences... Those who
are marginalised in the process of globalisation would continue
to give birth to more and more movements of protest, whose destructive
violence will resound not only within national boundaries, but
surely spread in concentric ripples within our region and beyond
to the most unexpected areas of the globe."
Under capitalism, integration into the global market will take
place only at the expense of the living conditions of the masses
burdened with mounting poverty, unemployment and social misery.
Communal, racial and other divisions will be incited by the ruling
classes in their strategy to suppress social unrest. The real
cooperation of the masses can be established only on the basis
of a socialist and internationalist alternative.
See Also:
East Asian financial crisis
rocking India
Future of BJP-led government again in doubt
[27 June 1998]
Pakistan explodes nuclear
device
Gathering war clouds in South Asia
[30 May 1998]
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