http://www.spinwatch.org/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=360
David Miller, 16 May 2005
"It would be very odd if people came to protest against this G8, as we're focusing on poverty in Africa and climate change. I don't quite know what they'll be protesting against."
Tony Blair in Dundee, March 2005[1]
Blair's mixture of perplexity and faux naivety is no off the cuff response. There is a clear strategy unfolding before us. The Prime Minister and his cohorts in government and in the police, special branch and MI5 have been busy with their strategy of trying to undermine and marginalise protest against their failed policies when they meet at Gleneagles this summer. The first part of the strategy is to separate the 'good protestors' from the bad ones. This is done first, by whipping up fear about the prospects of trouble at the G8 summit and second by suggesting that New Labour is on the side of the angels. They are building on the 'progressive consensus' in the phrase Schools minister David Miliband recites by rote.
We will come to the reality of New Labour policy shortly, but for the moment let's stay with the demonisation campaign. The aim is to suggest that anyone who protests against the G8 is illegitimate. The police have joined in enthusiastically encouraging increasingly wild media stories about anarchist training camps, plans for violent protests and the like.
But the government have appeared to be facing two ways on the issue. As early as January 2nd this year, Trade minister and Scottish MP Douglas Alexander could be found promoting the ‘massive rally… planned for Edinburgh on Saturday, July 2, to send the world leaders a message with a triple theme: Trade Justice, Drop the Debt and More and Better Aid.’ ‘The Make Poverty History campaign is a cause whose time has come. In Government, we know we will be challenged by this extraordinary coalition of people who care’, he went on. [2]
Blair has endorsed this view in the interview cited above he noted 'There will be people who come out on the street in favour of the Make Poverty History campaign and that's a good thing.' The good protestors will be tolerated, but the bad protestors will not. ‘Asked whether [the government] would use the new anti-terror laws against G8 protesters, Blair said: “I couldn't rule it out”’ [3] Even before being given the nod by the Prime Minister the police and intelligence services were preparing the ground to legitimise repression and police violence. This depends crucially on spreading fear and rumour about alleged threats from shadowy forces. The prize for the earliest reporting of ‘anarchists’ and the 'environmental "dogs of war"' goes to the Glasgow Herald on 26 January 2004, more than a year and a half before the summit. This was followed in short order by reports of ‘thousands of violent anarchists’ (Daily Star 27 January 2004), ‘Anarchists plotting to hijack’ the summit (Sunday Times, 13 June 2004), ‘Anarchists vow to storm Airport and block forth bridge’ (Daily Mirror, 14 June 2004) 'Anarchists start school for havoc' (Scotland on Sunday, 12 December 2004), ‘anarchists planning violence protests’ (Sunday Times, 17 October 2004) and so on. There is an apparent obsession with exaggerating every detail. Thus a publicly advertised workshop become a ‘secret camp’ (Scotland on Sunday, 12 December 2004) and a camp site becomes a ‘military style camp’ (Sunday Times, 17 April 2005). The coverage is building to a crescendo in the run up to the summit itself. Apart from the routine inaccuracy, exaggeration and hyperbole of this reporting, it should go without saying that the main problem with it is the almost total failure to report the issues (including the war in Iraq, global poverty, climate justice, corporate power and lots more) which will drive thousands of us to protest against he G8 except in terms favourable to political and business elites.
Much of the reporting results from briefings from police and intelligence sources with the line between legitimate mass protest and the alleged 'terrorist threat' being deliberately blurred. Thus the spooks ‘reveal’ that ‘British intelligence agents are disguising themselves as down-and-outs in “key terrorist target areas” as part of a nationwide surveillance operation to foil attacks by al-Qaeda.’ This is reportedly in use in areas ‘considered to be potential terror targets… such as around Westminster and the Scottish parliament’.[4] Other reports follow (in this case, the very next day) indicating that ‘a steel fence will be built around the Scottish Parliament and the Palace of Holyrood house ahead of the G8 summit at Gleneagles in an effort to tighten security against protesters.’[5] The propaganda builds by the government and intelligence agencies encouraging panic and the media amplifying it. Thus we get ‘British intelligence agents have been briefing police chiefs on how to tackle terrorist threats at the Gleneagles G8 summit'[6] on April 11 this year and then a succession of stories on the response of business including the boss of the Gleneagles Hotel (owned by Diageo) prediction that ‘riots may cost millions’ and companies, such as Shell and McDonalds, announcing that they will board up their premises. There are even alleged to be plans to shut down the operations of HBOS, Abbey and four other ‘blue-chip’ firms in Edinburgh[7]
The spiral of panic suits some very well, since they can make money out of it. Here is how the scam works. The press have repeatedly quoted 'Security consultants' about the risk of trouble around the summit. Two such are Clive Fairweather and Stuart Crawford, who regularly warn about a 'greater degree of organisation than had previously been recognised' amongst protestors which 'fuelled fears that violent… protests would erupt'(Crawford, Scotland on Sunday 12 December 2004) or that the protestors 'will be most interested in publicity' and so will focus their efforts on the 'temptation' of Edinburgh, Glasgow or Stirling' (Fairweather, Scotland on Sunday, 3 April 2005) or that 'I think it is far more likely there will be protests in cities like Edinburgh than at the summit itself' (Fairweather, Scotland on Sunday, 8 May 2005)
In fact both men work for Stuart Crawford Associates which describes itself as 'specialising in Scottish public affairs, security issues and media communications' - in other words public relations. The worse the warnings, the better the business. At present they are engaged in advising the Gleneagles Estates (bordering the Gleneagles hotel and owned by seriously old money) and possibly other business interests.[8] Their background is in the British Army, Crawford is a former Lt Colonel and Fairweather a Colonel. He was second in command of the SAS when it raided the Iranian embassy in London in 1980,[9] killing all but one of the hostage takers and, according to eye witnesses, executing two of them after they had surrendered.[10] Amongst their former clients are the 'Scottish People's Alliance' a political party linked to the 'New party', which was condemned by the Scottish Conservative leader David McLetchie as 'fascist and undemocratic'.[11] Both parties are run by Robert Durward, the Scottish business man who also runs the British Aggregates Association (also listed as a former client of Stuart Crawford Associates).
In other words trained killers with dubious connections to far right politics are posing as security experts and briefing the media on the dangers faced from protests. The more the dangers are hyped the more likely it is that they might be hired. At best this is a conflict of interest, at worst a conspiracy against democratic protest for pecuniary interest. Certainly the media do not yet seem to see a story in the fact that trained killers are advising on the security response to protests at Gleneagles. They prefer to refer to 'military style' training given to 'anarchists' whose total tally of killing of civilians or military personnel in the last decade is zero. This compares very favourably with the tally attributed to US and UK forces in Iraq in the year 2003-4 alone (over 100,000).
But the smearing of protestors as violent has been rebuffed to some extent by the G8 alternatives coalition which has applied for permission to demonstrate at Gleneagles. The police publicly accept the right to protest, but raise fears especially in off the record briefings about a minority bent on trouble. This translates in the media as shop smashing, police attacking, masked anarchists. But if one looks carefully at police statements there is cause for concern about their plans. Reports about the importation or authorisation of water cannon and plastic bullets[12] , have fuelled fears expressed by the MSP for the Gleneagles area Roseanna Cunningham who noted ‘there is actually a real danger that all the talk of armed police, surface-to-air missiles and holding compounds will make the fears of violence, understandable after Genoa and Seattle, a self-fulfilling prophecy. Some of it looks suspiciously like the police effectively saying: “Come on if you think you're hard enough”.’[13] The line between protest (including non violent direct action) and violence is blurred deliberately by some sections of the police as a means of legitimating police aggression against demonstrators engaged in peaceful protest. Scotland has a well known tradition of non violent protest such as the regular blockades of Faslane nuclear base. There is no reason not to treat non violent protests any differently around the G8. But already the MoD briefers at Faslane have been busy advising willing hacks that 'Our intelligence people are monitoring the situation closely'. 'We're used to this sort of thing but the people planning it are not the ordinary peaceful protesters. They have a different agenda.'[14] Such lies easily find a place in the sun in the press. If there is trouble at Gleneagles, it will not just be the police that are to blame, it will be their willing propagandists in the press. They should hang their heads in shame.
Can we discern the outlines of a strategy here? When Noam Chomsky visited Scotland in March one of the questions he was asked at a press conference was what should be the reaction of the protestors to the hysteria about violence. Chomsky noted that this is a classic pattern and that no doubt agent provocateurs working for the police or the intelligence services would be present amongst the demonstrators. His most important message, developed later in the day in the Gifford lecture, was that governments attempt to move the political debate and the strategies of resistance to their policies away from substantive political issues where they are very weak and towards issues and acts of violence, because that is where they are strong. Chomsky noted specifically what he called the important victories of non violent resistance in Iraq, which he claimed forced the US and UK to hold elections. But he also noted the desperation of our rulers to keep us from discussing anything which might threaten their power. Their real record is not one which bears examination so they attempt to divert attention onto the issue of violence. In any violent confrontation, Chomsky noted, the forces of the state have overwhelming firepower and resources. But on the political issues they stand exposed as defenders of privilege and corporate power.[15]
This is why a second element to the official strategy is their desperation to appear as if they are progressives and as a result to attempt to co-opt the Make Poverty History coalition. Blair has been sporting his white MPH wrist band, Bono refers to Brown and Blair as the 'Lennon and McCartney' of poverty reduction.[16] Both Blair and Brown have been making speeches on their commitment to Africa. In January, Brown made a long speech that in its own terms sounded serious about his concern to make poverty history. He noted the 'hopelessness and human loss that lies behind the numbers' and reported that in Tanzania he 'saw 8, 9, 10, 11 year old children begging to continue in school - but denied the chance because their parents could not pay the fees.' He concluded with a clarion call to make the 'arc of the moral universe… bend towards justice'[17]
On the launch of the Commission for Africa Report, the centrepiece of the government’s policy for the G8, the BBC listed eight findings requiring action by the West. They included doubling or trebling aid, forgiving debt, spend more on HIV/AIDS, fund African universities, remove trade barriers to African exports in the West. [18] Not much there to disagree with. But, in the report itself, a different picture emerges. Journalists need only read the summaries of the various chapters to get a clue about the real agenda. For example goals for economic growth in Africa are said in Chapter 7 to be possible 'only if the obstacles of… a discouraging investment climate are overcome'. This involves 'public and private sector working together to identify the obstacles to a favourable investment climate'.[19] What this means is more liberalisation and privatisation and more opportunities for western corporations to exploit African resources and labour. 'Investments in infrastructure and the enabling climate for the private sector are at the top of the agenda' says the summary of the next chapter.[20] These passages are available for all to see but are commonly suppressed in the mainstream media (including the allegedly left leaning papers the Guardian [21] and the Independent[22]). They provide a clue to the real agenda of the government, which is to spearhead neoliberal reform in Africa.
Also closely involved with the work of the Commission forAfrica is Business Action for Africa (BAA) a coalition of over 250 senior business representatives. BAA met with the Commission for Africa prior to finalising their report in February 2005. This followed a 'programme of formal consultations between the CFA and the private sector in Africa, Europe and North America'.[23] This was accomplished through the 'Business contact group' established in July 2004 at a meeting chaired by Niall Fitzgerald of Reuters and Chancellor Gordon Brown. Its programme was managed by the 'private sector Advisor' to the commission for Africa, an employee of Shell and input in the US and Canada was ensured through business lobby groups the Corporate Council on Africa and the Canadian Council on Africa, both representing trans-national capital.[24]
The corporations involved can barely contain their excitement. The 'outlook' of the business community is a 'positive one' says one of the CFA commissioners. 'It believes Africa is the next frontier for investment'. James Smith, the UK chair of Shell, which co-hosted the meeting noted that progress 'requires that the private sector has a bigger role'.[25] The chair of the Commonwealth Business Council, the business lobby group co-hosting the meeting, read out the concluding statement. Dr Mohan Kaul affirmed that 'getting the conditions right for doing business in Africa is the biggest single investment for the future well-being of its citizens'. A 'vibrant and successful private sector… is required' he noted.[26]
Amongst their duties in this adventure corporations 'should' sign 'leading codes of good social and environmental conduct'. The one apparent crumb of comfort is that 'Corporate governance principles should clearly identify and punish malpractice'. But this is a mirage as there is no requirement to sign and the codes noted (such as the UN global compact and the Global Reporting Initiative) are all voluntary and do not have any provisions or appetite for 'punishing' corporate wrongdoing.[27] This is their unifying and defining characteristic. Unsurprisingly, therefore we find that the corporations sponsoring the BAA conference are amongst the worst currently engaged in the exploitation of Africa including Shell (oil), Anglo American (mining), Rio Tinto (mining), De Beers (diamonds), Diageo, SAB Miller (both Drinks industry, use vast quantities of water), GSK (pharmaceuticals), British American Tobacco, and Unilever, (food and consumer products). Also involved are the providers of capital who profiteer from exploitation such as Standard Chartered bank and the venture capital fund Capital for Development.[28]
This pro-business agenda is nowhere clearer than in the statements of the IMF. Its International Monetary and Financial Committee, met on 16 April in Washington and reiterated the neo-liberal mantra that 'the key challenge remains to press ahead with reforms to strengthen the investment environment and foster private sector led growth’ The Committee ‘emphasizes that successful and ambitious multilateral trade liberalization is central to sustained global growth and economic development'.[29] This is as unsurprising as it is damaging to Africa and the rest of the world. The committee met in the middle of an election campaign in the UK, but the chair of the committee - Gordon Brown - managed to find time to attend. Those hankering after the accession of the Chancellor to No 10. take note.
Brown's mention of Tanzania in his speech in January 2005 is particularly inappropriate since the problems of education fees in that country are the direct result of IMF structural adjustment which forced the Tanzanian government to introduce the market into education. ‘Education's share in total budget percentage fell from 11.85% in 1983/84 to 6.95% in 1990/91’. ‘Government expenditures on education, health, and other social sectors had to be cut in order to meet conditions of donor countries and international lending institutions’[30]. What Brown gives, with apparent sincerity, with one hand is the means for the corporations to take away with the other. He offers, in other words not fine words unmatched by practice, but the very tools for the corporations to swoop on Africa and bleed it dry.
This is nowhere more apparent than in relation to aid, where the promised increases come with strings attached - they require liberalisation. Even worse, the Department for International Development aid budget directly funds privatisation PR campaigns run by the far right Adam Smith Institute and others. [31] In such obscene circumstances cutting aid to the developing world would be a better policy.
In fact the UK government is at the forefront of the new corporate drive to open up markets throughout the developing world. The adoption of some of the rhetoric of the Make Poverty History campaign is both a sign of the success of the movement and an indication of the dangers of co-option. Sadly some of the organisations involved in MPH are less than clear about this. For example Justin Forsyth Oxfam's campaign manager noted in 2002 that ‘When you speak to Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, they really understand these issues. They are easily some of the best leaders when it comes to talking about development and dismantling subsidy, and they are making the right arguments time and again.’[32]
Last year Forsyth left Oxfam to work as Blair's advisor of International Development. Meanwhile Brown's advisor on International Development, Shriti Vadera, described by the Guardian as 'tough-talking' and 'not suffering bright junior officials, let alone fools, gladly' is a former director at the US bank UBS Warburg and 'expert' on, and advocate of, 'the complex funding behind public-private partnerships'. Amongst her other roles Vadera sits on the Oxfam Council of Trustees, Oxfam’s the governing body. [33]
These relations are not necessarily corrupt, but the lack of critique of Brown and Blair and the apparent lack of recognition of the real agenda of the UK government by some in the development NGOs does suggest that the prospect of co-option of some sections of the movement is real.
The strategy to divide and rule is real and if we are to have any prospect of undermining the spin and building popular forces to turn back neo-liberalism, we should confront the failed policies of the G8 head on. This requires the broadest possible movement and in particular a battle on the terrain of politics and ideology. On the terrain of politics, the fact that we are many and they are few counts. Their policies on climate, on Iraq, on Africa, on global poverty (and the rest) have failed, it is time for us to declare that another world is possible and to make it so.
David Miller is co-editor of Arguments against G8 published by Pluto and co-editor of Spinwatch
http://www.spinwatch.org
References
[1] Cited in Lindsay McGarvie 'Labour in Dundee : Blair: G8 Wreckers Risk House Arrest ;Detention Without Trial "Cannot Be Ruled Out Exclusive"' Sunday Mail, March 6, 2005, Sunday, Pg. 2
[2] Douglas Alexander, ' Let's Make History: Scots can feed the world' Sunday Mail, January 2, 2005, Sunday, Pg. 18.
[3] Sunday Mail, March 6, 2005, as above.
[4] Liam McDougall and Neil Mackay 'The new weapon against terror: ‘tramps’: MI5 and Special Branch agents pose as vagrants to gather intelligence’, Sunday Herald, 17 April 2005 http://www.sundayherald.com/49168
[5] DAN MCDOUGALL, 'Holyrood to be given its own iron curtain for G8 summit' The Scotsman, 18 April, http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=409492005
[6] 'SPOOKS BRIEFING ON TERROR', Daily Record, April 11, 2005, Pg. 19
[7] ‘Gleneagles boss: G8 riots may cost millions' Sunday Herald, http://www.sundayherald.com/49325; ‘City petrol stations to shut during G8 protests’ Scotsman, UK - Apr 22, 2005; 'Big Macs off city for G8 protest' The Scotsman, http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=415892005; 'Corporate elite prepare secret HQs to escape G8 chaos in capital’ The Scotsman, 8 May 2005 http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=496222005
[8] Current clients list http://www.swcrawford.co.uk/clients May 2005.
[9] Stuart Crawford Associates website http://www.swcrawford.co.uk/associates.htm
[10] Peter Taylor, 'Six days that shook Britain', The Guardian, 24 July 2002, http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4467433,00.html
[11] Gethin Chamberlain, 'Doubts grow over validity of new party', The Scotsman, 22 January 2003, http://election.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=84042003
[12] DAN MCDOUGALL 'Scottish police authorised to use baton rounds during the summit' Sat 29 Jan 2005, http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/politics.cfm?id=110412005%22 ;Glenn Campbell, 'G8 officers consider water cannon' BBC Online Friday, 11 February, 2005, 17:25 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4258439.stm
[13] 'Ministers promise G8 demo rights' BBC Online, Thursday, 3 March, 2005, 17:12 GMT http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4313323.stm
[14] Mark Macaskill 'G8 summit protesters may force closure of Faslane' Sunday Times – Scotland, 17 April 2005, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2090-1573093,00.html
[15] Chomsky, N. Illegal but legitimate, A dubious doctrine for the times, Gifford Lecture, Edinburgh University, 22 March 2005. http://www.ed.ac.uk/explore/video/chomsky.html See also E. Miller, 'To Noam is to love him', Scottish Socialist Voice, 24 March 2005. http://www.scottishsocialistvoice.net/back%20issues%2005/issue%20213.htm
[16] 'Bono praises Blair and Brown' Daily Telegraph 29 September 2004 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/09/29/ubono.xml
[17] Brown, G. 'Speech by the Rt Hon Gordon Brown MP, Chancellor of the Exchequer at a DfID/UNDP seminar - 'Words into Action in 2005', Lancaster House, London., 26 January 2005. http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/newsroom_and_speeches/press/2005/press_09_05.cfm
[18] BBC Online 'Africa Report at a glance' 11 March 2005, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/4337239.stm
[19] Summary Chapter 7, Commission for Africa Report. http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/report/chapter7.html
[20] Summary Chapter 8, Commission for Africa Report. http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/report/chapter8.html
[21] The Guardian's main report was subtitled 'on a report aiming to put an ailing continent on the road to recovery' hardly a balanced perspective. Ashley Seager and Charlotte Moore, the greatest tragedy of our time: how the world can help and why it must do so now' the guardian, 11 March 2005. http://www.guardian.co.uk/hearafrica05/story/0,15756,1435198,00.html
[22] The Independent's leader described the report as a 'call to action - it must not go unheeded', again not much of a critique there. The Independent, 11 March 2005. The Independent journalist Paul Vallely was seconded to the Commission for Africa for six months and was the principal author of the report. His account of the process gives no sign that he understands the role of capital, or neoliberalism in Africa. Paul Vallely ‘Africa Commission had to work out what was wrong and how to fix it’ The Independent, 11 March 2005 http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/story.jsp?story=618858
[23] Commission for Africa, 'Commission for Africa meets global business leaders', 23 February 2004, cfapn07/05 http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/about/pressroom/pressreleases/2005/23-02-05_pr_global_business_meeting.pdf
[24] Business Action for Africa, Statement Issued by Business contact Group on Commission for Africa Report, 11 March 2005, http://www.cbcglobelink.org/cbcglobelink/events/baa05/Background.htm
[25] Commission for Africa, 'Commission for Africa meets global business leaders', 23 February 2004, cfapn07/05 http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/about/pressroom/pressreleases/2005/23-02-05_pr_global_business_meeting.pdf
[26] Commission for Africa, Business Action for Africa Conference, Concluding Statement, Delivered by Dr Mohan Kaul, CEO, Commmonwealth Business council, 5 April 2005. http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/about/documents/05-04-05_ev_business_concluding_statement.pdf
[27] Concluding Statement, as above
[28] Concluding Statement, as above
[29] Communique of the International Monetary and Financial Committee of the Board of Governors of the International Monetary Fund, 'The Global Economy and Financial Markets - Outlook, Risks and Policy Responses', Press Release No. 05/87, April 16, 2005. http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2005/pr0587.htm
[30] Joseph Figaro 'Debt Spotlight: Kenya & Tanzania' Economic Justice News Online, June 2002 Vol. 5, No. 2, http://www.50years.org/cms/ejn/story/94
[31] George Monbiot, On the Edge of Lunacy: British foreign aid is being directed to countries willing to sell off their assets to big business, Published in the Guardian 6th January 2004 http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2004/01/06/on-the-edge-of-lunacy/
[32] Cited in Johann Hari. 'The comfortable rich are being protected from the desperate poor' Independent Wednesday, June 4, 2003. http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=51
[33] Heather Stewart, 'Those who count in the Treasury', The Guardian, 15 April 2002, http://www.guardian.co.uk/budget2002/story/0,11219,684809,00.html ; Oxfam Trustees, http://www.oxfam.org.uk/about_us/trustees.htm#shriti
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
Nuff Said
19.05.2005 12:14
ninja tim
Making Poverty History demands that we work with whomever it takes
19.05.2005 13:56
The piece's conclusions are also interesting, and present a classic challenge to the thinking of the movement, which in my humble opinion it fails time after time to rise to.
The premise is that the government is trying to co-opt the Make Poverty History movement as a reflection of its own policy and to define this as legitimate protest, whereas protest on other more controversial policy issues is led by violent anarchists, and represents a threat to the British people. As evidence the article cites statements in support of MPH by government ministers and Blair and Brown, and also reciprocal positive messages from key campaign member organisations like Oxfam, praising the Blair government's stances.
The conclusion is that if we are to confront 'neoliberalism', we must avoid being split, that the strength of the movement lies in refusing to accept or condone the spin and half-truths of government and business. The challenge is to embrace the commonality of our causes in order to make the changes which are necessary before we address the details.
However, I would like to throw in some counter points to this conclusion, in defense of the campaign model being driven by Make Poverty History. First and foremost, it is worth emphasising the size and immediacy of the challenges facing the developing nations. Even acting within the neoliberal agenda, as Blair is, there are many measures which can be pursued to address the worst expressions of global poverty, to reduce the constant massive death toll which the west presides over. And although these solutions would not have the aspect of justice, or of readdressing the balance of power, and certainly not of promoting social equality, they can have real benefits to real suffering people, which make our concerns about our civil liberties and ID cards sound frivolous by comparison.
And this is why there is a divide between MPH and the anti-G8 movement. MPH is focussed on working with the powers that exist in the world to try to help as many people as possible as quickly as possible. There is some commonality of purpose with Blair, primarily because Gordon Brown has been willing to lead the international community in debt relief (ask John Smith about why this one matches the neoliberal agenda). Secondly because there is a willingness to talk about aid increases which are a good way for Labour to reassure the compassionate members of the electorate of their left wing credentials at a time when other indicators suggest the contrary. And most crucially, there is a consensus on agricultural subsidy reform, because subsidy reduction is actually a natural part of trade liberalisation, and because Britain is currently not a significant beneficiary of the Common agricultural Policy. So the government can make noises on all these issues, and MPH has to decide whether to emphasise working with government for these objectives, or to refuse to engage in the process until all the other demands are genuinely met.
The decision that MPH have made is in fact not to be co opted by government, they consistently lobby government for more than it wants to give, and there is a steady stream of low profile research papers from member organisations which are highly critical of government pro-liberalisation stances. But given the entrenched positions of other G8 governments, typically even less receptive than our own on some or all of the MPH issues (consider this from the guardian about the EU commission's vision for Africa: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardianpolitics/story/0,,1487141,00.html) the coalition has to engage in give and take with the government. Blair may give a little help, but he wants a great spoonful of credit and positive vibes in return.
And this is why there is a necessary division between the MPH and anti-G8 movement. The emphasis of resistance groups is to be positive and understanding about each other's grievances, to present a maximal set of criticism and demands, which inevitably include demands from StWC for Blair's resignation, or the trial of the cabinet as war-criminals, or the dropping of the government's keynote ID card legislation, all as part of a general demand that the power structure of the world needs to be fundamentally, revolutionarily overhauled. Anti-G8 groups are not in the habit of giving government credit in areas where they are less concerned, rather we tend (not unreasonably) to adopt more criticisms as they become available. If MPH want to make a difference rather than make a point, they do not have the same luxury.
So my counter-premise is that the general anti-g8 protesters are focussed mostly on making a point about our various causes, and that central to this point is a refusal to engage with government which is unrepresentative and special interest dominated in a way which is analogous to the G8 itself, whereas the MPH protesters are taking advantage of the fact the G8 does exist, to try for the best likely outcome in terms of policy changes.
And the counter-conclusion is that rather than berating MPH for failing to act in solidarity with the wider movement, we should recognise that it has begun the process of radicalising and informing thousands of people, and set out to make and win our case with them one at a time, because the approach of trying to force our views onto everyone will only undermine both our causes. And when, as they will, the media vilify us and ignore our causes, we must soldier on as we always do, in the hope that the more people actually have contact with protesters, the more will realise that we are trying to safeguard democracy rather than attack it.
And the answer to the challenge, is that some of our objectives can wait, some liberties might be ignored for now in pursuit of the prize of better democracy, real sustainability and global justice. But today, as uncounted people have died even while I wrote this, maybe poverty can't wait.
Chris Malins
e-mail: chrismalins@gmail.com
repressed already
19.05.2005 14:09
business as usual
so what else can we do, Mr Blair, than to shut you down?
just some bloke
Rubbish
20.05.2005 13:22
What a lie ! The police do not have the rescources to do this you idiot.
Not fooled for a moment
Good Article AND Good Comment :-)
22.05.2005 19:49
OVERLAP is good thing.
me
naivety
23.05.2005 15:12
"What a lie ! The police do not have the rescources to do this you idiot. "
well.. sadly, this is a bit of an iditiotic comment. speaking from personal experience, a few years ago I had the temerity to know people involved in putting on a reclain the streets party in hull, and as a result I had personal calls to my home and workplace, and my car was stopped, names of passengers noted etc when we were entering the city of london a month or two later. and given that that was for a fairly insignificant street party in hull, isn't it kind of logical there would be a bit more such behaviour for something on the scale of G8?
I guess not if you are naive eough to believe that the reason the police don't prosecute white collar crime, war crime, 'journalistic' sex crime etc in the same way they harrass environmental and social justice protesters is just due to 'lack of resources'.
to which I can only say: hahaha
and why not try organising an action that might really change the way the world works at the expense of the powerful, then try not to be suprised wby whatever harrassment you get.
zoe