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by
Naomi Klein
September
13, 2003
On
Monday, seven anti-privatization activists were arrested in Soweto for blocking
the installation of prepaid water meters. The meters are a privatized answer to
the fact that millions of poor South Africans cannot pay their water bills.
The
new gadgets work like pay-as-you-go cell phones, only instead of having a dead
phone when you run out of money, you have dead people, sickened by drinking
cholera-infested water.
On
the same day South Africa's "water warriors" were locked up,
Argentina's negotiations with the International Monetary Fund bogged down. The
sticking point was rate hikes for privatized utility companies. In a country
where 50 percent of the population is living in poverty, the IMF is demanding
that multinational water and electricity companies be allowed to increase their
rates by a staggering 30 percent.
At
trade summits, debates about privatization can seem wonkish and abstract. On
the ground, they are as clear and urgent as the right to survive.
After
September 11, right-wing pundits couldn't bury the globalization movement fast
enough. We were gleefully informed that in times of war, no one would care
about frivolous issues like water privatization. Much of the US antiwar
movement fell into a related trap: Now was not the time to focus on divisive
economic debates, it was time to come together to call for peace.
All
this nonsense ends in Cancún this week, when thousands of activists converge to
declare that the brutal economic model advanced by the World Trade Organization
is itself a form of war.
War
because privatization and deregulation kill--by pushing up prices on
necessities like water and medicines and pushing down prices on raw commodities
like coffee, making small farms unsustainable. War because those who resist and
"refuse to disappear," as the Zapatistas say, are routinely arrested,
beaten and even killed. War because when this kind of low-intensity repression
fails to clear the path to corporate liberation, the real wars begin.
The
global antiwar protests that surprised the world on February 15 grew out of the
networks built by years of globalization activism, from Indymedia to the World
Social Forum. And despite attempts to keep the movements separate, their only
future lies in the convergence represented by Cancún. Past movements have tried
to fight wars without confronting the economic interests behind them, or to win
economic justice without confronting military power. Today's activists, already
experts at following the money, aren't making the same mistake.
Take
Rachel Corrie. Although she is engraved in our minds as the 23-year-old in an
orange jacket with the courage to face down Israeli bulldozers, Corrie had
already glimpsed a larger threat looming behind the military hardware. "I
think it is counterproductive to only draw attention to crisis points--the
demolition of houses, shootings, overt violence," she wrote in one of her
last e-mails. "So much of what happens in Rafah is related to this slow
elimination of people's ability to survive.... Water, in particular, seems
critical and invisible." The 1999 Battle of Seattle was Corrie's first big
protest. When she arrived in Gaza, she had already trained herself not only to
see the repression on the surface but to dig deeper, to search for the economic
interests served by the Israeli attacks. This digging--interrupted by her
murder--led Corrie to the wells in nearby settlements, which she suspected of
diverting precious water from Gaza to Israeli agricultural land.
Similarly,
when Washington started handing out reconstruction contracts in Iraq, veterans
of the globalization debate spotted the underlying agenda in the familiar names
of deregulation and privatization pushers Bechtel and Halliburton. If these
guys are leading the charge, it means Iraq is being sold off, not rebuilt. Even
those who opposed the war exclusively for how it was waged (without UN
approval, with insufficient evidence that Iraq posed an imminent threat) now
cannot help but see why it was waged: to implement the very same policies being
protested in Cancún--mass privatization, unrestricted access for multinationals
and drastic public-sector cutbacks. As Robert Fisk recently wrote in The
Independent, Paul Bremer's uniform says it all: "a business suit and combat
boots."
Occupied
Iraq is being turned into a twisted laboratory for freebase free-market
economics, much as Chile was for Milton Friedman's "Chicago boys"
after the 1973 coup. Friedman called it "shock treatment," though, as
in Iraq, it was actually armed robbery of the shellshocked.
Speaking
of Chile, the Bush Administration has let it be known that if the Cancún
meetings fail, it will simply barrel ahead with more bilateral free-trade
deals, like the one just signed with Chile. Insignificant in economic terms,
the deal's real power is as a wedge: Already, Washington is using it to bully
Brazil and Argentina into supporting the Free Trade Area of the Americas or
risk being left behind.
Thirty
years have passed since that other September 11, when Gen. Augusto Pinochet,
with the help of the CIA, brought the free market to Chile "with blood and
fire," as they say in Latin America. That terror is paying dividends to
this day: The left never recovered, and Chile remains the most pliant country
in the region, willing to do Washington's bidding even as its neighbors reject
neoliberalism at the ballot box and on the streets.
In
August 1976, an article appeared in this magazine written by Orlando Letelier,
former foreign affairs minister in Salvador Allende's overthrown government.
Letelier was frustrated with an international community that professed horror
at Pinochet's human rights abuses but supported his free-market policies,
refusing to see "the brutal force required to achieve these goals.
Repression for the majorities and 'economic freedom' for small privileged
groups are in Chile two sides of the same coin." Less than a month later,
Letelier was killed by a car bomb in Washington, DC.
The
greatest enemies of terror never lose sight of the economic interests served by
violence, or the violence of capitalism itself. Letelier understood that. So
did Rachel Corrie. As our movements converge in Cancún, so must we.
Naomi Klein is a leading anti-sweatshop
activist, and author of Fences and Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines
of the Globalization Debate? (Picador, 2002) and No Logo: Taking Aim at
the Brand Bullies (Picador, 2000). Visit the No Logo website: www.nologo.org.
* Stark
Message of the Mutiny: Is the Philippine Government Bombing its Own People for
Dollars?
* Why Being a
Librarian is a Radical Choice
* Bush to
NGOs: Watch Your Mouths
* When Some
Lives Are Worth More than Others: Rachel Corrie and Jessica Lynch