After Seattle, violent demonstrations against
imperialism and their institutions have gained tempo. Then it was against the
WTO, now it is against the World Bank, IMF and Asia Development Bank (ADB). This
years May Day demonstrations too, were marked by pitched battles with the police
in many cities of Europe.
The month of mid-April/mid-May witnessed four major
international meetings — the bi-annual spring meeting of the World Bank and IMF
at Washington; the Group 77 meeting in Cuba; the NAM (Non-Aligned Movement)
meeting in Columbia; and the Asian Development Bank meeting in Thailand. The
first and last meetings were held under a virtual siege by thousands of
demonstrators; while the Group 77 meet saw even a number of comprador
governments speak up against the impact of globalisation in the third world.
But, at all these meetings the Indian
representatives aggressively promoted the West’s agenda — more particularly that
of the US. They seemed in desperate haste to prove their loyalty to their
imperialist bosses at these international fora. Wagging their puppy tails before
their masters, they barked ferociously at these meetings, formulae worked out by
the US.
The contrast was striking. On the one hand, the
sentiment against imperialism, specifically US imperialism, was seen to be
growing. On the other hand, the Indian lackeys were seen to be cringing more and
more towards imperialism, particularly US imperialism. Both these trends were
evident in and around these meetings.
Indian Rulers’
boot-licking Arrogance
The Yeshwant Sinhas, Jaswant Singh and gang have
acquired a new-found pompous arrogance, bloated and puffed up by US flattery.
Programmed by US imperialist software, they merely reproduce their master’s
voice .... but with an air of originality, that would put to shame India’s best
cine actors. Experts in the art of duplicity, they wallow and grovel before
their imperialist bosses, but act as pompous asses before the media and at
international fora, mouthing pre-programmed imperialist trash.
So, at the IMF/World Bank meet of Finance
Ministers, Yeshwant Sinha lectured at length on the need to restructure the IMF
in order to strengthen its role. While, the entire third world has been
devastated by IMF conditionalities, Sinha calls for strengthening its role in
world affairs !! Not surprisingly, the very next day the Group-7
countries(of the major imperialist powers) after a separate meeting, issued a
statement, of their resolve to push ahead with the restructuring of the two
bodies. To strengthen the IMF, defacto means, to strength US hegemony and TNC
loot.
At the ADB’s 33rd annual general meeting held in
early May, Sinha’s servility to US policy was even more blatant. This meeting
was marked by a clash of interests between the US and Japan, with the latter
persisting in their demand for setting up an Asia Monetary Fund (AMF).
This has been actively supported by most ASEAN countries, having faced
humiliating IMF conditionalities during the recent bail out. At this meeting,
the US representative, Truman, sought to undermine the ADB, seeing it as a
challenge to their own global hegemony asserted through the Fund/Bank combine.
Here, Truman and Sinha spoke exactly
similar words against the AMF.
A similar role was witnessed at the two other
meets. Prior to the Group 77 meet, the US sought to arm-twist countries not to
attend the meeting, being hosted by the ‘rouge state’ Cuba. This fact was
openly stated by the Indonesian president, who said that Thomas Pickering had
been specifically dispatched to Jakarta to dissuade him from attending the
meeting.
Significantly, Vajpayee, who had earlier announced
that he would be going to Cuba, suddenly changed his mind after Clinton’s visit
to this country. Even the External
Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh, who was in neighbouring Columbia just a day
earlier, attending the NAM meeting, did not attend the Cuba meet. Instead the
HRD minister Murali Manohar Joshi, was sent to put in a nominal appearance.
The five-day summit at Havana of the Group 77, was
attended by 133 countries, of which 42 were heads-of-state. Castro set the tune
by outlining the disastrous impact of globalisation on the third world. This
tune was taken up by speaker after speaker, with the Indian representative
totally silent. Ofcourse, being comprador rulers themselves, they had no
solutions to offer, except to beg for a few more crumbs from the imperialist
cake.
Even at the more mild 13th summit of the foreign
ministers of NAM, Jaswant Singh sought to divert the agenda. Here, the
whimperings were even milder than at the Group 77 meet. The main theme was
globalisation and humanitarian intervention, with the delegates pleading for
more doles from the imperialists, and pathetic appeals that the less developed
countries should not be marginalised. The Indian delegation totally digressed
from the main theme of the summit, focussing on international terrorism. In
fact, a few days before the summit, the minister of state for External Affairs,
Ajit Kumar Panja, went so far as to question the very relevance of NAM, saying
that India has emerged as a loser because of its long association with the
organisation. At the summit itself, Jaswant Singh pushed the new US-India
geo-political goals, saying that ‘democratic’ rule should be a criteria for
membership to NAM. This, in effect, targeted Pakistan, the Taliban, Myanmar and
had nothing to do with the NAM agenda.
At these meetings the Indian rulers seemed in
desperate haste to prove to the imperialist chieftains, that they are ‘more
loyal than the king’. The vulgar display of servility by India, surprised
even some of the comprador rulers of the other countries, having always been
seen as a supporters of Cuba, Iraq, Palestinians etc., against the US.
But while the Indian rulers cringed before
Bank/Fund officials, the masses rose in loud protest outside the venue.
Protests Frighten Imperialist
Conspirators
The Washington headquarters of the IMF/World Bank,
was, defacto, turned into a war-zone to facilitate the holding of its
semi-annual meeting from April 15 to 17th. The police had made elaborate
preparations to prevent a Seattle from recurring. As students had been
demonstrating against ‘corporate greed’, they closed down the George
Washington University for five days, and banned guests from staying at the
campus. They declared a holiday for government employees and warned them not to
enter the ‘war-zone’. The IMF/World Bank buildings were barricaded, with
a massive police cordon thrown around both buildings. And on the very first
morning of the meeting the police stormed the headquarters of the protestors,
closing down their meeting place.
But inspite of these preparations, some 30,000
demonstrators formed a human chain around the building preventing delegates from
reaching the venue. The way was cleared by the use of tear gas, pepper sprays
and the arrest of 600 activists. Many
delegates reached late and the meeting was disrupted. The next day, inspite of
the police high-handedness the demonstrators continued shouting slogans against
the Bank/Fund combine portraying them as agents of the TNCs. The delegates had
to sneak into the venue hall by coming two hours early. Yet many could not make
it. Finally, whatever meeting was actually managed by the finance ministers, was
under heavy armed guard, surrounded by thousands of slogan-shouting
demonstrators.
This was again repeated at the ADB meeting in
Thailand. Here 25,000 demonstrators, belonging to 38 organisations, smashed
the police barricades around the 5-star hotels housing the delegates and pushed
the police force backwards. The government had to call in the Thai Border
Security Force and army to hold back the demonstrators, using lathis, tear
gas,water cannons, etc. At the venue of the meeting the demonstrators ripped
down the barricades, broke through the police cordon, and were prevented from
entering the gates, only after the forces regrouped and launched a vicious
attack at the very entrance of the premises. Behind the building another group
of protestors, battled riot police. The demonstrators demanded to know "who
was running this country" and to
"kick the ADB out of Thailand."
Meanwhile, in Europe, May Day was celebrated with
violent protests. In America hundreds of
protestors took to the streets in US financial centres. In Berlin, leftists
briefly clashed with neo-nazis and later fought pitched battles with the police.
Thousands fought the police armed with water canons, clubs, tear gas and riot
shields. About 50 persons were injured in separate clashes in the port city of
Hamburg. In London thousands rampaged through the city disfiguring statues of
imperialist chieftains (like Churchill, Gen. Smuts, etc.,) dug up the grass at
parliament square and attacked the McDonald’s restaurant. In the pitched battle
that followed with the police, shops and cars were smashed and about 100 people
arrested. The Prime Minister, Tony Blair, in an angry outburst abused the
demonstrators as "mindless thugs", praising the real imperialist thugs,
Churchill and Gen. Smuts.
The events of this month show that while a section
of the ruling classes are capitulating totally to the imperialist offensive,
there is a rising tide of opposition to the imperialist policies of
globalisation. And, with each passing day, more and more people are taking to
the streets to voice their protests.
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