|
IF IT’S REALLY A “WORLD”
BANK, THEN LET’S LOOK SOUTH
Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.
March 23, 2005
The Bush Administration in
general, and Paul Wolfowitz in particular, would have you
believe that 1,500 Americans have died, perhaps 100,000 Iraqi
civilians have been killed, and more than $200 billion has
been spent on invading and occupying Iraq, in the name of “democracy”.
Funny then that Paul
Wolfowitz is now being promoted in a secret, opaque, closely
held process that freezes out most of the world. Of special
note, the selection of the new World Bank head freezes out the
1 billion people who live on less than $1 per day, and the 3
billion who live on less than $2 per day. It freezes out the
entire Southern hemisphereAfrica, Asia, South America. In
fact, it freezes out everyone who is not a Bush loyalist in
the U.S., or a nervous European elite.
It is as if fighting world
poverty were a ping-pong game between the U.S. and Europe, a
game in which the poorer nations are not even allowed to
enter.
But why? Why should the world’s
poorest people be excluded from the process of selecting one
of the most important leaders who will affect their lives? Why
are the nations most controlled by World Bank and
International Monetary Fund policies not allowed to nominate,
or even participate in any meaningful way, in the selection of
new leadership?
Is Nelson Mandela less
qualified to run the World Bank than Paul Wolfowitz? Or how
about one of the Brazilians behind the Lula government’s
innovative proposal to eliminate hunger by taxing
international arms sales? Or, since we know that the most
direct route to fighting world poverty is to empower and
educate poor women, why not a woman from the South to lead the
World Bank, say, Arundhati Roy of India, or Nobel Prize winner
Wangari Maathai of Kenya, two women who actually know
something about helping poor people?
These names are not even
considered. Only Americans, and even then, only hard-core Bush
loyalists, are in the loop. In an entirely secret process,
despite his lack of development credentials, and despite the
widespread rejection of the idea when the Wolfowitz name was
first floated publicly, George W. Bush followed up on his
divisive choice of John Bolton for the U.N. with the promotion
of leading war hawk Paul Wolfowitz to head the World Bank.
Forget all that talk about
reconciliation with Europe and the rest of the world. Bush’s
picks were like a thumb in each of the world’s wide-open
eyes.
Since Bush makes up his own
rules as he goes along, so should we. After all, when George
W. Bush meets with Tony Blair, that’s a minority
meetingthe U.S. & the U.K. together are only
one-sixteenth of the world!
It’s time for a new set of
international rules. The IMF is not just the property of
Europe; and the World Bank can no longer be just a tool of
U.S. foreign policy.
“One-dollar, one-vote” is
no recipe for democracy.
The South deserves a voice,
and a candidate. The South should nominate one of their own
this week, even if just to break the stranglehold the U.S.
& European elites have on the process, just to crack the
ice a bit.
That nominee should have a
program, a “4-D” platform:
- Democracy program,
to open up the WB/IMF systems to the whole world;
- Development program,
to move from big energy projects to micro-, women-centered
projects, with an emphasis on renewable technologies;
- Disease-fighting
program, to battle AIDs and malaria, and the other dread
diseases which ravage the Southern hemisphere; and,
- Debt cancellation
program, to completely eliminate the debts of Africa and
Latin America, to bring the “Jubilee” described in the
Bible to the world’s poorest people. 100% debt
cancellation, with no conditions, no tricks, no
limitations, no restrictions the single most useful
step we could take to fight world poverty.
We must challenge the
process, right now, by acting as if the Southern nations
matter. Nominate a Southerner. Practice democracy. Cancel the
debt. Wipe the slate clean, and let’s start over.
Three billion poor people are
waiting.
Reverend Jesse L. Jackson,
Sr., is the Founder & President of the National
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and a former candidate for President
in 1984 & 1988. |