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Money won’t be sufficient climate
change compensation


Atiq Rahman, one of the lead authors of the influential IPCC reports which established the scientific basis of climate change last year, tells New Age what Bangladesh will be seeking to achieve at the UK-Bangladesh climate change summit that kicks off today

Interviewed by Mahtab Haider


New Age: What are the key goals Bangladesh will look to achieve at the UK-Bangladesh climate change summit?
   Atiq Rahman: One of the key goals of the summit will be to establish Bangladesh as a country with a high degree of resilience to some of the most devastating outcomes of climate change – floods, cyclones, and other extreme weather events – and experience in developing adaptations measures. This is our first opportunity for a bilateral meeting on climate change funding, and although the discussion will be between the UK and Bangladesh, the aim is the creation of a multilateral fund. We also want to demonstrate that we are capable of handling a large multilateral fund, and that we have a strategy of good governance to achieve results.
   
   What amount of money are we talking about when we look to the West for funding?
   It’s likely that at this summit the UK will commit about US$ 85 – 100 million to the multilateral fund, and a number of other countries are also showing their interest. Overall, it’s difficult to estimate the total amount we need, but it is huge. Think that the quoted damage from Cyclone Sidr was about US$ 3-4 billion – and that was just one night. To that we have to add the damage it did to our food security, and given the current market situation, what price do we put on food anyway? Given the rising intensity and frequency of floods, cyclones and other extreme weather events, the money we need to adapt to these changing conditions is huge.
   
   And countries of the West are obliged to pay this money?
   The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is the first document in which the industrialised countries have admitted that, knowingly or unknowingly, they have achieved tremendous economic growth during the last century at a terrible price. Their use of energy resulted in heavy emissions of greenhouse gases making the world vulnerable to extreme weather events. Now, if we pursue the same course of development, the ecological damage will continue. So it is only fair that those who have benefited from these emissions that must now be stopped or curbed, must compensate those who played no part in it but are suffering the sometimes dire or fatal consequences. Some of this compensation can come in the form of fund transfers, others in the form of technology transfer, but if there are ten criteria to qualify for this compensation, Bangladesh fits seven of those. We are at the frontline, the ground-zero, of climate change.
   
   Controversies have emerged over who will manage this fund in Bangladesh with a section within the government under pressure to assign the World Bank as the manager, while others oppose this. Why is that?
   Yes the issue of the fund manager hasn’t been resolved yet. Since the fund will be owned by the government of Bangladesh, perhaps a new entity could be created and a committee formed to oversee the fund. Some donors have suggested that a multilateral agency be the manager. The problem with the World Bank managing the fund is that it comes with its historical baggage of imposing counter conditionalities on client governments. There is also a question of how much we will have to pay out as the Bank’s commission for managing the fund. Whoever is the manager though, the key will be the strength of an oversight committee that we should create to be the custodian of the fund.
   
   There are tensions between the environment ministry and the external relations division over a number of climate change issues but principally that the ERD thinks it is acceptable that climate change funding comes in the form of loans. Are loans acceptable?
   Let me be very clear on this: the entire climate change fund transfer issue is embedded in the framework convention and is part of the UN negotiations. Given our leadership role in the group of least developed countries, and in the G77, if we do a side deal, say accepting a loan as a climate change fund transfer, we will jeopardise the entire group’s position. We must not do anything, at this summit, or after, that will jeopardise our negotiations position. Our head of state said at the climate change conference held at the Dhaka University recently that we should get compensation for the harm that the industrialised north has caused. Our central point of loyalty must be to the framework convention.
   
   The Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan 2008 document, which Bangladesh is presenting at the UK summit is facing harsh criticism on the grounds that it was hurriedly put together and does not deserve national ownership. Do you think these criticisms are valid?
   Well, it is a living document and not set in stone, so there will be plenty of opportunities to incorporate more issues in it as we go along. But it is true that it was not circulated widely enough in preparation, possibly because time did not allow it. It was created from the need to present such a document at the London conference.
   
   Why is it that there is no mention of climate refugees in the whole document? In the past you have been quite outspoken about the need to address that issue.
   I can’t defend that – I admit that there should at least have been a mention of climate refugees in the preamble, if nothing else. The climate refugee issue is a human rights issue. We have to apply the ‘polluter pays’ principle to the problem. In a world where economies are becoming globalised, and the problem of climate change is globalised, the recognition of the right to survival should also be globalised. It is clear that money will not be sufficient compensation for climate change when countries like Bangladesh become saddled with millions of climate refugees. Where will we accommodate them? The west must share responsibility for this. There is no ethical or scientific reason why they shouldn’t.


Toward a new American isolationism

by Walden Bello


DESPITE the glitter that surrounded both the Olympics in Beijing and the Democratic National Convention in Denver, the messages coming to Asia from the two events were very different.
   From Beijing the message was, to put it in the words of one pundit, China has had a few bad centuries but is back on its feet. From Denver, the word was that the United States has been on a desperate decade-long downspin that can only get worse if the Republicans keep the White House.
   For people in this part of the world, the weakening of US power is most evident elsewhere: in the Middle East and Southwest Asia, where Washington is bogged down in unending wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; in Latin America, where the rebellion against neo-liberalism and US meddling is in full swing; and, most recently, in Central Asia, where Washington and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation have been taught a painful lesson in overextension in Georgia.
   The erosion of Washington’s position is less obvious in Asia. After all, the United States continues to maintain more than 300 military bases and facilities in the Western Pacific. Over the last decade, it has established a permanent troop presence in the Southern Philippines to make up for its giving up its two big military bases on Luzon Island in 1992. And in Indonesia, the Pentagon has re-established its close ties with the Indonesian military after several years of uncertainty, using the opportunity provided by relief operations during the tsunami of 2004.
   
   Erosion of US power in East Asia
   Nevertheless, the region – and Southeast Asia in particular – is probably more independent of the United States today than at any other time in the last 60 years. Economics is the reason. Over the last two decades, several developments have eroded the US position.
   First of all, its drive to create the trans-Pacific free-trade area known as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation failed. APEC was meant to be a westward extension of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and both were intended to serve as a geo-economic counterweight to the European Union. Japan, China, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, fearing US economic domination in the name of free trade, scuttled President Bill Clinton’s trans-Pacific dream at the APEC Summit in Osaka in 1995. APEC summits continue to be held, but these are remembered more as times when heads of state don the host country’s national costume than as occasions for serious economic decision-making.
   Second, US efforts to impose capital account and financial liberalisation on the Asia Pacific economies as a key element of more thoroughgoing structural transformation backfired. Capital account liberalisation led to the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998. Instead of helping to shore up economies in crisis, Washington took advantage of the crisis to try to comprehensively transform the region’s economies along neoliberal lines. As one of Clinton’s economic lieutenants saw it, ‘Most of these countries are going through a dark and deep tunnel…But on the other end there is going to be a significantly different Asia in which American firms have achieved a much deeper market penetration, much greater access.’
   The outcome proved to be different. Malaysia imposed capital controls. The International Monetary Fund was discredited, with the Thai government declaring its intention never to go back to the agency after paying off its loans in 2003 and the Indonesian government resolving to do the same thing in 2008. While Washington and the IMF were able to kill Japan’s proposal for an Asian Monetary Fund at the height of the crisis, the East Asian governments formed the ‘ASEAN Plus Three’ financial mechanism that excludes the United States and is likely to be the precursor of a full-blown regional financial agency. Neoliberal transformation has stalled in Japan and most Southeast Asian countries, with possibly only South Korea continuing to travel along the free-market path desired by the United States.
   Moreover, the Asian governments have built up massive foreign exchange reserves to protect themselves against future speculative crises provoked by the movements of global finance capital led by US funds. And the United States has become dependent on these Asian reserves for funds to prop up its massive military expenditures and the middle-class spending that for a long time served as an artificial barrier against recession. With the unravelling of American financial institutions, the onset of recession, and the depreciation of the dollar, the US economy has become hostage to these countries’ decisions to continue to lend to Washington and Wall Street.
   In a third development not positive for the United States, the region has become increasingly dependent on the red-hot Chinese economic locomotive. According to a United Nations report, China has been a ‘major engine of growth for most of the economies in the region. The country’s imports accelerated even more than its exports, with a large proportion coming from the rest of Asia.’ In fact, this Chinese demand pulled the Asia Pacific economies from the recession caused by the Asian financial crisis. China has not only surpassed the United States to become Japan’s main trading partner but Chinese demand has helped keep the world’s second-largest economy from falling back into recession.
   Conscious of its economic clout, China has moved to consolidate its position as East Asia’s new economic centre via smart economic diplomacy. In 2002, it convinced the ASEAN governments to create the ASEAN-China Free Trade Area that is scheduled to come into effect in 2010. Japan has tried to catch up by offering ASEAN countries ‘economic partnership agreements.’ Meanwhile, talks on a US-Thailand free trade area have been frozen by popular opposition to Washington’s strident championing of the so-called intellectual property rights of its corporations. All in all, the biggest beneficiary of the Bush administration’s imperial and corporate misadventures over the last decade has been China, which has kept itself from military entanglements and devoted itself single-mindedly to economic development.
   
   Challenges posed by China’s ascent
   The rise of China poses a number of fundamental challenges to different key actors in East Asia.
   For Japan, the key challenge is to move from being the springboard for US power projection in the region to a mature relationship with China. A definitive acceptance of responsibility on the part of the Japanese people and their leaders for the atrocities committed by Japanese troops during World War II, including the infamous Nanjing Massacre, is an indispensable step in this move toward a mature relationship between Asia’s leading economic powers.
   For Southeast Asia, the challenge is how to avoid becoming an appendage of the Chinese economy. Chinese demand was, as mentioned earlier, an immense force lifting Southeast Asia’s economies from the depths of the Asian financial crisis. However, China’s developing trade and investment relations with ASEAN also include some unpleasant aspects, for instance the experience of Thai vegetable and fruit producers under an ‘early harvest’ free trade arrangement with China earlier this decade. Under the agreement, Thailand expected to export tropical fruits to China while eliminating tariffs on imports of winter fruits from China. The expectations of mutual benefit evaporated after a few months, however, as massive imports from China wiped out Thai producers of many fruits and vegetables such as garlic and red onions.
   But the fears of many in Southeast Asia go beyond lopsided trade agreements with China. With land and energy relatively scarce in China, Beijing has encouraged Chinese enterprises to seek deals to mine minerals and grow crops in Southeast Asian countries for exclusive export to the China market. For example, in a deal with the Philippines, the Chinese Fuhua Group plans to invest $3.83 billion over five to seven years to develop 1 million hectares of land to grow high-yielding strains of corn, rice, and sorghum. The Philippine government is currently identifying ‘idle lands’ that can be incorporated into these Chinese plantations. This in a country where seven out of 10 farmers are landless.
   Some have been quick to call China’s international economic policies ‘imperialistic.’ However, exploitative relations between China and other developing countries have not acquired an imperial structure and lack the element of force and coercion that accompanied the imposition of European and American economic power on weaker societies.
   Nevertheless, Southeast Asian governments need to balance their spontaneous feelings of South-South solidarity with cool-headed realism. Countries like China, Brazil, and India are led by developmentalist elites that are seeking to find their place in a new global capitalist order marked by the loosening of the economic hegemony of the old capitalist centres, that is, Japan, the United States, and the European Union. The pursuit of national economic interest, not regional cooperation for development, is the central concern of these elites. The intention of China, India, and Brazil in promoting trade and investment agreements with smaller countries or courting them to join regional economic formations is to advance their own regional and global aims.
   However, this does not mean that a trade agreement and regional economic formation linking China and ASEAN should be avoided at all costs. Rather, ASEAN governments must enter talks with China with eyes wide open and negotiate collectively, not as 10 separate governments. They must make it clear to China that they don’t desire a trade agreement based on free trade – such as the arrangements that the US, EU, and Japan are pushing on them – but one in which the net benefits of the arrangement accrue to them, not China. Although China’s relationship with Southeast Asia is not exploitative, the negotiation of economic relationships between Beijing and its neighbours could replicate the old structural patterns marking the relations between Southeast Asia and Europe, the United States, and Japan – unless considerations of equity are front and centre.
   
   The US-China relationship
   The most critical regional relationship, however, is between the United States and China since the United States is the most powerful power in East Asia and China the next most powerful.
   In his stimulating book Adam Smith in Beijing, the eminent political economist Giovanni Arrighi of Johns Hopkins University writes that there are three alternative policies that the United States can adopt toward an ascendant China.
   The first is an updated version of the Cold War strategy of containment. In this strategy, China is seen as a strategic threat or, as the Bush administration puts it euphemistically, a ‘strategic competitor.’ The US response would be to ‘dissuade China’ from its military ambitions by boosting the massive American military presence in the Western Pacific, strengthening the bilateral agreements with US allies that sustain this trans-Pacific garrison state, and building up defence cooperation with India, Asia’s other big power. This response misconstrues the nature of the Chinese challenge, which is an economic rather than a strategic one, and would be disastrous for the whole world.
   According to the second strategy, the United States chooses not to confront China directly as it confronted the old Soviet Union but to put into motion balance of power politics to weaken China indirectly. Arrighi quotes James Pinkerton, a protagonist of this approach: Instead of confronting directly the rising Asian powers, the United States should play them off each other. As the Latin expression tertium gaudens – the happy third – reminds us, rather than getting in the middle of every fight, sometimes it is better ‘to hold the coats of those who do.’ For the US national interest, ‘a better Asia would be one in which China, India, Japan, and possibly another ‘tiger’ or two contend with each other for power while we enjoy the happy luxury of third party by-standing.’ This strategy, too, would also have terrible consequences for the region.
   A third strategy, which Arrighi identifies with former national security advisers Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski, views China not as a revisionist power but as one that wants to join the global status quo. The appropriate response for Washington is to accept China as part of the elite of the global state system and work with it in pursuit of international stability, in the same way that Britain, the hegemon of the 19th century, cooperated and made way for the United States, the hegemon of the 20th century.
   Arrighi prefers this third strategy. And I do, too, though not enthusiastically since it still is in essence conservative, preserving the global status quo. This strategy is, however, the least likely of the three to be adopted. Imperial America is not like imperial Britain. The United States is ideologically an expansionist missionary democracy that will find it difficult to accept No. 2 status without provoking a reactionary populist reaction among key segments of its population. Aside from powerful corporate and strategic interests – which desire an accommodation with China – US leaders have a messianic drive to remake the world along the lines of a liberal or neoliberal Lockean democracy.
   
   Civil society, China, and America
   This conundrum inevitably leads to a discussion of how civil society, both in Asia and globally, ought to respond to the erosion of US hegemony and the ascent of China. In the best of all possible worlds, the United States and China could be supporters of the drive to create a new world order built on peace, justice, and popular sovereignty. Unfortunately, we live in a less-than-ideal world.
   The task of civil society is to pressure China, as it intensifies its engagement with the world, to resist the temptation of following the destructive imperial path blazed by Europe and the United States. Social movements must also push China away from the fossil-fuel intensive, consumption-oriented path of development pioneered by the West and toward one that is more ecologically sustainable and sensitive to equity issues. This won’t be easy. Nevertheless, there are signs of hope. For instance, Chinese leaders are currently rethinking the direction of the country’s development. Notes Arrighi:
   ‘If the reorientation succeeds in reviving and consolidating China’s traditions of self-centred market-based development, accumulation without dispossession, mobilisation of human rather than non-human resources, and government through mass participation in shaping policies, then the chances are that China will be in a position to contribute decisively to the emergence of a commonwealth of civilisations truly respectful of differences. But, if the reorientation fails, China may well turn into a new epicentre of social and political chaos that will facilitate Northern attempts to re-establish a crumbling global dominance.’
   Given the Chinese leadership’s concern for legitimacy both internally and internationally, the failure of the proponents of reorientation is not a foregone conclusion. This is why pressure from international civil society for a change in economic strategy, for pro-environment policies, for the expansion of democratic rights, and for equitable relations with the developing countries must be kept up.
   
   What’s good for America and the world
   Blunting Washington’s innately hegemonic thrust will be much more difficult – but not impossible.
   Perhaps the best strategy for civil society at this point is not so much to rely on appeals to American ideals but to continually point to the very high costs of intervention, in terms of soldiers killed, money spent, domestic strife, and credibility lost. Part of this strategy must be pressure for the removal of the US military bases from Asia and the Pacific and the neutralising of the bilateral treaties between the United States and a number of Asian countries. Aside from being the pillars of Washington’s containment of China, these institutions are the main factors that prevent China and other East Asian countries from evolving a more mature relationship.
   More broadly, the aim of civil society mobilisation both in Asia and globally should be to encourage a new American isolationism. Barack Obama is definitely preferable to John McCain, but the world doesn’t need a new American internationalism of the liberal and soft-power variety. We shouldn’t tolerate a policy of withdrawing troops from Iraq only to send them to Afghanistan in the name of defending human rights. We don’t want in place of military confrontation, an aggressive diplomatic isolation of Iran led by a Democratic elite that is uncritical, as Obama is, of Israel. We don’t want an obsession with the Middle East to be replaced with an obsession with destabilising Hugo Chavez and restoring US influence in Latin America. And we should worry when Bill Clinton says, as he did during the Democratic Party convention, that one of Obama’s objectives will be to ‘restore American leadership in the world.’ Asia doesn’t need or want American leadership.
   What Asia, like the rest of the world, needs is a vacation from a messianic United States. A few decades of a withdrawn, self-absorbed, isolationist America, paying attention to its domestic troubles and deterred by the high costs of the continued pursuit of hegemony globally, would be good for the region and good for everybody.
   Foreign Policy In Focus, September 5, 2008. Walden Bello is professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines.




RAB web site hacked


If your doors are not secure, thieves will break in.
   Imtiyaz Husain
   Gulshan, Dhaka
   

* * *

   The RAB officials should take lessons from Shahi Mirza and his friends on how to improve RAB’s knowledge and skill in technology.
   RAB had been bestowed with serious responsibilities and was blessed with disproportionate amount of resources but they simply faltered.
   They continued to show their expertise in torture and extra-judicial killing in the name of cross-fires. RAB has become a burden and shame for the nation.
   Giving them more responsibi-
   lities and more resources without improvement of their record is an insane idea.
   MH Khan
   Via e-mail
Sarah Palin as VP candidate!


I was astonished by the Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s vice-presidential candidate pick.
   He chose Sarah Palin, the governor
   of Alaska, who is quite an unknown figure.
   Her acceptance speech at the convention astounded me as Sarah went after Barack Obama with tooth and nail! It was most ungracious. It was ‘all jury, without any substance’.
   I am baffled why McCain decided to make Sarah Palin his running mate.
   Nur Jahan
   Chittagong


Religion and state


The statement by the Awami League leader Ashraful to distinguish between ‘state functions’ and ‘religious functions’ is indeed a sign of maturity and this is long overdue. Politics and religion are two different concepts. The former is for worldly matters and the latter is for spiritual matters.
   Well done, Mr Ashraful of Awami League and I hope other political leaders will show such maturity of vision.
   Engineer Shafi Ahmed
   London, UK


‘Pakistan using US funds to
fight India’ - Obama


Now the Americans will be happy with Obama as he now shows true colour of America — black or white. Will America in future America fight Pakistan with Indian help?
   F Islam
   Dhaka


Zardari, the new Pak president


Genuine democracy is important for sustainable development of a country. It was long expected that a democratic government will replace the military government in Pakistan. But Zardari, who is well-known as ‘Mr 10-per cent’ — a true symbol of corruption, needs to prove himself. A corrupt person cannot be an ideal leader in the 21st century.
   Let’s see how it goes.
   Mohammed Feruje
   Via e-mail

Next on Quick Comments
a. ACC deluged with wealth statements of 12 lakh public servants: Writes to cabinet division for advice (New Age, September 9)

b. Dhaka to seek $5b climate fund at London conference (New Age, September 9)

c. Deaths of Bangladeshi workers on foreign land on rise (New Age, September 9)

d. Nepal abolishes slave labour system (New Age, September 9)


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