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Peace Patriot

(24,010 posts)
1. Colombia and Peru have both made pacts with the devil (so to speak):
Tue May 26, 2015, 02:01 PM
May 2015

Both governments have signed U.S. "free trade for the rich" agreements: Colombia, recently, under a center-right president, Manual Santos, after a decade of prep--murder of many labor leaders and other leftists, brutal displacement of 5 million peasant farmers, compliments of the corrupt, murderous, failed U.S. "war on drugs"--by Bush pal, the murderous fascist Alvaro Uribe; in Peru, signed by corrupt rightwinger Alan Garcia, since replaced by leftist Ollanta Humala who doesn't seem like much of a leftist any more. (Seems to have made the Corporate Compromise like so many of our Democratic Party leaders, hangin' out with the rich and powerful.) Both Colombia and Peru are selling their peoples' natural resources out from under them with little or no benefit to the majority of the people, and great harm to many people and to the environment.

Peruvian government web site touting its ties to the IMF and World Bank (gawd!):

Lima, June 10, 2014.- In October 2015 Peru will host the Annual Meetings of the Boards of Governors of the World Bank Group (WBG) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the world’s most important multilateral agencies, of which Peru is a full member.

The 2015 WBG/IMF Annual Meetings will provide Peru with a unique opportunity to strengthen its increasingly relevant position in the global stage. For seven days the country will be at the center of world attention and will have the chance to showcase its achievements and the policies implemented to become a referent at the regional and global level.

http://www.2015lima.gob.pe/en/2014/06/peru-to-host-world-bank-imf-meetings-in-october-2015
More at the link.


That says it all about Peru's 0.01% and Ollanta Humala--WELCOMING the World Bank and IMF into Peru, for godssakes! So anxious to be a "player," which inevitably means selling out your people and your country.

More from the OP article:

Fifteen years after Bolivia's water revolt, the leveraging power of loan conditionalities has given way to a popular myth among conservative governments in the region that securing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the cornerstone of economic development, regardless of the cost. Just as powers from the Global North are in a frantic scramble to control natural resources, national governments across Latin America are competing to woo investors. Combined with this corporate resource grab is a deeper ideological and political assault that allows multinationals to consolidate ever greater powers over governments already weakened by decades of neoliberal policy prescriptions. In Peru, these dynamics are clear to see: both (Spain's) Repsol and (Swiss) Glencore Xstrata have been directly implicated in an intense industry-led push for widespread deregulation of crucial environmental protections in favour of unfettered extractivism - demands that were dutifully taken up by policymakers in 2014's highly controversial “paquetazo” of reforms. Meanwhile in Colombia, (Italo-Spanish energy giant) Enel-Endesa was able to use the government's much vaunted promise to uphold “investor confidence” as a weapon against it, pressuring on three separate occasions for weaker commitments to affected communities, in a licence process that already reeks of corporate impunity.

Over and over again, the premise that giving away natural resources is a doorway to a better life has proven devastatingly false. In Peru, indigenous peoples who have inhabited the Amazon for more generations than are countable are seeing their traditional ways of life being decimated in just a few short decades as rapid industrialisation and a series of toxic spills have impacted on their ability to hunt and fish. In the copper and iron rich region of Espinar, community members at the COP20 People's Summit in Lima told us how they are being left destitute after heavy metals being leached into the water from Glencore Xstrata's mining operations are wiping out herds of livestock. This desolate story is repeated in Huila, where people who fought for their land rights during the peasant uprisings of the 1970s are now being violently evicted to clear space for Enel-Endesa's megadam project. Like Bechtel fifteen years earlier, both Glencore Xstrata and Enel-Endesa have benefited from the repressive use of state forces against civilians in asserting their government-assisted “rights” over precious raw materials.

http://upsidedownworld.org/main/bolivia-archives-31/5305-bolivia-15-years-after-the-cochabamba-water-revolt-echoes-in-new-cases-of-corporate-abuse
(my emphasis)


This is an horrendous model for economic development--letting transglobal corporations run rampant through your country--even with a relatively "liberal" president and government, as in Peru (so very like Clinton I). "Liberal" these days means "Neo-liberal" which means liberty for the rich few to steal everything in sight, with maybe a few sops to the people, such as non-racist social policy that eliminates obvious bias--gains that evaporate as the underclass sinks further into poverty (as here in the U.S. with poverty-stricken black ghettoes). (--Bill Clinton's social liberalism becomes a cruel joke, as community after community is devastated by Transglobal Corporate Rule.)

This important article (by Philippa Debossier, author of "Corporate Conquistadors&quot also discusses the crucial issue of climate change:

There is one facet in all this that is markedly different than in Cochabamba fifteen years ago: the accelerating climate crisis and the ways in which these new cases exacerbate its impacts. Repsol's relentless bingeing on fossil fuels is taking it to increasingly fragile frontiers in oil and gas exploration, setting in motion a slow industrial genocide for indigenous peoples living in the Peruvian Amazon. Glencore Xstrata is pushing communities in Espinar into greater climate vulnerability with its industrial appetite for water resources already stressed by climate-induced glacial melt. Enel-Endesa's rainforest-destroying, methane-belching hydroelectric dam, El Quimbo, is set to kickstart Colombia's own climate-wrecking fracking industry. Although wrapped in carefully crafted greenwash and invoking the myth of Corporate Social Responsibility, each of these multinationals are emblematic of how corporate activities are not only eroding social justice on the ground in South America but are also simultaneously driving climate change, with devastating consequences the world over.

http://upsidedownworld.org/main/bolivia-archives-31/5305-bolivia-15-years-after-the-cochabamba-water-revolt-echoes-in-new-cases-of-corporate-abuse
(my emphasis)


I have a lot of experience of corporate "greenwash" and it is something that thinking people and well-meaning people need to look out for. For instance, there is NO SUCH THING as "sustainable" logging in Planet Earth's current condition. The "Forest Stewardship Council" label is an utter crock. We need to put on our skeptic caps whenever we hear "green" from the maw of the Corporate P.R. monster. "Corporate social responsibility" is another baldfaced lie, when it comes to giant corporations and transglobals--entities that need to be demolished, frankly (their corporate charters pulled, their assets seized for the common good).

I am not opposed to "the marketplace." In fact, I think it's a good thing and a basic human need. But NOT these non-competitive, all powerful, everlasting corporate monopolists and rapers of the Earth. that the U.S. has unleashed upon the world. The article focuses on Spain's and Switzerland's corporate monsters, but the model is HERE--was unleashed here, and is our own rotten "gift" to the world. U.S. corporate monsters are committing equally great crimes in Latin America--indeed, even much greater crimes, combined with billions and billions of U.S. tax dollars bleeding into repressive militaries and police forces, and rightwing coffers, in Latin America, and billions more in secret budgets to destroy Latin American democracy.
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