Arundhati Roy does a formidable job exposing these NGOs...
"...When corporate-endowed foundations first made their appearance in the
US, there was a fierce debate about their provenance, legality and lack
of accountability. People suggested that if companies had so much
surplus money, they should raise the wages of their workers. (People
made these outrageous suggestions in those days, even in America.) The
idea of these foundations, so ordinary now, was in fact a leap of the
business imagination. Non-tax-paying legal entities with massive
resources and an almost unlimited brief—wholly unaccountable, wholly
non-transparent—what better way to parlay economic wealth into
political, social and cultural capital, to turn money into power? What
better way for usurers to use a minuscule percentage of their profits to
run the world? How else would Bill Gates, who admittedly knows a thing
or two about computers, find himself designing education, health and
agriculture policies, not just for the US government, but for
governments all over the world?"
"...By the 1950s, the Rockefeller and Ford foundations, funding several NGOs
and international educational institutions, began to work as
quasi-extensions of the US government that was at the time toppling
democratically elected governments in Latin America, Iran and Indonesia.
(That was also around the time they made their entry into India, then
non-aligned, but clearly tilting towards the Soviet Union.) The Ford
Foundation established a US-style economics course at the Indonesian
University. Elite Indonesian students, trained in counter-insurgency by
US army officers, played a crucial part in the 1965 CIA-backed coup in
Indonesia that brought General Suharto to power. Gen Suharto repaid his
mentors by slaughtering hundreds of thousands of Communist rebels.
Eight years later, young Chilean students, who came to be known as
the Chicago Boys, were taken to the US to be trained in neo-liberal
economics by Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago (endowed by
J.D. Rockefeller), in preparation for the 1973 CIA-backed coup that
killed Salvador Allende, and brought in General Pinochet and a reign of
death squads, disappearances and terror that lasted for seventeen years.
(Allende’s crime was being a democratically elected socialist and
nationalising Chile’s mines.)
In 1957, the Rockefeller Foundation established the Ramon Magsaysay
Prize for community leaders in Asia. It was named after Ramon Magsaysay,
president of the Philippines, a crucial ally in the US campaign against
Communism in Southeast Asia. In 2000, the Ford Foundation established
the Ramon Magsaysay Emergent Leadership Award. The Magsaysay Award is
considered a prestigious award among artists, activists and community
workers in India. M.S. Subbulakshmi and Satyajit Ray won it, so did
Jayaprakash Narayan and one of India’s finest journalists, P. Sainath.
But they did more for the Magsaysay award than it did for them. In
general, it has become a gentle arbiter of what kind of activism is
“acceptable” and what is not.
Interestingly, Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption movement last summer was
spearheaded by three Magsaysay Award winners—Anna Hazare, Arvind
Kejriwal and Kiran Bedi. One of Arvind Kejriwal’s many NGOs is
generously funded by Ford Foundation. Kiran Bedi’s NGO is funded by Coca
Cola and Lehman Brothers."
"...The transformation of the idea of justice into the industry of human
rights has been a conceptual coup in which NGOs and foundations have
played a crucial part. The narrow focus of human rights enables an
atrocity-based analysis in which the larger picture can be blocked out
and both parties in a conflict—say, for example, the Maoists and the
Indian government, or the Israeli Army and Hamas—can both be admonished
as Human Rights Violators. The land-grab by mining corporations or the
history of the annexation of Palestinian land by the State of Israel
then become footnotes with very little bearing on the discourse. This is
not to suggest that human rights don’t matter. They do, but they are
not a good enough prism through which to view or remotely understand the
great injustices in the world we live in."
The whole article can be found here.
1 comment:
Sophia - 100 dead in Syria today, killed by Assad's forces. Isn;t it time to stop blaming the West and the US and start examining to what length Assad will go to stay in his inherited power?
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