SAMIR AMIN:
MEMOIRS (extracts)
IDEP,
Codesria, TWF, and WFA
I The
struggle for IDEP
Professor at IDEP–Dakar (1963–67)
Sometime in 1962, I agreed to join a UN team to work on
setting up
an
African ‘Planning and Development Institute’. I therefore went to Addis
Ababa (for the first time in my life) and spent a month there exchanging ideas with other members of the team. I have to say that I was not impressed by how things looked. The majority – African bureaucrats and foreign ‘experts’ – knew what was a
‘good development policy’ and ‘good teaching of planning and management techniques’; everything had been written up in expert reports and put in the heads of all good teachers. This demonstrated either incredible naivety or mindless conceit. My
minority position had the support of some key people outside the team, both in New York (Philippe de Seynes) and in Addis (a few senior top African diplomats, some Ethiopian civil servants well above the average for the continent), and
of the Englishman Arthur Ewing, who was temporarily in charge of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) until the arrival of Robert Gardiner (who also soon showed an inclination to take our side). It was therefore worth remaining involved in the project, and in October 1963 Isabelle and I left Bamako for Dakar, the base of the new African Institute for Economic Planning and Development (IDEP).
IDEP soon brought home to me the
advantages of UN work – doing something new, in a multinational spirit – but
also the extreme weaknesses of the system, buffeted as it was by two
centrifugal forces which, for reasons bound up with its international
character, were impossible to reconcile. The rapid turnover of directors in the
196os – once a year for the first four years of its existence, when there
should have been maximum continuity – was one clear expression of these
weaknesses. Although the preparatory committee had produced a document defining
the Institute’s aims, mode of operation and funding, as well as an outline of
its teaching programme (plus a purely formal reference to research), it was a
document in the diplomatic and ambiguous style of UN ‘resolutions’. The
director and the team in charge of implementing the document therefore had
considerable autonomy if they wished to use it.
I do not know how it happened, but for the first year the directorship
was entrusted to two men with poorly defined functions: Christian Vieyra (a
legal expert from Benin, or, as it was then called, Dahomey) and John Mars (an
economics professor from Britain, of Austrian origin). Each shouted aloud that
he was the director, one in French, the other in English, as both were
resistant to bilingualism and communicated with (or, more often, insulted) each
other through the offices of a rather embarrassed interpreter. Vieyra was
close to the most moderate politicians in French-speaking Africa, especially
Dahomey, who were highly sensitive to the views of the French ‘Coopération’
service (the former colonial ministry, quickly rebaptized without a change of
location or, for the most part, personnel). Mars was a mainstream economics
professor, who had no experience of the ‘third world’ and had given little
thought to its problems. He was also totally naive politically, and used to
stand on his balcony (one floor above ours) to applaud some public figure or
folklore troupe as they passed by in the street. He probably had some character
problems too: we used to hear him grousing alone at night, or hurling his shoes
across the room.
In 1964 Robert Gardiner, the
director of UNECA, got rid of the Vieyra– Mars duo and appointed a Dane,
Boserup. I have a lot of respect for that man, who, despite his somewhat
Prussian stiffness, was open-minded and eager to learn. His wife, Ester, was an
extremely sharp woman, whose work on demography and agrarian technological
change (overturning all the prejudices about the evolution of work in so-called
primitive societies) is a classic in its field. We became friends, and many
years later I met up with Boserup again in Copenhagen. In the period I am
talking about, however, his
task was to find an African director to succeed him at the Institute within the
space of one year. He kept his promise, but in my opinion he made an
unfortunate choice. The Senegalese–Mauritian Mamodou Touré did not have the
right preparation for the job – although this did not prevent him from later
making a career at the IMF (whose zealous servant he was in Zaire) and as
finance minister in Dakar. Joseph Stiglitz recently wrote that the recruitment
of bogus economists served the function of turning them into executors of a
policy decided elsewhere, but his critical spirit was not much in evidence
during his days as a servant of the World Bank. In fact, he was timid in the
extreme and tried to avoid any research that might displease one government or
another, one minister or another. For my part, I did not think it possible to
teach without doing research, and I used the time available to us to work on
Ivory Coast and Mali, as well as on the three countries of the Maghreb. My
conclusions terrified Touré, who would have liked to put my ‘reports’ under
lock and key and prohibit their use or dissemination. I began to think of
leaving IDEP if Touré kept this position. And, when I left in October 1967, he
was still director – although soon after he would be recruited by the IMF. His
successor was David Carney, whom I myself succeeded in 1970.
In resigning from IDEP, I thought it best to
explain my reasons in a letter to U Thant, then secretary-general of the UN,
without mentioning anything personal regarding either myself or my colleagues
and the director. I simply said that, in my opinion, IDEP’s role should not be
that of a technical college poorly placed in the competition with African and
other universities; that the Institute should aim to become one of the main
centres for critical reflection and teaching about the theory and practice of
development in Africa. It was this letter which made people think of me for the
job of director, when a UNDP task force under Vu Van Thai was set up in 1969 to
propose solutions to the failure of the Institute to take off.
My original job at IDEP was to teach national accounting and African
techniques (and experiences) of planning. I
also taught input–output techniques (which were relatively easy to handle), but
I also gave my students a warning about project analysis: either it is nothing
more than a rationalization for capitalist calculations of profitability, and
should be studied to understand how the real (capitalist) world functions; or a
claim is made to extrapolate the logic of such calculation, giving it a social
dimension that is alien to it. In the latter case, national decision-makers are
offered instruments that are unusable, because they conflict with the type of
decision that real economic agents operate. Such ‘planning’ – which the World
Bank prefers, to the exclusion of all others – therefore comes down to throwing
dust in people’s eyes; it expresses a refusal to plan. After all, if the market
is self-regulating, what is the point of intervention? And, if development is
simply the spontaneous result of ‘market forces’, it becomes synonymous with
the expansion of capitalism, whereas the whole specificity of the concept of
development is precisely that it expresses a project containing identifiable
social and political objectives.
For the more advanced students, to whom I gave
additional classes. What I had learned to do in Cairo and Bamako, and at the
SEEF in Paris, was indispensable here. I set about teaching through a series of
exercises, which I first did in class and then gave to the students to do by
themselves. I devised a simplified General Economic Table (GET). I defined a
‘Plan’ in the terms in which plans are usually defined (investment volume, external
funding, etc.), and used it as the basis for long-term (say, five-year)
projections of the principal
macroeconomic quantities. This made it possible to establish the crucial links
between these quantities (propensity to import, coefficients of capital,
recurrent charges, etc.) and then, by placing these quantities within a
projected General Economic Table, to identify the inconsistencies. The tools:
compound interest tables and the slide rule.
So, this is how I understood my job as a teacher. I would say that, for
the third of students who had a minimum of education (albeit very general) or
intellectual capacities and a will to work, the results were not bad. I met
many of these students again in later years, in their respective countries, and
I could see that their work was appreciated there.
Director of
IDEP , 1970-1980
The UN assessment to which I referred earlier had reached the conclusion
that IDEP’s main role in Africa should be to analyse planning and development strategies
and experiences, and to gear its education programme to this specific
knowledge. This was exactly the position I had upheld in the commission
responsible for setting up the institute, and which I had recalled in my
letter of resignation. So, when my letter was found in the UN ‘briefing’
folder, it was normal that the assessment team should think of me as a suitable
person to take over. Philippe de Seynes, whom I had not yet met, was given the
job of contacting me.
I hesitated at first, unsure whether I could
really implement the necessary changes in view of all the weaknesses of the UN
system that I was beginning to know from experience. But I was in a strong
negotiating position, so why not give it a try? I met Philippe de Seynes in
New York for an interview, and found a charming man with all the qualities I
described above. We were able to discuss frankly and cordially, and from that
day we became good friends. I reminded him that I had certain views which I
would never give up, that I would continue to express them in writing, and that
this would probably not be to everyone’s liking. ‘It doesn’t matter,’ he said.
‘Someone without opinions cannot play the role expected of him in a position
like that. Look at the Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA): Raúl Prebisch doesn’t think twice
about surrounding himself with intellectuals who are in opposition to their
governments, some of them even political refugees, like the Brazilians Celso
Furtado and Fernando Henrique Cardoso. ECLA’s success is due to them, and to
the academic freedom inside it.’
So, I agreed in principle to take the job, although I feared that the
‘joke’ – the word I actually used – would only last a few months. First I had
to convene the IDEP board of governors, which was chaired by the executive
secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), and submit to them my
proposals. I did not think they would accept them, and I had no intention of
wangling some kind of half-hearted agreement. ‘I won’t try to blackmail them,’
I said. ‘And I won’t let them think I’ll resign if the meeting doesn’t go my
way. We’ll see. So, Monsieur de Seynes, please agree not to be surprised if you
receive my resignation letter in three months’ time.’ ‘I’ll take the risk,’ he
replied, ‘but you’ll see it’s not much of one.’ ‘They’ll have my hide in the
end, though.’ ‘It’ll take a long time, much longer than you think.’ And history
proved him right.
The echo of Idep in Africa
Soon after my arrival, I rang Gardiner and said I would like to meet him
to tell him of my intentions. ‘I know what they are, you’ve already expressed
them’, he replied. ‘Okay,’ I went on, ‘you know the principles, but the ways of
implementing them also have to be spelled out, and I’d appreciate your views as
we have to hear what the board of governors has to say.’ It was a polite
exchange, but not enough to tell me whether Gardiner had been sincere in
backing my nomination in New York.
I made a tour of the Institute and got to know the staff. Kwame Amoa had
been recruited after my departure and was already thinking of leaving, but I
immediately realized that he had some great qualities. Behind a phlegmatic,
English-style appearance, this young Ghanaian was intelligent, sharp,
thoughtful and progressive in his immediate reactions. I therefore at once
thought of a first innovation in the work of the Institute: namely, the
creation of a post of deputy director that he would occupy. I Egyptian and
officially French-speaking, he West African and English-speaking: it would be
good for balance and representativeness at IDEP. It would also ensure a degree
of continuity, since each of us would have to travel that much less frequently.
Finally, I could see that he had considerable organizational abilities – more
than abilities, in fact, the temperament of a high-quality diplomat, who knew
to perfection how to draft proposals, to negotiate, to get the gist of
something, and to identify which concessions it would be worth making. We
became very close friends, and I said of him that he could have been the
foreign minister of a major power. None of the directors before me had imagined
having a deputy; they had thought like good little autocrats, seeing their
colleagues only as rivals eager to take their place.
I did not know the members of the board of governors, which was elected
by a ‘Conference of African Planners’ that met every two years at ECA
headquarters in Addis Ababa. Although the relevant ministers were supposed to
attend this conference, it was in reality a gathering of development
administrators, varying from insignificant nobodies to high-quality civil
servants. It was not necessarily the best who were chosen for the IDEP Board, and the rule requiring linguistic balance
and representation of all four regions of Africa (North, West, Central and
East–Southern) complicated matters and created considerable scope for
manipulation. Gardiner, probably by temperament, baulked at that kind of thing,
but later Adedeji was not so loath to get involved in it. Anyway, I lost no
time worrying about it, having decided on principle not to try ‘cultivating
friends’ among the board of governors. Boards in my experience have had a
heterogeneous composition, in the image of administrations in Africa and
elsewhere. They generally contain some open-minded and competent members, with
whom it is possible to argue, but also some eternal ‘daily allowance hunters’
who get elected so that they can have an opportunity to travel. In the
end, Gardiner supported my proposals without reservations, but perhaps also
without enthusiasm. The board of governors passed them without a problem.
With the governors’ approval, I
introduced the idea of a ‘consultative academic board’. I thought it not only
useful but necessary to be able to draw on the views of well-informed people;
that is the kind of temperament I have. But the board of governors could not
serve that function, and so I submitted a list of names to Gardiner. He
approved this, but added that they were too important and would never come.
They all came, however: people like Dudley Seers, director of the Institute of
Development Studies at the new and modern University of Sussex; Celso Furtado,
who gave us the benefit of the knowledge he had accumulated in Latin America
and at ECLA; the Nigerian Onitiri, one of the longest-serving academics in
Africa; Ismail Abdallah; and Charles Prou, director of the French Centre for
the Study of Economic Programmes (CEPE). Do I need to add that the last two,
though friends of mine, were not cut out to be anyone’s accomplices’? Their
opinions, criticisms and suggestions were as free as anyone else’s.
The basic choice was to make IDEP a front-ranking centre for African
theory and reflection; to take away from foreign ‘technical
assistance’ or ‘cooperation’ agencies the monopoly of thinking about Africa.
This meant emphasizing research and creating special teaching programmes to
relay and continue debates.
There were various formulas to
achieve this. We offered quite long courses (one or two years), which could
tackle issues in depth and associate students as apprentices in research
projects, enabling them to acquire the tools of the trade. One of the main
innovations was the holding of a 4–6 week programme of seminars outside Dakar.
This had a number of advantages: in particular, each seminar could be attended
by as many as 5o to 1oo students at relatively little expense (the seminars
were monolingual and most participants were already living in the country in
question); and the operation helped to build closer links with the local
universities that shared the responsibility for the seminars, and with the
government departments in charge of development. IDEP thus frequently played
the role of catalyst and shock absorber between mutually dismissive academics
and civil servants, and between different political forces and theoretical
currents who otherwise had very little contact with each other. More than
thirty of these seminar courses were organized during the 197os, in a total of
twenty-five African capitals, thus giving the Institute a continent-wide
reputation. Each of these operations was a real event in the country concerned,
long remembered and discussed by those who took part in it.
To fulfil these tasks, we naturally had to
recruit the minimum staff at the necessary level of competence. We did more or
less manage to attract enough intellectuals known by their published writings
for there to be no need to present them here. The team gradually fleshed out
and, at one moment or another, included: Norman Girvan (Jamaica), Oscar Braun
(Argentina), Héctor Silva Michelena (Venezuela), Fawzy Mansour, Naguib Hedayat
and Hassan Khalil (Egypt), Samba Sow (Senegal), Jacques Bugnicourt and Duhamel
(France), Bernard Founou (Cameroon), Cadman Atta Mills (Ghana), Jagdish Saigal
(India), Marc Franco (Belgium: with a fine career later in the EU), Anthony
Obeng (Ghana) and Joseph van den Reysen (Congo). Hassan Khalil – who was the
spitting image of Nasser: tall, brown-skinned, wide nose, booming laughter –
later turned to literature and wrote some interesting memoirs. We also managed
to strengthen the team with a number of ‘missionaries’, either funded by the
French Coopération (e.g. Pierre Philippe Rey, Catherine
Coquery-Vidrovitch, André Farhi, Francine Kane) or invited by us as a result of
one of our seminars. When we had the funds we allocated some of the latter to
special research programmes: for example, the two Guineans Baldé and Kouyaté,
the Malian Lamine Gakou, the Sudanese Hamid Gariballah, the two Senegalese Abdousalam
Kane and Alioune Sall, the Kenyan Abdalla Bujra and the Malawian Thandika
Mkandawire. A young American, Barbara Stuckey, who came with a grant from Los
Angeles University and was highly critical of the education system and society
in the United States, proved able to give us a helping hand. Despite our
duties, Amoa and I did not give up teaching; I would never have accepted the
idea that one can ‘run’ an institute without direct knowledge of the problems:
that is, without living contact with students and active involvement in
research teams.
As I had learned at the SEEF in France, the best research programmes are
those which the people in charge of them freely define and carry out. The team
therefore served as a structure in which proposals and voluntary commitments could
be discussed, and debates could be organized at various stages of the work in
progress. If a few individuals may possibly have used this as a way of shirking
responsibility, it probably produced better results than any authoritarian
division of tasks. The evidence is the number of papers written – more than
four hundred, some of book length – and the launch of a publication series with
Anthropos in French and the University of Dar es Salaam in English.
The growing influence of IDEP led to a greater demand for consultative
visits to the Institute, both from governments and from African regional
institutions or transnational third world organizations (the Group of 77, the
non-aligned countries). Unfortunately, we could respond to only a small fraction of even the most serious requests;
neither our finances nor our human resources enabled us to do more without
unbalancing IDEP’s activity, which we wanted to be as well integrated as
possible. Yet some of these missions were too important politically for us to
turn them down, as they allowed us to hope that we could make a little real
impact on political forces that had chosen in principle a progressive path.
The expanding activities of IDEP
required more than the regulation budget funded by African states and the UNDP.
We managed to collect more than 50 per cent of the sums promised by African
governments – a little over $600,000. This was a higher percentage than for
financial commitments to the UN itself, and much higher than for African
official undertakings to any other African or international organization. But
this did not prevent certain unsavoury types – Doo Kingue (whom the Americans
propelled to the head of the UNDP), Bertin Borna (resident UN representative
in Dakar) and a few others like Paul Kaya – from waxing demagogic over the
‘mere 50 per cent’. When I left IDEP these critics were able to call the shots,
and the percentage fell close to zero.
At the same time, Philippe de
Seynes and Gardiner gave me carte blanche to seek out extra sources of funding,
and I managed to collect almost enough to double the IDEP budget. The French Coopération
people were really disappointing and have not changed since: their narrow
regulations and petty chauvinistic vision meant that they never went beyond
the funding of French teachers and researchers. It is hard to tell which gains
more from that kind of overseas aid: the institution on the receiving end of
French expertise or France itself, which thereby increases its stock of
knowledge about foreign countries. I had better luck with the Italians (who
agreed to fund a research programme set up by Baldé and Kouyaté) and especially
the Swedes, whose recently founded International Development Cooperation Agency
subsequently displayed exemplary generosity in relation to our projects.
The IDEP administration supported our efforts with an efficiency for
which I am sincerely grateful. UN institutions in the third world paid salaries
considerably higher than the going rate in the local civil service and private
sector, which enabled them to recruit high-quality local staff often relatively
more competent than the managerial personnel. The
administrative expenditure was certainly high, largely because UN pay scales,
bilingual translation and interpretation requirements and my insistence on a
well-stocked library meant that there was little objective scope for
cost-cutting. I thought that there could have been economies in some areas,
however. The unwieldy UN hierarchy keeps multiplying the number of
administrative and financial jobs, and its accounting system is one of the most
pointlessly complicated one could imagine: this does not exactly make it easier
to carry out the indispensable work of auditing, but it does fuel bureaucratic
guerrilla warfare when the circumstances are right! I therefore asked Gustave
Massiah, whom I knew to be hugely competent in these matters, to look into the
way IDEP was organized. I did not implement the sensible proposals that he put
to me, however, as I immediately realized that I would be leaving myself open
to attack on ground favourable to the enemy. It was not the ground on which I
had chosen to force my opponents to fight.
I did not imagine that IDEP alone could serve all the
functions of a major research centre. It was therefore necessary to take
initiatives and to create more specialized, complementary institutions. The
IDEP director was in a good position to do this, and I branched out in three
directions.
In 1972 I was invited to the conference in Stockholm
that really began to raise awareness about global environmental problems. I
immediately grasped their importance and in 1974, having negotiated for the
Swedes to support a first trial programme for Africa, made Jacques Bugnicourt
responsible for its implementation in Dakar. It was he who had the idea of
calling the programme Environment for Development in Africa (ENDA), and with
his good connections in the French Coopération establishment he secured
funding for a core support team (Mataillet, Guibert, Melle Mottin, Langley and,
later, Mhlanga) who soon got the project up and running. In keeping with my
temperament, I gave Bugnicourt carte blanche to negotiate the ways and means of
implementing his programme. Legally, however, the ENDA programme came under
IDEP until 1977, when, as I had originally intended, it became an independent
institution.
It was the same story for CODESRIA, the Council
for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (see chapter 2).
I will say more in the next chapter about the creation
of the Third World Forum. For the moment, I will just point out that I took the
initiative together with colleagues and public figures from Asia, Africa and
Latin America; we managed to get Salvador Allende to invite us to Santiago to
finalize the project (barely three months before the Pinochet coup). The
founding congress of the Forum took place in 1975 in Karachi, where one of our
members had obtained funding from the National Bank of Pakistan. I will also
come back to the audience I had with Olof Palme (in the same year, I think) and
to the invaluable financial support from Sweden’s International Cooperation
Development Agency.
The 197os were the high point for IDEP: I can say, without false modesty,
that its name was known and respected all over Africa. For that very reason,
however, I knew that things could not last.
The US administration was fundamentally opposed to us, as it was – and
is – to all liberation forces in the third world. However minor an institution
like IDEP might be on the global chessboard, it had to be destroyed. For
American strategy never neglects to do what needs to be done, on every front
major or minor. The third-party positional
warfare began in 1972, through mediocre or (corrupt) African bureaucrats
prepared to play the CIA tune for the sake of their UN career. My
counter-strategy – to get African governments on our side – was an application
of the Chinese formula: ‘states want independence, nations liberation, and
peoples revolution’. The idea, then, was a struggle to win respect for the
independence of African governments. Once this had been defined as the
battlefield (which meant giving up the secondary terrains I mentioned
earlier), my strategy was simple: to keep governments in the picture. This did
not mean reporting in detail all the enemy’s intrigues, but, on the contrary,
treating them with contempt and making our own activities as transparent as
possible to the top authorities, including heads of state, that we knew to be
sensitive to the independence argument and capable of understanding the
positive significance of what we were doing.
But then the enemy was given an opportunity to
intensify the offensive. Gardiner left the ECA secretariat, and his successor,
Adebayo Adedeji, was an autocratic and greedy young wolf. He immediately
stepped up the guerrilla warfare, using the ‘head of administration’ (whose
career depended on him) to undermine our work and flood us with ‘memos’. I
refused to fight on this terrain and did not even reply to the ‘memos’, thereby
forcing Adedeji to come into the open. In 1978 he had the supervision of IDEP transferred
from the UN to the ECA – that is, to himself – then set about manipulating the
Conference of African Planners and the administrative board of the Institute so
that they adopted two disastrous resolutions. The first did away with the
national seminars and kept only the course in Dakar, supposedly in order to
make it stronger. As a result, the amount of teaching at the Institute,
measured in student/months – which had nearly doubled between 1970 and 1977 –
fell back to its initial level by 1979, the year I gave up the directorship,
and (as far as I am aware) has never risen above it again. The second
resolution eliminated all the supplementary budgets under special funding
agreements, and transferred responsibility for the negotiation of agreements from
the IDEP director to the ECA. Of course, the ECA did not negotiate anything
after that, or anyway never obtained any funding. I did save something from the
wreckage: ENDA, CODESRIA and the Third World Forum could be detached from IDEP
and had the means to establish their autonomy. I and Amoa (to Adedeji’s
surprise) resigned in May 1980.
The three-month ‘joke’ had lasted ten years.
The UN machine
The modern world is made up of interdependent nations, in a context of
inequality that has been growing constantly worse for the last two centuries.
To devise and achieve a different organization and a different interdependence
of societies, one which removes the polarization inherent in the expansion of
global capitalism, is one of the major tasks of human civilization, if its body
and soul are not to perish in the material and moral devastation that
capitalist polarization inevitably produces.
The victory over fascism at the end of the Second World War and the rise
of national liberation movements in Asia and Africa were the background to the
creation of the United Nations, the first attempt in human history to organize
international relations on a global level (although it would take another
fifteen years for virtually the whole planet to be covered). The founding of
the UN was thus a positive historical development; the United Nations is
necessary, and if it did not exist it would be necessary to invent it.
My vision of the UN is therefore essentially political, unlike that of
most who have operated under its banner and seen it as a kind of ‘pool of
expertise’ that certain nations place at the disposal of others. That vision,
corresponding to the ‘global village’ discourse, has always struck me as simply
ridiculous, because it ignores the crucial dimension of polarization generated
by the logic of the system.
Globalization is not a new
phenomenon, and I was doubtless not the first to take an interest in the issue
before it started to capture the headlines. But this dimension was already
present in my earliest analysis of actually existing capitalism (my 1957
thesis). I have always thought that the most important unit for analysis was
the world system, not the sub-systems that make it up. Anyone who remains
confined to the framework of a single country – whether the USA or Belgium,
China or Somalia – will not really be able to grasp the dynamics of change even
at the level of his or her own society.
To be sure, this problem will not
be solved tomorrow, for it implies fundamental changes in every aspect of
social existence, in every part of the world, which can only be described as
‘socialism on a world scale’. Such changes will necessarily entail, at some
point, a supranational perspective that goes beyond mere relations among
nations; nor is it impossible that this requirement will first make itself felt
at the level of large regions, as the construction of Europe might illustrate.
But, as things stand today, the United Nations does not provide even the embryo
of a worldwide supranational framework. It is still a strictly inter-national
organization. If it remains this indefinitely, there is a danger that its
founding project will disappear from view: that is, the organization of the
world within a humanist perspective. The UN can help the world develop in that
necessary and desirable direction only if its components – the various nations
– pave the way by transforming themselves.
There are many obstacles to such an evolution, both locally and at the
level of the world system. The main immediate obstacle, however, is United States hegemonism, which is no longer based on
overwhelming economic and technological superiority – as it was in the period
after 1945 – but rather on military strength backed up by the effects of
neoliberal globalization and a vulgar ‘culture’ of capitalism expressed in
Anglo-American jargon.
In my view, then, the UN is not a
useless, contemptible institution which, because of its generality, interferes
with the real relations (of force) among nations. But nor is it the kernel of a
‘global village’, that naive idea popular in some circles that skates over the
reality of the mechanisms of polarization. The main enemy, American hegemonism,
exerts all its might to subjugate every country in the world, in varying
degrees and by suitably adjusted means, and to organize the international order
as it sees fit. This involves instrumentalizing the United Nations, and the
struggle to defend that organization and its mission in the world is therefore
synonymous with the struggle against American hegemonism. If I have dwelt a
little here on these general points, it is because they constitute the lesson I
drew from IDEP’s extremely modest battle away from the central arena. The US
administration, for its part, does not overlook a single detail in its unrelenting
struggle for hegemony.
The majority of developed capitalist countries
have accepted US leadership and are therefore quite happy about the activities
of the CIA. Britain made this historic choice in 1945, and no major political
force there questions it. The same is true of the other countries with British
roots – Canada (now an external province of the United States in many
respects), Australia and New Zealand. Germany and Japan have taken long-term
strategic decisions that point in the same direction, limiting themselves to
US-tolerated regional expansionism (towards Eastern and Southern Europe in the
case of Germany, and Southeast Asia in that of Japan) and otherwise, on global
issues, steering in Washington’s wake. Tokyo, in particular, considers its
dependence on the USA an unavoidable fact of life, since it would otherwise be
disarmed in relation to China and even Korea.
The situation has consistently allowed Washington to instrumentalize the
United Nations, not without a certain arrogance in such matters as its late
payment of UN dues. Things are even worse today, especially as Western
diplomats have joined in the US-orchestrated campaign to denigrate the
international organization in favour of NATO. It
may be said that, apart from these medium-sized powers, other developed
countries have been active within the UN system: the Scandinavians, among
others. In terms of financial contributions and positions of responsibility,
the weight of these countries within the UN system is indeed great. Do they
exploit its potential to the full? The answer to this question is simple. I
have often heard it said that top officials from these countries are ‘naive’
and tend to indulge in ‘wishful thinking’ about the role of the UN; or else
that their Protestant culture makes them inclined to side with the hegemonist
policies of the central American power. In my view, such explanations are at
best highly superficial, but also largely false and misleading. Sweden, in
particular, has taken courageous positions in support of third world struggles,
sometimes in frontal opposition to the United States. It welcomed American
deserters during the Vietnam war (as no other Western country dared to do); it
supported the liberation struggles in the Portuguese colonies, at a time when
no member of the Atlantic alliance was prepared to do it. I rather think,
therefore, that some of the countries in question have made a strategic
decision in principle to back the United Nations, perhaps because, given their
modest size, they feel most vulnerable in a situation of international chaos.
This decision of theirs seems to me correct and positive. It does not mean that
the positions they derive from it are necessarily effective, nor that they are
making the most of their presence within the UN system.
Third world countries were very
active within the UN system throughout the Bandung period, and especially
between 196o and 1975. Who does not remember those meetings of the General
Assembly in September–October of every year, when leading statesmen and famous
journalists used to gather in the lobby of the UN building in New York?
Nowadays, the only people one sees there are minor officials and insignificant
reporters. The diplomacy of the non-aligned countries and the Group of 77 used
to force discussion of all the real issues of our time, from the nature of the
international economic order (and the creation of UNCTAD in 1964) to the
political intervention of the major powers in the affairs of the third world. I
had the opportunity to attend several of these General Assembly sessions, as an
adviser to some of the most active non-aligned states. I learned a lot there
from well-briefed officials and experts, and I made a lot of new friends. The
weight of third world diplomacy in those days helped to temper Washington’s
ambitions, despite the presence of its African and other agents within the UN
apparatus.
Whatever the value of third world diplomacy at the
time, its role in the running of the UN was largely cancelled by the activities
of the Americans and their ‘friends’. The latter, whose position in the
executive hierarchy seemed to depend on their mediocrity, or on what the CIA
had on them in its files, never had a function other than the one assigned to
them by their bosses. There is no point in naming names: what I said earlier
should immediately suggest a few. Many of them certainly looked the part. I am referring to their crudeness, of course,
which I personally experienced at a few of the functions to celebrate
someone’s passing visit. There is no need to attach names to these portraits:
they are recognizable from the moment you set eyes on them. The trouble
is that, behind these ‘friends’ of the Americans and the many others in the
West who accept their strategy, one has always been able to glimpse cohorts of
‘experts’ and sometimes even ‘intellectuals’. They are not sufficiently strong
to assert their ‘irreplaceability’ (besides, as de Gaulle once said, ‘the
cemeteries are full of irreplaceable people’); nor are they sufficiently courageous
to avoid the temptation of ‘making a career’. And, once that choice has been
made, the rot soon sets in. Some even sink into alcoholism – no doubt in order
to drown their sense of remorse.
Here I have simply tried to sketch the human context in which IDEP and
many others had to struggle in those days.
II
Notes on the creation of CODESRIA
This short note is based on a presentation by Samir Amin about the
battles that took place during the creation of CODESRIA.
(i). The objective: What were the challenges faced in this battle? What
were the functions that the founders wanted to assign to CODESRIA in the
struggle of African peoples and African states for an economic and social
development worthy of the name? What kind of institution was imagined to best
fulfill this function?
(ii). The steps and negotiations undertaken for this purpose; the
reasons why Dakar chosen; what status was envisaged for the organisation of the
institution and the headquarters agreement.
I. The objective
There were two visions for the role and functions of CODESRIA, between
which a choice had to be made:
(i)CODESRIA conceived as a sort of common home where university social
science research institutes, would choose the leadership and would decide on
its orientation and programs. These institutions would be represented either by
their directors or others.
(ii)CODESRIA conceived as one of the engines needed to promote
independent and audacious African reflections on the challenges of the
contemporary world. Thus a call was made to African thinkers able to contribute
to this, regardless of whether they were part of academia (the idea was not to
eliminate the role of universities, but rather to combine their contributions
with others). This was because it was recognized that creative thinking is not
the exclusive monopoly of universities. Fanon and Cabral brought much from
outside of universities through their reflections on the struggles for the
liberation of African peoples. Today, the intellectual activists in civil
society have their contribution to make.
This second concept was deliberately chosen, said Samir Amin, and the
reasons for that choice were shared openly. This choice set the framework for
the subsequent negotiations conducted to create the organization, and guided the
founders in the choice of the first leaders. This deliberate choice has been at
the heart of the success of CODESRIA.
II. The first steps
The
Rockefeller Foundation took the initiative in October 1964 to invite to
Bellagio (in Italy) ten directors based in some of the major research
institutions of that time. The invitations were addressed only to ‘Sub-Saharan
Africa’: the five Arab countries of North Africa were excluded. Of the ten
directors invited, eight were British or French, one was Sudanese and one
Nigerian (Onitiri).
Samir Amin
was not invited as at the time because he did not have a position that entitled
him to be invited (he was then a teacher at IDEP). He was nevertheless brought up to speed by an
Italian friend at the OECD (who was associated with the Rockefeller
Foundation). He immediately grasped the reasons for the initiative: the Western
powers feared that with newly established independence, the directors of the
institutions in question would be replaced by Africans sooner or later. They
were afraid of losing their privileged influence in guiding the activities of
these institutions, and wanted to ensure that the new leaders would conform to
the views of foreign and international development cooperation.
Samir said
he immediately understood that it was necessary to engage in these battles, to
derail these plans and to open the way for the creation of an African
institution capable of contributing to the development of autonomous
reflections and critique.
The acronym
for the institution imagined by Rockefeller and the OECD was CODESRIA, but at
the time the letters stood for ‘Conference of Directors of Institutes of
Research in Africa’.
Onitiri then
took the initiative of organizing, in Africa, two successive conferences of
these selected directors (still only those from Sub-Saharan Africa).
The first
took place before August 1970 (when Samir took office as director of IDEP in
Ibadan). Samir was not invited, again
since he did not have a position that entitled him to be there.
The second
was in 1971 in Nairobi at the Kenyan institute then led by Dharam Ghai. Samir
was invited in his capacity as the director of IDEP. The atmosphere was
friendly, but the crucial choice about the objective of the institution was
still not clear. The majority of the Anglophone participants were inclined
towards the first vision. Samir remembers that only he and Dharam Ghai frankly
defended the second vision, fearing that even the ‘Africanisation’ of the
leadership of the institutes would remain in the flow of the dominant thinking
of ‘international cooperation’ that backed their governments.
The
‘Standing Committee’ of this conference was charged with the responsibility of
advancing the establishment of CODESRIA (if one sticks with that acronym) and
appointed Samir Amin as the ‘Vice President’ and chose IDEP (in Dakar) as the
provisional headquarters of the ‘Depository Centre’ (that was the name given)
responsible for the coordination of these efforts.
III. The choice of Dakar
Samir was convinced of the need to accelerate the procedures for moving
forward.
(i)He carried out what some have called (as he said, not without reason)
a ‘coup d’état’. He kept the acronym CODESRIA but used other words: ‘Council
for the Development of Social Sciences’ rather than ‘Conference of Directors of
…’.
(ii)He said he was convinced that it was necessary to integrate North
Africa into the project in the pan-African spirit of the OAU and to break away
from the isolation of ‘Black Africa’.
(iii)He was also convinced that the final headquarters of CODESRIA
should be established in Dakar, but not at IDEP, even if the latter could
provide a temporary shelter, as brief as possible, in the implementation phase.
This choice was not the obvious one. The large Anglophone universities
of Africa advanced solid arguments about their capacity to provide a good
number of their professors who would be capable of managing the programs of
CODESRIA. But Samir saw two dangers there: first that Francophone Africa would
play only a minor role; and secondly, the majority of professors provided by
the Anglophone universities would be facsimiles of their foreign masters,
conventional and anxious not to displease either their governments or donors.
Samir sought an audience with Senghor and told him of his fears. Senghor
immediately grasped the importance and told Samir - you are right, go ahead,
you have my support.
Samir said he feared, in return, that some would regard CODESRIA as a
“new cheese” reserved for the ‘Francophones’. That was why he thought it was necessary
to include at this stage some Anglophones who believed in the fundamental
choices to ensure the balanced pan-African character of the new institution.
Fortunately Cooperation Française, although well-disposed to giving its support
to a Francophone institution, was not at all so disposed if this was to be a
pan-African one that would give space to Anglophone, Lusophone or Arabophone
countries.
Onitiri decided in 1971 to take his sabbatical leave at IDEP. It was a
friendly decision even if Onitiri had probably not renounced his idea of
establishing the institution in Ibadan. That was his legitimate right; the
Nairobi decision of 1971 had not settled the question of the final location of
the headquarters.
Onitiri made only a few brief visits to Dakar during his sabbatical
leave. One of his Nigerian students - Abangwu - had been invited to assist him
with getting permanent residence at IDEP, but he was not much help. In fact, he
proved to be dishonest, leaving (after Onitiri) without leaving his forwarding
address (on his return to Nigeria) but … after having tapped into the small
funds allocated to CODESRIA at its birth. Samir insisted that he be sued in
Nigeria, but without success.
IV. The start-up team
With whom should he constitute a small team of collective reflection for
conducting the business of CODESRIA? In Samir’s opinion (and he informed
Senghor of this), he did not wish to take over CODESRIA. He wanted the
institution to become completely independent without delay and to have its own
headquarters agreement with Senegal, its own offices in Dakar outside of IDEP,
and an Executive Secretary that was not Samir himself.
He knew that some adversaries would not miss the opportunity of saying
that he was spending too much time on the establishment of CODESRIA and that he
was neglecting his duties as director of IDEP. He took the initiative of
informing Gardiner, then the Secretary General of ECA, who supported him
without hesitation.
Samir seconded Amoa (a Ghanaian) to IDEP for whom he had suggested the
creation of a post of Deputy Director, with the consent of Gardiner who
undertook to convince the IDEP Board. Amoa was extremely effective.
But, said Samir, this was not enough. It was then that he took advantage
of a visit to Tanzania to invite Abdalla Bujra (a Kenyan who had a post at the
University of Dar es Salaam) to join the team at IDEP and to lead the CODESRIA
team. Bujra fulfilled his duties with intelligence and dedication.
Samir also took advantage of a visit to Stockholm to move things forward.
(i)There he discovered a young Malawian, T. Makandawire, then a
brilliant doctoral student, respected in Sweden, and invited him to join the
Dakar team. History has shown that this choice would provide CODESRIA with a
quality leader of the greatest magnitude, an independent and bold spirit.
(ii)Samir took the opportunity to get SAREC on side. That was not an
obvious step. SAREC, solidly implanted in East Africa, could have, with
legitimacy, required that a Dar es Salaam headquarters would facilitate matters
as well as their financial support. Samir explained to SAREC the reasons for
the preference for Dakar: to give CODESRIA a real pan-African dimension from
the start, to focus on critical thinking in matters of development and thus
guarantee its own independence from all governments, as it should. Samir
convinced them. SAREC immediately substituted the starter funders (Rockefeller
Foundation, OECD, Cooperation Française and others) by, firstly, providing IDEP
with urgent funds for the nascent CODESRIA (which helped to negate the argument
of some adversaries that he was using IDEP funds for this purpose); and
secondly, pledging substantial long-term support for CODESRIA (SAREC has
scrupulously honored this commitment).
(iii)It was necessary also to obtain the signature of the government of
Senegal for the agreement on the headquarters. The responsibility for these
negotiations was entrusted to Bujra, supported by Professor Twum-Barima,
director of the Institute for Statistics and Social Research at Legon University
(Ghana).
Samir had in his possession a model agreement: that which Bugnicourt and
himself had negotiated and obtained for ENDA. A ‘fabulous agreement’, it is
said, due to the generosity of Senegal. Revised for the draft agreement for
CODESRIA, Abdou Diouf, then Prime Minister of Senegal, accepted it without
hesitation. Samir emphasized that the government of Senegal accepted the idea
of an independent, authentic pan-African institution, and since then, no
subsequent Senegalese government to this day has exerted the least pressure on
CODESRIA. This was not the current practice in Africa or indeed elsewhere. The
choice of Dakar was definitely a good one.
V. Exiting from the colonial isolation of Africa
The goal of CODESRIA as it was imagined was to contribute to breaking
the colonial isolation of Africa by building close and direct relations with
Latin America, the Caribbean and Asia.
Samir had started by organizing the first big Africa-Latin
America-Caribbean conference at IDEP in 1972, followed by the first Africa-Asia
conference organized in 1974 in Antananarivo.
In Dakar, for the first time, Africans heard the profound voices of the
nascent dependency theories: Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Pablo Gonzales
Casanova, Ruy Marini, André Gunder Frank and others. In Madagascar they met for
the first time the great figures of India and South-East Asia: Amiya Bagchi,
Ashok Mitra and others.
Samir’s previous meetings with these innovative critical thinkers of
Latin America and Asia gave him a small advantage. Invited as a foreign guest
in his personal capacity to the conference in Mexico of 1972, he witnessed the
birth of CLACSO and made friends with Enrique Oteiza, its future Secretary
General. The goal defined for this new institution was very similar to what had
been imagined for CODESRIA: to think for ourselves independently in order to
contribute to the commitment of our countries and continents outside the beaten
path of globalization constructed by the imperialist expansion of capitalism.
VI. Looking at the past, perspectives for the future
Samir Amin hoped that his brief presentation would help a new generation
to understand that the building of CODESRIA required the fighting and winning
of great battles against enemies whom it was not necessary to name here. We
would not have won these battles without the support of those whom we do need
to name here, in the first place: Senghor, Gardiner, Dharam Ghai, SAREC.
The intelligent and dedicated contributions of the team at IDEP (Amoa,
Founou) should equally be remembered, said Samir. We must also acknowledge our
colleagues invited to constitute the first group charged with the task of
creating CODESRIA, prime place given to Bujra and Mkandawire. Without them,
CODESRIA would probably not have seen the light of day. But over and above the
magnificent work of this small team, we managed to build a first network of
African thinkers of the highest quality with whom debates have been permanent
and ongoing, such as Claude Ake, Issa Shivji, Helmy Sharawi, Shahida el Baz and
others. The members of the academic Council of IDEP - created on the initiative
of Samir Amin with the support of Gardiner - and especially Celso Furtado
(Brazil), Ismail Abdalla (Egypt), the British Dudley Seers and the French
Charles Prou, but also other members of the Council who closely followed the
first steps taken by CODESRIA. Other younger African thinkers in turn quickly
made important contributions, like Mahmood Mamdani, Sam Moyo and others. The
early involvement of African feminists (Fatou Sow and others), it should be
remembered, happened at a time when it was exceptional in Africa (as well as
elsewhere!).
CODESRIA was launched officially on 1 February 1973, with Samir Amin in
charge as the first Executive Secretary. He was followed quickly by Bujra and
then Mkandawire, and he credits the success of CODESRIA to them. Bujra and
Mkandawire placed CODESRIA on track,
which allowed their successors (Zen Tadesse, Sam Moyo, Teresa Cruz e Silva) to
move forward.
CODESRIA is today facing a new and difficult situation. Africa is the
major victim of the momentary triumph of the new imperialist globalization
known as neo-liberalism. Its universities have been devastated and largely
subjected to the exigencies of the funders.
Impoverished and without a clear perspective of the real challenges with
which Africa is confronted, many of the universities on the continent see in
CODESRIA a source of financing for their own ‘research projects’, regardless of
their relevance or importance. If CODESRIA is reduced to being the “receiving
vessel” of these applications, it will lose its real function, which is to
promote through its own initiatives the debate on the major challenges of our
times. In this spirit, said Samir, it is necessary to understand that the discussions
concerning the eventual revision of the statutes of CODESRIA and the definition
of membership are downstream to the goals of CODESRIA and not upstream. For
example, the proposal concerning excellence (who could suggest recruiting
mediocre people!), for example, is irrelevant: ‘Excellence’ in the eyes of some
can hide in fact a great mediocrity (irrelevant) from the perspective of the
requirements for responding to the real challenges faced by Africa.
III The Third World Forum
Genesis of the
institution
I have already said that, as director of IDEP, I played a role in the
creation of other institutions for research and discussion: CODESRIA, ENDA and
the Third World Forum. As far as the Forum was concerned, we straightaway
thought it necessary to operate at the level of the third world, breaking out
of the isolation in which the colonial period had confined Africa.
In 1958, the Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM) had founded an AfroAsian Peoples’ Solidarity Organization (AAPSO), with
its headquarters in Cairo. In 1997 this organization tried to shake itself out
of its lethargy by organizing a major conference together with the Third World
Forum. I say lethargy because it had not managed, or perhaps even tried, to
assert its independence vis-à-vis the most active governments in the NAM:
Nasser’s Egypt, Indonesia (until the fall of Sukarno in 1966) and a few others.
Their financial support had made its life too comfortable, so that it
represented the various ‘peoples’ only via the single parties that were supposed
to be their emanation. Moreover, AAPSO’s credibility had been reduced by its
extreme ‘pro-Soviet’ option, and it did not embrace Latin America (except Cuba)
on the grounds that the continent remained outside the NAM.
In the late 196os the Cubans had set
up the ‘Tricontinental’, which presented itself as the organization
representing the ‘peoples’ of the three continents. Once again, it was a
question of grasp all, lose all. How to represent ‘the peoples’? The only two
ways I know are the election of a representative assembly and formation of
political parties. But, although elected assemblies may sometimes be credible
within certain limits, there is no assembly of assemblies operating at a
regional or global level. The European Parliament itself is not such an
institution, as there is no European government accountable to it. Political
forces have sometimes created an ‘International’ together with ideologically
‘fraternal’ parties: for example, the Socialist International or the Communist
International. As to the Tricontinental, it was little more than a gathering of
national liberation movements and the (usually single) political parties that
came out of them; history would prove just how eclectic was this group of third
world ‘parties’. Moreover, the orientations of the Tricontinental were more or
less those of the Cuban state. What we had in mind was something more modest:
an association of third world intellectuals. But, of course, it was necessary
to define the objectives and then the selection criteria.
We were certainly not alone in
considering this need for a more intense cross-frontier exchange of views among
TW intellectuals.
In April 1973, the Allende government in Chile
invited us to organize a meeting in Santiago. I remember this as the date when
the Forum really saw the light of day, although it was eight months later, in
Karachi, that it officially adopted its founding documents. In Santiago a
number of decisions were taken in principle that would define the subsequent
evolution of the Forum.
First, the Forum was not a club of ‘development officials’ operating
either at national level (planning technocrats and others) or in the international institutions of the UN. There could be no
question of creating a Southern imitation of the Society for International
Development. The point of the Forum was to bring together ‘thinkers’. The term
may sound a little grand, or even pretentious, but not every academic
automatically had a place in the Forum; it was not meant to overlap with the
international (or African, Arab, Indian and other) associations of academic
economists, sociologists or historians, worthy of respect as these are in their
way. We wanted something different, something that went outside the
requirements, conventions and limitations of the academic world.
Second, the ‘thinkers’ in question would not be
definable in terms of one scientific discipline (economists, sociologists or
political scientists) but would always be ‘cross-disciplinary’. They could be
academics, officials or people holding positions of responsibility in political
or social organizations, but such functions, often temporary, would not
‘entitle’ anyone to be a member of the Forum. If the Forum was to deserve its
name – that is, to be a centre for debate and not for academic research – its
participants had to have the necessary qualities to bring it to life.
Third, the thinkers should be critical: that is,
‘organic intellectuals’. After a long exchange of views, we agreed that this
should involve two dimensions. One of the axes of critique was the idea that
the world system was not per se favourable to development – in other words,
that development was not synonymous with insertion into the natural expansion
of the system, driven by its own logic. In my language, this meant that development
was not synonymous with capitalist expansion and therefore implied conflict
with its one-sided logic. But nothing was defined beyond this general critical
position; everyone was free to judge the most effective ways of
transforming the system and to debate them at the Forum. The other axis of
critique was that the fundamental goal of development should be to solve
problems facing the whole of the population, not only a minority. In other
words, development had a meaning only if it was ‘popular’, only if it was of
benefit to the people. We did not think that such development could be the
natural and spontaneous outcome of an extraneous logic – for example, that it
could result from the trickle-down effects of competitiveness and profitability. Once again, however, nothing
was laid down beyond this critical position. The alternative, which set the
popular focus of development as the central criterion of action, might or might
not be seen as socialism, according to how this was defined and to how one
theorized the evolution of society. Such questions were precisely the ones left
open for debate.
The meeting in Santiago also adopted a number of
organizational proposals. One was that some of us should be given the task of
starting up regional offices. I myself took charge of the African bureau, to be
run from IDEP in Dakar where I was still director. I was further made
responsible for coordination of the activities of the three bureaux, with the
aim of holding a congress with at least enough members of the association to be
representative. Some five hundred public figures were contacted and favourably
considered, and it proved possible to invite more than a hundred of these to
Karachi the following year.
Shortly after Santiago, the news reached us from
Algiers that a group based at CREA intended to set up an ‘Association of Third
World Economists’. Those of us who had some responsibility for the budding
Forum were pleased to hear of this new initiative, which seemed likely to
strengthen our common objective of encouraging critical debate on development.
A first meeting took place in Algiers in 1979, at the invitation of CREA
director Abdellatif Benachenhou. I took part in this interesting gathering,
whose debates pointed in the same direction as those the Forum wished to
develop, and the founding congress of the Association was held a little later
in Havana. I personally regretted – and did not fail to say so to the people in
charge – that the Association was giving too much weight to official government
representatives; a Cuban minister was chosen as its chairperson, for example.
The rush to attract sizeable funds (from the Algerian government, for example)
also had considerable influence on the choice of people to fill positions. In
my view – and history has sadly proved me right – these tendencies damaged the
credibility of the Association more than they boosted it. The Association
ceased to exist on the day when, for some reason, the Algerian government lost
interest in it.
The Karachi congress in December 1974 marked the
official birth of the Forum. As regards its essential role and functions, those
in attendance adopted the principles worked out in Santiago – which was hardly
surprising, given that its provisional membership had been selected on the
basis of those principles. It was also natural enough, since if you want to do
something you have a right to choose the means and strategy of achieving it.
Those who disagree are perfectly free to do something else. Democracy means
that everyone has a right to act in the same way.
The interesting thing about the Karachi congress
was that it did not simply reaffirm the Santiago principles but began the work
of putting them into practice. The quality of the participants made this
possible, indeed necessary. The debates therefore mainly centred on the
fundamental issues. What are the challenges facing the peoples of the third
world? What is general and what is particular in these challenges? How are they
defined by critical intellectuals from different regions, from different
cultural and political backgrounds, and from different schools of thought?
Which alternatives are being proposed, and what are
the arguments for them? It was a very promising start for the Forum.
At the same time, of course, the
congress adopted general statutes for the Forum. These called upon each of its
regional bureaux to hold meetings at which the ways of pursuing the Forum’s
goals would be spelled out in greater detail. Thus, when I left IDEP – which
had housed the Forum’s African bureau between 1975 and 198o – we lost no time
in organizing an African assembly to adopt regional rules for the Forum, in
conformity with the statutes of the organization. That was in Dakar in December
198o.
The expansion of
activities
In my opinion, the creation of the Third World Forum was a considerable
success. The simple fact that it has survived – for more than twenty years at
the time of writing – is testimony to this. For the cemetery holding
institutions that were dead at birth, or that lived for only a couple of years,
contains dozens if not hundreds of similar initiatives.
I have no hesitation in saying that the success was largely due to Olof
Palme. In 1975, when the left wind was still blowing strong, Swedish academics
had taken the initiative of creating a foundation to support independent
critical research in the third world. The statutes of SAREC, as the institution
is called, had been drawn up in a typically Swedish spirit, with nothing quite
like them anywhere else. Although publicly funded, SAREC was not in the
business of carrying out government policy; it was a genuinely independent
body. For the Swedish state, having chosen to support critical thinking in the
third world, was courageous in drawing the consequences. Such cases are
unfortunately too rare.
The idea convinced Palme on the spot. Palme was
one of those politicians who knew how to listen, and who, having formed an
opinion, really drew the practical consequences. He also had a broad vision of
world affairs, strongly critical of actually existing capitalism and
American-Atlanticist hegemonism. The positions that Sweden took in the Vietnam
war were evidence of this, and the decision to support liberation struggles in
the Portuguese colonies and South Africa sharply contrasted with the hypocrisy
of all the other Western governments, which in reality preferred the Portuguese
fascists and the apartheid oppressors. Sweden thereby gained a position on the
global chessboard – alongside democratic and progressive forces – which was
quite out of proportion to the small size of the country.
So, at the end of our discussion
Palme asked me directly: ‘How much do you need?’ I explained that we did not
want to succumb to the temptation to ‘start off rich’ – a temptation that is
often fatal because of the easy opportunities it offers. I said that we would
need something like $1oo,ooo a year for a few years, after which we would have
to prove the viability of the project and find more diverse sources of funding.
Palme said: ‘I’ll double that and guarantee it for five or even ten years, if
the voters stay with us that long.’ And that is what happened: the Social
Democrats continued to win the elections at regular three-yearly intervals, and
SAREC did not waver in its mission until the end of the 198os. The right,
semi-neoliberal wind eventually prevailed, as the country drew closer to and
eventually joined the European Union, and Stockholm’s courageous decisions of
the previous decades were watered down.
The fact remains that SAREC’s
generous support between 1978 and 1992 amounted to more than $2 million, mainly
in allocations for the Forum’s African programme, but also for the
coordination activities for which I was responsible. This gave us enough time
to look for other sources of support, chiefly from various institutions in
Norway, Finland, the Netherlands, Canada and Italy, as well as the EU and the
UN University.
The African bureau of the Third World Forum also
associated some of its programmes with UN institutions such as the Institute
for Training and Research (UNITAR), which managed the SAREC funds allocated to
the Forum between 1978 and 1980. Philippe de Seynes was having an active
retirement within UNITAR, whose director in those days was a gentleman from
Sierra Leone by the name of Davidson Nichol. This arrangement, which enabled
the UN to manage the Forum’s budget, continued until 1987. Then Nichol’s
successor, Michel Doo Kingue, hastened to impose his bureaucratic views in line
with his American bosses – something the Forum obviously could not accept. So,
the arrangement was switched to the UN Research Institute for Social
Development (UNRISD), whose successive directors were the Argentinean Enrique
Oteíza and the Kenyan Dharam Ghai, both Forum members and valuable
intellectuals of great intellectual and political integrity. Some of the
Forum’s African programmes were thus integrated into the UNITAR and UNRISD
programmes, without the latter having to contribute any funding themselves;
they simply managed some of the Forum’s finances in keeping with the rules of
the United Nations (for a fee of 14 per cent, under the famous category of
‘overheads’). Of course, the whole budget – for which I remained responsible –
was subject to an annual audit, in accordance with the general statutes and the
rules of good management. The arrangement with UNRISD anyway came to an end
when Bernard Founou and I reached retirement age and jointly decided to
continue with our activities in the Forum.
In my capacity as IDEP director, I had participated
each year in a meeting of directors of research and training institutes within
the body of the United Nations. The agenda always included a point on the
creation of a United Nations University, and opinions were always divided
between those who wanted to incorporate
their institute into the new UNU and those who wanted to leave out existing
institutes and build something new from scratch. In the end, the formula used
for the creation of the Tokyo-based UNU made it a kind of foundation to fund
other people’s programmes, rather than a real university in its own right.
Neither its successive rectors nor its senate made much of an impression on
me. And the institution was saved from mediocrity, for a while, only through
the efforts of its Japanese vice-rector, Kinhide Mushakoji, an intelligent and
extremely active man with an open and critical mind. He managed to implement 9o
per cent of the UNU’s actual programmes with 1o per cent of its budget, the
rest being quite simply thrown down the drain. Mushakoji selected the Forum as
a major partner in a programme of fundamental debates on the prospects for
third world regions within the global system. Between 198o and 1985 this
programme was one of the Forum’s principal axes of activity, and it was
maintained in part until Mushakoji was forced out of the UNU in 1988: his
efficient work was setting too bad an example! It goes without saying that
Mushakoji became and has remained a dear personal friend.
Whereas the funding from Nordic countries was
generally allocated to the Forum’s programmes on sub-Saharan Africa, the
contribution from Italy helped to expand its activities in the Arab world. In
this respect, the most memorable event was the great European–Arab symposium at
Naples in 1983, which brought together a hundred participants from countries in
the southern Mediterranean. Giuseppe Santoro, then director-general of Italian
overseas aid in Rome, worked together with me on the development of this
programme. It was a bold and clear-sighted initiative, which unfortunately no
other European politician whom one might have expected to take an interest in
the views of critical Arab intellectuals thought it necessary to pursue – a
failure especially remarkable in the cases of France and Spain.
Nevertheless, in the second half of the 198os, the Forum reached what
might be called its cruising speed. Its membership held steady at a figure
around one thousand, a good half of whom were really very active in one
programme or another. Over the past fifteen years the Forum has organized more
than 15o working groups, gathered more than 2,5oo written communications and published them under its own
imprint and in numerous journals. The publication of work on Africa and the
Middle East – in French, English and Arabic – has been running at the level of
seven or eight books a year, and the eightieth title in the Forum’s African
collection (a book on South Africa) appeared in 1998. Given its volume of
activity, the Forum’s funding appears extraordinarily modest in comparison with
that of institutions of similar scope. This modesty is actually quite
intentional: the point is to prove that debates of great importance for the
major issues of our time do not necessarily require the expenditure of large
sums of money. The members of the Forum are high-quality intellectuals
attracted by the debates themselves, not by any remuneration they may derive
from them.
Dakar was certainly a happy
choice for the Forum’s headquarters. I suggested it to President Senghor a few
months before I left IDEP. He encouraged me and promised the support of his
government, and to its great credit it never ceased to show a real and sincere
friendship towards us, without exerting the slightest pressure on the Forum. I
do not know many other countries, in Africa or elsewhere in the third world,
that have as much respect for intellectual freedom and take such pride in the
importance of the debates that it makes possible.
The Forum often opened new directions in its work. For example, it departed
from the costly and ineffectual formula of the conventional ‘symposium’, where
‘papers’ with varying status are presented, and gradually introduced the
formula of smaller working groups, each with a coordinator (who spent 3o to 5o
per cent of his annual work time on this activity) and four to six participants
(who spent Io to 2o per cent of their time on it). Over and above the personal
views of its members, the ‘dossier’ drawn up by the group was supposed to take
stock of the latest research on a particular topic. Most of the dossiers were
substantial documents (2oo pages or more) and were subjected to criticism by
twenty to thirty people known for their competence in the area, their diversity
of views and their eye for the practical consequences.
If the 196os were marked by high hopes of an irreversible process of
development throughout the third world, especially Africa, the present age is
one of disillusionment. Development has ground to a halt, its theory in crisis
and its ideology subject to doubt. The Forum starts from the fact that the
options available within the limited macroeconomic schemas offer only trivial,
predictable results, and that we need to raise the debate to a higher level by
integrating all the economic, political, social and cultural dimensions of the
problem, both in their local setting and as they interact globally. In doing
this, the Forum has helped to challenge the North’s monopoly on theoretical
reflection concerning globalization and its uneven impact on its geographical components.
On the occasion of the Cairo meeting in March 1997, a group of thirty
leading figures from the five continents, North and South, took the initiative
of creating a World Forum for Alternatives – of which the Third World Forum is
proud to be an active part. The Forum shares the conviction that it is more
necessary than ever to intensify global debate by linking up the different
networks that are pursuing the same objective – the construction of a
pluricentric and democratic world system.
IV THE WORLD
FORUM FOR ALTERNATIVES
The Genesis of
the WFA (1996-1999)
Self-described “neo-liberal”
capitalism/imperialism celebrated its triumph during the first half of the
1990s. The Soviet Union had disappeared, Eastern Europe had been reconquered,
Deng Xiaoping’s famous sentence (“it doesn’t matter if a cat is black or white,
so long as it catches mice”) was interpreted as synonymous with saying “why not
the capitalist path,” and the countries of the South had, one after another,
been subjected to “structural adjustment” policies. There were very few (but I
am proud–without arrogance–of having been one) who said (I actually wrote it):
we are only in the trough of a long wave just like there have always been in
history. I recalled Gramsci: “the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in
this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.” History quickly
proved us right. The triumph of imperialist monopoly capitalism was that of a
colossus with clay feet. The horrors that accompanied its triumph–the rapid
increase in poverty, NATO’s wars of aggression–brought about a quick rise in
resistance of all kinds, spontaneous and disorganized (but it is always this
way at the beginning). It was imperative to provide an organized form to
critical analysis, one capable of advancing a correct analysis of the challenge
and, consequently, able to contribute to defining consistent and effective
strategies for struggle.
Gathered together at Louvain la Neuve, at
CETRI, then led by François Houtart, a small group of intellectuals who had
been active over the preceding decades, and who had been aware of the obvious
problems with existing challenges to capitalism (and had offered critiques of
sovietism and national popular regimes), decided to create a “World Forum for Alternatives.”
Houtart and Pablo Gonzalves Casanova, if I am not mistaken, suggested the idea
and the name.
But how would we translate intention into
action?
Upon returning to Cairo, I contacted the
“Afro-Asian People’s Solidarity Organization.” This institution had been
created during the height of the Bandung era and Nasserism, had fallen into
decay, but was still in existence–a building and a few employees, nothing more.
Its president was Mourad Ghaleb, Nasser’s former ambassador to Moscow. Despite
our political disagreements–which appeared small with the passage of time–we
maintained strong mutual respect. When I proposed the idea to him, he jumped at
the chance. “We can organize some kind of congress for the organization and you
invite whom you want.”
Thus the WFA was born in Cairo in 1997.
The group of coordinators who appointed me
chairman of the WFA did me a great honour, which is perhaps justified, if at
all, by the fact that my activities over forty years familiarized me with a
large number of organizations and leading personalities around the world.
A
working group–in which I voluntarily abstained from participating–drafted the
WFA’s Manifesto. We owe this magnificent text to François Houtart.
The World Forum for Alternatives first appeared on the
international stage when it organized the “anti-Davos” in January 1999, on the
occasion of the annual elite conference at Davos. We were, of course, denied
access to the holy precinct itself, but we took up a position fifty metres
away, on the other side of the snow-covered street in this beautiful winter resort.
Our small group included a number of committed intellectuals and figures from
mass movements in the five continents, chosen for their high degree of
representativeness: the farmers’ organizations of Burkina Faso, Brazil and
India; the labour unions of South Africa, Korea and Brazil; the neo-Zapatistas
of Chiapas in Mexico; the activists of the World March of Women; the ‘Sans’ in
France and the ATTAC group. Helped into Davos by Le Monde Diplomatique, we were there to say that it was we, not the
club of billionaires, who represented the real world. The Davos organizers,
like the narrow-minded Swiss authorities, were so furious that it was
impossible to produce the surprise a second time round. Hence the idea of a
World Social Forum, on a different scale, for which Porto Alegre seemed a
natural choice because of the considerable resources that the Brazilian Workers
Party could mobilize for it there.
Constructing
Convergence in Diversity
The
World Forum for Alternatives is located within this complex universe. It is
therefore a forum in the true sense of the term–that is, a place of mutual
encounter and debate, not an ‘International’ (Communist, Socialist, Christian
Democrat, Islamic or Liberal). It brings together currents of thought and
action which, though totally independent of one another (a good thing, in my
opinion), share critical points of view about the application of liberal
policies to such areas of social management as relations between the sexes,
environmental issues, human rights or intercommunal problems. All these
currents have a place in the WFA, whatever their ideological inspirations or
practical choices. The WFA programme for debate on the objectives, instruments
and achievements of social movements around the world–whether it is a question
of regional balance sheets, the stimulation of alternatives to agribusiness, or
systematic reflection on universal values concerning individual, social and
collective rights–testifies to the openness, which is a matter of principle for
the Forum.
The World Forum for Alternatives and Third
World Forum organizations are both a “network of networks.”
The World Forum
for Alternatives’ role is to serve as a center for systematic analyses of
alternatives to the present world order. Our enemy recognizes the importance of
such systematic analyses without which no effective action strategy is
possible. I am referring here to the Mont Pelerin Society (MPS), founded in
1947, with members like Milton Friedman, Lionel Robbins, Ludwig von Mises,
Friedrich von Hayek, and Karl Popper, all advocates of today’s liberalism. I am
also thinking of the Trilateral Commission, founded in 1973, which includes
David Rockefeller, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Cyrus Vance, Andrew Young, and Paul
Volcker among its members, all of whom have participated in designing the North
American establishment’s strategy. The enemy recognizes that the major problem
confronting it today is managing the criminal and impossible system it is
attempting to foist on everyone. In the accepted jargon, this management is
called “governance,” which has been made into the dominant concern for the
programs of international institutions. Unfortunately, a large number of NGOs
have adopted this concern as their own, in the best of cases for lack of
critical reflection, in most cases out of opportunism. It is not clear at the
present moment exactly what the enemy’s analysis is, though Susan George has
attempted to evoke it with humor and sagacity in her Le Rapport Lugano.
Following our (anti-Davos) initiative, the
first meeting of the World Social Forum (WSF) was organized by a mainly
Brazilian committee, which benefitted from sizeable financial support, in
cooperation with ATTAC-France and Le
Monde diplomatique (Bernard Cassen). Others have written the history of the
WSF.
The
success of Porto Alegre I, in January 2001, did not feature on the front pages
of the major Western newspapers. The enemy’s chosen strategy was to boycott the
whole initiative. Nevertheless, the rich gentlemen at Davos grew a little
worried and suggested opening a “dialogue” with us. I was lucky enough to take
part in the ten minutes of airtime set aside for it on the radio. “Monsieur,”
asked my Davos partner, “how does it happen that an economist like yourself is
not there with us in Davos?” My answer was simple. “There were three reasons.
One: I don’t have $20,000 to spend on entering paradise for three days. Two: I
wasn’t invited–which doesn’t surprise me, as my opinions are well enough known.
Three: if by some mistake I had been invited, I wouldn’t have accepted, as I am
not a billionaire and have no interest in joining the club of their servants.” “But,
monsieur,” he countered, “I am not a
billionaire.” “I know, you are the public relations director of a company whose
owners are billionaires.” “What have you got against billionaires?” “Simple
arithmetic, monsieur. Their profits
doubled in the 1990s, but the incomes of all the non-billionaires–and there are
a lot of them–obviously did not increase in the same proportion. You want
inequality, and I equality. So, we are enemies, and I don’t see what we could
have a dialogue about.”
Even so, Davos will not fail to “make an
effort” in the future, and from the wide spectrum of social organizations it
will find some “left-wing figures” to go, consciously or unconsciously, on a
journey to the mountain of reconciliation.
In January 2002,
Porto Alegre II took a great step forward that was well expressed in the “appeal”
adopted at the final rally. The “social movements” have been growing more
political–in the good sense of the term. Beyond the organization of struggle
against the disastrous social effects of neo-liberalism, they are taking the
measure of a system which already entails, and will increasingly entail,
“military” barbarism on the pretext of a “war on terrorism.” The aftermath of
9/11 had amply demonstrated this.
The Third World Forum
and the World Forum for Alternatives were very active at Porto Alegre, leading
five major seminars at which the whole criminal political logic of global
neoliberalism was subjected to analyses and commentaries by hundreds of the
most lucid intellectuals in the contemporary world.
Nevertheless, we
must note that the system devised by the World Social Forum has not withstood
the test of time. The line advocated by the great majority of the NGOs that set
the tone for the WSF does not fall outside the framework of what those who control
the system are willing to tolerate. The critique of the WSF, formulated in a
collective letter drafted at Porto Alegre in 2005 (the document is available on
numerous Internet sites), was ignored and the WSF appears to us, consequently,
to have exhausted its capacities and no longer meets the necessary requirements
for mobilizing opposition. The last WSF (Montreal, 2016) turned into a farce!
Participation of the WFA/TWF in social
forums, whether at the world or other levels, is not our main objective. What
is a priority for us, first of all, is organizing meetings by ourselves for
ourselves in order to advance our own analyses of requirements for the
theoretical and practical construction of positive and real alternatives
leading to popular and democratic advances. Yet, we would not ignore the social
forums and intend to participate in them. It is a not unimportant means–among
others–to disseminate the results of our own analyses. In fact, the WFA/TWF has
probably been in attendance at all–or almost all–the forums held throughout the
world, even if this presence has been more obvious in some cases, less so in
others. I have personally participated in many activities of so-called civil
society.
A complete agenda for the social forums
should exist. Perhaps the WSF Secretariat could provide this. For my part, I
have participated (as part of WFA/TWF teams) in the World Social Forums of
Porto Alegre (2001, 2002, 2005), Mumbai (2004), Bamako and Caracas (2006),
Nairobi (2007), Belem (2009), Dakar (2011), and Tunis (2013 and 2015). I have
participated in some of the regional forums, which often are preparatory to the
World Forums: Hyderabad (2003, Indian and Asian Forum), Lusaka (2004, African
Forum), and Zagreb (2011, Balkans Forum). I have also participated in more
topical forums: Amazonia in Belem, Brazil (2003) and Via Campesina in Valencia,
Spain (2004). I have followed all the European Forums since Florence (2002),
followed by Paris, London, Athens, and Malmo. I have personally participated in
several Egyptian, Arab, and African Forums, but not unfortunately at those of
the network that called itself the “Mashriq-Maghrib Forum.”
At each of the forums mentioned, we have
always led four to ten round tables, led by six to ten of us who seemed the
most competent in the areas in question. In some cases, the miserable working
conditions certainly considerably reduced–for us as well as for others–the
reach of our messages. On the other hand, at Dakar in 2011 and Tunis in 2013
and 2015, we benefited from much better conditions. Many participants and
observers at these forums have noted the high quality of our round tables. The
interested reader can find reports on these round tables at numerous Internet
sites.
Responses to Our
Enemies
The active members of our WFA/TWF networks,
and I personally, have been and are invited to respond to the declarations of
our enemies, the leading lights of “happy globalization.” To make an exhaustive
list of these speeches would require some archival work, which I have not done.
I shall restrict myself here to singling out a few of these speeches. An
account of those of many other major actors in the WFA–particularly François
Houtart–would certainly make the WFA’s work better known to the reader. A more
exhaustive report of the WFA’s activities, which I am not attempting in my
memoirs, would be very useful.
I shall indicate, then, in calendrical
order, the speeches that I remember. The UN had organized at Copenhagen in 1995
one of the large conferences of its series pompously described as preparatory
for the renewal of civilization for the 2000s; the topic was the “reduction of
poverty”! This conference, like the others in the series, was
“intergovernmental,” i.e., delegates with the right to vote were selected by
member states. But members of “civil society” were invited as observers,
sometimes with the right to speak, but nothing more. Our opportunity arose
because the African states chose us–the TWF–to draft and present a report on
poverty in Africa. I jumped at this magnificent opportunity to respond to our
“partners”–in fact, enemies–the World Bank, the European Community, US-AID,
etc. Our report was drafted from the contributions of twenty active members in
Africa. Each of them provided a good report that, instead of drawing up an
“inventory” of the poor and of poverty, focused the analysis on a critique of
the policies implemented, which had inevitably led to a worsening of poverty in
the countries concerned. The synthesis report assembled these contributions
into a document of around 200 pages. The report had an impact. Some of the
official African delegates praised it officially. Our enemies were furious.
They simply insulted me and attempted to prevent me from crossing certain
barriers (in the physical sense of the term) separating officials from others
in the conference.
Typically,
in May 2001, the World Bank called off at the last minute its planned “dialogue”
in Barcelona with carefully selected NGOs, out of fear that some troublemakers
might pose a few awkward questions. We therefore drew up a list of charges to
replace that false debate between the World Bank and “civil society.”
The last of the major UN conferences of this kind was
held in Durban in 2001.
The
dominant establishment and the UN bureaucracy had previously controlled the
expressions of “civil society” that were invited to participate in these
international conferences; it had managed to do this through its
hold on the purse strings and its manipulation of NGOs sufficiently apolitical
to sign up to the mainstream proposals, which in effect cancelled any impact of
the protests and demands of the peoples in the countries where the NGOs
originated. The Durban conference had been planned along the same lines. The
protest against “racism and all other forms of discrimination” was to be an
innocuous event at which all participants, both governments and NGOs, would be
called upon to beat their breast over the “vestiges” of discrimination
afflicting “indigenous peoples,” “non-Caucasian races” (to use the official US
language), women and “sexual minorities.” Some highly general recommendations
were drawn up, in the spirit of North American legalism according to which an
act of legislation is all that is required to solve a problem. The social and
international inequalities generated by the logic of globalized capitalism,
which are the essential causes of the main forms of discrimination, were left
out of the original considerations.
This strategy of Washington and its allies
was defeated by the massive participation of African and Asian organizations
determined to pose the real questions. The issue of racism and discrimination,
they argued, is not synonymous with the behavior of people still suffering from
“outmoded” prejudices, who sadly are still present in large numbers in every
society on earth. Contemporary racism and discrimination are produced and reproduced
by the expansionist logic of actually existing capitalism, especially in its
so-called liberal form. The forms of “globalization” imposed by dominant
capital and its political intermediaries (above all, the triad governments) can
result in nothing other than “global apartheid.”
A first question raised
concerned “reparations” for the damage caused by the black slave trade.
American and European diplomats tried to undermine the whole discussion by condescending
remarks about the “amount” of reparations and the “professional beggars” who
were claiming them on behalf of formerly colonized peoples. Africans certainly
did not see things in that way. For them the issue was not “money” but
recognition that colonialism, imperialism, and slavery were largely responsible
for the “underdevelopment” of the continent and the legacy of racism. It was
these arguments that provoked the ire of the representatives of Western powers.
A second question concerned the actions of the State
of Israel. Here the Africans and Asians were clear and precise: the
continuation of Israeli settlement in the occupied territories, the eviction of
Palestinians in a process of veritable ethnic cleansing, the Bantustanization
plan for Palestine directly inspired by the defunct apartheid regime in South
Africa: these were but the latest chapter in its long history of evidently
“racist” imperialism. Characteristically, the Palestinian question unites
people in Africa and Asia, whereas it divides them in other parts of the world.
The WFA/TWF is always invited to
participate in the “counter G7 or G8 or G20” conferences. We are almost always
in attendance, and I personally have attended twice (Lyon and Saint
Petersburg). I regret having missed the counter-G7 at Genoa, where Berlusconi’s
police won notoriety by killing a youth.
I have only a vague memory of the Lyon
meeting. The conference had been organized by a panoply of “nice” French and
European NGOs for which it was imperative to avoid turning critiques of the
policies of the large imperialist powers into a trial of “Europe.” For them, since
Europe as community was not imperialist by nature, it should not have to bear
responsibility for such policies. Thus, nothing was said at the conference that
is worth remembering. A small number of participants from the Third World,
including me, found this emptiness amusing. But the French had organized things
well, culinarily speaking. At low prices, we could enjoy excellent dishes
typical of Lyonnaise cuisine. A Moroccan, a Chinese, and I enjoyed a delicious
meal together.
At Saint Petersburg in 2013, Boris
Kagarlitsky succeeded in getting financing to invite foreigners–including me–who
would come to reinforce the Russian delegation. This was a G20 and the topic
was “reform” of the international financial system. But we all knew that
developments in Syria (the allegation that chemical weapons had been used by
the Syrian government) were going to occupy most people’s attention. Obama and
Putin, moreover, had discussed nothing else. This was true of the Chinese,
Brazilians, and several others also. The organizers of this counter-G20 had
invited for our debates–at least for the financial question (we had, like the
G20, put Syria on the agenda for our discussions)–an assistant to the Brazilian
Minister of Finance. Pedro Paez questioned the financial system with his
well-known talent and presented his counter-proposal for reform of the international
monetary and financial system. Very good, but our Brazilian refrained from
commenting. For my part, I had chosen another method to launch our discussion.
I was content to say: you know, you Brazilians and other representatives from
the emerging countries, we will never get a good reform of the system, since
the G7 does not want it. We are going to be kept waiting around, from G20 to
G20, from Stiglitz Commission 1 to Stiglitz Commission 2, with anodine
proposals that will change nothing. So why take part in this game? We should
move the debate, locate it outside of the G20 and organize it among ourselves,
the BRICS, to advance, not an impossible international reform, but the
construction of a space for us, as distant and autonomous as possible from the
influence of the Western powers. The Minister’s assistant warmly approved of
what I had said.
In some situations, I have declined an
invitation to participate in undertakings to which I had been personally
invited. I refused to participate in the “Stiglitz Commission” formed by the UN
Secretary-General in 2010. I knew that it was a maneuver to impress and fool
public opinion by leading people to believe that it was possible to reform the
globalized system. Stiglitz, who has never ventured outside of the strictures
of neoliberalism and is a specialist in window-dressing reforms, was chosen for
that purpose. History has proved me right. The “Stiglitz Report,” delightfully
empty, has ultimately, and fortunately, been remembered by no one. On the other
hand, an UNCTAD committee proposed the beginning of a real reform. Obviously,
its report was rejected by the Western powers.
Solidarity Among
the Peoples, Nations, and States of the South
For all regions of
the capitalist third world, the construction of an auto-centered economy is the
unavoidable precondition for any further progress. This requires that external
relations be subordinated to the priorities of internal development, not that
the internal economy is “adjusted” to the external constraints (as mainstream
economic discourse repeats ad nauseam). Yet the construction of an auto-centered
economy–which remains indispensable at national level–would encounter serious
obstacles if it were not reinforced by forms of regional integration capable of
enhancing its positive effects. I am speaking here, not of regionalization as
it appears in mainstream economics–common markets–which is unable to
contemplate anything other than the logic of capitalist accumulation, but
rather of regionalization where the political dimensions are decisive and can
challenge the scientific, financial, and military monopolies through which the
first world imposes its project of world capitalist expansion. Regions such as
the Arab world, Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia, or vast countries
such as India or Brazil, can capitalize on certain advantages that history has
bequeathed to them (a common language or culture, for example), but also, and
above all, on the fact they have a common enemy.
Widespread demands
for democracy and for the running of society in the interests of the popular
classes would create the most favorable conditions for a way out of the present
impasse. The geometry of these two dimensions varies from one time and place to
another. But the art of politics, in the noble sense of the term, is not simply
to adjust to them passively or actively–in the manner of power-hungry
politicians–but to act in such a way as to transform them. As always, the
future remains uncertain: it is not programmed in advance in accordance with
some linear determinism, such as the rationality of the market; both
the worst and the best outcome are possible. There will probably be some breakthroughs
in the right direction, although it is impossible to predict where with more
than a middling degree of probability. If these breakthroughs occur in a
sufficient number of places and a concentrated period of time, they may
snowball and radically transform the world situation.
Here again the choices
of the ruling powers do not go in the direction I have suggested. The fact that
scarcely any of the regimes in question has any real legitimacy is already
proof that an alternative is possible. But it will become more than a
possibility only when the culturalist illusions fueling many protest movements
are dissipated–for such illusions are perfectly manipulated by those who run
the capitalist order. It will certainly be easier to overcome them in some
countries than in others and in some social milieux than in others.
In that perspective TWF and WFA have pursued
continuously their debates with the organizations of the Third World: among
others, the Non-Aligned Movement (which I have suggested characterizing as “non-aligned
over globalization”), the African Union, the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity
Organization, the Asia-Pacific Peoples’ Organization (which demonstrated its
real strength at the various official meetings of APEC). Parts of the UN system
are themselves sensitive to these trends: UNCTAD, for example, which was
created by Raúl Prebisch and run by a number of directors known personally to
me (Kenneth Dadzie, Gamani Corea, Rubens Ricupero); or the United Nations
University, at the time when Kinhide Mushakoji was vice-rector; or UNESCO when
Mahtar Mbow, well ahead of his time, was waging the struggle for a “new international
communications order.” The same was obviously not true of resolute opponents
such as those G7 and US instruments, the World Bank, IMF, and WTO, although
even they are now forced to confuse matters with various verbal contortions.
Nor is it true of the United Nations Organization itself, whose secretary-general,
Kofi Annan, produced a “Millennium Report” that seemed to come straight from
the offices of the State Department. Other UN institutions–UNIDO, FAO, or UNDP–have
now been vassalized by Washington and its loyal allies in the triad, whereas
the institutions of the EU, largely because of its elected parliament, are
quite sensitive to these trends, even if the bureaucracy of the Brussels
Commission remains subject to EU governments and has gone along with neoliberal
globalization. The summits held under these conditions–like the one on poverty,
in Copenhagen in 1995, where the Third World Forum presented the only really independent
report from Africa–have only a limited impact.
Then what do we
do now? The WFA and TWF are today participating in the fight to restore the
rights of the only international community possible, the UN. In my recent
speech to the congress of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers
(IADL) in Brussels in 2014, I commented on this.
Across the
world, in Hanoi, the Fondation pour la Paix et le Développement du Vietnam took
the initiative in 2009 to establish a network charged with formulating proposals
for strengthening South-South cooperation. Mme. Binh and her talented
collaborator, Tran Dac Loi, invited me to participate in this initiative. Many
colleagues in the WFA/TWF and I responded enthusiastically, of course.
I speak in these
pages of solidarity among the peoples, nations, and states of the South I know
quite well that states are what they are and are not always true
representatives of their peoples. But I am not one of those who believe that we
can “change the world” without modifying established states. Solidarity among
peoples, and the struggle of peoples in their home countries, must and can have
the objective of forcing states to change in ways likely to support popular
advances.
Relations of Cooperation between the WFA
Networks and Networks from Countries of the North
The TWF is, as
its name indicates, a network of the South. When the WFA was created, we well
understood that it was different because it is a world forum that includes the North in its network of
collaborators. The task was and is difficult. The historical experience of
North-South relations did not make the task easy. Relations among the world’s
states are unequal by definition. There are dominant imperialists, on the one
hand, and dominated peripheries, on the other. Certainly, outside of these
relations, there are other relations among persons, organizations, even
political parties from the North and the South. To be brief, I will note that
the Communist Internationals, just like the churches, formed places for such
encounters. Later, with the independence gained by the nations of Asia and
Africa, conditions were created that permitted the emergence of–socialist or
liberal–internationals and facilitated meetings between organizations from the
South (Bandung) and some political forces from the North (Europe and Japan, the
United States to a lesser degree) that put themselves forward as friends of
nations from the South. But the organizations and parties of the South of that
era–with national-popular tendencies–prioritized their relations with the East
of that time–the Soviets and Chinese. That is understandable.
The dominant
imperialist establishment had, for its part, formed non-governmental (in appearance
at least) organizations that were allegedly worldwide. The Society for International
Development (SID–headquartered in Rome) is a good example. In fact, these
“networks” were formed–pushed by the World Bank–as North to South transmission
belts. Decision-making powers were reserved for persons from the North or those
from the South who were their devotees; the other “representatives” from the
South occupied only minor roles. For that reason, I refused to join the SID, as
was suggested to me.
Of course, we
had no intention of reproducing an unequal North-South relation in the
formation of the WFA. We even, to avoid this danger, bent the stick in the
other direction, as it is said. That is, we gave to the South a representation
that reflected more accurately the reality (the South is the “minority” that
makes up 80% of the global population!). There are, thus, ten Vice-Presidents
in the WFA from the South and two from the North; there is one executive
secretary from the South and one from the North.
Immediately
after its creation, the WFA contacted a large number of European organizations
and individuals that we knew were sincere friends of peoples from the South.
The results of our meetings are, nevertheless, quite meager and there is no
reason to deny it. Responsibilities are shared, and I do not say that out of
diplomatic courtesy. I remain severe in my judgments of the new European left;
but I am no less so with regard to our lefts in the South. Personally, I am an
internationalist along with others, of course, in our WFA/TWF networks. I am
among those who believe that a better world can only be built together, when
and if the radical lefts of the North and South are able jointly to define
common strategic objectives and ultimately succeed, through the struggles they
undertake, in producing advances in this direction, i.e., win victories (not
necessarily the “final victory”!) in their own countries.
In my analysis
of the history of the 20th century, I reached what I consider to be a sad
conclusion: major progressive transformations on the world scale were initiated
by struggles of peoples in the peripheries of the world system, through the
socialist revolutions (Russia, China, Vietnam, and Cuba) and national-popular
liberation movements (of the Bandung era). It was actually these advances that
made possible those of the workers in the centers. There would have been no
true social democracy (whose achievements I do not denigrate, on the contrary)
without the “communist threat.” Nevertheless, the truly anti-imperialist
political forces in the North–by that I mean the communist parties of the Third
International–did not succeed in overcoming the relative isolation to which
they were condemned in their own societies. The tragedy of the 20th century is
precisely there, in my opinion: the isolation of the USSR, China, and the
countries of the Bandung South. These countries suffered terribly from the
systematic hostility against them from the states of the North and the
inability of the radical lefts in those countries to prevent this hostility
from reaching full strength. This situation is mainly what lay behind the
limitations of what could be achieved in the 20th century in the larger East
and South, and even behind the abuses and excesses, the stifling and ultimate
collapse of this first wave of attempts to “go beyond capitalism and
imperialism.”
To see a repeat
of this same failure to achieve effective solidarity in the development of
peoples’ struggles in the North and South today, in the 21st century, would be
even more tragic. That is why I am an internationalist, to avoid adding to the
risks of a tragic failure for everyone.
If I judge our
European comrades harshly, it is for this reason: their awareness of the
importance of anti-imperialist action is, in large part, far short of what is
required. There are several explanations for this state of affairs, none of
which justify it: (i) excesses in countries of the South (and East), which do
not encourage solidarity with their peoples; (ii) the drift of the left in
Europe (which originated in historical communism) towards a “humanist-social
democrat” view of the world; and (iii) the focus of Europeans on the problems
involved in the construction/reform/reconstruction of the European Union. If
the European reader finds my judgments too harsh, I will respond that they do
not appear unjust. Moreover, I am no less harsh in my assessment of struggles
in the greater South.
Towards an Assessment of the WFA/TWF’s
Activities
The most
favorable conjunction of factors for getting out of the current impasse
involves combining a widespread demand for democracy with a widespread demand
for social management that benefits the working classes. All of the recent
developments illustrate what I call the “autumn of capitalism.” But this has
not coincided with (or not yet) a true “springtime of peoples.” The temporal
distance between the two defines the nature of our era’s tragedy.
All societies on
earth, without exception, find themselves in an impasse where the only future
ahead seems to be the destruction of human civilization. The reader of my
writings will doubtless have come to the same conclusion–if, that is, he or she
accepts the analyses I have offered of the Third World, the former socialist countries,
and the “first world.” It may seem pessimistic in the extreme, but that is not
how I see it. The point, rather, is that the world capitalist system has
reached the end of its historical trajectory and can no longer produce anything
positive, if we assume that circumstances will allow it to survive at all.
Human civilization is therefore at a dangerous crossroads: it can avoid
destruction only by embarking on a new road, an “alternative,” as they say,
which for me is synonymous with the long transition to world socialism. The
neoliberal view of the world, though seemingly triumphant, is not viable. But
the certainty of its collapse does not guarantee that what follows will
automatically take the right path; the demise of liberal capitalism could
produce only indescribable chaos, with consequences impossible to predict. This
is not, however, the only exit from the impasse in which senescent capitalism
imprisons humanity. More or less everywhere in the world, real forces exist
that may initiate positive changes–forces visible today in the numerous
struggles whose scale has already shaken neoliberal triumphalism.
Capitalism has built a world system and can really be
overcome only at the level of the planet. Although national struggles have to
be the starting point, without which no progress can be achieved at the level
of the world, they are not sufficient because the scope for change that they
can unleash is inevitably limited by the constraints of globalization. It is
therefore absolutely necessary that these struggles should converge and open a
way beyond the logic of capitalist accumulation, both in its national bases and
at the regional and global levels.
The World Forum
for Alternatives has a major intellectual responsibility. Our moment is
characterized by a “treason of the intellectuals,” in the sense that the
overwhelming majority of the “experts” (academic, among others) no longer seeks
an alternative for the current system. They close their eyes, not without a
degree of cynicism, to the destructive dimensions of this system. Some act to
make a fortune in the tradition of pure and simple opportunism. Others busy
themselves sterilizing their own “critiques” by reducing them to the minimum
compatible with the main requirements of the authorities. This treason is not
surprising. It is always so in all the important moments of “the end of an
era,” when the established society declines, but the new has not yet
crystallized from qualitative changes.
The strongest
argument for pessimism about the future is based on the lack of visible
subjects capable of undertaking the necessary historical transformation to put
an end to the hugely destructive dimensions of senescent capitalism. To say
that “the workers”–or even wage and salary earners more generally–constitute
such a subject is likely to cause smiles all round. But the optimist that I am
will reply that active subjects appear only for relatively brief periods in
history, when a favorable combination of circumstances allows the different
logics of social existence (economic, political, geostrategic, etc.) to converge
with one another. At such moments, in ways impossible to predict in advance,
potential subjects may crystallize into decisive agents of change. Who could
have foretold two thousand years ago that the great religions (Christianity,
Islam, Buddhism) would become decisive subjects of history? Who predicted that
the nascent bourgeoisie of the Italian and Dutch towns would become the
decisive subject of modern history, a class for itself with a keen awareness of
what it wanted and what it was capable of achieving? Who predicted that the
road to socialism would be opened by a revolution in Russia–a periphery of the
global system–not in the advanced centers? And who predicted that certain “peoples”
in the periphery–the Chinese and Vietnamese–would take over and become the most
decisive subjects of transformation in the post-war world? This is not to say
that present-day social movements will not occasionally constitute themselves
into active subjects, whose precise shape is difficult to imagine. We need to
give constant thought to the precise situations that might permit this, and to
the strategies that would make it easier for their different elements to come
together.
I will not offer
here an appraisal of the WFA/TWF’s activities that have been organized in
response to the challenges described in the preceding analyses. I believe that
such an appraisal would be quite useful and a WFA working group would be
capable of doing it. I will content myself with indicating two milestones
through which our progress and our weaknesses can be assessed: (i) the WFA
Assembly held at Bamako in 2006 that produced the Bamako Appeal; and (ii) the Congress held in Caracas in 2008, the
committee reports from which are available on numerous Internet sites.
The reason for
our success–as modest as it is–in contrast with the World Social Forum’s
failure can be stated in a few words: we rely on those who understand that the
autumn of capitalism will become the springtime of peoples only if the
potentially radical lefts, in the North and South, boldly commit themselves to
the formulation and implementation of the socialist alternative.
Extracts from A Life Looking Forward (London: Zed,
2006) and Mémoires (Paris: Les Indes
Savantes, 2015).
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