by
Naomi Klein
When Rio hosted the
first Earth Summit in 1992, there was so much goodwill
surrounding the event that it was nicknamed, without
irony, the Summit to Save the World. This week in
Johannesburg, at the follow-up conference known as Rio
+ 10, nobody is claiming that the World Summit on
Sustainable Development can save the world-the
question is whether the summit can even save itself.
The sticking point is
what UN bureaucrats call "implementation" and the rest
of us call "doing something." Much of the blame for
the "implementation gap" is being placed at the
doorstep of the United States. It was George W. Bush
who abandoned the only significant environmental
regulations that came out of the Rio conference, the
Kyoto Protocol on climate change. It was Bush who
decided not to come to Johannesburg (even his father
showed up in Rio), signaling that the issues being
discussed here-from basic sanitation to clean
energy-are low priorities for his Administration. And
it is the US delegation that is most belligerently
blocking all proposals that involve either directly
regulating multinational corporations or dedicating
significant new funds to sustainable development.
But the Bush-bashing
is too easy: the summit isn't failing because of
anything happening now in Johannesburg. It's failing
because the entire process was booby-trapped from the
start.
When Canadian
entrepreneur and diplomat Maurice Strong was appointed
to chair the Rio summit ten years ago, his vision was
of a massive gathering that brought all the
"stakeholders" to the table-not just governments but
also nongovernmental organizations (environmentalists,
indigenous groups, lobby groups) as well as
multinational corporations.
Strong's vision
allowed for more participation from civil society than
any UN conference before, at the same time as it
raised unprecedented amounts of corporate funds for
the summit (it helped that Coca-Cola donated its
marketing team and Swatch produced a limited-edition
Earth Summit watch). But the sponsorship had a price.
Corporations came to Rio with clear conditions: They'd
embrace ecologically sustainable practices but only
voluntarily-through nonbinding codes and "best
practices" partnerships with NGOs and governments. In
other words, when the business sector came to the
table in Rio, direct regulation of business was pushed
off.
In Johannesburg, these
"partnerships" have passed into self-parody, with the
conference center chock-a-block with displays for BMW
"clean cars" and billboards for De Beers diamonds
announcing Water is Forever. The summit's main sponsor
is Eskom, South Africa's soon-to-be-privatized
national energy company. According to a recent study,
under Eskom's restructuring 40,000 households are
losing access to electricity each month.
And this cuts to the
heart of the real debate about the summit. The World
Business Council for Sustainable Development, a
corporate lobby group founded in Rio, is insisting
that the route to sustainability is the same
trickle-down formula already being imposed by the
World Trade Organization and the International
Monetary Fund: poor countries must make themselves
hospitable to foreign investment, usually by
privatizing basic services, from water to electricity
to healthcare. As in Rio, these corporations are
pushing for voluntary "partnerships" rather than
"command and control" regulations.
But these arguments
sound different today from a decade ago. Post-Enron,
it's difficult enough to believe that companies can be
trusted to keep their own books-let alone save the
world. And unlike a decade ago, the economic model of
laissez-faire development is being militantly rejected
by popular movements around the world, particularly in
Latin America but also here in South Africa. This time
around, many of the "stakeholders" aren't at the
official table, but out in the streets or organizing
countersummit conferences to plot very different
routes to development: debt cancellation, an end to
the privatization of water and electricity,
reparations for apartheid abuses, affordable housing,
land reform. The most ambitious is the Week of the
Landless, a parallel event arguing that unfulfilled
promises to introduce substantive land reform-in South
Africa and across the postcolonial developing
world-has been the single greatest barrier to
sustainable development globally.
Key to these movements
is that they are no longer willing to simply talk
about their demands-they are acting on them. In the
past two years, South Africa has experienced a surge
in direct-action, with groups like the Soweto
Electricity Crisis Committee, the Landless People's
Movement, Durban's Concerned Citizens Forum and the
Cape Town Anti-Eviction Campaign organizing to resist
evictions, to claim unproductive land and to reconnect
cut off water and electricity in the townships.
A mass demonstration
is planned for August 31, but the fate of the march is
by no means certain. The South African government
appears to have decided that if nothing else comes of
it, the summit is at least an opportunity "to change
misconceptions about safety and security in South
Africa [and] attract the attention of foreign tourists
and investors," in the words of Provincial Police
Commissioner Perumal Naidoo.
What this means in
practice is that while street signs welcome delegates
to "feel the pulse" of "the Sensational City," Sandton,
the ultra-rich suburb where the conference is being
held, has been transformed into a military zone,
complete with "mega search park" and remote spy planes
patrolling the skies. All protests are confined to a
1.8 kilometer "struggle pen," as many are calling it,
and even there, only police-permitted marches are
allowed.
Vendors and beggars
have been swept from the streets, residents of
squatter camps have been evicted (many have been
relocated to less visible sites, far from busy roads).
Moss Moya, a township resident facing eviction from
his home of eighteen years, holds out little hope that
the summit will help South Africa's poor. "If they are
going to help us," he said, "they need to see us." But
when Moya and his neighbors held a rally to resist the
attempts to relocate them behind a grove of trees, the
police cracked down and Moya, a former ANC supporter,
was shot in the mouth with a rubber bullet, knocking
out six of his teeth. When he went to file a complaint
with the police, he was thrown in jail. Moya and some
1,000 other township residents decided to take their
struggle to downtown Johannesburg, holding a peaceful
rally outside the offices of the Premier of Gauteng,
the province in which Johannesburg is located. Right
underneath a sign that announces, The People of
Gauteng Welcome WSSD Delegates to the Smart Province,
seventy-seven demonstrators were arrested, including
the entire leadership of the Landless People's
Movement. (All but one-a US citizen, still facing
deportation-have since been released.)
On August 24, police
even attacked a candle-light "freedom of expression
march," held to protest these and other mass arrests.
The spontaneously organized march was headed to a
downtown prison, but before the crowd of 1,000 local
and international activists had walked a block, riot
police surrounded them and barricaded the road.
Without warning, stun grenades were fired at the
marchers, injuring three.
The World Summit on
Sustainable Development isn't going to save the world;
it merely offers an exaggerated mirror of it. In the
gourmet restaurants of super-rich Sandton, delegates
are literally dining out on their concern for the
poor. Meanwhile, outside the gates, poor people are
being hidden away, assaulted and imprisoned for what
has become the iconic act of resistance in an
unsustainable world: refusing to disappear.
A version of this
article first appeared in
The Nation.
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