When Clare Short finally resigned as Minister at the Department for International Development (DFiD) in Tony Blair's government, she won praise for her high profile championing of development issues and for the growth in the UK's aid budget during her time at DFiD. The admiration of those at the World Bank for Short, who was the UK's Governor of the World Bank, was also noted.
But not everyone was grief stricken at Short's departure. International Development specialist, Brian Sims wrote to The Guardian of the "profound disillusionment" of many with Short at DFiD and its "acquiescence in allowing neo-liberal policies to be forced on third word countries". http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/comment/0,9236,955564,00.html
George Monbiot puts it another way (item 1), "Within her own department, where her decisions made a real impact on people's lives, she was more Blairite than Blair. She would emote with the wretched of the earth for the cameras, then crush them quietly with a departmental memo."
In the area of GMOs, Short presided over a government department that quietly funded a £13.4m programme to create a new generation of GM animals, crops and drugs via at least 80 projects in over 24 countries, with up to another 22 set to be involved (see item 2). When there were protests Short retorted that, "It would be wrong to block research which might bring real benefits to the poor." But included in DFiD's schemes are projects linked to its aid programme in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh which will help push 20 million subsistence farmers off their land.
As George Monbiot writes, "There was... no conflict between Clare Short's work at DFiD and that of the government as a whole. The central project of Blair's foreign policy is the appeasement of the powerful. Short ensured that this principle informed the business of her department."
Andrew Bennet has already moved from DFiD to head the Syngenta Foundation. Perhaps his old boss will be joining him soon.
1.Don't Cry for Clare - George Monbiot
2.Britain funds GBP13.4m GM programme in Third World
---
1.Don't Cry for Clare
Short's career as a licensed rebel casts light on our post-oppositional, post-modern politics
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 13th May 2003
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,5673,954804,00.html
Some of the Guardian's readers will, for all her faults, have shed a few tears at the departure of our development secretary. Clare Short may have failed, in March, to act upon her threat to resign over the war with Iraq. But even those who have turned against her will miss that splash of colour on the front benches, the Old Labour warrior who still spoke the language of feeling, and who, as if by magic, had somehow survived the control freaks and the little grey men for six vivid and tumultuous years. Westminster will be a bleaker and a colder place without her.
Well, dry your eyes. Clare Short survived because she was useful. She was as much a creature of the control freaks as any of the weaker members of the front bench. To understand her role in government is to begin to understand the nature of our post-oppositional, post-modern political system.
Short was a licensed rebel. She was permitted, to a greater degree than any other minister, to speak her mind about the business of other departments. She was able to do so because she presented no threat to them or to Blair's core political programme. Within her own department, where her decisions made a real impact on people's lives, she was more Blairite than Blair. She would emote with the wretched of the earth for the cameras, then crush them quietly with a departmental memo.
She was useful to the government because she behaved like someone guided by impulse rather than calculation. As a result, she permitted it to suggest that it remained a broad church, and the Prime Minister a broad-shouldered man. Her outbursts allowed the control freaks to pretend that they were not control freaks.
We have, in other words, been sold Short. Blair told us she had integrity, and, correctly interpreting her role, she acted as if she did. But she knew precisely where the limits lay, and when that "integrity" needed to be jettisoned. Her authenticity was prescribed. As a result she was, in some respects, a more dangerous figure than visibly ruthless ministers like Alan Milburn or John Reid.
If you think this sounds harsh, you should examine her record. Clare Short's approach to overseas development was more authoritarian than that of her Tory predecessor, Lynda Chalker. "Who represents the people of the world?" she asked the BBC World Service in November 2001. "It's the governments who come from civil societies. Having lots of NGOs squawking all over the place won't help. They don't speak for the poor, the governments do."1 Her deputy, Hilary Benn, repeated the sentiment: "The future is a matter of political will and choice, and only governments have both the legitimacy and the opportunity to exercise that will."2
There, is, in other words, no such thing as society, unrepresented by government. The people's organisations which seek to question governmental decisions -- the trades unions, peasant syndicates, associations of shanty dwellers or indigenous people -- are an irrelevant nuisance, the surly and recalcitrant natives who cannot interpret their own best interests. If a government, however corrupt and unrepresentative it may be, says it wants a particular kind of development, then the people are deemed to want it too.
Throughout her tenure, delegations of squawking NGOs came from the poor world to beg Clare Short not to destroy their lives. They were brushed aside with a ruthlessness which made Peter Mandelson look like Bagpuss. Last year, a group of peasant farmers from the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh travelled to Britain to ask the Department for International Development (DFID) not to fund the state government's "Vision 2020" programme.
Its purpose was to replace small-scale farming with agro-industry. While a few very wealthy farmers, seed and chemical companies, some of them closely connected to the government, would make a great deal of money from the scheme, some 20 million people would be thrown out of work.2 A leaked memo from Short's own department revealed that the project suffered from "major failings", threatened the food security of the poor, and offered no plans for "providing alternative income for those displaced."3 A citizens' jury drawn from the social groups the scheme is supposed to help rejected it unanimously.4 Yet Short ignored their concerns and instructed her department to give the state government pounds 65 million.
In 2000, a group of Bagyeli pygmies from Cameroon came to Britain to alert DFID to the dangers associated with the oil pipeline the companies Exxon and Chevron were planning to build through their land. The World Bank was preparing to help the oil companies to pay for it, and Clare Short was intending to provide some of the money the World Bank would use. The Bagyeli claimed that their land would be seized by incomers, that they would be attacked by the pipeline workers, exposed to new diseases and denied their hunting and gathering rights.
Clare Short intervened personally to ensure that the pipeline was built. "Britain", she claimed, "will use its influence to insist that all appropriate controls are in place and that they are implemented rigorously."5
The pipeline is now being constructed, with DFID's money, and everything the Bagyeli predicted has come to pass. They are suffering from epidemics of AIDS, malaria and bronchitis, brought in by the workers. They have lost much of their land and are rapidly losing their forests.6 When, at the end of last year, a pressure group called the Forest People's Programme reminded Clare Short of the promises she had made, she responded that such campaigners were "opposed to the interests of people in developing countries",7 by which, of course, she meant the governments.
She also championed the Chinese government's plan to move 60,000 Han farmers into the predominantly Tibetan region of western Qinghai. The World Bank's own inspection panel found that the project would be catastrophic for the indigenous people: it offended the Bank's guidelines on consultation, the protection of ethnic minorities and the defence of the environment;8 but Short, as a director, continued to argue that the Bank should help the Chinese government to fund it.9
To facilitate such projects, Clare Short has pressed for the weakening of the World Bank's guidelines -- for which people's movements in the poor world have fought so hard -- which prevent it from funding schemes which force tens of thousands from their homes, trash the environment and enrich only the elites. In future, her department has suggested, the Bank should give its money to governments with fewer strings attached.
There was, in other words, no conflict between Clare Short's work at DFID and that of the government as a whole. The central project of Blair's foreign policy is the appeasement of the powerful. Short ensured that this principle informed the business of her department. She was forced to resign yesterday not because she had rebelled, but because she had destroyed her credibility as a rebel. Having squandered her Old Labour credentials, she was of no further use to the New Labour government. Goodbye Clare Short, and good riddance.
www.monbiot.com
References:
1. BBC World Service, 11th November 2001.
2. Speech by Hilary Benn MP, 1 October 2001. Globalisation: Can capitalism be regulated?
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/News/Speeches/files/sp01oct01.html
3. Luke Harding and John Vidal, 7th July 2001. Clare Short in Indian GM crops row: Aid programme comes under fire for supporting disputed scheme. The Guardian.
4. International Institute for Environment and Development; Deccan Development Society; Christian Aid; ITDG; Friends of the Earth; Greenpeace; Institute of Development Studies, 18th March 2002. UK Government Funds Scheme to Throw 20 Million Indian Farmers off Their Land - Farmers Come to UK Parliament to Make Their Case. Press Release; Peter Popham, 7th July 2001. British aid policy 'driving Indians to lives of hardship'. The Independent.
5. Marcus Colchester, Director, Forest Peoples Programme. 23rd October 2002. Written Evidence Submitted to the House of Commons International Development Committee.
6. ibid
7. Clare Short, 5th November 2002. In evidence to the House of Commons International Development Committee.
8. Isabel Hilton, 28th June 2000. Climate of Fear. The Guardian
9. Clare Short, 5th November 2002. Ibid.
---
2.Independent on sunday, 15 September 2002
Britain funds GBP13.4m GM programme in Third World
By Severin Carrell and Geoffrey Lean
Clare Short's overseas aid department has quietly funded a GBP13.4m programme to create a new generation of GM animals, crops and drugs throughout the Third World. The so far unpublicised programme has financed research in more than 24 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe into at least 80 GM projects ranging from long-life bananas to fast-growing pigs and fish, from disease-resistant rice to stopping tsetse flies carrying sleeping sickness.
The scale of the long-running programme has taken even experts by surprise. Dr Sue Mayer, director of the charity Genewatch UK and a government adviser, said that Ms Short's Department for International Development (DFID) had "deceived" the public about the full scale of the research programme.
She said: "They have got to be completely open. They have given us isolated snapshots of the programme, but this gives a distorted picture of the direction of the research and of what actually has been done."
Ms Short retorted that her department was merely helping poor countries to keep pace with GM crops and medicines being created by Western governments and companies. British charities, she said, had no right to tell less developed nations what to do. "It would be wrong to block research which might bring real benefits to the poor," she said. "We believe that they and their governments should decide if such knowledge is useful to them."
But developing states are increasingly rejecting GM technology. Four years ago the representatives of every African country, except South Africa, signed a statement at a conference on GM crops and foods in Rome saying that they "strongly objected" to having their poverty used "to push a technology that is neither safe, environmentally friendly, nor economically beneficial to us".
This summer, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique refused to accept GM grain as aid from the US, despite an impending famine which threatens 10 million people in southern Africa. And when Secretary of State Colin Powell attacked their stance in his speech to this month's Earth Summit in Johannesburg, he was heckled by delegates.
The DFID programme stretches back to the early days of GM crop research, when its predecessor department, the Overseas Development Administration, funded projects to create disease-resistant cassava and groundnuts in the late 1980s.
Under John Major, the ODA gave China money to help it develop faster-growing, leaner "transgenic" pigs. It also spent nearly GBP 500,000 on experiments to genetically modify the tsetse fly, to stop it carrying the "sleeping sickness" which affects humans and cattle across sub-Saharan Africa.
But from the mid-1990s, DFID's programme has massively expanded, leading to research projects on four continents, from Cuba and Malaysia to Sri Lanka and Kenya. Although 24 countries are listed as partners, some projects are expected to involve up to 22 other countries. Projects include virus and parasite-resistant rice in Africa and India, goat and cattle vaccines for Ethiopia and India, GM tilapia fish in Thailand, weevil-resistant potatoes for Bolivia and GM maize roots in Tanzania.
Included in these schemes are projects linked to a controversial GBP 65m DFID aid programme in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. Critics allege the aid will help push 20 million subsistence farmers off their land. Yet little has been disclosed about the scale of its programme, in a move which has disturbed some senior DFID officials.
Earlier this year, the department compiled a list of 59 projects, worth GBP 10.3m, which involved "the potential release of genetically modified organisms" and a handful of studies into the economical and political issues posed by biotechnology in developing countries. Yet this list failed to mention another 22 DFID projects worth more than GBP3.1m: in total, DFID has spent at least GBP 13.4m on GM research.
Environment groups have applauded Ms Short for aggressively attacking firms such as Monsanto for including "terminator" genes in GM crops. Yet DFID's studies have added to campaigners' suspicions that it is forcing GM on the Third World, in step with biotech companies. Pete Riley of Friends of the Earth called for MPs to conduct an inquiry into DFID's spending. "In public, the Government says we're approaching GM technology with caution, but overseas they are gung-ho. The level of the Government's hypocrisy knows no bounds," he said. Additional research by Steve Bloomfield