INTERVIEW DEVELOPMENT FOR THE PEOPLE An Interview with Anwar
Fazal Anwar Fazal was President of the International Organization of Consumers
Unions (IOCU) from 1978-1984, and of the Environmental Liaison Centre International,
Nairobi, from 1987-1988. Fazal is a recipient of the Right Livelihood Award
popularly called the "Alternative Nobel Prize." He will step down as the
head of IOCU's office in Penang on January 1, 1992. He plans to continue
to work on infant formula and other "global citizen" issues. Multinational
Monitor: What is wrong with current models of development? Anwar Fazal:
The kind of development we currently have is characterized by three kinds
of terrible cultures. First is the culture of violence. We have violence
of several kinds. There is violence because we don't provide basic services
for people's survival that we could provide. We could give clean water,
but we don't, and people die as a result of it. That is a kind of violence.
Thirty years ago, 650 million people were absolutely poor; today the number
of people who are absolutely poor has almost doubled to between one billion
and 1.25 billion people. That is violence. The second kind of violence
is seen in the breakdown of societies--the violence in cities, drug abuse,
all kinds of things resulting from alienation. These are symptoms of bad
societies, of violent kinds of development. The third kind of violence
is war. Many wars are fought not across borders but within countries, and
they are very often directed at civilian groups. They have their roots
in economic and power relationships. I think [all three of] these kinds
of cultural violence are of one piece. Second is the culture of manipulation.
Political power, corporate power and communications power is increasingly
concentrated, and this enables people to keep populations in ignorance
and under control. Both bureaucratic and corporate control of communications
can lead to manipulation of people's thoughts, manipulation of people's
behaviors. That kind of culture also has to be broken and changed. Third
is the culture of waste. Just look at the way all societies are organized:
we spend so much time moving people around. Look at the sheer waste not
just in transportation systems, but from the use of products and the way
we deal with natural resources. MM: What should replace these cultures?
Fazal: I think we can begin to look for a vision in which we seek a culture
first of all to replace violence with a culture of harmony, balance and
understanding, [with attention paid] to justice not only between human
beings but also in terms of our relationship with the earth. The second
kind of culture that would be part of the vision would be a culture of
stewardship of the earth, [based on an] understanding that we have to share
and care for the earth in a different kind of way. Now we look upon it
as something to exploit, something to use. And the third culture is one
of accountability, partly in the legal sense in terms of community institutions,
legal institutions, questions of transparency. But we also must have accountability
to the future. When the Iroquois Indians needed to make an important decision
affecting the community, they looked at the impact it would have on the
seventh generation. So they had a sense of accountability not just to the
next generation but right up to the seventh generation. That kind of distance
thinking is very important. I see this people-centered vision struggling
against these terrible cultures of violence, manipulation and waste and
working toward the culture of balance and harmony, of stewardship and justice,
of accountability. MM: Do you see any signs of the emergence of this people-
centered vision? Fazal: Particularly in the last decade, one of the things
we've seen is the proliferation of people's organizations. Something special
is happening in the world with changes in Eastern Europe and in the South.
Literally thousands of citizens' organizations have emerged over the last
decade, partly as a reflection of the failure of institutions. People are
rising, people are fighting back, people are realizing that if you want
to see change, then you have to stand up and make that change, that change
is not going to come on its own. There was a time when voluntary organizations
were associated with charity-type work, and there were also organizations
subsequently that developed that were oriented toward community development
work. But increasingly people are beginning to realize that there is a
way of making change through civic action. Civic action, to be successful,
must involve alliances with different groups and societies. David Korten
has written a recent book, Getting to the Twenty-first Century, which I
think must be read by everyone who is interested in people power. He talks
about mass people's movements that are looking at the civic duty in a new,
assertive way and recognizing that, if you want to make change, then you
have to make broad-based coalitions. You must become a movement. MM: There
seem to be some emerging tensions between staffed, better-funded non-governmental
organizations and broader-based, grassroots movements. Fazal: I think there
will definitely be tensions. The citizens' movements occur in countries
which have [definite] class structures, and the tensions appear between
different groups that have not felt comfortable working with each other.
There are tensions in regard to tactics--there are those who like to see
gentle methods of change, others who feel like they should be far more
assertive. I think that there is now a mood that we need to be inclusive,
that making change requires a variety of approaches. Some changes require
a good deal of assertiveness; others require different tactics. I often
say that we have to combine the people who are correct, credible and cautious
with those who are fast, flexible and furious. The challenge is to have
people who take their civic responsibility beyond the personal self and
who see that inclusiveness and bringing groups together is critical, who
understand that there will be differences in tactics and even in visions;
some people think for the summer, others think for a year, others might
think for a decade and others will be thinking generations ahead. There
is a whole series of global networks where solidarity is built initially
through very specific actions on issues--issues like baby food, pharmaceuticals,
pesticides, human rights and women's issues. Based on that solidarity of
action on a specific issue, you begin to build another kind of solidarity,
a solidarity of fellowship that transcends particular issues. You are able
then to bring the groups that were involved in a single issue to broader
issues. And this is happening. People who are working on women's issues
or human rights, economic or consumer issues are beginning to see that
if you want to make change you are going to have to confront governments,
corporations and intergovernmental agencies. And if you want to do that,
you also have to develop a sense of power that comes from making alliances
that can deal with those institutions. These alliances, cross-cutting on
issues, are going to become more and more important. They are emerging
now, and I think they will be far stronger in the future. But the challenge
is to link more and more groups and multiply them at the local, national
and global levels. People talk about "thinking globally, acting locally"
or "living simply." I think we can do these things, but nowadays it is
not enough to act locally--you also have to act globally. Nor is it enough
to think globally, you also have to think locally. People must have a new
conception of space. More and more issues are ceasing to be associated
with political boundaries: the environment does not respect political boundaries,
the transnational companies are not concerned with political boundaries--except
when it benefits them. In communications, we are moving toward a global
village; products and services are becoming homogenized. So we will have
to understand space in a new way--we will have to think of space at all
three levels because all three--local, national, global--impact on you.
And we have to develop systems whereby groups can act locally, nationally
and globally. Different groups can work at different levels, but with vertical
and lateral links. If we have these vertical and lateral linkages, then
we can make use of people's power that will be inclusive and can make transformational
change to produce a more just and fair world. MM: So that is how a grassroots
group in a remote village might be able to take on a large multinational
corporation? Fazal: Right. If they want to take on a large transnational,
they will have to work within the community, but at the same time linking
with groups elsewhere--groups that can influence the transnational corporation's
headquarters, whichever country it is in. That will give them additional
power. At the same time, they should also work globally, so that the company's
operations worldwide feel the heat of peoples' action. That will give them
additional strength. And it will make the groups feel that they are not
alone, that there is a solidarity of global citizenship around issues of
justice and change. If people have that sense as part of them, then we
will see a new dimension of people's power that is both micro-sensible
and also macro- responsible. Both elements are, in a sense, trans-boundary,
trans-frontier. In the end, we share this earth, we are all citizens of
the earth. Civic duty has to have that global element. We breathe one air,
we drink one water, babies cry the same the world over, our blood is red
in color. There is so much that makes us the same. It is important that
we don't forget that human beings throughout the world have this linkage.
MM: What role do you see for national governments in the Third World in
controlling multinational corporations? Fazal: I think national government
is one of the areas where there is very often a poverty of vision. Governments
see short- term quick gains from relationships with corporations and they
are not prepared to put the same kind of energy into building the foundations
of a strong community. I think a strong community relies on five very important
values: self-reliance, self-determination, creativity, assertiveness and
humanity. When they are dealing with transnational corporations, governments
are looking for shortcuts that deliver goods and services, and, in the
short-run, they may find financial benefits. [They don't think about] whether
it will build those important values of self-reliance, self-determination,
creativity, assertiveness and humanity--but those are far more important,
and I think they will only come into existence if citizens' groups in those
countries are organized and constantly question the role of these multinational
corporations. They must prevent companies from undermining the foundations
on which nations and communities should be built. Given the [existing]
power of multinational corporations and the current trend toward privatization,
national governments may sell very important institutions to corporate
values when in fact they should be moving in other directions. If a certain
institution is not working, the problem of that institution may be that
we have not created self-determination or creativity or assertiveness within
that organization, and the solution is not to sell it to private oligarchies
or to foreign interests but to see how we can build those values in the
best way possible. MM: Which corporations have done the most damage in
the Third World? Fazal: The distinction between the Third World and other
worlds becomes less important in the so-called "new world order" where
the only thing "new" maybe who is calling the shots and the fact of being
able to do it without any challenges! Any list of corporations who have
done and can do great damage should include at least those involved in
these six activities: armaments (including the nuclear industry), tobacco,
pesticides, alcohol, infant formula and the banking business that fostered
a transnational "borrowing" culture and led us into the debt mess. As for
specific corporations, my list would include Union Carbide, for the legacy
in Bhopal. I would also include Nestle, the world leader in the infant
formula business who still after a full decade of United Nations codes
and resolutions on the marketing of breast milk substitutes, has been unwilling
to adopt them universally, unilaterally and unequivocally. I had hoped
that after the "settlement" which led to the end of the first boycott of
their products, Nestle would be taking the lead and move away from the
herd. Instead, their unconscionable intransigence has just encouraged newcomers
like the Japanese into the baby formula business, bringing with them some
of the worst practices. However, we cannot also ignore the fact that vast
and powerful bureaucracies and corrupt governments are often compliant
parties--they provide the shelter through sheer ignorance, inefficiency,
inaction or just plain greed. MM: Do you think it is appropriate for Third
World governments to set limits on foreign investment? Fazal: I think people
should develop their countries based on the resources within the country
itself and on utilizing the strengths and assets of the country. I think
if one talks about foreign investment, one has to begin to develop criteria
of exactly what kind of elements we need from abroad, what kind of skills
or technologies we need. There can be a whole mode of systems whereby a
country can get these, but it should be [designed] to build on the foundations
within the country itself. Just opening up to foreign investment can be
destructive in two ways. First, it can create a situation of a borrowing
culture and a system whereby the country becomes mortgaged abroad. Second,
it allows systems of exploitation of natural wealth that will be against
the long-term interest of the country itself. So one should be very, very
circumspect of foreign investment There should be very careful criteria
developed. Sometimes these so- called foreign investors are very clever,
and they actually don't even bring foreign money in. They appear to bring
foreign money in, but actually they very quickly strip the resources from
the country itself. Foreign investment and the borrowing culture has led
people, instead of looking at the strengths of their own community and
building on the foundation of self-determination and self- reliance, to
believe that the easy way is to get money from outside. MM: Many institutions
which have been responsible for fostering what you are calling the borrowing
culture, such as the World Bank, are now referring to concepts such as
people-centered development or human resource development. Are they talking
about the same concepts you are advocating? Fazal: I think increasingly
those institutions are realizing that change is not going to come until
people are involved. [But] there is still the question of whether it is
legitimate for organizations like the World Bank to be in the business
of development at all, and whether they are just rhetorically praising
these [people-centered] approaches. Fundamentally, because the World Bank
is a big lending agency, you still have the problem of not encouraging
self-reliance, and of having a mentality of lots of money coming from abroad
to make changes. You don't have the development of strong, self-reliant,
self- determining local entities that can negotiate with other places on
an equal basis. The World Bank is encouraging more trade and open markets.
But when you have openness between the very powerful and rich and the very
poor, you know which direction the market is going to go: it's going to
lead to exploitation of the weak. Nearly everyone [supports] food or textile
exports from the Third World to the North. But food or clothes for whom?
If one looks at clothes particularly, there is a huge amount of waste that
is involved in the global garment industry. One issue is helping Third
World people with jobs, but if it is going to be a process of waste, I
think there are bigger issues that are involved. Third World people who
are making garments should look at making clothes for their own country.
Similarly, [Third World farmers] should look at how to grow food to meet
the needs in their countries. Look at Asia: 700 million people are in absolute
poverty; 600 million people cannot read or write, two-thirds of them women;
half of the population has no access to safe drinking water. The challenges
in development are to address these issues directly. Making products for
export is marginal to the real structures that need to be developed in
those countries. I see a recognition now that people-centered development
is important. Whether the United Nations or the World Bank or similar institutions
are going to change sufficiently to give real meaning instead of lip service
to this will be one of the challenges of the nineties. If citizen's organizations
learn how to link and multiply, we can change those institutions and the
governments their policies reflect.