Farmers, Indigenous Peoples and NGOs Take to Streets in Ten Cities Demanding an End to World Bank’s Morally Bankrupt Development

Oct 06, 2014
tnoguchi

Farmers, Indigenous Peoples and NGOs Take to Streets in Ten Cities Demanding an End to World Bank’s Morally Bankrupt Development

Group Will Stage ‘Creative Resistance’ Outside of Bank’s Annual Meeting in Washington, DC —and Around the World— on October 10th & 11th

For Immediate Release: Monday October 6, 2014

CONTACTS:
Anuradha Mittal, amittal@oaklandinstitute.org, 510-469-5228
Alnoor Ladha, alnoor@therules.org, 917-971-7968

Washington, DC — On October 10, 2014, NGOs, farmers groups and Indigenous organizations from across the world are coming together as part of the Our Land Our Business campaign to denounce the World Banks’ Doing Business rankings. The campaign, endorsed by over 235 organizations, will be staging ‘creative resistance’ events at the Bank’s annual meetings in Washington DC and nine other cities around the world. The DC event is drawing support from a wide range of activist communities, including Occupy Groups who will join representatives of impacted communities from Kenya, Mali, and Ethiopia

“Under the banner #WorldvsBank, this movement is calling for the end of Doing Business rankings and the new Benchmarking the Business of Agriculture project. They are tools of a pro-corporate, anti-poor, environmentally unsustainable model of development. If the World Bank keeps promoting economic activity that destroys biodiversity and the livelihoods of smallholder farmers, pastoralists and indigenous communities, they should not have a mandate to exist,” said Alnoor Ladha of /The Rules.

The World Bank’s lending to developing countries reached $35 billion in 2012. The Doing Business rankings play a critical role in determining what form of economic development takes place around the world. According to the World Bank’s own literature, they are “an incomparable catalyst for business reforms initiatives.” In practice, this has meant liberalizing developing country economies so that large-scale land investment and western corporations can move in unimpeded. The casualties are the smallholder farmers and providers who currently feed 80% of the developing world but who are all too often rendered invisible or actively dispossessed.

“Working for the World Bank’s Social Fund in Gambella, I protested the widespread coercion and forced relocation of people. Today I live in political exile in Kenya. I am protesting the World Bank on October 10 because I know first-hand how their policies negatively impact communities,” said Okok Ojulu who will share his experiences at actions planned in DC.

To coincide with the #WorldvsBank mobilization, the Oakland Institute, one of the world’s leading think tanks on land issues, is releasing a new study tackling the Bank’s approach to land, agriculture and development, Unfolding Truth: Dismantling the World Bank’s Myths on Agriculture and Development. In addition, the Institute will also release six new country fact sheets that expose the reforms promoted by the World Bank in Kenya, Uganda, DRC, Laos, Cambodia, and Uruguay. In each country, the bank’s policies have served as a catalyst for massive land grabs, dispossession, and forced eviction of countless small-scale farmers.

“If you look behind many of the recent land grabs, you will find World Bank policies that enable investors to come in with projects that promise benefits to communities but don’t follow through. We can keep going after each corporation and investment group but it would be more effective if the World Bank stopped using their immense political and financial power to pave the way for what has become the systematic exploitation of land and people,” said Anuradha Mittal of the Oakland Institute

Our Land Our Business is also launching the world’s first transnational “missed call” campaign — uniting call-to-action across multiple countries. The idea is to make a call to a local phone number; the mobile number is then registered as an expression of support; then supporters receive free text messages to get further involved (e.g. showing up at a creative resistance). In parts of the world where first generation mobile phones are ubiquitous, but computers and the Internet are costly and inaccessible, this is a new powerful tool for mass engagement in political action.

October 10 resistance a 4pm in Rawlins Park is followed by further action on October 11 when, at 11 am, activists and concerned citizens from around the world will again gather outside the World Bank to protest the Bank’s attempt to dismantle critical protections for people and the planet that are currently enshrined in its operational policies. These changes come at a time when the Bank is making plans to scale up its lending to the private sector and return to the sort of risky mega-projects that characterized its now discredited Structural Adjustment Programs in the 1980s.

October 10 – 11 actions send a message to the Bank that the World won’t stand for its exploitive practices.