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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, September 22, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Fighting terrorism of all brands
By Vandana Shiva
September 18 was the day for solidarity with victims of the
terrorist attacks on the U.S. on September 11. I joined the
millions of people to observe two minutes silence at 10:30 a.m.
for those who lost their lives in the assault on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon. But I also thought of the millions who
are victims of other terrorist actions and other forms of
violence. And I renewed my commitment to resist violence in all
its forms.
At 10:30 a.m. on September 18, I was with Laxmi, Raibari and
Suranam in Jhodia Sahi village in Kashipur district of Orissa.
Laxmi's husband Ghabi Jhodia was among the 20 tribals who
recently died of starvation. In the same village, Subarna Jhodia
had also died. Later, we met Singari in Bilamal village who had
lost her husband Sadha, elder son Surat, younger son Paila and
daughter-in-law Sulami.
The deliberate denial of food to the hungry is at the core of the
World Bank Structural Adjustment programmes. Dismantling the
Public Distribution System (PDS) was a World Bank conditionality.
It was justified on grounds of reducing expenditure. But the food
subsidy budget has exploded from Rs. 2,800 crores in 1991 to Rs.
14,000 crores in 2001. More money is being spent to store grain
because the Bank wanted food subsidies to be withdrawn. This led
to increase in food prices, lowering of purchase from PDS and
build up of stocks. The food security of the nation is
collapsing.
Starvation deaths in Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Orissa are
symptoms of the breakdown of our food systems. Kashipur was
gifted with abundance of nature. Starvation is the result of
waves of violence against nature and the tribal communities, of
ecological plunder of the resources of the region, the
dismantling of the food security system under economic reform
policies and the impact of climate change which caused crop
failures.
Twenty years ago, the pulp and paper industry raped the forests
of Kashipur. Today, the herbs stand naked and the paper mills are
bringing eucalyptus from neighbouring Andhra Pradesh. Now the
giant mining companies - Hydro of Norway, Alcan of Canada,
Indico, Balco/Sterlite of India have unleashed a new wave of
terror. They are eyeing the bauxite in the majestic hills of
Kashipur as it is used for aluminium that will go to make Coca
Cola cans and fighter planes.
Imagine each mountain to be a World Trade Center built by nature
over millennia. Think of how many tragedies bigger than what the
world experienced on September 11 are taking place to provide raw
material for insatiable industry and markets. The Aluminium
companies want the homelands of the Kashipur tribals. But the
tribals refuse to leave. They are defending the land and earth
through a non-violent movement. This forced apportioning of
resources from people too is a form of terrorism - corporate
terrorism.
The 50 million tribals who have been flooded out of their homes
by dams over the past four decades are also victims of terrorism
- they have faced the terror of technology and destructive
development. For the 30,000 people who died in the Orissa
supercyclone, and the millions who will die when flood and
drought and cyclones become more severe because of climate change
and fossil fuel pollution, the U.S. President, Mr. George W.
Bush, is an ecological terrorist because he refuses to sign the
Kyoto protocol. The WTO was named the World Terrorist
Organisation by citizens in Seattle because its rules denied
millions the right to life and livelihood.
Terrorism can only be stopped by cultures of peace, democracy,
and people's security. It is wrong to define the post-September
11 world as a war between ``civilisation and barbarism'' or
``democracy and terrorism.''
It is a war between two forms of terrorism which are mirror
images of each other's mindsets. They share the dominant culture
of violence. They use the same weapons and the same technologies.
In terms of the preference for violence and use of terror, both
sides are clones of each other. And their victims are innocent
people everywhere.
As we remember the victims of Black Tuesday, let us also
strengthen our solidarity with the millions of invisible victims
of other forms of terrorism and violence which are threatening
the very possibility of our future on this planet. We can turn
this tragic brutal historical moment into building cultures of
peace.
(The writer is Director, Research Foundation for Science,
Technology and Ecology, New Delhi).
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