/ 19 September 2006

Mbeki blames ‘callous rich nations’ for poverty

Callous wealthy nations are indifferent to the plight of the poor as they pursue selfish policies that enrich the few at the expense of the many, South African President Thabo Mbeki said on Tuesday.

”These billions of poor people are increasingly becoming impatient because every year they hear us adopt declaration after declaration and yet nothing practical is done to assuage the hunger pains that keep them awake at night,” he told the United Nations General Assembly.

At the Millennium Summit in September 2000, world leaders at the UN agreed a series of goals to aid development. They vowed to cut extreme poverty — defined as living on less than $1 a day — by half by 2015 as well as reversing the spread of Aids.

But Mbeki said poverty is increasing ”during an era of unprecedented wealth accumulation and technological advances”, and pointed the finger at rich nations, who he said insist on an unequal relationship with the poor.

”The majority of the human race is entitled to ask the question whether the rich are responding the way they do because the further impoverishment of the poor is to the advantage of the rich,” he said.

The Commonwealth of mainly former British colonies, many of them in Africa, last week urged rich nations to keep their promises to end poverty.

Only a handful of developed nations have achieved the goal of spending 0,7% of their gross domestic product on international aid.

Mbeki said the rich have directed an ”uncaring declaration to the poor of today … even when they are acutely aware that many in their neighbourhood die of hunger, of preventable diseases and abject poverty”.

Mbeki’s South Africa is in many ways a microcosm of the global wealth divide, with some of the starkest income disparities in the world and widespread poverty.

But Mbeki himself has been accused by foreign and domestic critics of embracing market-friendly policies at home that have enabled a few blacks to accumulate vast wealth and some to enter the middle class while millions remain stuck in squalor.

Global development

He criticised the rich nations of the world for holding back global development through their ”unequal relationship” with poor countries. ”This common commitment for a global partnership for development cannot be transformed into reality when the rich and powerful insist on an unequal relationship with the poor.”

He said the absence of a global partnership for development had almost led to the collapse of the Doha round of talks. The apathy of rich nations was also behind the failure to implement the Monterrey consensus on financing for development.

This made it difficult for the majority of developing countries, especially those in Africa, to achieve the UN’s Millennium Development Goals.

”Part of the problem with this unequal relationship is the imposition of conditions on developing countries and the constant shifting of the poles whenever the poor adhere to each and every one of those conditions,” he said.

Mbeki said the solution to increasing poverty is to reform the UN and thereby help overcome ”the cold reality of the indifference of the many among the rich and powerful”.

He criticised the UN for being unable to meet its goals as it does not reflect ”expansion of the global family of free nations”, and called for its reform. ”Clearly, for the UN to continue occupying its moral high ground, it has to reform itself urgently, and lead by practical example as to what is meant to be democratic.” — Sapa, Reuters