Crude reflections

05/04/2008
  • Español
  • English
  • Français
  • Deutsch
  • Português
  • Opinión
-A +A

The boat crested the wave and swept in, crunching up against the stony-sand beach.  Within seconds it was surrounded by men in baggy shorts, bargaining like marine stockbrokers for the boat’s catch.  Danny, a fisherman and trader, pointed beyond the boat to a port shimmering on the horizon, which he said was the US military base Manta: “We used to be able to fish out there, but when it was given to the Americans they stopped us.” He mentioned that the US had also sunk at least eight fishing boats and that several people had gone missing.

In Ecuador, you don’t even have to head to the coast to see evidence of strong US presence.  You just have to put your hand in your pocket.  For since a financial crisis in 2000, Ecuador’s currency has been the US dollar.

Imperialism entrenched

The US, as in many Latin American countries, has a long history of presence and control in Ecuador – most obviously in the multinational companies that have dominated the country from the United Fruit Company to the petrol giants Occidental Petroleum and Chevron Texaco.  In 2000, this influence was further entrenched under a Harvard-educated President Jamil Mahuad who not only dollarized the economy, but also agreed to US military presence in Manta and started moves towards negotiating a free trade treaty with the US.

However just six years later, Ecuador is looking a much bleaker prospect for aspiring American imperialists.  For the Andean nation has been yet another domino caught up in the red-pink tide that has swept through the continent.  In Ecuador, this has taken the shape of the election of President Correa with his promise of a “citizen’s revolution” which boldly asserts the country’s sovereignty against external intervention.

The Manta military base was one of his first targets, where he famously suggested that the contract for the base (due to run out in 2009) would only be renewed if the US agreed to give the Ecuadorians a military base in Miami in return.  The US’s irritated silence suggests Danny may soon be back fishing in his old haunts.

President Correa, who as former university professor became known for his trenchant critiques of dollarisation, also refused to restart negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement with the US, initiated an audit of Ecuador’s external debt saying the country would not pay illegitimate debts, and backed a $12 billion trial against Chevron Texaco for having deliberately dumped billions of gallons of toxic waste directly into the rainforest.  Like Venezuela and Bolivia, Correa has asserted a new role for the State in the country’s economy.  “The long dark night of neoliberalism is over,” Correa asserted.  “We are no longer a country for sale.  We have a sovereign and nationalist government.”

Mahuad proved to be both the peak and the beginning of the end for US-backed neoliberal ascendancy.  In clear parallels with Bolivia and Venezuela, the rising social inequality and impoverishment that resulted from Washington Consensus policies eventually exploded onto the streets, with indigenous movements leading protests that overthrew two Presidents including Mahuad in 2000 and Bucarám in 1997.  It accompanied a profound popular distrust for the corruption embedded in what was called the “partidocracia” (partyocracy) of Congress.

Correa, who made his name for a series of populist measures in a brief four months as Finance Minister in 2005, was backed by left-wing academics and some social movement leaders to give voice to this popular frustration.  He overcame the opposition of banana magnate Alvaro Noboa to win elections in December 2006.  In a clever game of political brinkmanship, Correa who came to power rejecting any party support, then won a referendum by 82% that allowed him to dissolve Congress and to elect a Constituent Assembly to “re-found” the country.  Symbolically, the assembly set-up to structurally change Ecuador and assert the country’s dignity is meeting just twenty minutes by bus from Manta in Montecristi, famous as the birthplace of General Alfaro, a nationalist President of Ecuador in the early 20th Century.

Defining the Ecuadorian way

In the aircraft hangar-like, modern complex of the Constituent Assembly, we meet the President of the Assembly, Alberto Acosta.  In his beige suit and spectacles, the epitome of the lefty academic he used to be, he passionately outlines what asserting Ecuador’s dignity means: “The assembly provides us with an opportunity to rethink Ecuador, to revise, analyse and put forward a different path.”

Notably Acosta says that this doesn’t just involve rejecting US dominance and neoliberalism but also questioning the very notion of economic development itself.  “We can be exporting as many flowers as we like, or have a strong mining sector but still not be developed….  It is also more vital than ever that we recognise our interdependence with nature and other species as part of life which means protecting the wellbeing, and perhaps rights, of all living beings and the environment in which we live….  We need a vision of growing qualitatively not quantitively.”

His words are echoed in a packed assembly commission on “development” where Fander Falconi, the youthful national planning secretary says: “Our challenge is not to return to state industrialisation of the past or a Washington consensus that failed.  We need a new paradigm of development that enshrines how to live sustainably without harming the environment.”

It has the feeling of a paradigm still in the process of construction, but the same questions about models of development crop up in conversations with social movement leaders in Ecuador’s high altitude capital Quito.  It seems that “desarrollista” (developmentalist) is increasingly joining the lexicon of words like neoliberal and transnational that should not be mentioned in polite left-wing company unless they are half-spat.

From discourse to reality

There are also signs that the discourse is moving beyond rhetoric to policies.  Acosta, before he became President of the Constituent Assembly, was briefly Minister of Energy under President Correa.  He was instantly faced with a dilemma of whether to grant permission to the state petrol company to extract from one of the largest oil fields located in the national park of Yasuni, considered one of the most biodiverse regions in the planet and home to “uncontacted” indigenous communities.

The choice seemed to be a stark one: one between the environment and indigenous rights or generating much-needed income to tackle serious social needs in Ecuador.  Acosta rejected the choice as a false one.  Instead he took on board a civil society proposal to leave the oil in the ground in exchange for international compensation of $350 million a year for ten years (half what they would have earned for extraction).  “This is an issue that has to involve the whole world,” explained Acosta.  Kyoto is clearly not enough to tackle climate change.  We need to look for practices that go beyond mere market ones.”

This new emphasis on what Acosta called “integrated development” derives partly from the fact that many recent popular struggles have focused on the environmental devastation caused by extractive industry.  Not only are 30,000 indigenous people suing Chevron Texaco for environmental contamination, but there are also countless communities standing up against mining companies which with World Bank funding now have concessions that cover more than 20% of Ecuador’s territory.  Communities have had no choice but to protest environmental contamination caused by leaching cyanide and mercury, unsustainably high levels of water use, as well as expropriation of agricultural land that has undermined their very livelihood.  These same communities are now backing proposals for constitutional principles that would enshrine environmental and community rights against corporate greed.

Questioning Ecuador’s development model also derives from the prominence of indigenous movements in Ecuador who have been at the forefront of the nation’s protests and who proudly espouse a different worldview.

Efren Calapucha, takes time out one Saturday afternoon from his work preparing for the congress of the Ecuadorian Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities (CONAIE), to explain how the indigenous federation’s vision of development differs from a “western” model of development.  “Development for us has always been about living how we always have lived.  We have always looked for other ways to measure life rather than economic factors.  We want to encourage people to think about different values: not to be competitive and individualist, but to learn how to care for mother earth, live in community, be embedded in family.” Efren, his narrow face etched with tiredness, says he misses his rural Amazonian community of Arajuno because of its different values to the ones he daily experiences in Quito.

CONAIE is focusing its push for a different development model towards a demand for a “plurinational” state that would recognise indigenous peoples as nations with control over territory and rights to different cultural, social and political expression.  “We are ready to mobilise to make this recognition a reality,” says Efren.  Given CONAIE’s militant history in which they have frequently paralysed the country with blockades on issues from opposition to neoliberal agrarian reform to rejection of a free trade agreement with the US, it is clear this is no empty commitment.

Correa’s ‘developmentalist’ vision

Yet asserting a different development model, whether at the indigenous nation or country-wide level, will not be easy.  Correa himself represents a very different current of thinking than Acosta within the governing coalition known as Acuerdo Pais, and even made clear in his inauguration speech to the Assembly that he would refuse a proposal that rejected mining or petrol extraction.  He has condemned ecologists as “romantic” and “infantile” and has continued to aggressively seek international investment in mining as well as granted Petrobras, the Brasilian state oil company, rights to extract in an adjoining section of Yasuni national park.  He has also rejected plurinationalism as racist for distinguishing between fellow Ecuadorians, placing his emphasis on a revolution of “individual citizens” rather than community rights

Perhaps the most stark evidence of the clash between Correa’s vision of state capitalism and indigenous resistance to resource extraction arose when indigenous communities in the oil-producing region of Dayuma in November 2007 organised road closures and a strike to protest at environmental contamination and failures by the central government to meet promises of social investment.  Under Correa’s orders the army brutally repressed the protests, calling it “terrorism” and arresting 25 people who have almost all since been released due to lack of evidence.  Commentator and Quito academic Mario Unda pointedly said: “In the conflict between transnational mining companies and campesino (farmer) and indigenous communities we have clearly seen the limits of this government.”

Behind the scenes lies the pressure on Correa of the major export sectors such as petrol, mining and shrimp companies as well as the reality of trying to create jobs and stem huge migration flows.  Whilst unemployment has fallen slightly under Correa, underemployment is still growing.  Meanwhile more than a quarter of Ecuador’s population has migrated abroad in particular in the last seven years– creating an economy highly dependent on foreign remittances.  Extractive industries may create relatively few jobs, but it takes a brave politician to reject projects that promise income and economic growth.

Reconciling 21st Century socialism with the environment

Nevertheless it is clear that the conflict between a “developmentalist” approach (whether neoliberal or state capitalist) and communities affected by the realities of resource extraction is only likely to grow.  Not only Ecuador, but also Peru and Bolivia are witnessing increasing resistance against extractive policies that have pushed up against nature and community limits.  As Esperanza Martinez, one of Acosta’s advisors and member of ecological group Acción Ecologica makes clear: “If we continue treating nature as a dead entity, new conflicts will arrive which will have an environmental focus but will be expressed in social confrontations.  We will also have lost the chance to design a new moment which reconciles 21st Century socialism with the environment, which promotes wellbeing above economic growth.”

Back in Manta, Correa has announced plans to turn the military base into a key seaport for Latin American imports and exports to China.  Plans include roads that form part of a programme called IIRSA (the South American Regional Integration Infrastructure Initiative) that will cut through the Amazon and link the port up with agrofuel expansion in the region of Manaus in Brazil.  Helga Serrano, one of the leading campaigners in the movement to close down the US base, is in a reflective mood.  “Well they are not replacing the base with any other military power.  We need development but I do wonder if we might not be replacing the US with another form of empire.”

- Article Publisher in the April-May 2008 edition of Red Pepper,
www.redpepper.org.uk

Reproduced with permission of the author.

https://www.alainet.org/fr/node/126747
S'abonner à America Latina en Movimiento - RSS