M D Nalapat
After
nearly three decades of faithfully serving the interests of the NATO
powers, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak may have been forgiven for
believing that the alliance would stand by him in his moment of mortal
peril. Most of the huge assets that he has accumulated over the years
(perhaps by thriftily saving his salary) are in Egypt, and while his
immediate family have the means to run away from the country over which
they have ruled for so long, the bulk of his friends and relatives will
be left behind, to face the anger of the populace. And seeing the speed
with which the NATO powers have distanced themselves from him and the
system that Mubarak and they jointly created and administered for their
mutual benefit, it may not be long before the 83-year old gets arraigned
for human rights violations and be made to face trial in the
International Court. He would not be the first Third World leader to be
thus thrown to the wolves by those who are clear that only their
interest matters, and not that of the rest of the world, in any
situation. Indeed, the NATO powers consider themselves to be the world,
or the “international community”, as CNN or BBC calls them.
Amazingly,
none of these or other news channels has identified the small group of
individuals who are directly responsible for much of the unrest sweeping
across Egypt. While CNN,BBC and even Al Jazeera ( whose newsrooms are
filled with personnel from the NATO powers, as indeed are the key
positions in almost all countries in the Gulf Cooperation Council) focus
mainly on educated, “sophisticated” voices that clamour for “freedom
and democracy”, the reality is that it is economic hardship that has
brought hundreds of thousands of ordinary Egyptians to Tahrir Square.
Much of this pain has been caused by the huge increase in food prices
across the world.
If one were to rely on BBC or CNN for
information, you would be told that the high prices have been caused by
“supply disruptions”, which i turn has been caused ( or so we are told)
by “freak weather conditions”. Indeed, there have been floods and
storms. But this has been the case for centuries, if not millenia. The
reality is that more than 80% of the rise in price has been caused by
Speculation. The same small, super-greedy band of international
speculators who almost destroyed the world’s finances by their greed in
2008,are back in action, this time cornering foodstuffs so as to send
prices skyrocketing.
Those bankers and others who fund such
ghouls are the ones who need to be haule into prison for “human rights
abuses”. Instead, they are given not just honour and respect by
President Obama of the US and Prime Minister David Cameron of the UK,
but more than $1 trillion in subsidy, to rescue them from the economic
consequences of their own crimes. Those who preach “transparency” and
“accountability” to the world are silent when it comes to their own
deliberate failure in bringing to justice the handful of those who stole
more than $3 trillion from investors worldwide. Indeed, in the US, the
new Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, is as much a handmaiden of
speculators as was his predecessor, Hank Paulson.
Although
President Nicholas Sarkozy of France and Chancellor Angela Merkel of
Germany have called for changes in the laws so as to curb the
speculation and profiteering that caused the 2008 financial collapse,
this needed corrective has been opposed by President Obama and Prime
Minister Cameron, who seem to value the private interests of a handful
of super-greedy individuals more than they do the interests of the
global community. Fed by huge taxpayer-funded subsidies, the dozen-odd
financial conglomerates that were responsible for the 2008 meltdown are
again at work, once again sending the prices of oil, copper, foodstuffs
and other items shooting up. This they do by manipulating market prices,
free of any fear of adverse consequences, given the servility that
countries such as the US and the UK have shown to them since the era of
Reagan-Thatcher in the 1980s. Under Reagan-Thatcher, the making of money
in any way possible was glorified, hence the boom in the financial
industry since that period. While in the case of China under Deng
Xiaoping, money was made by increasing production and employment, in the
case of the US and the UK, money was made out of holding back
production, downsizing or destroying enterprises and dizzy speculation.
Such greed reached its high point during the George W Bush period, when a
company that was close to Vice-President Dick Cheney became the largest
corporate beneficiary of the Iraq war Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan,
Bill Clinton, George W Bush, Tony Blair. Since their time, speculators
have become the kingpins in the world financial system. Not content with
sending up the price of oil, they have focussed on Poor Country Debt
(draining hundreds of millions of dollars from very poor with the help
of certain NATO countries) and the staples of consumption of the poor.
Because of the price increases in petroproducts that are
speculator-driven, growth has slowed down in China and India, and as a
consequence, hundreds of millions have suffered in just these two
countries.
Because of the speculative rise in food prices,
several billion people have suffered, while many have even died of
starvation caused by higher food prices. Tens of millions more
(including many in the NATO countries that are the home of the
Super-Speculators) have lost their jobs because of the financial and
economic dislocation caused by the uncontrolled speculation that is
cheered on by both the US as well as the UK authorities.
It suits
the Super Speculators to pretend that the problems in Egypt are caused
by the “thirst for democracy” of the people there. The reality is that
it is the thirst for food and for jobs that have driven more than 95% of
the protestors towards the daily marches and rallies that are taking
place in Egypt against the Mubarak regime. Why there are no prorestors
in the UAE or in Kuwait is because the governments there have provided
food and jobs to the local people, thereby ensuring stability. However,
even they may face problems, if uncontrolled speculation continues in
items of mass relevance (such as petroproducts) or consumption (such as
foodgrains). Once again, the crimes of the few will lead to misery for
the many.
China, India and other emerging powers need to raise a
collective voice agains the Super Speculators. They need to shame the US
and the UK into enacting laws that criminalize the efforts at
withdrawing supplies from the market in order to boost prices, and that
make punishable the cornering of commodities by intermediaries intent
ony on fianancial windfalls. Hosni Mubarak is of a different cut from
Gamal Abdel Nasser, who lived a simple life and never allowed his family
to make money. Unlike Mubarak, who follows Thatcher and Cheney in
looking after only the interests of the super rich, Nasser cared for the
poor. It is ironical that it is the same super rich who have felled
Mubarak with their speculative ravaging of commodity markets.
Should
the US and the UK continue to permit speculators to push up the prices
of essential commodities, the world will witness such turmoil that the
core interests of even the US and the UK would be affected. Presumably,
the Super Speculators will not care, so long as they themselves are
safe. Greed has become King.
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