Monday, February 06, 2006

Political Education Class| featuring Interview with Judge Pamela Hill Veal


Interview with Judge Pamela Hill Veal
view information for Judge Veal At http://www.judgehillveal.com/

In this series of the Politcal Education Class. We hold a forum for the candidates to address the community. Click here to listen to the complete audio interview.

audio file interview
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In this series of PE classes the following candidates answer the questions of the community.

Check back for the additional audio broadcasts

Saturday February 4th
2pm at St. Stephens Lutheran Church
910 W. 65th st. (65th & Peoria), Chicago, Illinois 60619

The Judicial Candidates meet the people:

Attorney Jo Anne Guillemette
Attorney Pamela Hill-Veal
Attorney Bonita Coleman

Monday, January 30, 2006

Tupac: The COINTELPRO CONNECTION ?

uhuru and Power to the People,

Brothas and Sistas, I bring this information to you in the name of liberation for all Africans. Analyze and get it around, we must begin to utilize new startegies if we are to liberate our continent and restore balance. Every day our resources are raped from the continent and everyday we delay the excuse will grow, thatr it is not our land. The reality is we must reclaim Africa now, and it begins in America. let us learn from the strategies employed by others and move forward. let us use our national names as identities and add that our culture is Black, black is beautiful.

The following excerpt is from uhuru360 magazine on sale now @ your local afrocentric bookstore, if its not there ask them to get it there, contact us.

This article is submitted by field agent. johnny quest.Brooklyn

Although COINTELPRO formally ended in 1971, at least one ex-FBI agent stated that the FBI informally continued the same
program by framing it in different terms.11

Particular evidence of COINTELPRO’s informal continuance has come out in classaction suits in New York City.

In a landmark case challenging COINTELPRO activities in New York City, “[Police] Commissioner Murphy conceded that the Police Department was engaged in the vast bulk of activities described in [the class action] complaint, including surreptitious
surveillance and undercover infiltration of the political activities of individuals and groups.”12 The class action suit,brought by a coalition of activists, also exposed the activities of “physical and verbal coercion...provocation of violence, and recruitment to act as police informers,” against New Yorkers involved in lawful political and social activities.13 One Panther
historian noted that “at least five BOSS [Bureau of Special Services] agents were planted inside the Panther Party almost from its inception, beginning at once to worm their way into positions of power.”1

The settlement of this case led to a court order in 1985 stipulating specific “Guidelines” for future police activity.15 Police admitted there was a special unit called “The Black Desk” to monitor Black New Yorkers. BOSS illegal police surveillance on the Black Liberation Movement in the 1980s, which included Tupac Shakur’s lawyer, Michael Warren, was found to have
violated the Guidelines in a 1989 opinion.16 Statewide, the JTTF, an FBI-police amalgam, had hunted down Mutulu Shakur, among other “terrorists,” and harassed their supporters.17
The question remains whether the COINTELPRO activities carried out by BOSS under the auspices of The Black Desk, and JTTF, were continued under a different police unit name in the 1990s. Often described as the special elite police unit with an almost completely white racial make-up, New York City’s select Street Crime Unit would be the most likely candidate.18
New evidence detailed below suggests that COINTELPRO tactics against Blacks in particular may have been behind the first near-fatal shooting of Shakur in New York in 1994.
Fame and Politics By the end of the Reagan/Bush era, Shakur’s auspicious musical debut, including lyrics discussing his Black Panther family, coupled with leading movie roles, threatened to bring the Panthers back into vogue.

Thus it is no coincidence that Shakur attracted police attention in direct proportion to his fame and success. In line with Shakur’s quote, “I never had a record until I made a record,” shortly after his successful solo debut, Oakland police ticketed him for jaywalking, then arrested and beat him in custody.19 Shakur’s first record, 2Pacalypse Now, railed against the FBI, the CIA, and President Bush. In 1992, a year after that album’s release, Vice President Dan Quayle, and later Senator Bob Dole, singled him out as responsible for police deaths.

With the FBI watching Shakur since he was a teen, and his leadership in the New Afrikan Panthers, a group dedicated to replicating the Black Panthers,20 police involvement in his life deserves more scrutiny.

While Shakur’s lyrics often dramatized inner-city life, including what some might view as negative images, glorifying gang life and denigrating women, they also included many positive political messages: ideas about Malcolm X and various Black Panthers.21 As a youth, Shakur performed benefits for Black Panther prisoners. By nineteen, he sang with the Grammy nominated band Digital Underground. Besides his stint as a Panther Chairman and his Underground Railroad/Thug Life Movement, Shakur participated in a Stop the Violence program, helped with a home for at-risk youth, sponsored a “CelebrityYouth League,” joined Central American solidarity benefits, and regularly spoke at rallies for voter registration and progressiveactivist groups.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Thanks Howard Stern


As many viewers are aware Howard Stern's logo is the powerful Black fist that represents so many things to so many people within the struggle and movement of Blacks as awhole for several decades, if not centuries.

We know that some of the earliest Black magazines publsihed her in America, had fist on the cover, I believe specifically a magazine called "The Vanguard", circa 1910-22, somewhere around then.

Several ministers loyal to the people attempted to prevent Howard from using the symbol.
http://www.chicagodefender.com/page/local.cfm?ArticleID=3354
What many people from outside of the midwest dont realize is that the press didnt really pay attention to the comments frmo activists until the priest got involved (see story and check local research)

However I am appreciative to teh degenerate for abusing the icon, because it caused those that dont wear it on their sleeve to say," HEY WHAT the HELL..." and has helped to cause more and more Blacks to want to display their culture, or claim it as some might say.

thanx howie, as always the little things you do, brings my family so close together.
uhuru, no love for the beast
paul.Kagame. assistant editor.

Canada's Water not for SALE

Welcome this is our last part in our series on water.
Read thoroughly. We realize these blogs/articles are long, however information is that way sip slowly and enjoy.
uhuru.peace. Butterfly Williams, Nevada

Canada's Water


Courtesy of Field Agent R. Edgerton | By Unknown (If anyone recognizes the author of this document please ask them to contact us, as we believe in getting permission before syndication. Thank You)


"There is a common assumption that the world's water supply is huge and infinite. This assumption is false. At some time in the near future, water bankruptcy will result."

Maude Barlow, Council of Canadians

With more fresh water than any other place on earth, Canada seems to be in an enviable position as the new millennium approaches and the experts predict that water will be "the oil of the 21st century." The trouble with being in an enviable position, however, is sometimes the wrong people envy you. There are those who cast covetous looks at our ample water, whether for greener fairways on golf courses in Arizona, or parched farms in the American Midwest, or whole areas suffering drastic shortages of drinking water in distant parts of the globe. And there are the "privatizers," those who want to make a buck from water.

Some of the most alarming stories are going largely unreported, certainly by the Western press, the most alarming being the devastation of Yugoslavia brought about by NATO bombing. The most recent attack - April 19, the 26th day of NATO airstrikes - hit a huge chemical plant in Baric, 15 kilometres southwest of Belgrade.

Yugoslav scientists are reacting in horror at the NATO attacks, warning that they are ruining huge aquifiers - underground water sources - that serve areas and populations far beyond the area of conflict. Dr. Momir Komatina, author of 12 books and 260 scientific essays on underground water, says the NATO bombing is destroying not just military targets but the entire ecology of the region. Other scientists say the NATO bombing is creating "a new Chernobyl" in the Balkans.

Dr. Luke Radoja, a Belgrade agronomist, has written, "By burning down enormous quantities of naphtha and its derivatives, more than 100 highly toxic chemical compounds that pollute water, air and soil are released?. Just one litre of spilt naphtha or its derivatives pollutes one million litres of water. These poisons endanger all life forms, not only on the territory of Yugoslavia, but the territories of our neighbouring countries as well as the wider region of Europe because the winds and water-flows are directed right back to Central Europe, the Aegean Sea and the Black Sea region."

Alarming reports from "water-poor" countries have been appearing regularly in wire-service reports around the world. Last month there was a report from Beijing that 20 million Chinese are short of drinking water because of a severe drought affecting Sichuan, Guangxi, Gansu and Guangdong provinces. More than 200 million acres of farmland in China are "parched."

Iran has been hit by the worst water shortage in three decades. The official IRNA news agency reports that Iran is short by 1.2 billion cubic metres of water for farming. The shortage in Iran is expected to worsen starting in June, with severe drought predicted for the summer of 1999.

In Bangladesh this month, hundreds of residents of Dhaka attacked a power supply office, barricaded roads and burned vehicles to protest against a scarcity of running water. The Dhaka Water and Sewage Authority says more than 30 per cent of the city's nine million residents have no access to drinking water. Dhaka normally requires 1.4 billion litres of water a day and is getting only 960 million litres.

Researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Environmental Science and Technology reported in March that rainfall in Europe is so full of toxic pesticides that much of it is too dangerous to drink. The problem is that pesticides sprayed on crops evaporate, are absorbed by clouds, then return to earth in rainwater. Concentrations of toxic substances in the rain, especially after heavy storms, now exceed the limit for drinking water set by the European Union and Switzerland. The same problem occurs in North America. In the United States, one billion pounds of weed and bug killers are applied to the land every year, most of which ends up in the country's water systems.

Speaking on Canada's situation, Barlow says wetland loss includes 65 per cent of Atlantic coastal marshes, 70 per cent of Southern Ontario wetlands, 71 per cent of Prairie wetlands, and 80 per cent of the Fraser River Delta in British Columbia. "Over a century of mining, forestry and large-scale industry has affected virtually every body of water in Canada and toxic chemicals are found even in the most remote parts of the Far North," Barlow says.

A report from London says half the people in the developed world, and more in poor countries, carry the stomach bacterium Helicobacter pylori, usually caused by slime building up in water pipes. The bacterium causes stomach ulcers and cancer. The threat of Helicobacter pylori is particularly dangerous in unchlorinated water in wells and water supplies in developing countries.

And here we are in Canada with water thundering over Niagara Falls, countless freshwater lakes, rivers and streams, frozen water in the snow, ice and icebergs of the Arctic, oceans of water coursing underground, and one of the largest land masses in the world to catch rain and snow from the sky. Canadians worry more about flood than famine.

"The wars of the future are going to be fought over water," says Maude Barlow, chair of the Council of Canadians, a citizens' group with 100,000 members. She cites a recent United Nations study that says by 2025 - only 25 years away - two-thirds of the world will be "water-poor."

Is Canada morally obliged to share its water with an increasingly thirsty world?

Can it even be done without upsetting the delicate ecosystems?

And if it can be done, who's going to do it? And who's going to profit by it? When something valuable becomes scarce - and drinkable, usable water is becoming scarcer and scarcer - inevitably the profit-makers find a way to jump into the game. This is what alarms Barlow most of all. The free-traders want water to be regarded as a commodity, something to be bought and sold, perhaps included as an integral part of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). This makes environmentalists shudder.

In a paper released last month, The Canadian Environmental Law Association (CELA) said, "Water is an essential need, a public trust, not a commodity. It belongs to everyone and to no one." CELA argues that bulk exports of water will not help water-poor countries:

"Even large-scale water exports cannot possibly satisfy the social and economic needs of distant societies. "Water shipped halfway around the world will only be affordable to the privileged and will deepen inequities between rich and poor. International trade in bulk water will allow elites to assure the quality of their own drinking water supplies, while permitting them to ignore the pollution of their local waters and the waste of their water management systems."

Commenting specifically on the Great Lakes Basin, shared by Canada and the United States, CELA says: "Changing water levels and flows will have unpredictable and harmful consequences to basin habitat, biodiversity, shorelines, jobs and culture, particularly to First Nations. Lower water levels will mean greater disturbance of highly contaminated sediments in shallow harbours and connecting channels and less dilution of polluted waters."

The CELA paper was deliberately released on March 31, 1999, a year to the day after the province of Ontario issued a permit to a private company to collect Great Lakes water and transport it to Asia. The permit was issued to Nova Group, a company in Sault Ste. Marie, allowing it to ship up to 600 million litres of Lake Superior water to Asia by 2002. After a public outcry on both sides of the border, the permit was withdrawn and the deal never went through. But Barlow, the Council of Canadians and the Canadian Environmental Law Association expect there will be more such attempts in coming years as people seek to turn a profit from water.

Dennis Mills, a Liberal MP, wants Canada to open its water resources to international trade. On its website, Environment Canada predicts that Canada soon will be in the commercial water export business. The National Post has jumped on the export-water bandwagon, calling water "blue gold." The Post's financial columnist, Terry Corcoran, has written: "Canada is a future OPEC of water. Here's a worthwhile long-term bet: by 2010, Canada will be exporting large quantities of fresh water to the U.S., and more by tanker to parched nations all over the globe."

Paul Muldoon, executive director of CELA and a co-author of the report - Maude Barlow had much input into it - says Ontario is lagging in its efforts to manage its water resources. There is a law to block water exports, the 1989 Water Transfer Control Act, but Muldoon says it has never been proclaimed. Another provincial tool, enacted in June 1998, is the Surface Water Transfer Policy. It expressed opposition to water transfers, but carries no legal weight, Muldoon says. The latest provincial regulation aimed at managing Ontario's water supply is the Ontario Water Resources Act, which was proposed in December 1998. Its purpose was to give legal weight to the Surface Water Transfer Policy, but it has not been approved by the Ontario Cabinet.

Muldoon says protecting Ontario's water is more urgent than ever because of growing world demand for water, and because entrepreneurs increasingly are looking for ways to export and sell) large amounts of Canadian water. They are also looking for precedents, anything that could be used to have water designated as a "commodity" that can be bought, sold and exported.

Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy is on the record as saying water is "not just a commodity." He said this in March 1999 when he announced an export moratorium) that will remain in place until all the provinces can agree on a method to ban water exports permanently. The provinces share jurisdiction with the federal government over lakes and rivers in Canada.

There may already be a precedent, however, as it is legal to export bottled water, which is not considered a "bulk" export. McCurdy Enterprises of Newfoundland wants to "harvest" 13 billion gallons of water a year from Gisborne Lake, an 11-square-mile lake in Newfoundland. The plan is to take water from the lake by pipeline five miles to the coastal town of Grand LaPierre, where it would be loaded into scrubbed, single-hull former oil tankers. McCurdy Enterprises also plans to open a water-bottling plant in Grand LaPierre that would employ 150 people. The local municipality approved the plan, as did the province, but it is on hold because of the moratorium announced by the federal government.

Another Canadian company, Global Water Corporation, has a bulk-water purchase agreement with the Alaskan community of Sitka, which would allow the company to take five billion gallons of water a year from the glacier-fed Blue Lake for export to China. The bottled water would be contained in five-gallon jugs.

Other water export schemes have been cooked up over the years. In the late 1950s, American engineers prepared a plan to dam part of James Bay to divert water to the American Midwest. In the 1960s, there was a similar plan to take water from the Yukon and Mackenzie Rivers in Canada's North and divert it to the American West. In 1991, British Columbia gave six Canadian companies licences to export bulk shipments of water. One of the companies formed a joint venture with an American firm to ship Canadian water to Goleta, California, which was experiencing a severe drought. British Columbia later withdrew from the scheme, abiding by the federal government's moratorium.

In February 1999, The New York Times carried a story on Canada's position in a water-rich, water-poor world. It began:

"For just about as long as there has been a border with the United States, some Canadians have believed that Americans covet their country and the resources it contains.

"A few conspiracy subscribers still believe Washington harbors ambitions about northern expansion similar to those that provoked the first armed incursion into what is now Canada in the 18th century. And a certain type of Canadian is sure that free-trade agreements are a plot to make Canada a commercial colony of the United States.

"But there is one subject that leaves a broad range of even normally clear-eyed and level-headed Canadians looking for American subterfuge - fresh water.

"From the thunderous torrent at Niagara Falls to the perpetual rainy coast of British Columbia, Canada is awash in more fresh water than almost any other place on earth. But although it contains 20 per cent of the world's known freshwater resources, Canada believes it has little or none to spare."

The Times article quotes Barlow of the Council of Canadians as saying, "I don't think the United States is going to send up an army to take our water. I don't think they have to." What Barlow means is that under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Canadian bulk water may already be subject to continental exploitation, and unless Canada acts firmly and forcefully it almost certainly will be. Canadian bottled water already is included in NAFTA. The difference between a litre of bottled water and a supertanker of bulk water may turn out to be merely a matter of size and semantics.

Muldoon of the Canadian Environmental Law Association expects the first serious pressure on Canada's water resources to come from the U.S. Southwest where development is rapidly outgrowing the region's water supply. He also expects pressure from the American plains, where intensive agriculture is depleting aquifiers, the scientific term for what we know as underground water supplies. Muldoon fears that even a modest water export precedent "could open the floodgates, changing Canada's water supply position for the worse - and forever."

An irony here, Maude Barlow points out, is that even an attempt to ban water exports would acknowledge that fresh water in lakes and rivers is a commodity subject to trade-agreement regulations. Her mission now is to emphasize Canada's sovereign rights, its right to control its own resources.

In this she would have an ally in Col. Pierre LeBlanc, commander of Canadian Forces in the North. Col. LeBlanc chose the creation of the new territory of Nunavut as an opportune time to warn Canadians their sovereignty will be affected if global warming results in an open Northwest Passage, which he expects to happen in 10 to 15 years. A navigable Northwest Passage would cut shipping time in half between Europe and the Pacific because ships now must use the Panama Canal.

"In the old days there was very little activity in the North, especially when it was all frozen up," he told CBC News in Iqaluit in March. "But now that it appears it's thawing, and with the end of the Cold War, there's a lot more activity, so maybe we require more active surveillance of the North." With the diminishing supply of fresh water in the world, Col. LeBlanc says it is only a matter of time until foreign ships sail into the Canadian Arctic and take on fresh water without detection.

Meanwhile, the Council of Canadians keeps churning out warnings, which are worth reading and heeding. Such as:

  • The consumption of water is doubling every 20 years, twice the rate of world population growth;
  • The underground aquifier that supplies one-third of the water for the continental United States is being depleted eight times faster than it is being replenished;
  • Saudi Arabia is a net exporter of wheat using non-renewable water reserves. Saudi Arabia is expected to exhaust its water reserves in 50 years;
  • The manufacture of computer wafers, used in the production of computer chips, uses up to 18 million litres of water a day. Around the world, the computer industry uses 1.5 trillion litres of water and produces 300 billion litres of wastewater every year.

Barlow expects the first severe impact of the coming water bankruptcy will hit China, where annual industrial water use is expected to rise from 52 billion tons to 269 billion tons in the next 30 years, due to a huge population increase and rising incomes that mean more indoor plumbing. "China will be the first country in the world that will literally have to restructure its economy to respond to water scarcity," Barlow says.

We will be hearing much more about water in coming months and years. And if wars of the future will be fought over water, Canada will be in the thick of the battle.

We at Uhuru thought this information would be interesting to those that have either already to begun to prepare for this, and for those that haven’t heads up.

Uhuru and Peace

End

Water Privatization : Ask the experts or My water so what u gonna drink?


welcome, we had to include this as part of the water piece, express your opinion.
We recognizee that most afluent americans in urban and rural areas attempt to drink"clean" water. As if unconsciously we have accepted that our fresh water supply, or at least our local acces to it is unsafe.

Read this and hit us up, or better yet hit your local politician

uhuru.peace.

Water Privatization : Ask the experts

Both sides !!

Article by the BBC. A copy of this article is available at www.bbc.co.uk/haveyoursay.

Courtesy of Field Agent N. Renruth

World leaders at the Evian Summit have called for the number of people without access to safe drinking water or proper sanitation to be halved by 2015.

But critics are worried that the UN-set targets amount to a push for privatisation in the water sector.

They argue that private companies have no incentive to provide water to poor and rural communities.

The pro-privatisation camp, on the other hand, argues that the poor already pay more than the rich for water in many countries because the state has failed them. They say only the private sector can make the necessary investment.

What do you think? Is privatisation an effective solution, or does it lack credibility in the Third World, where water shortages are most acute? What role should multinationals play in the provision of water?


Mike Wooldridge:

Hello I'm Mike Wooldridge and welcome to the second of our forums on water. This week the leaders of the industrialised world renewed their commitment to halve the numbers of people without access to safe water or proper sanitation by 2015. But what's the best way to do this? Through governments or through private companies? To take your questions on how best to manage water and the pros and cons of privatisation we have Michael Klein, vice president for private sector development at the World Bank in Washington and Trevor Ngwane of the Anti Privatisation Forum in Johannesburg.

Can I begin by asking both of you to outline your case on the issue of water privatisation in just a minute or so. Michael Klein first.

Michael Klein:

Yes thank you. I think that a lot of the debate is cast in terms of public versus private and I think this is pretty much beside the issue. The real issue is what gets greater access to water to people all over the world and fundamentally here after lots of decades of trying to improve water systems we come to the realisation which is pretty obvious in the first place that somebody has to pay for the water, it's either consumers through user fees or it's governments through subsidies. But governments all over the world have either found it politically impossible to raise consumer tariffs or fiscally impossible to provide subsidies. And neither the public sector nor the private sector can invest when nobody pays at the end of the day. So the solution lies more in getting to grips with the user fee problem or the subsidies than with privatisation. The next question is then whether public providers or private providers in any particular case are better suited to do so and that's a case-by-case decision.

Mike Wooldridge:

Thank you very much indeed Michael Klein. Now Trevor Ngwane you presumably do not think that private providers are the best people to supply water?

Trevor Ngwane:

Yes Mike, we believe that water is life, everyone should have access to water. Without water there is disease, hardship, misery. It is in the public interest for everyone to have access to water and it is better if the state provides water on the basis of need. Now with privatisation private companies come in and provide water on the basis of profit. So it's a clash between need and profit and I think in this case, with water, we should prioritise need, therefore we should have the government make means to provide every citizen with water.

Mike Wooldridge:

Trevor Ngwane thank you very much indeed. Now we have on the line Charles Moore from Edinburgh in Scotland. You've a point I think you particular want to put to Michael Klein.

Charles Moore:

Yes please. It's in the form of a question really. What I'd like to know is can you give any concrete examples of third world countries that have benefited from privatisation in the sense of clean water being made available universally without there being massive - and I mean big - increases in charges?

Mike Wooldridge:

So Michael Klein there's the challenge - are there any examples?

Michael Klein:

There are - first most of the cases that have been analysed where private participation came into water systems in the 1990s, which is when this mostly started, have had good physical success, in the sense that they have increased connections, have improved reliability of water supply, duration of water supply, etc. And the cases that have been looked at are in Ivory Coast, Guinea, in several Colombian cities, in several Argentine cities, in two Bolivian cities etc. So I would think on the - in Manila as well - on technical grounds the private sector has performed in a number of cases where previously public sector companies had problems. Does that lead to universal service connections? In many cases we're so far away from universal service that it has not moved there yet but neither had before the public sector. Now has this happened without price increases? On average in the developing world prices in the beginning of the '90s were at about 30% of the cost of water systems. So either prices have to rise to make these investments possible or governments have to provide subsidies. Now in a number of cases de facto governments have in various ways provided subsidies so in cases like originally Manila, Buenos Aries etc. the way the subsidies had provided overall price levels initially stayed low, in some cases have later gone up again but over time I think in most places prices will have to rise regardless of whether it's public or private.

Mike Wooldridge:

Trevor Ngwane if I can just bring you in from Johannesburg. Do you accept that those would be examples of success, the ones just cited there by Michael Klein?

Trevor Ngwane:

No, not at all. I mean in Bolivia, in Cochabamba, there was virtual civil war when privatisation led to hundreds of thousands losing their access to water. Here in South Africa since our government made moves to privatise water - note it moves to privatise, it's not yet fully privatised - already there is social conflict, the trade unions are unhappy, people are getting cut off from water. Two years ago we had an outbreak of cholera - a waterborne disease - because people who ironically had been getting free water under the apartheid regime now found themselves without water under the democratic government because of privatisation. As a result more than 200 people died from the cholera outbreak. I would say in Africa, especially the third world countries, privatising water is not good. I think too for first world countries.

Mike Wooldridge:

Okay, we have on the line now a caller who I think particularly wants to put a question to you, Trevor Ngwane, Neal Lang from Florida in the United States. Go ahead please.

Neal Lang:

Hi Trevor. My question is how much oil do you think would be available without any private sector involvement in its distribution?

Trevor Ngwane:

How much water would be available without private ..?

Neal Lang:

Oil. Oil as a commodity is very much like water in the way it's found - it's a natural resource, in most cases it has to be lifted from beneath the surface, it requires processing and it requires a logistic system for delivering it to the consumer. Now my question is how much oil would be available if it were free and there were no private sector involvement in the distribution, the logistics associated with the distribution of oil.

Mike Wooldridge:

You work actually for a water company don't you Mr Lang?

Neal Lang:

I work for a company that manufactures water pumps yes.

Trevor Ngwane:

Okay let's not mix water and oil because they don't mix at all and we don't drink oil and people can live without oil but just a day without water I think you'd find it very hard to survive. I think that water should not be handled like oil, I think that water is a basic need and I think that in South Africa at least and in most of Africa people were getting water, of course not up to maximum what we want - optimum but since the privatisation came in we see people going without water, in cities and places where the infrastructure is there - they cut of your individual household water because you are too poor to pay. In South Africa with an unemployment rate of 40%, 70% of the workforce don't get a living wage, as a result many people are not in a position to afford privatised water.

Mike Wooldridge:

Neal Lang do you accept that - what Trevor Ngwane's essentially saying there is that it simply doesn't work in terms of getting water particularly to the very poorest?

Neal Lang:

Okay I have a follow up then for Trevor. What would happen to the distribution of food, arguably that's just as important as water for people's existence, what would happen if you didn't pay the farmers for growing the food?

Trevor Ngwane:

I think you are getting closer to the point now because we do have a problem of hunger and famine in the world because food is provided on the basis of profit. So I think even with food we should have more state intervention, not just food aid programmes but governments of the world joining hands and committing themselves to ensure that no child sleeps on an empty stomach. So I think food is a good example of where we need vigorous state intervention in favour and to the advantage of the poor.

Neal Lang:

Are you suggesting that the government should take over the growing of food like it did in Russia with collectives - did you see the results there? I mean that's a terrible idea.

Trevor Ngwane:

I think that we're not yet talking about socialising all the Stalinist system which happened in Russia, the Soviet Union, we're talking about a capitalist system which is near liberal. Only 20 years ago it was common knowledge and common sense that the state provides water, the state runs the roads and then with Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, the new liberal offensive we called this attack on the state, now people are telling us that the state is good for nothing. I think it's just an ideology and a change in capitalism. So I'm not talking about socialism, not yet anyway.

Mike Wooldridge:

Thank you for your points Neal Lang. If I can just pursue with you Michael Klein if I may in more detail this question of the pricing of water through privatisation, we've had quite a number of e-mails which reflect a division of opinion on the whole issue generally but several of them have to do with pricing. Let me just quote you a couple. One from Paul Matthews in the Hague in the Netherlands: "What action can be taken to ensure that the cost of water will not rise above affordable levels in the third world?" And similarly from Rose in Australia: "What's to stop water companies from hiking up the prices?"

Michael Klein:

I think I would start off by pointing out that the big debate and the big issue is not about the pricing of water to those who have already access to water but it's providing access who don't have good modern water systems. And those people who don't have access, about a billion people in the world, they pay a lot more per cubic metre of water, let's say, than those who are connected because they either have to spend lots of time walking, they have to drill wells, they may have to pay private water vendors who sell in buckets or tank trucks and that costs typically at least ten times as much per unit of water than those people who are connected. Now therefore if you extend service to those people with better investment, better operations and maintenance their prices will fall, they will have the ability to get better water at lower prices and that directly affects affordability in a positive way.

Then there's the question of those people who are already connected and ultimately also those where regardless of excess investments and so on they're just too poor to be able to afford, that's a question then on how much subsidy is available to help bring the costs down - bring the price down for those because the costs after all are there and cannot be avoided. And here is the question of what kind of subsidy systems can actually work in practice and there are two questions, number one, do governments have the money to provide the subsidies and number two, can we target them so that actually the poor get them. The experience over the last 40, 50 years with government run subsidy programmes in most of the developing world has been, unfortunately, that on average subsidies tended to go to the better off rather than the poor. And so we need to focus very much on where the money comes from for these subsidies and how to target this.

Mike Wooldridge:

So a long way to go in other words to get it right you would consider. Let me just put to you another e-mail that we've had which suggests that there are contradictions in the whole business, this from Gertrude Lyatuu in Dar es Salaam Tanzania, where you indeed at the World Bank have a project. Gertrude says: "The government of Tanzania has privatised water here in Dar es Salaam, at the same time the Government entered it into a credit agreement with the World Bank for the Dar es Salaam water supply and sanitation project. Who benefits from such initiatives?"

Michael Klein:

Most of the so-called privatisations, particularly in the lower income countries and particularly in Africa, are not full privatisations. The private sector tends to be brought in to either just - under a management contract to run a system but the investments are still borne by the state or sometimes the private sector comes in under a so-called leasing system where the private sector also takes on responsibility for billing and collection and those are typically systems which are always government financed partially in this particular case, as you mentioned, maybe with the World Bank credit. So the question here is the private sector in these cases doesn't bring finance, the private sector in these cases only makes sense if it has a management and technical capability to bring to the project that improves on operations. So that's an issue quite independent from pricing and financing.

Mike Wooldridge:

Okay I'm going to bring another caller in now, Belinda Calaguas who works with Wateraid - a development organisation that's very much focused on all these matters based here in London. Belinda I think you have questions for both Michael Klein and also for Trevor Ngwane.

Belinda Calaguas:

My question to Michael is that experience shows already that the international private sector is actually not interested in the least developed countries, in the poorest countries, nor are they interested in the poorer sections of even the middle income countries, hasn't the World Bank actually oversold private sector participation and instead what it should be doing is really to support public utilities to improve their services and make them more efficient?

Michael Klein:

I would agree with you that some of us, as well as others, have oversold the switch from public to private as the main step and that's why I also agree acting against casting the bait in terms of public versus private. The real issue is who pays at the end of the day. In those concession arrangements and so-called privatisation arrangements, it's never full privatisation, where adequate incentives have been built in and contractual obligations have been given to private sector companies there have been significant expansion of service, for example in La Paz in Bolivia in the [name] neighbourhood several hundreds thousand people are being connected extra, in Manila there are special programmes, in Buenos Aries there are special programmes to connect poor neighbourhoods. It always depends on whether there's somebody there who pays for it, either a subsidy scheme like exists in Chile or some internal subsidy system embedded in the concessions. So the private sector is serving poor communities when it has an incentive to do so but they don't do it for free. Nor can the government do it - government's water company do it for free, the taxpayer at the end of the day has to pay that subsidy.

Belinda Calaguas:

I think that in the first instance that the real issue here is how do you improve the capacity of the public sector, of governments, to act to regulate where they bring in the private sector, I'm not talking about the international private sector. There are countless domestic local private operators in every country that provides some level of service but the governments are not in any position, at this point in time, to regulate them, improve their standards and all of that. I think that that is where the investment should be going in relation to the private sector but also in terms of getting the public sector up to speed in terms of how to set up its regulation.

Mike Wooldridge:

Okay, and what was the question that you wanted to put to Trevor Ngwane of the Anti Privatisation Forum?

Belinda Calaguas:

For Trevor I think that there has been some successful struggle against cutting off people in South Africa and these are extra legal means of trying to make sure that people continue to have access to water. But my question is on two counts, first is what is the positive agenda, what is the constructive agenda, the campaign in South Africa is bringing to government, who is after all trying to provide services, after all they put up the free basic water service and all of that? The second point is about the pricing of water, I think that our colleagues in South Africa need to understand that water cannot be provided for free, it has to come from somewhere - taxation or from consumers actually paying service or from core subsidies from other consumers. I want to be able to hear from Trevor what the constructive agenda is.

Mike Wooldridge:

So there's a challenge there Trevor if you like from another campaigning organisation, you're not being sufficiently constructive.

Trevor Ngwane:

We do have our proposals, we really hope that the government and the World Bank, IMF, will listen to us. In South Africa our proposal is that water should follow the line of our constitution and Bill of Rights and be regarded as every citizens right, that's what our Bill of Rights says. So our government has to learn to respect that. Secondly, to achieve that we recommend exactly what Belinda says - cross subsidisation from high volume users, which is mostly companies, industry, to low volume users, which is mostly domestic users and the poor. So we'd like that, we should have a pricing system - we call it block tariff system. So for the first say 200 litres, you get that for free, and then after that it starts going up and the more water you use in terms of volume the more you pay per unit because water is a scarce resource. We cannot use water and price it as if you were pricing pairs of shoes, so that the guy with money can save and use more water, the result in South Africa is wastage - people use water for their swimming pools, Jacuzzi, cleaning their cars, whereas their next door neighbours are living without water to drink. So we recommend cross subsidisation. We also recommend that the state should be a major player, a vigorous player, in the provision of water, we don't want this responsibility to be abrogated and be handed over to the private sector. That is our position.

Mike Wooldridge:

Let me just put two e-mails to you. One that's come in since we began from John McDaniel in the United States who says: "Isn't privatisation of water just a signal that the local governments can't control corruption - how do you stop this corruption in Africa?" And from Kwame in the United States as well who said to Trevor and all who are against privatisation: "How long should the remotest regions of developing countries wait to get clean water - is a 50 year wait okay for you?" Now before we do turn to Michael Klein on that let me get your response Trevor on both of those points made in e-mails.

Trevor Ngwane:

Okay usually in Africa it's privatisation which brings corruption because that is when multinational corporations find a need to bribe politicians, put my tender on top, shortlist me and this and that. So usually corruption is made worse by privatisation. On remote areas waiting a long time, it is true that one major argument for privatisation has been that the multinational corporations will lay out - it's called rolling out remote areas. But in our experience this has not really happened because basically what happens is they cherry pick, they choose the juiciest, most profitable areas which usually are the cities with the certain middle class and then they are not interested in remote rural areas where they know they're unlikely to get a return because people are too poor to pay.

Mike Wooldridge:

Michael Klein just the corruption issue perhaps, what's your view on that and of course if it is a big issue in terms of water supplies and improving sanitation then it can apply of course in the private sector as in the public?

Michael Klein:

Yes once again the issue is not public versus private, it's the governing systems in the particular place. As we well know in public sector systems in all sorts of countries, not only in developing countries, there tends to be a certain amount of corruption when it comes to the supply of equipment or civil works in public sector run infrastructure systems. So the argument that by privatising the operations of the system as well the corruption is going to be bigger I don't buy and we have decades of experience that public sector systems have not performed. After all most of the world tried, as Trevor pointed out, for many, many years to work with public sector systems and in a number of cases it hasn't worked well. So when you bring private sector companies in it doesn't mean that incentives or possibilities for corruption disappear, what can happen, if it's reasonably well designed, is that there's a better arm's length relationship, if, like Linda says, you strengthen the regulatory authorities there's more transparency, more arms length relationships, in fact in many ways privatisation attracts more criticism and it's a good thing, that's precisely what it is supposed to do because people, particularly in the government, find it easier to complain about private companies. And one example to close with, in Buenos Aries when we visited areas in slums of Buenos Aries people said we have been waiting for water for decades, now that we have a private company we have some leverage because complaints about private companies are politically much better than complaints about state owned companies.

Mike Wooldridge:

It's clear from many who have contacted the forum that the issue is essentially about pricing and particularly I think for people who contacted us from Africa, Eddie Lee, for example, originally from Liberia though now living in the United States sent an e-mail asking: "How are poor people living in Africa going to pay for water? More specifically how are my brothers and sisters who are living in rural Liberia who are already poverty stricken going to pay for water?"

Michael Klein:

Well at the moment most people in Africa do not have access to modern water systems and they get their water either from rivers by walking hours etc. etc. or by paying private water vendors. And once again the price they pay either through their effort or in cash is actually much higher per unit of water consumption than in the relatively modern systems in those few areas that actually have access to them. And so the question - the big challenge is providing greater access to more areas throughout the country. How is that going to happen? Public sector companies had universal service targets forever in their charters and haven't been able to deliver in many of the developing countries, now does that mean the private sector will automatically do it? No only the pricing problem is solved. So what are the intermediate solutions? I think somebody made the remark that domestic private companies have got more of a role to play and I would think we see that in Cambodia and Paraguay and Mauritania and a number of places where governments are allowing local small private water companies, community development systems etc. to provide water. In these systems the community pays in one form or another, either by putting in effort in kind or by having payment systems in cash in the system and that's the most - domestic private companies are the most likely candidates to expand water access in remote areas.

Mike Wooldridge:

Trevor Ngwane that e-mail that we had there, as I was saying, was about Africa in particular, the question was about Liberia, I think that you feel there's a big cultural issue, don't you, I believe you have said that in Africa you simply don't have water for sale, is it as simple as that?

Trevor Ngwane:

Well if you go back through African history and most societies before capitalism, before the commoditization of everything, where everything now has got a price - from water, food, sex, I don't know even going in to pay the priest. I think we have quite a different value system, for example African hospitality is that you have to help your neighbour and when someone visits you, even if it's a stranger, you give them something to eat, which I think is something which is done even in the West. But if we have nothing the least you can give them is water. Now we find ourselves in a situation where we can't even afford the water which we always took for granted, in fact at the moment our government is busy with these multinational corporations installing prepaid water meters, which means that people must buy a card for 50 rand before they can get water. I've heard that in Britain prepaid water meters are illegal, so I don't know why something which is illegal in Britain - buy water - the British multinational corporation wants to do in Africa.

Mike Wooldridge:

We have a caller on the line from Africa, Tony Adams calling from Accra in Ghana, what question did you want to put?

Tony Adams:

How can the poor in Africa afford privatised expensive water because anybody coming to take part in any privatisation is interested in profits, that means that at the end of the day the water that is being produced will be very expensive? I think that Africa has got to a point where we have to privatise everything, privatisation is a good thing but if anything should be privatised at all I think water should be the last because it must remain a government responsibility.

Mike Wooldridge:

Are you saying we're at the point of last resort, that the record does suggest that it needs to be privatised or it should remain in the hands of the state even with all the difficulties?

Tony Adams:

I think it should remain in the hands of the state because if you look in Africa the state has a very big role in making sure that certain social responsibilities are fulfilled and such social responsibilities include the provision of water, plain water and safe water.

Mike Wooldridge:

Okay, just before I put that point to you Michael Klein can I also just read an e-mail we've had in from Spain from David Tabar who says: "Who will police the water companies and what penalties will apply for the environmental damage caused by the pursuit of profits?" What would you say in answer both to Tony Adams who was on the line there and also to that particular point in the e-mail?

Michael Klein: First of all the notion that private water - water provided by private providers is somehow more expensive than state water provided that in many cases is not true, there are some cases in the world the state owned water companies that are very efficient in many other cases there are private water companies that are very efficient, so once again it's case-by-case. State owned companies also need profits to finance their investment, so there's no fundamental difference there. It comes back to the pricing issue and I think as Trevor outlined before the block tariff approach, the lifeline subsidies and so on is something that we probably all agree on as an approach to that. Then when it comes to - if the pricing solutions are found that are acceptable to those concerned in the system then the question is who provides the water? And here is then the question it should remain in the hands of the state was said, in many cases those hands are empty and remain empty and the issue for most people in the countries we have to look at the coverage of water in Lagos, for example, in Nigeria some 6% of the total city and it's after all the major city in the country have actual water access in their houses from the public sector water company, most people get their water from private water vendors. So the private sector is the domestic small private sector is de facto the provider of water to the vast majority of people all over Africa and in the rest of the poor countries. And the issue is how to get access to better and more modern systems to all of those who pay a lot? And that may involve in a number of cases using private parties, in other cases it may use public parties, or community development organisations, local private sector, whatever the appropriate solution in a particular case is.

Mike Wooldridge:

And just a quick question to both of you, Michael Klein and also Trevor Ngwane, this in a e-mail from G. Ngan in Halle, Germany: "What do you think about the public sector owning 51% and the rest being owned by the private sector, what would be the advantages and disadvantages of such an arrangement?" Trevor Ngwane.

Trevor Ngwane:

We have found that as soon as you have the idea of public/private partnerships then you get the government, the state's federal system all mixed up. Instead of the state having the priority of looking after its citizens, the wellbeing of the citizens, the state starts to think like a business enterprise. So you get, what we call, commercialisation can take the form of corporation but basically government behaving and conducting its business as if it was the private sector. So just back to Mr Klein, I don't think it's a case-by-case issue but it's a question of principle, all must have water, that is the problem, not how to make people pay for water because if all have water then we won't have problem of disease. Secondly, the question of inequalities are increasing in the world, the rich are getting richer, the poor are getting poorer, who is getting richer? It is the big multinational corporations. Now Klein is trying to fudge the difference between a big company like Bechtel, By Water, Suez and a small African informal trader who carries water on their donkey's back. I think these two are different.

Mike Wooldridge:

Trevor Ngwane thank you very much. Michael Klein?

Michael Klein: I would have thought that de facto when you look at what is touted under the label of privatisation you have de facto already a whole range of mixed ownership structures. Trevor's quoted the case of South Africa as pretty much all public sector and the issue is one of pricing. Then when you look at the public/private partnerships in poor countries in Africa almost none of them have majority private ownership, most of them have government majority ownership many times, hundred per cent government ownership with the private sector only taking management responsibility, sometimes a little bit of investment responsibility etc. So I think it's a number of combinations can make a sense, it's a question of who happens to be a competent operator, who is a good provider of finance etc. etc. So I think very much in the spirit of the caller who asked for the 51/49% share, we need to be flexible about what the model is. With Trevor I would agree the principle that all people should have access to water, that is the principle, the principle is not whether it's state or public or private or small or large.

Mike Wooldridge:

And just before we end a statistic to underline that was calculated this week by one aid agency that during the three days of the G8 summit at Evian in France more than 170,000 people will have died of diseases triggered by the lack of safe drinking water. Well that's all we have time for today, I'd like to thank you all for joining the forum and also thanks to our two guests - Michael Klein and Trevor Ngwane. Don't forget to take part in our online vote on privatisation, you can find that and the transcript of this forum on our special water site at www.bbc.co.uk/haveyoursay. Goodbye.


End