By Mumia Abu-Jamal from death row
The water wars
The recent visions of the tsunami rushing, raging, tearing through the Asian
coasts has given us all some interesting insights into the truly stunning, and
indeed awesome power of water, and how nature's fury is virtually boundless when
unleashed.
Yet there is another watery war that is being waged, that may
affect the lives of millions, but it garners neither the concern, nor really the
attention of the world's media. The electronic media, especially, thrives on
drama and conflict, and seeks pictures and stories which reflect these
features.
It also affirms the positions of the privileged, as opposed to
the plight of the poor, and powerless. Yet all across the globe, in Africa,
Asia, and Latin America--and even here--in North America-- people are living
under the very real threat of the corporatization of water and water systems.
The waters of the earth, which have been, since the dawn of human civilization,
for the collective usage of the community, are fast becoming just another
commodity--something to sell. If you can afford it, cool. If not,
tough.
Michael Stark, a senior executive at US Filter, a subsidiary of the
multinational corporation, Vivendi, put it this way: "Water is a critical and
necessary ingredient to the daily life of every human being, and it is also an
equally powerful ingredient for powerful manufacturing companies."
(Lake)
Veronica Lake, a Michigan-based environmental activist, has noted
that corporations acquire the world's water by three major methods: a.) by
"water mining" the underground aquifers, or deep sources of many of the world's
streams or rivers; b.) by leasing state and government water systems and
collecting revenues; and c.) by "managing" city water systems.
In short,
there's money in water, and where money is, there too are corporations, trying
to get paid.
That's the dark, unforeseen and treacherous side of the
globalization movement among western governments and corporations.
That's
also what privatization really means--taking the common inheritance of nature,
and making it into someone else's private property.
In South Africa, this
movement has resulted in more misery for the poor. Indeed, cholera rates are
higher now there, than in the days of apartheid. It's often the result of tough
austerity measures imposed by the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund,
where governments are privatizing essential services, and the costs of living
now means the right to buy water, to live.
Nor is this merely a story for
the distant Third World.
In Detroit, Michigan, today, some 40,000 people
on the southwest side have had their water shut off for non-payment. In many
older buildings, water isn't just the stuff that's supposed to run through
faucets; it also provides steam heat through old radiators. So no water means,
no heat. In Detroit.
Scholars say that the next world wars will be fought,
not for oil, but for water, for it is infinitely more
precious.
Thankfully, people, all over the world, in South Africa, in
Plachimada, India, in Bolivia, in Brazil, in France, Ghana, and Canada, are
fighting both their sell-out governments and the corporations for the human
right of free access to water.
Those of you who have read my earlier
pieces may remember my piece on the Bolivian water wars in a place called
Cochabamba.
There, a popular group calling itself La Coordinadora de
Defensa del Agua y la Vida (Defense Committee in Defense of Water and Life),
organized the poor, the homeless, the street walkers, and everyone they could to
oppose the corporatization of their water. They ran out the Bechtel corporation.
It must spread.
Or else water will become as rare as gold; and as
expensive.
Source: Veronica Lake, 'Corporations Corner Market on Life,
Offer Buy-Back: The New World War: Water,' "Against the Current," 108,.
Jan.-Feb. 2004, 26-31.
Reprinted from the Feb. 5, 2005, issue of Workers World newspaper
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