Applying the solutions of the 21st century to 10th century problems
by Josep Enrique PONS-GRAU
Over the last few years the world has witnessed a series of
democratic developments in developing countries, particularly on the African
continent.
It already seems to have become a cliche to refer to the fall of
the Berlin Wall and the consequent end of the Cold War when attempting to
account for these new processes. Realpolitik was an accomplice to dictatorships,
corruption and the sale of weapons of mass destruction; in short, it turned a
blind eye to human rights violations worldwide.
Most international forums have seen the opening of a political
debate on democracy, human rights and development. In some of those forums,
however, the traditional rather hypocritical and misleading arguments persist.
Some countries, too, particularly the traditional donors in the industrialized
North, have been two-faced in their utterances while pretending to harbour only
the best of intentions. At all events, there is a strand of public opinion in
the donor countries which seeks to justify their traditional lack of interest in
a genuine development cooperation policy by invoking the defence of human
rights. This is a dangerous time for countries receiving aid, now that the onus
has shifted from covering up a threadbare cooperation policy to justifying it
under the much more progressive guise of defending human rights.
At the present stage of international economic and political
relations, the capital markets are aware that a higher and faster rate of
profitability can be achieved more easily if trade flows shift to countries in
the eastern part of Europe, which has in fact been transformed into a political
and economic South.
On the other hand, many well-intentioned people in northern
countries are genuinely sick and tired of the fact that aid funded from their
taxes fails to bear fruit in the beneficiary countries and that it serves in
many to prop up dictatorships that are economically ostentatious and politically
bloody. In the worst cases, which are all too common, a large percentage of the
finance provided is paid into bank accounts in the traditional tax havens,
leading to a drain on the hard currency which is so necessary in the beneficiary
countries.
Moreover, we are now seeing a change in attitudes in many of the
traditional donor countries, where the feeling of guilt which used to motivate
people to make penance for the past is in the process of disappearing. Equally,
while it is generally agreed that there is no more fertile breeding ground for
dictatorships than poverty, this cannot be taken as a permanent excuse for
failure to respect human rights. No political leader today can continue to see
himself as the owner of his people's sufferings and exploit them to block human
development.
Quite apart from the above reasons and opinions, which are
justified to differing extents, one thing is clear; the system of development
cooperation and all its political and economic offshoots as they have developed
hitherto have not been equal to the task of meeting the needs of the poor, and
positive results- apart from a number of isolated cases- are notable by their
absence. There needs to be a change of direction in commercial, cultural and
political relations. There is a vital need for determined action from within the
beneficiary countries to avoid a situation in which others impose reform from
outside. This explains why-to venture a little optimism-we have recently
witnessed a number of democratic changes in developing countries. Clearly, the
right of each country to carry out the necessary changes in accordance with its
culture, tradition and individual character is a principle which must be
defended through thick and thin. In other words, we must abandon the
universalising model of democracy and, of course, the Eurocentric and
ethnocentric variant thereof. We therefore advocate an anthropological dimension
to democracy not rooted solely in an economic model.
We cannot use talk of good governance, the rule of law and
corruption as an excuse for abandoning cooperation with needy countries. We
cannot speak of democracy in African countries while the institutions set up
under the Bretton Woods agreement impose certain measures on governments as a
sine qua non for economic recovery. These economic conditions are diametrically
opposed to the basic needs of the economies of African countries.
The challenge for the 1990s and forthcoming decades will be to
reconcile modernity with tradition, but a bridge must be created if the
solutions of the 21 st century are to be correctly applied to 10th century
problems.
Deepening the Treaty of Maastricht
The Community institutions (Parliament, the Commission, the
Council and the Economic and Social Committee) have definite views on the issue
of democracy and human rights. Admittedly, a number of questions which will play
an important role when it comes to applying corrective measures-'who, how and
when' - have yet to be considered in detail. At all events, it seems to us that
Community policy could be more coherent and determined than has been the case
hitherto with some of the main bilateral policies in this cooperation field. The
disparity between bilateral and Community policy is evidence of incoherence and
political short-sightedness, and it does not escape the notice of European
citizens that their governments are motivated by utterly outdated geopolitical
or strategic interests.
Maastricht must serve as a point of departure for a genuine
common foreign and security policy including development cooperation issues. If
fundamental divergences between the two policy areas persist, not only in the
field of development cooperation but also in that of human rights and democracy,
we shall continue to fuel contradictions and encourage the rise of tyrannical
dictatorships.
The principle of subsidiarily cannot be interpreted in such a
way that Brussels is responsible for implementing impossible or unpopular
policies (negative or restrictive measures in the field of cooperation) while
the Twelve pursue the policies which best suit their currencies, banks, stock
markets or enterprises. This is the great challenge with which the 1996
Intergovernmental Conference will present us.
We must, furthermore, deepen dialogue between the countries of
the North and the South in order to change many of the outdated ideas underlying
an antiquated system of international law. Certain components of a new system of
international law, such as the right to peaceful and democratic intervention,
must be examined in detail to enable the democratic concerns of North and South
alike to circulate freely beyond the frontiers of each.
The new hopes for democracy and human rights which have been
emerging recently must be reflected in political agreements and commitments of a
new type, based on the revision and reformulation of agreements derived from the
colonial past. Third-generation agreements containing clear specifications on
human rights cannot co-exist within the European Community with first-generation
agreements which take an ambiguous stance on the issue and which date back
beyond the Berlin Wall era.
Whilst the European Community cannot fight the good fight on its
own, it can and must make itself heard with a single voice in other
organisations, particularly the UN. This represents a new challenge to innovate,
reform and improve existing structures to enable them to adapt to the prodigious
economic, social and cultural changes which have taken place in other
continents. Solidarity cannot continue to operate in one direction only; many
other countries which have been neglected hitherto are knocking at our doors.
We must lay the foundations for and continue to stress the need
for genuine worldwide economic democracy. Let us start by condemning any element
of obligation in the allocation of the economic roles hitherto imposed on each
country or group of countries. We must champion the implementation of genuinely
cohesive regional policies. How long will international economic and monetary
institutions continue to determine the economic policy of sovereign countries
without taking into account either their views or their interests?
We must continue to stress the need to establish a cultural
democracy which will oppose cultural norms and standards foreign to the
development of the countries concerned. Cultural and religious extremism cannot
be viewed as offering hope to betrayed and manipulated peoples.
We would stress that political democracy, which must embrace the
characteristics peculiar to each people or region, must be based on scrupulous
respect for the rule of law. We know that while it is difficult to define
democracy, it is easy to prostitute it. Democracy exists when the inhabitants of
the country concerned experience it day-by-day and minute by minute.
In order to achieve these three forms of democracy, in the
economic, cultural and political spheres, far-reaching reform of existing
international institutions will be required, from the most universal-such as the
United Nations-to the most specific-such as these derived from the Lomonvention. This is the challenge facing the European Community. Its
achievements will determine in no small measure the name and role which it
decides to give itself.
J.E.P.-G.