George
Monbiot
Tuesday July 24, 2001
The Guardian
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Asking the G8 leaders to decide what to do about the developing
world's debt is like asking the inmates of Wormwood Scrubs to decide
what to do about crime.
Debt is the direct result of the banking structure which has enriched
the G8 nations. Our leaders are the last people on earth who should be
charged with tackling it.
The same goes for poverty in Africa. For 150 years, a few rich nations
have decided how Africa should be "helped". The G8's new
"Marshall plan" for the continent is no more enlightened
than the schemes some of its members were devising in 1860.
The problem is not the decisions the G8 makes. The problem is that
it's the G8 making the decisions.
I had imagined that this was so obvious it scarcely needed stating,
but some of the big development charities criticising the G8's new
plans are now arguing not that these constitute a new form of
colonialism, but that this colonialism is insufficiently funded.
Reading the responses of some of the organisations I have long
admired, I can't help wondering whose side they are on.
My bewilderment has been compounded by a recognition, painful and
reluctant as it is, that the G8 leaders, the press and the millions of
people for whom these issues were meaningless just a year or two ago,
are now discussing them only because of the fighting in the streets.
Having campaigned against violence towards people for years, I find
this perception terrifying. It is simply not true to say that Carlo
Giuliani died in vain.
By contrast to the hundreds of thousands of people who, like me, spent
their working lives making polite representations, he was acknowledged
by the eight men closeted in the ducal palace. They were forced, as
never before, to defend themselves against the charge of illegitimacy.
This discovery is hardly new. I have simply stumbled once more upon
the fundamental political reality which all those of us who lead
moderately comfortable lives tend occasionally to forget: that
confrontation is an essential prerequisite for change.
The problem with the fighting at Genoa is not only that the
confrontation
was of the kind which hurts people, but also that it was not always
clear
what they were being hurt for.
The great Islamic activist Hamza Yusuf Hanson distinguishes between
two forms of political action. He defines the Arabic word hamas as
enthusiastic, but intelligent, anger. Hamoq means uncontrolled, stupid
anger.
The Malays could not pronounce the Arabic H, and the British acquired
the second word from them. On Friday and Saturday, while the white
overalls movement practised hamas, seeking to rip down the fences
around Genoa's red zone but refusing to return the blows of the
police, the black block ran amok.
The important thing about hamas is that, whether or not it is popular,
it is comprehensible. People can see immediately what you are doing
and why you are doing it.
Hamoq, by contrast, leaves its spectators dumbfounded. Hamas may have
demolished the McDonald's in Whitehall on May Day 2000, but it would
have left the Portuguese restaurant and the souvenir shop beside it
intact.
Hamas explains itself. It is a demonstration in both senses of the
word: a protest and an exposition of the reasons for that protest.
Hamoq, by contrast, seeks no public dialogue. Hamas is radical. Hamoq
is reactionary.
If, like some of the black block warriors I have spoken to, you cannot
accept this distinction, then look at how the police responded to
these two very different species of anger.
On Friday, though they were armed to the teeth and greatly outnumbered
the looters, the police stood by and watched as the black block
rampaged around Brignole station, smashing every shopfront and
overturning the residents' cars.
Then on Saturday night, on the pretext of looking for the people who
had
caused the violence, the police raided the schools in which members of
the non-violent Genoa Social Forum were sleeping, and started beating
them to a pulp before they could get out of their sleeping bags. The
police, like almost everyone else in Genoa, knew perfectly well that
the black block were, at the time, camped in a car park miles away.
It is not hard to see which faction Italy's borderline-fascist state
feels
threatened by, and which faction it can accept and even encourage.
If Carlo Giuliani did not die in vain, it was because the Genoa Social
Forum had so clearly articulated the case he may have been seeking to
make. His hamoq forced a response because other people were practising
hamas.
Hamas instructs us to choose our enemies carefully. And if there is
one
thing upon which all the diverse factions whose members gathered at
Genoa can agree, it is the identity of some of our enemies.
There are some corporations, for example, which activists and
non-activists everywhere regard as a menace to society.
Almost everyone agrees that the world would be a better place without
the companies which are lobbying against action on climate change,
building Bush's missile defence system, producing fragmentation
grenades, demanding control over health and education services,
privatising water in third world cities then selling it back to their
people at inflated prices, ripping up virgin forests, designing plants
with sterile seeds.
The state was once empowered to destroy such menaces: in the 18th
century, for example, the British government could dismantle any
commercial enterprise "tending to the common grievance, prejudice
and inconvenience of His Majesty's subjects". Now the state has
renounced this power and refuses, whatever its people may say, to
demolish the dens from which the thieves of the public realm raid our
lives. Hamas insists that we pull them down ourselves.
Those who will be most horrified by this suggestion were doubtless
also
delighted to see the public demolition of the Berlin wall.
It is surely obvious that the excesses of corporate power are no more
likely to be reversed voluntarily by the states which it has captured
than that the Berlin wall would have been pulled down by the
governments which built it.
And I suspect that, in private, most British people would be as happy
to see the headquarters of, say, Balfour Beatty or Monsanto dismantled
by
non-violent direct action as they were to see Lord Archer go to
prison.
These things can be done, as peaceful protesters have demonstrated in
fields of GM maize, nuclear laboratories and military aircraft hangars
all over the country, without hurting anyone. In deed, when actions
are clearly focused, then violence towards human beings is far less
likely to take place, as it's harder to forget what we are seeking to
achieve.
While it would cause some of our liberal supporters to shudder, it
would also generate the massive public debate without which no
political change can take place.
Ours is, in numerical terms, the biggest protest movement in the
history of the world. We have a better opportunity for generating
progressive,
democratic change than at any time in the past 50 years.
But, though I am scared to say it, it's now clear to me that we cannot
win without raising the temperature. The disorienting, profoundly
disturbing lesson from Genoa is also the oldest lesson in politics:
words alone are not enough.
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