People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 48 November 27, 2005 |
An
American Scam: The Disaster Of Relief
Jayati
Ghosh
HOW
quickly and easily those in power manage to divert our attention from the real
issues of the day, and from the questions that are more inconvenient for
themselves. Consider, for example, the extraordinary fallout of the Volcker
report, the peculiar result of an exercise which was stage-managed from
beginning to end by a US government that has shown its complete contempt for
both international law and the UN itself.
RAMPANT
LOOTING
OF IRAQ
Quite
apart from its other effects, this has completely diverted the attention of
national and international media from the huge and ongoing corruption in Iraq. Currently
the real scam is happening there, whereby the Iraqi people are not only under
daily physical attack but are also deprived of even basic reconstruction because
of the pervasive corruption of the American military contractors so beloved of
the Bush administration.
This
has meant that, even while tens of billions of dollars are supposedly spent by
the US on "reconstruction" and American companies rake in the profits
on such activity, Iraqi citizens continue to be denied basic services, the
infrastructure continues to be in shambles (and even more is destroyed by the
day) and even workers for such companies are denied their due wages.
Yet
none of this is documented, much less advertised and disseminated in the
international press and other media, which maintains a veil of silence and
allows the rampant looting of Iraq by its current rulers — both US and local
— to persist. And because so much of what happens in Iraq now is explicitly
hidden and non-transparent,
it is extremely difficult to get any real sense of the actual extent of what is
acknowledged to be widespread corruption.
NEGLECTED
RELIEF WORK IN
NEW ORLEANS
We
may still get some idea, though, from the instructive yet sorry example provided
by relief work within the US — in the areas like New Orleans that were hit by
Hurricane Katrina. The enormous damage caused by Katrina — and the complete
failure of local and national governments to look after the citizens — are now
well known. But the bleeding of the region continues, and is now being extended,
by the manner of the post-disaster reconstruction and relief work.
The
recovery of the city of New Orleans has been slow, especially because the city
of New Orleans is now so impoverished and without federal support that it has
been forced to lay off thousands of workers who could have played a crucial role
in the much-needed reconstruction. But there were other areas that were
affected, where it was expected that the US government would take a much more
pro-active role in ensuring a rapid recovery.
For
example, among the destruction caused by Katrina, a number of US military bases
along the Gulf Coast of the US were affected, with the buildings destroyed and
streets and other infrastructure badly in need of cleanup of the human and other
debris. Since these were military installations, it was expected that the Bush
regime would spare no expense in a rapid reconstruction, given both the current
importance of the military and the close association of the Bush administration
with a range of military contractors.
PRO CORPORATES AND ANTI-WORKER MEASURES
But
the sleaziness of the subsequent deals is already having its effect. Immediately
after Katrina, as part of "emergency measures," president Bush
suspended the Davis-Bacon Act, which requires employers to pay "prevailing
wages" for labour used to fulfil government contracts. The administration
also waived the requirement for contractors rebuilding the Gulf Coast to provide
valid employment eligibility forms (I-9 forms) completed by their workers.
These
measures operated to increase the profitability of the contractors who were
brought in for the reconstruction of the military bases. The foremost among
these was Halliburton — the company which has recently benefited from so many
US governments in the United States, Iraq and Guantánamo Bay. The company here
appeared in the form of its subsidiary, Kellogg Brown Root, now known simply as
KBR.
The
"emergency" labour market deregulation measures allowed Halliburton/KBR
and its subcontractors to hire undocumented workers (usually migrants from
Mexico and other countries in Central America) and pay them very low wages well
below the legal minimum wage.
Usually these migrants were brought in on promises of much higher wages, but
their illegal status meant that they had no bargaining power and could not
register any complaints, even with non-payment.
Intense
political pressure has forced a reversal of these labour market measures —
president Bush reinstated the Davis-Bacon Act in early November, while the
Department of Homeland Security reinstated the I-9 requirements in late October.
But these policies have already allowed extensive profiteering by these favoured
companies beneath layers of legal and political cover.
EXPLOITATION OF MIGRANT WORKERS
There
are documented cases of very young workers — often as young as 15 or 16 years
old — being brought in from Mexican villages (especially poor regions such as
Oaxaca) by subcontractors, made to work for weeks, and then not even paid at
all, forced to sleep on the streets of New Orleans because they have nowhere
else to go.
The subcontracting companies in turn claim that they have let the workers go
because they have not been paid for months by KBR, which meanwhile has
continuously been receiving payment for the reconstruction work from the US
government.
So
the migrant workers are exploited and denied their dues, while local workers
have not only lost all their material possessions as well as sometimes their
family members, but even their jobs. And these local workers are not being used
for the reconstruction work because they would have to be paid the minimum wages
and be given basic workers’ rights.
If
this is happening to "relief work" within the US, imagine the scale of
worker oppression and corruption in countries like Iraq. And yet all of us in
the rest of the world still allow representatives of such regimes to preach to
us about corruption and supposedly murky deals.