Globalia Magazine 7th edition

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GLOBALIA

Magazine

Quarterly | Issue 07 | January 2010 EUR 4, USD 5.5, GBP 3.5, AED 20, MYR 20, ZAR 44

A new focus on the world

Economy: The eagle is grounded. Gold: the halt in sales confirms appeal. Middle East: Bad neighbourhood. The water crisis in the Middle East grows.

Image: picture-alliance.de (c) dpa-Report

Cover story: Secrets of the Cape. On South Africa’s Cape Town and its Muslims.


Still strong. M. Erol Yarar on Turkey’s economy, page 14.

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EDITORIAL By Abu Bakr Rieger.

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COVER STORY Secrets of the Cape. On South Africa’s Cape Town and its Muslims.

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ECONOMY Still strong. M. Erol Yarar on Turkey's economy.

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The eagle is grounded. Gold: the halt in sales confirms appeal.

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AFRICA Sudan: Tabloid geopolitics. The contours of conflict in Darfur.

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ASIA Singapore: a case study. From Sultanate to Brave New World.


Image: SAM/PADIA

CONCEPT AND EDITORIAL

Bad neighbourhood. The water crisis in the Middle East grows, page 38.

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EUROPE Growing tensions in Europe. England's prejudice takes to the streets.

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CHIEF EDITOR Abu Bakr Rieger

MIDDLE EAST

PUBLISHER IZ Medien GmbH Beilsteinerstr. 121 12681 Berlin Germany

Bad neighbourhood. The water crisis in the Middle East grows.

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Sulaiman Wilms

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Water resources in the Middle East. A brief overview.

DISTRIBUTION IZ Medien GmbH

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BOOKS

PRINTING msk marketingserviceköln

Slaves and stock exchanges. Interview: Jean Ziegler on “The hatred for the West”.

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Tremors in the South. Jean Ziegler's book gets to the heart of the matter.

GLOBALIA Magazine reserves the right to shorten letters. Readers’ letters, guest articles and quotations do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Editors, nor do articles by named authors.

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THOUGHT

PHONE +49 (0)30 240 48974

The Nomos of the Earth. The Muslim perception of the world and space.

MOBILE +49 (0)179 967 8018 FAX +49 (0)30 240 48975 E-mail info@globaliamagazine.com WEBSITE www.globaliamagazine.com


EDITORIAL

EDITORIAL BY ABU BAKR RIEGER

0Dear Readers,

devoured more money than the cost of over a decade of foreign aid.

I am pleased to be able to present the new edition of Globalia Magazine. The Globalia

There is no doubt that the search for a just

project continues to develop and soon we

nomos for the earth has begun. A new order

hope, with the help of sponsors, to further

of peace must not only include a new

develop professionally. Our aim is an ambi-

economic order, but it will firstly have to

tious one; we want to be at the forefront of

solve the problem of the uncontrolled

the world media market.

production of capital.

As always, the point of Globalia is a deeper

In this issue, we speak to Turkish industria-

understanding of the geopolitical and contem-

list and chairman of the IBF, Erol Yarar, about

porary questions of our time. In our article on

the growing Turkish economy and the impact

and interview with Swiss professor Jean

of the financial crisis. Turkey with its unoffi-

Ziegler, we present his convincing critique of

cial capital Istanbul has always been a point

the West. Ziegler explains that the West's

of convergence for important trade routes. Of

political expansion can only be understood

late, the new Turkish Foreign Minister Davo-

as an expression of the uninterrupted econo-

toglu has quietly been bringing bordering

mic needs of the Europeans and the Ameri-

states of Central Asia and Libya closer to

cans. Ziegler traces the West's powerful finan-

Turkey and with the aim of expanding its eco-

cial instruments through the tradition of

nomic role in the region is simplifying visa and

slavery and the exploitation of the former

export regulations. Its rejection by European

colonial powers.The current trouble between

conservative parties is becoming a secondary

Algeria and France shows that the South is

problem for Turkey and remains a loss for

increasingly unwilling to follow guidelines

Europe, which has had forgone historically

set out by the West. Economic relations

unique option of Turkey's EU-membership

between the two are still frosty after President

and the forming of an alliance with Turkish

Sarkozy’s refusal to apologise for fatal ele-

President Erdogan's conservative AK-Party.

ments of France’s erstwhile colonial policies. While Turkey appears to be reasonably stable We note that an increasing numbers of intel-

in the financial crisis, fears are growing about

lectuals in the West, like Ziegler, are uneasy

the vast Chinese empire. In the view of many

and continue to lament the circumstances

experts, for a variety of reasons, China is

driving up the death toll in the third world;

quickly becoming an unpredictable opponent

rampant speculation and food shortages

of the western world. Instead of creating eco-

now assuming tremendous proportions. The

nomic opportunities, the country is develo-

rescue of the banks in the financial crisis has

ping enormous economic risks; a bubble is

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


EDITORIAL

forming, which could burst sometime soon. What would be the implications for the internal cohesion of this multi-ethnic state? Finance expert, James Chanos, explains the situation in an interview with the US television network CNBC, “Beijing has manipulated the numbers.” Chanos, who early on recognised US energy giant Enron's own manipulation, assumes that the bubble, or beautiful dream, will burst in the Middle Kingdom: “Bubbles are best seen on the basis of credit excess,” he says, “and nowhere is there more credit excess than in China.” The property market is only being kept above water with speculative capital.” In fact the Chinese property companies are heavily indebted.The individual and national debt today amounts to 160 per cent of the GDP and could rise to 200 per cent of the economic output by 2011. European thought is still relevant for a world in transition. Our global situation is still described through notions and terminology from the West. The following phrase from the famous German jurist, Carl Schmitt, is illustrative: “All concepts of politics and constitutional law are secularised theological concepts.” According to Schmitt, European political terminology and values will remain misunderstood, if the European process of secularisation and the neutralisation of Christian beliefs is not understood. Currently being discussed in Europe, for example, in view of the growing economic fears, is why the Christianity lifted the originally accepted ban on interest.

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COVER STORY

Image: Haroun Masoet, Cape Town 2010

An important centre of activity, the Jumu’a Mosque in the heart of Cape Town.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


COVER STORY

SECRETS OF THE CAPE ON SOUTH AFRICA'S CAPE TOWN AND ITS MUSLIMS

Over recent years the South African city of Cape Town has become a favourite global tourist destination and has also become home to many new immigrants. What is not so widely known is that it is an important centre of Muslim life, as quickly becomes evident if you visit the city with its centuries-old Islamic tradition and active Muslim communities. If you want an adventure then travel to

With its natural beauty, its pleasant (if

South Africa. Its southernmost city, Cape

changeable) Mediterranean climate, and its

Town, is not only the country’s second largest

very particular and much-vaunted light, Cape

town, but together with the surrounding Cape

Town has recently developed into a booming

Peninsula one of the most extraordinary

tourist destination. Cape Town is in fashion,

places in the world.

with the Cape attracting not only tourists but also immigrants, many of whom establish

Little wonder that Cape Town is a top travel

their own businesses.

destination and a favourite landing-place for immigrants. What is less well known is that

There is a certain wildness that the country

Cape Town, like South Africa as a whole, is

still has, often perceived as liberating by the

one of the world’s most important centres of

new South Africans who arrive from European

Muslim life.

countries. Cape Town had an estimated 3.5 million inhabitants in 2007.

The Cape region has so many plant species that its natural landscape constitutes a bota-

The odd European ship had already sailed

nical kingdom in its own right. But it is also

around the Cape of Good Hope earlier, but

the human cultures that converge here in a

continuous contact between the region and

unique configuration. Boers (Afrikaners),

Europeans – and settlement – did not begin

English, Xhosa, Cape Malays and people of

until 1652, when Jan van Riebeeck and others

Indian origin, together with large numbers of

were sent to the Cape by the Dutch East India

new immigrants from Europe, the rest of

company to set up a staging post for ships

Africa, and elsewhere: all of these groupings

sailing for Southern and South-East Asia. From

go to make up the city and the region around.

then on a town gradually began to grow.

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COVER STORY

Workers were needed and slaves were brought in, especially from Indonesia, Madagascar and Bengal.They included exiles who had fought in their homelands against the rule of the Dutch – Muslim leaders from Indonesia and Malaysia, for example. It was they who founded the great Muslim tradition in the Cape. After a series of conflicts between the Dutch and the British, Cape Town finally came under British rule in 1814.The so-called Cape Colony then expanded considerably over the course of the 19th century. The city became the capital of South Africa for a time – from 1910 on – and today it is still the seat of the National Parliament and many institutions of government. From 1948 onwards, it, like all South Africa, was overshadowed by apartheid. But Cape Town produced many fighters against the system of racial segregation. Since apartheid ended in 1994, the city and the country as a whole have been in positive change, both in tourism and in the economy in general. But the city and the nation have also had to fight much harder against problems like HIV/AIDS, drugs, violent crime, robbery and not least, the disparity of rich and poor, between the monitored residential areas of the affluent and the townships. The hotel business has a long tradition in Cape Town and far pre-dates the tourist boom of recent years. One favourite domicile for visitors is the outstanding Alphen Hotel in the Constantia district, a Cape Town suburb, which spreads out on the mountain slopes that extend away towards False Bay, Two generations in the streets of the traditional Muslim quarter, the Bo Kaap.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

Muizenberg and Fish Hoek, and to the


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COVER STORY

Image: Yaseer Booley, Cape Town

southwest towards Hout Bay. Constantia,

mosque) is now one of the best-known

Almost a million Muslims currently live in

known as part of the Winelands, is one of

tourist attractions, drawing increasing

Cape Town and the surrounding region. Halal

the most sought-after residential areas.

numbers of Muslim visitors from areas such

products are of course widespread, retailers

as South-East Asia. In reality the people,

having adapted to Muslims as customers. For

The Alphen Hotel is a listed national

although known as the Cape Malay are not

visitors it is evident how openly and easily the

monument and it too is situated on a former

purely Indonesian or Malay, they are an

locals treat Islam and the Muslims.

wine estate. Surrounded by beautiful land-

ethnic mixture of Indonesian-Malay, Indian,

scape, and with its antique furniture and

Turkish-Osmanli, Arab, European, and to a

Cape Town is home to South Africa’s oldest

colonial architecture, the venerable old

significant extent also African.

mosque. The Dutch administration gave the

building radiates the charm of times gone by – but with present-day comfort.

Muslims increased religious freedom in 1803, The so-called ‘Coloured’ peoples make up the

in gratitude for their assistance in warding off

largest proportion of the region’s population,

the British. The oldest mosques include the

Muslims in the Cape

ahead of Europeans and black Africans. The

Awwal Mosque, or ‘First Mosque’ as the name

Like South Africa as a whole, Cape Town at

Cape’s most important language is Afrikaans,

suggests, and the Palm Mosque, in the Bo

its most southern tip has a very dynamic

which is based on Dutch, and this too has

Kaap and the city centre respectively, both of

Muslim population, which shapes the city

been influenced strongly by the Muslims in

which attract many visitors.

more than first meets the eye. The old Cape

its vocabulary, its pronunciation and its

Malay quarter in the city centre, known as

grammar. The first written documents in

The largest number of Muslims today inhabit

the Bo Kaap, with its pretty cottages and old

Afrikaans were in fact written using the

the area known as the Cape Flats, which

mosques (including Cape Town’s oldest

Arabic script.

extend over large stretches of the plains to

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


COVER STORY

the east of Table Mountain.There are numerous impressive mosques such as the Habibia Mosque, as well as schools like Islamia College.

Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir As-Sufi author and teacher

There are also orphanages, including those that take care of Aids orphans. Together with businesses, media and much more, these things go to make up a living infrastructure as is otherwise usually only found in majority Muslim countries. In the city centre, and very near to the old Bo Kaap quarter, the big new Jumua Mosque has been standing at the top end of Long Street since 2005. Established in a building designed by Herbert Baker, South Africa’s

The author and teacher Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi has been living in Cape Town for a number of years. There in that historical city at the southern tip of Africa, has been responsible for a successful work of Da’wa, and, as the founder of Dallas

financial crisis as well as the logical end of

College, concerned especially with the build-

the financial system.

ing-up of a young Muslim elite. Furthermore, a unique collection of impor-

most famous architect, allegedly after a visit to Istanbul, it was formerly used as a church and a civic centre, before it became what today it seems it has always been – a mosque. The mosque was founded by the community of Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi, who came

Image: Yaseer Booley, Cape Town

as in Europe, the USA and Asia before, he

His work is as broad as it is fascinating, and

tant discourses given to his Jama’at in Cape

in it he shows that the quintessence of

Town have recently been published. In the

European thought leads to the teachings of

light of the Qur’anic Revelation he teaches

Islam. Shaykh Abdalqadir, of Scottish origin,

Tawhid, the ‘Amal of Madinah and the

teaches among other things the founda-

temporality of man.

tional importance of the Muwatta of Imam

to Cape Town a number of years ago. As well

Malik, of which he commissioned the first

This year, inshallah, Shaykh Abdalqadir will

as Cape Malay, Indian and African Muslims,

full translation into English.

celebrate his 80th birthday with a large Moussem.

the mosque is also frequented by Muslims of European origin.

For several decades, Shaykh Abdalqadir has been involved on a practical level togeth-

The invitation to Islam among blacks and

er with his Community in the correct

coloureds received a significant boost from

establishment of what is a de-facto lost

the presence Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi.

pillar of Islam: Zakat. His important Fatwa

Islam has long been seen in much of South

against suicide attacks draws a clear,

Africa as the “religion of the Indians”, but of

widely-respected line between Islam and

late, more and more Africans and people of

terrorism/nihilism.

mixed race, including those in townships, have been entering Islam.

His books ‘Technique of the Coup de Banque’, ‘The Time of the Bedouin’ and

In the Jumua Mosque, the old ethnic

‘Political Renewal’ are modern classics of

divisions have disappeared entirely and the

political thought. For many years he has

universality of Islam – founded on the practice

been discussing in his political works the

of Madina and embodied in the Fiqh of Iman

problem of unfettered financial technology,

Malik – is clearly visible.

and in them he anticipated the current

One of Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir As-Sufi’s recent books, ‘The Time of The Bedouin’.

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COVER STORY

Poor children are riding the waves

Upon such principles, its community has once again established the authentic collection and distribution of Zakat, the obligatory tax on wealth assets. It is paid in pure gold,

“Everyone partakes in reading, hiking, swimming lessons, writing, and on some days – weather permitting – fishing.There are currently 38 children at our school.” This project is unique, “in that we don’t just concentrate on surfing. Our work extends beyond that: we mainly take care of the kids’ education and welfare,”

collected by an Amir, and handed out according to Qur’anic injunction, reawakening the practical social reality of Islamic practice. Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi founded not only the Jumua Mosque but also the Dallas Institute, a college offering higher education to young Muslims and a form of curriculum which is almost certainly unique.

explains Khan. Taking care of poor children does not just

The aim of the College is to train future leaders

mean the essential provision of shelter, food,

With regard to medical care there is a

medical assistance and so on.They also need

medical doctor from the Muslim

activities in which they can experience nature

community who assists when he is able.

as well as their own potential. One such inter-

“I also have a good friend who is a dentist

esting project in Cape Town is the Palama

and he provides free dentistry for the

behaviour they will play an active role in

Metsi Surf Development Academy (PMSDA)

children.”

conveying Islam, and further the positive

which serves Cape Town’s Muizenberg district

by giving students not only classical Islamic knowledge but also a means to understand the modern world. By this it is hoped that, strengthened by noble Islamic character and

transformation of society. The curriculum

and the nearby areas. “Palama Metsi” means

The project – as Shafiek Khan told us in

includes subjects such as geo-politics, history

“water-riders” in Sotho, which is one of the

an interview – has had such a strong

and European literature, as well as IT – not

official languages in South Africa.

effect on all the people involved that

found in traditional Muslim madrassas –

some of the older boys and a coach

alongside the great Muslim languages of

“Our school started two years ago as a

became Muslim through it. Since trans-

Arabic, Urdu and Turkish.

voluntary operation to help get kids off the

port is difficult they are looking for ways

street and away from drugs and abuse.At our

to incorporate a small Islamic teaching

It is no accident that Cape Town, although

school we use surfing as a medium to get

programme near the beach.

apparently at the “bottom of the world” is

children involved and guide them with the

for many people one of the world’s most

best intentions to ennoble themselves,”

Contact details for Shafiek Khan:

fascinating and attractive places. Part of this

reports Shafiek Khan, founder and director of

africahaveaball@yahoo.com

is surely derived from the spirit of optimism

this innovative project.

+27 (0)825 648520

that prevailed in its founding years, as well as the relative freedoms, which set in after

Children from every walk of life are presently

the end of apartheid.

attending a two-day-weekly surfing course with the PMSDA coaching team. Lifesaving

It is that very spirit of optimism which

is another option for the older boys, which

encourages growth and innovation, but

stimulates them mentally and physically.“That

whether it continues will depend upon the

also offers an employment opportunity for

future political development of South Africa

them once they have completed the course,”

as a whole.

says Shafiek Khan.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

Text By Yasin Alder


Image: Yaseer Booley, Cape Town

COVER STORY

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ECONOMY

community and in the OIC countries, trade

STILL STRONG

barriers and other technical and political

M. EROL YARAR ON TURKEY’S ECONOMY

matters were discussed. This year, it will be in Istanbul again, insha

M. Erol Yarar is a successful Turkish businessman

Allah, and our Istanbul meeting is always

and is the founder of the Turkish entrepreneurs’

backed up by MÜSIAD’s trade fair, one of the

organisation MÜSIAD, an Islamically oriented organisation of traders and business people. He

biggest in the Islamic OIC countries, if not the biggest. On the first day there will be the Forum and

is currently chairman of the International

on the second day the opening of the MÜSIAD

Business Forum (IBF), which is a similar organisa-

fair, backed up by business-to-business discussion sessions.

tion, but on an international level, and is especially active in the countries of the Organisation

Globalia: Is the International Business

of the Islamic Conference, (OIC). In the interview

MÜSIAD at an international level?

Mr. Yarar speaks about the role of Muslim

Forum (IBF) basically an extension of

Erol Yarar: MÜSIAD is the main supporting

businessmen in the current situation and what

body of the IBF. Of course, MÜSIAD is a Turkish

Islam has to offer to the world economy.

organisation, with IBF being an international organisation. Both organisations are co-ordinating their efforts. IBF has 30 affiliated mem-

Globalia: Mr. Yarar, could you please tell

countries and cities, like Malaysia, Iran, Abu

ber countries and member associations, and

us a bit about the IBF and its latest

Dhabi, Jeddah and Cairo, venue for the last

all representatives of IBF member countries

activities?

one which took place this year. We have

come together during IBF meetings.This is the

established a rhythm whereby we meet one

Board of Governors which incorporates the

M. Erol Yarar: The IBF was founded in 1995

year in Istanbul and the next year in other

structure of IBF.

during a meeting which was arranged when

countries.

we were invited to Pakistan by the Pakistan

Globalia: How is Turkey affected by the

Business Forum. We came up with the idea

The meeting this year in Cairo was , in asso-

of establishing an international business

ciation with the Cairo Chamber of Commerce,

organisation to unite different associations

under the auspices of the Foreign Trade

M. Erol Yarar: Turkey is of course affected

within different countries.

Ministries of Egypt and the Turkes. It was a

because Turkey is an export oriented country.

financial crisis?

large event which assembled more than 1,000

Our exports have dropped by around 20 per

We brought up the issue of establishing a

businessmen from outside Egypt and another

cent. But the internal economy is not so bad.

forum, which we named the International

1,000 from Egypt. It was held over two days;

The Turkish economy has a very dynamic

Business Forum. In the following year we

the first day being the Conference day and

relationship with its neighbouring countries,

organised a large gathering in Istanbul

the second concerned with business

and these new links sustained economic

where it was decided that Istanbul should

matchmaking sessions and a number of

activity with the result that we did not feel

be the headquarters of the IBF. Since then

panels in which current business issues, the

the crisis so much. But the Turkish economy

we have held many conferences in different

problems being faced both within the Islamic

was affected to some extent.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


ECONOMY

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ECONOMY

Globalia: Is Turkey nowadays orienting

centre of inspiration for the OIC countries

key starting point: too often we were ignorant

itself economically more to eastern,

in terms of economic policy, civil society,

of what we were eating – a bad situation for

Asian and Islamic countries rather than

human rights and not least, in terms of

the Muslim community all around the globe.

towards Europe?

entrepreneurship; how to guide and to

As you know, the Jewish community has

enhance it. It now serves an important role

the kosher standard, closely regulated by the

M. Erol Yarar: Turkey had a stronger

model for all OIC countries. I think this

religious rabbis. Even people in Muslim

connection to Europe ten years ago when I

importance has surpassed MÜSIAD’s

societies buy kosher food when they are not

think most of the hard trade was with the

importance in Turkey.

sure what they are eating, because they can

West. At that time we were very much

be sure that there is no pork in it.

opposed to any other idea and the importance

Globalia: On a global level, the so-called

of neighbouring countries was neglected.

‘halal business’ is playing an increasingly

It was in a way shameful for the Muslim

important role. Is it true for the Turkish

society to be in such a situation. What we

economy?

realised first of all was that it was a fatwa

But the new government, which has been very effective in its policies for nearly the last

situation, yet we found out that there was

seven years, has changed this direction and has developed a more balanced approach to

very little intelligence on the matter from the

But the new government

Islamic scholars. Either they did not know

its neighbouring countries – with the support

which has been very

the technical issues or they were not very

of the foreign trade minister, our prime

effective in its policies

aware of the problem.

minister and our government in general,

for the last seven years

Turkey has extended its trade relationships with the neighbouring countries. So now, the

has changed direction

In Egypt we accomplished a lot regarding this issue over the past years, and recently the

relationship with the East and the West, the

and has developed a

issue of genetically modified foods has been

North and the South is more balanced – as

more balanced approach

raised.

should be the case. Turkey does not want to

to its neighbouring coun-

be dependent on any one area.

tries – with the support

This should be an increasingly important aspect of the halal issue. It was MÜSIAD

Globalia: What role do businessmen

of the foreign trade mi-

members who brought this issue up, would

within MÜSIAD play inside Turkey?

nister, our prime minis-

there was indeed a great lack of information

ter and our government

regarding the issue as there were no bio-

Erol Yarar: They are very effective. We constitute more than 10,000 companies; export-

in general, Turkey has

oriented companies, representing more than

extended its trade rela-

10 per cent of Turkish exports – a major part

tionships with the neigh-

of the GNP of Turkey – and employing – close

bouring countries.

to one million people.

medics or biologists within the Islamic community to comment or to guide the Islamic scholars on the issue. I believe it is an international Islamic issue and I know that the OIC is striving very much to resolve it. Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,

So MÜSIAD is very effective in the Turkish

Erol Yarar: Yes, of course. I mean, there is

the general secretary of OIC, is personally

economy and is getting more and more so

always a fatwa problem within the halal

involved in solving this problem within the

by the year, although it is still a young -

concept, and we discussed this matter at the

madhhabs and trying to unite the madhhabs

organisation, just 20 years old next year. It

last IBF meeting in Cairo.Within MÜSIAD we

and their different views so that a unity can

is highly professional, with effective

have some experts dealing with this issue.

be achieved.

governance, with vision, dynamism and

Even 20 years ago, when we founded MÜSIAD,

energy. Most importantly it has become a

it was an important issue as halal food is a

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

I also think that political will is very important


ECONOMY

for this. Politicans have to show determina-

rules of Allah, in avoiding riba and promoting

tion to overcome this issue. If they do, I think

trade and economic activity – towards entre-

Islamic scholars will rally to unite their

preneurship, joint ventures, partnership and

judgements and come up with a single fatwa,

also debt without riba.

first in the general sense of the halal food concept, and secondly for new concepts like

We have a lot to give to the world. The last

genetically modified foods. MÜSIAD is very

economic crisis has shown that this extensive

much aware of the importance of this issue

use of riba produced so much paper money

and is working on it all the time.

in the world economy that it could not be matched by collateral – namely the products

Globalia: In your talk at the Young

themselves. While there is a lot of money,

MÜSIAD Germany conference in Berlin,

there are fewer products on the world market.

you mentioned the Qur’anic ayat in which

In fact, they do not know what to do with this

Allah has declared riba as haram and has

mass of paper.

declared trade as halal.You also said that

Erol Yarar, head of the IBF.

understand. I believe that we have to

Islamic rules and ethics can have a

This is time-bomb which is still ticking. They

promote joint ventures, we have to promote

positive influence on global economic

pumped more money into the system to try

partnerships and we have to promote debt

practics. Can you explain this a bit more

to overcome the problem and so there is even

without riba, which is friendship. We should

in detail?

more paper money now than before the crisis

not always think about earning money by

started. It is like a tsunami – you do not know

lending money.

Erol Yarar: The Prophet Muhammad was a

where it is going to hit next.

businessman himself, and his wife was also

Globalia: How does a Muslim business-

a tradeswoman. Most of his companions

Although interest rates have fallen a great

were also tradesmen. So the Qur’an came to

deal, inside some countries to nearly zero,

a people who were very much involved in

we still continue to support the idea of

Erol Yarar: A businessman wants to earn

trade.That the Qur'an is held to be valid until

promoting entrepreneurs without charging

money, while a Muslim businessman is

the Last Day of the universe is an indication

them any interest, and instead become

always questioning the way of doing this,

that in the coming centuries the economy

partners with them.

would be of utmost importance.

man differ from a non-Muslim one?

how to do find a halal way of earning money. Profit is not the only thing he is

We will show the world that prosperity can

interested in. For example, he cannot deal

If this is the case, it means that Allah subhana

come with a just economic system. Money

in alcohol.

wa ta’ala has prepared us for an under-

may not bring happiness, but justice will. If

standing of trade, governance and regulation

we succeed, then we will share our profit, if

Another aspect is how he spends his money.

of the economy in such an ethical way that

we do not succeed, then we will not be in

For us, Allah has shown us how we should

prosperity will come along with justice. In the

debt, and no one will lose.

earn and how we should spend our money

capitalist world we see that economic

in a halal way. In capitalism, any kind of

prosperity brings neither justice nor neces-

So it is a win or lose situation, for everybody.

profit is strived for, and it does not matter

sarily happiness.

When transactions are based on interest,

how the money is spent. As Muslims, we are

loss of money would still leave the original

not allowed to waste money, we have to

If we want wealth only, perhaps Allah may

debt, while in the event of making a profit,

pay the Zakat and so on.

give us it but not necessarily happiness, since

one would still have to pay one’s debts,

happiness is felt in the heart. Accordingly, we

plus the riba. This is a very important part

Globalia: Erol Yarar, thank you very much

follow the path of our Prophet and obey the

of the economy that everybody should

for the interview.

16

17


ECONOMY

Text By Sulaiman Wilms

Gold, more and more ordinary people want it as an alternative to losing their savings.

Ironically, the increase in demand for gold

THE EAGLE IS GROUNDED

has also led to negative side effects.

GOLD: THE HALT IN SALES CONFIRMS APPEAL

Among other things, speculators and other “investors” use precious metals and other commodities of natural value in order to

In times of uncertain relationships and shaky

further operate their business in seemingly

confidence, gold and other precious metals are

safe speculative markets.

made the focus of private investors as well as

The increase in the price of gold and the

entire nations. Recently though, a report by the

continuing deteriorating economic conditions

US Mint prompted attention, when it stated that

also lead to a situation where the ordinary

the popular ‘American eagle’ was temporarily not for sale.

consumer, who for obvious reasons would like to acquire more gold, cannot afford to due to the worsening economic climate. It is for this reason that the demand for gold has

“We are left with gold. Whether in your

heavy loss-making stock markets rightly hold

declined in Turkey. Here – in a sad irony –

camp there is hyperinflation or deflation

on to their precious metals. “Increasing

sections of the population are having to sell

(or any other of the ‘flations’), gold is

worries about inflation, a failing U.S. dollar

their gold in order to survive.

king, regardless of spot price.” (Tarek

and geopolitical tensions are prompting

Saab, ‘The Crash, Cash & Gold’)

individual investors to take physical pos-

On the other hand, US consumer demand,

session of gold coins [...] as a safe haven in

particularly for the one-ounce ‘American eagle’

In times of volatility, those whose retirements

financial and political crises,” reported the

(gold), reached levels that the US mint could

were not destroyed by mortgages or in the

Reuters news agency recently.

– at the end of last year – no longer meet,

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


ECONOMY

forcing them to suspend sales. Critics of the

have been impossible that the mint could

distributed by Liberty Services. In May 2009

US financial administration have implied that

have been in a position where it was unable

von NotHaus and others were accused of

there may be more sinister motives.

to supply the popular coin. Rather, according

federal crimes in connection with the Liberty

to an unnamed source, the reason for the

Dollar. On 31 July 2009, he stated that he

Demand for the coin

temporary stops was that the mint was

had to suspend the entire alternative

Since the US mint first began to distribute the

unwilling to deliver.

currency operation until the trial was over.

At the core of the criticism is an obvious

In contrast to complementary alternative

has proven very successful.The price of these

break with logic. On the one hand, due to the

currencies, Liberty Dollars were based on their

coins – a popular variety is also available in

demand for the one-ounce coins from consu-

weight in metal and were of real value –

silver – is in line with the market value [spot

mers – triggered by the comparatively low

gold, silver, platinum and copper. “Real

price] of their precious metal content, and

price of gold – the supply could no longer be

money like gold and silver holds its value, it

not

unit.

maintained. Later it was explained that

is the US dollar that buys less and less,”

According to a statement from the US mint,

because of the high price of blank gold

explained von NotHaus in a lengthy, online

“With the US congress-authorised American

coins, nobody was able to deliver.

statement of 13 January 2010, pending

‘American eagle’ in 1986, the gold coin, offered in weights of 1/10, 1/4, 1/2 and 1 ounce

the

currency

eagle coins [bullion], they offer an easy and cost effective way to incorporate a small

criminal proceedings against him. This argument was – in the eyes of those

amount of physical platinum, gold or silver

critics – simply absurd. The American eagle

“The value of the US dollar is worth less and

into your portfolio. Since its inception in 1986,

is a sign of lasting value. Everyone knows the

less so it takes more and more of them to buy

the American eagle coins made of gold,

coin. By May 2009 – as before – there was

the same goods and services. Most people

platinum and silver have been the leading

also a temporary halt in the sale of the equally

think prices have gone up, but actually, it is

investment product on the market in terms

successful American eagle in silver. The fact

the value of the US dollar that has gone

of bullion coins.”

that the ‘unnamed insiders’ were not just the

down,” the self-proclaimed “monetary archi-

usual critics is underpinned by the fact that

tect” said, describing the fact that the price

Now a press release from the end of last

the temporary suspension was also reported

of gold has risen exponentially since the dis-

November caused ears to prick up. It stated

by news outlets such as Reuters and Yahoo,

connection between gold and the dollar.

that the mint had run out of supplies of the

as well as more specific professional news

one-ounce coin and that due to popular

services.

Services cannot take a joke The federal authorities were unwilling to

demand it could no longer be sold for that particular timespan. But in November 2009

Dangerous freedom

accept – despite allegedly ambiguous

alone, coins weighing a total of 124,000

The search for crisis-proof investment and

statements from individual officials – an

ounces in gold should have been sold.

savings products for US citizens not only

alternative. On 14 November 2007, agents

Ostensibly, the necessary gold blank coins

leads to empty shelves, but in extreme cases,

from the FBI and the secret services raided

for the minting were no longer available at

can also have very tangible criminal conse-

various offices belonging to Liberty Dollar.

end of last year. “Due to the unforeseen

quences, as was the case with the former

According to an email from Bernard von

demand for the American eagle, gold

alternative currency: the “Liberty Dollar.”

NotHaus to clients and friends, the FBI confis-

supplies have been exhausted. We have,

cated all the gold, silver and platinum.

therefore, temporarily suspended the sale

The project was conceived in the form of

Moreover, the computers and files were seized

of these coins,” stated a memorandum

coined precious metals, gold and silver

and the accounts frozen.

issued by the mint to US wholesalers.

certificates and a complementary electronic currency. Until July 2009, the Liberty

In May 2009, von NotHaus and three others

Expressions of doubt

Dollar, initiated by Bernard von NotHaus –

were indicted before a federal grand jury in

According to critical industry insiders, it would

co-founder of the Royal Hawaiian mint – was

the US district court in Statesville (North

18

19


ECONOMY

Carolina). He himself was arrested on 6 June

Since then, nearly every country – especially

foreign exchange reserves). They are

2009. The indictment was on several indivi-

the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and

followed by Germany with 3,413 tonnes.

dual counts, which in essence stated that

China) who slowly but surely want to free

Officially, the International Monetary Fund

Liberty minted coins that – contrary to federal

themselves from the global dominance of

(IMF) is the third largest holder of the precious

law – were meant to be similar to legal

the dollar as a medium of exchange – have

metal with 3,217 tonnes. However its partial

tender. On 28 July 2009, von NotHaus

given speeches indicating that they want

sell off is the cornerstone of a new income

pleaded not guilty on all charges.

to increase their gold reserves.

model to reduce the IMF’s dependency on income revenue from credit.

The criticism of the concept of the Liberty

Mark Robinson, an expert on investment

Dollar (voiced by people otherwise well-

bullion [Bullion], considers this to be an

Confronting reality

disposed to monetary alternatives) was that

extremely ambitious project. If Beijing

The real value of gold (along with other real

it contradicted the basic concept of mea-

really wants to reach 10,000 tonnes in ten

potential means of exchange, this author

suring the weight of the precious metal used

years time, then it has to acquire 1,000

would suggest) should not however, accor-

with the design of the coin, drawing people

tonnes a year from now. China has already

ding to Tarek Saab in “The Crash, Cash &

to the false conclusion that the Liberty Dollar

invested large amounts in the discovery of

Gold”, be measured by its “performance” on

was legal tender and not a private voluntary

new deposits. The Chinese economic ex-

the stock market. Because, “Since gold is true

currency.

pansion into Africa, particularly in its

money, and intrinsically, fiat currency is hardly

resource-rich regions must be understood

worth the paper it is written on, then the

Von NotHaus disagreed with this view:

in this respect. This trend in Beijing’s policy

value of assets in terms of gold is a better

“Please remember, the Liberty Dollar is a

on reserve currencies is also corroborated in

barometer of gold’s performance than its

private voluntary barter currency. It is not

the evaluation of the third quarter (Q3) of

price in dollars.”

government money so it is not intended to

2009 in a recent report by the World Gold

be used as ‘legal tender’, ‘current money’ or

Council (WGC). Whilst the rates of purchase,

“[...] When measured over a wider swathe of

a ‘coin’.”

year on year (Q3/2008 to Q3/2009) were

time, we see a clearer picture of gold’s

lower, mainland China was the notable

formidableness. Gold’s performance lays

The nations are looking for gold

exception. In the third quarter of 2009, its

waste to the notion that the economy is

The raiding of private homes by government

gold purchases had increased by 10 percent.

‘strengthening’ or in ‘recovery,’ and mani-

agents, as has happened in the US and else-

In terms of investment bullion, demand from

fests the stark, decade-long decline of our

where, ostensibly because of attempts to

end consumers increased by 30 percent when

nation’s economy.” Gold’s worth currently,

establish altenative currencies, seems to have

compared with the third quarter of 2008.

as we have shown, is not in its function as a new speculative object – when there are

become a viable option internationally and appears to be a result of the increasingly

Additionally, figures also increased in the

weaknesses in the various financial deri-

unstable reserve currency.

Middle East as well as in the United States –

vatives and paper currencies – but rather in

the two are also important markets. This was

its function as a currency and as a safe

According to an article by David Lew in

due to the WGC’s announcement that it was

investment option.

“Commodity Online” (01 December 2009)

a particularly strong quarter. Significantly,

China wants to increase its national gold

however, the 17 per cent decline in the US

The question we have to ask ourselves, as

reserves – to the massive amount of 10,000

between 2008 and 2009 correlates to the 9

enlightened people, is how to position

tonnes over the next ten years.

percent depreciation of the dollar.

ourselves in civil society given this apparent trend. A rational option – that has not been

In April 2009, Beijing announced that it had

At the moment, everything is as usual. The

dismissed by representatives of the current

already increased its gold holdings from 454

United States have the largest reserves with

financial system – would be that states at

tonnes in 2003 to the current amount of 1,054.

8,133 tonnes of gold (76.3 percent of its

least give their citizens the freedom to choose

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


20

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AFRICA

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


AFRICA

region, tribal militia not affiliated with the

SUDAN: TABLOID GEOPOLITICS

rebels, such as the nomadic Abbala.While the

THE CONTOURS OF CONFLICT IN DARFUR

Abbala camel-nomads have been described as forming the backbone of the feared Janjaweed, proxy forces of Khartoum, the

In an age of media-politics where complex issues

reality is that Janjaweed is a blanket term

are reduced to ‘sound bites’ carrying politically

for roaming, criminal militia on horseback,

charged meaning, we are reminded of Marshall

not having any particular ethnic source or political affiliation.

McLuhan who famously wrote that ‘the medium is the message’, meaning that what reaches us through modern media format is usually subject to a repackaging which renders news as

The results were high levels of destruction in the rural homelands of the tribes comprising the bulk of the two rebel groups, namely the Zaghawa, Fur and Massalite tribes, but also including the Tungur, Bergid and Dagu tribes.

‘entertainment’ or involves degrees of intrigue

The geographical significance of these attacks

designed to capture an audience’s imagination

reveals the other driving issue in this conflict: competition over fertile land and water.

for a suitable period on issues, which in many cases oversimplify and serve an unsaid agenda.

When Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai said in 2004 that, “The roots of the Darfur conflict is a struggle over controlling

The situation in Darfur is no different, itself

Darfur, trying to prevent an unproven geno-

an environment that can no longer support

being reformatted as an intriguing and racially

cide, at a time in which popular mobilisation

all the people who must live in it,” she was

motivated conflict between an Arab Islamist

against the illegal Iraq war is nowhere to be

alluding to the ecological aspect of the

government, native African farmers and

seen.

conflict, an issue ignored in mainstream

Contours of Conflict

as opposed to causes. The Fur, Massaliet,

In 2003, the SLA and JEM rebel movements

Tungur, Bergid and Dagu tribal homelands

The effect has been a mobilised campaign

led an insurgency against government tar-

are situated around the verdant Jebel Marra

involving all calibres of people, from celebrities

gets in Northern Darfur.The rebels destroyed

mountain range in central Darfur, the area

tribes in Darfur, a situation which calls for action.

analysis which tends to focus on outcomes

to students and Zionist groups to African-

89 police stations and killed up to 400 police

most affected by violence.The lush vegetation

American organizations, who are calling for

officers as well as destroying a number of

of this 70km mountain range stands in con-

an end to the atrocities, usually demanding

government aircraft. The rebels who laun-

trast to the stark desert of north Darfur and

some sort of United Nations authorizsed inter-

ched the attacks were transported in around

provides the means of survival to whoever

vention to halt the claimed ‘genocide’. The

40 brand new Land-Cruisers carrying

controls it. Access to these lands has been

common denominator in this mobilisation,

advanced weaponry and modern satellite

one of the driving forces of the conflict.

as explained by Mahmud Mamdani in his

communication, equipment Khartoum claims

book ‘Saviours and Survivors: Darfur, Politics,

the rebels could not access nor afford with-

Mahmud Mamdani writes that,“In the 1960’s,

and the War on Terror’, has been the moral

out foreign assistance. The government of

when the Sahelian drought hit the region and

high-ground claimed by these diverse groups,

Sudan responded with a brutal counter-insur-

the desert began to move southwards, a full

including the mass media, which see them-

gency, in the process arming, through there

one hundred kilometers in four decades, many

selves as the allies of the dispossessed in

being insufficient government forces in the

of the inhabitants of the Sahel – both nomads

22

23


AFRICA

tariqas. The Mahdi also continued the centralising political plan of the historic Darfurian Sultanates. In contrast to the selfreinforcing and exclusive power structures of hereditary tribal groupings in Darfur from the mid 17th century, a Sultanate emerged whose power base comprised a multi-ethnic and amalgamated tribal bloc and a significant slave population incorporated into the standing armies of this Sultanate.This had the effect of diluting the influence of the larger tribes, as well as bolstering the power of the and settled people – began to move, some

The newcomers insisted on their right of

Sultan at the expense of chiefs and tribal

south, others east, all in the direction of the

equal access to land based on the fact that

leaders through detribalising land owner-

Jebel Marra, which is flanked on its southern

they, like the sedentary populations, were

ship, instead making it the preserve of the

side by the Al-Arab River…and is thus the one

citizens of Sudan and thus entitled to access

Sultan who would parcel out land in a manner

certain source of sustenance in an increasingly

to communal territory, a position the seden-

conducive to political stability, creating

arid land. Just as the drought knew no

tary Fur, amongst others, rejected due to the

individually owned properties, alongside

borders, those affected by it also shed their

rights sedentary groups enjoyed under the

communal property, in effect, a balance of

sense of borders, whether between coun-

judicial structure pertaining to land which

power scenario.

tries or between tribal homelands, as they

Sudan had inherited from the British. Mamdani explains that Islam served as the

groped for ways to survive.”

Imam Mahdi

glue which bound together the various tribes

The bulk of the ecologically displaced people

It was from Darfur that the forces which in-

of the region, “The Mahdi’s rallying cry was

of North Sudan came from the culturally non-

flicted a humiliating defeat upon the British

simple: for justice to exist, Islam must be

Arab Zaghawa and Bedeyat, and the cultu-

in the 1880’s were mobilised. Led by Imam

purified. Islam provided the ideology that

rally Arab, Abbala tribes comprised of the

Muhammad Ahmed, a multi-ethnic group of

rallied the multiplicity of ethnic groups and

Mahamid, Beni Hussein, Mahariya and

soldiers and horsemen took up arms against

the glue to bind a trans-ethnic movement.”

Irayqat. While the Zaghawa, extending into

the British and Ottoman-Egyptian forces con-

The role of Sufi tariqas served to enhance the

Chad, are a mix of sedentary farmers and

trolling the country. The Mahdi, as he called

power of the Mahdi, with various Shaykhs

camel nomads, the Abbala by contrast are

himself, declared jihad against the foreign

endorsing the anti-colonial jihad.

almost entirely nomadic, moving with their

powers in 1881 and eventually succeeded in

camel herds across the Sahel region, having

driving both the Egyptian and later the British

Mamdani writes that the Mahdiyya deeply

no permanent homelands, just a traditionally

forces out of the country.The event was deeply

disrupted the tribal structure in Sudan, noting

symbiotic relationship with other tribes and

felt by the British Empire, whose government

that power was not only challenged from

peoples encountered along their migratory

mouthpiece The Daily News, wrote, “Seldom

below, in response to the call for jihad, but

routes .The effects of the drought meant that

in the memory of living man has news been

from above as well from the highly centralised

as these groups moved south and east in

received of such a disaster in England.”

Mahdist state. The autocratic Mahdi saw the power wielded by tribal Shaykhs as a direct

search of suitable pasture, they sought access to the lands of the Fur, Tungur, Dagu and

The significance of the Mahdi lay in three

challenge to his supreme authority and as a

Bergid communities who decided that the

interconnected strands: the movement

result took offensive action against such

land could not sustain the newcomers as well

emerged from Darfur, the movement was

groupings. One such tribe, the Kababish “were

as themselves.

trans-ethnic, and was held together by Sufic

not sufficiently submissive” and as a result

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


AFRICA

had their money and flocks confiscated and

dominion over Darfur and Sudan, the British

the west (Darfur, Kordofan etc), British

their leadership suppressed, with the Kababish

sought to undo the heterogeneity of the

colonialism championed a policy of retriba-

“practically ceasing to exist as a people.”

Sultanate and the progress of the Mahdi

lisation, “heralding ‘tribe’ as the authentic

And again, “Given the duration and depth of

through a policy of ‘divide and rule’ once they

political identity of Africans as opposed to all

its impact on society, the Mahdiyya must be

reclaimed control of key parts of the country

other wider trans-local identities.”

regarded as a revolutionary movement.When

under General H.H. Kitchener in 1898. The

revolution came to Darfur, it was not Sparta-

key was to retribalise Darfur, and indeed

British strategy involved eliminating private

cist, but Sufi.The soldier slaves in Darfur were

Sudanese society in order to fragment Mahdist

land ownership and, instead, redistributing

always armed, and they constituted the bulk

power, emphasising tribal allegiances as

land as communal property, putting it not

of the Sultan’s army. Slavery was a counter-

opposed to obedience to a Sultan, alongside

under the control of an overarching author-

weight to tribal identity and a building block

a policy of indirect rule through subservient

ity such as a Sultan, but rather dividing the

of state formation. But the armed slaves of

local rulers. Mamdani writes that “British

land up into tribal homelands, according to

Darfur did not provide its revolutionaries.

administrative policy in the colony of Sudan

ethnic groups identified in census collections.

Churchill understood this better than any

was shaped by one supreme objective: to

colonial official. It is Sufism that heralded an

remove every trace of Mahdist influence from

The effect of this retribalisation was to have

egalitarian rebellion against authority.” Islam,

the country by attacking the very basis of its

far reaching consequences for the Darfuri

as opposed to nationalism or tribal allegiance,

trans-ethnic mobilisation.”

was at the heart of the anti-colonial rebellion.

once the Sahelian drought forced an unsettling pattern of migration, for alongside

Whereas the Mahdi had pushed forward a

the redistribution of land into tribal homelands

Recognising the danger that these political

centralising governance structure uniting for

came a further discriminatory policy; that of

and spiritual developments posed to foreign

the first time the lands of riverine Sudan with

providing access to land to people the British

The encroachment of the Sahel belt is one of the core reasons for the conflict in Darfur.

24

25



AFRICA

designated ‘settled’ such as the sedentary

nomadic Abbala, the government commis-

assistance for the belligerent parties. The

Fur, a category further reinforced by the British

sioner of Nyala granted the Hamdania tribe

German jurist Carl Schmitt wrote that “the

classification of the tribes in Sudan according

a piece of land south of Nyala in government

concept of humanity is an especially useful

to race. This meant that ‘settled’ peoples in

registered land which fell within the Fur

ideological instrument of imperialist expan-

Darfur, determined as being more African

magdumate or province.The Fur had not been

sion, and in its ethical-humanitarian form it

than Arab, being accorded the status of nati-

consulted and took up arms, leading to

is a specific vehicle of economic imperia-

ves of the land, and enjoying more rights than

renewed violence and grievances against

lism.” Aid agency CARE International, opera-

the Darfuri Arabs who had, according to the

Khartoum.

ting in Sudan, has for example, received

British, migrated there from the Middle East

funding from one of the world’s largest

and elsewhere. This distinction has been

The crisis in Darfur is very much a product of

proven false and only served to exacerbate

judicial failure within a biased legal struc-

tensions between groups, where natives, ac-

ture inherited from British colonialism which

cording to the British system, had more rights – and political representation – than settlers. Mamdani writes that “For all populations,

armaments manufacturers, Lockheed Martin. Reports of proxy warfare and foreign assistance for rebel groups only serve to

The crisis in Darfur is very much a product of judi-

reinforce Sudanese government fears of destabilisation. The strategic value of Sudan cannot be underestimated: the sanctions

nomadic and sedentary, the effect of the

cial failure within a biased

against it and the US-promoted isolation of

ecological crisis filtered through the land and

legal structure inherited

Sudan are leading to the vacuum being filled

governance system created during the colonial

from British colonialism

by the Chinese. US fears centre on the future

period.” Thus a civil war developed in the region during the 1980’s between tribes with land rights and those without, notably invol-

which prevented an equitable handling of both the

relations between Sudan and the People’s Republic of China. Sudan could in effect become the centre of Chinese military and

ving the Zaghawa and Mahariya against the

effects of ecological

logistical presence in the Horn of Africa,

Fur tribes who refused to accommodate their

displacement

and

notwithstanding the fact that Sudan shares

claims to land based on common Sudanese

traditional conflict medi-

the same waterway with Saudi Arabia and

citizenship. Zaghawa settlements were destroyed and their leaders executed, with the same meted out to the Fur. Zaghawans who moved to urban areas had more success in business

ation, and further exac-

Israel, making it a critically significant territory bordering the Middle East.

erbated by governmental shortsightedness.

The Unified Combatant Command of the US,

than those in rural areas and came into con-

AFRICOM, which has military jurisdiction

tinual conflict with tribal militia. In 1989, a

over all of Africa bar Egypt, works alongside

reconciliation meeting took place between the

prevented an equitable handling of both the

CENTCOM – which covers the Middle East

belligerents, and what emerged was that both

effects of ecological displacement and tradi-

and Central Asia – regarding strategic

the Fur and the Abbala saw themselves as

tional conflict mediation, further exacerbated

planning and force deployment. Reports of

victims of a campaign of extermination, the

by governmental shortsightedness.

Sudanese air force planes taking off from Chinese oil installations before bombing

Fur alleging a genocide had been perpetrated against them and the Abbala claiming to

“Cry havoc and the dogs of war”

rebel troops in Darfur only serve to reinforce

be the victims of a holocaust.The significance

The media portrayal of the Darfur conflict

this fear.

of this, as Mamdani notes, is that these were

represents the ‘tip of the iceberg’ in relation to

the views of the belligerents before the Arab

the deeper geo-strategic manoeuverings

The author is currently teaching for the Dallas

government of Omer al-Bashir took power.

underway in Sudan. Hiding behind the calls

Institute, Cape Town.

for humanitarian intervention in Sudan lie In a clumsy attempt to pacify the landless,

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

unspoken interests and covert foreign

Text By Dawud Stewart Hurrell

26

27


ASIA

On 29th January 1819, Stamford Raffles,

SINGAPORE: A CASE STUDY FROM SULTANATE TO BRAVE NEW WORLD

Governor General of Bencoolen, landed on the shores of Singapore.That arrival would shape the next one hundred and forty four years of the island’s history. Singapore on that day

With regards to its evolution over the last forty

was still de jure part of the Johor Sultanate

years since independence, Lee Kuan Yew boasted

of Tengku Abdur Rahman, although in practice it was under the administration and

of taking Singapore from the status of a third-

legislation of the local vizier, Temenggung

world nation-state to that of a first-world nation-

Abdur Rahman. Convinced that the British

state. In reality, Singapore’s Independence Day marked the direction the small City-State Island would take: not reaching first-world status but rather a Brave New World status.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

needed a new base in Southeast Asia and with the support of Lord Hastings, the Governor General of India, Raffles had set out on a mission to find the most strategic spot in the region: firstly, to counter Dutch colonial ambitions there and secondly, to enhance the


ASIA

Text By Hasbullah Shafi’iy

sea trade route between Britain and China.

catalyst to the transition. The exiled Hussein

ing post in Singapore. Four years later, on the

Singapore seemed at once to be the ideal

Mu’azzam Shah, who was considered by some

7th of June 1823, having realised how bene-

geopolitical decision. Its transition from Sulta-

of the nobility in Johor, as well as Temenggung

ficial Singapore might be for British power in

nate to a British colony had commenced.

Abdur Rahman, to be the legitimate heir to

Southeast Asia, Raffles signed a second treaty

the Johor Sultanate, was immediately recog-

with the same two puppets, that extended

Tengku Abdur Rahman was under the influ-

nised by the British as the new Sultan and

British possession to most of the island.

ence of the Dutch and therefore would never

smuggled into Singapore despite Dutch indig-

agree to a British base in Singapore, while the

nation. Through financial support and

In other words, the island was purchased by

Dutch had not yet realised the strategic

political recognition, Raffles gained both

the British for the meagre annual stipends of

significance of the island. Raffles had thus to

Hussein Shah’s and the Temenggung’s favour

$1,500 and $800, going to the newly recog-

undertake a Machiavellian approach to the

to establish the base in Singapore that

nised Tengku, Hussein Shah, and the old Te-

matter to swiftly secure it as a new British

would soon become a colony.

menggong respectively.This was just a minor preview of British machinations in the greater

colony. He calculated the prevalent political tension over the legitimacy of Tengku Abdur

On 6th February 1819, Raffles signed a treaty

Muslim world over the next century – one only

Rahman’s succession to the throne of his late

with Hussein Shah and the Temenggung that

has to think of the procuring of Shah

father to be the loophole that could be the

gave Britain permission to establish a trad-

Muzaffaruddin of Persia in return for the entire

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unexplored petroleum fields of Persia, or of

and parliamentary politics led to the setting

Independence Day marked the direction the

Shaikh Mubarak Al-Sabah in return for the

up of first an Executive Council and then a

City-State Island would take: not reaching

Gulf port of Kuwait and not least, Sheriff

Legislative Council that eventually ended up

first-world status but rather a Brave New

Hussein in return for Jerusalem and the break-

in a merger with Malaysia. That too did not

World status.

up of the Hijaz from the Ottoman Sultanate.

last and finally Singapore became an indepen-

The procurement of Singapore increased

dent City-State on 9th August 1965 under

The image of Singapore – impeccably clean

the rule of the People’s Action Party (PAP).

and crime-free, free of slums or poverty,

tension between the British, who now had the

minimal unemployment, a multi-racial society

upper hand, and the Dutch who were quite

Lee Kuan Yew, the first Prime Minister and

living in harmony with one of the world’s

appalled at the situation. There followed the

current Minister Mentor, wept on the day

highest GDP growth rates and a highly

1824 Anglo-Dutch treaty for a final break-up

Singapore was given independence. He

efficient transport system – hides the subtle

of the Malay Archipelago.The Malaccan Strait

mentioned that all his adult life he had

and silent oppression that lurks beneath.

became the dividing line between the two

believed in the Malaysian merger and the

powers – north to the British and south to

unity of the two territories. The idea of the

Aldous Huxley published ‘Brave New World’

the Dutch. Almost a century later, the Sykes-

merger was to make Singapore an

in 1932. It was an accurate socio-political

Picot agreement would similarly divide the

autonomous island functioning under its own

description of a decaying society, which, if

greater Muslim Sultanate (Osmanli Empire)

constitution but joined with Malaysia in its

allowed to carry on in a solely economic direc-

into three regions of influence amongst the

economy. That would have meant three

tion, would lead to the dysfunction of organic

British, the French and the Russians.

important ports – Singapore, Melaka and

human existence and would be replaced by

Penang – that could have collectively benefit-

a technical and utilitarian society groomed to

After the break-up, from 1826 to 1942,

ted the merging states economically and

serve a meritocracy devoid of history, reli-

Singapore functioned as part of the British

geopolitically.Today, over 50,000 vessels pass

gion, education and even emotion, living only

Straits Settlements that soon became a

through the Malaccan strait per year carrying

under the command of the state, living for the

separate Crown Colony directly administered

about one-quarter of the world’s traded

State and for economic efficiency. It was far

by the Colonial Office in London. The island

goods, including oil, Chinese manufactures,

beyond a gloomy prognostication of the

moved from being an important trading port

and Indonesian coffee. When independence

future. Little did he think that half a century

to a major city because of an incremental

came, Lee Kuan Yew lost that economic and

later, his novel might serve as an apposite

rise in immigration that commenced with the

strategic opportunity and therefore had to

education for Singaporeans.‘Brave NewWorld’

opening of the Suez Canal in 1869. In 1942,

base the independent island’s economy

was not totalitarianism – the picture that

the Japanese captured Singapore, to the

heavily on exports, entrepot trade and inter-

George Orwell painted in 1984, which was the

complete surprise and shock of the British

national financial markets and services.

other route many countries had taken after

superpower, a strategy to repel them from the

Colonialism. It was a benevolent dictatorship.

region and for imperial reasons of their own,

It can be seen now that from 29th January

Applying it to Singapore, it may be described

besides Singapore’s strategic location per se.

1819 to the present day, Singapore has existed

as an “authoritarian capitalism”, a term the

However, it did not last long. When the USA

for geopolitical and economic reasons – which

German philosopher Sloterdijk, has often

devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki, for-

have made it the world’s busiest port today,

used. In fact, he has on a few occasions given

cing the Japanese to surrender, Singapore

in terms of shipping tonnage.

Singapore as an apt example of that term.

there came a short lull in Singapore’s political

With regards to its evolution over the last

Singapore’s striking parallel to ‘Brave New

history, although there was internal social

forty years since independence, Lee Kuan Yew,

World’ is its one-party rule since indepen-

disarray due to disregard for the rule of the

had boasted of taking Singapore from the

dence that has assumed an almost parental

British who were not fully protected from

status of a third-world nation-state to that of

authority over its citizens. One man, Lee Kuan

Japan. Independence movements arose

a first-world nation-state. In truth, Singapore’s

Yew, has led that single party since 1965.

was given back to the British. At this point,

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


ASIA

Forty years of psychological conditioning by

is no press freedom (ranked 153rd out of 195

an ‘authoritarian capitalism’, which Christo-

this parental party, under this father figure,

countries), no legal, political rival is allowed

pher Lingle, in his book ‘Singapore’s Authori-

has rendered its residents absolutely docile

to exist in competition with the ruling party,

tarian Capitalism’, describes in great detail

– so much so that everyone is convinced that

and yet the country has achieved a high

coming too the conclusion that it was needed

the state is above individual and family and

economic status with a relatively strong

to make Singapore democratic. This article

that to achieve productive efficiency is the

currency compared to the other countries of

by comparison is aiming not to show the

primary function of a Singaporean. Everything

the region. Freedom therefore is not a pre-re-

need for Democracy in Singapore, but to illus-

else is secondary.

quisite for capitalism in Singapore, something

trate, among other things how, in the process

that Huxley portrayed in ‘Brave New World’.

of this particular country’s transformation,

More than half of the major businesses in

No wonder Sue Anne Tellman in her online

society, the individual and the family have

Singapore are state-owned through govern-

article about Singapore (published in the New

been conditioned and channelled (and thus

ment entities like the Government of Singa-

Internationalist, January 1995) described it as

considerably disrupted) in order to fulfil a

pore Investment Corporation and Temasek

‘Happy-Face Fascism’. Eleven years later

specific task on behalf of a parent state. The

Holdings.They account for sixty percent of the

(January 2006), John Cobin, Ph.D., wrote two

disruption of the individual and the family can

country’s GDP. With no natural resources

articles about Singapore for the Times

be clearly seen in the small country’s divorce

(even the water supply is inadequate), no

Examiner, and entitled them ‘Brave New

rates (3 out of 10 marriages end in divorce),

agriculture, and with little manufacturing of

Singapore’.

suicide rates (1 suicide per day) and low

its own, Singapore has entered deeply into

fertility rates (1.29 children per woman). The

international financial markets and services

Singapore has avoided Western Liberalism

current Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, in

but all at the expense of individual freedom.

but has simultaneously concocted ‘Asian

his first National Day Rally, in 2004, dedicated

Politics is not to be discussed in public, there

Democracy’ and ‘Asian Values’ to camouflage

the last part of his speech to ‘babies’, but the

Singapore’s Mentor Minister, Kuan Lee Yew, architect of the ‘Brave New World’ on the former Sultanate of Johor.

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ASIA

fruits of that massive public campaign have yet to be reaped. Women are expected to maintain a productive efficiency and often cannot afford a first pregnancy, let alone the expense of having a a second baby; hence the consequent breakdown of the family. Singaporeans have also been completely submerged into state-sponsored religions, which usually bear the prefix ‘moderate’. Religion itself, regardless of whether it is Buddhism, Christianity, Islam or Hinduism, has been confined to the places of worship or to the four walls of one’s own room. The Muslim heritage that comes from the old Singapura under the Johor Sultanate has been completely erased and refashioned to suit the island’s Brave New World raison d’être. Religion in Singapore, and Islam in particular – since Singapore was initially part of a Sultanate – has gone through such methodical restructuring and censorship that it would be more appropriate to describe it as ritualism; in the case of Islam, Islamic ritualism. The education structure in Singapore, with its student streaming system at every level – primary to tertiary – brings to mind Brave New World’s Alphas, Gammas, Deltas and Epsilons.The young population is conditioned from a very early stage in life to move in the direction of the professions that are ‘suitable’ for them. Those who are groomed to be at the top control and those who are trained to be at the bottom toil. The population of Singapore today no longer reflects the people of the previous British colony, let alone the people of the old Sultanate. The current population is living in what Aldous Huxley once termed ‘crowd delirium’; ‘Everyone belongs to everyone else.’ As such the nation exists without the

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


ASIA

individual and the family as they all do what

Singapore, business school professor, Koh

delegation on public administration recently.

everyone else does.Any traveller in Singapore

Seng Kee, correctly pointed out some time

Because of this new boastful diplomacy, Dr.

who is familiar with Huxley’s work would

ago, “Should there be a financial or political

Mahathir sarcastically called Lee Kuan Yew,

quite easily observe the atomised nature of

crisis, the wealth of Singaporeans will

‘the great man from the little country’ and

the society in the early morning and evening

dissipate quickly.”

‘little Emperor’. He then continued, ”(Malay-

commuting, when crowds move in and out

sia) should not have anymore problems now.

of the CBD area; the family is broken and the

A new legislation entitled the Public Order Act

We have been told the direction to take.” But

people live to serve those in power. In Huxley’s

(POA) was passed in April 2009 boosting the

it is likely with the repercussions of the

words, there is ‘no leisure from pleasure.’ In

discretionary powers of the People’s Action

financial crisis, that Singapore will forward

Singapore; ‘Life is Work.’

Party-led government, under the pretext of

new economic ambitions to work with

fighting terrorism. It bans any outdoor

Malaysia. Lee Kuan Yew’s belief in the

The city-state is a company and the citizens

activity deemed by the state as political in

Malaysian merger and the unity of the two

are shareholders irrespective of personal

nature even a single individual unless that per-

territories seems never to have faded.

choice. One fifth of the income of most citizens

son has a permit from the government.

is deducted monthly and transferred to their

The one-party rule, government control of

CPF (Central Provident Fund) account and

It has further restricted laws on the media.

businesses, structuralisation of education and

locked up until retirement when they receive

The spectacular economic downturn of the

economy, psychological conditioning of the

measly allowances from it over a number

country has put great pressure on the people

population, censure of religion and the media,

of years, or which may be used to pay for

and the passing of the POA seems to have

classification of the masses, the strict penal

housing loans. This Central Provident Fund is

facilitated the policing of anyone who tries

code, and the latest passing of the POA, all

then invested in other international projects

to respond or comment on the situation,

bring to light the silent oppression that is

and in financial stock exchanges. Over the past

including the legal political parties rivaling

hidden behind the tourist image.

few years, the government has been distri-

the PAP.

buting dividends to citizens from such

Singapore proves to be an excellent case

investments. On the contrary, it could well

Minister Mentor, Lee Kuan Yew, who refused

study of how the greater Muslim world was

be termed the Central Deprivative Fund as it

to step down from the government after he

purchased and divided and how the Muslims

deprives 20 per cent of every month’s labour

left the Prime Minister post in 1990, made a

today generally are being beguiled to live for

under the pretext of investments and savings

recent one-week visit to Malaysia where he

the state, and by extension for the world

for the future.This is usury.This is authoritarian

mentioned that Singapore regards the lands

economy. The two other nations from the

capitalism.

within a radius of 6,000 miles as its hinterland.

Sultanates of the Malay Archipelago –

An area that includes Beijing and Tokyo as

Malaysia and Indonesia – are also moving in

According to two BBC reports on 18th March

well as Malaysia and Indonesia. In a critical

the direction of a authoritarian capitalism

and 15th June 2009, with the onset of the

reply to this, former Prime Minister of

and Brave New World status so that they too

world financial crisis, the Singapore econo-

Malaysia, Dr. Mahathir, echoing Lee Kuan Yew,

may be embraced by the World Community

my suffered a great blow that reduced its

said, “Of course this self-deluding percep-

– Singapore already having successfully been so.

exports dramatically and shrunk its GDP

tion places Singapore at the centre of a vast

growth. Its economy is shrinking at a faster

region. It is therefore the latter day Middle

pace than at any time in its recent history –

Kingdom (the Ancient Middle Kingdom

In terms of its economy, politics, society, and

by as much as ten percent in the last year.

being China). The rest is peripheral and is

other factors beyond the scope of this essay,

Unemployment rates have shot up: 12,000

there to serve the interest of this somewhat

such as international relations and the

workers retrenched and 200,000 jobless

tiny Middle Kingdom.” Lee Kuan advised

military, Singapore is the perfect model that

foreign workers expected to leave Singapore

Malaysian politicians on how to run the

those in control of the world want subservient

by the end of this year. National University of

country, the same way he advised a Tataristan

states to follow.

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EUROPE

Brussels.The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB)

GROWING TENSIONS IN EUROPE

is naturally both “concerned and alarmed”

ENGLAND'S PREJUDICE TAKES TO THE STREETS

at this development.

Question Time

Single issue, anti-Muslim parties or “citizens’

In October, the infamous BNP leader Nick

movements” have become a part of Western

Griffin made his first appearance on the BBC’s weekly political programme, Question

European life. In Germany and many other states,

Time. The BBC’s decision to invite him on the

it is clear that they are not without influence.

show was a controversial one and resulted in several high profile politicians refusing to appear alongside the fascist party leader.

In recent years, extreme right wing

movement in Britain. While they provoked

The BBC’s studios were held under siege

movements have mobilised against Muslims

violent reactions among the Muslim

during filming, as members of the public

and their presence – not just in one parti-

youth, the EDL made it clear well ahead of

stood side-by-side with politicians to

cular country, but throughout Western

the protests in Harrow that they wanted to

condemn Griffin’s appearance on the

Europe. Together with so-called “citizens’

demonstrate against the “jihadists in our

programme. Other BBC studios across the

movements” and a massive online pre-

society.”

country were also targeted.

As the editor of the online magazine, “Asians

The BBC claimed that due to impartiality laws,

in Media”, Sunny Hundal, commenting on

they had no choice but to invite him on the

In England in recent months, several right

the recent attitude within the media

show, after the party won seats in the

wing groups have spoken out against what

(including the BBC), to allowe the BNP among

European elections. He was joined on the

they feel is the Islamisation of Europe.

others to enter the discussion, said that the

panel by the Justice Secretary, Jack Straw,

attempt to defeat the BNP through rational

the Conservative spokesman on community

There have been anti-Muslim demonstrations

argument was a mistake. It would probably

cohesion, Baroness Warsi, the Liberal

organised by the BNP (British National Party),

have been better not to offer the neo-fascists

Democrat’s home affair’s spokesman, Chris

SIOE (Stop the Islamisation of Europe) and the

a platform. This would not have been an

Huhne and American playwright, Bonnie

EDL (English Defence League) in the Midlands’

attempt to ban the party, but merely a ”demo-

Greer.

city of Birmingham and in the London

cratic decision by right-thinking people not

borough of Harrow – not merely involving

to share a platform with fascists.”

sence, they have an enormous potential for anti-Muslim resentment.

He was questioned about his views on Islam and said, “It does not fit in with the funda-

the radical section of the anti-Muslim The Muslim newspaper The Muslim Weekly

mental values of British society” but that is

drew parallels between the recent protests

had “good points”. He also claimed that

against mosques – or the so-called “Islamisa-

“indigenous” Britons faced “genocide.”

tion of England” – and the electoral success

Speaking to BNP supporters, he boasted that

of the BNP in last year’s European elections.

he was “relishing the opportunity.” Prime

The events wer “A bad day, because the

Minister Gordon Brown, speaking before the

extreme right have challenged our British

programme said that he was confident that

democratic values.”

Mr. Griffin would be exposed for his unacceptable views. At several points during the

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

They could – like other parties in the rest of

show, Griffin was booed by hostile members

Europe – create a mandate for themselves in

of the audience and labelled “a disgrace”.


EUROPE

Birmingham On 4th September, the English Defence League (EDL) attempted to demonstrate against “Islamic extremism” in Birmingham’s city centre. Their appearance provoked clashes with counter demonstrators, among whom were members of the local Muslim community. The rally came about as the result of previous clashes in August between the EDL and the British alliance, Unite Against Fascism, in which 35 people were arrested. According to reports, a total of 80 people were apprehended in the latest clashes. Additional EDL supporters were arrested as they attempted to make their way into the city centre by coach. Once the event became known, the city’s Muslims – contrary to the advice of police – participated in the counter-demonstrations.

Nick Griffin, triumphant BNP leader after the last European elections.

According to Dr. Mohammed Naseem,

chaos after the rival groups clashed on

rejected the allegations as an “incitement of

chairman of Birmingham Central Mosque and

August 4th. Birmingham’s City Council issued

hatred.” “There has been a mosque in

renowned figure in the Muslim community in

a statement praising the police’s “successful

Harrow for 35 years and it is therefore a part

central England, the presence of Muslims in

management” of the event.

of the local landscape,” said David Ashton, leader of Harrow council. It was a “great

the protest was an important statement made against anti-Islamic fascism. “I think it shows

Others were not so complimentary. Labour MP

shame” that fascists and preachers of hate

that the community has got a sense of

Khalid Mahmood accused the police of failing

found it necessary to bring their “extreme

cohesion,” he continued.

to prevent the riots. He said that the police

views” to bare in the area.

had let down innocent members of the public When asked if it would perhaps have been a

and suggested, “The force needs to look at

According to reports, about 2,000 people

better idea to encourage Muslims not to

things at the highest level.”

gathered on the streets around the mosque, in order to demonstrate their solidarity.

attend the rally at all, he said, “The thing is, it is their right. I cannot say ‘you don’t have

Harrow

The event was organised by the NGO, Unite

this right’.” Dr. Naseem took great pains to

In the London borough of Harrow, symbo-

Against Fascism (UAF). “The English Defence

emphasise that members of Birmingham’s

lically on September 11th, protests were

League and other groups wanted to march

Muslim community were not encouraged to

directed at the planned central mosque. The

against the mosque and shout at Muslims,”

attend the protests alone, but rather to form

mosque, which is due to open its doors next

said Weyman Bennett, secretary of the UAF,

allegiances with other counter-demonstrators

year, will be the largest in the capital. “Our

“instead they were held back by normal

such as members of other religious denomi-

problem is the mosque in Harrow,” said one

people from all sections of the community

nations and socialist groups.

of the protesters. “It is almost as big as

who came to show their solidarity with the

Wembley [stadium] – five floors. This is not

Muslims of Harrow.”

What was initially planned as a two-hour

good for community cohesion.” Non-Muslim

“stationary protest” turned into scenes of

politicians and civil rights activists have

Unfortunately, there were violent confronta-

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EUROPE

to provoke violence on British streets, and

In countries such as Denmark, Italy or the

said that although the number of actual

Netherlands, central government indifference

demonstrators was small, “We are taking the

has driven the traditional conservatives into

situation seriously.” Denham drew parallels

introducing elements within their local and

with the anti-Semitic rallies of the 1930’s,

national legislations, aimed specifically

organised by the famous British fascist,

against Muslims. The following key points

Oswald Mosley. In Denham’s opinion,

are reason enough for us to keep a close eye

”Violence only plays into the hands of the

on the situation in England:

Islamophobes” he felt were behind the protests. “If you look at the type of demons-

The atomisation of European societies, driven

tration they’ve organised… it looks pretty

by the decoupling of entire communites or

clear that it’s a tactic designed to provoke a

social groups and a fear of poverty has caused

response and hopefully to create violence.”

the potential for conflicts to rise to the

The aim was to then to accuse those who

surface. This contributes to a process of

were provoked into overreaction.

decay, which then breaks out into irrational violence, such as sudden acts of violence in

Dark clouds on the horizon?

schools. In terms of social resentment against

If we could regard these as isolated events,

minorities, for example, against the Sinti and

it would give us some peace of mind. We are

Romani gypsies in Central Europe, the old

not so sure that this is so. Similar protests in

political dialectic of “Right” and “Left” no

tions on the fringes of the demonstrations

Cologne, Brussels and other European cities

longer exists.

between protestors and young Muslims, who

against mosques or against the feared

were provoked by the demonstrators pre-

“islamisation of Europe” demonstrate a

The famous “centre” is itself vulnerable, since

sence. Police units came between the two

new stage of mobilisation in terms of anti-

racism has been replaced by new prejudices.

opposing groups. “While the anti-fascist

Muslim sentiment.

During demonstrations, state institutions

demonstration remained mainly peaceful,

are placed between the two camps, against

there were sporadic clashes when a group

In recent years, protagonists of this tangled

whom they must defend the security of public

of racists attempted to approach the mosque

conspiracy theory have made their imaginary

spaces. In this they deserve the support of

itself,” said Bennett in the media. The UAF

fears public, particularly over the Internet.

Muslims who due to their religious views

laid responsibility with “racists” who tried

Actual protests, which unfortunately cannot

ought to reject any form of anarchy.

to intimidate Muslims. Local politicians

be restricted to the right wing, have without

condemned the violence in Harrow and later

question, taken on a new quality.

Site of the new mosque in Harrow.

insisted that a “message of peace and

As with other social groups, there is a potential for violence among the Muslim

solidarity” had been made clearly audible to

Along with such resentment on the streets of

those who opposed unity in the area.

Europe, single issue, anti-Muslim parties or

ideology” in order to manifest itself. A look

youth. This does not need any “extremist

“citizens’ movements” in local and/or regio-

at the videos and pictures from the rally in

Historical parallels

nal parliaments have, unfortunately, become

Harrow, will corroborate this conclusion.

British politicians also reacted to the recent

a part of Western European life. While, for

rallies. Birmingham and Harrow are only two

example in Germany, the governing bourgeois

Europeans – Muslims and non-Muslims alike

examples of the increased public presence

political

– are well advised to take a closer look at the

of the BNP, SIOE and EDL. John Denham,

development has apparently ignored these

Gordon Brown’s Communities’ Secretary

groups, it is clear that they are not with-

accused the anti-Muslim groups of wanting

out influence.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

centre

of

this

ideological

situation in England. Text By Adil Morrison & S. Wilms


EUROPE

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MIDDLE EAST

Text By Karin Leukefeld

Reason for new conflicts? Man washing in a Palestinian refugee camp.

It is Friday in Damascus’ Old City. There is a

BAD NEIGHBOURHOOD

convivial atmosphere on Harika Square, near

THE WATER CRISIS IN THE MIDDLE EAST GROWS

the famous Al-Suk Hamidiye. Instead of the hectic everyday noise, you can hear the laughter of boys enthusiastically kicking a

Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and the occupied

ball back and forth. Men and women, young

Palestinian territories have all suffered due to

and old, sit on the benches and observe the spectacle. They talk to one another, eating

Israel's great thirst for water. Israel at present

ice creams, whilst some look lost in thought

occupies the Lebanese Shebaa farms, an area of

at the water feature in the fountain in the middle of the square.The sun sets behind the

great strategic importance with regards to the

Darwish Pasha Mosque’s minaret, its last rays

supply of water. Settlements and plantations have

bathe the square in velvet red.

emerged there and are supplied with water that Syria and Lebanon need, but not as much as their southern neighbours, Jordan and Palestine. The authors behind the study “Rising Temperatures, Rising Tensions” appreciate that climate change is likely to increase tensions in the region.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

Water was the source of Damascus’ wealth. The flower-entwined fountains were a bird paradise. Today, it is still possible to come across sebil, small drinking fountains, in streets and squares at which the people of the city can refresh themselves at anytime. The waters of the Barada River and the Figeh Spring in the nearby Anti-Lebanon Mountains


MIDDLE EAST

turned Damascus into an oasis in the Syrian

centimetres. Without the measures being

the wasteful misuse of water. The Authority

basalt desert, giving the city the name

taken in terms of rationing, there would be

is active at all levels, says Mwafak Khallouf,

”paradise on earth.” The French philosopher

no water at all. Currently,” Khallouf conti-

as he talks about a meeting with imams, the

Constantin François de Volney wrote enthu-

nues, “we can only provide three hours of

spiritual leaders of mosques: “Persistently, I

siastically about his visit to Damascus at the

fresh water per day, that’s all there is. Outside

explained the situation to them and

end of the 18th century: “Many streams flow

of the city, it’s even worse. Sometimes we

explained why it was so important for them

from the mountains, which transform the area

can provide fresh water every two or three

to call the faithful to save water. Before and

of Damascus into the best irrigated and -

days for a couple of hours at a time. Our

after the prayer, they wash themselves.

loveliest city in Syria. The Arabs only speak

hands are tied. The scarcity of water is very

Nevertheless they should still save water and

of the city with enthusiasm and never tire of

severe.”

speak to others about the severe water shortage. Nobody should waste water.”

praising the verdancy and the freshness of the orchards, the abundance and variety of fruits,

Water-saving campaigns

the number of springs, as well as the clarity

Syria is an agricultural country. The main

As around 60 per cent of the 27 million Syrians

of the fountains and waters.”

producing regions comprise of four zones

are under the age of 15, they are predomi-

running east west across the country. The

nantly concentrating on the youth. Children

Those days are over. Syria is witnessing its

most fertile areas lie to the west on the Medi-

are receptive to novelty, says Khallouf as he

worst drought in 40 years. It has barely rained

terranean and the Orontes River, where the

explains that it is the school’s water-clubs

in the region for the fourth year in a row;

yearly rainfall and underground water springs

and youth organisations who are the pioneers;

rivers, springs and underground reservoirs

are well replenished. The Euphrates coming

their members making sure that taps are

are drying up.The city’s water fountains often

from Turkey and crossing Syria towards Iraq,

properly turned off. They are also receiving

remain dry, a muddy brew evaporates in the

is also fertile,irrigating even the cotton fields.

help from experts from Germany. Khallouf

ponds of mosques and stately homes, which

To the northeast of the country, the small

explains: “A German Development Service

once enjoyed ducks and fish.

Khabur River used to provide prolific agricul-

employee is very active in the campaign to

ture. But the rain is staying away and the

save water. She has become known in

drought is having dramatic consequences.

Damascus, her name is Christin. She is very

Water is being rationed, said Basil, who works

famous within schools.”

as a chef in a small hotel.“Figeh water comes straight out of the tap. It is so good that we are

Over the last two years, farmers in the region

able to drink it,” he says enthusiastically, as

have yielded 50 per cent less than previous

Christin Lüttlich’s office is on the upper floor

he turns the tap in order to demonstrate. But

years. Small farmers and ranchers have lost

of the Damascus Governorate’s Water and

the tap stays dry. Basil glances at his watch

up to 80 per cent of their herds because they

Sewerage Authority, overlooking the time-

and shrugs his shoulders. “Nothing there, it’ll

were unable to find pasture, according to a

honoured Hejaz railway station in the city

probably be there this evening. Water from

report by the United Nations. More than a

centre. The employee of the German

the other tap comes from a tank, but it isn’t

quarter of a million people have left their

Development Service is fluent in Arabic and

safe to drink.”

villages and farms behind and sought their

along with four Syrian co-workers she heads

fortunes working as day labourers in the cities.

the campaign to save water. “Children and

The Barda used to flood in spring leaving the

teenagers are the water users of tomorrow

small cafés and shops submerged, recalls

Climate change and drought are not the only

and they have to change their habits,” she

Mwafak Khallouf, director of DWSSA,

things putting pressure on Syria. Population

said. This is better communicated with

Damascus Governorate’s Water and Sewerage

growth and increasing industrialisation

humour, as opposed to orders and prohi-

Authority. Thirty years ago, the snow in his

call for a new awareness of the precious

bitions. A cartoon that was produced for

home village was up to four metres high.

commodity that people took as a God-given

the water campaign tells the story of a

“We had to shovel a path in order to get to

gift. Damascus Governorate’s Water and

water spirit, which loses its breath through

school. Now it snows just ten or twenty

Sewerage Authority wants to put a stop to

excessive water use, such as in car washing,

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MIDDLE EAST

showering and housework.The saviour of the

could equip participating schools with taps

The Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ)

day is one young Jasmine, who explains to

and demonstrate the ways in which modern

is a central partner in Syria’s transformation.

her parents that they have to be careful with

equipment can be used to reduce water

Under the project leader, Jochen Rudolph,

water. “We have been able to attract

consumption.

who has coordinated the work in the water

businesses that have contributed prizes for

sector for the last two years, workshops will

competitions in school and universities, and

Drinking water first

be organised, working practices standardised

under the slogan ‘Do Good and Talk About

The federal government has encouraged

and made more effective, as well as services

It’, they have strenghtened their image”,

German company involvement in Syria’s

and accounting to be modernised with a

water and sanitation sector. Public Private

typical German thoroughness.

reports Lüttich.

Partnership (PPP) is the magic phrase; with A German company providing sanitation

PPPs creating new markets within the frame

The commitment to water in Syria is of

facilities would like to participate. The

of development for medium-sized German

strategic importance for the federal govern-

company, which already has an outlet in a

companies. In Syria, there are several involved

ment of Germany; the proximity of Syria to

residential neighbourhood in Damascus,

in the restructuring of the water sector.

Europe, personal links between both countries through the many Syrians living in Germany, Syria’s special position in the Middle East,

The Jordan River stems from the Lebanese Mount Hermon, flows

as well as the “central and sensitive”

through the Syrian Golan, the Shebaa Farms and the Tiberias,

importance of water to the entire region.The

also known as the Sea of Galilee, where it flows as a border

topic of “water” has become the focus of

between Israel, the Palestinian West Bank and Jordan and

bilateral relations, according to a brochure

ebbs a further 320 kilometres south of the Dead Sea. While

from the German embassy in Damascus. Whether it is irrigation, agriculture, the

Syria and Lebanon have access to other water sources, Israel,

environment, building or health, many

Jordan and the occupied Palestinian territories are almost

government departments have a say in the

entirely dependent on the River Jordan as a lifeline, although

distribution of water. Even though agricul-

there are still some underground reservoirs.

ture is by far the largest consumer of water, with more than 70 per cent usage, with households and industry needing far less, competition and conflicts of interest have not failed to appear. “The need for cooperation between government departments is always present; this is not something specific to Syria, it is also apparent in Germany,” said Jochen Rudolph, GTZ project leader.“It was important that the Syrian government made the decision to prioritise the supply of drinking water and water to industry over the supply of water to agriculture.” Implementing this was not always easy “Because with a growing population and increasing industrialisation, one has to take something from one group and give

GLOBALIA

| Issue 07 | January 2010


MIDDLE EAST

something to the other. This naturally leads to conflict”.

Water resources in the Middle East

According to Mwafak Khallouf of the DWSSA, agriculture is the most problematic sector. Farmers need to rethink, find other means of irrigation. “We collaborate with farmers and see what it is that they need. If a farmer is planting something that consumes a lot of water, I try to discourage them. If there is no other way, then he gets the money that he would

Water is the most widespread natural product in the world. It covers more than 70 per cent of the Earth’s surface, but only 1 per cent of its global resources, which account for 2.4 billion km3, is fresh water. Even so, theoretically, this could be enough for a population five or ten times the present number living on Earth.

1,000 m3 a year, and will fall to 600 m3 in 2050, compared with a global standard of 1,700 m3. This is an average figure. In some water-poor countries, like Jordan, this indicator does not surpass 500 m3 a year. In the opinion of some experts, the H2O formula will soon become a formula for peace in the Middle East.

The question, therefore, is not the availability of water, but its distribution over the globe. Water resources (we refer to only fresh water for the purposes of this article) are spread unevenly across the globe, with the Middle East and Northern Africa being the least supplied with it. In that part of the world, water has always been an issue causing clashes between tribes, regions and states.

The situation in the Arab-Israeli conflict zone is most alarming, because the parties to the conflict are divided not only by water-related, but also by political and military contradictions. This concerns the Israeli-Syrian water “knot” on the Golan Heights, water arteries in Southern Lebanon, and deposit waters on the Western bank of the Jordan River.

have got from his harvest. The main thing is that he does not use the water that we need for people to drink. This is the top priority.”

Israel’s thirst for water At an international flower exhibition in Teshrin Park, a popular destination in Damascus, the water flows in streams into the flowerbeds, fountains and canals from dripping pipes and cranes. The plants show their gratitude with splendid colours and intoxicating fragrances. Orchids and roses, lavender and tulips, even heather are on display. Creams, perfumes, soaps and honey, conserves and dried herbs are sold from small stalls. A theatre troupe enchants the children; the parents listen to lectures on rare plants or marvel at a photo exhibition showing the world from above.

The main aspect of the water problem in this area is the trans-boundary nature of water sources: the most significant rivers, like the Nile, Euphrates, Tigris, Jordan and Yarmuk, flow through more than one country. Their origins lie in non-Arab lands, which makes water distribution doubly complicated.

Two students look with fascination at a picture of the Assad Dam, the dam on the north of the Euphrates.“The picture shows his country from a completely different perspectiv,” says Kemal Al-Khateeb, who is training as an interpreter. His friend Samer Abdallah agrees with him. Although he spent 16 years living in Aleppo, close to the dam, he had never seen an aerial photograph. They are both aware of Syria’s water problem, “It’s no secret, the media are reporting it and we notice it at home.We only get water every two or three days, without the tank we are

With water essential for living, both for human consumption and food production, its availability or lack becomes a matter of national security. So contradictions occasionally flaring up between, for example, Israel and its neighbours, Turkey, Syria and Iraq, and Egypt with the Sudan and Ethiopia, make the military and political escalation of these disputes very likely. Eventually, water will join oil as a conflictgenerating resource in the Middle East. The water situation is worsening; its quota per person in the region is now below

Although Israel and Jordan have signed a peace treaty, water distribution still has rough edges. Regular Syrian-Jordanian disagreements on the water resources in the Jordan-Yarmuk basin relate to Syria and Israel having no peace treaty. A solution could be an all-embracing cooperation in water supplies, with regions having the least reserves (population numbers should also be taken into account) able to receive it from areas which are as yet far from having a water crisis. Such an approach could see hydro-schemes being built, enabling water to be accumulated and transported across borders. The one, outstanding condition is an end to the military and political conflict and a higher level of confidence and cooperation. (RIAN) The author is the director of Rusya al-Yaum News Channel of Russia Today. Text By Aydar R. Aganin

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MIDDLE EAST

left sitting on dry land”, said Samer Abdallah. Although he would not discuss politics, his friend Kemal said, “There is a conflict between us and Turkey. They cut the water supply to the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers, which supply 70 per cent of our water in the north. We give Jordan and Iraq from our own drinking water. They are our neighbours, so we cannot simply say no.” In ten years, Kemal is convinced “That water will be more valuable than oil.” Everyone has to save water, he says, the farmers have to rethink. “New irrigation methods are indeed expensive for the farmers, but it has to be that

The Middle Eastern geopolitics of water pays no regard to national boundaries.

way for the future. We can no longer take water for granted.”The lack of rain and pollu-

Israel’s great thirst for water. Israel is occupy-

contaminated with human excrement and

tion are problems – as is of course Israel,

ing the Lebanese Shebaa farms, an area that

waste in villages, temporarily occupied by the

“We had the Golan Heights; there is a lot

is of great strategic importance with regards

Israeli army. Israel has refused to sign inter-

of water there and arable land.And Israel just

to the supply of water. The 22-square-

national agreements such as UN Resolution

simply occupied it. No idea how we are to

kilometre territory lies below the water-rich

51/229 (1997) on the use of unnavigable

solve it, but the fact is that we need water.”

Mount Hermon and along with the Hasbani

waterways and instead has dictated its own

and Banias rivers is considered the source

terms to its neighbours. Jordan, who agreed

The political tensions in the region could be

region of the Jordan River. In 1965 Syria and

to the 1994 peace treaty with Israel and recei-

further exacerbated in the future due to the

Lebanon began to channel water from both

ves 75 million cubic metres of water from the

water shortage, according to the authors of

rivers for irrigation and removing the need for

River Jordan in return for a secure eastern

“Rising Temperatures, Rising Tensions”. Is

Israeli access. Two years later, Israel attacked

border, as if the water were Israeli property.

there the threat of a war over water in the

and destroyed the two channels, occupying

region? Mwafak Khallouf hopes that it

the water-rich areas and refusing to leave

Bone of contention

doesn’t come to that. Even if it hasn’t always

them to this day.

The Jordan River stems from the Lebanese

been the case, Turkey and Syria are currently

Mount Hermon, flows through the Syrian

getting on well; they could come to an

Settlements and plantations have emerged

Golan, the Shebaa Farms and the Tiberias,

agreement over the distribution of water from

there supplied with water that Syria and

also known as the Sea of Galilee, where it

the Tigris and Euphrates. Things are more

Lebanon need, but not as much as their

flows as a border between Israel, the

difficult, however, with Israel, “Israel is our

southern neighbours, Jordan and Palestine. In

Palestinian West Bank and Jordan and ebbs

biggest and only enemy here in the Middle

2002, a new aqueduct was built in southern

a further 320 kilometres south of the Dead

East, and they are using our water! If Syria

Lebanon designed to transport water from the

Sea. While Syria and Lebanon have access to

gets back the Golan Heights, then the water

River Wazzani into the surrounding villages.

other water sources, Israel, Jordan and the

situation will ease. I hope there isn’t a war

The then Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon

occupied Palestinian territories are almost

over water.”

declared the development “Casus Belli”, and

entirely dependent on the River Jordan as a

in the 2006 war the water network was

lifeline, although there are still some under-

Like Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and the occupied

almost entirely destroyed by the Israeli air

ground reservoirs. While the other Arab

Palestinian territories have all suffered from

force. Ponds and wells were deliberately

countries bordering Jordan attempt to come

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


MIDDLE EAST

to cross-border agreements, Israel continue

river, because they have been contaminated.”

Amnesty International recently released a

to go it alone, and literally leaves the others

The over-exploitation of the Jordan, the exces-

report , which states,“The inequality in access

sitting on “dry land”. Each year, they extract

sive digging of wells and the coast has led

to water between the Israelis and the

more from the river system than Syria,

to the salinisation of groundwater, which is

Palestinians is striking. Palestinians in the

Lebanon, Jordan and the occupied Palestinian

unable to regenerate due to poor rainfall.

occupied areas have about 70 litres per day per person. That is far less than the 100 litres

territories put together.The annual flow of 1.3 billion cubic metres of water has fallen to

By the time the Jordan reaches the Dead Sea,

per day recommended by the World Health

less than 100 million cubic metres in the last

it is only dirty mud. The surface of the Dead

Organisation (WHO). The Israelis, however,

50 years.Today, the River Jordan mainly trans-

Sea falls by one metre a year, with the inflow

use around 300 litres per day per person, four

ports waste-water, according to the environ-

from the Yarmouk River running parallel to

times as much. In some rural areas (…) the

mental organisation, Friends of the Earth in

Jordan’s King Abdullah Canal, which supplies

Palestinians have less than 20 litres per day.”

the Middle East (FOEME), which was foun-

the Jordanians with water, up to the capital,

ded in the wake of the Israeli-Palestinian

Amman. “It is particularly scarce in the -

The authors behind the study “Rising

peace agreement in 1994 and has offices in

summer,” explains Mohammad Nawasra,“the

Temperatures, Rising Tensions” appreciate

Amman, Bethlehem and Tel Aviv.Their motto,

fields are irrigated once a week and on ano-

that climate change is likely to increase -

‘good partnership for better water’ will be put

ther day we get fresh water for between three

tensions in the region.They also point to new

to the test, explained Abdul Rahman Sultan

to five hours, then we have to fill the tanks

“security issues”; with the tremendous

at the FOEME office in Jordan’s capital,

on the roofs and hope that it’s enough for a

competition for water in the region likely to

Amman. “The situation in Jordan is

week. Some families don’t have many tanks,

complicate

alarming; agriculture, industry, tourism and

so for them things look bleak.”

provisions for the population remain uncer-

peace

agreements, while

tain, economic growth likewise impeded and

households are all competing for water. On top of that, Jordan, Palestine and Israel are

For over 30 years, Nawasra was a teacher in

poverty increasing. The water shortage will

also in competition. Syria and Lebanon share

the community, and is known by all. Since his

lead to migration and a growing militarisa-

water from upper Jordan and the Yarmouk,

retirement, he has headed the FOEME office

tion, in order to safeguard water sources.The

but it isn’t enough for them. The water that

in the village.They have created an eco-park,

significant mistrust that already exists

we get is neither sufficient nor clean.”

which needs to be protected from the increa-

between the Arab states, on the one hand,

singly hungry sheep belonging to the Bedouin.

and the West and Israel, on the other, will

As a unique and cross-border ecosystem,

They collect water and learn how water can

undoubtedly increase.

Jordan has been at the centre of FOEME’s

be saved and how the environment can be

public awareness campaign. Its valley is up

protected.

to 400 metres below sea level, where there are historically significant Jewish, Christian

The environmental activist was also in Israel

and Muslim sites. 90 per cent of the water

as part of his international work:“I have seen

will shortly be diverted by Israel behind the

many settlements in Israel. Incredibly, I have

Sea of Galilee and large parts of the Jordan

not seen a single tank on their roofs.They have

Valley will be militarily controlled by Israel.

running water for 20 hours a day. How do they

Palestinians and Jordanians have often been

do it? Well, right there, where the Jordan

unable to get access to the river, says Nawas-

leaves the Sea of Gallilee, they branch off the

ra, from the town of Sheikh Hussein, “As a

water and pass it through pipes; up to the

child, I was able to go down to the Jordan

desert in the south. 20 hours a day, the Israelis

River.We could drink the water, we were able

have drinking water, not the Palestinians, no,

to swim, to catch the fish and eat them. Now

only the Israelis. And no one has a tank on

we are no longer able to eat the fish from the

the roof.”

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new terms of agreement. Suddenly, this

SLAVES AND STOCK EXCHANGES

poverty stricken Bolivian government has the

JEAN ZIEGLER ON “THE HATRED FOR THE WEST”

money to lead their people out of misery and famine. This is the rational hatred.

The Swiss sociologist and political thinker Jean

Question: Mr. Ziegler, where does this

Ziegler is seen as a critic of globalisation. For

hate stem from?

decades he has fought against famine and poverty

Jean Ziegler: It has two sources. The first

and against those behind the capitalist conditions

source is a wounded consciousness. It’s like

he sees are to blame. For many years he was a

the holocaust; we don’t know why a wounded consciousness, a terrible crime, takes two or

socialist party member of the National Council

three generations to surface. The peoples of

in the Swiss Bundestag. Between 2008-2009 he

the South are now experiencing the same

was the UN special correspondent on the right to nutrition. In 2008 Jean Ziegler was elected to the advisory committee of the Human Rights

thing. Slavery and the colonial massacres are two terrible wounds that continue to live in people’s [collective] memory. Generations after these particular massacres have taken place, these wounded memories have entered

Council.

political consciousness.

Question: Mr. Ziegler, your book “Der

about two forms of hatred. The hatred of the

I would like to tell you an anecdote to illustrate

Hass auf den Westen” has recently been

southern hemisphere, where 4.5 billion of

this point. In December 2007, French President

published. In what way is the West

the world’s 6.7 billion people live, has two

Nicolas Sarcozy is in Algiers for the first time

hated? The age of colonialism is long

very different sides to it. On the side, there

to negotiate oil contracts. The French

since over…

is pathological hatred; this is Al-Qaeda,

delegation sits down at the table at the

terrorism, which is organised crime. Jean Ziegler:The title of my book “The Hatred for the West” can be shocking. My book is

On the other, is a rational hatred, the desire to revolt against the cannibalistic, western

Is child poverty not a form of violence?

presidential palace in Algiers. Before the negotiations even begin, President Bouteflika

established world order. In Bolivia, for example, it has been 3 years since the first democratically elected native president – in 500 years – was elected. There is an incredible identity movement underway, a

says: “First, I want an apology for Setif!” Setif being the terrible massacre that the French Foreign Legion committed against Algerian civilians on 8th May 1945. It left over 42,000 either dead or wounded. Quite upset, Sarkozy answered:“I have not come here for nostalgia.” The response from Bouteflika: “The memory before business.” Subsequently, there were no

democratic opposition movement, which

negotiations. The next state visit that

has arisen from the five major native tribes

Bouteflika was due to make to Paris last July

in the Andean highlands.

was cancelled because an apology for Setif still hadn’t been made.

Evo Morales, thanks to this opposition

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010

movement now has the power to take control

Question: What are the reasons for the

of over 200 foreign companies and to direct

schizophrenic attitude of the West?


BOOKS

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BOOKS

trated in the hands of a few Western oligarchs

Jeans Ziegler: Today, things are indeed

has a power that has never before been

dictated by the Euro-Atlantic world, along

wielded by any king, emperor or pope in

with a couple of corrupt oligarchies on the

human history.

peripheries of China and India. They have integrated commodity prices in their

Southern peoples see this financial dictator-

commercial exploitation and they still

ship as the last stage of the West’s strategy

continue to plunder the massive South.

of exploitation and oppression. The slaveholders are sitting in the stock exchanges

The Democratic Republic of Congo, a subcon-

that determine the commodity prices and

tinent almost, where people are dying of

speculation, which – although not visible –

starvation by the thousands every single day,

are responsible for hundreds of thousands of

is a geological wonder. There is incredible

starving people. Every five seconds a child

wealth. The looting continues, however, be-

under the age of 10 dies of hunger.

cause the corporations, as in many countries, have been able to utilise corrupt leaders who

In April 2009, the number of chronically

sign up to these exploitative contracts. The

starving people exceeded the one billion

real story, the story of the mobilisation of

mark for the first time. And this on a planet

resistance, of the emergence of life and poli-

teeming with wealth. Today, fate no longer

tical solidarity is taking place in the South.

exists. A child, who as we speak is dying of hunger, is effectively being murdered. This

What is happening with today’s mobilisation

world order, which the West imposes on the

in the Andean Highlands, what is happening

planet, also creates its own theory. The

in Venezuela or Ecuador is radically new.These

West believes in the universality of its own

forces are even emerging in Africa. Marx said

ethnocentric values.

that the revolutionary must be in a position to hear the grass grow. And this grass is

The Swiss author Jean Ziegler.

I have just come from the United Nations

growing everywhere on the periphery of the

General Assembly in New York. Each of the

Western financial dictatorship.

Jean Ziegler: The West with 12.8 per cent of

Western ambassadors, so clever, subtle and

the world’s population is a minority that has

cultivated when he speaks, speaks in the

In your book, you talk about a lot about

ruled over the planet for over 500 hundred

name of humanity, universal values and

the changes taking place in Bolivia and

years. At the end of the fifteenth century,

preaches his teachings to the peoples of

about Evo Morales. Are these real alter-

once the earth was round, after Columbus’

Latin America, Asia and Africa. This basically

natives to the developments of – as you

fourth voyage, there was genocide in Latin

is the paradox of the Western discourse,

call it – ”predatory capitalism”? Many

America.Then there was the slave trade lasting

which stems from a near total blindness,

have criticised the developments in

350 years, followed by 150 years of colonial

produced through material oppression,

Bolivia as totalitarian…

massacres and territorial occupation. Today

which also produces the discourse of

there is a tyranny of global finance capital.

legitimacy. And today, this is no longer

Jean Ziegler: Here, you can have any political

tolerated.

prejudice you like. You can be Left, you can

Last year, according to the World Bank’s own

be Right. We live in free societies in Western

statistics, the world’s 500 largest companies

Question:Will world history now emanate

Europe. But the ignorance and arrogant

dominated 53 per cent of the world’s gross

more and more from the South? Or is

condemnation of the revolutionary move-

production. This financial capital, concen-

that not too utopian a view?

ments on the periphery are unworthy. In fact,

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


BOOKS

a cohesive, communal and solidarity-developing story is taking place in the Andes and among the 12,000 native tribes that make up Bolivia. In many parts of South America, history is being made and we ought to learn from it. But in Europe too, something is happening. I no longer believe in the European nation whose sovereign rights are now determined by the capitalist commodity rational. The EU is nothing more than a corporate board of directors. No values and no ambitions remain. But, there is civil society; a wonderful brotherhood. I went back to the Heiligendamn in the summer of 2007. I was on the other side of the barbed wire. There were 140,000 people from 41 nations of all political persuasions. There were pastors there, Trotskyites, young and old. They were all there and were all driven by moral imperatives, not by the political imperative or any party ideologies. Immanuel Kant said: “The inhumanity that is being done to another, destroys the humanity within me.� This moral imperative is the engine of a new civil society that will no longer tolerate a society in which a child dies of hunger every five seconds. This civil society is very strong in Germany thanks to World Hunger Relief and Greenpeace. The revolt of consciousness will come. Germany is the most vibrant democracy in Europe. There is no weakness in a democracy. Fundamental rights exist and they may be needed to force our government to waive the dumping of EU agriculture in Africa and to the break the bondage binding third world countries, rather than continuously promoting the interests of creditors such as Deutsche Bank and other major banks. I am quite confident this uprising of conscience is imminent.

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au-Prince in the epilogue of his book, La haine

TREMORS IN THE SOUTH

de l’Occident – ‘Hate for the West’. Ziegler’s

JEAN ZIEGLER’S BOOK GETS TO THE HEART OF THE MATTER

latest remarkable work continues to draw the world’s attention to forgotten peoples.

Switzerland’s Jean Ziegler is a well-known author

The Geneva-based professor’s books are more

and for many years was the UN Commissary for

than the literary windmill-tilting of a modern

Hunger. Based in Geneva, the professor criticises

Don Quixote, they are important logbooks of the human catastrophes of our time.

in newspaper articles and interviews the West’s

When he became UN Special Correspondent

centuries-long ignorance of the destitution in

for the Right to Food, his condemnations of the global hunger scandal began to reach a

the South. According to Ziegler the new oligarchic

wide audience. In his lectures, interviews and

power structures are leading the world into an

books, Ziegler not only unmasks structural

abyss.

injustices, he introduces an appropriate – because passionate – language into the age of the Global Economic War.

“In the Southern Hemisphere, epidemics,

latest earthquake may be the media caravan’s

hunger, contaminated water and civil war

latest big topic, but before the quake, few

caused by poverty kill almost as many

were interested in the political chaos inside

for the West, as something beyond the

people each year as the Second World

the former French colony, where a whole

relativities of affluence – the ‘haves’ and the

War killed in six.” (Jean Ziegler, La haine de

nation was virtually living on mud pies as

‘have nots’ – but rather a hate based on an

l’Occident)

food prices had been driven through the roof

emerging revolt against the West’s claim to

by speculators. Switzerland’s Jean Ziegler

hegemony. To illustrate Western blindness to

describes the bleak living conditions in Port-

its own bloody history outside Europe’s

Haiti.The abominable situation following the

In his latest book Ziegler explains the hatred

Haiti: Poverty has been the trademark of the people’s daily life.

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


BOOKS

boundaries, Ziegler describes Sarkozy’s ignorant statements in Africa, where he mocked what he called the Third World’s ”anti-progressive lack of a sense of history”, even while refusing to apologise for France’s own bloody history in Africa – in particular that of Algeria. More and more people in the South are listening to this kind of Western rhetoric with a growing disgust. The latest machinations of the financial industry, according to Ziegler, are a simple continuation of the old colonial practices of exploitation and slavery. His assessment is clear: “From the point of view of the Southern peoples,” writes Ziegler bitterly, “the current globalised order of Western financial capital, with its mercenaries; the World Trade Organisation, the IMF, the World Bank and global corporations, not to mention

A “crook” in the spotlight: Richard S. Fuld from the now defunct Lehmann Brothers.

its neo-liberal ideology, are the latest and by the far the most murderous of the systems

in detail the interplay between the global

the Bolivian Way remains a rocky one, he

of oppression that have been set up over the

thirst for energy supply, quasi-sovereign oil

says, and a range of interests threaten

course of the past five centuries.”

companies, and their “partners” in the Third

Morales daily through the promoting of

World. The sustaining of criminals, the shat-

terror, secession and civil war.

The strength of Ziegler’s books lies in the

tering of whole societies and the instigating

fact that he describes the people at work

of chaos are all acceptable business policies.

At the end of his book Ziegler urges people

behind the structures, the power machinery

Only “shattered politics” can provide an

to remember the values of their civilisation,

and revolts, whom he encounters regularly

environment suitable for Western corporate

Human Rights, and calls on them to initiate

in person. Everywhere there are actors,

pillaging. Even in countries that are nomi-

reforms – which remains the book’s ques-

addressees and recipients of another way of

nally rich, Western money fails to establish a

tionable element. In some places it lacks

thinking and seeing things.

humane nomos.

clarity too about the decisive role of virtual, ”created” money, and as such lacks the

He assembles the harrowing facts in order to

There is little hope. But Ziegler still has some,

provide a framework for the tragic fate of

and, taking Bolivia’s President Evo Morales

foundation for concrete political demands.

those who have lost out from the much-vaunt-

as an example, he shows how a South

ed globalisation. For instance, the fact that

American people have clawed back political

vague term, something akin to a virtual

in Asia’s largest democracy, India, more than

sovereignty against structural foreign rule.

reality, and certainly not a known political

125,000 farmers committed suicide out of

“Morales,” says a simple Bolivian woman to

entity, which can somehow move forward

desperation between 2001 and 2007 comes

Ziegler,“is a poor person like myself, a farmer,

in unison – particularly not without a

over as more than just a mundane statistic.

who has been elected as the Constitutional

revealed set of instructions.

“Humanity”, it should also be noted, is a

President, who has nationalised oil and gas Using the example of Nigeria, Ziegler reveals

... and who has defied imperialism.” But

Text By Abu Bakr Rieger

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GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


THOUGHT

THE NOMOS OF THE EARTH THE MUSLIM PERCEPTION OF THE WORLD AND SPACE

Carl Schmitt, together with Martin Heidegger and Max Weber, is among the most widely-read German thinkers of the twentieth century. Following the dissolution of the nation-states, European thinking has revolved around the search for a new ‘Nomos of the Earth’. What role are the Muslims playing in this respect? Space always used to be part of the world,

determined the human being’s cultural

but today the perception of space has

identity and sense of belonging to a place.

reversed: the world is in space. Perceived this way, man is encapsulated in an empty space,

The process of this spatial revolution now

or, as the existentialists put it, in nothingness.

seems unstoppable. Consequentially, man,

This new way of experiencing our located-

now without a home, is going so far as to try

ness corresponds with the thesis of the

to establish himself on the moon and on

German legal thinker Carl Schmitt, who

Saturn, as if to become the new ruler of space

stated that modern nihilism is characterised

from up there. The old Earth has become

by a peculiar lack of what he calls Ortung,

nothing more than a mere dot, while space

or placement. Indeed Schmitt goes so far as

and nothingness merge in man’s experience

to define nihilism by its radical capacity to

of his own nullity.

separate location and order. Today, the Internet, with its virtual worlds, is one of the

The Old World

symbols of the end of man’s former relation-

The modern world is shrugging off the old

ship with place.

order and locations of the European continent, whether we like it or not.The renowned

The consequences of this modern spatial

places of European culture, be they Rome,

revolution are quite severe. The structures of

Berlin, Paris or Madrid, are becoming level-

order have today become planetary in scale,

led megacities and showplaces for a

and by the same token people are loosing

monolithic culture which neither needs nor

their locality and their connection with their

brings forth any particular sense of place

native homes. The imprinting power of a

at all. The things displayed and consumed in

person’s origin is dissolving in the face of a

the pedestrian precincts of the world’s big

more monotonous world-culture. For hun-

cities are becoming the same everywhere –

dreds if not thousands of years, order and

and so too are the consumers walking in

location as a single intrinsic reality have

those precincts.

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That particular set of dynamics known as

technology only good, the last hope, or even

structures, the power of modern man has

globalisation is, as we can now more clearly

a kind of Ersatz-Religion for modern man.

clearly become relative. The integrative

see since the financial crisis, almost inse-

There is no doubt that technology is now

constraints and automation processes of the

parable from the new global order of finan-

made, expanded, and sometimes even

self-imposing economic zone, and the titanic

cial technique. The networked banks and

worshipped across the globe, and it is also

energy-thirst of the technological project, are

financial institutions are not only verging on

gradually integrating man himself into its

what drive events. Man no longer governs,

megalomania, they are at home everywhere

own technological world. In the struggle

he responds.

and nowhere at once.

for power between technology and the human

It is the world-dominating technique of

being, many sceptics seem unsure what the

Confronted with this new type of human

outcome will be.

who is basically enslaved to technology, the

banking which therefore best embodies the

great German philosopher Martin Heidegger,

actual nature of the transformation of this

And then there is another, increasingly

who reflected for a lifetime on technology,

century. The financial flows are at work

worrying aspect of the rule of technology,

stated that only a “God” could rescue

everywhere, but you cannot pin their power

and that is that the political dimension of the

mankind; a statement by the philosopher

down to a particular point on the globe. The

individual human creature is becoming more

corroborated by the jurist Carl Schmitt when he said that man, as a sovereign entity and as the administrator of a world worth living

It is the world-dominating technique of banking which therefore

in, could only be rescued by a new “Nomos”.

best embodies the actual nature of the transformation of this century. The financial flows are at work everywhere, but you cannot pin their power down to a particular point on the

The Nomos needs People Throughout his life, Schmitt placed great emphasis on the Greek word Nomos. To him,

globe. The new banker, who no longer recognises any nation,

Nomos did not mean human laws alone.

now says: everything is possible if it can be financed, and the

Society’s belief in the sanctity of godless

one in charge is the one who has enough funds!

humanism was shaken to the core by the global destruction of the 20th century and the horrors of Europe’s ideologies. The thesis that humanity itself is the creator and pro-

new banker, who no longer recognises any

and more tenuous. In this age of mighty

tector of justice only barely made it through

nation, now says: everything is possible if it

global financial and technological corpora-

into the modern ethical discourse after the

can be financed, and the one in charge is the

tions, old-style politicians who think in terms

violent and unstoppable death of millions

one who has enough funds!

of nations are permitted to bemoan the

in the Second World War.

demise in sovereignty of their old countries. This extraordinary power invested in finan-

They are now barely able to wield even a

Given the circumstances, Schmitt did not

cial technology demands that we look at the

minimum of political primacy. Only the big

believe that the new Nomos which man

nature of that technology which enables it.

players and their economies have access to

would have to seek and find would be some

What actually is the meaning and the nature

the necessary global instruments in the age

kind of final rationale or a set of meta-laws

of modern technology?

of the one-world economic zone.

designed by man.

In Europe this question has been debated

The Secular Position

What Schmitt recalled was the authentic

vigorously for a long time. Some demonise

In Europe it has long been common

meaning of the Greek word Nomos, which he

technology as “evil”, a growing threat to

knowledge that homo politicus no longer

defined as “Nehmen, Teilen, Weiden” – col-

nature and the creation; others see in

writes history alone. Within the global

lecting, distributing, tending – not a law,

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


THOUGHT

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THOUGHT

therefore, but a life-practice which encom-

rediscovers the autonomous law of econo-

independent Islamic rule, which, as we now

passes man, divinity and the world. It was this

mics from its own sources, it will not realise

know, was itself a Nomos.

law-giving basic process of human activity

its full possibility of producing a genuine

which Schmitt considered the genuine

Nomos. The Muslims will then only be in the

The state: national romanticism

”religious” activity of mankind. Within this,

position of “negatively” defining and fighting

It is quite clear that in the age of globali-

the good person, as the repository of law,

an enemy, but not “positively” establishing

sation and the imminent dissolution of natio-

actually embodies the law in all of his or her

Islam as a peaceful Nomos.

nal power, the Muslims will not go on hol-

knowledge and actions. “Law is more than

ding to the antiquated 19th century concept

The Leviathan: Western philosophy of order

too the objective of forming a state, together

Many people all over the world now see in

with the idea of national independence, is

Law, which is normally divinely inspired, is,

the Islamic life-practice a way in which the

an antiquated, nineteenth century, imaginary

according to Schmitt, already there before

human being can return to his experience of

view of social order. It will not take much

the state, which in itself is the political and

place and sense of justice.What is furthermore

adjustment on the part of the Muslims, since

historical product of Christian metaphysics.

remarkable is that Islam’s potential for being

they have always been prepared for a world

It is only the nihilistic, secular state which

a new Nomos in the world is being re-under-

based on freedom of trade-routes and estab-

can no longer differentiate what is right and

stood from within European thought and

lished free economic zones.

just state legality,” states one of Schmitt’s famous key insights.

of the nation-state for very long. In Europe

just from mere legality.According to Schmitt’s

European experience. It is worth remembering

understanding, every system of law in its

that in Europe, national boundaries are

substance is either revealed, or is the subjec-

gradually losing relevance, and that most

The “being-in-the-world” of the Muslims

tive justice of a historical victor who seeks to

European societies have long been de facto

Islam has from the outset two pillars which

impose his policies. But, in order to be a

multicultural. To many Europeans, even the

describe the Muslim’s inner order and

genuine Nomos, policies must not only take

conquest of space and the mastery of the

location in the world: Hajj and the prayer.

(taxes, for example), they must also establish

stars – including “Star Wars” – have become

The spirituality of the Muslim is neither

a permanent, politically and economically

dubious human objectives.

inward-only nor outward-only. These two

just reality.

rites orientate the Muslim within the New elites of European Muslims, especially

totality of his or her world-experience: a

Schmitt’s work is of course now more relevant

because of the modern doctrine of the secular

world, which encompasses the moon, the

than ever before. The crisis of modern law is

nation-state, have become alienated from

earth, geographical direction, the individual,

evident not only in the waging of illegitimate

their received sense of place and justice,

and society in general.

wars, but also in the fact that, without a

through their own way of “being-in-the-

Nomos, peace never follows. In this sense the

world”. The foundation of every nationalism

Millions of Muslims take the pilgrimage to

Gulf War is a stark demonstration that the

is race, something that has always been a

Makkah and Madinah from all over the world,

military victor is not able to establish a Nomos

completely un-Islamic foundation, not to

and there they witness human solidarity and

because he simply does not have one. Instead,

mention a limiting one.

the order which is established, in accordance with its predatory character, restricts itself to

The old division of the world into national

mere taking, whether in raw materials or in

zones is certainly the product of the Western

taxation.

way of viewing location and order. It was this philosophy of order which considered

But even Islam itself is reduced if you take

every rule to be the domination of an area

away from it the revealed quality of a

by a sovereign people. In the Arab world, the

complete Nomos. For example, until Islam

idea of national identity spelled the end of

GLOBALIA | Issue 07 | January 2010


THOUGHT

nearness to the Creator. In every minute of the day, millions of Muslims turn themselves towards Makkah. On the journey to Makkah and Madinah the Muslim experiences an inward and outward completeness, in radical

Dr. Carl Schmitt German Thinker and Jurist

contrast to the helplessly irrational longing of modern man to conquer empty space and the stars.

The German philosopher and expert in constitutional law Carl Schmitt (1888 -1985)

Heidegger’s analysis of Dasein, as a

is considered, alongside Martin Heidegger

necessary, spatial “being-in-the-world” finds

and Ernst Jünger, to be a defining figure of

a fundamental and complete fulfilment in the

German intellectual life of the twentieth

mandatory pilgrimage of Islam. It is not

century.

until he goes on Hajj that the Muslim completes his “being-in-the-world” in the existen-

New books about the thinker continue to

tial experience of the unity of his world. This

appear. However Carl Schmitt is hardly

is a defining experience beyond space and

ever taught at German universities any

time. It is this reflection on the world and its

more because of criticism raised against

existence which forms the character of the

him of being on occasion associated with

and analysis of power, authority and the

Muslim and the Muslim’s understanding

National Socialism (“Crown Jurist of the

actualisation of law, with declared “states

of location.

Reich”).

of emergency” being for him the most

Image: Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach

important indicator when appraising the

The Ummah – a political issue

This accusation led to his social banish-

sovereignty of the political. “The Sovereign

In Europe there is growing doubt as to

ment in Germany. Schmitt defended himself

is the one who disposes over the state of

whether the technological project alone can

against the accusations, pointing to his

emergency,” is how it reads in his political

create an intellectual and spiritual bond

many jewish friends and referring to

theology.

between people, like that called for in the

passages in his works which criticised the

European Anthem. Beethoven’s deeply Euro-

racism of the Nazis. His philosophical

Himself a model of the concept, Schmitt

pean and humane insight into the fraternity

significance is today recognised by both

considered the jurist to be an indepen-

of all people is exemplified by the Ummah,

friend and foe.

dent and incorruptible figure in the face

the world community of Muslims. The unity

of political power. Alongside state and

of Muslims is not a new idea, rather it is an

There is no doubt that his famous books

constitutional law his publications touch

existential consequence of the Islamic life-

“The Concept of the Political”, “Political

upon numerous other disciplines like

practice and its orientation towards Makkah

Theology” and the “Nomos of the Earth”

political science, sociology, theology,

and Madinah. But what is fascinating and

characterise current political debate.

German language and literature studies,

attractive about Islam today is that it also has

and philosophy.

what is necessary to bring about a Nomos for

One of his well known definitions, namely

the Earth. To counter the nihilism described

that the nature of the political is “the

Schmitt drew on the defining influence

by Schmitt at the beginning of this article,

discrimination between friend and foe” is

of political philosophers and political

Islam, uniquely, can bring about peace, and

often cited today and has led him to become

analysts such as, Thomas Hobbes, Niccolò

is itself the unification of order and location.

an enduring and authoritative political

Machiavelli, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Juan

thinker. His thinking, rooted in the catholic

Donoso Cortés and contemporaries like

faith, represented a lifelong questioning

Georges Sorel and Vilfredo Pareto.

Text By Abu Bakr Rieger

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