IBFAN INFO NEWSLETTER
September 1999 - Volume 1, No.2

 

Business and UN Forge Aid Link

Behind closed doors in a luxury hotel in Geneva, a gathering of top people from major business corporations and from humanitarian organizations met to establish "The Business Humanitarian Forum" - an association under Swiss law with an opening budget of a quarter of a million US dollars, is raising questions regarding links between transnational corporations and the UN.

Participants included the president of United Technologies Corporation - the worlds largest military contractor; the vice president of Nestlé - the company in the forefront of the effort to undermine the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes and the manager for international and governmental affairs of Rio Tinto - whose questionable activities were recently documented by the International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers Unions. ("Rio Tinto Tainted Titan.")

The forum was headed by a private aid organization (International Rescue Committee), an oil company (Unocal Corp.) and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

Secrecy was the order of the day, with media strictly excluded and the participants, notably the chairpersons, reluctant to comment. Even the chief spokesperson for the UN Secretary General at the UN Geneva Office was unaware of the forum, although the Secretary General sent an opening greeting.

The commercial sector's participation in the United Nations and its affiliated organizations is controversial and was highlighted at the press conference by the International Committee of the Red Cross's director of field operations, Jean-Daniel Tauxe, who deplored the "privatization" of conflicts i.e. not only the use of mercenaries, but the launching and prosecution of wars by multinational corporations to serve their own interests. The failing struggle of the Director General of the WHO to get governments of member states to increase the budget to compensate for inflation, opens the door to multinational corporations who wish to invest in many poor countries where there have been conflicts and disasters, showing interest in projects that affect their areas of investments or where opportunities exist for profit.

Is it really possible that in the future humanitarian aid will also answer to shareholders with the complicity and active participation of the humanitarian aid community?


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