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Today's
Stories
December
15, 2004
George
Caffentzis
The Petroleum Commons
December
14, 2004
Dave
Lindorff
DNC Meddling in the Ukraine Elections
Larry
Birns / Seth DeLong
Haiti is Unraveling and No One is Saying
Anything
Richard
Thieme
My Last Talk with Gary Webb: "I Knew It Was the Truth and
That's What Kept Me Going"
Patrick
Cockburn
A Year After Saddam's Capture, Iraq
is Getting Worse
Chris
Floyd
Client State: Moral Values and Voluntary Servitude in Bush's
America
Akiva
Eldar
A One-time Hanukkah Miracle
Burbach
/ Cantor
The Legacy of Pinochet: Kissinger
and the Teflon Tyrant

December
13, 2004
Cockburn
/ St. Clair
Gary Webb: a Great Reporter, Trashed
by the CIA's Claque
David
Phinney
"Contract Meal Disaster" for Iraqi Prisoners: Rancid
Food Sparked Abu Ghraib Riots
Paul
Craig Roberts
A Dose of Non-Delusional Reality
for Douglas Feith
M.
Junaid Alam
The War is the War Crime
Robert
Jensen
The US Has Lost the Iraq War...and That's a Good Thing
Richard
Oxman
Kafkaesque Lessons for the Left
Greg
Moses
Send No Messengers of Defeat
Douglas
Lummis
The Pentagon's Neurosis: Fallujah
Gulag

December
11 / 12, 2004
Alexander
Cockburn
Running an Empire on the Cheap
Ron
Jacobs
The Drugs of War: Getting High in the Green Zone?
Saul
Landau
Listening and Talking to God About
Invading Other Countries
Gary
Leupp
Bush's Capital
Sharon
Smith
The Horrible Toll on US Troops
Dave
Lindorff
Deja Vu All Over Again: 5,000 Desertions and Counting
Uri
Avnery
The Boss Has Gone Crazy
Jude
Wanniski
The Neo-Con Smear on Kofi Annan: What Food-for-Oil Scandal?
Heather
Gray
How the South Became Republican: an Interview with John Egerton
Patrick
Cockburn / Ken Sengupta
Fallujah: the Homecoming and the Homeless
John
Pilger
Return to Kosovo: Calling the Humanitarian Bombers to Account
Joshua
Frank
All the Rage: Mr. Solomon, Say You're Sorry
Ben
Tripp
O Canada!: the Truth About the Election of 2004
John
Stanton
God Speaks!
Laura
Nathan
Porn Stars are People, Too: a Talk with Christi Lake
Poets'
Basement
Capaccio, Davies, Louise, Ford and Albert
Website
of the Day
Fallujah Photos: Killed in Their Beds

December
10, 2004
Ralph
Nader
President Bush, Stop Destroying the
Mosques of Iraq
Greg
Moses
Whitewashing Voter Fraud
Nicole
Colson
Rebellion in the Ranks: Grunts Are Resisting Stop-Loss Orders
Frederick
B. Hudson
"They Still Got Those Dogs": A New Book Probes Old
Civil Rights Lessons
Patrick
Cockburn
Iraq's Insurgents Oppose the Occupation, Not the Elections
Kathy
Kelly
From Haiti to Iraq: Burying Water
December
9, 2004
Greg
Moses
Ask Not Who Bankrolled Fallujah
Joshua
Frank
Cobb and the Ohio Recount: Vote Fraud as Fundraiser!
Ralph
Nader
An Open Letter to Bush: It's Time to
Disclose the Real Casualty Figures
Lee
Sustar
Bhopal: the Making of a Disaster
Tom
Barry
Restrictionist Resurgence
Mickey
Z.
Sander Hicks and the 9/11 Truth Movement
Christopher
Brauchli
Bush in the Bubble
Mark
Donham
Why are House Democrats Trying to
Deny Cynthia McKinney Seniority?
Gary
Corseri
On the Anniversary of John Lennon's Death, 2012
Paul
de Rooij
The Voices of Sharon's Little Helpers
December
8, 2004
Ralph
Nader
Will the Real Michael Moore Ever Re-Emerge?
Ann
Harrison
The Ohio Recount: Reluctant Officials
and Few Rules
Paul
Craig Roberts
War Crime
Dave
Lindorff
They've Got a Secret: Inside the $40 Billion Black Budget for
Spying
Patrick
Cockburn / Andrew Buncombe
CIA Warning on Iraq: Fallujah Did Not Break the Back of the Insurgency
Col.
Dan Smith
Rules of Engagement in Iraq
Emily
Alves / Michael Johnson
Paradise Lost: Corruption and Clientelism in Costa Rica
Richard
Oxman
The Dylan Bob Wouldn't Mention: Up With Dylan Thomas
Ron
Jacobs
In Fallujah, Freedom Isn't Free
December
7, 2004
Patrick
Cockburn
Running Battles in Baghdad
Behrooz
Ghamari
Lost Muslim Voices of Dissent
Dave
Lindorff
American Fantasies: Psst! Hey Buddy,
Did You Hear How Well the War's Going?
Joshua
Frank
Dean at the DNC?
Richard
Oxman
Down with Dylan: the Insufferable Interview
Ray
McGovern
All Mosquitoes, No Swamp
John
Chuckman
The Invasion of Hallifax: The Imperial Wizard Visits Canada
James
Petras
Latin America: the Empire Changes Gears
Website
of the Day
ToxMap: Who's Poisoning You
December
6, 2004
Paul
Craig Roberts
Paranoia and Pre-emption: Is the
Bush Administration Certifiable?
December
4 / 6, 2004
Alexander
Cockburn
Politicize the CIA? You've Got to
be Kidding
Joe
Bageant
Dining with the Rhinos
Alan
Maass
Reporting from the Ground in Iraq: an Interview with Patrick
Cockburn
Brian
Cloughley
Democracy, Bush-style, in the Gulf
Laura
Carlsen
Latin America Shifts Left
Lenni
Brenner
Jefferson, Madison, Bush and Religion
Anna
Ioakimedes
Brazil's Haitian Mission: Doing God's Work or Washington's?
Uri
Avnery
Widow of Opportunity?
Fred
Gardner
Supreme Court Hears Medical Pot Case
Dave
Zirin
Steroids to Heaven
Jackie
Corr
Mining Camp Blues: the Red State Variation
Don
Fitz
Will Greens Abandon IRV?
Lucy
Herschel
"Art can be a Weapon of the Oppressed": an Interview
with Artist Anthony Papa
Richard
Oxman
No Angels in America: Bashing the Gay Play
Ron
Jacobs
Holiday Greeting Card
Poets'
Basement
Collins, Albert, LaMorticella
December
3, 2004
Dave
Lindorff
Lie Then Escalate
Ben
Tripp
Fun With Boycotts: How to Shop in a
Time of Crisis
Joe
Allen
Murder in El Salvador: the Assassination of Teamster Organizer
Gilberto Soto
Matthew
B. Riley
Human Rights Court Fails Lori Berenson
Meir
Shalev
In the End, It is the Violin that Wins
Bob
Wing
The White Elephant in the Room: Race and Election 2004
Christopher
Brauchli
When McCain Bit His Tongue
Sasan
Fayazmanesh
The EU, the US, Israel and Iran
December
2, 2004
Tito
Tricot
No Justice in Chile: I'm a Torture
Survivor in a Country Where Torturers Still Run Free
Behzad
Yaghmaian
The Murder of Theo Van Gogh and Muslim Migration
Dr.
Susan Block
Lana and Me: Meetings with Remarkable Apes
Frank
/ Chowkwanyun
Liberalism and Its Bounds
Lee
Sustar
Standoff in Ukraine: the Bad v. the Corrupt
Patrick
Cockburn
Another Grim Record in Iraq
Mark
Engler
Seattle at Five
Michael
Donnelly
Something Stinks in South Bend: the Firing of Tyrone Willingham
Nate
Collins
The Bay Area Mall on an Ohlone Burial Grounds
Saul
Landau
The Assassination of Danilo Anderson
December
1, 2004
Phillip
Cryan
Associated with Whom? Rightist Bias
in Wire Coverage of Colombia
Dave
Zirin
What's the Matter with "Leon"?:
Budweiser's Racist Commercial
Ghali
Hassan
Iraq's Health Care Under the Occupation:
200 Children Die Every Day
Donna
J. Volatile
Beware Western Nations Threatening "Democracy"
Patrick
Cockburn
How Saddam Tried to Arm the Insurgency
Nick
Meo
Chemical War Over Afghanistan
Mike
Ferner
The Battle of Toledo
Mokhiber
/ Weissman
Shame and Determination on Global AIDS Day: 40 Million and Rising
Kathy
Kelly
Looking the Other Way: the Real Crimes
of the UN in Iraq
November
30, 2004
Jennifer
Van Bergen
The Veil of Secrecy
Toni
Nelson Herrera
Meeting Kurtz: When Art is a Crime
Paul
Craig Roberts
The Bush Delusions: Successful at Incompetence
Patrick
Cockburn
The Insurgency Strikes Back: There Are No Safe Havens in Iraq
Chuck
Munson
WTO Protests Five Years Later: Seattle Weekly Trashes Anti-Globalization
Movement
Adam
Williams
Citizenship Sold: Back to Business in Indiana
Gregory
Elich
A Dangerous Turn in the US Plans for
North Korea
Website
of the Day
Read Lynne Cheney's Lesbian Novel Online!
November
29, 2004
Dave
Lindorff
Blowback in Ukraine: The Hand of
the CIA?
Omar
Barghouti
"The Pianist" of Palestine:
Roadblock Concerto at Gunpoint
Mike
Whitney
The US Media and Fallujah: How to
Market a Siege
Uri
Avnery
The Abu Mazen Style: "Give Me
Some Credit!"
Matt
Vidal
Globalization and Economic Inequality: a Look at the Numbers
Patrick
Cockburn
An Interview with Iraq's Foreign
Minister
Alan
Farago
Sex Change and Salvation: God, Girly Men and Endocrine Disrupters
Justin
Huggler
Bhopal 20 Years Later
Antony
Loewenstein
How Australia Reported Arafat's Death and Legacy
Gary
Leupp
Ukraine: Poll Results Aren't the Real
Issue
Website
of the Day
Mosul: Images from a Kill Zone
November
27 / 28, 2004
Peter
Linebaugh
Torture & Neo-Liberalism with
Sycorax in Iraq
Alexander
Cockburn
What Happened to O'Reilly's Loofa?
Fred
Gardner
Ashcroft v. Raich: Medical Marijuana and the Supreme Court
Kathy
Kelly
What We Can Control
Diane
Christian
The Other Cheek: "Empire Doesn't Analyze, It Acts"
Gary
Leupp
One More Neocon Target: South (Yes, South) Korea
Lenni
Brenner
Equality and Rights of Return: Jefferson Instructs the New York
Times
Ron
Jacobs
Death Squads and Iraq's Elections: the Mysterious Murders of
the AMS Clerics
Joshua
Frank
An Interview with Kevin Zeese on Nader, Kerry and the ABB Crowd
Toni
Solo
The Murder of Danilo Anderson
Saul
Landau
Fallujah, the 21st Century Guernica
JoAnn
Wypijewski
Matthew Shepard Case 6 Years Later: Why Hate Crimes Laws are
No Cure for Homophobia
Justin
Taylor
Empire's Lawless Opportunities
Amos
Harel
The Case of Captain R.
Walter
A. Davis
Tabloid Justice
Stephen
Hendricks
God's Kind of Men
Poets'
Basement
Albert, LaMorticella and Ford
November
26, 2004
Peter
Feng
Gavin Newsom: Man or Machine?
Greg
Moses
It's the White Vote, Stupid
Liaquat
Ali Khan
The Devil's Work: Bush's Minority Appointments
Michael
Mandel / Gail Davidson
Why Bush Should Be Banned from Canada: a Memo to the Ministry
of Immigration
Dave
Lindorff
Nation of Sheep, Turkey of an Election: Urkrainians Show the
Way
Gary
Corseri
When Black Friday Comes...
Paul
Craig Roberts
Whatever Happened to Conservatives?
Website
of the Day
Iraq Pipeline Watch
November
25, 2004
Willliam
Loren Katz
Giving Thanks to Whom?: "Thanks
to God We Sent 600 Heathen Souls to Hell Today"
Mitchel
Cohen
Why I Hate Thanksgiving
Mike
Ferner
An Uncommon Mom
November
24, 2004
Gila
Svirsky
License to Kill: the Example of Violence
is Set by the State
Winslow
T. Wheeler
The
Other Mess in Congress
Christopher
Brauchli
The Company He Keeps: the Syndicate of Tom Delay
Dave
Lindorff
Double Standards on Exit Polls: Hypocrisy Sans Irony
Ron
Jacobs
The Occupation of Iraq is the Root of t he Problem
Ken
Sengupta
Witnesses: War Crimes in Fallujah
Diana
Barahona
The Final Holocaust or Why I Voted for Ralph Nader
John
L. Hess
Safire the Shameless
Jason
Leopold
Did Harvard Hire (Another) War Criminal?
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Mark of McCain: the Senator Most Likely to Start a Nuclear
War
Map
of the Day
Now and Then: 2004 v. 1860
November
23, 2004
Forrest
Hylton
Bush and Uribe at the Beach
November
22, 2004
Dave
Zirin
Fight Night in the NBA: Selective Outrage
in Detroit
Paul
Craig Roberts
On to Iran: We Won't Get Fooled Again?
Michael
Mandel / Gail Davidson
Why Bush Should be Banned from Canada
Kathie
Helmkamp
Our Son: a Marine Who Won't Kill
Ken
Sengupta
The Triangle of Death: "This is Now the Most Dangerous Place
in Iraq"
Mike
Whitney
Greenspan's Hammer
Roger
Burbach
Why They Hate Bush in Chile
Website
of the Day
Fed Up with Government Lies and Corporate Spin?
November
20 / 21, 2004
Alexander
Cockburn
The Poisoned Chalice
Todd
May
Religion, the Election and the Politics of Fear
Abbas
Ahmed Ibrahim
The Horrors of Fallujah: a First-Hand Account
Kevin
Zeese
Mishandling Nader
Landau
/ Hassen
After Arafat
Tom
Barry
The Vulcans Consolidate Power: The Rise of Stephen Hadley
Fred
Gardner
Pot Shots: Ask Dr. Todd
Justin
E.H. Smith
Triumph of the Will: the Sequel
Carl
Estabrook
Where We Are Now
Gary
Leupp
Imperial History-Making vs. Reality-Based Thought: a Dialogue
Dave
Lindorff
Apocalypse Soon
Jenna
Michelle Liut
Plans Colombia and Patriota: Wanton Wastes of Money, Manpower
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Mickey
Z.
The Granma Moses of Radical Writing: an Interview with William
Blum
Greg
Moses
The Same Old Struggle Against Imperial America
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Smith
Abortion Rights and the Election: What Now?
Ron
Jacobs
Sandwiches and Car Bombs
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Raising d'Etre: Finding Money in Hollywood These Days
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|
December 15, 2004
Local, Islamic and Global
The
Petroleum Commons
By
GEORGE CAFFENTZIS
1. All land and natural resources
(including mineral resources) within the Ijaw territory belong
to Ijaw communities and are the basis of our survival.
2. We cease to recognize all
undemocratic decrees that rob our
peoples' communities of the right to ownership and control of
our lives and resources, which were enacted without our participation
and dissent. These include the Land Use Decree and The Petroleum
Decree.
-The Kaiama Declaration
(December 1998)
Introduction:
Oil and Water
The struggles over the ownership
of the two most important political liquids of this era, petroleum
and water, have had different fates. Though water has been proclaimed
to be either private, state or common property throughout history,
the novel feature of this neo-liberal period has been the move
by corporations to totally privatize it. The powerful struggles
waged against the corporate privatization of water from Cochabamba
(Bolivia) to Soweto (South Africa) have focused world attention
on the question: Who owns water? The consequent efforts to keep
water as a common property on a local and global level are now
among the most important initiatives of the anti-globalization
movement.
Petroleum, on the other hand,
has in the last hundred and fifty years been considered exclusively
as either private or state property. Thus, the pages of the history
books on the petroleum industry have been filled with "magnates"
like John D. Rockefeller or government "leaders" like
Saddam Hussain and Winston Churchill. Similarly, the "struggle
over oil" has been largely seen as a struggle between oil
companies and governments, since its beginnings in the mid-nineteenth
century.
However, over the last fifteen
years, there has been a major shift in the physiognomy of the
protagonists of the oil struggle. National governments and huge
energy conglomerates no longer dominate the scene. The new protagonists
include: "peoples" like the Ijaws, the Ogoni, the Chiapanecos,
the U'wa, the Cofan, the Secoyas, the Huaorani, the people of
Ache (Sumatra); border-transcending social movements under the
star of Islam and subscribing to "Islamic economics;"
elements of the UN system like the World Bank, claiming to provide
the "global governance" of the "global commons."
These peoples, movements and global entities have entered the
struggle for the control of oil production, legitimizing themselves
with a new (and at the same time quite archaic) conception of
property: common property.
Why is the notion of a petroleum
common emerging now, and what are its consequences for the oil
industry?
There are three levels of claims
to petroleum as a common property, correlating with three kinds
of allied communities that are now taking shape, for there is
no common property without a community that regulates its use:
*First, some local communities
most directly affected by the extraction of petroleum claim to
own and regulate the petroleum under their territory as a common.
*Second, Islamic economists
claim for the Islamic community of believers, from Morocco to
Indonesia, and its representative, the 21st century Caliphate
in formation, ownership of and the right to regulate the huge
petroleum fields beneath the vast territory corresponding to
the countries of the ummah.
*Third, UN officials claim
for the "coming global community" the right to regulate
the so-called global commons: air, water, land, minerals (including
petroleum) and "nous" (knowledge and information).
This imagined global community is to be represented by the dizzying
array of "angels" that make up the UN system, from
NGO activists to UN environmentalist bureaucrats to World Bank
"green" advisors.
All these claims and their
legitimizing discourse are displacing, with different results,
the monopoly hold of governments and corporations over the ownership
and regulation of the planet's petroleum. There is much that
is shared by these different conceptions of the petroleum commons,
but they are also often in conflict. These conflicts will determine
how the ownership of petroleum and the regulation of its extraction
and use will be transformed by the entrance of the "commoners"
into a field dominated for over a century by nation states and
global corporations.
The Local Petroleum
Commons: Nigeria, Chiapas, the Amazon
One of the most important areas
where the petroleum commons is emerging as a political reality
is the Niger Delta. This area is at the meeting point of many
crossroads in the world market. Three centuries ago the region
from Escarvos to Calabar was the main place for the storage and
transshipment of African slaves bound for the plantations of
the Americas. The slave trade poisoned social relations in the
Niger Delta, but the people of the Delta continue to be poisoned,
physically, economically, as well as socially, today by the global
oil industry. They have been resisting this fate with great courage
and originality, taking a political road that has begun with
the demand for reparations for the damages caused by petroleum
extraction, and has evolved into the declaration that petroleum
in the Delta is a commons.
The story of this struggle
begins in the early 1990s, when the Ogoni people decided that
the time was ripe to transform what had been a long-fought but
largely unknown local struggle against the Nigerian government
and the oil companies into an internationally-recognized one.
The Ogoni are a relatively small ethnic group in Southeastern
Nigeria (with a population of less than a million), but they
have been at the center of oil production from its beginning
and have suffered greatly for it. In the 1990s they realized
that if they had to fight a global oil company--in this case,
Royal Dutch Shell-- to obtain reparations, they had to become
global themselves. How could a small, impoverished ethnic group,
in the midst of an "obscure" part of Africa, do that?
Parochial, ethnic politics had to be transcended so that the
Ogoni struggle could be connected to the worldwide ecological
struggle against the oil companies. On the heals of the "No
Blood for Oil" campaign against the 1991 Gulf War, the Ogoni
proclaimed that they too had paid a high price to fuel Shell's
profits and the industrial machines of Europe and the US. With
the help of one of their leaders, playwright Kenule Saro-Wiwa,
who had built up an international audience with his writings,
this message reached the environmental groups across the planet.
The Movement for the Survival
of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) stimulated a recomposition of the
anti-capitalist movement, as it made it clear that the Ogoni's
demand for reparations from Shell was an integral part of the
broader demand by grassroot movements internationally that corporations
everywhere pay for the destruction caused by capitalist development.
In 1995, Saro-Wiwa was arrest and hanged, together with another
eight Ogoni leaders, on fabricated murder charges by the Nigerian
military regime of General Sani Abacha. Simultaneously scores
of Ogoni villages were attacked, often razed to the ground by
the Nigerian army, plausibly with the complicity/assistance of
Shell. In response to these events, which left many people dead
on the ground and thousand of refugees, Greenpeace and other
environmental groups organized a worldwide boycott against Shell,
protesting the exchange of blood for oil blood in Nigeria as
in the Middle East. Ken Saro-Wiwa paid with his life for connecting
the Ogoni with a world environmentalist movement, but his organizational
model has been used again and again by other small ethnic groups
throughout the world.
In Nigeria itself, the high
cost paid by the Ogoni for their struggle was noted by other
militant groups in the Niger Delta, who have since de-emphasized
the international aspect of their organizational efforts and
focused, instead, directly on negotiations with the oil companies
and with the Nigerian government, based upon their capacity to
hinder or halt production or shipment of oil. These groups have
also pushed the demands of the struggle to a new level. Instead
of demanding reparations, as MOSOP had done, they are have been
claiming ownership of the petroleum underneath their territories,
defining it as a common property.
The most prominent movement
in the Delta after the decline of MOSOP has been the Movement
for the Survival of Ijaw Ethnic Nationality (MOSIEN). It is one
of the largest ethnic groups in the Delta (with a population
of approximately eight million). The Ijaw have abandoned the
non-violence tactics sponsored by the Ogoni and resurrected the
militant symbols and memories of their collective past. The cult
of Egbesu, their traditional war god, has been the recruiting
ground for young militants who in its name have liberated their
leaders
from government prisons, taken over oil installations, and kidnapped
oil workers.
Ken Saro-Wiwa and the other
Ogoni leaders had been convinced that it was folly to presume
that a small ethnic group could directly confront the mighty
Nigerian army at the time controlled by a military government.
Thus they had preached non-violent resistance. The Ijaw militants
have rejected this path, though they have faced devastating attacks
by the Nigerian military--including the horrendous Christmas
massacre at Odi in 1999 that left 2,000 dead. This shift in tactics
has put into question much of the international support that
the Ogoni struggle and Saro-Wiwa's martyrdom had engendered for
the struggles in the Niger Delta.
There were other important
changes in the struggle of the Ijaw with the government and oil
companies. As stated in the Kaiama Declaration, the Ijaw have
formally declared the petroleum within Ijaw territory as common
property of the Ijaw community. Presently, the idea of a petroleum
common is at the center of the discourse of the resistance to
oil companies in the Nigeria Delta. An example is the reply which
the former president of the Ijaw Youth Council and current militia
commander, Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, gave to a Financial
Times reporter when asked how much his men take from the
pipelines each day. "As much as we can. It's free,"
Dokubo-Asari answered. Another example is the scornful graffiti
that the invading army soldiers left behind after the Odi massacre:
"Na you get oil? Foolish people." ("Does the oil
belong to you? Foolish people.")
A further dramatic political
development in the struggle for the "petroleum commons"
was the entrance in it of women's organizations. Local women
from the Ijaw and Istkeri ethnicities remembered in this context
the old tactic of shaming soldiers by appearing before them collectively
naked--which had been used to effect against the British in the
Aba Women's War of 1929. In November 2002, after being brutally
beaten by the oil company guards, one group of women protesters
in the Delta threatened that "within 10 days from today,
if our hospital and rehabilitation bills are not paid, we will
all come out en masse fully naked, and we shall occupy not only
their gates but their flow stations throughout the Niger Delta."
The showing of one's genitals, especially for women past the
age of reproduction, is a formidable curse, in many areas of
Africa. But what was more threatening to the oil companies and
the Nigerian government than the occupation of the oil installations
by thousands of naked women was the fact that these women came
from different ethnic groups, often in conflict with each other.
The most powerful weapon in the hands of the government and the
oil companies against the demand for reparations and the recognition
of communal ownership of oil are the division existing between
the different ethnic groups that populate the Delta, which have
already resulted in thousands of deaths over the last decade.
Thus the fact that women from the oft-warring Itsekiri, Ijaw,
Ilaje and Urhobos groups could join in a united front is a troubling
sign that women at least have understood the secret of power.
Whether their unity will set the pace for the petroleum commons
movement in the Delta remains however an open question.
The early 1990s was a turning
point in the struggle to claim communal ownership of petroleum
not in the Niger Delta alone. New organizations of indigenous
peoples formed around similar demands in Mexico, Ecuador, and
Colombia. At the time of the Zapatista rebellion in Chiapas,
launched on New Years Day 1994--the precise moment in which NAFTA
took effect-- sub-commandante Marcos frequently pointed
out that when the indigenous cut firewood for their homes they
are arrested and fined, but when oil developers cut huge swathes
through the forest and destroy trees with dynamite, they are
congratulated for their productivity!
As fate would have it, post-rebellion
Zapatista communities are often located near or directly over
oil deposits. Consequently, the San Andres Accords--the main
document arising from the peace talks between the Zapatistas
and the Mexican government--included the recognition of the indigenous
communities' "collective right to evaluate federal and state
plans to exploit strategic resources in their region in order
to determine those plans' effects on indigenous territories."
This provision which, in effect, gave the indigenous communities
a veto over oil exploration and exploitation, was certainly one
of the main sticking points that prevented the approval of the
Accords. Similar developments took place in Ecuador in the early
1990s. Although oil exploration and extraction began in the Ecuadorian
Amazon in the 1960s, it took time for the indigenous peoples
affected by the environmental pollution and the disintegration
of social life caused by the oil industry to organize: first
to demand a clean-up and reparations, and then to proclaim oil
a common resource to be dispose of only by the community, and
not by the state's or the oil companies.'
"The [community's] Right
To Say 'No'" climaxed in the struggle of the U'wa in Colombia
against Occidental Petroleum's decision to drill for oil in their
territory, beginning in 1993. The U'wa threatened to commit collective
suicide if the company, which was granted exploration rights
by the Colombian government, actually carried out this plan.
Occidental Petroleum Company had calculated it could extract
over a billion barrels of oil from this area, and was anxious
to verify the estimate. But a combination of lawsuits in Colombian
and international courts, shareholder resolutions, demonstrations
in front of the company's California offices and the home of
its CEO, carried on by the U'wa and their allies --compounded
by the threat of mass suicide by the entire U'wa community--
put the plan to rest and avoided what promised to be an ecological
as well as social disaster. Occidental Petroleum pulled out of
U'wa territory without making a second try, in contrast to the
standard procedure. Subsequently, Ecopetrol, the Colombian state
oil company has also planned exploration activities in the region
of the U'wa, but these too are likely to be resisted.
The U'wa are among the many
peoples across the planet who now refuse to approach the oil
industry as supplicants, demanding compensation for the harm
oil extraction has caused on their lands. The growing activism
by non-corporate, non-state actors who claim communal ownership
of petroleum is having a decisive impact on the oil industry's
development, especially in this period with the expansion of
oil exploration into the "margins" --areas that had
previously been too distant from the main centers of the oil
industry to be taken into consideration. But it is here that
the oil industry comes continually in confrontation with people
who still have a sense of the commons, since they often have
common property resources such as land, and methods to regulate
them. Consequently, the state and market paradigms of oil ownership
are clashing with dozens of new, often "small," local
movements and communities that, when integrated across the planet,
are beginning to have an impact on the legal status of oil ownership.
The Islamic
Petroleum Commons: From Morocco to Indonesia
Another conception of a petroleum
commons has developed in Islamic economic theory and political
practice since the 1970s. It claims that petroleum found beneath
Islamic territory is the common possession of the worldwide Islamic
community (Ummah) and consequently it is neither state
nor private property. This conception is challenging the relations
that have been worked out between the oil companies and Islamic
nation-states since World War I.
A key event in the development
of the international oil industry was the destruction of the
last Caliphate, the Ottoman Empire, at the end of World War I.
A Caliphate requires a secular military-political entity that
is pledged to defend the worldwide Islamic community. The Ottoman
Turks had been performing this role of "defenders of the
faith" since the 15th century. Their imperial lands included
Iraq, Kuwait, and parts of Saudi Arabia--i.e. the center of the
main oil reserves of the planet. In order for the petroleum industry
to operate on a capitalist basis, the large international oil
companies and main imperialist powers at the end of World War
I (US, Britain, France) tore up the Ottoman Caliphate and created
a number of rentier states that were largely under their control.
The incompatibility between
the existence of the Caliphate and the for-profit operations
that were required by the oil industry is evident. An Islamic
Caliphate had to be committed, at least in principle, to specific
re-distributive economic principles (including the concept of
a petroleum common owned by the ummah, the entire Islamic
community) that were in contrast with the corporate control envisioned
by the founders of the oil industry in the Middle East in period
between 1918 and 1945. A genuine Caliphate would have had to
invest in ways that would have made it autonomous from the directives
of the imperialist powers (governmental or corporate). Last,
a genuine Caliphate would have had worldwide reach, and would
have had to be committed to intervening in areas where the Islamic
community resided. These areas, however, were often essential
parts of the empires of Britain, France and Holland. (e.g., India,
Algeria, and Indonesia).
What is presently called Islamic
fundamentalism, or political Islam, or Islamism, is in part an
effort to revive the Caliphate almost a century after its end.
This gives these social movements a "global reach,"
as they claim to unite and "protect" the Islamic community
presently stretching from Morocco to Indonesia and, through immigration,
into the heart of Europe and North America. Whatever the ultimate
fate of this type of patriarchal politics and whatever its class
composition, this drive towards a Caliphate represents an important
reality for the oil industry since both are operating at the
center of the major oil reserves of the planet. Indeed, if one
correlates the nation-state members of the Organization of Islamic
Congress with the oil reserves that are estimated to lie in their
territories, one sees that nearly two-thirds of the world's petroleum
is "Islamic" Such a drive is toward an "imagined
community"--but then, what community except the most intimate
is not imagined?
Along with the revival of Islam
as a political force has come the development of an "Islamic
economics" that has a number of tenets relevant to the oil
industry. First, since oil is a sub-soil resource, from an Islamic
perspective, it is seen as a gift from Allah and hence a community
good. Although Islamic economics respects private property --after
all, Islam is a religion founded by a merchant-- it also recognizes
the role of communally shared resources. Islamic economics accepts
the standard division of private, state, and common property,
and oil is definitely included in the category of common property.
It is now traditional to repeat at this juncture the famous statement
of Mohammed: "The people are partners in three things: water,
pastures and fire [today, petroleum]." The recognition of
an Islamic petroleum commons is seen as a first step in the realization
of an Islamic economics.
True, some common property
must be mined (like oil, gold, silver, and iron), but the minerals
themselves remain the common property of all Muslims. The Caliphate
itself might mine them or sub-contract their collection, but
all revenues gained from their sale should be kept in the Bait
al-Mal--the same treasury that the zakat, or redistributive
tithe, is destined for.
The second principle of Islamic
economics is the redistributive one. Islam, for all of its respect
of private property, instituted from its beginning a system of
income transfers. Even non-Muslims know of the zakat,
but there are many other re-distributive mechanisms (e.g., the
prohibition of charging interest) that make the doctrine of neo-liberalism
anathema in Islamic discourse. A Caliphate is duty-bound to fund
the poor, the needy, the travelers, the debtors and its jihad
from the funds in the Bait al-Mal. This is especially
true of revenues derived from oil, since they are directly derived
from the sale of a communal good. Thus the charges of corruption
hurled against the Saudi Arabian elite by Islamists are especially
damning, since the Saudi elite's extravagant ways of living can
be accused of denying bread to the mouths of the poor children
Allah destined it for.
The third principle of Islamic
economics is based on the prohibition of waste and the concern
for conserving scarce resources. Islamists can plausibly argue
that if the conspicuous consumption and self-protective expenditure
on military hardware indulged in by the present elites are ended,
more oil could be left in the ground. Such an economic policy
would clearly have a significant impact on the price of oil,
since oil would no longer be considered a state or corporate
commodity to be sold to the highest bidder, and instead would
be viewed as a common good whose conservation would be valuable
in itself.
Common property in the Islamic
tradition is often not emphasized in academic expositions of
Islamic economics, where the pride of place is given to a symbolic
zakat and a banking system that denies a role to interest.
The works of Pakistani social thinker Savyid Abul-Ala Mawdudi
(1903-79), martyred Egyptian Islamist Sayyid Qutb (1906-66) and
Iraqi writer Muhammad Baquir al-Sadr (1931-80) --the intellectual
progenitors of Islamic economics-- are often taken to task for
imposing unrealistic constrains on the development of capitalism
in the Islamic world. Nevertheless, if the doctrine of the petroleum
commons were implemented as the basis of social planning, in
an Islamic world that counts more than a billion people, we can
presume it would have a far greater impact than any other of
its economic recommendations.
If Islamic nations turned their
petroleum resources into a commons, then three major, even revolutionary
changes would follow. First, this would lead to a tighter control
of the pace of extraction and a willingness to exercise the "Right
to say 'No'," resulting in much higher oil prices. Second,
the surplus of the commons would flow into re-distributive projects
in the Islamic world, rather than being channeled into the economies
and financial systems of Europe and the US. Last, the neo-liberal
program for the Middle East (as outlined in George W. Bush's
plan for the outcome of the Iraq war) would be challenged.
The Global
Petroleum Commons of the Future and the United Nations System
If we combine the local claims
to petroleum as communal property with those by Islamic economic
theorists, we find that more than 70% of the oil on the planet
is considered to be a part of a commons. There is, however, a
third concept of petroleum as a global commons that incorporates
all oil deposits, whether discovered or not. The proponents of
this notion argue that the consequences of the exploration, extraction,
distribution, and consumption of petroleum are so problematic
for "humanity" that they cannot be left to the devices
of private companies or nation states, but have to be managed
by international organizations. According to this view, there
exists a global petroleum commons that needs an adequate regulative
community, most commonly identified with the United Nations system.
Thus, in the 1990s, the concept
of a global commons has given new luster to the UN system, suffering
from an identity crisis after the end of the Cold War. Increasingly,
the UN system has claimed to represent a global community that
does not exist, but presumably represents the horizon of UN activities.
On this basis, the UN system has negotiated a number of accords
with mining and energy companies according them ideological legitimacy.
These include the Global Compact and the Global Mining Initiative,
as well as the Kyoto Accords. This makes of the UN system--which
includes the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF)--the
global "partner" to and regulator of the planetary
oil, gas, and coal companies.
It is crucial to understand
why, in the last fifteen years, the UN system has dared to claim
the right to regulate petroleum as a global commons. During this
time the extractive industries, with special emphasis on mining
and oil, have been in crisis, mostly because of the refusal by
millions of people across the planet to accept the social and
environmental destruction caused by mining and oil drilling activities.
What appears to be the "natural" limit of extraction
(as explained by the Club of Rome's "asymptotic depletion
curves" or by M. King Hubbert's "peak oil" graphs)
is indeed the resistance of an ever-broader circle of people
to suffering the consequences of private or state sponsored mineral
or oil extraction with no compensation or redress. Global warming,
environmental pollution and illness, hazardous working conditions
have increasingly been the source of anxiety, protest, and disruption
of operations in the extractive industries. The loss of trust
suffered by these industries has been due to such resistance
and the problems it addresses, more than to the difficulty of
finding new fields of coal, copper or petroleum. Thus, the need
of the extractive industries for some "legitimate partner"
to negotiate with, not posing threatening demands such as those
workers' organizations and local communities increasingly present.
Just as the extractive industries
were undergoing their crisis, the UN system was facing it own.
It had been set up to negotiate the conflicts between Capitalism
and Communism, Colonialism and Anti-Colonialism. With the dissolution
of the Soviet Union and the collapse of apartheid in South Africa,
its mission seemed to vanish. Here is where the call of the extractive
industries, especially the oil industry, provided a new lifeline,
appointing the UN not only as the partner of the extractive industries
but as their regulator as a representative of the coming global
community, a task akin to the surrogate service the Catholic
Church is expected to provide in anticipation of the "the
City of God" in the period before the Second Coming!
The difficulties of such a
surrogate global community have been brought to every one's attention
in the course of more than a decade of activism by the anti-globalization
movement. Central to this movement has been a critique of the
UN system's most powerful bodies besides the Security Council:
the World Bank and IMF. As "No-global" activists have
documented, the problems of the nation state have not been transcended
by the rise of global forms of government such as the World Bank,
IMF, and UN presume to provide. The neo-liberal turn of the World
Bank and IMF demonstrates that the UN system magnifies the problems
of nation-state capitalism. Indeed, the UN-based "coming
global community" offers a classic solution to all distributive
problems: "What's yours is mine, and what's mine is mine."
For instance, in the name of this "virtual community,"
the UN-system and its satellite NGOs advocate themselves the
right to demand that indigenous people in the South respect designated
"ecological zones" or "conservation regions"
to the point of ceasing to use them for their own sustenance
and economic well-being, even when no other alternatives are
available to them, and they have lived upon the now off-limit
lands for time immemorial.
The Petroleum
Commons as Conflict and Opportunity
The entrance of "commoners"
(indigenous peoples, Islamists, UN officials) into the world
of oil ownership and production on the three levels discussed
here is undoubtedly creating major changes in the oil industry
worldwide. The logic of both market and state rationality is
increasingly losing its compelling power to determine the future
of oil extraction and, with it, the whole system of capitalist
production it energizes.
Critics of capitalism, however,
cannot be complacent about the rise of the petroleum commoners.
This social reality also poses political problems that can easily
divide the anti-capitalist movement as well as make neo-liberalism
stumble. Every local commons requires a regulatory community
with insiders and outsiders, and the outsiders might rightly
demand to become insiders, with all the attendant possibility
of conflict. Similarly, the regulation of the Islamic petroleum
commons can conflict with the rules of local communities and
their claimed commons. Finally, the demands of the global commons
have already conflicted with the needs of local communities and
the prescriptions of the Islamic ummah. Whatever the results
of these actual or potential conflicts, the assumption that petroleum
is a different political liquid from water has been put into
doubt by the demands and struggles of petroleum commoners. Will
petroleum become one day as "common" as water still
is at least in our political imagination? Or will water reach
the market-price and give rise to the same conflicts, and undergo
the degree of monopolization that has characterized the history
of petroleum in our times?
George Caffentzis is a professor in the Department of
Philosophy, University of Southern Maine and a coordinator of
the Committee for Academic Freedom in Africa. He is author, with
the Midnight Notes Collective, of "Midnight Oil: Work, Energy,
War, 1973-1992" and "Auroras of the Zapatistas: Local
& Global Struggles of the Fourth World War". He can
be reached at: GCAFFENTZ@aol.com
This article is based on
the text of a talk given at the Fusion Arts Museum in New York
City on Nov. 7, 2004. The article originally appeared on www.ww3report.com.
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