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Opinion
Switzerland – Mozambique, bad governance
06.12.2021, International cooperation
The credit scandal facilitated by Credit Suisse in Mozambique has clearly revealed to that country’s citizens the contradictory nature of Switzerland’s role in reducing poverty and inequality.

A woman selling dried fish at the Central market in Maputo, Mozambique.
© Alfredo D'Amato / Panos Pictures
The author, Faizal Ibramugy, is a journalist in Nampula in northern Mozambique and a media operator.
Switzerland has been cooperating with Mozambique since 1979, and as of 2012 – the year when the loans involved in the so-called “hidden debt” (dívidas ocultas" ) were negotiated – the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) has been focusing on three priority areas: besides economic development and health, also governance. The continued development of a natural resource-endowed country like Mozambique can only take place through good governance and responsible investment. This is why Swiss support in this field is welcome. However, the scandal surrounding the “hidden debt” is now undermining all its endeavours.
For years Mozambicans have been taught how to govern, how to manage public funds, how to avoid illegal and corrupt practices, which could harm the state, and how to operate transparently. This is the good governance that the Swiss have been transmitting to Mozambicans through their various interventions to further the country’s advancement. Never would Mozambicans have imagined that the economic representatives of a country that gives them lessons in the sustainable management of economic resources would make common cause with their corrupt government. Those involved defrauded the State of over 1 billion dollars, even after feasibility studies had shown that the agreed loans were not sound.
Here, the saying “do as I say but not as I do” is a perfect fit. Mozambicans were being taught not to be corrupt, but employees of Credit Suisse have clearly shown that corruption matters more to them than the transparency that is proclaimed in almost all projects and programmes funded with Swiss money.
Debt forgiveness is not enough
Now that Credit Suisse must shoulder some of the blame by paying a financial penalty of 475 million dollars to the USA and the United Kingdom and granting debt forgiveness worth 200 million dollars to Mozambique, most Mozambicans now hope that this is an opportunity to demand full debt forgiveness before the courts.
In my view however, this would be far from sufficient. Official Switzerland – which supports Mozambique’s aspiration toward the decentralised, equitable and transparent management of resources by state institutions – would moreover have to admit that their efforts of more than 40 years have made no impact. Despite major efforts, Mozambique has failed to appropriate this knowledge, just as Credit Suisse bank employees have shown themselves incapable of issuing a loan in full transparency.
A new governance handbook
Today Mozambicans are saddled with a debt that was approved by deception, in a criminal association of bankers and powerbrokers. Mozambique is confronting an unprecedented disaster, the satisfactory management of which requires not just forgiveness, but also a rethinking of the strategy for promoting good governance.
If this financial scandal that has rocked Mozambique is any indication of what the country has learned over the decades from Switzerland about governance and the management of public affairs, all I can only say is that it is worth nothing. What is urgently needed is a new handbook of governance, transparency and integrity, one that teaches Mozambicans that they themselves are at the top of government. Failing this, cooperation between Switzerland and Mozambique, which was being built on solid foundations, will degenerate into a crying shame, on the back of the “hidden debt” affair.
Opinion
Free expression of opinion – the greatest asset
21.03.2022,
At the last annual meeting with the development organisations, Federal President Ignazio Cassis laid out his three most important quality criteria for Switzerland's international cooperation, namely, reliability, trust and predictability… Bingo!

Markus Allemann, Präsident Alliance Sud und Geschäftsleiter SWISSAID
© SWISSAID
The Alliance Sud of the future is on the trail:
Reliability: Since January, Alliance Sud has received a further boost, with the addition of two well-known civil society entities engaged in development cooperation. We welcome new members Solidar Suisse and Terre des hommes! Together with Helvetas, HEKS/EPER, Fastenaktion, Caritas and Swissaid, Alliance Sud represents civil society's most reliable interlocutor when it comes to sustainably shaping favourable regulatory environments for people in the Global South. To lay the groundwork for continued orderly growth, we came together this year in an association, and now offer a second category of membership, which allows non-governmental organisations, also from the human rights and environment sectors, to become associate members and support our work in this way. We are grateful to the Swiss Red Cross for leading by example and becoming the first associate member.
Trust: This quality criterion is less easy to achieve. Trust requires reliability and is only built over time. For 50 years now, Alliance Sud has been a reliable and competent player vis-à-vis the parliament, government and administration. And with enviable policy space! Unlike its member organisations, Alliance Sud receives no government support and is therefore not bound by a confidentiality agreement with respect to information sharing with the Department of Foreign Affairs and other agencies of the Federal Administration. Alliance Sud can therefore bring its expertise to bear and speak out at any time. Free expression of opinion is its greatest asset.
Predictability: What Federal President Cassis meant by: "Switzerland does what it says, and says what it does." What is predictable is that Alliance Sud will be uncompromising yet constructive in showing that Switzerland does not always do what it says. Policy coherence is our core concern, and the Sustainable Development Goals are our guiding framework. Conflicts can be foreseen in this negotiation process, as official Switzerland turns not infrequently to other principles.
Reliability, trust, predictability: We consider ourselves fortunate that Andreas Missbach has taken over the reins at Alliance Sud – as the new Director since January. Together with Andreas, the Alliance Sud team and members are off to a strong new start after 50 years.
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Global, Opinion
«There will be more conflicts»
21.06.2022, International cooperation
China is challenging Western values and will change globalization, says Prof. Patrick Ziltener. The new world power’s overarching goal comprises domestic stability and a world order in which China can continue its rise. Interview by Andreas Missbach.

Patrick Ziltener, Adjunct Professor at the University of Zurich, is a sociologist and East Asia expert. He conducts “research with practical value”, and regrets the dearth of China expertise at Swiss universities: “We have no idea just how much China is changing the world”.
Many are now seeing the beginning of the end of globalization. With China’s rapid growth since the 1990s, do you expect the country in future to rely less on globalization – understood as world market dynamics?
Patrick Ziltener: All indications are that globalization will continue, but not on a one-to-one basis as during the push towards globalization witnessed over the past 40 years. China clearly states its interest in continuing globalization, but with a much stronger Chinese influence. Chinese rules, standards and methods will become more widespread and the West will no longer be in a position to continue to dictate the rules. We have lost sight of the fact that East Asia continued to globalize while that process was already stagnating in the West: China forged ahead with the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) in the Pacific, while Donald Trump buried the Western-dominated Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
In other words, globalization is no longer “global” but fragmented globalization, with spheres of influence, each globalizing at its own pace and intensity.
Indeed, with the Pacific region intensifying and liberalizing – while nothing is happening in the West. The WTO continues in stalemate and China does not see it as the main arena, but is instead focusing on regional integration and, of course, the new Silk Road. Once a “rule taker”, China is now a “rule maker”. But let us not forget that China is already competitive throughout the world market. When the World Bank invites tenders for projects, it is Chinese bidders that succeed 40 per cent of the time.
And yet, for its growth, China has not relied on the prescriptions of the globalizers, as embodied by the “Davos Man” and the Washington Consensus. What were the success factors behind China’s rise?
China has studied everything, including the rise of Japan, South Korea, Taiwan or Singapore, and in so doing has learned that world market integration is possible and able to unleash very powerful dynamics, but that the entire process must be steered. Incentives are provided and spaces opened up, but always step by step and never in the form of a “big bang” triggered through an ideological economic policy; it is done very pragmatically. It began with the special economic zones of Shenzhen and those in Fujian province, and once these experiences were evaluated, laws and regulations were adapted and gradually extended to other sectors. This blend of market forces and control has unleashed incredible momentum, which was prepared and monitored through a state infrastructure policy. The entire undertaking was never guided by the idea of complete liberalization.
And China has not given foreign companies carte blanche either.
There are always red lines somewhere on the horizon, and the leeway available to companies depends entirely on the way they fit into the Chinese agenda: they are either given the red-carpet treatment or asked to leave. This is why entrepreneurs have such contrasting experiences. For a time, it appeared that the influence of state-owned companies was waning and disappearing. This is no longer the case, however, and it is very clear that the state-controlled sector is and will always be a cornerstone. The authoritarian tendencies are also apparent in the economy – party groups must be formed in every company, including foreign ones. Walmart in China therefore has a Communist Party group. Most often they have no direct influence on company operations, but they represent a kind of reinsurance, in that, if something is not going in the right direction, they are a tool through which to effect the adjustments desired by the leadership.
How, then, is the right direction determined? Has anything changed, or is it always simply about growth and economic power?
The supreme and overarching goal is political stability, in other words, “regime survival”. Then comes economic growth, though not just economic growth, but the development of Chinese companies capable of competing in the world market – like Huawei. Policymakers very openly identify the priority areas, whether aviation, agricultural engineering or robotics. At some point there will be world market competition from some rather large Chinese companies, which will teach our ABB and our Novartis, and eventually, also Nestlé, the meaning of fear.
Let us get back to the issues of the moment. The war in Ukraine has confronted the Chinese Government with a dilemma: on the one hand, it would like to see a “Eurasian” alliance with Russia against the USA, on the other, the West is much more important to the Chinese economy.
Do you share this view? If yes, how will the Chinese leadership navigate this situation?
The whole thing is extremely unpleasant for China, as was clear from the first press conference, where are the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman had to do some very careful manoeuvring. On the one hand, China insists on the principle of non-interference and refraining from the use of military means. On the other, and this is true also among the population, the West is considered largely to blame, the argument being that NATO’s eastward expansion and the containment of Russia are the main causes of the war. China therefore does not really approve of Russia’s behaviour, and this, in my view, is welcome news. On principle, China would never resort to such means, it will never, for example, absorb Taiwan into the motherland, in the way Russia has done with Crimea. Instead, it becomes a strategic game, one that already began when Xi Jinping stated that the problem of Taiwan would not be left to future generations.
But how then will that work without military means, if Taiwan does not find it so appealing to become part of China?
I consider one scenario to be the most likely, it is a long-term one and entails isolating and cutting off Taiwan. A first move could be for China to say that it no longer considers supplies to Taiwan and shipping traffic to be secure. What that would do to the Taiwan stock market is abundantly clear. Thanks to methods of this kind, whereby the ground is cut from under the feet of Taiwan, it will at some point fall like a ripe fruit into China’s lap.
You have researched the new Silk Road and China’s influence in Africa. Is there any truth to the often-heard claim that China is just another colonial power?
My definition of colonialism encompasses coercive measures, which are enforced through the use or the threat of violence. This is the renowned gunboat diplomacy, which I do not see China practising. Of course, one may now also use the term neo-colonialism, in other words domination and manipulation by non-military means. To an extent that is the case but, especially in the early phases of the new Silk Road, the Chinese would come and ask: “What do you want?” And if the president of an African country said he wanted a highway leading to his home town or home village, then it was built, with no thought to its economic implications. That has now changed somewhat, as projects are being better identified and executed. It is all a learning organism, in that assessments are made, experiences are shared, new standards are then set, and this on a continuing basis.
But the people often take a different view.
Some initial research findings show that successful projects, e.g., a new railway line in Nigeria, positively influence attitudes to China. But in most of the countries that I have looked at, there is considerable popular distrust of their own government and, in equal measure, of China. The distrust is all the more intense when they do things together in circumstances that are not transparent. It is expressed in sentiments like: “Our corrupt elite is in cahoots with China and plundering all our resources”.
So is it, after all, primarily about commodities, as in the traditional colonial division of labour?
China is keen to have an uninterrupted supply of commodities that are crucial to Chinese industry, including such advanced fields as information and communication technologies. There is, of course, a scramble for commodities in the Congo or Zambia, for example, and China too is present in those places, as one among several players; we are also host to such key players right here in Switzerland. But the research reveals one difference. Chinese companies are keen to have a steady supply of these resources to China, irrespective of the world market price, while Western companies react to the world market price by either ramping up or cutting back production, and hiring and firing staff. With respect to these resources, China also makes “swap deals”, which means offering the possibility to pay for infrastructure projects with commodities. This is not a new practice, others did it long before China, which itself has experienced the same thing: there have been Japanese infrastructure projects in China, paid for with Chinese resources. But China does much more than merely securing commodity deals; it also carries out infrastructure projects such as the construction of dams, sports stadiums, parliament buildings, or the headquarters of the African Union. However, China does not pitch this as development aid, but as “win-win” situations, confident in its belief that it outperforms the West in this regard.
And how does this actually differ from infrastructure projects funded by the West?
There is no environmental impact assessment, no social impact assessment, and there are no conditions attached; this naturally appeals to African politicians. Nor are there any transparency-related or anti-corruption stipulations. The second major benefit for African governments is speed. China is able to build an airport in the space of two, three or four years, and this plays a pivotal role, especially in places where elections need to be won.
Is China therefore weakening democracy in Africa – yet another topos – or even contributing to authoritarianism?
China’s stated intention not to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries is entirely plausible. In principle, the type of government is of no consequence. Whether authoritarian rule, dictatorship or democracy – if there is a suitable project, China will do it. Second, China is not in fact interested in exporting any style of government. China does nevertheless promote the stability of these various regimes through developmental successes, at least in places – but then there is an authoritarian dimension. What I find especially alarming about this is that China also exports methods for stabilizing regimes, in the form of public opinion shaping, and through surveillance technologies. For example, China trains experts in manipulation techniques that she herself employs on social media, for instance. This already embodies the danger of authoritarianism and of reinforcing authoritarian tendencies on the part of governments that came to power by democratic means.
Turning now to one last topos: China is using its investments and projects to drive Africa into debt bondage.
Yes, we have seen that trend. On the one hand, it has to do with China’s still limited experience in debt management, and it is now realizing that over-indebtedness can prove problematic. Still, the research could not to prove that China actively pursues a strategy of indebtedness designed to make countries dependent and no longer able to service their debt, so that it can then dictate terms. There is a handful of countries whose debt to China is so enormous that it has to be said that they are in effect dependent on China. Djibouti is a case in point. Most countries have several financial mainstays, however.
China embraces entirely different notions of economic and political systems. It could be a good thing if China formulates alternatives to the neoliberal prescriptions of the Washington Consensus, but what is the situation regarding the UN system, the values that are dear to us, including human rights, minority rights, political participation by civil society, and the like?
This should set alarm bells ringing for us. In this regard, China has aggressively announced the following: “We will change this system, it will be less Western-inspired and will take on stronger Asian, and more specifically, Chinese characteristics.” What from a Chinese perspective is an overemphasis on individual civil liberties is being downplayed in favour of economic and social rights to development and the right to security; in our view, this is indicative of further elements of authoritarianism. For the first time since the end of the Cold War, a player is openly formulating an aggressive agenda that challenges the dominance of Western institutions and Western values. This must be taken most seriously. What we have seen so far have been symbolic moves: for example, China mobilizes friendly countries against the accusation of a deteriorating human rights situation. China then puts on a show in the UN and says, okay, we have been criticized by 24 Western countries, but there are 50 UN Members that repudiate this, and are of the view that “it is not justified”. Such conflicts will grow in number, and not just at the symbolic level. In many respects, the UN will become less able to act when it comes to measures that have already been taken by the West, including sanctions or interventions in defence of human rights.
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The Alliance Sud magazine analyses and comments on Switzerland's foreign and development policies. "global" is published four times a year (in german and french) and can be subscribed to free of charge.
Opinion
Switzerland's contribution to saving the UN
21.06.2022, International cooperation
The war in Ukraine has compounded a crisis of values that is bound up with the political instrumentalization of the UN. Neutral countries like Switzerland should strive harder for a better world, says El Hadji Gorgui Wade Ndoye.

El Hadji Gorgui Wade Ndoye is a journalist accredited to the United Nations in Geneva, correspondent for the "Soleil" newspaper from Senegal, and Director of the Pan-African magazine ContinentPremier.com.
© zVg
The major crisis now gripping the United Nations is fundamentally an identity crisis. The universal values that brought nations together are now being tested to their limits under the pressure of militaristic thinking that is entirely divorced from the values of peace and human rights. The war in Ukraine makes this clear. On the one hand, there is a country, a permanent member of the Security Council and which, in the middle of the 21st century, attacks another country under the pretext of denazification. On the other hand, there is a western bloc that is outdoing itself at the level of rhetoric, and has committed resolutely to arming the country concerned.
Besides the climate catastrophe announced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and confirmed in the report of 18 May published by the World Meteorological Organization, and the humanitarian and food crises, which are being managed as best as possible by a financially weak UN, the war in Ukraine has compounded most of all a crisis of values, which is bound up with the political instrumentalization of the world body. The Geneva-based Human Rights Council itself, successor to the Commission of the same name, does not always escape this instrumentalization. Yet, the United Nations was not created in 1945 on the ruins of the League of Nations based on a dualistic, Manichean worldview.
Makane Moïse Mbengue, Professor at the Faculty of Law of the University of Geneva and member of the Institute for International Law, suggests that "the discourse around the values, aims and basic principles of the United Nations should be reframed". In this context, a key role falls to the African continent, which until recently accounted for almost 70 per cent of the volume of United Nations interventions. As the first continent, and not being part of an Eastern or Western bloc, it is yet again witnessing a confrontation that has come about with the rekindling of the Cold War. As the eldest son of the earth, the continent could offer "that little something extra" to the international community. Likewise, historically neutral countries should strive harder for a better world. This also applies to Switzerland, in particular, and all the more so having just become a member of the Security Council – one of the most important of the six organs of the United Nations. As Swiss sociologist Professor Jean Ziegler reminds us: "The UN is the last line of defence before chaos."
What is Switzerland's role
June 2022 is a historic juncture for Switzerland, in that it will cease to be part of the list of 62 countries that have never sat on the Security Council. With the new trust reposed in it by the United Nations General Assembly, the Swiss Confederation, having joined the UN in 2002, could be that breath of fresh air to relations among the 15 Member States, and more particularly, the five permanent members (China, France, the Russian Federation, the United Kingdom and the United States). Despite the sanctions against Russia, in which Switzerland is also participating, Switzerland's credibility and neutrality could still serve to build bridges between nations. The Swiss Confederation, in concert with other countries from the African and Latin American continents, could therefore work towards reframing the discourse in the Security Council, so that it is better aligned with the ideals of the Charter of the United Nations.
Switzerland could act as a mediator in the current war between Russia and Ukraine, being neither a member of NATO nor of the European Union. To that end, it would need to infuse its values of peace and participatory democracy into this powerful body during its two-year membership of the Council. It will be difficult, if not impossible, to abolish the veto power enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, and accorded to the five permanent members in virtue of their key role in the founding of the organization. However, together with other countries, Switzerland could draw on the resolution adopted by consensus in the General Assembly on 26 April 2022. It provides that the use of a veto would in future automatically trigger a General Assembly meeting, enabling all UN Member States to scrutinize and comment on the veto. The resolution is entitled "Standing mandate for a General Assembly debate when a veto is cast in the Security Council", and was adopted without a vote, in the wake of Russia's use of the veto in the Council the day after it invaded Ukraine, and calls for its unconditional withdrawal from the country. It signals the creation of a new means by which to exert pressure on the countries with a veto to display greater responsibility. UN Member Countries have entrusted the Council with the principal responsibility for preserving world peace and international security and have agreed that when acting on their behalf, the Council must at all times display the greatest possible sense of responsibility for realizing "the goals and principles of the Charter of the United Nations".
Is neutrality compatible with the Security Council?
Switzerland is committed to the ideals enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations. Its presence in the Security Council must therefore reflect its commitment to peace and security in the world and within the world organization. The fundamental aim of Swiss neutrality is comparable to the aspiration of the United Nations inasmuch as the latter constitutes a law-based system designed to "save succeeding generations from the scourge of war". In fact it is evident that countries whose independence and impartiality vis-à-vis a conflict are beyond question, and which have no direct national interests or hidden agenda bound up with the resolution of the conflict, are predestined for the role of honest broker. The seat in the Security Council offers Switzerland new possibilities to contribute to peace, security and an equitable international order. Even if the UN has so far not fulfilled all its missions successfully, it still remains “the last line of defence before chaos”, to paraphrase John Ziegler.
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Opinion
The time is ripe for a change
03.10.2022, International cooperation
Latin America has had enough of the inequality, injustice and corruption of right-wing governments that ignore the real needs of their people, writes Guatemalan journalist Mariela Castañón.

Over recent years, left-wing governments have won elections in countries like Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, Honduras, Chile and Colombia. This reflects people’s unmistakable demand that priority be given to social policy.
There is obvious and palpable disenchantment with right-wing governments, which not only have left nothing behind for their people, but instead have plundered the public coffers to enrich themselves. Although each country has its own reasons for electing a new government, the problems plaguing us are similar. They are poverty, extreme poverty and inequality.
The corona pandemic has further compounded the problems with which we in Latin America have been grappling for decades. The collapse of health and education systems, unemployment, lack of decent housing, and food shortages – all of this makes it clear why left-wing governments are now expected to bring about change.
With uncanny regularity, the political right courts the privileged and corrupt elites, who do nothing to help the poorest in the society, but are more committed to amassing wealth for themselves and safeguarding their own interests and those of their closest cronies.
The challenge now is to bring about changes that are worthy of the name, and to ensure that the words of left-wing government representatives are followed by deeds that benefit the people – rather than by populism, demagoguery and authoritarianism, as we too have experienced it.
Nicaragua is an example of those countries under authoritarian rule where criticism is met with brutal suppression. The Nicaragua of today is no longer a shining example of identification with the Left that it once was. There are now countless people sitting in jail in Nicaragua for having rebelled against the regime of Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo; others have been forced into exile. There is simply no limit to the oppression and violence being faced by our Central American brothers and sisters. It fills us with pain to see them suffering in this way. Many other countries have also taken a similar path.
Between misgivings and hope
It is hard to predict what the Latin American Left in general is capable of, for despite the striving for change, politics remains vulnerable to unexpected developments. It is up to us to keep an eye on our elected leaders and to act as committed and responsible citizens.
It is, of course, no simple matter being engaged as a citizen, social activist or journalist in countries where oppression and violence are daily fare and where our human rights and constitutional guarantees are flouted.
In my native country Guatemala, for example, a Central American country with over 17 million inhabitants, fear is our constant companion if we speak out against the corrupt rulers or stand up in defence of the living spaces and rights of indigenous communities.
In March 2022, we learned of “Mining Secrets”, a “Green Blood” project coordinated by the “Forbidden Stories” network in cooperation with 40 journalists from around the world, and which revealed environmental scandals surrounding mining companies. Journalists who reported on popular protests against a local mining company – a subsidiary of the Solway Group, which is domiciled in Switzerland and run by Russian and Estonian nationals – were harassed by the Guatemalan authorities and persons with close links to the company.
A hacker collective calling itself “Red McCaw”, after a native parrot species, passed hundreds of documents to “Forbidden Stories”. The documents obviously originated from the subsidiary of the Solway Group, and reveal the way journalists reporting on the mining company were documented, watched and even followed around by the company’s security services.
It turned out that the company had set aside a budget for drone surveillance of the local people and journalists.
This leaked information paints a picture of impunity and protection of offenders. The abuses committed against the press, the environment and the Guatemalan people have remained without consequence.
“Mining Secrets” further revealed scientific studies and “friendships bought” with “generous” donations by the company. Also coming to light were the strategies used by the mines to drive away and stigmatise families in order to get at the iron and nickel deposits under their houses.
Without a doubt, the environmental crisis and global warming are forcing us to change our lifestyles and put an end to industrial policies that are detrimental to the environment and to the lives of the people they place at risk. In Guatemala, however, it would seem that there is still no awareness of these dangers, and the governments continue to issue licences allowing unregulated mining to continue, which soon or later will take a very heavy toll.
The integrity and life of social activists, engaged citizens and journalists are in constant danger, as public denouncement, activism and truthful and up-to-date reporting uncover the methods being deployed by powerful corporations, which often enough are protected by the very State itself. The consequences are surveillance and threats, and not infrequently, these people pay for their commitment with their lives.
Real change
As children of the Third World, we have the strength to keep fighting for our causes, and will not abandon the hope that someday there will be governments in power that place people at the centre of their social policy.
The shift towards left wing governments reflects the urgency of the situation and the desire to overcome the inequality and injustice we have inherited from right-wing governments notorious for their ineffectiveness and corruption.
It is to be hoped that the left-wing governments will reverse the policies followed by their predecessors, failing which the stage will be set for yet another disappointment for millions of people in the continent.
Latin America needs capable leaders with transparent and legitimate strategies for transforming health, education, food, security and other systems, so that the change can be worthwhile.

© Mariela Castañón
The Guatemalan journalist Mariela Castañón is Professor of Deontology of Communication at the University Rafael Landívar. This summer she was in Switzerland participating in the exchange programme of "En Quête d'Ailleurs (EQDA)".
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Global, Opinion
Sri Lanka's "Emperor without clothes"
04.10.2022, International cooperation
In mid-July, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled Sri Lanka like a hounded dog, but he returned at the beginning of September. For almost two decades, he and his brothers have determined the country's fate with an iron fist.

Protesters in the swimming pool of the presidential palace in Colombo after storming it in July 2022.
© KEYSTONE-SDA/EPA/CHAMILA KARUNARATHNE
By Karin Wenger
What played out at Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s residence on 9 July 2022 were scenes of rage and triumph: some people splashed about in the swimming pool, others danced on the villa’s front lawn, or took a midday nap in Rajapaksa four-poster bed. Thousands invaded the residence clamouring loudly for the President’s resignation. They blame him and his family for plunging Sri Lanka into its worst economic crisis since independence in 1948.
In May, the highly-indebted country became insolvent for the first time. The result was that the government could therefore no longer afford essentials like fuel, medicines and cooking gas. People had to cook with wood, and spend endless hours in line to buy vital medicines – if they could find them. Tens of thousands poured into the streets to protest against the government and to storm the residence. Shortly thereafter, the President fled head over heels on a military jet to the Madives, then on to Singapore, where he announced that he was stepping down. It was the flight of a man and the overthrow of a ruling family that had run Sri Lanka like a family business for almost 20 years.
No dissent tolerated
I experienced Rajapaksa's arrogance first hand in 2010. Given to temper tantrums, Gotabaya was still Defence Minister at the time, his brother Mahinda had been President since 2005, while other brothers held key government positions. In May 2009, the Rajapaksas had ordered that the Tamil Tigers be crushed with the utmost brutality. By UN estimates, government troops killed some 40 000 Tamil civilians during the closing months of the fighting. Yet the Sinhalese majority population continued to revere President Mahinda and his brother Gotabaya, who had, after all, put an end to the 26-year civil war. All else seemed insignificant.
Back then, in January 2010, I was South Asia correspondent for Radio SRF and had travelled to Sri Lanka for the presidential elections. Although Mahinda Rajapaksa’s re-election was all but certain, he would still silence anyone who criticised him: the military surrounded the hotel where his political challenger Sarath Fonseka was staying; critical journalists disappeared; and Defence Minister Gotabaya threatened to burn down the building housing the opposition newspaper Lanka. On the very evening of the day when I asked two critical questions at a government press conference, a hotel staffer handed me a letter from the government: I was being expelled from the country. It was only under pressure from the international media, which had picked up the story of the deportation, that the government finally backtracked. Mahinda Rajapaksa personally invited me to lunch.
Shortly after the elections, I therefore found myself sitting with a re-elected President Mahinda Rajapaksa at a long table draped in white. Rajapaksa slurped his soup as he delivered his answers via the microphone. He jovially laughed off questions about his government's human rights abuses, answering instead: "I plan to press ahead with my country’s development, that is the top priority. I have invited all countries to invest in Sri Lanka and I want to promote tourism." But out of scepticism, many Western countries made their approval conditional on the Sri Lankan Government’s commitment to respecting human rights. China made no such demands and therefore became one of the country's leading lenders over recent years. Chinese loans paid for costly projects that did little for the country, but much more for the ego of the Rajapaksas.
Bad for Sri Lanka, good for China
With a loan from China worth over a billion US dollars, for example, the government built a deep-sea port in Hambantota, the Rajapaksa home town in the south of the country. Both western powers and India were concerned that in so doing, China was shoring up not just its economic power but also its military power in the Indian Ocean. That worry proved well-founded when, in 2017, Sri Lanka had to lease the port to China, as the government was unable to repay the billion-dollar loan. By that point, Mahinda Rajapaksa was no longer President, having lost the 2015 elections. Yet in 2019, the Rajapaksa family staged a political comeback: Gotabaya became President, and his brother Mahinda Prime Minister. In August, just weeks after Gotabaya Rajapaksa had fled the country, a Chinese military surveillance vessel, the "Yuang Wang 5", docked in Hambantota Harbour. The loan had paid off for China, but not for Sri Lanka.
In retrospect, the development of Sri Lanka, which Mahinda Rajapaksa had declared to be his priority at our luncheon 12 years ago, amounted to a sell-out of the country, and its looting by the Rajapaksa family. They were not rulers for everyone, but instead emperors without clothes.

Karin Wenger was South Asia correspondent for Radio SRF from 2009 to 2016, based in New Delhi, and South-East Asia correspondent based in Bangkok from 2016 to 2022. In the spring, she published three books about her time in Asia. www.karinwenger.ch
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The Alliance Sud magazine analyses and comments on Switzerland's foreign and development policies. "global" is published four times a year (in german and french) and can be subscribed to free of charge.
Global, Opinion
Spicy world politics on the Island of Grenada
16.01.2023, International cooperation
The small Caribbean island of Grenada is also called Spice Island. In the past, the French and the English fought over the island. Today, other powers are fighting to gain more influence on Grenada and thus in the world. By Karin Wenger

Carib’s Leap or Leapers’ Hill is the name of the cliff in northern Grenada from which the Caribs, the last remaining original inhabitants, hurled themselves into the ocean in 1651. Where there must have been jungle and bushes at the time, today there is a church and a commemorative plaque. Cutty, a local tour guide, has brought me here. He points to the roaring sea far below us and says: "The Caribs chose certain death over being taken prisoner and enslaved by the French colonial masters."
What led up the fatal jump is easy to explain. While Christopher Columbus still sailed past Grenada, the French recognized the island’s treasures and wanted to claim it for themselves. They bought land from the Caribs in exchange for a few knives, glass beads and alcohol. But before long, the islanders regretted the deal, attacked the French fort with bows and arrows in an attempt to drive the French from the island. Equipped with cannons and firepower, the French repelled the Caribs and drove them all the way to the north, to the edge of the cliff and to their death.
Colonial past
Today, the small Caribbean island of Grenada is no more than a one-day excursion for many cruise passengers – they visit waterfalls, buy nutmeg, vanilla, cinnamon and rum, then move on to the next sunny destination. Grenada’s colonial past and that of the other Caribbean islands is forgotten. Forgotten is the bloody heritage of the Europeans, who were still major powers at the time, dividing up the world amongst themselves. Grenada too, changed hands between the French and the British. In the late 18th century, the British brought a large number of people from Africa and forced them to work as slaves on sugar plantations. Today, more than 80 per cent of the population are direct descendants of these slaves. It was also British traders who, in the mid-19th century, brought nutmeg from Indonesia to Grenada and began growing it here.
Grenada currently produces 20 per cent of the world's supply of nutmeg, making it the world's second largest nutmeg producer after Indonesia. "Today, Europeans come here because of our spices, our nutmeg. European colonial rule has long ended, today there are others fighting over us and trying to colonize us," says Cutty, pointing to the cricket stadium which we have now reached, and which Chinese workers started building in 2005, with Chinese money. "We call it the Chinese bribe. Projects funded by China, so that we vote for China and against Taiwan at the United Nations."
Cold War
Today, like yesterday and beyond, Grenada is at the centre of geopolitical squabbling; it is being kicked around like a football by major powers. No longer are France and England in the forward positions, instead, it is China and the USA. In this game, China is venturing ever farther into America's backyard, to which several Caribbean countries belong, including Grenada. Even today, two plane wrecks at the old airport bear witness to Grenada’s importance to the USA during the Cold War. At the time, on 25 October 1983, one week after a military coup on the island, Ronald Reagan sent 8,000 American soldiers to Grenada. Officially, their mission was to protect American students at St George's University, but even then, it was already about something different. It was the Cold War, and Reagan feared that the putschists would side with Cuba. The US troops therefore deposed the putschists, and a pro-US civilian government took power.
Selling out to China
China does not send soldiers, but money, workers and covert diplomats. Construction work on the cricket stadium was completed in 2007. The Chinese Ambassador arrived for the inauguration ceremony, but instead of the Chinese national anthem, Grenada’s police orchestra played the Taiwanese national anthem…a mistake and political faux pas, which cost the orchestra director his job. After a brief period of awkward political relations, other Chinese projects followed the building of the stadium: residential settlements, agricultural aid, and currently, expansion work on Grenada’s new airport, paid for with a Chinese loan of over USD 60 million. Cutty the tour guide is worried that China will simply appropriate land or the airport if Grenada is unable to repay the loan – for the island nation is not rich.
Diplomatic mercenary
Is Grenada selling itself out? It seemed that way, at least until recently. Grenada also sells citizenship. Since 2016, foreigners have been able to legally purchase Grenadian citizenship under the "Grenada Citizenship by Investment" programme for at least USD 150,000, which allowed them visa-free travel in the Schengen area for example. By this means, Chinese national, Yuchen (Justin) Sun, became a Grenadian citizen – and more. The world-renowned Chinese cryptocurrency and blockchain entrepreneur was appointed Grenada’s Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Geneva last December. The fact that it was never entirely clear which interests he was representing – his personal business interests, Chinese, or Grenadian State interests – seemed not to bother the Government of Grenada. Nor was it troubled by the fact that there were several charges hanging over Sun in the USA, including money-laundering, and violation of the regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and of the tax authorities. Since his appointment as Grenada’s representative to the WTO, Switzerland has withdrawn the legitimation card, for mixing personal business dealings with diplomacy. That ended his diplomatic immunity, his right of residence in Switzerland, and also the possible purchase of a house in Switzerland. Yet, Sun is no exception in Grenada’s diplomatic circles – dozens of Chinese nationals are travelling around the world as diplomats of the small island nation. According to several media reports, they have all bought their diplomatic passports. In return, Grenada has become pro-China, has committed to the One China policy and severed ties with Taiwan.
New government, new hope
It would seem that many in Grenada no longer want to see their own government selling out their small Caribbean country, so that major powers can use the island for their geopolitical games. This was certainly one of the reasons why Prime Minister Keith Mitchell was voted out of office in elections held in late June 2022. The 75-year-old politician had held the reins of power for 23 years and been running Grenada more and more like a family business. It seems a universal principle that whoever stays in power for too long becomes greedy. The new Prime Minister, Dickon Mitchell, has pledged to fight corruption and announced an end to the sale of diplomatic passports to foreign nationals. Tourist guide Cutty says: “We are pinning our hopes on Mitchell, the island’s best advocate." The 44-year-old now plans to work to advance the interests of his homeland and all its citizens. He has already announced his intention to recall all ambassadors and introduce new policy priorities. In his address to the United Nations General Assembly in September, he named one first priority: that of climate change. It is likely that the Chinese diplomats who have so far pretended to be serving Grenada will now have to look around for new occupation.

Karin Wenger
The author: Karin Wenger
Karin Wenger was South Asia and South-East Asia correspondent for Swiss Radio SRF from 2009 to 2022, based in New Delhi and Bangkok. In the spring, she published three books about her time in Asia. Since summer, she has been sailing the world’s oceans and writing about forgotten political events and conflicts in the Global South. For more information, see www.karinwenger.ch or www.sailingmabul.com
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The Alliance Sud magazine analyses and comments on Switzerland's foreign and development policies. "global" is published four times a year (in german and french) and can be subscribed to free of charge.