Bretton Woods Project - Critical voices on the World Bank and IMF

Jump to main content | Jump to sidebar | Jump to navigation menu



Poverty project endangers Tibetans

News|Bretton Woods Project|15 June 1999|update 13|url
print|email |bookmark FacebookTweet thisdel.icio.usDigg!Stumble UponRedditGoogle BookmarksYahoo Buzz

In early June the World Bank rushed to defend the proposed China Western Poverty Project from charges that it would disrupt the lives of ethnic Tibetans and had undergone too limited environmental scrutiny. After much pressure from China and pleas from Bank Management the project passed the Board in late June in the face of opposition from the US and Germany. No money will be paid for the most controversial component, however, until a claim to the Bank's Inspection Panel is dealt with.

The project was drawn up to tackle poverty in Western China by providing seeds, fertilizer, insecticides, rural roads, and support for labour mobility and "voluntary settlement".

The proposed transfer of about 60,000 people into a prefecture in Qinghai province which has Tibetan and Mongolian autonomous status triggered international concern. From Tibetan support organisations' knowledge of the area, and two letters smuggled out from China, it was clear that Tibetans in the area faced further erosion of their cultural and economic status.

Whilst the World Bank says it evaluated the project's merits on a purely economic basis, the Free Tibet Campaign points out that: "the approval of this project is political: China has for the first time secured international funding for population transfer onto indigenous Tibetan lands". Consultation of people in the "move-in area" appears to have been inadequate, Only 5 per cent of households were interviewed in person, and despite county officials being present, 10 per cent of them opposed the project.

Yet it appears to be the relatively technical matter of environmental categorisation which most angered many Executive Directors. The project, which involves constructing a 40m high dam to irrigate a huge area of fragile arid land, was only rated environmental category B, thus escaping a full assessment.

A series of letters have been written to UK ministers and officials, and questions have been tabled in the House of Commons.

More information: tibetsupport@gn.apc.org.

Published: 15 June 1999 , last edited: 29 June 2009

Viewings since posted: 4019

Articles: 3795

Advanced article search
Search newswire and resources

Recent briefings & reports

Climate Investment Funds Monitor 7: April 2013  25 April 2013

Working paper: The private sector and climate change adaptation: International Finance Corporation investments under the Pilot Program for Climate Resilience  24 April 2013

The UK's role in the World Bank and IMF: Department for International Development and HM Treasury  13 March 2013

World Bank on jobs: a "significant departure" or "business as usual"? 13 February 2013

The World Bank and industrial policy: Hands off or hands on? 6 December 2012

Climate Investment Funds Monitor 6: October 2012   26 October 2012

Latest video from IFIwatch.tv

The awakening of the squares 20 May

Subscribe

Bretton Woods Update, 6 emails/year:
highlights fulltext pdf
Alerts of new web content
Weekly newswire email

Email:


Bretton Woods Project on Facebook


home | subscribe | donate | search | help | contact


validate: | XHTML | CSS | RSS | 508

powered by Action Apps | hosted by GreenNet | Credits