The IMF rapes the world
By
Heather Cottin
New York
Published Jul 7, 2011 6:49 PM
The hotel housekeeper who accused then-head of the International Monetary Fund
Dominique Strauss-Kahn of raping her is fighting back after a media barrage
meant to defame her character and undermine her credibility. This brave woman
has filed a libel suit against the New York Post for a series of articles in
which the paper, in vulgar and demeaning terms, openly claimed she was a
prostitute.
The Post, a right-wing Murdoch tabloid, is infamous for its vicious language
and disregard for truth. But it wasn’t that newspaper that started this
campaign to discredit the woman who says she was attacked by Strauss-Kahn. That
role was taken by the supposedly liberal New York Times, which opened an
offensive against her with several articles, beginning June 30 with
“Strauss-Kahn Prosecution Said to Be Near Collapse.” The articles
were supposedly based on information from two unnamed “well-placed law
enforcement officials.”
Immediately, a judge granted Strauss-Kahn bail, and he was released.
The Times articles unleashed a media frenzy of attacks and speculation on the
woman’s character. None of it had anything to do with whether this
powerful and wealthy man had actually attacked her. The conclusion that the
case against Strauss-Kahn had now been totally blown apart disregarded the fact
that her account of what happened was corroborated by DNA findings in the hotel
room and by a medical check of her body after the event.
Moreover, other women who say they were attacked by him are coming forward.
Tristane Banon, a French journalist and writer, has filed a lawsuit against
Strauss-Kahn for attempted rape. It had already been known that in 2008 he
coerced a subordinate into an affair who filed a complaint. The IMF board
called Strauss-Kahn’s behavior “regrettable” but took no
other action.
“All journalists knew he had a special behavior with women,” says
Marion Van Renterghem, a reporter for Le Monde. “Why did all we
journalists ... never write a line about this?”
Guilty of raping whole countries
The word “rape” means “sexual violation or ravishing”
of a person by force. It also means plundering and despoiling a country, often
during war. As head of the IMF Strauss-Kahn administered a program of worldwide
rape of women and children — the majority of the world’s
people.
He began before he was head of the IMF. As the French Minister of Economics,
Finances and Industry, he implemented a wide privatization program, selling
France’s public property to the highest bidder. As director of the IMF,
he was in charge of the largest public lender of funds in the world. In league
with rich and powerful leaders of 186 countries, the IMF sets up economic
“reform” programs, otherwise known as structural adjustment
programs.
SAPs require poor countries to privatize public property and reduce spending on
health, education and development to pay their debt service. This lowers the
standard of living of poor nations. Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize winner for
economics, said, “The IMF likes to go about its business without
outsiders asking too many questions. ... But all the power in the negotiations
is on one side — the IMF’s.” This, he said, forces farmers in
some countries to compete with heavily subsidized U.S. agribusiness, which
“drives down the price and forces these farmers out of
business.”
IMF policies have been raping poor people all over the world for some time. In
Guinea, the African country from which the housekeeper emigrated, life
expectancy is 45 years. SAPs forced Guinea to privatize its government-owned
enterprises, remove price controls, raise the price of food and lay off public
workers. It is a rich country with almost half of the world’s bauxite
reserves, but only 24 percent of the population is literate; there is one
doctor per 46,000 people.
During Strauss-Kahn’s tenure another big loan was set up, so that Guinea
is now more than $3 billion in debt. (CIA World Factbook) This is the rape of a
nation.
The IMF can be held responsible for the hundreds of millions of African, Latin
American and Asian people, like the hotel housekeeper, who, because of
increasing poverty, have been forced to migrate. As a report by the Asia
Pacific Mission for Migrants states, “Migration of peoples from these
poor countries became a forced one as people were left with no option but to
find work overseas.” The IMF has actually encouraged the Philippine
government to export its own people. (apmigrants.org, July 2009)
Immigrants send more than $200 billion home annually in remittances to keep
their families alive.
Jamaica is an example. Debt service comprised more than 56 percent of its
2009-2010 budget. Jamaica has become one of the IMF’s most highly
indebted countries in the world. Its payments for debt service steal food,
health care and education from the people.
This is rape: “Two out of every three poor adults are women.”
“Women do two-thirds of the world’s work, receive 10 percent of the
world’s income and own 1 percent of the means of production.”
(Richard H. Robbins, “Global Problems and the Culture of
Capitalism”)
This is rape: “It is estimated that each year more than half a million
women — roughly one woman every minute — die as a result of
pregnancy complications and childbirth,” 99 percent of which occur in
developing countries. Yet “many of these women’s lives could be
saved if they had access to basic health care services.”
(globalissues.org)
This is rape: Half the world — more than 3 billion people — live on
less than $2.50 a day and at least 80 percent on less than $10 a day. The gap
between rich and poor is widening. This is directly due to the IMF’s
programs.
This is rape: 22,000 children die every day around the world, mostly in the
poorest countries indebted to the IMF. This has been going on before, during
and after Dominique Strauss-Kahn was in charge.
When Dominique Strauss-Kahn took over in 2007, the countries of the world owed
the IMF more than $4 trillion — a 70 percent increase since 2000. This
went up even more during his tenure. Strauss-Kahn raped the world.
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