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YEMEN: 13 Dead in Riots Over World Bank-Backed Price Hikes
Interpress Service
Jul 21, 2005
by Emad Mekay
WASHINGTON, Jul 20 (IPS) - At least
13 people were killed Wednesday in the Middle Eastern nation of Yemen in massive
protests against fuel price increases that came as part of an economic reform programme
promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
According to news reports from Arab television
channels and online newspapers, the 13 Yemenis died during protests by thousands of
demonstrators angry over the doubling of gas prices in the poverty-stricken country,
which is trying to secure new loans.
Protestors clashed with the police in the capital
of Sana'a and several towns as demonstrators chanted anti-government slogans, attacked
government buildings and threw stones at police.
The price increases were a severe blow for
Yemenis, many of whom are already well below the poverty line. Located on the
southwestern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, Yemen is one of the least developed countries
in the world and ranks 149 out of 177 countries on the 2004 U.N. Development
Programme Human Development Index.
The land once known as the home of the Queen
of Sheba now has a per capita Gross Domestic Product of 510 dollars a year, and 42
percent of its people live in poverty. One in five of Yemen's 21.5 million people is
malnourished.
Yemeni analysts and anti-poverty campaigners
pointed a finger at the policies dictated by the World Bank and the IMF, which they say
benefit only Western corporations and local elites.
”The World Bank has been heavily active
in Yemen as one of the poorer countries in the Middle East, and the raising of fuel prices
was a very easy way for the government to generate money, supposedly,” said
Sameer Dossani of the 50 Years Is Enough Network, a Washington-based group that has
been critical of the policies of the World Bank and the IMF.
”What's happened is that the raising of oil
prices has hurt the poor far more disproportionately than the more wealthy segments of
society and as a result you have this kind of violence -- very unfortunate and very
unnecessary violence,” Dossani said.
Under a World Bank programme, the Yemeni
government agreed to cut spending and reduce subsidies. The Bank and the IMF had
sought a reduction in the non-oil fiscal deficit from 25 percent of GDP in 2000 to 20
percent this year by curbing expenditures and raising non-oil revenues through
introduction of a general sales tax (GST), anti-smuggling measures and income tax
reforms.
In March, the IMF issued a brief report in which
it said that IMF ”Directors particularly welcomed the planned significant reduction in
the petroleum product subsidy and the improvement in tax revenue expected from the
introduction of the GST by mid-year.”
A month earlier, former World Bank president
James Wolfensohn had visited Yemen and met with Pres. Ali Abdullah Saleh. He
conditioned World Bank loans on more policy reforms, especially on the issue of ”
energy pricing”.
”Additional financial support from the
World Bank would depend on the portfolio performance and the implementation of much
needed policy reforms in areas such as governance, civil service and energy
pricing,” said a World Bank press release on Feb. 17.
Official Development Assistance (ODA) to
Yemen amounts to about 200 million dollars annually, representing two percent of GDP,
which gives the international financial institutions enormous clout with the government.
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In 2002, Yemeni officials produced the
country's first Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP), which sets out the government's
plans if it wants to get more funding. Sana'a is now on its way to merge the next PRSP with
the Five-Year Development Plan, which included measures to raise fuel prices.
Yemen has one of the largest World Bank
portfolios in the Middle East and North Africa. A new Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) is
due to be renewed this year. CAS details the World Bank's commitment to a certain country
and details the conditions attached to loans.
The Yemen News Agency (SABA) blamed the
World Bank for the price hikes.
”Under the reforms programme, the
Parliament approved in December a package of administrative and economic reforms
whereby the rest of government subsidy for oil products will be lifted,” SABA said in
its English translation of the Arabic news story.
Munir al-Mawari, a Yemeni journalist based in
Washington, said that these ”reforms” were grossly deficient since they did
not address corruption or political change in the country.
”The burden of price reforms as such is
shouldered by the poor citizen in Yemen,” al-Mawari said. ”Instead, they
should have called for a reduction of the presidential expenses, or ministerial expenses or
the military. This would have produced better results and can fight corruption too.”
Dossani of 50 Years is Enough said that the
riots exploded in part because of the government's acceptance of the dictates of the World
Bank, and that it should instead take cues from its own people.
But a former Yemeni diplomat in Washington
said the government was resorting to the Bank because assistance from Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia and Iraq has dried up for political reasons.
”The only resource left for the Yemeni
government is the IMF and the World Bank funding because the government is not able to
generate foreign investment,” said Gamal Numan. ”And now the government
is running very short and the only source they have is the IMF and the World Bank, and of
course they put such stiff conditions to implement their programmes.”
An IMF spokesman said that the Fund did not
have a programme with Yemen at the moment and that the last programme expired in
2001.
World Bank officials were not immediately
available for comment. (END/2005)
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