Bank Watchdog raises alarm on ADB’s general capital increase
NGOs warn that increased funds will equal increased harm
2 May 2009, BALI – The NGO Forum on the Asian Development Bank
today challenged the multilateral bank’s move for a general capital
increase (GCI), calling it irresponsible and dangerous.
The
ADB’s 42nd annual meeting opened today, with community representatives
questioning ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda about the implications of the
increased funds, given the region’s experience of forced displacement
and environmental degradation caused by ADB projects.
The
Forum is calling on the Bank’s Governors to take extreme caution with
the institution’s general capital increase. “If not managed well, this
200% general capital increase could easily translate into a more than
200% increase in social and environmental harm,” warned Red
Constantino, Executive Director of NGO Forum on ADB.
According to the ADB, the purpose of the capital increase is to
help the poorest countries in Asia to reach the Millennium Development
Goals. However, this claim has been slammed by Bank monitors citing
that the increase is largely planned to go toward private sector
clients and big infrastructure, as described in the Bank’s
Strategy2020, the ADB’s long-term strategic framework. Numerous
studies have shown this type of financing does not translate into
benefits reaching the poorest of the poor, and instead often
exacerbates inequality.
“In the midst of global calls for increased regulations around
financing, the ADB will be going against the current if is does not
strengthen its social and environmental safeguard policies,” said
Joanna Levitt of the International Accountability Project. “Without
real improvements, we can expect to see more reckless use of Bank
funds, resulting in more disastrous projects.”
In Nepal, local communities and organizations are raising
significant concerns about the proposed ADB-funded West Seti Hydropower
Project, a massive proposed dam for one of the most remote and
ecologically sensitive areas of Nepal. Over 30,000 people will be
impacted by this project and at least 20,000 will be forced to move
from their traditional lands and homes. The proposed resettlement
sites are the homelands of indigenous Tharu people. “The ADB is
planning to move tens of thousands of people onto our lands but there
has been no free, prior, informed consent from Tharu people,” Said Raj
Kumar Leky, Secretary General, Tharu Welfare Society.
“For over a decade we have been asking and asking for a complete
copy of the environmental impact assessment in local languages,” said
Ratan Bhandari, whose family will be relocated from their ancestral
lands if the project goes forward. “Our people have never been told
that the land they will be moved to may be contaminated by arsenic and
is aleady occupied by Tharu people. There has been a stunning lack of
consultation about this project which will devastate our environment
and local livelihoods.“
“These social and environmental failings are not unique to West
Seti, but are reported by communities impacted by ADB-financed projects
across the Asia-Pacific region,” said Stephanie Fried of Environmental
Defense Fund. “Globally, this is a real opportunity to rethink
development finance. Will the ADB use its capital increase in a
responsible manner or will it continue business as usual at the cost of
local people and the environment?”
The NGO Forum on ADB is a 250-strong Asian-led network of civil society
organizations that has been monitoring the ADB’s programs, policies and
projects since 1992. #
