CBC's corporate predators

Wednesday, May 30, 2001 - 10:00

BY SEAN HEALY

Organisers of the protest against the Commonwealth Business Council
Forum point to the record of the corporate leaders involved as motivation
for their action.



  • Hugh Morgan, chief executive, Western Mining Corporation, chairperson,
    CBC Steering Committee for Commonwealth Business Forum 2001. One of Australia's
    largest mining companies, WMC is notorious for its record of environmental
    destruction and union-busting. WMC is the target of concerted protest by
    the indigenous Arabunna people of the Lake Eyre South district for its
    operation of the Roxby Downs uranium mine, which is steadily draining the
    water of the Great Artesian Basin.


Morgan and WMC are also prominent “greenhouse sceptics” and have sought
to use their influence to prevent, or slow, action on climate change.


  • Rahul Bajaj, chairperson, Bajaj Auto: The scion of a long line of wealthy
    industrialists, Rahul Bajaj is one of India's richest men, the owner and
    absolute ruler of the country's fifth largest company.


Corporate India's principal spokesperson, Bajaj was one of those most responsible
for pressuring the Indian government to deregulate its capital markets,
investment rules and trade policies, a policy which has enriched him but
further impoverished many Indian farmers and factory workers.

Bajaj's 1997 decision to back the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party was one of the major factors behind its ability to win, and since
then to keep, federal power.



  • Niall FitzGerald, chairperson, Unilever: Unilever is the world's second
    largest food and household products manufacturer (behind Nestle), selling
    1600 brand-names in nearly every country on Earth.


One of the world's most active “corporate citizens”, FitzGerald and his
company are movers and shakers in countless international business bodies,
including the International Chamber of Commerce, which drew up the Multilateral
Agreement on Investment, the “corporations' bill of rights” shelved after
public protest in 1998.

Despite its attempts to present a clean, green image, Unilever was accused
by Greenpeace in March of shameful negligence for allowing its Indian subsidiary
to dump several tonnes of highly toxic mercury waste into a popular tourist
lake in Tamil Nadu.



  • Julian Ogilvie-Thompson, chairperson, Anglo American: By far South Africa's
    largest corporation, mining giant Anglo American made its fortune by taking
    advantage of the extreme racism of the country's apartheid era.


In fact, according to the Congress of South African Trade Unions, Anglo
American and the big mining companies “pioneered many of the core features
of what later came to be known as apartheid”. The toll on black workers
has been immense: 87,000 have died in South Africa's mines.

Since the election of the African National Congress government, Anglo
American has sought to play down its past, but is one of the major companies
pressuring the ANC to privatise government assets, keep a lid on wage demands
and implement other pro-business policies.

From GLW issue 450