Reformed,
Discplined and Humiliated UNESCO
By Andre Vltchek
November 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "NEO"
- Lately, the cabinet of Japan’s Prime Minister, Shinzō Abe, is
clearly running amok. It is sable rattling, militarizing the
Constitution and arming Japan to its teeth. It is picking up fights,
unnecessarily, mainly to show its allegiance to the handlers in
Washington and in the European capitals.
Now, according to The
Guardian, “Japan threatens to halt UNESCO funding over Nanjing
massacre listing”:
“Japan has
threatened to withdraw its funding for UNESCO after the UN body
included disputed Chinese documents about the Nanjing massacre
in its Memory of the World list, despite protests from Tokyo.”
In late 1937, over a
period of six weeks, Imperial Japanese Army forces brutally murdered
hundreds of thousands of people in the Chinese city of Nanking (or
Nanjing). The horrific events are known as the Nanking Massacre or
the Rape of Nanking, as between 20,000 and 80,000 women were
sexually assaulted.
Only a lunatic would
try to dispute that the Nanjing massacre actually took place. And
even Abe’s cabinet is not really disputing it. But Japan is
“crossed” that it was not “consulted”. And it also refuses to admit
that it actually massacred about 300.000 Chinese people in Nanjing
alone.
Japan’s arrogance
knows no boundaries. So called “liberal” daily newspaper, Asahi
Shimbun, recently insulted China’s academics and journalists,
claiming that they cannot really access the numbers of the Nanjing
victims, because they have “no freedom” to independently do so. As
if most of the Japanese media and academia would be anything else
than some sclerotic and subservient group of collaborators with the
West.
But back to UNESCO!
The Memory of the World is one of the last great projects of this
once progressive and anti-imperialist organization. This is where
the countless crimes against humanity are immortalized, as well as
the brave and determined resistance against the Western supremacy,
colonialism and wars. And going through the list it gets clear that
most of the crimes were actually committed by the extreme right-wing
regimes backed by the Western imperialism: from Chile, Paraguay and
Argentina to Angola, South Africa and elsewhere.
The list also includes
the 1955 Bandung Asia-Africa Conference in Indonesia, as well as
many cultural heritage forms, from all over the globe.
From the beginning,
the West and its allies were always disgusted with UNESCO and its
positions. They have been doing everything possible to reduce its
funding to an absolute minimum, and to diminish its influence on the
world.
*
In the past, the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) used to make attempts to function like an independent
progressive global brain, connecting some of the greatest
educationalists, thinkers, scientists and artists of the planet.
The organization’s
first Director General was Julian Sorell Huxley, a British scientist
and internationalist, brother of novelist and philosopher Aldous
Huxley, author of the Brave New World.
UNESCO was greatly
influenced by the Cuban education system, by Marxist ideology and by
the anti-colonialist and anti-imperialist struggle in Africa and all
over the World.
Throughout the
history, UNESCO’s staff consisted of many important internationalist
and anti-imperialist thinkers. This fact, unsurprisingly, infuriated
Western and pro-Western imperialist powers. In 1956, South Africa
withdrew from the organization and it was not until the fall of the
apartheid that the country rejoined, in 1994 under the leadership of
Nelson Mandela.
The United States left
UNESCO in 1984, declaring, “The organization was riddled with
corruption and overly influenced by the Soviet Union”. The U.S.
Department of State wrote on its official site: “The United States
joined UNESCO at its founding but later withdrew in 1984 because of
a growing disparity between U.S. foreign policy and UNESCO goals.”
In the 1980’s, the
United Kingdom and Singapore left as well.
The situation changed
only after the organization was so-called “reformed”, especially
under the leadership of yet another Japanese pro-Western bureaucrat
lackey, Director-General (1999-2009), Koichiro Matsuura. Educated in
the US, this Japanese career diplomat took over the Paris-based
organization in 1999. Since then Mr. Matsuura had been relentlessly
lobbying for the United States to return, while purging “hardline”
anti-imperialist cadres from the ranks of his organization. Under
his leadership, UNESCO became toothless, submissive to the West, and
technocratic. He managed to strip it of all ideological principles.
In short: he turned UNESCO into yet “another UN agency”.
“There is absolutely
nothing we can do”, several UNESCO staff members told me in Paris,
during the Matsuura reign. “This is perhaps the end of the
organization, as we know it. It is the end of its independent and
progressive global stand.”
The New York Times
reported in 2002 (“How the head of UNESCO got Washington to
rejoin”):
“Director-General Koichiro Matsuura… has spent three years
lobbying energetically in Washington to convince administration
and lawmakers that this rehabilitated UN agency could be a
valuable world forum — notably for the United States… In other
words, he said in an interview, America has gone as far as it
can go in reforming Unesco from the outside, and now it is time
for Washington to keep up the pressure from inside the
organization it left 18 years ago, when it charged that the
organization was riddled with corruption and overly influenced
by the Soviet Union…”
The New York Times
wrote this without any irony or sarcasm. This is how the world was
supposed to function. “A valuable world forum — notably for the
United States!” Is this what the UN agency was supposed to
represent? For a Japanese bureaucrat that was the case, perhaps, but
for the world?
Britain rejoined in
1997, the US in 2003 and Singapore in 2007. UNESCO was never the
same afterwards.
*
Even in the past,
UNESCO was periodically forced to abandon its internationalist and
often pro-Communist positions. As described by Charles Dorn and
Kristen Ghodsee in their academic report “The Cold War
Politicization of Literacy: Communism, UNESCO and the World Bank”:
“Throughout
the Cold War era, UNESCO director generals struggled to both
develop a clear strategy for eliminating illiteracy and obtain
the funding necessary to fully implement their literacy
projects. Moreover, as with other UN agencies, such as the World
Health Organization, Cold War tensions exposed UNESCO to U.S.
criticism that it had come under Communist influence and that the
goals of Fundamental Education were “contrary to American ideals
and traditions.” Furthermore, after the widely recognized
success of Cuba’s “mass” literacy campaign in 1961, UNESCO faced
increasing pressure from the Johnson administration to redefine
its literacy programs as “functional” (the term used to refer to
vocationally oriented literacy) rather than “mass” (the term
used to refer to literacy that was meant to achieve a political
or social goal such as consciousness raising), the latter having
become associated with Cuba and communism.”
*
In 2011, Palestine
became a UNESCO Member State after 107 member states voted for and
14 voted against. According to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz (4
November 2011):
“Laws passed in the
United States in 1990 and 1994 mean that it cannot contribute
financially to any UN organization that accepts Palestine as a full
member. As a result, it withdrew its funding which accounted for
about 22% of UNESCO’s budget.”
Almost immediately,
Israel had frozen payments to UNESCO, and imposed sanctions on the
Palestinian Authority. So much for the democracy and autonomy inside
the United Nations agencies! The West and its allies sent clear
message, once again: “You do as we say, or we would starve you to
death”.
And so UNESCO got the
worst deal imaginable: The US has remained as a Member State,
spreading its demagogy and influence, but at the same time it
refused to pay its dues, hiding behind some grotesque and
supremacist “laws” that it, the US, had erected several decades
earlier.
In the Middle East,
Western and Israeli interests continuously infiltrate UNESCO,
pushing for cooperation with the “opposition”, while the
organization tries to work directly with the government of Syria.
And now Japan is
threatening to withhold further 10 percent of the funding.
One of UNESCO staff
members is concerned about the recent developments:
“This is a
very difficult time for the organization and it would become
even more so if Japan decided to withdraw its dues or reduce
them. US and Israel stopped contributing four years ago, as
Palestine became a full member of UNESCO. That is more than 20
percent of the cut. Japan now contributes the largest sum:
around 10 percent. For Japan this is not actually even a matter
of money but of denying its horrid deeds committed in China
during World War II.”
*
When I think about
UNESCO, I imagine my good friends who went to fight for a better
world, for the rights to education and culture. UNESCO staff went to
all corners of the globe, some ravished by Western imperialism. Many
of them went because they were true internationalists, true
anti-imperialists, and true revolutionaries.
I also remember that
beautiful villa in Santiago de Chile, where UNESCO staff offered
political asylum to the members of Allende’s government, right after
the US-sponsored military coup of General Augusto Pinochet, on
9-11-1973.
Since those days, the
West and its lackeys forced UNESCO to change!
But not everything is
lost. There are those who still believe in the mission of the
organization; those who are willing to fight for the original
UNESCO, which existed before those people like Matsuura turned it
into “a valuable world forum — notably for the United States!”
President Rafael
Correa of Ecuador, during the plenary meeting, made a speech, in
front of 195 Member States at the 37th General Conference of UNESCO,
20 November 2013. His discourse was poetic, philosophical, Latin,
full of original pathos on which the organization was formed during
its early days:
“UNESCO’s
mission is to contribute to the consolidation of peace, to the
eradication of poverty, to support sustainable development and
intercultural dialogue but this hinges on less charity and more
justice. If knowledge were not privatized but placed at the
service of humanity as a whole, it could boost the development
of the poorest countries. They do not need charity as much as
they need skills, science and technology. Nobody is more aware
than I am of the fact that—in view of the forces at play in the
world today and of the present condition of humanity—this is
utopian. But UNESCO was created for Utopia. As Uruguayan writer
and the author of the Open Veins of Latin America, Eduardo
Galeano, once said, ‘Utopia is on the horizon. I move two steps
closer; it moves two steps further away. I walk another ten
steps and the horizon runs ten steps further away. As much as I
may walk, I’ll never reach it. So what’s the point of utopia?
The point is this: to keep walking’.”
As he told me in
Montevideo, Eduardo Galeano had two muses: Reality and Utopia.
UNESCO used to share them with the master of South American letters.
But imperialism kills
muses, injecting nihilism, Western “values” and market pragmatism.
UNESCO staff should
insist on defending original values of its organization. It should
be once again serving humanity, not the bullies in Washington or
Tokyo!
*
On 11 November 2015,
the United States was elected as a Member of the Executive Board of
UNESCO for a four-year term. It received 158 votes. It was truly
bizarre occurrence, considering that the country already lost its
right to vote, after not paying its dues since 2011.
Andre Vltchek is philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and
investigative journalist, he’s a creator of
Vltchek’s
World an a dedicated Twitter user, especially for
the online magazine
“New Eastern Outlook”