OPINION Wednesday, March 8, 1989 Page 4 The Michigan Daily Life in the liberated zones By Bill Gladstone This is the third in a series on El Salvador. In the last nine years El Salvador has made remarkable progress in healthcare, education, and the development of demo- cratic government. Access to hospitals, universal education, and mass political participation in local decision-making have been introduced under extremely ad- verse conditions. What is striking about these accomplishments is that they have occurred in regions of the country that re- ceive practically no external assistance, have been historically neglected by the leaders of this small country, and are sub- Bill Gladstone is an Opinion Page staffer. jected to the daily visitation of bomb- dropping helicopters intent on decimating the population. These regions, or liber- ated zones, comprise roughly one-third of El Salvador Edbd gdsitsa n flicI Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan the country and are controlled by the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN). The FMLN-FDR has evolved into a major political-military group fighting for justice and a radical transformation of El Salvadoran society. Against the U.S.-sponsored government that boasts financial and military superiority, the FMLN could not wage an insurrectionary campaign if it did not have the support of the general population. Unlike other "classical" revolutionary movements, the FMLN is not able to re- treat to a mountain refuge to regroup and plan strategy. El Salvador, the most densely populated country in the region, does not have such advantageous terrain. The popular saying is "our mountains are the people" where the rebels find support and protection. The overwhelming majority of the rural peasantry and urban proletariat recognizes that the FMLN is fighting for their free- dom from economic exploitation, political disfranchisement, military repression, il- literacy, and malnutrition. (This is the modern legacy of over $3 billion of United Sates assistance since 1980.) Traditionally conservative and apprehensive of radical change, these people are rapidly accepting the revolutionary ideology of the FMLN combatants. Working within the infrastructure of Christian Base Communities (CEB) and peasant unions, the FMLN has established a model society in the liberated zones. The CEBs have long been active in raising the consciousness of the people through a reinterpretation and active dialogue around the gospel. The peasant unions have been the vehicle promoting the collective inter- ests of the people. Together with these grassroots organizations the FMLN has implemented social programs that depend on mass participation and benefit the whole population. In rural El Salvador most people have never seen a doctor and, in a country with an illiteracy rate of over 50 percent, have never received sufficient education. Understanding this harsh reality, the guer- rillas give top priority in the use of scarce resources to healthcare and education. The medical system is geared primarily to the needs of the war. Casualties from the indiscriminate bombing campaign are brought through for amputation, surgery, and convalescence. In most villages, popular clinics have been created through local initiative. For those who do not have immediate access to the clinics, a barefoot doctors program has been established to provide at least rudimentary healthcare. Particular emphasis has been placed on education to ensure that people have the tools to take responsibility for the main- tenance of society. Education is no longer considered a luxury, but a vital part of the process of people taking control of their lives. Logistics under the circumstances the population. In this relationship, lead- ers are held directly accountable by their constituency. These democratic structures represent the embryo of future forms of popular and autonomous local govern- ment. After these experiences, the people are not likely to be passively subservient to a minority government ever again. They are not engaged in this heroic effort merely to see the reigns of power pass from the hands of one elite group to an- other. The province of Chalatenango provides a good example of the revolutionary pro- grams recently established. In this rela- tively secure area, the people (through the PPLs) have organized collective farms, introduced compulsory education, insti- tuted medical care, and initiated a literacy 'These democratic structures represent the embryo of future forms of popular and autonomous local government. After these experiences, the people are not likely to be passively subservient to a minority government ever again.' 10 Vol. IC, No. 107 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Carbie cuts a deal ON DECEMBER 3, 1984, in the city of Bhopal, India, a cloud of methyliso- cyanate, a toxic chemical, "spread through the slums and poor neighbor- hoods... killing people in their sleep and sending them running into the streets in panic" (New York Times 2/15/89). Union Carbide's fatal leak permanently injured or paralyzed some quarter of a million people. Today, four years later, at least one victim dies every day from what has been called history's worst industrial accident. The Indian government, representing a half-million survivors who have filed for compensation, originally sought $3.3 billion in damages, charging poor maintenance and design flaws in the plant. Yet the final settlement was for a slim $470 million to be paid to an in- determinate amount of people by March 31. The total funds available to the company through insurance and liability reserves amounts to $450 million, leaving only $20 million which Carbide remains accountable for. Taking into consideration the com- pany's 1988 profits which exceeded $700 million, the settlement is farcical. The implications of the Indian high court's decision not to punish Union Carbide severely is emblematic of how multinational corporations affect the decision-making processes of lesser- developed nations. The international socio-economic cycle of dependency forces underdeveloped counties like India to have disproportionate reliance on large corporate industry. The benefits to the host country are primarily cosmetic as they usually only bring short-term economic growth. The majority of multinational profits leave the country or go to the underdeveloped country's exploitative elite. The corporate profit motive usually means that the majority of the people affected will not profit. Union Carbide's hypocrisy runs deep when it calls a decision which hardly rebukes it "fair," while it keeps its workers impoverished and reaps the benefits of India's labor force and nat- ural resources on the world market. Multinational exploitation is evident in the heavy investment in mineral-rich Southern Africa;.or Panama, where wealthy banana companies, like United Fruit subsidiaries pay local workers one dollar per day to haul banana stalks though the jungle to the ports in the Caribbean; or franchise manufacturers who pay hired help in Asian countries one tenth of what they would a worker in the United States. Union Carbide's unanswered genocide in Bhopal is only one example of how multinationals maintain an iron grip on the reigns of power around the world. Giants like Union Carbide also have the power of currency devaluation as the Interna- tional Monetary Fund and World Bank work in accordance with corporate in- terests worldwide. For India's Supreme Court to have blamed Union Carbide for wholesale mass murder - as they were originally charged - would have alienated an extremely powerful and historically vengeful corporate community. The ruling is emblematic of the system of multinational manipulation which cre- ates a cycle of dependency so threaten- ing that it prevents a Supreme Court from prohibiting even a company like Union Carbide from continuing opera- tions in its own country. This grisly precedent can hardly be expected to instill a sense of responsi- bility in the international corporate community. Besides failing to alleviate the suffering of the victims of this dis- aster, it leaves the door wide open for future industrial abuse. of war make it difficult to provide for all the peoples needs, but the system is nevertheless proficient. Mobile schools for adults and children have been set up throughout the country that are prepared to outrun the army in case of attack. Cut off from external aid, resourceful- ness becomes a necessary substitute for the lack of materials. The most important resource, teachers, are recruited from all age-groups and hastily trained. The new relationship in the "classroom" supports teachers and students as partners in a mu- tual learning process. To administer the new society, the peasants and guerrillas have organized a sophisticated infrastructure of popular government. The foundations of local government are the Local Popular Power councils (PPLs). These groups are demo- cratically elected at the base level of soci- ety and represent manageable segments of campaign. These kinds of social services were never available to the people during centuries of oligarchic, military, and United States-sponsored despotism. Probably the most fundamental change in the liberated zones has been in the peo- ples' attitudes. There now exists a collec- tive spirit that is manifested in the devel- opment of agricultural collectives, the gradual disappearance of sexism, and the unified effort to overcome oppression. The model society that is being developed in the popularly controlled areas of El Salvador demonstrates a viable program to replace the failing system of elite political and economic domination that has plagued this country since the arrival of the Span- ish. If the people have been this successful in a war-torn environment imagine what they could accomplish on a national level in a climate of peace Israeli By Dean Baker All but the most determinedly ignorant are well aware of the fact that criticism of Israel is virtually invisible in this country. Even the most extreme stories of human rights abuses and violence directed against Israel's Palestinian population or against the population of neighboring states rarely prompt criticism, and certainly never so much as to warrant even a reduction in the $3 billion sent annually to fund Israeli brutality by the U.S. government. Those who wonder why criticism of Is- rael is not permitted in the U.S. need look no further than the Daily for the answer. The response to several Daily editorials abuses I finding out what makes 200 people protesting in Ann Arbor national news. Certainly the protests involving hundreds of people against the Ann Arbor News' bias in its coverage of Central America were never seen as "fit to print" by the New York Times. Closer to home, there is the letter from President Duderstadt that expresses concern about "recent editorials and news stories in The Michigan Daily that have been widely regarded as anti-Semitic." This is a serious charge made in a very vague and slipshod manner. Duderstadt cites nothing. Perhaps he does not really take the charge seri- ously, or perhaps all his scholarship is 'Pro-Israeli groups have effectively intimidated the national media into virtually unquestioning support of Israel in both its news coverage and its editorial stands out so much.' policies. That is why the Daily Lgnored University of Michigan or anywhere else," he has been very selective in his willing- ness to express concern, and even in this case he lacked the courage to specify the object of his complaint, relying instead on vague innuendo. It is encouraging to know that the ad- ministration takes the time to sit down and formulate opinions about Daily edito- rials. It is discouraging however to see that they don't consider the respecting of Palestinian rights to be good, since this was the ultimate goal of the editorials. The willingness of President Duderstadt to make irresponsible and unsubstantiated accusations, and of the New York Times and other major media to report a story that would ordinarily be regarded as trivial, explain why criticism of Israel is so rarely heard in this country. Pro-Israeli groups have effectively intimidated the national media into virtually unquestioning support of Israel in both its news coverage and its editorial policies. That is why the Daily stands out so much. Until now it has been able to stand up against this tidal wave of censorship. If the Daily's critical voice is silenced, those interested in hearing anything other than Israeli propaganda on the Middle East will have to rely on the Canadian Broad- casting Company or the European Press for their news, since such alternative views cannot be tolerated at the University of Michigan. Instead there will be more stories like a front page story that appeared in the New York Times last Wednesday (3/1/89), in which the State Department warned that acts of violence committed by the PLO, referring to a battle with Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, could lead to a break- ing off of all contacts between the United States and the PLO. Underneath the con- tinuation of the story on page seven, a small story appeared about an Israeli mis- sile that had hit a school in Lebanon, in- juring 22 children. Needless to say, there was no discussion of whether this sort of violence might lead to a cut-off of contacts 'with the Israeli government. that have criticized Israel has truly been impressive. In addition to endless letters and phone calls that have run the gamut from polite hostility to threats of vio- lence, the Daily has also been the object of a protest, nationwide press coverage, and a threatening letter and condemnation from the University's President and Vice- President respectively. Obviously, the Daily encourages and welcomes expression of divergent views. Most of the non-threatening ones have even appeared on the opinion page. It is truly extraordinary however to see this sort of interest in the editorials of a student newspaper. For example, it is certainly impressive that the New York Times saw fit to report on a protest at the Daily in- volving approximately 200 people. The hundreds of thousands who have turned up at unreported marches against various policies of the Reagan-Bush administra- tion would undoubtedly be interested in Dean Baker recently received a PhD in economics from the University this sloppy. But if he expects a reasoned response, rather than simply expecting the Daily to be intimidated into submission, he might start by stating specificly which editorials or news stories were "widely re- garded as anti-Semitic." This could provide the basis for reasoned discussion; his im- plied threats cannot. One might furthermore speculate as to what circumstances prompted President Duderstadt to take action in this case. When Palestinian rights activists were victimized by racist attacks of various sorts, not a peep was heard from President Duderstadt. When the Daily printed two photos of different Black males as repre- senting a single suspect no complaint was heard from President Duderstadt. In fact, President Duderstadt was nowhere to be heard last year when there were protests over comments made by Dean Steiner in a meeting and in a textbook, which were widely regarded as racist. The record on this is quite clear, while Duderstadt claims that "racism, anti-Semitism, and all other forms of bigotry have no place at the I v,. ,,..,. <' ; > - more is the implicit threat, in Daily, or to shut it down alto- more is the implicit threat, in Daily, or to shut it down alto