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 27 January 2012 from TheGuardian Website 
 
 
 
 
	 
	
	 
	
	 is the wrong one because philanthropy is the enemy of justice'. 
	Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty 
 
 
	It's strange that at this week's World 
	Economic Forum the designated voice of the world's poor has been 
	
	Bill Gates, who has pledged £478m to 
	the Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, telling Davos that 
	the world economic crisis was no excuse for cutting aid. 
 It's a loud voice, but the model of development it proclaims is the wrong one because philanthropy is the enemy of justice. 
 
	But beware the havoc that power without 
	oversight and democratic control can wreak. 
 But if you listen to southern groups such as the Karnataka State Farmers of India, food security is precisely the reason they campaign against GM, because biotech crops are monocrops which are more vulnerable to disease and so need lashings of petrochemical pesticides, insecticides and fungicides - none of them cheap - and whose ruinous costs will rise with the price of oil, bankrupting small family farms first. 
 
	Crop diseases mutate, meanwhile, and all the 
	chemical inputs in the world can't stop disease wiping out whole harvests of 
	genetically engineered single strands. 
 It runs from Tsar Alexander I's model village colonies in 1820s Novgorod to 1920s Hollywood film producer Hickman Price, who, as Simon Schama brilliantly describes in The American Future, 
 
	His fleet of tractors were kept working day and 
	night, and the upshot of such sod-busting was the great plains dustbowl. But 
	there's no stopping a plutocratic philanthropist in a hurry. 
 
	When Microsoft was on its board, the American 
	Electronics Association, 
	
	the AeA, challenged European Union proposals 
	for a ban on toxic components and for the use of a minimum 5% recycled 
	plastic in the manufacture of electronic goods. 
 But many an African country lacks the war chest for such a fight, and so will end up paying for the healthcare of those exposed to leaky old PCs' cadmium, chromium or mercury, instead of embarking on, let's say, a nationwide anti-malaria strategy. 
 
	Bill Gates himself may not indeed have known 
	about what the AeA was doing on Microsoft's behalf, but the fact remains 
	that if a philanthropist's money comes from externalizing corporate costs to 
	taxpayers, and that if Microsoft is listed for its own tax purposes as a 
	partly Puerto Rican and Singaporean company, then the real philanthropists 
	behind these glittering foundations might be a sight more ragged-trousered 
	than Bill and Melinda. 
 To which I reply: 
 But the point is that the poor are not begging us for charity, they are demanding justice. 
 And when, on the occasion of his birthday, a sultan or emperor reprieved one thousand prisoners sentenced to death, no one ever called those pardons justice. Nor is it justice when a plutocrat decides to reprieve untold thousands from malaria. 
 Human beings should not have to depend upon a rich man's whim for the right to life. 
 
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