Cape Times

Ibsa could function as a democratic organisati­on within BRICS itself

- William Gumede William Gumede is Associate Professor, School of Governance, University of the Witwatersr­and; and author of South Africa in BRICS (Tafelberg).

BEFORE the rise of BRICS, the alliance between India, Brazil and South Africa (Ibsa) promised to align the globe’s largest developing democracie­s across continents to trade with each other to oppose the dominance by industrial countries of global trade, rules, ideas and institutio­ns, and share developmen­t experience­s.

Ibsa was establishe­d in 2003. BRICS was establishe­d in 2009 by China, Russia, India and Brazil, with South Africa joining in 2010. Ibsa has been for all purposes under the shadow of BRICS.

Ibsa meetings have in recent times been somewhat low-key affairs, compared to the fanfare that accompanie­s BRICS meetings. Last month for example, a meeting of foreign ministers from Ibsa countries who converged in South Africa for an Ibsa meeting went almost unnoticed.

Ibsa was establishe­d after India, Brazil and South Africa had been invited at the time as observers to the 2003 G8 summit of industrial countries in France, and left feeling their own fates and that of the developing world are being decided by a small group of unrepresen­tative developed countries.

Following the meeting, the three countries strongly felt they must formally club together, to push for a bigger say in global governance for developing countries, to diversify their trade away from industrial countries and to share their unique lessons of the twin pursuit of developmen­t and democracy amidst multicultu­ral societies, with deep poverty and inequaliti­es.

Brazil, India and South Africa are the globe’s leading developing country multi-ethnic democracie­s. The promise of the Ibsa alliance, was the idea of the countries not only pushing for fair global trade, institutio­ns and rules, but also for democratic ones.

In their domestic sphere all three Ibsa countries are attempting to pursue both developmen­t and democracy. Ibsa is a formal alliance of like-minded developing countries facing similar developmen­t, inequality and multi-cultural challenges, but wanting to resolve this within building viable democracie­s.

BRICS is pushing for a bigger say for developing countries in global trade, institutio­ns and rules, but not for global democracy. China is a one-party state, pursuing state capitalism, with little freedom. Russia is a one-party-one-leader dominant state, pursuing state capitalism, with controlled freedom.

Both China and Russia are trying to show that developmen­t is possible without democracy.

The mix of non-democracie­s, and democracie­s within BRICS, has been one of the reasons for the BRICS grouping’s lack of cohesion.

In 2007, leaders from the Ibsa countries mooted a plan to connect the three countries’ markets to bring together the world’s largest developing free trade area.

The proposal was for a Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement, between the regional customs unions aligned to South Africa and Brazil and between India.

Although that goal was never realised, the new free trade area between South Africa and the Southern African Customs Unions and Mercusor, the Latin American regional grouping with Brazil at its centre, which came into an effect last year, was a partial outcome of that early ambition.

In 2005, the Ibsa countries agreed to annually put money into an Ibsa fund, which would be used to help developing countries. The fund, operationa­l since 2006, is now managed by the UN Developmen­t Programme’s (UNDP’s) office for SouthSouth cooperatio­n.

The fund, called the Ibsa Fund for the Alleviatio­n of Poverty and Hunger, has become the most active co-operation mechanism between the countries.

The Ibsa Fund has now approved 27 projects in 21 developing countries. Some of the projects funded included the strengthen­ing rice production in Vietnam, people with disabiliti­es in Cambodia, building a hospital in Palestine and improving solid waste collection in Haiti.

The criteria for developmen­t support from the fund include that there is knowledge sharing among developing countries, that developing countries’ experts and institutio­ns are used, that the capacity of the beneficiar­ies are boosted, and that projects have built-in long-term sustainabi­lity.

Ibsa, just like the G20 and G8, establishe­d formal mechanisms for non-state organisati­ons, such civil society organisati­ons, including the media, to influence the decision-making of the grouping. Channels for independen­t civil society organisati­ons to influence BRICS are absent.

In their domestic sphere, China and Russia do not give space for civil society to shape their countries’ foreign policies. In contrast, South Africa and Brazil have formal mechanisms for civil society to participat­e in shaping its internatio­nal relations, trade and developmen­t policies.

South Africa’s Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation in 2015 establishe­d the South African Council on Internatio­nal Relations, on which civil society, organised labour, business and academia are represente­d to shape the country’s foreign policy.

Brazil has structured democratic channels for civil society involvemen­t in foreign policy. Brazil has a Committee on Foreign Policy and Human Rights which pushes for transparen­cy in internatio­nal relations of the government.

It holds public hearings in Brazil’s Congress, review the country’s positionin­g in the Human Rights Council and pushes for informatio­n about the government’s foreign policy decisions to be made publicly available.

Although India does not have structured mechanisms for civil society to influence foreign policy, the country’s civil society organisati­ons hold the government robustly accountabl­e for foreign policy decisions, shaping official policies through stances in public debates and protests against malign policies.

The big question now is whether Ibsa remains relevant, if so, what should be a new role for the organisati­on, given the prominence of BRICS. Ibsa could continue but as a space to share lessons building democracy and developmen­t in multicultu­ral societies, with high levels of poverty and inequality.

There is no regional or global alliance of developing countries which specifical­ly want to promote democracy and developmen­t – making Ibsa unique. Within BRICS, Ibsa could be a formal caucus to push for participat­ory, ecological sustainabl­e, and for democratic developmen­t. This means that Ibsa would be a democratic lobby within BRICS itself. Ibsa countries should continue to push for global democracy, country equality and ecological­ly sustainabl­e developmen­t in internatio­nal trade, even within the BRICS alliance.

Furthermor­e, the three countries must continue at global level to push not only for developing countries to have a greater say in global governance, but to push for increased for democracy within global institutio­ns, rules and country behaviour. Ibsa should form pro-democracy strategic alliances within global institutio­ns, such as the UN, World Trade Organisati­ons and World Bank, not only to reform these institutio­ns but for these institutio­ns to adopt inclusive policies, have participat­ory decision-making processes and appoint globally diverse personnel.

Ibsa countries must deepen their trade as a way to diversify their trade away from industrial countries.

There also need to be greater peopleto-people exchange between these countries, and a greater sharing of democratic, developmen­t lessons and nation-building lessons.

Civil society organisati­ons within Ibsa countries can influence their countries foreign policies, which in turn, could influence the BRICS and global agenda also. Civil society organisati­ons across the three countries should join partners more closely, provide solidarity to each other and share resources, ideas and lessons.

Civil society must play a greater role in monitoring the sustainabi­lity, inclusivit­y and community participat­ion in projects of the Ibsa Fund. Civil society organisati­ons in Ibsa countries must push to make it mandatory that their parliament­s approve foreign loans for infrastruc­ture. This is not currently a requiremen­t in any of the Ibsa countries.

They must also push for domestic investment protocols that binds their countries’ public and private companies adhere to ecological sustainabl­e, consultati­ve and honest corporate behaviour when they investment in foreign countries.

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