"Who are you?" "I'm Zegue Bamba." "Are you a witness?" " Yes." "Bei!" "Would the court usher... ask the gentleman to remove his hat?" "Tell him it's not his turn yet." "He'll get his chance to speak." "He can wait in the courtroom." "Words are something..." "They can seize you in your heart." "It's bad if you keep them inside." "You can say what you have in your heart when the time comes." "Since he hasn't asked you to speak, stop now and sit down." "It doesn't matter..." "He says he understands." "The goat has its ideas but so does the hen." "When you come for something, you have to do it." "You must know why you're here." "But coming and leaving without speaking..." "Tell him to speak to the court." "You haven't been asked to speak." "Go and sit down." "Your chance will come." "They're just asking you to wait." "I'll give him back his word." "My words won't remain within me." "All right." "Thank you." "Chaka..." "Ina has atemperature." "Mum..." "I'm fine." "I'm okay." "Yes, everything's fine." "I just have a cold." "She's asleep." "I'm coming back to Dakar." "The railway brought Africa its emancipation." "That's the role of labour regulations in Africa." "It awoke political awareness." "The World Bank is throwing all that out with the trash." "Our identity, your identity, our history, your history." "What are your feelings when you witness this disaster?" "I don't care..." "You complicate things too." "Here, take this." "The hearing has resumed, please sit down." "Ifyou go in, you're not filming!" "No one films here." "Bei!" "I'm singing late tonight." " Hello, Boire, how are you?" " Hello." "It is stated that the share of our states' budgets devoted to social services and to the repayment of the debt is set as follows between 1992 and 1997." "We have examined afew countries." "I shall use those examples." "In Kenya, when the national budget allocated 12.6% to the basic social services, health, education and infrastructure," "40% of that same budget was devoted to repayment of foreign debt." "In Zambia, when 6.7% was spent on basic social services," "40% was again used to pay off the debt." "In Cameroon, it's even worse." "4% of the budget was spent on basic social services while 36% was used to pay off the debt." "To take a concrete example, of the 200 billion CFA francs in Cameroon's budget, only 8 billion was spent on basic social services while, at the same time, 72 billion left the country to pay off the debt." "Howdo you feel about these figures that are particularly disastrous for African peoples?" "See that policeman there?" "He's not a good man." "I'm a criminologist, see." "You work for the police?" "I just take photos for them." "When there are crimes, murders or accidents," "I take photos." "Does this mean, in these Burkina Faso peasants' words, that Africa at last accepts globalization and simply asks that the rules be fair, transparent and valid for all?" "The relationship is governed by lies, hypocrisy and cynicism." "Everything is done to make sure" "Africans are unaware of the system's rapacity." "That is what I denounce when I say the impetus is northern but the theft is local, done with our complicity." "I make a little money that way," "like with weddings." "There's another market now:." "funerals." "There's money in that." "The faces of people who talk don't interest me." "There's no truth in them." "I prefer the dead." "They're truer." "Firstly, I strongly oppose the idea that Africa's key characteristic is her poverty." "She is the victim of her riches." "I would rather we talk about pauperization than poverty." "In talking of pauperization, you pinpoint the mechanisms and Bush is at the heart of them." "Bush is the conductor." "Therefore, I don't see... why he is complaining." "I say that the West has created and imposed two fears on itself:" "terrorism and immigration." "Let's stay calm." "We must stop presenting the problems' causes as the solution." "Everything can be sold or bought." "Today, a sick woman in a village risks dying because the nurse who has the medicine won't treat her because she can't pay." "That is what it has come to, what we've learned from the system." "In other words, pay or die." "That's the West's lesson that we inflict on ourselves." "And, personally, I think that what Africa needs to do now is to make an effort to pull herselftogether." "Along with the West, we are caught up in striving for a society that we can't attain." "Our public services have been sold off." "We could have developed a control system for the administrators, brought the necessary pressure to bear, and denounced the profiteers." "We have accepted it at times." "If you had awell-placed relative, you were happy to profit from the system with him." "How can we take back our assets?" "That's a major political issue." "Death is good." "Nothing's better than death." "Your suggestion is that you pull yourself together." "That's afine idea, awide-ranging and abstract idea, but it isn't a programme." "After this first remark, I would like to take two examples that will provide striking proof that your ideas..." " Can you get to the point?" " Right away." "For instance, I have heard Maitre Tall provide figures and you have approved them." "What figures?" "My esteemed colleague, you said earlier," ""We are given 54 billion" ""and, in actual fact, we have to pay back 436 billion."" "Do you know, madame, that, for Mali, we plan to give up the sum of 1.42 billion CFA francs that represents 60% of the debt?" "Are you aware of that fact?" "I'm aware of that act of deception and..." "Madame Traore, please address the court." "It was decided at Gleneagles, during the G8 summit, as part of a so-called cancellation of the debt." "Firstly, we consider, given the interest rates applied, that Africa has paid off this debt and owes nothing more to these institutions." "Secondly, we say that the disastrous nature of economic policies in which only borrowed money was invested without any benefit to the people of Mali and Africa, is a moral wrong that didn't even require this "good deed" by the G8." "But, above all, I wish to say that this 1.42 billion is not fresh money injected into Mali's economy." "What we need today is fresh money in order to create jobs and to invest." "We haven't even mentioned corruption yet." "I feel that the correct use of our own resources could safeguard us today from this manipulation of opinion that presents afalse cancellation as atrue one." "We shall perhaps be able to save afewbillion each year as part of the debt we're paying off." "But this decision has done more to improve the G8's image than to actually help Africa." "True, I haven't put forward a programme but that isn't my intention." "I would simply like a critical mass of Africans to knowmore about the reasons why we are in this position." "Your Honour, I agree with the witness." "Writers don't put forward programmes." "And I also agree that writers should denounce what they are able to observe." "They can express their personal feelings and thoughts." "But you abandoned that role just now, madame." "You presented yourself, on this stand, as an expert." "You tackled specific issues, you spoke about the debt, you said the debt impoverishes Africa, a moot point, and that its cancellation, as you just said, is of no consequence." "I am a citizen of this country, with my feet firmly grounded in the realities of this country." "Being awriter doesn't mean I don't have a certain expertise at dealing with aggressive stances in an open debate on issues that I experience from the inside." "But this money comes with a provison." "It forces the hand of 18 countries to make them speed up the structural reforms that benefit the North." "But I'm not only fighting for subsidies." "I'm fighting for the possibility for a country like Mali to produce cotton if it wishes or not, but to earn its living." "A living to sell what?" "That's why this issue goes way beyond Africa." "Why should the fate of people depend on their ability to produce and sell abroad?" "China's expansion must be integrated into the debate." "Your own countries tremble before China." "What will Mali do?" "I believe that cotton production has had its day." "Besides, with the prices of products that come from China and copy our textiles, there is no major stake for us in the cotton debate." ""ln an inevitably open world," ""we must civilize globalization" ""and give it a meaning."" "What do you think of those words?" "Can progress be made or not during the globalization process?" "For example, if the standards enforced by the ILO were made general, would that be good or bad?" "Or would that merely oppress the Africans even more?" "I strongly oppose your starting point: "the open world"." "We don't live in an open world, Mr Rappaport." "The words you just read provide an eloquent answer to the questions that you ask." "If globalization needs to be improved and civilized, that means it "decivilizes" and dehumanizes." "Today, we see Africans who opt for emigration, who are economic refugees, arrested, handcuffed, deported, humiliated and sent back home." "How can you claim, given that terrible situation that shocks the whole world, that we live in an open world?" "It's clearly open for whites but not for blacks." "I'm awitness." "Madou Keita isn't on the list." "Step back." "Our countries are not imploding today because, on a domestic level, the women play an important role." "That is why they must refuse to be imprisoned within the conventional interpretation of the situation that says they are victims of their culture, society and men." "The men are in trouble, the women too." "We have to work together." " Where's the mirror?" " Here it is." "Very pretty." "I'll do you a good price." "You all say that." "Some darker ones." "They're by Gucci, an Italian designer." "Where's the Gucci logo?" "It's top quality." "Where's the logo?" "They're by Gucci." "So where's the logo?" "Falai..." "That's not the same policeman." "The one there before fell asleep during the break." "He said his gun has vanished." "An officer's investigating." "He suspects me." "Raise your right hand and swear to tell nothing but the truth." "What does he want?" "We were in Morocco together." "He's the one we need for now." "You can sit down." "He says that he left Mali to go to Spain." "He crossed Niger." "He left Niger and went to Algeria." "From there, he went to Morocco." "The Moroccans brought us back to Oujda." "They made us all board atruck to take us into the Sahara." "From there, we walked to Algeria." "The Algerians refused to let us in." "They helped us the first time, but this time they didn't." "They opened fire on us but the bullets didn't hit anyone and we set off again." "There were around 30 of us." "We walked for seven nights." "We walked for aweek." "Without water or food." "Those who were sick were soon exhausted." "One man couldn't go any further." "His young brother sat down next to him to wait for him." "He said, "Don't wait." ""Go." ""I can't go on," ""I accept death." ""There's no sense in you waiting with me." ""Go..."" "There was a woman with us." "She was from Ghana." "We didn't know she was a woman." "She was disguised as a boy." "She was exhausted." "We went over to her to help her." "We couldn't do anything." "There were 30 of us at first but only ten or so survived without much trouble." "We don't knowwhere the others are." "Are they dead?" "Are they wandering in the Sahara?" "I don't know." "Madou Keita..." "The reason why you left your country, was the suffering you felt." "Since your birth, Madou, have you been to school to learn?" "Since your birth, Madou, has the state given you the health care you need?" "Since your birth, Madou, has the state taught you atrade?" "Has it found you work?" "Has it given you money?" "It has given me nothing." "Nothing." "The state has given me nothing." "What do you mean?" "You're not thinking." "You're being unreasonable." "We can understand him." "Look at yourself and look at him!" "You'll never be like them!" "Howcan you defend them?" "Look at yourself and look at him!" "Until your dying day, you'll never be like them!" "Never like them." "You're lost for us!" "Madame, please..." "Let me speak." "Let me speak to this fool!" "Look what he's doing!" "Please, madame." " He's just doing his duty." " Let's get serious here!" "Honestly!" "What is this?" "You're wearing us out." "Ifwe were alone, you wouldn't leave unharmed." "I'd accept the consequences." "Enough suffering!" "Enough suffering!" "Enough manipulation..." "The hearing is adjourned." "Saramba, will this do?" "Hold it up to see." "That's good." "Rinse it and hang it out to dry." "You knowRaymond is dead?" "Which Raymond?" "The same one." "What was wrong with him?" "Nothing." " 140/120..." "That's good." " It's good?" "Thank you." "What are you looking for here, by this streetlight's glow?" "Have you lost something?" "Yes, I've lost my wallet." "Are you sure you lost it here?" "And now, tonight's film." "I'll be here tomorrow for our news bulletin." "Good night." "Some technical problems but everything will be settled shortly." "I'm lost here." "Knowwhere the square is?" "They don't need two teachers." "Spare the kids." "Guys..." "I fired at one and I got two!" "What's up, guys?" "Have you seen my soap-dish?" "No, I haven't." "Mamou!" "Take this." "Let's do the blue ones." "Do a sky blue one like this." "I'm off to Dakar on Sunday." "But without lna." "Tell me, what's going on between Mele and you?" "Nothing." "What do you mean, nothing?" "You don't talk to her anymore." "She's the one not talking to me." "Nor to Mariam, either." "Ifyou want to sort it all out, talk to your wife, not to me." "All rise." "As social realities demand, we shall take a short break." "Aren't there people with money in Mali?" "People who've enriched themselves?" "People who are rich enough and who can now create jobs by founding a company and keeping it in Mali simply don't exist." "We have heard awitness, a mutual insurance manager, Mr Aouitara." "Is that his name?" "Ouatara." "Mr Ouataratold us that part of the money provided by international aid wasn't spent." "He didn't say it was embezzled." "He said it was there and that it wasn't being used." "Money is provided but not used even though it is vital." "Why is that?" "I can't say anything about Mr Ouatara's statement." "It's his opinion." "My viewls different." "It's not a matter of opinion..." "Maitre Rappaport, let the witness answer." "Yes, Your Honour." "Mr Keita, actually, Maitre Rappapov..." "Ra-ppa-port." "...is saying our disbursement capacities are poor." "Very poor!" "Maitre Rappaport," "let's consider the most social fields today and that are also considered fundamental for us." "Education." "Has anyone ever seen a school built using what you refer to as financial means?" "No." "We can provide figures." "Let's not clutter up this debate." "Maitre Rappaport, he's awitness, not the opposing party." "Occasionally, through twinning or another form of cooperation, it can come about." "As part of the process of decentralization, we have made a superhuman effort to ease our suffering." "And, in these conditions, all we can do is come to terms with ourselves." "And break away from this system." "Have you read Lao-Tse?" "Confucius." "I haven't read all of it." "I win a point." "He says," ""He who is excessive is insignificant."" "We would gain in all matters if we avoid being excessive." "Listening to you, our African nations" "were calm states or countries, without problems, prosperous..." "Then came the World Bank and the lMF, and we became poor and we have become poorer and poorer." "Is that right?" "These countries have known 100 years or more of colonization and, with colonization over, are struggling to ensure the conditions for their development." "And what do they find themselves facing?" "An international diktat, institutions that more or less regulate world relations." "I don't see howyou can describe those countries as you just did." "I did inform you, professor, that I'm no expert in this field." "But you've just said..." "Our countries were characterized more or less like in Aime Cesaire's poem," ""The Prayer of a Negro Child"." "The very same thing." "We've known nothing but misfortune." "And it's getting worse." "Is it absurd to imagine... that this increased poverty could have a cause other than the World Bank and the lMF?" "Well before colonization, there was a country, awealthy and stable country where life was good." "But colonization came along and set up what?" "It took everything:" "men, riches, everything." "A leading gold-producing country where the people are poor." "As you can see, our women don't even wear gold jewellery." "Can we imagine aworld without the lMF or the World Bank?" "Absolutely." "Thank you." "When someone dies in Africa, at that person's funeral, one of the questions asked is whether he owes money or if there is anyone in his local community who owes him money." "In Africa, we remind people that death is better than shame." "The African states owe money." "Is it normal that these people should claim their due and that you, as an expert, should advise these Africans not to pay off their debt?" "Chaka..." "What are you reading?" "Falai..." "Is there an Israeli embassy here?" "No." "One day there will be." "Yes, that's possible." "The guard will be me." "You're going to choke." "I'm sorry." "The question we are asking now after around 45 years of cooperation, with these states and institutions, is where are we exactly?" "And we've had to wait 45 years to realize that, despite having everything needed to achieve it, the economy has never taken off or developed over time but that we're bogged down in anti-development." "Malnutrition, undernourishment, chronic illiteracy, chronic unemployment and even the total lack of decent living conditions." "As we can see, promiscuity reigns." "It's impossible to describe." "What does this lead to?" "The total degeneration of the foundations that represented our society's key values." "To that, we need to add this flood of information we receive that only flows one way." "At times, it cancels out all our efforts to try to live as we really are." "Because even within our imaginations, we are raped." "They don't just take our resources, our work, and our money, they take our minds too." "We have reached the last threshold of the human heartbeat." "And now, in atotally biased manner, they come to observe this failure." "And, on observing it, they say, "No." ""You must maintain libertarianism" ""as the development mode for your countries."" "In other words, prevent us from creating a payments deficit." "That presupposes that all the money we receive must be used to restore and maintain our solvency in relation to our creditors and cannot be used within the national economy." "Today, we pay out much more than the true total of our budgets." "This framework of action set up by the World Bank, what effect will it have?" "It will smother afire that will continue to smoulder." "It's simply the fire of imposed destitution." "It's the fire of aterrible form of colonialism." "It's the fire of an unspeakable form of exploitation." "It means some countries will disappear." "We are barely kept in this international system and take part in it just because we are good little markets and a source of money." "Today, we give everything to North America and we give everything to Europe!" "Through the rape of my imagination and of the little space that I could call my own, they come to tell me that the Negro is lazy." "He cannot develop independently." "But this Negro that you are crushing to death with your economic and financial machinery" "laid the foundations of your economy." "And this Negro has ensured your development." "Today, in Mali or other countries, if you fall ill and you have no money," "you're dead." "Everything here concerning democracy or elections is nothing but a show, a big show." "We occasionally go to vote but it's as if we were never there." "This external legitimacy of power remains in place today, many intellectuals have accepted it, but I won't judge anyone." "But each one of us had a moment of clarity and then made a deliberate choice." "Either I fully support the true ideals of my people or I sell them off, as many of our governments do." "That's their share of responsibility in this." "I think I should have stayed there." "Perhaps it was better for me than coming to work for a corrupt Mali administration that has no responsibilities." "We end up asking ourselves," ""Why do we receive a salary?" ""For a job we don't do."" "All of a sudden, we regress in relation to goals that we had or that we were attaining before." "They've taken everything from us." "I didn't realize that poverty, albeit imposed poverty, could change human nature to this extent." "But today," "I may be allowed to assert that when I step out into the street, believe me, I don't meet other Malians." "I see everything in Mali but Malians." "A man who is hungry, a man without health care, a man who is never educated and left in total obscurantism, is a man who will negate himself and be in denial." "He's a man who will become alienated, lost and depraved." "You can't come in." "The witness Samba Diakite." "Your full name, please." "Samba Diakite, born in Dakar, 1953." "Hamdallaye district." "Your profession?" "Former schoolteacher." "Former schoolteacher." "You have nothing to say?" "Your date and place of birth." "I was born in Bamako." "I'm 52." "Do you know who summoned you as awitness?" "Yes, the plaintiff." "Yes, the plaintiff." "African society." "Opposite, we have international financial institutions." "Are you related or subordinate in any way to either of the two parties?" "In no way at all." "Raise your right hand." "Swear to tell nothing but the truth." "Raise your hand and swear." "I swear." "Samba Diakite..." "If you please..." "But trees are vital for life." "That's true, but to run a company, you don't need trees." "Fine..." "All right." "When the gun vanished, were you here?" "I was here." "You didn't move?" "I didn't move." "But I was told you went out for awhile." "I went to get a spare part from Japan Casse." "Did you find the part?" "No, I didn't." "Come to my office tomorrow." "When you add it all up... this money squandered... these public holdings sold off... these families ruined... what is your feeling about that today?" "A feeling of shame, of anger..." "Of anger and compassion." "Compassion for the country." "You see villages that lived through the railway and that are now obliged, after 100 years of existence, that are now obliged to move somewhere else because the train no longer stops." "Life came to those villages because of the railway." "When those villages are obliged to move, when their inhabitants, in order to buy food, have to travel by donkey, by cart or on foot" "and when the young people who grewvegetables can't sell them because they used to sell to the train's passengers, you witness the start of an exodus." "And when they are turned back, the situation is distressing." "And when you wrote on November 4, 2002, to the Ministry of Transport, you made a serious accusation." "In reference to the railway, you wrote," ""It's the victim of a conspiracy."" "This accusation of conspiracy," "I presume you have proof of it?" "What elements do you have to back up this serious accusation of conspiracy against the..." "Be quiet!" "Maitre Rappaport, I have to..." "Don't oblige me to..." "The witness never spoke of a conspiracy!" "The witness spoke of a conspiracy." "Let's refer to the statement..." "I did indeed speak of a conspiracy." "In fact, a letter was received, addressed to the authorities, saying that if we refused to privatize the transport system, the World Bank would withdraw subsidies for health and education in Mali." "It was a confidential letter." "You can't just come before a court and say, "There's a conspiracy."" ""Howdo you know?"" ""l sawa letter."" "Where's the proof of this conspiracy?" "For example, is the World Bank to blame when a manager buys ballpoint pens and pays 1,500 CFA francs when he can get them for 500?" "Do we truly believe the World Bank steps in at that level or does the World Bank make the manager plant trees..." "I've finished." "Are you asking questions or putting your case?" "Your Honour, the other side..." "You can plead your case later." "The other side pretends to ask questions, develops lines of argument..." "We're being discreet, we hardly make any interventions..." "We nonetheless have the right to say that the serious accusations brought before you must be backed up by evidence." "One should be attacking those responsible." "Your Honour, you asked questions earlier that showyou have afewideas and some information about the reasons for the railway's collapse." "Maitre Bourdon, please." "I'm not seeking your approval," "I'm trying to drawyour attention to some simple points." "Why would the World Bank want Mali to be deprived of a means of communication and why would it want her inhabitants to be unable to travel?" "A country without a means of communication, without energy, without transport, cannot really be called a sovereign nation." "And those are precisely the areas that the multinational companies wish to take from us." "That's the case and we must not let it happen." "It's hard... but I'm more optimistic than hell." "I knowwe can do it." "We just need to get organized." "Fode!" "Turn it off." "Your Honour, in relation... to this witness, may I petition..." "Petition in relation to..." "Jean-Paul..." "I have a dream every night that bothers me." "What's your dream?" "Jean-Paul, I dream..." "I'm in the darkness..." "the light..." "In any case, I'm not at home." "In this dream," "I'm sitting down and in front of me there's a big bag." "It's full of the heads of heads of state." "Each time I dip my hand into it," "I pull the same head out." "And when I put it back, my dream ends and I wake up." "Is it a black head or not?" "I don't know if it's black or white." "In any case, it's the same head." "Don't tell anyone else about this dream." "Don't talk about it again." "That's not howit works legally." "Maitre Bourdon is giving you lessons in procedure!" "It's a debate, not a lesson." "The witness, after taking the oath to tell the truth, says that she happened to come across a letter clearly not addressed to her, that she should never have seen, and so read the said letter." "It's incredibly cynical, yet typical of the Bank's general cynicism, to say, "Madame, you must be joking." ""That letter can't have existed." ""And if you had it, you should have copied it" ""and sent it to the press."" "But she would have risked years and years of imprisonment, as you well know." " It's a risk..." " A huge risk!" "She cannot play Antigone for eternity." "For the moment, nothing challenges the credibility of this embarrassing testimony." "Maitre Bourdon, the lawsays each party must provide evidence of its claims." "So why are you looking here and not over there?" "Because it's too dark over there." "You can't see anything." "The other day, you were saying that the worst after-effect of structural adjustment was the destruction of the social fabric." "This whole part has been erased." "Can you start again?" "Howdid that happen?" "I must have recorded the trial over it." "Too many cassettes." "I get confused." "No one will listen." "Don't waste your time." "I don't know if we must share that honour but, in any case, it's a great responsibility for us." "We knowthat the audience, as is only natural, all the lay-offs and the outcasts who are here, who have described their suffering, wholly support the plaintiff." "And we have clearly perceived that the court's feelings are not that far removed from those of the plaintiff." "And so it's a great responsibility." "You claim the international institutions, the World Bank, the lMF and others you have named, are deaf and blind." "Deaf and blind and, if we follow the reasoning and arguments that I have heard here, murderers too." "Murderers even with premeditation... since we are reproached" "with incidents that are real and that we deplore." "Infant mortality is on the rise in Africa." "This is an attack on those who will come after us." "Do you believe, that for international institutions, those are the results that we seek?" "Do we really want life expectancy in regions of Africa to drop and fall below the age of 50 years?" "People die of diarrhoea in Africa, people die of malaria and we're not responsible." "But they die of those things." "Someone has said medicine is in the North and the sick in the South." "Even if we were guided by pure self-interest, we could not possibly seek such goals." "But that is howthings are." "We knowit and we knowwhy because we have worked in partnership with governments to assess the situation and to decide what needs to be..." "All the same, we need to raise an issue that not only concerns Africa but that is particularly detrimental to Africa." "I am talking about corruption." ""Corruption isn't a natural disaster," ""it is cold and calculated pillaging."" "Far be it from me to claim that corruption is rife solely in Africa." "We knowfull well that in the West, large companies," "Total and oil," "Thales and arms policy, are caught up in the cycle of corruption." "But allowme to say that there is a difference." "What is it?" "Corruption in Africa, given the state of economic development..." "In the West we must fight corruption and defeat it but its impact on economic development is less serious than in Africa." "This trial's becoming annoying." "When is it going to end?" "No one can say." "And nowthe polar icecap is melting." "And the water will flood out." "What will remain of the icecap in afewdecades?" "People have trouble breathing in some of our big cities." "Aren't those common interests to be managed together?" "We cannot avoid dealing with these issues." "At the same time, we are witnessing the proliferation of weapons." "What will become of us if, one day, a potentate somewhere gains access to the atom bomb?" "Is that truly impossible?" "And there's another danger." "We've all referred to it." "It crosses all continents and has struck them all." "One of the elements feeding it is poverty." "Terrorism is a danger not only for Africa but for all of us." "We want to fight it." "And the fight against terrorism cannot succeed without the defeat of poverty and without giving hope in life to those who have lost it today." "Thank you, Maitre Rappaport." "But, before going on," "I would like to ask you..." "Do you consider this court biased?" "Your words seemed to indicate..." "Your Honour, prior to being magistrates, you are men and women and you are clearly sensitive in particular to the suffering of your people whose causes and reasons you are aware of." "And when you see them, expressing themselves before you, your heart suffers and your thoughts are with them rather than with us." "I do not consider that to be an abnormal bias." "Are you Chaka's wife?" "Why?" "I just have a few questions to ask you." "If it's about the gun, I don't knowanything." "It is clearly a great honour to defend African society." "It is a great honour to defend millions of women and men of honour" "who have been represented superbly over the last fewdays and who have come to say that the world, since its creation, has always made sure that the part of the world that suffers and endures is kept quiet and remains quiet." "For Africato remain silent in her suffering, that requires watchdogs." "It requires prison guards at times." "Watchdogs, in other words the American empire and its accomplices in Europe and elsewhere." "It requires Dr Diafoiruses, Dr Strangeloves who drawup prescriptions that Africans "cannot read"" "and "never follow"." "Prescriptions of so-called magic potions that soon turn out to be poisons with a remarkable effect," "Chinese poisons..." "And maybe the Chinese will start too, making evil absolute." "As a result," "I believe your court can easily declare the World Bank guilty, with its accomplices." "After all, the situation is terrifying." "The figures are murderous and the statistics homicidal!" "We simply need to look back at the last 20 years of structural adjustment." "These plans have caused destruction and impoverishment." "The figures provide eloquent information on the tragedy taking place." "Life expectancy has dropped to the age of 46." "The Aids crisis is manipulated to conceal that mortality rates are on the rise because of their link to the important and significant fall in average income in Africa." "So the party's over." "The party's over and the structural adjustment plans have failed wholesale." "50 million African children are scheduled to die over the next five years." "Three million are scheduled to die of malaria next year." "In the face of such tragic figures, one will say that the World Bank and the others have won." "We cannot say it and we won't say it." "We shall avoid saying it because structural adjustment has clearly placed Africa in a vicious circle, an absurd circle that begins, as we have clearly seen, with the debt!" "The debt is a stone around Africa's neck, the slave's sign of allegiance to his master." "The figures speak for themselves." "$220 billion in 2003." "The latest statistics have shown," "Your Honour, even though $4 has been paid back per African," "$4 remains to be paid." "It is clear that this debt has brought Africato her knees by depriving her of her financial sovereignty, by dismantling her civil service." "It has forced her to sell off her public services to serve financial predators." "It has razed some of her hospitals to the ground." "It has privatized her school system through the lowwages paid to civil servants." "It has brought Africato her knees, making her the gloomy mirror of what the world is becoming:" "a privatized world." "And in this privatized world, the World Bank, in theory humane, has become inhumane!" "The World Bank has become an inhumane bank because it is the Trojan horse of financial capitalism." "Of course, one will say that the corruption is shared by the Africans and the Europeans." "But does the defence dare to assert that Africans invented corruption?" "Is there a chromosome of corruption in Africa?" "Remember the corruptors come from rich countries, never from poor ones." "The G8 and the World Bank, after bringing Africato her knees, are nowthreatening to suspend all public aid to Africa because corruption is rife here." "The circle is complete, confusing causes and consequences." "Murder thus reveals its sinister side, the World Bank's cynicism." "Far be it from us, Your Honour, to claim that the World Bank feeds on African children or that it hates drinking water and public railways!" "The World Bank isn't governed by murderous instincts." "But the World Bank is simply the cornerstone, the centre of gravity of this unchained form of capitalism, financial capitalism, predatory capitalism, capitalism ignoring general interests to attain its key goals:" "the production of profits for all eternity!" "The World Bank occasionally tries to appear more humane and I shall give you an example of its attempts to be more humane." "A fewdays ago in Paris, crying crocodile tears, who said?" ""Every week, 200,000 sick children aged under five" ""die in developing countries."" "Paul Wolfowitz said that." "Paul Wolfowitz, the man behind the war in Iraq that costs more than providing water to all Africa and saving Aids victims with generic drugs." "He's the man who pretended to weep at a symposium in Paris afewweeks ago." "Let's end this hypocritical dance." "Let's end this cursed predatory dance." "Let's consider the World Bank's arguments." "There seems to be a curse on Africa." "Europe holds up aterrifying mirror to Africa that pollutes people's minds and stifles crucial awareness." "Is Africa doomed?" "Is poverty as natural as tropical genocide, slavery and neo-colonialism?" "You also find this fatality in the idea of an ignorant Africa." "What did we hear the other day?" "When Madame Souko had the nerve to say she could read a balance sheet, they called her an upstart!" "The Africans knownothing about the complexities of this world!" "Since they knownothing, all criticism is considered unfounded." "Yet we have heard it bravely expressed here." "So, yes!" "You will declare the World Bank guilty of abusing the African people." "You'll declare the World Bank guilty of failure to render assistance." "You'll declare the World Bank guilty of not respecting its mandate to serve mankind." "In doing that, you'll open the path to the utopia" "that each one of us has in mind and allows us to imagine a newworld beyond the hills." "This utopia is, in away, the African ram that comes to rub against and rip the pants of reasons of state and the market!" "Utopia, tomorrow, to avoid what is under way in the suburbs of Accra, Abidjan and Cairo where children drunk on deprivation could turn into balls of fire tomorrow." "You'll declare the World Bank guilty and force it to become more humane." "You'll declare it guilty of the crimes of inhumanity and cynicism committed over 20 years." "The only sentence possible is the most modest sentence, the most clement one." "We can't throwWolfowitz in the Niger." "The caimans wouldn't want him." "The sentence that we request of you..." "Community service for mankind for all eternity." "I am honoured to appear before this court and to lend my robes to defend a noble and fair cause, but above all to lend my voice to Africa's silent majority that has been subject for 25 years to the iron law of adjustment," "the law of the strongest that has never been the best." "Yes, Your Honour, adjustment is an evil, an organized and structured evil administered and inoculated to our people." "This evil, Your Honour, is the cynicism of the debt, the vicious circle of the debt." "This debt that has ruined our economies and that has sapped our energy before we have finished paying it." "What must we do, faced with the debt's violence?" "I hear the Latin Americans." "They told us, Your Honour..." ""The debt can't be paid."" "Yes, it cannot be paid because it is illegitimate." "Because it is violent." "It cannot be paid simply because it is untenable." "On top of the debt's violence, we witness the selling off of our public services, our basic social services..." "Privatization!" "The health service has been privatized but between June and September 2005," "42,000 people died of cholera, a mediaeval disease that was thought to have been eradicated here." "We don't need to look far." "Here, in this room, a patient lies suffering." "Do you hear his moans?" "I've heard them." "And we're privatizing health!" "And that's not all!" "We're privatizing education, a universal right." "The acquisition of knowledge should be the same for all but two thirds of our children are illiterate and nowwe're being asked to pay to acquire knowledge!" "That's not all!" "Our public services have been sold off." "Water has been privatized." "The Joliba, Senegal, Zambezi, Limpopo!" "Our rivers privatized!" "With our stories, legends and traditions buried in the current, rivers and lakes!" "That's inadmissible." "This people is awidow mourning the death of a husband buried under the ruins of adjustment." "This people is an orphan crying for a mother who died in childbirth." "All it asks for is its due:" "basic health care." "This people is afather, made redundant by the railway, these men you have heard, these women who have pleaded on your stand." "The father who has seen his authority, who has seen his influence and his dignity weakened and swept away by an unfair redundancy." "This people, Your Honour, is Zegue Bamba." "Have you heard, Your Honour, Zegue Bamba's lament?" "This peasant who asks, "Why don't I sowanymore?" ""When I sow, why don't I reap?" ""Why don't I eat when I reap?"" "This Africa, Your Honour, is asking you with dignity, humility and modesty, but with legitimacy, for justice." "You must do justice to Africa." "You must not do this by condemning the World Bank." "You will achieve it, Your Honour, by forcing the World Bank, the lMF, the WTO and the G8, along with their accomplices, to respect their mandate that they should never have forgotten, with man" "as the goal of all humane action." "It's your responsibility, sir, since your pen will be signing the ruling." "It's mine too, through the robes I wear." "And we're all responsible because it's our duty as a generation to bring about the advent of that day for the balance of the world and of man's future is at stake." ""My ear to the ground," ""I heard tomorrow pass by"" "Subtitles:" "Ian Burley Subtitling:" "CMC"