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Time Out with Nick Cohen: Barbara Stocking

Nick Cohen

Published 28 May 2007

In what circumstances would Oxfam's head choose to speak plainly, even if telling the truth endangered famine relief?
Photographs by Nick Dawe

Oxfam was founded in 1942 to bring aid to the oppressed of Nazi Europe, a cause that didn't make it popular with the Churchill government. After the Germans occupied Greece, the Royal Navy blocked the shipping lanes. Food and medicines couldn't get through to civilians, and famine set in. Lifting the blockade might have helped the starving, but Whitehall wondered whether food meant for the hungry wouldn't end up in the bellies of German troops instead, and gazed with some disdain on the new lobbyists.

The founders of the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief were stereotypical members of the great and the good: bishops, academics, retired teachers and Quaker philanthropists, all of whom have been at the forefront of liberal causes for generations, and the butt of satirists for just as long. In Bleak House, Dickens gave us Mrs Jellyby, who had "very good hair but was too much occupied with her African duties to brush it", and was so obsessed with bringing edu cation and coffee cultivation to "the natives of Borrioboola-Gha, on the left bank of the Niger" that her neglected daughter declared: "I wish Africa was dead! I do! Don't talk to me, Miss Summerson. I hate it and detest it. It's a beast!"

Yet Churchill's coalition government found it no easier than its successors to dismiss the new charity. Mock if you like, implied Gilbert Murray, Regius professor of Greek at Oxford, founder of Oxfam and friend of half the worthy causes of the mid-20th century, but "be careful in dealing with a man who cares nothing for comfort or promotion, but is simply determined to do what he believes to be right". Murray was better at predicting the power of organised conscience than Dickens. The ad hoc response to the Greek famine turned into the most visible charity on the high street. It was infused with the amateur air English liberals adopt when they go out in the world to do good. The first head office was in a cramped room above the original Oxfam shop in Broad Street in the city centre; the second in a dingy parade of shops in Victorian north Oxford.

The tweeds and piles of dusty pamphlets are gone now. Under the leadership of Barbara Stocking, Oxfam has moved to a huge HQ at a new business park on the edge of town. Old hands find the identikit postmodern box with its dispiriting views of traffic jammed on the ring road soulless, and I saw why when I got there. This might be the head office of any corporation in any ribbon development anywhere in the industrialised world. Once inside, however, there's no denying the efficiency of the place. Charity workers sit in an open- plan office the size of a football pitch. Neat shelving units hold research papers, while a GM-free, organic, fair-trade canteen offers succour when they need a break from rescuing Africa.

The businesslike atmosphere reflects the personality of the director. Stocking is a former regional director of the NHS who, according to rumour, was in the running for the top job. Corporate cant litters her talk - "making a difference", "meeting the challenge" and all the rest of it - but it would be a mistake to see her as another empty suit. The charitable world is notoriously uncharitable, but I couldn't find a director of a rival charity with a bad word to say about her. Her own staff describe her as an honest and popular manager.

Annus mirabilis

Above all, she is a success. Under her leadership, turnover has hit £300m. Oxfam now has more than 750 shops in the UK, 6,000 staff all over the world and sister organisations in 13 countries. Oxfam officials have gone from the charity into government and helped make new Labour the most charitable administration ever. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown were the "Lennon and McCartney" of poverty reduction, cried an approving Bono, and if you can forgive the cheesy comparison, you can see his point. I would be exaggerating if I said that aid was a major political issue in Britain, but it matters more to voters here than in any other European country.

The annus mirabilis for Oxfam was 2005, when Blair and Brown pushed for the G8 nations to agree to an extraordinary programme of debt relief and subsidies for Africa, Live 8 played Hyde Park, and the Asian tsunami provoked an outburst of altruism. "It was a time that people recognised that we are part of the global world," Stocking remembers with a warm smile. "For the first time, the new horizons of travel and the net came together and made people realise that if we're going to live happily in the global world we're going to have to make it better."

I wasn't as convinced then and am less so now. Even at the peak of Make Poverty History's campaign, you didn't have to be a Telegraph-reading Tory to think the aid movement was taking a wrong turn. It presented a picture of a world as much the white man's to direct as it was at the apogee of the European empires. No one told the audience at Live 8 that Africa had nepotistic dictators in power or kleptomaniac families in office. They stayed silent about genocidal movements and spy-ridden regimes. All that was needed to rescue Africa from poverty was for the developed world to agree more aid, fairer trade and debt relief and - poof! -the suffering would end.

Two years on, the neocolonialist view hasn't been shaken. A recent Oxfam study of global warming says, truthfully, that pollution from the rich world will hurt the poor world, but fails to ask how Africa can develop without increasing its output of greenhouse gases. A report on foreign policy says, again rightly, that the Iraq war has made humanitarian intervention harder to justify, but it makes no condemnation of Ba'athist and Islamist "insurgents", nor does it offer solidarity to their victims. A report in advance of this summer's G8 summit condemns rich governments for failing to honour promises made in 2005, but assumes the problems of the world are the fault of the west and, by converse, that the remedies lie in western hands.

The usual justification for lopsided vision is that pressure groups can best influence their own governments. A demonstration in London against the massacres in Darfur will have no influence on the regime in Khartoum, but a march to demand that the British government commit more money to, say, education in Africa might. If double standards and myopia follow, then so be it. What matters is what works. But the easy ride given to Oxfam, Christian Aid and the other aid charities overlooks a structural problem. The aid charities are hybrids with incompatible aims. On the one hand, they provide relief regardless of the political consequences - like the Red Cross - and, on the other, they lobby for political change - like Human Rights Watch. As Amartya Sen showed, dem ocracies don't have famines. The great hungers of the past hundred years were presided over by colonial administrators, communist tyrants and, today, African nationalists and gangsters. Dictatorships do not as a rule tolerate censure from anyone inside their borders. Therefore, if Oxfam were to speak out against the obscenity of Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe being elected to head the UN Commission on Sustainable Development, there's a fair chance Mugabe would stop Oxfam workers from relieving the suffering inflicted by his economically unsustainable regime. Its hybrid status means Oxfam has to direct disapproval at governments that won't respond to criticism by closing down Oxfam operations, but, rather, will invite Stocking in for a chat and a cup of tea.

Stocking has the strength of character to face hard questions candidly. In Darfur, I said, Oxfam is feeding 600,000 refugees on the Chadian border. Is that why it refuses to call the Darfuri genocide "genocide"?

"It is a dilemma for us," she said. "We think we've got to save lives today while trying to get the international com munity to sort out the bigger problem. Now we will do our absolute utmost to go to the edge of that. We will try to give as much information out, but not in ways that are challenging to the Khartoum government."

I asked if she could imagine circumstances in which Oxfam would choose to speak plainly, even if telling the truth en dangered famine relief. There were two, she replied. First, if charitable aid was a "sticking plaster" that allowed the international community to feel that conditions in, say, Darfur were not so bad. Second, if aid was keeping an oppressive government in power, as may soon be the case in Zimbabwe.

Future dangers

I suggested that a better policy would be to help African progressives set their countries free by championing their causes and highlighting the crimes of their oppressors. If I'd confessed to stealing second-hand books from my local Oxfam, she couldn't have been more shocked. "No, no, that's not our mandate. We want to offer a way out of poverty that makes them feel they have economic opportunity and provides them with a right to be heard. It's not our job to help groupings that want to overthrow their governments."

She sounded reasonable as she marked out her limits, but I was left wondering how long the aid charities could stay in British politics while staying out of African politics. The strongest criticism she would make of governments in the poor world was that some of them were corrupt. But the trouble with Africa is not that its post-colonial elites are corrupt - there are corrupt governments all over the world - it is that they are unpatriotic. From Côte d'Ivoire to Zimbabwe, post-colonial rulers have shown that they would prefer to bring the roof down on their wretched peoples rather than let the opposition challenge their power.

A thought experiment shows future dangers for Oxfam. Suppose the G8 meets all its 2005 promises. Suppose the World Trade Organisation stops the rich world subsidising its farmers. Then suppose that nothing changes or, as Sen would predict, that change for the better comes only in those countries already on the path to accountable politics. Would Oxfam be able to rouse governments and publics for another Live 8? Or would governments and publics echo young Miss Jellyby and say that Africa was a beast?

At its birth, Oxfam had to decide whether destroying tyranny was more important than relieving immediate suffering, and 65 years on it seems no closer to an answer.

I asked Stocking if she expected to see Africa break away from the demeaning need for other people's charity by the time we both retired. Yes, she replied. Absolutely. Look at the strides made in combating poverty in India. The naysayers said change was impossible, but it happened, for all their sneers. I forgot about the question and moved on, but it evidently niggled away. As I left, she corrected herself: "Perhaps not by the time we retire, but maybe before we die."

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9 comments from readers

alexweir1949
26 May 2007 at 07:40

Oxfam is just like 99% of the players in the aid and development game - their actions and inactions are grossly hypocritical. They ignore and sideline initiatives designed to achieve concrete results. cd3wd technical development information project and SEEV 3rd world voting project are just 2 examples of this. Oxfam and others should be sued by their contributors and donors, who are being deceived big-time. Mr Alex Weir, Harare and Nairobi

realitycheck
29 May 2007 at 10:55

I take issue with Mr Weir's irresponsible and ill-informed comments; How is it that big international NGOs, housing some of the world's most globally dynamic, responsive and accountable management structures, can "ignore and sideline initiatives designed to achieve concrete results"? I have studied 'Development' to Master's level and could provide a damning report to Mr Weir's outrageously sweeping statement that NGOs do not think strategically to enhance long-term impact on poverty reduction and the advancement of equal opportunities. Moreover, 'Oxfam and others' CAN be 'sued': they are accountable organisations - if their work is not demonstrably effective they will not receive future contracts and the respect of those they work with. Finally, I would also like to enlighten Mr. Cohen's myopic reading of Sen's hypothesis on the total lack of famines in democracies - take a glance at the respectable work of Vandana Shiva - Observer, June 2002. Mr Reality-Check, UK.

sunnysideup
30 May 2007 at 09:15

Newsflash for Mr Cohen; British charities are forbidden by law from being political. Oxfam tried it once and was slammed by other cynical, smart alecs in the media. It can't win really, can it? And is Mr Cohen seriously suggesting that the G8 campaign cry should have been "More aid and fairer trade... and, by the way, did you know that African leaders are corrupt and nepotistic?" British people are only too aware of the failings of (they assume all) African leaders, and often trot them out as an excuse to do nothing to help. At least Oxfam is doing something. It can't do everything. What are you doing to help, Mr Cohen, apart from trying to undermine people's confidence in an organisation that is bringing relief and hope to hundreds of thousands of people around the world, however imperfectly?

Radhika Sharma
30 May 2007 at 10:54

Nick Cohen is right in pointing out that Oxfam suffers from a neo-colonial view despite its no-nonsense management atmosphere, its posh modern head quarters and its new location in a smart business park on the outskirts of a provincial English city. Part of the problem is that Oxfam’s senior-most managers are all white, English, aspiring middle-class, in league with New Labour and in awe of Gordon Brown. Some people joke in the aid sector that the ‘GB’ in front of Oxfam stands for Gordon Brown, not for Great Britain anymore! What Barbara Stocking has created in Oxfam is the cult of the celebrity executive director, which did not exist before she came to the organisation, and which she has borrowed shamelessly the private sector whom she courts with unseemly haste. Oxfam is an organisation that may be close to its sell by date, and it needs to transform its approach to development and change its structure if it wants to help poor people across the world. Barbara Stocking reminds me of Nero fiddling while Rome was burning!

Harishmehta
30 May 2007 at 11:19

If India has made massive strides in tackling poverty it is because Indian institutions- public, private and civil society- are made of much sturdier stuff than their counterparts in Africa, a point that seems to escape Barbara Stocking, who seems to believe that more foreign aid and opening EU’s markets to goods and services from developing countries will transform poor people’s lives. Oxfam has 70 country offices in developing countries; it has 8 huge regional centres; and a staff overseas that number in their thousands, and yet it keeps silent about corruption, poor governance and the mismanagement by government departments of scarce financial and human resources in many of the countries in which it has a presence. For a humanitarian organisation, it keeps it mouth eerily shut on the widespread abuse of human rights and a massive emergency situation existing in Burma. Oxfam still believes rather quaintly that public bodies should deliver all essential social services in developing countries, even though it’s patently false and also unrealistic to take that path. Unfortunately the do-gooders in Oxfam’s head office in Oxford lack sufficient understanding of life for poor people in developing countries as they have never lived there for long periods of time and many of them are steeped in a colonial, slightly left-wing mind-set, believing that the North is the saviour of poor people in developing countries.

Hangonthere
30 May 2007 at 12:28

Nick Cohen forgets that the main structural problem hampering Oxfam’s effectiveness is that it’s a British NGO that can mainly influence the British government, and it has little leverage with the governments of developing countries. Oxfam represents a bygone era, when Britain had a large overseas Empire, ruled the waves and it had global presence; when the Royal Navy, UK Treasury and 10 Downing Street had significant influence in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Unfortunately Barbara Stocking behaves as if Gordon Brown and Tony and the rest of the British Establishment are still responsible for poor people overseas, but they are not. It’s developing country governments and their burgeoning middle classes that are primarily responsible to eradicate poverty in their countries, and Oxfam has no strategy to influence either of them. It’s about time that Oxfam dismantled its own global empire of 70 country offices, many of which are managed by British and other OECD nationals, and got rid of its 8 so-called regional centres in Nairobi, Delhi, Bangkok, Dakar, Pretoria, Lima etc., and also cut the size of its ever-growing Oxford head office, which as Nick Cohen quite correctly points out, is the size of a football pitch!

Jumbojet
30 May 2007 at 13:53

The founders of Oxfam wanted to create a global community of ordinary men and women, rich and poor, with similar values, despite their cultural diversities, all wanting to bring an end to poverty and suffering. This vision of an international community of like-minded ordinary individuals still shines in Oxfam, and it is reflected in the expansion of Oxfam International, the confederation of 13 national organisations from New Zealand to Quebec, and from Ireland to Hong Kong that together work in 120 countries and work with 3000 other organisations for the good of mankind. Creating a global community of people who help one another across national boundaries and despite cultural divisions is an extraordinarily noble ambition. Unfortunately it conflicts with another ambition that people like Barbara Stocking hold increasingly close to their hearts: wanting to be part of the British Establishment and being excessively keen to support rich country governments’ aid, trade and development agendas, and spending perhaps too much time with business and political leaders in Davos and at the G8 and at other rich ‘hunting grounds’. My worry is that Oxfam is being used by the likes of Gordon Brown to launch his premiership and for UK’s foreign policy ends, and by the likes of General Musharraf and other Third World dictators to make themselves more appealing to the west, and by the likes of c-grade British celebrities to polish their images and resurrect their declining careers. Oxfam should seek inspiration from the vision that its founders had in mind, adapting it for a world that is remarkably different from the one in which Oxfam was born nearly 70 years ago.

Ugandaddy
30 May 2007 at 17:24

The role of northern-based NGOs such as Oxfam is to support the efforts of progressives in developing countries to improve the lives of people who are poor, disadvantaged and excluded and to support the building and reform national institutions, both state and civil society. Oxfam has a role in Africa and elsewhere, in helping to create plural societies and to build democratic institutions that are sensitive to the needs and aspirations of poor men and women. Nick Cohen is right in saying that while Oxfam delights in participating in British politics, it fails to appreciate the importance of helping progressive organisations in developing countries to take part in their national politics. I worry that the reason why Oxfam’s director is not facing up to the fact that pro-poor change happens mostly within developing countries is because she fears that this implies Oxfam has a much smaller role to play to eradicate poverty and it might mean dividing resources differently within Oxfam, between its powerful UK-based campaigns and public relations infrastructure with its close links with UK institutions, media and political process and its country offices.

faridjaved
31 May 2007 at 23:31

What the tragic consequences of the war in Iraq has clearly demonstrated, as has the failure on the part of G8 countries to deliver on their promises to increase aid to Africa, is that foreign governments, foreign political leaders and foreigners like Barbara Stocking who run foreign non-governmental organisation, are ultimately not responsible to the people in Africa for the failure of their policies, for their sheer incompetence in achieving what they have set out to achieve, and for their failure to translate their good intentions into action. Tony Blair's policy on Iraq has failed miserably, yet he shows not only no remorse but beleives that he is unaccountable to the Iraqis whose lives have been ruined by the war. Nick Cohen is so right when he argues that there is a deep seated neo-colonial mind-set that informs Oxfam's approach to development for the simple reason that Oxfam is unaccountable to poor people in Africa and will always remains so..

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About the writer

Nick Cohen is an author, columnist and signatory of the Euston Manifesto. As well as writing for the New Statesman he contributes to the Observer and other publications including the New Humanist. His books include Pretty Straight Guys – a history of Britain under Tony Blair.

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