21 Mar 2022

The Horrific Scam that Water Billionaires are Running on Poor Countries

Tamara Pearson



Photograph Source: candi… – CC BY 2.0

Mega corporations like Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Danone are making around 494 times what they spend by bottling water in Mexico and selling it back to locals who have no choice but to buy it.

In Mexico and other poor countries and regions, companies are taking water from aquifers, springs, rivers, and lakes, and putting it in plastic bottles or turning it into flavored and sugary drinks, then dumping their used and dirty water back into water sources. That, along with other industrial pollution which is disproportionately disposed of into rural, Indigenous, and poorer communities, means locals are not able to drink tap water and end up paying extortionate prices to the European and US corporations.

In exchange for taking Mexico’s water, Mexicans give water bottling corporations US$66 billion a year. Coca Cola, Pepsi, Danone, Nestle, Bimbo, and other bottling and junk food companies extract over 133 billion liters of water, and then dump at least 119 billion liters of contaminated water back into water basins and aquifers.

Inequality in access to water

Mexico is a dry country, and water is limited. But corporations are allowed to take as much water as they like, and there is little left over for small rural farmers and for domestic consumption.

I talked to Nahui, a leader of the United Peoples who are resisting Danone’s water brand, Bonafont’s ongoing robbery of their water in Puebla state. For her safety, she asked that just one name be used. We talked in the backyard of local person’s home. Chickens walked around us and birds chirped loudly in the trees above, but behind us the forty or so pear trees were totally empty of fruit. Bonafont’s extraction of water from the Indigenous Nahua region has caused local wells and water supplies to dry up.

“There is a lot of interest in territories where original peoples live because they are areas where people have habits and customs of looking after life, the rivers, the forests,” Nahui says. That, along with discrimination, makes such regions more attractive to companies, she argued.

The United Peoples brings together over 20 Nahua communities in the region. Early last year they closed down, then took over the local Bonafont bottling plant and converted it into a community center, but Mexican national and local security forces stood by the corporation and kicked them out of the plant last month.

I also spoke to Adriana Flores, a researcher with the Transdisciplinary University Center for Sustainability (CENTRUS) in Mexico City. “Coca Cola, Nestle, and some pharmaceuticals have been awarded access to whole aquifers, to millions of cubic meters of water, and that means when there are droughts, they don’t care. They’ll take the water. There are very unequal terms when accessing water. Those with the financial means are guaranteed water,” she said. Other people meanwhile, go without; 12 million people in Mexico don’t have access to a piped water supply.

Stealing water and polluting waterways is very profitable

The global bottled water market was worth US$230.4 billion in 2020, and the top beneficiaries are all US and European companies. Pepsi Co’s Aquifina brand tops the list, and is followed by Coca-Cola’s Dasani and Glaceau Smartwarter, Nestle’s Perrier, Danone (headquartered in France), Ozarka, and others.

To gain access to locals’ water, these companies use a range of devious methods. In the Nahua region, people in one town recently voted on whether the area would be governed by municipal or Indigenous law. All voting booth workers could be seen with Bonafont bottled water. To the south, in Chiapas, Coca Cola’s aggressive marketing includes using Indigenous people’s homes as distribution points. The company also fought a legal battle in Oaxaca, as the state had prohibited the sale of single-use PET bottles, and in Toluca, it runs its biggest plant in the world. But the area faces extremely high water stress, and the 3 billion liters of water that Coca Cola takes only worsens that.

Meanwhile, corporations deliberately locate in poorer countries so they get away with polluting more. In Guadalajara, where there is a lot of heavy industry, Flores says the water “smells very bad, it tastes like metal … sometimes it makes my eyes burn.” Her team analyzed industries near two catchment areas, and found that milk processing plants, pharmaceuticals and more were dumping their waste directly into water sources, “without any monitoring, no transparency, environmental laws aren’t enforced.”

The Santiago river, also near an industrial zone, was covered in foam a meter and a half high. Activists and scientists blamed Swiss pharmaceutical, Ciba Geigy, now Novartis. There is no requirement in Mexico for companies to declare what contaminants they are discharging into water supplies or soil, and European companies that are banned from using lethal substances such as benzene or bisphenol in their home countries, don’t face that obstacle in Mexico.

But countries like Mexico don’t have lax environmental enforcement because they care less. Poorer nations have been pressured to accept polluting industries under the guise of “developing” their economies. Water exploitation licenses increased in Mexico by 3191% between 1995 and 2019 – a period that corresponds to the NAFTA agreement which completely opened Mexico up to US and Canadian companies and manufacturing, and barred Mexico from using environmental regulations against them.

“Free trade agreements allow companies to basically do whatever they want … Mexico is a fiscal paradise for them,” says Nahui, explaining that Bonafont has been able to steal water from Indigenous communities for decades thanks to “protection from the state.”

The US offshores its pollution, and is also one of the largest exporters of plastic waste, sending its trash to Canada, South Korea, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Thailand, and more – though countries like Canada may also then re-export the waste.

In addition, poorer countries have fewer financial resources to monitor and punish corporate pollution, or to treat contaminated water. In Mexico, only 25 to 57% of wastewater is treated, and over half of the treatment plants are not in working order. Some 80% of water bodies are contaminated with industrial waste.

The number of water monitoring centers in Mexico has halved over the last few years, Flores says, due to budget reductions. Industry does “what it likes” because authorities are more interested in spending money on pro-business projects such as the so-called Maya Train, she argues.

And bottled water companies only take the pressure off governments to improve the water supply. NestlĂ© started selling Pure Life in Lahore, Pakistan, in 1998. Local experts say that back then, they could go anywhere and get clean tap water for free, but nowadays everyone is drinking bottled water.

The correlation between countries with highly polluted water and high bottled water consumption

While the resources that go into bottling water would be better used in treating tap water and preventing pollution, that is never the case. Instead, those countries that most consume bottled water do so because they have to, with the exception of many European countries who have faced strong marketing campaigns that portray bottled water as a healthy lifestyle choice. Top consumers of bottled water per capita include Mexico, Thailand, El Salvador, Indonesia, China, Brazil, Romania, Germany, the US, and India, while the countries with the worst water include India, Germany, Indonesia, Brazil, China, Thailand, and Mexico.

Safely managed drinking water is still very much a privilege of wealthier countries. Elsewhere, the lack of access to safe tap water only further exacerbates inequality. Poorer regions are more vulnerable in times of drought or crisis if there is little water availability. Treating illnesses as a result of contaminated water is harder for people in poor regions, and small farmers struggle to survive when water is limited.

“We have a certain amount of water available to us for food, energy, and production, and … the fact that the water bottling companies have quantities of water guaranteed to them, reduces the amount available to other users, to rural and Indigenous communities,” says Flores.

Animals are also affected. The environmental damage caused by bottled water is 1,400 times that of tap water, in terms of species loss.

Charities won’t solve water inequalities

Many charities take an individual approach to the water crisis in poorer regions. But the donations they are campaigning for won’t halt the abuse perpetrated by corporations.

A lot of charities and NGOs also have strong messaging about the damage caused by the plastic bottles. This messaging is accurate and useful, but it focuses on consumer choices and ignores the role of global power and economic inequalities. Some organizations even talk about “collaborating” with industry, though in reality companies like Danone do not engage with or listen to the communities they are affecting.

“We’ve been cut off from the possibility of deciding what happens to the water in the areas we live in. Instead of access to water being a human right, it is expensive and inaccessible,” Nahui says.

Surge in UK COVID cases fueled by Omicron BA.2

Robert Stevens


The Omicron BA.2 sub-variant is fueling a resurgence of COVID cases and deaths in Britain. According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) an estimated one in every 20 people were infected with the disease last week. COVID infections are increasing among every sections of the population, including the most vulnerable 75 years and over.

BA.2 was only discovered in India and South Africa in late December 2021. By mid-January, the UK Health Security Agency designated it a “variant under investigation” after 1,072 cases were identified in England. The highly transmissible strain became dominant in the UK within a month, making up 52 percent of all Covid infections in Britain in the week to February 20. Just two weeks prior BA.2 accounted for just 19 percent of all cases. As of March 11, the variant was already accounting for more than 80 percent of cases in England.

Primary school pupils return to a school in Bournemouth, England on Monday September 6, 2021 (WSWS Media)

Last Thursday, the UK passed a grim milestone of 20 million people infected. This is just short of 30 percent of the entire population. According to the ONS, a total of 187,261 deaths have occurred where COVID-19 is mentioned on the death certificate.

Such hellish figures have been all but excluded from the national media, with only the Sun newspaper bothering to report the 20 millionth case.

The media is on board with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s declared policy of “Living with COVID-19”. The fact is, as scientists and the WSWS predicted, for many this means “Dying with COVID-19”.

Since “Living with COVID-19” was published February 22, according to official figures, a further 4.33 million people have been infected and 2,663 people have died. The government only records COVID deaths if a person dies within 28 days of testing positive.

In the seven days to March 18, 552,198 people were infected nationally, up 152,378 and a nearly 40 percent increase on the week prior. Deaths are beginning to rise again, with the 752 recorded in the same week, up 3 percent on the week prior.

With no opposition from Labour and the trade unions, the Conservative government in Westminster and devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have done away with virtually all COVID containment measures.

Last Friday, all remaining travel restrictions were lifted for passengers entering the UK. Vaccinated people have not had to take tests for months on arrival. Now even the unvaccinated don’t have to, and passenger locator forms have ended. The UK’s largest airport, Heathrow, has done away with the requirement for people to wear facemasks in its terminals, railway stations or office buildings.

With no impediments to the spread of COVID, its resurgence was inevitable. In parts of the country it is once again out of control. In Essex, a county adjacent to London with a population of almost 1.5 million, 57 COVID “blackspots” were recorded last week. These are classed as areas with an infection rate above 800 cases per 100,000 residents. Essex Live reported that in the seven days to March 12, “12 neighbourhoods across the county… recorded some of the highest infection rates in the UK, with infections above 1,000 per 100,000 residents. The neighbourhoods, located in the districts of Maldon, Colchester, Tendring and Braintree, have all recorded a huge number of Covid-19 cases from March 5 until March 12. This is almost double the UK average of Covid cases, sitting at 684.6 cases per 100,000 residents.”

The increase in infections is again having a terrible impact on the National Health Service (NHS) and its workers. In the week of March 7, according to NHS data, 123,055 staff were off sick with COVID-related illness—up from 103,753 the week before. Many have likely been ill for a long time, suffering with Long COVID. The Independent reported, “NHS data on Covid related staff sickness does not differentiate between staff off sick due to symptoms of Long Covid and those off with recent illness.”

The fall in the number of staff available in the NHS’s one million workforce takes place amid a spike in hospitalisations. The newspaper reported that hospital admittance across the south west of England, “shot up 726 to 1,066 during the same period.” Last Thursday, March 17, the number of people with COVID-19 in UK hospitals reached 13,548—the highest figure for five weeks. This included 280 people who required ventilators. This was a rise of over 1,500 people requiring hospitalisation in just three days.

Schools are once again primary vectors. The Guardian reported March 5, “According to the latest data from the Office for National Statistics, 2- to 11-year-olds have the highest rate of infections of any UK age group, with 4.2% testing positive during the week ending 5 March.”

Wales Online reported March 16, “There were 445 coronavirus cases among [Welsh] staff and children in the six days to March 10. That compares with 306 the previous week and 468 the week before that, Public Health Wales data shows. Of the overall total 306 were in primary schools, 97 were in secondaries, and 42 were classed as ‘other’, which includes independent and special schools and pupil referral units.” Cases were “being fueled by primaries where three times as many pupils are off compared to secondaries.”

Most children in UK primaries remain unvaccinated. Despite the government allowing healthy primary school children to be vaccinated, nothing has been put in place to organise a mass vaccination programme for this cohort.

At Newquay Tretherras secondary school, an “unprecedented situation” was reported with over 30 members of staff off as a result of a positive Covid test on March 14. The school was forced to send two year-groups home. Cornwall Live reported, “This follows previous reports that the school had sent an initial letter to parents and pupils last week (Wednesday, March 9), outlining that there had been a growing number of staff and pupil sickness as a result of an increase in Covid cases throughout the school.”

The Manchester Evening News reported March 16, “Nineteen pupils and seven members of staff, including the head, have tested positive at Woodfield Primary School in Wigan.”

The agenda of the ruling elite in Britain from day one of the pandemic has been that the profits of the corporations must come before the health and lives of the population. This week the Wilco home and garden retailer demanded that its 16,000 staff attend work even if they tested positive for COVID. A workplace policy memo instructed staff, “If you test positive for Covid-19 and feel well you can continue to come to work, if you feel too unwell you can follow the absence policy.” Only after opposition from workers and the public did the company claim a “miscommunication” and withdraw their instructions.

Such policies are being enforced de facto by firms throughout the UK, with the collaboration with the unions. From April 1, companies will no longer need to explicitly consider coronavirus in their risk assessments.

Reporting of daily case numbers is to be ended. A big step towards this is the governments ceasing of funding to the ZOE Covid Study app from the end of this month. The app cost just £5 million to run during the past 18 months.

The ZOE app (screenshot: covid.joinzoe.com)

ZOE runs the world's largest COVID-19 study, and the app—with four million contributors globally—is able to closely track Covid symptoms and spread of the disease. Its latest data available, for March 18, found there were 305,134 symptomatic cases of COVID in the UK on that date. Co-founder Tim Spector, Professor of Epidemiology at King’s College London, described the decision as “a really bad mistake. Zoe is going to be the tool that protects the UK from the next pandemic and saves the NHS millions as we try and discover ways to prevent major diseases.” The government was “wanting to get rid of data and move on,” he said. “Other surveillance tools have been given the axe, which means we will have less eyes on the ground and radar on the next variant.”

Spector warned last week, “It seems very hard to stop Omicron, especially the new form of it, Deltacron [a new genetic combination with the Delta variant]. It will be going up to 250,000 a day soon.”

German government ends pandemic measures

Tamino Dreisam


Just as a steep rise in coronavirus cases is leading to the highest incidence levels since the pandemic began, and the number of severe cases is also increasing, the German government is ending all protective measures. The previous Infection Protection Act, which authorized the remaining protective measures, expired on Saturday. The day before, a new Infection Protection Act was passed in the Bundestag (parliament), which will apply until September 23.

However, the new law only provides for so-called basic protection. It is limited to obliging mask wearing in nursing homes, hospitals, local and long-distance public transport, as well as a testing obligation in clinics, nursing homes, day care centres and schools. Even in retail stores, masks are no longer mandatory. Abolition of the isolation rules for infected persons has not been decided, but is still under discussion.

Stricter measures are now only possible in so-called hotspot areas. However, the point at which a region is considered a hotspot does not depend on fixed values, but must be determined by the relevant state parliament. Nevertheless, even in hotspot areas, far-reaching protective measures are no longer permitted as a result of the new legislation. The possible regulations are limited to mandatory FFP2 masks in other areas, social distancing of 1.5 metres indoors, and 3G (allowing admittance for persons who have recovered from COVID, are fully vaccinated or with a negative test result) and 2G (persons who have recovered from COVID or fully vaccinated persons) regulations—all completely inadequate measures that have not stopped the current wave.

The individual German states are also free to adopt transitional regulations until April 2 after the expiration of the Infection Protection Act. However, these may only be limited to mandatory mask wearing, as well as 2G and 3G regulations, but not contact restrictions or limits on the number of participants at large events.

In addition to the Infection Control Act, the Coronavirus Occupational Safety and Health Regulation also expires on April 19. Here, too, only “basic protection” is to apply going forward, consisting of social distancing, wearing a mask and ventilation. This eliminates the 3G regulation in the workplace, the provision of two free tests per week for each worker, and the requirement for employers to provide work-from-home options for their employees.

Numerous government officials justified the end of the protections by claiming the pandemic was over. Liberal Democrat (FDP) health expert Christine Aschenberg-Dugnus called it an “important step toward normality.” Federal Justice Minister Marco Buschmann (FDP) declared on Twitter, “Soon [there will be] virtually no restrictions in everyday life ... because the coronavirus situation is manageable. This removes the justification for many serious measures.”

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (Social Democratic Party, SPD) was particularly cynical during the debate in the Bundestag, saying, “As an epidemiologist, I would have wished we could have done more for those who are now at risk. But we have to consider the legal situation: The legal situation is this: we can’t continue to put the whole country under protection to safeguard a small group of those unwilling to be vaccinated and those who are not willing to go along with the measures.”

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD) during a press conference on January 14 (AP Photo/Michael Sohn).

Who is Lauterbach trying to fool? The “legal situation” to end the measures was created by the coalition government itself, whose first official act in November was to phase out the legal designation of an “epidemic emergency.” If Lauterbach and other government representatives are now justifying the end of the measures on the grounds that the situation is “manageable” and that only “a small group of those unwilling to be vaccinated” is threatened, this is simply a lie.

The number of unvaccinated is not “small” either, but includes nearly 20 million. Most of them are not “unwilling” to be vaccinated, but simply have not been reached by the completely inadequate vaccination campaign. The unvaccinated also includes millions of children under the age of five, for whom there is still no official vaccination option.

Moreover, it is well known that vaccination—important as it is—only reduces the likelihood of a severe or fatal illness, but does not always prevent it. However, because the virus works to infect masses of people, there will still be a great many who suffer severe illness or die, even if the overall probability is lower.

Allowing the virus free rein also leads to the emergence of vaccine-resistant mutations that can evade vaccine protection. The emergence of the Omicron variant and its BA.2 subvariant illustrates this. The government is absolutely aware of the murderous consequences of its policy. It will be “the case that in many places, there will be precisely this overload [of hospitals],” Lauterbach predicted in his speech in the Bundestag.

Infection figures are already reaching new record levels every day. According to data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) on Friday, 297,845 people were newly infected with the virus within one day. That is 45,000 more daily cases than a week ago. The nationwide incidence rate rose by 55 from the previous day and now stands at 1,706 per 100,000 inhabitants. Both are the highest values since the start of the pandemic. Since the beginning of last week alone, 1.1 million new infections have already been recorded.

Across the country, the pandemic is running wild. A total of 390 of 411 districts have an incidence rate of over 1,000. In 158 districts, the incidence level is over 2,000 and in eight it is even over 3,000. However, since testing capacities and health departments are at their limit in many places, and contacts are essentially no longer being followed up, a high number of unrecorded cases must be assumed.

The number of severe outcomes is also rising sharply. On Friday alone, 2,097 people were hospitalised. The adjusted hospitalisation incidence rate is currently close to 15 per 100,000, which corresponds to 12,000 hospitalisations per week. Some 294 people had to be newly admitted to the ICU within one day, which means that currently about 2,300 coronavirus patients are being treated in the ICU. The national average for the proportion of free intensive care beds is already around the 10 percent mark, which is considered the cut-off point for the hospitals’ ability to respond.

The number of deaths is particularly alarming. Between 200 and 300 people are dying every day. On Thursday alone, there were 278 deaths, and on Friday 226. Contrary to the government’s narrative, it is not just the elderly who are being hit. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 57 children and young people between the ages of 0 and 19 have died. Currently, at least one child is added to the list of fatalities every week. For reasons of privacy, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) does not disclose more precise details.

The spread of the virus in schools continues to fuel infection rates among children and adolescents. The 5- to 14-year-old and 15- to 35-year-old age groups have by far the highest incidence rates, at 3,004 and 2,475, respectively. For the last four weeks, 649 outbreaks have been reported at nursery schools. There have also been 426 outbreaks at schools in the last four weeks. And in both areas, follow-up reports for the last two weeks are still pending.

The high number of outbreaks in medical treatment facilities and nursing homes and homes for the elderly is particularly deadly. There were 510 outbreaks in nursing homes and homes for the elderly last week, and 196 in medical treatment facilities—23 more than the previous week. The current increase in hospitalisations, as well as the spread of Omicron subvariant BA.2—the most dangerous COVID variant to date, according to the study—will continue to drive up the death toll. In total, more than 126,000 people have already died from COVID-19 in Germany.

The vast majority of the population consider ending the measures to be sheer madness and reject this course. According to a Civey poll for Der Spiegel, 65 percent of the population is in favour of extending the coronavirus measures beyond March 20. Sixty percent favour a general vaccination requirement. But the ruling class is pushing the herd immunity policy to the extreme. There are objective reasons for this.

The first factor that runs through the entire pandemic policies of the ruling class is the maxim “profits before lives.” Especially in view of the growing economic crisis and the developing opposition in the working class, nothing must interrupt production—and thus capitalist profit maximisation. For the ruling class, the scientifically necessary measures to contain the pandemic—first and foremost, the closure of schools and non-essential businesses—are unacceptable.

Another factor behind the murderous herd immunity policy is the drive to war. The German government is using Russia’s attack on Ukraine, systematically provoked by NATO, to advance its own rearmament and war plans. Germany is increasingly taking a leading role in the NATO war offensive against Russia and is transporting more and more soldiers and war equipment to Eastern Europe. On Wednesday, the cabinet approved funding for the “Special Assets of the Bundeswehr,” amounting to €100 billion, the largest rearmament drive since Hitler.

War and rearmament go hand in hand with capitulation to the pandemic. Wolfgang Ischinger, the former head of the Munich Security Conference, summed this up in his opening speech at this year’s gathering with the statement: “We cannot simply postpone world politics. Security requirements do not abide by social distancing rules.”

COVID-19 surges in Solomon Islands

Patrick O’Connor


COVID-19 infections have now been detected in seven out of the eight provinces in the South Pacific country of Solomon Islands.

The unchecked spread of the coronavirus throughout the impoverished country threatens an escalation of the health crisis. Many of the provinces now affected lack all but the most basic healthcare infrastructure and personnel.

Solomon Islands had been among the few countries to have avoided COVID community transmission. The island state’s isolation, low population (700,000), and strict border controls prevented coronavirus incursions until early January this year. Infected people then crossed the ocean border from Papua New Guinea and transmission quickly escalated in the country’s capital, Honiara, before spreading to the provinces.

Australian Army soldiers talk with local citizens during a community engagement patrol through Honiara, Solomon Islands, Saturday, Nov. 27, 2021. (Cpl. Brandon Grey/Department of Defence via AP)

According to the Our World in Data website, as of March 18 a total of 9,851 cases have been detected across the country.

This is a significant underestimate of the actual spread of the virus. Testing capacity, as with every aspect of COVID-19 response infrastructure, is grossly inadequate. The Associated Press reported on February 17 that health authorities believed as many as one in two of Honiara’s 80,000 residents had symptoms consistent with COVID-19, though there were also flu and cold viruses circulating.

The very limited healthcare preparations that had been put in place before the outbreak quickly broke down. An absence of basic personal protective equipment (PPE) in Honiara’s National Referral Hospital (NRH) saw more than 100 medical staff contract COVID before February.

The Guardian on February 22 published anonymous reports from a senior doctor and two nurses at the hospital. At that point there were “no beds for COVID patients—leading to people dying on the floor of the wards—as well as a lack of facilities and staff shortages that have led to COVID-positive nurses being recalled to work and probationary nurses tending to critically ill patients solo, when they should be supervised by a more senior nurse.”

The senior doctor said: “People are dying on the floor, the hospital is overcrowded … Sick people and dead bodies were all over. The morgue is full. It’s a sad experience. I have never seen this before.”

Confirmed deaths from COVID-19 now stand at 127. According to Our World in Data, less than one-third of the population have received a single dose of vaccine, and only 14 percent two doses.

The crisis has now spilled into the outer rural areas of the country. In the remote southern Rennell and Bellona province, testing only began on February 28, reportedly a fortnight after residents complained of growing numbers of people afflicted by COVID symptoms.

The Island Sun reported on March 10 that of the 61 tests carried out by that point, 41 were positive, that is 67 percent. “The results pointed to a very high transmission of the virus on Bellona and this is very worrying,” Dr Yogesh Choudhri, technical advisor to the Ministry of Health, told the newspaper.

As in other provinces, there are no isolation facilities on Bellona, and affected residents are asked to self-isolate in their homes.

Outside of Honiara, Solomon Islands’ most populous province of Malaita is the worst affected. It has registered 994 cases, again with the real infection level much higher. Twenty-two deaths have been recorded on the island, with another four patients in critical condition.

Also badly affected is Western Province. The towns and villages of Gizo, Noro, Munda and Seghe were locked down for three days at the beginning of the month, in response to escalating infections. Only essential services and work was permitted.

Widespread poverty in Solomon Islands, combined with inadequate government services and emergency support, has inflicted significant hardships on the population amid the pandemic.

Those infected are required to self-isolate at home, but there is no financial assistance provided to offset loss of income. The chairperson of Western Province’s disaster operation committee, Jeffrey Wickham, told the Island Sun on March 10: “I’m concerned about the welfare of families who are undergoing home quarantine. All potential sources to get funding in the province have been exhausted and now we are also running behind time in our operation.”

On March 18, the Island Sun reported that many residents in Western Province’s largest town of Gizo were avoiding being tested, “because if they are positive they will have to be isolated and go hungry during their quarantine period.”

Food shortages have been reported in Shortlands, Western Province. On March 9, a group of residents staged a demonstration outside the Harapa Police Station. The Solomon Star reported that “they displayed written slogans demanding their leaders and government to address their concerns regarding the need to provide services and support their livelihood through food.”

The pandemic is heightening social tensions across Solomon Islands. Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare last month delivered a speech warning that the limited lockdown measures enacted had cost the government millions of dollars in lost revenues. Next month will see the delivery of an annual budget reportedly including far reaching austerity measures.

The Solomon Star, citing anonymous sources, reported that this will include slashed annual leave entitlements for public sector workers, including for low level public servants currently paid just $300 Solomon Islands’ dollars ($50 Australian) a week.

Australian imperialism, long the US-backed dominant power in the South Pacific, has provided only limited aid in response to the economic and humanitarian crisis in Solomon Islands.

Inadequate supplies of vaccines, testing equipment, and medical provisions have been supplied, and air force food drops have been organised for some of the affected provinces. This is driven not by any concern for the plight of ordinary people in Solomon Islands, but rather by geo-strategic calculations, above all the fear of being perceived as less active than China.

Honiara switched diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to China in 2019, triggering outrage and alarm in Washington and Canberra. American officials regarded this sovereign decision as a blow to their efforts to isolate and undermine Beijing. The Sogavare government has been in US imperialism’s crosshairs ever since. Concerns have only grown as Honiara and Beijing have collaborated on security issues—Chinese police advisors are currently working in the Solomons with local police—with a potential military partnership the greatest US-Australian fear.

Last November, US-funded and supported Malaitan separatists staged a violent though unsuccessful coup attempt.

Tensions remain high however, and the Biden administration announced last month that it is going to upgrade its consulate in Honiara to an embassy. This will see a significant expansion within Solomon Islands of the US corps of State Department and intelligence agency operatives, raising the spectre of a stepped up “regime change” drive.

Deepening political crisis in New Zealand as living costs surge

John Braddock


After a government cabinet meeting on March 14, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced that in an effort to offset skyrocketing costs, public transport fares will be halved and fuel taxes and road user charges reduced by 25 cents per litre for 3 months.

Price shocks are impacting households around the globe. With crude oil prices running to nearly $US140 a barrel, petrol in New Zealand last week reached $NZ3 a litre, up 13 percent in a month. The Automobile Association (AA) warned the price could balloon to $4.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern addresses a post-Cabinet press conference at Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand on October 4, 2021. (Mark Mitchell/Pool Photo via AP)

Ardern said the invasion of Ukraine has unleashed a “global energy crisis.” “We are in a wicked perfect storm and it’s a storm that’s impacting many people’s lives,” she declared. Russia’s war on Ukraine would mean “continued volatility' for fuel prices. In fact, the surge in the cost of everyday items is fueled by the sweeping sanctions regime imposed by the imperialist powers, designed to crash Russia’s economy, which New Zealand has hastily joined .

Ardern had earlier refused to acknowledge the impact of escalating inflation, prompting widespread accusations that she is “out of touch.” Asked on TV1 if the country was experiencing a “crisis” with the cost of living rising by 5.2 percent within a year, Ardern flatly replied, “I wouldn’t describe it that way.”

Christopher Luxon, leader of the opposition National Party, asked in parliament why Ardern would not admit there was a crisis when rent was up by $140 a week and food prices had increased by more than 13 percent in four years. Luxon used the issue to advocate tax cuts, which would inevitably benefit big business and the rich.

The fact that National, with a long history of brutal attacks on working people, could falsely pose as a defender of living standards is testament to the right-wing record of the Labour-Green Party government. Labour was elected in 2017 on promises to tackle child poverty and other social ills. These have proven to be completely fraudulent.

Ardern’s belated acknowledgment of the problem this week remained circumscribed. “Undoubtedly, for many families, there is [a cost of living crisis],” she declared. “But I think the most important thing is regardless of what anyone's calling it, it’s whether or not we accept that there's something that needs to be done,” Ardern told Radio NZ.

A poll on March 10 saw National overtake the government for the first time during the pandemic, with Labour dropping to its lowest result since 2017. The TVNZ/Kantar Public Poll had National on 39 percent, up 7 points and Labour down 3 on 37 percent, with the Green Party steady on 9 percent.

The erupting social crisis, on top of the ongoing Omicron outbreak, is shifting popular sentiment. Unemployed mother of five, Krystine Nation, told TVNZ her family’s expenses have exploded over the past year. “To say there isn’t a crisis… she [Ardern] needs to get on the ground floor,” Nation said. “In just over a year my groceries have increased $7,000 annually. That’s a lot, my husband hasn’t received a $7,000 increase in his pay,” she declared.

The latest Statistics NZ figures show annual food inflation has increased to 6.8 percent, the highest since July 2011. Prices surged 2.7 percent in January alone. Compared to the same month last year, fruit and vegetable prices jumped 17 percent, driven by staples such as tomatoes, broccoli and lettuce. The rise in global dairy prices saw an 8.9 percent increase for cheese and milk.

The ASB Bank predicted that annual inflation, running at 5.9 percent, will hit 7.5 percent by the middle of the year, its highest level since 1990. “We expect higher food and fuel prices alone to add $40 of costs to the average weekly household budget over 2022, adding to the squeeze facing the household sector,” ASB economist Mark Smith said. “Many households will cop a larger hit.”

Ardern claimed that while inflation has risen, people have seen wage growth and the rise to minimum wage and family tax cuts. “Since we came into government, we know that, for instance, incomes have been lifting more than the cost of living” she declared in one interview. “What we see at the moment is an exception at this period of time.”

In fact, wage growth last year was only 2.4 percent, well under half the inflation rate. Some 42 percent of workers did not receive a pay rise at all, while of those that did, more than 80 percent were below inflation. The government last year announced a public sector pay freeze while the trade unions have dedicated themselves to cancelling strikes and enforcing low settlements.

Meagre rises in welfare benefits have failed to make up for decades of cuts. Economist Bernard Hickey noted that before Christmas 2020 the government rejected a recommendation for an urgent $50 a week benefit increase. Current plans to marginally increase benefits from April 1 fall far short of what the government’s Welfare Experts Advisory Group warned in 2018 was desperately needed.

Millions of dollars are still being handed out to businesses to offset profit losses during the pandemic, on top of the $20 billion paid over the last two years, ostensibly in wage subsidies. Hickey noted that the government will soon pay over $100m in cash for two weeks’ payments to small businesses along with an $815m payment to subsidise air freight.

Meanwhile, reports of increasing food poverty and homelessness are mounting. In one case cited by Hickey, the public housing agency, Kainga Ora, is struggling getting tenants to pay rent arrears which have grown to $9m from $0.75m four years ago. The waiting list for public housing has tripled in five years. Over 10,000 people on the emergency housing register are living in motels, boarding houses and campgrounds.

Levels of food stress are similarly escalating. One Christchurch pre-school said it has been forced to make food parcels for about a third of the families of the 50 children it looks after. Single mother Sarah Williams told Stuff: “It’s not going to be liveable. I either need more money, or the prices of everything to drop by 30 to 40 per cent.” One week she had to pay $28 for two RATs, which left no money for food. “I don’t know what I‘m going to do for dinner. It’s just a snowball effect,” Williams said.

Signalling deepening attacks on the working class, the Reserve Bank has forecast it will deliver a double-hike of 50 basis points on the Official Cash Rate (OCR) in both April and May. The OCR is currently sitting at 1 percent after increases in October, November and February. The OCR is expected to reach 3.5 percent by April 2023—up from a previous forecast of 3 percent. The result will be a disaster for indebted homeowners.

A working-class rebellion, directed against the Labour government and its trade union allies, is brewing. Recently, 10,000 allied health workers voted overwhelmingly to strike for two days after rejecting a pay offer that did not match inflation. The Employment Court banned the strikes in favour of an injunction brought by the District Health Boards. The resort to such anti-democratic measures will only intensify workers’ opposition to the assault on living standards as rising anger intersects with a radicalisation from the pandemic, intensifying austerity and the drive to war.

CDC “adjustment” slashes child COVID-19 deaths by 25 percent

Emma Arceneaux


The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) slashed its reported number of child COVID-19 deaths by nearly 25 percent Wednesday without any serious explanation, amid a deepening effort by the entire political establishment to cover up the ongoing mass death from the pandemic. According to Newsnodes, an average of 1,138 people are dying from COVID-19 every day in the US as the official death toll approaches 1 million.

In its COVID Data Tracker, the CDC eliminated 72,277 deaths previously reported across 26 states, including 416 pediatric deaths.

David J. Sencer CDC Museum in Atlanta, GA (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Explaining the change, the CDC claimed that “data on deaths were adjusted after resolving a coding logic error. This resulted in decreased death counts across all demographic categories.”

In a subsequent response to an inquiry by the World Socialist Web Site, the CDC elaborated on its earlier statement, writing, “An adjustment was made to COVID Data Tracker’s mortality data on March 14 involving the removal of 72,277—including 416 pediatric deaths—deaths previously reported across 26 states because CDC’s algorithm was accidentally counting deaths that were not COVID-19 related.”

This response clearly indicates that the CDC has changed what is counted as a COVID-19 death. The move comes as the CDC is actively working to implement measures that would differentiate COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths “from” COVID-19 as opposed to “with” COVID-19, in what is widely perceived to be an effort to reduce the number of official COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths.

Greg Travis, a data analyst with decades of experience in the healthcare industry, told the WSWS that the CDC’s data change “makes very little sense.”

Travis commented that he has never witnessed a change of this type or magnitude, noting, “Sometimes you will see small variants in the Data Tracker where deaths decrease by a few dozen one month to another, but I’ve never seen the toll in a specific age group start shooting up and then come crashing down. And I have never seen the number of deaths they’re drawing data from come down. That’s never happened.”

WONDER, the Wide-Ranging Online Database for Epidemiological Research, is a searchable directory from the CDC with data on births, deaths, disease, environmental exposures and population statistics. It publishes a report titled Provisional Mortality Statistics that is based on the death certificates received by the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS) through the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).

The NCHS also publishes its own weekly report on provisional death counts due to COVID-19. The NCHS report and WONDER use the same data from the CDC’s aggregation of death certificates, with WONDER consistently showing far less pediatric deaths than Data Tracker.

Despite the decrease in pediatric deaths on Data Tracker, which reduced the figure from a height of 1,755 on March 15 to 1,339 on March 16, the tracker still shows significantly more pediatric deaths than the NCHS or WONDER. The current pediatric COVID-19 death toll according to NCHS is 921. Data Tracker has added an additional 17 after Wednesday’s reduction.

While the NCHS’s weekly report is based on death certificates that the CDC has received and reviewed from states, the Data Tracker publishes daily reports on COVID-19 cases and deaths that the CDC receives from state and local health departments.

In its reply to the WSWS, the CDC noted that the Data Tracker offers the most real-time information, while the NCHS data is the most “complete source.” NCHS updates once per week, whereas Data Tracker updates six days per week.

Following the CDC’s revisions, multiple press personnel, doctors and anti-COVID activists issued revisions to their articles and Tweets, accepting the CDC’s claim that the NCHS data is the most accurate source for counting pediatric deaths.

However, in explaining the discrepancy between the two data sets, the CDC acknowledged in an email to a New York Times writer that pediatric death certificates can lag far behind adult death certificates: “Depending on the jurisdiction, finalizing a [pediatric] death certificate can take months.”

The unprecedented surge of child infections and hospitalizations during the Omicron wave peaked in January, when 1,150,543 children were infected during the week ending January 20, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

The steepest rise in pediatric deaths, as seen through Data Tracker, has occurred during and following the height of the Omicron wave, with the most rapid increase happening since the start of 2022.

By the CDC’s own explanation, many of the child deaths recorded by Data Tracker would not yet have been processed through the CDC’s collection of death certificates.

Another issue with relying on death certificates to estimate COVID-19 deaths is the fact that they pass through the system of coroners and medical examiners. The WSWS has previously explained the antiquated and politically manipulated nature of this system.

In many jurisdictions, being appointed or elected coroner requires neither extensive training nor a background in medicine. One coroner in Missouri admitted to striking COVID-19 from the death certificate at the request of the family.

Additionally, Greg Travis pointed out that WONDER, using death certificates confirmed by NCHS, is totally unreliable for tracking deaths from Multi-Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C), a disease which has been connected to prior COVID-19 infection.

Currently, WONDER only shows four total deaths from MIS-C, whereas Data Tracker records 63 deaths from the COVID-19 complication.

The WONDER count is verifiably incorrect. The Louisiana Department of Health has confirmed 16 MIS-C deaths in the state, while New York State has confirmed three MIS-C deaths.

The WSWS has followed up with the CDC for further clarification about why its algorithm was counting deaths that were not COVID-19-related. It is unclear why the change only involves 26 states and whether these deaths span the entirety of the pandemic or a specific period of time.

The CDC acknowledges that the 72,277 deaths took place. Were these people diagnosed with COVID-19? In other words, does the change reflect that their deaths were reclassified despite a COVID-19 diagnosis?

It is also unclear why the error “resulted in decreased death counts across all demographic categories” but not a decrease in the total death count shown by Data Tracker, since they are both based on the same reporting system.

The changes to the CDC’s data come amid a broader campaign to cover up infections, hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19 at the federal, state and local level across the US, which escalated during the Omicron surge.

In February, in addition to the White House seeking to change criteria for defining COVID-19 hospitalizations to fabricate lower numbers, the Department of Health and Human Services ended its requirement for hospitals to report daily in-hospital COVID-19 deaths. Following suit, states across the US have moved to shut down case and death reporting.

The CDC itself has repeatedly made antiscientific recommendations which prioritize the interests of the corporate elite over the protection of human life, including reducing quarantine and isolation guidelines and changing masking recommendations to align with hospital capacity rather than community transmission. The latter move resulted in 70 percent of the US population shifting from living in a high-risk area to a low- or medium-risk area overnight.

In February, the New York Times reported that the CDC had withheld critical information about COVID-19, including on booster effectiveness, breakthrough infections and wastewater data, for over a year.

The slashing of 72,277 deaths, including nearly 25 percent of pediatric deaths, raises once again the need for the public to have access to reliable, comprehensive and timely data about COVID-19.

Entering the third year of the pandemic, rather than improve and expand the systems for collecting, verifying and publicizing such information with uniform reporting requirements across states, the health authorities in the US, as in most of the world, have moved to reduce COVID-19 data and obscure it from public view.