| | UK media take up Guyana's Case
March 17th
In October 2002, Jubilee Research began an investigation into the case being taken against the Government of Guyana by the UK supermarket chain Iceland Group (now called the Big Food Group) for repayment of a debt incurred in 1976. A campaign designed to bring public pressure to bear on the company to make it drop its claim against this very poor country is now being mounted by Jubilee Debt Campaign, and the UK media is taking up the country's cause.
After 26 years, UK food group squeezes poverty-stricken Guyana for £12 million
Nick Mathiason
Sunday March 16, 2003
The Observer
Big Food Group, owner of the Iceland store chain, is demanding £12 million from the government of the tiny, poverty-stricken South American country of Guyana.
The money is compensation for a sugar business that Guyana nationalised in 1975.
The cash-strapped country, which is so poor that the international financial community has written off 90 per cent of its debts, has already paid back £6m of what was a £13m debt.
But it defaulted on repayments in 1989 following the Latin American currency crisis. Now interest has swelled the debt to £12m.
Repaying it would cripple the country, a spokesman for the President's office said. 'It would have serious implications in our budget capacity. It would compromise our social services and economic obligations.'
The group's turnover, at £5.2 billion, dwarfs Guyana's GDP, which stands at £2.15bn. Its government's entire annual income is just £120m - and Big Food Group is demanding a tenth of that.
The group is refusing to back down and has forced Guyana to a binding World Bank arbitration tribunal hearing which will take place at the end of this month in London.
The nationalised Guyanese sugar business was originally owned by Booker, the cash-and-carry firm which merged with Iceland in 2000. Booker had made provisions for the Guyanese debt. It accepted it may get a chunk of the debt following a privatisation of the sugar business. But privatisation is not on the Guyanese government's agenda and the group's management, led by Bill
Grimsey, has decided to pursue it.
Big Food Group claims that the nationalised sugar business is worth £1bn, that Booker contributed much to Guyanese society, and that it has not forced the company into arbitration.
But aid workers are furious. An alliance of the Jubilee Debt Campaign and the World Development Movement is to hold protests later this month.
Ashok Sinha, of Jubilee, said: 'The bottom line is that this is predatory
behaviour. In the UK, taxpayers have accepted that this country is entitled to debt relief. It is trying to haul itself from the brink and now the Big Food Group are saying they should be exempt.
'This country hasn't been granted debt relief just so that Big Food Group can pick up a slice of the proceeds. Money from this relief needs to be spent on attacking poverty.'
Big Food Group is used to being at the centre of controversy. It has had a troubled two years following a disastrous move into organic food and difficulties merging the two businesses. Its share price has plummeted.
But it still makes healthy profits, which last year came in at £12m before tax. It was recently criticised for keeping a corporate jet at a cost of £400,000 a year when it was ruthlessly cutting costs. And former founder Malcom Walker was castigated for selling £13.5m worth of shares ahead of a serious profit warning.
The plight of Guyana is reminiscent of that suffered by Ethiopa following a demand by Nestlé, the multinational coffee corporation, that the country pay back £3.7m. Nestlé later dropped the demand after a massive public outcry.
Big Food Group attacked for £12m claim against Guyana
Geoff Gibbs
Monday March 17, 2003
The Guardian
Big Food Group, owners of the Iceland stores chain, is facing protests from debt campaigners over its attempts to claim more than £12m in compensation from the impoverished south American state of Guyana.
Activists are calling on the group to drop its case to recover the 27-year-old debt ahead of an arbitration hearing by the international court for the settlement of investment disputes later this month.
The row is reminiscent of the furore that greeted Nestlé's recent attempts to recoup money from the government of Ethiopia. Nestlé dropped its demand following a public outcry.
At issue is compensation for the nationalisation of Guyana's sugar industry - then owned by Booker - in 1976.
Guyana, where average income is said to be £1.50 a day, has paid back about £6.2m of the original £13m debt but defaulted on payments in 1989 in the face of the Latin American currency crisis. With interest, the amount still owed has risen to £12.1m.
Big Food Group - which took over Booker three years ago - is hoping the matter will be resolved at the London arbitration hearing but is coming under mounting pressure to drop its claim.
Ashok Sinha of the Jubilee Debt Campaign said Guyana was one of the world's poorest countries and was receiving debt relief on money owed to the World Bank and to countries including Britain. "It hasn't been granted debt relief by the international community just so that Iceland can pick up a slice of the proceeds," he said yesterday.
"The money from this relief needs to be spent on attacking poverty not marginally improving the Big Food Group's bottom line."
Big Food Group declined to comment on the campaign but sources close to the company stressed it was not taking legal action to recoup the money. It had reached agreement with Guyana to take the matter to arbitration and was aware of its responsibilities. The sources said Booker had developed the country's sugar industry over decades and had invested money in schools and hospitals there. The nationalised assets were now thought to be worth more than £800m.
From:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,915448,00.html
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