MARC NERFIN, a visionary thinker and
activist in international development dialogue on the side of those seeking a
just, equitable and sustainable world order, passed away peacefully at home in
Paris on 15 August, cared for with devotion by his beloved wife, Joy Assefa.
Born in Geneva, Switzerland, he transcended his national origins,
identified himself with the South, trying to free itself from the vestiges and
shackles - mental and material - of the colonial era. He was the founder of the
SUNS in 1980.
While being very proud of his Swiss origins and background, Marc was truly
international, transcending nations and cultures, a world citizen, speaking
several languages fluently and having lived in many countries, not as an
expatriate detached from the life of the locals, but as someone engaged with
them.
Early in his career Marc worked as a journalist in Tunisia, observing at
close hand the reforms in that country in its early years of independence, when
it liberated Muslim women and introduced socialist reforms in the colonial
economy.
Marc was particularly impressed and enthusiastic about the reforms
instituted by its then Minister for Planning Ahmad Ben Salah (who subsequently
was ousted and went into exile in Switzerland).
Subsequently, Marc published in a book his interviews and conversations
with Ben Salah, 'Entretiens Avec Ahmed Ben Salah Sur La Dynamique Socialiste
Dans La Tunisie Des Annees 1960'.
Marc was a staff member of the United Nations at the Economic Commission
for Africa (ECA) and was involved in its pioneering role in Africa, as it was
emerging from a long period of colonial and racist rule. His knowledge and
experience of the UN system, in particular in the field, gave him insights that
enabled him to play a key role in Sir Robert Jackson's "Study of the Capacity of
the United Nations Development System" (1969).
He was a key aide of Maurice Strong in organising the United Nations
Conference on the Human Environment (1971-72). When the UN decided to convene
that conference, developing countries were deeply suspicious, viewing it as an
effort by the North to divert the attention of the UN from its role in economic
development of the developing world.
After some initial hesitation, leaders of the developing world came to
Stockholm, Sweden for that conference, with India's Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi, among leading participants, citing ancient Indian literature to present
a holistic view of the world as one community and poverty as the greatest
environmental pollutant.
That conference and its experience led Marc into deeper thinking on
alternative concepts of development beyond growth and integrating social and
environmental dimensions, ideas that were shaped by symposia held at Founex,
Switzerland (1971) and Cocoyoc, Mexico (1974).
Marc's innate sense of equity, justice and need for an equitable world
order, motivated him greatly when he led a project at the Dag Hammarskjold
Foundation, Uppsala, Sweden, and was the principal author of its report, "What
Now? Another Development" (1975).
Aimed at and for the 1975 UN Special Session on Development and
International Economic Cooperation, it identified ten human needs and placed
them at the centre of development.
It was a revolutionary idea and conceived of development beyond growth,
integrating environment and equity, and envisaged inclusive growth for
underdeveloped nations to "develop" autonomously, each rooted in its own
cultures and varieties.
That report also identified as maldevelopment, the ills of over-consumption
in the North, and promoted the corrective of reducing materialist consumption in
the North. Those were the roots of what later emerged as "sustainable
development".
In 1976, evolving into the role of institution builder, he established the
International Foundation for Development Alternatives (Nyon, Switzerland), a
network of progressive thinkers and home of the IFDA Dossier, an open forum for
ideas about development that was published from 1978 to 1991.
Nerfin's own thinking on the mobilization of civil society in national and
international governance was presented in 'Neither Prince, nor Merchant:
Citizen', IFDA Dossier, Nov./Dec. 1986.
At IFDA, he brought together people of varying, sometimes conflicting
viewpoints, around the same table, to discuss in informal settings major issues
facing the world and reach mutual, if not common understanding.
The 1975 DH (Dag Hammarskjold Foundation) report had identified
'information' and 'communication' as one of ten material and non-material human
needs, and the satisfaction of these needs as an ingredient of
development.
The report had drawn attention to the ideological stranglehold the
transnational corporate media and the dominant transnational news agencies,
essentially the four major Western news agencies, had over the Third World by
the virtual monopoly of the means of communications.
Even from about the 1960s, this issue of democratisation of information
(and freedom from controls by governments or commercial interests) had actively
engaged the attention of communication researchers, who had formulated concepts
of vertical and horizontal communication.
From its founding, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation
(UNESCO) had been studying information and communication issues as part of its
work in the area of culture, but its early work was 'stamped out' in the
aftermath of the Communist witch-hunt in the US Senate in the McCarthy era (in
the 1950s). This was a shameful era for the UN system when its leaders failed to
stand up to the witch-hunt or protect the US nationals it employed.
At the time the DH Report was published, this writer was Editor-in-Chief of
the Press Trust of India (PTI) and when the report had landed on my desk, I
wrote a lengthy review article of the report which had been picked up and
published by Indian newspapers.
As part of its contribution to the 1975 UN General Assembly (UNGA) Special
Session, the DH Foundation organised a seminar of Third World journalists, held
on the sidelines of that UNGA from 29 August to 12 September 1975, and I
received an invitation to participate in that seminar.
When we met at the seminar, and on that very first occasion, Marc and I
found ourselves in full rapport, as he put it subsequently, "it was as if we had
both gone to school together from primary stage."
At the seminar, the participants held discussions with high-level UN
officials and with a number of key ministers and high-level representatives of
UN member countries on issues related to the New International Economic Order
(NIEO), and Development and International Economic Cooperation.
What struck us all in these discussions was that everyone appeared to agree
conceptually on the need for NIEO, but representatives from the developed world
expressed difficulties in moving towards NIEO due to the state of their public
opinion and the need to mobilise media and public support in the North.
At the end of the seminar, the participants prepared and issued a consensus
statement of conclusions, which among others, said, "The New International
Economic Order requires a new framework of world information and
communications", to indicate that "a framework for information and
communication" was an integral part of a New International Economic Order.
As President of IFDA and as Vice-President of Inter Press Service (IPS),
Marc provided practical support for "alternative information for another
development". After some initial experiments in May 1979 (Manila, UNCTAD V) and
UNIDO III (New Delhi, January 1980), IFDA began publishing from 10 March 1980
the Special United Nations Service (SUNS) as a daily news bulletin, every
weekday.
Writing on this, on 2 May 1984, on the occasion of the publication of the
1000th issue of SUNS, which he noted was also the 20th anniversary of IPS, Marc
said: "The SUNS attempts to cover, from a Third World point of view, the
North-South discussions in the United Nations and other fora and the efforts of
the G77 and the Non-Aligned countries towards South-South cooperation and
collective self-reliance. It is thus at the same time an alternative and a
unique source of information and analysis. There is some coverage of the debate
in the mainstream media but this usually reflects a western perspective. The
SUNS helps its readers to form a more balanced opinion, not so much because of
its own 'objectivity' but principally because it expresses another point of
view, seldom heard... The SUNS intends to serve primarily G77 missions. Writing
daily as it does on what is happening in Geneva, Rome, New York, Brussels and
other locations, it provides G77 missions in other centres with up to date
reports not otherwise available, thus contributing to G77 missions' mutual
information."
Marc was also involved, behind the scenes, in the 1987 establishment of the
South Commission, chaired by Mwalimu Julius Nyerere and led by Manmohan
Singh.
Marc Nerfin was a man of conviction who earned the respect of those who
encountered him.
His conceptualisation and commitment to 'alternative development', when
that concept was still evolving, and to 'inclusive growth' and 'gender
equality', when these terms were not in vogue or fashionable, was truly
remarkable.
Those who knew Marc personally will treasure the memory of a wise, loyal
and caring friend.
Besides his widow, Joy Assefa, Marc leaves behind five children, five
grandchildren and four great- grandchildren.
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