Carolyn Hayman

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Since 2004, Carolyn Hayman has been Chief Executive of Peace Direct which ‘supports and promotes the work of people seeking to use non-violent methods to resolve conflict’. Hayman has worked in the civil service (DfID and the Cabinet Office).

Project Syndicate

Hayman is also part of Project Syndicate. [1] Somewhat reminiscant of Encounter and the CCF operation — funded by Soros’ Open Society Institute — this syndicates commentaries by a narrow range of ‘prominent figures’ to mainstream newspapers (the Guardian & Scotsman in the UK). They would hardly seem to need assistance: and include Richard Haass President of The Council on Foreign Relations, Kofi Annan, former NATO Secretary General George Robertson, Zbigniew Brzezinski former US National Security Advisor, James D. Wolfensohn former President of the World Bank Group, George Soros, Lord Ralf Dahrendorf and so on.

Project Syndicate is run by Anders Åslund (Director of the Russian and European Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) and Hans Bergström (formerly Editor-in-chief of "Dagens Nyheter," Sweden’s leading newspaper) and Christoph Bertram (formerly director of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs in Berlin).

Development

Hayman was also appointed by the FCO to the board of the Commonwealth Development Corporation from 1994 to 1999 with Pendarell Kent and Sir William Ryrie, He worked in the Colonial Office and then the Treasury, including four years on the Boards of the World Bank and the IMF. For two years he managed the British aid programme, as Permanent Secretary of the Overseas Development Administration. Then from 1984 to 1993 he was Head of the International Finance Corporation, a part of the World Bank Group. also a member of the International Centre for Economic Growth. [2]

CDC provided assistance to commercial enterprises in some 54 developing countries around the world, and in the early 90s announced a programme for its own privatizations. Its sale was managed by [Baroness Amos]. Gone is the rhetoric of aid and development now: “CDC is one of the world’s leading equity investors in emerging markets.” [3]

Transformed from a statutory corporation by the “positive power of capital” in colonial investments — this is a return to the past not a vision for the future. [4]

CDC owns a great deal of assets, such as copper mines in Zambia, a senior policy advisor at Oxfam, Tricia Feeny, has stated:

"A lot of (CDCs) African investments are in things like shopping malls stuffed with imported luxury goods, which cater to the wealthy elite or expatriate community. These have a neutral or even negative impact for the poor." [5]

The previous link documents a Westminster Hall debate on CDC, Wednesday, 10 April 2002.

Career

After a career in DFID and the Cabinet Office and in Venture Capital, she joined the Foyer Federation as Chief Executive in 1997. Over the next seven years she grew its turnover eightfold. She served as a Board member of the Commonwealth Development Corporation from 1994 to 1999 and in 2003 was awarded an OBE for services to young people.[6]

Notes

(1) See also Robin Ramsay, ‘Friends of the British Secret State’, Lobster 16 June 1988 and The Terrorism Industry, Edward S. Herman and Gerry O’ Sullivan, Random House 1990 page 176. Wilkinson was chair of the Research foundation for the Study of terrorism, an institution closely linked to the British conservative party and industry and openly designed to serve their security and ideological needs.