Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Reforming the World’s Highest Security Institution is an Imperative for World Peace.


As European leaders scramble to tackle the global refugee crisis unfolding across Europe  after a large spike in deaths drew public condemnation, questions remain about who is responsible for the crisis, and whether such a moral travesty - the worst since World War II, is merely Europe’s problem to solve 1,2,3.
While European concerns about resources and the logistics of managing so many people are understandable, the simple truth is that these desperate, vulnerable refugees are braving the perilous journey to seek refuge from oppression, instability and conflict 4.    
While a small number are people who could be classified as economic migrants, looking at the countries of origin of those sending the most pointed public message that the United Nations (UN) has failed, there’s “no question” that the majority are refugees from Syria, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan 5,6.
At stake are not only the lives of millions of Iraqis, Syrians, Afghans, Libyans and the future of the Middle East, but also the credibility of the UN, which was created in 1945 to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.
The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) is the world’s highest security institution with primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security, but unfortunately, it only addresses the strategic interests and political motives of Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States, China, and France, collectively known as the Permanent Five (P-5) 7.
At the time when much of the world was under colonial rule, the winners of World War II crafted the Charter of the United Nations in their interests, awarded "permanent" veto-wielding Council seats for themselves and ensured Security Council decisions bind on all UN member states.
Today, the UNSC is suffering from gridlock, political sclerosis and does not represent the realities of the international community in the 21st century. P-5 members cover up for each other, denial the sad reality of today’s spiralling human catastrophe and lack a proactive strategy for conflict prevention. 
By blocking motions and preventing multilateralism that is based on democratically-evolved global consensus to act proactively and effectively, P-5 members hinder the international community’s ability to address burning issues that affect the lives of millions around the world 8, 9.
The ill-conceived 2003 invasion of Iraq was the main ingredient for absurd bloodshed, barbarous sectarian violence and political posturing that set the stage for the emergence for an entirely new branch of al-Qaida—al-Qaida in Iraq.
With Saddam's regime deposed and no functional Weapons of Mass Destruction found, the group that emerged in direct response to the withdrawal of US troops is resurgent, not just inside Iraq but as a regional movement, rebuilding its networks in Syria.
Today Iraq is a receptive hub for the notorious jihadist group, Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) whose quest for purity has surpassed the barbaric Nazi record for cruelty and internationalized terrorism.
The Libya conflict, one of the most important contributors to the daily flotilla on the Mediterranean, was sparked by a UNSC inspired intervention with no clear aftermath plan for long-term stability in Libya 10.
Who can blame Syrian refugees for attempting to enter Europe? Every attempt by the international community to provide justice for them has been vetoed, and only a fraction of the humanitarian aid they need is being provided.
After four years of fighting in Syria, whole neighborhoods have been razed to the ground by conventional and occasionally non-conventional weaponry. Chemical weapons have been used to slaughter innocent men, women, and children. Indiscriminate massacres and deliberate barrel-bomb air strikes on civilians are an awful familiarity. More than 250,000 people are dead and nearly half of Syria’s population of 23 million people has been displaced. 11.
Unfortunately, violence in Syria has intensified, killings have increased, humanitarian access has diminished, the political track to tackle the crisis has stalled and humanitarian response remains severely and chronically underfunded.  
According to Ambassador Lakhdar Brahimi, the former UN Peace Envoy to Syria, “there are "plans of war... no peace plans. I don't see anybody saying, "let's stop fighting and let's talk” 12.
Not since the Cuban Missile Crisis has the world been this close to World War III. But the war in Syria is prompting superpowers - the US and Russia to put their military assets in close proximity to each other, and all that is needed is a spark 13, 14.
Though P-5 members of the UNSC are supposed to do more and can clearly do more to de-escalate the conflict and implement practical changes to ease the plight of civilians and fully fund the humanitarian response, on the contrary, they are the main backers of those fighting.
Instead of using their diplomatic, political and financial influence to push for peace talks, they are supplying guns, ammunitions, vehicles and missiles to insurrectionists and jihadists alike in Syria, thereby creating a receptive hub for violent extremism and a cycle of terrorism15.
Like generations before us, the responsibility to inspire even the most hardened of cynics to help lift our world from the desolate valley of inequality and social injustice to a bright path of peaceful religious co-existence, and justice for all of God's children is not only one for governments, but for all who care and desire a better and just world for all humanity.


As we sacrifice to reach for the world that ought to be - “living for the sake of others” as the guiding principle for building a global community - that spark of the divine preached by the Universal Peace Federation, it is time for people of all races, religions, nationalities and cultures to work together to ensure UNSC is democratic, accountable, effective, united, and above all, capable of protecting with impartiality the interest of every global citizen irrespective of their colour, nationality, ethnicity, linguistic heritage, sex, gender, religion or age 16.


People inspecting the bodies of more than 400 children and adults killed in a chemical attack on August 21st 2013,17.


Children cry as thousands of refugees most of them fleeing Syria’s bitter conflict break through a police cordon to cross into Macedonia from Greece, 18.


Reference:
18.  http://edition.cnn.com/2015/09/03/world/gallery/europes-refugee-crisis/

Thursday, June 11, 2015

What Is The Religion Of A Terrorist?



According to the Holy Bible (Galatians 3:29 NIV), those who belong to Christ are counted as the TRUE SEED of Abraham and heirs of the covenant promises made by God to Abraham. 

For centuries Iraq didn’t only shelter Abraham’s birth place Babylon, but was home to one of the largest Christian populations in the Middle East. The place Christians believe God created mankind, pilgrims visited its ancient monasteries, cities like Nineveh and the shrines of prophets like Jonah, Daniel, Ezekiel and Nahum.

Today unfortunately, Christianity is being eliminated from Iraq by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in plain sight of the world. After 2000 years of continuous worship, most of Iraq’s surviving 1.5 million Christians and other religious minorities, have been crucified, bombed, beheaded, raped, kidnapped or forced to flee as refugees 1. According to Sarah Kaplan of the Washington Post, “Iraqi churches stand empty, even on major holidays, because so many congregants have fled” 2.

The sad reality is that Christian blood is not only being splashed in Iraq and neighboring Syria, but the world over 3, 4. Recently Al-Shabab extremists attacked the Garissa University College in eastern Kenya, killing at least 148 people, reportedly singling out non-Muslims 5.   In Libya, 21 Egyptian Christians were beheaded by ISIS, meanwhile absurd bloodshed and barbarous acts of violence have claimed the lives of thousands of Christians in Nigeria 6, 7

Speaking on Good Friday, the pope said “there have been more 'martyrs' for Christianity in recent years than in the early centuries of the faith…..our brothers and our sisters … are persecuted, exiled, slain, beheaded, solely for being Christian……I hope that the international community doesn’t stand mute and inert before such unacceptable crimes, which constitute a worrisome erosion of the most elementary human rights” 8. 
The truth is that, although Christian communities are being ravaged, terrorized and decimated in many parts of the Middle East, Africa and Asia, Muslims too are killed every day by their brothers, with Sunnis arrayed against Shiites, radicals against moderates, and the religious against the secular 9

Today, the Rohingya, a long persecuted Muslim ethnic minority group in Burma is the world’s “least-wanted” population. Since their neighbourhoods were razed by Buddhists in 2012 killing hundreds, more than 100,000 have fled violence and poverty, with many of those who escaped dying in the hands of trafficking gangs 10, 11. In the Central African Republic, Christian anti-Balaka militias killed thousands of Muslims, displacing hundreds of thousands 12.
 
During the last Israeli – Palestinian conflict, 66 Israeli military personnel, six Israeli civilians and a Thai national were killed by rockets, mortars fired from Gaza and from direct involvement in the conflict.  
Though an Israeli government official told the BBC that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) killed 1,000 "terrorists" during their assault on Gaza, the UN said at least 2,104 Palestinians died, including 1,462 civilians, of whom 495 were children and 253 women 13.


The killing of innocent civilians whether by the Israeli government, Hamas, ISIS, Boko Haram, Al-Shabab, anti-Balaka , Hezbollah, al-Qaeda, AQAP or by other extremists groups or government sponsored terrorism, is something that concerns all of us, as thousands of innocent people are routinely killed and millions displaced. 

Behind the bombs and bloodshed, beyond the sectarian violence and political posturing, the war that rages against individual lives, whose stories are as heartbreaking as they are numerous, is irrespective of religion.  
In spite of growing and concerted calls for peace, war is big money and it’s because of this uncomfortable fact, at least in part, that the defense budgets of world powers have grown increasingly swollen, prompting a mega market for arms manufacturing, and thus, arms exports.
Guns, ammunition, vehicles, missiles, and many other weapons of death, are consistently changing hands on an international scale, finding their way to insurrectionists and jihadists alike, and making them more potent and better equipped. 

According to a recent study by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), most of the weaponry flooding in international markets, as unfortunate as it may be, is made by the permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany. Coupled with huge defense contracts, it only makes sense that world powers are constantly offloading their older weapons to make room for the newer ones 14.   These arms are the main ingredients for persistent internal tensions and violent conflicts in the Middle East, Africa and Asia. Instability creates receptive hub for extremism, terrorism, and a cycle of hate amongst Christians, Muslims and people of all other religions. That is why everybody irrespective of their religion has a moral imperative to act to ensure that the world’s highest security institution – the UN Security Council is reformed.  


Bodies of Christian students at Garissa University in Kenya shot execution style. Image courtesy of BUZZ Kenya http://buzzkenya.com/kenyan-university-attack-victims-bodies-still-on-school-ground-face-down-and-shot-in-back-of-head/


Reference:





4. https://www.opendoorsusa.org/christian-persecution/world-watch-list/     

5. http://edition.cnn.com/2015/04/02/africa/kenya-university-attack-scene/

6. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-31481797

7. http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/missing-nigeria-schoolgirls/boko-haram-200-000-christians-risk-massacre-nigeria-n306211


 
10. http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2015/may/06/thailand-human-trafficking-mass-grave-burma-rohingya-people



13. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-28439404