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MANDELA IS OUT OF TOUCH PDF Print E-mail
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Sunday, 12 April 2009 21:05
For the Star, Mercury and Argus

 MANDELA IS OUT OF TOUCH

  By Zubeida Jaffer*

 Nelson Mandela needs to explain his recent statements at the White House. For those
of us who respect his moral stature, his comments are inexplicable. How can a man
who has led us towards finding peaceful solutions to our problems support the
indiscriminate bombing of Afghanistan? 

A war which started as an effort to find one man has now become a battle against an
oppressive regime which harbours him. What if Osama Bin Laden moves to Pakistan or
to the United Arab Emirates? Will the bombs follow him there? Or is the real intention to
bring about political change in Afghanistan?

If Bin Laden takes refuge with extremist groups in Cape Town, will we too become
targets?

The saddest part of all of this is the present course of action probably does little to
avenge the deaths of those killed on September 11. Surely their memory is best served
if we try and create a world where this sort of act is not possible? 

President Bush and his allies are doing the predictable. The chain of events they are
unleashing must be playing right into the hands of those who committed the September
11 atrocity. Instead of doing the unexpected which could have unnerved the
perpetrators, they are repeatedly doing what they have done around the world for many
many decades confirming the prejudice that Americans are a war-mongering people. 
And it is precisely those indiscriminate war actions over the years which breed the kind
of hatred which prompts extreme action.

Parliament’s Chairperson of Foreign Affairs, Ebrahim Ebrahim said at the
commencement of this war that the Bush administration’s approach is likely to result in
the emergence of an entire generation of extremists ready to do harm against Western
interests. 

His sentiments are echoed by US conflict resolution professor, John Paul Lederach
when he says: “Military action to destroy terror is like hitting a mature dandelion head
with a golf club. The seeds are scattered far and wide, ensuring another generation of
recruits…”

Shortly after September 11, Professor Lederach made a call on his government to 
pursue the unexpected. “The key does not lie in finding and destroying territories,
camps and certainly not the civilian populations,” he said. “The key is to think about
how a small virus in a system affects the whole, and how to improve the immunity of
the system.”

The perpetrators have not faced the enemy with a bigger stick, he said. They did the
more powerful thing. They changed the game.

I would have expected Nelson Mandela to change the game again. To give birth to the
unexpected as Lederach argues. But instead he has failed to rise above the limited
approach that threatens to destroy all of us.

As a contribution to changing the game, Lederach makes three suggestions:

     Energetically pursue a sustainable peace process to the Israeli/Palestinian
     conflict now. 
     Invest financially in development, education and a broad social agenda in
     countries surrounding Afghanistan. 
     Quiet but dynamic support of the Arab League seeking to explore together the
     cause of discontent in numerous regions. At the same time, an energetic
     engagement in interfaith dialogue to create a web of ethics for the new
     millennium, that builds from the heart and soul of all faiths, and creates the
     capacity for each to engage the roots of violence in our own traditions.

 
Are there no leaders in the world today who can make a contribution to developing a
broad political approach to stopping extreme actions on all sides? 

 What is desperately needed is an approach which impacts on the roots of violence
which will safeguard our children and our grandchildren. 

The bombs incinerate the Taliban fighters now but it is their children who will come
back to haunt us.

Last week, the infamous BLU-82 (15,000 pound) bombs were dropped on the Taliban
frontlines. “Daisy cutters” as they are called, spray small chunks of hot metal which
obliterates everything within a radius of hundreds of metres.These bombs were used by
the US military during the Vietnam war to create landing zones for helicopters and in
the Gulf War to experiment with their effectiveness in clearing minefields.  They are
classified as weapons of mass destruction that cannot be considered acceptable for use
against humans in the pursuit of war. According to the United Nations, already 5 million
Afghans are in need of immediate humanitarian assistance as a result of the bombing
campaign.

Osama Bin Laden must be sitting somewhere in his comfortable cave having a good
laugh at the mighty and powerful who through their weak actions confer on him a
power which he could only have dreamed of.

Our Foreign Minister, Nkozana Zuma has been resolute in her opposition to the
bombing campaign. President Mbeki and his cabinet have ruled that war-ships will not
be allowed to dock in our harbours. We can only applaud the call of UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan for the bombing to stop and the initiative of French
president Jacques Chirac to hold an urgent UN conference on aid to Afghanistan. The
UN is also circulating a petition calling for an end to the military actions.

It is sad to say but Nelson Mandela is clearly out of touch with the sentiments in his own
party and the broad interfaith movement against the war which is gaining momentum
across the world.

Ends 

*Zubeida Jaffer is an award-winning freelance journalist. Comments can be sent to
her at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Last Updated on Sunday, 12 April 2009 21:08
 

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