Monday, April 11, 2011

The Ivory Coast, end to the violence?

Gbagbo surrenders! He will now hopefully be held accountable for the human rights atrocities committed in the Ivory Coast. However the likely hood of president Ouattara being held accountable for violence is slim.
http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/ivory-coasts-gbagbo-must-be-held-to-account-for-atrocities-rights-group/

A copy of my first facebook note in a long time:

Okay so my profile picture is not the best picture of me which has ever been taken, as I am yelling to someone off to the side of the photo, and I may not be one of these 'youth' who are voting, as our signs stipulate, BUT I believe in the message being portrayed. All over the world there are people currently fighting and dying for the right to democratic governance, the right to have a say in the rule of their nation. I heard a statistic the other day that today Canada is 69th in the world in terms of peacekeeping. We have denied UN requests to send peacekeepers to the Congo four times. As well, although Canada aided in instigating the Millennium Development Goals, we have ceased to make any attempt to fulfilled this commitment. This is not the Canada I feel like I live in, this tight-fisted, uncharitable, corporate run country. Something must change, I want to see the Canada I was taught to believe in.

There is one way we can change this, by starting to hold our government accountable for it's actions, by asserting our democratic right to vote. Currently, if the Canadian government does something citizens disapprove of, it is irrelevant, what are we going to do about it? In 2006, 64.7% of the population voted. In 2008, it was 59.1%.

Are you disillusioned by the Democratic process in North America? Do something about it. Are you sick of rhetoric? Do something about it. It doesn't have to be this way, change is possible, and the best way we can instigate change at this moment in history is to vote. I don't care how you vote, so long as you exercise this right.

The following is a quote from one of my hero's, Tony Benn:

"Keeping people hopeless and pessimistic - see I think there are two ways in which people are controlled - first of all frighten people and secondly demoralize them. An educated, healthy and confident nation is harder to govern...People in debt become hopeless and hopeless people don’t vote. They always say that that everyone should vote but I think that if the poor in Britain or the United States turned out and voted for people that represented their interests there would be a real democratic revolution"

Monday, April 4, 2011

April 4th

No longer is Ouattara a victim in the conflict between his party and incumbent presidential candidate Gbagbo, but has begun inflicting extreme violence in an effort to oust Gbagbo. Massacres in the West of the Ivory Coast have left up to 1000 people dead, sparking the UN to call on the warring factions not to attack civilians. Although the UN has removed non-essential staff from regions where they have been targeted, "France has ordered more troops into Ivory Coast to protect civilians as forces backing presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara prepared a "lightning" assault to remove Laurent Gbagbo from power". About 250 children have been displaced and are living in the forests.

At the very least I find it encouraging that the number of French troops will be increased, although UN troops being removed from certain locations is eerily reminiscent of the way violence was allowed to continue in Rwanda right before the infamous genocide. Why is violence labelled as genocide particularly heinous compared to other forms of violence? What makes it more evil and worthy of action or at least horror then the 5 million dead in the Congo? How far does violence need to escalate in the Ivory Coast before intervention is acceptable? And what form does that intervention take?


http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/dont-target-civilians-un-tells-ivory-coasts-warring-sides/
http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/un-evacuates-staff-after-attacks-in-ivory-coast/