Tuesday, June 13, 2006

The Jihad Continues


It's now a week since cold-blooded murderer and insurgent leader, Jordanian, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was hunted down and killed by US forces in Iraq. Fighter jets dropped two large bombs on the safe house where he and his 'spiritual adviser' were hiding. This is undoubtedly a hugely welcome development. The leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Zarqawi was responsible for personally beheading hostages, dispatching suicide bombers, and inflaming tensions between the Sunni and Shia communities in Iraq. He may be dead; the violence in Iraq continues. At least 24 people were killed in Iraq yesterday according to the Reuters news agency. Three suicide bombers blew themselves up and another was shot dead in an attempt. Unfortunately the insurgency in Iraq - both the Islamic fundamentalists and nationalist fighters - is too well entrenched and committed to their respective causes to be affected by the death of one man, however influencial. Al-Qaida in Iraq named his successor, Sheikh Abu Hamza al-Muhajir on Monday.

So where does this leave the War on Terror? A key al-Qaida figure has been assassinated (although it's unclear how close al-Qaida in Iraq is to the main international organisation - especially since frontline fighter al-Zarqawi's prominence was growing in comparison to Osama bin Laden's low profile presumably in Pakistan leading to a rivalry). To the Americans it is a victory. President Bush was quick to pay a flying visit to Baghdad yesterday as much to celebrate this success as to bolster flagging Republican poll ratings before the upcoming mid-term elections in November with a 'good news' story from Iraq. However can there really be victories in this abstract war? No sooner had Zarqawi been killed than his replacement was named within days. Surely there are more recruits being created every day by the coalition occupation of Iraq that will step up to replace him upon his death. This can be seen in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. When Hamas leaders have been assassinated others have replaced them, and now the militant group is more popular than ever, winning this year's election to control the Palestinian Authority. The United States should learn from the example in Palestine.

In a way it's unfortunate that al-Zarqawi hadn't been captured alive and put on trial. The United States successfully prosecuted the so-called 20th 9/11 hijacker Zacarias Moussaoui, sentencing him to life in prison instead of execution; denying him the martyrdom he craved. While a trial of Zarqawi in Iraq would most likely have ended with his death, it would have denied him the instant martyrdom that this assassination will give him in the eyes of some misguided and ignorant people in the Muslim world. Also unfortunate is that this killing seems to have taken the Haditha massacre, perpetrated by US Marines, out of the headlines. Just because the United States had a good day in Iraq last week doesn't mean we should forget about the bad.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Murderous Milosevic Dies

The Butcher of the Balkans is dead. The man responsible for the worst bloodshed in Europe since the Second World War died in his cell at the United Nations Prison in the Hague yesterday. Death caught up with the tyrant by means of natural causes, a form of dying that his policies denied to hundreds of thousands of people in the Former Yugoslavia while he was President of Serbia in the 1990s.

The long drawn out nature of the trial means that four years after he was handed over to the UN War Crimes Tribunal he was still not convicted of any of the 66 charges of crimes against humanity - genocide, ethnic-cleansing etc. - levelled against him. Arrogant and malevolent to the last Milosevic never showed any remorse for the central role he played in the wars that resulted from the break-up of Yugoslavia.

His death means that justice has been denied to the victims of this man’s primitive nationalism and cold-hearted disregard for the sanctity of life. Of cold comfort will be the fact that at least he spent the remainder of his life in prison. It can only be hoped that his death will give a new impetus in the hunt for Bosnian Serb War Criminals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic to provide some justice to the innocent victims of the Balkans Wars.

Prosecutors in the heavily criticised trial of Saddam Hussein in Iraq might also learn from this case and ensure that, while the trial is conducted with fairness and due process, a similar outcome doesn’t occur there by taking too long to convict an elderly man. Long drawn out war crimes trials are taking place in relation to Rwanda, Iraq and the Former Yugoslavia. In all of these cases closure is vital for these battered nations to put there pasts behind them.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Satire? No laughing Matter in the Islamic World

The picture to the left is a ‘Buddy Christ’, the mascot of the ‘Catholicism Wow!’ campaign that features in the film Dogma directed by Kevin Smith. The movie is a comedy that satirises Christianity, poking fun at some of the religion’s (and particularly Catholicism’s) most sacred precepts. In the film there is the Character Rufus, supposedly a thirteenth member of Jesus’ band of apostles - written out of history because he’s black. The main character Bethany, who works at an abortion clinic and teams up with two junkies - so-called prophets - to save the world, is also claimed to be a direct descendant of Christ. To moderate Christians the film is an entertaining parody that highlights some of the hypocrisies of organised religion. To say this kind of material is offensive to hard-line fundamentalist Christians would be an understatement. The film faced distribution problems because of its subject matter and its website feature a page that published the hate letters that the director received from ‘actual people, many who had not even seen the movie before they wrote in.’

However while ‘Buddy Christ’ et al. may have upset some Christians there were no violent protests outside American Embassies, none burnt down, no deaths, no offensive placards calling for the beheading of people who blaspheme against Christianity, and no boycott of products from the USA in, say, the deeply Catholic countries of Latin America. Contrast this with the widespread violent protest that has erupted in recent weeks because of a few cartoons in an obscure Danish newspaper. Scandinavian Embassies in Damascus and Beirut have been razed to the ground, Muslims dressed as suicide bombers have protested in London and there is a boycott of Danish goods in much of the Muslim World. Dogma was a major motion picture with a very high profile yet it did not illicit protest on this scale. Imagine what would have happening if such a film had been made about the life of the Prophet Mohammed.

Depiction of the Prophet is taboo for many Muslims although this has not prevented many images from being created in the past even by Muslims themselves. These pictures have never generated the kind of vitriolic protest that we are witnessing today. The Danish Newspaper that published cartoons of Mohammed did so last September in an exercise in free speech, the editors having become concerned with the self censorship that has become common in much of the media. While they undoubtedly knew that this would cause offence, and so were not as sensitive to Muslim feelings as they ought to have been, the publication passed with little incident and the controversy blew over. The cartoons only became an issue after Danish Imams toured the Middle East with the pictures (including some that were even more offensive) and more importantly when the French tabloid France Soir, republished the cartoons in a move that was deliberately provocative. Was their sudden desire to exercise their right to free speech by any chance influenced by the Muslim rioting that had taken place in the French banlieue late last year? It was undoubtedly intended to cause offence.

This is not to absolve Muslims of all of their guilt in the current uproar. Certainly it has been the extremists who’ve led the charge in instigating protests which have become even more offensive than the cartoons and even caused deaths in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but this has also been spurred on by moderates who have participated in boycotts of Danish products. Never mind that the Danish government have condemned the cartoons and aren‘t responsible for the content of their newspapers. It can be accepted that these cartoons, published now across the West, have become yet another reason for Muslims to feel - in some cases rightly - under attack by the West. It adds to other issues such as the Iraq and Afghan wars, the Israel/Palestine conflict and the prejudice that Muslims have to live with in Western countries.

However when these serious injustices - at least form the point of view of many Muslims - are measured against the controversy surrounding the cartoons it makes these doodles pale into insignificance. Why is it then that it has become such a rallying cause for Muslims regardless of there level of extremism? Why is there this reaction among Muslims when Christians are regularly insulted by parodies of their religion, Jews live with extremely nasty cartoons of their people in Arab newspapers and Hindus are satirised on The Simpsons? The excuse that it is because of the depth of feeling Muslims have for their prophet is not enough, as other religions revere their sacred figures equally without resort to violence when they are mocked or laughed at.

It seems ridiculous that atrocities in Iraq or the scandal of Guantanamo Bay don’t arouse the same protests that these not very funny cartoons have. In these cases people, Muslims, are actually being killed or abused. Of course it could be said these issues encourage terrorism but where are the widespread protests on the streets? To take this idea even further al-Qaida have killed many hundreds of Muslims, in Egypt, Turkey, and elsewhere. Where are the violent protests then? Rather than criticise these murderers, al-Qaida has growing levels of support in the Islamic World. This is what happens when the extremists hijack a religion. The radicals are not yet in the majority in the Islamic faith but they are louder, more determined and so are gaining more attention both within there own community and in the West than their moderate counterparts. Proof of this can be seen in the widely covered pronouncements of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran on the destruction of Israel or the success of Hamas in the Palestinian elections.

There are disturbing elements of extremism in other religions as well, in Christianity not least, but they are the minority and are often ridiculed for their out-moded beliefs. We’re a long way from a time when the release of a film such as Dogma would create the kind of unrest among Christians than we have seen among Muslims in the last month. There were death threats certainly, no actual deaths. It is essential that Muslim moderates wrest back their religion, the Islam of compassion, equality and tolerance, from the extremists. As it stands Muslims cannot be expected to receive much sympathy when cartoons are met with violence, and terrorism is often met with adulation among some Muslims. Only when the moderates take back there rightful place will they regain the moral high ground to protest against the issues where Muslims are genuinely hard-done-by.

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Bush's State of the Union Speech

Click to enlarge

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

March of the Orangemen

On February 25th the Orange Order plan to march in Dublin to protest at the Dáil, highlighting the plight of the victims of terrorism in Northern Ireland in the era of the Good Friday Peace agreement which has seen many of the perpetrators of the worst atrocities in the Irish ’Troubles’ set free from prison. If all goes to plan they will parade down O’Connell Street in an event that many in the Irish capital will see as extremely provocative.

For those out there who don’t know, the Orange Order is a highly sectarian society who celebrate the Protestant William of Orange’ famous victory over the Catholic King James II at the Battle of the Boyne over 300 years ago and want to maintain the Union between Britain and Northern Ireland. Their marches are the cause of much tension between the Loyalist and Nationalist communities of the province every summer. Northern Catholics see them as triumphalist and deliberately provocative, Orangemen say they are merely worshiping and asserting their right to hold parades; even if they are routed directly through Catholic communities Their presence in the South will not be popular.

In the North, Orange Marches are met with counter-protests and often riots. We can only hope the same won’t happen South of the border as this would be playing into the Orangemen’s hands. No doubt they would love trouble to prove the hostility of the Irish Republic to their culture. Trouble at the march would confirm everything that Unionists have always said about the intolerance of the South. The best thing that could happen would be for the parade to be ignored. Indeed that would be the best thing for Nationalist communities in the North for them to do the same even in the face of deliberately confrontational marches in their areas.

The Orange Order is a relic of the troubled history of Ireland but today these men in their black suits, bowler hats and orange sashes, swords in hand, are more to be pitied or ridiculed than anything else. More often than not they are drunken yobs in tracksuits, rangers football shirts and trainers - hardly an expression of pride in Loyalist or Protestant culture.

Unionism in general appears to feel under siege at the moment. Unwilling to share power in the North with Sinn Féin (which isn’t that hard to understand), threatened by the demographic time bomb that is the higher Nationalist birth rate in Northern Ireland and flanked to the South by a more prosperous, and tolerant Irish Republic, their way of life is under threat like never before. It is not impossible to imagine a United Ireland within the coming decades and with that Unionism would eventually lose its popularity and relevance. Orange marches may be petty and offensive to the Nationalist community but they are increasingly looking like the last gasps of a the slowly dying movement that is Unionism. Nationalists should realise this and let it die in peace.

As for the coming march in Dublin I welcome it as a sign of the more tolerant times that have belatedly reached this country and hope it passes off with the low levels of controversy that such an irrelevant movement deserves.