Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Crimes Against Humanity Persist In A Broken World

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Crimes Against Humanity Persist In A Broken World

    CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY PERSIST IN A BROKEN WORLD
    by Chelsea Milko

    UNLV The Rebel Yell
    Feb 19 2009
    NV

    Response to war crimes must be attuned to changes

    Upon hearing news of the Khmer Rouge genocide tribunal opening up
    in Cambodia this week, my nostrils were reminded of the assaulting
    stench of genocide that fouled much of the 20th century.

    The grisly photos circulating of Pol Pot's killing fields, where
    a quarter of the country's population perished due to starvation,
    overwork and execution more than 30 years ago prompts me to wonder
    if the decades-long epoch of such atrocities will ever receive its
    own death knell.

    Recent action taken to persecute culprits and accomplices was seen
    as a breakthrough in corralling law enforcement agencies. The July
    apprehension of the Srebrenica massacre mastermind Radovan Karadzic was
    heralded as a victory for democracy against genocidal injustice. "The
    butcher" of Bosnia now has an impending date with the United Nations
    war crimes tribunal to face allegations of complicity in the horrific
    ethnic cleansing of the 1990s.

    In spite of that, the glacial pace at which war crimes are prosecuted
    and the corrupt, biased elements that weaken international courts
    counteract any movement to snatch human rights violators-at-large. Even
    more maddening is that some of the most merciless perpetrators of
    mass murder and torture techniques still roam free.

    I am afraid that haunting images and sharp lessons from the abuses
    the 20th century has not translated into networks and systems of
    preventing more of the same in the future.

    The carnage from mass exterminations in Armenia and Nanking, the
    Nazi-led Holocaust and the Soviet-engineered famine in Ukraine were
    supposed to sober us up. The calamitous 1994 extermination of 800,000
    ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus by rival Hutu extremists in Rwanda
    leveled a heavy helping of shame on international actors who failed
    to respond swiftly to the mass killings. Those humanitarian crises
    should have defogged the goggles of the U.N. and Western governments
    in order to foresee military debacles and state collapses and prepared
    for the inevitable fallout.

    At the same time the world has been trying to piece together a
    sensible analysis of the why and how of crimes against humanity-
    the nature of war has been changing. Formal military clashes between
    sovereign states over territory and resources are gradually being
    replaced by small-scale proxy conflicts focused on ethnic tension and
    historical hatred. Latent hostilities further inflame in ungoverned and
    misgoverned regions where fragility breeds illegality. Rebel movements
    are on the rise compared to major armed conflicts and have very similar
    unraveling effects. As violent outbreaks in the Congo and rampant
    hunger in Darfur demonstrate, vacuums of explosive conflict persist.

    Those fertile zones of human rights violations and war crimes are not
    just unspeakable pockmarks of the dotted geopolitical landscape of
    the last century; they are also bitter representations of government
    failure, political turmoil and warped economies. As long as militants,
    warlords and insurgents can profiteer from the victimization of their
    own people, global instability will be chronic in nature.

    Civilian deaths are all too often deliberate and sponsored by the
    plunders of war. Calculated attacks against non-combative civilians and
    widespread brutalities including rape and disfigurement are strategies
    that will not cease unless the incentive for militias to fight is
    removed. In many ways, most of the intervening countries interested
    in nation-building and humanitarian relief are tributaries of funding
    that feed right into the raging rivers militant authoritarianism,
    unsteady security and waning prosperity.

    Western and many developing countries do have the means to guarantee
    large-scale tragedies of the past and the horrors of today do not
    endure. A multi-dimensional approach is needed to remove justification
    and weaponry. We should not appease or galvanize the genocidists
    any longer.

    Policies must be crafted to end the definitional paralysis caused by
    disagreement over what the term 'genocide' really entails. Foreign aid
    donor must selectively withdraw contributions from the most egregious
    violators while working to target monies to the survivors who need
    it desperately. The transformation in the way wars are fought demands
    more than just an upgrade in crisis management.

    Decisive action is needed from the international community
    to neutralize the root factors of inequality and discord- strip
    combatants of legitimacy and incentives to resolve the debate over
    how best to intervene.
Working...
X