Imagining a different world

Situation has been made worse by foreign intervention and the disregard of human dignity by international agencies


Muhammad Hamid Zaman March 19, 2024
The writer is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute professor of Biomedical Engineering, International Health and Medicine at Boston University. He tweets @mhzaman

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In February 2020, just a few weeks before the global travel was to come to a standstill, I was in Jerusalem. On a cold, rainy evening, I met up with a Palestinian anthropologist, whose family had lived in Jerusalem for several centuries. Not far from the walls of the old city, we met at Al Zahra restaurant, well known among the locals for its extraordinary cuisine. That evening seems like a lifetime and a universe away, but the words of my colleague, who was candid and honest, echo often in my mind. As we talked about the suffering of the Palestinians, he told me that no one cares. He was talking about nearly everyone — the US, the Europeans, the Muslim countries and of course the Arab neighbors of Palestine. He talked about how awfully the Palestinian refugees have been treated in the neighbouring countries, and why more than anything else, they are viewed as a nuisance. He talked about the cycles of violence, and the accompanying cycles of hollow condemnations by political leaders. Nothing changes because no one really cares.

Today, as a man-made famine grips Gaza, and is being livestreamed, I often think about what my Palestinian colleague said. The famine in Gaza was long predicted by many around the world ever since the aid routes were blocked by the Israeli army. Those grim predictions come true every day as children waste away in front of our own eyes. Instead of real solutions we find the US air dropping a few packages — an approach that is widely recognised as inefficient and useless. In fact, some of these packages have fallen on houses and people, leading to their deaths. So much for humanitarianism.

There are, of course, a number of explanations for the famine in Gaza. Political alliances, military ties, UN vetos and many other reasons are discussed as the likely causes of this calamity. But I am not convinced that these reasons provide the real explanation. As I look around the world, I feel there is something much more fundamental at play. Something that my Palestinian colleague was alluding to.

It has been nearly a year since the war broke out in Sudan. It has led to the largest internal displacement crisis in the world. Over 8 million people have been displaced from their homes in the last year alone. The reasons and causes may be fundamentally different than the situation in Gaza — but the pain and agony of the sick, wounded and the hungry is the same. Sudan rarely appears in the news, or on the radar of our concern. Few around me seem to be interested in providing support, care, food or funds. More recently, the situation in Haiti has taken a turn for the worse. Haiti has long been hit by insecurity, pain and suffering. The situation has been made worse by foreign intervention and the disregard of human dignity by international agencies, including the UN that was responsible for the worst cholera outbreak in the history of the country that lead to the death of tens of thousands.

In Sudan, Haiti, and in many other places of the world, we fail to feel the pain of the people because in our mind these places have always been like this. We have built racist frameworks in our mind that suggest that people in these countries have always been fighting; that they are uncivilised, and incapable of living in peace. The views of many about Afghanistan (including many in Pakistan) are not very different either. Many in the West may not say it openly, but I have little doubts that they harbour the same kinds of views about Gaza: a place teeming with primitive people. So what if there is famine in 2024? So what if we have enough food and ample knowledge to avoid it?

The theater of air drops, empty rhetoric and bombastic statements will continue until there is a fundamental shift in how we view other people and until we view them as our own.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 19th, 2024.

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COMMENTS (1)

Jackie Simpson | 7 months ago | Reply Why hasn t the West intervened in Haiti How sad and sickening to witness the lawless violence so close to other Caribbean beauty spots. Haiti is indeed such a beautiful country and we have so many fond memories of visiting Haiti. Talking of Port au Prince Graham Greene and the H tel Oloffson Haiti may be a shocking place to live now but not everyone thinks Haiti is Hell and that sentiment would not just be limited to Graham Greene were he alive. Of course Graham was one of the great writers of the 20th Century and an MI6 spook. One other ex-spook used to love Haiti until the TonTon Macoute hunted him down like a wild animal. Maybe he deserved it Was he front running the real CIA Haitian equivalent to the Cuban Bay of Pigs If you relish and yearn for Haitian spy thrillers as curiously and bizarrely compelling as Graham Greene s Comedians crave for the cruel stability of the Duvaliers and have frequented H tel Oloffson you re never going to put down Bill Fairclough s fact based spy thriller Beyond Enkription in The Burlington Files series. His Haitian experiences may have been gruesome but they make for intriguing reading compared with today s grim news. Beyond Enkription is an intriguing unadulterated factual thriller and a super read as long as you don t expect John le Carr s delicate diction sophisticated syntax and placid plots. Nevertheless it has been heralded by one US critic as being up there with My Silent War by Kim Philby and No Other Choice by George Blake . Little wonder Beyond Enkription is mandatory reading on some countries intelligence induction programs. Beyond Enkription is so real you may have nightmares of being back in Port au Prince anguishing over being a spy on the run. The trouble is if you were a white spook being chased by the TonTon Macoute in the seventies you were usually cornered and ... well best leave it to your imagination or simply read Beyond Enkription. Interestingly Fairclough was one of Pemberton s People in MI6 see a brief intriguing News Article dated 31 October 2022 in TheBurlingtonFiles website . If you have any questions about Ungentlemanly Warfare after reading that do remember the best quote from The Burlington Files to date is Don t ask me I m British .
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