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Kofi
Annan
By Mehru Jaffer

The world often looks upon
Kofi Annan as if the United Nations secretary general was
a fairy godmother. Even a reluctant fairy godmother who refuses
to use the magic wand to will away all the ills of the world.
We listen to him list his dream of seeing a world that is free
from want and fear. He is for the immediate reduction of
greenhouse gases responsible for global warming. He is
against the plundering of our children's heritage to pay
for unsustainable practices. He wants free access to markets for
goods from poor countries, an expansion of debt-relief programs
for the most heavily burdened and cooperation with
pharmaceutical companies to develop an affordable vaccine
for AIDS.
He is desperate to strengthen the capacity of the UN to conduct
peace operations, to target sanctions against delinquent rulers
instead of innocent populations and to curb the illegal
traffic in small arms that fuel innumerable wars.
He would like to put people at the center of everything done. He
says that no calling is more noble and no responsibility
greater than that of enabling men, women and children in
cities and in villages around the world to make their
lives better. He wants to redefine the goals of the UN on a
planet where population has more than doubled since 1945
from fewer than 2.5 billion to 6 billion people.
But then what holds Annan from realising all his dreams and
making life a little more attractive than it is at the
moment for the world? The fact that Annan is the head of a
strictly non-authoritarian international family that is
made up of 191 countries may have something to do with it? What
delays his dream from being realised is the fact that he must
get consensus from member countries that are made of a
multitude of different beliefs, customs, systems of law
and powerful self interests that are often put before the
interest of others in the world.
The UN can not do much when member countries agree but do not
put into practice or honor treaties concerning arms
control and international human rights law for example.
The stature of an international criminal court is
collecting dust and it is impossible to put it into force as too
few countries have so far ratified it. In the name of
national sovereignty many states continue to protect and
shield terrible crimes against humanity.
Many harsh words are pelted at the UN's role in the conflict in
Angola for example. In 1945 wars were fought with another
country and Angola's civil war is not the kind of human
behavior that the founders of the UN expected the
organisation would have to deal with. It is an unrealistic
expectation to put a peacekeeping force like the UN in the
center of wars like in Bosnia and Somalia. The mandate of
the UN allows it to stop war and not to participate in one.
Besides no war can ever end if the two sides want to continue to
fight over more territory and more wealth. There are
governments today that refuse to share the wealth of a
country with the poorest. They would rather fight, kill
and persecute. The wars today are over oil and diamonds and not
against mass poverty and ill health that ails the majority on
this earth.
And the UN is nothing but clay in the hands of the international
community. It is we who can mold it in whatever way we
want to. We have the power to sculpt it into a monster or
a madona. It is not the magic wand of Annan that will make
the world a better place but our own, personal integrity and
commitment to do so as individuals, as head of families and head
of state.
For I dont believe that Annan
even has a magic wand.
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