NELSON’S CONVENIENT EYE WON’T WORK

NELSON’S CONVENIENT EYE WON’T WORK

In 1801, British Admi­ral Lord Nel­son bold­ly put a tele­scope to his blind eye to ignore an order. It spawned the phrase ”turn­ing a blind eye”, and result­ed in an epic vic­to­ry. Today, what’s also known as “a Nel­son eye“ is a craven act, regen­er­at­ing epic disasters.

While the eyes of the world have been focused on the U.S. and Iran grop­ing for a way out of a blind alley of point­less destruc­tion, what the UN has called an his­toric human­i­tar­i­an cri­sis of “indus­tri­al pro­por­tion”  entered its fourth year, main­ly out of sight and ignored.
Four­teen mil­lion Sudanese (the pro­por­tion­al equiv­a­lent of 120-million Amer­i­cans or 150-mil­lion Euro­pean Union cit­i­zens) are inter­nal­ly dis­placed or refugees from vio­lence mea­sured in mass graves and blood-soaked streets, vis­i­ble from space via satel­lite imagery.
While the world con­ve­nient­ly turned yet anoth­er blind eye, the open source analy­sis Insight Group has found that a net­work of Columbian mer­ce­nar­ies, backed by the U.S.-allied Unit­ed Arab Emi­rates (UAE), flew drones, trained sol­diers and were present, when the Rapid Sup­port Forces (RSF) com­mit­ted what the Pros­e­cu­tor of the Inter­na­tion­al Crim­i­nal Court has con­clud­ed were war crimes and crimes against human­i­ty across large swathes of the third largest coun­try in Africa.
As many as 150,000 peo­ple are believed to have been killed.
The World Food Pro­gramme esti­mates 60 per­cent of Sudan’s 50-mil­lion peo­ple will need assis­tance this year.
Pro­vid­ing it will require about 3‑billion dollars.
For per­spec­tive, a mon­i­tor­ing group cal­cu­lat­ed that the first weeks of the war in Iran cost Amer­i­can tax­pay­ers that much every three days.
Any­one not embar­rassed by that might want to consid­er re-adjust­ing  their con­science focus.

                               FROM PRIORITY TO PASSE     

When Zim­bab­we was white minor­i­ty-ruled Rhode­sia, protests and calls for sanc­tions and boy­cotts were de rigeur in the UN Gen­er­al Assem­bly, the echo cham­bers of lib­er­al caus­es and on lib­er­al campuses.
In their eyes, the guer­ril­la move­ments fight­ing for major­i­ty rule could do no wrong.
April 18 marked the 46th anniver­sary of their victory.
The slo­gan for the 88 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion born after the date Zim­bab­we came into being , is “the Born Free Generation”.
But as Zim­bab­wean jour­nal­ist Angus Shaw recent­ly wrote, most now describe them­selves as “the Born to Suf­fer Generation”.
Oppo­si­tion polit­i­cal par­ties are bru­tal­ly repressed. Zim­bab­we ranked 123 out of 142 in the 2024 World Jus­tice Project Rule of Law Index. 
 And, as Shaw writes “… there’s crip­pling unem­ploy­ment coun­try­wide indus­tries are shut­ting down, hos­pi­tals are with­out drugs and schools are with­out books.”
 (FULL DISCLOSURE: Angus Shaw has been a friend and col­league since we were neo­phyte for­eign cor­re­spon­dents in Africa in the 1970s,)
South Africa’s sys­tem of apartheid was jus­ti­fi­ably seen for the abhor­rent aber­ra­tion it was. Nel­son Man­dela, Arch­bish­op Desmond Tutu and uici­dal­ly brave street activists put, and kept South Africa in the eyes of the world until it was overthrown.
The crime-rid­den and impov­er­ished land their cor­rupt suc­ces­sors have made of the  “rain­bow nation” now gets lit­tle more than an occa­sion­al side­long glance.

                ONLY MONEY MATTERS

Post-colo­nial Ango­la suf­fered a 23 year civ­il war, pro­longed by the  CIA and South Africa back­ing the charis­mat­ic (lat­er revealed as rutal mass mur­der­er) guer­ril­la leader Jonas Sav­im­bi, whom they saw as a counter to Moscow’s aims in  Africa.
Once that issue fad­ed from view, the daugh­ter of the then Angolan pres­i­dent was put in charge of the state oil com­pa­ny, and quick­ly became Africa’s first female bil­lion­aire. That the major­i­ty of ordi­nary Angolans remained wal­low­ing in a mire of pover­ty was, in the main, looked at with a Nelson’s eye by the West.
The spin­ning coun­ters on fuel pumps have been afford­ed a much clos­er and focused look than more basic and long term con­se­quences of the Iran war. Dis­rup­tion of fer­tilis­er exports from the Per­sian Gulf to Africa and Asia may pose “…an even more con­se­quen­tial impact on the glob­al econ­o­my and human wel­fare” than the oil price fluctuations.”
Fur­ther esca­la­tion “… puts tens of mil­lions of peo­ple at risk of falling into pover­ty across 162 countries.”
And if that doesn’t pluck a chord of car­ing, look at anoth­er way. Britain has made a deal to pay France near­ly $900-mil­lion as part of a three-year bor­der secu­ri­ty deal to curb ille­gal ‌migrants cross­ing the Eng­lish Channel,
But more pover­ty will dri­ve more peo­ple to migrate ille­gal­ly, mak­ing present efforts to stop the flow about as effec­tive as  a buck­et brigade at a five alarm fire.
The obvi­ous answer is mak­ing it more attrac­tive for peo­ple to stay in their own coun­tries. Peo­ple do not  risk their lives to flee places where they have a future.
It must sure­ly by now be obvi­ous that it is no longer con­ve­nient to choose a Nelson’s Eye to look at con­flicts and their consequences.

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One thought on “NELSON’S CONVENIENT EYE WON’T WORK

  1. The world choos­es to direct its com­pas­sion large­ly based on what west­ern media leads with, I think, and that leaves many tragedies unseen. I work across the con­ti­nent of Africa and my heart breaks too often to describe, yet I am very aware not to judge by west­ern stan­dards. I also trav­elled across Zim­bab­we last month and while I agree that the promise of free­dom in the ear­ly days has long gone sour, the amount of traf­fic and activ­i­ty over East­er tells a more com­plex sto­ry than your com­men­tary allows.
    Your descrip­tion of South Africa leaves me bemused. Yes we have crime and pover­ty, but we are not crime and pover­ty. In many ways we are more alive to our issues and make more progress to resolve them than many west­ern coun­tries. You dis­miss us as though we are just anoth­er post colo­nial fail­ure — but con­sid­er­ing the dam­age and trau­ma caused by colo­nial­ism, I think we’re mak­ing some­thing viable out of the ash­es, some­thing that doesn’t resem­ble the empires that con­strained us, but will in the long term serve us much better.

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