from the November 14, 2006 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1114/p07s01-wogi.html

No clash of civilizations, says UN report
A UN-sponsored group says the Israel-Palestinian conflict is the main
cause of global tensions.

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
CAIRO

A UN-sponsored group called the Alliance of Civilizations, created
last year to find ways to bridge the growing divide between Muslim and
Western societies, released a first report Monday that says the
conflict over Israel and the Palestinian territories is the central
driver in global tensions.

"Our emphasis on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not meant to
imply that it is the overt cause of all tensions between Muslim and
Western societies," write the report's authors, a group of academics
and present and former government officials from 19 different
countries. "Nevertheless, it is our view that the Israeli-Palestinian
issue has taken on a symbolic value that colors cross cultural and
political relations ... well beyond its limited geographic scope."

But while the authors hope their report will invigorate and create
cross-cultural dialogue, its tone implies that it is unlikely to be
well received by the United States and Israel, focusing as it does on
allegations of double standards by those two nations while giving less
time to the faults of the Palestinians or specific Muslim governments.

Criticism of US policies, though at times oblique, is a major feature
of the document and hits on themes that have angered representatives
of the Bush administration in the past. For instance, in a discussion
of Al Qaeda's attack on the US on Sept. 11, the report states: "Later,
these attacks were presented as one of the justifications for the
invasion of Iraq, whose link with them has never been demonstrated,
feeding a perception among Muslim societies of unjust aggression
stemming from the West."

While that is indeed a common view in Muslim countries, it is unlikely
to gain the favor of the current US administration, whose
representative to the United Nations, John Bolton, is an ardent
supporter of the invasion of Iraq and a frequent critic of the world
body. Earlier this year, Mr. Bolton characterized the UN Human Rights
Commission as packed with officials from "some of the world's most
notorious human rights abusers."

The report is the result of a UN-sanctioned "High Level Group" meeting
of some twenty "eminent personalities" that UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan appointed last year. The group, which was cosponsored by the
Prime Ministers of Turkey and Spain and included among its authors
Nobel Peace Prize-winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former Iranian
president Mohammed Khatami, issued the final report on Nov. 13 at its
final meeting in Istanbul.

To be sure, the report is also framed as a direct challenge to the
notion that a "Clash of Civilizations" is imminent - a concept first
popularized by Samuel Huntington's 1996 book of the same name.

In a statement, Mr. Kofi Annan said it was clear that religion is not
at the root of current tensions.

"The problem is not the Koran or the Torah or the Bible,'' Mr. Annan
said. "The problem is never the faith, it is the faithful and how they
behave towards each other."

That sentiment was echoed in an editorial published in the Houston
Chronicle on Sunday by three of the report's authors, who also said
that political repression in the Muslim world contributes to
extremism.

"Denying peaceful opposition movements the freedom to express their
views and jailing their supporters generate anger and resentment,
encouraging some to join violent groups,'' wrote Mr. Tutu, former
Indonesian foreign minister Ali Alatas, and Andri Azoulay, an advisor
to Morocco's King Muhammed VI.

"When Western governments lend their support - tacitly or overtly - to
authoritarian regimes, they become part of the problem," the authors
wrote.

The overall objective of the paper is to set out problems between the
Muslim and the West as a matter of politics, and not of culture, and
tends to see anger and misunderstanding as largely a problem of
inadequate education.

For instance, the authors point to a recent Gallup poll that found 57
percent of Americans either responded "nothing" or "I don't know" when
asked what they most admired about Muslim societies, as evidence for a
need for education systems in both the West and Muslim countries to
provide a "basic understanding of religious traditions other than
their own."

The authors also point to another recent survey that found 30 percent
of US government money for cultural exchanges go to programs with
Europe - the societies with which the US has the most in common -
while just 6 percent go to programs with the Middle East, arguably the
place where such efforts could do the most good.

How to build an alliance of civilizations

The UN's High Level Group report includes a set of concrete
recommendations for the international community. Among the
recommendations:

• The international community should draft a white paper to analyze
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. [wow! why didn't I think of that?]

• An international conference should be convened to reinvigorate the
Middle East peace process.

• Ruling parties in the Muslim world should provide space for the
participation of peaceful political groups.

• Leaders and shapers of public opinion should behave responsibly and
work to promote understanding among cultures.

• The UN should appoint a high representative to assist in defusing
cross-cultural tensions.

• The UN should establish a forum for the alliance of civilizations
under its auspices.

• Journalists should receive improved training in intercultural understanding.

• Media content should aim to promote intercultural dialogue.

• Educational materials and media literacy programs in schools should
face a critical review.

• Governments should increase the number of international youth
exchanges and youth-oriented websites.

• The international community should create media campaigns to combat
discrimination.

Source: United Nations Fourth High Level Group, www.unaoc.org

--
Jim Devine / "In economics, the majority is always wrong."   --  John
Kenneth Galbraith

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