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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Talks, not bombs, will defeat IS, UN high commissioner tells MEE
'The bombing algorithm is not one that can work,' the UN's High Commissioner for Human Rights tells MEE.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein speaks at a press conference last month (AFP)
James Reinl-Monday 8 June 2015
Zeid, a Jordanian royal, spoke on Monday as the Sunni militant group
cemented military gains in the Iraqi city of Ramadi and Palmyra, in
Syria, and leaders of the world’s top economies debated anti-IS tactics
at the so-called Group of Seven, or G7, talks in Germany.
According to Zeid, US-backed military efforts have failed to halt the
growth of IS from its origins in Iraq over the past decade and
overcoming the threat will require peace talks like those which were
held with Afghanistan’s Taliban and Central American paramilitaries.
“In 2004-5, the mentor of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of Daesh [the
Arabic acronym for IS], Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was battling away in
Iraq. There were beheadings, victims in orange jump suits, and we had
countless meetings at the UN Security Council about their actions and an
almost unprecedented investment in money and in military force,” Zeid
told MEE.
“The group is still there, more powerful than ever was the case eight
years ago. So clearly the bombing algorithm is not one that can work. It
requires a much more sophisticated response and one where certainly the
state cannot cut corners on its own obligations to human rights.”
The US leads a coalition of mostly Western and Arab states against IS,
which launched its blitzkrieg assault into northern Iraq one year ago
this week. On Sunday, Britain announced plans to boost the number of UK
troops in Iraq to about 900.
While the US says a combination of foreign air power and local ground
troops will defeat the caliphate-building hardliners, some analysts
question whether the multi-nation force is backed by enough manpower or
political will.
The coalition features such Sunni-majority Arab nations as Jordan, where
public opinion stiffened against IS after the group burned Jordanian
pilot Moaz al-Kassasbeh alive in a cage following his capture in Syria
in December.
According to Zeid, formerly Jordan’s ambassador to Washington, lessons
for tackling IS can be learned from the Taliban, where negotiations have
yielded changes to the group's battlefield behaviour.
“The Taliban developed an embrace of takfiri ideology ten years ago, and
ten years ago nobody would talk to them,” Zeid told MEE at an event in
New York, referring to the belief among religious hardliners that
justifies the killing of apostates.
“That has changed. Interestingly, the Taliban now have prohibited the
use of certain weapons, they recognise that there is a level of human
suffering that cannot be supported. And so who knows where we will be in
ten years’ time.”
Overcoming IS will mirror historical examples of paramilitary groups
being brought to the negotiation table and eventual political accords in
turbulent Central America, Zeid added.
“The only frame through which [mediators] could push the political
discussions in Guatemala, Salvador and Nicaragua was the human rights
framework. They all could agree that there were certain boundaries
beyond which that you couldn’t go in terms of human cruelty,” he told
MEE.
“And if they could agree that there was a normative human rights
framework that all of us must uphold, then that was the starting point
for the political discussion that ensued.”
