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    Vol 10, No.4 April 2010

    STATEMENT

    IRAQ: NATIONAL UNITY GOVERNMENTOR RETURN TO SECTARIANISM?

    ARTICLES

    THEWORLDIN 2020 (PART 2)

    CONDEMN BOMB BLASTS IN RUSSIA!...........The International Movement for a Just World

    condemns the series of bomb blasts in Russia in the

    last three days which have killed more than 50

    people................................................................p.2

    By Catherine Rottenberg & Neve Gordon ......... page 4

    WAR CRIME TRIBUNAL IN BANGLADESH: A

    MISCARRIAGEOF JUSTICE

    continued next page

    By Juan Cole

    By Michael T. Klare ....................................... page 7

    THE BASIC MORAL VALUESOFTHE KORAN

    By ODT.org ................................................. page11

    IS ETHICAL CAPITALISM POSSIBLE?By Kamran Mofid ........................ ...................page 5

    Patrick Martin of the Toronto Globe

    and Mail gets the diction right

    when he says that Iyad Allawis list

    won a thin plurality. The official results

    of the March 7 Iraqi parliamentary

    elections have been announced by the

    Independent High Electoral Commission.Of 325 seats, 91 went to the National Iraqi

    List (Iraqiya) of former interim prime

    minister Iyad Allawi. The State of Law

    grouping of incumbent Nuri al-Maliki

    came in at 89. The Shiite fundamentalist

    coalition, the Iraqi National Alliance,

    which includes the followers of clerics

    Ammar al-Hakim and Muqtada al-Sadr,

    garnered 70 seats. The Kurdistan Alliance

    won only 43 seats.

    That leaves 33 seats in the hands ofsmaller parties, many of them wild cards.

    Shortly before the results were

    announced, two large bomb blasts in

    Khalis, in Diyala Province northeast of

    Baghdad, killed 53 persons. Diyala is still

    the site of violent struggle between

    Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds.

    Most Sunni Arabs in Iraq have moved

    on from the violence and fundamentalism

    of groups such as the Islamic State ofIraq, and most voted for the Allawi list

    as a way of reentering national politics.

    Despite some breathless headlines, the

    outcome of the elections is not very

    different from previous elections. Allawi

    put together a coalition of Sunni Arabs

    and secular Shiites. In the December,2005, parliamentary elections, those two

    groups received about 80 seats, only 11

    less than Allawis just list won. If the two

    major Shiite religious lists (State of Law

    and Iraqi National Alliance) had run on

    the same ticket, they would have nearly

    a majority, about what they won in

    December, 2005. The Kurdistan Alliance

    only has 43 seats, down from 54 in the

    last parliamentary election, but the overall

    number of Kurdish Members of

    Parliament is not so different from that inthe last polls.

    In spring-summer of 2006, Prime Minister

    Nuri al-Maliki put together a government

    of national unity, with the help of the US

    ambassador. It included Sadrists and

    Allawis Iraqiya. But it gradually fell apart.

    This election is an opportunity for al-

    Maliki to attempt to repeat that feat.

    Indeed, a national unity government may

    be the first preference of the Iraqi

    National Alliance, which has, accordingto al-Sharq al-Awsat, swung into action

    to convince the other major lists that such

    a path is the only right one for Iraq at this

    juncture.

    Although Allawis list won the most seats,

    he is very unlikely to be the next prime

    minister. Al-Malikis State of Law list isanti-Baathist and hasnt gotten on well

    with Sunni Arabs, while ex-Baathists and

    Sunnis are the backbone of Allawis

    constituency. Likewise, the Shiite

    religious party, made up of Sadrists and

    members of the Islamic Supreme Council

    of Iraq (ISCI), among others, are unlikely

    to ally with secularist ex-Baathists. Allawi

    says that he is dialoguing with the parties

    led by Hakim and Sadr, as well as with the

    Kurds. But Allawi rejects a role in politics

    for Shiite clerics, which would make foran uneasy alliance with lists headed by

    clerics. Without the two big Shiite blocs,

    Allawi could only become prime minister

    by attracting the Kurdistan Alliance and

    all of the smaller parties and

    independents. Keeping such a disparate

    coalition together would be difficult in

    the extreme. Allawi is supported by Sunni

    Arabs who have sharp differences with

    the Kurds over the future of the mixed

    province of Kirkuk, which the Kurds

    covet. Allawi may therefore have a

    EDUCATING CHILDREN IN CONFLICT ZONES

    ARTICLES

    By Dr S.Serajul Islam and Dr M.Saidul Islam ... page 3

    EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBERSOFTHEINTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT ................ page 10

    STATE OFTHE VILLAGE REPORT

    By Yoginder Sikand ....................................... page 9

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    I N T E R N A T I O N A L M O V E M E N T F O R A J U S T W O R L D A R T I C L E S

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    continued next page

    WARCRIME TRIBUNALIN BANGLADESH: A MISCARRIAGEOF JUSTICE

    While Bangladesh (formerly East

    Pakistan) got its independence from

    Pakistan in 1971 following a bloody war,

    some issues of the past are still inflicting

    the nation. Today, the ruling coalition led

    by Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) has

    formed a special war crime tribunal to try

    the war criminals not of Pakistani forces

    but of its own people who opposed the

    idea of an independent Bangladesh and

    fought for a united Pakistan. The tribunal

    will not however try war crime rather

    crime against humanity. This move of

    the government is highly contested.

    It is evident in history, however, that war

    crimes, alongside grievous oppression ofcivilians were committed in the 1971 war

    by the Pakistani forces and some of their

    local allies against Bengali civilians, and

    by some Bengali freedom fighters against

    Bihari Muslims. Following the

    independence of Bangladesh, 195

    Pakistani army officers were identified as

    war criminals in the preliminary

    investigation by the then Bangladesh

    government. Following the Simla

    Agreement signed on 2nd July 1972

    between Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister ofIndia and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, President

    of Pakistan, a number of agreements were

    signed between India and Pakistan

    regarding repatriation of the POWs. On

    9th April 1974, an Agreement was signed

    between Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan

    in New Delhi in which, among other

    issues, the question of the trial of the 195

    POWs was raised and finally it was

    decided that they would be repatriated

    to Pakistan along with the other prisoners

    without trial (The Daily Tribune,

    Wisconsin, 10 April 1974). For a better

    understanding, paragraph 15 of the 1974

    Agreement is quoted here:

    In the light of the foregoing and,

    in particular, having regard to the

    appeal of the Prime Minister of

    Pakistan to the people of

    Bangladesh to forgive and forget

    the mistakes of the past, the

    Foreign Minister of Bangladesh

    stated that the Government of

    Bangladesh had decided not to

    proceed with the trials as an act ofclemency. It was agreed that the

    195 prisoners of war may be

    repatriated to Pakistan along

    with the other prisoners of war now

    in process of repatriation under the

    Delhi Agreement.

    On 24 January 1972, the government of

    Bangladesh enacted another law,

    Collaborators Act, 1972, to try those

    who did not side with the liberation war,

    or politically opposed the call of liberation

    war, or willingly cooperated with the

    Pakistan Army or committed criminal acts.

    Among thousands arrested, 752 people

    were found guilty and punished under

    this law. Taking into account the overall

    situation (of discontent) obtaining in the

    country, in November 1973 the

    Government of Bangladesh under the

    leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman,the father of the current Prime Minister

    Sheikh Hasina, declared a general

    amnesty. By virtue of the general

    amnesty, those accused or convicted for

    minor crimes under theActwere all set

    free. But those accused of rape, murder,

    arson or plunder were not pardoned. In

    other words, the general amnesty kept

    the scope of prosecution and trial of

    those accused of such serious crimes

    under the Act. On December 31, 1975, the

    Collaborators Act was repealed by aPresidential Order. After the amnesty, the

    Actremained in force for a little over two

    years. In that period, no case was filed

    for the said four serious offences.

    Perhaps that was the logic behind repeal

    of the law in 1975.

    While the issue was resolved before both

    nationally and internationally, the attempt

    of the Bangladesh government for trials

    of war crimes after 39 years is, however,

    according to many, a politically motivated

    act. A list of 36 war criminals has already

    been announced even before the trial has

    started, the majority of whom are from

    Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islam (BJI), the

    mainstream liberal Islamic party in

    Bangladesh that formed a coalition

    government with the Bangladesh

    Nationalist Party (BNP) during 2001-2006.

    A few of them in the list were between 4-

    8 years old during the war in 1971 (Daily

    Amar Desh, 28 March 2010). It is claimed

    that while the issue of war crimes was

    resolved internationally (through SimlaAgreement) and nationally (through

    Collaboration Act), bringing it up again

    shows that it is highly politically

    motivated. Moreover, the Bangladesh

    judiciary is now being subjugated by the

    current regime and therefore a fair

    judgment is absolutely unexpected from

    this politically motivated trial (Daily

    Amar Desh, 16 February 2010).

    Analysts and legal scholars apprehend

    that the trial will simply be a miscarriage

    of justice. First, the International Bar

    Association (IBA) found over a dozen

    loopholes in The Crimes (Tribunal) Act,

    1973, by which the accused would be

    tried (bdnews24.com, Dhaka, 14 March

    2010). Crimes against humanity

    described in section 3(2)(a) of theActare

    very easy to prove through producing

    false witness-evidences in a domesticperspective. It is easy to manipulate a

    witness for crime against humanity than

    for war crime. Most importantly, the

    Evidence Act [1872 (I of 1872)] and the

    Criminal Procedure Code [1898 (V of

    1898)] application have been excluded by

    section 23 of the International Crimes

    (Tribunal) Act, 1973. Therefore,

    newspaper reports and hearsay evidence

    will be accepted thus making the tribunal

    a kangaroo court. Second, the tribunal

    will neither try the actual war criminals,the 195 Pakistani army officers, nor

    Bengali freedom fighters who were

    responsible for ethnic cleansing of

    Biharis, but try only some collaborators

    belonging to an opposition party who

    supported a united Pakistan but do not

    have any proven record of war crimes,

    such as killing, rape, arson etc. Third, it

    is not clear whether the judges of this

    court are either trained or neutral for this

    specialized kind of trials. According to

    various reports, most of the appointed

    judges and prosecutors are former party

    men of, and therefore loyal to, the ruling

    coalition. Finally, many feel that the legal

    apparatus is being manipulated and

    therefore expectation of a fair and free

    trial is a mere dream. Even as it is, there

    have been rampant violations of human

    rights without any justice, such as the

    154 extra-judicial killings in 2009 in the

    hands of law enforcement authorities

    (Odhikar 2009 Report).

    More importantly, if the trial is notconducted freely and fairly for all

    criminals irrespective of any kind of

    political affiliation, the nation may have

    By S.Serajul Islam and M.Saidul Islam

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    A R T I C L E S

    continued next page

    continued from page 3

    to pay a severe price. In the first place,,

    if it targets only the members of Islamic

    parties, reconciliation with the Muslim

    world will be very difficult. Since

    Bangladesh needs to build strong

    relations with the Muslim countries for

    financial support and for supplyingmanpower to those countries, this will

    have a negative impact. Second, having

    no alternative, the BJI which is openly

    involved in the democratic process of

    politics may go underground due to the

    unjust trial. If that happens, it will be

    dangerous for the nation. Third, the

    unfair trial will divide the whole nation

    as BJI has millions of supporters which

    is evident from last few elections. Finally,

    if the regime fails to conduct the trial, it

    will also backfire upon the party in power.

    The whole move of the government so far

    seems to be interpreted by the

    international community as nothing but

    an extreme political vendetta intended tosubdue the opposition party/parties. This

    victors justice is always a questionable

    justice. The regime has already started a

    nation-and-worldwide campaign for this

    trial and obstructed the free movement

    and overseas travel of the BJI leaders. If

    this highly disputed trial is conducted

    unfairly, Bangladesh will certainly enter

    into another dark chapter of political

    chaos, uncertainties, and most likely, a

    civil war. If the trial is held, the

    government must ensure a free and fair

    trial beyond any doubt. The best way is

    to form an international tribunal under

    the auspices of the United Nations. It will

    not only provide credibility to the current

    regime, but also remain a reference fortrying other war crimes committed

    elsewhere.

    2 April 2010

    Dr S. Serajul Islam and Dr M. Saidul

    Islam are both University Professors and

    columnists. They can be reached at

    [email protected]

    [email protected] respectively.

    Educating children in a conflict zone is

    no simple matter. More often than not,

    those responsible for the curricula

    succumb to the masters of war and adopt

    a pedagogical approach that exacerbates

    rather than diffuses strife. Israel,

    unfortunately, is no exception.

    Consider the way Jewish and Palestinian

    children are educated. Segregation in the

    classroom is the rule so that Jewish and

    Palestinian children only rarely mix. Thisstrict segregation exists despite the fact

    that the Palestinians are citizens of Israel,

    comprising 19.5 percent of Israels

    populationaround 1.37 million

    peopleand 25 percent of all school

    children. Unlike the Palestinians in the

    Occupied Territories, these Palestinians

    vote and pay taxes like Jewish citizens.

    Notwithstanding their incorporation into

    the citizen body, Palestinian citizens do

    not enjoy full equality. In comparison totheir Jewish counterparts, Arab schools

    receive half the per capita budget. It is

    therefore not very surprising that

    Palestinian students have the highest

    dropout rates and lowest achievement

    levels in the country.

    Equality in education is reserved to the

    uniformity of the school curriculum,

    particularly the texts dedicated to

    teaching the history of the Israeli state.

    The existing history textbooks adopt the

    Zionist historical narrative, erasing alltrace of the Palestinian nakba (Arabic for

    catastrophe, referring to the events of

    1948, when approximately 750,000

    Palestinians out of a population of

    900,000 either fled or were expelled from

    their homes). Furthermore, these

    textbooks emphasise the significance of

    the Land of Israel for Jews and attempt to

    prove that the State of Israel could only

    have been created in historical Palestine,

    while simultaneously portraying the

    connection between the Arabs and

    Palestine as purely incidental. Along

    similar lines, the study of literature in the

    Arab schools is oriented toward Zionist

    portrayals and is conspicuously lackingin any patriotic or nationalistic Palestinian

    sentiments.

    It is, no doubt, a truism that public schools

    in modern liberal democracies inculcate

    their students with the dominant national

    worldview. In the US, for example, children

    still recite the pledge of allegiance and in

    France children sing La Marseillaise. But

    while the public schools in these

    democracies are today more willing to

    provide students with a multiculturalcurriculum that includes the historical

    narratives of those who have been

    oppressed and marginalised over the

    centuries, Israel is arguably becoming less

    tolerant to any pedagogy that challenges

    the dominant Zionist national narrative.

    This increasing intolerance does not bode

    well for the future of the Israeli-Palestinian

    relationship. It has therefore become more

    urgent than ever to consider alternative

    educational models.

    Since educating for tolerant thinking

    within a conflict zone is no easy task, there

    are very few such projects in Israel. The

    bilingual Arab-Jewish Hagar School in

    Beer-Sheba is the only one of its kind in

    Israels southern regiona region that

    is home to over half a million people, 25

    percent of whom are Palestinian citizens.

    While Hagar is a public school supported

    by the Ministry of Education, it is also

    the exception that proves the rule.

    Hagars uniqueness stems from the fact

    that it has created a venue in which Jewish

    and Arab children not only mix (each

    ethnic group makes up 50 percent of the

    student body) but learn together in anatmosphere of mutual respect. Currently

    67 children, nursery through first grade,

    attend this bi-lingual school, whose

    commitment to equality informs every

    aspect of its educational agenda.

    To ensure that Hebrew and Arabic are

    awarded equal status, for example, two

    teachers, one Jewish and the other Arab,

    are present in every classroom. By

    creating a bilingual space that

    encourages direct contact with theheritage and customs of the different

    cultures, Hagar promotes tolerance, while

    being sensitive to nurture the personal

    EDUCATING CHILDREN IN CONFLICT ZONESBy Catherine Rottenberg & Neve Gordon

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    A R T I C L E Scontinued from page 4

    continued next page

    identity of each child and each tradition.

    Thus, by the time the children are old

    enough to learn that there are two

    conflicting national narratives, both of

    which will be taught, they already have

    the necessary emotional and intellectual

    tools to deal with conflict throughdialogue.

    Hagar is an educational island that is

    expanding against all odds. Indeed, the

    schools achievements within the current

    political contextespecially following

    the assault on Gaza and the sporadic

    missile attacks on Beer-Shebaare

    astonishing. But ongoing local support

    and international financial assistance arenecessary to guarantee the future

    success of this educational spacea

    We live in a time of transition, a time when

    all is changing and being challenged

    weather systems, ecosystems, our

    interaction with nature, our

    understanding of other beings. We now

    understand that we are all interconnected

    and interdependent. Somewhere along

    the line, our actions as human beings

    have created enormous instability to the

    planet and the millions of species who

    reside here.

    Much of which is familiar to us and

    deemed the norm is no longer working

    and is being challenged. Sometimes

    change brings with it destruction.

    Sometimes destruction is beneficial. It

    can alert us to practices that do not work.

    With destruction also comes new birth,and new avenues open wide to be

    explored. There are many choices as to

    which route to take; the issue is which

    route is the one that will provide life for

    all. The golden opportunity presented by

    the current ongoing crises is to make the

    right choices that will affect the long term

    future for us, our descendants and our

    planet.

    There is no denying the fact that we are

    in a serious state of crises, a crises of ourown making, all of us and not the bankers

    alone. They responded to what we

    wanted: cheap, available, unregulated

    money and loads of it.

    They in turn were responding to the neo-

    liberal agenda of the so-called

    Washington Consensus: Privatisation,

    deregulation, market forces,

    liberalisation, low taxation, free trade, and

    one glove fits all policies and more. No

    regards, no respect for different cultures,

    civilisations, religions and history. Whatis good for America and the West, then,

    must also be good for everybody else,

    regardless of all other factors, we were

    told again and again.

    The tragedy is that we have now

    discovered that what we were pushing

    on others, which we thought was good

    for us - the so-called market-forces driven

    Anglo-Saxon model of capitalism - was

    nothing but a huge cancerous cell which

    at the end brought the house of cards

    down. The emperor has no clothes, so to

    say.

    What to Do Now?

    The current global economic crisis is

    deeply complex and perplexing. Many

    world politicians, business people,

    academics, activists, and civil society

    representatives, as well as religious and

    spiritual leaders, have called for a new

    kind of ethical capitalism - a moral,spiritual and virtuous economy. People

    everywhere are calling for an international

    framework of standards for an equitable

    and sustainable global economy to

    replace the current economic system of

    unbridled growth and increasing

    ecological degradation. While some look

    for quick short-term solutions that would

    perpetuate the current economic model,

    others see the need for more fundamental

    changes of the model itself. Our challenge

    is great. In a time of continuing crisis andpolarizing viewpoints, can the world

    agree on an ethical approach to the global

    economy?

    I propose a comprehensive examination

    of the major attempts to integrate

    economics with ethics and spirituality,

    along with an exploration of the

    theoretical underpinnings of these

    activities. In considering the need for bold

    economic initiatives, we must keep in

    mind the deeper questions that rarely find

    their way into political debate or publicdiscourse.

    We should explore the emerging

    economic issues as well matters that are

    deeply ethical and spiritual:

    * What is the source of true happiness

    and well-being? What is the good life?

    * What is the purpose of economic life?

    What does it mean to be a human being

    living on a spaceship with finite

    resources?

    * How can the global financial system

    become more responsive and just?

    * How can the world make the global

    trade system more equitable and

    sustainable?

    * What paths can be recommended to

    shift the current destructive globalpolitical-economic order from one of

    unrestrained economic growth, profit

    maximisation and cost minimisation, to

    one that embraces material wealth

    creation, yet also preserves and

    enhances social and ecological well-

    being and increases human happiness

    and contentment?

    * How can society overcome poverty and

    scarcity with limited natural resources?

    * How should we deal with individual

    and institutionalized greed?

    * What are the requirements of a virtuous

    economy?

    * What religious or spiritual variables

    should be considered in economic/

    business ethics and economic

    behaviour?

    * How are these components to be

    integrated with economic theories anddecisions?

    IS ETHICAL CAPITALISM POSSIBLE?By Kamran Mofid

    space that is actively translating a

    pedagogy of mutual respect into practice

    within a conflict zone.

    16 October, 2009

    Catherine Rottenberg is a founding member

    of Hagar School and sits on its pedagogic

    committee. Neve Gordon is the author of

    Israels Occupation.

    Source: Common Groung News Service

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    continued next page

    * What role should universities play in

    building an integrity-based model of

    business education?

    * What should be the role of the youth?

    * How might the training of youngexecutives be directed with the intention

    of supplying insights into the nature of

    globalisation from its economic,

    technological and spiritual perspectives,

    to build supporting relationships among

    the participants that will lead toward

    action for the common good within their

    chosen careers?

    * Indeed, is ethical, profitable, efficient

    and sustainable capitalism possible?

    These questions and more need to bereflected upon, debated, and ultimately,

    answered and put into policy formation,

    guiding us to a more humane

    globalisation.

    A concrete framework for understanding

    what has gone wrong and possible

    remedies, including both broad

    perspectives on policies and specific

    recommendations, must include not only

    an economic perspective, but also a

    spiritual, moral and ethical understanding.

    Steps can be taken towards a sustainable

    economy, to turn the current crisis of

    casino capitalism into an opportunity for

    a successful, sustainable and everlasting

    change, where all people, wherever they

    may be, can live fulfilling, healthy, and

    yet more ecologically compatible lives.

    Here are the steps I suggest:

    1. Begin a Journey to Wisdom

    Economics and business are all abouthuman well-being in society and cannot

    be separated from moral, ethical and

    spiritual considerations. The idea of an

    economics which is value-free is totally

    false. Nothing in life is morally neutral.

    In the end, economics cannot be

    separated from a vision of what it is to

    be a human being in society.

    In order to arrive at such understanding,

    my first recommendation must surely be

    for us to begin a journey to wisdom, byembodying the core values of the Golden

    Rule (Ethic of Reciprocity): Do unto

    others as you would have them to do to

    you. This in turn will prompt us on a

    journey of discovery, giving life to what

    many consider to be the most consistent

    moral teaching throughout history.

    It should be noted that the Golden Rule

    can be found in many religions, ethical

    systems, spiritual traditions, indigenous

    cultures and secular philosophies.

    Applying this universal principle can

    provide an enabling mechanism for the

    dialogue and development essential to

    resolving the challenges we face

    globally, nationally, and locally.

    2. Now is the Time for a Revolution in

    Economic Thought

    An economist who is only an economist

    cannot be a good economist. Therefore,

    the focus of economics should be on the

    benefit and bounty that the economyproduces, how to let this bounty

    increase, and how to share the benefits

    justly among the people for the common

    good.

    Moreover, economic investigation

    should be accompanied by research into

    subjects such as anthropology,

    philosophy, politics and most

    importantly, theology, to give insight into

    our own human mystery, as no economic

    theory or no economist can say who weare, where have we come from or where

    we are going to. Humankind must be

    respected as the centre of creation and

    not relegated to short-term economic

    interests, as has been the case for the

    past few centuries.

    3. Dont Repair the Economy, Change It

    The current financial meltdown is the

    result of under-regulated markets built

    on an ideology of free market capitalism

    and unlimited economic growth. The

    fundamental problem is that the

    underlying assumptions of this ideology

    are not consistent with what we now

    know about the real state of the world.

    The financial world is, in essence, a set

    of markers for goods, services, and risks

    in the real world and when those markers

    are allowed to deviate too far from reality,

    adjustments must ultimately follow

    and crisis and panic can ensue.

    To solve this and future financial crisesrequires that we reconnect the markers

    with reality. What are our real assets and

    how valuable are they? To undertake this

    readjustment requires both a new vision

    of what the economy is and what it is for,

    proper and comprehensive accounting of

    real assets, and new institutions that use

    the market in its proper role as servant

    rather than master. We have to first

    remember that the goal of the economy

    is to sustainably improve human well-

    being and quality of life, not the

    promotion of materialism, consumerism

    and shop till you drop values -

    especially when they are done with

    borrowed money!

    Ultimately we have to create a new model

    of the economy and development that

    acknowledges this holistic context and

    vision. This new model of development

    would be based clearly on the goal of

    sustainable human well-being. It would

    use measures of progress that clearly

    acknowledge this goal. It wouldacknowledge the importance of

    ecological sustainability, social fairness

    and real economic efficiency.

    Ecological sustainability implies

    recognising that natural and social capital

    are not infinitely substitutable for built

    and human capital, and that real

    biophysical limits exist to the expansion

    of the market economy.

    Social fairness implies recognising thatthe distribution of wealth is an important

    determinant of social capital and quality

    of life. The conventional model has

    bought into the assumption that the best

    way to improve welfare is through

    growth in marketed consumption as

    measured by GDP. This focus on growth

    has not improved overall societal welfare,

    which is why explicit attention to

    distribution issues is sorely needed.

    4. Recognise That the Economy Is Part

    of the Biosphere

    A comprehensive economic plan must be

    based on the scientific fact that the global

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    economy is a subsidiary of the natural

    order. Economic policies should be

    attuned to the limited capacity of Earths

    biosphere to provide for humans and

    other life and to assimilate their waste.

    Photosynthesis and sunlight are as

    essential to the framework for economicbudgets and expenditures as the laws of

    supply and demand.

    5. Acknowledge That We Need New

    Institutions

    An economic renewal tailored to the 21st

    century would establish institutions

    committed to fitting the human economy

    to Earths limited life-support capacity.

    We need something like the central

    reserve banks which will look after sharesof the Earths ecological capacity, not just

    interest rates and the money supply.

    Money should be recognised as a social

    licence for using part of Earths life-

    support capacity. Some functions of

    governance will have to operate at a

    global level through a federation modelled

    perhaps on the European Union, with

    enforceable laws designed to assure that

    individual nations dont overrun Earths

    limits. The rules for the developed

    countries that are responsible for the

    current ecological crisis should bedifferent from those of developing ones.

    6. Fairness Matters

    A right human-Earth relationship

    would recognise humans as part of an

    interdependent web of life on a finite

    planet. The economy must recognise the

    rights of the human poor and of millions

    of other species to their place in the sun.

    In a world awash in money, addressing

    poverty only with growth reflects a tragic

    lack of moral imagination. Indeed, in

    pushing for more free trade as it is

    currently understood, we would entrench

    an ongoing addiction to consumption,

    pursued in a manner that often ravages

    the bio-productivity of developing

    countries.

    7. Expand the Discussion

    The new knowledge that will forever

    mark this period in human history is the

    overwhelming scientific evidence that

    we are over-consuming the planet and

    accelerating toward ecological

    catastrophe. The short-term approaches

    of most ministers of finance and

    professional economists dont account

    for how the planet works, or even thatthe economy exists on a finite planet.

    Scientists morally committed to

    protecting the global commons and

    researching ecological limits to the

    global economy need more funding and

    influence in policy-making.

    8. Look beyond Neoliberal Education and

    Short-Term Fixes

    We must begin a serious debate on the

    role of education and what education is

    all about. We must greatly increaseinvestment in educational and civic

    institutions that teach that we are not

    consumers, but citizens of the Earth

    and guardians of lifes prospects on a

    small, beautiful and finite planet. In

    todays largely decadent, money-driven

    world, the teaching of virtue and building

    of character is no longer part of the

    curriculum at many of our universities

    around the world. The pursuit of virtue

    has been replaced by moral neutrality -

    the idea that anything goes. For centuries

    it had been considered that universities

    were responsible for the moral and social

    development of students and for bringing

    together diverse groups for the common

    good.

    Given the above, it is clear that we need anew economic model, enabling us to deal

    with new challenges, rather that rescuing

    and bailing out a discredited and

    bankrupt model, philosophy and theory.

    The long-term solution to the financial

    crisis is therefore to move beyond the

    growth at all costs economic model to

    a model that recognises the real costs and

    benefits of growth. We can break our

    addiction to fossil fuels, over-

    consumption, and the current economicmodel and create a more sustainable and

    desirable future that focuses on quality

    of life rather than merely quantity of

    consumption.

    It will not be easy; it will require a new

    vision, new measures, and new

    institutions. It will require a redesign of

    our entire society. But it is not a sacrifice

    of quality of life to break this addiction.

    Quite the contrary, it is a sacrifice not to.

    15 March 2010

    This article is an abridged version of a

    presentation delivered at the Biltmore Hotel,

    Santa Clara/Silicon Valley, California, on 1st

    December 2009.

    Kamran Mofid is the Founder of the

    Globalisation for the Common Good Initiative(Oxford, 2002), Co- founder/Editor of Journal

    of Globalisation for the Common Good and a

    member of the International Coordinating

    Committee of the World Public Forum,Dialogue of Civilisations

    Source: Share The Worlds Resources

    .

    continued next page

    The Rising South

    The second decade of the century will

    also witness the growing importance of

    the global South: the formerly-colonized,

    still-developing areas of Africa, Asia, and

    Latin America. Once playing a relatively

    marginal role in world affairs, they wereconsidered open territory, there to be

    invaded, plundered, and dominated by

    the major powers of Europe, North

    America, and (for a time) Japan. To some

    degree, the global South, a.k.a. the

    Third World, still plays a marginal role,

    but that is changing.

    Once a member in good standing of the

    global South, China is now an economic

    superpower and India is well on its wayto earning this status. Second-tier states

    of the South, including Brazil, Indonesia,

    South Africa, and Turkey, are on the rise

    economically, and even the smallest and

    least well-off nations of the South have

    begun to attract international attention

    as providers of crucial raw materials or as

    sites of intractable problems including

    endemic terrorism and crime syndicates.

    To some degree, this is a product ofnumbers growing populations and

    growing wealth. In 2000, the population

    of the global South stood at an estimated

    THE WORLDIN 2020

    Part 2

    By Michael T. Klare

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    A R T I C L E S

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    4.9 billion people; by 2020, that number

    is expected to hit 6.4 billion. Many of

    these new inhabitants of planet Earth will

    be poor and disenfranchised, but most

    will be workers (in either the formal or

    informal economy), many will participate

    in the political process in some way, andsome will be entrepreneurs, labor leaders,

    teachers, criminals, or militants.

    Whatever the case, they will make their

    presence felt.

    The nations of the South will also play a

    growing economic role as sources of raw

    materials in an era of increasing scarcity

    and founts of entrepreneurial vitality. By

    one estimate, the combined GDP of the

    global South (excluding China) will jump

    from $7.8 trillion in 2005 to $15.8 trillion in

    2020, an increase of more than 100%. In

    particular, many of the prime deposits of

    oil, natural gas, and the key minerals

    needed in the global North to keep the

    industrial system going are facing

    wholesale depletion after decades of

    hyper-intensive extraction, leaving only

    the deposits in the South to be exploited.

    Take oil: In 1990, 43% of world daily oil

    output was supplied by members of the

    Organization of Petroleum Exporting

    Countries (the major Persian Gulfproducers plus Algeria, Angola, Ecuador,

    Libya, Nigeria, and Venezuela), other

    African and Latin American producers,

    and the Caspian Sea countries; by 2020,

    their share will rise to 58%. A similar shift

    in the center of gravity of world mineral

    production will take place, with

    unexpected countries like Afghanistan,

    Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Niger (a major

    uranium supplier), and the Democratic

    Republic of Congo taking on potentially

    crucial roles.

    Inevitably, the global South will also play

    a conspicuous role in a series of

    potentially devastating developments.

    Combine persistent deep poverty,

    economic desperation, population

    growth, and intensifying climate

    degradation and you have a recipe for

    political unrest, insurgency, religious

    extremism, increased criminality, mass

    migrations, and the spread of disease.

    The global North will seek to immunize

    itself from these disorders by buildingfences of every sort, but through sheer

    numbers alone, the inhabitants of the

    South will make their presence felt, one

    way or another.

    The Planet Strikes Back

    All of this might represent nothing more

    than the normal changing of the imperial

    guard on planet Earth, if that planet itself

    werent undergoing far more profound

    changes than any individual power or set

    of powers, no matter how strong. The

    ever more intrusive realities of global

    warming, resource scarcity, and food

    insufficiency will, by the end of this

    centurys second decade, be undeniable

    and, if not by 2020, then in the decades

    to come, have the capacity to put normal

    military and economic power, no matter

    how impressive, in the shade.

    There is little doubt about the main

    trends, Professor Ole Danbolt Mjs,

    Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel

    Committee, said in awarding the PeacePrize to the Intergovernmental Panel on

    Climate Change (IPCC) and Al Gore in

    December 2007: More and more

    scientists have reached ever closer

    agreement concerning the increasingly

    dramatic consequences that will follow

    from global warming. Likewise, a

    growing body of energy experts has

    concluded that the global production of

    conventional oil will soon reach a peak

    (if it hasnt already) and decline,

    producing a worldwide energy shortage.Meanwhile, fears of future food

    emergencies, prompted in part by global

    warming and high energy prices, are

    becoming more widespread.

    All of this was apparent when world

    leaders met in Copenhagen and failed to

    establish an effective international regime

    for reducing the emission of climate-

    altering greenhouse gases (GHGs). Even

    though they did agree to keep talking and

    comply with a non-binding, aspirational

    scheme to cut back on GHGs, observers

    believe that such efforts are unlikely to

    lead to meaningful progress in controlling

    global warming in the near future. What

    few doubt is that the pace of climate

    change will accelerate destructively in

    the second decade of this century, that

    conventional (liquid) petroleum and other

    key resources will become scarcer and

    more difficult to extract, and that food

    supplies will diminish in many poor,

    environmentally vulnerable areas.

    Scientists do not agree on the precise

    nature, timing, and geographical impact

    of climate-change effects, but they do

    generally agree that, as we move deeper

    into the century, we will be seeing an

    exponential increase in the density of the

    heat-trapping greenhouse-gas layer in

    the atmosphere as the consumption of

    fossil fuels grows and past smokestack

    emissions migrate to the outer

    atmosphere. DoE data indicates, for

    example, that between 1990 and 2005,

    world carbon dioxide emissions grew by

    32%, from 21.5 to 31.0 billion metric tons.

    It can take as much as 50 years for GHGs

    to reach the greenhouse layer, which

    means that their effect will increase even

    if as appears unlikely the nations

    of the world soon begin to reduce their

    future emissions.

    In other words, the early manifestations

    of global warming in the first decade of

    this century intensifying hurricanes

    and typhoons, torrential rains followedby severe flooding in some areas and

    prolonged, even record-breaking

    droughts in others, melting ice-caps and

    glaciers, and rising sea levels will all

    become more pronounced in the second.

    As suggested by the IPCC in its 2007

    report, uninhabitable dust bowls are likely

    to emerge in large areas of Central and

    Northeast Asia, Mexico and the American

    Southwest, and the Mediterranean basin.

    Significant parts of Africa are likely to be

    devastated by rising temperatures anddiminished rainfall. More cities are likely

    to undergo the sort of flooding and

    destruction experienced by New Orleans

    after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And

    blistering summers, as well as infrequent

    or negligible rainfall, will limit crop

    production in key food-producing

    regions.

    Progress will be evident in the

    development of renewable energy

    systems, such as wind, solar, and

    biofuels. Despite the vast sums now

    being devoted to their development,

    however, they will still provide only a

    relatively small share of world energy in

    continued from page 7

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    A R T I C L E S

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    continued from page 8

    2020. According to DoE projections,

    renewables will take care of only 10.5%

    of world energy needs in 2020, while oil

    and other petroleum liquids will still make

    up 32.6% of global supplies; coal, 27.1%;

    and natural gas, 23.8%. In other words,

    greenhouse gas production will rage on and, ironically, should it not, thanks

    to expected shortfalls in the supply of

    oil, that in itself will likely prove another

    kind of disaster, pushing up the prices of

    all energy sources and endangering

    economic stability. Most industry experts,

    including those at the International

    Energy Agency (IEA) in Paris, believe

    that it will be nearly impossible to

    continue increasing the output of

    conventional and unconventional

    petroleum (including tough to harvest

    Arctic oil, Canadian tar sands, and shale

    oil) without increasingly implausible

    fresh investments of trillions of dollars,

    much of which would have to go into

    war-torn, unstable areas like Iraq or

    corrupt, unreliable states like Russia.

    In the latest hit movie Avatar, the lush,

    mineral-rich moon Pandora is underassault by human intruders seeking to

    extract a fabulously valuable mineral

    called unobtainium. Opposing them

    are not only a humanoid race called the

    Navi, loosely modeled on Native

    Americans and Amazonian jungle

    dwellers, but also the semi-sentient flora

    and fauna of Pandora itself. While our

    own planet may not possess such

    extraordinary capabilities, it is clear that

    the environmental damage caused by

    humans since the onset of the Industrial

    Revolution is producing a natural

    blowback effect which will become

    increasingly visible in the coming decade.

    These, then, are the four trends most likely

    to dominate the second decade of this

    century. Perhaps others will eventually

    prove more significant, or some set of

    catastrophic events will further alter theglobal landscape, but for now expect the

    dragon ascendant, the eagle descending,

    the South rising, and the planet possibly

    trumping all of these.

    6 Janauary 2010

    Michael T. Klareis a professor of peace and

    world security studies at Hampshire College

    A documentary film version of his book, Blood

    and Oil, is available from the Media Education

    Foundation at Bloodandoilmovie.com.

    Source: http://www.countercurrents.org/

    klare060110.htm

    Chandra Muzaffar is one of Malaysias

    best-known human rights activists and

    public intellectuals. While being critical

    of western global hegemony, he says

    Muslims have to fundamentally re-

    evaluate their understanding of Islam and

    its traditions.

    Author of numerous books, Muzaffar isa prolific writer, having published widely

    in Malaysia and abroad. One of his

    principal concerns, in his writings and

    activist involvement, is to promote an

    Islamic ethic of inter-religious dialogue.

    Such dialogue, he believes, is an Islamic

    imperative, besides being indispensable

    in todays multi-ethnic and multi-religious

    Malaysia.

    But it is also crucial at the global level, he

    stresses, particularly since manyconflicts across the globe, while rooted

    in economic and political factors, are

    sought to be projected and legitimised

    as religious conflicts between Islam and

    other faiths and ideologies.

    Muslim, Dialogue and Terror is

    Muzaffars principal work on Islam and

    inter-faith dialogue, in which he seeks to

    articulate an inter-faith ethic rooted in an

    expansive understanding of Islam.

    Like many other contemporary socially-engaged Muslim scholars, Muzaffar

    seeks to directly approach the Koran in

    order to understand and interpret his

    faith, largely by-passing the corpus of

    traditional fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence),

    and making only passing reference to

    the corpus of Hadith. This is hardly

    surprising since the latter two sources

    contain numerous prescriptions that are

    plainly inimical, to put it mildly, to

    harmonious relations between Muslims

    and others.

    Stressing ethical values

    Muzaffar describes the Koran as in

    essence, a Book whose fundamental aim

    is to raise the spiritual and moral

    consciousness of the human being.

    This understanding of the Koran leads

    him to stress what he sees as the

    underlying spirit or ethical values of the

    text over its letter. Some of the

    fundamental values that he discerns inthe Koran are freedom, accountability,

    justice, kindness, mercy, love, equality,

    honesty, compassion, fairness, and

    devotion to the cause of the poor and

    the oppressed. These values he regards

    as universal, not limited in their

    applicability to fellow Muslims alone.

    In this way, Muzaffar is able to articulate

    an Islamic ethic of inter-faith dialogue

    that is Koranic, that prioritizes the spirit

    over the letter of the text, that is based

    on what he regards as the fundamentaland universal values of the text, and one

    that is also contextually-relevant.

    Muzaffar describes this way of relating

    to the Koran as a values-based

    approach. He contrasts this with the

    traditional fiqh-based approach, which

    prioritises the letter of the Koran over its

    spirit, draws heavily on the cumulative fiqh

    tradition, and stresses, to the point of

    obsession, forms, externalities, symbols,

    rituals, laws, regulations and narrowly-construed understandings of Muslim

    identity.

    The former is universal, flexible, open, and

    inclusive, while the latter is particularistic,

    rigid, closed and exclusive. The former

    stresses justice, freedom, love,

    compassion and equality, the latter

    authoritarianism, control, harshness and

    hierarchy. The former is open to non-

    Muslims, actively embraces them as fellow

    human beings and appreciates thecommon values that their religions share

    with Islam. The latter is stridently hostile

    to people of other faiths, or only

    grudgingly tolerates them at best.

    Historical necessity

    Appealing for this fundamental

    transformation in Islamic thought based

    on the values-based approach to the

    Koran, Muzaffar argues:

    It is only too apparent that a non-dogmatic approach to Islam, which

    recognises the primacy of eternal,

    THE BASIC MORAL VALUESOFTHE KORANBy Yoginder Sikand

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    continued from page 9

    universal spiritual and moral values while

    acknowledging the importance of rituals,

    symbols and practices, is the most sane

    and sensible way of living the religion in

    todays world. The values approach to

    Islam the antithesis of the rituals and

    symbols approach is not only legitimatefrom the perspective of the religion but

    also necessary at this juncture in history.

    Making a broad survey of relations

    between Muslims and others in various

    countries, and at the global level as a

    whole, Muzaffar argues that a host of

    factors have contributed to increased

    polarization between them in recent years,

    particular after 9/11. Much of the

    responsibility for this rests on the

    Muslims themselves, he says, but he alsoregards what he calls the politics of

    global hegemony emanating from

    Washingtons imperial ambitions as a

    major factor.

    This latter point leads him to argue, as he

    does in many of his other books, that inter-

    religious and inter-communal solidarity

    for peace and justice must necessarily

    also require a forceful challenging of the

    structures of power at the global level,

    most importantly Western, and, in

    particular, American, political, economic

    and cultural hegemony, because this is

    one of the major causes for conflict

    between Muslims and others.

    Human beings as brothers and sisters

    This task, Muzaffar insists, must go hand-

    in-hand with a willingness on the part of

    Muslims themselves to introspect, and

    to cease blaming others for all their ills.

    In turn, this requires a fundamental re-

    evaluation of the way Muslims

    understand their religion, identity and

    tradition. In particular, it requires,Muzaffar says, breaking through the

    hardened crust of exclusive, dogmatic

    thinking, and embracing an inclusive,

    universal approach.

    Seeking to pre-empt critics who would

    regard this as compromising on Islamic

    teachings, he insists that it is perfectly in

    consonance with Islam, which regards

    all human beings as brothers and sisters,

    imperilled by the same human condition.

    The pathetic state of most contemporary

    Muslim societies and states, including

    the increasingly strained relations

    between Muslims and others, have much

    to do, he says, with a dogmatic

    understanding of Islam that negates the

    fundamental Koranic values that he

    distils from the text.

    The basis of shared beliefs and values

    For this new approach to Islam and

    Islamic morality to emerge as a dominant

    paradigm would require Muslims to re-

    orientate their thinking on Islam,

    focusing particularly on what Muzaffar

    regards as the basic moral values of the

    Koran. From this would emerge

    understandings of Islamic theology and

    jurisprudence that are rooted in these

    values values that are universal, not

    limited just to Islam alone.

    Aware of the growing influence of

    conservative as well as radical groups

    that are vehemently opposed to inter-faithdialogue and interpret Islam accordingly

    in a narrow, exclusivist fashion, Muzaffar

    insists that Islam calls upon Muslims to

    dialogue with others. He points out, for

    instance, that the Koran exhorts Muslims,

    Jews and Christians to come together on

    the basis of certain shared beliefs and

    values.

    He also regards the Pact of Medina,

    between the Muslims, led by the Prophet,

    and the Jews and pagans of the town,and the Pact of Najran between the

    Prophet and Christians, as the Prophets

    practical expression of the Koranic call

    for inter-faith dialogue and solidarity and

    the imperative of coming to terms with

    the other.

    10 December 2009

    Yoginder Sikand is a writer-academic and

    the author of several books on Islam-

    related issues in India. He is the editor

    and primary writer of Qalandar, a monthly

    electronic publication covering relations

    between Muslims and followers of other

    religions.

    Source: http://www.qantara.de/webcom/

    show_article.php/_c-478/_nr-978/i.html

    TREASURER,

    Mr K Haridas

    PRESIDENT, VICE PRESIDENT,

    Dr Chandra Muzaffar Dr Abdullah Al-Ahsan

    SECRETARY-GENERAL, ASSISTANTSECRETARY-GENERAL,

    Mr Anas Zubedy Tengku Ahmad Hazri

    At the International Movement for a Just World Triennial General Meeting held on

    20 March 2010, the following were elected to the Executive Committee:-

    EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBERSOFTHE INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENTFORA JUSTWORLD 2010-2013

    1. Dr Arujunan Narayanan

    2. Dr Asma Abdullah

    3. Dr Chin Yoong Kheong

    4. Mr Gan Teik Chee

    5. Mr Jahaberdeen Mohamed Yunoos

    6. Ms Evelyn Khoo Lyn Yin

    7. Tengku Iskandar

    COMMITTEEMEMBERS

    8. Dr Michael Allan

    9. Dr Muddathir Abdel-Rahim

    10. Dr Nooraini Mohd Ismail

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    ODT's version of the "State of the Village Report" has been updated and revised to 2005 statistics and is the most current versionavailable. Research for the first twenty facts for the updated version was done by Donella H. Meadows' think tank: the SustainabilityInstitute. The rest came from a variety of sources including David Smith's children's book: If the World Were a Village. The author ofsome things "to ponder..." is unknown. This conclusion to the piece was also adapted and revised by ODT, with support from Bette

    Abrams-Esche. ODT distributes their updated version with every copy of their Population Map. In the same spirit of Donella Meadows'initial work, ODT has made the material available copyright-free, as long as the source is acknowledged in any reproductions. More info

    at www.odt.org/pop.htm. It can be viewed as a Flash film at luccaco.com/miniatureearth. Donella Meadows' original "State of theVillage Report" may be found at: vn338villageed

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    INTERNATIONALMOVEMENTFORAJUSTWORLD(JUST)P.OBOX288JalanSultan46730PetalingJaya SelangorDarulEhsan

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    The International Movement for a Just World isa nonprofit international citizens organisationwhich seeks to create public awareness aboutinjustices within the existing global system.It also attempts to develop a deeper

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