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No Emergency Summits for Arab Human Development
Crisis
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, November 14, 2009
When the first Arab Human Development Report (AHDR) was
published in 2002, a star glistened in a vast, gloomy sky. The fact that a
UN-sponsored report, authored by independent Arab scholars would receive so
much attention in Arab media, was in itself a promising start. The fact that
such terminology as human security, personal security, economic security,
etc – as highlighted in the report – would even compete with the largely
ceremonial news bulletins’ headlines in many Arab countries was in itself an
achievement. But then, the star quickly faded, the terms became clichés, and
the report, published seven times since then, became a haunting reminder of
how bad things really are in the Arab World. Those who wish to
discredit Arab countries, individually or as a collective, now find in these
reports plenty of reasons to fuel their constant diatribes; those who
genuinely care and wish for things to improve are either silent or muted.
The last report, sponsored, like the rest, by the United Nations
Development Program (UNDP) was published in July 2009. It was the grimmest.
Its statistics are intriguing, although depressing. 2.9 million square
kilometers of land in the Arab World are threatened by desertification.
Natural resources are depleting at an alarming level. Birth rates are the
highest in the world. Unemployment is skyrocketing. 50 million new jobs must
be created by 2020. Arab oil-based economies leave some Arab countries
entirely vulnerable to market price fluctuations or the depletion of oil
altogether. While many economies, especially in Asia are shifting or have
already achieved great strides into becoming knowledge-based economies, Arab
economies are still hostage to the same cycle of oil and cheap labor. In
fact, 70 percent of the Arab region’s total exports, according to the
report, is oil. The problem is not just economic, or environmental,
it’s societal as well. Inequality is entrenched in many Arab societies.
Women’s rights are not the only individual rights violated. Men’s right are
violated too, that is if they are not members of the dominant group, which
are either divided by blind political allegiance, tribal or sectarian
membership, or economic leverage. Admittedly, Arab
societies are, of course, not the only societies that suffer from these
ills, but sadly, the problems of Arab countries are most convoluted,
accentuated by the fact that there is little action to rectify the problem,
neither at individual country’s level or using joint platforms, for
instance, the Arab League. Why didn’t the Arab League hold an emergency
summit following the release of the first or even the last AHDR report? One
would think that problems of such magnitude, ones that affect the lives of
330 million people, are pressing enough for such gatherings. Arab
media has been highlighting the issue and the shortcomings, some media
outlets more than others. But the discussion is largely political, at times
a mere attempt at discrediting this government or that leader, and are still
conducted in general terms. The latest report for example was supplemented
by opinion polls conducted in four Arab countries - Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco
and occupied Palestine. One need not emphasize the different human
development challenges in these countries, situated in diverse geopolitical
settings. One cannot possibly devise the same solution to a country occupied
by a foreign army, to an independent country with untold oil wealth, to a
third with immense human potential but dire poverty.
Generalized problems can only obtain generalized, thus superficial
solutions. Therefore, it has been summarily decided that the problem lies in
lack of education, not the inequitable and unrepresentative political
systems. Education became the buzz word, as if education is a detached
value; therefore, education cities are erected in Arab countries that can
easily afford importing the best teachers and curricula money can buy. More,
research institutions are also making appearances in various Arab capitals.
Those existing in rich Arab countries are operated largely by foreigners,
whose sense of priority lies, naturally, elsewhere. One fails to grasp the
wisdom. But of course, education is a mindset, a culture even. What
is the point of pursuing a PhD in a society where nepotism determines who
does what? It’s most rational, from a self-seeker’s point of view, to spend
time knowing and passing one’s business cards to the ‘right people’ than
spending years of one’s life pursuing a university degree. UNDP had
recently launched “The Arab Knowledge Report 2009”, jointly with the United
Arab Emirates-based Mohammad bin Rashid al-Maktoum Foundation. Another
depressing read, nonetheless. Governments were criticized for paying lip
service to ‘reform’, yet “widening the gap between word and deed.” It
concluded that Arab countries are far from being knowledge based societies.
Numbers and more numbers told the story: Finland spends $1000 per person on
scientific research, while less than $10 are spent annually in the Arab
world. More, the number of published books averages one for every 491
British citizens, while in the Arab world it’s one for every 19,150. But
that should not be much of a surprise considering that one-third of older
Arab citizens are illiterate, two-thirds of whom are women. Meanwhile, more
than seven million children, who should be in school, are not. Illiteracy
stands at 30 percent in the Arab world. Dr. Ghassan Khateeb, of
Birzeit University in the occupied West Bank believes that there “is a
direct relation between the lack of investment and the problematic situation
we find ourselves in relation to knowledge.” “This is all related to
politics; the lack of democracy and the lack of knowledge enforce each
other,” he was quoted as saying. Paul Salem, writing in the British
Guardian, while recognizing the failure of Arab governments, found that
others are also, if not equally, responsible. “The cost of a single month of
Western military spending in Iraq or Afghanistan would be enough to triple
total aid for education in the Middle East. The cost of two cruise missiles
would build a school, the cost of a Eurofighter a small university.”
Alas, some Arab governments, spend twice, if not three times more on their
military budget than invest in education. And keeping in mind that nearly
one out of every five Arab citizens lives below the poverty threshold of
two-dollars a day, the tragedy is suddenly augmented. Arab
governments must rethink and reconsider their current priorities and course
of action. They must think and act individually, but collectively as well,
before the crisis turns into a catastrophe, as will surely be the case if
nothing is done. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world. His
latest book is, "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's
Struggle" (Pluto Press, London), and his forthcoming book is, “My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London), now available
for pre-orders on Amazon.com.
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