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           |  | Justice by Reliance on Non-Violent Courage
 
 By Chris Doebbler
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 9, 2012   The past year has been as turbulent as it has been inspiring for human 
	rights defenders and social justice activists around the world.
 The 
	Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions renewed hope in the masses of peoples' 
	ability to reassert their right to participate in their governments. Brave 
	citizens stood up, non-violently to their governments' violence and whatever 
	the final outcome, made their voices and their concerns very much heard. But 
	while these 'uprisings'
 succeeded, others were high-jacked by foreign 
	interests or succumb to oppression.
 
 In Libya and Syria, what may 
	have once been legitimate efforts by the people of those countries to gain 
	greater participatory rights in their own governance, have turned into proxy 
	foreign interventions.
 The NATO-led rebels in Libya, already seen as 
	foreign puppets by many Libyans, have now declared war on the indigenous 
	people of Libya and their practices. In Syria, reports by the opposition 
	themselves show a significant contribution of foreign weapons and 
	encouragement to violence. Both of these 'uprisings' have been characterized 
	by recourse to violence and massive civilian causalities.
 
 In the US 
	and Europe, governments used more complex and covert ways to stifle their 
	citizens' efforts to gain a greater role in their own governance. 
	Governments such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland 
	have been caught red-handed interfering with the very right to freedom of 
	expression that they profess to protect. The Occupy Movement in the US, for 
	example, has been hacked and attacked by government institutions ranging 
	from local police to national security institutions. In the UK, the 
	government has been compliant with Swedish and US pressure to silence 
	Wikileaks, after these young independent media activists embarrassed the 
	cooperate media for its failure to report news honestly and with even a 
	minimal effort to obtain the truth.
 
 Perhaps most depressingly, as 
	the year ended, the rich Northern countries of the world, told the almost a 
	billion Africans on their own continent at the Durban Climate Talks that the 
	rich are too selfish to act to protect the 100 million Africans that are 
	projected to perish because of our collective failure on climate change.
 
 In such a variable world it is hard to find much certainty, even in the 
	year ahead. That's why this year I had only one New Year's resolution.
 
 It is that I will strive to distinguish justice by 
	reliance on non-violent courage rather recourse to violence, right 
	from wrong by depending on the consented and consensually agreed rules of 
	international law, and humanity from inhumanity by asking myself if there is 
	really love for their fellow human beings in the motives of international 
	actors.
 
 These are pretty basic questions, even if the answers might 
	be more complex, but in a time of turmoil and uncertainty, sometimes relying 
	on fundamentals is best.
 
 Regards,
 Curtis Doebbler
 Venice, 
	Italy
 
 
 
 
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