Peace. Dignity. Equality. Planet.
Victor Angelo
On
this Christmas Eve, it seems appropriate to recall the current motto of the
United Nations: "Peace, dignity and equality on a healthy planet". It
is a call for the implementation of policies that place people and nature at
the centre of public interventions. It expresses well the wishes that I would
like to leave here.
We
live in a complex reality, full of real concerns and dangers. The UN itself
appears to many to have been weakened and marginalized. In this context, it is
easy to lose hope, to confuse realism with pessimism, and to fall into an
attitude of every man for himself, each behind his own walls. There is also the
temptation to recover the growth that the pandemic caused to be lost with
economic programmes based on unsustainable recipes. In other words, without
considering the long-term consequences, the excessive debt that will burden
future generations, the environmental commitments, and the need to transform
the way we live and how we relate to other societies, especially the less developed
ones. Electoralism turns democracy into an exercise of political opportunism.
Russian
demands and military manoeuvres are the most immediate threat to peace. I wrote
about this last week. Since then, Putin's stated conditions - and the language
used - have become even more categorical and unacceptable. And military
preparations have intensified. We are two days away - 26 December - from the
thirtieth anniversary of the demise of the Soviet Union. A historic moment,
seen by Putin as the great tragedy of millenarian Russia.
What
are the reasons behind the present Russian escalation?
That
is the big question, far beyond the old tape of the narrative about NATO's
eastward expansion. The most plausible answer will be to ask heaven and earth,
to get a no, and thus create a pretext to annex part of Ukraine. And, at the
same time, reaffirm the determination and strength of the Kremlin.
But
what is Putin's strategic objective?
Strengthening
his control of domestic politics will not be a sufficient explanation, even if
we recognise that there is a marked erosion of his popularity. It has been
seen: last September's parliamentary elections were a massive exercise in
deceit and coercion to hide the extent of popular discontent.
It
could then be an attempt to paralyse NATO by dividing it, showing its
weaknesses. At the same time, it will send a signal to the Baltic countries.
And still, that one does not make policy in the immediate vicinity of Russia
without the green light from the Kremlin.
Whatever
the intention, we must insist on peaceful coexistence in Europe. On mutual
concessions. As indeed in other parts of the world. In Syria, at war for more
than ten years. In Palestine, in the Sahel, in Central Africa, in Ethiopia, in
Myanmar, in Yemen. Today is the day to mention again these and other places
that have been so afflicted.
Dignity
and equality mean respecting the basic rights of every person, as defined in
the 1949 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the additional conventions
and protocols. The proclamation that "all human beings are born free and
equal in dignity and rights" and have "the right to life, liberty and
security of person" applies to humanity, regardless of the specific
contexts of each nation.
I
recognize that the vision that inspired the Universal Declaration places the
individual at the centre of rights, while in certain cultures the well-being of
the community is presented as having primacy. In one case and in the other, it
is about people, the protection of their lives and their creativity. There are
no cultural differences there.
On
the planet, a little more than a month after the COP26, just a few words to
share a thought of solidarity with the thousands of victims of the recent
natural disasters. The floods in South Sudan, with entire regions submerged and
misery transformed into despair. The typhoons in the Philippines. The tornadoes
in the USA. Extreme climatic phenomena are becoming more and more overwhelming.
Let us remember, in relation to this great challenge and the others, that this
must be the time of rebirth.
(Automatic translation of the opinion piece I published in the Diário de
Notícias, the old and prestigious Lisbon newspaper. Edition dated 24 December
2021)