Like father like son? Is Hilary Benn the exception to the rule?

Last night, MP’s in the British House of Commons, held a marathon debate on whether Britain’s Royal Air Force should join a bombing campaign against Daesh in Syria and Iraq.

The Rt. Hon. Jeremy Corbyn MP, leader of HM opposition made his feeling clear that he did not support the proposals and is vehemently opposed to war.  Corbyn however, did not use the whip, but instead allowed a free vote.  I suspect that this was certainly to avoid a very public and humiliating revolt by members of his shadow cabinet and backbenchers.

The free vote did not save Corbyn from humiliation however, when 66 of his MP’s, including 11 members of his shadow cabinet voted in favour of war.  This is Corbyn’s first loss since his election to the role of party leader suggesting that there is disgruntlement within the parliamentary party’s more centrist and Blairite MP’s. No shock there.

The greatest betrayal came from within his shadow cabinet, from the son of Britain’s most prolific and respected left wing politicians, Shadow Foreign Secretary Hilary Benn.  Last night Mr Benn gave a speech that received rapturous applause from both sides of the house.

Interestingly it would seem that Hilary’s point of view is diametrically different from that of his late father Tony Benn, who was up until his death vehemently opposed to the evils of war.

In a very powerful oration Hilary Benn certainly stirred the consciences of those who were undecided or uncertain.

Hilary Benn speech to the Commons on joining the fight against IS

“… I hope the House will bear with me if I direct my closing remarks to my Labour friends and colleagues on this side of the House. As a party, we have always been defined by our internationalism. We believe we have a responsibility one to another. We never have and we never should walk by on the other side of the road.

And we are here faced by fascists. Not just their calculated brutality, but their belief that they are superior to every single one of us here tonight, and all of the people that we represent. They hold us in contempt. They hold our values in contempt. They hold our belief in tolerance and decency in contempt. They hold our democracy, the means by which we will make our decision tonight, in contempt. And what we know about fascists is that they need to be defeated.

And it is why, as we have heard tonight, socialists and trade unionists and others joined the International Brigade in the 1930s to fight against Franco. It’s why this entire House stood up against Hitler and Mussolini. It is why our party has always stood up against the denial of human rights and for justice. And my view, Mr Speaker, is that we must now confront this evil. It is now time for us to do our bit in Syria. And that is why I ask my colleagues to vote for this motion tonight.”

In stark contrast, his father Tony Benn delivered a speech to the Commons on the debate of whether or not to participate in the 1992 Gulf War.

Tony Benn in the House of Commons – Iraq Bombing speech

“War is an easy thing to talk about. There are not many people of the generation that remember it here… I was in London in the Blitz in 1940.

Every morning, the Docklands on fire, 500 people killed in Westminster by a landmine one night, it was terrifying. Aren’t Arabs terrified? Aren’t Iraqis terrified? Aren’t Israelis terrified? Don’t Arab and Israeli women weep when their children die? Doesn’t bombing strengthen their determination?

What fools we are, to live in a generation, for which war is a computer game for our children, and just an interesting little Channel 4 News item.

Every member of parliament tonight that votes for the government motion will be consciously and deliberately accepting your responsibility for the deaths of innocent people, if the war begins as I fear it will.

The words of [the founding UN charter] are etched into my mind and move me even as I think of them. ‘We the people of the United Nations determine to save future generations, succeeding generations, from the scourge of war which twice in our lifetimes has caused untold suffering to mankind.

That was the pledge of that generation, to this generation, and it will be the greatest betrayal of all if we vote to abandon the charter and take unilateral action and pretend we are doing it in the name of the international community”.

While Corbyn may be damaged by the betrayal, his principles, policies and ethics remain resolute.  Corbyn is from a different Labour Party, the Labour Party of Tony Benn and Clement Attlee.

Hilary Benn, educated, articulate and intelligent, pinned his flag to the mast with his speech, a speech that would have made Tony Blair proud.  The speech is the very embodiment of Blairite politics.

In a very public disapproval, shadow chancellor John McDonnell, speaking to BBC Radio 4 said “It reminded me of Tony Blair’s speech, taking us into the Iraq war.  I’m always anxious that the greatest oratory is going to lead us to the greatest mistakes”.

His words come as RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus launch a bombing campaign in Syria.  A bombing campaign that will ultimately involved the deaths of civilians, a hatred of the west and an increased move and support towards Daesh.

Looking back on the past 14 years of ‘War on Terror’ it is near impossible to see how this new ‘War on Terror’ will actually make a positive difference.

Daesh cannot be beaten without winning the hearts and minds of those who support, embrace and fear them.

quote-peace-does-not-rest-in-charters-and-covenants-alone-it-lies-in-the-hearts-and-minds-of-the-people-john-f-kennedy-321848

 

Educated and multilingual Syrian refugees will mean a better Ireland

Irish Examiner

Wednesday, September 09, 2015

Today the omnipotent prevalence of social media means we can see the tragedy as it happens on our smart phones, computers and TV’s in an explosion of images, videos and soundbites. It is impossible not to feel emotional when presented with these images of despair and destitution. Half sunken boats with terrified people clinging to anything that floats to stay alive. Horrifically, this image is often surpassed by the tragic scenes of dead children washed up on the beaches of southern European holiday resorts.

European leaders are still struggling to decide how to deal with the refugees much to the consternation of Germany which has pledged to take in an admirable 800,000 people. That is 1% of its entire population. In spite of this offer the Hungarian authorities have sought to prevent those people leaving for Germany, even tricking them into a train journey to Germany that was actually heading to a camp! How did they even think that this was the correct thing to do? As a result, tens of thousands of refugees are walking to the Austrian frontier where they are being welcomed by cheering Austrians ready to offer food and comfort.

The actions of the Hungarian government to protect the Schengen borders are incongruous to the general will of the Hungarian people who are outraged and their government’s response to the crisis. The refugees do not even want to stay in Hungary; they want to go to Germany and beyond. Those outraged Hungarians are doing what they can to help the refugees on there long journey to Germany.

Yesterday Tánaiste Joan Burton has said that there would be no upper limit on the amount of refugees Ireland takes after we reach the 5000 mark that is ‘now in the mix’. Nor will these people be placed in direct provision like many economic migrants have been. As highly educated, middle class, mostly polyglot people, the Syrians will want to work and make a contribution to Irish society. As head of Goal and former Minister Barry Andrews already pointed out, these people will be net contributors to the Irish economy within 12 months. Such an influx of people is bound to generate income for the exchequer, deepen our gene pool and greatly add to our society.

Sadly not all people view this as pragmatically as I do of course and it is nothing short ignorance followed by fear followed by hatred and then racism. Though I should never give them any attention to this type of commentary it is difficult not to succumb to the temptation to challenge such bigotry in the public sphere and point out exactly why they are wrong. The majority of Irish people will welcome these people to Ireland with warm embrace. For those who don’t I challenge them to publicly give one valid reason why these people do not deserve sanctuary and help.

On a trip to Lebanon in 2012 I had the pleasure of meeting some Syrian people. In my experience they are incredibly friendly, warm and educated. They vary in religion from Sunni, Shia, Druze and a host of Christian sects such as Maronite, Eastern Catholic, Assyrian, Chaldean, Greek Orthodox, Armenian, Syrian Protestant et al. That aside they are honourable people with a deep sense of humility and a work ethic that would shame many Irish people.

These people are not migrants as the news continues to call them, they are refugees. They are not fleeing Syria to make money, or to scrounge of our welfare system, they are fleeing for their lives, from ISIS, Jabat al-Nusra, the Free Syrian Army and the forces of Bashar al Assad. They are fleeing war. This war has raged for four years and has caused the displacement of more than 5 million people. Many of whom have been welcomed in Lebanon and Jordan, whose populations are already swelled with Palestinian refugees who have been arriving since the Nakba of 1948. Many others have died on the perilous journey to Europe attempting to cross the Mediterranean in flimsy boats and rafts.

We have a moral obligation as fellow human beings to welcome these refugees to Ireland, to open our hearts and open our homes, to dig deep and to give these people a peaceful home for the first time in four years. We need to give them something we aat times take for granted, to be able to sleep at night in comfort, not in fear, to wake in the morning and bring our children to school; to work and to live a peaceful, happy life. This is all they are looking for, nothing more and nothing less.

To all those who oppose any refugees coming to Ireland or Europe let me say this to you, during the Irish Great Famine more than 4 million Irish people left Ireland not as emigrants but as refugees. They left our shores in coffin ships, many dying on the way to the USA, UK and beyond. They didn’t leave because of economic reasons; they left because staying in Ireland meant certain death, 2 million deaths are testament to that.

I see on social media xenophobes spreading misinformation, generating hysteria and in general visceral hate filled comments about Syrian refugees. To those of you who believe these people are economic migrants, let me tell you that Irish people leave our shores daily as economic migrants to build the economies of the world’s most powerful nations. We may be welcomed now, but let us not forget those many signs that read – No Blacks, No Irish, No Dogs, in the windows of boarding houses in the UK and beyond. Are we to become the type of people who raise those signs? I think not!

As an Irish person I pledge to do whatever I can to help these people when they do arrive in Ireland, not because it is now suddenly fashionable but because it is the right thing to do. I am urging all Irish people and residents of this country to do the same. Ireland is known as the ‘Nation of 100,000 Welcomes’ the people we are going to host will be those with ‘100,000 Sorrows’. We are a generous nation with a large heart and a reputation for our contributions to humanity, let us not be found wanting now.

Philip Jones

Radicalisation

It is always saddening to read about the death of a young person, a teenager, a child. No matter what the circumstances in which they died were, the fact that a life was extinguished before it even began is heart wrenching.

When I read in the papers this morning that Samara Kesinovic had been beaten to death trying to flee IS, I immediately asked the question, “why on earth would anyone want to go to Syria?”

Samara Kesinovic 17, and her friend Sabina Selimovic 15, traveled to Syria in 2014 to become IS fighters. The girls left the safety of their own homes in Vienna and traveled via Turkey to Syria and ISIS controlled Raqqa.

It is unclear what their exact roles were but there has been reported that they were married off to ISIS combatants and spirited away to locations in their territory.

The two became a ‘poster girl’ for Isis, also known as Islamic State, appearing on social media websites in images showing them carrying Kalashnikovs and surrounded by armed men (Independent 25/11/2015)

David Scharia, a top level UN counter-terrorism expert, wrote in a report last year that a 15-year-old girl of Bosnian origin from Austria had joined Isis had “disappeared”. It is believed that the girl referred to was Ms Kesinovic.

Mr Scharia said: “We received information just recently about two 15-year-old girls, of Bosnian origin, who left Austria, where they had been living in recent years …one was killed in the fighting in Syria, the other has disappeared”.

The teenagers who lived in Austria were children of Bosnian refugees who had fled their country during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s. It is alleged that the girls had become radicalised by an Islamic preacher at a Vienna mosque.

The Austrian authorities have accused a Vienna-based Bosnian Islamic preacher known as Abu Tejda – named as Mirsad O under Austrian privacy laws – of recruiting the woman (Telegraph 25/11/2015).

Understanding the girls motives in defecting to IS is something that we in the West have been questioning Ad nauseam. This incident is not unique and its prevalence is being seen more and more in Western society.

Both girls were Bosnian Muslims, with all the trappings of everyday teenage life. They took selfies, wore make-up, fashionable clothing and lived the lives of ordinary Austrian teenagers.

What exactly turned them away from safety of Austria and their own homes, into the arms of the worlds most barbaric and murderous organisation?

Looking at Europe’s history of war and sectarian conflict, there are many incidents of similar activity. Take for example the protracted armed conflict in Northern Ireland.

Many young men and women joined the ranks of armed paramilitaries (republican and loyalist) and carried out attacks on what they deemed legitimate targets.

Similarly ETA, Conspiracy of Fire Nuclei and the Baader-Meinhof groups have all recruited young people into their ranks with idealistic and vitriolic propaganda.

Propaganda plays an intrinsically important role in the inculcation of young people. Take for example the murals and graffiti that adorns gable ends in Belfast or along the separation walls in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The subject and content of the murals and graffiti is almost always emotive, provocative and full of sadness and anger.

From Belfast to Jerusalem and Hitlers Germany, propaganda has been used by one group or another to instill xenophobia, ethnic tension and to encourage inter communal violence.

It is strange to think that religions and devotees to God could inflict so much pain and hatred to another ethno-religious group. But when we consider the origins of propaganda it becomes evident that both it and religion are almost inseparable.

The origins of propaganda do not lie within state institutions, armies, political parties or business interests. Propaganda in fact was the brainchild of the Roman Catholic Church and was instituted under the auspices of Pope Gregory XIII. The Congregatio di Propaganda Fide,
was ―charged with spreading Catholicism and regulating ecclesiastical affairs in heretic, schismatic or heathen lands‖ (Lambert,
1938:07).

Yesterday I was horrified to read in an article by Cormac O’Keeffe in the Irish Examiner which said that up to 40 Irish teenagers and adults had left Ireland to fight in Syria and Iraq.

Dr Maura Conway, lecturer in International Security in DCU said in an interview with Cormac O’Keeffe:

[ ]…….the online strategy of IS has recently shifted into another gear.

“They have begun to reach out directly to internet users who express sympathy with their position.”

She said this was “likely to be quite effective”, for a number of reasons:

It’s more targeted as the individuals have already expressed sympathy with IS;
Those targeted are “oftentimes young and searching for an identity and meaning in their lives”;
IS will often “love bomb” such people, by having online supporters flock around the individual and “bombard” them with messages.

Many if not all of those who left were not radicalised in their local mosque. No, it is too easy to label all Imams with the “radical preacher” moniker. They were radicalised on-line, on social media and on every well known communication and messaging service.

Young people are targeted, groomed and love bombed by an organised network of propagandists. When the young person eventually ends up in the hands of IS at home or in Syria, he very quickly realises that life under IS looks nothing like it did in the brochure.

Many, sadly find their only way out through martyrdom on suicide missions or are killed trying to escape. Others revel in the barbarism that allows them to murder, pillage, rape and raze to the ground an entire civilisation.

How do we tackle on-line radicalisation? There are many schools of thought on this issue with the UK government proposing a ‘Snoopers Charter’. This charter would allow for the monitoring of social media activity, search history and all forms of online activity by suspected terrorists or potential victims.

While this system may be effective, it also poses a greater risk to society at large. Allowing government agents to carry out surveillance of suspected individuals is open to abuse and ‘function creep’ . Is it possible that governments could use their new powers to spy on ordinary citizens?

I am reminded of the British Prevention of Terrorism Act 1974 which gave sweeping powers to the security services. The act was used in the wrongful conviction of the Guildford Four and the Birmingham Six. I am not suggesting that this is what the Snoopers Charter will be used for, but it is fair to say that it is open to abuse.

There is no doubt that governments need to prevent terrorism and radicalisation of younger people, but how can this be done without effecting, the civil liberties and right to privacy of the entire population?

Are we as European citizens open to the idea of a Stasi organisation that would monitor all our electronic activity. Is there not a danger that we are sleep walking into a world like that in the Orwellian novel 1984? Or is this now the price we must pay for our freedom and safety?

 

“Crimestop means the faculty of stopping short, as though by instinct, at the threshold of any dangerous thought. It includes the power of not grasping analogies, of failing to perceive logical errors, of misunderstanding the simplest arguments if they are inimical to Ingsoc, and of being bored or repelled by any train of thought which is capable of leading in a heretical direction. Crimestop, in short, means protective stupidity.” George Orwell, 1984.

Philip Jones
Communications Consultant

Isil is an existential threat to the EU

Getty images

Getty images

In total, 129 people were murdered by jihadists on Friday, November 13, in Paris.

While France went into total lock- down, Europe at large searched for a reason why such a cowardly and barbaric attack took place in Paris, the cultural epicentre our union of like-minded, democracy-espousing people.

Doubtless, every right-wing politician, fascist and neo-Nazi stood up pointed at their TV screens and shouted “this is what we warned about, Isil has sent their warriors to destroy Europe”.
Their claims are probably gaining some traction, with a definite shift in opinion regarding the refugee crisis.

Among those of us who supported the arrival of Syrian refugees fleeing the horror of war there is silence. Silence because we do not know what to say because, perhaps, deep down inside we now know that one of the attackers, Ahmed Almuhamed, a Syrian passport holder, reportedly entered Europe through the Greek island of Lesbos and moved on to France.

Strangely, he travelled unhindered in Europe before arriving in his final destination, the Bataclan theatre in Paris, where he blew himself up.
France declared a state of emergency while President Francois Hollande declared the attacks as an ‘Act of War’. Every arm of the security apparatus was mobilised to catch the perpetrators and bring them to justice for an attack on the French Republic, the cradle of European freedom.

Belgian-born fugitive Salah Abdeslam is now being hunted after the attacks. He is said to have been born and lived in Belgium, although French police have described him as a French national.
It is up to Europe to decide what the next steps are in terms of protecting the union and its citizens from further attacks.
European nations, including France, have committed to fighting Isil and crushing them in Syria and Iraq. Why? Because Isil is an existential threat to the entire EU. Schengen is already under threat, with member states closing borders and now refusing to take refugees.

These actions and disagreements are not simply because of fears about lack of space in towns and cities or resources to support refugees. Nor is it only about xenophobia, which sadly exists in Europe. It is about a real and present risk of a terrorist attack, carried out by Isil jihadists hiding among genuine refugees.

Citizens in Europe now live in fear of further attacks. Is it safe to get onto a flight? Is it OK to go to Paris this weekend, or take the London Underground? Are cities like Dublin, Helsinki and Lisbon safe? Should we be worried about our neighbours’ religious or political beliefs? I have no doubt in my mind that people are asking these questions.

It is highly likely that we have not seen the end of these attacks, but as with all wars, life must go on, we must go to our jobs, take the bus or metro, send children to school and do what we have always done, that is to live.
To do anything less would be tantamount to letting the terrorists win, and we must never do this.

We must stand resolute as one indelible, united European citizenry with the future of our union and all it stands for at heart. We must not let this tragedy destroy what we have built or change how we treat other people, in particular those who are suffering.

If anything, the Paris attacks must strengthen our resolve as a people to move forward and protect the principles of “Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité”.
Martin Luther King Jr once said “the ultimate tragedy is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people but the silence over that by the good people”. Europe must not be silenced by the tyranny of evil and the actions of a few.

Philip Jones

Communications Consultant

We need to address radicalisation if we are to win the war on terrorism

The recent terrorist attacks on Paris must be seen as an attempt by the self-styled Islamic State to create a schism between western democratic culture and the Muslim communities that live within.

Seeking to blanket blame all subscribers to Islam for these attacks simply panders to the desires of IS to create such a schism. We cannot allow ourselves to become victims of psychological warfare.

While many people have called for immediate military action against IS in their self-declared caliphate, the reality is we already know how effective this will be.

For the past 14 years the West has been fighting a ‘Global War on Terror’.Can anybody say how successful it has actually been at eradicating terrorism globally?

The writer Samuel P. Huntington said “The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion […] but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact; non-Westerners never do.”

If we keep on repeating the same old mistakes are we not doomed to a continuous cycle of wanton destruction and violence?

Regardless of how we look at this problem we cannot escape the fact that a rational political solution needs to be sought even if it is part of an overall military campaign.

We also need to address why young people become radicalised if we are ever to prevent it from happening again.

IS and religious terrorism cannot be defeated by bullets and bombs alone we must fight the cause as well as the symptoms.

Philip Jones

Communications Consultant

image: CHRISTOPHE ENA/ASSOCIATED PRESS via mashable.com