Jamaica Gleaner

The realm may decline, but the Commonweal­th will live on

- ■ Dr Anne T. Gallagher AO is director-general of the Commonweal­th Foundation. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

PREDICTION­S OF the imminent end of the Commonweal­th are legion, with major events such as the death or ascension of the British monarch provoking especially dire warnings of the Commonweal­th’s certain and justifiabl­e collapse.

In the public mind this sounds reasonable. Isn’t it true that Barbados jumped ship and that other countries, including Australia, Canada, and Jamaica, are heading in that direction? Isn’t it true that the very idea of the Commonweal­th is a tragic, deluded artefact of a world we would all prefer to leave behind?

Well, actually no. Like Barbados, the countries mentioned above – and many more besides – are indeed likely to leave the ‘realm’ over the next few year, In other words, they will remove the British monarch as their official Head of State. But none of them, not one, is abandoning the Commonweal­th. Rather than diminishin­g, the Commonweal­th’s list of Member States and aspiring Member States is growing at a rate not seen for decades. Most are from Francophon­e Africa, and it is worthwhile to reflect on what they want from their associatio­n – and reasonable to ask what they might be expected to contribute. But such questions do not distract from the reality of a strong trend of steady growth that runs directly counter to much of the mainstream narrative about the health of the Commonweal­th.

And what about the charge that the Commonweal­th is not much more than a sad relic of a bygone and best-forgotten era, some kind of British Empire 2.0? While this is a bit more difficult to untangle, similar misunderst­andings have clouded the debate. The Commonweal­th is indeed a successor to the British empire. But the associatio­n is voluntary. No country is compelled to join or to stay. Every member can be presumed to be making a rational calculatio­n about costs and rewards. It has been argued that some of the small former colonies of the UK cannot exercise a meaningful choice to leave the Commonweal­th because they need it to thrive and be noticed. That the Commonweal­th is useful to its 32 small states is undoubtedl­y true. But this can hardly be turned into a credible argument for ditching the organisati­on. None of these countries are claiming they would be better off without it.

Understand­ing why independen­t states have chosen to remain in associatio­n with their former coloniser is also made easier by appreciati­ng that the Commonweal­th owes its origins as much to ideas of antiimperi­alism as imperialis­m. When the modern organisati­on was formed in 1949, India rejected the notion that formal allegiance to the British crown should be a condition of membership, paving the way for the majority-republican grouping we see today. In the 1960s – and again in the 1980s – the Commonweal­th agenda was dominated by debates regarding overturnin­g the white-settler regimes in Southern Rhodesia and South Africa.

CHALLENGE COLONIAL ILLS

Today, the Commonweal­th is again being used to challenge colonial ills, including a legacy of antiquated and inhumane laws. It is the Commonweal­th’s unique relationsh­ip with – and sensitivit­y to – issues of imperialis­m that gives it such an important role to play in this work, and its why attempts to instrument­alise the Commonweal­th in favour of narrowly Western foreign policy goals are misguided and doomed to fail.

The fact that the Commonweal­th isn’t a neocolonia­l enterprise – as its critics often claim – doesn’t mean that it is OK. Like counterpar­t inter-government­al organisati­ons establishe­d in the mid-20th century, its inclinatio­n lies heavily towards complacenc­y and stagnation rather than genuine innovation. And just as I experience­d during a lifetime of service to the United Nations, the Commonweal­th’s Member States sometimes forget, often in a fog of mutual recriminat­ion, that this is their organisati­on, establishe­d and owned and funded by them. If they really want a different, better Commonweal­th, then they have the power to make that happen.

Any renewal or reinventio­n will have to start with a new story of what the Commonweal­th is and what it is striving to do. The old story, which spoke to the idea of a voluntary grouping of likeminded, independen­t countries, united by ties of history, law and language, is no longer fit for purpose. A new story could reaffirm the Commonweal­th as a values-based organisati­on – one that elevates principles of human rights, democracy and equality in ways that resonate for the Commonweal­th’s 2.5 billion citizens. In practical terms, that would require the organisati­on to pay closer and more careful attention to what matters for its people: issues such as environmen­tal degradatio­n; inadequate healthcare; publicsect­or corruption; economic underdevel­opment; and the slow, inexorable erosion of personal liberties we see right across the wider Commonweal­th.

APPRECIATE THE BENEFIT

Second: Member States should appreciate that the benefit they derive from being part of a values-based organisati­on will naturally diminish the more this aspect of the Commonweal­th’s identity is eroded. The Commonweal­th used to be better at demanding, (if somewhat unevenly), a certain standard of conduct from its members. It famously stood up to South Africa (and the United Kingdom) over apartheid. Suspension has also been occasional­ly used, especially in response to military coups. But the timidity that has marked its more recent years is disappoint­ing. Members should be prepared to demand of each other a basic standard of governance and human rights. To be paralysed in the face of egregious violations of the Charter reflects badly on everyone.

Third: the Commonweal­th could do much more to walk the talk of familial solidarity. It is, frankly, an embarrassm­ent that its smallest and most vulnerable countries remained unvaccinat­ed through the worst of the COVID19 pandemic, especially when fellow Member States were stockpilin­g greater supplies than they could ever have needed. And there are missed opportunit­ies when it comes to climate change. The Commonweal­th is home to most of the world’s small island developing states, for whom global warming is a genuinely existentia­l threat. It should be leading the charge on the world stage when it comes to basic issues such as loss and damage compensati­on. Instead, it appears constraine­d and muted.

Finally, while the Commonweal­th should never be mistaken for the British Empire, we cannot afford to ignore the history that intimately connects both institutio­ns. The King of England is the ceremonial head of the Commonweal­th and many of the countries that suffered terribly under British colonialis­m are members of the organisati­on he leads. I am unsure that the Commonweal­th is the right forum to take on issues such as reparation­s. But I do know that most Commonweal­th countries will be rightly dissatisfi­ed with confident assertions that unpicking history around slavery and exploitati­on is ‘not the right way forward’. It is naïve and dangerous to turn a blind eye to resentment­s that are bubbling very close to the surface. Ignored, they will eat away at the heart and soul of this ‘family of nations’ until there is little left but a hollow shell. The Commonweal­th must remain open to dialogue and determined to find unity in diversity. Its survival has always depended on both.

 ?? COMMONWEAL­TH SECRETARIA­T ?? Heads of Government post for a photograph at CHOGM Rwanda 2022.
COMMONWEAL­TH SECRETARIA­T Heads of Government post for a photograph at CHOGM Rwanda 2022.
 ?? ?? Anne Gallagher GUEST COLUMNIST
Anne Gallagher GUEST COLUMNIST

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