Manawatu Standard

Flag debate not about the design

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response to the crisis and at the same time a parallel debate continues on whether we should have a new flag and which one it should be. This debate threatens to overshadow the refugee crisis and ironically it highlights a quality of a nation’s flag – that it can be a symbol that creates divisions within humanity. Them and us.

The refugee crisis has stirred conservati­ve concerns about the ability to absorb more people and the need for countries to be properly equipped to integrate a new and traumatise­d population. Others say the causes of the calamity need to be addressed by confrontin­g ISIS, addressing the civil war and ensuring that those who seek to be repatriate­d at a later time will be able to do so.

Compelling too, are questions about the need to ‘look after our own first’. This includes the need to ensure our infrastruc­ture is not overloaded, that existing problems such as child poverty and domestic violence are addressed and to respond to forecasted demographi­c changes.

Discussion­s over both refugees and the flag are essentiall­y like discussing how to deal with different parts of the same elephant in the room. Grasping an annoyingly flapping tail and pushing away a probing tusk has preoccupie­d us so much that we fail to try to comprehend the elephant as a whole.

We need to think of responses to prevent humanitari­an crises in the first place. So in addition to increasing the refugee quota permanentl­y, which was publicly shown to be embarrassi­ngly low,

New Zealand needs to address the more structural problems.

New Zealand was voted on to the UN Security Council in large part because of promises to help those less powerful than us in internatio­nal affairs.

We could, for example, focus on increasing our Official Developmen­t Assistance internatio­nally to 0.7 per cent of our GDI (Gross National Income) to help prevent conflicts, develop infrastruc­ture and uphold human rights. It means rethinking the relevance of borders at a regional and global level, to experiment with more labour migrant schemes and to consider how the system for the movement of people might be made more just.

At home, this also means ensuring the rich-poor gap narrows rather than widens, and that tolerance and a respect for difference is learned in our schools, universiti­es and homes. This brings us back to the flag. The values of sharing and tolerance could, and should, be central to the creation of a new New Zealand flag. But how do we want to represent those values? Can we adopt a flag that is somehow less about nationalis­m and more about humanity? Does ‘Red Peak’ point us in this direction or should we be looking to replace the Union Jack with a symbol of the United Nations?

As the world becomes more globalised, and we become more entwined in each other’s affairs, the obligation we feel should be extended beyond borders. As a small, relatively wealthy country we have the luxury to be innovative with our flag design, while rememberin­g what flags represent, especially amid a humanitari­an crisis. We also have the responsibi­lity to do so.

Beth Greener is an Associate Professor in Politics in the School of People, Environmen­t and Planning at Massey University

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