The Pak Banker

A rising tide of oppression

- Matthew Daniels

In the New Year, as humanity staggers from the pain of a global pandemic, the forces of oppression continue assaults on freedom and human rights around the world.

In China the Communist Party has locked a million Muslim Uyghurs in reeducatio­n camps and subjected many to sterilizat­ion and torture. In North Korea, the CCP model has been perfected into a multi-generation­al system in which generation­s of children are now born and die inside a vast network of concentrat­ion camps.

In Iran, the government continues to ruthlessly crush and oppress all forms of dissent and resistance to the nation's totalitari­anism theocracy. The pattern persists around the globe - in Myanmar, in Turkey, in the Middle East.

The Middle East in particular is largely moving backwards into oppression. Across the region, religious minorities have been imprisoned, enslaved, raped, brutalized and murdered in rising numbers.

Of course, in the past decade, no single movement has more publicly and flagrantly assaulted the moral and legal norms of fundamenta­l human rights than the Islamic State or ISIS. That is why there should be ISIS genocide trials - in order to reaffirm the commitment of civilized nations to the fundamenta­l rights enshrined in the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

At the same time, we must confront the ideas and philosophi­es behind the mass violation of human life and dignity. Doing so offers the best hope of enduring victory against such forces of oppression.

The horrors which are so obvious to us are seen differentl­y by the perpetrato­rs. Certainly, many human rights abusers are oppressors seeking to gain power, grab resources, and expand their influence. But many of the worst abuses and conflicts are based on malign philosophi­es and theologies which demonize other human beings. In such cases, those responsibl­e for the worst crimes believe they are doing good - or even doing the will of God. So, it is not enough to stop those who are committing crimes. It is necessary to displace their toxic ideas and values with those ideals that are the only enduring antidote to the collective disease of genocide, racism, violence and oppression.

This is the reason that we created the Universal Rights Academy in order to harness the power of digital media to spread the principles of freedom and human dignity in the digital age.

The term "universal rights" originates in the most widely known statement of human rights in human history. Translated into more languages than the Bible or the Koran, the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights was created in 1948 in the aftermath of the Holocaust to help protect humanity from future outbreaks of totalitari­an violence and oppression.

Universal rights are those rights without which we cannot experience our full humanity. Universal rights are so important that civilizati­on and the future of humanity depends upon not tolerating the violation of these rights in any culture or society, for any reason. The Universal Rights Academy will teach digital natives around the world the timeless ideals that are the only enduring remedy for ideologies of oppression.

From Gandhi to Martin Luther King Jr. to Malala Yousafzai, universal rights is a dream that we need to understand, embrace, teach and practice so that it can achieve its full potential - for everyone everywhere.

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