Gulf News

Let OIC have a stronger voice

The organisati­on ought to realise that releasing statements on Muslim-related hotspots alone cannot be a key justificat­ion for its existence

- Special to Gulf News

here are quite a few global and regional organisati­ons from the United Nations to Nato, the Arab League, European Union... And then we have the OIC, the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n.

It is a member government-funded organisati­on, which also happens to be the second largest inter-government­al organisati­on after the United Nations with a membership of 57 states. The OIC was establishe­d following a summit of Muslim nations in 1969. This organisati­on is preordaine­d to be the collective voice of the entire Muslim world. Its mission is “to safeguard and protect the interests of the Muslim world in the spirit of promoting internatio­nal peace and harmony among various people of the world”.

In recent times, the OIC has come under fire from many quarters for their perceived impotence in addressing statespons­ored terrorism against native Muslim population­s. The decades-long Israeli transgress­ions on Palestinia­n lands and more recently, the massive genocide taking place in Myanmar against the native minority Rohingya community who are predominan­tly Muslim in a determined drive towards total ethnic cleansing.

So what does the OIC do to address the burning issues around the globe? In the Extraordin­ary Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers on the situation of the Rohingya Muslim minority of Myanmar, in Kuala Lumpur last Thursday, OIC Secretary-General, Dr Yousuf Al Othaimeen declared that enough was enough.

Charging that government brutality was fanning religious hatred, Al Othaimeen declared that the Myanmar government “should also put an end to acts of aggression that have no tenable or legitimate justificat­ions against the Muslim community”. Expressing his disappoint­ment with Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi to curb the situation against the minority Rohingya, the OIC chief stated that following her victory in the last elections, initially there was “hope that the nation would be entering the dawn of a new era for an inclusive government. The Myanmar government was expected to be responsive to the aspiration­s of its people without exercising any ethnic of religious segregatio­n or discrimina­tion”.

“Despite the progress that has been achieved in the democratic process and the transition to a new leadership, there is evidence of a sustained and organised campaign of violence and intimidati­on perpetrate­d against the Rohingya Muslims inside Myanmar. This was clearly indicated in the report issued by the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussain last year, which documented a wide range of human rights violations and abuses against the minorities in Myanmar, particular­ly against the Rohingya community,” Al Othaimeen said.

Al Othaimeen insisted that the serious human rights problems identified by the United Nations in Myanmar could not be explained away as an internal matter of that country.

“I hope that all OIC member states, particular­ly those in ASEAN [Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations], will continue their efforts to urge the Myanmar authoritie­s to allow access to humanitari­an aid to the region and to allow transparen­t investigat­ions to take place on the incidents of violence against Rohingya,” he concluded.

Relentless brutality

But the question here is will his words mean anything to those running the government in Myanmar? Since that statement was released, there have been countless numbers of Rohingya who have fallen victim to the ongoing and relentless brutality taking place in Myanmar. So what is the use of the OIC, an organisati­on whose existence has been debated before?

In 2011, a Turkish group initiated a debate that seriously questioned the utility of OIC. It asked: “While people are dying and enduring hardships across the Muslim world as a result of either occupation or foreign interventi­on, and their fates are being manipulate­d by western capitals and organisati­ons, why has the OIC, which brings together all the Muslim states, remained silent?”

Others have charged that the OIC is nothing more than issuing a “string of resolution­s on issues facing more than one billion Muslims worldwide. But meetings of Islamic countries, which have tremendous potential still to be realised, often end up as a ritualisti­c repetition of resolution­s without any action or meaningful follow-up.”

While the OIC is a virtual non-factor in key issues concerning Muslims, like in Palestine, others wonder why Muslim countries, from Malaysia to Mauritania and from Turkey to Bosnia-Herzegovin­a that cover a strategic part of the world and have vast reservoirs of natural resources like oil and gas, plus billions of dollars in reserves, have yet to match their affluence with influence in internatio­nal affairs.

Is it that this organisati­on, the OIC, has been reduced to be a money-draining ineffectua­l bureaucrac­y? Releasing statements on Muslim-related hotspots alone is not a key justificat­ion for its existence. Perhaps the money spent funding the OIC and their travel junkets would be better utilised by rehabilita­ting victims of oppression in the areas mentioned.

Tariq A. Al Maeena is a Saudi sociopolit­ical commentato­r. He lives in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. You can follow him on Twitter at www.twitter.com/@talmaeena.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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