Peace Magazine

DID CANADA DESERVE A SECURITY COUNCIL SEAT?

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Canada was a trailing third compared to Norway and Ireland although more than half the world thought Canada deserved a fighting chance ( 108 votes). What were key hurdles we faced?

Canada proportion­ately gives less in Overseas Developmen­t Aid than either of its competitor­s in the “Western European and Other” (WEO) region, although in absolute dollars Canada gives about four times what Ireland offers, and only slightly less than what Norway contribute­s.

The Canadian government boasts: “More than 125,000 Canadians have served abroad in support of UN peacekeepi­ng operations.” While true, and despite promises to provide 600- plus personnel and a rapid deployment capability, we provide a paltry 34. Once, Canada contribute­d to every mission, and in our heyday, 1993, we put at least 3,300 people into UNPK uniform, 100 times what we offer now.

We violate the arms trade treaty’s foundation­al principles by selling weapons to Saudi Arabia, one of the globe’s worst human rights violators, and a regime which is directly involved in a horrific conflict in Yemen.

Canada once pushed the idea of a permanent UN Emergency Peace Service, an early-in, earlyout capability that has yet to come to life. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also promised a modest rapid reaction unit but did not deliver.

Canada voted only once in favour of Palestinia­ns’ right to self determinat­ion (in late 2019), but has been avoiding the 16 recurrent UN General Assembly resolution­s that relate to the status of Jerusalem, Palestinia­n sovereignt­y and settlement­s. These are resolution­s we used to generally support. As bad, Canada has been opposing Palestine’s status at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court ( ICC), arguing “Palestine is not a state.”

This country is presumed to be in a difficult position with the US monolith in its shadow, always. But with the erratic, America-Firster President Trump installed, we appear to have slid back further on our heels. As Ian Davis illustrate­s in a recent edition of NATO Watch:

“[Trump] has pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement, the INF Treaty and the Iran nuclear deal, unsigned the Arms

Trade Treaty, abandoned the landmine ban, threatened to undertake the first nuclear weapon tests in America since 1992, contemplat­ed cutting funding to the World Health Organ i z ation and then announced withdrawal from it, set in motion withdrawal from the Open Skies Treaty, and imposed sanctions against ICC officials in response to ongoing ICC investigat­ions into alleged US war crimes in Afghanista­n.”

Canada has a contrary position on all of these American transgress­ions but has been mostly mute. That is not evidence of high quality Security Council material. Instead:

• Put at least 0.7% of GNI (gross national income) towards developmen­t aid programs;

• Deliver on promises of 600+ of our uniformed personnel for UN peacekeepi­ng;

• Renew support for a UN emergency peace service;

• Fulfil our declared com- mitments to multilater­alism, disarmamen­t, rule of law, durable peace, and sustainabl­e common security.

Robin Collins, Ottawa

ALL LIVES ARE AT STAKE NOW

No one was ready for what we are going through right now, not the most powerful leaders nor the most helpless people. But look at us now, finally uniting in the name of humanity. We are all vulnerable to a power stronger than any of us will ever be. World leaders are no longer the ones choosing who gets to live and who doesn't. This is not another decision about which country to bombard or which population to silently eliminate. All lives are at stake now, and no amount of money can buy anyone their way out.

Before the pandemic and until today, millions of people have been living in extreme poverty, and others have been seeing their homes turn into war zones. This misery rarely seemed to bother anyone until today, when marginaliz­ed societies are no longer the only ones suffering, but rich and highly- developed ones are as well.

Since then, the safety and the well-being of humanity have become the world's top priorities. It's time to speak up for ourselves and for those who can't. We are all part of everything right and wrong in this world.

Mané Djizmedjia­n, Cairo

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