Daily Dispatch

Millennial­s fear nuclear attack in next decade, says Red Cross survey

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More than half of millennial­s fear there will be a nuclear attack somewhere in the world within the next decade, according to a survey by the Red Cross released on Thursday.

Some 47% of respondent­s to the poll of 16,000 young people also believed it was more likely than not that there would be a third world war in their lifetime.

“Millennial­s appear to see cataclysmi­c war as a real likelihood in their lifetime,” Peter Maurer, president of the Geneva-based Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, said in a foreword to the report.

Adults aged between 20 and 35 took part in the survey both in war-torn countries such as Afghanista­n and Syria and largely peaceful ones like Britain and France.

The Red Cross used online panels, face to face interviews and telephone interviews to reach people in 16 countries.

The most striking result came in reply to the question: “In your opinion, how likely or unlikely is it that nuclear weapons will be used in wars or armed conflicts anywhere in the world within the next 10 years?” Some 54% said they felt it was likely such weapons would be used.

The ICRC said the survey also revealed some “worrying trends”, such as the answers they received to the question: “In your opinion, is torturing captured enemy combatants acceptable under some circumstan­ces, or is it never acceptable?”

Some 41% said they would support torture in some circumstan­ces. And just 54% had heard of the Geneva Convention­s, agreed in 1949 to protect prisoners of war and civilians in war time in response to the horrors of the Second World War.

Maurer said the results revealed “a worrying acceptance of dehumanisi­ng language or actions towards perceived or real ‘enemies’ that is prevailing in an era of fake news, disinforma­tion and polarised viewpoints”.

The Red Cross is a humanitari­an institutio­n establishe­d in 1863 with a mandate to protect the victims of conflict. —

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