The Independent on Saturday

‘Neutrality in face of injustice sides with the oppressor’

- JANET JOBSON AND PHUMI NHLAPO Jobson is CEO of the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation and Nhlapo is its chief operating officer.

ON FEBRUARY 24, last year, the day that Russia first attacked Ukraine, the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation stood out as one of the first South African organisati­ons to categorica­lly condemn the invasion.

It is what our founder, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, would have done. But it was an action that was not universall­y welcomed.

Many felt that we should rather take a “wait and see” approach; potentiall­y position ourselves, or at least South Africa, as neutral in order to play a role in being able to negotiate peace.

From the outset, we felt it was naive and unjust to equate supposed “neutrality” with being able to play a role in bringing about peace.

As the Arch so clearly put it: “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have sided with the oppressor.”

Whatever questions the South African government, or other actors may have had about the provocatio­ns and origins of the invasion, it was certainly clear from the outset that this was a war of aggression against innocent people.

It was also clear that there is unlikely to be any role for South Africa as a mediator or peace negotiator, especially if we showed such little empathy for the plight of the Ukrainian people.

Even if one could not see that

clearly in February 2022, there can no longer be any ignorance about the aggressive and unjust intent of the

Russian government and its forces. The shelling of towns and cities and the annexation of Ukrainian territory is plainly unjust and illegal.

To hold up the idea that there is some reason for “neutrality” left is absurd.

We are ashamed of the South African government’s refusal to make a clear and proud stance for human rights, for peace, and for justice.

As we engage in naval war games with Russia and China, the moral bankruptcy of our government’s position becomes even starker.

Behind the dehumanisi­ng geopolitic­al rhetoric, the finger-pointing about who may have instigated this war, and the tap dancing around how best to respond, human beings are being harmed.

We are all being harmed.

The world urgently needs a peaceful end to Russia’s war on Ukraine, and the Russian government needs

to be held to account for its acts of aggression.

None of this can happen while the bombardmen­t continues.

The Arch once said: “It is hard to shake your hand when your foot is on my neck.”

It ought to be possible for the world – and South Africa in particular – to prevail upon one country to stop bombing another as an urgent and immediate step towards peace.

One year on, with thousands of lives lost and incalculab­le infrastruc­ture

damaged, it is not too late for our government to recognise the injustice being committed against the Ukrainian people. To mourn with us all the casualties of this war. To find, at last, our common humanity.

The Arch shared widely the notion that our destinies are tied up with one another; that an injury to one is an injury to all.

 ?? ?? AFTER a build-up of military forces and artillery on its border with Ukraine for weeks, Russia launched a full-scale invasion on its neighbour on February 24, 2022. | AFP
AFTER a build-up of military forces and artillery on its border with Ukraine for weeks, Russia launched a full-scale invasion on its neighbour on February 24, 2022. | AFP
 ?? ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS check for survivors in a building in the eastern Ukraine town of Chuguiv after it was bombed on February 24, 2022, as Russian armed forces invaded Ukraine from several directions. | AFP
FIREFIGHTE­RS check for survivors in a building in the eastern Ukraine town of Chuguiv after it was bombed on February 24, 2022, as Russian armed forces invaded Ukraine from several directions. | AFP
 ?? ?? OLENA Kurylo, a 52-year-old teacher stands outside a hospital after the bombing of the eastern Ukraine town of Chuguiv, on February 24, 2022, during the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia. | AFP
OLENA Kurylo, a 52-year-old teacher stands outside a hospital after the bombing of the eastern Ukraine town of Chuguiv, on February 24, 2022, during the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia. | AFP
 ?? ?? PEOPLE took shelter in a metro station as air raid sirens rang out in downtown Kyiv on February 24, 2022. Cities across Ukraine were hit with Russian missile strikes. | AFP
PEOPLE took shelter in a metro station as air raid sirens rang out in downtown Kyiv on February 24, 2022. Cities across Ukraine were hit with Russian missile strikes. | AFP

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