Why Are We Focused on ‘Economies’ While Humans Are Being Slaughtered? Can We Put An Immediate Stop To ‘Self-Interest’ Attitudes?
Where’s Our Sense of Empathy?
“An Economic ‘Atomic Bomb’: Hungary Threatens EU’s Latest Sanctions Against Russia, Including Oil Embargo”
“Ukraine focus diverts food aid from other crisis-stricken regions”
“Ukraine war contributes to ‘perfect storm’ for famine in Somalia”
The quotes above are just some of the commentary to be read, and the focus of discussions since Ukraine was attacked on the 24th of February.
Global Crisis Response Group on Food, Energy and Finance is the title of a press release by the UN on 13 APRIL 2022, NEW YORK:
The war in Ukraine, in all its dimensions, is producing alarming cascading effects to a world economy already battered by COVID-19 and climate change, with particularly dramatic impacts on developing countries. The world’s most vulnerable people can not become collateral damage.
World on brink of “perfect storm” of crises, warns UN Chief calling for immediate action to avert cascading impacts of war in Ukraine
Dire consequences of the war on global food, energy and financial markets could upend millions of lives
Dire Consequences?
The UN’s Response
Put another way, when our farmer neighbour and his family are being slaughtered in an unprovoked attack, rather than deploy an emergency response, we choose to complain about a “food price crisis”
This, because our farmer neighbour and his family are unable to supply us with what we, perhaps, think we are entitled to be provided by them?
The Charter of the United Nations begins with this introduction:
WE THE PEOPLES OF THE UNITED NATIONS DETERMINED
to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and
to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small, and
to establish conditions under which justice and respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,
AND FOR THESE ENDS
to practice tolerance and live together in peace with one another as good neighbors, and
to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security, and
to ensure, by the acceptance of principles and the institution of methods, that armed force shall not be used, save in the common interest, and
to employ international machinery for the promotion of the economic and social advancement of all peoples,
HAVE RESOLVED TO COMBINE OUR EFFORTS TO ACCOMPLISH THESE AIMS.
To maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by peaceful means, and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations which might lead to a breach of the peace
Ukraine: the World’s Tragedy
Misplaced Priorities and / or Self-interest Approach?
It seems the priority for some people (outside Ukraine) is to engage in discussions which focus on what we think we are being ‘deprived’: food supplies which, prior to 24th February, had come from Ukraine.
Hungary: An Economic ‘Atomic Bomb’?
Ghanaians should be justifiably proud that their president received universal praise (and quote of the year, according to Professor Shari Ahmed @ShafiAhmed5) for that statement he made putting human life above everything else; especially, “the economy”:
Ukraine’s Daily Reality
- When the first bread you are able to eat was 38 days after the invasion of your country
- Being attacked when a bomb was dropped on a railway station where people were attempting to escape to a safe destination
- Experiencing unspeakable acts of brutality inflicted on your family and neighbours
- Being trapped in underground bunkers in darkness for several weeks in Mariupol steelworks, not knowing if you will ever come out alive
- Having to live your life in an underground shelter for over sixty-days before you see daylight
- When land mines will be one of the legacies of this Russian invasion, according to The New York Times reports that: Land Mines on a Timer, Scattered Over a Ukrainian Town
- Having to flee your own hometown, and not knowing when you will be able to get back to rebuild the home you left behind, which has now been destroyed through deliberate civilian attacks
- A school attended by children being the latest target of indiscriminate bomb attacks
- You see nine-year old Masha, a resident of Lysychans’k, whose city is under constant shelling, but still defiant during her interview with BBC News on 2 May
We the Peoples …
Ukraine’s Tragedy and Africa: Intervention By Foreign NGOs
Another response to Ukraine’s tragedy comes from NGOs with foreign origins, who are making links between Ukraine’s tragedy and what in their opinion is Africa’s food crisis:
“East Africa is facing the worst drought in decades, with the #pandemic and conflict in northern Ethiopia compounding the crisis.
But the region is now also feeling the impact of war in #Ukraine through a spike in agricultural commodity prices.” Farm Africa.
Are Africans incapable of speaking for themselves?
Vegetables From Kenya on the Shelves of Europe’s Supermarkets
Meanwhile, these same NGOs haven’t issued a statement questioning why vegetables from Kenya (in the same East Africa) and Zimbabwe are to be found on the shelves of supermarkets in Europe.
Africans are embarrassed by the heartless manner in which outside organisations attempt to suggest that we are victims of Ukraine’s tragic circumstances.
Shouldn’t any dependence by an African country for its food needs on temperate Europe be something which must be questioned? Does Africa not have the conditions to grow its own indigenous crops?
Nonetheless, this is one African farmer’s view: “As Africans, let’s reduce dependence on imported crops whether in war or climate change.” @Chief_Tshepo
Immediate Tasks and Actions
- Every effort should be made to bring an end to this war and, hence, the loss of innocent lives
- Rebuild the country so that Ukrainians can rebuild their own lives
Other Wars and Conflicts
After these tasks and actions have been addressed, the world should then turn its attention to other parts of the world where war and conflict still persist.
What we also need to demonstrate, above all else at this time, is:
- Our Sense of Empathy with the people of Ukraine;
- Show Solidarity with people in other parts of the world going through similar tragedy as Ukraine;
- Remember what the True Meaning of ‘Sacrifice’ is: which is, to forego the things we are used to, and which are supplied by the same neighbours who are now in a tragic situation.
These must be the only things which should be on our minds until our fellow human beings see peace return to their country.
Secretary-General Gutteres in Kyiv