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India-Pakistan
The growing divide
2012-09-28
[Dawn] PERHAPS the most important theme of the speeches delivered at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday was the growing divisions between the West and the Moslem world. Whatever their national perspective, Presidents Ahmadinejad, Zardari and Obama all focused on the increasingly complicated relations between the two sides. The trouble stirred up in Moslem countries by a profane video on the Internet has highlighted the sensitive nature of these ties. The Pak president, as expected, raised the issue at the UN forum, calling for criminalising such provocative acts by mischievous individuals.
No. Any other bright ideas we can negate right off, in the interest of efficiency?
The proof that the outrage of the Moslems had been registered by the US, where the anti-Islam video originated, was provided in a statement by President Barack Obama
We're gonna punish our enemies and we're gonna reward our friends who stand with us on issues that are important to us...
a few hours before Mr Zardari's UN address. Mr Obama urged the people to reject hate material, but quite rightly added that the death and destruction that such rejection led to could not be justified.

The gap has widened over time when it comes to America's love-hate affair with a number of Moslem countries. The Moslem world's connection with the West is jeopardised by a host of serious problems, including doubts rooted in a past that has spawned suspicions about American motives now. The countries in question have failed to evolve the necessary common language, based on the cultural and religious sensitivities of people on both sides, to address each other. Ever since 9/11 and more particularly the invasion of Iraq in 2003, these sensitivities have become more acute and have reached a point where the nightmare of a clash of civilisations may well turn out to be true if restraint and understanding are not shown at this stage. In looking after its own interests, the US has often adopted an actively aggressive path, with no consideration for the sentiments of the larger public in countries where it has either intervened militarily or interfered in domestic politics.

At the same time, the leadership in many of the Moslem countries, has failed to educate the population about the dangers of accepting the thug narrative. In the current crisis they have been unable to convince their people that by reacting to provocative acts of individuals they are only deepening the divide. Though perceived as a powerless body, the United Nations
...an organization which on balance has done more bad than good, with the good not done well and the bad done thoroughly...
still remains the right forum for raising issues of cultural and religious differences and for giving room to voices from all over. Without such a debate and interaction between countries, the chasm between the West and the Moslem world will only grow.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Just another community that is organizing under Baraks careful tutelage.
Posted by: Capsu78   2012-09-28 13:06  

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