Thursday, December 11, 2008

Reduced aid can lead to war and terrorism, Ahtisaari warns

Nobel Peace Prize winner for 2008 Martti Ahtisaari of Finland reminded aid donors not to reduce or hold back on their commitment to development assistance because of the current economic crisis because this could lead to war and terrorism. He had a clear message to say after he received his peace award: "All conflicts can be resolved."

"We should not accept excuses from holders of political power. Peace is a question of will," he was quoted as saying. He warned at the same time that peace negotiators like him take too much attention instead of focusing on the parties in conflict. He says that this creates a wrong picture that peace comes from outside instead of inside.

He stressed that poverty and inequality are reasons for war and terrorism, reminding the rich donor countries that the current economic crisis should not be made an excuse for reducing aid to poor countries that are already suffering from hard climate changes and reduced world trade. " Hundreds of young people risk losing their jobs," he said. "If we don't do anything, this could create criminality, instability and war when all these young people lose hope."

To the US President-elect Barack Obama, he admonished prioritizing the resolution of the Middle East conflict.
"The international community's credibility is under challenge. We cannot pretend year after year that something is being done about the situation. We must have results."

Ahtisaari's accomplishments as peace negotiator are particularly significant in the following: In Kosovo, along with Russia and USA, succeeded with a peace agreement in 1999 that ended civil strife; In Aceh province in Indonesia, where a bloody conflict for independence raged for centuries, a peace agreement was signed in 2005; and Namibia in southern Africa, which after years of quiet negotiations got its independence in 1990. # (Translated and edited from Dagens Nyheter, 11 dec. 2008)

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