Category: Peace and Conflict
Michael Walzer on Just War Theory | Big Think
Colombia’s Uncertain Road to Peace
“What happened, happened. All we can do is to make sure that it doesn’t happen again.”
How Yemen Became a Humanitarian Nightmare: Untangling a Complex War
Saudi Arabia and its neighbor and close ally, the United Arab Emirates, intervened in 2015 because of perceived Iranian support for the rebels. The Sunni Muslim monarchy of Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran are rivals for power and influence across the Middle East, and Yemen has become a battlefield for one of the proxy wars between them.
From Muhammad to ISIS: Iraq’s Full Story
WHY DID THE U.S. AND ITS ALLIES BOMB LIBYA? CORRUPTION CASE AGAINST SARKOZY SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON OUSTING OF GADDAFI.
The former French president is accused of accepting campaign cash from the Libyan leader. The rush to bomb Gaddafi gets a necessary second look.
https://theintercept.com/2018/04/28/sarkozy-gaddafi-libya-bombing/
Why Is the Syrian Civil War Still Raging?
After nearly seven years and hundreds of thousands of deaths, the war in Syria continues to defy attempts at a resolution, and it has reached a new level of intensity in recent weeks.
Podcast: One Night in Snake Park
Six episode Podcast series that explores, “South Africa’s xenophobic demons through the death of 14-year-old Siphiwe Mahori”
https://pod.link/1052444623/episode/65f2e4e778bfd2960de9e7919ae914f8
Half-Truth and Reconciliation: After the Rwandan Genocide
Rwanda, Sundaram learned, was not the peaceful democracy it appeared to be. It was a state whose grip over the population subdued most citizens into silence or false flattery. Through the clarifying lens of this book, Rwanda appears not as a democracy making rapid progress after the horror of genocide, but as a disguised North Korea—a massively repressive dictatorship demanding slavish devotion to the leader, president Paul Kagame.
Rwanda & South Africa: a long road from truth to reconciliation
Reconciliation goes hand in hand with many other factors and generates many difficult questions. Who needs to be reconciled with whom? Who should initiate the process? Who should facilitate it? What should it look like? How do national and interpersonal movements towards reconciliation intersect, if at all? Can you reconcile when there’s no freedom? Justice? Equality? Redress?
https://theconversation.com/rwanda-and-south-africa-a-long-road-from-truth-to-reconciliation-75628