Saturday, November 24, 2007

Everyone cares - but do they care enough

There is no shortage of caring about the plight of the Uighurs among ordinary people, and it is only the ordinary people who can make a difference. So why do they not do something about cruelty and injustice, about torture of the innocent? Are they only too ready to tell themselves everything is alright really - it was just a momentary lapse when they reacted to a pain felt by others far out of their sphere? Or are their hearts hardened; are they just too ready to turn away and shove the idea into the dim recesses of their minds.

I believe people can change, or at least they can allow themselves space for ideas they had once banished. When I wrote to Jacques Rogge of the International Olympics Committee this week, it was to remind him that the dream of introducing China to the idea of actual human rights was laudable, but flawed. Surely the knowledge that Chinese people are being forcibly evicted and imprisoned so that smart Olympic sites can be built to impress the world, is alone a degradation of the Olympian ideals. If the IOC want to really do something about human rights they would make the biggest humanitarian gesture of all by calling off the Beijing Olympics. I wonder if they care about human rights that much?

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