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Life is Valuable
in Turkey,
in Belgium
"Even as I decry the carnage in
Paris and in Belgium, I am troubled
that there is a disproportionate amount
of compassion for those who are
“first world” victims of terrorism and
those who victims live in countries
deemed less important in the
international order of things."
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The
ISIS attack on Brussels, Belgium strikes fear in the heart of every
human being who lives in a “first world” nation rattled by random,
brutal and terrorist attacks on law and order. How is it that
people get into a subway car, planning to arrive at work, only to find
tunnels collapsing and their lives snuffed out? How is it that
you go to an airport to be engaged in the ordinary business of
international travel, only to find two bombs planted at the airport and
hundreds of lives imperiled. How does it feel to end a day not
knowing how many perished or, days later, to write that “at least
thirty”, or “more than thirty” with no exact number of casualties at
hand? How does the inexactitude diminish the sacredness of life?
It was right for the world’s news gaze to focus, unrelentingly, on
Brussels during the week of the ISIS attack. It made sense that
we learned the harrowing details of the ways bombs were detonated, who
was killed, and the details of their lives. It was important,
especially, because so many saw Brussels as a “capital” of Europe, or
at least of the European Zone. Several international agencies
were located within walking distance of the subway station where one
bomb went off. The bombs were designed to destroy and disrupt,
and they did.
These were the same bombs, the same group of terrorists, who chose to
destroy and disrupt Paris with November attacks that left more than 130
dead and hundreds injured. There is a solid line between the
Paris attacks and those in Belgium as the arrest of one of the alleged
Paris terrorists seems to have been the spark for the Belgium
bombings. The world has every right to be horrified at the
callous loss or attack on normality, or the massive loss of life, and
of the ways these attacks have invoked the spirit of fear both in
European capitals and in the United States.
(As an example, a friend told me she found her customary Washington
stop both “empty and uneasy” the day after the Brussels attacks.
“Should we expect an attack here,” she asked, considering ways (there
are none) to protect her and her family from terrorist madness.
She had planned travel to London this summer and wondered if it were a
good idea. How many others are sharing her apprehension)?
Even as I decry the carnage in Paris and in Belgium, I am troubled that
there is a disproportionate amount of compassion for those who are
“first world” victims of terrorism and those who victims live in
countries deemed less important in the international order of
things. March 13 attacks on a beach on the Ivory Coast, claimed
as Al Queda’s revenge against France, made headlines, but for fewer
days and with reporting at less depth. Well, some might say, it
was just the Ivory Coast, a Sub-Saharan African country that, though
clearly a French ally, seemed less important than Belgium. So for
a week we learned details of the Brussels debacle. Not so much
about the Ivory Coast.
Similarly, a suicide bomber hit Ankara, Turkey on March 19. This
was the fifth time since October that there has been an attack on one
of Turkey’s two largest cities – the other is Istanbul. Almost
200 people have been killed, and hundreds more have been injured, but
in contrast to the news coverage we’ve seen in Brussels, coverage of
the carnage in Turkey has been miniscule. The bombers in Turkey,
like those in Brussels, have been liked to ISIS. As in Belgium,
these bombs have disrupted “business as usual”. Why did Turkey’s
bombing get sideline, not headline, treatment. Was it because
Ankara, Turkey is not a “European capital”?
Our nation’s first world, Eurocentric bias in coverage of terrorism is
a bias that has the propensity to breed more terror. To publicly
value some lives while ignoring the value of other lives is to send a
signal that engenders resentment and dissent. If Brussels and
Paris deserve headlines, so do Turkey and the Ivory Coast. A
colleague told me he heard about what happened in the Ivory Coast on
twitter. I learned about it only because I often look for
international news on sites like allafrica.com.
The late political scientist Dr. Ron Walters talked about “foreign
policy justice” as way of viewing nations through a lens that had some
foundational principles, some around the sanctity of human life.
In other words, while strategic concerns may shape our engagement with
one or another country at a point in time, nothing should diminish the
ways we value human life and mourn the loss of it. A Turkish life
is as valuable as a Parisian life, an Ivorian life as valuable as a
Belgian life. Our media engagement and our public statements must
reflect these values. Otherwise, we may not be pleased when
others hear our message and how they act on it. We cannot expect
others to value our lives when we do not value theirs!
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr. Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is the Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. A native San Franciscan, she is the President and
owner of Economic Education a 501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in
Washington, D.C. During her time as the 15th President of Bennett
College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was the architect of exciting and
innovative transformation at America’s oldest historically black
college for women. Contact Dr. Malveaux and BC. |
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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