As the actual events and details surrounding the
alleged terrorist plot to blow up commercial airliners unfold,
the fear and foreboding that has lived within many of us since
9/11 resurfaced. Yet, in the initial announcement of the alleged
plot, there was a reference by a British official that caught
my attention. Describing the alleged plot, this official went
on to say that the outcome of such bombings would be an unimaginable
loss of life.
Before going any further, let me be clear that as
far as I am concerned, any attack on non-combatants is criminal
and should be condemned. Yet, in thinking about the comment by
the British official, my first and continuing response was: Unimaginable
to whom? The probable numbers of people who would have been killed
might have gone as high as 15,000 (a very rough guess). As someone
who just flew back from the West Coast, I would not look forward
to flying on a plane that was the target of a terrorist attack.
Nevertheless, in today's world, 15,000 dead civilians is not an
unimaginable figure, unless, of course, one means 15,000 dead
civilians from Western Europe, the United States or Canada.
I do not wish to be harsh or unsympathetic, but
let's count a few numbers and you tell me what conclusions you
come to. Since 1997, approximately 4 million people have been
killed as a result of the civil war (and foreign interventions)
in the Congo. That comes down to approximately 444,000 per year
or 37,000 per month or about 1,200 per day. I would call that
figure unimaginable (even though it happened), or perhaps inconceivable
in the sense that this planet has permitted 4 million people to
die with very little international attention. Or, a few miles
to the north, in the Sudan, over 20 years, more than 2 million
people were killed in the north/south civil war that recently
ended. In the Darfur region of the Sudan, more than
400,000 people (not part of the 2 million) have died as a result
of the government-backed genocide, and this number starts around
2003. Or, if we wish to be more modest, we can see the more than
1,000 Lebanese civilians killed as a result of Israel's collective
punishment of that country, a collective punishment that has specifically
targeted civilians and civilian targets, this from an allegedly
civilized nation. Should I mention Iraq? More than 2,600 U.S.
personnel dead and by most reports more than 100,000 Iraqis dead
as a result of an illegal war (by the way, that is more than 30,000
dead per year or about 80 dead per day). This does not count the
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who died as a result of the US/British
sanctions against pre-war Iraq.
So, I found myself wondering about this term "unimaginable
loss of life." The potential tragedy of a terrorist attack
on civilian aircraft would deserve condemnation should even one
person die as a result. But telling us about an unimaginable loss
of life when the government of Britain, let alone the United States,
has been prepared to sit back and watch or participate in the
massive loss of life in countries of the global South is nothing
short of disingenuous.
This returns us to an issue that I have raised in
previous columns, i.e., the relative importance or unimportance
of the lives of different peoples. Four million dead in the Congo
is absolutely unimaginable. It is difficult to even count to 4
million sitting in the same place. It is unimaginable that so
many people could lose their lives and yet the Congo has to fight
to get the attention of major news media in Western Europe, the
United States and Canada. Short of a titillating incident or an
obvious and gross atrocity, the loss of 1200 people per day does
not seem to merit our consideration.
Perhaps I have a different imagination?
Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a Washington, DC-based writer
and activist involved with labor and international issues. A former
president of TransAfrica Forum, he is now a Visiting Professor
in Political Science at Brooklyn College-CUNY. Click
here to contact Mr. Fletcher.