| Letters To The Editor Bush Right on Africa
I wish to commend President Bush’s vision of aid to Africa as “a two-way
street” in the current G8 aid and debt relief debate. The U.S. has decided
not to give aid to countries that are corrupt, or do not hold true to democratic
principles – a clear sign that the administration is fervently dedicated
to a vision of a new deal for Africa.
Any new aid package to the continent will only succeed if it is matched
by tackling corruption. Doubling aid, for all the noble aims of such a step,
is useless unless the capacity of African countries to spend that aid effectively
is doubled first. And this simply has not happened.
Corruption undermines every step of development – any type of reform
that is tried is continually halted by a wall of corruption. As long as
corruption exists at its current level in Africa, and as long as donors
continue to look the other way, foreign aid will simply serve to keep African
kleptocrats in power.
Consider this — Africa has had about 10 Marshall Plans in terms of the
amount of aid the continent has received, estimated at $114 billion in bilateral
and multilateral aid from 1995-2002.
Yet African countries have consistently ended up at the bottom of the
United Nations Development Program’s Human Development report, which measures
life expectancy, gross domestic product per person, and literacy.
The billion-dollar question is — where did the aid go? The Commission
for Africa Report rightly notes, “Africa has suffered from governments that
have looted the resources of the state; that could not or would not deliver
services to their people…that maintained control through violence and bribery;
and that squandered or stole aid.”
The Bush administration will be remembered as the government that had
the moral courage to tackle corruption head on, confronting this century’s
greatest obstacle to development in Africa.
John O’Shea, GOAL USA, New York, New York
Stop Visa
Denial
I was very pleased to see the recent letters from Sean O’ Lubaigh and
Brian Wardlow regarding the Eire Nua peace proposal and the visa denial
policy which has been used by the U.S. government against proponents of
this plan.
The Eire Nua peace proposal holds the potential of achieving what the
Belfast Agreement has failed to deliver — a peaceful, sovereign Ireland
which would guarantee, as the Proclamation of the Republic states, “religious
and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens.”
Irish Americans have a right to learn about the merits of Eire Nua first
hand from its most eloquent proponents. Yet the visa denial policy prevents
such individuals from entering the U.S. States despite the fact that they
clearly pose no threat to American security, and despite the fact that there
is ample evidence to conclude that the Belfast Agreement is dead in the
water.
One must ask oneself why they are barred from speaking about an alternative
peace plan when one would certainly seem to be needed?
The State Department, in their misguided attempts to make post-September
11 America a safer place, and as quid pro quo for British cooperation in
the “war in terror,” have cheated the American people of their right to
hear the merits of Eire Nua from those who can best explain it.
They have cheated the Irish people by censoring a proposal which seeks
to bring a just and lasting peace. The State Department must, in the interests
of peace in Ireland and freedom in America, end its policy of denying visas
to proponents of Eire Nua.
Robert Fitzgerald, St. Paul, Minnesota
Troubling Attack Ignored
The Irish Troubles are unfortunately far from over. In spite of what
the mass media would have us believe, there is in fact a reasonable, non-sectarian,
feasible peaceful alternative to the failed, so-called Good Friday Agreement.
This alternative unites the island of Ireland in way that is fair, responsible,
and would make for a healthy country for all. That proposal is named Eire
Nua (New Ireland).
Unfortunately those who support this viable alternative are banned from
sharing their ideas in the U.S. through visa denials and instead are branded
as terrorists.
While I’d like to use this letter to promote Eire Nua more, I’ve learned
of a situation this morning that your readers should be made aware of immediately.
Friday night (June 10, early June 11) after a tribute ballad event for
a deceased Irish community worker, Frank Gartland, members and supporters
of organizations that support the Eire Nua peace proposal were brutally
assaulted and arrested in Tallaght, outside of Dublin.
Youth, women, men, even a young person suffering from Cerebral Palsy
were pistol whipped, beaten, threatened and arrested without a warrant,
and so far without any charges.
While this sort of brutality might have been a common occurrence in Belfast
in the 1980s, this is just outside of Dublin today, in an Ireland that greatly
contrasts the image the Provos, British and American governments and media
would have us believe exists.
As I type this there has been no coverage of the attack in the media
and chances are any mention will be done solely by concerned individuals.
And that’s what I’m doing with this letter.
If your readers would like to learn more about this situation, I encourage
them to visit the following websites — the Irish Republican Bulletin Board
at www.irbb.rr.nu, or
Na Fianna Eireann at
www.fiannaeireann.com.
And for information on the Eire Nua peace proposal visit Republican Sinn
Fein at www.rsf.ie.
Saerbhreathach MacToirdealbhaigh, Dublin, Ireland
Gaelic Is Official
I want to express my joy at the Irish language becoming the 21st official
and working language of the European Union. This decision can only assist
in the development of a modern dynamic dimension to one of the oldest European
languages.
The Irish language has the greatest living oral tradition, its deep spiritual
and poetic capabilities are widely recognized and now has a unique opportunity
of communicating 21st century social ideals and political complexities.
It shows that the European community is not leading towards a homogenized
“dumbing down” of cultures, but glories in the richness and diversity of
European cultures and languages.
Tír gan Teanga, Tír gan Anam.
Elaine Ní Bhraonáin, CUNY Institute for Irish-American Studies, Bronx,
New York.
United Ireland Is Right
I just read the letter in the June 1-7 issue of the Irish Voice where
Martin McGrath supported letter writer Thomas Keown on his dislike of a
Michael Cummings letter in May to the Irish Voice.
I know Michael and he has been very active in Irish affairs. He is respected
in Ireland and from coast to coast in this country.
He strives to see an end to injustice in Ireland. One may disagree, and
I thank the Voice for giving us this forum.
When I see the words “inaccuracy and hysteria” it doesn’t fit the Michael
Cummings I know. I guess it is how one looks at it.
An atheist may see the Bible as inaccurate for his own reasons, and a
Christian may see both his bibles as accurate. Now we take a Jewish view
of it, and they might say the atheist is wrong and the Christian is only
half-right.
Whoever writes the headlines on the letters to the editor page does the
job well. On Mr. Keown’s letter it read “Look Ahead, Not Back.”
Keown states we must look for ways to cooperate. It reeks of white flag
waving. His letter was well done, but I think I would have to stand with
the atheist on this one.
As for Mr. McGrath’s letter, I think the answer is there in the headline
to his letter — “Brits Out Is Old.” The alternative then is, “Brits In.”
The statement is old because the problem is old and great injustices
are seldom new. There would be no need for the IRA if there were no Brits
in Ireland.
Mr. Keown and Mr. McGrath may be comfortable with the Union Jack in Ireland,
but I thank God we still have those who seek a united Ireland.
Bill Ashe, Corona, California
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