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The
Privilege of Being Born Human?
I refer to Dr Gopee’s article ‘The Privilege of Being
Born Human’ (MT 8 Aug 08). To say that humans have any
kind of privilege is to assume that Life is partial. Is this
a fact? Did Life pick and choose whom It would drown when It
unleashed the devastating tsunami a few years ago? The human
mind is always seeking an explanation for such disasters.
Therefore it invents the theory of Karma and conveniently
parks it in one of its other inventions -- the 'Books of
Illusions' read by billions resulting in wave after wave of
conflicts over centuries.
Life being Eternal, Non-dual, and Complete has no opposite
or choice and therefore it is arrogance on the part of the
human mind to think that it is a privileged manifestation of
that Life.
Dr Gopee also writes: "Because we possess the higher
faculty of intellect, we are in a position to make rational
choices instead of blindly following our baser
instincts."
If humans really possessed a 'higher faculty of intellect'
which is able to make 'rational choices', this planet would
not be suffocating and there would be no wars. Again the
Theory of Karma will probably be used to explain the
unexplainable. Can the appallingly limited human mind
explain the movements of an Unlimited Being? Is this
possible?
It is the illusion that Life (some would prefer the word
God, Brahman, etc., instead) has given humans carte
blanche which is putting this planet slowly into
intensive care. The price humans will pay for this
'privilege' is... extinction. Life knows no 'win-win'
situations. It is these 'rational choices' of humans which
have left Mauritius with only 1.4% of its forest. My belief
is that in just a few more decades the so-called 'privilege'
of humans will wipe out this 1.4% and transform our homeland
into a piece of bare rock in the middle of the Indian Ocean.
Lou
Belle
Rose
Georgia
vs. South Ossetia: From Conflict to Major War
On
August 8, 2008, South Ossetia attracted world's attention
when Russian military forces entered Georgian territory, and
seriously interfered in the Georgian-South Ossetian
unresolved conflict. This conflict is well known to the
world, yet, current Russian military intervention helped
amplify the dispute.
South
Ossetia is a small region in the South Caucasus within the
territory of Georgia. She has been a de facto independent
administration from Georgia since its declaration of
independence as the Republic of South Ossetia
in 1990; however, South Ossetia continues to be part of
Georgia, since it was not diplomatically recognized by any
member of the United Nations.
Georgia
was part of the Soviet Union from 1922 until its
independence in 1991. Since its independence from the Soviet
Union, Georgia has been facing many difficulties: first,
there was civil unrest and economic crises, then came a
Revolution in 2003, when then President of Georgia, Eduard
Shevardnadze was ousted from power; and, finally, the
unresolved secessionist conflicts in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia; Russia's allied regions.
We
may recall the genesis of the current situation which has
been precipitated by the 1918-1920 Georgian-Ossetian
conflict. Later, in 1922 the South Ossetian Autonomous
Oblast was created after Soviet occupation of Georgia. In
the eighties, the conflict was followed by rising
nationalism in the former Georgian Soviet Socialist
Republic, the South Ossetian desire for greater autonomy,
Ossetian demands for unification with Russia's North Ossetia,
and persistent Ossetian declarations of independence.
In
1989, from ethno-political conflict, the Georgian-South
Ossetian conflict evolved to civil war in January 1991. War
was fought between Georgian government forces and ethnic
Georgian militias on one side and South Ossetian
secessionists and North Ossetian volunteers on the other,
with periodic participation of Russian military forces.
Russian officials including the then President of the
Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin made statements supportive
of Ossetians. The war ended in June 1992 when the Head of
the State Council of Georgia, Eduard Shevardnadze and the
Russian President Boris Yeltsin met to discuss the question
of South Ossetia. By some estimates, around 3000 people were
killed in that war.
In
May 2004, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili offered
humanitarian aid to both Georgian and Ossetian population in
South Ossetia and promised to give the region broad
autonomy; however, that did not stop violence. New conflict
between South Ossetians and Georgians forces accrued in mid
June 2004 when Georgian forces closed Ossetian main supply
market for tax-free goods from Russia in order to stop
smuggling. In retaliation, South Ossetian forces blocked the
highway between Georgia and Russia. Later, Georgian forces
intercepted Russian convoy with military equipment,
including missiles. This interception created tension
between Georgia and Russia, and the subsequent incarceration
of around fifty Georgian peacekeepers by South Ossetian
militants. In mid August 2004, a ceasefire agreement was
signed, but just few days later, was violated.
In
January 2005, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
presented a new plan for resolving the Georgian-South
Ossetian conflict. This proposal included broader forms of
autonomy, including a constitutional guarantee of free and
directly elected local self-governance. Among others,
President Saakashvili stated that South Ossetia's parliament
would have control over issues such as culture, education,
social policy, economic policy, public order, organization
of local self-governance and environmental protection. No
agreement was signed, although the United States government
and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
(OSCE) supported Georgian action plan.
In
September 2006, South Ossetian forces opened fire at a
Georgian helicopter carrying Irakli Okruashvili, the
Minister of Defence of Georgia. South Ossetian de facto
government confirmed their troops were responsible for the
attack, alleging that the helicopter had entered their air
space. Later in September 2007, Irakli Okruashvili was
arrested on charges of extortion, money laundering, and
abuse of power while still Georgia's Defence Minister. A
Georgian court found him guilty and sentenced him to 11
years imprisonment in absentia. However, Okruashvili did not
go to jail, he was granted political asylum in France.
In
May 2007, Dmitry Sanakoyev was appointed by the President of
Georgia the Head of South Ossetian Provisional
Administrative Entity. Sanakoyev's new resolution plan
earned approval from the United States government, but not
Russia's. This move alarmed the de facto authorities in
South Ossetian capital Tskhinvali, and without any delay,
South Ossetian separatists ordered that traffic to ethnic
Georgian villages be blocked, and threatened to overthrow
Sanakoyev's government by force.
In
July 2007, Georgia set up a State Commission, chaired by the
Georgian Prime Minister, Zurab Noghaideli, to develop South
Ossetia's autonomous status within the Georgian State.
In
August 2007, a new conflict occurred: the Georgian missile
incident. This time incident was between Georgia and Russia.
Georgian government said that two Russian fighter jets
violated its airspace and fired a missile, which fell on the
edge of a village of Tsitelubani, near the Georgian-Ossetian
conflict zone, but did not explode. Russia denied this
allegation and said that Georgia may have fired the missile
on their own territory as a way of provoking tensions in the
region. This Georgia-Russia incident is not an isolated
issue, there were several crises, incidents and accusations
in the past, including: the 2004 Adjara crisis, the 2006
North Ossetia sabotages, the 2006 Russian ban of Moldovan
and Georgian wines, the 2006 Kodori crisis, the 2006
Georgian-Russian espionage controversy and the March 2007
Georgia helicopter attack incident.
On
August 1, 2008, after two months of continuous
Georgian-South Ossetian fighting; the South Ossetia war
between Georgia, Russia, South Ossetia, and Abkhazia began.
On
August 8, following several days of heavy fighting between
Georgian army and South Ossetian militants, in which around
1500 civilians, 15 Russian peacekeepers, and dozens of South
Ossetian militants were killed. Russia responded by moving
its troops across the Georgian border, bringing tanks and
artillery into South Ossetia.
According
to Russian officials, their main aim was to defend Russian
citizens in South Ossetia, and force the Georgian government
to accept peace and restore the status quo. Russian
officials also stated that its army was acting within its
peacekeeping mission in South Ossetia, and in line with the
mandate issued by the international community. Tbilisi also
stated that it was now responding to Russia's aggression.
On
August 9, conflict between Russia and Georgia escalated, and
on August 10, Georgian troops retreated from the capital of
South Ossetia.
In
relation to the current situation in Georgia, the
international community issued many statements: In general,
it is calling confronted parties to respect International
Law, and for an immediate end to the armed clashes and
resumption of direct talks. In New York, at Russia's
request, an emergency session of the United Nations Security
Council was held, but failed to reach an agreement on
immediately halting of fighting.
Both
Georgia and Russia traded counter-accusations; whiles
Georgia accused Russia for invasion of land, air, and sea,
Russia accused Georgia of genocide against South Ossetians.
According
to the latest development there are some pertinent questions
that should be asked; these include:
Will
the United States seize the opportunity in the current
situation in Georgia as an excuse to invade Iran, since they
are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan? By the way, Iran is
right in the neighbourhood.
Will
the NATO and the EU intervene, and in which form?
Will
Russia use the Kosovo situation as an example for South
Ossetia?
Is
this war foundation of larger Euro-Asian conflicts?
It
is still not quite clear what will happen next; however one
thing is obvious: no country will dare to use military force
against Russia, especially not in isolation.
Ivan
Simic
Belgrade, Serbia
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