Give peace a chance

In other words, lie down you infidels and die quietly. Gerard Henderson, writing in the SMH. And they insist, insist I tell you that they are unbiased.
On Sunday the annual Hiroshima Day rally was held in Australian capital cities. Green Left Weekly provided an idea of what was to come. It told readers where to assemble - from Brisbane to Perth - and set out the political agenda: "Stop the war on Lebanon and Palestine. No nuclear power, no uranium mining. Troops out of Iraq and Afghanistan. No attack on Iran."

There was no call on Hezbollah or Hamas to stop firing rockets indiscriminately into Israel. And there was no call on the Islamist militants in Iraq to stop murdering their fellow Iraqis by exploding bombs in marketplaces, on playing fields and the like.

The Hiroshima Day Sydney website carried a similar message. It advised a theme of "no war in the Middle East" and listed the Islamic Friendship Association's Keysar Trad as a principal speaker. He was depicted on ABC TV news on Sunday night as criticising Israel - but not Iran or Syria, which back Hezbollah and Hamas. Reporting the event, Annie Guest said that "hundreds gathered in rallies like this one in Sydney, supporting peace or protesting against current conflicts".

Not so. There was no report of anyone at the main Hiroshima Day rally in Sydney having supported peace or having protested against both sides in the conflict. Protesters carried banners depicting both George Bush and John Howard as terrorists.

What's more, only one party in the Middle East conflict was criticised. Israel, of course. According to reports, the main Sydney rally was effectively taken over by a group of young Australians, many with a Lebanese Muslim background, who turned the occasion into a protest against Israel.

It is understandable that some supporters of peace and opponents of conflict would want to criticise Israel over the hostilities on the Israeli-Lebanese border and in the Gaza Strip. But to genuinely support peace, and to genuinely reject conflict, it is necessary to oppose the actions of both sides.
This is even more worrying, boy am I glad I filed the 'Emergency Appeal' from World Vision and 'Message in a bottle' from Amnesty International in the recycle bin.
The heads of some of Australia's leading non-government organisations did not perform much better. When Australians give money to organisations such as Anglicord, Caritas, Plan or World Vision, they expect that, after reasonable administrative costs, the funds will help relieve poverty somewhere in the world.

So it must have come as a surprise for some donors to open The Weekend Australian on Saturday to find that a group of non-government organisations had paid for advertising space to send an open letter to the Prime Minister.

John Howard is not difficult to contact. The likes of Jack de Groot (Caritas) and Tim Costello (World Vision) could have spoken or written directly to Howard. But they chose the media option to call on the Government "to support the call for an international ceasefire immediately". This was consistent with the position of Israel's critics. On the ABC's AM program on Saturday, de Groot and Costello made it clear the prime focus of their criticism was directed at Israel - rather than at Hezbollah or Iran.
VDH explains this quite nicely in one of his articles , The Brink of Madness, A familiar place.

And finally examine here at home reaction to Hezbollah — which has butchered Americans in Lebanon and Saudi Arabia — from a prominent Democratic Congressman, John Dingell: “I don’t take sides for or against Hezbollah.” And isn’t that the point, after all: the amoral Westerner cannot exercise moral judgment because he no longer has any?

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