Archive for the ‘un dispatch’ tag

Canadians and Pirates #

August 9th, 2008 | In Worth Knowing 

Every once in a while I like to see stories about high-seas piracy. I’d be a liar if I said it wasn’t because of fictions of peglegs and eyepatchs.

In any case, the Canadians have stepped up and are providing a frigate for safe passage of much needed food shipments from the World Food Program through the pirate-infested waters and to the famine-stricken country.

The ICC and Omar al-Bashir #

July 17th, 2008 | In Worth Reading 

I haven’t been following too closely, but I found both of these pieces on the (recommended) indictment of the Sudanese president to be useful:

Invading Burma #

May 16th, 2008 | In Worth Considering 

Combining the theme of the last two posts: a lot of pundits are saying it’s a good idea to invade Burma to provide humanitarian relief. (If you don’t believe me, sample the sources cited in this UN Dispatch post.) I think Mr. Yglesias offers an interesting explanation of the trend:

The thing you have to understand about the surge of pundits wanting to invade Burma is that it’s the very absurdity of the idea that makes it such an appealing op-ed thesis. It’s self-righteousness without responsibility. Advocate an invasion of a country you don’t know anything about and have it happen and, well, all kinds of things might go awry in a way that’s embarasing. But since everyone knows there’s not going to be an invasion of Burma, you can say there ought to be one and then make up a nice story about how well it hypothetically went. You can even show your thoughtful seriousness about matters of war and peace by chalking up the tragic failure to invade as yet another disastrous consequence of the war in Iraq.

The Good News in Africa #

March 14th, 2008 | In Worth Considering 

Given the ongoing mess in Sudan, the recent chaos in Chad, the shambles of Zimbabwe, and the still-fragile situation in Kenya, it easy to see Africa as a hopeless case. In the Washington Post, Craig Timberg points to the great steps forward that have been made in western Africa in the last decade.

Reborn as well, over the past decade, has been democracy itself here in Ghana and among its neighbors along West Africa’s Atlantic coast. From Sierra Leone east to Nigeria, stability and at least a tentative version of multiparty politics have begun taking hold after many years of coups, military dictatorships and civil war.

(via UN Dispatch)