![]() | ![]() |
Home page |
SAARC summit reveals pathetic inadequacy of South Asia's leaders comment from Maldives January 2002
The intellectuals do not seem to be placed in a position to put any kind of sense into the well-oiled mindsets of hard-boiled leaders and politicos of all colors and creeds. The collective well of enlightened thinkers has long ago dried up with the declaration of the end of history, and the birth of post-modernism. According to Samuel P. Huntington, this is 'the age of Muslim Wars'. His simplistic categorization of cultures into watertight compartments, however, sounds pathetic. This type of grandstanding commentary does not help us either. The inadequacy of his argument is discussed by Nobel prize winner Amartya Sen, in his essay 'The Right to One's Identity' in the Frontline issue of 5 - 18 January 2002. According to Sen, 'The main hope of harmony in the contemporary world lies not in any imagined uniformity, but in the plurality of our identities, which cut across each other and work against sharp divisions around one uniquely hardened line of impenetrable division'. It is the respect for pluralistic thinking that may finally get us out of this huge confusion and escalating disaster that is brewing around Paradise. However, the sight of imposters paying lip service to grand designs in highly choreographed summits such as the SAARC charade in Nepal, only help to indicate the dire need for better leadership and more pragmatic politics in South Asia. We need a reality check. Now. |
|
MaldivesJournal is an independent internet magazine of Maldivian cultural issues.
Editors and translators: friends and Michael O'Shea, Australia
We invite contributions from Maldivians and others interested in Maldives.
Contributions and comments - mc_editors@hotmail.com