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Comment on [[Cultural Diplomacy]]
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Comment on Cultural Diplomacy
 
By Clive Myrie (Journalist, BBC)
 
By Clive Myrie (Journalist, BBC)
  
 
[[File:Myrie.jpg|400x200px|thumbnail|left]]
 
[[File:Myrie.jpg|400x200px|thumbnail|left]]
  
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"There was no applause, just stunned silence." The words of  Jonathan Powell  the Chief of Staff to Tony Blair  when the British Prime Minister, the leader of the Republic of Ireland and representatives of the Catholic and Protestant communities in Northern Ireland hammered out the Good Friday Agreement. The deal paved the way for peace in the province after decades of conflict that cost many lives. What was apparent to all the negotiators was that once they began talking, they realised they had so much in common; that the other side didn't represent the devil, that the leaders simply wanted the best for their communities based on individual liberty, [[Human Rights|human rights]] and equality. Exactly the same feelings flowered during the initial talks between [[Mandela, Nelson|Nelson Mandela]], while he was still on Robben Island, the ANC and representatives of the [[apartheid]] regime in the late 1980s. White negotiators talk of being surprised at how reasonable the black negotiators were, how they were proud, and funny and humble, and determined and conciliatory. In short, how they displayed all the traits of human beings!
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"There was no applause, just stunned silence." The words of  Jonathan Powell  the Chief of Staff to Tony Blair  when the British Prime Minister, the leader of the Republic of Ireland and representatives of the Catholic and Protestant communities in Northern Ireland hammered out the Good Friday Agreement. The deal paved the way for peace in the province after decades of conflict that cost many lives. What was apparent to all the negotiators was that once they began talking, they realised they had so much in common; that the other side didn't represent the devil, that the leaders simply wanted the best for their communities based on individual liberty, [[Human Rights|human rights]] and equality. Exactly the same feelings flowered during the initial talks between Nelson Mandela, while he was still on Robben Island, the ANC and representatives of the [[apartheid]] regime in the late 1980s. White negotiators talk of being surprised at how reasonable the black negotiators were, how they were proud, and funny and humble, and determined and conciliatory. In short, how they displayed all the traits of human beings!
  
 
As a war correspondent I've seen far too many times what happens when protagonists lose sight of their own humanity and that of their enemies; when the talking stops and the firing begins. Not just in Northern Ireland or South Africa, but also in Angola, Liberia, Bosnia, Croatia, East Timor, Borneo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon and Georgia; a roll call of misery. Different cultures and peoples all focusing on the few things that divide them, rather than the many things that unite them.
 
As a war correspondent I've seen far too many times what happens when protagonists lose sight of their own humanity and that of their enemies; when the talking stops and the firing begins. Not just in Northern Ireland or South Africa, but also in Angola, Liberia, Bosnia, Croatia, East Timor, Borneo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon and Georgia; a roll call of misery. Different cultures and peoples all focusing on the few things that divide them, rather than the many things that unite them.

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