From: b sabha <bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com>

From: Fr. Cedric Prakash sj 
<cedricprak...@gmail.com<mailto:cedricprak...@gmail.com>>


(For favour of publication
 on World Social Justice Day (February 20th 2017)THANKS


Social Justice: Setting a Tone!
-         Fr Cedric Prakash sj*
“Preventing Conflict and Sustaining Peace through Decent Work” is the theme of 
the 2017 World Social Justice Day, which will be observed on February 20th

As a justification of the theme the UN lists the following objectives: (i)to 
highlight the importance of employment-centred strategies and programs and 
their contribution to international efforts to prevent conflicts, sustain 
peace, build resilient societies and promote social justice;(ii) to explore the 
intersectionality of employment, peace and social justice across the 2030 
Agenda for sustainable development; (iii) to expand knowledge sharing and 
collaboration with the UN system and other key stakeholders on effective 
strategies for peace, social justice and development.

Both the theme and the objectives are certainly laudable! Wars and conflicts 
have held centre-stage across the globe in the last few years. It has cost the 
world enormously in every sense of the word. With over 65 million people as 
refugees or internally displaced and with numbers growing – the need and 
importance to prevent conflict and to ensure sustainable peace should 
necessarily be topmost on the World Agenda. Providing ‘decent work’ (as the UN 
puts it) is a key social justice factor that could lead to a more sustainable 
global peace.

The moot point to be considered is whether those who control the destinies of 
nations today can honestly demonstrate the political will towards the 
realisation of the theme. In a concept note for the day, the UN says, “peaceful 
and inclusive societies, as well as decent work and equitable growth, are key 
priorities of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The 2030 Agenda 
states that sustainable development cannot be realized without peace and 
security and encourages member States to build peaceful, just and inclusive 
societies that provide equal access to justice and that are based on respect 
for human rights.”

An ideal certainly not negotiable or debatable; but several of the world 
leaders do not seem to be on the same page! Political leadership in many 
countries today seem to doing exactly the opposite. The US President is keen on 
building walls and keeping out even legitimate refugees and immigrants. The 
Palestinians are forced to live in a hostile environment, since Israel just 
does not pay heed to world opinion. No one seems to be serious in preventing 
and ending wars and conflicts. Why would they? Many of them are conveniently 
tied up to the profiteering military- industrial establishment. The only way to 
stop wars, as everyone knows, is to halt the production of arms and ammunition; 
to make disarmament and denuclearisation a reality. Tragically, the spending on 
military warfare has been escalating in most countries (for example, India’s 
‘defence’ budget!); besides, spending in the social sector like on health, 
education and the creation of employment (or as the UN says ‘decent work’) is 
drastically decreased.

Every effort must be made to ensure ‘decent work’ – for those who need it. This 
would entail ensuring that the rights of the workers are respected with a just 
wage, reasonable working hours, social security and other benefits. One should 
also make sure that the refugees and other displaced are not exploited. 
Unfortunately today social discrimination and exclusion; xenophobia and 
jingoism seems to be on the rise as never before. India is in the midst of an 
election season. The divide-and –rule campaign, by sections of the political 
class is a blatant human rights violation. The primary objective of winning an 
election is no longer about serving the people- but rather of how one can 
selfishly accumulate more power and wealth. As said earlier, the numbers of 
refugees and IDPs continue to grow: from Syria to South Sudan; the world 
witnesses the suffering of the Rohingyas of Myanmar and the Yezidis of Iraq who 
face genocide. Be it the child soldiers of Colombia or those who labour in the 
sweatshops of China, there are today, millions of children who are deprived of 
their childhood. Human trafficking pays rich dividends to the unscrupulous and 
other vested interests.  In the midst of such a grim and complex reality, can 
one actually talk of preventing conflict and sustaining peace and much more, 
providing decent work particularly to the refugee, to the migrant and to the 
displaced?

It is ten years since World Social Justice Day was launched  in 2007 and it  
comes as a very powerful reminder to all  that, “social justice is an 
underlying principle for peaceful and prosperous coexistence within and among 
nations. We uphold the principles of social justice when we promote gender 
equality or the rights of indigenous peoples and migrants. We advance social 
justice when we remove barriers that people face because of gender, age, race, 
ethnicity, religion, culture or disability.”

What  is  certainly heartening , is that the concept note this year provides a 
frame-work  emphasizing that, “for communities and individuals, participation 
in the reconstruction can provide job creation and initial income, skills and 
entrepreneurship development that are essential means for recovery and 
development, confidence building and promotion of equality and social justice. 
Employment is key in reaching out to young people to help build more resilient 
societies as well as vital in reintegrating crisis affected societies and 
specific groups such as former combatants, refugees, IDPs, returnees, and 
provide opportunities for the most vulnerable in fragile, conflict and disaster 
settings”.

In doing so a tone is set: that the world leaders need to get their act 
together as soon as possible; to prevent conflict and in no way exacerbate it; 
to promote peace and ensure that it sustains and above all, to realise that 
providing necessary decent work to all, especially for the youth will go a long 
way in establishing a more just and equitable world. The right notes, the right 
tone- hopefully, it will ultimately become music for those who matter!

                                                                                
                                         18th February 2017



* (Fr Cedric Prakash sj is a human rights activist. He is currently based in 
Lebanon, engaged with the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) in the Middle East on 
advocacy and   communications. Contact: 
cedricprak...@gmail.com<mailto:cedricprak...@gmail.com>)

Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
Advocacy & Communications
Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) MENA Region
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