2018
August
13
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 13, 2018
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

It’s the kind of proposal that could seem like a great idea. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said Sunday that, to fight corruption, he wants youth to start making citizens’ arrests. “The power is in your hands to end this vice in this country,” he said.

There’s no question Kenya needs to do something. Corruption is rampant, and Mr. Kenyatta has tried everything from introducing lie detector tests for some government officials to declaring corruption a national security threat. But Kenya’s spot on a key corruption index isn’t moving much.

Around the world, leaders often try to distract citizens from problems at home by embarking on “anticorruption drives” that are more style than substance. You’ll see a story in today’s issue on that trend in the Arab world. In Kenya, lie detector tests and citizens’ arrests sound decisive, but they show a lack of understanding about what actually works.

Look at Hong Kong. Its economic success, many say, is directly tied to its astounding success in overcoming a legacy of deep corruption in the 1970s. Yes, change began with punishment. But locals say something else mattered more: a long-term commitment to teach and promote honesty and fairness across society, starting with the kindergarten curriculum. “We don't teach them about the laws, but we teach them about the values,” an official with the pioneering Independent Commission Against Corruption told CNN. “Nowadays in Hong Kong, people will never tolerate corruption.”

Now, here are our five stories of the day. Two of them – the Arab anticorruption story and one about “mobile money” in Zimbabwe – look in different ways at the issue of trust in society. We also look at a multibillion-euro effort to save small-town France.    


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

In American politics, secret tapes seem to be popping up everywhere. How did we get to this point of recording everything – in private and even security-sensitive areas – to support our side of the story?

Raad al-Adayleh/AP
Protesters in Amman, Jordan, gather in June to demand that the government scrap its tax proposal, restore bread subsidies, cut fuel prices, and fight corruption. Across the Arab world, citizens are challenging the economic-political elite for, as they see it, enriching themselves at the expense of the people.

The need to address corruption in the Arab world is urgent. But if new initiatives are simply politically expedient – as many citizens suspect – they risk only fueling distrust and suspicion.

Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi/AP
Alex Mupondi hangs one-dollar notes to dry after washing them in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 2010. The US dollar was declared legal tender in 2009, after Zimbabwe abandoned its own notes because of hyperinflation. Dollars change hands so many times that some people wash their bills.

Currency depends on trust and confidence. Years of economic crises in Zimbabwe have left all three in short supply, spurring a boom in “mobile money” – an industry that is revolutionizing banking in Africa.

What is the value of small-town life? As the world urbanizes, that has become a real question for the most developed nations, where small towns are struggling. France offers a €5 billion window into the search for solutions.   

Books

Author V.S. Naipaul leaves a complicated legacy, seen in his views of women writers. But he also helped change the West’s view of countries often seen only as vacation destinations, finding rich literary material in places where colonizers once ruled.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, left, and Oman's Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf bin Alawi, stand at attention during a ceremony welcoming Alawi to the Pentagon July 27.

Since May, the United States and Iran have appeared on course for confrontation. President Trump pulled the US out of the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran. Iran’s forces in Syria began to threaten Israel. In August, Mr. Trump imposed new sanctions on Iran and sought to reduce Iranian oil exports to zero. Iran then warned of a regional war if the US pushed too hard.

Those, at least, were the big headlines, the type that feed off conflict and fear. Less visible were quiet efforts at diplomacy that could eventually quell the escalation.

In recent weeks, the tiny country of Oman has again stepped into its role as a third-party mediator in Middle East disputes. A top Omani official, Yusuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah, met with top leaders in both the US and Iran, including the head of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, Qassem Suleimani. Just the fact that both Iran and the US met with this Omani diplomat is good news that each side may want to step back from the abyss and reach a settlement.

Oman’s role, however, is far more than one of mere messenger. For that kind of back channel, the US and Iran could be using Switzerland, which represents US interests in Iran. Instead, Oman brings special qualities to difficult negotiations, the kind that many peacemakers admire.

Oman’s ruling sultanate has long preached tolerance to its people and others, an approach which has helped it become a neutral player in the Middle East and allowed it to have cordial relations with Israel, Saudi Arabia, Iran and many others. It has a track record of knowing how to build trust and mutual respect. This includes its pivotal role in facilitating the talks between the US and Iran between 2011 and 2015 that led to the agreement curbing the Iranian nuclear program.

But for Oman, neutrality and tolerance are not enough for peacemaking. It also relies on a command found in the three Abrahamic faiths: Love your neighbor as yourself.

In a recent talk, Sayyid Badr bin Hamad al-Busaidi, secretary-general of Oman’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, explained that his country’s pursuit of good relations in the region goes beyond merely assisting its neighbors. It entails living as “though we were as them, to see the world through their eyes.”

“You enter the [diplomatic] process not seeking to maximize gains in line with your own perception of your own interests, but by seeking to understand the interests of your neighbor: What does he want? How might what he wants be compatible with what I want? Is there some solution to this problem that neither of us have yet thought of that might turn out to work better for both of us?” said Mr. Busaidi.

The solution to a dispute starts with a dialogue, and dialogue starts with humble listening. “Put your own interests to one side for one moment, and start with your neighbor’s interests,” he said. The love-your-neighbor command, stripped of its ethical or sacred connotations, starts with the assumption that you and your neighbor share the same fundamental interests.

“I’m aware that this might seem to fly in the face of many orthodox accounts of international relations, which assume a realist attitude on the part of global actors,” he said. But the realist paradigm has so far been unworkable in the Middle East. Instead, the region needs “one in which no negotiation is ever seen as a zero-sum game.”

In coming weeks or months, the US and Iran may announce an agreement that involves compromises on each country’s part. If so, their grand bargain will probably be scrutinized to see who gained, who lost. Economic and military pressure may be seen as the driving forces. Yet little noticed could be Oman’s quiet role as mediator, one that starts with the power of a simple commandment found in Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Love may not break out between the US and Iran. But they might at least begin to respect each other as they do themselves.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Inspired by the courage of those fighting the raging wildfires in California and elsewhere, today’s contributor considers how even a glimpse of the power of divine Love arms us with a strength not our own, even when things seem hopeless.


A message of love

Eloisa Lopez/Reuters
Residents affected by flash floods caused by monsoon rains sleep at an evacuation center Aug. 13 in Marikina, part of metro Manila. Some 5,000 people there had to evacuate their homes after water rose in the Marikina River.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Please come again tomorrow when staff writer Story Hinckley looks at how the survivors of two high-profile shootings – Parkland and Newtown – are joining forces.

More issues

2018
August
13
Monday

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