Kofi Annan -- Bring the Boys Back Home By Judea and Ruth Pearl Opinion, The Wall Street Journal August 28, 2006
As the parents of Daniel Pearl, The Wall Street
Journal's reporter who was kidnapped and brutally murdered in Pakistan in
2002, we share the anguish of the families of the kidnapped Israeli
soldiers, and their frustration with the international community for failing
to secure the release of their loved ones.
For more than six weeks now, these soldiers and their families live each day
tortured by unimaginable fears and shattered hopes, praying desperately for
the nightmare to end; we relive this nightmare each time an innocent person
falls victim to the inhumanity of terrorist abduction.
Whatever success the U.N. Security Council would presume to claim, it cannot
be said that Resolution 1701 has effectively addressed the direct cause of
the fighting--the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers, Ehud Goldwasser, 31, and
Eldad Regev, 26, by Hezbollah, and the earlier abduction of Gilad Shalit,
19, by Hamas. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's call for the unconditional
release of these soldiers has been ignored. Moreover, in flagrant violation
of international humanitarian law, the terrorists have not only seized the
soldiers as hostages for political blackmail, they have not allowed the Red
Cross to visit them. Their families do not know their physical condition;
they have no proof they are even alive.
And so now these families of Ehud, Eldad and Gilad are asking to meet with
Kofi Annan. They wish to plead with the secretary-general to use the full
weight of his moral authority to mobilize and intensify the efforts of the
international community he leads--an influential body that has managed to
compel two fierce armies to cease hostilities--to address this flagrant
violation of humanitarian law.
On that score, these families are correct: The time has come for Mr. Annan
to personally and aggressively intervene, and to insist publicly that, at
the minimum, the Red Cross, or his personal humanitarian representatives, be
given immediate access to these soldiers.
Will he? It seems unlikely. Sadly, this is not the first time that concerned
parents have turned to Mr. Annan in much the same circumstances. Six years
ago, another delegation of distressed families came to the U.N. with a
similar tragedy, following the abduction of three Israeli soldiers by
Hezbollah from under the noses of Unifil and, by some accounts, with their
help. The investigation that was subsequently conducted found that the U.N.
had made "serious errors in judgment" by hiding information that "would have
been helpful in an assessment of the condition of the three abducted
soldiers." At that time, the U.N.'s interest in appearing "neutral"
overshadowed its commitment to the preservation of human lives. The world
cannot afford a repeat of such inaction and poor judgment.
Undoubtedly, the secretary-general will tell the families of Ehud, Eldad and
Gilad that he has dispatched a high-level team to Beirut that will urge the
release of their loved ones. But that team negotiates behind closed doors.
And by not publicly demanding the unfettered access of humanitarian
representatives to the kidnapped soldiers, Mr. Annan has deprived his team
of the force of credibility and seriousness they need in those negotiations.
When our son Daniel was in captivity, millions of people around the world
prayed for his safe return. In that prayer, they made a solemn pledge never
to allow abductions of innocent people to become the norm of civilized
society, no matter the political purpose, regardless of grievance or goal
Kofi Annan's resolve against these acts of terrorism will determine to a
great extent what norms will govern our society in generations to come, and
whether organizations such as Hezbollah and Hamas will gloat in unruly
appetite or be reined in by moral principles.
We urge Mr. Annan to make bold and brave efforts to ensure--as a legacy and
gift--that we will not allow our children and our world be taken captive by
terror.
Mr. Secretary-General, this time, help bring the boys back home.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl are co-founders of the Daniel Pearl Foundation (www.danielpearl.org), a U.N.-affiliated NGO.
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