Hope For Humanity's
Future
by His Excellency Arthur N. R. Robinson, December
1999
TC., OCC., SC., Hon. Fellow, St. John's College, Oxford
President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
George Santayana, said "Progress, far from consisting of
change, depends on retentiveness. Those who cannot remember the
past are condemned to repeat it."
These are wise words which would well
enter our minds as we reflect on the coming dawn of the 21st century.
What is the greatest lesson of the 20th century? It is not man's
inhumanity to man. This has been a characteristic of human nature
since time began. Man has also had rationality and this has characterized
men's relationship with one another since the dawn of history.
This quality distinguishes civilization from the animal kingdom.
It is this quality that has given rise to laws
and negotiations for peace instead of war. It is this characteristic
of rationality that leads men to establish institutions and organizations
for human development. It also has led to the development of science
and enormous strides in technology. Science and technology can
be used for the progress and advancement of civilization or for
the destruction of all on the planet. Rationality thus gives rise
to the power to choose and it is this use of choice which is the
fundamental issue which faces us in the 21st century catastrophe
on a vast scale, as in the First and Second World Wars, or to
employ it with all its enormous potential for peace, growth, development
and human welfare on a scale never achieved or envisaged.
To achieve this latter alternative, however, rationality
must be employed on a scale as never before, giving rise to world
order, to world peace based on law and justice worldwide. Co-ordination
and mobilization of the efforts of all men and institutions is
a necessary pre-requisite towards this end.
Power must be humanized and subjected to laws.
Human rights must be universalized and their grossest violations
penalized. Impunity for such violations must no longer be the
natural order of things but be relegated to the past. Efforts
must b e intensified to put in place an international criminal
jurisdiction so that perpetrators of atrocities against humanity,
such as this century has witnessed, may be brought to account.
On July 17, 1998, in Rome, one hundred and twenty nations took
a significant step towards creating such a jurisdiction when they
adopted a Statute for the International Criminal Court. We, the
peoples of the 20th century, can make a lasting contribution to
peace and security in the twenty first century and beyond by making
this international system of justice a reality.
Our very humanity must reassert itself with
rights, principles, laws and institutions directed towards the
enlightenment and advance of humankind of every creed and race
in every region of the world.
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