Monday, November 30, 2020

St Andrews Day, Nov 30th: since we cannot dance, let us celebrate with this portrait of Bonny Prince Charlie, leader of the 1745 rebellion against England's imported German kings from Hanover. Prince Charles Edward Stuart is kissing the hand of Flora MacDonald .... the lady who helped the prince escape Over The Sea To Skye after his defeat by "Butcher Cumberland" (son of George II) at the Battle of Culloden on 15th April 1746. That was the end of the Stuart challenge. Bonny Prince Charlie lived the rest of his life in France, and is buried in the chapel of the Scottish College, beside the Sorbonne.
 

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Bulliying Is Bad, Boris is wrong, Pritti Patel must go

 ON ETHICS and IMMATURITY in GOVERNMENT

Sir Alex Allan was the British Government’s advisor on ethics. Until Friday 20th November 2020. He has just issued a report criticizing home secretary Pritti Patel’s “behaviour that can be described as bullying” – citing instances of Patel shouting and swearing, and finding that she had breached the ministerial code.

Sir Alex writes: “My advice is that the Home Secretary has not consistently met the high standards required by the Ministerial Code of treating her civil servants with consideration and respect. Her approach on occasions has amounted to behaviour that can be described as bullying in terms of the impact felt by individuals. To that extent her behaviour has been in breach of the Ministerial Code, even if unintentionally.”  Unintentionally? Bullying behaviour is never unintentional. Shouting and swearing is a sign of immaturity and lack of control: and if you are the minister, then you are bullying your assistants. If Patel needed have this explained to her, then she is obviously unfit to lead.

Boris Johnson announced that he had full confidence in Patel: he has ignored the bullying, and ignored Sir Alex Allan’s advice. Sir Alex, who also served Johnson’s two predecessors, said: “I feel that it is right that I should now resign from my position as the prime minister’s independent adviser on the ministerial code.” In British etiquette, that is a slap in the face of the PM. Sir Alex refuses to work for a man who condones bullying ..... by allowing a woman to abuse her staff by bullying.

 Sir Alex Allan is 70 years old, was the first permanent secretary in the Ministry of Justice, a former High commissioner to Australia, and was until 2011, the chairman of the Joint Intelligence committee and Head of Intelligence Assessment. This not the resignation of a lightweight, nor of some opposition trouble-maker, but of an substantial establishment figure who was principal private secretary to Conservative prime minister John Major for five years (1992-97). He is too good a man to work for Boris Johnson.

 

The Guardian reports that Downing Street failed to deny that the prime minister tried to persuade Allan to tone down his conclusions and say he could find no clear evidence of bullying. A No 10 spokesman said: “As you would expect, the prime minister spoke to Sir Alex Allan to further his understanding of the report. Sir Alex’s conclusions are entirely his own.” Sir Alex came to his conclusion: he has resigned, showing up Johnson for the weak and cupid man he is. 

 

Allan also appears to be a quintessentially quirky Englishman. Totally discrete as befits his security career, he is said to have been poisoned in 2008 by a foreign power; he certainly spent time in hospital for unexplained reasons. According to Wikipedia, he also windsurfed to work in a suit and bowler hat down the Thames during a train strike.

 

Boris Johnson then urged Tory colleagues in a WhatsApp message to “form a square around the Prittster”. This sounds like a message from a spoiled brat at Eton College. “The Prittster?” Is this the language of the Prime Minister of Great Britain? This puerile language is an inappropriate response to Sir Alex Allan’s report. No wonder he resigned!  Let’s change the PM, and Make Britain Great Again.

 

Patel later apologised: “I’m sorry that my behaviour has upset people and I have never intentionally set out to upset anyone. I work with thousands of brilliant civil servants every single day and we work together, day in day out, to deliver on the agenda of this government and I’m absolutely sorry for anyone that I have upset.”

 

Sir Philip Rutnam, who resigned as the Home Office’s permanent secretary after accusing Patel of a “vicious and orchestrated briefing campaign” against him, challenged a claim in the bullying report that she had been given no feedback about her behaviour by civil servants: “As early as August 2019, the month after her appointment, she was advised that she must not shout and swear at staff.” Rutnam has lodged an employment tribunal claim against Patel under whistleblowing laws, claiming he faced constructive dismissal after informing the Cabinet Office of the home secretary’s behaviour. This sort of thing never happens in the British civil service. Boris and his Brexit colleagues are completely losing the plot! They are supposed to be a GOVERNMENT for goodness sake, not a boys’ club throwing darts. 

 

Bullies Both?  Two of a kind?

Boris is not looking pritti.


Patel’s reputation for bullying goes back several years: similar bullying accusations were raised at DfID in 2017 when she was Minister for Overseas Development. Enough is enough. Respect is not ‘saying’ but ‘doing’ - people who are unwilling to show respect for their assistants, do not deserve a position of responsibility. Johnson should invite Pritti Patel to join Dominic Cummins and Lee Cain in Barnard Castle, where they can all test their eyesight together. Indeed, perhaps Boris Johnson should join them, leaving the Prime Minister’s chair to be filled by someone more competent, more mature, more responsible.

Time to bring back Mrs Thatcher. 

Or even Mrs May. 

Theresa May looks competent when compared to Boris.


Monday, November 2, 2020

UNIDIR - HAPPY BIRTHDAY !!!! Yes, it is 40 years since President Giscard d'Estaing created UNIDIR in Geneva.

 

UNIDIR is 40 years old.      HAPPY BIRTHDAY UNIDIR !

It is 40 years since President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing created UNIDIR.  

Giscard created the Institute inside the Palais de Nations in Geneva, because he did not want all the disarmament work to be kept in New York where the Secretary General lives. The French president was standing up for French values: and quite right too!

 

I work for peace, and I worked for one of my favourite peace organisations: UNIDIR in Geneva, United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research. 

 

Disarmament does not just happen!  It requires a great deal of hard work and patience as you persuade armed rebels or armed governments to give up their arms, to immobilize them or even destroy them.

 

During the 1990s, while my wife Michelle ran the European office of ChildFund and chaired the NGO Committee for UNICEF, I became a Research Fellow (and later a Senior Fellow) of UNIDIR working for micro-disarmament in West Africa and publishing books about how it is done.

 

UNIDIR studies different types of disarmament and offers new solutions. Nuclear, chemical and biological weapons are well-known weapons of mass-destruction regulated by international conventions; micro-disarmament concerns the small arms and light weapons that kill thousands of people every year, and which need a different type of regulation in each country; recently UNIDIR has been focused on new emerging issues like the Arms Trade, Swarm Robotic weapons, Ammunition, Cyber-Space and Weapons in Outer Space.

 

The whole range of UNIDIR’s work makes fascinating reading, and in the 40th Anniversary Report you can discover the evolution of our research work over the decades. See:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Y1ZOenDv7Y

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=read+the+UNIDIR+40th+anniversary+report

 

If you would like to know more:  https://www.unidir.org   If you would like to read more:  https://www.unidir.org/publications

If you would like to meet the Director, @Dr Renata Dwan (from Ireland):

https://twitter.com/RenataDwan

 

 

One of my micro-disarmament successes in which UNIDIR was involved, was disarming the Khmer Rouge after thirty years of war in Cambodia. One day I might write the whole book, but meanwhile I wrote a short story:

 

  Peace is Possible: Exchanging Weapons for Development and how we disarmed the Khmer Rouge with wit, bluff and balloons

This amazing short story is fun to read. Robin Poulton takes you into rural pagodas along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, along tracks threaded between fields of landmines and rice paddies. Here you can read peace journalism at its best, and peace anthropology at its most creative: an uplifting and amusing story proving that even after a civil war, Peace is Possible.

On Amazon.com


 

STRETCHING is good for keeping you fit and healthy during 2023 !

  I WISH YOU PEACE and HAPPINESS during 2023. I stretch out several times each week to keep my body supple, and my back straight. Over Chr...