Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /customers/d/1/a/ufmalmo.se/httpd.www/magazine/wp-content/themes/refined-magazine/candidthemes/functions/hook-misc.php on line 125 Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /customers/d/1/a/ufmalmo.se/httpd.www/magazine/wp-content/themes/refined-magazine/candidthemes/functions/hook-misc.php on line 125 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/d/1/a/ufmalmo.se/httpd.www/magazine/wp-content/themes/refined-magazine/candidthemes/functions/hook-misc.php:125) in /customers/d/1/a/ufmalmo.se/httpd.www/magazine/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8 Diego Annys – Pike & Hurricane https://magazine.ufmalmo.se A Foreign Affairs Magazine Thu, 03 Dec 2020 12:02:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.9 https://magazine.ufmalmo.se/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Screen-Shot-2016-08-03-at-17.07.44-150x150.png Diego Annys – Pike & Hurricane https://magazine.ufmalmo.se 32 32 Let It Flow: The Netherlands Under Water https://magazine.ufmalmo.se/2019/04/let-it-flow-the-netherlands-under-water/ Fri, 12 Apr 2019 13:29:15 +0000 http://magazine.ufmalmo.se/?p=3023 Don’t hold it back anymore A land of water The Netherlands and water are an inseparable combination. In a corner of the European continent, water is everywhere, around and within. Besides its long North Sea coast line, the country is basically a large river delta. Belgium’s largest rivers, the Scheldt

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Don’t hold it back anymore

A land of water

The Netherlands and water are an inseparable combination. In a corner of the European continent, water is everywhere, around and within. Besides its long North Sea coast line, the country is basically a large river delta. Belgium’s largest rivers, the Scheldt and the Meuse, do not reach the sea in its own territory. They go on to the Netherlands, and reach the North Sea there. Same for the Rhine, once one of the northern border rivers of the Roman Empire. The Netherlands is the place where the water goes.

A lot of the country used to be a swamp area. Its name, Netherlands, literally means low lands. With 26 percent of its land below sea level and 60 percent of the land vulnerable to flooding , an appropriate name . Its stereotypical windmills are not just a pretty sight. They were used to pump out the water, and create land for farming and living. The Dutch have been fighting the water for a thousand years. Water is what makes the country what it is.

The Dutch are quite effective in managing their water situation. They learned through experience. In 1953, a devastating storm hit. They call it the Water Disaster. Hitting the southwest of the country and the province of Zeeland, literally mean Sea-land, many dikes broke. Over 1,800 people died, in one night. The Dutch decided to lock out the water.

Keeping it out

Because if the disaster was able to happen due to the dikes being weak and old, what would be the first response? Make bigger, higher, stronger dikes. They called it the Delta Works. Instead of heightening over a thousand kilometres of dikes, they dammed the mouths of major rivers. Except not all river mouths can simply be closed shut. Some were left open, so ships could reach the massive harbours of Rotterdam and Antwerp. Nor does the water always come from the sea. It comes from the rivers, or the sky.

While the Dutch learned from 1953, more lessons were still to come. Because of the unwillingness to demolish houses in flood prone areas, new water disasters in the 90s caused large economic damage, and hundreds of farm animals died. If keeping the water out does not always work, how about letting it in?

Letting it in

Living with the water rather than battling it. Being safe from the water by letting it in. A counter-intuitive and at first strange approach to many Dutch who know their history of dikes and water well.

Reminiscent of the children’s book “Niemand Houdt Mij Tegen”, taking place in a future where Amsterdam is flooded and Rotterdam surrounded by huge walls keeping out the water, building larger and larger dikes is not a solution. Unless you want to build 10 meter high walls along the entire coast line and at every river bank, other solutions will have to do. A solution called controlled flooding.

The concept is simple: if places will flood anyway due to storms or sudden rises of the rivers, the Dutch would rather have farm land and parks flood, than city centres and neighbourhoods. The new project, called Room for the River, does not take land from the water. It gives the water space.

Yet in a land as densely populated as the Netherlands, all the land belongs to someone – and when the government decides your land will be re-purposed as an area to be flooded, the predictable outcome are uprooted farmers.

Flood the land

Yet the benefits are clear. In a country where 60 percent of the GDP is produced below sea level, defence against water is a priority. One example is the Overdiepse Polder.

The area, farmland by the Bergse Maas canal, lays lower than the canal and was surrounded by dikes. By lowering the dike just a bit, the area would be flooded when heavy storms occur, and by such lowering the water level of the canal – leaving the upstream city safe from flooding. By sacrificing the farmland, the city is safe. Yet of course the farmers were not cheering.

They were however given no choice. The government decided this was what is going to happen, and that was final. A politically difficult decision, especially if the results are not immediately visible. Yet, the Dutch have a responsibility to make these difficult choices. So they do not once again have to learn their lessons the hard way.

After negotiations with the farmers, through dialogue and honesty, they understood they could not stay – yet they made a compromise. All farms were demolished, half of them left, and half stayed. Their new farm is now on a man-made hill. Their farmland, available for use, and likely to flood once every 25 years.

As time flows, so does water

With half of the population, 8 million people, living below sea level, water is a constant thought for the Netherlands. With too many disasters in the past that could have been prevented if it were for some political courage and foresight, the Dutch do not want to make the same mistakes again. The process of coping with water is everlasting. At least if the Dutch want to continue living in their country, the evolution must never end.

by Diego Annys

Photo Credits

Water – floating houses

Water – a high farm

Water – Flood plan

Water – Netherlands height level

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Water – Netherlands water – terp foto Water – Overdiepse plan
Keeping International Law Grey https://magazine.ufmalmo.se/2018/03/ungreyzones/ Wed, 28 Mar 2018 17:51:30 +0000 http://magazine.ufmalmo.se/?p=2298 The grey zones between UN Charter goals 1945. The United Nations is full of hope. We fast-forward through time. Countries invaded. Human rights violated. Territories occupied. Peaceful demonstrations knocked down. People in despair. Where is the UN, the marvelous international society with all of its principles, the world wonders? That

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The grey zones between UN Charter goals

1945. The United Nations is full of hope.

We fast-forward through time. Countries invaded. Human rights violated. Territories occupied. Peaceful demonstrations knocked down. People in despair. Where is the UN, the marvelous international society with all of its principles, the world wonders?

That is where the problem begins—all of its principles. The UN has quite a few of them. But the UN’s principles are not a problem, you respond. Because who would argue against human rights? I reckon that no sane human would. Who would dispute the right to self-defense? Perhaps only imperialist warmongers. Then what exactly is this problem?

Grey zones. The place where no one is sure what is allowed, and more importantly, not allowed. International law by itself is already a grey zone. Is it truly law? Or merely standards, norms, and principles? In the UN, these grey zones come in the shape of the goals and values written in the UN Charter, which lays out the core of the whole organisation. Many of the articles in the Charter conflict with one another, causing situations where you cannot honour both at the same time. Which article overrules the other, which is more important? Let us answer that question with an example. When your mom used to say you can only have one cookie a day, but also that you should not waste food and the pack of cookies expires tomorrow. Then what? Easy. You have another cookie, or five, making sure they are not wasted. You pick the value which is in your best interest.

However, the best interest of one is often not the best interest of another. Where you enjoyed the benefit of a lot of cookies, your mom faces the disadvantage you not hungry while she made dinner. There is however an advantage to having no clear boundaries: more freedom to act. When the UN is stuck in a bureaucratic nightmare of inaction, the grey zones in the Charter can be used to undertake action. Or they can also be abused. What is permitted, tolerated, frowned upon, protested against, forbidden? There is no black and white.

Self-defense vs non-intervention

The United Nations consists of, no surprise, nations. An important principle to states is sovereignty, having been added to the Charter in several ways, including the right to self-defense (article 51) and the right to non-intervention (article 2.4). When your state is attacked by another, you can defend yourself against it, even when this means breaking the UN’s non-aggression rule. Similarly, another state does not have the right to intervene in your state’s affairs to begin with.

Sounds clear cut? Unfortunately not. Remember when the United States and its allies invaded Iraq? They did so by claiming Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, which could be a threat to their national security. So they felt the need for self-defense, and invaded. Preemptive self-defense, but nonetheless, self-defense—going directly against Iraq’s right to non-intervention.

Self-defense vs individual human rights

Even in war, human rights need to be safeguarded. While Security Council resolutions often mention the need for human rights, and the Secretary General and the General Assembly argue for them in a persistent manner, reality is that legal reasonings are being put forward to justify human rights violations.

In his book ‘The UN and Changing World Politics’, Thomas G. Weiss argues that in the case of severe safety threats and war, as part of self-defense, human rights can justifiably be violated. When a plane, containing 110 people, was supposedly hijacked and considered a threat to thousands attending the Sochi Winter Olympics Games in 2014, permission was given to have it shot down. In the War on Terror, prisoners were tortured as part of the interrogations.

Many would disagree with the claim that war is a valid reason to violate human rights, but also in this case a defense to continue harming them is shaped. Even if not in self-defense, they would argue it is illegal for others to intervene in the sovereignty of the state, even a state using torture. Yet the protection of human rights is evermore seen as a prerequisite for a state to earn their sovereignty, and the Responsibility to Protect hangs over their head.

However, law has grey zones. By using these grey zones, attempts are made not to make torture legal, but at least to make it not illegal.

The ever-lasting self-determination dispute

The 2005 UN World Summit agreed to “condemn terrorism in all forms”. Yet, this does not resolve the question of what constitutes terrorism. The reason why this was left undefined is quickly found. The UN Charter mentions “the principle of […] self-determination of peoples” (article 1.2).

Some consider that there are justifiable motives for the use of terrorism, such as in the process of liberation from foreign occupation. Examples include the independence of many states, from the Eastern Bloc to the decolonised Africa. The liberated people might see the terrorising moves as heroic but the story must be different for those that witnessed violent self-determination movements within their territory. To them, recognising that they themselves are to blame for terrorist activities being undertaken against them, is completely unacceptable.

Self-determination can also go against UN Charter right to territorial integrity (article 2.4). One can argue the Catalans have the right to self-determination, but at the same time that Spain has the right to territorial integrity. Both have a valid point in their reasoning.

Fighting for values, one shade of grey at a time

The United Nations was made by states to improve the world, without them agreeing on what is an improvement. So the grey zones were made, to make sure the UN could at the least protect some of its core values. Now the grey zones are kept, so the states can pick and choose their values. The UN is caught in a grey web of bright global goals and dark national realities. So we are left wondering, between hope and fear: just as the UN was founded after the scourge of war, do we have to again go through the dark night before we can greet the sunrise.

  1. The UN is full of doubt.

By Diego Annys

Image by Harshil Shah, Geneva – United Nations logo, Attribution-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-ND 2.0) 

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