Start Up
Our first venture, begun in 1999 under the leadership of CECHE Vice Chairman
Mark Palmer, was to help conceive, organize and participate in history's
first meetings of all the world's democratic governments and democratic
non-governmental organizations. Held in Warsaw on June 25-28, 2000, the
meetings provided CECHE the venue to produce and disseminate over one thousand
brochures and buttons designed to promote universal democracy by the year
2025. On June 30, 2000, The Wall Street Journal noted that CECHE Vice Chairman
Mark Palmer "was one of the architects of the first global conference
to promote worldwide democracy." Recent democratic breakthroughs in
Mexico, Yugoslavia and Kenya, and for the first time serious discussions
and movement towards democracy in the Middle East encourage us to persevere.
2002 and Beyond
The second meeting of the world's democracies and democrats took place in
Seoul, South Korea in November, 2002 and endorsed an action agenda with
particular emphasis on regional cooperation in Asia, Africa and the Middle
East - where the major challenges to democracy are located. The next meetings
are scheduled for Chile, Mali and Portugal. The Middle Eastern country Qatar
has stated that it is working to become a democracy and thereby qualify
to host the subsequent meeting. One of our first objectives-formation of
a democracy caucus at the United Nations-is already a reality.
A Poignant Example
The circumstances surrounding the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), which spread outwards from China across the world in late 2002 and early 2003, is a stark reminder of the inextricable link between honest and clear communications, better health and a clean environment -- CECHE's founding objectives -- and the growth of democracy and human rights. It took four months for communist political leaders to permit public health officials in China to share information about the SARS outbreak in Guangdong province with the World Health Organization (WHO), and another month of heavy international publicity and pressure to allow visits and access to data. But even in mid-April 2003, the head of WHO's Beijing office noted that the international community did not trust China's statistics.
According to veteran New York Times China correspondent John Pomfret (himself married into a Chinese family), "From the start, China's reaction to the disease was textbook Chinese communism."
"The SARS epidemic is not just a 'misstep' by the leadership in Beijing, but an endemic problem of the regime… placing an obsessive view of power above the interests, and the very lives, of its people," agreed the oppressed traditional Chinese health and spiritual group Falun Gong. Conversely, one retired senior Chinese official said the government response to SARS "will create new expectations among the masses. The old equation, 'We rule and you have no rights,' is finished now." (Washington Post, April 22, 2003)
The interplay between health and the need for democracy is clear. A more transparent, democratic government which had to answer to a free press would have informed its own people and the world much earlier, thereby saving many lives in China and beyond. This phenomenon -- reluctance by nondemocratic countries to divulge accurate and timely information about health crises -- is not new. Tragically, we have witnessed it before in China in the case of AIDS when leading activist Wan Yanhai was jailed for "revealing state secrets" upon publicizing a government report that proved Henan province officials privately knew about the extent of HIV infections. (Washington Post, April 27, 2003)
However the recent handling of the outbreak of SARS by the non-democratic government of China reminds us that we still face serious challenges. Chinese public health officials were only permitted by their Communist political leaders to share information about SARS with WHO four months after the outbreak in Guangdong province, and to allow visits and access to data only after another month of heavy international publicity and pressure. A more transparent, democratic government which had to answer to a free press would have provided information to its own people and the world much earlier, thereby saving many lives in China and beyond. We have seen this same pattern of hiding the truth about Aids by Communist China and other non-democratic countries.
CECHE is at work on democracy and health in a number of the key countries and regions. In April 2003, CECHE's vice chairman, Ambassador Mark Palmer, author of “Breaking the Real Axis of Evil—How to Oust the World’s Last Dictators by 2025” traveled to Qatar to meet with more than 100 Arab media, government and academic leaders, and to address a session on the role of the media and democracy in fulfilling the health and other needs of the Middle East. Echoing the United Nations Development Programme's 2002 Arab Human Development Report, a number of the leaders and session participants pointed to the gap in freedom, gender and knowledge as impeding the region's progress in health and other fields. Women from several Arab countries spoke out strongly about the need for reform. Meanwhile, the emir of Qatar introduced a new constitution that enables women to play a full role in his country, including voting in national elections. Ambassador Palmer was invited to appear on the three major Arabic language satellite television stations Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya and Al Hurra to discuss democracy, human rights and related subjects.
At Ambassador Palmer's initiative and in part with CECHE’s support America's oldest global democracy and human rights organization, Freedom House will be producing an annual report on the world's worst dictators. This report will be the first systematic effort to chronicle inter alia their personal crimes against the people of the countries over whom they rule.
Questions? Comments? Concerns? E-mail CECHE at CECHE@comcast.net
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