Mr.Mohamed Nasheed – deposed President of the Maldives honoured in Liverpool


On April 2nd 2012 Mohamed Nasheed, the deposed President of the Maldives, was awarded an honorary fellowship by his university, Liverpool John Moores University. The citation was read by Prof.Lord Alton of Liverpool and the Vice Chancellor, Professor Nigel Weatherill, made the presentation. The Fellowship was accepted on behalf of Mr.Nasheed by Dr.Farah Faizal, who resigned as Maldivan High Commissioner in protest at the coup d’etat. Her speech may listened to at this link:

http://www.ljmu.ac.uk/roscoe/97603.htm

Background:

Mohamed Nasheed (Dhivehi) was born on 17 May 1967 and was one of the founders of the Maldivian Democratic Party and the 4th President of the Maldives.

Mr Nasheed attended Majeediyya School in the Maldives, between 1971 and 1981. He continued his secondary school education overseas at the Overseas School of Colombo, from 1981 to 1982 and in August of that year he moved to the UK where he completed his Higher Secondary Education at the Dauntsey’s School in Wiltshire. After his A-Levels, Nasheed moved north to Liverpool where he read for a Bachelor of Arts in Maritime Studies at Liverpool Polytechnic – later Liverpool John Moores University, graduating in 1989.
Mohamed Nasheed is a man heralded as the harbinger of change who pledged to complete the archipelago’s transition to democracy. A former political prisoner and activist, he was jailed numerous times by his authoritarian predecessor Maumoon Abdul Gayoom. He had founded his own magazine Sangu and published a series of investigative reports about President Gayoom’s regime, which he accused of being corrupt and guilty of human rights abuses. Due to this he spent several months in solitary confinement accused of trying to overthrow the government. Mr Nasheed was named an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience in 1991.

In recent years, Mr Nasheed has attracted worldwide attention for his campaign for action on climate change, even holding an underwater cabinet meeting to highlight his cause. He founded the Climate Vulnerable Forum, an association of countries affected disproportionately by climate change. He has won various awards for this work. In 2009, he was presented with the Coral Cultivation Initiative Award by Huvafen Fushi Resort and Underwater Spa, Maldives in recognition of his active participation in cultivating coral in the resort’s nursery as well as for his efforts in creating greater awareness on the impact of climate change in the Maldives. The The recent coup d’état which occurred in the Maldives resulted in the President, Mohamed Nasheed, being forced to resign at gunpoint and following his detention there have been fears for his safety and security. Anna Lindh Memorial Fund awarded Mr Nasheed, the 2009 Anna Lindh Award for the instrumental role he played in bringing democracy to the Maldives and in recognition of his efforts on the world stage to highlight the dangers of climate change by bringing people and their human rights at the heart of the debate.

In September of that year, at the global premiere of the “Age of Stupid”, Nasheed was presented with a “Not Stupid” Award for his efforts to tackle climate change and for the Maldives’ announcement to become the first carbon-neutral country in the world. In the same month, Time magazine named Nasheed No. 1 in the “Leaders & Visionaries” category within its annual list of “Heroes of the Environment (2009)”. On the Earth Day of 2010, Nasheed was awarded the Champions of the Earth Award, the United Nations’ most prestigious environmental prize. According to a press release by the United Nations Environment Programme, the award was in recognition of Nasheed, being “an articulate voice for the vulnerable and the poor facing the challenges of global warming and also a politician who is showcasing to the rest of the world how a transition to climate neutrality can be achieved and how all nations, no matter how big or how small, can contribute”.

In 2010, he was named by Foreign Policy magazine to its list of top global thinker and in March 2011, following his official visit to the Republic of Mauritius, he was decorated by President Anerood Jugnauth and was awarded the highest distinct order of merit in the country. He was elevated to the rank of Grand Commander of the star and key of the Indian ocean during the official lunch offered by the Jugnauth at the Château of Réduit .

Mohamed Nasheed came to power as President of the Maldives after elections in 2008 ended 30 years of autocratic rule by Maumoon Abdul Gayoom. In the Maldives first ever democratic elections, Mr Nasheed won with 54% of the votes.

He has faced fierce political opposition, as parliament is dominated by opposition supporters of the former president. Tensions escalated after the army arrested a senior judge the government accused of political bias, prompting street protests. Human rights groups added their voices to calls for the judge to be released – and, as matters grew increasingly heated, there were demands for the United Nations to be brought in. Mohamed Nasheed resigned on 7 February 2012, following weeks of protests by opposition which was eventually joined by some of the military. Vice-President Waheed Hassan was sworn in vowing to uphold the “rule of law”.

Mr Nasheed’s resignation statement read: “I believe if I continue as the President of the Maldives, the people of the country would suffer more. I therefore have resigned as the President of Maldives. I wish the Maldives would have a consolidated democracy. I wish for justice to be established. My wish is for the progress and prosperity of the people. And I thank you all for your support and contributions to achieve success for the past three years.”

Mohamed Nasheed was intending to deliver a Roscoe Lecture in September last year, while on a state visit to the UK, and would have received an Honorary Fellowship on this occasion. This is the University’s highest honour, bestowed on those in public life who personify its ethos of ‘dream, plan, achieve,’ and was in recognition of the role he had played in spear-heading the democracy movement in his country and which led to his imprisonment, to solitary confinement, and to torture.

Mohamed Nasheed studied at Liverpool John Moores University between 1984 and 1989. The University has, therefore, followed events in this Commonwealth country with more than passing interest. On behalf of LJMU’s Roscoe Foundation for Citizenship, Vice-Chancellor, Professor Nigel Weatherill hosted Dr.Faizal’s talk and discussion about what has occurred.

April 15th 1912, the sinking of Titanic – its link to a church in Liverpool and to two remarkable women

At 11.40pm on April 15th, one hundred years ago  RMS Titanic collided with an iceberg 375 miles south of Newfoundland as she sailed on her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York.
Built in Belfast by Harland and Wolff she was operated by White Star Line. Titanic’s crew numbered 900, with 2,200 passengers. 1,517 died and, notoriously, Titanic only had lifeboats for one third of that number. Just 710 people survived.
Some of the male survivors, most notably White Star Line’s chairman, J.Bruce Ismay, were accused of cowardice for leaving Titanic while women and children remained on the ship. Subsequently, he faced social ostracism and obloquy. The disintegrating wreck of Titanic lies on the seabed but, through a succession of books and films, memory of that fateful night remains sharp.
White Star Line was a Liverpool company founded by John Pilkington and Henry Wilson. It made its money and reputation on trade between the UK and Australia and later on its regular voyages to New York – taking thousands of émigrés from Europe to America. In 1868, over dinner at Broughton Hall in Liverpool (a Gothic house which would become a Catholic girls school), a merger deal was struck between Thomas Ismay and his partner, William Imrie. Subsequently the company passed into the hands of his son, J.Bruce Ismay.
Commemorating this most deadly of maritime disasters, Liverpool’s Maritime Museum has opened an exhibition entitled “Titanic and Liverpool, the Untold Story.” But within that story there is a deeper story too – one which links Everton’s beautiful church of St.Mary of the Angels in Liverpool to Titanic, to White Star Line’s heiress, to the Poor Clares and to the remarkable Kay Kelly.
Both Ismay and Imrie wanted to build a small empire to bequeath to their descendants. However, Thomas’ son, J.Bruce Ismay, was clueless whilst William Imrie had no issue. This changed when in 1872 Imrie adopted his South American niece, Amy.
After Thomas Ismay’s death his hectoring and bullying son increasingly isolated Amy. An astute businesswoman in her own right she saw the writing on the wall and removed herself from J.Bruce Ismay’s circle. At around the same time she and her maiden aunt met a Franciscan, Fr.Bede Wrigley, and were received into the Catholic Church.
Amy and her aunt determined to travel to Italy on “The Grand Tour.” They were captivated by Rome’s churches. In Assisi, at the basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli, much venerated as the place of St. Francis’ death and where St. Clare embarked on her monastic life, Amy determined that she, too, would become a Poor Clare. On the death of her parents in 1907 she became Imrie’s sole heiress and one of the ten richest women in England, inheriting more than £18 million in today’s currency.
She then took her vows of poverty as a Poor Clare, living a life of austerity and asceticism – giving away most of her money to the poor of Liverpool.
In April 1944 she died in the poverty at the convent of Sclerder Abbey, close to the Cornish fishing village of Polperro, which her money had built.

By one of those serendipitous twists of dates, Titanic had sailed from her Southampton berth, number 44, in April 1912. Her nemesis, J.Bruce Ismay died a few years before – their lives and deaths a total contrast.

In addition, Amy used her White Star Line inheritance to found the stunning church of St.Mary of the Angels in Liverpool and the adjacent Friary School.
The church was modelled on the Roman church of Santa Maria di Ariacoeli, with which Amy had fallen in love. She endowed it with beautiful fifteenth and sixteenth century Renaissance artefacts. These include stunning Stations of the Cross and an imposing sixteenth century High Altar which originally stood in Bologna Cathedral. Tradition has it that many saints, including St Ignatius of Loyola, St Philip Neri and St Charles Borommeo offered Mass at the High Altar and preached from the church’s pulpit.
The St. Anthony’s altar was brought from Valetta, and in front of which the Knights of Malta prayed The Rosary all night before embarking for the October 1571 Battle of Lepanto. It is a wonderful church – often called The Vatican in Liverpool – and English Heritage should list it as Grade I, to give absolute certainty to its future. Mother Mary Clare said that “Liverpool people will never be able to visit Rome, so I will bring Rome to them.” Having entered an enclosed order she never herself saw the finished church.
St.Mary of the Angels is a church of extraordinary beauty, but it is also inextricably linked to one of the greatest tragedies of the twentieth century. Its association with Titanic endows it with huge international significance and importance.
The great nephew and closest living relative of Mother Mary Clare, formerly Amy (née Pollard) Imrie, is Richard Pollard, who lives in California. He says his great aunt “deliberately located the church in what was, and still is, one of the poorest wards in England. Her dream was to enable those less fortunate than herself to be able to worship in a setting containing architecture and works of art that would stand comparison with the finest in Europe.”
And it was this church which Liverpool’s Kay Kelly – who had experienced a miraculous healing from cancer – would  campaign to save when, in 2001, it was closed and rumours circulated (denied by the Archdiocese) that it might be demolished.

Happily, today it is used by the combined Catholic-Anglican Faith school and by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra ( see http://davidalton.net/2011/03/20/in-harmony-making-music-in-west-everton-at-st-mary-and-the-angels/)
The sinking of Titanic, on April 15th 1912, has many threads – but few which are as remarkable as the contrasting lives of the man and woman who inherited White Star Line’s wealth – and which link two remarkable Catholic women with a beautiful church in the port of Liverpool.

Commemorating these events, Brother Ken Vance SJ of St Francis Xavier’s Church in Liverpool (SFX), close to the church of St.Mary and the Angels, is preparing to welcome a collection of rare and historic photos to mark the centenary of the sinking of  Titanic.  The photos, taken by an Irish Jesuit, are a unique record of the events of 1912 and will be a highlight of the parish’s Flowers for the Titanic flower festival. They will be highlighting the photographs of Fr Francis Browne SJ who took the last photos of ship before she sank and who was a periodic visitor to SFX.

His uncle was the bishop of Cork who gave him a ticket for the first leg of the voyage from Southampton to Queenstown.

Kony 2012 – House of Lords debate on March 26th about the LRA and Kony.

Kony 2012 ( http://www.youtube.com/user/invisiblechildreninc?feature=watch )is a viral video watched on the internet by more than 100 million people worldwide. Made by an American advocacy group, Invisible Children, it tells the story of the mass murderer and child abductor, Joseph Kony, and his Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).

In 1987Kony began his ruthless campaign in northern Uganda of killing and mutilation, recruiting 30,000 children into his militia. The LRA routinely abducts and indoctrinates boys, training them to fight, while girls are raped and used as sex slaves.

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Infanticide, Gender Abortions, Subversion of Conscience: Wake Up Britain – before it’s too late…

Three shocking stories indicate a depravity and brutalism which at first glance appears beyond belief.  But these wake-up calls are all too real.

 

   The first concerns a group of ethicists linked to Oxford University who argue that newborn babies are not “actual persons”, don’t have “a moral right to life” and can legitimately be killed after they are born. It’s called infanticide although they prefer the euphemism “after birth abortion.”

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First Anniversary of the Killing of Shahbaz Bhatti – one of a long line who have courageously given their lives for their beliefs and for their friends…

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TEOBIlZs1I&context=C3edb8c0ADOEgsToPDskJ55Bb422uTeEmiNJll-Iiz

 

http://davidalton.net/?s=shahbaz+Bhatti&x=8&y=13

 

This weekend marks the first anniversary of the assassination of Clement Shahbaz Bhatti. Aged 42, the life of Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Minorities, was cut short by self described Taliban assassins. His murderers scattered pamphlets describing him as a “Christian infidel”. The leaflets were signed “Taliban al-Qaida Punjab.”

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Gender Based Abortions: Question – “If it’s illegal and immoral” (Andrew Lansley) in these cases, why is it legal and OK in other cases? I thought it was all just a matter of choice….

Gender Based Abortions: Question – “If it’s illegal and immoral” (Health Secretary, Andrew Lansley) in these cases, why is it legal and OK in other cases? I thought it was all just a matter of choice….

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9099511/Abortion-investigation-doctors-filmed-agreeing-illegal-abortions-no-questions-asked.html

 

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Shahbaz Bhatti – one year on since his brutal assassination: what to make of his sacrificial life and the treatment of minorities in Pakistan

The First Anniversary of the Death of Shahbaz Bhatti

David Alton

 

On March 2nd, 2011, aged 42, Clement Shahbaz Bhatti, Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Minorities, was brutally murdered. His assassination not only robbed Pakistan’s National Assembly of a dedicated, honest, and able politician but his death also threw into sharp relief the plight of Pakistan’s minorities, whose fearless champion he had become.  

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“Bringing about Political Change” – Liverpool Hope University 21st February – 2012

 

Mahatma Gandhi - be the change you wish to see

Liverpool Hope University Bringing About Political Change 4 – Powerpoint Presentation

Hope University: Tuesday February 21st 2012.

 

“Bringing about Political Change”

 

 

Arun Gandhi attributed the following remark to his grandfather, Mahatma: “You must be the change you want to see in the world” (quoted by Michael Potts in India-West (San Leandro, California) Vol. XXVII, No. 13 (1 February 2002) p. A34;

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Pyongyang Literary Festival – House of Lords Launch and How To Help

A reception to launch The Pyongyang Literary Festival project was held on February 15th in the River Room of the Lord Speaker’s apartments at the House of Lords. This was under the auspices of the charity the Epiphany Trust. The event was addressed by Dr.James Kim, founder of Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, Professor Keith Hanley of Lancaster University, Dr.John Swenson-Wright of the University of Cambridge (Chairman of the PLF), David Lee (PLF Committee member), Lord Alton (PLF Patron)and the Lord Speaker, Baroness D’Souza.

Pictures of the event may be viewed at:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ibisbill/sets/72157629345002521/

Further details at:

http://epiphany.org.uk/plf.html

And how to support the event:

http://www.justgiving.com/epiphany-plf