Monday, December 26, 2016

UnChristmassy movies

2016 kicked off its death roster of clebrities early this year, with Alan Rickman.  Myself and a friend had watched only a month earlier the original Die Hard at the cinema, claimed as it was (somewhat ironically) as a Christmas movie.  Now, in the wake of Rickman's passing, Die Hard is acclaimed uncritically as a Christmas movie.
I have no problems with that.  There are other films which definitely do not fit the Christmas spirit.  A colleague of mine at work said he got this family to watch Requiem for a Dream on Christmas Eve.  A compelling picture, apparently it was so distressing it ruined Christmas day for everyone.  Other movies that can sour the festive cheer could be ones like The Piano Teacher and Mystic River, though my colleague says he has learnt his lesson.
On Christmas Day this year, on Channel 5, The Dallas Buyers' Club was broadcast.  I knew it was about AIDS and was a critical smash, but maybe not your average Christmas flick, yet I was determined to see it.  To my surprise, I didn't find it depressing - despite downbeat events throughout, I took from it a vibrant human desire to not just survive, but live and there was much ingenuity on display against the odds.
The story arc was fairly standard - bigoted man has life-changing event/news and comes around to value though he once treated with contempt - and those representing Big Pharma a little too unctuously villainous and money-grabbing.  This, however, could not detract from a film with powerful performances and enough local detail (1980s Texas and its gay scene, government agencies and hospitals in hock to Big Pharma, the entrepreneurial creation of buyers' clubs), plus topicality with LGBT rights, to give the film a grip it doesn't loosen.  In the end, a man who was given 30 days to live by his local hospital, managed 2,557 before succumbing to the consequences of the virus probably acquired through unprotected sex.  What I took from the movie though was how life-affirming it was and the ordinary person's struggle against malign corporate forces and bought government agencies and medical professionals acting as henchmen.  In some ways, maybe it was an appropriate Christmas film.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Gambia riven by vengeance

Early hopes that Gambia can prove a bright spot in 2016 by moving to a democracy seem to be hanging in the balance. President Yahya Jammeh’s U-turn on accepting the election results that were won by his challenger Adama Barrow throws this small West African country into more turmoil. Jammeh’s latest move to prop up his rule has been to put troops onto the streets.
It is widely thought that Jammeh’s change of heart came after Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang, chair of Mr Barrow’s coalition, threatened to prosecute the president. Jammeh had said he would return to his farm following the conclusion of his dictatorship in which he once threatened to rule for “a billion years”! But instead of emulating the Roman politician and dictator Cincinnatus, Jallow-Tambajang claimed he would start an uprising from the farm.
Though it might be expected to have a certain naivety in political discourse after Jammeh’s long autocratic rule, it is common sense not to threaten a rival when the latter still holds onto the levers of power and you do not. Had Mr Barrow and his allies contented themselves with fairly neutral statements such as returning to the Commonwealth until his swearing-in, things may have gone well. However, none of that is now certain with the unpredictable eccentricity of Mr Jammeh who has claimed to have invented a cure for AIDS.
Mr Jammeh is certainly guilty of heinous human rights abuses documented by western NGOs and punishment would be fitting. In a new democracy though, it can serve a greater good of stability both internally and further afield to not prosecute your political opponents. Mr Jammeh could not have committed his crimes without significant help from people who may also fear the accession of Mr Barrow and thus would stir up trouble. Also, many despots often cling to power because they fear their rivals taking revenge should they become the government. The more examples where this does not happen, the more likely democracy will spread.
Even in mature democracies, it is accepted as not the done thing to attempt to imprison those whose viewpoints differ to your own or have been an election rival. One of Barack Obama’s first acts was to give amnesty to all US intelligence agents who had committed torture. Even Donald Trump has rowed back from his campaign promise to appoint a special prosecutor to send Hillary Clinton to prison.
One striking example from the same continent of Africa was the acquittal of Frederick Chiluba, former president of Zambia on corruption charges. The trial lasted from 2003 to 2009 and several of his aides and even Chiluba’s own wife were found guilty but Chiluba himself walked free. Transparency International Zambia lambasted the decision. Chiluba was also not impressed at the attempt to convict him but in not going to prison, Zambia’s fledgling democracy was left on a firmer footing.
South Africa, a country with sharp divisions and a controversial history, found a way to confront the demons of the past without them imperilling the post-apartheid constitutional settlement. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) gave immunity from criminal proceedings to all those who appeared before it. Many harrowing stories were recounted and sometimes those who had committed atrocities broke down in acts of contrition. Others showed no remorse for their actions and such brazen attitudes enraged those who wanted ‘justice’ of a harder kind. The TRC was not perfect and reconciliation was not always forthcoming but it provided an outlet for past tensions to be aired peacefully rather than violently.
Whatever now happens to Gambia, the best course of action would be for the opposition to grant Mr Jammeh and his associates immunity for historic crimes (while leaving open a legal avenue should he rebel in the future). It may not seem like justice in the short term but in the long term it will be the justice of an established democracy.