Monday, February 11, 2008

France To The Rescue Of Hirsi Ali?

It seems so:


Somali-born author and former Dutch member of parliament Ayaan Hirsi Ali has appealed worldwide for help to fund her protection. She says she is daily receiving death threats because of her open criticism of extreme islam.

Her dreams may be about to come true as French politicians and intellectuals come to her rescue. They have responded by offering her worldwide protection but only if she takes up French citizenship. The Dutch government is refusing to protect her outside the country.

There are two reasons for the support she has gained from the French intellectural elite. First of all there is Nicholas Sarkozy, the French president, who offered last year to protect all women worldwide who are oppressed. And that is what Ayaan Hirsi Ali has been repeating in Paris: that it was the French president himself who made the offer.

Second, there is a big group of left-wing intellectuals, who are supporting her and her struggle. They point to the French tradition of human rights, of protecting people around the world who are oppressed when they defend human rights. They want to defend Hirsi Ali as well, because after all it is very strange that she is a European citizen, holding a European nationality (Dutch) - but she's not protected by Europe.

BeggingAyaan Hirsi Ali says she wants nothing other than "do my work and stay alive". She says that since October she has hardly done any normal work. The only thing she is doing is travelling around the world begging for funds to pay for her protection, but that's not the way she wants to live her life.

The government of the Netherlands, meanwhile, has not yet responded to this in any way. There is no evidence of any feelings of shame over the fact that Ms Hirsi Ali had to go to such lengths to ensure her own safety and her own protection.

The Dutch administration made a terse statement last year, saying that the government does not pay for her protection once she is abroad. Since then there has been no debate on the issue in the Netherlands.

There are still daily threats to her life because of things she says, things she writes about extreme Islam. When RNW talked to her at a small university in Paris, there was a lot of visible protection, with dozens of policemen outside and inside the building.

The next leg of her itinerary will see her to Brussels, where, accompanied by a delegation of French intellectuals, she will argue her case for protection with the European Parliament.

She is doing the right thing. She is making her case to as many people as she can get to listen. She is giving them the opportunity to help. If they decline to do so, then her blood will be on their hands, if it comes to the worst.

1 comment:

Pastorius said...

There is a sense in which that is true.