BANGKOK, November 1 (IPS) – It’s a bleak international second—with civil society actors battling assassinations, imprisonment, fabricated fees, and funding cuts to pro-democracy actions in a world gripped by inequality, local weather chaos, and rising authoritarianism. But, the temper at Bangkok’s Thammasat College was something however defeated.
As soon as the positioning of the 1976 bloodbath, the place pro-democracy college students had been brutally crushed, the campus—a “hallowed floor” for civil society actors—echoed with renewed voices calling for defending democracy in what Secretary Basic of CIVICUS, Mandeep Tiwana, described as a “topsy-turvy world” with rising authoritarianism—a poignant reminder that even in locations scarred by repression, the battle for civic area endures.
“Let it resonate,” stated Ichal Supriadi, Secretary Basic, Asian Democracy Community. “Democracy have to be defended collectively,” including that it was the “shared energy” that confronts authoritarianism.
Regardless of the hopeful spirit at Thammasat College, the place the Worldwide Civil Society Week (ICSW) is underway, the conversations usually turned to sobering realities. Dr. Gothom Arya of the Asian Cultural Discussion board on Improvement and the Peace and Tradition Basis reminded individuals that civic freedoms are being curtailed throughout a lot of the world.
Citing alarming figures, he spoke bluntly of the worldwide imbalance in priorities—noting how navy expenditure continues to soar at the same time as civic area shrinks. He pointedly referred to america’ Ministry of Protection because the “Ministry of Conflict,” evaluating its USD 968 billion navy finances with China’s USD 3 billion and noting that spending on the warfare in Ukraine had elevated tenfold in simply three years—a stark illustration of worldwide priorities. “That is the place we’re with respect to peace and warfare,” he stated gloomily.

At one other session, related reflections set the tone for a broader critique of worldwide energy dynamics. Walden Bello, a former senator and peace activist from the Philippines, argued that america—particularly below the Trump administration—had deserted even the pretense of a free-market system, changing it with what he known as “overt monopolistic hegemony.” American imperialism, he stated, “graduated away from camouflage makes an attempt and is now unapologetic in demanding that the world bend to its needs.”

Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy, a Pakistani physicist and writer, echoed the sentiment, expressing outrage at his personal nation’s management. He condemned Pakistan’s choice to appoint a “psychopath, routine liar, and aggressive warmonger” for the Nobel Peace Prize, saying that the management had “no proper to barter away minerals and uncommon earth supplies to an American dictator” with out public consent.
Hoodbhoy urged the worldwide neighborhood to intervene and restart peace talks between Pakistan and India—two nuclear-armed neighbors perpetually teetering on the sting of renewed battle.
However at no level in the course of the day did the main focus shift away from the continuing humanitarian crises. Arya reminded the viewers of the tragic lack of civilian lives in Gaza, the devastating preventing in Sudan that had led to widespread malnutrition, and the worldwide inequality worsened by local weather inaction. “As a result of some massive nations refused to observe the Paris Settlement ten years in the past,” he warned, “the remainder of the world will undergo the implications.”
That grim actuality was introduced into even sharper reduction by Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi, a Palestinian doctor and politician, who delivered a harrowing account of Gaza’s devastation. He stated that via the usage of American-supplied weapons, Israel had killed an estimated 12 % of Gaza’s inhabitants, destroyed each hospital and college, and left practically 10,000 our bodies buried beneath the rubble.
“Whilst these crises unfolded the world over, the convention demonstrated that civil society continues to persevere, as practically 1,000 individuals from greater than 75 organizations overcame journey bans and visa hurdles to collect at Thammasat College, sharing methods, solidarity, and hope via over 120 classes.
Amongst them was a delegation whose presence carried the load of a complete nation’s silenced hopes—Hamrah, believed to be the one Afghan civil society group at ICSW.
“Our participation is vital at a time when a lot of the world has turned its gaze away from Afghanistan,” Timor Sharan, co-founder and programme director of the HAMRAH Initiative, instructed IPS.
“It is important to remind the worldwide neighborhood that Afghan civil society has not disappeared; it’s preventing and holding the road.”
By way of networks like HAMRAH, he stated, activists, educators, and defenders have continued secret and on-line colleges, documented abuses, and amplified these silenced below the Taliban rule. “Our presence right here is each a press release of resilience and a name for solidarity.”
“Visibility issues,” identified Riska Carolina, an Indonesian lady and LGBTIQ+ rights advocate working with ASEAN SOGIE Caucus (ASC). “What’s much more highly effective is being seen collectively.”
“It was particular as a result of it introduced collectively actions—Dalit, Indigenous, feminist, incapacity, and queer—that not often share the identical area, creating room for intersectional democracy to take form,” stated Carolina, whose work focuses on regional advocacy for LGBTQIA+ rights inside Southeast Asia’s political and human rights frameworks, particularly the ASEAN system, which she stated has traditionally been “gradual to acknowledge problems with sexuality and gender variety.”
“We work to ensure that SOGIESC (Sexual Orientation, Gender Identification and Expression, and Intercourse Traits) inclusion isn’t just seen as a distinct segment challenge, however as a core a part of democracy, governance, and human rights. Which means participating governments, civil society, and regional our bodies to make sure queer individuals’s participation, security, and dignity is a part of how we measure democratic progress.”
She stated the ICSW supplied ASC with an opportunity to make “seen” the connection between civic area, democracy, and queer liberation and to remind folks that democracy just isn’t solely about elections but additionally about “who is ready to reside freely and who stays silenced by regulation or stigma.”
Away from the principle classes, civil society leaders gathered for a candid huddle—half reflection, half reckoning—to look at their position in an period when their area to behave was shrinking.
“The dialogue surfaced some robust however crucial questions,” he stated. They requested themselves: ‘Have we grasped the complete scale of the challenges we face?’ ‘Are our responses robust sufficient?’ ‘Are we anticipating anti-rights forces to respect our guidelines and values?’ ‘Are we reacting as an alternative of setting the agenda? And are we allies—or accomplices—of these risking every part for justice?’
But when there was one factor crystal clear to everybody current, it was that civil society should stand united, not fragmented, to defend democracy.
IPS UN Bureau Report
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