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Red Cross and Red Crescent Need to change!
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No best answer has yet been selected by nfn. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The proposal of a neutral 'red crystal' is designed to end the years of controversy over symbols used by relief workers and medical workers throughout the world.
You have unwittingly demonstrated the very reasoning behind the proposal in your rant of a question.
There are only two symbols (for relief / medical workers) recognised under the Geneva Conventions - the Red Cross and The Red Crescent.
Almost by definition, these operations usually operate in war zones and politically unstable areas - (hence their protection under the Geneva Convention) - conflicts often arising from religious or ethnic differences.
If, as you say, "EACH TO HIS OWN", you would have a different symbol for every "Shintu, Muslim, Catholic, Hindu, and Jehovah's Witness" relief / medical organisation.
This would lead to, at best, confusion - at worst (say, in a war zone between Shintus and Jehovah Witnesses), probable deliberate targeting of vehicles bearing "the enemy's" symbol. This would not only be against the Geneva Convention, but surely, against the whole purpose of showing a symbol that is supposed to afford some sort of protection?
Take the Daily Mail-esque "PC-gone-mad" spin off the issue, and ask yourself whether you still think having one, unified, neutral symbol would not be good idea?
Did you know that the Scouts had to change one of their emblems for a similar reason. Up until the rise of Nazism, the swastika was one of the badges given for services to Scouting. The badge was changed only because it could be misconstrued as standing for something other than its true meaning.
During the Russo-Turkish War from 1876 to 1878, the Ottoman Empire used a Red Crescent instead of the Red Cross because its government believed that the cross would alienate its Muslim soldiers.
From 1924 to 1980, Iran used a 'Red Lion with Sun' symbol for its national society, based on the flag and emblem of the Shah dynasty. The Red Lion with Sun was formally recognised as a protection symbol in 1929, together with the Red Crescent.
Magen David Adom, the national society of Israel, has used the Red Shield of David as its organization emblem since its foundation. They argue that the symbol should be recognised by the ICRC, citing the clear religious meaning behind the Red Crescent.
It is partly because of Israel's use of the Red Shield of David and both Sri Lanka & India wishing to use a Red Swastika that the Red Crystal is being proposed as a single, unified symbol.
>> "oh, and changing the symbol is going to fool the bad guys is it? They aim at a red cross, red crescent or red crystal. They will still aim " <<
You miss the point completely, nfn. Who made any mention of 'bad guys'? I suggested there would be "probable targeting of vehicles bearing the enemy's symbol". This could be deliberate or in error.
Where there are opposing sides with different symbols for their respective medical outfits, then flying your symbol in the face of the enemy may be asking for trouble.
If both sides used the same, universal, neutral symbol, then deliberate targeting would be less likely, as they could not be sure that it was not one of there own medical vehicles.
If this also reduced the chances of being targeted in error (someone mistaking the enemy's 'relief symbol' for that of their military insignia), then is that not a good thing?
kempie has raised a good point.
In the Second World War, there were many soldiers from all over the 'Empire' fighting for the Allies. Including those from the Indian sub-continent.
Now, it would have been really useful if, instead of Red Cross ambulances, Indian Regiments serving in Malaya, Burma and North and East Africa etc., used ambulances with their own relief symbol on it. ('Each to their own', as you say.)
So you would have ambulances with bloody great big swatikas on the sides. How useful would that have been?
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