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Nature 399, 505 (1999) © Macmillan Publishers Ltd.
10 June 1999
A cause worth funding
A German synchrotron would be good for the Middle East.
It's too easy for Nature to urge the world to spend more money
on science. On the whole, that temptation is resisted. But there
are honourable exceptions. A proposal -- as yet unfunded -- to establish
a joint synchrotron radiation facility in the Middle East is one
such, and deserves immediate attention.
The government of Germany is understood to be receptive to the
idea of giving away a fully functioning synchrotron radiation source
for use by scientists in the Middle East (see pages
507-508). The synchrotron is to be the focus of a broader centre
for research excellence for scientists from throughout the region,
as well as other parts of the world. The project's founders envisage
a facility similar in aim to the European Laboratory for Particle
Physics (CERN), which brought together scientists from countries
that had fought each other during the Second World War.
Scientists nominated by many of the region's governments will discuss
the project at a meeting organized by the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization in Paris next week. Israel
is expected generously to agree not to bid to host the synchrotron
-- as its scientific competence would well qualify it to -- allowing
the facility to be housed in one of its neighbouring countries.
There appears to be no shortage of potential hosts, with Cyprus,
Egypt and the Palestinian Authority among the contenders.
But the proposal needs funds in no small measure. There are several
potential sources. These include the European Union and the US government,
as well as states within the Middle East itself. The issue of funds
for the project will also be raised at the World Conference on Science
in Budapest later this month. Nature's advice to any potential funder
is not to hold back, for this will be a worthwhile investment. Initiatives
such as this do not come around often. When they do, they should
be supported unhesitatingly.
After a troubled half-century, the peoples of the Middle East are
making the slow transition to peace. It is sometimes hard to imagine,
but there was a time not so long ago when the Christians, Jews and
Muslims of the Middle East lived in relative harmony, when philosophers
and scientists were recruited to the region's leading institutions
of learning because of their expertise, and not on the basis of
their faith or geographic identity.
Is it too optimistic to suggest that next week's meeting in Paris
may mark the return of such happier times? Probably. But the meeting
will be a valuable and long-awaited beginning. And if the project
succeeds, it could be a step closer to the day scientists from Israel
and its neighbours are free to travel to -- and work in -- one another's
laboratories, exchange information and cooperate in research. That
alone would be a major step forward.
Nature © Macmillan Publishers Ltd 1999 Registered No. 785998 England.
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