Three years ago, New Zealand's former Ambassador to the United Nations, Colin Keating, was granted Rwanda's Campaign against Genocide Medal by its President, Paul Kagame.
Keating was UN Security Council president during the darkest days of the 1994 Rwandan genocide and, as the Rwandans now put it, "relentlessly sought the intervention of the international community to end the carnage". Long before George Clooney et al were making Africa a cause celebre, Keating was a lone and courageous voice, "indignant about the deafening silence of the then Permanent Representative of Rwanda to the United Nations" as the killing intensified.
This year, despite his best efforts 20 years ago, Keating apologised for the UN's "utter failure" to stop the massacre of as many as one million Tutsi people by Rwanda's Hutu majority.
This type of insistent voice is the one that we, as New Zealanders, should be aiming to send to the United Nations Security Council, even if our thoughts are too dangerous to succeed, and even if our intentions fail to fire. Independent and ready to call a spade a shovel - if that's really the role we envisage for ourselves.