Australian Red Cross turns 100, please stop misusing its symbol
THIS is a problem we desperately need to fix. One of our most important, iconic symbols is being badly misused. We can change that.
National
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IT’S one of the most familiar symbols in the world. But is it becoming a bit too familiar?
The Red Cross, a symbol synonymous with humanitarian and medical aid, is being misused by a range of individuals and companies.
It might be a medical or veterinarian centre wrongly using the cross.
Or something outside the medical realm like an appliance fix-it business. It might even be something as simple, not to mention saucy, as a naughty nurse outfit.
Whatever the case, Australian Red Cross officials warn that any time the Red Cross is misused, it potentially jeopardises everything the iconic symbol stands for.
“The Red Cross basically means ‘don’t shoot’,” says Phoebe Wynn-Pope, Director of International Humanitarian Law and Movement Relations at the Australian Red Cross.
“It means that this person or building or vehicle or whatever is not part of the fight. It is a neutral entity providing medical or humanitarian assistance.”
This week is the 100th anniversary of the Australian Red Cross. The Australian chapter formed at the outbreak of World War I.
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One of the focuses of this week’s centenary celebrations is to promote awareness of the importance of the symbol. The Australian Red Cross says its emblem has come to mean health care to many people, however it specifically means humanitarian aid in war and emergency zones.
“People don’t understand what the Red Cross actually means,” Wynn-Pope explains. “We find again and again that people are quite surprised when we tell them.”
The Australian Red Cross is constantly dealing with people who misuse the symbol, unaware they were doing the wrong thing.
“We find in Australia that if someone misuses it is not such a drastic thing. But if we think of someone in Syria misusing the emblem, there can then be real confusion about what the symbol means. We can’t afford even in peacetime to misuse it.”
Wynn-Pope’s advice to anyone thinking of using the Red Cross symbol is to think twice.
“It’s actually illegal to use the symbol. Its use is protected by the Geneva Convention.”
Founded in the 19th century by Swiss businessman Henry Dunant, the Red Cross uses as its symbol an inverse representation of the Swiss flag, which features a white cross on a red background. The Red Cross is often misinterpreted as the Christian cross, which is not the case.
Today, the Red Crescent is used by 33 countries instead of the Cross symbol. Both organisations are part of the same body, known as the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. A new symbol, the Red Crystal, has also recently been approved.
Originally published as Australian Red Cross turns 100, please stop misusing its symbol