Friday, September 30, 2005

Darfur militia resume deadly attacks

From correspondents in Khartoum
01oct05

THE African Union appealed for restraint overnight after deadly attacks by Arab militias in Darfur and neighbouring Chad threatened to wreck months of political, security and humanitarian efforts.

"We are issuing an urgent appeal to all parties involved to halt all hostilities," AU spokesman in Khartoum Nureddin Mezni said.
He confirmed there had been a deadly attack by marauding horse- and camel-riding Arab gunmen in northwest Darfur against Aro Sharow camp for displaced Darfurians.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said Friday that the death toll in the attack had risen to 34, describing it as a "murderous assault".

UNHCR staff who arrived at the camp said at least one victim appeared to have been tied up before he was killed, camp dwellers said he had been dragged behind a horse until he died.

Most of the 4,000 to 5,000 residents had returned from the surrounding countryside, where they fled as the mounted militia launched their deadly attack on the camp, said the UNHCR.

Staff also found that the raiders had stolen livestock and burned many of the flimsy shelters in which residents were living after abandoning their villages in the area because of similar attacks.

"Such acts have serious humanitarian repercussions since these people are already living a tragedy," Mezni said, adding that an investigation into the incident was underway.

Mezni also said that such incidents were a blow to ongoing negotiations between Darfur rebel groups and the Sudanese government to end the 30-month-old civil conflict.

The Darfur war has pitted ethnic minority black Darfurians against government troops and their proxies, sometimes described as Janjaweed, since February 2003, killing up to 300,000 people and displacing more than two million.

The conflict spilled over into neighbouring Chad this week, when 75 people, including 55 herdsmen, were killed in the village of Madayoun near the border with Sudan.

Chadian President Idriss Deby, himself a Zaghawa, one of the main tribes in Darfur, charged the attack had been carried out by Janjaweed.

A Sudanese official said overnight that the Chadian government had reported arresting seven of the assailants after the attack by "horse- and camel-riding Sudanese men".

The word Janjaweed is an Arab acronym which roughly means "men who ride horses and carry G3 guns", in reference to a German-made automatic rifle. They have been accused of carrying out massacres and rapes against local tribes.

The new round of talks that kicked off earlier this month in Nigeria under the aegis of the African Union have again stalled, with only part of the Darfur rebel factions represented in the negotiations.

The latest killings have prompted the United Nations' top aid official Jan Egeland to warn that all humanitarian operations may have to be halted.

There are around 11,000 UN-supervised aid workers bringing relief to civilians in the western Sudanese region, where the UN has said one of the world's worst humanitarian crises was taking place.



source: theaustralian.com

Sins of inaction

By Joshua Powers
Roughly one year ago, I wrote an article for a competing on-campus newspaper entitled “United Naïveté.” In this article, I described the worsening conditions in Sudan, particularly within the Darfur region, where a massive ethnic cleansing campaign was being conducted by government-assisted Janjaweed militias on a scale comparable to the genocides in Rwanda no more than a decade earlier. One year ago, these Janjaweed militias were responsible for carrying out a racial scorched-earth policy in which all non-Muslim as well as all non-Arab villages were burned to the ground and their inhabitants massacred. One year ago, the number of deaths resulting from this policy was put somewhere between 40,000 and 60,000. The International Crisis Group had warned that if the United Nations or any other power did not take action in Sudan, death tolls could easily reach 350,000 within one year’s time.

That was one year ago. Today, according to numerous sources, including the Coalition for International Justice, a non-governmental organization operating under the U.S. Agency for International Development, it is estimated that the death toll has climbed to 400,000. Studies done on refugees on the Chad-Darfur border indicate that over 60 percent of Sudanese refugees have witnessed the death of a family member. These statistics are not merely numbers; each number is a person who once existed, a person who suffered while the world turned a blind eye.

Holocaust survivors have always reiterated the sentiment of “never again.” But it has happened again and again. It happened in Cambodia, it happened in Rwanda and it has happened in Sudan. One year ago I wrote that article, outlining the expected future if my country and the free world chose not to take action. Now, after 400,000 people have been massacred, millions of Sudanese forced to become refugees living in appalling conditions, the world may begin to mourn their own indifference.

Recently, the rebel groups in the South and the government forces in the North have established peace in Sudan through a sharing of oil revenues and government positions. However, this push toward peace was only accomplished after the genocide had occurred; what punishment awaits those who have violated human rights? It seems that a mere 51 suspects will be put on trial before the International Criminal Court. The punishment of 51 senior officers is not nearly enough to bring justice after the death of 400,000 innocent men, women and children. Justice would have only been served had the United Nations quelled the genocide before it began.

Yes, hindsight is 20/20, but in this case, so was foresight. The United Nations saw the number of body bags they would need if no action was taken, and they made a choice to let this slaughter occur.

I have always advocated the presence of UN peacekeepers in the Darfur region. While medical and food supplies are urgently needed for the camps, so is stabilization. In March of this year, the United Nations voted to send 10,000 peacekeepers to the Darfur region. If the United Nations had simply taken this action when the genocide was in its infancy, with the intention of staying until the conflict had diminished, 400,000 lives would have been saved. Created in the aftermath of the worst genocide in Europe’s history, the United Nations was established for the purpose of preventing such carnage. Now it is at the epicenter of a sentiment of insouciance, withholding the resolve this world desires to do what is just.

I have come to believe that man’s foremost sins are apathy and inaction, committed by those who have the capacity to act and the cowardice not to.

Joshua Powers is a junior at the College. His views do not necessarily represent those of The Flat Hat.

UNHCR: Death Toll in Darfur Camp Attack Rises

By Lisa Schlein
Geneva
30 September 2005



The U.N. Refugee Agency reports the death toll in a murderous assault on a camp and nearby villages in the West Darfur region of Sudan has risen to 34. A UNHCR team of protection monitors that went to the region Friday morning describes a scene of fear and desolation.

The U.N. Refugee Agency says the Aro Sharow camp in Western Darfur was attacked on Wednesday by a group of 250 to 300 armed Arab men riding horses and camels. They also attacked some nearby villages.

UNHCR Spokesman, Ron Redmond, tells VOA 34 people were killed, 10 were seriously wounded and 80 makeshift shelters in the camp were burned.

"In all, 17 of the dead actually lived in the camp and another 17 lived in nearby villages and had been visiting the camp because Wednesday was market day," he said. "All 34 of the victims were males. The UNHCR team witnessed the burial of one of the 34 dead and said the man appeared to have had his arms bound before he was killed. Witnesses in the camp said he had been tied up and dragged to his death behind a horse."

After the attack, Mr. Redmond says 4,000 to 5,000 residents of the camp fled to the nearby Jebel Moon mountains for safety. But, the UNHCR team reports many of these people now have returned to the camp.

According to the survivors, the armed men divided into three groups after entering the camp. They said one group stole the cattle, a second chased and killed the people in the camp and a third group set fire to the flimsy shelters.

This is the first time a camp for internally displaced people has been attacked since fighting erupted in Darfur in early 2003. It follows a series of worrisome security incidents throughout the region. The camp is located in an area that has been a no-go zone for the United Nations for months because of the violence.

Mr. Redmond says the UNHCR is concerned the worsening security situation might prevent vital aid from getting through to tens of thousands of vulnerable people.

"And, we also worry that if this violence and insecurity continues, we could see more people fleeing from Darfur to nearby Chad where we have already got 12 refugee camps bursting at the seams with about 200,000 people," he said. "So, we sincerely hope that this violence can be brought to an end and that the Sudanese government accepts its responsibility to protect its own citizens and halts this violence. "

Since the war began, tens of thousands of people have been killed and more than two million made homeless. Little progress has been made in peace talks in Abuja, Nigeria.

Sudan: Annan 'Appalled' By Attack On Displaced Persons Camp in Darfur Region

UN News Service (New York)
September 30, 2005



Saying he was "particularly appalled" by Wednesday's deadly attack on a displaced persons camp in Sudan's Darfur region, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan today called for an immediate halt to attacks, as well as action by the Government to protect its people and redoubled efforts from all sides to achieve peace.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which sent a team to the Aro Sharow camp after the attack, reportedly by 250 to 300 armed Arab men on horses and camels, said today the death toll there and in nearby villages had risen to 34.

Many of the 4,000 to 5,000 camp residents, who initially fled to nearby mountains and surrounding countryside when the attackers swooped into the camp, killing residents and burning down their makeshift shelters, had now returned, UNHCR added.

In a statement issued by his spokesman, Mr. Annan voiced alarm at the recent escalation in violence in Darfur, where fighting between the Government, allied militias and rebels has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced more than 2 million since early 2003.

"The Secretary-General strongly condemns the attacks on civilians, humanitarian workers and assets, and the African Union (AU) Mission in Sudan, and deplores the many casualties. He is concerned about the additional suffering and displacement these attacks have caused to the civilian populations," the statement said.

"The Secretary-General emphasizes the need to immediately halt the attacks and bring the perpetrators to justice. He urges all parties to exercise maximum restraint to avoid any further escalation.

"In the meantime, the parties must apply themselves fully at the sixth round of the Abuja talks to bring an end to the suffering of the people of Darfur," it added, referring to talks in the Nigerian capital.

"The Secretary-general calls upon the Government of Sudan to protect its civilians and to continue its efforts in bringing stability and fostering national reconciliation in the country," it concluded.

The statement was the latest in a recent series of expressions of alarm by UN officials over the deteriorating security situation in Darfur. UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland on Wednesday said the situation had become dangerous enough that relief agencies had temporarily suspended operations in some areas.

Also on Wednesday, the Security Council called on all parties to negotiate in good faith with a view to reaching a peace agreement by the end of 2005.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

Arab Militia Attack on Darfur Refugee Camp Kills 29, UN Says Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) --

Arab men on horses and camels attacked a camp for displaced black villagers in Darfur yesterday, killing 29 people in what the United Nations said was the first assault on a refugee camp during the nearly three-year long conflict in western Sudan.

The incident came amid reports of renewed violence in Darfur and in oil-rich southern Sudan that threatens the stability of the coalition cabinet formed on Sept. 20. The violence also is hindering delivery of food and other humanitarian aid to more than 2 million displaced people in Darfur and neighboring Chad, the UN said.

``As we speak, we have had to suspend action in many areas, tens of thousands of people will not get any assistance today because it is too dangerous, and it could grow,'' Jan Egeland, the UN's emergency relief coordinator, told reporters in Geneva, according to a transcript of his remarks.

British lawmakers have said as many as 300,000 people have died in Darfur, a region as large as France, since February 2003. The crisis began when the Sudanese government, responding to rebel attacks, organized nomadic herders and some Arabic tribal militias into a counterinsurgency force known as the Janjaweed to attack farming settlements.

Shelters Burned

The UN refugee agency said as many as 300 Arab men attacked the Aro Sharow camp near the town of Saleah in northwest Darfur. The unidentified attackers burned down 80 makeshift shelters and drove thousands of villagers into the unprotected countryside, the UN said.

Helene Caux, spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency, said it was the first time an Arab militia has attacked a refugee camp in Darfur. The area around the Aro Sharow camp, where up to 5,000 villagers lived, had already been declared off-limits to UN aid workers, according to the refugee agency.

Jan Pronk, who represents Secretary-General Kofi Annan in Sudan, told the Security Council on Sept. 21 that deployment of UN peacekeepers to southern Sudan and African Union troops to Darfur must be accelerated. The AU has sent about 3,000 of 7,000 promised troops to Darfur to protect villagers.

The UN has deployed 2,500 of the 10,000 troops authorized in March to monitor a January cease-fire in the two-decade conflict between the Muslim-dominated government in the north and the Christian and animist south that has killed an estimated 1.5 million people. Pronk told the Security Council that the Lord's Resistance Army, a Ugandan rebel group with forces in southern Sudan, has begun attacking government troops there.

Sudan is sub-Saharan Africa's third-biggest oil producer after Nigeria and Angola, and expects to boost output to more than 500,000 barrels a day this year from about 340,000 barrels now. Under the peace agreement, the north and south will split oil revenue equally.



To contact the reporters on this story:
Bill Varner in United Nations at
wvarner@bloomberg.net or Karl Maier in Khartoum, Sudan at
kmaier2@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: September 29, 2005 11:20 EDT

U.N.: Attack in Darfur kills 29 refugees

GENEVA, Switzerland (Reuters) -- Twenty-nine people were reported killed in an unprecedented attack on a refugee camp in the northwest of the Sudan region of Darfur, the United Nations said on Thursday.

According to initial reports, the Aro Sharow camp was attacked by 250 to 300 "armed Arab men on horses and camels" late on Wednesday, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said in a statement.

Another 10 people were reported to have been seriously wounded and the nearby village of Gosmeina was also believed to have been attacked and burned, the agency said. The death toll referred only to camp dwellers.

The camp, home to between 4,000 and 5,000 people, lies 16 kilometers (10 miles) north of the town of Saleah in an area that has been regarded as a no-go zone for the U.N. for months because of continuing violence.

Nevertheless, this was the first time that a camp had been attacked since fighting broke out in the vast Sudanese region over two years ago forcing hundreds of thousands to flee to the makeshift settlements, the UNHCR said.

The U.N. has warned that it may have to suspend aid operations in Darfur because of a resurgence in violence.

Following the attack, High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres said it was the responsibility of the Sudanese government to restore order.

"As long as this insecurity continues, the international community cannot provide the assistance that is so desperately needed by hundreds of thousands of people," Guterres said.

"The government of Sudan has a responsibility to ensure security for all its citizens," he added.

The UNHCR said that most of the camp dwellers had fled into the surrounding countryside, which the U.N. considers unsafe.

The attackers had apparently burned about 80 crude shelters, around a quarter of the camp's households.

Fighting erupted in Darfur in early 2003 after years of low-level conflict when rebels took up arms over what they saw as Khartoum's preferential treatment of Arab tribes.

They accused the government of backing militias that have driven non-Arabs from their villages. Khartoum denies the accusations.

Tens of thousands have been killed and more than two million people are living in the camps, mostly inside Darfur, which is the size of France.

Clashes have continued despite a cease fire agreement and little progress has been made in peace talks in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, brokered by the African Union.

Copyright 2005 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Hell on earth

Source: Oxfam

Date: 27 Sep 2005

Kalma Camp in Sudan is home to 120,000 people who have lived through some of the most hellish experiences imaginable. Annette Salkeld tells of the daily challenges they face and how Oxfam is helping them to get on with their lives.

From a few kilometres away, you can tell you are coming up to Kalma camp in South Darfur, Sudan, as the scattered baobab trees and acacias of the desert plains give way to a stark, sandy expanse, with little more than tree stumps dotted over land.

This harsh environment has felt the impact of the influx of more than 120,000 people from the surrounding region, who have fled their homes in the face of some of the worst conflict seen in recent years. This is a very brutal conflict, which has seen the civilian population directly targeted. The suffering is immense and on a scale hard to imagine.

Oxfam International is currently working in 17 locations across the three states that make up Darfur — North, South and West Darfur. Oxfam is reaching approximately 700,000 of the nearly two million people who have been made homeless by this crisis, by providing water, sanitation, and public health education.

Kalma camp is the largest in Darfur. It stretches for seven kilometres along the wadi, the dry river bed, and spans up to two kilometres in width. As I arrive at the outskirts of the camp, all I can see for miles in every direction is a sea of makeshift shelters — white plastic sheeting stretched over basic frames made out of sticks and any other material available. Many families have made small fences around their shelters out of the local shrubs, in order to define their little patch of land.

I arrived in Kalma camp on a searing hot day with four other Oxfam staff. Getting out of our vehicles, we were quickly surrounded by dozens of children, most of them waving to us and trying to shake our hands, shouting “okay, okay”, the only English phrase most of them know. Some of the shyer youngsters quietly get beside me and try to hold my hands as I walk along. I feel like the Pied Piper — everywhere I go I am surrounded by millions of children, many contentedly playing with hoops made from old metal wheels or toy cars fashioned out of empty tin cans and bits of rubber.

Kalma camp’s marketplace, which has sprung up in the centre of the camp, is the lifeblood for many residents who have very few options of making a living. Here, people sell meat, clothes, vegetables, dates, fruit, peanuts and basic items such as sugar, salt and soap. At one stall I see, there is a huge pile of thongs, the standard footwear at the camp.

Sheltering from the midday sun under a thatched roof shelter, Kaltaman and her neighbour sit on the ground in front of a bucket of peanuts, shelling them for cooking. Kaltaman’s daughter plays nearby. She is one of Kaltaman’s three children and wants to be a teacher when she grows up.

“We walk about an hour to the nearby town to buy the raw peanuts,” Kaltaman tells me. “We shell them and boil them and then sell them in the market.” The small amount of money she earns enables her to buy food to supplement the rations and basic necessities she can access in the camp.

I was fortunate enough to be able to sit in on part of a two-day public health workshop, held in the Oxfam compound. There were two workshops being held one for women and one for men. These workshops form a central component of the public health promotion that Oxfam undertakes in all of the areas it works in, in an effort to reduce illness and death from disease and infections that can spread so easily among such a crowded population.

The focus of the workshop was basic hygiene. The importance of basic practices, such as washing hands with soap and keeping water containers clean, cannot be under-estimated. The highest cause of death and illness in children under five here is diarrhoea.

Other health issues include where people defecate, keeping animals away from water sources, and reducing the risk of malaria. Positive public health messaging is important, as residents of the camps are living in conditions that they have never encountered before.

The overcrowding, use of western style latrines, inadequate space for the donkeys, which are the main form of transport in this region, and lack of facilities means that in order to stay healthy, some traditional practices have to be changed.

As part of this workshop, the women were divided into groups and given 10 drawings of hygiene actions, and were asked to put them in order from the worst practice to the best. This caused lively debate among the women, although all groups came to a consensus in the end.

During a meal break, I sat down with some of the women to ask why they had participated in this workshop. “We are here for the food,” I was told as the women eagerly awaited the arrival of the meal being provided for them by Oxfam. A good feed of meat, salad and bread is a rarity for most camp residents, as fresh food and meat is unaffordable for most.

But as I probed further to ask if they had enjoyed the workshop or learnt any new practices, there was a general positive consensus, with a few women explaining what they thought were the biggest threats to their health. “Animals near the water sources”, “people defecating around the camp” and “dirty water containers” were among the comments.

After the two-day workshop, these women will become part of the “community mobiliser” network in Kalma camp. They will be able to talk to their neighbours about what they have learnt and hopefully influence the hygiene practices within their communities.

This will complement the work done by Oxfam’s public health promotion teams, which visit each “house” in the camp about every six weeks to see how people are going and reinforce the public health messages, particularly with the women who have the main responsibility of caring for their families.

As I leave these women to their meal, I come away with a feeling of admiration for the courage, tenacity and generosity they show — every single one of them has endured terror, hardship and hellish experiences beyond my comprehension, but they still maintain a sense of positiveness; they’re getting on with their lives.

But I also have a heavy heart as I wonder about their future and whether they will ever be able to go back to their homes and resume the lives they enjoyed before the conflict.

Annette Salkeld is Emergencies Program Officer at Oxfam Australia and visited Darfur as part of an Oxfam International monitoring trip.

UN’s Egeland threatens to halt Darfur operations

2005-09-28

Top UN aid official warns upsurge in violence in Durfur could force relief operations to be halted soon.

By Patrick Baert - GENEVA Top UN aid official Jan Egeland on Wednesday warned that relief operations in Darfur may have to be halted because of an upsurge in violence in the conflict-ravaged western Sudanese region.

Egeland, the overall humanitarian aid coordinator for the United Nations, said the risks faced by the world body's 11,000 relief workers in Darfur could soon be too great.


"The level of violence has been escalating again sharply," he told reporters.


Renewed fighting is undermining a ceasefire between government and rebel movements which was agreed in April 2004 and which had largely held despite sporadic attacks.


"If it continues to be so dangerous to do humanitarian work, we may not be able to sustain our operations for 2.5 million people," Egeland said.


"It could end tomorrow. It's as serious as that."


"We want to stay as long as we can. As we speak we have had to suspend action in many areas. Tens of thousands of people will not get any assistance because it's too dangerous and it could grow exponentially."


Since rebels launched an uprising in western Sudan in February 2003 more than 300,000 civilians have been killed and over two million driven from their homes, according to UN relief agencies.


The Darfur conflict pits two rebel groups, the Sudanese Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality movement, against Sudanese forces and the Janjaweed, a government-backed militia which has been accused of carrying out unprovoked attacks on civilians.


Egeland said the international community should ponder past failures, notably during the break up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, when Muslims were massacred by Serb forces in areas purportedly protected by the UN and aid workers' operations were hampered by violence.


"Is it a repeat of the safe areas of Bosnia all over again? We keep people alive, we give them food, we give them medicine but we don't protect them and our own staff," he said.


"So something has to happen. We need to have the same kind of pressure on the parties as we had (in 2004), when world leaders really put their thumb on the government of Khartoum and the guerrilla groups. I don't think they feel the same kind of pressure."


Last year, the UN Security Council threatened sanctions against the Sudanese government unless it disarmed the Janjaweed, and also called on the rebels to stop fighting.


Egeland said he hoped that all sides in the conflict will "behave responsibly and not be utterly irresponsible as they are today."


The African Union (AU) is currently brokering peace talks between Khartoum and its opponents, but progress has been limited, in part because of splits among the rebels.


Pending a deal, Egeland said, the international community must help boost the number of peacekeeping troops sent by the AU in Darfur to monitor the ceasefire -- and deploy more troops from elsewhere.


Egeland called for a force with "three times the strength they have today."


"There are now in excess of 5,000 troops, which is better than they were last year, but it's still incredibly behind what it should be," he said.


"I still cannot believe how a hundred world leaders can say the biggest priority on earth is to get a large AU force in place and then, years after the crisis started, we still have a very inadequate force in place."


Last week, the UN Security Council extended for six months the mandate of its own peacekeeping mission. It is meant to deploy 10,000 soldiers, but only 1,708 were in Darfur as of last month.

DARFUR

'Never again' means fighting for justice

BY JENNIFER SANTIAGO
santiagoesq@yahoo.com

Never again.

I remember the phrase with haunting clarity -- uttered over and over again on Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Remebrance Day. I was just a fourth grader at Solomon Schecter School in Queens. And that year, like every on Yom Hashoah, our teachers would tape yellow paper stars that read ''Jude'' onto our blue-and-white uniforms then march us down to the library to watch grainy black-and-white films of Jewish Holocaust survivors. The film was apparently taken by allied forces after the Germans fled the Nazi concentration camps, leaving thousands of tortured, starving survivors to await rescue. Naked men smiled for the cameras, their flesh hanging lose over bone-thin frames. I remember being confused by their unapologetic nudity, confused by their laughter. I was too young to really understand how this was a moment that captured a freedom thought futile.

And then the world uttered Never Again. But, here we go again. This time I'm much older, and the emotions don't provoke confusion, just a profound, heavy sadness. This time it is mostly women who smile for the cameras -- their black, dusty flesh hanging over bone thin-frames. Some clutch tiny children -- pouring formula onto their chapped lips.

Surrounded by Jews

This isn't a concentration camp, but a refugee camp in Chad where thousands of Sudanese women and children are sheltered after fleeing the Janjaweed -- a maniacal militia supported by the Sudanese government and armed to rid Darfur of its black Africans. A tall white man walks among the refugees -- explaining to a 60 Minutes crew how this 2 ½-year conflict has already cost the lives of more than 300,000 people, threatening millions more. His name is John Prendergast. Today as I watch the video, I am again surrounded by Jews -- this time men and women who have gathered at the Greater Miami Jewish Federation to hear Prendergast explain how it is happening all over again.

''This is Rwanda in slow motion,'' explains Prendergast who has spent a good part of the last 20 years of his career focused on conflict resolution in Africa. The Jewish Community Relations Council invited him to speak last week to raise awareness and promote action to stop the Genocide in Darfur. This former director of African affairs during the Clinton administration likens this genocide to the Holocaust and most recently Rwanda in the '90s when more than 800,000 Tutsis were massacred over the course of 100 days by the majority Hutus after a coup.

Back then the world didn't react -- ambivalent, in part, and confused over whether the killing in Rwanda was in fact genocide.

This time there is no confusion. One year ago, almost to this day, President Bush concurred with then-Secretary of State Colin Powell calling the killings in Sudan's Darfur region genocide. The United States, under the 1948 U.N. convention on genocide, is committed to preventing such killings and punishing the killers if it deems a genocide is taking place. And yet, the killings continue one year later. Never again?

Sudan conflict to forefront

''Shame them,'' says Prendergast to his all-Jewish audience. ''Shame them into doing something,'' he continues acknowledging that grass-root efforts by Jewish organizations have brought the Sudan conflict to the forefront of our consciousness. Because it isn't enough to wear a yellow star and watch videos of the dying to honor the victims of the Jewish Holocaust. ''Never again'' means making the world aware that the only response to genocide isn't designating a day of remembrance but designating everyday to fighting injustice for those who can't fight for themselves

• To see the interview with John Prendergast and video from the refugee camps, watch today's CBS 4 News First at Five.

Jennifer Santiago is a reporter for CBS 4 News.

Friday, September 23, 2005

No time for patience


Opinion
Editorial

September 23, 2005

The arrival of Paul Rusesabagina to campus elicited an enormous response from the student body. The Bowdoin Film Society has screened Hotel Rwanda every night this week, and will continue to do so through the weekend. Tickets for Mr. Rusesabagina's Common Hour talk ran out soon after tickets became available. Students rightly feel awe and admiration for the man who, abandoned by the world, risked his life fighting against the unspeakable horror that engulfed Rwanda over a decade ago.

Any student who attended a screening of Hotel Rwanda this week likely found herself overwhelmed by guilt over how Americans wallowed while thousands of Africans were slaughtered by hand.

It may be too late for us to stand behind Mr. Rusesabagina, but it is not too late for us to stand against the genocide of today.

The Sudanese government currently sponsors the Janjaweed militia in its terrorization of villages in the Darfur region of the Sudan. The violence in this region has displaced close to a million people from their homes. Many are in camps where there isn't enough food or water to sustain the multitudes of refugees. Women are raped on a daily basis. One hundred thousand people have already died. If left unchecked, the genocide will extend beyond blatant murder. For many, disease and starvation will finish the job the militia started.

Mr. Rusesabagina's visit to Bowdoin rightly prompts us to reflect on the horrors of the Rwandan bloodshed. But it should also spur us into action against the bloodshed going on presently. There are two easy things you can do today: read an article about genocide, and write your elected officials. It should not take a feature film 11 years after the fact to bring the issue of genocide to the forefront of our collective conscience.

As Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jewish Holocaust survivor and later inventor of the term "genocide," asked, "When the rope is already around the neck of the victim and strangulation is imminent, isn't the word 'patience' an insult to reason and nature?"






Thursday, September 22, 2005

Religious, Humanitarian Aid Leaders Urge Nation to Stand Up, Speak Out to Save Darfur

The Save Darfur Coalition held a National Leadership Assembly on Sept. 21 at the nation's capital to highlight the urgency of the Darfur situation and the need to face the millions that are being abused, starved and displaced in Sudan.


WASHINGTON – On the day that marked the first anniversary of when President Bush declared the crimes in Darfur as genocide, leaders of religious and humanitarian aid groups came together on a strong call to stop the violence.

The Save Darfur Coalition held a National Leadership Assembly on Sept. 21 at the nation's capital to highlight the urgency of the Darfur situation and the need to face the millions that are being abused, starved and displaced in Sudan.

In the midst of such sweeping disasters as last year's tsunami, Hurricane Katrina and now Rita, the Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, executive director of the National Council of Churches, stressed that the Darfur genocide must be the world's top issue of concern.

“The issue of genocide is one that needs to break through the haze and is one that needs to be lifted in scale," said Edgar, "and we need to stand firm against genocide wherever it happens."

With 400,000 people killed, 3.5 million suffering in hunger and 2.5 million displaced, U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) encouraged the crowd of participating groups, including Bread for Life, Open Doors, World Relief and the American Jewish World Service, to make every effort in pushing the issue forward.

"Your thoughts and your prayers and your actions are all necessary," he said.

"This is a moment for civilization to step up."

Religious leaders sent a letter to President Bush on behalf of the Save Darfur Coalition to call for more action.

"The United States government has to do more," said Rev. Richard Cizik, vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals.

"There is a moral imperative to respond to these atrocities," stated the signers in the letter that called for four steps of actions.

The points of action called the President to: continue to speak out forcefully against the ongoing atrocities in Darfur, press China and other leading nations to support international action to end the crisis, employ the coalition's mission to the United Nations to propose a Security Council resolution, and instruct the State Department to issue regular reports on the situation in Darfur and the effectiveness of the involvement of the coalition and other partnering groups there.

The Security Council resolution proposes the expansion of the African Union Mission in Sudan's (AMIS) mandate to include civilian protection with the guarantee that the United States and other nations will provide the AMIS with the financial and logistical support necessary to fulfill the mandate.

Drawing attention to the grassroots involvement in what the United Nations dubbed as "the worst humanitarian crisis in the world," Brownback said that "there are a lot of people who care about this."

A phone call from Faisal Hussain Omar, a witness to the genocide in Darfur, made the situation more real to the assembly attendants as he described his burned down village and murdered family members.

"We need to stand up when others tell us to sit down, and we need to speak out when others tell us to be silent," stated Edgar during the assembly.

Students, religious groups, and church communities spoke out as they hosted local events across the states to spread awareness.

Access Sudan, a student organization led by Askia Tariq West, a senior at Washington International School, hosted a screening of "Hotel Rwanda" to get the word out about the atrocities in Sudan to the youth.

"We want to take a holistic view of Sudan and we wanted to give context to [the situation] in Sudan," said West.

Following the National Day of Action that brought hundreds to their feet in action, the Save Darfur Coalition will be reconvening Thursday to review the words spoken and steps taken on Wednesday and plan for further action.

"The real heroes of the movement, of history will be the people who unite together behind this – the Darfurians who are being so mercilessly slaughtered," said Cizik.


lillian@christianpost.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

NATO extends Darfur airlift mission:

Posted on 22 Sep 2005 # Reuters

BRUSSELS: NATO has agreed to extend by a month a mission to airlift African troops joining peace efforts in Sudan's Darfur region and is studying other ways to help, an alliance official said.

NATO chiefs agreed today to prolong until the end of October its first mission on the African continent and added it was considering an African Union (AU) request for help in training of African officers and in providing transport for future troop rotations.

''The AU came to NATO with a new request,'' said the official, who requested anonymity, adding the alliance would by the end of this week have airlifted a total of 3,500 African troops, including from Nigeria and Rwanda.

Fighting between government troops and rebels has caused tens of thousands of deaths and driven about 2 million people from their homes in Darfur. Aid officials have said banditry has increased and is disrupting aid deliveries.

There have been calls from non-governmental organisations and others for NATO to send its own troops to act as a buffer between opposing forces in Darfur.

The alliance is sceptical of such a role and insists any involvement must be sanctioned both by the AU and the Sudanese government.

source: www.newkerala.com

U.S. has 'Moral Duty' to Stop Genocide Against Civilians in Darfur

By NewsWires
MichNews.com
Sep 21, 2005

The Save Darfur Coalition, an alliance of 134 faith-based, humanitarian and human rights groups representing 130 million Americans, today met with Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick and members of Congress and delivered a letter urging them to make stopping the genocide by government-sponsored militias in Darfur, Sudan, against civilians their No. 1 priority (see letter to President Bush at http://savedarfur.org/go.php?q=/misc/letterToPresidentBush.html.) Simultaneously, Coalition members in more than 50 local communities in 21 states held "National Day of Action" vigils and wrote postcards to President Bush urging him to lead the world in protecting the civilians of Darfur (see list of local events with local contact information at http://www.savedarfur.org/takeActionNow/participate.php?ftype=everything&fval=0).

"We told senators and Deputy Secretary of State Zoellick when we met with them that, as the world's most powerful country, the United States has a moral duty to lead the world to stop the slaughter of innocent civilians in Darfur," said Rev. Richard Cizik, vice president of government affairs for the National Association of Evangelicals, based in Washington, D.C. "But we didn't just say 'do something'; we proposed specific steps to resolve this horrific humanitarian crisis that is killing one Darfurian civilian every four minutes."

According to recent reports by the World Food Program, the United Nations (U.N.) and Coalition for International Justice, 3.5 million people are now hungry, 2.5 million have been displaced due to violence, and up to 400,000 people have been killed in Darfur since February 2003.

"In 1999, Arab militia burned the Dilli village where my family and I lived. I was outside the village with my cattle, but my brother and sister were burned alive and my mother ran away and I still don't know where she is," said Faisal Hussain Omar, a Darfurian farmer and cattle trader. "We moved to the Shoba village, but another militia attack later that year killed my father. In 2002, a huge militia wearing army clothes burned down 47 houses and all of the huts in the village when I was outside the village with my cattle, but my wife who was five months pregnant was there. I don't know if she is alive or dead. We desperately need the United States' help to protect us."

"Currently, the only security on the ground is an undermanned African Union force that cannot protect civilians or aid workers," said Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, general secretary of the National Council of Churches, based in New York City. "To stop the bloodshed, the African Union will need a stronger civilian protection mandate, a major increase in the number of troops on the ground, and much larger logistical and monetary contributions from the U.N., European Union, and NATO. Only the United States has the power to lead that effort."

"We commend the efforts of the Bush administration in brokering a peace deal to end the gruesome 21-year civil war in the south Sudan and its generous pledge of $300 million in U.S. humanitarian aid," said Rabbi David Saperstein, director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, based in Washington, D.C. "Now, the Bush administration needs to press the United Nations to approve a Chapter 7 mandate allowing the African Union to use force to protect both civilians and themselves and Congress needs to pass The Darfur Peace and Accountability Act, so the perpetrators of this genocidal activity are held responsible for their crimes against humanity."

The Darfur Peace and Accountability Act is bipartisan legislation sponsored by Sens. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) and Jon Corzine (D-N.J.), and U.S. Reps. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.), Donald Payne (D-N.J.) and Robert Wexler (D-Fla.). It would:

Intensify political and economic pressure on the Sudanese government by authorizing the President to place severe restrictions on Sudan's ability to sell oil, and to block the assets of those responsible for acts of genocide.


Increase direct U.S. involvement by authorizing increased logistical aid to the African Union forces already on the ground in Darfur, and by pushing for limited NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) reinforcement of those forces.


Build further international support for action by introducing a U.N. Security Council resolution supporting an expansion of the African Union's efforts in Darfur, and by prohibiting U.S. aid to countries found to be providing arms to Sudan in violation of existing U.N. embargos.
"The decision of whether or not to stop the genocide in Darfur may be one of the defining moral questions of our time," said the Rev. Bill Sinkford, president of the Unitarian Universalists Association, based in Boston. "When the cost of failure is six to ten thousand lives lost for every month the conflict continues, responsible nations of the world have a clear ethical and religious obligation to act."

"Last week, the World Summit enshrined the principle that the international community has the responsibility to protect civilians from genocide and crimes against humanity," said Dr. James Smith, chief executive of Aegis Trust for Genocide Prevention, based in the United Kingdom. "Now it's time for the U.N. Security Council to put that into action with a mandate for protection of civilians in Darfur. This would provide the force on the ground with the authority it needs, and oblige the international community to provide it with sufficient resources and reinforcements to enable Darfur's displaced Africans to return home and rebuild their lives in safety."

Day of Action for Darfur, Sudan

Sept. 21, 2005

Proclamation
WHEREAS, since 2003, over 400,000 people in Darfur, Sudan have died; tens of thousands of women and girls have been victimized; more than 600 villages burned or destroyed; and more than 2.5 million Darfurians, mainly women and children, have been displaced; and

WHEREAS, fearing for their lives, the millions of displaced persons have been forced to flee from their destroyed villages to refugee camps where they face, without sufficient humanitarian aid, an ongoing crisis leading to disease and starvation; and

WHEREAS, the United States Congress has termed the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, Sudan as genocide and while there has been some indication of bipartisan concern for the people of Darfur, to date little action has been taken to effectively address this important issue; and

WHEREAS, the people of Martin Luther King, Jr. County make up a diverse local community and represent groups who have experienced inhumane treatment, and on many occasions have expressed their commitment to fair treatment for all people; and

WHEREAS, with overwhelming evidence that the atrocities occurring in Darfur, Sudan have been government sponsored and aimed at a specific group, we must all educate ourselves about the current situation and answer the call to action;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Ron Sims, Executive of Martin Luther King, Jr. County, do hereby proclaim Wednesday, September 21, 2005 to be

Day of Action for Darfur , Sudan

in King County . I encourage all residents to take time during this day to raise the community's awareness about Darfur, Sudan; to take time to reflect about this crisis, its causes and the commitment to end genocide; to take time to let elected officials at all levels of government know that now is the time for leadership to give meaning to the phrase "never again."

Ron Sims
King County Executive

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

U.S. blocks tougher words on genocide

Posted on Tue, Sep. 20, 2005

Bush administration, with help from Cuba, guts U.N. measure

NICHOLAS KRISTOF

New York Times


President Bush doesn't often find common cause with Cuba, Zimbabwe, Iran, Syria and Venezuela. But this month the Bush administration joined with those countries and others to eviscerate a forthright U.N. statement that nations have an obligation to respond to genocide.

It was our own Axis of Medieval, and it reflected the feckless response of Bush to genocide in Darfur. It's not that he favors children being tossed onto bonfires or teenage girls being gang-raped and mutilated, but he can't bother himself to try very hard to stop these horrors, either.

It's been a year since Bush -- ahead of other world leaders, and to his credit -- acknowledged genocide was unfolding in Darfur. But since then he has used that finding of genocide not to spur action but to substitute for it.

Bush's position in the U.N. negotiations got little attention. But in effect, the United States successfully blocked language in the declaration saying countries have an "obligation" to respond to genocide. In the end the declaration was diluted to say, "We are prepared to take collective action on a case by case basis" to prevent genocide.

Bush's base active in Darfur

That was still an immensely important statement. But it's embarrassing that in the 21st century we can't even accept a vague obligation to fight genocide as we did in the Genocide Convention of 1948. If the Genocide Convention were proposed today, Bush apparently would fight to kill it.I can't understand why Bush is soft on genocide. His political base, the religious right, has been one of the groups leading the campaign against genocide in Darfur. As the National Association of Evangelicals noted in a reproachful statement about Darfur a few days ago, the Bush administration "has made minimal progress protecting millions of victims of the world's worst humanitarian crisis."

Incredibly, the Bush administration has even emerged as Sudan's little helper, threatening an anti-genocide campaigner in an effort to keep him quiet. Brian Steidle, a former Marine captain, served in Darfur as a military adviser and grew heartsick at seeing corpses of children who'd been bludgeoned to death.

In March, I wrote a column about Steidle and separately published photos he had taken of men, women and children hacked to death. Other photos were too wrenching to publish: One showed a pupil at the Suleia Girls School; she appeared to have been burned alive, probably after being raped. Her charred arms were still in handcuffs.

Steidle is an American hero for blowing the whistle on the genocide. But, according to Steidle, the State Department has ordered him on three occasions to stop showing the photos for fear of complicating our relations with Sudan. Steidle has also been told he has been blacklisted from all U.S. government jobs.

Why cover up atrocities?

The State Department should be publicizing photos of atrocities to galvanize the international community against the genocide -- not conspiring with Sudan to cover them up.

I'm a broken record on Darfur because I can't get out of my head the people I've met there. On my first visit, 18 months ago, I met families hiding in the desert from the militias and soldiers. The only place to get water was at the occasional well -- where soldiers would wait to shoot the men who showed up, and rape the women. So anguished families sent their youngest children, 6 or 7 years old, to the wells with donkeys to fetch water -- because they were least likely to be killed or raped. The parents hated themselves for doing this, but they had no choice. They had been abandoned by the world.

Passivity costs, too

That's the cost of our passivity. Perhaps it's unfair to focus so much on Bush, for there are no neat solutions and he has done more than most leaders. He at least dispatched Condoleezza Rice to Darfur this summer, more interest in genocide than the TV anchors have shown.

Still, others' failures don't excuse Bush's own unwillingness to speak out, impose a no-fly zone, appoint a presidential envoy or build an international coalition to pressure Sudan.

So, Mr. Bush, let me ask you just one question: Since you portray yourself as a bold leader, since you pride yourself on your willingness to use blunt terms like "evil" -- why is it that you're so wimpish on genocide?

Nicholas

Kristof


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times, 229 W. 43rd St., Room 943, New York, NY 10036.

Faith-Based Groups to Urge Bush Administration, Congress to Make Stopping Genocide Against Civilians in Darfur No. 1 Priority

9/20/2005 11:14:00 AM


To: Assignment Desk, Daybook Editor

Contact: Sean Crowley, 202-478-6128 or 202-550-6524 (cell) or scrowley@mrss.com, for the Save Darfur Coalition

News Advisory:

-- Faith-based Groups to Urge Bush Administration, Congress to Make Stopping Genocide against Civilians in Darfur No. 1 Priority

-- Christian, Jewish Group Leaders to Hold Briefings for Journalists, Senior Bush Administration Officials, Congress

WHAT: The Save Darfur Coalition, an alliance of 134 faith-based, humanitarian and human rights groups representing 130 million Americans, will hold a National Leadership Assembly to urge President Bush and Congress to make stopping the genocide by government-sponsored militias in Darfur, Sudan against civilians their No. 1 priority. The Save Darfur Coalition leaders will hold issue briefings for journalists, senior Bush administration officials and members of Congress to propose solutions to the world's worst humanitarian crisis. Simultaneously, Save Darfur Coalition members in over 50 local communities in 21 states will hold National Day of Action vigils and write postcards to President Bush urging him to lead the world in protecting the civilians of Darfur (see list of local events with local contact information at http://www.savedarfur.org/takeActionNow/participate.php?ftype=everything&fval=0 )


WHO:

-- U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), member, Senate Appropriations Committee

-- U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.), member, House International Relations Committee

-- Rev. Richard Cizik, VP, Government Affairs, National Association of Evangelicals, Washington, D.C.

-- Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, general secretary, National Council of Churches, New York

-- Rabbi David Saperstein, director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Washington, D.C.

-- Rev. Bill Sinkford, president, Unitarian Universalists, Boston

-- Ruth Messinger, executive director, American Jewish World Service, New York

-- Faisal Hussain Omar, Darfurian farmer/cattle trader whose brother and sister were burned alive and whose father was killed in militia attacks (via conference call)

WHERE: U.S. Capitol Building, Room HC-7, Washington, D.C.

WHEN: Wednesday, Sept. 21, 12:15 p.m. EDT: issue briefing for journalists

CONTACT: Sean Crowley 202-478-6128-w, 202-550-6524-c, scrowley@mrss.com

WHY: According to recent reports by the World Food Program, United Nations (U.N.) and Coalition for International Justice, 3.5 million people are now hungry, 2.5 million have been displaced due to violence, and up to 400,000 people have died in Darfur since February 2003. The only security now on the ground is an undermanned African Union force that cannot protect civilians or aid workers. To be effective, the AU will need a stronger civilian protection mandate, a major increase in the number of troops on the ground, and much larger logistical and monetary contributions from the U.N., European Union, and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

http://www.usnewswire.com/

Darfur militias raid rebel bases

By Agencies ( Wednesday, September 21, 2005)

At least 30 people have been killed in fresh fighting in Sudan's troubled Darfur region.


Pro-government Arab militia launched an offensive at the weekend against the headquarters of one of Darfur's rebel movements, the Sudan Liberation Army.


Talks aimed at finding a solution to the area's two-and-a-half-year long conflict are continuing in Nigeria.


Over two million people have been made homeless by the violence.

This latest violence is being seen as a retaliation for a rebel attack three weeks ago.


Then, the SLA killed nomadic camel herders and seized 3,000 of their animals.
But when mediation failed, pro-government Arab militia launched an offensive against the rebel stronghold of Jebel (Mountain) Marra.
The relationship between the Sudanese government and the Arab militia is complex.


Khartoum has admitted arming them, but now says they are bandits outside of their control.

The last few weeks have seen an upsurge of fighting in Darfur.

Militias have clashed with the rebels and aid agencies and humanitarian convoys have been targeted.

Against a backdrop of this violence, talks aimed at achieving a lasting settlement in Darfur continue in Nigeria.

Five previous rounds of discussions have made little difference to the situation on the ground.

Monday, September 19, 2005

Don't let Darfur repeat in Chad

By JOHN HEFFERNAN AND KIRSTEN JOHNSON

Sunday, September 18, 2005 Posted at 11:54 PM EDT

Special to Globe and Mail Update

As the conflict in Darfur, Sudan, continues to destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions of people, another crisis looms next door. Last month, while we were in Chad, its ailing President was in France seeking medical care for an unknown, reportedly serious illness. Chadians we spoke to were anxious that he might not return. The tension was palpable. The demise of the long-time Chadian ruler could trigger regional unrest and directly affect the 200,000 Sudanese refugees living in Chad.

Chad's President, Idriss Deby, maintains a precarious balance between the Islamist dictatorship in Sudan, which helped put him into power, and his ethnic brethren, the Zaghawa, who live along the Chad-Sudan border. It is the Zaghawa and other non-Arab groups that have been systemically targeted by the Arab Sudanese government and their proxy forces - the janjaweed - in an attempt to cleanse Darfur of its non-Arab population.

The refugees from Darfur are housed in camps not far from the Sudan-Chad border. They crossed into Chad after repeated attacks by the Government of Sudan and the janjaweed, beginning in February, 2003, which forced them from their land and homes. Talking with members of the Zaghawa, Fur and Massaleit tribes in Chad a few weeks ago, we found that many of these refugees have witnessed the rape and/or killing of family members. The overwhelming majority have had their livestock stolen or killed, crops burned, water supply destroyed and property looted. Many faced starvation and illness and were separated from families as they fled their villages. In some camps we visited, up to 70 per cent of the heads of household are women - their husbands and sons murdered by the janjaweed.

Although life as a refugee in Chad is almost certainly better than the plight of more than two million of their counterparts in the camps inside Sudan, these people still do not have it easy. And if Mr. Deby's rule comes to an end, their fate may well be even worse if Chad's fragile stability unravels.

Tensions between the refugees and their Chadian hosts are on the rise, principally due to scarcity of resources and ethnic divisiveness between the Chadian Arabs and the non-Arab refugees. As water supplies dwindle, refugee women have to wait for hours for a turn at the pump. The wood supply for cooking is diminishing; in some areas, refugee women are forced to walk more than 10 kilometres, going through Arab-controlled villages, to search for it, which puts them at great risk of assault. We were told of one 13-year-old refugee girl who was raped by local bandits while her family was returning to their camp after searching for wood.

The refugees have nowhere to go and no resources to help them become more self-sufficient. They are reliant on humanitarian assistance and whatever else they can scrape together. To resolve the problem in some camps, aid organizations have been able to provide refugees with all of their food supplies, water requirements and shelter needs, and have been trucking in firewood to use as fuel. The local Chadians, who in many places are worse off than their refugee neighbours, feel increasingly marginalized and resentful. One relief worker told us of an armed clash in his camp in May that left three dead and many seriously injured.

To date, Mr. Deby's regime has provided some security to the refugees and considerable access to them by the humanitarian organizations. If the President cannot maintain his rule and the fragile balance is lost, the government of Sudan could exert its influence during a power vacuum. The refugees' situation would become more precarious. Tensions that would likely erupt into violence might force humanitarian organizations to pull out of the country.

The future of those living near the Chad-Sudan border region rides not only on a resolution of the conflict in Darfur, but also on a stable Chad. A fragile balance in which the different groups can peacefully co-exist must be found soon. Chadian authorities, with the help of the international community, must address these problems or dire widespread consequences could result.

Canada has an opportunity to exercise a leadership role in this festering crisis. It can, for example, push for more international assistance to Chadians. For the Darfurians, the ideal solution would be for them to return to their homes, but as the security outlook in Sudan remains grim, there is little chance they will be going home any time soon - yet another reason to help assure a stable Chad.

The world failed to intervene effectively in Darfur, and hundreds of thousands have died. As disaster looms in Chad, will we fail again?

John Heffernan, a senior investigator for Physicians for Human Rights, has led three investigations to the Chad-Sudan border; Kirsten Johnson, a Canadian physician and recent graduate of Harvard School of Public Health, participated in a human-rights investigation to Chad for the U.S.-based Physicians for Human rights.

Genocide should be acted upon

2005-09-19 /
New York Times / BY Nicholas Kristoff

President Bush doesn't often find common cause with Cuba, Zimbabwe, Iran, Syria and Venezuela. But this month the Bush administration joined with those countries and others to eviscerate a forthright U.N. statement that nations have an obligation to respond to genocide.

It was our own Axis of Medieval, and it reflected the feckless response of Bush to genocide in Darfur. It's not that he favors children being tossed onto bonfires or teenage girls being gang-raped and mutilated, but he can't bother himself to try very hard to stop these horrors, either.

A cursory nod to abuses

It's been a year since Bush - ahead of other world leaders, and to his credit - acknowledged that genocide was unfolding in Darfur. But since then he has used that finding of genocide not to spur action but to substitute for it.

Bush's position in the U.N. negotiations got little attention. But in effect the United States successfully blocked language in the declaration saying that countries have an "obligation" to respond to genocide. In the end the declaration was diluted to say that "We are prepared to take collective action on a case by case basis" to prevent genocide.

That was still an immensely important statement. But it's embarrassing that in the 21st century, we can't even accept a vague obligation to fight genocide as we did in the Genocide Convention of 1948. If the Genocide Convention were proposed today, Bush apparently would fight to kill it.

I can't understand why Bush is soft on genocide, particularly because his political base - the religious right - has been one of the groups leading the campaign against genocide in Darfur. As the National Association of Evangelicals noted in a reproachful statement about Darfur a few days ago, the Bush administration "has made minimal progress protecting millions of victims of the world's worst humanitarian crisis."

Incredibly, the Bush administration has even emerged as Sudan's little helper, threatening an anti-genocide campaigner in an effort to keep him quiet. Brian Steidle, a former Marine captain, served in Darfur as a military adviser - and grew heartsick at seeing corpses of children who'd been bludgeoned to death.

In March, I wrote a column about Steidle and separately published photos that he had taken of men, women and children hacked to death. Other photos were too wrenching to publish: One showed a pupil at the Suleia Girls School; she appeared to have been burned alive, probably after being raped, and her charred arms were still in handcuffs.

Not allowed to show photos

Steidle is an American hero for blowing the whistle on the genocide. But, according to Steidle, the State Department has ordered him on three occasions to stop showing the photos, for fear of complicating our relations with Sudan. Steidle has also been told that he has been blacklisted from all U.S. government jobs.

The State Department should be publicizing photos of atrocities to galvanize the international community against the genocide - not conspiring with Sudan to cover them up.

I'm a broken record on Darfur because I can't get out of my head the people I've met there. On my very first visit, 18 months ago, I met families who were hiding in the desert from the militias and soldiers. But the only place to get water was at the occasional well - where soldiers would wait to shoot the men who showed up, and rape the women. So anguished families sent their youngest children, 6 or 7 years old, to the wells with donkeys to fetch water - because they were least likely to be killed or raped. The parents hated themselves for doing this, but they had no choice - they had been abandoned by the world.

That's the cost of our passivity. Perhaps it's unfair to focus so much on Bush, for there are no neat solutions and he has done more than most leaders. He at least dispatched Condi Rice to Darfur this summer - which is more interest in genocide than the TV anchors have shown.

Still, the failure of networks to cover the genocide does not excuse Bush's own unwillingness to speak out, to impose a no-fly zone, to appoint a presidential envoy or to build an international coalition to pressure Sudan. So, Mr. Bush, let me ask you just one question: Since you portray yourself as a bold leader, since you pride yourself on your willingness to use blunt terms like "evil" - then why is it that you're so wimpish on genocide?


Nicholas Kristoff is a columnist for the New York Times.

Sunday, September 18, 2005

A Wimp on Genocide

September 18, 2005

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

President Bush doesn't often find common cause with Cuba, Zimbabwe, Iran, Syria and Venezuela. But this month the Bush administration joined with those countries and others to eviscerate a forthright U.N. statement that nations have an obligation to respond to genocide.

It was our own Axis of Medieval, and it reflected the feckless response of President Bush to genocide in Darfur. It's not that he favors children being tossed onto bonfires or teenage girls being gang-raped and mutilated, but he can't bother himself to try very hard to stop these horrors, either.

It's been a year since Mr. Bush - ahead of other world leaders, and to his credit - acknowledged that genocide was unfolding in Darfur. But since then he has used that finding of genocide not to spur action but to substitute for it.

Mr. Bush's position in the U.N. negotiations got little attention. But in effect the United States successfully blocked language in the declaration saying that countries have an "obligation" to respond to genocide. In the end the declaration was diluted to say that "We are prepared to take collective action ... on a case by case basis" to prevent genocide.

That was still an immensely important statement. But it's embarrassing that in the 21st century, we can't even accept a vague obligation to fight genocide as we did in the Genocide Convention of 1948. If the Genocide Convention were proposed today, President Bush apparently would fight to kill it.

I can't understand why Mr. Bush is soft on genocide, particularly because his political base - the religious right - has been one of the groups leading the campaign against genocide in Darfur. As the National Association of Evangelicals noted in a reproachful statement about Darfur a few days ago, the Bush administration "has made minimal progress protecting millions of victims of the world's worst humanitarian crisis."

Incredibly, the Bush administration has even emerged as Sudan's little helper, threatening an antigenocide campaigner in an effort to keep him quiet. Brian Steidle, a former Marine captain, served in Darfur as a military adviser - and grew heartsick at seeing corpses of children who'd been bludgeoned to death.

In March, I wrote a column about Mr. Steidle and separately published photos that he had taken of men, women and children hacked to death. Other photos were too wrenching to publish: one showed a pupil at the Suleia Girls School; she appeared to have been burned alive, probably after being raped, and her charred arms were still in handcuffs.

Mr. Steidle is an American hero for blowing the whistle on the genocide. But, according to Mr. Steidle, the State Department has ordered him on three occasions to stop showing the photos, for fear of complicating our relations with Sudan. Mr. Steidle has also been told that he has been blacklisted from all U.S. government jobs.

The State Department should be publicizing photos of atrocities to galvanize the international community against the genocide - not conspiring with Sudan to cover them up.

I'm a broken record on Darfur because I can't get out of my head the people I've met there. On my very first visit, 18 months ago, I met families who were hiding in the desert from the militias and soldiers. But the only place to get water was at the occasional well - where soldiers would wait to shoot the men who showed up, and rape the women. So anguished families sent their youngest children, 6 or 7 years old, to the wells with donkeys to fetch water - because they were least likely to be killed or raped. The parents hated themselves for doing this, but they had no choice - they had been abandoned by the world.

That's the cost of our passivity. Perhaps it's unfair to focus so much on Mr. Bush, for there are no neat solutions and he has done more than most leaders. He at least dispatched Condi Rice to Darfur this summer - which is more interest in genocide than the TV anchors have shown.

One group, www.beawitness.org, prepared a television commercial scolding the networks for neglecting the genocide - and affiliates of NBC, CBS and ABC all refused to run it.

Still, the failures of others do not excuse Mr. Bush's own unwillingness to speak out, to impose a no-fly zone, to appoint a presidential envoy or to build an international coalition to pressure Sudan. So, Mr. Bush, let me ask you just one question: Since you portray yourself as a bold leader, since you pride yourself on your willingness to use blunt terms like "evil" - then why is it that you're so wimpish on genocide?

E-mail: nicholas@nytimes.com

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Genocide, One Year On

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

A YEAR AGO, then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell declared that the violence in the Darfur region of Sudan justified the term "genocide." That was the first time since the adoption of the U.N. Genocide Convention in 1948 that a government had accused a sitting counterpart of this worst of all humanitarian crimes, and Mr. Powell chose his words carefully. His language was based on a survey of Darfurian refugees commissioned by the State Department: Of 1,136 civilians interviewed, a third had heard racial epithets while being attacked, suggesting that the mass killings and evictions in Darfur constituted genocide. The survey also found that three in four refugees had seen government insignia on the uniforms of their attackers, leaving no doubt as to the guilt of Sudan's government.

Since that finding, the United States has led an international effort to end the genocide. The effort has not been as quick or decisive as the genocide finding warranted: The Bush administration's attempt to pressure Sudan's government with U.N. sanctions was feckless, and it made no effort to deploy a robust NATO peacekeeping force. But, little by little, American diplomacy has made headway. For now, the horror has abated.


The first success of Western diplomacy was to improve access to Darfur for humanitarian workers and supplies, ending the government's policy of systematically denying visas to aid officials and bottling up their equipment in customs. Next, Sudan's rulers were persuaded to accept the deployment of 7,700 African Union troops in Darfur, up from the handful who were there a year ago. Partly thanks to the presence of these troops, violence between government forces and rebels, and between government and civilians, has greatly diminished.

But the progress is incomplete and reversible. Fully 3.2 million people have been affected by the war, half of Darfur's population. Many of these subsist in crowded camps for displaced people, where they depend on Western charity. Although humanitarian access has improved since last year, it remains imperfect. In the Kalma camp, which is home to something like 160,000 displaced people, the government has refused to extend a Norwegian group's authority to coordinate the distribution of relief supplies and has imposed an economic blockade. Meanwhile low-level violence continues. Although the government has authorized the deployment of 7,700 A.U. troops, only 5,800 are in place so far -- a failure both of the African governments that had promised troops and of the Western governments that promised to support them logistically.

The progress over the past year demonstrates that the United States and its allies do have the power to save lives by the tens of thousands. It also suggests that, if the Bush administration had pushed harder and earlier, it could have saved many more people. This lesson must be remembered over the coming weeks and months. Outsiders need to persist in their efforts to broker peace negotiations between Sudan's government and Darfur's rebels; they must complete the deployment of the African Union force and continue to pressure the government for humanitarian access. The past year demonstrates that, if the United States and its allies pursue these goals with determination, they can get what they want. But if they lose interest in Darfur, violence may resume and humanitarian access may dry up. With so much of the population already displaced and weakened, Darfur's death rate could easily return to the horrific levels of a year ago

source: washingtonpost.com

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

We must not be silent

Posted on Tue, Sep. 13, 2005

EDITORIAL

SILENCE IS NOT GOLDEN, not when it comes to genocide. In fact, it is nothing short of complicity. That is why we praise the efforts of local people who have banded together to spread the word about the genocide taking place in Darfur, Sudan.

Their group -- called the Dear Sudan: Love Contra Costa County Campaign -- is committed to helping tell about atrocities going on in Sudan, especially in Darfur, that are being sponsored by the Sudanese government.

The United Nation estimates that more than 3 million people have been displaced or killed.

Demonstrating the sickness of this situation, the Sudanese government used the distraction of the South Asia tsunami last year to step up its campaign of murder. Now, in the wake of Hurricane Kartrina, it wants the United States to retract the term genocide, which would relieve the United Nations of its obligations.

The United States should do no such thing.

The local campaign has vowed not to be silent. We will not be silent, either.

On Oct. 9 at 6:30 p.m. in Danville Oak Hill Park an interfaith group will conduct a vigil to raise awareness and promote action to stop the Darfur genocide.

We urge all in the community -- regardless of political stripe -- to come and raise their voices against genocide.

The only way this horror can continue is if the world remains silent. We cannot allow that to happen.

source : www.contracostatimes.com

Human-Rights, Faith-Based Groups Call U.S. Attention to Darfur

The ELCA hosted a rally and vigil in Washington, D.C., along with more than a dozen human-rights and faith-based organizations to mark the one-year anniversary of the Bush Administration's declaration of genocide in Sudan's Darfur region.

2038-01-18 19:14



Though news media are rightly focused on recovery efforts following Hurricane Katrina, many of the world's "silent emergencies" have been long forgotten, according to a research assistant for the federal public policy office of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).

One such emergency is that in Darfur, Sudan, where ELCA’s Kimberly C. Stietz said government-backed militias, known as the Janjaweed, have killed an estimated 400,000 Darfurians in the past two years and displaced another 2.5 million Darfurians when the militias destroyed their villages.

There is a false sense that the violence is subsiding, Stietz said according to the ELCA News Service (ENS), because there are fewer reports of fighting in the villages.

Recently, the ELCA hosted a rally and vigil in Washington, D.C., along with more than a dozen human-rights and faith-based organizations to mark the one-year anniversary of the Bush Administration's declaration of genocide in the Darfur region of western Sudan in Africa.

On Sept. 9, 2004, President Bush had expressed the United State’s dismay over the violence in Darfur, concluding that genocide had taken place in war-ravaged African region.

“We urge the international community to work with us to prevent and suppress acts of genocide," he said last year. "We call on the United Nations to undertake a full investigation of the genocide and other crimes in Darfur."

By declaring the conflict in Darfur genocide, the U.S. government has placed itself in a position of global leadership to protect the people of Darfur and bring the conflict to an end, Stietz said, yet "completely not enough" has been done in the past year.

At the recent rally on Sept. 8, about 500 people gathered in Lafayette Park in front of the White House to hear a series of speakers and to unfurl a petition with 100,000 names that Africa Action collected, Stietz said. She reported to ENS that the unfolded petition and signatures reached the White House gates.

Rally organizers and speakers suggested that the United States support full funding for African Union forces in Darfur and back African Union efforts to assemble a multinational presence in that region of Sudan, ENS reported.

The speakers included Salih Booker, executive director, Africa Action; the Rev. Robert W. Edgar, general secretary, National Council of Churches USA; Fatima Haroun, Sudan Peace Advocates Network; Ruth Messinger, president, American Jewish World Service; David Rubenstein, coordinator, Save Darfur Coalition; and the Rev. Jim Wallis, founder and editor-in-chief, Sojourners Magazine.

In addition to the ELCA and other organizations the speakers represented, the day's events were planned by the Armenian National Committee of America, Faithful America, Greater Washington Jewish Task Force on Darfur, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National STAND Coalition (Students Taking Action Now: Darfur), Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Sudan Peace Advocates Network, TransAfrica Forum and United Methodist Church.



joseph@christianpost.com

Copyright © 2005 The Christian Post. Click for reprint information

Monday, September 12, 2005

Sudan: assaults mean nightmares, suicidal impulses

Monday, 12 September 2005, 8:22 pm
Press Release: United Nations

People of western Sudan report nightmares, suicidal impulses as result of assaults – UN
The Janjaweed Arab militia's sexual and other assaults on the people of Darfur, western Sudan, have resulted not only in physical injuries, but a range of psychological traumas, including suicidal impulses and nightmares, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) says.

In a new report, "The Effect of Conflicts on Health and Well-Being of Women and Girls in Darfur: Situational Analysis Report, Conversations with the Community," based on testimony from women, as well as men, UNICEF said that on questions of safety and security, "sexual violence and abuse was mentioned in every group discussion as an existent and serious problem for girls and women," with a deep impact on fathers and husbands.

Girls and women reported that incidents of sexual violence, abuse and abductions by the Janjaweed Arab militia were continuous, with most cases of sexual assault taking place outside of the camps for the internally displaced, usually when they were collecting firewood, or grass, UNICEF said in its summary.

The girls and women added that in addition to pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases and other illnesses, the psychosocial consequences for them included shame, depression, social stigma, difficulty coping, and at the worst, some girls and women had committed suicide, the study said.

All of the groups, but especially the men, felt powerless and humiliated by the ongoing violence directed at the women and girls. In one location, the men also said the only reason they had not committed suicide was because it was forbidden by the Muslim religion.

The men summed up their situation by saying, "Their eyes see, but their hands cannot reach," UNICEF said.

Many men said if their daughters were raped, they would have no choice but to deal with it. As husbands, they would care for a child of rape, but would always bear in mind that that was a Janjaweed child and that the identity would be a problem for such a child in the future in their communities.

Unmarried girls were the most affected by sexual violence and some failed to go to clinics or hospitals due to stigma and shame, UNICEF said.

The study's main objectives were to increase humanitarian understanding of how the conflict affected women's and girls' health, it said, to determine the men's perceptions of those consequences, to gain insight into the community's coping mechanisms and to recommend donor action.

In its recommendations, UNICEF highlighted the need for better access to improved, more extensive health care services and increased prevention of and response to sexual violence, including training the police and the military of the Sudanese Government and African Union (AU) peacekeepers.

Refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) need fuel-efficient stoves, community-driven income generation activities, access to education for girls, and community-based psychosocial treatments. In addition, an in-depth investigation needs to be undertaken to examine the barriers to seeking health care and education, it said.

source: www.scoop.co.nz

Neglect of Darfur under scrutiny

By Indiana University Staff Editorial


September 11, 2005

One year ago today, the Bush administration declared the situation in Sudan constituted genocide.

Yet one year later, where does the international community stand? Have the killings stopped? Can we even point Darfur out on a map? And more importantly, do we even care?

Approximately 400,000 people have died in Darfur at the hands of the Janjaweed armed militia, and 200,000 have been forced to flee to the neighboring country of Chad. There have also been instances of rape and starvation, not to mention outbreaks of numerous infectious and deadly diseases within refugee camps.

With all this cruelty and devastation, we have to wonder, where is the media?

After the genocide of Rwanda, journalists vowed to “never again” allow such an incident to go uncovered, and yet, many Americans today remain ignorant about what’s happening in Sudan.

According to an articleby Sherry Ricchiardi of The American Journalism Review, in 2004, nightly newscasts at the three major networks dedicated a grand total of 26 minutes to the Darfur crisis.

We at the IDS feel the lack of media coverage on Darfur is unacceptable. We realize it is our duty, as journalists, to expose such events to the public.

We do not believe Americans feel apathy toward what is going on in Sudan, it’s simply that they are not aware of the situation.

Not everyone is completely ignorant to Darfur, however. Computer users can access information about the events in Sudan on the Internet at www.savedarfur.org.

Admittedly, gaining entrance into Darfur has proven difficult, and journalists, therefore, cannot readily access first-hand information. And with the war in Iraq taking center stage, much of the attention of news organizations has turned toward the Middle East. Hurricane Katrina has shoved Darfur further down the list of priorities for media coverage.

Even when some journalists have attempted to write about the genocide, their stories are often shoved into the inside pages of newspapers.

One could certainly make a case, however, that if more people were aware of this tragedy, they would be more interested in what is going on and try to find ways to get involved. Journalist Emily Wax of The Washington Post points out, “Most Americans don’t know where Sudan is,” and most won’t make an effort to find out until they’ve been given a good reason to.

Certainly, the U.S. government, as well as others around the world, have an obligation to help Darfur’s victims. However, we recognize it might take a spark of pressure in order to ignite such action, and it is up to the media to provide the matches.

One year later, Darfur genocide still pressing

By The Oracle
Published: Monday, September 12, 2005


The Issue: Issues of Darfur cannot be ignored
What we think: U.S. can't stand idly by during genocide

Darfur, a region in the west of the Sudan, has been the location of atrocities for several years. Thousands have been killed, raped or mutilated, which last year led to United States' officials chastising the world for standing idly by.

Exactly one year ago last week, Secretary of State Colin Powell used a widely publicized speech at the United Nations to address the situation as what it is: genocide.

One year later, little has changed for the afflicted. This cannot be said about the resolve of U.S. officials to end the plight of millions in Darfur and the surrounding regions, where refugees are holding out in camps with little food and water.

Apparently criticism over the administration's handling of Iraq quickly moved Darfur to the backburner.

Astonishingly, even numbers about the conflict remain sketchy: The World Health Organization estimates at least 71,000 deaths while the United Nations pegs the number at 180,000. Both organizations readily admit that actual numbers are certain to be much higher. The numbers regarding how many individuals have been displaced are similarly murky, but the figure is said to exceed 2 million.

No matter how the numbers add up, it's a very grim situation.

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof traveled to the region numerous times last year and brought back distressing tales that shockingly illustrated the gravity of the situation. Teenage girls are being raped, villages pillaged and entire regions ethnically cleansed.

With most of the nation's military either still tied up in Iraq and Afghanistan or busy with cleanup and rescue operations in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, military intervention seems unlikely, even if the administration was willing to do so. As Iraq continues to be compared to Vietnam, nobody seems interested in getting into a situation many find reminiscent of Rwanda.

But there is no need to send troops; pressure on the international community has great potential to shed light on the situation, alleviate suffering or end it altogether.

The visit of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Sudan to initiate talks with the Sudanese government in July was a good step, but to ensure changes, diplomacy should not be abandoned as has happened in the past and must go beyond talks with Sudan.

Naturally, diplomacy will take time and effort. There is also no guarantee that pressure will lead to success.

The alternative, however - to ignore the problem while thousands suffer - is simply unacceptable. Considering the administration keeps espousing the value of democracy and freedom, the U.S. cannot afford to stand idly by. This may not be convenient or a "quick fix," but at this point is the only viable option.

-The Oracle (U of South Florida)

source: www.bcheights.com

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

We Cannot Forget Darfur

As Ruth Messinger, President of the American Jewish World Service said, "The expression 'never again' cannot be reserved only for Jews."
By Or N. Rose

September 9th marks the one year anniversary of the Bush administration's declaration that the violence and destruction in the Darfur region of western Sudan is genocide. Sadly, since that time, the US government has done very little to stop this massacre. The Janjaweed militias, backed by the Sudanese government, continue to conduct a merciless campaign of slaughter, rape, starvation, and displacement. Since February 2003, an estimated 400,000 people have been killed, more than 1.9 million have been exiled from their homes, and an additional 200,000 people have fled across the border to Chad. Many are now living in refugee camps lacking adequate food, shelter, sanitation, and health care.

The United States is, of course, in the midst of its own crisis, recovering from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. It will take billions of dollars and many years to rebuild New Orleans and other ravaged areas along the Gulf coast. The pain and suffering of our fellow citizens demands a compassionate and comprehensive response. Yet, we must also remain attentive to other humanitarian crises around the world. We must overcome the tendency to become so absorbed in the calamity of the moment that we ignore other ongoing social justice issues. Darfur cannot be forgotten in the wake of Katrina.

As Jews, we have a particular obligation to take action against genocide. As Ruth Messinger, President of the American Jewish World Service said, "The expression 'never again' cannot be reserved only for Jews." The American Jewish community must use its considerable political clout to press the US government to intervene in Darfur.

One year ago the House of Representatives called upon the government to take the following steps:

·Assume responsibility to act and stop genocide as mandated by the 1948 UN Genocide Convention
·Consider leading a multilateral or even unilateral intervention to stop violence in Darfur
·Impose sanctions, visa bans, and asset freezes on the Sudanese Congress and individual leaders of genocide in Darfur
·Establish a Darfur Resettlement, Rehabilitation, and Reconstruction Fund so that those driven off their land may return and begin to rebuild their communities.

It is our responsibility to insist that the White House act on these recommendations, otherwise untold numbers of innocent Sudanese people will be dead by the end of the year. As the great theologian and activist, Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote, "In a free society some are guilty all are responsible."

Or N. Rose is Director of Informal Education at The Rabbinical School of Hebrew College. He is a Contributing Editor to TIKKUN.

Never Again: the Jewish community and Darfur

By JONATHAN LASKI

n Jan. 20, 1942, leaders of the Nazi regime convened the Wannsee Conference to plan their solution to the “Jewish problem.” As history has recorded, they were largely successful in their evil undertaking.

But some European Jews did survive and since then, Jewish identity has become synonymous with the term “Never again”– a pledge that the kind of evil felled upon our families, communities and religion will not threaten the existence of another people.

Our widespread apathy toward the genocides of today threatens our credibility. As Nobel Peace Prize-winner Elie Wiesel said, “The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it’s indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it’s indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it’s indifference.”

The genocide currently taking place in Darfur, Sudan – where Arab janjaweed militias equipped and trained by the Sudanese government are killing, torturing and raping civilians, razing their villages and forcing two million people into refugee camps rife with the preconditions of famine and disease – is the issue Jews are failing to address.

What we Canadian Jews have failed to realize is that people facing genocide today are intricately connected to us – they are almost extensions of our own Jewish history from 60 years ago, and as such, we have a special duty to fight for them. In fact, I would argue that the Jewish community has the opportunity to do something about the genocide in Darfur, which is far more important than contributing Nobel laureates or producing doctors, lawyers and entrepreneurs. By fighting tirelessly for the people of Darfur and stopping the genocide before the bureaucratic global community gets around to it, we can be the first religious, ethnic or social group since our families were victims in the Shoah to put an end to a genocide. This can be done by demanding that representatives from our schools, synagogues and federations speak out in classrooms and from bimahs, and use every resource possible to affirm that although very few stood up to fight for us, we will do better.

There are organizations working to raise awareness on the streets and in the synagogues, and to stir the hallowed halls of Parliament in Ottawa. The Canadian Jewish Congress has made concerted efforts to help and student organizations, such as STAND Canada (Students Taking Action Now: Darfur), are taking up arms against acquiescence and apathy on the part of young Canadians.

There are no excuses for indifference – not because the genocide is being orchestrated in a faraway land or because the rogue government is Muslim, the militia groups are Arab and their victims tribal Africans. I would argue that this two-year-long genocide is neither exclusively a Canadian issue nor an international issue, nor is it a black issue or a white one. It is, however, very much a Jewish issue.

In every instance that we invoke the “Never again” pledge, in our Yom Hashoah commemorations and CJN-published journal entries of March of the Living participants, we implicate ourselves further to actually do more than utter these words and mark them for empty cliché. Darfur is very much a Jewish issue, as these post-Holocaust years provide the litmus test for our social conscience and determination on one hand and our indifference and hypocrisy on the other.

In historical terms, we are not very far past the time of the Shoah. In 500 years, historians will record the war years from 1939 to ’45 and today as the same era. Will we be remembered simply as people who worked with ruach to rebuild our own communities from the ashes of the Holocaust, or as more – as a group who fought against the destruction of other cultures and as a community who said “Never again” and actually meant it?

Jonathan Laski is the media relations director of Students Taking Action Now: Darfur (STAND Canada).