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Armenians Must Raise Their Voices For Truth and Justice in Sudan

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  • Armenians Must Raise Their Voices For Truth and Justice in Sudan

    http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?a rticle_id=c512c58caf10a4ad57ffeead1b61891d

    Armeni ans Must Raise Their Voices For Truth and Justice in Sudan
    Armenian Weekly (Watertown, Mass.), Commentary,
    Jason Sohigian, Aug 15, 2004

    Although the U.S. State Department and even the United Nations have
    hesitated to call the continuing atrocities in the Darfur region of western
    Sudan a genocide, the US Congress unanimously passed a resolution last month
    declaring that the events unfolding there are genocide, and urged the Bush
    administration to do the same.

    The wavering of the UN may be because the Genocide Convention of 1948
    obligates the international community to take the complicated step of
    "preventing and punishing" acts that it has declared as genocide; also, the
    body recognizes the dangers of trivializing the act by applying the term to
    situations that may not fully meet the criteria.

    Yet, already at least 30,000 civilians have been killed and up to one
    million displaced since groups from the Darfur region took up arms over what
    they regard as unjust treatment by the government in their struggle with
    Arab countrymen over land and resources. The government- armed militia,
    called Janjaweed, began attacking Darfur villages in retaliation.

    However, regardless of the terminology, with killings of this magnitude it
    is imperative that the UN and the US work with the international community
    to stop it immediately by using economic and arms embargoes against those
    that supply the Janjaweed, deploying troops from other African states, and
    applying sanctions and other means to pressure those responsible.

    The Armenian community has a special responsibility to speak out on this
    issue. Past instances of genocide, including the brutal murders of 1.5
    million Armenians, were not prevented--even when the massacres taking place
    were well known to the outside world--because the international community
    failed to act.

    As Gary Bass, author of Stay the Hand of Vengeance: The Politics of War
    Crimes Tribunals, noted in an interview with the Armenian Weekly, "There is
    more of a sense for communities in the US who are sensitive to the issue of
    genocide--such as Rwandans, Jews, or Armenians living here--about the
    reality of genocide and of what it means to be abandoned when you are dying
    in the hundreds of thousands and no one cares."

    Similarly, in The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide, Yair
    Auron has written about the importance of the Israeli viewpoint concerning
    acts of genocide, because of the Jewish experience in the Holocaust.

    As a result of the work of the International Association of Genocide
    Scholars and others, the term genocide and the weight of its meaning have
    become known to a wide segment of the public, and important issues
    concerning genocide are now being discussed in the media and by the
    international community.

    The U.N. is to be commended for its appointment last month of Juan Mendez to
    the new position of Special Advisor on the Prevention of Genocide. Mendez is
    an Argentine human rights lawyer and one-time political prisoner under the
    military regime that ruled his country in the 1970s.

    Whether or not Secretary of State Colin Powell and the Bush administration
    have the inclination or ability to follow the lead of the US Congress on
    Sudan, Secretary-General Kofi Annan must work with Mendez and others without
    delay to prevent genocide--before it is too late once again.

    Related Stories:

    Recognition of Armenian Genocide Increasing Despite White House Opposition
    Armenian-Americans Say U.S. Trade Decision Will Hurt Homeland
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