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  • Ethnic Media, Activists Decry Crisis in Sudan

    Pacific News Service, CA
    New California Media, CA
    July 16 2004

    Ethnic Media, Activists Decry Crisis in Sudan

    News Report, Compiled by Peter Micek,

    Asbarez Armenian Daily, Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater
    Chicago, Jul 16, 2004

    WASHINGTON -- Armenian activists joined with Rep. Charles Rangel and
    leading African American and human rights activists at a
    demonstration July 13 outside the Sudanese Embassy calling for United
    States and international pressure to end the genocide in the Darfur
    region of Sudan.

    The Washington protest, organized by the Sudan Campaign, featured the
    arrest of rep. Charles, Rangel, a senior Democrat and New York
    Congressman who serves as the Ranking Member on the influential
    United States House Ways and Means Committee.

    Staff and activists with the Armenian National Committee of America
    also participated in the protest. Armenian and Black media gave ample
    coverage to the protest.

    "When human lives are in jeopardy, there should be outrage,' Rangel
    said.

    Some 30,000 have already perished over the past 18 months in Darfur,
    Sudan, with approximately one million forced to flee their homes. If
    the Sudanese government does not allow for the distribution of
    international humanitarian assistance, the death toll could rise to
    350,000, according to conservative estimates.

    In a July 15 press release, the Council of Islamic Organizations of
    Greater Chicago, said `an apparent ethnic cleansing campaign' against
    non-Arab, ethnic Sudanese has led to refugee camps with little access
    to food or medical care.

    `It is a neglected humanitarian tragedy,' said Jihad Shoshara of the
    Council's newly created Darfur Awareness and Relief Program.

    Rangel was arrested for trespassing after stepping to the door of the
    Embassy. He was released within hours from a Washington, D.C., jail
    after paying bail of 50 dollars. Former member of Congress and
    current president of the National Council of Churches Robert Edgar
    was arrested at the Sudanese Embassy the next day.

    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Executive Director Aram
    Hamparian, Government Affairs Director Abraham Niziblian and ANCA
    interns, led by Director Arsineh Khachikian, joined the midday
    protest which included some 150 activists and representatives from a
    diverse coalition of Sudan Campaign partner organizations including
    the Congressional Black Caucus, Center for Religious Freedom at
    Freedom House, Institute on Religion and Democracy, American
    Anti-slavery group, Wilberforce Project, and Christian Solidarity
    International, among others.

    "We marched today, in the name of all Armenians, to do our part to
    help end the cycle of genocide," said Hamparian. "As the descendants
    of survivors of the Armenian Genocide, we bear a special burden to
    fight intolerance and to demand moral leadership - and decisive
    action - from our government to prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths
    in Darfur."

    Niziblian, in an interview with the Associated Press (AP), was quoted
    as saying that, "A lot more people should be protesting and taking to
    the streets now."

    The Sudan Campaign is led by Rev. Walter E. Fauntroy, co-founder of
    the Congressional Black Caucus, and Joe Madison, a civil rights
    activist and radio personality in the Greater Washington, DC area.
    The group has been holding noon-time protests in front of the
    Sudanese Embassy for the past month, during which several leading
    human and civil rights activists have been arrested.

    During his remarks, Madison announced that he is launching a hunger
    strike until the Sudanese government takes action to end the
    obstruction of humanitarian assistance from reaching hundreds of
    thousands in need in Darfur.

    Over the past month, the ANCA has called attention to the atrocities
    in Sudan through a series of letters to Congressional offices, urging
    them to take a stand to stop the cycle of genocide through support of
    Congressional initiatives regarding Sudan as well as for the Genocide
    Resolution (H.Res.193, S.Res.164), which reaffirms United States
    commitment to the principles of the Genocide Convention.

    On June 23, Niziblian participated in a press conference organized by
    the Congressional Black Caucus and Africa Action. The ANCA has urged
    Armenian Americans to add their names to the Africa Action petition
    drive for Sudan, by visiting www.africaaction.org.

    The coming rainy season in Sudan will make roads impassable,
    obstructing relief efforts to the camps, the Council of Islamic
    Organizations of Greater Chicago said. The United Nations, it said,
    has called the situation in Darfur `the world's greatest humanitarian
    crisis.'

    It is a neglected humanitarian tragedy, said the Council's Jihad
    Shoshara.

    `There are people who are dying and nobody knows about it.'

    The Council opened a relief fund and asks, `Muslims and fellow
    Americans of all faiths,' to spread awareness of the situation and
    contact elected representatives.
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