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After visit to refugees, Doctors Assert Sudan Committing Genocide

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  • After visit to refugees, Doctors Assert Sudan Committing Genocide

    After visit to refugees, doctors' group asserts Sudan is practicing
    genocide

    Says world response needed now in Darfur

    The Boston Globe
    June 24, 2004

    By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Globe Correspondent

    The violence in the Darfur region of Sudan includes systematic killings,
    rape, pillaging, and destruction of villages that ''are clear indicators
    of genocide," according to a report issued yesterday by Physicians for
    Human Rights.

    A delegation from the Boston-based advocacy group visited the
    neighboring country of Chad last month and interviewed non-Arab refugees
    from the Darfur region, who gave firsthand accounts of being assaulted
    and chased while their wells were poisoned, livestock stolen, and
    villages burned by an Arab militia known as the Janjaweed, working with
    the Sudanese government.

    ''What we determined, based on a number of testimonies, is that there
    are clear indicators of genocide," investigator John Heffernan said.
    ''The main point here is a consistent program of targeting non-Arabs."

    Under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
    Genocide, which the United States has signed, any member country is
    obligated to stop or prevent genocide if it is identified. The
    international genocide convention, adopted in 1948, defines genocide as
    actions intended to destroy a racial, national, religious, or ethnic group.

    There is widespread agreement that the humanitarian crisis in Darfur
    demands urgent action, but a coordinated international response is
    coming too slowly for many critics. The physicians' group said that by
    presenting evidence of genocide, it hoped to instigate a more serious
    international response.

    ''Those countries which have signed on to the genocide convention are
    committed to prevent and punish those who are perpetrating it,"
    Heffernan said.

    Darfur has been the center of escalating violence as the Arab-dominated
    central government has fought non-Arab rebel groups over the past 18
    months. In April, a UN official called the conflict ''ethnic cleansing."

    The physicians' group's report noted that non-Arabs were consistently
    attacked while neighboring Arab villages were spared. ''The Janjaweed
    attacked us, and then the government helicopters attacked us. They want
    to attack all the black people in Sudan, so that Sudan will be for the
    Arabs only," a refugee is quoted as saying.
    Tens of thousands of people have died, and roughly 1 million people have
    been displaced within Darfur. Most of these displaced people lack food,
    clean water, and medical care and some are even living in ''prison
    enclaves," according to Heffernan. For the refugees in Chad, those
    conditions will only worsen as the rainy season begins, making transport
    of food or other humanitarian aid impossible, the report said.

    The study outlines assault methods it said were intended to annihilate
    the non-Arab group. They cite systematic attacks on villages, using
    coordinated air and land forces.

    The Arab militia worked with the Sudanese government's troops to destroy
    property and pursued fleeing villagers in order to kill, rape, or rob
    them, the report charges.

    The report called on the Sudanese government to halt the violence, and
    on the international community to intervene.

    A spokesman from the United Nations said yesterday that although the
    secretary general is not prepared to call the atrocities ''genocide,"
    the flagrant human rights violations occurring in Darfur are a major
    concern to the UN.

    ''The idea is not to wait until it gets to that point," said Jemera
    Rome, a Sudan researcher at Human Rights Watch. ''The Security Council
    does not need genocide in order to act."

    She said that the UN should invoke its Chapter VII authority of the UN
    charter, which permits the Security Council to take all actions
    necessary, including sending a military force, to ''maintain or restore
    international peace and security."

    The US government has so far not taken a view on whether the violence
    amounts to genocide. In a June 11 interview with The New York Times,
    Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said, ''I'm not prepared to say what
    is the correct legal term for what's happening. All I know is that there
    are at least a million people who are desperately in need."
    /

    Carolyn Johnson can be reached at [email protected]/
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