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  • The 'g' word loses its meaning when no real action follows it

    Portland Press Herald, ME
    Jan 19 2005

    The 'g' word loses its meaning when no real action follows it


    by Nikki Kallio

    It was almost shocking when top government leaders dared to utter the
    "g" word - "genocide" - when referring to the violence in Sudan's
    Darfur region, because by all accounts that meant the United States
    would have to do something to stop it.

    As a signatory to the United Nations' 1948 Genocide Convention, we're
    now bound to "undertake to prevent and to punish" the crime.

    At least, that's the way it's supposed to work.

    The law started with Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew who studied the
    Turkish destruction of Christian Armenians during World War I and
    escaped Poland a week after the Nazis invaded.

    In her Pulitzer prize-winning book, "A Problem from Hell," Samantha
    Power describes Lemkin's efforts to set up an international law that
    was meant to forever eliminate such atrocities.

    He'd seen in Hitler's writings what the madman had in mind and tried
    to warn his family and friends, who didn't believe such a heinous
    plan could be executed. His parents were among those to perish.

    First, these crimes against humanity needed a name. Lemkin, an
    attorney and a trained linguist, knew what had happened was worse
    than mass murder, it was worse than an atrocity and it was worse than
    a crime against humanity. It needed a name that would transcend all
    others and compel the world to prevent it from ever happening again,
    Power wrote.

    Lemkin's new word, "genocide," finally gained the acceptance of
    Webster's Dictionary in 1944. The next step then was to establish an
    international law that would force the world to act to prevent it.

    If there were no such law, Lemkin knew genocide would continue to be
    regarded as an "internal" problem and that the world would continue
    to hesitate to intervene, Power wrote.

    Lemkin's vision of future genocide compelled him to take on the
    personal responsibility of preventing the slaughter of millions of
    people, and it consumed his life.

    The new international law was all he talked about, and he would talk
    about it with anyone who would listen and many who didn't, Power
    wrote. Day and night, he hammered at leaders and journalists, and,
    after an exhaustive campaign, the United Nations finally adopted the
    Genocide Convention in 1948. The United States, however, didn't
    ratify it until 1988.

    The Convention defines genocide as actions "committed with intent to
    destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious
    group."

    It compels signatories to act when genocide is occurring.

    For that reason, past leaders have been excruciatingly reluctant to
    speak the word, avoiding it like poison, believing that its utterance
    would behold them to action.

    The painful footage of State Department officials discussing in 1994
    why what had occurred in Rwanda wasn't "genocide" - despite the
    slaughter of 800,000 Rwandans in 100 days - demonstrated how much
    weight leaders thought the word carried.

    That's why pundits and editorialists - including me - called on
    leaders to use the word in discussing the crisis in Sudan. At least
    70,000 black Africans have been killed since last year and close to 2
    million more have been displaced from their homes by the
    government-backed Arab Janjaweed militiamen in an apparent attempt to
    gain control of the resource-rich Darfur region.

    Surprisingly, Congress, Secretary of State Colin Powell and President
    Bush responded. They've all taken the extraordinary step of using the
    powerful word. Much to Darfur's dismay, little has happened.

    Only weak resolutions that allude to economic sanctions have been
    passed (barely), and they've been given little teeth, even after
    Darfur's situation had been officially called "genocide."

    Scott Straus, an assistant professor of political science at the
    University of Wisconsin-Madison, wrote in the January/February issue
    of Foreign Affairs that "Darfur has shown that the energy spent
    fighting over whether to call the events there 'genocide' was
    misplaced, overshadowing difficult but more important questions about
    how to craft an effective response to mass violence against civilians
    in Sudan."

    Apparently, he's right.

    So, has the word lost its power?

    Should we start over? Rewrite the law? Talk about it some more? Wait
    and see?

    It took the United States 40 years to ratify the Genocide Convention
    in the first place, and now we find out that it has about as much
    strength as a paper towel.

    "Never again," indeed.

    Nikki Kallio is an editorial writer at the Portland Press
    Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram. She can be contacted at 791-6481 or at:
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