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  • UN: 'Never Again' Echoes At Auschwitz Remembrance,

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Jan 25 2005


    UN: 'Never Again' Echoes At Auschwitz Remembrance, But Darfur Poses
    Challenge

    By Robert McMahon

    Refugees from Darfur in Chad (file photo)

    Reflecting on the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz
    death camp, leading UN member states have vowed to act to prevent the
    recurrence of genocide. But they face an immediate challenge in
    Sudan's Darfur region, where UN experts have raised alarm about
    atrocities and the mass abuse of human rights for more than a year.
    An international commission is due to report today on whether or not
    genocide is occurring in Darfur. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in
    a speech about Auschwitz, called on the UN Security Council to be
    ready to respond to the commission's findings.


    United Nations, 25 January 2005 (RFE/RL) -- "Never again" was the
    refrain at a high-level meeting of the UN General Assembly session
    commemorating the liberation of Auschwitz.

    But speakers at the session expressed dismay at the world's failure
    to stop the genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, and the Balkans during the
    last quarter of the 20th century.

    UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan also used the assembly's first-ever
    commemoration of the Holocaust to remind countries of the current
    humanitarian disaster in Sudan's western Darfur region. Annan said an
    international commission of inquiry, requested by the UN Security
    Council, is due to report to him today on the extent of the abuses.
    He urged the Security Council to be prepared to act.

    "That report will determine whether or not acts of genocide have
    occurred in Darfur. But also, and no less important, it will identify
    the gross violations of international humanitarian law and human
    rights which undoubtedly have occurred," Annan said.

    Darfur has been embroiled in violence for nearly two years, after two
    rebel groups began an armed resistance against the government in a
    clash over resources.

    Since then, Arab militias known as Janjaweed have retaliated by
    rampaging through the area. Tens of thousands of civilians have died
    and nearly 2 million have been displaced since the fighting began.
    The Sudanese government denies links to the Janjaweed, but there have
    been numerous reports that the militia is equipped by Khartoum.

    The UN Security Council is divided over a course of action to bring
    an end to the abuses. There is a growing debate over whether it
    should refer cases of major abusers to the new International Criminal
    Court, which the United States strongly opposes.

    French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier told reporters at UN
    headquarters today that "terrible things" have been done to Darfur's
    civilians. But he stressed that any solution should involve
    engagement with the Sudanese government. "It's my conviction that we
    won't solve this dramatic situation without the Sudan or against the
    Sudan but with the Sudan, and that is the aim of the mediating
    efforts that have been carried out in the United Nations and
    particularly by the African Union," Barnier said.

    Aside from the UN secretary-general, few speakers mentioned the
    Darfur tragedy by name during the Auschwitz session.

    But Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian made a strong appeal to
    the international community to do more to track down the perpetrators
    of atrocities in Darfur. "Recognizing the victims and acknowledging
    them is also to recognize that there are perpetrators, but this is
    absolutely not the same as to name them, shame them, to dissuade
    them, to isolate them and to punish them," he said.

    Oskanian said that, based on its own experience, Armenia has a
    special understanding of the trauma caused by genocide and
    international indifference. Armenia says 1.5 million ethnic Armenians
    were killed by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923 in a genocidal
    campaign. Turkey denies genocide occurred.
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