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No excuse to ignore Darfur

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  • No excuse to ignore Darfur

    The Toronto Star, Canada
    March 5, 2005 Saturday

    No excuse to ignore Darfur


    Nobody who saw the horrific photos and who read the accompanying
    commentary by Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times about the
    current genocide in the western region of the Sudan called Darfur
    could remain unmoved (Toronto Star, Feb. 24).

    As Kristof put it, during past genocides against Armenians, Jews and
    Cambodians (he might have added 800,000 Rwandans also) it was
    possible to claim we didn't really know fully what was going on. This
    time, there is no excuse.

    What is happening, according to the International Commissions of
    Inquiry (ICI) in its report to the United Nations just a few weeks
    ago, is that "war crimes" and "crimes against humanity" are being
    committed by "Janjaweed" militias with the full approval and
    assistance of the government in Khartoum against hundreds of
    thousands of black farmers.

    Secretary-General Kofi Annan has described the mayhem, rape,
    mutilation, destruction of homes and crops followed by starvation and
    disease as "little short of hell on Earth."

    An estimated 200,000 non-Arabs have been killed, 1.6 million people
    have been driven from their dwellings, and an estimated 2 million
    men, women and children are reportedly at risk of being wiped out by
    mid-summer if nothing is done to stop the carnage.

    Thousands of photos documenting the savagery have been collected by
    African Union monitors, Kristof reported. While he apologized for the
    gruesomeness of the four accompanying his article, he made the
    obvious point that "the real obscenity isn't in printing pictures of
    dead babies - it's in the world's overall passivity that is
    permitting this outrageous annihilation to go on.

    Thank God a powerful U.S.-based group, the Save Darfur Coalition,
    composed of more than 100 religious, humanitarian and human rights
    organizations, (www.savedarfur.org) has taken up the cause of raising
    public awareness and agitating for international political action.
    But, to date, the overall response has been muted.

    Others have spoken out. For example, as far back as last July 14, the
    Committee on Conscience of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum took
    the unprecedented step of declaring "a genocide emergency in the
    Sudan."

    Louise Arbour, Commissioner for Human Rights for the U.N., has
    alerted the Security Council on the findings of the ICI.

    Both houses of the U.S. Congress have declared the mass murdering to
    be genocide. Former secretary of state Colin Powell has accused the
    Sudanese government of "supporting and sustaining" the rampaging
    militia.

    Yet nothing truly effective has been done.

    Sudanese President Umar Bashir has ignored all calls to stop the
    carnage. Perhaps he knows that conflicting financial and other
    interests on the part of the major world powers are working to make
    them very reluctant to intervene.

    There are huge oil resources in the southern Sudan that are being
    hungrily sought after by British, Indian and other would-be
    investors. The entire Nile Basin, as the region is called, is rich in
    resources - but also ripe for drought, famine, and plague. Polio, a
    short time ago almost defeated, has broken out with fresh virulence
    in eastern Sudan.

    If you have access to the Internet, go not just to the site already
    given above, but also to www.darfurgenocide.org and learn about one
    direct initiative aimed at fingering some of the dollar structure
    supporting the chaos.

    The Hon. Rev. Walter F. Fauntroy, a former congressman and adviser on
    civil liberties to several presidents, is chairman of the Divest
    Sudan Campaign as well as president of the National Black Leadership
    Roundtable. His group claims that $91.2 billion (U.S.) by 100
    prominent American pension funds is invested in publicly-traded
    companies which are currently helping to prop up Khartoum's
    "murderous regime."

    His group has been urgently calling on such funds to disinvest
    immediately. He, himself, has been arrested on several occasions for
    demonstrating and protesting on the steps of the Capitol.

    The question, of course, is what can we do to avoid having to tell
    others one day that we stood by stunned as another genocide happened
    before our very eyes?

    Kristof points out that the answer is massive indignation - "so far
    the response has been pathetic."

    U.S. Senator Paul Simon said after the Rwandan genocide that if every
    member of the U.S. House and Senate had received 100 letters from
    people protesting the Rwandan affair when it was in its beginnings,
    the overall response would have been quite different. That's relevant
    now.

    Look at the websites and respond. Here are two more: www.un.org and
    www.darfurinfo.org, where you can sign a petition, or write to your
    own M.P. today. The horror of Darfur can be stopped, but only if we
    act now.

    Speaking of evils, it is truly sad that at a time when there is so
    much hatred and criminality in the world the Supreme Pontiff of the
    Roman Catholic Church has chosen to release a book condemning love
    between two persons of the same sex. God is love and wherever there
    is genuine love, God is always there too.

    Tom Harpur is a theologian whose focus is on cosmic spirituality. His
    website is at www.tomharpur.com.

    GRAPHIC: ABD RAOUF AP FILE PHOTO Sudanese President Umar Bashir may
    have pledged to bring peace to the wartorn Darfur region but has done
    nothing to stop the carnage in the western area of the country.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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