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California Leading the Human Rights Charge - Again

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  • California Leading the Human Rights Charge - Again

    CALIFORNIA LEADING THE HUMAN RIGHTS CHARGE - AGAIN

    California Progress Report, California
    Aug 3, 2006

    By Assemblymember Jerome Horton

    The United Nations has called it the greatest humanitarian crisis in
    the world. The United States calls it genocide. For the first time
    in world history, the term "genocide" is being applied to an ongoing
    tragedy rather than an event in our history books.

    More than two and a half years into the crisis, the western Sudanese
    region of Darfur is acknowledged to be a humanitarian and human rights
    crisis of the first order with as many as 500 people - overwhelmingly
    civilians - dying every month. The situation continues to deteriorate
    as the international community fails to protect innocent civilians
    or influence the Sudanese government to do so themselves.

    The need for action has never been greater. It is estimated that since
    the beginning of the conflict up to 400,000 people have been killed
    and 2.5 million have been displaced from their homes by the government
    militia, the "janjaweed". Currently, 25% of Sudanese children do not
    live past the age of five.

    Since being placed on the "Terror Watch" list by the Clinton
    Administration, the Sudanese government has been supplying us with
    information on terrorist activity within their own country, despite
    the fact that this information is often outdated and "cherry-picked"
    for minimal importance. It is because of these ties that we continue
    to avoid confronting Sudan on the issue of genocide. How can President
    Bush say that "we cannot ignore" their suffering and then feed the
    very beast responsible for their destruction? How can he allow these
    fruitless ties to the Sudan take precedent over the lives of the
    millions suffering in Darfur? Because steps are not being taken on
    the federal level, California must take a lead to prevent this tragedy
    from escalating any further.

    This year, I, along with Assemblymember Paul Koretz, have introduced
    a bill in the State Assembly, AB 2941 (Koretz), to address this
    atrocity. This bill would require two of the nation's biggest pension
    systems, CalPERS and CalSTRS, to begin a targeted divestment of
    holdings in companies that continue to do business with a government
    that slaughters, rapes, starves and displaces their own people. One
    would think that after the Holocaust and the genocides in Armenia,
    Rwanda, and that of California's Indian population, we would not
    stand idly by while people suffer from such inhumane treatment.

    AB 2941 will affect the revenue that the Khartoum government
    receives. The Khartoum government has used the funds it receives to
    purchase Russian MIGs which have been used in the attacks in Darfur
    and to arm the brutal Janjaweed militia. The Darfurians receive no
    benefits from the central government, but more significantly, their
    destruction is enabled by the wealth of the Khartoum government.

    AB 2941 will be heard on Tuesday, August 8th in the Senate Judiciary
    Committee. That same day the Sacramento Committee on Conscience
    will be holding its 2nd Annual Call to Conscience: Darfur, a rally
    in support of the bill. Speakers will include myself, Assemblyman
    Jerome Horton, and Assemblymembers Paul Koretz and Joe Coto, as well
    as representatives from groups sponsoring the bill, including the
    California State Conference of the NAACP.

    We in California are in a unique position to affect the direction of
    the entire country on yet another important social goal. Although other
    states have chosen to divest, none of these states have the holdings
    in Sudan that we do, and consequently none of these states could
    have an impact as powerful as ours could be. The federal government
    is wrestling with the question of how to act, but they have been
    reluctant to act due to foreign policy allegiances. It is up to the
    states themselves to lead the charge, and while it may be too late
    to begin the divestment charge, it is not too late for us to lead it.

    Assemblyman Jerome E. Horton was elected in November 2000 to represent
    the 51st District. He is the Chair of the Assembly Governmental
    Organization Committee.
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