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Congressman Miller Takes Struggle In Darfur To UN

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  • Congressman Miller Takes Struggle In Darfur To UN

    CONGRESSMAN MILLER TAKES STRUGGLE IN DARFUR TO UN

    California Chronicle, CA
    March 8 2006

    California Political Desk
    March 7, 2006

    Miller Follows Up on Trip to Sudan with Pleas for International
    Assistance.

    WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressman George Miller, House Democratic Leader
    Nancy Pelosi, and several other members of Congress met today with
    United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan in New York City to
    express their sense of urgency about the need for more forces and
    humanitarian assistance in the Darfur region of the Sudan to address
    the serious crisis there.

    "We wanted to make sure that the United Nations heard our message
    loud and clear: that we cannot let the Sudanese government continue
    to victimize its own citizens," said Miller. "We need to make sure
    that the U.N. remains committed to increasing the number of United
    African troops in the region to protect the people there."

    According to the Congressional Research Service, an estimated 1.9
    million people have been displaced because of the political crises and
    more that 213,000 people have been forced away from their homes and
    into neighboring Chad. While there are no reliable estimates of the
    number of people killed as a result of the conflict, some observers
    project that up to 300,000 people have been killed over the past 24
    months. In July 2004, the House and Senate declared the atrocities
    in Darfur "genocide," and the Bush Administration reached the same
    conclusion in September 2004.

    "Despite the passage of time, the situation in Darfur is getting
    worse, not better," Miller said. "The world community must respond
    immediately. The current African Union Forces need to be strengthened
    and given greater support. President Bush has declared this crisis
    to be genocide, and it will continue to be genocide unless there is
    a stronger reaction from the world community, including the United
    States."

    Miller noted that on April 30 in Washington, D.C. and in other cities
    thousands of people are expected to hold protests calling for stronger
    actions on Darfur. Prominent political figures, faith leaders, human
    rights activists, entertainers, journalists and thousands of others
    who support a stronger multi-national force to protect the civilians
    of Darfur are expected to participate.

    "During the past genocides of Armenia, the Holocaust, and Rwanda, the
    world community failed to speak up and act with diligence in a timely
    manner," Miller added. "Now we look back at the tens of millions of
    lost and destroyed lives and ask how this happened. Today we have the
    opportunity to learn from history rather than repeat it. Already too
    much damage has occurred but if we act with diligence now, perhaps
    we can stop this catastrophe that is occurring in Darfur."
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