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  • Stop another holocaust

    Friday, March 24, 2006 - Last Updated: 6:39 AM
    Stop another holocaust

    Post and Courier
    Chalston.net
    X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
    X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    Close to a million people were killed in Rwanda in 1994 when the
    dominant Hutus turned against the Tutsis. The slaughter that went
    unchecked should have ensured that at the first signs of genocide the
    United Nations would act to prevent yet another human tragedy.

    Not so. Genocide has been proceeding in the Darfur region of Sudan as
    if there had never been a commitment by the international community to
    make the vow "Never Again," after the Jewish Holocaust, mean
    something. To date, the United Nations has shrunk from its
    responsibility to intervene and the United States, overstretched in
    Afghanistan and Iraq, is in no position to act unilaterally.

    Over the past three years, during which at least 300,000 people were
    killed and two million displaced from their homes, the United States
    was at the forefront of diplomacy aimed at persuading the Sudanese
    government to rein in its murdering militias, known as the Janjaweed,
    and to cease the "ethnic cleansing" of the black Christian population.

    Eighteen months ago, then-U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell
    declared that the Arab government was carrying out a campaign of
    genocide against the people of Darfur and was using rape as a
    weapon. President Bush has repeated the charge of genocide, as has
    Congress.

    A campaign mounted by the American Jewish World Service called
    "Million Voices for Darfur" calls on people around the world to remind
    President Bush that during his first year in the White House, he wrote
    in the margins of a report on the Rwandan genocide, "Not on my watch."
    American Jews are organizing a mass rally in Washington on April 30.

    Last month, the president called for a mission to Darfur under "NATO
    stewardship, planning, facilitating, organizing, probably double the
    number of peacekeepers that are there now, in order to start bringing
    some sense of security." The Associated Press reports that after a
    visit with President Bush in Washington Monday, NATO Secretary General
    Jaap De Hoop Scheffer told reporters: "I am quite sure, as I told the
    president, that when the U.N. comes [to ask for help], the NATO allies
    will be ready to do more in enabling a United Nations Force in
    Darfur."

    The president was quoted as saying the African Union must ask the
    Security Council to put its mission in Darfur under a U.N. flag. When
    that happens, he said, NATO can move in with U.S. help "to make it
    clear to the Sudanese government that we're intent on providing
    security for the people there and intent upon helping work toward a
    lasting peace agreement."

    Evidently, President Bush has not forgotten the words, "Not on my
    watch," that he scribbled on the Rwandan genocide report.
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