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President Bush Signs Darfur Supported Bill

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  • President Bush Signs Darfur Supported Bill

    UC Daily News, TN
    Jan 6 2007


    President Bush Signs Darfur Supported Bill


    WASHINGTON - President Bush signed the Sudan Accountability and
    Divestment Act into law - just two weeks after unanimous passage by
    the U.S. House of Representatives and, during the week prior,
    unanimous passage by the U.S. Senate. The law authorizes state and
    local governments to divest from companies that support the Khartoum
    government at the expense of marginalized populations in Sudan and
    prohibits federal contracts with those companies. Darfur activists
    hailed the bill's passage into law despite a loosely-worded signing
    statement attached to the bill.

    In a joint statement, Darfur activist groups - including the Save
    Darfur Coalition, Genocide Intervention Network, and STAND - said the
    president must avail the full force of his administration to enure
    this measure is thoroughly enforced.

    "This measure is intended to change Khartoum's behavior by putting
    pressure on the foreign companies lining the pockets of the ruling
    National Congress Party. Elected officials of all political
    persuasions joined together to unanimously pass this legislation in
    the Congress. It presents a stark choice - stop enabling genocide in
    Darfur or lose our business. The people of Darfur cannot afford an
    empty 'law on the books,' which is why the president must vigorously
    enforce this critical legislation."

    Since the introduction of the Sudan Accountability and Divestment
    Act, nine companies - including La Mancha resources, CHC Helicopter,
    ABB, Siemens, Rolls Royce, ICSA of India, Weatherford International,
    Weir Group, and Schlumberger - have ceased operations in Sudan or
    significantly changed their behavior in the country.

    Since 2005, 22 states and more than 50 universities have adopted
    Sudan divestment policies. The movement has rapidly spread through
    Europe: in July the European Parliament unanimously adopted a
    resolution calling on European Union members to support targeted
    Sudan divestment efforts. Seven major foreign companies - CHC
    Helicopter, ABB, Siemens, Rolls Royce, ICSA of India, Schlumberger
    and La Mancha Resources - have ceased problematic operations in Sudan
    or significantly changed their behavior in the country since the
    proliferation of the Sudan divestment movement.

    In 2001, President Bush wrote "not on my watch" in the margins of a
    memo detailing the Rwandan genocide. With a little more than a year
    left in office, President Bush has an opportunity to protect
    civilians in Darfur and help ensure lasting peace for Sudan. Signing
    the Sudan Accountability and Divestment Act is an important step
    towards fulfilling the promise he made early in his presidency.

    Other necessary actions include deployment of a full-time envoy with
    a team in the region to coordinate the Darfur peace process and
    ensure the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement;
    support for the deployment of the UNAMID force, including pressuring
    allies to volunteer military resources for the mission; and
    introduction of a sanctions resolution at the U.N. Security Council
    to address the blatant obstructionism and intransigence of the
    government of Sudan.

    President Bush described the ongoing crisis in Darfur as "genocide"
    more than three years ago and identified the government of Sudan and
    its allied militia as responsible. Since then, diplomatic efforts by
    the United States and the international community have failed to
    leverage sufficient pressure on the Sudanese government to end the
    violence. As many as 400,000 men, women and children have died as a
    result of the conflict, and more than 2.5 million have been displaced
    from their homes to refugee and internally displaced persons camps.

    A U.N. peacekeeping mission authorized by the Security Council in
    August has yet to deploy in large part because the Sudanese
    government has refused to allow non-African peacekeepers into Darfur,
    landing rights for U.N. transport and unfettered communications
    between peacekeepers. In addition, the government of Sudan continues
    to bomb villages and to relocate its supporters onto land vacated by
    the displaced.

    The broad and diverse coalition that supported and played a critical
    role in the passage of Sudan Accountability and Divestment Act also
    includes the American Jewish Committee, the Armenian National
    Committee of America, the Armenian Assembly of America, B'nai B'rith
    International, the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the Leadership
    Conference of Women Religious, the National Council of Churches, the
    NAACP, the ENOUGH Project, the National Council of Jewish Women, the
    Religious Action Center, the Unitarian Universalist Service
    Committee, and dozens of state and local faith-based and community
    organizations.

    Who will lose their federal contracts?

    The Sudan Divestment Task Force, a project of the Genocide
    Intervention Network, maintains a list of problematic companies
    supporting the Sudanese government. The following companies appear on
    this list and, as of September 2007, maintained contracts with the
    federal government: ALSTOM (FRANCE), LAHMEYER INTERNATIONAL
    (GERMANY), MOTT MACDONALD ( UK). All companies renewing or pursuing
    new contracts with the federal government must now certify that they
    do not support the Sudanese government. The law includes explicit
    exemptions for South Sudan to ensure that its effects are felt by the
    regime in Khartoum and not by civilians elsewhere in Sudan.

    http://www.ucdailynews.com/politics/13486342.htm l
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