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2003-11-28 Africa: East
Amnesty sez Sudan’s largely to blame for troubles in Darfur province
There is "compelling evidence" that the government of Sudan is "largely responsible" for the abuses and humanitarian crisis in Darfur, western Sudan, said rights group Amnesty International (AI) in a statement on Thursday. Arab militia groups responsible for attacks on farming communities which have killed thousands, contained well armed and uniformed elements of the Sudanese army, AI researcher Benedicte Goderiaux told IRIN. Following interviews with refugees from Darfur who have fled to neighbouring Chad, AI said it had come to the "the bleak conclusion that at least some elements in the army" were encouraging the devastation. According to the UN, 600,000 people have been displaced since February. "Refugee after refugee, in widely scattered areas, told how militias armed with kalashnikovs and other weapons, including bazookas, often dressed in green army uniforms, raided villages, burnt houses and crops and killed people and cattle," the statement said. Allegations of abductions, rape of women, and torture in detention had also been made.

The Sudanese government has repeatedly denied backing the Arab militia groups in Darfur, known as the Janjaweed, but has committed itself to controlling them. At the very least, AI said it had "totally failed in its obligation to protect its own people". Goderiaux said she would be "cautious" about describing the attacks as ethnic cleansing. The attacks have mainly targeted the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups, which make up two rebel movements - the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army and the Justice and Equality Movement - fighting for political and economic rights. Goderiaux warned that the conflict, which is currently centered in northern and western Darfur, had the potential to spread further and become a fullscale civil war.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) on Thursday said the security situation along the Chadian border was deteriorating, as the militias launched "bolder and more aggressive attacks". Over a three-week period, the militias had launched six raids on refugee and Chadian communities close to the border, stealing hundreds of cattle and killing a Chadian villager, the agency said. In another attack Arab militias had torched six villages over the border from Borota. Meanwhile, the lack of travel permits being granted by the Sudanese government, coupled with general insecurity, is preventing aid agencies from supplying urgently needed humanitarian aid.
And I think that Khartoum is quite happy with that state of affairs ...
Posted by Dan Darling 2003-11-28 2:06:48 AM|| || Front Page|| [5 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 And where's the outrage? I'm really fed up with our media 's double standards.
Every day, we've got detailed review of the tiniest iraqi events, because everybody is waiting for the stupid americans to fail as we predicted, and because it involves the new pet cause of the chattering class (muslims, seen as the new global underdogs). All this while whole part of the world are more or less a living hell, but still not worth of our mediacracy's attention (think of DRC/Rwanda, with 3-4 millions deads since 1993, 9 countries involved, for example).
In Sudan, of course, the victims are black, and christian/animist, and the perps are not the "right" kind of racist imperialists.
Tell me... is this just ideological bias, or does anyone believes the financial weight of the petromonarchies is also to be taken into account, just like at the UN?
Posted by Anonymous 2003-11-28 7:29:48 AM||   2003-11-28 7:29:48 AM|| Front Page Top

#2 Methinks your rant sums up one of the fatal flaws of established "news" outlets and the very selective self-righteous "rights" groups quite admirably. And that be why we be here - to dig and discover and get beyond their agendas and biases. You're on-target. Keep it up!

Of course the perps had better beware - else they might find themselves warned by the UN! Swift as eagles and tough as doves they *swoop* down upon those who do evil. Terrifying them with resolutions and press trash talking - and in extreme cases messing up their hair. Thrilling to see! Your UN contributions in action! Vindication!
;-)
Posted by .com 2003-11-28 7:50:05 AM||   2003-11-28 7:50:05 AM|| Front Page Top

#3 anon says, "Tell me... is this just ideological bias, or does anyone believes the financial weight of the petromonarchies is also to be taken into account, just like at the UN?"

We can also blame the Org of African States whose policy is basically pro tyranny. We can also blame the left wing Christian church organizations whose policy is basically anti-American. We can also blame the various Civil Rights groups whose policy is to do nothing that might offend Jesse Jackson.
Posted by mhw 2003-11-28 9:24:36 AM||   2003-11-28 9:24:36 AM|| Front Page Top

#4 This situation is not new in Darfur. (See Africa's Thirty Years' War: Chad, Libya and the Sudan, 1963-1993) Nevertheless, recent developments are bloodier inside Sudan than they have been for more than a decade.
Posted by Tancred 2003-11-28 11:27:03 AM||   2003-11-28 11:27:03 AM|| Front Page Top

#5 I think it would be real time to remind Jesse Jackson that he is a black and that he is supposed to care when blacks are being abused by people of lighter color.
Posted by JFM  2003-11-28 1:31:31 PM||   2003-11-28 1:31:31 PM|| Front Page Top

#6 But JFM, Jesse can't make any MONEY defending these people. His whole purpose in life is to see how many rich Americans he can shake down, make feel guilty, and give him money - which he feels perfectly ok about spending any da$$$$ way he pleases.
Posted by Old Patriot  2003-11-28 3:37:27 PM|| [http://users.codenet.net/mweather/default.htm]  2003-11-28 3:37:27 PM|| Front Page Top

01:07 Grom the Reflective
00:28 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677









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