I hope people have been hearing at least a little about the genocide in Darfur, Sudan. My dad drew my attention to it recently in an article saying what an urgent and serious problem this is, one that shouldn't be ignored.
If you have time, please look over this article, and as for getting involved, I would recommend email Bush, Condoleeza Rice, and Senators Boxer and Feinstein. (That's what my family did, anyway.) There are also a few organizations that I've found that at least can give you more information about the crisis (see upper-right corner of my blog).
If you have time, please look over this article, and as for getting involved, I would recommend email Bush, Condoleeza Rice, and Senators Boxer and Feinstein. (That's what my family did, anyway.) There are also a few organizations that I've found that at least can give you more information about the crisis (see upper-right corner of my blog).
Never Again, Again
By BERNARD-HENRI LÉVY
April 13, 2006; Page A12 (The Wall Street Journal)
April 13, 2006; Page A12 (The Wall Street Journal)
We already knew that villages are being leveled by planes from bases in Obeid and Port Sudan. We knew that the Janjaweed ("armed men on horseback") come, after the bombers, to finish off the survivors by hand. We also knew -- as I myself attested in 2001 after a stay with John Garang's guerrilla army -- of the use of mass rape, as in Bosnia, as a weapon of war and conquest.
But there are new elements that we do not know so well: the way the Khartoum regime at the last minute banned a visit by the top U.N. relief official; the harassment of European NGOs, especially the Norwegians, who were keeping the humanitarian pipeline open against all odds and have been forced to pack their bags; the cynicism with which the militias enforce the Feb. 20 law prohibiting any "foreign organization" whose activities constitute an "interference" in Sudan's "internal affairs" and thus encroach upon the "sovereignty" of a state that claims the right to exterminate as it pleases.
The new development, in short, is the frightening warning from Juan Mendez, the U.N.'s special adviser on the prevention of genocide, that this policy of the forced withdrawal of NGOs could signal that the regime has embarked on the last stage of its plan, where there cannot and must not be any witnesses.
And this is when there are those who, faced with the atrocity of a massacre and perhaps genocide, denounce the very principle of an intervention which they condemn in advance as "neocolonial": Such is the case this week of the Arab League.
There are, in the U.S. as in Europe, organizations who, though presumably having the duty and speciality of defending black minorities against discrimination or historical denial, are conspicuous by their silence. Is it because this war between Arab and non-Arab Muslims complicates, yet again, the old schema? Is it because the war is a terrible confirmation, by fact and fire, of the historians' thesis that the massacre of African blacks was an African and especially an Arab crime as well as -- and before -- being a Western crime? In sum, there are all those who each have a different reason for feeling inconvenienced by this drama in Sudan and who would therefore like President Omar El Bashir to do whatever he has to do quickly, and in silence.
But what about the others? All the others? What about all those ordinary people who, like you and me, had sworn "Never again Auschwitz" and then "Never again Bosnia" and then "Never never again the shame of Rwanda"? What about Kouchner, my friend Bernard Kouchner, who invented the right to intervene? And Mandela, the great man in whom human conscience and nobility were incarnated? And the United States? And France and its African diplomacy? And all those everywhere who have made themselves advocates of the cause of blacks and from whom we so much want to hear?
I acknowledge that the problem is not simple.
But it also must be acknowledged that it is a hundred times less complicated than the removal of Saddam Hussein. Telling Khartoum to stop would not take more effort than was required 10 years ago, after five years of procrastination and cowardice, to stop Milosevic.
What, then, are we waiting for? Every day that goes by is a day of shame and defeat.
Mr. Lévy is the author, most recently, of "American Vertigo" (Random House, 2006). This piece was translated from the original French by Hélène Brenkman.
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