ME and Ophelia
Saturday, July 31, 2004
THE WORLD'S GREATEST HUMANITARIAN DISASTER
Lies squarely on the government of Sudan
Yesterday, a newly passed UN resolution says Khartoum must halt atrocities by Arab militias in the western Darfur region within 30 days. Here are excerpts from a BBC report:
"The government of Sudan has left us no choice. It has done the unthinkable, it has fostered an armed attack on its own civilian population, it has created a humanitarian disaster," US Ambassador John Danforth told the Council after the vote. "The responsibility for this disaster lies squarely on the government of Sudan," he said.
The resolution calls on Sudan to make good on promises it made on 3 July to rein in the fighters.
It calls for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to issue a report in 30 days on the progress made in each of those areas.
The US removed any specific reference to sanctions in the resolution after objections from seven members - including China, Russia and Pakistan - who believe Khartoum needs more time to act.
Sudan's reaction to the new UN resolution was to reject it.
Diplomats say it is not up to Sudan to accept or reject the resolution.
Update from BBC:
Sudan's UN ambassador Elfatih Erwa, and its ambassador to the African Union, Osman al-Said, separately said Khartoum would comply. "We are not happy with the resolution, but we are going to implement it - we have no other option," Mr al-Said told reporters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell said during a visit to the Middle East: "They [The Sudan government] can say whatever they wish to say. The Security Council has spoken (and) in a rather strong vote."
- - -
SUDAN'S INFORMATION MINISTER
Says Khartoum are capable of "disarming all the looting and robbing gangs"
Today, Sudan's Information Minister Malik says Khartoum is capable of "disarming all the looting and robbing gangs". Well if that's true, how come they haven't already done so? They've had enough years.
Here are more gems from Mr Malik today:
- the resolution "does not conform with the agreements between the government and the United Nations"
- the resolution "focused on Arab militias more than humanitarian issues in Darfur"
- "It pains Sudan to have to express its rejection of the Security Council resolution"
- - -
THE LONG PATH TO RELIEF
U.S. food takes 3 months to get to Chad
Above is a map of the long path to relief. After a month-long trip down the Mississippi River and across the Atlantic, U.S. food arrives on the coast of Cameroon.
From there it's 10 to 15 days to get it to Chad and at least a week until it makes it to the camps.
With delays, the entire trip can take 3 months.
See report of the fight against truck-eating rivers.
- - -
WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME
Airdrops food for 85,000 people isolated in Darfur
Good news from the BBC today: the World Food Programme (WFP) said it will begin a series of airdrops targeting 85,000 people in isolated regions of West Darfur in 3 days.
About time too. It's not like WFP is short of money. Financial contributions to WFP in 2004 - as at 12 July 2004 - amounts to a grand total of:
U.S. dollars 856,382,319.
The conflict started 17 months ago. Enough food could have been delivered for victims months ago - by land or air. If security was such a problem, WFP and other aid agencies ought to have pushed harder for political action months ago - or gone to the media with their story.
Note, I've not yet seen word of thanks from the government of Sudan.
- - -
200 FRENCH TROOPS IN CHAD
To secure Chad's eastern frontier with Darfur
It comes as a surprise to read news today that French soldiers stationed in Chad began airlifting aid to the town of Abeche near the border of Chad and Darfur: yesterday. Perhaps it's connected with the WFP deliveries (see next post above).
The military operation began when a Hercules C-130 flew 12 tonnes of supplies to Abeche, destined for people in nine refugee camps, according to Colonel Charles. He said the action was "in the framework of strengthening logistical aid to UN agencies".
Tomorrow, 200 French soldiers are going to Chad's eastern frontier with Darfur to deter incursions by the Janjaweed.
President Idriss Deby of Chad has accused Sudan of fomenting militia forces in his country.
Asked what French troops had been ordered to do if the Janjaweed crossed the border, the French ambassador to Chad, Jean Pierre Bercot, said: "Our capacity to react will be jointly decided with our Chadian partners. With our presence on the ground, we want to show that we will be there to attest to any incursions by the Janjaweed before the eyes of all the world."
He said French military aircraft would carry out flights "according to need" in coming days between Ndjamena and Abeche, which is about 700km east of the capital.
Note: What took the French so long? And why is the AU so slow in getting their 270 soldiers into Sudan? I am working on finding answers to these questions.
- - -
Further reading:
July 31: Costello's tears for Sudan - World Vision leader Tim Costello broke down in tears when he told reporters about the devastating humanitarian crisis and the suffering he saw in camps in war-ravaged Sudan. Melbourne's Herald Sun newspaper said Mr Costello made an emotional plea for $A2 million after returning to Melbourne from a week-long visit to the African nation's refugee camps. Sky TV showed Mr Costello's voice failing as he described the stories of rape and cruelties he had heard in the refugee camps. He pleaded with Australians not to turn their heads away from the suffering. The Herald Sun newspaper quoted him as saying none of his work on the streets of Melbourne or in the slums of the Philippines and Cambodia had prepared him for the horror of the camps in the western Sudanese region of Darfur.
June 10, 2004: The EU announced it had mobilised 12 million euros from its recently established Africa Peace Facility to support African Union peace-keeping operations in Darfur, Sudan. The Peace Facility provides 250 million euros from the European Development Fund to support African led peacekeeping operations in Africa.
July 29: Head Heeb posts two plausible reasons why Egypt would court Khartoum. [via Patrick Hall]
Passion: "The closed society of Sudan breeds terrorism as well as genocide"
July 29: "Darfur crisis the result of years of US sponsored terrorism in Southern Sudan"
Passion: "Could activists fund an AU-led peacekeeping force for Darfur and Sudan?"
July 30: "Financial woes delay Darfur observer team"
July 30: "Now Darfur Threatened with Locust Plague"
Lies squarely on the government of Sudan
Yesterday, a newly passed UN resolution says Khartoum must halt atrocities by Arab militias in the western Darfur region within 30 days. Here are excerpts from a BBC report:
"The government of Sudan has left us no choice. It has done the unthinkable, it has fostered an armed attack on its own civilian population, it has created a humanitarian disaster," US Ambassador John Danforth told the Council after the vote. "The responsibility for this disaster lies squarely on the government of Sudan," he said.
The resolution calls on Sudan to make good on promises it made on 3 July to rein in the fighters.
It calls for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to issue a report in 30 days on the progress made in each of those areas.
The US removed any specific reference to sanctions in the resolution after objections from seven members - including China, Russia and Pakistan - who believe Khartoum needs more time to act.
Sudan's reaction to the new UN resolution was to reject it.
Diplomats say it is not up to Sudan to accept or reject the resolution.
Update from BBC:
Sudan's UN ambassador Elfatih Erwa, and its ambassador to the African Union, Osman al-Said, separately said Khartoum would comply. "We are not happy with the resolution, but we are going to implement it - we have no other option," Mr al-Said told reporters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell said during a visit to the Middle East: "They [The Sudan government] can say whatever they wish to say. The Security Council has spoken (and) in a rather strong vote."
- - -
SUDAN'S INFORMATION MINISTER
Says Khartoum are capable of "disarming all the looting and robbing gangs"
Today, Sudan's Information Minister Malik says Khartoum is capable of "disarming all the looting and robbing gangs". Well if that's true, how come they haven't already done so? They've had enough years.
Here are more gems from Mr Malik today:
- the resolution "does not conform with the agreements between the government and the United Nations"
- the resolution "focused on Arab militias more than humanitarian issues in Darfur"
- "It pains Sudan to have to express its rejection of the Security Council resolution"
- - -
THE LONG PATH TO RELIEF
U.S. food takes 3 months to get to Chad
Above is a map of the long path to relief. After a month-long trip down the Mississippi River and across the Atlantic, U.S. food arrives on the coast of Cameroon.
From there it's 10 to 15 days to get it to Chad and at least a week until it makes it to the camps.
With delays, the entire trip can take 3 months.
See report of the fight against truck-eating rivers.
- - -
WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME
Airdrops food for 85,000 people isolated in Darfur
Good news from the BBC today: the World Food Programme (WFP) said it will begin a series of airdrops targeting 85,000 people in isolated regions of West Darfur in 3 days.
About time too. It's not like WFP is short of money. Financial contributions to WFP in 2004 - as at 12 July 2004 - amounts to a grand total of:
U.S. dollars 856,382,319.
The conflict started 17 months ago. Enough food could have been delivered for victims months ago - by land or air. If security was such a problem, WFP and other aid agencies ought to have pushed harder for political action months ago - or gone to the media with their story.
Note, I've not yet seen word of thanks from the government of Sudan.
- - -
200 FRENCH TROOPS IN CHAD
To secure Chad's eastern frontier with Darfur
It comes as a surprise to read news today that French soldiers stationed in Chad began airlifting aid to the town of Abeche near the border of Chad and Darfur: yesterday. Perhaps it's connected with the WFP deliveries (see next post above).
The military operation began when a Hercules C-130 flew 12 tonnes of supplies to Abeche, destined for people in nine refugee camps, according to Colonel Charles. He said the action was "in the framework of strengthening logistical aid to UN agencies".
Tomorrow, 200 French soldiers are going to Chad's eastern frontier with Darfur to deter incursions by the Janjaweed.
President Idriss Deby of Chad has accused Sudan of fomenting militia forces in his country.
Asked what French troops had been ordered to do if the Janjaweed crossed the border, the French ambassador to Chad, Jean Pierre Bercot, said: "Our capacity to react will be jointly decided with our Chadian partners. With our presence on the ground, we want to show that we will be there to attest to any incursions by the Janjaweed before the eyes of all the world."
He said French military aircraft would carry out flights "according to need" in coming days between Ndjamena and Abeche, which is about 700km east of the capital.
Note: What took the French so long? And why is the AU so slow in getting their 270 soldiers into Sudan? I am working on finding answers to these questions.
- - -
Further reading:
July 31: Costello's tears for Sudan - World Vision leader Tim Costello broke down in tears when he told reporters about the devastating humanitarian crisis and the suffering he saw in camps in war-ravaged Sudan. Melbourne's Herald Sun newspaper said Mr Costello made an emotional plea for $A2 million after returning to Melbourne from a week-long visit to the African nation's refugee camps. Sky TV showed Mr Costello's voice failing as he described the stories of rape and cruelties he had heard in the refugee camps. He pleaded with Australians not to turn their heads away from the suffering. The Herald Sun newspaper quoted him as saying none of his work on the streets of Melbourne or in the slums of the Philippines and Cambodia had prepared him for the horror of the camps in the western Sudanese region of Darfur.
June 10, 2004: The EU announced it had mobilised 12 million euros from its recently established Africa Peace Facility to support African Union peace-keeping operations in Darfur, Sudan. The Peace Facility provides 250 million euros from the European Development Fund to support African led peacekeeping operations in Africa.
July 29: Head Heeb posts two plausible reasons why Egypt would court Khartoum. [via Patrick Hall]
Passion: "The closed society of Sudan breeds terrorism as well as genocide"
July 29: "Darfur crisis the result of years of US sponsored terrorism in Southern Sudan"
Passion: "Could activists fund an AU-led peacekeeping force for Darfur and Sudan?"
July 30: "Financial woes delay Darfur observer team"
July 30: "Now Darfur Threatened with Locust Plague"
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/31/2004
0 comments
Friday, July 30, 2004
FRANCIS CRICK, DNA PIONEER, DIES
Codiscovered the double helix
Great excerpt from Nick's post at Blogborygmi:
It is a matter of some irony that two immodest researchers wrote one of the most beautiful understatements in the history of science:
"This structure has novel features of considerable biological interest... It has not escaped our attention that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material."
-- Watson J. D., Crick F. H. (1953) Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for deoxyribose nucleic acid. Nature 171: 737-738.
Codiscovered the double helix
Great excerpt from Nick's post at Blogborygmi:
It is a matter of some irony that two immodest researchers wrote one of the most beautiful understatements in the history of science:
"This structure has novel features of considerable biological interest... It has not escaped our attention that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material."
-- Watson J. D., Crick F. H. (1953) Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for deoxyribose nucleic acid. Nature 171: 737-738.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/30/2004
0 comments
- - -
DARFUR DEATH TOLL UP TO 80,000
Sudan threatens BBC with legal action over Darfur
Over the past week or so, several reports have listed the number of deaths in Darfur as 50,000 - not 30,000.
Today, a top U.S. official was quoted as saying the number of deaths in Darfur is 80,000.
Also today, in a July 30 report the chief of Doctors Without Borders is quoted as saying that even with the new improved deliveries - only half of the basic needs for food will be met in July. He confirms the current aid effort is insufficient and that urgent action is still overdue - as it has been throughout Darfur’s man-made emergency.
- - -
Sudan Tribune report says "Sudan threatens BBC with legal action over Darfur". Heh. Sounds like GoS are getting stressed and clutching at straws trying to do spin with the media. Bet they're scratching their heads as to how come Darfur got in the world's spotlight. They may be good at controlling what type of news goes in and out of Khartoum but, going by what they are quoted as saying in news reports, they don't sound very media or net savvy. They must think we're soft - and daft.
Like most other statements of theirs, the GoS is full of bluster and bluff and, as usual, is talking a load of rubbish. Remember the funny Minister for Information in Iraq? Well his twins are in Khartoum: Foreign Minister Ismail and Interior Minister (forgotten his name) are a hoot. They're so full of barmy statements, I've started to collect their quotes for posting here at a later date.
By comparison, Colin Powell and Kofi Annan are a lot more smart - and trustworthy - so I go by what they say. The international community's strategy looks like it is working. Khartoum are definitely feeling the heat. They've even released political prisoners (an issue in the demands by the rebels). But I am still appalled at the food and aid not reaching the refugees. Some reports give the impression things are getting better, but don't you believe it - they're not. The U.N. are paid well enough to do a great job. If they claim it is the best they can do - well their best is just not good enough.
Back in April and May, I complained here about the BBC's reporting on Sudan only because their reports were too far and few between. The only inaccuracies I've noticed in their reporting I've put down to them erring on the side of caution.
For example, not long ago, the BBC were continuously quoting the number of deaths as 10,000 when in fact it was 30,000 - and more recently 50,000. (I've noticed today BBC reports "up to 50,000" - there's a huge difference between 50,000 and 80,000 lives, how come the BBC don't say 80,000?
If I have any criticisms of the BBC in its reporting of the Sudan, it would be they did not report enough news or frequently enough. But they've done great over the past month. Sudan Tribune comes up with some useful reports (it has just published the text of U.N. security council resolution on Sudan), Scotsman.com is pretty good too. But the best and most timely news on the Sudan I find, is Reuters.
Note, BBC is inviting people to join the BBC's Africa Live debate on Wednesday 4 August at 1630 & 1830 and discuss "What do you think is the way forward for Darfur? What role should the UN and the African Union play? Should the crisis be resolved through sanctions, through military intervention or through quiet diplomacy?
- - -
July 30 Reuters: "UN sets Darfur deadline" - The U.N. Security Council has voted for a U.S.-drafted resolution that threatens to impose sanctions on Sudan in 30 days if it does not disarm and prosecute marauding militia in Darfur.
The 13-0 vote, with abstentions from China and Pakistan, came after the United States deleted the word 'sanctions' and substituted a reference to a section of the U.N. Charter permitting punitive measures to gain more support.
The Article 41 provision allows the 'interruption' of economic, transport, communications or diplomatic measures, which amounts to sanctions.
The measure, co-sponsored by Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Chile and Romania, demands that Khartoum disarm and prosecute within 30 days militia known as Janjaweed or the Security Council will consider punitive measures.
But China's deputy U.N. ambassador, Zhang Yishan, said on Friday this was still too harsh and was 'not helpful in resolving the situation in Darfur and may further complicate the situation.'"
DARFUR DEATH TOLL UP TO 80,000
Sudan threatens BBC with legal action over Darfur
Over the past week or so, several reports have listed the number of deaths in Darfur as 50,000 - not 30,000.
Today, a top U.S. official was quoted as saying the number of deaths in Darfur is 80,000.
Also today, in a July 30 report the chief of Doctors Without Borders is quoted as saying that even with the new improved deliveries - only half of the basic needs for food will be met in July. He confirms the current aid effort is insufficient and that urgent action is still overdue - as it has been throughout Darfur’s man-made emergency.
- - -
Sudan Tribune report says "Sudan threatens BBC with legal action over Darfur". Heh. Sounds like GoS are getting stressed and clutching at straws trying to do spin with the media. Bet they're scratching their heads as to how come Darfur got in the world's spotlight. They may be good at controlling what type of news goes in and out of Khartoum but, going by what they are quoted as saying in news reports, they don't sound very media or net savvy. They must think we're soft - and daft.
Like most other statements of theirs, the GoS is full of bluster and bluff and, as usual, is talking a load of rubbish. Remember the funny Minister for Information in Iraq? Well his twins are in Khartoum: Foreign Minister Ismail and Interior Minister (forgotten his name) are a hoot. They're so full of barmy statements, I've started to collect their quotes for posting here at a later date.
By comparison, Colin Powell and Kofi Annan are a lot more smart - and trustworthy - so I go by what they say. The international community's strategy looks like it is working. Khartoum are definitely feeling the heat. They've even released political prisoners (an issue in the demands by the rebels). But I am still appalled at the food and aid not reaching the refugees. Some reports give the impression things are getting better, but don't you believe it - they're not. The U.N. are paid well enough to do a great job. If they claim it is the best they can do - well their best is just not good enough.
Back in April and May, I complained here about the BBC's reporting on Sudan only because their reports were too far and few between. The only inaccuracies I've noticed in their reporting I've put down to them erring on the side of caution.
For example, not long ago, the BBC were continuously quoting the number of deaths as 10,000 when in fact it was 30,000 - and more recently 50,000. (I've noticed today BBC reports "up to 50,000" - there's a huge difference between 50,000 and 80,000 lives, how come the BBC don't say 80,000?
If I have any criticisms of the BBC in its reporting of the Sudan, it would be they did not report enough news or frequently enough. But they've done great over the past month. Sudan Tribune comes up with some useful reports (it has just published the text of U.N. security council resolution on Sudan), Scotsman.com is pretty good too. But the best and most timely news on the Sudan I find, is Reuters.
Note, BBC is inviting people to join the BBC's Africa Live debate on Wednesday 4 August at 1630 & 1830 and discuss "What do you think is the way forward for Darfur? What role should the UN and the African Union play? Should the crisis be resolved through sanctions, through military intervention or through quiet diplomacy?
- - -
July 30 Reuters: "UN sets Darfur deadline" - The U.N. Security Council has voted for a U.S.-drafted resolution that threatens to impose sanctions on Sudan in 30 days if it does not disarm and prosecute marauding militia in Darfur.
The 13-0 vote, with abstentions from China and Pakistan, came after the United States deleted the word 'sanctions' and substituted a reference to a section of the U.N. Charter permitting punitive measures to gain more support.
The Article 41 provision allows the 'interruption' of economic, transport, communications or diplomatic measures, which amounts to sanctions.
The measure, co-sponsored by Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Chile and Romania, demands that Khartoum disarm and prosecute within 30 days militia known as Janjaweed or the Security Council will consider punitive measures.
But China's deputy U.N. ambassador, Zhang Yishan, said on Friday this was still too harsh and was 'not helpful in resolving the situation in Darfur and may further complicate the situation.'"
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/30/2004
0 comments
Thursday, July 29, 2004
PROS GET BLOGGING
At Democratic Convention
Meet the "bloggers" accredited for a national political convention.
It's the first time that weblogs as a news medium (other than the estimated 15,000 journalists from traditional outlets) have been accredited to cover the news at the Democratic Convention in America. Bloggers being accredited means the people behind the weblogs are allowed access to the main hall and can sit at designated workspaces with their computers.
As of yesterday the total count is 119 people blogging the convention.
Jim Moore explains how it is for webloggers covering news there in Boston and describes the tension he feels when deciding what is OK - or not - to disclose on the Internet.
It's easy to imagine professional journalists from traditional news outlets not treating the blogging media as equals. They have much to take into consideration when writing a story. Bosses, sources and reputations. It's their livelihood.
Bloggers are their own bosses and free to write as they please. Interesting how we are not an unruly bunch. 99% of the bloggers I read are mindful of what they write about and the effect their words will have on others. And seem pretty open, honest and caring over the truth and crediting sources.
Having said that, Jim's post talks about secrets. *Groan* .... secrets bug me when I don't have a clue what they could be about. Like when someone says: "Oh, you'll NEVER guess what -- Oh nevermind -- it doesn't matter -- it's nothing -- I'll tell you later..." Grrrr.
Hey Jim, spill the beans: WHAT secrets?! Do tell. Or at least give us a clue ;)
Update: More neat links in Blogger's Blogging-from-Boston post.
- - -
Above post is especially for Pauly to wish him best of luck with his new political blog This Side of the Truth [Pauly: sorry I'm behind with blog reading past few weeks - routine all upside down here with carpenter, visitors and stuff - not to mention Sudan - look forward to catching up with your posts soon]
- - -
ACTIVIST GROUPS ARE DRIVING U.S. SUDAN POLICY
Public pressure drives U.S. push on Sudan crisis
It's good to see that politicians do listen. See. Our voices do count. According to a report by Reuters, Jewish, Christian and black activist groups are driving U.S. Sudan policy. The lobbying has increased this month "in leaps and bounds," Kansas Republican Sen. Sam Brownback, who visited Darfur in recent weeks, wrote in a statement to Reuters.
One voice may seem like one drop of water in a bucket - but with enough drops, a bucket can overflow and be noticeable in no time. How to stop the drips? Get another bucket. What if the drips don't let up? Sort out the problem. The drip drip effect of activists must be a nightmare for politicians. On the other hand, activists can act as a support to politicians when they need the courage to push on certain issues. In times of doubt and uncertainty, it must help politicians and make them feel they are doing a good job.
- - -
"BLOGGING FOR THE BLOG-LESS -
Speaks for the speech-less now on a global scale"
Joe Lockard's report entitled Electronic Darfur came to me via Google's email alerts. I subscribe to Google's alerts on Darfur and Sudan, which means all online reports by mainstream media (not weblogs) that contain those two words are emailed to me within an hour of being picked up by Google. It would be great to receive the same sort of service for blogs.
The report appears on a group website "Bad Subjects" where Joe is a collective editor. He lives in Arizona and teaches English at University of California. On doing a quick Google search, I was surprised to find that Joe has a blog.
I've not yet had enough time to ingest and digest Joe's report. When I glanced through it, I got the impression that Joe was not a blogger. Seemed to me that he didn't *get* blogging. I wasn't quite sure what to make of his report but I did find his subject matter refreshingly original with useful links to good information on the genocide in Darfur.
Unfortunately, before I found out Joe was indeed a blogger, I'd drafted the below post. Instead of re-writing the post, I've decided to publish it here because I'd gone to the trouble of getting all the links together and I am over tired from putting together the above posts on Sudan and having visitors here at home over the past two days.
I need to take a blogging break for the next few days and look forward to reading Joe's report in depth after I've had some serious rest. If in the meantime anyone can get the gist of what Joe is saying, I would appreciate any comments or emails. Thanks. Here is what I wrote, before I found out Joe is a blogger:
[The above half-completed post is from my drafts folder from a week or two ago - I am posting it here now, before it gets buried and forgotten. Hopefully, I'll pick up on it again at a later date. The following is part of the second half - I wrote quite a long draft so this is a reminder to get back to it again]:
When it was announced that Kofi Annan and Colin Powell were to visit Darfur, I asked myself: "Did we bloggers make a difference?" and emailed David Sifry to ask if Technorati's databases held any evidence. I got a great reply saying he has asked his people to look into it. I'm also looking in to how professional journalists track and measure their reporting. But I don't have any answers yet which is the reason for the delay in posting on the subject.
Jim Moore and Ethan Zuckerman, both out of Harvard, have been working on ways to analyse our blogging of the Sudan crisis. Jim has a great post on "activisits supported by blogs and RSS aggregators and Technorati and Feedster desperately focus on genocide in Darfur and Sudan".
Ethan says he enjoys watching how news media work in parallel on stories like Iraq or how attention slowly builds around stories like the crisis in Sudan. He explains he's already seeing some evidence that blogs are moving in lockstep with major media sources.
Ethan has graphs showing data that he's been collecting for about a year. He has a graph of "hits" that represent the number of stories matched on a given search engine for a particular keyword: "Iraq" or "Ghana". Ethan started tracking BBC figures for 14 and 90 day periods, as well as for the last three years - and has data on stories for about 14 months now, so there's quite a bit more information if anyone is interested in digging into it.
- - -
DO FLIES HAVE EYES IN THE BACK OF THEIR HEADS
How to catch a fly?
Right now there is a fly in this room. It's driving me crazy. Two hours. Buzzing around at full speed. Big black fat hairy one. Over my head. In front of my screen. So loud too. Bouncing from wall to window and back again. I just got rid of one two hours before. Don't want to open a window incase another comes in. Every time I get up to swat it, it seems to know. And speeds off at full blast out of the room and down the hallway. I go after it with a folded paper. It's so fast it goes from room to room. It's wearing me out.
Apart from bug spray, does anyone know how to keep flies away? I like to have the windows all open during the day. But during the summer, here by the seaside, some days flies are a problem. I don't want to install fly screens as they'd spoil the view. Maybe there's a herb or plant that keeps them away.
Now that I come to think of it, I am having a really bad day. Haven't been able to blog. Carpenter finished balcony. Painter arrived early this morning. He knocked on the door. We were still asleep. Next thing I knew I could hear all this commotion by the back door, like someone was breaking in. We rushed to the kitchen. It was the painter. How did he get in? The back gate was bolted top and bottom. He'd used two long ladders to get over a 12' high wall. Charming.
That's how the day started -- and the rest of the day went downhill. Fancied something sweet. Tried to bake a cake. But only had gluten free plain flour. Improvised by sifting it with baking powder. Did all the work. Used the food processer. Made a mess of dishes. 45 minutes in oven. Total and utter disaster. The whole thing turned out as a bubbling mass of liquified syrup. I've never seen anything like it. It was supposed to be German upside down cake with pineapple rings.
Ophelia seems to be having a slight problem swallowing food. I am a bit worried but wonder if I'm over fussing. Maybe she has a little sore throat. Time will tell. Right now she's curled up fast asleep on her chair. Her eyes are clear and her nose is healthy damp. And she is getting through her food OK. But not with her usual gusto. I want to wake her up and give her a kiss and a cuddle and tell her I love her. I'm glad today is nearly over.
Update: Ophelia is now rushing around chasing the fly. Heh. What would I do without her. It's gone now.
Update: it's back.
- - -
FACTS OF THE DAY
Courtesy NYT and Scotsman.com
On July 28, 1945, a US Army B-25 bomber crashed into Empire State Building in New York City, setting it ablaze and killing 13 people.
On July 28, 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. World War I began as declarations of war by other European nations quickly followed.
On July 29, 1981, Britain's Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer at St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
At Democratic Convention
Meet the "bloggers" accredited for a national political convention.
It's the first time that weblogs as a news medium (other than the estimated 15,000 journalists from traditional outlets) have been accredited to cover the news at the Democratic Convention in America. Bloggers being accredited means the people behind the weblogs are allowed access to the main hall and can sit at designated workspaces with their computers.
As of yesterday the total count is 119 people blogging the convention.
Jim Moore explains how it is for webloggers covering news there in Boston and describes the tension he feels when deciding what is OK - or not - to disclose on the Internet.
It's easy to imagine professional journalists from traditional news outlets not treating the blogging media as equals. They have much to take into consideration when writing a story. Bosses, sources and reputations. It's their livelihood.
Bloggers are their own bosses and free to write as they please. Interesting how we are not an unruly bunch. 99% of the bloggers I read are mindful of what they write about and the effect their words will have on others. And seem pretty open, honest and caring over the truth and crediting sources.
Having said that, Jim's post talks about secrets. *Groan* .... secrets bug me when I don't have a clue what they could be about. Like when someone says: "Oh, you'll NEVER guess what -- Oh nevermind -- it doesn't matter -- it's nothing -- I'll tell you later..." Grrrr.
Hey Jim, spill the beans: WHAT secrets?! Do tell. Or at least give us a clue ;)
Update: More neat links in Blogger's Blogging-from-Boston post.
- - -
Above post is especially for Pauly to wish him best of luck with his new political blog This Side of the Truth [Pauly: sorry I'm behind with blog reading past few weeks - routine all upside down here with carpenter, visitors and stuff - not to mention Sudan - look forward to catching up with your posts soon]
- - -
ACTIVIST GROUPS ARE DRIVING U.S. SUDAN POLICY
Public pressure drives U.S. push on Sudan crisis
It's good to see that politicians do listen. See. Our voices do count. According to a report by Reuters, Jewish, Christian and black activist groups are driving U.S. Sudan policy. The lobbying has increased this month "in leaps and bounds," Kansas Republican Sen. Sam Brownback, who visited Darfur in recent weeks, wrote in a statement to Reuters.
One voice may seem like one drop of water in a bucket - but with enough drops, a bucket can overflow and be noticeable in no time. How to stop the drips? Get another bucket. What if the drips don't let up? Sort out the problem. The drip drip effect of activists must be a nightmare for politicians. On the other hand, activists can act as a support to politicians when they need the courage to push on certain issues. In times of doubt and uncertainty, it must help politicians and make them feel they are doing a good job.
- - -
"BLOGGING FOR THE BLOG-LESS -
Speaks for the speech-less now on a global scale"
Joe Lockard's report entitled Electronic Darfur came to me via Google's email alerts. I subscribe to Google's alerts on Darfur and Sudan, which means all online reports by mainstream media (not weblogs) that contain those two words are emailed to me within an hour of being picked up by Google. It would be great to receive the same sort of service for blogs.
The report appears on a group website "Bad Subjects" where Joe is a collective editor. He lives in Arizona and teaches English at University of California. On doing a quick Google search, I was surprised to find that Joe has a blog.
I've not yet had enough time to ingest and digest Joe's report. When I glanced through it, I got the impression that Joe was not a blogger. Seemed to me that he didn't *get* blogging. I wasn't quite sure what to make of his report but I did find his subject matter refreshingly original with useful links to good information on the genocide in Darfur.
Unfortunately, before I found out Joe was indeed a blogger, I'd drafted the below post. Instead of re-writing the post, I've decided to publish it here because I'd gone to the trouble of getting all the links together and I am over tired from putting together the above posts on Sudan and having visitors here at home over the past two days.
I need to take a blogging break for the next few days and look forward to reading Joe's report in depth after I've had some serious rest. If in the meantime anyone can get the gist of what Joe is saying, I would appreciate any comments or emails. Thanks. Here is what I wrote, before I found out Joe is a blogger:
[The above half-completed post is from my drafts folder from a week or two ago - I am posting it here now, before it gets buried and forgotten. Hopefully, I'll pick up on it again at a later date. The following is part of the second half - I wrote quite a long draft so this is a reminder to get back to it again]:
When it was announced that Kofi Annan and Colin Powell were to visit Darfur, I asked myself: "Did we bloggers make a difference?" and emailed David Sifry to ask if Technorati's databases held any evidence. I got a great reply saying he has asked his people to look into it. I'm also looking in to how professional journalists track and measure their reporting. But I don't have any answers yet which is the reason for the delay in posting on the subject.
Jim Moore and Ethan Zuckerman, both out of Harvard, have been working on ways to analyse our blogging of the Sudan crisis. Jim has a great post on "activisits supported by blogs and RSS aggregators and Technorati and Feedster desperately focus on genocide in Darfur and Sudan".
Ethan says he enjoys watching how news media work in parallel on stories like Iraq or how attention slowly builds around stories like the crisis in Sudan. He explains he's already seeing some evidence that blogs are moving in lockstep with major media sources.
Ethan has graphs showing data that he's been collecting for about a year. He has a graph of "hits" that represent the number of stories matched on a given search engine for a particular keyword: "Iraq" or "Ghana". Ethan started tracking BBC figures for 14 and 90 day periods, as well as for the last three years - and has data on stories for about 14 months now, so there's quite a bit more information if anyone is interested in digging into it.
- - -
DO FLIES HAVE EYES IN THE BACK OF THEIR HEADS
How to catch a fly?
Right now there is a fly in this room. It's driving me crazy. Two hours. Buzzing around at full speed. Big black fat hairy one. Over my head. In front of my screen. So loud too. Bouncing from wall to window and back again. I just got rid of one two hours before. Don't want to open a window incase another comes in. Every time I get up to swat it, it seems to know. And speeds off at full blast out of the room and down the hallway. I go after it with a folded paper. It's so fast it goes from room to room. It's wearing me out.
Apart from bug spray, does anyone know how to keep flies away? I like to have the windows all open during the day. But during the summer, here by the seaside, some days flies are a problem. I don't want to install fly screens as they'd spoil the view. Maybe there's a herb or plant that keeps them away.
Now that I come to think of it, I am having a really bad day. Haven't been able to blog. Carpenter finished balcony. Painter arrived early this morning. He knocked on the door. We were still asleep. Next thing I knew I could hear all this commotion by the back door, like someone was breaking in. We rushed to the kitchen. It was the painter. How did he get in? The back gate was bolted top and bottom. He'd used two long ladders to get over a 12' high wall. Charming.
That's how the day started -- and the rest of the day went downhill. Fancied something sweet. Tried to bake a cake. But only had gluten free plain flour. Improvised by sifting it with baking powder. Did all the work. Used the food processer. Made a mess of dishes. 45 minutes in oven. Total and utter disaster. The whole thing turned out as a bubbling mass of liquified syrup. I've never seen anything like it. It was supposed to be German upside down cake with pineapple rings.
Ophelia seems to be having a slight problem swallowing food. I am a bit worried but wonder if I'm over fussing. Maybe she has a little sore throat. Time will tell. Right now she's curled up fast asleep on her chair. Her eyes are clear and her nose is healthy damp. And she is getting through her food OK. But not with her usual gusto. I want to wake her up and give her a kiss and a cuddle and tell her I love her. I'm glad today is nearly over.
Update: Ophelia is now rushing around chasing the fly. Heh. What would I do without her. It's gone now.
Update: it's back.
- - -
FACTS OF THE DAY
Courtesy NYT and Scotsman.com
On July 28, 1945, a US Army B-25 bomber crashed into Empire State Building in New York City, setting it ablaze and killing 13 people.
On July 28, 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. World War I began as declarations of war by other European nations quickly followed.
On July 29, 1981, Britain's Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer at St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/29/2004
0 comments
- - -
DARFUR VISITOR ASKS:
Is this planet earth?
World Vision Australia chief executive Reverend Tim Costello had just visited the Kalma camp in Sudan's war-torn Darfur region, where 70,000 Sudanese refugees huddled under humpies of wood and plastic, their only respite from the pitiless African sun. "Nothing prepares you for the incredible heat," Mr Costello said by telephone last night immediately after his visit.
"It was the rawest expression of humanity I've ever seen. You ask yourself, is this planet earth?"
"The camp stretches for five kilometres and it's utterly exposed. As far as the eye can see there are people under small humpies with five or six people crowded underneath -- it's absolutely mind-blowing."
He said the Sudan crisis, which has been described as like Rwanda in slow motion, was hanging by a thread and the lives of more than a million people were at stake.
"It is without a doubt the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today," he said. "But it's not hopeless and a holocaust can be prevented.
- - -
U.K. GATHERING EVIDENCE OF GENOCIDE
African Union preparing plans to send a force to Darfur
Yesterday's Guardian report "Sudan to face 'genocide' inquiry" says the US and British governments are gathering evidence to determine whether genocide is being committed in the Darfur. The report states the Foreign Office said that it would not shy away from uncomfortable conclusions, even though a declaration of genocide would invoke a legal obligation to intervene.
Today's Telegraph reports on the UN security council preparing to vote on a resolution warning Sudan to protect civilians or face sanctions in 30 days and in the meantime putting a weapons embargo on armed groups in Darfur.
Seven of the Council's 15 members are putting pressure on America to soften the threat of imposing sanctions. Four are: Russia, China, Algeria and Pakistan. Who are the other three are that are still putting self interest before the lives of people? Seems they are the countries with the most interest in Sudan's oil and arms but with the least concern over human rights abuses. How much, if anything, are those seven countries contributing to the humanitarian assistance, does anyone know?
Sudan's foreign minister, said Sudan would retaliate if troops were sent in. If GoS are confident their troops will obey orders to fight those sent in to provide a safe corridor for aid, how come Sudanese troops are not obeying their government's orders to fight and disarm their Arab militias? They've had enough years.
The Africa Union has a small force of 300 soldiers preparing to leave for Sudan to protect its military observers re the south Sudan conflict. Today it announced it is preparing plans to send a peacekeeping force to Darfur, which is in the western region of Sudan (a separate conflict).
- - -
Meanwhile, in Darfur, Sudan ...
IT'S NOT JIHAD
It's genocide
The Death Dealers.
July 29: Amnesty International USA just passed a resolution declaring the situation in Sudan a genocide. This resolution has been officially sent to the Amnesty International International Secretariat in London, which will make a final determination on behalf of Amnesty International groups worldwide.
- - -
U.K. STRATEGY UNDERWAY
A multi-part plan and joint civilian-military team
According to a BBC report, there are precedents for using troops not to attack a central government but to provide security for refugees. After the Gulf War in 1991 the US, Britain and others set up safe areas for the Kurdish refugees from Iraq who flooded over the mountains into Turkey.
The report says the serious international concern about Darfur might lead to a limited form of military intervention, but such action is likely to be aimed mainly at securing aid. And that a strategy of pressure on the government of Sudan is being tried first.
The British government's strategy is one of getting aid to the distressed and dying and of putting pressure on the Sudan government by threatening sanctions. Planning is already under way. Britain is thinking about a joint civilian-military team, according to Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who is going to Sudan at the end of next month.
British Development Minister Hilary Benn, who has played a leading role for the British government over Sudan has outlined a multi-part plan - get money for aid, provide that aid, ensure security for it, pressure the Sudanese government to provide safety for the people and finally get a political settlement of the underlying rebellion.
"If the situation does not improve very soon, " says Mr Benn, " the UN Security Council should adopt the draft US-sponsored resolution, which the UK strongly supports, to make it absolutely clear that further action will follow."
In other developments:
The European Union as a whole has now added its voice to the above warnings. The government in Sudan is in no doubt about world opinion.
▪ UN secretary-general Kofi Annan is pressing governments for more aid for Darfur, as the Security Council considers threatening the Sudanese Government with sanctions over its role in the humanitarian crisis in the region.
[Full Story]
▪ A report by African observers in the Sudanese region of Darfur says civilians were chained and burned alive during an attack by Arab Janjaweed militia earlier this month.
[Full Story]
▪ The United States has presented a new version of its draft resolution on Sudan to the United Nations Security Council and is hoping for a vote by the end of the week.
[Full Story] Update: U.S. cuts 'sanctions' in Sudan text.
▪ July 29: Hassan al-Turabi 'to be released'
- - -
Powell to rally Egypt over Darfur during Cairo talks
Last week Egypt appeared to side with Sudan. Yesterday, US Secretary of State Colin Powell was in Cairo meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to seek support for tough measures to resolve the Darfur crisis.
I recall reading something about Sudan being accused (years ago) of trying to assassinate President Mubarak. Note this excerpt from arab.de report on Sudan and relations with Egypt, Libya, Iran and USA:
"In January 1995 Egypt rejected a request by Sudan to refer the dispute over the Halaib border area to a meeting of the OAU´s council of Ministers of Foreign affairs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
On 26 June relations suffered a further, serious setback after the attempted assassination of President Mubarak of Egypt on his arrival in Addis Ababa to attend the annual conference of the OAU there. The Egyptian Government immediately accused Sudan of complicity in the attack, and the OAU made the same allegation in September.
There was evidence of increasing economic and military links between Sudan and Iran in 1991. Some 2,000 Iranian Revolutionary Guards were allegedly dispatched to Sudan to assist with the training of the Sudanese army, and in December President Rafsanjani of Iran made an official visit to Sudan, during which a trade agreement between the two countries was concluded.
In November 1993 Iran was reported to have financed Sudan´s purchase of some 20 Chinese ground-attack aircraft. In April 1996 the Government was reported to be granting the Iranian navy the use of marine facilities in exchange for financial assistance for the purchase of arms although, in response to a Sudanese request for military aid in 1997, Iran provided assistance only with military maintenance. "
- - -
Kenyan press attacks Sudan over Darfur
Another excellent round-up yesterday from BBC Monitoring based in Caversham in southern England (it selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages - and is also where top British blogger Scaryduck works):
Several newspapers in Kenya have launched scathing attacks on the Sudanese government over the conflict in the troubled western region of Darfur. One influential daily called the Sudanese government "racist... and undemocratic". This hardening of language comes as Kenya plays host to long-running peace talks between the Sudanese government and the southern SPLA rebels, which are now being overshadowed by the Darfur crisis. Excerpts:
- - -
THE EAST AFRICAN STANDARD
Says what is required in Sudan is either regime change ... or partition
A commentary in The East African Standard described what is happening in Darfur as a "pogrom" committed by "the racist, fundamentalist and undemocratic Sudanese state". "What is required for peace in Sudan is either regime change... or partition"
"The Darfur pogrom is part of a historic continuum in which successive Arab governments have sought to entirely destroy black Africans in this bi-racial nation," the paper said. "What is required for peace in Sudan is either regime change... or partition."
The paper urged the African Union and the Arab League to stop their "hypocrisy" and to take more robust steps to end Khartoum's "genocidal policy" in Darfur. "The Janjaweed are President Al-Bashir's creation... It is stupid for a government to let thugs loose ".
- - -
KENYAN DAILY PAPER 'THE PEOPLE'
Calls Janjaweed 'thugs'
Kenyan daily The People called for an investigation into charges of ethnic cleansing in Darfur. "There is... a need for an international commission of inquiry... to examine evidence of war crimes, crimes against humanity... as well as allegations of genocide."
- - -
KENYA'S MOST POPULAR PAPER 'DAILY NATION
Says Janjaweed are President Bashir's creation
A commenter in Kenya's most popular paper, the Daily Nation, accused Sudanese President Bashir of creating the Arab militia group, the Janjaweed, to carry out the alleged ethnic cleansing campaign. "The Janjaweed are President Al-Bashir's creation," it argued. "It is stupid for a government to let thugs loose."
- - -
SUDAN WANTS TURKEY TO MEDIATE
And help fix Sudan relations with the U.S.
July 28: GoS wants Turkey to help fix Sudan relations with the U.S. Turkey, Iran and Yemen sent a letter to the U.N. not to apply sanctions to Sudan. I couldn't recall anything on Sudan and Iran so googled for some background (see next post below re Egypt).
Sudan asking Turkey for mediation? A week or two ago they were asking Libya to sponsor "talks". Who knows if the U.S. is even speaking to Khartoum any more. Seems to me it's said all its got to say to Khartoum. The world needs to see GoS deeds and actions - not more words.
A few weeks ago I'd read that Yemen had offered the U.S. some troops for Iraq - and if needed some could be used for Sudan. All I know about Iran is that it was invaded and attacked by its neighbour Iraq - seemingly out of the blue for no good reason. Iraq lost, which is why - as part of the agreement of Iraq's surrender - the U.N. inspectors had to spend so many years in Iraq to ensure it was not stockpiling weapons to attack with again.
Note, a curious statement in a Turkish report: "Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail held high-level talks with Turkish officials in Ankara at the beginning of this week, seeking assurances that Turkey has no hand in the ongoing violence."
Update July 30: BBC report Sudan hails 'softer' Darfur draft: "Seven Security Council members - Pakistan, China, Russia, Algeria, Angola, the Philippines and Brazil - had pushed for the reference to sanctions to be removed because they believe Khartoum needs more time to act."
DARFUR VISITOR ASKS:
Is this planet earth?
World Vision Australia chief executive Reverend Tim Costello had just visited the Kalma camp in Sudan's war-torn Darfur region, where 70,000 Sudanese refugees huddled under humpies of wood and plastic, their only respite from the pitiless African sun. "Nothing prepares you for the incredible heat," Mr Costello said by telephone last night immediately after his visit.
"It was the rawest expression of humanity I've ever seen. You ask yourself, is this planet earth?"
"The camp stretches for five kilometres and it's utterly exposed. As far as the eye can see there are people under small humpies with five or six people crowded underneath -- it's absolutely mind-blowing."
He said the Sudan crisis, which has been described as like Rwanda in slow motion, was hanging by a thread and the lives of more than a million people were at stake.
"It is without a doubt the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today," he said. "But it's not hopeless and a holocaust can be prevented.
- - -
U.K. GATHERING EVIDENCE OF GENOCIDE
African Union preparing plans to send a force to Darfur
Yesterday's Guardian report "Sudan to face 'genocide' inquiry" says the US and British governments are gathering evidence to determine whether genocide is being committed in the Darfur. The report states the Foreign Office said that it would not shy away from uncomfortable conclusions, even though a declaration of genocide would invoke a legal obligation to intervene.
Today's Telegraph reports on the UN security council preparing to vote on a resolution warning Sudan to protect civilians or face sanctions in 30 days and in the meantime putting a weapons embargo on armed groups in Darfur.
Seven of the Council's 15 members are putting pressure on America to soften the threat of imposing sanctions. Four are: Russia, China, Algeria and Pakistan. Who are the other three are that are still putting self interest before the lives of people? Seems they are the countries with the most interest in Sudan's oil and arms but with the least concern over human rights abuses. How much, if anything, are those seven countries contributing to the humanitarian assistance, does anyone know?
Sudan's foreign minister, said Sudan would retaliate if troops were sent in. If GoS are confident their troops will obey orders to fight those sent in to provide a safe corridor for aid, how come Sudanese troops are not obeying their government's orders to fight and disarm their Arab militias? They've had enough years.
The Africa Union has a small force of 300 soldiers preparing to leave for Sudan to protect its military observers re the south Sudan conflict. Today it announced it is preparing plans to send a peacekeeping force to Darfur, which is in the western region of Sudan (a separate conflict).
- - -
Meanwhile, in Darfur, Sudan ...
IT'S NOT JIHAD
It's genocide
The Death Dealers.
July 29: Amnesty International USA just passed a resolution declaring the situation in Sudan a genocide. This resolution has been officially sent to the Amnesty International International Secretariat in London, which will make a final determination on behalf of Amnesty International groups worldwide.
- - -
U.K. STRATEGY UNDERWAY
A multi-part plan and joint civilian-military team
According to a BBC report, there are precedents for using troops not to attack a central government but to provide security for refugees. After the Gulf War in 1991 the US, Britain and others set up safe areas for the Kurdish refugees from Iraq who flooded over the mountains into Turkey.
The report says the serious international concern about Darfur might lead to a limited form of military intervention, but such action is likely to be aimed mainly at securing aid. And that a strategy of pressure on the government of Sudan is being tried first.
The British government's strategy is one of getting aid to the distressed and dying and of putting pressure on the Sudan government by threatening sanctions. Planning is already under way. Britain is thinking about a joint civilian-military team, according to Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who is going to Sudan at the end of next month.
British Development Minister Hilary Benn, who has played a leading role for the British government over Sudan has outlined a multi-part plan - get money for aid, provide that aid, ensure security for it, pressure the Sudanese government to provide safety for the people and finally get a political settlement of the underlying rebellion.
"If the situation does not improve very soon, " says Mr Benn, " the UN Security Council should adopt the draft US-sponsored resolution, which the UK strongly supports, to make it absolutely clear that further action will follow."
In other developments:
The European Union as a whole has now added its voice to the above warnings. The government in Sudan is in no doubt about world opinion.
▪ UN secretary-general Kofi Annan is pressing governments for more aid for Darfur, as the Security Council considers threatening the Sudanese Government with sanctions over its role in the humanitarian crisis in the region.
[Full Story]
▪ A report by African observers in the Sudanese region of Darfur says civilians were chained and burned alive during an attack by Arab Janjaweed militia earlier this month.
[Full Story]
▪ The United States has presented a new version of its draft resolution on Sudan to the United Nations Security Council and is hoping for a vote by the end of the week.
[Full Story] Update: U.S. cuts 'sanctions' in Sudan text.
▪ July 29: Hassan al-Turabi 'to be released'
- - -
Powell to rally Egypt over Darfur during Cairo talks
Last week Egypt appeared to side with Sudan. Yesterday, US Secretary of State Colin Powell was in Cairo meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to seek support for tough measures to resolve the Darfur crisis.
I recall reading something about Sudan being accused (years ago) of trying to assassinate President Mubarak. Note this excerpt from arab.de report on Sudan and relations with Egypt, Libya, Iran and USA:
"In January 1995 Egypt rejected a request by Sudan to refer the dispute over the Halaib border area to a meeting of the OAU´s council of Ministers of Foreign affairs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
On 26 June relations suffered a further, serious setback after the attempted assassination of President Mubarak of Egypt on his arrival in Addis Ababa to attend the annual conference of the OAU there. The Egyptian Government immediately accused Sudan of complicity in the attack, and the OAU made the same allegation in September.
There was evidence of increasing economic and military links between Sudan and Iran in 1991. Some 2,000 Iranian Revolutionary Guards were allegedly dispatched to Sudan to assist with the training of the Sudanese army, and in December President Rafsanjani of Iran made an official visit to Sudan, during which a trade agreement between the two countries was concluded.
In November 1993 Iran was reported to have financed Sudan´s purchase of some 20 Chinese ground-attack aircraft. In April 1996 the Government was reported to be granting the Iranian navy the use of marine facilities in exchange for financial assistance for the purchase of arms although, in response to a Sudanese request for military aid in 1997, Iran provided assistance only with military maintenance. "
- - -
Kenyan press attacks Sudan over Darfur
Another excellent round-up yesterday from BBC Monitoring based in Caversham in southern England (it selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages - and is also where top British blogger Scaryduck works):
Several newspapers in Kenya have launched scathing attacks on the Sudanese government over the conflict in the troubled western region of Darfur. One influential daily called the Sudanese government "racist... and undemocratic". This hardening of language comes as Kenya plays host to long-running peace talks between the Sudanese government and the southern SPLA rebels, which are now being overshadowed by the Darfur crisis. Excerpts:
- - -
THE EAST AFRICAN STANDARD
Says what is required in Sudan is either regime change ... or partition
A commentary in The East African Standard described what is happening in Darfur as a "pogrom" committed by "the racist, fundamentalist and undemocratic Sudanese state". "What is required for peace in Sudan is either regime change... or partition"
"The Darfur pogrom is part of a historic continuum in which successive Arab governments have sought to entirely destroy black Africans in this bi-racial nation," the paper said. "What is required for peace in Sudan is either regime change... or partition."
The paper urged the African Union and the Arab League to stop their "hypocrisy" and to take more robust steps to end Khartoum's "genocidal policy" in Darfur. "The Janjaweed are President Al-Bashir's creation... It is stupid for a government to let thugs loose ".
- - -
KENYAN DAILY PAPER 'THE PEOPLE'
Calls Janjaweed 'thugs'
Kenyan daily The People called for an investigation into charges of ethnic cleansing in Darfur. "There is... a need for an international commission of inquiry... to examine evidence of war crimes, crimes against humanity... as well as allegations of genocide."
- - -
KENYA'S MOST POPULAR PAPER 'DAILY NATION
Says Janjaweed are President Bashir's creation
A commenter in Kenya's most popular paper, the Daily Nation, accused Sudanese President Bashir of creating the Arab militia group, the Janjaweed, to carry out the alleged ethnic cleansing campaign. "The Janjaweed are President Al-Bashir's creation," it argued. "It is stupid for a government to let thugs loose."
- - -
SUDAN WANTS TURKEY TO MEDIATE
And help fix Sudan relations with the U.S.
July 28: GoS wants Turkey to help fix Sudan relations with the U.S. Turkey, Iran and Yemen sent a letter to the U.N. not to apply sanctions to Sudan. I couldn't recall anything on Sudan and Iran so googled for some background (see next post below re Egypt).
Sudan asking Turkey for mediation? A week or two ago they were asking Libya to sponsor "talks". Who knows if the U.S. is even speaking to Khartoum any more. Seems to me it's said all its got to say to Khartoum. The world needs to see GoS deeds and actions - not more words.
A few weeks ago I'd read that Yemen had offered the U.S. some troops for Iraq - and if needed some could be used for Sudan. All I know about Iran is that it was invaded and attacked by its neighbour Iraq - seemingly out of the blue for no good reason. Iraq lost, which is why - as part of the agreement of Iraq's surrender - the U.N. inspectors had to spend so many years in Iraq to ensure it was not stockpiling weapons to attack with again.
Note, a curious statement in a Turkish report: "Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail held high-level talks with Turkish officials in Ankara at the beginning of this week, seeking assurances that Turkey has no hand in the ongoing violence."
Update July 30: BBC report Sudan hails 'softer' Darfur draft: "Seven Security Council members - Pakistan, China, Russia, Algeria, Angola, the Philippines and Brazil - had pushed for the reference to sanctions to be removed because they believe Khartoum needs more time to act."
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/29/2004
0 comments
Tuesday, July 27, 2004
MY NEW BLOG - A BREATH OF HOPE
Dedicated to the late Karen Southwick
Jim Moore never ceases to amaze me. Talk about serendipity. Hey Jim, guess what I found today, just after I started a new blog!? Bear with me on this post. I am still over tired and have to bash this out without thinking much or editing - it started out as an email to Jim but since I can't manage it, and publish here, I've turned the email into a post. I've been doing a lot of different things on the computer today, including leaving comments over at Robert's blog - and John's too in Australia where there is a bit of a discussion going on. (Check it out - and feel free to chip in a view - John's post is the first of its kind I've seen on the Sudan - and raises some interesting points).
Yesterday, I'd read Jim's sad post about the death of his close friend Karen Southwick. And I followed Jim's link to Karen's extraordinary last essay entitled "A Breath of Hope". Sorry I can't go into here why it is so beautiful. There is too much to say on it. Parts of it are timeless. A classic. And very original. (Here's pinging a message to say hi to Cass Brown who I know will be most interested in the essay).
It's been three months since my post put the spotlight on the UN, EU and aid agencies. My previous post (see below) says the aid agencies are now only meeting 40% of critical needs in Darfur. Of course I am aware of the difficulties and security issues etc. But even the UN aid agencies admitted three months ago they were too slow.
Now that the media are reporting on Sudan in earnest, the number of email alerts flying into my email inbox has quadrupled over the past week. Posts on aid agencies are piling up in my drafts folder and so I've come to realise I definitely need a place - a special category for them. This blog has no categories so I've decided to experiment with maintaining another blog. It's an idea I've wrestled with for the past 3 months and fear it may be too taxing and will halve my energy for each blog. One blog is more than enough for me to handle.
But because of all what's happening in the Sudan, I had a feeling I might need a second blog by Aug 1 anyway. So, today I took the plunge and made a start. And had to come up with a title. What immediately sprang to mind was the title of Karen's essay: "A Breath of Hope".
And so I've used the title and dedicated the blog to Jim's friend, Karen Southwick. I thought it was apt because humans suffer illnesses whether in USA, UK or Africa. And I wouldn't be doing any of this on the Sudan and aid agencies if it weren't for Jim. I picked up on genocide in Darfur at Jim's blog on April 24 at a time when reports on the Sudan were hard to find.
Here in England being chronically long term ill is a bureacratic nightmare. But for a refugee falling ill in the heat of Africa must be horrendous. The word "hope" in the title of my blog will be: that the whole multi billion dollar business of humanitarian aid - food, water, shelter and medical care - will get attention, shaken up and sorted. Refugees in Africa also contract cancer - so I hope Karen would not mind a stranger dedicating a blog to her last essay. Who knows, one day extracts from the essay could be translated into Arabic and Swahili and other languages.
A Breath of Hope only took two minutes to set up, but two hours to fiddle around getting used to it. Can't figure how to use sidebar properly. Sorry it's a bit scrappy and needs tidying. Right now the way I see the blog working is that it will act as a collection of news reports etc., to see at a glance, why the humanitarian aid business needs attention and sorting.
My previous post, here below, is a good example - along with yesterday's report quoting the head of Medecins Sans Frontieres as saying: "The scale of response is still not adequate ... there is still a massive need to help these people and it hasn't materialised yet - water was in critically short supply and food was equally scarce - "Malnutrition rates are high and they are going to get higher," he added.
So, I tested my new blog with a few posts and links. And visited Jim's blog to capture his link to Karen's essay (I can't direct link to pdf files). But the Harvard server was down. I was stuck. My new blog was sort of half alive with half a post published and dangling in the blogosphere.
So I went back into my copy of the pdf file to find a way to link it. And noticed a link at the top of Karen's essay - clicked into it - and what did I find?? The view of a person blog. I hadn't seen it before but knew right away Jim had something to do with it. Don't ask me how I know. I don't even know myself.
And then I read the post. Who else is in west Boston, in front of a Mac, blogging so thoughtfully?? It had to be Jim of course!! Hey what a surprise. Neat blog too.
But how sad too. Note the first entry was on July 17. My guess is that Jim's co-author was to be Karen - who died on, or shortly before, July 26, the date of Jim's post. Although the blog linked to me, I had no idea because it's not shown up in Technorati as linking to me (Technorati seems to be getting worse, not better).
So, that's what I mean about serendipity. Within a few thoughts, ideas and a few keystrokes I found - among the trillions of messages zipping around the net - stuff that spoke directly to me, simply because Jim cared to put a link to the new blog in Karen's essay. Who's a clever pussycat eh? Jim, that's who! How amazing the blogsphere is. Love from Ingrid and Ophelia xx Sorry Jim must be feeling so sad.
God bless and RIP Karen Southwick + + +
- - -
Q&A:
Sudan President Omar al-Bashir
July 26: Q&A interview with Sudan President Omar al-Bashir.
- - -
Arab press sharpens tone on Darfur
July 27: Another great news round up from BBC Monitoring, based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages:
Several Arab newspapers have been unusually critical of the Sudanese government in commentaries on the continuing crisis in Darfur in western Sudan.
One daily takes the Khartoum government to task for its "constant stubbornness", another says Darfur has become a "brand of shame" on Sudan.
There is also a complaint that the international community wants to act quickly in Sudan, but is still dragging its feet in the Middle East.
Dedicated to the late Karen Southwick
Jim Moore never ceases to amaze me. Talk about serendipity. Hey Jim, guess what I found today, just after I started a new blog!? Bear with me on this post. I am still over tired and have to bash this out without thinking much or editing - it started out as an email to Jim but since I can't manage it, and publish here, I've turned the email into a post. I've been doing a lot of different things on the computer today, including leaving comments over at Robert's blog - and John's too in Australia where there is a bit of a discussion going on. (Check it out - and feel free to chip in a view - John's post is the first of its kind I've seen on the Sudan - and raises some interesting points).
Yesterday, I'd read Jim's sad post about the death of his close friend Karen Southwick. And I followed Jim's link to Karen's extraordinary last essay entitled "A Breath of Hope". Sorry I can't go into here why it is so beautiful. There is too much to say on it. Parts of it are timeless. A classic. And very original. (Here's pinging a message to say hi to Cass Brown who I know will be most interested in the essay).
It's been three months since my post put the spotlight on the UN, EU and aid agencies. My previous post (see below) says the aid agencies are now only meeting 40% of critical needs in Darfur. Of course I am aware of the difficulties and security issues etc. But even the UN aid agencies admitted three months ago they were too slow.
Now that the media are reporting on Sudan in earnest, the number of email alerts flying into my email inbox has quadrupled over the past week. Posts on aid agencies are piling up in my drafts folder and so I've come to realise I definitely need a place - a special category for them. This blog has no categories so I've decided to experiment with maintaining another blog. It's an idea I've wrestled with for the past 3 months and fear it may be too taxing and will halve my energy for each blog. One blog is more than enough for me to handle.
But because of all what's happening in the Sudan, I had a feeling I might need a second blog by Aug 1 anyway. So, today I took the plunge and made a start. And had to come up with a title. What immediately sprang to mind was the title of Karen's essay: "A Breath of Hope".
And so I've used the title and dedicated the blog to Jim's friend, Karen Southwick. I thought it was apt because humans suffer illnesses whether in USA, UK or Africa. And I wouldn't be doing any of this on the Sudan and aid agencies if it weren't for Jim. I picked up on genocide in Darfur at Jim's blog on April 24 at a time when reports on the Sudan were hard to find.
Here in England being chronically long term ill is a bureacratic nightmare. But for a refugee falling ill in the heat of Africa must be horrendous. The word "hope" in the title of my blog will be: that the whole multi billion dollar business of humanitarian aid - food, water, shelter and medical care - will get attention, shaken up and sorted. Refugees in Africa also contract cancer - so I hope Karen would not mind a stranger dedicating a blog to her last essay. Who knows, one day extracts from the essay could be translated into Arabic and Swahili and other languages.
A Breath of Hope only took two minutes to set up, but two hours to fiddle around getting used to it. Can't figure how to use sidebar properly. Sorry it's a bit scrappy and needs tidying. Right now the way I see the blog working is that it will act as a collection of news reports etc., to see at a glance, why the humanitarian aid business needs attention and sorting.
My previous post, here below, is a good example - along with yesterday's report quoting the head of Medecins Sans Frontieres as saying: "The scale of response is still not adequate ... there is still a massive need to help these people and it hasn't materialised yet - water was in critically short supply and food was equally scarce - "Malnutrition rates are high and they are going to get higher," he added.
So, I tested my new blog with a few posts and links. And visited Jim's blog to capture his link to Karen's essay (I can't direct link to pdf files). But the Harvard server was down. I was stuck. My new blog was sort of half alive with half a post published and dangling in the blogosphere.
So I went back into my copy of the pdf file to find a way to link it. And noticed a link at the top of Karen's essay - clicked into it - and what did I find?? The view of a person blog. I hadn't seen it before but knew right away Jim had something to do with it. Don't ask me how I know. I don't even know myself.
And then I read the post. Who else is in west Boston, in front of a Mac, blogging so thoughtfully?? It had to be Jim of course!! Hey what a surprise. Neat blog too.
But how sad too. Note the first entry was on July 17. My guess is that Jim's co-author was to be Karen - who died on, or shortly before, July 26, the date of Jim's post. Although the blog linked to me, I had no idea because it's not shown up in Technorati as linking to me (Technorati seems to be getting worse, not better).
So, that's what I mean about serendipity. Within a few thoughts, ideas and a few keystrokes I found - among the trillions of messages zipping around the net - stuff that spoke directly to me, simply because Jim cared to put a link to the new blog in Karen's essay. Who's a clever pussycat eh? Jim, that's who! How amazing the blogsphere is. Love from Ingrid and Ophelia xx Sorry Jim must be feeling so sad.
God bless and RIP Karen Southwick + + +
- - -
Q&A:
Sudan President Omar al-Bashir
July 26: Q&A interview with Sudan President Omar al-Bashir.
- - -
Arab press sharpens tone on Darfur
July 27: Another great news round up from BBC Monitoring, based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages:
Several Arab newspapers have been unusually critical of the Sudanese government in commentaries on the continuing crisis in Darfur in western Sudan.
One daily takes the Khartoum government to task for its "constant stubbornness", another says Darfur has become a "brand of shame" on Sudan.
There is also a complaint that the international community wants to act quickly in Sudan, but is still dragging its feet in the Middle East.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/27/2004
0 comments
Sunday, July 25, 2004
URGENT: DARFUR AND CHAD
RELIEF EFFORTS MUST BE DOUBLED -- NOW --
Current aid relief is meeting only 40 percent of the critical needs
Apologies to readers for no original commentary in the past few posts. I am over tired through posting a whole series of updates here (please keep scrolling) in which I have written my take on things. I stayed up very late last night posting about the appalling aid situation - that turned into a vent - and lo and behold woke up this morning to find the BBC have been reporting on the aid situation almost every few hours today.
My thoughts since last night are that I would like to see the Head of the British Army, General Sir Mike Jackson, head up coordination of aid from international aid agencies. UN Jan Egeland is clearly not up to the job. It's a massive and complex operation that requires quality military precision, planning, efficiency and reliability. Surely it can be conducted out of England or UN HQ. The multi billion dollar business of humanitarian aid relief must get its act together - they've had enough years. Bring in the expertise and leadership of the British Army to sort them out. If the British Army cannot be inside Sudan right now - because the Sudanese government is refusing all offers of help - then at least we in the West can try to help the refugees by using first rate expertise, training, planning, equipment and technology - not to mention all the other special resources, contacts, networks at our disposal.
Tomorrow I shall email my MP Oliver Letwin to suggest that General Sir Mike Jackson (along with as many staff as he needs) oversees the distribution of aid to Chad and Sudan to ensure it reaches those in need. The whole relief effort needs doubling within a matter of hours (it can't wait days, weeks, months) and since the past 16 months of effort from people like Jan Egeland has been a 60 percent failure - then it is crucial that someone else - of top drawer ability - takes charge temporarily and leads and directs operations.
If I had the energy, and know-how, I'd set up a petition online calling for Downing Street to put Sir General Mike Jackson in charge of the relief effort for Chad and Sudan so my MP could see some evidence of public support for our military handling the logistics of aid distribution. Britain is the largest cash donor - we need to ensure that what the UK is paying for, is used to maximum effect. No doubt the taxpayers and donors in many other countries would agree.
Please excuse if any part of this post sounds disjointed - I am extremely over tired, cannot spend any time on editing this down and realise I may have not produced a tight enough argument to support my suggestion - but deep down I know it is a good suggestion (that the GoS can't take offence at because it is not military intervention) that can start happening within 24 hours of the nod and not having to wait for UN Resolutions and deadlines. General Jackson can be monitoring and assessing the situation through the distribution of aid and feedback he gets for the reasons of any of the aid failing to reach the refugees in Chad and Darfur.
July 25: Report by International Rescue Committee (IRC) - copied here in full - on why relief efforts for war-displaced in Darfur and Chad must be doubled now:
The international humanitarian response to the crisis in Darfur, Sudan, and eastern Chad must be boosted immediately and dramatically to save hundreds of thousands of lives that may be lost because of rising levels of disease and malnutrition.
IRC health teams in Darfur and Chad report increasing cases of diarrhea and dysentery and the growing threat of cholera and other predatory diseases such as measles and typhoid. According to the World Health Organization, a cholera epidemic striking up to 300,000 could break out within weeks now that heavy rains have begun. Once the rains subside, we fear a devastating outbreak of malaria.
“The existing health crisis in Darfur is greatly exacerbated by a capacity and logistics crisis,” says IRC president George Rupp. “Even with UN and international aid groups ramping up humanitarian assistance, current capacity in the region is by best estimates meeting only 40 percent of the critical needs of the displaced population.”
When health and social services are interrupted by war, death rates soar. The IRC documented this in the Democratic Republic of Congo where our mortality surveys found that between 1999 and 2003, over 3 million people died, most of them from disease in the absence of a functioning health system.
“To ensure that mortality rates do not increase to this horrific level in Sudan,” emphasized Rupp, “the international community must significantly boost the humanitarian delivery of basic health, water, sanitation and food services to Chad and Darfur right now.”
Vast security and logistical improvements, unhindered access, and a doubling, if not tripling of humanitarian relief programs are necessary to meet the needs of 1.2 million uprooted Sudanese. This will require a focused and cooperative effort by the UN, the African Union (AU), major international and regional powers, the donor community and NGOs. While we recognize that efforts are underway with the Government of Sudan to work through political and security issues, we urge that the same effort, if not more, be focused on doubling humanitarian capacity on the ground.
The IRC calls on the UN Security Council, UN member states and the larger international community to explore the following options for delivering assistance in a permissive and a non-permissive environment:
1) Accelerate diplomatic, political and military efforts to improve security and access within Darfur.
· Strengthen the mandate of the African Union Protection Force to include protection and assistance for the civilian delivery of humanitarian aid. · Consider a no-fly zone over Darfur and along the Chad/Sudan border to protect civilians and permit the scaling up of rescue and relief operations.
2) Ramp up the logistical capacity to double the delivery of aid. · Seek additional civil and military logistical and material support from UN member states to ensure the civilian delivery of aid.
· Boost UN and NGO capabilities for coordination and management of regional relief efforts and support the establishment of a logistics base for humanitarian relief activities. · Expand Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS) to include Darfur. Use the OLS airbase in Lokichokio, Kenya, to airlift material and supplies to western Sudan.
3) Increase funding and resources for the UN and the African Union. · Provide urgent support to the African Union with funding, supplies, transport, vehicles, command, communication and leadership.
· Fund the pending UN humanitarian appeals (currently funded at only 40 percent).
Founded in 1933, the IRC is a global leader in relief, rehabilitation, protection, post-conflict development and resettlement services for refugees and others uprooted or affected by persecution and violent conflict. The IRC has been providing humanitarian assistance in Sudan for more than 20 years. For more information, visit www.theIRC.org. CONTACT: Sandra Mitchell (DC) 202-822-0166, ext. 10 Melissa Winkler (NY) 212-551-0972.
- - -
Further reading:
July 25: Aid agencies in Chad brace for more Sudan refugees. Fresh fighting could push them over the frontier and relief workers have also received reports that the displaced are unhappy with efforts by Sudanese authorities to move them to new camps. Those people may decide to head for Chad instead. 'The first thing we have to identify is where we could put the people,' said Geoff Wordley, a senior emergency officer with the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR liaising with other aid groups.
'We agreed that the planning figure would be for 200,000.' Struggling with one of the world's worst humanitarian crises in harsh desert and savannah terrain, aid workers say finding water to supply refugee sites and potential new camps stretching over 600 km (375 miles) ranks among their biggest problems.
UNHCR has called in Alain Gachet, a French expert in exploring for oil, gold and other precious resources for big multinational companies, to use radar satellite technology he has pioneered to find likely sites of underground water."
July 25: Aid agencies are restoring food supplies to two refugee camps in Chad after operations were suspended for several days because of violence. Another 5,000 people are outside one of the camps, currently without food.
July 25: On Sunday night a plane loaded with Oxfam aid for Sudanese refugee camps will fly from England to an airstrip in Darfur. Oxfam's Adrian McIntyre is based in Darfur. He tells BBC News Online of the difficulties of getting aid to those who most need it.
July 25: Aid workers who were forced to leave two refugee camps in Chad because of violence have resumed their operations.
- - -
Update Sunday July 25:
Warm thanks for great and speedy response from Crazy Canuck in Canada.
July 26: Sudanese President Bashir has brushed off mounting international concern over the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, accusing the West of using the issue to 'target Islam'." (like Jim Moore says, you can't make this stuff up).
RELIEF EFFORTS MUST BE DOUBLED -- NOW --
Current aid relief is meeting only 40 percent of the critical needs
Apologies to readers for no original commentary in the past few posts. I am over tired through posting a whole series of updates here (please keep scrolling) in which I have written my take on things. I stayed up very late last night posting about the appalling aid situation - that turned into a vent - and lo and behold woke up this morning to find the BBC have been reporting on the aid situation almost every few hours today.
My thoughts since last night are that I would like to see the Head of the British Army, General Sir Mike Jackson, head up coordination of aid from international aid agencies. UN Jan Egeland is clearly not up to the job. It's a massive and complex operation that requires quality military precision, planning, efficiency and reliability. Surely it can be conducted out of England or UN HQ. The multi billion dollar business of humanitarian aid relief must get its act together - they've had enough years. Bring in the expertise and leadership of the British Army to sort them out. If the British Army cannot be inside Sudan right now - because the Sudanese government is refusing all offers of help - then at least we in the West can try to help the refugees by using first rate expertise, training, planning, equipment and technology - not to mention all the other special resources, contacts, networks at our disposal.
Tomorrow I shall email my MP Oliver Letwin to suggest that General Sir Mike Jackson (along with as many staff as he needs) oversees the distribution of aid to Chad and Sudan to ensure it reaches those in need. The whole relief effort needs doubling within a matter of hours (it can't wait days, weeks, months) and since the past 16 months of effort from people like Jan Egeland has been a 60 percent failure - then it is crucial that someone else - of top drawer ability - takes charge temporarily and leads and directs operations.
If I had the energy, and know-how, I'd set up a petition online calling for Downing Street to put Sir General Mike Jackson in charge of the relief effort for Chad and Sudan so my MP could see some evidence of public support for our military handling the logistics of aid distribution. Britain is the largest cash donor - we need to ensure that what the UK is paying for, is used to maximum effect. No doubt the taxpayers and donors in many other countries would agree.
Please excuse if any part of this post sounds disjointed - I am extremely over tired, cannot spend any time on editing this down and realise I may have not produced a tight enough argument to support my suggestion - but deep down I know it is a good suggestion (that the GoS can't take offence at because it is not military intervention) that can start happening within 24 hours of the nod and not having to wait for UN Resolutions and deadlines. General Jackson can be monitoring and assessing the situation through the distribution of aid and feedback he gets for the reasons of any of the aid failing to reach the refugees in Chad and Darfur.
July 25: Report by International Rescue Committee (IRC) - copied here in full - on why relief efforts for war-displaced in Darfur and Chad must be doubled now:
The international humanitarian response to the crisis in Darfur, Sudan, and eastern Chad must be boosted immediately and dramatically to save hundreds of thousands of lives that may be lost because of rising levels of disease and malnutrition.
IRC health teams in Darfur and Chad report increasing cases of diarrhea and dysentery and the growing threat of cholera and other predatory diseases such as measles and typhoid. According to the World Health Organization, a cholera epidemic striking up to 300,000 could break out within weeks now that heavy rains have begun. Once the rains subside, we fear a devastating outbreak of malaria.
“The existing health crisis in Darfur is greatly exacerbated by a capacity and logistics crisis,” says IRC president George Rupp. “Even with UN and international aid groups ramping up humanitarian assistance, current capacity in the region is by best estimates meeting only 40 percent of the critical needs of the displaced population.”
When health and social services are interrupted by war, death rates soar. The IRC documented this in the Democratic Republic of Congo where our mortality surveys found that between 1999 and 2003, over 3 million people died, most of them from disease in the absence of a functioning health system.
“To ensure that mortality rates do not increase to this horrific level in Sudan,” emphasized Rupp, “the international community must significantly boost the humanitarian delivery of basic health, water, sanitation and food services to Chad and Darfur right now.”
Vast security and logistical improvements, unhindered access, and a doubling, if not tripling of humanitarian relief programs are necessary to meet the needs of 1.2 million uprooted Sudanese. This will require a focused and cooperative effort by the UN, the African Union (AU), major international and regional powers, the donor community and NGOs. While we recognize that efforts are underway with the Government of Sudan to work through political and security issues, we urge that the same effort, if not more, be focused on doubling humanitarian capacity on the ground.
The IRC calls on the UN Security Council, UN member states and the larger international community to explore the following options for delivering assistance in a permissive and a non-permissive environment:
1) Accelerate diplomatic, political and military efforts to improve security and access within Darfur.
· Strengthen the mandate of the African Union Protection Force to include protection and assistance for the civilian delivery of humanitarian aid. · Consider a no-fly zone over Darfur and along the Chad/Sudan border to protect civilians and permit the scaling up of rescue and relief operations.
2) Ramp up the logistical capacity to double the delivery of aid. · Seek additional civil and military logistical and material support from UN member states to ensure the civilian delivery of aid.
· Boost UN and NGO capabilities for coordination and management of regional relief efforts and support the establishment of a logistics base for humanitarian relief activities. · Expand Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS) to include Darfur. Use the OLS airbase in Lokichokio, Kenya, to airlift material and supplies to western Sudan.
3) Increase funding and resources for the UN and the African Union. · Provide urgent support to the African Union with funding, supplies, transport, vehicles, command, communication and leadership.
· Fund the pending UN humanitarian appeals (currently funded at only 40 percent).
Founded in 1933, the IRC is a global leader in relief, rehabilitation, protection, post-conflict development and resettlement services for refugees and others uprooted or affected by persecution and violent conflict. The IRC has been providing humanitarian assistance in Sudan for more than 20 years. For more information, visit www.theIRC.org. CONTACT: Sandra Mitchell (DC) 202-822-0166, ext. 10 Melissa Winkler (NY) 212-551-0972.
- - -
Further reading:
July 25: Aid agencies in Chad brace for more Sudan refugees. Fresh fighting could push them over the frontier and relief workers have also received reports that the displaced are unhappy with efforts by Sudanese authorities to move them to new camps. Those people may decide to head for Chad instead. 'The first thing we have to identify is where we could put the people,' said Geoff Wordley, a senior emergency officer with the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR liaising with other aid groups.
'We agreed that the planning figure would be for 200,000.' Struggling with one of the world's worst humanitarian crises in harsh desert and savannah terrain, aid workers say finding water to supply refugee sites and potential new camps stretching over 600 km (375 miles) ranks among their biggest problems.
UNHCR has called in Alain Gachet, a French expert in exploring for oil, gold and other precious resources for big multinational companies, to use radar satellite technology he has pioneered to find likely sites of underground water."
July 25: Aid agencies are restoring food supplies to two refugee camps in Chad after operations were suspended for several days because of violence. Another 5,000 people are outside one of the camps, currently without food.
July 25: On Sunday night a plane loaded with Oxfam aid for Sudanese refugee camps will fly from England to an airstrip in Darfur. Oxfam's Adrian McIntyre is based in Darfur. He tells BBC News Online of the difficulties of getting aid to those who most need it.
July 25: Aid workers who were forced to leave two refugee camps in Chad because of violence have resumed their operations.
- - -
Update Sunday July 25:
Warm thanks for great and speedy response from Crazy Canuck in Canada.
July 26: Sudanese President Bashir has brushed off mounting international concern over the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, accusing the West of using the issue to 'target Islam'." (like Jim Moore says, you can't make this stuff up).
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/25/2004
0 comments
- - -
TWO EXCELLENT REPORTS ON SUDAN
Help explain complexities of helping those suffering in Sudan
We fight on, says the demon of Darfur
July 25, 2004 by Rich Miniter, El Fasher, Darfur Sunday Times
IN THE desolate hills of North Darfur, scene of some of the most hideous atrocities in a campaign of mass rape, ethnic cleansing and murder on a scale that has prompted claims of genocide, this weekend’s international machinations to get United Nations resolutions passed and peace talks started meant nothing to Musa Khaber.
A tall, glowering man, Khaber is the leader of the Janjaweed militia in the north. That his men have lived up to the militia’s name — Arabic for “demon on horseback” — is not in doubt. These particular demons have burnt countless villages, hacked and shot thousands of men and boys and raped the women or driven them into the desert to die.
Yet Khaber, who was tracked to his lair by The Sunday Times on Friday after a gruelling journey by Land Rover and on foot, does not like the word Janjaweed. An interpreter warned that it should not be used in front of him. “You will make him angry,” he whispered, drawing a line across his neck.
What actually infuriated Khaber, as it turned out, was the mention of possible international intervention in Darfur under the auspices of the UN, or perhaps the British and American governments.
Khaber, his face masked by a turban arranged to cover all but his eyes and the crown of his head, glared menacingly, oblivious to two flies crawling on his eyelids.
“We will fight them,” he declared. “We hate them and we will attack the foreigners. We refuse to be like Iraq — surrendered, confused and occupied.”
As his bodyguards — hard men carrying AK-47s and G3 assault weapons — looked out from hillside vantage points in rocks above us and the desert below, Khaber formed his hand into the shape of a pistol to emphasise his point. “We will fight them, more than the mujaheddin in Afghanistan.”
The journey to Khaber had taken us through rough terrain in some ways reminiscent of Afghanistan, with its welter of tough, independent tribesmen, its Islamic extremism and its multitude of weapons.
From this combustible mixture at a point where black African peasants have clashed with nomadic African Arabs for centuries, a conflict exploded last year with a force that has only now shaken the international community into limited action.
Put simply, a revolt mounted largely by black Africans triggered a ferocious response from mainly Arab militias, allegedly backed by the government in Khartoum.
The picture on the ground is much more complex, but about 1.5m people have been displaced — nearly one-fifth of the population of Darfur. About 200,000 have fled into neighbouring Chad, while 1m have settled into one of 132 “internally displaced persons’ camps” spread over a region the size of France.
Perhaps 30,000 have been killed and starvation and disease threaten thousands more.
Aid is arriving but is in short supply; UN officials have acknowledged that this is the world’s worst humanitarian crisis but have been unable to contain it; and no consensus has emerged among African or western leaders on what to do.
The power in Darfur still rests largely with Khaber and a host of lesser men like him. To find him meant passing through a Sudanese army cordon around the dusty town of El Fasher. We drove for 40 miles over sandy savannah.
A steep wall of rock-strewn hills eventually blocked our path and we continued on foot. After hiking over hills more than 150ft high we were halted by the shouts of a gun-waving man in a white turban. He was a Janjaweed lookout.
We were told to wait. From the steep, lifeless hills we could see for miles and eventually a truck emerged in the distance. As the white dot grew, we realised that it was a pick-up truck with a number of armed men in the back. It stopped out of sight and about 20 minutes later we were given the signal to proceed into some stony ravines.
There, beside a scrub bush, I met Khaber, a dark black man who introduced himself as an Arab. Many members of the opposing groups in the conflict are physically virtually indistinguishable from one another and Khaber’s band is a mixture of men from Arab and African tribes. What they have in common is a taste for war and loot.
The Janjaweed leader claimed that despite reports of backing from Khartoum, his militia was allied to nobody. “We are not with the rebels, we are not with the government — we are in hell,” he said. “But we look for our due.”
Asked what he considered his due, he replied: “Development.” When I pointed out that the number of schools had tripled in Darfur in the past 10 years and there were three hospitals and one university where before there had been none, he was dismissive. “I am from Krniui village. They have built nothing in my village.”
I pressed Khaber on the allegations — long denied by Khartoum — that the Janjaweed are funded and controlled by the national government. He insisted it gave him no support.
“We fight all governments in Sudan,” he said. “We get nothing from the government.” He conceded only that he had some relatives in the local government who provided assistance from time to time.
The interview ended abruptly when a lookout sounded that the Sudanese army was approaching. Men with rocket-propelled grenade launchers and heavy machineguns climbed into crags, evidently preparing for a shootout.
Khaber stood up suddenly and ran to Dafalla Hajar, his number two. They argued rapidly in Arabic, but were clearly outnumbered. As the Janjaweed fled north, we retraced our steps hoping to avoid the army and arrest.
This rugged and remote region, divided into North, South and West Darfur, is the perfect environment for misery. Famine and disease are familiar. Most of the hardship is man-made, the product of competing ideologies and rival groups such as Khaber’s.
Sudan’s army now garrisons the cities, as do the police in blue camouflage uniforms.
While the government’s Popular Defence Force, a part-time body of territorials, patrols some of the hinterland, irregular army units and 80 Arab tribal militias rove the landscape on camel and horseback.
To them can be added the wandering nomads whose dirty white turbans, flowing robes and camel trains could be from a millennium ago, but for their AK-47s. Then there are gun- toting bandits who roam western Sudan and Chad, seeking women and booty.
Finally there is a constellation of armed groups loosely called the rebels. These include the professionally trained insurgents of the Justice and Equality Movement — backed by the now jailed former speaker of Sudan’s parliament, Hassan al-Turabi; the Sudan Liberation Army, believed to be supported by Eritrea; the Federal Democratic Movement, which specialises in murdering policemen; and the so-called “African” tribal militias, one of which calls itself Tora Bora in homage to Osama Bin Laden’s fighters in Afghanistan.
“Outside the major market towns,” said David Hoile, who works as a consultant to the government of Sudan and western companies, “men carry guns as casually as women in Chelmsford would carry handbags.”
Disarming these warring factions may be impossible. If Khartoum dispatches more troops to Darfur, it will be in violation of its ceasefire with the two main rebel groups.
Disarmament would in any case enrage the Janjaweed and the African and Arab tribal militias, who may turn their guns on aid workers and Sudanese soldiers alike, detonating any chance of relief efforts.
Sudan’s president, Omar al-Bashir, nevertheless issued a decree on June 18 declaring that all groups will be disarmed and that those guilty of human rights abuses will be punished.
Khartoum’s ability to enforce its will is doubtful. Over the 196,404 square miles of Darfur there are only 15 paved roads. The rainy season will soon turn them into mires. Still, some progress is apparent.
At Nyala, in South Darfur, a judge opened the prison gates to reporters last week. Inside the British-built structure, 12 Janjaweed prisoners squatted in the sunlight. The judge explained that they had been convicted of crimes ranging from theft and rape to murder and sentenced to between three and 12 years’ “hard time”.
The governor of North Darfur, Mohammed Kupor, said there was now “a great campaign” by the army, police and intelligence services against the Janjaweed. For the past two weeks these combined forces have staked out water holes, searched with helicopters and even sent camel patrols into the mountains. During that fortnight, the governor said, 400 Janjaweed have been captured.
Yet nobody knows how many thousands are still at large, roaming freely to terrorise the inhabitants of Darfur.
The victims are not hard to find. Abu Shouk, six miles north of El Fasher, is one step away from hell. On hot plains at the edge of the Sahara, 43,000 people live behind a chain link fence guarded by Sudanese soldiers. It is more than 100F by late morning and to survive the heat, the inhabitants need eight litres of water per day. They often do not get it.
The story of one woman at the camp, Hawa Addella Mahmud, 28, is typical of many. Until a year ago she thought she had it all. Her husband was loving and she was pregnant with twins. Then, early in the morning, came the camel-riding Janjaweed. Her husband and neighbours were killed and she walked for 10 days. When she arrived at the camp, her twins were born dead.
At the Sayalabe camp near Nyala in the south, refugees told another story that sounded a lot like ethnic cleansing. On the afternoon of May 22, Janjaweed attacked their village on foot. As a helicopter hovered, more than a dozen gunmen sought out the Africans for murder while sparing the Arabs.
Another refugee, Suakan al-Taher, 17, who is now at a camp near Genina in the west, lost her husband in an attack on their village. All its 63 men were murdered, she said. She fled with her baby.
Last week she rearranged her blue veil to shield her daughter from the sun. Her thoughts were not of Janjaweed or rebel forces, but of survival. “We are suffering for (lack of) food,” she said. “We are cold at night and hot in the day.”
- - -
Darfur's deep grievances defy all hopes for an easy solution
Sunday July 25, 2004 - The Observer:
The world is waking to the human disaster in Sudan. But, argues writer and world authority on the country, Alex de Waal, the crisis is far more complex than some claim - and cannot be resolved by a quick fix.
Darfur, the war-torn province in western Sudan where a terrible humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding, has yet more awful secrets to divulge.
In addition to 1.2 million displaced people living and dying in refugee camps in the region and across the border in neighbouring Chad, there are hundreds of thousands more struggling to survive in their homes in the vast areas held by the rebel movements fighting against the Khartoum government.
They are far from any TV cameras, and far from the comfort of aid agencies. They are surviving as their parents and grandparents did, through hardiness and skill.
They, not us, are the proven experts in surviving famine. Where a foreigner sees a wasteland of sand and mountain, a rural woman sees landscape replete with wild grasses, berries and roots.
The most ubiquitous of these is a berry known as mukheit, which grows on a small bush. It looks like a big pale pea, it's toxic and needs to be soaked in water for three days before it's edible, and even then it tastes sour. But it's nutritious, and it's in season now.
During the drought-famine of 1984-85, perhaps two million people survived on mukheit, often for months. It was a far bigger factor in survival than food aid, and it was common to see women foraging on the remotest hills, children strapped to their backs, gathering this unappetising but life-preserving crop. Then there's difra, a wild grass that grows across the desert-edge plateaux, which can be harvested in August, and up to 80 more species known to every grandmother.
Mukheit keeps adults alive, but it isn't enough for children. During the 1980s famine, infectious diseases and lack of weaning foods killed an estimated 75,000 children. As the world becomes aware of this as-yet-invisible disaster, aid agencies will demand access across the front lines. And those aid convoys will need an international protection force.
The Darfur war erupted early last year, when two armed movements - Sudan Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement - began a rebellion against a government in Khartoum that had neglected their region.
In response, the government mobilised, armed and directed a militia, known as Janjaweed ('rabble' or 'outlaws' in local dialect), using scorched earth, massacre and starvation as cheap counter-insurgency weapons. The UN has described Darfur as 'the world's worst humanitarian crisis'. On Friday, the US Congress described it as 'genocide'. The British government is considering sending in 5,000 troops.
Characterising the Darfur war as 'Arabs' versus 'Africans' obscures the reality. Darfur's Arabs are black, indigenous, African and Muslim - just like Darfur's non-Arabs, who hail from the Fur, Masalit, Zaghawa and a dozen smaller tribes.
Until recently, Darfurians used the term 'Arab' in its ancient sense of 'bedouin'. These Arabic-speaking nomads are distinct from the inheritors of the Arab culture of the Nile and the Fertile Crescent.
'Arabism' in Darfur is a political ideology, recently imported, after Colonel Gadaffi nurtured dreams of an 'Arab belt' across Africa, and recruited Chadian Arabs, Darfurians and west African Tuaregs to spearhead his invasion of Chad in the 1980s. He failed, but the legacy of arms, militia organisation and Arab supremacist ideology lives on.
Many Janjaweed hail from the Chadian Arab groups mobilised during those days. Most of Darfur's Arabs remain uninvolved in the conflict, but racist ideology appeals to many poor and frustrated young men.
Since 1987 there have been recurrent clashes between the Arab militias and village self-defence groups. Their roots were local conflicts over land and water, especially in the wake of droughts, made worse by the absence of an effective police force in the region for 20 years.
The last intertribal conference met in 1989, but its recommendations were never implemented. Year by year, law and order has broken down, and the government has done nothing but play a game of divide-and-rule, usually favouring the better-armed Arabs.
In response, the non-Arab groups (some of them bedouins too - there's a clan related to the Zaghawa that even has the name Bedeyaat) have mobilised, adopting the label 'African', which helps to gain solidarity with the southern-based Sudan People's Liberation Army, and is a ticket to sympathy in the West.
The Darfur conflict erupted just as protracted peace negotiations between Khartoum and the SPLA on an end to the 20-year-old war in southern Sudan entered their final stage. Some observers have speculated that the rebellion was launched because the SPLA won its concessions by dint of armed struggle, thereby encouraging other discontented Sudanese regions to try the same.
There's an element of truth in that, and a danger that the Beja of eastern Sudan will also re-ignite their dormant insurrection. But Darfur has long-standing grievances. Even more than southern Sudan, the province has been neglected. It has the fewest schools and hospitals in the country. Promises of development came to nothing.
Darfurian radicals have long tried to start a liberation war. In 1991, the SPLA sent an armed force to Darfur to foment resistance: it failed, and an entire cadre of leftist leadership was arrested or neutralised as a result. The young SLA leaders have emerged from the shadow of this debacle.
Meanwhile, the Islamic government tried to neutralise complaints of neglect by playing the religion card. Darfur's Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa tribes are well-known for their Muslim piety, and were attracted by the idea of being enfranchised through their Muslim faith. But this proved another hollow promise, and when the Sudanese Islamist movement split four years ago, most Darfurian Islamists went into opposition, some of them forming the JEM.
There is no quick fix in Darfur. But after the first round of mediation by the African Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, a week ago, the elements of a settlement are coming into focus. The first of these is removing obstacles to relief operations. The second is enforcing the ceasefire, agreed by the parties in the Chadian capital of Ndjamena in April, but flouted - far more egregiously by the government and Janjaweed. For hungry villagers, the ceasefire is a survival issue, as their skill at harvesting wild foods has no value if they are confined to camps by fear of rape, mutilation or murder.
The African Union - headed by its energetic leader, the, former Malian President Alpha Konare - has put 24 ceasefire monitors on the ground so far to oversee the Ndjamena agreement. Three hundred African troops are also on their way, to ensure that the monitors can move in safety.
Providing security to civilians will need a far larger and more robust force. Even before the insurrection, Darfur was a province in arms. Every village or nomadic clan possessed automatic weapons - a necessity given that there has been no effective police force there for the past 20 years.
Last month, President Omer al-Bashir promised to disarm the Janjaweed. In doing so, he has put himself in a corner. There's overwhelming evidence, circumstantial and documentary, that Khartoum supplied the militia with arms, logistics and air support. But it doesn't follow that it can so easily rein them in. Darfur cannot be disarmed by force.
The principal Janjaweed camps can be identified and the militiamen cantonised there. This demands a tough surveillance regime, overseen by international forces. But the armed Bedouin cannot be encamped: they rely on their herds for livelihood and hence need to move, and they are too numerous and scattered to disarm. In fact, 'disarmament' is a misnomer. What will work is community-based regulation of armaments, gradually squeezing out bandits and criminals.
What to do with the Chadian Arabs will be one tricky issue. Another will be the fact that all Darfurians - Arab and non-Arab alike - profoundly distrust a government in Khartoum that has brought them nothing but trouble. Arms control can be made to work only when the scaffolding of a provincial administration and political settlement is in place.
Another issue is human rights: investigating claims of genocide and who's responsible. This issue is best parked with an international commission - perhaps a special investigator from the International Criminal Court.
A political solution can be framed as these immediate issues are tackled. At the moment the sides are far apart, their public language one of mutual recrimination.
In theory, a settlement of Darfur's provincial issues should not be too difficult. The rebels - who drop their simplistic 'African' versus 'Arab' terminology as soon as they get into details - have no desire to purge Darfur of its indigenous black Arabs.
They do not seek self-determination or separation. Their demands, for equitable development, land rights, schools and clinics, and local democracy are perfectly reasonable. Formulae for provincial autonomy are also negotiable.
The national issues are more difficult. Settling Darfur's grievances will mean revisiting many of the Naivasha formulae, which were drafted on a simplified north-south dichotomy. For example, senior government jobs have been divided between the ruling Congress Party and the SPLA: who is going to make concessions to allow Darfur its fair share?
Nonetheless, the Darfur process can be speeded up by implementing the Naivasha agreement and bringing SPLA leader John Garang to Khartoum as vice president. Garang aspires to represent a coalition of all Sudan's non-Arab peoples, including Darfurians, and it will be politically impossible for him to endorse a war in Darfur.
The African Union, with UN support, is applying lessons learned from the Naivasha negotiation. If this is to work, the US, Britain and the EU will need to use their leverage in support of the AU formula. The next meeting is scheduled for a month's time.
The immediate life and death needs of Darfur's people cannot wait for these negotiations to mature. A British brigade could make a formidable difference to the situation. It could escort aid supplies into rebel-held areas, and provide aerial surveillance, logistics and back-up to ceasefire monitoring, helping to give Darfurian villagers the confidence to return to their homes and pick up their lives.
Alex de Waal is director of Justice Africa (London). An updated version of his book, Famine that Kills: Darfur, Sudan, 1984-5, is published by Oxford University Press this autumn.
TWO EXCELLENT REPORTS ON SUDAN
Help explain complexities of helping those suffering in Sudan
We fight on, says the demon of Darfur
July 25, 2004 by Rich Miniter, El Fasher, Darfur Sunday Times
IN THE desolate hills of North Darfur, scene of some of the most hideous atrocities in a campaign of mass rape, ethnic cleansing and murder on a scale that has prompted claims of genocide, this weekend’s international machinations to get United Nations resolutions passed and peace talks started meant nothing to Musa Khaber.
A tall, glowering man, Khaber is the leader of the Janjaweed militia in the north. That his men have lived up to the militia’s name — Arabic for “demon on horseback” — is not in doubt. These particular demons have burnt countless villages, hacked and shot thousands of men and boys and raped the women or driven them into the desert to die.
Yet Khaber, who was tracked to his lair by The Sunday Times on Friday after a gruelling journey by Land Rover and on foot, does not like the word Janjaweed. An interpreter warned that it should not be used in front of him. “You will make him angry,” he whispered, drawing a line across his neck.
What actually infuriated Khaber, as it turned out, was the mention of possible international intervention in Darfur under the auspices of the UN, or perhaps the British and American governments.
Khaber, his face masked by a turban arranged to cover all but his eyes and the crown of his head, glared menacingly, oblivious to two flies crawling on his eyelids.
“We will fight them,” he declared. “We hate them and we will attack the foreigners. We refuse to be like Iraq — surrendered, confused and occupied.”
As his bodyguards — hard men carrying AK-47s and G3 assault weapons — looked out from hillside vantage points in rocks above us and the desert below, Khaber formed his hand into the shape of a pistol to emphasise his point. “We will fight them, more than the mujaheddin in Afghanistan.”
The journey to Khaber had taken us through rough terrain in some ways reminiscent of Afghanistan, with its welter of tough, independent tribesmen, its Islamic extremism and its multitude of weapons.
From this combustible mixture at a point where black African peasants have clashed with nomadic African Arabs for centuries, a conflict exploded last year with a force that has only now shaken the international community into limited action.
Put simply, a revolt mounted largely by black Africans triggered a ferocious response from mainly Arab militias, allegedly backed by the government in Khartoum.
The picture on the ground is much more complex, but about 1.5m people have been displaced — nearly one-fifth of the population of Darfur. About 200,000 have fled into neighbouring Chad, while 1m have settled into one of 132 “internally displaced persons’ camps” spread over a region the size of France.
Perhaps 30,000 have been killed and starvation and disease threaten thousands more.
Aid is arriving but is in short supply; UN officials have acknowledged that this is the world’s worst humanitarian crisis but have been unable to contain it; and no consensus has emerged among African or western leaders on what to do.
The power in Darfur still rests largely with Khaber and a host of lesser men like him. To find him meant passing through a Sudanese army cordon around the dusty town of El Fasher. We drove for 40 miles over sandy savannah.
A steep wall of rock-strewn hills eventually blocked our path and we continued on foot. After hiking over hills more than 150ft high we were halted by the shouts of a gun-waving man in a white turban. He was a Janjaweed lookout.
We were told to wait. From the steep, lifeless hills we could see for miles and eventually a truck emerged in the distance. As the white dot grew, we realised that it was a pick-up truck with a number of armed men in the back. It stopped out of sight and about 20 minutes later we were given the signal to proceed into some stony ravines.
There, beside a scrub bush, I met Khaber, a dark black man who introduced himself as an Arab. Many members of the opposing groups in the conflict are physically virtually indistinguishable from one another and Khaber’s band is a mixture of men from Arab and African tribes. What they have in common is a taste for war and loot.
The Janjaweed leader claimed that despite reports of backing from Khartoum, his militia was allied to nobody. “We are not with the rebels, we are not with the government — we are in hell,” he said. “But we look for our due.”
Asked what he considered his due, he replied: “Development.” When I pointed out that the number of schools had tripled in Darfur in the past 10 years and there were three hospitals and one university where before there had been none, he was dismissive. “I am from Krniui village. They have built nothing in my village.”
I pressed Khaber on the allegations — long denied by Khartoum — that the Janjaweed are funded and controlled by the national government. He insisted it gave him no support.
“We fight all governments in Sudan,” he said. “We get nothing from the government.” He conceded only that he had some relatives in the local government who provided assistance from time to time.
The interview ended abruptly when a lookout sounded that the Sudanese army was approaching. Men with rocket-propelled grenade launchers and heavy machineguns climbed into crags, evidently preparing for a shootout.
Khaber stood up suddenly and ran to Dafalla Hajar, his number two. They argued rapidly in Arabic, but were clearly outnumbered. As the Janjaweed fled north, we retraced our steps hoping to avoid the army and arrest.
This rugged and remote region, divided into North, South and West Darfur, is the perfect environment for misery. Famine and disease are familiar. Most of the hardship is man-made, the product of competing ideologies and rival groups such as Khaber’s.
Sudan’s army now garrisons the cities, as do the police in blue camouflage uniforms.
While the government’s Popular Defence Force, a part-time body of territorials, patrols some of the hinterland, irregular army units and 80 Arab tribal militias rove the landscape on camel and horseback.
To them can be added the wandering nomads whose dirty white turbans, flowing robes and camel trains could be from a millennium ago, but for their AK-47s. Then there are gun- toting bandits who roam western Sudan and Chad, seeking women and booty.
Finally there is a constellation of armed groups loosely called the rebels. These include the professionally trained insurgents of the Justice and Equality Movement — backed by the now jailed former speaker of Sudan’s parliament, Hassan al-Turabi; the Sudan Liberation Army, believed to be supported by Eritrea; the Federal Democratic Movement, which specialises in murdering policemen; and the so-called “African” tribal militias, one of which calls itself Tora Bora in homage to Osama Bin Laden’s fighters in Afghanistan.
“Outside the major market towns,” said David Hoile, who works as a consultant to the government of Sudan and western companies, “men carry guns as casually as women in Chelmsford would carry handbags.”
Disarming these warring factions may be impossible. If Khartoum dispatches more troops to Darfur, it will be in violation of its ceasefire with the two main rebel groups.
Disarmament would in any case enrage the Janjaweed and the African and Arab tribal militias, who may turn their guns on aid workers and Sudanese soldiers alike, detonating any chance of relief efforts.
Sudan’s president, Omar al-Bashir, nevertheless issued a decree on June 18 declaring that all groups will be disarmed and that those guilty of human rights abuses will be punished.
Khartoum’s ability to enforce its will is doubtful. Over the 196,404 square miles of Darfur there are only 15 paved roads. The rainy season will soon turn them into mires. Still, some progress is apparent.
At Nyala, in South Darfur, a judge opened the prison gates to reporters last week. Inside the British-built structure, 12 Janjaweed prisoners squatted in the sunlight. The judge explained that they had been convicted of crimes ranging from theft and rape to murder and sentenced to between three and 12 years’ “hard time”.
The governor of North Darfur, Mohammed Kupor, said there was now “a great campaign” by the army, police and intelligence services against the Janjaweed. For the past two weeks these combined forces have staked out water holes, searched with helicopters and even sent camel patrols into the mountains. During that fortnight, the governor said, 400 Janjaweed have been captured.
Yet nobody knows how many thousands are still at large, roaming freely to terrorise the inhabitants of Darfur.
The victims are not hard to find. Abu Shouk, six miles north of El Fasher, is one step away from hell. On hot plains at the edge of the Sahara, 43,000 people live behind a chain link fence guarded by Sudanese soldiers. It is more than 100F by late morning and to survive the heat, the inhabitants need eight litres of water per day. They often do not get it.
The story of one woman at the camp, Hawa Addella Mahmud, 28, is typical of many. Until a year ago she thought she had it all. Her husband was loving and she was pregnant with twins. Then, early in the morning, came the camel-riding Janjaweed. Her husband and neighbours were killed and she walked for 10 days. When she arrived at the camp, her twins were born dead.
At the Sayalabe camp near Nyala in the south, refugees told another story that sounded a lot like ethnic cleansing. On the afternoon of May 22, Janjaweed attacked their village on foot. As a helicopter hovered, more than a dozen gunmen sought out the Africans for murder while sparing the Arabs.
Another refugee, Suakan al-Taher, 17, who is now at a camp near Genina in the west, lost her husband in an attack on their village. All its 63 men were murdered, she said. She fled with her baby.
Last week she rearranged her blue veil to shield her daughter from the sun. Her thoughts were not of Janjaweed or rebel forces, but of survival. “We are suffering for (lack of) food,” she said. “We are cold at night and hot in the day.”
- - -
Darfur's deep grievances defy all hopes for an easy solution
Sunday July 25, 2004 - The Observer:
The world is waking to the human disaster in Sudan. But, argues writer and world authority on the country, Alex de Waal, the crisis is far more complex than some claim - and cannot be resolved by a quick fix.
Darfur, the war-torn province in western Sudan where a terrible humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding, has yet more awful secrets to divulge.
In addition to 1.2 million displaced people living and dying in refugee camps in the region and across the border in neighbouring Chad, there are hundreds of thousands more struggling to survive in their homes in the vast areas held by the rebel movements fighting against the Khartoum government.
They are far from any TV cameras, and far from the comfort of aid agencies. They are surviving as their parents and grandparents did, through hardiness and skill.
They, not us, are the proven experts in surviving famine. Where a foreigner sees a wasteland of sand and mountain, a rural woman sees landscape replete with wild grasses, berries and roots.
The most ubiquitous of these is a berry known as mukheit, which grows on a small bush. It looks like a big pale pea, it's toxic and needs to be soaked in water for three days before it's edible, and even then it tastes sour. But it's nutritious, and it's in season now.
During the drought-famine of 1984-85, perhaps two million people survived on mukheit, often for months. It was a far bigger factor in survival than food aid, and it was common to see women foraging on the remotest hills, children strapped to their backs, gathering this unappetising but life-preserving crop. Then there's difra, a wild grass that grows across the desert-edge plateaux, which can be harvested in August, and up to 80 more species known to every grandmother.
Mukheit keeps adults alive, but it isn't enough for children. During the 1980s famine, infectious diseases and lack of weaning foods killed an estimated 75,000 children. As the world becomes aware of this as-yet-invisible disaster, aid agencies will demand access across the front lines. And those aid convoys will need an international protection force.
The Darfur war erupted early last year, when two armed movements - Sudan Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement - began a rebellion against a government in Khartoum that had neglected their region.
In response, the government mobilised, armed and directed a militia, known as Janjaweed ('rabble' or 'outlaws' in local dialect), using scorched earth, massacre and starvation as cheap counter-insurgency weapons. The UN has described Darfur as 'the world's worst humanitarian crisis'. On Friday, the US Congress described it as 'genocide'. The British government is considering sending in 5,000 troops.
Characterising the Darfur war as 'Arabs' versus 'Africans' obscures the reality. Darfur's Arabs are black, indigenous, African and Muslim - just like Darfur's non-Arabs, who hail from the Fur, Masalit, Zaghawa and a dozen smaller tribes.
Until recently, Darfurians used the term 'Arab' in its ancient sense of 'bedouin'. These Arabic-speaking nomads are distinct from the inheritors of the Arab culture of the Nile and the Fertile Crescent.
'Arabism' in Darfur is a political ideology, recently imported, after Colonel Gadaffi nurtured dreams of an 'Arab belt' across Africa, and recruited Chadian Arabs, Darfurians and west African Tuaregs to spearhead his invasion of Chad in the 1980s. He failed, but the legacy of arms, militia organisation and Arab supremacist ideology lives on.
Many Janjaweed hail from the Chadian Arab groups mobilised during those days. Most of Darfur's Arabs remain uninvolved in the conflict, but racist ideology appeals to many poor and frustrated young men.
Since 1987 there have been recurrent clashes between the Arab militias and village self-defence groups. Their roots were local conflicts over land and water, especially in the wake of droughts, made worse by the absence of an effective police force in the region for 20 years.
The last intertribal conference met in 1989, but its recommendations were never implemented. Year by year, law and order has broken down, and the government has done nothing but play a game of divide-and-rule, usually favouring the better-armed Arabs.
In response, the non-Arab groups (some of them bedouins too - there's a clan related to the Zaghawa that even has the name Bedeyaat) have mobilised, adopting the label 'African', which helps to gain solidarity with the southern-based Sudan People's Liberation Army, and is a ticket to sympathy in the West.
The Darfur conflict erupted just as protracted peace negotiations between Khartoum and the SPLA on an end to the 20-year-old war in southern Sudan entered their final stage. Some observers have speculated that the rebellion was launched because the SPLA won its concessions by dint of armed struggle, thereby encouraging other discontented Sudanese regions to try the same.
There's an element of truth in that, and a danger that the Beja of eastern Sudan will also re-ignite their dormant insurrection. But Darfur has long-standing grievances. Even more than southern Sudan, the province has been neglected. It has the fewest schools and hospitals in the country. Promises of development came to nothing.
Darfurian radicals have long tried to start a liberation war. In 1991, the SPLA sent an armed force to Darfur to foment resistance: it failed, and an entire cadre of leftist leadership was arrested or neutralised as a result. The young SLA leaders have emerged from the shadow of this debacle.
Meanwhile, the Islamic government tried to neutralise complaints of neglect by playing the religion card. Darfur's Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa tribes are well-known for their Muslim piety, and were attracted by the idea of being enfranchised through their Muslim faith. But this proved another hollow promise, and when the Sudanese Islamist movement split four years ago, most Darfurian Islamists went into opposition, some of them forming the JEM.
There is no quick fix in Darfur. But after the first round of mediation by the African Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, a week ago, the elements of a settlement are coming into focus. The first of these is removing obstacles to relief operations. The second is enforcing the ceasefire, agreed by the parties in the Chadian capital of Ndjamena in April, but flouted - far more egregiously by the government and Janjaweed. For hungry villagers, the ceasefire is a survival issue, as their skill at harvesting wild foods has no value if they are confined to camps by fear of rape, mutilation or murder.
The African Union - headed by its energetic leader, the, former Malian President Alpha Konare - has put 24 ceasefire monitors on the ground so far to oversee the Ndjamena agreement. Three hundred African troops are also on their way, to ensure that the monitors can move in safety.
Providing security to civilians will need a far larger and more robust force. Even before the insurrection, Darfur was a province in arms. Every village or nomadic clan possessed automatic weapons - a necessity given that there has been no effective police force there for the past 20 years.
Last month, President Omer al-Bashir promised to disarm the Janjaweed. In doing so, he has put himself in a corner. There's overwhelming evidence, circumstantial and documentary, that Khartoum supplied the militia with arms, logistics and air support. But it doesn't follow that it can so easily rein them in. Darfur cannot be disarmed by force.
The principal Janjaweed camps can be identified and the militiamen cantonised there. This demands a tough surveillance regime, overseen by international forces. But the armed Bedouin cannot be encamped: they rely on their herds for livelihood and hence need to move, and they are too numerous and scattered to disarm. In fact, 'disarmament' is a misnomer. What will work is community-based regulation of armaments, gradually squeezing out bandits and criminals.
What to do with the Chadian Arabs will be one tricky issue. Another will be the fact that all Darfurians - Arab and non-Arab alike - profoundly distrust a government in Khartoum that has brought them nothing but trouble. Arms control can be made to work only when the scaffolding of a provincial administration and political settlement is in place.
Another issue is human rights: investigating claims of genocide and who's responsible. This issue is best parked with an international commission - perhaps a special investigator from the International Criminal Court.
A political solution can be framed as these immediate issues are tackled. At the moment the sides are far apart, their public language one of mutual recrimination.
In theory, a settlement of Darfur's provincial issues should not be too difficult. The rebels - who drop their simplistic 'African' versus 'Arab' terminology as soon as they get into details - have no desire to purge Darfur of its indigenous black Arabs.
They do not seek self-determination or separation. Their demands, for equitable development, land rights, schools and clinics, and local democracy are perfectly reasonable. Formulae for provincial autonomy are also negotiable.
The national issues are more difficult. Settling Darfur's grievances will mean revisiting many of the Naivasha formulae, which were drafted on a simplified north-south dichotomy. For example, senior government jobs have been divided between the ruling Congress Party and the SPLA: who is going to make concessions to allow Darfur its fair share?
Nonetheless, the Darfur process can be speeded up by implementing the Naivasha agreement and bringing SPLA leader John Garang to Khartoum as vice president. Garang aspires to represent a coalition of all Sudan's non-Arab peoples, including Darfurians, and it will be politically impossible for him to endorse a war in Darfur.
The African Union, with UN support, is applying lessons learned from the Naivasha negotiation. If this is to work, the US, Britain and the EU will need to use their leverage in support of the AU formula. The next meeting is scheduled for a month's time.
The immediate life and death needs of Darfur's people cannot wait for these negotiations to mature. A British brigade could make a formidable difference to the situation. It could escort aid supplies into rebel-held areas, and provide aerial surveillance, logistics and back-up to ceasefire monitoring, helping to give Darfurian villagers the confidence to return to their homes and pick up their lives.
Alex de Waal is director of Justice Africa (London). An updated version of his book, Famine that Kills: Darfur, Sudan, 1984-5, is published by Oxford University Press this autumn.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/25/2004
0 comments
- - -
DARFUR REBELS CALL FOR INTERNATIONAL TROOPS
To combat Darfur's humanitarian crisis
My question to readers re below excerpt: Surely, the more hands there are on deck - to help get aid to those in most need - the more chance there is of saving the lives of hundreds of thousands Sudanese people. Why do you think government of Sudan has been saying no? Any thoughts, ideas, suggestions - no matter how scrappy - would be appreciated via comments or email. Thanks.
July 25 - EU report excerpt: "A rebel movement in strife-torn Darfur called Sunday for a rapid deployment of international troops to combat the humanitarian crisis in the western Sudanese region.
"We are asking the United States, the United Nations secretary general, the European Union and the African Union for the urgent deployment of troops in the coming days to ensure the delivery of food aid to millions of refugees," rebel spokesman Abdel Wahed Mohammed Nur told AFP.
Contacted by telephone, the spokesman of the Sudan Liberation Armyadded that the intervention would "avert a humanitarian disaster of great proportions".
But Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Ismail, speaking to BBC television on Sunday, questioned the need for foreign troops in the vast region, saying his government was doing all it could to disarm Arab militias.
"Why should we have to rush and to talk about military intervention as long as the situation is getting better?" Ismail asked. "My government is doing what can be done in order to disarm the militia."
In Khartoum, the ruling National Congress (NC) party took opposition to foreign intervention a step further, with a threat to use force to counter it, a press report said Sunday.
"Anybody who contemplates imposing his opinion by force will be confronted by force," NC secretary general Ibrahim Ahmed Omar said, quoted by the official Al-Anbaa daily."
DARFUR REBELS CALL FOR INTERNATIONAL TROOPS
To combat Darfur's humanitarian crisis
My question to readers re below excerpt: Surely, the more hands there are on deck - to help get aid to those in most need - the more chance there is of saving the lives of hundreds of thousands Sudanese people. Why do you think government of Sudan has been saying no? Any thoughts, ideas, suggestions - no matter how scrappy - would be appreciated via comments or email. Thanks.
July 25 - EU report excerpt: "A rebel movement in strife-torn Darfur called Sunday for a rapid deployment of international troops to combat the humanitarian crisis in the western Sudanese region.
"We are asking the United States, the United Nations secretary general, the European Union and the African Union for the urgent deployment of troops in the coming days to ensure the delivery of food aid to millions of refugees," rebel spokesman Abdel Wahed Mohammed Nur told AFP.
Contacted by telephone, the spokesman of the Sudan Liberation Armyadded that the intervention would "avert a humanitarian disaster of great proportions".
But Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Ismail, speaking to BBC television on Sunday, questioned the need for foreign troops in the vast region, saying his government was doing all it could to disarm Arab militias.
"Why should we have to rush and to talk about military intervention as long as the situation is getting better?" Ismail asked. "My government is doing what can be done in order to disarm the militia."
In Khartoum, the ruling National Congress (NC) party took opposition to foreign intervention a step further, with a threat to use force to counter it, a press report said Sunday.
"Anybody who contemplates imposing his opinion by force will be confronted by force," NC secretary general Ibrahim Ahmed Omar said, quoted by the official Al-Anbaa daily."
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/25/2004
0 comments
- - -
OPERATION SAFARI LEAVES FOR SUDAN
Advance party of UN's high readiness brigade
July 25 - Canadian report excerpt:
"Two Canadian soldiers depart with advance team on UN peacekeeping mission to Sudan. The first Canadian soldiers have headed off to Sudan on Operation Safari, a UN peacekeeping mission to the strife-torn north African nation. But only two Canadians will be joining the advance party of the UN's high-readiness brigade: Major James Simiana, a public affairs officer, and Warrant Officer Robert Moug, a staff officer.
Although thousands of troops may follow them to Sudan to avert a humanitarian disaster and to separate warring Arab militias from southern rebels, only about six Canadian soldiers can be spared for the mission. Brigadier-General Greg Mitchell, a Canadian, commands the UN force, but the Canadian army had to scrap plans to contribute about 1,000 troops because of budget cuts. The advance party is being formed at the request of UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, with the full peacekeeping force to follow once a peace accord is reached."
[via mostly AFRICA]
- - -
Note: Seems Operation Safari is the advance party connected with the ceasefire observers mission. The ceasefire mission is already in Sudan observing the ceasefire agreement signed early April 2004 re conflict in South Sudan. Darfur is in West Sudan - a separate conflict.
Anytime now a U.N. human rights delegation is arriving in Sudan to monitor conditions in Darfur. Soon, we should be hearing reports of the AU-led 270 armed troops arriving in Sudan to protect the 60-120 (reports vary on numbers) monitors already there. The AU troops are EU supported and funded. It took three days of arm twisting the GoS at the AU summit to get GoS permission for the AU mission into Sudan. They will be the first foreign troops to set foot on Sudanese soil. Khartoum must be getting nervous at the prospect of armed troops becoming a reality.
The controversy over the 270 AU-led troops is their mandate as they're supposed to protect the UN observers only - but it's been made clear to the GoS by the AU that the troops will not fold their arms if refugees etc., are attacked. So, really they are there to protect the observers, refugees, aid and aid workers - much to the dismay of GoS who argued it is GoS responsibility to protect their people (like Jim Moore says, you can't make this stuff up).
So, in short, this week the heat has been turned up full - position of GoS must be weakening - and they know it. It will be interesting to see how quickly the situation will change on and after July 31st - which I believe was the deadline Colin Powell gave to Bashir when they met in Khartoum last month.
A report today says GoS forces have moved 90,000 refugees back into Darfur - all this new activity could be to do with the arrival of the U.N. human rights delegation, Operation Safari advance party and the AU-led forces.
The EU has told Khartoum straight: what needs to happen next - without further delay - is for Khartoum to give the order to arrest and disarm the Arab militia leaders.
What I cannot understand is why the refugees do not have enough food and water. I cannot find any proper reporting and accountability. Seems one person: Jan Egeland is the UN spokesperson on aid - and he is the coordinator of aid (he's not going to criticise himself is he? Why isn't anyone shouting about the food and water - why is the aid still not reaching those who need it most? I don't get it. Why aren't people asking these questions and getting proper answers from Kofi Annan?
They are all seem so secretive. I noticed there was a person from Oxfam giving a talk at Harvard - and they asked for their comments and talk to be off the record and not to be recorded. Everyone else who contributed to the discussion was recorded. But not Oxfam.
Why are all these human rights orgs and activisits and goodness knows how many other agencies spending hours and weeks and months nit picking over words and talk, discussions, meetings and musing over the meaning of ethnic cleansing and genocide when every minute counts in getting food, water, shelter and medicine to those who need it the most in Sudan? Three months ago Jim Moore said time is critical and hours matter ... And yet, go read the story below, written by Hilary Andersson in Darfur (part of a BBC crew filming) what have the aid agencies achieved over the past three months? What's happened to all the plane loads of aid that has been flown into Darfur? Who is picking up 1,400 tons of aid that was being air dropped into Darfur by WFP this week - who is there to pick it up and distribute it? Why are there no reports? Why aren't journalists asking and answering these questions? What is going on??!!
OPERATION SAFARI LEAVES FOR SUDAN
Advance party of UN's high readiness brigade
July 25 - Canadian report excerpt:
"Two Canadian soldiers depart with advance team on UN peacekeeping mission to Sudan. The first Canadian soldiers have headed off to Sudan on Operation Safari, a UN peacekeeping mission to the strife-torn north African nation. But only two Canadians will be joining the advance party of the UN's high-readiness brigade: Major James Simiana, a public affairs officer, and Warrant Officer Robert Moug, a staff officer.
Although thousands of troops may follow them to Sudan to avert a humanitarian disaster and to separate warring Arab militias from southern rebels, only about six Canadian soldiers can be spared for the mission. Brigadier-General Greg Mitchell, a Canadian, commands the UN force, but the Canadian army had to scrap plans to contribute about 1,000 troops because of budget cuts. The advance party is being formed at the request of UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, with the full peacekeeping force to follow once a peace accord is reached."
[via mostly AFRICA]
- - -
Note: Seems Operation Safari is the advance party connected with the ceasefire observers mission. The ceasefire mission is already in Sudan observing the ceasefire agreement signed early April 2004 re conflict in South Sudan. Darfur is in West Sudan - a separate conflict.
Anytime now a U.N. human rights delegation is arriving in Sudan to monitor conditions in Darfur. Soon, we should be hearing reports of the AU-led 270 armed troops arriving in Sudan to protect the 60-120 (reports vary on numbers) monitors already there. The AU troops are EU supported and funded. It took three days of arm twisting the GoS at the AU summit to get GoS permission for the AU mission into Sudan. They will be the first foreign troops to set foot on Sudanese soil. Khartoum must be getting nervous at the prospect of armed troops becoming a reality.
The controversy over the 270 AU-led troops is their mandate as they're supposed to protect the UN observers only - but it's been made clear to the GoS by the AU that the troops will not fold their arms if refugees etc., are attacked. So, really they are there to protect the observers, refugees, aid and aid workers - much to the dismay of GoS who argued it is GoS responsibility to protect their people (like Jim Moore says, you can't make this stuff up).
So, in short, this week the heat has been turned up full - position of GoS must be weakening - and they know it. It will be interesting to see how quickly the situation will change on and after July 31st - which I believe was the deadline Colin Powell gave to Bashir when they met in Khartoum last month.
A report today says GoS forces have moved 90,000 refugees back into Darfur - all this new activity could be to do with the arrival of the U.N. human rights delegation, Operation Safari advance party and the AU-led forces.
The EU has told Khartoum straight: what needs to happen next - without further delay - is for Khartoum to give the order to arrest and disarm the Arab militia leaders.
What I cannot understand is why the refugees do not have enough food and water. I cannot find any proper reporting and accountability. Seems one person: Jan Egeland is the UN spokesperson on aid - and he is the coordinator of aid (he's not going to criticise himself is he? Why isn't anyone shouting about the food and water - why is the aid still not reaching those who need it most? I don't get it. Why aren't people asking these questions and getting proper answers from Kofi Annan?
They are all seem so secretive. I noticed there was a person from Oxfam giving a talk at Harvard - and they asked for their comments and talk to be off the record and not to be recorded. Everyone else who contributed to the discussion was recorded. But not Oxfam.
Why are all these human rights orgs and activisits and goodness knows how many other agencies spending hours and weeks and months nit picking over words and talk, discussions, meetings and musing over the meaning of ethnic cleansing and genocide when every minute counts in getting food, water, shelter and medicine to those who need it the most in Sudan? Three months ago Jim Moore said time is critical and hours matter ... And yet, go read the story below, written by Hilary Andersson in Darfur (part of a BBC crew filming) what have the aid agencies achieved over the past three months? What's happened to all the plane loads of aid that has been flown into Darfur? Who is picking up 1,400 tons of aid that was being air dropped into Darfur by WFP this week - who is there to pick it up and distribute it? Why are there no reports? Why aren't journalists asking and answering these questions? What is going on??!!
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/25/2004
0 comments
Saturday, July 24, 2004
A DAY IN THE LIFE
Of a BBC correspondent in Darfur
Did you know that when you send a letter to your political representative, it is classed as representing the views of one hundred people?
No, I didn't know that either. A friend who was visiting me here on Wednesday told me. Seems our political representatives do welcome evidence of public opinion on any issue.
As there's been opposition to sending troops to Iraq, they need to know that they have our support in sending troops to Sudan. So, now they are faced with considering courses of action to take on Sudan, please make your voice count.
This post serves as a reminder that what I've written about here for three solid months on Darfur is real. Please spare the few minutes it will take to read it - and imagine being the eyes and ears of the author ...
The following entry was written by BBC correspondent Hilary Andersson, on the ground in Sudan, and appeared online today:
I'm sitting in the dark on the edge of a camp for displaced people in Darfur. I can hear the loud, persistent crying of one child rising above the murmur of the camp as the people settle down for the night.
Tonight the stars are out - that means no rain. Last night was not like this at all.
You can see it coming in the afternoons. The sky begins to darken and the horizon goes an ominous, brown shade of yellow.
Then the wind starts and the dust of the Sahara desert whips up, blasting whirling sands in all directions. The people start to run in their long rags, heads bowed against the wind.
Then, the heavens simply open, the wind ferociously hurls drenching curtains of water at everything around.
Mothers with their children, whose faces are twisted up in misery, squat grasping the sides of their makeshift shelters - which do almost nothing to keep them dry.
The torn plastic bags that make up the walls of their twig shelters flap madly in the wind. The ground turns into a mire of mud.
My TV crew and I run for our shelter 15m (50ft) away. All night, the rain pounds against our ceiling. I wake up at 0300 - it is still going on.
The people on the other side of our wall are still sitting, bracing themselves against the wind and rain, where they were at dusk. This is what it is like most nights for them.
In the morning we wake up to hear the children crying. In the makeshift hospital here, set up by foreign aid workers, it is so crowded with the sick that some are sleeping on the floors.
Among the stench and flies, the children lie wasted, staring into space. Tiny human beings, who were born into the madness of man's inhumanity to man, into the madness of a spate of killing that has left many of their fathers, brothers, grandparents and uncles dead.
And now, they face starvation which is cruel and slow. Most of the children are too far gone to eat. Some have the peeling skin and lesions that come with advanced starvation - their skin is wrinkled, loose around their bones. The mothers sit by powerless.
We spent two weeks in Darfur, driving through eerie, burnt-out villages, empty of people.
We travelled to Mornay camp, where we were a month ago. On arriving back, we went to the medical tent. It was strangely quiet inside.
Four people were sitting in a circle. A mother was looking down and sobbing silently, rubbing her hands on her face. I realised I knew her. Then it slowly came to me what was going on. Her daughter Nadia, whom we had spent two days with in this tent a month ago, was dying.
The mother, Juma, was saying an awful goodbye.
We moved away in their private moment. Ten minutes later Nadia was dead.
The men took her body away to prepare for the burial. Then they emerged at the far end of the graveyard, carrying her tiny body in their hands. They said their prayers and laid her body in the earth.
Juma, her mother, sat on the ground. She wasn't crying any more.
After the funeral I went to pay my respects. Juma had two older women next to her who, perhaps through custom, were telling her to hold her emotions in.
But when she saw me, perhaps remembering the filming we did with Nadia last month, she started screaming "Nadia, Nadia, Nadia".
She fell on me, screaming, she kept screaming. She kept repeating her daughter's name. Then the older women started screaming too.
When Juma left the graveyard I saw her walking away on her own, sobbing and crying her child's name out into the breeze of the vast desert, into the nothingness of the camp.
Donkeys, half starved themselves, moved around slowly. Refugees continued collecting water and fixing their huts. This happens here every day.
Darfur is in a nightmare that is alive here today and perhaps somewhere else tomorrow. Racial and tribal tensions, and regional disquiet, have erupted into a war where the civilians are being punished, killed and abused.
We are adults, this is the world we live in and accept. The world we have created for ourselves.
Will these things still happen in Africa a century from now? Will it ever change? Why are massacres of civilians allowed to happen in Sudan? Why has no-one even counted the dead?
Money is needed desperately now to save lives. But it has gone this far in Darfur, because no-one really noticed or did anything to stop it. Nadia did not have to die at all.
- - -
Photo - A malnourished Sudanese refugee child is seen on June 23, 2004 at a feeding center in Iriba Town in Chad. Secretary of State Colin Powell arrived in Sudan on June 29 demanding the government crack down on Arab militias whose actions he said approached genocide against African villagers in western Darfur. (Arnold Temple/Reuters)
Of a BBC correspondent in Darfur
Did you know that when you send a letter to your political representative, it is classed as representing the views of one hundred people?
No, I didn't know that either. A friend who was visiting me here on Wednesday told me. Seems our political representatives do welcome evidence of public opinion on any issue.
As there's been opposition to sending troops to Iraq, they need to know that they have our support in sending troops to Sudan. So, now they are faced with considering courses of action to take on Sudan, please make your voice count.
This post serves as a reminder that what I've written about here for three solid months on Darfur is real. Please spare the few minutes it will take to read it - and imagine being the eyes and ears of the author ...
The following entry was written by BBC correspondent Hilary Andersson, on the ground in Sudan, and appeared online today:
I'm sitting in the dark on the edge of a camp for displaced people in Darfur. I can hear the loud, persistent crying of one child rising above the murmur of the camp as the people settle down for the night.
Tonight the stars are out - that means no rain. Last night was not like this at all.
You can see it coming in the afternoons. The sky begins to darken and the horizon goes an ominous, brown shade of yellow.
Then the wind starts and the dust of the Sahara desert whips up, blasting whirling sands in all directions. The people start to run in their long rags, heads bowed against the wind.
Then, the heavens simply open, the wind ferociously hurls drenching curtains of water at everything around.
Mothers with their children, whose faces are twisted up in misery, squat grasping the sides of their makeshift shelters - which do almost nothing to keep them dry.
The torn plastic bags that make up the walls of their twig shelters flap madly in the wind. The ground turns into a mire of mud.
My TV crew and I run for our shelter 15m (50ft) away. All night, the rain pounds against our ceiling. I wake up at 0300 - it is still going on.
The people on the other side of our wall are still sitting, bracing themselves against the wind and rain, where they were at dusk. This is what it is like most nights for them.
In the morning we wake up to hear the children crying. In the makeshift hospital here, set up by foreign aid workers, it is so crowded with the sick that some are sleeping on the floors.
Among the stench and flies, the children lie wasted, staring into space. Tiny human beings, who were born into the madness of man's inhumanity to man, into the madness of a spate of killing that has left many of their fathers, brothers, grandparents and uncles dead.
And now, they face starvation which is cruel and slow. Most of the children are too far gone to eat. Some have the peeling skin and lesions that come with advanced starvation - their skin is wrinkled, loose around their bones. The mothers sit by powerless.
We spent two weeks in Darfur, driving through eerie, burnt-out villages, empty of people.
We travelled to Mornay camp, where we were a month ago. On arriving back, we went to the medical tent. It was strangely quiet inside.
Four people were sitting in a circle. A mother was looking down and sobbing silently, rubbing her hands on her face. I realised I knew her. Then it slowly came to me what was going on. Her daughter Nadia, whom we had spent two days with in this tent a month ago, was dying.
The mother, Juma, was saying an awful goodbye.
We moved away in their private moment. Ten minutes later Nadia was dead.
The men took her body away to prepare for the burial. Then they emerged at the far end of the graveyard, carrying her tiny body in their hands. They said their prayers and laid her body in the earth.
Juma, her mother, sat on the ground. She wasn't crying any more.
After the funeral I went to pay my respects. Juma had two older women next to her who, perhaps through custom, were telling her to hold her emotions in.
But when she saw me, perhaps remembering the filming we did with Nadia last month, she started screaming "Nadia, Nadia, Nadia".
She fell on me, screaming, she kept screaming. She kept repeating her daughter's name. Then the older women started screaming too.
When Juma left the graveyard I saw her walking away on her own, sobbing and crying her child's name out into the breeze of the vast desert, into the nothingness of the camp.
Donkeys, half starved themselves, moved around slowly. Refugees continued collecting water and fixing their huts. This happens here every day.
Darfur is in a nightmare that is alive here today and perhaps somewhere else tomorrow. Racial and tribal tensions, and regional disquiet, have erupted into a war where the civilians are being punished, killed and abused.
We are adults, this is the world we live in and accept. The world we have created for ourselves.
Will these things still happen in Africa a century from now? Will it ever change? Why are massacres of civilians allowed to happen in Sudan? Why has no-one even counted the dead?
Money is needed desperately now to save lives. But it has gone this far in Darfur, because no-one really noticed or did anything to stop it. Nadia did not have to die at all.
- - -
Photo - A malnourished Sudanese refugee child is seen on June 23, 2004 at a feeding center in Iriba Town in Chad. Secretary of State Colin Powell arrived in Sudan on June 29 demanding the government crack down on Arab militias whose actions he said approached genocide against African villagers in western Darfur. (Arnold Temple/Reuters)
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/24/2004
0 comments
- - -
U.N. TROOPS IN DARFUR BY DECEMBER
U.N. advance force within next few months
The United Nations (UN) are gathering troops to go into Sudan.
Looks like a UN force is expected to be in Darfur by the year's end.
And a UN advance force will be "inserted" within the next few months.
I've found no report yet that confirms the whereabouts of the African Union (AU) led force of 270 armed troops that were approved, funded and supported by the European Union. They are being sent in to protect the AU observer mission of 60-120 personnel, currently on the ground in Sudan observing the ceasefire agreements. My guess is that their presence will be made known in Sudan on or after July 31st.
On Monday the British are pushing for EU support to add on to the above AU-led force by providing back-up that could include British personnel who have military expertise. I wouldn't be surprised if our lot were already out there, via that Oxfam aid plane that left Kent yesterday for Darfur ... heh only joking - wishful thinking.
U.N. TROOPS IN DARFUR BY DECEMBER
U.N. advance force within next few months
The United Nations (UN) are gathering troops to go into Sudan.
Looks like a UN force is expected to be in Darfur by the year's end.
And a UN advance force will be "inserted" within the next few months.
I've found no report yet that confirms the whereabouts of the African Union (AU) led force of 270 armed troops that were approved, funded and supported by the European Union. They are being sent in to protect the AU observer mission of 60-120 personnel, currently on the ground in Sudan observing the ceasefire agreements. My guess is that their presence will be made known in Sudan on or after July 31st.
On Monday the British are pushing for EU support to add on to the above AU-led force by providing back-up that could include British personnel who have military expertise. I wouldn't be surprised if our lot were already out there, via that Oxfam aid plane that left Kent yesterday for Darfur ... heh only joking - wishful thinking.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/24/2004
0 comments
- - -
AUSTRALIA CONSIDERS UN REQUEST FOR TROOPS
To join U.N. force into Darfur, Sudan
Australia is considering a United Nations' request for troops to join a mission to Darfur. Australia's Defence Minister Robert Hill said the UN had approached Australia for a contribution to the UN force, which was expected to be in place by year's end.
"The UN has pointed out a number of areas of specialty where they would appreciate assistance. We are looking at that, together with all our other obligations at the moment," he said.
Mr Hill gave no indication of the size of the deployment Australia was considering but said the specialist troops of most interest to the UN included engineers and medics. "They have got plenty of infantry offered, as usual it is more the technical support areas that they are struggling with," he told reporters.
"The force itself is still being fashioned and final decisions in relation to the force itself haven't been taken."
He said Australia was able to consider a commitment because of scaled down operations in East Timor and the Solomon Islands.
Hill said he believed the UN would insert an advance force within the next few months.
- - -
BRITISH TROOPS 'READY' FOR SUDAN
Says head of the British Army
July 24: "If need be, we will be able to go to Sudan," said General Sir Michael Jackson, head of the British army. "I suspect we could put a brigade together very quickly indeed." Asked how many troops that would entail, he replied: "Five thousand."
- - -
EU URGES ARREST OF JANJAWEED LEADERS
As a first significant step towards dismantling militias
Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail responded to the above report in the Guardian newspaper by saying that Khartoum would withdraw government troops from the region if Britain sent forces in.
Seems Ismail better pipe down and get on with the job of arresting the Janjaweed leaders or he will be the one withdrawing himself from the region if the Brits and Aussies send forces in. He sure gets around and does a lot of chin wagging and wining and dining while tens of thousands of Sudanese that his government is responsible for, are starving to death.
Yesterday, Ismail had a late night meeting in Brussels with Javier Solana. Mr Solana is the EU's top diplomat. Bet he is a real smoothie with a first rate command of the spoken word. If Ismail doesn't listen to him, Khartoum won't *get it* - ever.
Mr Solana "strongly urged" Sudan to arrest the leaders of the Janjaweed *without delay*, as a first significant step towards the dismantling of these militias, which are held accountable for most of the human rights violations.
Earlier this month, EU foreign ministers threatened unspecified "measures" against Khartoum if it failed to act against the Dafur crisis. The issue is set to debated on Monday when the ministers meet again in Brussels.
- - -
Over the past few months, I have seen reports that Denmark and Germany would be willing to send troops as part of a UN force into Sudan if necessary. Right now it would appear the UN is calling its member states to see who is willing to contribute troops. I've read somewhere that the French and Americans have troops in surrounding areas that could be deployed. More later.
AUSTRALIA CONSIDERS UN REQUEST FOR TROOPS
To join U.N. force into Darfur, Sudan
Australia is considering a United Nations' request for troops to join a mission to Darfur. Australia's Defence Minister Robert Hill said the UN had approached Australia for a contribution to the UN force, which was expected to be in place by year's end.
"The UN has pointed out a number of areas of specialty where they would appreciate assistance. We are looking at that, together with all our other obligations at the moment," he said.
Mr Hill gave no indication of the size of the deployment Australia was considering but said the specialist troops of most interest to the UN included engineers and medics. "They have got plenty of infantry offered, as usual it is more the technical support areas that they are struggling with," he told reporters.
"The force itself is still being fashioned and final decisions in relation to the force itself haven't been taken."
He said Australia was able to consider a commitment because of scaled down operations in East Timor and the Solomon Islands.
Hill said he believed the UN would insert an advance force within the next few months.
- - -
BRITISH TROOPS 'READY' FOR SUDAN
Says head of the British Army
July 24: "If need be, we will be able to go to Sudan," said General Sir Michael Jackson, head of the British army. "I suspect we could put a brigade together very quickly indeed." Asked how many troops that would entail, he replied: "Five thousand."
- - -
EU URGES ARREST OF JANJAWEED LEADERS
As a first significant step towards dismantling militias
Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail responded to the above report in the Guardian newspaper by saying that Khartoum would withdraw government troops from the region if Britain sent forces in.
Seems Ismail better pipe down and get on with the job of arresting the Janjaweed leaders or he will be the one withdrawing himself from the region if the Brits and Aussies send forces in. He sure gets around and does a lot of chin wagging and wining and dining while tens of thousands of Sudanese that his government is responsible for, are starving to death.
Yesterday, Ismail had a late night meeting in Brussels with Javier Solana. Mr Solana is the EU's top diplomat. Bet he is a real smoothie with a first rate command of the spoken word. If Ismail doesn't listen to him, Khartoum won't *get it* - ever.
Mr Solana "strongly urged" Sudan to arrest the leaders of the Janjaweed *without delay*, as a first significant step towards the dismantling of these militias, which are held accountable for most of the human rights violations.
Earlier this month, EU foreign ministers threatened unspecified "measures" against Khartoum if it failed to act against the Dafur crisis. The issue is set to debated on Monday when the ministers meet again in Brussels.
- - -
Over the past few months, I have seen reports that Denmark and Germany would be willing to send troops as part of a UN force into Sudan if necessary. Right now it would appear the UN is calling its member states to see who is willing to contribute troops. I've read somewhere that the French and Americans have troops in surrounding areas that could be deployed. More later.
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/24/2004
0 comments
# posted by Ingrid J. Jones @ 7/24/2004
0 comments
HOMEPAGE
July 2003
August 2003
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
January 2007
February 2007
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
January 2009
February 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
October 2009
November 2009
January 2010
June 2010
August 2010
Thank you to Blogger for this weblog - you can start yours for free now at:
Please contact me anytime
Email: Ingrid Jones
- - -
KHARTOUM ADMIT THEY CAN'T CONTROL ARAB OUTLAWS
2m Sudanese are in desperate need of aid
Have 10,000 people from Darfur have been exterminated? Or is the figure 30,000? Have one million been driven from Darfur? Or is the number two million? Have 20,000 fled over the border to the neighbouring country of Chad? Or is it 200,000?
Reports vary on the number of people that have been eliminated from Darfur. The Financial Times seemed to get it right in its report that Arab militia in Sudan have killed up to 30,000 and left 2m in desperate need of aid. But today UN emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland says the Darfur death toll is at least 30,000 and could be high as 50,000.
Last month, at a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan's President Bashir promised US Defence Secretary Colin Powell and UN General Secretary Kofi Annan to: (1) try the Arab militia leaders believed to be responsible for atrocities; (2) disarm the militia groups; (3) grant freedom of movement to aid workers.
If by the end of this month, the security situation did not improve, President Bashir agreed that Sudan would have to accept the international community's offer of help to get food and aid safely to Sudanese refugees.
The United Nations (191 sovereign member states including U.S. and U.K.), European Union (25 European countries, including U.K.), African Union (53 African nations) and the United States of America now know that no progress whatsoever has been made by the government of Sudan (GoS) in Khartoum.
Despite the past two months of intense political pressure on GoS and the huge amount of aid and diplomatic effort given by the U.S., U.K., Ireland, Italy, Germany, France, Belgium, Holland, Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Kuwait, Libya - the aid and help is still not reaching all of those who need it most.
Aid workers are still being attacked, supplies are being looted, rains are making huge areas impassable, disease is spreading and the killings continue. Even the GoS admitted it cannot disarm the Arab militias that have been running amok for the past ten years.
How can GoS ever provide unimpeded access for aid to safely reach the Sudanese refugees? They can't. Even though the lives of hundreds and thousands of their citizens are at stake, the GoS are rejecting offers of outside help. Why?
The only reason I can come up with is that the GoS cannot see things the way we do. They come from such a different mindset and culture and are a hundred years or more behind us in comprehending human rights.
Well, they need to learn the error of their ways - or else.
Or else -- what? Well, here's the deal and message for GoS in Khartoum: "If you don't listen up and learn pdq, we Brits will come back and sort you out. You've had nearly fifty years to sort yourselves out since we left. Clearly you, and all those before you, can't do it. You'll not get away with threatening us. We weren't an Empire for nothing. So stick that up your flea bitten camel backsides and listen up. Or else -- you're toast.
- - -
BRITAIN IS LEADING FIGHT TO STOP SUDAN CRISIS
EU support for AU mission to include British personnel with military expertise
July 23: UK aid planes left for Darfur.
Prime Minister Tony Blair confirmed he is considering sending troops to Sudan to help distribute aid, lend logistical support to an African Union (AU) protection force to protect refugee camps from marauding militias.
"We rule nothing out, but we are not at that stage yet," Blair told reporters in London. He said the "critical thing", in the short-term, was to try and make the current international strategy work, adding "we want the European Union to make a far bigger commitment on this."
"We have a moral responsibility to deal with this and to deal with it by any means that we can," he told reporters at Downing Street. But he said the first step was to increase diplomatic pressure on the Sudanese government and he stressed the need to work by consensus with African governments through the African Union.
Mr Blair left little doubt about his willingness to consider his sixth overseas military intervention since 1997. He has described the state of Africa as a "scar on the conscience of the world", while the genocide in Rwanda inspired his doctrine of putting humanitarian intervention above state sovereignty.
Britain has been pressing for a United Nations Security Council resolution setting a deadline for the Sudanese government to control the militia and open up access for aid agencies.
Mr Blair held talks last night with Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, about providing assistance for monitoring a ceasefire.
- - -
UK International Development Secretary Mr Hilary Benn said Britain is leading attempts to stop government-backed militias in Sudan from continuing their campaign of murder, rape and terror.
He also confirmed that Britain, the largest cash donor, is heading attempts in the U.N. to force the Sudanese government to take action. "The UK has done as much, if not more, than any other nation in the world" he said.
Mr Benn's comments came as the charity Oxfam prepared to send a third aid flight to Sudan from Manston airport in Kent. The flight carrying 30 tons of water and £90,000 worth of sanitation equipment left at 7pm yesterday.
- - -
UK FOREIGN SECRETARY TO VISIT SUDAN
UK pushes EU for "joint civilian military team" as backup for AU mission
July 23: UK Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw Friday said: "The Sudan army is at best passive and at worst complicit in these attacks".
Mr Straw is set to visit Sudan, and possibly Darfur, next month and will talk with EU foreign ministers on Monday as he's pushing EU members to take action on Sudan that includes sending a "joint civilian military team".
As he said it would not be a British military operation and would not be a fighting force, my guess is, given that 270 armed troops (led by the AU and funded by the EU) are about to become the first foreign troops to set foot on Sudanese soil anyway, Mr Straw is pushing the EU to support a "back-up" for the mission to include British personnel with military expertise.
July 23: U.K. Liberal Democrats have called for Britain to lead an EU military force dealing with the humanitarian crisis in Sudan.
Lib Dem spokesman Sir Menzies Campbell said this diplomatic work was not working. "It is becoming increasingly clear that food aid and pressure on the Sudanese government alone will not be sufficient to stem the impending disaster in Darfur," he wrote to Straw yesterday. "An EU military force operating under a UN mandate looks like the only answer if we are to prevent a disaster on the scale of Rwanda a decade ago. "With US and British forces stretched to breaking point, countries such as France and Germany have the opportunity to make a significant contribution. But Britain too must also contribute to any such force so far as it can.
July 23: Plaid MP backs task force for Sudan crisis - Adam Price has broken with his party's anti-war ethos to urge the deployment of troops to Sudan. If British troops, backed by a United Nations resolution, were sent in to Sudan, Mr Price promised to support the action. It would be the first time a Plaid Cymru MP backed military action by Britain since the no-fly zones were first established in Iraq in 1983.
The Conservatives have said there is a "good case" for military action.
Yay for Britain.
- - -
BRITAIN COULD SEND 5,000 TROOPS TO SUDAN
The head of the British Army has said
July 23: British Army 'ready' to help in Sudan says ic Wales, UK:
Britain could send 5,000 troops to Sudan to intervene in the humanitarian crisis, the head of the Army has said. The Chief of General Staff, General Sir Mike Jackson, said the Army would be ready if called upon.
He said a brigade of 5,000 soldiers could be ready and fully equipped if the Government decided to send troops in. In an interview to be shown on BBC News 24's HARDtalk, General Sir Mike said: "If need be we will be able to go to Sudan. I suspect we could put a brigade together very quickly indeed."
Asked how many troops that would entail, he replied: "Five thousand."
Yay for the British Army :)
Update -
July 24: BBC: UK troops 'ready to go to Sudan'
July 24: Guardian: UK could send troops to Sudan 'quickly'
- - -
SUDAN WARNS U.K. and U.S.
Not to interfere in Darfur
Sudan had the cheek to warn Britain and the United States not to interfere in Darfur after UK Prime Minister Tony Blair said he had not ruled out military aid to help combat the crisis in Darfur.
It is my view that, by issuing the following four statements on Friday, the GoS has sealed its own fate:
(1) "We don't need any (UN) resolutions. Any resolutions from the Security Council will complicate things," said Sudan's Foreign Minister Ismail, who likened U.S. and British pressure as similar to that put on Iraq before the war.
(2) In an interview with the BBC, Sudanese Interior Minister Hussein denied there had been massacres in Darfur. "Disarming the militias is a long process that required patience," he said.
(3) "I don't understand why Britain and the United States are systematically increasing pressure against us," Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail said yesterday on a visit to Paris." (This) pressure closely resembles the increased pressure that was put on Iraq (before the war)," he said.
(4) Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail, in Paris this week for talks with French Foreign Minister Barnier, when asked to comment on the report that the UK was considering sending troops to help with the aid, said Khartoum would withdraw its forces from the region if British troops were to be deployed, adding: "We will give him the chance if he can give security to Darfur." "The Janjaweed are a gang of faithless thieves and assassins, who have operated outside the law for some 10 years and who are taking advantage of a state of war," the Sudanese minister told reporters.
Given that Mr Ismail does not understand the reasons why Britain and the United States (the two largest donors of aid relief to Sudan) are pressuring Khartoum for the aid to safely reach the refugees, goes to show their little, if any, understanding of human rights. And of how the Western world thinks and operates.
Clearly, the present regime in Khartoum is not fit to govern. There is enough evidence to prove they can never be trusted to do right by its people. They are no better than the lawlords, outlaws and bandits that they allow to roam Sudan and rule regions by intimidation while make a living from theft and looting.
Sudan has had nearly fifty years of independence since the British left. During most of that time, the Sudanese have endured constant war. Sudan needs help in getting its Peace Accord sorted to give a united "New Sudan" every chance to live and trade in peace.
My conclusion is that the present regime will never be fit to govern and must be removed, sooner or later. Preferably sooner.
Who could act as an interim government? I don't know. Could Darfur come under the protection of the U.N. and be made into a Peace Zone where the refugees could return to and farm while the Peace Accord is being sorted for a united and "New Sudan"? I don't know if such a thing is possible. One thing is sure though, there is enough evidence to prove that the present unelected dictatorship in Khartoum are complicit in war crimes, if only through their neglecting their responsibility to protect its people.
Personally, I would support a call for the present regime in Khartoum, along with the other perpretators of atrocities in Sudan, to be arrested and put on trial at the Hague for war crimes.
Further reading:
July 23: Race & Resources Drive Darfur Conflict - Says human rights center. The head of a US university human rights center says race and resources are the driving forces behind the conflict in western Sudan’s Darfur region. “Khartoum must be put on notice that only an open and inclusive democracy will save it from partition into two states, one black African, the other Arab", says Makau Mutua, professor of law and director of the Human Rights Center at the State University of New York in Buffalo.
July 23: Rebels in western Sudan say the pro-government Janjaweed militiamen have attacked civilians in the Darfur region several times this week, despite Khartoum's pledge to disarm the militia. The rebels also accuse the Sudanese government of sending military planes to support the Janjaweed and to harass civilians."
July 23: "A conspiracy of silence on Darfur ... in Beirut" by Julie Flint who writes: "The opportunity to engage in a debate about the monstrous goings-on in Darfur was lost as Khartoum's ambassador in Lebanon was allowed to hijack the presentation of the report and turn it into a platform for Sudan's lies and propaganda. Who was responsible for throwing neutrality in the dustbin by permitting the Sudanese ambassador to speak to his heart's content (and beyond) from a preferential seat on the podium, from where he questioned the integrity of Amnesty International, heaped scorn on human rights concerns and brazenly asserted that he would offer a visa to Sudan - but only to an "Arab" researcher "under my supervision." (Ecstatic applause.) ..."
July 22: Amid Sudan crisis, Khartoum takes delivery of Russian fighter jects: Despite Khartoum's denials of any role in the deaths, groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch say they have evidence that shows the government is arming pro-government Arab militias and using MiG aircraft to attack black Africans in Darfur. "When I was in Chad in February, I collected a number of testimonies from refugees from Darfur who specifically identified MiGs as having been involved in the bombings of villages and so on," said Leslie Lefkow, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who has interviewed people caught up in the conflict. "They drew pictures of what the planes looked like."
July 24: Editorial from Arab News on Darfur Crisis.
- - -
U.S. DRAFTS U.N. RESOLUTION
That threatens sanctions
Yesterday, the US Congress passed a resolution calling on Sudan to arrest the leading members of the militias within 30 days. The text calls for an immediate arms embargo in Darfur and raises the possibility of sending peacekeepers to the region. Experts from the 15 Security Council nations were to discuss the draft on Friday, diplomats said.
Today, US President Bush has told Sudan to halt violence in the troubled Darfur region. Mr Bush urged Khartoum to rein in the Arab militia known as the Janjaweed, and allow relief agencies to work. His comments came after the US Congress - in a non-binding vote - called the Darfur crisis a "genocide".
Resolution key points excerpts: US to lead an international effort to prevent genocide in Darfur; US to consider multilateral or even unilateral intervention; Impose targeted sanctions; Establish a resettlement and rehabilitation fund.
The United Nations Security Council is also pressing for a resolution that could see sanctions imposed on Khartoum if it does not stop the ethnic cleansing. In the UN, Secretary-General Kofi Annan says he believes the Security Council is likely to back a draft resolution threatening Sudan with sanctions over Darfur.
- - -
U.S. DECLARES 'GENOCIDE' IN SUDAN
U.S. U.N. resolution that threatens sanctions
Yesterday, US Congress, by a vote of 422 to zero, passed a non-binding resolution qualifying the atrocities committed in Darfur as "genocide" and calling on the White House to lead international efforts to intervene in the region.
According to the U.N. Genocide Convention, countries are obliged to take action to stop genocide wherever it is taking place. Congress hopes it can now put further pressure on the international community to intervene.
The motion which has passed Congress goes so far as to call on the Bush administration to intervene unilaterally, should the United Nations Security Council fail to act.
- - -
Pope John Paul II on Thursday dispatched a special envoy to Darfur, with the Vatican comparing Darfur to "Rwanda in slow motion" -- an allusion to the 1994 genocide that left at least 800,000 Rwandans dead.
French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier is due to visit Darfur next week.
Update - July 23: Patrick Hall at The Horn of Africa blog has a link to the government of Sudan's response to US Congress declaring the massacres in Sudan as genocide.
- - -
DARFUR REBELS TO RESUME PEACE TALKS
July 22: Two rebel groups from Darfur say they will resume peace talks they broke off with the Sudanese government a few days ago. The agreement to resume negotiations was concluded during crisis talks held at the Geneva-based Center for Humanitarian Dialogue.
Reps from the AU, Chad and the UN attended the one-day meeting to try to persuade rebels hat dialogue was the only way to achieve peace.
At the end of the closed-door session, AU chief mediator said the SLM and the JEM had agreed to continue consultations with the Sudanese government in Khartoum immediately.
However, he acknowledged that the problems, which precipitated the rebel walkout have not been resolved.
The rebels abruptly broke off talks after the Sudanese government refused to demilitarize the so-called Janjaweed Arab militia, and to discuss an exchange of prisoners as preconditions for negotiations.
A spokesman for the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue, confirmed that the parties want to keep the peace process going. "The two sides have shown commitment, and what we do hope is that they follow through with that commitment, and that the innocent people of Darfur that are caught up in the fighting, that their lives can be improved and that we are not too late,"said the CHD spokesman.
Note: At a news conference earlier in the day, the U.N.'s top human rights official, Louise Arbour, expressed her concern over the events unfolding in Darfur. She said outside intervention may be necessary, if the government is unable to protect its own people.
KHARTOUM ADMIT THEY CAN'T CONTROL ARAB OUTLAWS
2m Sudanese are in desperate need of aid
Have 10,000 people from Darfur have been exterminated? Or is the figure 30,000? Have one million been driven from Darfur? Or is the number two million? Have 20,000 fled over the border to the neighbouring country of Chad? Or is it 200,000?
Reports vary on the number of people that have been eliminated from Darfur. The Financial Times seemed to get it right in its report that Arab militia in Sudan have killed up to 30,000 and left 2m in desperate need of aid. But today UN emergency relief coordinator Jan Egeland says the Darfur death toll is at least 30,000 and could be high as 50,000.
Last month, at a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan's President Bashir promised US Defence Secretary Colin Powell and UN General Secretary Kofi Annan to: (1) try the Arab militia leaders believed to be responsible for atrocities; (2) disarm the militia groups; (3) grant freedom of movement to aid workers.
If by the end of this month, the security situation did not improve, President Bashir agreed that Sudan would have to accept the international community's offer of help to get food and aid safely to Sudanese refugees.
The United Nations (191 sovereign member states including U.S. and U.K.), European Union (25 European countries, including U.K.), African Union (53 African nations) and the United States of America now know that no progress whatsoever has been made by the government of Sudan (GoS) in Khartoum.
Despite the past two months of intense political pressure on GoS and the huge amount of aid and diplomatic effort given by the U.S., U.K., Ireland, Italy, Germany, France, Belgium, Holland, Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Kuwait, Libya - the aid and help is still not reaching all of those who need it most.
Aid workers are still being attacked, supplies are being looted, rains are making huge areas impassable, disease is spreading and the killings continue. Even the GoS admitted it cannot disarm the Arab militias that have been running amok for the past ten years.
How can GoS ever provide unimpeded access for aid to safely reach the Sudanese refugees? They can't. Even though the lives of hundreds and thousands of their citizens are at stake, the GoS are rejecting offers of outside help. Why?
The only reason I can come up with is that the GoS cannot see things the way we do. They come from such a different mindset and culture and are a hundred years or more behind us in comprehending human rights.
Well, they need to learn the error of their ways - or else.
Or else -- what? Well, here's the deal and message for GoS in Khartoum: "If you don't listen up and learn pdq, we Brits will come back and sort you out. You've had nearly fifty years to sort yourselves out since we left. Clearly you, and all those before you, can't do it. You'll not get away with threatening us. We weren't an Empire for nothing. So stick that up your flea bitten camel backsides and listen up. Or else -- you're toast.
- - -
BRITAIN IS LEADING FIGHT TO STOP SUDAN CRISIS
EU support for AU mission to include British personnel with military expertise
July 23: UK aid planes left for Darfur.
Prime Minister Tony Blair confirmed he is considering sending troops to Sudan to help distribute aid, lend logistical support to an African Union (AU) protection force to protect refugee camps from marauding militias.
"We rule nothing out, but we are not at that stage yet," Blair told reporters in London. He said the "critical thing", in the short-term, was to try and make the current international strategy work, adding "we want the European Union to make a far bigger commitment on this."
"We have a moral responsibility to deal with this and to deal with it by any means that we can," he told reporters at Downing Street. But he said the first step was to increase diplomatic pressure on the Sudanese government and he stressed the need to work by consensus with African governments through the African Union.
Mr Blair left little doubt about his willingness to consider his sixth overseas military intervention since 1997. He has described the state of Africa as a "scar on the conscience of the world", while the genocide in Rwanda inspired his doctrine of putting humanitarian intervention above state sovereignty.
Britain has been pressing for a United Nations Security Council resolution setting a deadline for the Sudanese government to control the militia and open up access for aid agencies.
Mr Blair held talks last night with Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, about providing assistance for monitoring a ceasefire.
- - -
UK International Development Secretary Mr Hilary Benn said Britain is leading attempts to stop government-backed militias in Sudan from continuing their campaign of murder, rape and terror.
He also confirmed that Britain, the largest cash donor, is heading attempts in the U.N. to force the Sudanese government to take action. "The UK has done as much, if not more, than any other nation in the world" he said.
Mr Benn's comments came as the charity Oxfam prepared to send a third aid flight to Sudan from Manston airport in Kent. The flight carrying 30 tons of water and £90,000 worth of sanitation equipment left at 7pm yesterday.
- - -
UK FOREIGN SECRETARY TO VISIT SUDAN
UK pushes EU for "joint civilian military team" as backup for AU mission
July 23: UK Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw Friday said: "The Sudan army is at best passive and at worst complicit in these attacks".
Mr Straw is set to visit Sudan, and possibly Darfur, next month and will talk with EU foreign ministers on Monday as he's pushing EU members to take action on Sudan that includes sending a "joint civilian military team".
As he said it would not be a British military operation and would not be a fighting force, my guess is, given that 270 armed troops (led by the AU and funded by the EU) are about to become the first foreign troops to set foot on Sudanese soil anyway, Mr Straw is pushing the EU to support a "back-up" for the mission to include British personnel with military expertise.
July 23: U.K. Liberal Democrats have called for Britain to lead an EU military force dealing with the humanitarian crisis in Sudan.
Lib Dem spokesman Sir Menzies Campbell said this diplomatic work was not working. "It is becoming increasingly clear that food aid and pressure on the Sudanese government alone will not be sufficient to stem the impending disaster in Darfur," he wrote to Straw yesterday. "An EU military force operating under a UN mandate looks like the only answer if we are to prevent a disaster on the scale of Rwanda a decade ago. "With US and British forces stretched to breaking point, countries such as France and Germany have the opportunity to make a significant contribution. But Britain too must also contribute to any such force so far as it can.
July 23: Plaid MP backs task force for Sudan crisis - Adam Price has broken with his party's anti-war ethos to urge the deployment of troops to Sudan. If British troops, backed by a United Nations resolution, were sent in to Sudan, Mr Price promised to support the action. It would be the first time a Plaid Cymru MP backed military action by Britain since the no-fly zones were first established in Iraq in 1983.
The Conservatives have said there is a "good case" for military action.
Yay for Britain.
- - -
BRITAIN COULD SEND 5,000 TROOPS TO SUDAN
The head of the British Army has said
July 23: British Army 'ready' to help in Sudan says ic Wales, UK:
Britain could send 5,000 troops to Sudan to intervene in the humanitarian crisis, the head of the Army has said. The Chief of General Staff, General Sir Mike Jackson, said the Army would be ready if called upon.
He said a brigade of 5,000 soldiers could be ready and fully equipped if the Government decided to send troops in. In an interview to be shown on BBC News 24's HARDtalk, General Sir Mike said: "If need be we will be able to go to Sudan. I suspect we could put a brigade together very quickly indeed."
Asked how many troops that would entail, he replied: "Five thousand."
Yay for the British Army :)
Update -
July 24: BBC: UK troops 'ready to go to Sudan'
July 24: Guardian: UK could send troops to Sudan 'quickly'
- - -
SUDAN WARNS U.K. and U.S.
Not to interfere in Darfur
Sudan had the cheek to warn Britain and the United States not to interfere in Darfur after UK Prime Minister Tony Blair said he had not ruled out military aid to help combat the crisis in Darfur.
It is my view that, by issuing the following four statements on Friday, the GoS has sealed its own fate:
(1) "We don't need any (UN) resolutions. Any resolutions from the Security Council will complicate things," said Sudan's Foreign Minister Ismail, who likened U.S. and British pressure as similar to that put on Iraq before the war.
(2) In an interview with the BBC, Sudanese Interior Minister Hussein denied there had been massacres in Darfur. "Disarming the militias is a long process that required patience," he said.
(3) "I don't understand why Britain and the United States are systematically increasing pressure against us," Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail said yesterday on a visit to Paris." (This) pressure closely resembles the increased pressure that was put on Iraq (before the war)," he said.
(4) Sudanese Foreign Minister Ismail, in Paris this week for talks with French Foreign Minister Barnier, when asked to comment on the report that the UK was considering sending troops to help with the aid, said Khartoum would withdraw its forces from the region if British troops were to be deployed, adding: "We will give him the chance if he can give security to Darfur." "The Janjaweed are a gang of faithless thieves and assassins, who have operated outside the law for some 10 years and who are taking advantage of a state of war," the Sudanese minister told reporters.
Given that Mr Ismail does not understand the reasons why Britain and the United States (the two largest donors of aid relief to Sudan) are pressuring Khartoum for the aid to safely reach the refugees, goes to show their little, if any, understanding of human rights. And of how the Western world thinks and operates.
Clearly, the present regime in Khartoum is not fit to govern. There is enough evidence to prove they can never be trusted to do right by its people. They are no better than the lawlords, outlaws and bandits that they allow to roam Sudan and rule regions by intimidation while make a living from theft and looting.
Sudan has had nearly fifty years of independence since the British left. During most of that time, the Sudanese have endured constant war. Sudan needs help in getting its Peace Accord sorted to give a united "New Sudan" every chance to live and trade in peace.
My conclusion is that the present regime will never be fit to govern and must be removed, sooner or later. Preferably sooner.
Who could act as an interim government? I don't know. Could Darfur come under the protection of the U.N. and be made into a Peace Zone where the refugees could return to and farm while the Peace Accord is being sorted for a united and "New Sudan"? I don't know if such a thing is possible. One thing is sure though, there is enough evidence to prove that the present unelected dictatorship in Khartoum are complicit in war crimes, if only through their neglecting their responsibility to protect its people.
Personally, I would support a call for the present regime in Khartoum, along with the other perpretators of atrocities in Sudan, to be arrested and put on trial at the Hague for war crimes.
Further reading:
July 23: Race & Resources Drive Darfur Conflict - Says human rights center. The head of a US university human rights center says race and resources are the driving forces behind the conflict in western Sudan’s Darfur region. “Khartoum must be put on notice that only an open and inclusive democracy will save it from partition into two states, one black African, the other Arab", says Makau Mutua, professor of law and director of the Human Rights Center at the State University of New York in Buffalo.
July 23: Rebels in western Sudan say the pro-government Janjaweed militiamen have attacked civilians in the Darfur region several times this week, despite Khartoum's pledge to disarm the militia. The rebels also accuse the Sudanese government of sending military planes to support the Janjaweed and to harass civilians."
July 23: "A conspiracy of silence on Darfur ... in Beirut" by Julie Flint who writes: "The opportunity to engage in a debate about the monstrous goings-on in Darfur was lost as Khartoum's ambassador in Lebanon was allowed to hijack the presentation of the report and turn it into a platform for Sudan's lies and propaganda. Who was responsible for throwing neutrality in the dustbin by permitting the Sudanese ambassador to speak to his heart's content (and beyond) from a preferential seat on the podium, from where he questioned the integrity of Amnesty International, heaped scorn on human rights concerns and brazenly asserted that he would offer a visa to Sudan - but only to an "Arab" researcher "under my supervision." (Ecstatic applause.) ..."
July 22: Amid Sudan crisis, Khartoum takes delivery of Russian fighter jects: Despite Khartoum's denials of any role in the deaths, groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch say they have evidence that shows the government is arming pro-government Arab militias and using MiG aircraft to attack black Africans in Darfur. "When I was in Chad in February, I collected a number of testimonies from refugees from Darfur who specifically identified MiGs as having been involved in the bombings of villages and so on," said Leslie Lefkow, a researcher for Human Rights Watch who has interviewed people caught up in the conflict. "They drew pictures of what the planes looked like."
July 24: Editorial from Arab News on Darfur Crisis.
- - -
U.S. DRAFTS U.N. RESOLUTION
That threatens sanctions
Yesterday, the US Congress passed a resolution calling on Sudan to arrest the leading members of the militias within 30 days. The text calls for an immediate arms embargo in Darfur and raises the possibility of sending peacekeepers to the region. Experts from the 15 Security Council nations were to discuss the draft on Friday, diplomats said.
Today, US President Bush has told Sudan to halt violence in the troubled Darfur region. Mr Bush urged Khartoum to rein in the Arab militia known as the Janjaweed, and allow relief agencies to work. His comments came after the US Congress - in a non-binding vote - called the Darfur crisis a "genocide".
Resolution key points excerpts: US to lead an international effort to prevent genocide in Darfur; US to consider multilateral or even unilateral intervention; Impose targeted sanctions; Establish a resettlement and rehabilitation fund.
The United Nations Security Council is also pressing for a resolution that could see sanctions imposed on Khartoum if it does not stop the ethnic cleansing. In the UN, Secretary-General Kofi Annan says he believes the Security Council is likely to back a draft resolution threatening Sudan with sanctions over Darfur.
- - -
U.S. DECLARES 'GENOCIDE' IN SUDAN
U.S. U.N. resolution that threatens sanctions
Yesterday, US Congress, by a vote of 422 to zero, passed a non-binding resolution qualifying the atrocities committed in Darfur as "genocide" and calling on the White House to lead international efforts to intervene in the region.
According to the U.N. Genocide Convention, countries are obliged to take action to stop genocide wherever it is taking place. Congress hopes it can now put further pressure on the international community to intervene.
The motion which has passed Congress goes so far as to call on the Bush administration to intervene unilaterally, should the United Nations Security Council fail to act.
- - -
Pope John Paul II on Thursday dispatched a special envoy to Darfur, with the Vatican comparing Darfur to "Rwanda in slow motion" -- an allusion to the 1994 genocide that left at least 800,000 Rwandans dead.
French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier is due to visit Darfur next week.
Update - July 23: Patrick Hall at The Horn of Africa blog has a link to the government of Sudan's response to US Congress declaring the massacres in Sudan as genocide.
- - -
DARFUR REBELS TO RESUME PEACE TALKS
July 22: Two rebel groups from Darfur say they will resume peace talks they broke off with the Sudanese government a few days ago. The agreement to resume negotiations was concluded during crisis talks held at the Geneva-based Center for Humanitarian Dialogue.
Reps from the AU, Chad and the UN attended the one-day meeting to try to persuade rebels hat dialogue was the only way to achieve peace.
At the end of the closed-door session, AU chief mediator said the SLM and the JEM had agreed to continue consultations with the Sudanese government in Khartoum immediately.
However, he acknowledged that the problems, which precipitated the rebel walkout have not been resolved.
The rebels abruptly broke off talks after the Sudanese government refused to demilitarize the so-called Janjaweed Arab militia, and to discuss an exchange of prisoners as preconditions for negotiations.
A spokesman for the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue, confirmed that the parties want to keep the peace process going. "The two sides have shown commitment, and what we do hope is that they follow through with that commitment, and that the innocent people of Darfur that are caught up in the fighting, that their lives can be improved and that we are not too late,"said the CHD spokesman.
Note: At a news conference earlier in the day, the U.N.'s top human rights official, Louise Arbour, expressed her concern over the events unfolding in Darfur. She said outside intervention may be necessary, if the government is unable to protect its own people.
ME and Ophelia
is the personal blog of Ingrid J. Jones
I live by the sea in England, United Kingdom
Here on my laptop I communicate to my friends
About things in general and my life with M.E. and cat Ophelia
Home user technology and business services
Food and household management
How it all impacts on my *lifestyle management programme*
And my battle for more energy.
My Blogger Profile
My other blogs:
Archive:
HOMEPAGE
July 2003
August 2003
September 2003
October 2003
November 2003
December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
January 2007
February 2007
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
January 2009
February 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
October 2009
November 2009
January 2010
June 2010
August 2010