Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Darfur crisis, the delegation, and you

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Darfur crisis, the delegation, and you

    The Providence Journal (Rhode Island)
    April 25, 2006 Tuesday
    All Editions

    The Darfur crisis, the delegation, and you

    M. CHARLES BAKST


    In a recent House speech, Rep. Jim Langevin said of Darfur, "We
    should all be ashamed that the atrocities that have taken place there
    are happening in our time. Where is the world's outrage? Why have we
    not learned from the mistakes in the past -- the Holocaust, Armenia,
    Cambodia and Rwanda?"

    He was speaking for a bill, which the House passed, directing
    President Bush to impose sanctions on Sudan and calling on NATO to
    step in to help protect people.

    Government-sanctioned genocide in Sudan's Darfur region has killed
    400,000 civilians and displaced millions. Rape and hunger are
    rampant.

    There'll be a Save Darfur rally in Washington on Sunday
    (www.savedarfur.org). Fittingly, the 150-plus sponsor organizations
    include more than 20 Jewish groups. In light of the Holocaust, Jews
    should feel a special obligation to demand that Mr. Bush and Congress
    intensify efforts to end the horror in Darfur.

    Rhode Island's congressional delegation says constituents are far
    likelier to talk about, say, gas prices, health care, immigration or
    Iraq. Indeed, the heavy commitment of troops in Iraq can work against
    acting on Darfur. For example, Rep. Patrick Kennedy, the Rhode
    Islander most vocal in support of sending troops to Darfur -- in
    concert with forces from African countries and the United Nations --
    finds no appetite for it in Washington.

    Sen. Jack Reed says America probably could provide some limited
    logistical military support but, given the Iraq war and threats from
    North Korea and terrorists, "The strain on our military forces is
    severe."

    To many Americans, Darfur is remote and complex. "It doesn't have the
    clarity of what we recognized too late was the Holocaust," says Reed,
    who nevertheless deems it imperative to act. (Darfur would be an apt
    place for the kind of up-close, on the ground observation mission he
    likes to make.)

    There are several economic and diplomatic steps the United States
    could take in regard to Darfur and which Rhode Islanders in Congress
    endorse.

    For instance, Sen. Lincoln Chafee says U.N. peacekeeping troops
    showed "amazing effectiveness" in Liberia and the United States
    should lean on the U.N. to send a force to Darfur.

    But Washington needs to be jolted into making Darfur a top priority.
    Langevin says, "Get educated about the issue." And contact Congress
    and the White House. A critic of the Iraq war, Langevin asserts,
    "It's amazing that the president can act decisively when he cares
    about injecting the U.S. into a situation. Why can't he get this
    worked up about the genocide that's occurring in Darfur?"

    Kennedy, discussing Sunday's rally, says that advances in America,
    such as on civil rights, haven't happened simply because they're
    just. "They've happened because people have petitioned their
    government and raised the consciousness of America."

    He says of the atrocities in Darfur, "I don't think human beings can
    look the other way."

    I'd like to think he is right.

    Certainly, he is right when he says that Darfur calls to mind a quote
    identified with Martin Niemoeller, who was a Protestant minister in
    Nazi Germany:

    "They came first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I
    wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak
    up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists,
    and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they
    came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a
    Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time no one was left
    to speak up."

    Will you speak up for Darfur?

    M. Charles Bakst is The Journal's political columnist.
Working...
X