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  • Genocide in Sudan

    Harvard University Gazette, MA
    July 22 2004

    Genocide in Sudan
    SPH's Leaning investigates and urges action
    By Ken Gewertz
    Harvard News Office


    The international community has not succeeded very well at stopping
    incidents of genocide. From Armenia to Rwanda, efforts at
    intervention have generally been either nonexistent or too little and
    too late.

    The fact that new opportunities to finally get it right occur with
    distressing regularity can hardly be regarded as a positive factor,
    yet for those who seek to mitigate human suffering, these
    opportunities are still a powerful call for action and hope.


    These young people have settled at a refugee "location" (not a camp)
    near Chad's border with Sudan. The United Nations High Commissioner
    for Refugees (UNHCR) has moved most refugees in such settlements to
    camps because of the danger posed by frequent cross-border attacks by
    Sudanese militia. This group feared that UNHCR would not be able to
    transfer them to camps before the rainy season began. (Photo courtesy
    of Physicians for Human Rights)
    The Darfur region of western Sudan is the latest area to give rise to
    such a call. The non-Arab inhabitants of this poor and arid region
    have become the direct targets of attack by a loosely organized Arab
    militia known as Janjaweed, with apparent backing by military forces
    controlled by the Sudanese government. The conflict arises in a
    context of resource constraints and was initially described as a
    response to two rebel groups who formed against the Sudanese
    government. But in the past 16 months it has evolved into a vicious
    program of terror and death, aimed at destroying the livelihoods of
    the non-Arabs and driving them off their land.

    The Arab marauders have swept into non-Arab villages in Darfur,
    murdering the men, raping the women, burning houses, stealing
    livestock, and forcing the survivors to flee into larger towns in
    Darfur or across the border into Chad. So far, more than a million
    non-Arab Darfurians have been displaced within Darfur and another
    200,000 have sought refuge in Chad.

    In May, Jennifer Leaning, professor of international health in the
    School of Public Health, spent two weeks observing conditions and
    interviewing Darfurian refugees along the Chad border as part of an
    investigative team sponsored by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR).
    The team's report was published June 23.


    Jennifer Leaning, professor of international health in the School of
    Public Health, was part of an investigative team that reported on the
    conditions of Darfurian refugees along the Chad border. Leaning says,
    `What has been delivered to the government of Sudan, very forcibly I
    think, in the last couple of weeks, is the message: `Hold on to any
    of your expectations, guys. You are not going to be readmitted back
    into the community of good nations until you adequately settle this
    problem in Darfur.'' (Staff photo Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard News
    Office)

    Since her return, Leaning has appeared on radio and TV programs and
    has visited Washington to urge government officials to take action.
    At the moment, she said, the prospects for mobilizing some sort of
    intervention seem to be looking up.

    "I would say that things are looking more hopeful, largely because
    just in the last three weeks there has been a progressive groundswell
    of discussion about what's going on in Darfur. More and more media
    outlets are handling the story, and there are higher- and
    higher-level discussions in government and in national institutions
    about actually doing something."

    What PHR and other human rights groups hope to do is pressure the
    Sudanese government to end its support of Janjaweed and force the
    group to stop its genocidal campaign in Darfur. According to Leaning,
    there is some possibility of accomplishing this goal because Sudan
    has been looking forward to improving its standing with the
    international community as a reward for ending its long-running civil
    war between the north and the south.

    "What has been delivered to the government of Sudan, very forcibly I
    think, in the last couple of weeks, is the message: 'Hold on to any
    of your expectations, guys. You are not going to be readmitted back
    into the community of good nations until you adequately settle this
    problem in Darfur.'"

    Secretary of State Colin Powell has recently visited Sudan to make
    his own assessment of the situation in Darfur. He is the
    highest-ranking U.S. official to visit the country in several
    decades. Andrew Natsios, the administrator of the U.S. Agency for
    International Development (USAID) accompanied him. UN
    Secretary-General Kofi Annan has also recently traveled to Darfur.
    And, according to Leaning, President Bush has been in communication
    with Sudanese President Umar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir. Human rights
    organizations would like Bush and leaders in other countries to apply
    greater pressure on al-Bashir to fulfill a promise he made June 19
    that he would call off the Janjaweed militia.

    The visits of Powell and Annan have helped to raise the visibility
    and urgency of the need to organize a response to this ongoing attack
    on a civilian population. "But Powell only went to the areas that are
    already well traveled. He didn't see the most isolated and trapped -
    and he did not complain about that. We are still not putting enough
    pressure on the Sudanese government to bring about an immediate end
    to this conflict and this policy of obstruction of aid," Leaning
    said.

    But even with high-level officials beginning to pay attention to the
    genocidal activity in Darfur, a favorable outcome to the situation is
    anything but assured. Already, many thousands have died, and many
    thousands more have been rendered homeless and at risk of disease and
    death in a harsh, unforgiving environment. The rainy season has now
    arrived, washing out primitive roads and making it all but impossible
    to bring food, water, and supplies to the refugees, except by
    airlift. Even under present conditions, trucking supplies to the
    displaced persons in Darfur has proved difficult because of efforts
    by the Sudanese government to obstruct access.

    "This part of the world is very hard to survive in," said Leaning.
    "When people are driven from their water sources and land, when their
    animals are killed or stolen, it deprives them of their source of
    livelihood. Then, if they can't get outside aid, they will die."

    Even if people are able to wait out the rainy season, returning to
    their land afterward is absolutely essential to ensure their
    continued survival, for that is when they must plant crops for the
    next harvest, Leaning said.

    A further concern is that the Sudanese government will fail to
    respond to pressure and change its policy in Darfur. In this case,
    the matter will have to be brought before the UN Security Council,
    with the possibility of greater coercive measures adopted, including
    sending troops under a Chapter VII mandate, perhaps invoking the
    Genocide Convention of 1948.

    "The problem now," said Leaning, "is that the United States has not
    publicly stated what we all know to be the case: that the Sudanese
    government is responsible for supporting this conflict in Darfur, for
    obstructing humanitarian aid, and for arming the Janjaweed. Nor has
    the U.S. managed to persuade major European nations to back a stiff
    UN Security Council resolution that calls the Sudanese government to
    account and demands immediate action."

    ---------
    Jennifer Leaning (holding notebook) talks to the leader of the Goz
    Amer refugee camp. The man in the blue shirt at left and the woman
    behind Leaning to the right are both translators working with the
    Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) team. Because of the sensitive
    nature of testimony given by female refugees, many of whom were
    raped, PHR interviewed men and women separately. Leaning, working
    with a female translator, interviewed women who had been raped or
    suffered other forms of sexual violence. (Photo courtesy of
    Physicians for Human Rights)
    http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2004/07.22/01-sudan.html
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