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One Footstep For Every Five Dead

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  • One Footstep For Every Five Dead

    ONE FOOTSTEP FOR EVERY FIVE DEAD

    Imprint, Canada
    University of Waterloo
    April 4 2007

    UW Genocide Action Group (GAG) held its third annual "Footsteps of
    Death" walk for Darfur on Wednesday, March 28 from 2:00p.m.-7:30p.m.

    With each foot walked representing about five people killed in Sudan,
    students repeatedly lapped around Ring Road, totalling 23 km.

    Christopher Tuckwood, president of UWGAG, started the event in 2005
    after hearing discusstion about the situation in Darfur, which inspired
    him to create "Footsteps of Death."

    After doing some simple math, Tuckwood decided to walk nine laps of
    Ring Road to raise awareness - one foot for every death in Darfur by
    2005, an amount which has multiplied by over five times since then.

    In response to criticisms regarding the timing of the event, he
    maintains that it is better at the busy end of term than during the
    bitter cold of winter.

    Tuckwood ran the fledgling event on his own for the first year as UWGAG
    had yet to be formed, and the walk functioned solely as an awareness
    raiser. Last year Tuckwood realized the potential to fundraise with
    the event, with this year's walk raising a total of $2,500.

    All funds raised through the event will go to Oxfam's Canadian Students
    for Darfur Appeal. Tuckwood and UWGAG chose this organization due to
    Oxfam's reputability and the fact that the organization guarantees
    100 per cent of the proceeds, minus minimal banking fees, will go
    directly to humanitarian aid in Darfur.

    Tuckwood advocates donating money as "hunger is as much a weapon
    being used against the people of Darfur as weapons or bombs."

    Since the inception of UWGAG, its membership - as well as surport
    for the walk - has been increasing.

    In the fall UWGAG held a conference for Darfur which received 140
    attendees. Earlier this month, they hosted a benefit concert with an
    attendance of over 200 people. UWGAG are also selling black T-shirts
    with "DARFUR" written across the chest in bold green letters for $10
    to increase publicity and raise funds.

    According to Tuckwood, UWGAG's aim is to "take history and relate it to
    today." They've attempted to do so through screenings of movies like
    The Pianist and Hotel Rwanda, which feature premises that closely
    relate to the situation in Darfur. Although the group is intended
    to spread awareness about genocide, its focus is on Darfur because
    "that's what's happening now."

    When asked about what he believes to be the major hindrance to
    international involvement in Darfur, Tuckwood emphasized China's
    influence as a permanent member of the UN Security Council and its
    interests in Darfur, which he concedes "get harped on a lot." Sudan
    gets a percentage of its national income from China's purchases
    of their oil; in turn, 70 per cent of this goes into the Sudanese
    military which helps perpetrate the current genocide.

    Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir has continually resisted the
    deployment of UN peacekeeping troops to Darfur with the argument that
    they must be more pre-dominantly African. However, there are already
    African Union forces in Darfur which are not achieving much success as
    they are "undermanned, underequipped, underfunded, and undertrained,"
    to use Tuckwood's words for a seemingly general consensus.

    Tuckwood advocates that there is need for more western involvement in
    Darfur; otherwise the same problems of improperly trained forces will
    persist. He believes that the "world community must act together"
    and has a "moral responsibility" to intervene. He also propounds
    that military intervention is "absolutely the only thing that ends
    genocide" because it is impossible to reason with people committed
    to killing others, citing the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, and
    the Cambodian genocide as historical examples where violence was the
    only action capable of ending the conflict.

    Media coverage of the Darfur genocide has been limited, so Tuckwood
    urges students to contact the media and inform them that they want
    more news on Darfur. UWGAG checked the KW Record's archives and
    discovered that while 7,000 articles have been written on Iraq in the
    past year and 3,000 on the Israel/Palestine conflict, they have only
    printed 301 on Darfur. Meanwhile, 317 articles have been published
    on Britney Spears. The Record declined to comment on this discovery
    but did print UWGAG's letter to the editor regarding this information.

    Those who wish to be notified about future UWGAG events can e-mail
    them at [email protected].

    http://imprint.uwaterloo.ca/in dex.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=13 29&Itemid=55&issuedate=2007-03-30
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