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Genocide in slow motion: How Darfur refugees dying protracted death

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  • Genocide in slow motion: How Darfur refugees dying protracted death

    ReliefWeb (press release), Switzerland
    Aug 24 2007


    Genocide in slow motion: How Darfur's refugees are dying a protracted death

    Source: American Jewish World Service (AJWS)


    (excerpt)

    Background

    A delegation of US advocates participated in a mission to eastern
    Chad to launch a global advocacy campaign to address the Darfur
    crisis, and to interview refugees from Sudan and internally displaced
    Chadians. The group also surveyed conditions in the camps - at the
    Oure Cassoni refugee camp in Bahai, the Djabal refugee camp in Goz
    Beida, and the Gouroukoum camp for internally displaced Chadians in
    Goz Beida. After Chad, the group traveled to Kigali to discuss the
    healing and reunification process with survivors of the 1994 Rwandan
    genocide. The group traveled in eastern Chad from August 7 to 11,
    2007 and in Rwanda from August 12 to 15, 2007.

    The delegation in Chad consisted of: Mia Farrow, UNICEF Goodwill
    Ambassador; Ruth Messinger, President of American Jewish World
    Service; Ira Newble, an NBA player on the Cleveland Cavaliers; and
    Jill Savitt, Director of Dream for Darfur. In Rwanda, the delegation
    was joined by Omer Ismail, a Sudanese refugee, and Clare-Hope
    Ashitey, an actor who appeared in Beyond the Gates, a film about the
    Rwandan genocide, and the film Children of Men.

    The advocacy campaign launched by the group is called Olympic Dream
    for Darfur. The campaign is designed to press the Chinese government
    for urgent action to end the Darfur crisis, using the 2008 Games as
    leverage. China is the 2008 Olympic host and has proven to be
    susceptible to pressure about Darfur because of this role. China is a
    focal point because Beijing has unrivaled influence with Khartoum -
    China is a close business partner and fierce diplomatic supporter of
    the Sudanese regime and as such is complicit in the Darfur genocide.
    The advocacy campaign involved the lighting of an Olympic-style torch
    at events in both Chad and Rwanda as a way to call on China to press
    President Bashir of Sudan to accept the implementation of an
    international peacekeeping force for Darfur and to engage in a
    goodfaith peace process. The campaign is also building a global
    anti-genocide movement by uniting communities of genocide survivors
    from different countries. The campaign travels next to Armenia,
    Bosnia, Germany and Cambodia to involve the survivors of these
    genocides in calling for an end to the crisis in Darfur.

    The following report outlines the delegation's observations from Chad
    and Rwanda.

    Refugees Are Experiencing Slow-Motion Genocide

    The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
    Genocide clearly states that in addition to mass killings and
    `deliberate bodily or mental harm with the intent to destroy a
    national, ethnic or racial or religious group,' the crime of genocide
    also includes `deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
    life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or
    in part.' The case for genocide at the hands of the leaders in
    Khartoum and their Janjaweed militias is clear. The United States
    called the Darfur crisis a genocide three years ago. More than
    200,000 Sudanese from Darfur have been killed - and the violence is
    ongoing.

    In addition to the direct killings, the population of the Darfur
    region is now suffering genocide by attrition in refugee camps. By
    refusing to allow international peacekeepers into Darfur and by
    refusing to abide by its numerous ceasefire commitments, the regime
    in Sudan prevents refugees from returning to their homes or to where
    their villages stood. This keeps refugees in camps, where the
    conditions amount to a slow-motion genocide of the survivors who
    managed to flee deadly attacks.

    The refugees with whom we spoke face sickness, disease and
    malnutrition, as well as unsanitary conditions, trauma, emotional
    instability and the inability to forge any semblance of a normal or
    productive life. They are prevented from earning a living, receiving
    an education, or living in a decent shelter. They are even at risk
    collecting firewood for daily cooking, with constant fear of attack.
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