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New York Times Columnist Speaks On Darfur At U. Oregon

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  • New York Times Columnist Speaks On Darfur At U. Oregon

    NEW YORK TIMES COLUMNIST SPEAKS ON DARFUR AT U. OREGON
    By Edward Oser, Oregon Daily Emerald

    Oregon Daily Emerald via U-Wire
    May 1, 2007 Tuesday

    New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof began his presentation
    to the overflowing crowd in 150 Columbia by showing images of people
    he met under trees he walked past when he first visited a refugee
    camp for those displaced by the genocide in Darfur, Sudan.

    The first was a man who had been shot in the face and left for dead
    in a pile of bodies, two of which belonged to his parents. The man's
    brother found him in the pile and carried him for 49 days to the
    refugee camp.

    The fourth was a woman whose husband had been killed before her eyes,
    whose two small children were stripped from her arms and killed in
    front of her, and who was repeatedly gang raped alongside her two
    sisters, the two of whom were killed in front of her. Her attackers,
    Sudanese government-sponsored Janjaweed militiamen, then scarred her
    leg to permanently and publicly stigmatize her as a rape victim.

    Kristof said after hearing this story, he stood and saw trees like
    these ones all round him in every direction. That experience, he said,
    has kept him writing about "the first genocide of the 21st century."

    Darfur consists of a large area of mostly arid land in western Sudan.

    The conflict that has led to the genocide has pitted Arabs, who are
    generally lighter-skinned nomadic herdsmen, against non-Arabs, who are
    generally darker-skinned settled farmers, Kristof said. Conflict has
    simmered between these groups for centuries for a variety of reasons
    including competition for water and forage land, and climate change
    has exacerbated the conflict by spreading the desert and making water
    more scarce.

    But, Kristof said, this is not a genocide caused by climate change.

    The devastating effects of climate change are evident in the
    neighboring countries of Chad and Niger. What's fundamentally different
    in Sudan is that actors in the government have devised a policy of
    mass murder.

    It began when anti-government insurrectionists rose in southern Sudan,
    and rational and pragmatic actors in the government decided to employ
    Arab militiamen to raid several of their villages to kill men and rape
    women, setting an example for future uprisings. This tactic devolved
    into policy and then a war, the peace accords of which were signed in
    2005. But Janjaweed militiamen are still raiding villages in Darfur
    and the raids are spreading into the neighboring states of Chad and
    the Central African Republic.

    In the average Janjaweed raid, 200 to 300 people attack a village
    and kill about 50. Most of the raiders feel a grudge against the
    villagers (complaints range from theft of water to encroachment
    on foraging territory to the occasional theft of livestock) but
    most are in it for the loot. Pillage from a raid can vastly improve
    one's holdings in Darfur. Most Janjaweed will just shoot in the air,
    Kristof said, but there are some -- maybe a couple dozen -- who are
    more pathological. Sudan emptied its prisons to fill the ranks of
    the Janjaweed, Kristof said.

    In the early stages of the conflict, women who told authorities
    they were raped were arrested for adultery. Now, women who leave the
    refugee camps to find firewood are raped regularly.

    When he asked a local man why women get the firewood instead of men,
    the man told him "when men go, they are killed. When women go, they
    are only raped."

    "This is not rape as a byproduct of chaos," Kristof said. "This is
    really a government policy of rape."

    The genocide is continuing because global political powers are allowing
    it to continue, Kristof said.

    The Chinese government is propping up the Sudanese government,
    Kristof said in a panel discussion earlier Monday. Sudan exports 60
    percent of its oil to China, and when Janjaweed shoot kids in Darfur,
    Kristof said, they do so with Chinese-made AK-47 assault rifles.

    Kristof said American leadership has failed throughout history in
    stopping genocide. When Armenians were being slaughtered in 1915,
    President Woodrow Wilson looked the other way. During the Nazi
    Holocaust, President Franklin D. Roosevelt refused to bomb rail
    lines that were bringing people to the death camps. During the 1994
    genocide in Rwanda, President Bill Clinton refused to even use the
    term genocide because doing so might hold him responsible.

    Because of lobbying efforts by evangelical Christian anti-genocide
    activists, President George W. Bush knew of the genocide early and
    aspired to use his power to put an end to it, Kristof said. But
    Bush's aspirations haven't translated into reality. He's been pretty
    good about sending medical relief aid, Kristof said, but after four
    years of doctors carving bullets out of kids, continuing to fund the
    bandages has proven ineffective at stopping the genocide.

    The media aren't helping either, he said.

    During the Nazi Holocaust, The New York Times published 24,000 articles
    on its front page. Only seven of them were concerned with the Nazi's
    treatment of Jews, Kristof said. Additionally, he said, the three major
    broadcast networks showed 45 minutes of footage relating to Darfur,
    while dedicating 55 minutes of footage to the false confession in
    the JonBenet Ramsey murder case.

    The staggering annual numbers of deaths from malaria and diarrhea and
    the late-1990s, early-2000s war in Congo -- the most deadly conflict
    since World War II -- are expensive stories to cover. News executives
    are less inclined to send a crew to Congo when their rival will cover a
    cheaper story about a runaway bride that will beat them in the ratings,
    Kristof said.

    Kristof said he's "not terribly optimistic about this being improved."

    Addressing the audience, Kristof said if the genocide is going to stop,
    "It's gonna have to come from you and people like you."

    In Darfur, Kristof said, "there's no doubt about it -- you see evil --
    you feel evil."

    "The only thing we can do in response is to try and assert our humanity
    and stand up to it," he said.

    In the wake of Iraq, Kristof said, sending ground troops into oil-rich
    Sudan will not help end the genocide. It may even help Sudanese
    President Omar al-Bashir by allowing him to play the victim.

    President Bush should instead invite survivors of the genocide to
    the White House, have a primetime speech about Darfur, bring together
    global leaders for a summit on how to end the genocide, put pressure on
    the Sudanese government, work with regional Arab powers to pressure
    the Sudanese government, and send Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice to speak with Sudanese leaders. Any or all of these would help,
    he said, because the situation is getting worse.

    Individuals can help, Kristof said. People can call the White House,
    write letters to their congressmen, and write letters to local and
    foreign newspapers. The political pressure activists have put on
    the White House has already saved hundred of thousands of lives,
    Kristof said. The genocide will stop only as a result of the concerted
    efforts of many different actors working together, Kristof said,
    but it's possible.

    University of Oregon student Natasha Compton, who watched the lecture
    on a live video feed in 123 Pacific, said she heard about the event
    from a friend. Now, Compton said, she's planning on writing a letter
    of her own.
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