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Comment: Sudan genocide challenges Canadian indifference

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  • Comment: Sudan genocide challenges Canadian indifference

    CanadianChristianity.com, Canada
    Sept 23 2004

    Comment: Sudan genocide challenges Canadian indifference

    By Mel Middleton
    ChristianWeek

    GENOCIDE is raging in the nation of Sudan. It is now unquestionably
    the greatest humanitarian crisis in the world today.

    Unfortunately, our political leadership is not acknowledging it. The
    reason for this is clear. Use of the term 'genocide,' under
    international law, carries with it an obligation for countries to act
    -- and action to save African lives carries too few political
    benefits.

    Following the Nazi holocaust, a shocked international community
    cried, "Never again!" Never again would a dictator like Hitler be
    permitted to exterminate an ethnic group like the Jews. Never again
    would the world stand idly by while hundreds of thousands of people
    stood waiting to be slaughtered. Never again would such an evil be
    allowed to take root and flourish.

    But it has. The list of post-Nazi genocides -- including Biafra,
    Cambodia, Rwanda, Congo and Sudan -- continues to grow. The
    international community, including Canada, has yet to demonstrate
    that it is serious about stopping genocide.

    We recently observed the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan holocaust,
    where the world community stood idly by while extremists hacked to
    death more than 800,000 people in front of the world's media. This
    genocide was both predictable and preventable, yet the international
    community did nothing.

    But no politician, no bureaucrat, no western official has paid any
    political price for this decision -- one which has wrought such
    unimaginable suffering on the entire region. U.S. president Bill
    Clinton, who led the way in 'doing nothing,' was re-elected. UN
    bureaucrat Kofi Annan, who gave the orders to 'do nothing,' was
    promoted to the top UN position of Secretary General.

    Recently, the Canadian House of Commons voted to declare the Turkish
    slaughter of Armenians to be "genocide." Yet Canada's Liberal cabinet
    refused to support the motion. Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham
    urged parliamentarians not to recognize this genocide, fearing that
    it might adversely affect trade with Turkey. Canada's justice
    minister, Irwin Cotler, who only a few days before had issued strong
    pronouncements about the need to never stand idly by in the face of
    genocide, did not even bother to show up for the vote.

    With political leadership like this, it is not surprising that
    genocide is mushrooming in Darfur, Sudan. As New York Times columnist
    Nicholas D. Kristof wrote in an April 14 editorial: "In the last l00
    years, the United States has reacted to one genocide after another --
    Armenians, Jews, Cambodians, Bosnians -- by making excuses at the
    time, and then saying, too late, 'Oh, if only we had known!'

    "Well, this time we know what is happening in Darfur: 110,000
    refugees have escaped into Chad and testify to the atrocities. How
    many more parents will be forced to choose whether their children are
    shot or burned to death before we get serious?"

    On July 9, 2004, Sudan researcher Eric Reeves pleaded with the world
    to take action, concluding that if genocide is allowed to take its
    ugly course in Sudan, "It will not be because we did not know what
    was happening or what needed to be done. It will be because we
    ourselves, acquiescing in the face of political obstacles, judged
    these African lives not worth saving. It is difficult to imagine an
    uglier truth for history to record, but history will have no choice."


    For Canadians, the moral implications of genocide in Sudan are even
    more disturbing. It was Canadian oil money and Canadian moral cover
    which helped to solidify Khartoum's brutal stranglehold on power in
    Sudan. It was this blood oil, backed by Canada's banks and the Canada
    Pension Plan, which provided Sudan's military junta with the
    resources to purchase the helicopter gunships and other weaponry of
    genocide. Sudan's holocaust is the direct result of failed Canadian
    foreign policy.

    The real lesson of the tragedy in Sudan is that genocide will
    continue to occur until politicians pay a price for allowing it to
    occur. As long as turning a blind eye to genocide is the political
    path of least resistance, the cry of "never again" will have no
    meaning.

    For God's people, who are commanded to "let justice roll down like a
    river," indifference is not a moral option.

    Mel Middleton is executive director of Freedom Quest International.
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