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  • Call Specter, Santorum to put Darfur "on radar screen'

    Morning Call (Allentown, Pennsylvania)
    February 24, 2005 Thursday
    FIFTH EDITION

    Call Specter, Santorum to put Darfur "on radar screen'

    By Karen Norvig Berry Special to The Morning Call - Freelance

    There is no easy way to talk about genocide. It's even more difficult
    to listen to people asking you to stop genocide. That's what our
    Amnesty International group learned recently when we talked to staff
    in the offices of Pennsylvania's Republican U.S. Sens. Rick Santorum
    and Arlen Specter about the Darfur region of the Sudan.

    Author Samantha Power, who studied American reaction to genocides
    from Armenia to Rwanda in her book, "Problems from Hell," says, "The
    fear with genocide is the minute you engage, you are going to get
    dragged in to do the real deal, to send in troops and to be taking
    serious political and military risks." She calls it a "system shut
    down" because the political costs are high to act and zero to do
    nothing. That's the inertia that human rights activists must
    overcome.

    At the end of one interview, a senatorial staffer told us the Darfur
    issue has fallen off the U.S. radar screen. That was a sudden plummet
    to those of us who were hoping for action. Last summer, Congress
    called it genocide and asked for sanctions. But since then, the news
    has been full of the war in Iraq, the constant upset in the Middle
    East, the tsunami and Social Security. We are a society that craves
    novelty in our news. So although the massacres in the western part of
    Sudan, known as Darfur, continue in the form of village strafing by
    government planes and attacks by militia and mounted Janjaweed
    (private militia), incredibly, we just don't hear much about it.

    The UN report in late January was more than disappointing with its
    conclusion that it had no proof of "genocidal intent" on the part of
    the Khartoum government of Sudan. This was in direct opposition to
    the judgments of former Secretary of State Colin Powell and the
    Congress who called it genocide last July.

    Last summer, both Sen. Santorum and Sen. Specter sent statements
    about their commitments to ending the violence in Darfur for public
    reading at a Bethlehem vigil jointly sponsored by Amnesty
    International and an arm of the Jewish Federation of the Lehigh
    Valley. Also speaking out against the violence were academics,
    religious people (Muslims, Jews and Episcopalians) and an
    international charity--CARE.

    Sen. Santorum said he was working "to negotiate an international
    response to the emerging famine and extreme crisis in Darfur." He
    said he had sponsored the May Senate resolution condemning the
    government of Sudan "for its attacks, and for its failure to stop
    militia attacks on the innocent civilians in Darfur." He had urged
    Secretary Powell to commit emergency assistance and to "publicly
    identify those responsible for the atrocities and impose targeted
    sanctions against them."

    Sen. Specter was equally clear: "Today the situation in Sudan
    represents the worst humanitarian crisis facing the world and has
    left in its wake more than 30,000 dead and over one million
    displaced." He noted that he had been an original co-sponsor of S.
    2705, the Comprehensive Peace for Sudan Act which authorized $1
    billion "for food, shelter, health services, infrastructure
    rehabilitation and disarmament and demobilization assistance for
    Sudan."

    So we went to Washington expecting to find some resonance with this
    issue. Having just observed the 60th anniversary of the freeing of
    Auschwitz, we talked about the similarities to the Holocaust and
    genocides in Cambodia, the Balkans and Rwanda and how we Americans
    keep saying "never again." Therefore, shouldn't the United States,
    for humanitarian and moral reasons, take leadership in this crisis,
    as President Bush implied, in commenting on earlier atrocities, "Not
    on my watch"?

    We asked our senators to put this issue on their front burners, to
    speak on the Senate floor about Darfur, to urge President Bush and
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to go to Sudan (as Powell did
    last July). We extended invitations to both senators to speak here in
    the Lehigh Valley on this issue. We asked both to look at the
    uncontrolled trade in small arms that makes guns and rockets
    accessible to guerrilla groups not only in Sudan, but in many other
    African countries where society is in chaos. We supplied them with
    two Amnesty International reports on Sudan.

    But we fear the issue is "off the radar screen" unless constituents
    say they want America to pressure the Sudanese government. The local
    phone number for Sen. Specter is 610-434-1444 and for Sen. Santorum,
    610-770-0142. Tell them that the people of Darfur certainly is "on
    our watch."

    Karen Norvig Berry of Bethlehem is a local coordinator for Amnesty
    International USA.

    ***

    "At the end of one

    interview, a senatorial staffer told us the

    Darfur

    issue has fallen off the U.S. radar screen."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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