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  • Bearing Responsibility For Genocide

    BEARING RESPONSIBILITY FOR GENOCIDE
    by Carlo Romero

    Oklahoma Daily, OK
    Oct 4 2005

    Staff column

    "We have talked; we have sympathized; we have expressed our horror;
    the time to act is long past due."

    These words appeared in a 1943 resolution by the U.S. Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee calling for the liberation of European Jews from
    the Nazi Holocaust.

    They need to be spoken again about the genocide in Darfur, Sudan,
    before the conscience of another generation is stained.

    Already, since 2003, an estimated 300,000 African Sudanese have been
    summarily slaughtered by their own Arab government in Darfur. At the
    same time, more than 2 million people have been driven from their
    homes in Darfur and forced to live indefinitely in refugee camps
    in other regions of Sudan or neighboring Chad. Refugees have been
    left to fight for sparse humanitarian aid while being harassed by
    government militias.

    The United States has a responsibility to take definitive action to
    stop genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.

    According to a report by the United Nations International Commission of
    Inquiry on Darfur released in January, "Government forces and militias
    conducted indiscriminate attacks, including killing of civilians,
    torture, enforced disappearances, destruction of villages, rape and
    other forms of sexual violence, pillaging and forced displacement,
    throughout Darfur."

    Alarmingly, the U.N. Commission found that "attacks on villages,
    killing of civilians, rape, pillaging and forced displacement have
    continued" despite its presence in the Sudan.

    On Sept. 9, 2004, the United States declared through then Secretary
    of State Colin Powell that the atrocities committed by the Sudanese
    government amounted to genocide.

    In a statement to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Powell
    cited "a consistent and widespread pattern of atrocities committed
    against non-Arab villagers" and "that the government of Sudan and
    the Janjaweed bear responsibility."

    Powell was right about the scale of human devastation. He was wrong
    about who bears responsibility.

    In a day and age when a person can fly anywhere in the world in less
    than 24 hours, when no First World closet is without textiles from at
    least 10 Third-World countries, when the Internet reveals precision
    satellite photos of every square mile on the globe at any time of the
    day to anyone interested, we all bear responsibility for the genocide
    that is taking place in Darfur.

    Americans in particular, who still live in a democracy (despite the
    complaints of journalists and college professors), bear responsibility
    for seeking information about the genocide and provoking their
    government leaders to take action.

    Tragically, the glaring majority of the civilized world has managed
    to ignore the atrocities of Darfur.

    Print media have buried stories about Sudan in the depths of their
    publications. And, in 2004, NBC and CBS spent a total of eight minutes
    covering the genocide in Darfur (Harper's Index, October 2005). The
    fourth estate has failed to fulfill its watchdog role, thus forcing
    those interested in Sudan to turn to less accessible sources.

    More and more, the situation bears stark resemblance to the genocide
    inflicted on Armenians by the Ottoman-Turkish government in the second
    decade of the 20th century. Despite a mountain of evidence exposing the
    horrors, including photographs of mass graves and execution squads,
    the United States held an isolationist stance during the Armenian
    genocide and allowed over one million Christian Armenians to fall by
    knife, bullet or worse to the Ottoman government. The country that
    is now Turkey still denies the genocide ever took place.

    The world's reaction to the genocide in Darfur is also reminiscent
    of the reaction to the more recent genocide that took place in Rwanda
    in 1994. In Rwanda, more than 800,000 Tutsis were slaughtered at the
    hands of the Hutu majority while the world watched on the evening news.

    The United States never involved itself in Rwandan genocide. And
    the United Nations, who maintained peacekeeping troops in the region
    to prevent widespread violence prior to the genocide, abandoned the
    Tutsis and its purpose when the violence actually escalated.

    Last Wednesday, Sept. 28, the U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland
    warned about Darfur, "If (violence) continues to escalate, if it
    continues to be so dangerous on humanitarian work, we may not be able
    to sustain our operation for 2.5 million people requiring lifesaving
    assistance."

    We walk into the Holocaust Museum and out of Hotel Rwanda saying
    "never again." Yet, in the words of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
    "It is happening again."

    Americans can only inspire their government to take action in Darfur
    by displaying popular sentiment in favor of such action.

    We must write our congressmen to voice distress about the genocide
    in the Sudan.

    We must organize demonstrations to show our leaders that we are
    unified in our humanitarian cause.

    But first, we must accept responsibility. Then we must act.

    -Carlo Romero is a letters senior. His column appears every other
    Tuesday, and he can be reached at [email protected].

    http://www.oudaily.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/10/04/4341f89d86a3f
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