Friday, April 25, 2008

300,000 possibly dead in Darfur

And yet more people are being slaughtered like animals in Darfur -- while we do nothing. This kind of death toll makes the Iraq War and Hussein regime pale in comparison. Does America really care about humanitarian issues? Of course not! We only care about causes that are preceded with dollar signs. As many as 400,000 people have been killed in Darfur. Another 2.5 million have been driven from their homes and into danger. The threat of rape, torture, murder and malnutrition pursue the women and children of Darfur wherever they flee. World leaders must unite now to end the genocide and establish a lasting peace in Darfur.


From the Jerusalem Post:


The conflict in Darfur is deteriorating, with full deployment of a new peacekeeping force delayed until 2009 and no prospect of a political settlement for a war that has killed perhaps 300,000 people in five years, UN officials said Tuesday.


In grim reports to the Security Council, the United Nations aid chief and the representative of the peacekeeping mission said suffering in the Sudanese region is worsening. Tens of thousands more have been uprooted from their homes and food rations to the needy are about to be cut in half, they said.


"We continue to see the goal posts receding, to the point where peace in Darfur seems further away today than ever," said John Holmes, undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs.


The conflict began in early 2003 when ethnic African rebels took up arms against Sudan's Arab-dominated central government, accusing it of discrimination. Many of the worst atrocities in the war have been blamed on the janjaweed militia of Arab nomads allied with the government.


A joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force took over duties in Darfur in January from a beleaguered 7,000-man AU mission. But only about 9,000 soldiers and police officers of the authorized 26,000 have deployed... .


Today, Holmes told the council, "of Darfur's estimated 6 million people, some 4.27 million have now been seriously affected by the conflict."


He said nearly many of them have had to flee their homes - some 2.45 million people are sheltering elsewhere in Sudan and 260,000 more in neighboring countries. Some 100,000 civilians have been forced to flee just this year, Holmes said. Some 60,000 of them were displaced in West Darfur, which has seen an upsurge in violence.


"Those in the camps feel helpless and voiceless," Holmes said. "The fear of never being able to return to their areas of origin, and the pressure by government authorities to return when conditions are clearly not right, lead to increasing tension, polarization, politicization and even militarization."


The U.N. World Food Program announced last week that it will have to halve the amount of food provided to Darfur's needy next month because humanitarian convoys are being attacked. The cut "could not come at a worse time ... as the rainy season approaches," Holmes said.


Meanwhile American newsstands are talking about Carly Smithson going home from the American Idol competition... Does anyone care about social injustice any more? Am I alone?


UPDATE: The Pope appeals for peace in Somalia, Darfur, and Burundi. See this Reuters article for more information.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

i brought this up at work today, and the question that was posed to me..."where is Darfur?" Good question...since it never seems to make it in the news...AFrica is important, too. Right? Don't worry, you are not alone...there are others...another question that was asked..."what can we do about it?" well praperamedic...do you have an answer for that question?--the better half

prayeramedic said...

The first thing you can do is to raise awareness, i.e. talk about it. The second is to write to the president, which savedarfur.org has made simple by providing a web-based format for you to do so at this link. Third, you can join an activist group by going to this website. Hope that helps some!

Daltonsbriefs said...

I actually think people care, but they don't know what to do.

I visited Sudan in 2006 while on a missions trip to Kenya. The Sudanese hate us ... it's the worst possible combination of black Africans and Muslim fanatics.

First, we should be praying for the Sudanese.
Second, we should be helping the Sudanese refugees camped along the Kenyan border return to their homes with venture capital
Third, we need to do everything possible to help the Kenyans and the Chads and Ethiopians to seek freedoms and democracy.

I'll post more on one of my sites today.

prayeramedic said...

Those are some great points, Steve. My frustration is more aimed at the media and U.S. government. I agree that we need to pray! Thanks for the great advice and I'll be looking for your post later on.

prayeramedic said...

Check out Steve's post on Darfur at http://daltonsbriefs.blogspot.com/2008/04/do-we-even-care-about-darfur.html!

Chris said...

Hi Dan,

We always seem to have this problem. Rwanda and Cambodia are recent examples. Bad people take advantage of chaos and we're afraid because of a fear of being stuck in a mess that we can't solve.

Chris said...

Hi Dan,

Speaking of Carly. When I post about political issues, people flee the blog in terror like I'm asking them to solve the Darfur crisis, but write a post about American Idol and the traffic peaks like a roller coaster.

Daltonsbriefs said...

Thought this additional feed that popped up tonite was pretty interesting: Using Google and Facebook to put pressure on these war criminals

Aegis Trust Seeks Help In Sudan Via Facebook And Google Maps

prayeramedic said...

That's a really neat Facebook application. Very good idea!