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God save Darfur because we won’t

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Ghanadot

June 4, 2007

 

This is not a statement on faith or a disclaimer of it. Nor is it a claim that God will or won’t save Darfur. Whether God will or not is beyond my ability to discern.

 

But given the situation in Darfur today, it seems certain to assume that no one would.

 

As things stand now, the world, by every definition of it, is a mere bystander in the affairs of Sudan.  And unfortunate for the people in the Darfur region of Sudan, their fate will be dictated by the choices of the very leaders of the world who currently don't seem to care very much for them.

 

These world leaders have a choice to make.  Either they intervene forcefully in Sudan or engage in a peaceful dialogue with the government of Sudan as the only reasonable course left.

 

In the face of the cruelties that have transpired in the Darfur region, it shouldn’t be difficult to assume that one cannot reason with the perpetrators of the horrendous ethnic cleansing that is ongoing in the region.

 

To insist on doing so with the perpetrators, the masters of the diabolical acts in the region, is to be deliberately cruel to the point of being diabolical.

 

To start with the conflict in Darfur is genocide.  It is that plain and simple.

 

It is easy to know genocide when it happens.  And so far, very few nations have recognized it as such. Though there have been some talks about military action to stem the killings, it would be sane not to hold one's breath for this to happen.

 

The nations who could likely use force for the sensible result to happen in Darfur are not likely do so because of the power Arab oil holds over them.

 

China, even if it wanted to, would not because it is enthralled by Sudan as a possible tong term oil resource country, and, therefore is more likely to be compliant with Sudan’s wishes.

 

Africa, perpetually weak, with no force of her own, will continue to look on to see her sons and daughters in Darfur mowed down by the unfolding tragedy.

 

The AU, on the issue of Darfur so far has called for “dialogue.”  Like the rest of the countries of the world, it is ready to use the world as a safe-house for non-action.

 

For the West, a “dialogue” may seem like a politically profitable posture, or rather as a knee-jerk reaction to Bush’s interventionist policy on Iraq.  Iraq was too much, so “dialogue” could be a plausible default mode.

 

But if even the AU will not see the genocide as a reason to use force and part ways with Sudan why should one then not suppose that Europeans might think that using force in Sudan could only result as a fool’s quest as happened in Iraq?

 

But wait till you hear Professor Jeffrey Sachs, the esteemed economist, join the do-nothing group on Darfur.

 

In a statement timed to come soon after President Bush pronounced his economic sanction on Darfur, against Sudan, Sachs showed his displeasure.

 

Sachs claimed that Bush’s economic sanctions “would do little to address the underlying causes of the four-year conflict.”

 

By the way, the same Professor Sachs was always against war.  In Bosina. No?

 

The professor’s premise on the cause of the Darfur conflict, as reported on TomPaine.com, shouldn’t be the ground for disagreement.  But his conclusion should.

 

The premise that “Darfur has been caught in a drought-induced death trap, but nobody has seen fit to approach the Darfur crisis from the perspective of long-term development rather than the perspective of war.” should not cause concern.

 

But his conclusion that “Darfur needs a water strategy more than a military strategy” should serve as a warning for trouble because Sachs, in reality, had no solution to the problem in the Darfur region.

 

What should one do about the ongoing genocide; tell the victims to hold on until the water problem was fixed?

 

That Darfur is in the arid region of Sudan should be a description, but not necessarily a statement for solution or intervention for peace.

 

Professor Sachs was described by BBC's Karen Allen as “professor at Columbia University, an adviser to the UN secretary-general, (and) a long critic of US foreign policy."  

 

Any surprise that Sachs should speak soon after Bush’s pronouncement?

 

Professor Sachs was asking the world not to use force in Darfur until “the underlying causes” were stemmed.

 

His approach could be likened to a trauma victim who was being asked by his doctor to wait for a yet to be manufactured medication.

 

“Until we face up to the underlying reality that at the core, Darfur is a hungry, water-stressed, impoverished area that needs economic development," solution to the Darfur genocide should wait for the world to settle on some all agreeably funded heavy development plan for Sudan first.

 

Others have strongly condemned Professor Sachs’ prescription as a mark of impunity.

 

Sudan to date has waffled from one agreement to the other and from one dialogue to another. Meanwhile, the genocide in Darfur has continued.

 

It will be interesting to know what Professor Sachs said about Bosnia.  Were economic development plans put in place before the military intervention and the tribunals? 

 

One should recall that before anything was done by the West, the cry “genocide” had already gone up to bring attention to what was happening in Bosnia. 

 

It could be good to note that the word “genocide” has yet to be used to describe what is going on today.  And Professor Sachs’ is yet to use the word or show concern for it in his perspective on Darfur.

 

The Bush administration has maintained, since the days of former Secretary of State Colin Powell, that Darfur was genocide.

 

Professor Sachs reputed opposition to Bush’s foreign policy has been clear for some time.  His silence on the issue of genocide in Darfur is loud.  But it has still left us confused as to what exactly he wanted done to save the people of the Darfur region.

 

In the four years of the Darfur conflict, according to the BBC, “more than 200,000 people (have) died …. and 2m have fled their homes.”

 

The dead could be higher. For, who could say with certainty that all in the 2 million that fled from their homes arrived intact and safe at their destinations?

 

 We should also add that the dead counted were mostly African Sudanese, all victims of the Janjaweed, Arab Sudanese militants.

 

The persuasion is there today to call Darfur a genocide. It lies in the fact that there are two races involved in the conflict.  All are Islamic. Religion, therefore, could not be the factor.

 

We may agree with Professor Sachs that the conflict can be driven by scarce resources.  But while we wait for change for new resource formations, we could still agree that the conflict is being waged on racial lines.  Powerful Arab Janjaweeds are cleansing out feeble Sudanese Africans.

 

Professor Sachs’ development plan alone, no matter how massive, will not help dissuade people of a race who are hell-bent on wiping out the other.

 

Again, it will be gratifying to learn what Professor Sachs said about Bosnia.  But, like it or not, Darfur is “genocide.” It will take a superior military force to bring the Janjaweed and the government of Sudan to their senses.

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Washington D.C, June 4, 2007

 

Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.

 



 

   

 

 

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