Thursday, December 01, 2005

Lite blogging

Blogging will be lite (if at all) over the next few days. In the meanwhile, here is a link to the Sudan Tribune, a site which compiles the latest news coming out of Sudan and neighboring regions.

The situation in Darfur is still bad

Who would have thought that a genocide could become worse? But after two years of heartbreaking slaughter, rape and mayhem, the situation in Darfur is now spiraling downward.

More villages are again being attacked and burned - over the last week thatch-roof huts have been burning near the town of Gereida and far to the northwest near Jebel Mun.

Aid workers have been stripped, beaten and robbed. A few more attacks on aid workers, and agencies may pull out - leaving the hapless people of Darfur with no buffer between themselves and the butchers.

The international community has delegated security to the African Union, but its 7,000 troops can’t even defend themselves, let alone protect civilians. One group of 18 peacekeepers was kidnapped last month, and then 20 soldiers sent to rescue them were kidnapped as well; four other soldiers and two contractors were killed in a separate incident.

What will happen if the situation continues to deteriorate sharply and aid groups pull out? The U.N. has estimated that the death toll could then rise to 100,000 a month.

The turmoil has also infected neighboring Chad, which is inhabited by some of the same tribes as Sudan. Diplomats and U.N. officials are increasingly worried that Chad could tumble back into its own horrific civil war as well.

This downward spiral has happened because for more than two years, the international community has treated this as a tolerable genocide. In my next column, my last from Darfur, I’ll outline the steps we need to take. But the essential starting point is outrage: a recognition that countering genocide must be a global priority.

2 comments:

John Lombard said...

Have you seen the film The Constant Gardner? The climax takes place in the Sudan. The hero has to flee with villagers who are attacked by a Janjaweed militia. The Janjaweed set fire to the huts, hack anyone they catch to death, and kidnap boys to fill their ranks. There's even a reference to the refugee camps a little later.

Something tells me there'll be a movie about the Sudanese genocide in the model of Hotel Rwanda -- when it's over, and nobody can do anything about it.

Hume's Ghost said...

Have not seen it.