Darfur

Salaam

It seems the bloodshed is continuing. It has been a year or so since this incident was first highlighted.

But it is not getting any real coverage.

Arab Sudanese are at war with non-arab sudanese. Well not at war really since the government is arab sudabnese, and the non-arabs have very little apart from some millitia's.

Many many people have already died. Many many more will die before anything is done.

This is another black mark on the Muslim World. Where is the Arableague? OiC?

The 'evil West' seems to have realised the seriousness of the issue and is pressing it at the UN.

Even George Clooney has got into the act!

Quote:
[size=18]Blair urges EU unity on Darfur[/size]
The prime minister has written to the other 24 members of the European Union to press for an end to violence in the Darfur region of western Sudan.

Tony Blair's letter is part of an effort to pressure Sudan's government to stop military action in the area.

Tens of thousands of people have died and up to two million have been displaced in three years of conflict.

His letter coincides with a Darfur Day of Action in 30 cities worldwide, including London.

Senior members of the Muslim, Jewish and Christian faiths have prayed for Darfur outside Downing Street.

A prayer from Archbishop Desmond Tutu - written with the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams, Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks and Sheikh Ibrahim Mogra - remembered the dead and the displaced, those charged with trying to find a solution, and those perpetrating the violence.

"We pray that those who causing misery and death in Darfur will turn away from racism and violence - may they be forgiven when they turn to You instead."

[b]Peacekeepers refused[/b]

The Darfur Peace Agreement, signed by the government and one of the major rebel groups in May, has failed to end fighting between rival rebel factions.

The mandate of African Union peacekeepers in the region expires at the end of the month and the Sudanese government has refused to approve their replacement by a UN force.

Mr Blair said the EU should play a "central role" in peace efforts and that the Sudanese government should prepare to face isolation if it failed to respond to diplomatic pressure to end the "slaughter".

"The EU should play a central role in mobilising world opinion on this issue," he wrote in the letter, which has also been sent to European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso.

"We should strongly call upon the government of Sudan and non-signatories alike to stop immediately the violence in northern Darfur."

Baroness Amos, the Leader of the House of Lords, said that if the Sudanese government refused to allow UN peacekeepers into the region, the British government would press for further sanctions and for human rights abuses to be investigated by the international criminal court.

"They have a responsibility to look after all of their citizens. We want that UN peacekeeping force in there. We can't see the kind of scale of devastation, human rights abuses, people being killed. The world community cannot stand back and watch this unfold yet again."

[b]Clooney's appeal[/b]

But Sudan's junior foreign minister, Ali Khati, said the situation on the ground was improving. He denied that his government had bombed villages.

And he was critical of the Western media's coverage of events in Sudan.

"People there in the West, in Europe and the United States, are moved by the media. And the media is unfortunately moved by political agendas, and by people making problems in the Third World, like Sudan."

The crisis began in 2003 when ethnic African tribes revolted against the Arab-led Khartoum government.

Actor George Clooney recently addressed the UN on the issue, and said that, if UN forces were not sent in, all aid workers would leave and the 2.5 million refugees who depend on them would die.

"The US has called it genocide. For you it's called ethnic cleansing. But make no mistake - it is the first genocide of the 21st Century."

[url= News[/url]

I agree that muslim countries haven't done enough to condemn the Sudanese government and China who is causing a lot of the trouble there.

One thing I do wonder though is whether these american politicians and movie stars would be so sympathetic if only the people in Darfur were muslims and the Sudanese government wasn't. You get people justifying Milosevic's actions now on the basis that he was fighting "islamist terror".Which is kind of strange considering Christian Serbs and Croats killed eachother as well.

I do not know.

But recently I have been playing the theme that Muslims are actually getting what they deserve.

And so far I cannot find any real error in that logic apart from the start of the chechen conflict.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

I don't know much about the Darfur situation but I'd be very vary wary about US involvement in Sudan.

Quote:
A former commander of NATO's forces in Europe, Clark claims he met a senior military officer in Washington in November 2001 who told him the Bush administration was planning to attack Iraq first before taking action against Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and [b]Sudan[/b].
[url= 2003[/url]

I think this situation would be much better and more honestly handled by anyone but the US. African Union, Arab League, OIC, UN are better candidates for sorting this out.

Frankly I'd love for us to get into Sudan. They are just as complicit in aiding Al Qaeda as the Taliban was.

But we wont...

To summarize Darfur:

The West: "Muslims are killing Christians!!!"
The World: "No mostly its Muslim on Muslim"
The West: "oh"
The West: "Arabs are killing non Arabs!!!"
The World: "Actually nobody is really an "Arab," they are all black."
The West: "Oh..."
The West: "So... they're just like all the other black Africans?"
The World: "yea pretty much..."
The West: "Oh...
The West: "...Natalie Holloway is missing!!!"