By Gene Sperling
03/22/2006
The World's Shame for Doing Too Little in Darfur: Gene Sperling
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Below is an
excerpt of an article from Bloomberg News:
For three years we have known that
the government in Khartoum, Sudan's capital, is supporting atrocities
by the gangs of Arab janjaweed militia against the black African
Muslims in Darfur -- leading to as many as 400,000 deaths, 2 million
displaced persons, and stomach-turning accounts of brutal mass rapes.
Yet year after year, horror after horror, the global response falls
tragically short.
...
Policy makers would have to be
comatose to miss the reports of atrocities from the International
Crisis Group, Save Darfur Coalition, Human Rights Watch, Human Rights
First, Refugees International,
not to mention the compelling accounts from the New York Times' Helene
Cooper, the Washington Post's Emily Wax, Today Show's Ann Curry, and
especially Kristof.
...
Last month, President George W.
Bush momentarily provoked hope by making an emotional call for doubling
the current peacekeeping presence and providing ``NATO stewardship.''
But the White House immediately seemed to downplay Bush's comments. It
is still unclear if the African Union will fulfill a commitment to hand
over control of its peacekeeping operation to a stronger U.N. force.
...
The Bush administration sees itself
as the champion of freedom around the globe. If that is the case, then
we should ask why we have officially acknowledged the Darfur genocide,
but then use the cover of `it's very complex'' as an excuse to do so
little?
...
Yes, bold action will be complex
and result in unforeseen consequences. Inaction, on the other hand will
be simple and highly predictable: more horror stories of children
watching their parents butchered and sisters raped while the most
powerful nations on the planet fail to even muster a slow-motion
response to slow-motion genocide.