NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
01/16/2007
The New York Times
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Genocide may be the worst of crimes, but historically it has also
brought out the best in some people.
The Raoul Wallenbergs of 2007 speckle America and the globe. And I
don't just mean the aid workers -- 13 of whom have been murdered for
their efforts in Darfur since last May -- but also those ordinary
Americans who have united in a grass-roots campaign to try to stop
genocide half a world away in Sudan.
President Bush and other world leaders have dropped the ball on Darfur.
But that vacuum of moral leadership has been filled by university
students, churches and temples, celebrities like George Clooney and Mia
Farrow, and armies of schoolchildren.
Their arsenal -- green armbands, phone calls to the White House, bake
sales to raise money -- all seem pallid. How can a ''Save Darfur'' lawn
sign in Peoria intimidate government-backed raiders in Sudan or Chad
who throw babies into bonfires?
Yet, finally, we see evidence that those armbands and lawn signs can
make a difference. Last week, the Save Darfur Coalition -- the
grass-roots organization that puts out those lawn signs -- sponsored a
trip by Bill Richardson, the New Mexico governor, to Khartoum to
negotiate with President Omar al-Bashir.
--
Mr. Richardson worked out a joint statement in which Sudan agreed to a
60-day cease-fire to allow peace talks to resume, provided the Darfur
rebels go along as well. Mr. Bashir also agreed that Sudan would
prosecute rapes and stop painting its military aircraft to look as if
they belong to the U.N.
The first thing to say is that Mr. Bashir has repeatedly broken his
pledges in the past. Count me deeply skeptical about whether it will be
any different this time. Mudawi Ibrahim Adam, a Sudanese human rights
campaigner, told me he thinks that President Bashir simply made
cosmetic concessions in hopes of winning the chairmanship of the
African Union later this month.
That said, there may be a path forward here. While U.N. peacekeepers
and a no-fly zone are needed, ultimately the only way to end the
slaughter is to achieve a peace agreement in Darfur. And that seems
more feasible today than it was a week ago.
Most striking, it's clear that the cease-fire was a consequence of all
those armbands and lawn signs. Mr. Richardson told me that Mr. Bashir
was motivated by concern at the way the killings have been spotlighted
by Darfur activists. Mr. Richardson quoted him as saying, ''These guys
have caused me a lot of damage.''
Ken Bacon, who heads Refugees
International and accompanied Mr. Richardson, said of President Bashir:
''One thing that was very clear was that the Save Darfur movement has
gotten under his skin. The vilification of the Khartoum regime in
columns and editorials and ads is making a difference.''
So cherish this historical moment. The long record of genocide is one
overwhelmingly of acquiescence, but this time ordinary citizens are
trying to write a different ending.
--
But finally President Bashir is confronting people whom he can't bully.
Let's have no illusions about how much more pressure will be necessary
to stop the slaughter, but let's also celebrate this moment. Mr. Bashir
has blinked, showing that it just may be possible to fight genocide
with moral courage and lawn signs.