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February 28, 2007

Central African Republic: Life in the Bush

Yahoo! News is now featuring a Flash-based report from the IRC concerning CAR.

Africa_300x100b

Darfur aid workers fear war crimes allegations

By Matthew Green, for the "Financial Times" (updated to fix a few incorrect references on my part - EJM)...

(See also today's semi-related pair of stories concerning reaction from the UN in Khartoum.)

Aid workers fear [that] war crimes accusations made by the International Criminal Court against two Sudanese suspects could hamper their work in Darfur and [could] raise an added hurdle to a proposed deployment of United Nations troops.

Khartoum has a long history of retaliating against international measures. These have often strengthened the hand of hardliners in the regime.

The ICC filed evidence on Tuesday against a Sudanese minister and [a] militia leader for alleged war crimes in the Darfur region, where tens of thousands of people have been killed since a rebellion began in early 2003.

The two suspects named were Ahmad Muhammad Harun, minister for humanitarian affairs and Ali Mohammed Ali Abd-al-Rahman, a prominent militia leader.

Human rights activists were quick to welcome the charges as a small but first step towards establishing justice for Darfur.

But analysts and relief workers believed [that] the move could complicate efforts to bring both Khartoum and the many rebel organisations in Darfur to the negotiating table. Relief workers with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) helping some of the 2 [million] people displaced by the conflict are also concerned that pro-government Janjaweed militia may target their staff in protest at the ICC move.

“There’s a big fear that some of the Janjaweed groups or perhaps people who have operated under him [Kushayb] might take it out on NGOs and also the UN,” said an aid worker in Khartoum.

UN staff in the town of El-Fasher in Darfur said yesterday [Wednesday? - EJM] they were on heightened alert in the wake of the ICC decision.

Although the United Nations and relief agencies are separate entities from the ICC, aid workers fear [that] the government may seek to punish them as representatives of the wider international community.

Aid workers are also concerned that Mr Harun may use his position as a senior humanitarian official to make the onerous task of obtaining permission to work in Darfur even more difficult. Relief workers face big problems gaining permission to reach war-affected populations.

The ICC’s action raises questions over how UN humanitarian staff should liaise with Mr Harun, now that he has been named as a war crimes suspect. A UN spokeswoman in Khartoum said [that] the world body was taking legal advice on the matter. Mr Harun was previously minister of state for the interior.

The prosecutor claims that, as head of the “Darfur security desk” in 2003, he was responsible for recruiting, funding and arming Janjaweed militia forces and, on several occasions, incited them to carry out attacks.

Sudan’s justice minister has dismissed the allegations – the first potential indictments to surface since Darfur was referred to the ICC prosecutor by the United Nations Security Council in March 2005.

Some relief officials fear [that] the ICC’s decision may complicate UN efforts to persuade Khartoum to accept proposals to deploy UN troops to support an undermanned and ineffective African Union force in Darfur.

U.N. chief deplores Sudanese government aerial bombings in Darfur / Ban Ki-moon calls for ‘dialogue’ from all sides as daily violence continues

Two largely related stories:

From the AP...

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged Sudan's government to stop aerial bombings in Darfur, deploring attacks that have killed innocent civilians in the escalating conflict.

In a report to the Security Council on Wednesday, Ban also called on countries to provide "urgent contributions of human resources and equipment" for a three-phase plan to deploy a joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force to Darfur.

The second phase, which would send more than 3,000 U.N. troops to Darfur, would cost US$287.9 million (€217.9 million) over a six-month period, Ban said. The plan is supposed to culminate with the deployment of a 22,000-strong AU-U.N. force, but Sudan's government has resisted the idea.

Although Sudan's government has denied indiscriminately bombing villages, Ban's report described airstrikes that have killed more than a dozen civilians since December. Ban said [that] bombings of rebel strongholds have intensified in the past month, though he gave no specific casualty figures for that period.

In mid-January, AU and U.N. officials said Sudan's air force bombed villages in northern Darfur, killing at least two people.

"I particularly deplore the aerial bombings by Sudanese government forces, which have expanded to new areas since 19 January, resulting in more civilian casualties and suffering," Ban said.

Darfur's conflict erupted in 2003, when ethnic African rebels took arms against the Arab-dominated central government, accusing it of neglect. More than 200,000 people have died, and 2.5 million have fled their homes. The government is accused of unleashing militias known as the janjaweed blamed for the bulk of the conflict's atrocities.

Ban's report described a particularly bloody period over the past three months, in which scores of civilians were killed.

The report highlighted escalating violence against aid workers in a region where two-thirds of the population relies on humanitarian assistance.

Ban demanded that the government hold accountable police and security officials who arrested and assaulted 20 people — including five U.N. staff members — in South Darfur's capital of Nyala on Jan. 19. One female U.N. worker was sexually assaulted, the report said.

Sudan's mission to the U.N. did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

The U.N. chief also called on Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir to "uphold his commitment" to the three-phase AU-UN peacekeeping plan. The first phase — which added equipment, military officers and U.N. police to the AU operation — is almost complete.

The U.N. hopes to start implementing the second phase this spring. But al-Bashir has sent conflicting signals about his commitment to the initiative, saying last month that U.N. troops were not required in Darfur because the 7,000-member AU force on the ground could maintain order.

From the UN News Service...

Painting his grimmest picture yet of the humanitarian and security situation in Sudan’s strife-torn Darfur region, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has reiterated the urgent need for a ceasefire, calling for “dialogue and negotiation” from all sides, while the United Nations mission in the country today [Wednesday] reported more abductions, hijackings and tribal fighting throughout the region.

In his latest report on Darfur to the Security Council, which was released today and covers the past three months, through January, Mr. Ban in particular condemns the recent aerial bombings by the Government, and the arrest and physical abuse of international humanitarian staff by local police last month.

“I am distressed by the deteriorating humanitarian and security situation on the ground. All parties must cease violent attacks on civilians. I particularly deplore the aerial bombings by Sudanese Government forces, which have expanded to new areas since 16 January, resulting in more civilian casualties and suffering,” he writes.

“I appeal, in the strongest possible terms, to the Government of the Sudan and the other parties to desist from further hostilities, which destabilize the entire region and render peace an increasingly distant prospect. All parties must submit to dialogue and negotiation, and commit themselves to a non-military solution to the devastating conflict in Darfur.”

Mr. Ban says [that] the increasing violence since November [of] last year has also stretched the capacity of the African Union Mission in Sudan (AMIS), and he appeals for more international assistance to the Mission and also for the UN support packages to this operation.

Highlighting his attendance at last month’s African Union Summit in Addis Ababa, Mr. Ban also writes of his frank discussions with Sudanese President Omar Hassan Al Bashir, noting [that] their views “clearly differed on the gravity of the security situation” in Darfur, but adding that the President had reiterated his support for a hybrid UN-African Union force.

“I look forward to receiving from the Government of the Sudan a confirmation of their readiness to implement both the heavy package of United Nations support to AMIS and the hybrid African Union-United Nations operation. In the meantime, the United Nations is proceeding with the preparatory work to implement these plans.”

Mr. Ban said last week [that] he had sent a letter to President Bashir on 24 January stressing the importance of more support for AMIS, as well as the need for the rapid deployment of the hybrid force.

Today’s release of the Secretary-General’s latest report on Darfur, comes as the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) reports continuing violence throughout the region, and also as the Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General in the country said [that] much still needs to be done to follow-up on the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended 21 years of separate civil conflict between north and south Sudan.

In north Darfur, UNMIS reports that military authorities denied access for a UN agency and other aid organizations to an internally displaced persons (IDP) camp on Tuesday, while in a separate incident elsewhere, local police say [that] Arab nomads abducted four women who were out collecting firewood.

In south Darfur, fighting is still continuing between Targem and Rezegat Maharia tribes in the Kass area, while in west Darfur, on Tuesday, three armed men attempted to hijack two vehicles belonging to a UN agency in Dorti IDP camp.

On the separate issue, concerning the CPA that was signed in January 2005 ending the conflict between north and south Sudan, Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General and UNMIS Head of Mission Tayé-Brook Zerihoun told reporters today that while some progress had been achieved, pressing legislation still needs to be passed, especially in the area of security reform.

UN rights chief calls for action to tackle "plague" of violence against women

From the UN News Service...

(See also today's semi-related Reuters story.)

Progress has been made already this year in protecting human rights worldwide, such as the recent adoption of a convention against enforced disappearances and other legislation, the top United Nations rights officer said today [Wednesday], but she stressed that more must be done in other areas, particularly to curb the “plague” of violence against women.

High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour also told a press briefing in New York that Tuesday’s decision by the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) chief prosecutor to name a Sudanese minister and a militia commander as the first suspects for war crimes in Darfur would help deal with the issue of impunity, although this was still a major concern.

She voiced optimism about progress in the work of the Geneva-based Human Rights Council. “I think [that] in the general landscape of human rights normative work this year, we’ve seen lots of progress,” she said, citing the adoption of the treaty against enforced disappearances and other initiatives, including on torture and the protection of indigenous peoples.

But she said [that] gender-based attacks remain a cause for grave concern. “The continuing plague of violence against women…continues to be a very serious issue in times of war, in times of peace, in times of transition to peace and I think we need to be much more proactive,” Ms. Arbour said, adding [that] she hoped [that] this issue would be highlighted again next week, on 8 March, which is International Women’s Day.

“The second thematic issue…that I think should trouble all of us is the question of impunity,” she added.

Ms. Arbour also said [that] she sensed a “renewed interest and momentum” this year by the international community in looking toward abolishing the death penalty, adding [that] she hoped [that] there is now public interest in looking at this.

Turning to country-specific issues, earlier this year she travelled to Nepal, where the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has a large presence and is working toward helping the peace process. Ms. Arbour also visited Bolivia, to sign an agreement on opening an office there.

Responding to a reporter’s question on the failure earlier this month of the Human Rights Council’s fact-finding mission to obtain visas to get into Darfur, Ms. Arbour said [that] she would not characterize the reasons put forward by the Government for refusing entry, but strongly disagreed with the decision.

“My understanding is that they had objected to a member of the high-level mission, and to a staff member, and, assuming that my information on that is correct, I think [that] it’s entirely unacceptable that United Nations staff not be granted access in the discharge of their professional responsibilities,” she said.

“The mission was launched by the Human Rights Council in late December, there were interminable discussions…about the proposed dates for the visit, and the need, of course, for visas, so frankly I think [that] an allegation that they were not given sufficient time is not credible,” she said, highlighting, however, that the mission was not aborted, but travelled elsewhere in the region, and will soon report to the Council.

Earlier this month, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also expressed his disappointed that the team could not get into Sudan.

Report Provides Clearer Picture on Irregular Migration From Ethiopia to Yemen

A recent IOM press release...

An IOM [report] aimed at gauging levels of human trafficking among Ethiopian migrants attempting to reach the Gulf countries via Somalia [44-page PDF, housed on the IOM site], has shed valuable light on smugglers and routes on a practice that is costing hundreds of lives each year.

Tens of thousands of Ethiopians and Somalis use the port of Bossasso in Somalia's Puntland on an annual basis, as a departure point for irregular migration to the Gulf countries via Yemen, with many falling victim to the dangerous sea crossing and unscrupulous and ruthless practices of smugglers.

The report, based on interviews carried out with a group of the most vulnerable Ethiopian migrants stranded in Bossasso in November 2006, found that although there was little information available regarding human trafficking, there was enough to indicate a well-organized smuggling network that ran from the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, to Bossasso en route to Yemen.

Although the majority of Ethiopian migrants making the journey to Bossasso were young single men from the northeast of the country with little or no education, there were also women and some girls as young as 14-16 years of age. Naïve and vulnerable, the migrants had little to no awareness of the dangers of the journey on which they embarked.

The migrants interviewed recounted horrible tales of thirst, hunger, exhaustion and attacks by Somali bandits, as well as robbery and physical abuse along the journey from Addis to Bossasso, where they had all been arrested by Puntland authorities.

The migrants, who have had to borrow anything between USD 115 [and] 800 to pay for their journey, repeatedly spoke of individual 'brokers' established at various points. They said [that] the brokers swindled or robbed them, stripped, searched and attacked them by threatening to set fire to them if they didn't agree to pay for services [that] they had no ability to provide, such as the boat journey from Bossasso to Yemen.

With information gleaned from the interviews, IOM has established a predominant smuggling route from the Ethiopian capital which took the migrants through the eastern cities of Harar and Hartishiek, and then to the Somali town of Burao. After that, migrants were often abandoned in the desert to make their own way on foot to Bossasso, a journey which could take them anywhere between five [and] 21 days.

By the time the migrants had reached the desert stage of the journey, they were usually left without any money, food, water or identity papers. They survived usually through the kindness of locals or by doing menial jobs. Upon arriving in Bossasso, they would have to ask families back home to wire them the money to pay for the boat journey to Yemen, which further increased their debt.

"Although the migrants may not realise it or think it, they were lucky in the end not to have done the sea journey to Yemen, as they were arrested just beforehand. It is probably the most dangerous part of the trip," says IOM's Yitna Getachew, who wrote the report. About 330 people died last year making the sea journey and another 300 more went missing. Nearly 140 have died so far in 2007, according to UNHCR, with many missing.

Most of the migrants interviewed were poor farmers trying to reach the Gulf, in search of work as shepherds, or housemaids lured by the apparent success of fellow villagers returning from the region.

In a bid to tackle the issue, IOM will be raising awareness of the dangers of irregular migration and on protecting migrant rights in Bossasso itself. The Organization will also carry out prevention activities, such as awareness raising in Ethiopia and potentially Somalia on what is happening to migrants attempting to reach Yemen. IOM has also provided migrants stranded in the Somali port town who wanted to return home, assisted voluntary return assistance and health checks.

Plague outbreak leaves nine people dead in north-western Uganda

From DPA...

Nine people died and 15 others were hospitalized following an outbreak of pneumonic plague [in] early February in a district in north-western Uganda, health officials confirmed [on] Wednesday.

The health ministry has despatched emergency drug supplies, and is warning the public in the Masindi district to report any suspected cases of plague, a disease caused by bacteria carried by fleas, which are also transmitted by rats.

The sick have been taken to the area's government hospital of Kiryandongo, about 200 kilometres north-west of the Ugandan capital, Kampala.

'Yes, the disease is affecting people in Masindi district. It is pneumonic plague. On the 2nd of this month, a child fell sick and died three days later. Afterwards, other people started getting sick and nine have so far died. We have set up an emergency response programme to manage the disease,' the commissioner for health services in the ministry, Dr Sam Okware told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

The disease, which [infects either] the lungs, blood or lymph glands, is fatal if left untreated.

The ministry has also warned the public to put in place flea-control measures and destroy rats in the affected areas.

Outbreaks of plague have killed hundreds of people in Uganda's plague-prone West Nile region since the 1920s. According to Dr Okware, the first casualty of the disease in Masindi district came from that region.

Taking guns at gunpoint / Guns Don't Kill People, Gun Control Kills People: Uganda terrorizes its own citizens under the auspices of UN gun-control mandate

Two recent analysis/opinion items primarily concerning Karamoja:

From South Africa's "Mail & Guardian" (by Alexis Okeowo)...

Illegal firearms have replaced bows and arrows as the weapons of choice for the pastoral people on the borders of Kenya and Uganda. The recent escalation of tension between these governments and cattle raiders not only poses a threat to political stability in the region, but has also led to widescale human rights abuses.

North-east Uganda’s Karamojong and their neighbours in Kenya, the Turkana and Pokot, have been engaged in cross-border conflict for centuries, often resulting in death and destruction of property.

Violence in notoriously lawless Karamoja has long been fuelled by inexpensive, semi-automatic firearms smuggled from Somalia and other countries in the Horn of Africa. The border tribes regularly engage in cattle raiding against their northern neighbours, the Toposa of Sudan.

The Ugandan government has encouraged voluntary disarmament of the rustlers in past years, but the Karamojong say [that] they need guns to protect their way of life: they have to guard themselves against other cattle rustlers, as well as hostile government soldiers. Meanwhile, the dry region remains the least-developed in Uganda, lacking infrastructure and basic services.

Kenya and Uganda agreed in June to cooperatively confiscate all arms from their borderlands. It is estimated that the pastoralists possess up to 200 000 guns in Kenya and up to 150 000 in Uganda. Both governments claim that their gun confiscation programmes are in accordance with the Nairobi Protocol, a treaty banning unlicensed gun possession. A government programme to rid the region of firearms recovered 4 500 guns in “cordon-and-search” operations between January and October, along with thousands of looted cattle and goats.

But local Karamajong leaders have accused the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) of numerous human rights abuses in the course of the disarmament programme, a claim [that] the government has denied. In mid-2006, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) halted its own disarmament programmes in Karamoja, in protest against UPDF abuses during the gun-recovery process, which they said were worse than the violence committed during cattle raids.

The UNDP has recently lifted its suspension of activities in the area. Last November, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour released a report that found that the soldiers used “indiscriminate and excessive” force, killing 55 civilians, including women and children between late October and mid-November 2006. She called on the UPDF to halt a six-month disarmament campaign, until it could guarantee civilian safety in the Karamoja region.

The Kenyan government says [that] a strong hand is necessary to ensure the peaceful handover of guns by the Pokot and Turkana pastoralists. Last March, the Kenyan Internal Security Minister, John Michuki, issued a shoot-to-kill directive to the police.

Allegations of murder, rape and torture by state forces in West Pokot have been reported and thousands of people have fled to Uganda, leaving behind ghost towns.

Despite the professed collaboration between the two governments, there is still frequent movement across the porous border. And the countries’ solution to the armed conflict so far appears to have primarily left thousands of refugees, burned villages and destroyed livelihoods.

From "Reason" (by three members of the Independence Institute)...

The country of Uganda plans to send about 1,500 troops to Somalia as part of an African Union peace-keeping force. The goal is to stabilize the weak government of Somalia, with the hope that the warlords will voluntarily disarm. Hopefully, Ugandan troops will be more successful in Somalia than they have in their own country.

For months now, Ugandan army troops have been garrisoned in the northeast part of the country under orders to disarm the local populace—pastoral, cattle-herding tribes known as the Karamojong. The army is attempting, and failing, to quash an uprising which was caused by a prior attempt to disarm the same tribes.

But in its effort to "disarm," the Ugandan army, supported by tanks and helicopter gunships, is burning down villages, sexually torturing men, raping women, and plundering what few possessions the tribespeople own. Tens of thousands of victims have been turned into refugees. Human rights scholar Ben Knighton has used the term “ethnocide” to describe the army's campaign.

This is not the first time the central government in Kampala [...] has persecuted the Karamojong. During the Idi Amin regime, the Karamojong were selected as special targets for genocide. Against Amin's armies, their traditional bows and arrows were futile. So it's understandable why they'd be reluctant to voluntarily lay down their weapons.

This time, the pretext for the "disarmament" of the Karamojong is United Nations gun control. The Ugandan military is trying to round up every last firearm in Karamoja, supposedly for the Karamojong's own good.

The procedure is euphemistically called “forcible disarmament.” It works something like this: The misnamed Uganda People’s Defence Force (UPDF) will torture and rape Karamajong, after which some Karamojong might then disclose the location of some hidden guns. Or the army will burn down a village, after which it might find some guns in the ash left behind.

If the pastoral tribespeople's bloody history with Amin weren't enough, they don't much have reason to trust the current government of Uganda, either. The current government has repeatedly broken its promises of goods, services, and personal protection for tribespeople who voluntarily disarmed.

According to David Pulkol, the former Director of External Security Organisation (part of the Ugandan government’s intelligence agency), the disarmament process is a tactic to facilitate robbing the Karamojong of their resources. The Daily Monitor newspaper, for example, reports that the Ugandan government has announced plans to confiscate “about 1,903 sq km out of the total area of 2,304 sq km of the Pian Upe game reserve” for private investment purposes.

This government predation has naturally sparked resistance. More and more Karamojong are wearing traditional ethnic garb—not only as a symbol of solidarity, but also because the loose clothing makes it so easy to conceal weapons. The tribes are also uniting and improving their tactical skills. The weapons that had been taken by the government have been replaced by better ones from the ubiquitous black market. The helicopters that have been bombing the populace and burning their villages are now at risk from high-powered rifles. The Karamojong women aren't remaining passive while their families suffer, starve, and die, either. Some Karamojong widows have taken their husband’s firearms and are actively defending themselves, their families, and their cattle.

Last summer, the Ugandan army's atrocities led the United Nations Development Programme to cut off its disarmament aid to Uganda. But the outrage didn't last long. This year, the aid was restored. Although the United Nations does not fund the Ugandan army, the UN does provide a public relations sanction for the disarmament. In November, Louise Arbour, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, stated: “The actions of the UPDF do not comply with international human rights law and domestic law.” But, she also stipulated, “the decision of the Government to undertake renewed efforts to eradicate illegal weapons in Karamoja is essential….” Never mind that the disarmament campaign also eradicates people.

If the Karamojong didn’t have to worry about the central government targeting them for genocide, or stealing their land, one could possibly make an argument that they would be better off without guns. The various tribes have a long tradition of inter-tribal cattle rustling, and the cattle-raiding would undoubtedly be less dangerous if perpetrated with stone-age weapons instead of AK-47s. But as a practical matter, there have been numerous instances of civilians who have voluntarily disarmed, and were then—despite government promises of protection—robbed by the competing tribes who remained armed. And the loss of even a small number of cattle can place a subsistence level family at risk of starvation. Of course, cattle-rustling never led to the deliberate destruction of entire villages, turning thousands of people into refugees. Nor has it ever paved the way for government theft of the land the tribespeople need to survive.

The number of illegally possessed firearms prior to the disarmament campaign had been estimated at between 50,000 and 150,000. On November 10, New Vision reported that “since this year began, they have recovered 4,500 guns.” So the Ugandan government is wiping out the very people the government ostensibly claims to protect, and that "protection" amounts to just 3-9 percent of unauthorized weapons. And all the while, the Ugandan government is using its own guns to destroy Karamoja, burn villages, slaughter the defenseless, and perpetrate ethnocide.

Seems like the kind of "protection" the Karamojong could live without.

David Kopel is research director for the Independence Institute. Paul Gallant and Joanne D. Eisen are senior fellows at the Independence Institute.

Roundup of Recent Non-Sudan Items

Links to various items from, in almost all cases, the past day:

(See also, most recently, last night's batch.)

"World should give Africa a chance: FW de Klerk" (SAPA)

"U.N. health chief urges new drive against polio" (by Reuters' Richard Waddington)

"WHO Says Polio Eradication Within Grasp" (by VOA's Lisa Schlein; related)

"New parasite insight could aid anti-malaria fight" (by Reuters' Will Dunham)

"Controlling Measles: the power of partnering" ("official" IFRC story)

"EU states urged to pool aid policies" (Reuters)

"Report urges IMF, World Bank to collaborate more" (by Reuters' Lesley Wroughton)

"Festival Brings Attention to Female Filmmakers' Challenges in Africa" (by VOA's Phuong Tran)

"Immigration tops the bill at Africa film festival" (by Reuters' Orla Ryan; related)

"Africa shifts to 'whole village' approach for orphans: Orphanages in southern Africa are closing in favor of efforts to reintegrate children into communities" (by Stephanie Hanes of the "Christian Science Monitor")

"African Jazz Gets New Voice" (by VOA's Jackson Muneza Mvunganyi)

"More attacks in Somalia's capital" (BBC)

"Unknown gunmen shot three men dead in Somali capital" (AP; related)

"Burundi to send 1,700 peacekeepers to Somalia" (AFP)

"Africa needs cash for Somalia peace mission" (by Reuters' Tsegaye Tadesse)

"Somalia mulls anti-terror bill" (SAPA/AFP)

"Crime, corruption harming Kenyan economy - UN" (by Reuters' C. Bryson Hull)

"UN Report Says Kenyans Getting Poorer" (by VOA's Cathy Majtenyi; related)

"No glove, no love - young women take charge of condom use" (IRIN; also concerning Kenya)

"Rats, Where There Once Were Elephants" (IPS; concerning Chad)

"Libya's 'masses' system intact, economy reform focus" (Reuters)

"Western democracy is ill-suited to Africa - Gaddafi" (by Reuters' Salah Sarrar; semi-related)

"Tunisian Internet writer still jailed after two years" (CPJ press release)

"Army captain killed in suspected Islamist attack in northern Algeria" (AP)

"Death toll from Algeria violence fell in February" (Reuters; semi-related)

"Daughter born to Morocco's royal couple" (AP)

"The Niger River in Intensive Care" (IPS)

"Wade walkover in Senegal poll draws challenges" (by Reuters' Diadie Ba)

"Senegal poll results 'rejected'" (BBC; related)

"Senegal's president appears victorious" (AP; related)

"Senegal opposition cries foul" (SAPA/AFP; related)

"Senegal president claims election win despite fraud row" (by Dino Mahtani of the "Financial Times"; related)

"IFJ Condemns Journalists’ Intimidation by Public Prosecutor in Ivory Coast" (press release)

"Stories critical of president trigger charges" (CPJ press release; related)

"Government takes aim at unemployment" (IRIN; concerning Liberia)

"Life Improves for Liberians, but Uncertainty Persists" (by VOA's Darren Taylor)

"Activists Battle Liberia's Rape Problem" (by VOA's Kari Barber)

"Newspaper's licence revoked, premises sealed" (CEMESP press release, reprinted by IFEX; also concerning Liberia)

"Liberian Government Bans a Newspaper for One Year" (by VOA's James Butty; related)

"Liberia's ex-leader 'stole $1m'" (BBC)

"Ex-leader of Liberia accused of stealing" (AP; related)

"Liberia’s President tells UN and UNICEF delegates education is key to development" ("official" UNICEF story)

"Ritual killings challenged" (AFP; concerning Gabon)

"Ghanaian Health Official Laments Slow Progress in Providing Universal Health Care" (by VOA's Peter Clottey)

"Gunmen abduct Lebanese worker in Nigeria oil delta" (by Reuters' Austin Ekeinde)

"Lebanese man kidnapped in Nigeria" (AFP; related)

"Gunmen again kidnap foreigner in Nigeria" (AP; related)

"Vice President Rejects Nigerian Senate Indictment on Oil-Money Corruption" (by VOA's Chinedu Offor)

"Nigerian Senate Panel: Vice President Guilty" (by VOA's Gilbert da Costa; related)

"Nigerian Senate begins debating panel report on corruption" (AFP; related)

"Draft same-sex legislation in Nigeria may criminalise activities in the defence of human rights" (Front Line Defenders item)

"Christian Leaders in US Condemn Nigeria’s Anti-Gay Bill" (HRW press release; related)

"Anti-Gay Bill Threatens Democratic Reforms; Homophobic Legislation Restricts Free Speech, Association, Assembly" (separate HRW press release; related)

"Obasanyo seeks approval to pay London Club debt" (AFP; also concerning Nigeria)

"Japan's grant to help disarm former combatants" (IRIN; concerning Congo Republic)

"Three-month jail sentence for journalist who accused tax official of corruption" (RSF press release; concerning DR Congo)

"Nlandu case: DR Congo court confusion as judges fail to convene" (CSW press release)

"Burundi responds to criticism on democracy" (by Reuters' Marie-Louise Gumuchian)

"AU creates SA force for Burundi" (AFP)

"As Waters Recede, More Mozambicans Seek Flood Aid" (by VOA's Joe De Capua and Scott Bobb)

"Mozambique flood victims pour into refugee camps" (SABC; related)

"Pledging a day's wage" (SAPA; related)

"Emergency aid for flood-hit Mozambique" (ActionAid press release; related)

"Flood Victims in Mozambique Could Face Hunger" (Caritas press release; related)

"Dual emergencies hit Mozambique" (UNICEF press release; related)

"Coastal town in Mozambique reeling but on the move after Cyclone Favio" ("official" UNICEF story; related)

"Mozambique malaria deaths rise" (SAPA)

"Providing Assistance to Flood Victims in Remote Eastern Province" (IOM press release; concerning Angola)

"Malawi's President Warns Bakili Muluzi" (by VOA's Peter Clottey)

"Aids-ravaged Malawi debates male circumcision" (SAPA/AFP)

"Protesters greet 'tyrant' Mugabe on Namibia visit" (Reuters)

"Anti-Mugabe Demonstrators Counter Namibia's Warm Official Welcome" (VOA's "Studio 7 for Zimbabwe"; related)

"Namibians protest visit of Zimbabwe's Mugabe" (DPA; related)

"Hundreds Protest Mugabe Visit to Namibia" (AP; related)

"Mugabe greeted by protestors" (AFP; related)

"Namibia to refurbish Zimbabwean power plant in exchange for energy" (DPA; semi-related)

"Mugabe says farm seizures a success" (AFP; semi-related)

"Leader Of Zimbabwe Teachers Union Responds To Attack By Mugabe" (VOA's "Studio 7 for Zimbabwe")

"Zimbabwe's Land Reform Chief Called To Account On Fallow Farmland" (also VOA's "Studio 7 for Zimbabwe")

"Zimbabwe Information Ministry Confirms Jamming of VOA Broadcasts" (also VOA's "Studio 7 for Zimbabwe")

"Zimbabwe land reforms cause shortages - c. bank head" (Reuters)

"Embattled Zimbabwe hungry and broke, says central bank head" (AP; related)

"Zimbabwe warns on foreign currency" (by Tony Hawkins of the "Financial Times"; related)

"Lecturers in Zim down their books" (AFP)

"'Gold-digger judge' caught mining" (BBC; also concerning Zimbabwe)

"Forecasters predict winds of change for Zimbabwe" (AlertNet "NewsBlog" post by Nina Brenjo)

"South Africa says may resume elephant cull" (by Reuters' Stella Mapenzauswa)

"S Africa considers elephant culls" (BBC; related)

"South Africa set to renew elephant culling" (AFP; related)

"S. Africa proposes elephant slaughter limits" (AP; related)

"Migrants Abused by Officials and Farmers" (HRW press release; also concerning South Africa)

"Tsotsi's boost for SA film scene" (by the BBC's James Copnall)

"S. Africa could broaden land seizures ahead of 2008" (Reuters)

"S. Africa to urge Iran to comply fully with IAEA" (also Reuters)

"S. Africa can meet UN poverty goals - UNICEF" (also Reuters)

"Campaigners warn on SA Aids policy" (by Alec Russell of the "Financial Times")

"S African officials play down windfall tax reports" (also by Alec Russell)

UN rights chief warns of romanticizing Ugandan LRA

By Reuters' Evelyn Leopold...

The top U.N. human rights official warned on Wednesday of romanticizing Uganda's brutal Lord's Resistance Army and said [that] peace negotiations should focus on surrender terms for its top leaders.

The International Criminal Court, based in The Hague, in 2005 indicted four LRA leaders on charges of killing, sexually abusing, looting and abducting children, mainly from the Acholi people in northern Uganda.

Before and after the indictments, there have been on-and-off peace talks with the group, the latest initiated by the government in southern Sudan, where LRA operatives have also created havoc.

"I think [that] it is very important not to romanticize the LRA as, all of a sudden, the political champion of the rights of the Acholi people that it terrorized for 20 years, kidnapped their children," Louise Arbour, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, told a news conference.

"So I think [that] there is a certain amount of revisionism in transforming what is essentially a quite well-organized, very well-armed criminal enterprise into a political interlocutor with whom we should have great hope of yielding to a peace settlement," she said.

Arbour, a former Canadian Supreme Court justice, said [that] talks needed to focus on "the terms and circumstances of their surrender so they can come and address the charges against them in The Hague."

The LRA pulled out of peace talks with the Ugandan government in Juba, southern Sudan, last month, citing security fears. But it has agreed to a truce that was set to expire on Wednesday.

LRA deputy commander Vincent Otti, who is under indictment, told Reuters by satellite telephone from his hide-out in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo that he had no intention of renewing the truce, but would not take offensive action.

The cease-fire, signed in August and renewed last December, raised hopes of an end to a conflict that has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted 1.7 million in northern Uganda.

Arbour, responding to comments in Uganda and elsewhere that the ICC indictments have hindered the peace process, said [that] the LRA had been active for 20 years without a prospect for peace.

"So for those who now say [that] it is the ICC indictments that are an impediment to peace, I say, 'you have a very short memory,'" Arbour said.

In her visit to the east African country a year ago, Arbour also criticized the Ugandan military's abuses in squalid camps for civilians, designed to protect them from the LRA.

Teddy bear comes home after journey into space: Astronaut took it into orbit to honor father and bring attention to Darfur

From the "Houston Chronicle"...

(This is not the first time that an astronaut has been involved in a Darfur-related activity: Belgian astronaut Frank De Winne--in his capacity as a UNICEF ambassador--visited Darfur in mid-2004.)

Mark Polansky wanted to honor his Jewish father. So the NASA space shuttle commander worried a Jewish mother.

Polansky's father, Irving, died in 2001. To pay tribute to him and raise awareness of the genocide in Darfur, Sudan, the astronaut asked the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum if he could take one of its artifacts on the Discovery mission in December.

"It's probably the strangest phone call the museum ever got," Polansky said at the Washington museum [on] Tuesday.

The museum gave Polansky, whose father's family emigrated from Russia in the early 1900s, a photo of a Darfurian child refugee. It also made him a replica of Refugee, the tiny teddy bear that a Holocaust survivor, Sophie Turner-Zaretsky of New York, was given by her mother in Poland after the war.

The bear was donated to the museum by Turner-Zaretsky in 2002. When museum officials told her of Polansky's plan, she reacted with happiness and gratitude — and, naturally, fear.

"He hasn't got a Jewish mother," Turner-Zaretsky joked about Polansky, whose mother, Edith, is a native Hawaiian of Korean descent.

Turner-Zaretsky had never spoken to Polansky until Tuesday, when the astronaut returned the bear in a ceremony at the museum. But she nervously monitored Discovery's status as if she'd had a relative aboard.

"I watched the (NASA) Web site every day and made sure they were OK," she said. "I worried when they delayed the flight (because of weather), and then I worried when he piloted it. And when he landed it, I think it was a Friday afternoon, I heaved a big sigh of relief."

Turner-Zaretsky has spent much of her life worrying. Born in Poland in 1937, her family was forced into a ghetto by the Nazis in 1941. Her father was killed in 1942.

Turner-Zaretsky and her mother escaped the ghetto, survived the war by pretending to be Catholic and fled Soviet rule by moving to England in 1948. But Turner-Zaretsky, who had come to believe she was Christian, was traumatized again when her mother told her they were Jews — people she had learned to despise. Then, in 1963, she had to start a new life once more, this time as a medical student in the United States.

Her bear was a mere 3 inches tall. Its eyes weren't quite aligned. But until she donated it to the museum, Refugee came with her every arduous mile she journeyed.

Of course, the original Refugee can't compete with its replica.

"Traveled 5,330,398 miles," Polansky read from a certificate he gave Turner-Zaretsky. "In space for 12 days, 20 hours, 45 minutes.

"Not bad for a bear."

Social change for the next generation


  • Sudan_darfur_girlwchild_dscandling_img13

    Young girl with infant child at refugee camp in Darfur. Photo by Dan Scandling, Office of U.S. Representative Frank Wolf

Hack the Noosphere: face2face and online

Act: Music

Act: Organize, lobby

Act: Blog!

The Passion of the Present (the essay)


  • -

    In Darfur, a region in western Sudan approximately the size of Texas, over a million people are threatened with torture and death at the hands of marauding militia and a complicit government. Genocide evokes not only the moral, but also, the legal responsibility of the world community. Under international agreement, a nation must intervene to stop a genocide when it is officially acknowledged.

    "Officially" is the key word here. So far, no nation in the international community has "officially" acknowledged the truth: Sudan is a bleeding ground of genocide. In this void, the Sudanese government continues to act with brutal impunity.

    Thankfully, there are individuals working in human rights organizations who are watching - and witnessing - and organizing, in support of the victims in Darfur. These individuals represent, for all of us, a personal capacity to bear witness to the passion of the present; one candle lit against the darkness.

    However, before one can light a candle, someone has to strike a match: a donation to any of the human rights organizations active in Sudan, contacting your government representative, local newspaper, radio and t.v. station. Our individual activism is essential for the candlepower of witness to overcome and extinguish the firepower of genocide.

    This world has long endured wars that take lives. Let us be part of one that saves them.

    About: The Passion of the Present site is a totally non-profit labor of love and hope - in peace. Thanks for joining the effort.

  • Detailed administrative map of Sudan
  • Oil concession maps
  • Climate and biogeography of Sudan
  • Satellite Images of destruction in Darfur, from USAID

About this blog

  • Greenribbons_3
    SaveDarfur.org partner

  • GOOGLE SEARCH THIS SITE: More than 2966 chronological posts from April, 2004. Try "oil" "China" "women" "genocide treaty" "UN" "Kofi Annan" "timelines" "grassroots".


  • Our name comes from an essay entitled "The Passion of the Present" that one of our grassroots founders wrote and circulated by email in March of 2004. The blog started at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School.

    The editors are semi-anonymous in order to keep the focus on Sudan. This site is a resource for a blog-based information community now numbering several hundred interlinked bloggers and sites. Visitors come from around the world. Daily traffic ranges from just under a thousand visitors, to more than eight thousand on days when news attention peaks.

    Our technology cost for a public blog service, with no special discount, is still just $13.46 per month! Start a blog if you don't have one already!

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