Sunday, October 22, 2006
Darfur
Like a lot of people, I can only take so much bad news. There are times when I just can't tolerate any more stories about 54 more people who were killed in an outdoor market in Iraq, or how easy it is to smuggle a nuclear weapon into New York harbor, or how some deranged maniac killed a bunch of innocent Amish schoolgirls. Each story seems more depressing than the last, and there is a saturation point that, once achieved, can turn even the most compassionate person into a detached, ambivalent zombie. In the age we live in, with 24-hour news coverage, things can get pretty overwhelming and downright depressing if one does not take pains to control the news intake valve.
I guess this is why I have not bothered to focus very much on the genocide that is happening in Darfur, Sudan right now, other than to read the occasional New York Times or Time magazine article. Every time I have listened to a talking head discuss this issue, it has always seemed like there are two sides to this story and things are not as simple as some would believe. Maybe if I bothered to pay attention and took more of an interest, things would be slightly more clear.
Well tonight, Darfur and one of my favorite shows, 60 Minutes, intersected, so finally I was a captive audience for a discrete story about Darfur called "Searching for Jacob." This particular story certainly did not make it seem that there are two sides to the Darfur genocide, only one.
The 60 Minutes story began with a team of journalists who were visiting the United States Holocaust Memorial museum in Washington, D.C., which, besides cataloguing the history of the Holocaust, collects artifacts of victims of genocide all over the world. Included among the exhibits at the museum were several schoolbooks and notebooks from a young Sudanese boy named Jacob. A few years ago, these were found in the ashes of Jacob's burned out house in Hangala, a small village in Darfur. Hangala was one of many villages that have been destroyed by the Janjaweed, a racist Arab militia that is acting as a proxy of the Sudanese government to exterminate or expel non-Arabs from Darfur. Their tactics are ripped from the genocidal playbook: kill all the men, gangrape the women, and orphan or kill the children.
At the outset of the story, we don't know if Jacob is alive or dead. But Scott Pelley, a 60 Minutes reporter sets out to try and find Jacob in Darfur.
Not surprisingly, the Sudanese government is trying to keep journalists out of Darfur in order to minimize reports of the genocide. So Pelley had to sneak into the area via Chad, flying in on a small, prop plane, and then soliciting help from a bunch of Sudanese rebels who call themselves the National Redemption Front. It is the families of these rebels who are being exterminated. We see Pelley and the rebels drive through the desert for 13 hours in old, white trucks with open cabs. Pelley sits in the back of one of the trucks, giving his narrative to a camera man nearby. He is surrounded by the rebels, who are shrouded in white coverings and carrying machine guns with rocket propelled grenades. When the trucks get stuck in the muck, Pelley gets out of the truck to help the rebels push his truck out of the mud. Stories like this always give me a healthy respect for journalists who venture into dangerous places they really shouldn't go.
After a long trek through the desert, Pelley and the rebels finally reach Hangala. At one time, Hangala had 500 inhabitants. Now it has no inhabitants. The before and after pictures of Hangala shown on the television reveal that where there used to be a small group of little thatched huts and a little town, now there are just burned out, empty shells. Circular walls marking where homes used to be, and nothing more. The rest of the town is ashes, except for an occasional piece of pottery that appears in the middle of the rubble. These are the only things left in an original state of wholeness. Here is a picture I found that looks similar to what I saw on 60 Minutes:
An escapee from the massacre at Hangala tells 60 Minutes that the Janjaweed came to Hangala and set the houses on fire. Then, working with Sudanese government soldiers who were sitting on the outskirts of the village, they shot and killed as many of the men as possible and gangraped the women. Only a few people managed to escape.
Why is the Sudanese government doing this, you rightfully ask? Based on the little that I have read, the answer seems pretty simple: they are using genocide as a means to try and gain control of the country. The racist Arab government that is currently running Sudan -- and which not too long ago, gave shelter to Osama bin Laden and his buddies -- is trying to kill off or expel any non-Arab inhabitants of Darfur simply because they are not Arab. When you deliberately kill people because of their racial, ethnic, or cultural status, that's genocide. While the world watches with its thumb up its collective ass, more than 300,000 people have been killed in Darfur, and there are now more than two million refugees living in camps in the middle of the desert.
Pelley visits a refugee camp nearby Hangala and meets Ashis Brahma, a doctor who is caring for about 25,000 refugees by himself. Pelley asks Dr. Brahma what he thinks people don't understand about what is happening in Darfur. Here is Brahma's response:
"This is bad. They go to the villages, and they burn one village after the other, then when the people come out they catch the women and gang bang, they rape them not one guy, no 10, 15 then they carve up the men and throw them in the drinking water to make sure that this place will never ever be used again. And you’re telling me the people in America don’t know this or don’t want to know this. Maybe its too much to know but that’s what’s happening right now and its happening all over again . . . I’m sorry to say I’m going to sit here with you in two years time and I’m gonna tell you the same sad story. People will say, 'Ich habe nicht gewusst,' which is German for 'I didn’t know.'"
This quote sent chills up my spine, not just because of the atrocities Dr. Brahma described, but when he said that people in America don't know or don't want to know about what is happening in Darfur, and his allusion to the head-in-the-sand attitude of everyday Germans while Jews were being exterminated during the Holocaust. How many of us want to know about this problem? Want to care?
Miraculously, they manage to find a man at the refugee camp who recognizes the books Pelley brought with him and the name Jacob. The man says he was Jacob's teacher and that Jacob is alive. He takes them to a part of the massive camp where he says Jacob is.
When we finally meet Jacob, he looks much older than I thought he would -- he's actually 19 years old now. When he talks to Pelley, he comes across as educated, serious, articulate, and thoughtful. He looks at his books with some amazement that they have come back into his hands from across the world. Like a message in a bottle he threw into the ocean, never thinking he would see it again. He tells Pelley of how he doesn't know where his family is and how the Janjaweed killed his 4 year old brother because he tried to run away. Jacob's voice shakes a little when he says this, but otherwise, he is steely and unemotional.
Rather than keep his books and notebooks -- reminders of a normal life that he will probably never have again -- Jacob tells Pelley to bring them back to the Holocaust museum so that the whole world can see what is happening in Darfur. Poor Jacob actually has hope that the world will do something about his plight.
The little backstory to this is the current American policy towards the Sudanese government, led by dictator Omar AlBashir. As previously stated, in the 1990s, AlBashir and the Sudanese government hosted Osama bin Laden. After 9/11, the government agreed to play ball with the U.S. AlBashir has a lot of dirt on bin Laden, given their prior association. Apparently, Sudan's intelligence service has been sharing a lot of information with the CIA about bin Laden, and 60 Minutes was told by U.S. officials that the information we have obtained from Sudan has been "substantial." This ostensibly has complicated our ability to complain or do anything about the genocide in Darfur.
Same old story, it seems. We are willing to dance with dictators, even if they are committing genocide, as long as it supports our short-term foreign policy goals. We slept with all kinds of sick bastards when we were fighting communism, and it looks like we are making the same mistake now against the latest bogeyman, terrorism. Where will it end?
Seriously, our congenial approach to genocidal dictators like AlBashir makes me wonder whether the United States would accept Hitler as an ally today as long as he was helping us fight terrorism.
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3 comments:
OK T.- I also saw this segment on 60 mins tonight. So then, what would you suggest we do? I read a lot of lamenting about this administrations lack of action in your blog entry, but no reccomendations of a solution. You have stated before that you don't think the US should intercede, invade, or police, another sovereign enity ... so even if there was not an osama connection and the US was free to do anything... what exactly would you have us do?
We did nothing in Rwanda and very little in Bosnia ( a few random bombs ...after thousands of people had already been shot by firing squads) Both of these situations were pre 9/11 and under different administrations. Our government pretty much ignored those millions of people raped, and /or slaughtered, and shoveled into mass graves... Without even the creative ability to hide behind the terrorism scapegoat excuse. In those instances, we had absolutely no excuse.
I for one, believe that we had better get the UN under control and create an enitity with both economic and military power that can actually DO something when situations like this occur in the world. If not, then America (and whatever allies are willing to get onboard) has to step up to the plate and be the country that attempts to stop these atrocities from occuring. In my opinon, we have an obligation as human beings sharing this earth, to other human beings who are being mudered for no other reason than the cowardness and hatred of the ignorant.
With all of america's faults... I am extremely grateful that I live in a country which allows for all the freedoms we enjoy here in the USA.
K,
thanks for laying into bloggy. Beyond Rwanda and Bosnia, there are many other instances in Africa and SE Asia where mass genocide has occured within the past 30 years. The outside world including the US has done little to intercede. What needs to be reconciled is an armed police force going into various situations abroad to install order? Under what authority? Who initiates the actions? It is doubtful that the call would come from the gov't doing the cleansing. What gives the UN of all places the right to go in and what qualifies for action?
A
Gee, I never thought I would have to justify the prevention of genocide in the 21st Century, but here goes, my dissenting commenters.
First, K., it's a little unclear to me whether you actually think genocide is worth trying to prevent, or whether you feel we should be isolationist in our approach to the world. I see both trains of thought in your comment. You can't have it both ways. Also, if you have been reading carefully, you will see that I have never said that we should never invade a foreign country. In fact, I have said that I feel the invasion of Afghanistan was justified. I also feel that our actions in Bosnia were justified, even though they came much too late in my opinion. The United States helped stop a genocide there (of Arabs, no less), and we should be very proud of that.
Conversely, Europe should be ashamed of itself for doing nothing for years while a massacre was happening in its own backyard. Europe is a fucking joke when it comes to issues like this. It needs to be led, and the United States should lead.
I do feel that our military power should be used as a last resort and only when necessary. To me, self-defense and helping end genocide are worthy uses of our power. Fighting oil wars is not, particularly when we have the means and ability, but not the desire, to develop alternative fuels in this country.
Obviously, we are not the world's policeman and can't be everywhere. I am not advocating that. But to me, it is wrong to sit idly by when a genocide is occurring on this size and scale and hundreds of thousands of people are being massacred and dying of starvation. We have the power to do something, even if it doesn't immediately solve the problem. Rwanda was a global embarrassment. You are not going to hear an argument from me about that. The bottom line is you can't sit in a history class and give a "tsk tsk" to the world and the German populace for not acting sooner to stop the killing of Jews in the Holocaust and then say it's okay to watch the same thing happen to Africans or Bosnians today.
Which brings me to A.'s comment. The assumption underlying your opinion, Bloggy, is that the United States needs some kind of "authority" to act to stop a genocide. Says who? Did we have authority to invade Iraq? Vietnam? Panama? Haiti? Grenada? Nicaragua (via the contras whom we funded throughout the 1980s), Iran (when we overthrew Mossadegh and installed the Shah), Chile (when we helped overthrow Allende and brought that angel Pinochet to power). Need I go on? On a daily basis we exercise our power to "initiate actions" in many ways, seen and unseen, to create the foreign policy effects we desire. And we do it with zero authority from anyone but the President of the United States and some unknown NSA employees.
Putting this aside, contrary to your respective comments, the U.N. has acted to stop the killing in Darfur, and it has done so with global support. The problem is that Sudan is refusing to accept the deployment of 22,000 United Nations soldiers and police officers in Darfur. The Security Council passed a resolution on August 31st to replace a 7200-member African force with U.N. forces, but now the small African force is going to have to remain there until December 31st because the Sudanese government won't let them in. To make matters worse, AlBashir is threatening to attack any United Nations soldiers sent to Darfur. It's not accurate to say that the U.N. has not or cannot act.
When we wanted to invade Iraq, we upped the ante with U.N. resolution after U.N. resolution and sanction after sanction. We have done very little in that regard against the Sudan. What's needed now in my view is intense pressure on the Sudanese government to stop the atrocities and to broker a lasting peace with the rebels to unify the country again.
The United States has immense influence and substantial power, even short of military power, to make the Sudanese government feel some pain short of an invasion or bombing. How about we give that a try and see what happens? Right now, we are doing ZERO but giving lip service to the issue.
Another problem I have with your comment A is that you ask a lot of questions but you answer none of them and instead, provide non sequiturs. You take no position, either to allow the genocide to continue or to do something to stop it. Reading between the lines of your comment, I think you prefer the former. You seem to suggest that it's okay to allow what is happening to continue because (a) it has happened before and will happen again; and (b) the United States should never act unless it has "authority" to do so.
I can't agree with either premise. As you suggested, such authority is almost never given, and as I said above, the U.S. has often acted without obtaining authority from anyone. The U.S. does what it wants, when it wants, at least when oil and other perceived "national interests" are at stake.
But in this case, given the global support that already exists for doing something to stop the genocide in Darfur, I don't think unilateral action is necessary at this point. As a first step, the United States should take the lead in lighting a fire in the U.N. to deepen and intensify global opinion on this issue. We have numerous sticks to wield, and we should use them. Bombing the Sudan back to the stone age is not the first or the only option.
But something, anything, is better than what we are doing now, which is nothing.
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