نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان.

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02-04-2004, 04:41 AM

خالد الحاج

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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)




    Amnesty International Reports on Darfur:
    "Too Many People Killed for No Reason"

    Eric Reeves
    February 3, 2004

    Amnesty International, perhaps the world's most distinguished human
    rights organization, has today issued a very substantial, immensely
    well-researched, and compelling account of the catastrophe unfolding in
    Darfur, far western Sudan. The report ("Darfur: Too Many People Killed
    for No Reason") could not be more timely. For though there have been
    scattered accounts and assessments by various humanitarian
    organizations, important UN statistical generalizations and reportage,
    and growing news reporting, there has been nothing like Amnesty's
    sustained and comprehensive account of the realities that have been
    developing for the last year. This authoritative compendium of gross
    human rights abuses by the Khartoum regime and its Arab militia allies
    (the "Janjaweed"), the rapidly growing racial and ethnic animus that
    defines Khartoum's prosecution of the war in Darfur, and the exploding
    humanitarian crisis deserves the closest possible attention. Full text
    can be found at: http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR540082004

    We learn a great deal from the Amnesty report, and we hear many, many
    of the voices of those who have been displaced in Darfur, internally
    within the province and into neighboring Chad. And the voices bring
    with them horrific stories of civilian destruction, rape, torture, child
    abductions, pillaging, and the profound disruption of agricultural
    production. But as full as Amnesty's account is, and as the report
    itself frankly acknowledges, it touches only on what is visible from the
    Chad-Sudan border, what can be narrated by witnesses able to reach this
    point of tenuous refuge. The vast majority of human suffering and
    destruction remains hidden because of the inaccessibility of Darfur, an
    inaccessibility that Amnesty several times notes is directly related to
    Khartoum's restrictions on travel and humanitarian access.

    No reader can fail to be struck by two features of the Amnesty report:
    [a] the terrifying consistency of the accounts from those who have been
    displaced, and the sheer scale of the destruction, primarily by
    Khartoum's Arab militia allies, now exceedingly heavily armed and
    consistently reported as supported and commanded, directly and
    indirectly, by Khartoum's regular military and security forces.

    On this latter score of the scale of civilian destruction, we must
    nonetheless also take note of Amnesty's detailed accounts of countless
    aerial bombing attacks on civilian targets. Amnesty reports, on the
    basis of a great deal of evidence assiduously assembled, that Khartoum
    has "bombed indiscriminately civilian towns and villages suspected of
    harbouring or sympathizing with members of the armed opposition,
    unlawfully killing many non-combatants" (page 3).

    For example, Amnesty reports that "most villages around Tina (on the
    Chad/Darfur border) were also bombed. Khasan Abu Gamra was bombed so
    many times that its villagers said: 'The planes bomb anytime and
    everywhere, sometimes four times a day, in the morning, in the evening.
    They bomb so much that we can't go to cultivate our fields. Many people
    and animals were killed because of the bombings.' In Tumdubai, about
    four hours walk away from Tina, bombings also occurred several times a
    day." (page 16)

    The report is replete with many more such accounts.

    But it is the Janjaweed militia attacks (transliterated from the Arabic
    by Amnesty as "Janjawid") that clearly emerge as the source of greatest
    devastation. A great deal of the Amnesty report is (appropriately)
    given over to narratives provided by those displaced by Arab militias,
    narratives which are our only real source of information about what is
    happening inside Darfur. For example, under Section 4.2 ("Denial of
    protection and assistance to the displaced in Darfur") Amnesty reports:

    "Scores of civilians fled to Kabkabiya town between June and August
    2003. Reports alleged that 300 villages had been attacked or burnt to
    the ground in the area. Many displaced were reportedly living in the
    open or in the local school in Kabkabiya, having very little or no
    access to humanitarian aid. For instance, hundreds had fled after an
    attack on Shoba, a Fur village situated 7 km south of Kabkabiya on 25
    July, by armed militia wearing government army uniforms, in which at
    least 51 Shoba villagers, including many elders, were killed." (page
    35)

    The brutality of the attacks is captured in another account:

    "The village of Murli, some five kilometres away from Al-Jeneina [very
    near the Chad/Sudan border], was attacked twice between July and August.
    One villager told AI delegates: 'It was early in the morning, people
    were sleeping. About 400 armed people cordoned the village, with
    military uniforms, the same ones worn by the army, with vehicles and
    guns. A
    plane came later, to see if the operation was successful. At least 82
    people were killed during the first attack. Some were shot and others,
    such as children and elderly, were burnt alive in their houses.'" (page
    13-14)

    The largest consequence of the attacks by Khartoum's regular and
    militia forces may be the disruption of the agricultural economy in
    Darfur, where so much of the population survives on subsistence farming.
    This disruption has very large, potentially devastating spill-over
    effects, not only in Darfur but neighboring Chad:

    "Ground attacks [by Khartoum's regular and militia forces] seemed not
    only to aim at killing the people, but also their livelihoods and their
    very means of subsistence. In a region prone to drought and
    underdevelopment, the destruction of houses and crops bears terrible
    consequences on the coping strategies of the local population. It means
    that shelter and food, essential commodities and also economic and
    social rights are being denied to the population. The displacement
    triggered by direct attacks on civilian villages is also adding pressure
    on the populations in Darfur or in Chad where others take refuge."
    (page 19, section 2.1.3 in the Amnesty report: "Destruction of
    villages, crops, and #####ng of cattle and property")

    Given the ethnic and racial animus in Khartoum's prosecution of the war
    in Darfur, highlighted in one way or another on most pages of the
    Amnesty report, this deliberate destruction of economic livelihood is
    clear evidence of genocide: the United Nations Convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (194 declares that
    genocide also consists in "deliberately inflicting on the group
    conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in
    whole or in part" (clause [c]).

    On the consistency of the accounts recorded, it is important to attend
    to Amnesty's characterizations of what it found:

    "Amnesty International delegates obtained more than a hundred
    testimonies from Sudanese refugees in nine locations along the eastern
    Chadian border, scattered over 300 kilometers. The testimonies were
    coherent, credible and all pointed at a quasi-systematic pattern of
    attacks." (page 9)

    "Amnesty International delegates collected many other testimonies from
    the refugees which were consistent with each other. They indicated a
    clear pattern of repeated violations both by the Janjawid and government
    soldiers. Many testimonies consistently suggested that the Janjawid and
    the soldiers were co-operating." (page 15)

    Amnesty also reports a deeply ominous consistency in the evidence that
    war in Darfur is ever more insistently driven by a racial and ethnic
    animus. The attacks on civilians reported to Amnesty characteristically
    refer to "Arab" attackers, who often speak contemptuously of their
    "African" victims:

    "According to an eyewitness, the militia accompanied by soldiers
    attacked people, saying 'You are opponents to the regime, we must crush
    you. As you are black, you are like slaves. Then the entire Darfur
    region will be in the hands of the Arabs. The government is on our side.
    The government plane is on our side, it gives us ammunitions and food."
    (page 12)

    "A refugee farmer from the village of Kishkish reported to Amnesty
    International delegates the words used by the militia: 'You are Black
    and you are opponents. You are our slaves, the Darfur region is in our
    hands and you are our herders.' They also reportedly said: 'You are
    slaves, we will kill you. You are like dust, we will crush you.' Another
    civilian attacked was reportedly told: 'You are in the fields, the rest
    is for our horses. We have the government on our right side, you are on
    the left side. You have nothing for yourselves.'" (page 2

    "A civilian from Jafal confirmed this when he was reportedly told by
    the Janjawid: 'You are opponents to the regime, we must crush you. As
    you are Black, you are like slaves. Then all the Darfur region will be
    in our hands. The government is on our side. The government plane is
    on our side to give us ammunition and food.'" (page 2

    "A local chief in the Abu Gamra area, between Tina and Kornoy, painted
    the extent of the destruction in his village: 'The Arabs and the
    government forces arrived on both sides of the village, with vehicles,
    on horseback and on camels, and armed with big weapons. The Arabs
    cordoned the village with more than 1,000 horses. There was also a
    helicopter and an Antonov plane. They shelled the town with more than
    200 shells. We counted 119 persons who were killed by the shelling. Then
    the Arabs burnt all our houses, took all the goods from the market. A
    bulldozer destroyed houses. Cars belonging to the merchants were burnt
    and generators were stolen. They said they wanted to conquer the whole
    territory and that the Blacks did not have a right to remain in the
    region.'" (page 20)

    These accounts square all too well with numerous others coming from
    humanitarian organizations, news reports, and other sources.

    Though Amnesty International does not describe this massive destruction
    of civilians, with clear racial and ethnic animus, as "ethnic cleansing"
    or genocide, it is difficult to read the report in full and not be drawn
    inevitably to this conclusion. Amnesty does speak of "ethnic
    differences between communities becoming more and more manipulated in
    the current conflict" (page 4), and offers this overview:

    "Another division often referred to is between those labeled or seeing
    themselves as 'Arabs' and those who are 'Black' or 'indigenous African.'
    The 'Arabs' are composed mainly of nomad groups, who would claim 'Arab'
    descent and speak Arabic and the 'Blacks' or 'Africans,' those who are
    not of Arab descent and speak their own local language. However,
    Amnesty International was told several times that the Beni Hussein, seen
    as 'Arabs,' are not taking part in the current conflict. The
    organization also met in Chad members of the Dorok community who said
    they were attacked by the Arab militia after they refused to join them
    and refer to themselves as 'Black Arabs.' In short, differences between
    groups are becoming more manipulated and entrenched as the conflict
    worsens." (page 4)

    What Amnesty does not say directly enough, though providing all the
    evidence required for the conclusion, is that this "manipulation" and
    "entrenchment" along racial and ethnic lines is being deliberately
    engineered by the Khartoum regime as a key feature in its use of Arab
    militias as the main counter-insurgency weapon in Darfur. It is no less
    genocide because it takes place primarily by military proxy: the
    strategy is still clearly one of destroying, in whole or in part, the
    African tribal groups that are perceived as supporting the Sudan
    Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), both
    discussed in the Amnesty report.

    The last section in the body of the Amnesty International report
    (Section 5) notes how Khartoum's prosecution of the war in Darfur
    entails many extremely serious violations of international human rights
    law and international humanitarian law, including violations of various
    of the Geneva Conventions. Dutifully, Amnesty also notes that "Sudan
    has ratified numerous international and regional human rights treaties,"
    including "the Geneva Conventions of 1949 to which Sudan is a state
    party" (page 37).

    The nature of Khartoum's war against the people of the south---now over
    20 years and the longest and most destructive conflict of its kind in
    the world---should make fully clear the regime's utter contempt for all
    "international human rights law" and "international humanitarian law,"
    as well as the Geneva Conventions, the Rome Convention of the
    International Criminal Court, and various other treaties it has on
    previous occasions proved expedient for Khartoum to sign. But it must
    still be said that such continued and open flouting of international
    law, if receiving no appropriate rebuke from the international
    community, inevitably undermines this tenuous constraint upon the
    actions of those who would do evil in the world, and weakens our ability
    to shame or hold accountable great powers for their failure to respect
    international law.

    It is in this context that we should assess the thirteen
    "recommendations to the Sudanese government" articulated by Amnesty
    International (pages 40-41). These include (among others) that the
    regime:

    *"publicly condemn all instances of grave abuses of human rights and
    international humanitarian law committed by its armed forces and militia
    aligned to them; and set up independent and impartial investigations
    into all such reported cases;

    *"take immediate measures to give adequate protection to civilians in
    Darfur against deliberate and indiscriminate attacks;

    *"ensure that humanitarian organizations have unrestricted and secure
    access to the whole Darfur region and to all victims of the conflict,
    including internally displaced persons;

    *"ease all support and supplies to any irregular armed forces,
    including Arab militia and the Janjawid, or establish clear chain of
    command control over them, giving clear instructions that abuses of
    human rights and humanitarian law will not be tolerated and making them
    accountable to these instructions;

    *"allow the establishment of a human rights monitoring component in any
    ceasefire monitoring force in the region which can investigate freely
    attacks on civilians" (page 40)

    It is, of course, appropriate for a supremely distinguished human
    rights organization to make such recommendations, as well as a series of
    other recommendations to all who are party to the conflict in Darfur or
    who may play a role in resolving the conflict and responding to the
    massive humanitarian crisis it has spawned. But Khartoum has responded
    to none of these recommendations when they have come from other sources,
    including the US State Department, and gives absolutely no sign of
    presently complying in any fashion with any of the recommendations.

    In turn, Amnesty International well understands that its voice cannot
    compel, only clarify both human rights abuses and what the appropriate
    responses to those abuses would be, at least in a world defined by moral
    responsiveness.

    Of course the world is only very partially defined by moral
    responsiveness; and nowhere is it less defined in these terms than in
    Khartoum. Amnesty International has made clear, at least as far as
    present evidence permits, the ghastly and deeply ominous realities in
    Darfur, the gross and continuous abuses of human rights that define
    Khartoum's prosecution of the war, and the terrifying scale of the
    humanitarian crisis now exploding into catastrophe. But the task of
    holding the Khartoum regime accountable, and of responding with
    appropriate urgency to vast and desperate human need, is that of the
    international community as a whole.

    It continues to be the case, as it has for too many months, that for
    reasons of diplomatic expediency and moral indecision, no such
    appropriate response is in evidence. In one sense, the scale of the
    human consequences of this failure cannot yet be measured; in another
    sense, the consequences are all too readily evident and all too
    disgracing of the very notion of an "international community."

    Eric Reeves
    Smith College
    Northampton, MA 01063

    413-585-3326
    [email protected]



    شكري وتقديري للأخ /a.abdalla

    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:48 AM)
    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:56 AM)
    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:57 AM)









                  

العنوان الكاتب Date
نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 05:30 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. اساسي01-22-04, 05:57 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Tumadir01-22-04, 06:05 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 06:10 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 06:07 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. اساسي01-22-04, 06:26 PM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 06:39 PM
          Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. اساسي01-22-04, 07:17 PM
            Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 07:25 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. فايز السليك02-01-04, 00:06 AM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. nahar osman nahar01-22-04, 07:49 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Mohamed Adam01-22-04, 08:17 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 08:35 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Adil Isaac01-22-04, 09:01 PM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج01-22-04, 10:05 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. hala guta01-22-04, 10:11 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. abdelrahim abayazid01-22-04, 11:02 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Ali Mahgoub01-23-04, 05:20 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. بلدى يا حبوب01-23-04, 07:09 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. تراث01-23-04, 10:16 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. abdelrahim abayazid01-31-04, 04:35 PM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. degna01-31-04, 08:09 PM
          Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Al-Masafaa02-01-04, 11:59 AM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. فايز السليك02-02-04, 00:11 AM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. مريم الطيب02-02-04, 07:39 AM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-03-04, 11:48 PM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-04-04, 04:41 AM
          Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. مهيرة02-04-04, 01:37 PM
            Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-04-04, 02:01 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Khalid Eltayeb02-04-04, 03:47 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:11 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:13 PM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:15 PM
          Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:16 PM
            Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:20 PM
              Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-05-04, 11:21 PM
                Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. فتحي البحيري02-06-04, 02:34 PM
                  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-06-04, 03:17 PM
                    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. ديامي02-06-04, 03:27 PM
                    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-06-04, 03:40 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Elmosley02-06-04, 03:47 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. lana mahdi02-06-04, 03:49 PM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. خالد الحاج02-06-04, 04:05 PM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Raja02-28-04, 03:23 AM
    Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Alia awadelkareem02-28-04, 06:08 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. hanouf5602-28-04, 06:54 PM
      Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. abdelrahim abayazid02-29-04, 02:43 AM
        Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. Kostawi03-01-04, 08:08 AM
  Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. maryoud ali03-01-04, 05:32 PM


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