July 14, 2004 5:28 AM

So, does this meet the "legal definition" of tragedy?

Another Problem From Hell: A human-rights expert who has witnessed the persecution in Darfur insists that genocide is occuring. A dispatch from Sudan.

While Colin Powell and the UN debate whether or not what is taking place in Sudan's Darfur Province meets the "legal definition" of genocide, the atrocities are continuing virtually without interruption.

Consider, if you will, this story as representative of the tragedy that currently is Darfur:

Thirty-five-year-old Azine (not her real name) is still in shock at what happened to her in Western Darfur, Sudan, four months ago. One morning, soldiers entered her village, burned her house, and forced her to flee with her four children. She and her family now live in a refugee camp in Farchana, Chad, in a tent provided by the United Nations. On a recent day at the camp, she described what happened to her in the Sudan:

"At around 5 a.m., helicopters and Sudanese military Antonovs circled the village," she said. Later, four men wearing Sudanese military uniforms entered her house and took all her property, then set the house on fire.

"My husband had fled first for fear that he might be killed," she continued, describing what appears to be a common pattern among Darfurian villagers attacked over the last several months. As the men in the village get wind of impending attacks, they flee at once – knowing that they will be killed if they stay – leaving the women and children behind. The male villagers know that the women will be raped, but probably not killed. That is, unless they resist.

Of the 300 families from this village, about 25 people were killed and about 15 wounded. Azine's sister ran away from the attackers and was shot and killed, along with her 3-year-old daughter.

Since early 2003, tens of thousands of Sudanese citizens of African descent who live in the Darfur region have been systematically killed, raped, and displaced as their villages have been destroyed. Through coordinated land and air attacks; the burning of homes and crops; the rounding up of livestock; the destruction of wells, granaries, and irrigation works; the uprooting of trees; and the theft of all possessions, the government of Sudan and the government-supported Arab militia, Janjaweed, have displaced more than 1 million people.

The US government has finally begun to rouse from it's slumber on this issue, but it's response has been tepid at best. While Colin Powell and the UN haggle over whether Darfur meets the legal definition of "genocide", the killing, rape, and repression continue. Since we protect people from the abuses of corrupt, power-mad, murderous dictators, I'm wondering when we're going to invade?

Oh, right; there's no oil in Darfur....

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This page contains a single entry by Jack Cluth published on July 14, 2004 5:28 AM.

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