'Once Again' in Darfur
Sojomail - March 20, 2009
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We should kill everyone there. Everyone there is a terrorist. - An Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) squad leader describing the complaints of his soldiers after he convinced his commander to change rules of engagement that allowed the clearing out of houses by shooting residents without warning. He also described how, during the recent Gaza invasion, his company commander ordered an elderly Palestinian woman be shot and killed while she was walking on a road about 100 meters from a house the company had commandeered. Since the release of his and other soldiers' testimony by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, the IDF has ordered an investigation into allegations of misconduct including killing civilians, vandalism, and lax rules of engagement. (Source: Haaretz) + Sign up to receive "Verse and Voice" - our daily quote and Bible verse e-mail
'Once Again' in Darfur
Here we are again, and again, and again. It is not a new message or a new concern. People have been suffering, starving, raped, beaten and killed year in and year out. There are those who have committed years, entire lives, to the cause. They have preached, they have marched, they have sung, they have divested, and they have been arrested to make their voices heard. Politicians, celebrities, faith leaders, and activists have joined together to stand up and speak out. The campaigns have gone on so long and the education so effective that 58 percent of Americans can now locate this remote country on a map. But, “never again” has turned into “once again,” and history repeats itself with genocide in Darfur. Over the past few weeks, 13 international humanitarian organizations have been expelled from Sudan at the dictate of Omar al-Bashir, president of Sudan. These actions came soon after the International Criminal Court handed down an indictment of al-Bashir and issued a warrant for his arrest for crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Darfur. As a result, 1.1 million Darfuris are without food, 1.5 million without health care, and more than 1 million without access to clean drinking water. If there was any doubt as to whether or not he was truly acting in the best interest of his people, his use of food and water as weapons of war show that he just does not care about the people of Darfur. Over the past month, officials have spoken to me about invoking Article 16 of the Court’s statutes which would allow the U.N. Security Council to defer proceedings for a year or even more. They argue that this would allow the Khartoum government to take positive steps forward in taking care of its people and moving toward peace. With the expulsion of these humanitarian organizations, al-Bashir has shown that he has no interest in the well-being of the people of Darfur or in bringing piece. These actions show that once again there comes a time when a political leader has so violated standards of international law and morality that he should no longer be treated as a sovereign, even in his own country, but as a criminal. Actions like this show that he should no longer be president, but prosecuted and brought to justice like the international fugitive of the law he now is. If he was serious about peace and progress, the first thing he should do is welcome the aid organizations back into his country, and without that he has ensured that this warrant will be pursued. Thursday morning, a small group gathered in the Rules Committee meeting room of the Capitol building. Congressmen and women, activists, faith leaders, and celebrities spoke to express our outrage at the flagrant disregard for human life, but press was sparse at the event. AIG bonuses were the headlines of the day. Certainly, that is a revelation worthy of our anger, but in the midst of our financial concerns, we must remember the lives of the millions killed over the past 20 years and the hundreds of thousands of deaths that will come with the support of the Khartoum government. Where do we go from here? Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in response to the expulsion of aid groups,
We all must ask ourselves what more we can do as we escalate our own response to this offense to our faith and our conscience. The president took a step forward by appointing a new special envoy to Sudan, General J. Scott Gration, but that is not enough. Congresswoman Donna Edwards said it this way at the press conference: “It is not just by our appointments but by our actions that we need to show that what Khartoum has done is unacceptable.” Again, and again, and again. The unacceptable has been accepted, atrocities have been ignored. When the dust clears and the bodies are buried, burned, or left to rot in forsaken camps, the whole world will mourn for what has been done. But, what Sudan needs is not apologies in the future, but hope today. Until the killing has stopped and peace restored, Sudan needs people of conscience across the world who will stand in solidarity today, tomorrow, and the day after that – again, and again, and again. + Click to share to this article + Click to respond to this article on the God's Politics Blog + See what's new on the blog of Jim Wallis and friends Obama Speaks on Immigration Reform Lent Devotional: The Triumphal Entry and the Poor People's Campaign Mule Train I'm Taking Down All My Miley Cyrus and Jonas Brothers Posters Colombian Pastor Still Missing, Family Threatened God's Garden: Church-based Community Agriculture Liberian Deportation Threat One More Reason for Immigration Reform Defiant Hope: St. Patrick's Day in Northern Ireland No Anger Without Alternatives The Real History of 'Saint Patrick': The Saint He Wasn't, the Man He Was The Collapse of Evangelicalism? Darfur's Cries Grow Louder What to Do If Someone at Your Church Has an Eating Disorder Obama's Community of Support and Challenge Miracle Shots: On the Court and on the Street Through Lenten Darkness, Rays of God's Grace in Zimbabwe Recommended Reading from the Twittersphere Watchmen: A Clone without a Soul Palestinian and Israeli Former Fighters Unite for Peace Sunday School with Jon Stewart The Perils of Well-Meaning But Short-Sighted Generosity Jon Stewart, Prophet (But Not the Phoney Future-Telling Kind) + Sign up to receive our "Daily Digest" e-mail - the latest headlines on critical issues Top Stories: President Obama has been without a pastor or a home church ever since he cut his ties to the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. in the heat of the presidential campaign. But he has quietly cultivated a handful of evangelical pastors for private prayer sessions on the telephone and for discussions on the role of religion in politics. All are men, two of them white and three black — including the Rev. Otis Moss Jr., a graying lion of the civil rights movement. Two, the entrepreneurial dynamos Bishop T. D. Jakes and the Rev. Kirbyjon H. Caldwell, also served as occasional spiritual advisers to President George W. Bush. Another, the Rev. Jim Wallis, leans left on some issues, like military intervention and poverty programs, but opposes abortion. "Sojourners in the news" articles are the most recent news clippings that mention Sojourners in any way - whether favorably or unfavorably. Though we provide the text on our site for your convenience, we do not necessarily endorse the views of these articles or their source publications. |
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