China and Russia block Darfur sanctions...
... and it defies my ability to understand why:
The two powers, joined by Qatar, used their position on a UN sanctions committee to block the imposition of a UN travel ban and asset freeze on four unnamed Sudanese, including one government official, proposed by Britain.
The United States, which backed the British initiative, reacted angrily by threatening to call a public vote of the 15-nation Security Council that would force Russia and China into making a formal veto.
“This will be a test for the council to see if the sanctions procedure is going to work at all,” John Bolton, the US Ambassador, said.
The Security Council voted a year ago to impose sanctions on individuals responsible for the violence in Darfur, where Janjaweed Arab militia have made two million black villagers homeless since 2003.
It's past time for things to come to a head in the Sudan. Well past time. Chuck Colson provides details:
While the words never again linger on the lips of still-grieving Rwandans, just a thousand miles away, genocide continues to ravage the country of Sudan.
Just two years ago, in April 2004, the N’Djamena Ceasefire Agreement called for an end to hostilities in the Darfur region of Sudan. Since then, that ceasefire has been flagrantly violated by the government of Sudan and its proxies, the Janjaweed militia, which have continued to attack and slaughter innocent civilians.
Some 400,000 people made in the image of God have been killed in Darfur and
eastern Chad. Another 200,000 have fled their homes in the past three months.The chairman of Prison Fellowship Rwanda, Bishop John Rucyahana, has led efforts in Rwanda to bring healing, forgiveness, and reconciliation through Christ to genocide’s perpetrators, survivors, and family members. Listen to what he has to say about what is happening today in Sudan:
“It’s a repeat of what happened to Rwanda. You know the genocide in Rwanda happened when the United Nations was just watching. Of course, it is happening at a different level, with a different approach in the Sudan, but still it is a genocide; targeting a particular people in a community, to wipe them out, to disrupt their productivity, to uproot them, to stop them from education, to eliminate them either by a slow or quick death.”
When asked what we can do to help, Bishop Rucyahana minces no words: “You can mobilize the people in the world, to speak against them, to condemn them,” he says. “We must condemn what is going on; we must take actions to stop it.” To that, I say, Amen.
In an article in the New York Times, the courageous reporter Nicholas Kristof quotes the late Senator Paul Simon: “If every member of the House and Senate had received 100 letters from people back home saying we have to do something about Rwanda when the crisis was first developing, then I think the response would have been different.” Just think of it—a hundred calls to each senator and congressman.
Well, another April is upon us, and this time we have a “Hotel Darfur” on our hands. But you and I can do something about it. Recently, the House passed the Darfur Peace and Accountability Act, calling for immediate action. The Senate has a similar resolution now in committee. If you are horrified by what is going on in Sudan—and you must be—please write or call your senators and the White House today.
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Take action:
Please contact your two senators today and urge them to pass the Darfur Peace and Accountability Act. To learn who your senators are and how to contact them, visit www.senate.gov. Contact the White House at 202-456-1111; e-mail president@whitehouse.gov.
I think it's past time to act. Well past time.
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