Sunday, May 1, 2011

Bibliography:

·         “Darfur Human Rights Organization of the USA.” Darfurhumanrightsorg.org/index.html. (accessed May 1, 2011).

·         "Genocide in Darfur | The Nation." The Nation. http://www.thenation.com/article/genocide-darfur (accessed May 1, 2011).


·         "History of the Darfur Conflict." Amnesty International USA - Protect Human Rights. http://www.amnestyusa.org/darfur/darfur-history/page.do?id=1351103 (accessed May 1, 2011).

·         “Janjaweed Complicit in Rape, says Amnesty report.” Sudan Watch. http://sudanwatch.blogspot.com/2006/01/janjaweed-women-complicit-in-rape-says.html. (accessed May 1, 2011)

·         Reeves, Eric. "Genocide in Darfur - How the Horror Began - Sudan Tribune: Plural news and views on Sudan." Sudan Tribune: Plural news and views on Sudan. http://www.sudantribune.com/Genocide-in-Darfur-How-the-Horror,11445 (accessed May 1, 2011).


·         "War in Darfur - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia." Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_in_Darfur (accessed May 1, 2011).

Opinion: Government

I think our government has made another huge mistake. History is supposed to be something that we learn from and improve upon, however we just keep on making the same mistakes over and over again. It actually scares me how much the US disregards the important conflicts that go on in other countries, and yet we can sit here and pretend that by going to war for basically no reason (in my opinion) is actually helping the world. Imagine your siblings being slaughtered. If you have a sister, picture her being taken away as a sex slave. If you were left to fend for yourself in the middle of a desert, how would you feel? And then on top of that how would you feel if your only hope basically told you that your situation was of no interest to them because they can’t get anything out of it?
That’s the type of hopelessness imbedded in these people, and we are directly to blame.

Opinion: Abuse of women and girls

In the paragraph where I talked about how the Janjaweed are raping girls nonstop and using them as sex slaves- I don’t think anyone can really understand the level of brutality and horror that goes behind rape especially in this case because the Janjaweed have such extreme tactics when it comes to humiliating women. I read a few interviews that were taken by women in refugee camps, and they talked about their experiences being raped, and I can’t even comprehend the situation that these women are put in. I didn’t even want to add their stories into my blog because they are so graphic but I think it is one of the biggest issues because in some cases it’s worse than death. Even in the video they showed a brief clip of a women saying she was raped next to her husband’s dead body, and I can’t imagine anything that could get more disrespectful than that. Plus the fact that there is a group of Janjaweed women singing while other women and even little girls are being beaten and raped; it’s unconscionable.

Opinion: Video by Green Day

This video is so devastating to me personally because I spent a few years at my old school tying to spread awareness about Darfur and trying to get other people involved. And our government has really done nothing to keep this genocide from getting worse, even after they promised they wouldn’t do the same thing that they did in Rwanda. So the fact that the people in this video are crying out for help and begging for the US to step in and do something more, and yet we continue to disregard these people because it might not be in our “interest” to go save their lives makes me sick.

What is the Darfur Genocide?



Darfur is located in the western region of Sudan and it is just about the size of Texas.  
Starting in 2003, only ten or eleven years after the genocide in Rwanda, 350,000 to 400,000 people were killed through murder, disease, torture, and other forms of malnutrition all within twenty nine months. This violence began unnoticed in February of 2003, and is said to have “precipitated the first great episode of genocidal destruction in the 21st century.”
The genocide in Darfur began because starting in 1991 many people of Sudan thought they were victims of an Arab apartheid campaign. The Sudanese Arabs who control the government are said to practice apartheid against the non-Arab citizens in Sudan.  Many have also accused the government of carrying out policies of apartheid and “ethnic cleansing” against non-Arabs in Darfur.
In Early 2003, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) began attacking the government. The reason for their attacks was that they believed in mainly the same principles stated in the last paragraph. In response to these attacks, the Sudanese government supported, contributed to, and aided the Janjaweed. The Janjaweed are a militia force, armed by the Sudanese government. The members of the Janjaweed militia are black Arab tribesmen who despise black African farmers.  According to CNN "These guys have a racist ideology that sees the Arab population as the supreme population that would like to see the subjugation of non-Arab peoples. They’re criminal racketeers that have been supported very directly by the government to wage the war against the people of Darfur." The Janjaweed seriously believe that if they don’t get rid of non-Arab people, their government will be overrun by them.
                                         http://www.nature.com/news/2008/080311/full/news.2008.663.html
                           This is one example of the Janjaweed attacking or bombing a village.
Since 2003 Darfur has been corrupt with every type of torture imaginable such as: rape, detentions, forced displacement, the burning of homes and villages, and the theft and deliberate destruction of crops and cattle. And it still remains one of the worst human rights devastations, despite the attempts from foreign powers to end the brutality and to keep genocide from coming about. There is no way of actually knowing, but the estimate of dead men, women, and children comes to over 300,000 bodies. There have been at least 2.6 million people displaced from their homes who have turned to refugee camps; Internally Displaced Person (IDPs). But for those who can’t make it to a camp, because their wounded or the camp is too far for them to walk, they are attempting to survive by hiding out under trees, in courtyards, and/or anywhere else they can’t be seen.
Assuming they survive, the hardest decision for most people to make after their homes have been destroyed by the Janjaweed is whether or not to seek out a refugee camp. Believe it or not sometimes it is even more dangerous to run across the desert for miles and miles to get to the camp than to hide under a tree in the same area that the Janjaweed just got done destroying. The reason for this is because the Janjaweed are well- equipped with heavy machinery (bombs, guns, etc.) and in some instances they travel by helicopters that are supplied by the Sudanese government and they shoot and throw bombs from above. So if they see anyone who is non-Arab they would just shoot them down. This is why the non-Arabs try to hide under trees or anything that wouldn’t get them noticed by the Janjaweed.  
                                        http://columbiachronicle.com/exhibition-brings-darfur-close-to-home/
                                       These are a few members of the Janjaweed militia.
Rape is one of the most serious parts of Janjaweed brutalization. The number of women and girls that have been abducted, raped, and abused is unknown. The Janjaweed rape women on a regular basis, and lots of times they kidnap women to use as sex slaves. They abuse these women constantly and usually break their limbs so they are not able escape. “[The militiamen] are happy when they rape. They sing when they rape and they tell [us] that we are just slaves and that they can do with us how they wish,” according to a 37 year old victim who was interviewed at a refugee camp.  There is also a female group in support of the Janjaweed who go around and sing for joy while the Janjaweed men are raping their enemies. The songs that the Hakama (Janjaweed women) sing encourage the acts of the Janjaweed and the singers motivate and stir up the racial hatred against black civilians during assaults on their villages. The Hakama also celebrate the humiliation of the “blacks” that they see as their enemies. Rape is just on variation of the many human rights violations going on in Sudan, and Darfur in particular.
The Darfur Human Rights Organization (DHRO) was created with the belief that everyone should have the same basic human rights, and it is the rest of the world’s obligation to enforce these rights by necessary means if certain governments are not protecting them. The Darfur Human Rights Organization was founded by a man named Dr. Adam. He was born in Darfur and despite his rough life, he was lucky enough to receive an education in Sudan, his home country. Dr. Adams got a Bachelors Degree in Medicine from the Khartoum Teaching Hospital, and he worked there for about twelve years. Then he moved to the United States in 1990. Since then he has been an advocate for the citizens of Darfur and he has spoken in several conferences throughout the US stating the severity of the situation in Darfur and stressing the need for international assistance.

               
This is Dr. Adm (founder), Mark Feinman (lawyer), and two other members of DHRO.
The Darfur Human Rights organization is a non-profit organization in Philadelphia. This organization provides resettlement and rehabilitation services in Darfur for the people who have been displaced because of human rights violations caused by the Sudanese government and Janjaweed, along with other militia groups. DHRO also documents the different cases of human rights violations an reports them to the international community. In the past few years DHRO has teamed up with numerous groups and collected money to purchase a water pump, and shoes, and the DHRO has also received tons of used clothes that have all been taken to Darfur by a group of people including Dr. Adam himself, and Mark Feinman who is a lawyer involved in DHRO. The reason it is such a big deal for these people to go and deliver the goods is because the journey to Darfur is extremely dangerous and life-threatening, which is why the trips have often been delayed in caution to violence.