South Kordofan Archive

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House Letter Urges Obama to Reinvigorate Sudan Policy

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Congressman Michael Capuano (D-MA) has been joined by the co-chairs of the Sudan Caucus in writing a bipartisan letter to President Obama. The letter urges Obama to adopt a new approach on Sudan.

Urge Your Representative to Sign-on

The letter will be open for additional signatures until November 18, 2011 and all members of the House of Representatives are welcome to join. Urge your Representative to add their signature to this letter today. You can contact your Representative by phone through 1-800-GENOCIDE or send an email through house.gov. Your Representative should contact Congressman Capuano’s office to sign-on.

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Making a Difference: End Genocide Action Summit Report

Monday, October 24th, 2011
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Four hundred advocates, supporters and friends of United to End Genocide and the STAND student network converged on Washington, D.C. this weekend for the End Genocide Action Summit. It was an incredible gathering overflowing with information and inspiration.  It was impossible to be there and not be moved.

Right now, many of these advocates are converging on Capitol Hill to deliver a message that is a matter of life and death for many thousands in Sudan who are the latest targets of a mass murderer who is wanted for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide by the International Criminal Court: Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir. They are demanding that the United States take action now to stop Bashir from continuing to terrorize the Sudanese people.

Many summit participants were young activists – some experienced campus organizers and others who had never taken action in support of any cause before. There were seniors, soccer moms, business people and artists. There were those who have been touched by the horror of genocide and mass atrocity first hand.  They all joined us to show that even when conflicts don’t hit the headlines, there is a wellspring of citizens who are vigilant and ready to take action. Their willingness to act to stop the suffering of people in far parts of the world has a power that cannot be underestimated.

Courageous activists from Sudan shared their stories and grounded us in the realities of those who are facing threats and violence every day.  A panel on what is happening in Sudan was packed to overflowing. Conference participants demanded that the session be repeated a second time so that everyone could learn what is happening there.  Indeed, we were heartened that New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof chose this past Sunday to highlight the current violence in the Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile regions of Sudan in his column, getting this story to many people who were not here with us, but also care and will take action.

What is happening In Sudan? It bears repeating that right now violence against Sudanese in these southern border regions is escalating to a horrific level.  Omar al-Bashir, architect of the Darfur genocide, has directed attacks on civilians in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.  Huge numbers of people have been displaced from their homes.  The attacks are only going to intensify now, as the rainy season comes to an end and roads become passable.  And adding to the terror, the bombings have prevented Sudanese from planting crops, the government is denying access to humanitarian aid and hundreds of thousands are now at risk of starvation.

Conference participants committed themselves to action. United to End Genocide’s Stop Bashir! campaign has already generated over 25,000 individual calls to action even before this weekend’s Action Summit and is gaining momentum.  We have testified before Congress and are working with allied Members to push for stronger US action, and we continue to keep the pressure on the Administration.

The Action Summit was a moment for all of us to recharge and recommit to our vision of a world without genocide or mass atrocities.  Now we’re ready to continue to ground that vision in action.  We will send postcards and petitions, we will have call-in days, we will call for and testify at Congressional hearings, we will propose legislation, we will continue to speak out in the media and organize events to garner attention, we will build our numbers and our presence in Washington and throughout the nation.  We will create a drum beat of pressure on the Administration that won’t let up until they reverse course and stop accommodating this brutal killer and his ruthless regime.

We need you now more than ever. There a number of ways to help but for starters, we want to collect at least 50,000 signatures to our Stop Bashir campaign by December 6th, the 6 month anniversary of when Bashir’s forces began their attacks in South Kordofan.  Please go to www.stopbashir.org, sign a postcard and then share this action through your social networks. Five minutes of your time will go a long way to getting us to 50,000.

We will be acting on other crises, as well.  Activists heard firsthand about what is happening to people in Syria, in Burma, in Democratic Republic of Congo.  As many of you at the summit reminded us, we can only have an impact if we come together, if we amplify our voices, if we build a larger, stronger community of activists who will stand up now, today — to stop Bashir’s campaign of horror in Sudan, and to act any time people are threatened by genocide or mass atrocity, anywhere in the world.

Together, we move forward, sobered by the enormity of the challenge before us but heartened by the committed men and women – young and old – who are uniting to end genocide.

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UEG Director of Policy Briefs Congress on Crises in South Kordofan and Blue Nile in Sudan.

Friday, October 14th, 2011

Director of Policy & Government Relations at UEG, listens to Chairman Frank R. Wolf (R-VA) speak, after briefing the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission on the violent crises in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

Director of Policy and Government Relations for United to End Genocide, Daniel Sullivan, testified yesterday in a hearing before Members of Congress on the increasingly dire situation in Sudan.  The hearing titled “First Hand Accounts of Violence and IDP/Refugee Problem in South Sudan’s Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile regions”, was held by the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission and included testimony by independent journalist, Ryan Boyette, and Director of Communications for the Enough Project Jonathan Hutson, who spoke on the work the Satellite Sentinel Project is doing in Sudan.

Mr. Sullivan discussed conversations he had with Sudanese displaced by fighting in South Kordofan and testified on the looming food crisis in South Kodofan and Blue Nile. Denial of access to humanitarian aid organizations combined with a failed harvest due to combat and government bombings will put over one million people at risk of famine in the next two to three months.  Mr. Sullivan laid out steps that the US government can take to stop the attacks in Sudan and emphasized that the time to act to avert a major famine is now.

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Impending Food Crisis in South Kordofan and Blue Nile

Friday, October 7th, 2011

Civilians in South Kordofan and Blue Nile are on the verge of a potential food crisis. Next month’s harvest is expected to fail due to the disruption of the major crop season as a result of attacks by the Government of Sudan and fighting between Bashir’s forces and the Sudan People’s Liberation Army- North (SPLA-N). According to the UN, at least 235,000 people in both South Kordofan and Blue Nile are in need of help.

Displaced civilians in South Kordofan

On Tuesday, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) called for urgent action to prevent a humanitarian and food crisis in the conflict affected regions of Blue Nile and South Kordofan. In South Kordofan, fighting between the SPLM-N and Sudanese government began on June 5th at the beginning of the planting season displacing over 200,000 civilians. Many fled into nearby caves seeking refuge from the Sudanese Armed Forces’ aerial bombardments. Those who did not flee their villages have stayed close to their homes and makeshift bomb shelters they created by digging holes into the ground and have not ventured to their fields fearing the indiscriminate bombing by government planes.

Earlier this week, the UN reported that food stocks that were delivered two months ago have now been depleted and civilians are experiencing food shortages. These shortages are unlikely to be remedied in the near future as the Sudanese government continues to prevent international humanitarian organizations from providing food and other desperately needed supplies. The few Sudanese NGOs permitted in South Kordofan face a multitude of restrictions severely limiting their ability to deliver aid.

President Bashir’s forces have also restricted international aid groups from accessing Blue Nile where the Sudanese government and SPLM-N have clashes repeatedly since September 1st. The people of Blue Nile were able to plan their crops since fighting in the state began several months after clashes broke out in South Kordofan. Unfortunately, many civilians in Blue Nile have been forced to abandon their fields as the Sudanese Armed Forces attacked towns throughout the state and many crops have become overgrown and withered.

The likely crop failures will not only affect the people of South Kordofan and Blue Nile but will also have an impact on civilians elsewhere in Sudan who already face rapidly increasing food prices. Over the past week there have been several series of protests against the rising food prices and high levels of inflation on food which last month topped 27%. The lack of crops to harvest in South Kordofan and Blue Nile and food shortages in South Sudan will likely cause prices to soar even further.

The Government of Sudan’s restriction of aid combined with the looming failure of the upcoming harvest will likely have devastating effects in the near future. The United States and international community must immediately pressure the Sudanese government to allow international humanitarian organizations and UN agencies to provide critically needed aid to the people of Blue Nile and South Kordofan in order to prevent a food crisis.

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Report Confirms Continued Killing in South Kordofan

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Sudan continues to indiscriminately bomb civilians and block humanitarian aid to South Kordofan, with the latest confirmation coming from today’s joint report by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.

“The Sudanese government is literally getting away with murder and trying to keep the outside world from finding out” said Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International’s Senior Crisis Response Advisor.  “The international community, and particularly the UN Security Council, must stop looking the other way and act to address the situation.”

Displaced man in Kurchi in his makeshift bomb shelter watches an Antonov aircraft fly overhead. Tens of thousands of civilians have fled indiscriminate aerial bombardment by the Sudanese military to seek shelter wherever they can. © 2011 Kaarsten Stormer

The joint report was based on a week spent by researchers in South Kordofan, during which, “Antonov aircrafts dropped bombs over farmlands and villages almost daily.”  Casualties took place in and around homes and village markets or while victims were cultivating fields or fetching water, and many of the victims were children.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International collected detailed information on indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas, denial of humanitarian aid, extrajudicial killings, coerced returns, sexual violence, and the destruction of property, including churches.

The report confirms accounts recorded by Genocide Intervention Network/Save Darfur Coalition in early July, as well as many of the findings in the United Nations report released on August 15 including “patterns of unlawful killings and widespread attacks on civilian properties that could amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The lack of strong condemnation and action by the UN Security Council is also decried in the report with South Africa, Russia, and China singled out for their role in blocking any statements or action.

The report concludes with a call for the UN Security Council to:

“firmly condemn and demand an end to Sudan’s indiscriminate bombings in civilian populated areas and other violations, call for unfettered access for humanitarian agencies to all affected areas, and take concrete action to ensure an independent human rights monitoring presence across Southern Kordofan” and “to mandate an independent inquiry into the alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law that occurred during the hostilities in southern Kordofan, and hold perpetrators to account.”

 

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