Posts Tagged Obama Administration

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Headlines from Conflict Areas: Dec 02

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

Here is the daily roundup and summary of the major headlines coming out of conflict areas. United to End Genocide does not necessarily support the views expressed in the articles in this post.

Sudan and South Sudan

ICC arrest warrant sought for Sudan minister—Al Jazeera

“The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has requested an arrest warrant for Sudan’s defence minister for alleged crimes committed in Darfur. Luis Moreno-Ocampo asked the court on Friday “to issue an arrest warrant against the current Sudanese defence minister, Abdelrahim Mohamed Hussein, for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Darfur from August 2003 to March 2004,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement…”

Sudan army ‘captures’ area in South Kordofan, new images show destruction in Blue Nile—Sudan Tribune

“The Sudanese army (SAF) has claimed it seized control of an area in South Kordofan State from the hands of the rebels Sudan People’s Liberation Movement North (SPLM-N)…”

Kenya’s chief justice warns government against circumventing court orders—Sudan Tribune

“The Kenyan chief justice on Thursday stepped to the defense of his institution following a high court judge order this week to the government that it arrests Sudanese president Omer Hassan al-Bashir should he sets foot in the country…”

Sudan says it will seize South Sudanese oil as talks fail—Miami Herald

“Sudan vowed Wednesday to confiscate a portion of South Sudan’s oil as it passes through a pipeline in Sudan as talks between the countries failed to produce any agreement on how to split oil revenues…”

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Headlines from Conflict Areas: Nov. 29

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Here is the daily roundup and summary of the major headlines coming out of conflict areas. United to End Genocide does not necessarily support the views expressed in the articles in this post.

Sudan and South Sudan

SOUTH SUDAN: Clement John Kandang, “We can’t bring more goods because of the mines”—IRIN

“Violence in Sudan’s breadbasket border states such as South Kordofan has blocked food to South Sudan since just before it gained independence in July. In the new nation’s northern states such as Unity, heavily mined roads have compounded the problem of closed trade routes. Clement John Kandang, 43, who sells sorghum, the state’s staple food, in the capital Bentiu, told IRIN that massive price hikes as shortages increased meant many people were going hungry…”

S. Sudan “surprised” by oil export halt, seeks pipeline–Reuters

“South Sudan’s oil minister said on Tuesday Sudan’s decision to halt the South’s oil exports over a transit fee row would hurt both countries’ oil interests, and that the South would keep seeking an alternative pipeline…”

Kenya-Sudan relations veering towards a breakdown after court decision on Bashir’s arrest –Sudan

“The Sudanese government on Monday night took the surprise step of asking the Kenyan ambassador in Khartoum to leave the country after a High Court judge in Nairobi ordered the government to arrest president Omer Hassan al-Bashir…”

(more…)

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US Must Increase Sanctions on Sudan

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

On Tuesday, the Obama Administration announced the continuation of the national emergency with respect to Sudan which maintains sanctions on the country for another year.  The sanctions, which are renewed on an annual basis, were initially placed on Sudan by Presidents Clinton and Bush because of Sudan’s past support for international terrorism and widespread atrocities in Darfur.

While it is positive that President Obama extended these sanctions, it is also discouraging that he has taken few additional steps to stop Bashir’s most recent atrocities, especially the Sudanese government’s greatly intensified and expanded attacks against civilians, which have displaced over 500,000 civilians this year alone.

U.S. sanctions primarily targeted Sudanese officials who have committed atrocities in Darfur and those with ties to international terrorist organizations.  The Obama administration has yet to impose measures on specific perpetrators of violence against civilians in Abyei, South Kordofan, or Blue Nile.  United Nations sanctions on Sudan are similarly lacking, only applying to four individuals and omitting individuals wanted by the International Criminal Court.

In order to prevent further escalation of violence in Sudan, the U.S. should lead a push at the United Nations Security Council to expand sanctions to include individuals responsible for attacks against civilians in Sudan.  Any international push by the United States would likely prompt the European Union to follow suit, increasing the effectiveness of international asset freezes and travel bans.

The Obama Administration has a strong track record of implementing targeted sanctions on perpetrators of severe human rights violations, but has not yet imposed consequences on Sudanese officials who commit violent crimes against their own people. The United States must not ignore the brutal attacks on civilians in Sudan and should lead the international community in enacting targeted asset freezes and travels bans on those responsible.

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President Obama Sends 100 US Special Forces advisors to assist African countries in actions against the Lord’s Resistance Army

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

By Krista McCarthy

President Barack Obama sent a letter to the US House of Representatives and Senate on Friday, October 14th, announcing plans to send 100 US Special Forces advisors to Uganda, South Sudan, Central African Republic and Democratic Republic of Congo.  The advisors will advise the militaries of these countries in countering the rebel militia the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), led by Joseph Kony.

Maj. Gen. David Hogg, Commander of US Army Africa, inspects Ugandan troops in April 2011. Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army

The Lord’s Resistance Army has long been a source of instability and violence in the nations of central Africa.  Joseph Kony formed the Lord’s Resistance Army to overthrow the government of Uganda and replace it with a Christian theocracy. The LRA has committed massacres of civilians and often mutilated victims to spread fear. Between 1986 and 2007, the LRA reportedly killed 100,000 people in Uganda.  They have also become infamous for their use of children as soldiers and sex slaves. Over the course of the war in Uganda, over 66,000 children have been abducted by the LRA in Uganda. More than 1,700,000 Ugandan civilians have been displaced by the LRA’s violence.

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US Special Envoy for Sudan, activists bring violence in Sudan to the attention of Congress

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

By Krista McCarthy

On Tuesday, October 4th 2011, US Special Envoy to Sudan Princeton Lyman testified before the House Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, and Human Rights in a hearing titled “A Comprehensive Assessment of US Policy Toward Sudan”. Ambassador Lyman was joined by John Prendergast of the Enough Project, emancipated slave Ker Aleu Deng, Dr. Gerard Prunier of the Atlantic Council, and Ellen Ratner of Talk Radio News Service in testifying on the ongoing violent conflicts in Sudan.

Ambassador Lyman expressed concern over Sudan’s unwillingness to abide by the June agreement with South Sudan over troop withdrawal from the contested Abyei region. The June agreement established a September 30th deadline by which both Sudan and South Sudan had to withdraw their occupying troops and the UN Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) would deploy to protect civilians. Sudan has missed the deadline and is now refusing to withdraw its forces until UNISFA is fully deployed, a condition that was not part of the agreement. Ambassador Lyman denounced this statement, saying that the agreed upon withdrawal did not have such conditions, and that UNIFSA is already fully deployed and capable of protecting the civilians of Abyei.

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(Watch Ambassador Lyman’s full congressional testimony)

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Obama’s UN speech misses opportunity to warn of continued violence in Libya and Sudan

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

In his speech before the UN General Assembly on Wednesday September 20th, President Obama spoke of the continued challenge of creating “peace in an imperfect world.” Aspects of the President’s speech were welcomed by the genocide prevention community. In particular, Obama spoke of the realization that “peace is more than the absence of war” and stressed the responsibility of the international community in actively creating peace and diffusing conflict.

The President also asked, in no uncertain terms, for coordinated and efficient international action on the violent regime of Bashar al-Assad.  In what seemed to be an attempt to move Syria’s allies to action, Obama argued that, “for the sake of Syria…we must speak with one voice. There is no excuse for inaction. Now is the time for the United Nations Security Council to sanction the Syrian regime”.

The President also spoke about several of the other conflicts that United to End Genocide actively watches, including South Sudan and Libya.  Unfortunately, it was here that President missed a golden opportunity to warn of the continued violence affecting these countries.

While commending the successful referendum and independence of South Sudan, Obama failed to mention the ethnic and tribal violence that has convulsed South Sudan’s Unity, Warrap, Jonglei, Western Equatoria, and Lakes states.

He also did not mention the violent conflicts that wage unabated in Sudan. Violent attacks on civilian population continue not just in Darfur, but in South Korodofan and Blue Nile as well. Kharatoum has run bombing raids over South Korodofan hitting civilian targets, and government-backed militias have massacred civilians, many of them women and children. At least 200,000 people have fled South Kordofan. Meanwhile, the First Vice President of Sudan Ali Osman Taha has stated that the Sudanese Armed Forces will expand their presence and “purify” the rebels from the Blue Nile state.

The President spoke at length about triumph of the Libyan people and the international community over Libyan President Muammar Qaddafi. He stressed the importance of backing the new government, made up of the leaders of the rebellion.  Unfortunately, his remarks did not express concern over the continued fight between rebel forces and forces loyal to Qaddafi that rage in cities such as Sirte, where civilians are caught in the crossfire and desperate for basic aid.  There are concerns that loyalist forces will use civilians as human shields and that rebels are callous to the danger their offensive pose to the residents of Sirte. The sentiment of the rebel force toward the civilians is expressed in the words of one rebel fighter, “some 70% of the people of Sirte have always been with Gadhafi. Anyone who has chosen to remain in Sirte until now is a loyalist, and this means they have decided to fight against us”.

Although the President missed an opportunity to bring the world’s attention to the ongoing conflicts in Sudan and Libya, his clear and unequivocal support for strong sanctions on Syria was laudable. Obama’s speech also seemed to infer a continued commitment to protecting civilians from mass atrocities, something that genocide prevention organizations, like United to End Genocide, have pushed to see actualized.

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Bashir’s Campaign of Violence Spreads to Blue Nile

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

Fighting broke out today between the Sudan People’s Liberation Army- North and the Sudanese government forces in the state of Blue Nile. After launching recent invasions in Abyei and South Kordofan, the attack in Blue Nile is the latest in Bashir’s campaign to violently dominate the people of Sudan.

According to the SPLM-N, the political wing of the SPLA, the Sudanese army and allied militias carried out an attack on SPLA-A positions in Blue Nile’s capital of Damazin early on Friday targeting the residence of Malik Agar, the Governor of Blue Nile and Chairman of the SPLM-N, as well as the position of the commander of special joint units in Damazin.

Blue Nile, like Abyei and South Kordofan, was a focal point during the 22 year civil war between the North and South.  According to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended the war and led to South Sudan’s independence, Abyei (which has been occupied by the Sudanese Army) was to hold a referendum over whether it would join the South and both Blue Nile and South Kordofan were to remain in the North but carry out ill-defined “popular consultations”. Amid continuing attacks in South Kordofan and frustration in Blue Nile, that process has been suspended. The tense atmosphere in Blue Nile has mirrored that of South Kordofan in the weeks before violence broke out and during the past several months, both sides have significantly increased their military presence. In 2010, there were an estimated 17,000 SPLA-N troops and around 20,000 Sudanese Armed Forces troops in Blue Nile, however the current figure likely much higher.

By failing to impose serious consequences on Bashir’s regime for crimes committed in Darfur, Abyei and South Kordofan, the Obama Administration and the international community has essentially given the green light to the Sudanese government that they are free to perpetrate atrocities on civilians with impunity. The United States must lead the international community by taking concrete action to stop Bashir from brutally targeting the Sudanese people.

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He’s getting away with murder

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

History is repeating itself in South Kordofan, Sudan. And the same man that destroyed the lives of a generation of Darfuris is getting away with murder again.

Sudan’s president Omar al-Bashir is slaughtering people in South Kordofan and doing everything he can to keep the outside world from finding out. So far, his strategy is working. Why? Because the U.S. government and the United Nations are quite literally choosing to ignore his brutal attacks.

A report released yesterday by our friends at Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International related this disturbing news: “The relentless bombing campaign is killing and maiming civilian men, women, and children, displacing tens of thousands, putting them in desperate need of aid.”

These are the stories and the images that Omar al-Bashir is trying to hide from the world. Watch the video and then be sure to share it with your friends and family.

The U.S. government is doing nothing to stop Bashir’s attacks on the people of South Kordofan. The United Nations suppressed its own reports of ethnic targeting. And the media – just like with Darfur – is silent.

We can’t allow the world to ignore the horrors in South Kordofan. Watch the video now – then share it with everyone you know. We can’t let history repeat itself and wait until the government, the media, or the international community decide it’s time to intervene. By that time thousands more will be dead or displaced.

Thank you for watching and sharing the video – be sure to check back soon to learn more about what you can do to help the people suffering in South Kordofan.

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UN Confirms Crimes in South Kordofan

Friday, August 19th, 2011

The United Nations report on South Kordofan released this week is an official confirmation of reports of ethnic targeting, house to house searches, extrajudicial killings, bombing of civilians, attacks on churches, and displacement of large amounts of people, which have been coming out of the Nuba Mountains since early June.

As I told Radio France International in an interview (listen below), when I was in South Sudan in early July, I spoke with people displaced from the Nuba mountains and heard first hand all of the charges now confirmed in the UN report.

Listen to part of my interview with RFI:

It is high time that the report, which was leaked weeks ago, was officially released, and as attacks continue, the report is already out of date.  The initially reported 73,000 displaced people has been upgraded to over 200,000.

The UN report states the need for an independent investigation into the violence taking place in South Kordofan.  But it falls short of calling for a UN Security Council mandated investigation, ideally through the International Criminal Court.

What is truly needed is a UN civilian protection force in South Kordofan as well as in Blue Nile, a region described as equally tense as South Kordofan was just before violence broke out there.  The UN should also expand the current embargo on arms in Darfur to all of Sudan to take away the regime’s means for targeting civilians and should increase sanctions to hold those responsible for the recent violence accountable.

At the very least, there should be a strong demand for immediate access for humanitarian aid.  The violence has prevented the planting of crops and threatens to affect over 1 million people when the harvesting season comes and there is no food.

As the UN report states, there is ethnic targeting and bombing of civilians taking place in South Kordofan.  The same perpetrators, President Omar al-Bashir and Ahmed Haroun, are using many of the same methods used in Darfur.  The United States has condemned the violence, but actions speak louder than words.

The Obama administration deserves praise for its recent Presidential statement that preventing mass atrocities is a national security priority.  There is no stronger case for acting to live up to this commitment than the dire situation unfolding in South Kordofan.

More from my interview with Radio France International:

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A Call To Action In South Kordofan

Monday, August 8th, 2011

The architect of the genocide in Darfur, Omar al-Bashir, is at it again – attacking the people of South Kordofan.

During my recent trip to Sudan, I heard stories about families being systematically slaughtered, churches being burned and entire villages cut off from supplies of food, water, and medicine. An Anglican priest from the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan told me that a million people are now at risk.

What Bashir did in Darfur is now underway in South Kordofan.

Watch this video of people I spoke with on my recent trip to Sudan. Then take action to stop the violence.

 

 

Take Action NOW

A leaked UN report describes the killing of growing numbers of innocent people. Aid groups are reporting that more than 200,000 innocent civilians have already been driven from their homes.

While Secretary of State Clinton has condemned the violence, she has not called for action to stop Bashir – an international fugitive wanted for crimes against humanity and genocide.

Tell Secretary Clinton to stop the flow of arms to Sudan, protect civilians and impose strong economic sanctions on Bashir and his cronies.

We know the Bashir regime is targeting civilians and bombing villages in South Kordofan. We cannot let this happen. Tell Secretary Clinton we need action – not words – to stop the killing.

Thank you for your ongoing support.

Donate Now to the Save Darfur Coalition

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