Posts Tagged Save Darfur Coalition

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April’s Darfur Hero – David Rosenberg

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

David Rosenberg at the 2010 Sudanese Diaspora Summit in Pittsburgh. Photo Courtesy of PDEC

The Darfur Heroes program is a way for the Save Darfur Coalition to honor individuals and groups who have done inspiring and important work in an effort to end the violence in Sudan. This April, Save Darfur Coalition is proud to honor David Rosenberg.

David Rosenberg helped organize “The Way Forward in Darfur and South Sudan,” a Sudanese Diaspora Summit held on March 19 – March 21, 2010 in Pittsburgh. The summit focused on promoting dialogue, a unified Diaspora voice and recommendations on advocacy, capacity building, and the elections in Sudan.  David Rosenberg has been a longtime activist in the Sudan movement, and below are his words about his passion for the people of Sudan.


I co-founded the Pittsburgh Darfur Emergency Coalition (PDEC) in the summer of 2004 after seeing news accounts of the genocide in Darfur. I served as volunteer coordinator of the organization during my last two years as an archivist at the University of Pittsburgh and continued in this role after retiring. Already experienced in other community campaigns, I had been able to bring together diverse constituencies (students, retirees, religious and nonprofit organizations) in signature citywide campaigns which successfully impacted political leaders and media.

PDEC has supported Save Darfur Coalition initiatives in a number of ways. For the “Million Voices” campaign -an initiative to deliver 1 million signed postcards to President Bush demanding his support for a stronger multilateral force to protect Darfuris;  PDEC collected more than 15,400 postcards with help from student and religious organizations from Pittsburgh, Western Pennsylvania and Ohio.  PDEC collected an additional 15,000 postcards for the “Be a Voice for Darfur” campaign targeting President Obama, which called for the protection of civilians, sustainable peace, justice for victims, and accountability for perpetrators.

The PDEC cards included 4,704 signatures collected at President Obama’s Inauguration by more than 150 Pittsburghers who were part of the Save Darfur Coalition call to service around the Inauguration and Martin Luther King Day. When actor and activist George Clooney delivered PDEC’s postcards and 235,000 others to President Obama, he urged the president to appoint someone to work on Sudan full-time, an initiative which was influential in the appointment of U.S. Special Envoy Gen. Scott Gration.

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Darfur Now More than Ever

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Cross posted from the Huffington Post

In recent weeks several commentators have declared the Save Darfur movement variously as no longer useful, confused, or stuck in the past. Such assertions belie a misunderstanding of what the Save Darfur movement is all about. Darfuris continue to suffer, and as national elections and the referendum on independence for South Sudan grow closer, it is clear that the problems of Darfur will not be solved in the absence of major governance reform in Sudan, and conversely that the myriad of problems facing Sudan cannot be resolved until peace is secured in Darfur. Resolving the Darfur conflict is critical not just for the people of Darfur, but for the future of Sudan and the stability of the entire region. Rather than being past its expiration date, the Save Darfur movement is needed now more than ever.

The Save Darfur movement is perhaps, along with the anti-apartheid movement, the most successful domestic mobilization on a non-military international issue in American history. When the genocide began in 2003, few Americans knew of Sudan, let alone the distant region of Darfur. By raising awareness and communicating public outrage about the genocide to Congress and the Bush administration, the movement helped secure funds for one of the largest humanitarian operations in the world and hundreds of millions of dollars of US support for the eventual deployment of a United Nations peacekeeping force. These actions have saved tens of thousands, if not millions, of lives, and have helped salvage millions of civilian livelihoods devastated by years of conflict and forced displacement.

As the conflict has evolved, the Save Darfur movement has matured. Mass janjaweed attacks on villages no longer take place with any regularity; prior to the recent Jebel Marra offensive, violence (thankfully) was at an all-time low, according to the United Nations. Our critics contend that our movement has refused to acknowledge that the face of the battle has changed; that we are adrift unless villages are burning and wells are being poisoned. We not only acknowledge that the contours of the conflict have changed, we welcome it. But success in raising domestic awareness of the issue and putting pressure on the Sudanese government to stop the most visible abuses does not mean that our work is done – in fact, much hard work remains.

According to UN estimates, 2.7 million Darfuris (a number equivalent to the population of the President’s home town of Chicago) remain in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps. Over 4.7 million Darfuris rely on humanitarian aid. Compounding matters, levels of insecurity have only increased in recent months. A column of over sixty UN peacekeepers was recently disarmed and held overnight by parties allegedly unknown on its way to investigate claims of civilian deaths and displacement. Darfuri civilians, international aid workers, and UN peacekeepers all face daily threats of banditry; all (ironically) depend on the Sudanese government for protection, which it fails to provide. The scourge of rape plagues the IDP and refugee camps. Darfuri civilians cannot leave these designated areas of relative safety and return home because their safety is not guaranteed, and the protracted length of the conflict has made repatriation an uncomfortable and complex prospect, particularly for the hundreds of thousands of children who have grown up knowing nothing but insecurity.

While fewer Darfuris die today from direct violence than in 2003-2005, pervasive violent banditry, combined with the ever-present dangers of poor sanitation and hygiene, contaminated water supplies, and irregular food distribution poses daily risks. President Bashir demonstrated one year ago how quickly he can threaten the humanitarian lifeline when he expelled 13 international aid organizations, which collectively represented 40% of the humanitarian capacity in Darfur. Additionally, the Government of Sudan has failed to disarm the janjaweed and small arms’ trafficking has become a grave concern, so Khartoum easily could resume mass direct attacks if it desired. As I write, it is unclear what the current status of the fighting between Sudanese government forces and rebels in Jebel Marra is, or whether civilians have been intentionally targeted. Humanitarian agencies estimate over one hundred civilian casualties and tens of thousands of displaced civilians, but have been forced out by obstructionism and insecurity. The resulting silence is itself a condemnation of the lack of peace in the region.

In short, Darfuris today face different, but no less dangerous, challenges and they still depend upon international support to survive. Thus, there remains a political imperative for activists to continue to draw attention to their plight and engage with relevant domestic and international actors to build the political will to address both the immediate needs and the underlying cause of the danger.
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Save Darfur and Propr Release New T-Shirt

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Propr/Save Darfur

Propr/Save Darfur

The Save Darfur Coalition has partnered with the owners of Propr (David Arquette, Ben Harper, and David Bedwell) to design a new exclusive t-shirt that will be sold both in their Venice store and on the Save Darfur website. The shirt will raise awareness and support advocacy work to end the crisis in Darfur. An official VIP launch part will be held at the Propr store tonight in Venice, CA.

The new “Peace” t-shirt, designed by David Arquette, is just one of many items of clothing that can be purchased from the Save Darfur Store. Shop now for great holiday deals and help support our work.
Propr Launch Party

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Our Activists and Omar al-Bashir’s Travel Arrangements

Monday, November 9th, 2009

As of Saturday morning, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir was 100 percent committed to traveling to Turkey. Bashir, an indicted war criminal wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity, was scheduled to arrive in Turkey on Sunday for a Monday summit of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Turkey, for some reason, did not initially feel compelled to prevent a war criminal from planting his feel on their soil. However, that didn’t prevent the Save Darfur Coalition and hundreds of committed activists from mobilizing.

As reported in the Christian Science-Monitor, the Save Darfur Coalition was planning an large action at the Turkish Embassy in Washington, DC. The action – a gathering of students, activists and Sudanese expats – was organized to pressure Turkey into not letting Bashir travel to their country. We planed on delivering handcuffs to the Turkish government and demanding that if Bashir made it into their country that they immediately place him under arrest and ship him to The Hague.

Well, Omar al-Bashir didn’t go to Turkey, he didn’t even get wheels up out of Sudan. Omar al-Bashir remains an outlaw, stymied by the ICC and on the run from justice. Hopefully, his days as the leader of Sudan are drawing to a close, and a new day for the people of Sudan is on the horizon.

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U.S. Policy on Sudan on VOA’s In Focus

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Amir Osman, Senior Director of Policy and Government Relations for the Save Darfur Coaltion, appeared on Voice of America’s In Focus to discuss the recently released Sudanese Policy Review:

Learn more about the Sudan Policy Review

Donate Now to the Save Darfur Coalition

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