Posts Tagged Sudan Policy Review

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White House Statement on Sudan Strategy

Monday, October 19th, 2009

From the White House:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 19, 2009

Statement of President Barack Obama on Sudan Strategy

Today, my Administration is releasing a comprehensive strategy to confront the serious and urgent situation in Sudan.

For years, the people of Sudan have faced enormous and unacceptable hardship. The genocide in Darfur has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and left millions more displaced. Conflict in the region has wrought more suffering, posing dangers beyond Sudan’s borders and blocking the potential of this important part of Africa. Sudan is now poised to fall further into chaos if swift action is not taken.

Our conscience and our interests in peace and security call upon the United States and the international community to act with a sense of urgency and purpose. First, we must seek a definitive end to conflict, gross human rights abuses and genocide in Darfur. Second, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the North and South in Sudan must be implemented to create the possibility of long-term peace. These two goals must both be pursued simultaneously with urgency. Achieving them requires the commitment of the United States, as well as the active participation of international partners. Concurrently, we will work aggressively to ensure that Sudan does not provide a safe-haven for international terrorists.

The United States Special Envoy has worked actively and effectively to engage all of the parties involved, and he will continue to pursue engagement that saves lives and achieves results. Later this week, I will renew the declaration of a National Emergency with respect to Sudan, which will continue tough sanctions on the Sudanese Government. If the Government of Sudan acts to improve the situation on the ground and to advance peace, there will be incentives; if it does not, then there will be increased pressure imposed by the United States and the international community. As the United States and our international partners meet our responsibility to act, the Government of Sudan must meet its responsibilities to take concrete steps in a new direction.

Over the last several years, governments, non-governmental organizations, and individuals, and from around the world have taken action to address the situation in Sudan, and to end the genocide in Darfur. Going forward, all of our efforts must be measured by the lives that are led by the people of Sudan. After so much suffering, they deserve a future that allows them to live with greater dignity, security, and opportunity. It will not be easy, and there are no simple answers to the extraordinary challenges that confront this part of the world. But now is the time for all of us to come together, and to make a strong and sustained effort on behalf of a better future for the people of Sudan.

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Sudan Policy Review Briefing Live

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Update: The press conference has concluded. We will post a video of the press conference as soon as it becomes available. You can also read the State Department’s outline of the strategy, Sudan: A Critical Moment, A Comprehensive Approach.

Policy Review SS
Watch the State Department’s
Sudan Policy Review
briefing live on CNN.com

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Obama Administration Set to Release Sudan Strategy

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

The Obama administration plans to release its long-awaited Sudan strategy document at 9 a.m. on Monday, apparently with a press conference including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, and Special Envoy for Sudan Scott Gration.

Elements of the strategy were outlined by Special Envoy Gration on Friday at an event at Kean University and in leaks to the pressAccording to the Washington Post, the policy will call “for a campaign of ‘pressure and incentives’ to cajole the government in Khartoum into pursuing peace in the troubled Darfur region, settling disputes with the autonomous government in southern Sudan and providing the United States greater cooperation in stemming international terrorism.”  As more details are provided, we’ll compare the strategy to our checklist for an effective policy.

Beyond details, actual implementation will be crucial, and there will be at least three elements that will be vital: (1) No front loading of incentives, which should only be provided after concrete and lasting progress is made by the Government of Sudan; (2) generating multilateral support for both incentives and pressures; and (3) direct presidential leadership in the process.

Save Darfur will closely monitor implementation, keeping in mind the ultimate objective: a Sudan whose people can live free of fear and whose rights are protected by a government that legitimately represents them.

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Administration To Release Sudan Policy Review On Monday

Friday, October 16th, 2009

The Obama Administration is scheduled to release it’s long overdue Sudan Policy Review on Monday morning after months of internal debate. The State Department has declined to comment on the release, but according to foreignpolicy.com: “Senior contacts in the White House have said it will be coming out of State on Monday.”

The Save Darfur Coalition created a checklist outlining key issues that must be addressed in order to achieve a lasting and comprehensive peace. Visit the blog on Monday for details about the announcement and reaction from Save Darfur and other advocacy groups.

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Were Darfur Promises For Real?

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

This post by award-winning author Dave Eggers and Enough Co-founder John Prendergast originally appeared on CNN.com and is cross posted from Enough Said.

We have been part of an extraordinary social phenomenon over the past four years surrounding Darfur: the development of a genuine anti-genocide people’s movement. It’s succeeded in cultivating a number of true champions in the political sphere, led by three former senators: Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Barack Obama.

Now that Obama, Biden and Clinton are in office, and another fierce anti-genocide advocate, Susan Rice, is in as ambassador to the United Nations, we felt there finally would be a consequence for the perpetrators of the genocide, the regime officials in Khartoum, Sudan.

But rather than the kind of tough actions the these top officials had all advocated in their previous jobs and on the campaign trail, President Obama’s Sudan envoy instead began to articulate a friendly, incentives-first message that even Sudan’s president, an indicted war criminal, publicly welcomed. Our chins hit the floor in disbelief, because our chins had nowhere else to go.

The administration is preparing to announce the results of its Sudan policy review soon, but the policy direction has already been set, and it is of urgent concern. There is no clear decision for the U.S. to take the lead in revitalizing a peace process for Darfur, or to create real costs for non-implementation of the existing North-South peace deal.

But this isn’t just a debate about policy towards one country. President Obama, like President Bush before him, has called Darfur an ongoing genocide. So the policy that will be unveiled soon on Sudan will have global ramifications, because it will be the president’s first chance to articulate his policy on responding to genocide.

For the rest of this commentary please visit CNN.com.

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CNN’s Inside Africa

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Earlier this week Jerry Fowler, President of the Save Darfur Coalition, appeared on CNN’s Inside Africa to discuss the Obama Administration’s Sudan Policy Review and the situation on the ground in Darfur:
Embedded video from CNN Video

You can watch all 4 parts of this series – including interviews with General Martin Agwai, commander of the combined United Nations-African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, and the Enough Project’s John Prendergast – by visiting the Inside Africa’s homepage.

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A Sudan Policy Review With Life Or Death Implications

Monday, August 3rd, 2009
John Prendergrast (Photo: Center for American Progress)

John Prendergrast
(Photo: Center for American Progress)

Cross posted from Enough Said blog.

The Obama administration is in the midst of a contentious review of its Sudan policy, which was the subject of three hearings on July 29 and 30 on Capitol Hill. The outcome of the debate will help determine the future of millions of people from Sudan and the surrounding region.

At the July 29 Africa Subcommittee hearing, members heard a bipartisan critique of the current direction of U.S. policy towards Sudan. Rich Williamson, Roger Winter and I all have negotiated extensively with the regime in Sudan, have roughly a combined six decades in working on or in Sudan, and have a very clear idea of what is required for lasting peace to have a chance in that embattled country.

This hearing comes at a moment in Sudan’s history fraught with danger and potential. There is no effective peace process for Darfur, but one could be built with U.S. leadership. The CPA is on the brink, but could be salvaged if U.S. engagement deepens. Next year’s elections are at risk, but could become an important opportunity to strengthen opposition parties and democratic structures crucial for the referendum and for Sudan’s political future. The referendum itself is doubtful, but its prospects could be enhanced with a credible international roadmap.

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All Things Considered On U.S. Approach To Sudan

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

On Saturday, NPR’s news program All Things Considered discussed U.S. Special Envoy Scott Gration’s testimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and the reaction of the activist community.

From President Obama on down, the administration is stacked with officials who have talked tough about ending what they have termed “genocide” in the Darfur region of Sudan. That made it all the more surprising this week when the administration’s special envoy suggested holding out new carrots for Khartoum.

At a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing Thursday, retired Air Force Maj. Gen. J. Scott Gration suggested it was time to take Sudan off the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism, a designation that has led to a whole series of sanctions.

However, Jerry Fowler, president of the Save Darfur Coalition, urged caution in dealing with the government in Khartoum:

“[The Sudanese] took this incredibly cruel and callous step of expelling humanitarian organizations in March and the process that we’ve mostly seen since then is them gradually easing up on that,” he says. “But it was a crisis they created themselves, and all we are doing is expending a lot of effort to get back to a status quo that was unacceptable and unsustainable in the first place.”

Listen to the full segment:

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Save Darfur Coalition’s Amir Osman Testifies on Capitol Hill

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Amir Osman Testifying Before the Tom Lantos HRC

Amir Osman testifying before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission

Updated: Earlier today, the Save Darfur Coalition’s Co-Senior Director of Policy and Government Relations, Amir Osman, testified before the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission at the U.S. House of Representatives. Amir joined the Save Darfur Coalition in July of 2006 and is responsible for designing and implementing the Coalition’s international policy, advocacy and outreach to foreign governments, regional and international institutes, media and non-governmental organizations. You can read his opening statement after the jump.

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Special Envoy Scott Gration Testifying Before Senate Committee on Foreign Relations

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

You can follow today’s hearing, “Toward A Comprehensive Strategy For Sudan” by:

Watching the hearing live
(requires flashplayer)

OR

Following Save Darfur on Twitter
Update: Special Envoy Scott Gration’s opening statement has been posted on the committee’s website
Update II: The hearing has concluded. You can see all our tweets from the first panel after the jump.

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