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DAFUR: the open sore of a continent
Another human tragedy is playing out in western Sudan. It is the tragedy of Dafur. The conflict in the Sudan has been described as genocide. But we shall return to this. However, let me point out that what we see in Dafur is another example of how Africans are made victims of an expansionist, and brutal external marauders who have historically taken advantage of the inherent pacifism, and some might even say indolence, of the Negroid people.
Many Africans have focused singularly on the effects of the European conquest and colonisation of Africa. And Africans have often forgotten that the history of Africa is the history of double penetration: one from the East, and the other from the West.
Although each form of these violent penetrations of Africa remains the central basis of its historical instability, but a close study shows, that the Eastern –– that is Arab - penetration of Africa in the last one thousand years remains the most violent.
The Arab conquest of Africa which has been examined by key African scholars - Chinweizu for instance –– when it is taken into account has been the most vicious. It rose with the sword, and it continues, with the belligerent Arab worldview that the Black African is a kaffir, a slave, one not even worth more than camel dung. This worldview is the primary idea that has governed relations between the Arab-led government of Sudan, and the indigenous African population.
The Arabs have come to dominate the Sudan, and have consigned the indigenous Negroid population to the lowliest status, treating them as slaves, from a tradition which began as the Arabs moved into this stretch of Africa, which was once the site of Nubia, the great African civilization. Sudan has been mired in civil conflict, with the Christians rallying behind the John Garang led Sudan Peoples Liberation Army, SPLA, fighting for control of the South from the Arabs of the North.
Generally, Sudan has remained in a flux for most of its modern era. It was conquered by Egypt in 1821, which unified the northern part until the rise of the Mahdi, Muhammadu Ibn Abdalla who led a campaign of colonial resistance against the Anglo-Egyptian alliance with his party of the Ansas. This group remains the basis of the Umma party in Sudan to date led by descendants of the Mahdi.
The Mahdist movement in Sudan incidentally was happening about the same time as Uthman dan Fodio was declaring himself Caliph in Sokoto. Anyway, Lord Kitchener eventually crushed the Mahdist resistance, and the British established a joint authority with the Egyptians until 1956 when it was granted independence. Incidentally, Nigeria’s last colonial governor-general had served in the Sudan, as did many of the British colonial officers who also came to work in Nigeria.
So in fact, there are too many things, even aside from the cultural links to Nubia from which many Nigerian groups emerged, that Sudan and Nigeria have in common. The difference is that Nigeria did not, and does not have to endure the Arab menace, although what is happening in Sudan ought to be an eye opener to the threat of Arab racist objectives in Africa. The Arabs in Sudan view that country as an Arab Islamic state, irrespective of the wishes of the majority of the Negroid people, especially in the South of Sudan, around the Kodorfan.
The Arabs reneging of the agreement to create a federal union following the ceding of power led to the first Southern mutiny in Torit, and to the long civil war which has continued to date, with the only respite following the short-lived 1972 peace accord. Sudan remains at war, and the war is endless because the Arab Muslim population in the North is unwilling to grant the Black Negroid population its humanity.
In 1983, Jafaar El-Niemery imposed the Sharia law, and the Southern resistance led by John Garang indicates the futility of a state religious policy, although the current government of Omar el Bashir continues, and has even exacerbated the atrocities against the black population.
In 1998, the Newsweek magazine broke the story of slavery in Sudan, and this led to an international outcry. Very few governments in Africa reacted. No state in Africa called El-Bashir’s government to account. No African country withdrew its legation from Khartoum. The Organization of African Unity did not respond to these revelations.
Yet daily, the black African population is subjected to the worst forms of indignity including slavery in places like Sudan and Mauritania, by an Arab population. No other people or society could endure or tolerate this open sore, at this stage of human development. But by all accounts, the government in Khartoum is apparently made of a barbaric group intent on perpetuating the subjugation and further decimation of the black African population. That is the meaning of the tragedy that is unfolding in Dafur. It is genocide because of its pattern of operation.
Dafur is ethnic cleansing; it is a racist, state sponsored violence targeted towards the elimination of a particular racial and ethnic group. The Arab government of President Omar el-Bashir had armed and sponsored Sudanese troops and Arab militiamen called the Janjaweed to attack and destroy the pastoralist Fur, Massalit and Zagharwa group of the Negroid people found in Western Sudan. A low intensity war had started in April 2003 over what has been described as a struggle over land and resources, and by March 2004 thousands of displaced people in Dafur were seeking refuge in neighbouring Chad.
The Janjaweed entered villages and killed thousands of people, while an estimated one million black people have fled their homes from attacks by the Arab militia or Janjaweed.
They killed the men, and systematically raped the women with the purpose, according to reports, of impregnating them. In fact, according to a recent Human Rights watch report, “rape appears to be a feature of most of the attacks in Dafur.” Even the concept of “Moslem brotherhood” here has been put to rest because the people of Dafur whom the Arab Moslems kill, are almost all Sufi Moslems, and therein is the irony: it speaks to the singular truth that the Arab conquest of Africa is a continuous objective which rides on the false back of Islamic brotherhood; it is nothing but a racist movement, one whose implication is emphasized with this situation in which Arab Muslim militias kill and rape the black African Muslims of Dafur, whom they call slaves. This continuous violation of the rights of the black people is the open sore of a continent which must be healed with adequate strategic action.
The genocide in Dafur resembles so much of the atrocities that took place in Biafra from 1967-1968, especially the massacres in places like Asaba and Onitsha by a brutal, ill-trained horde armed by the Nigerian government to exterminate the Igbo.
While the rest of the world was mealy-mouthing about whether genocide was taking place or not in Biafra, and the Gowon government was covering up a vast scale of atrocities, over three million people were dying, many of them children and women, denied even the comfort of a morsel in death. The same silence pervaded the genocide in Rwanda. Luckily, international attention has been directed to the Dafur situation with the recent visit by US secretary of state, Colin Powell, and United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan. The UN has described what is going on in Dafur as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
“The ruined villages, the camps overflowing with women and children, the fear of the people, should be a clear warning to us all –– without action, the brutalities already inflicted on the civilian population of Dafur could prelude an even greater humanitarian catastrophe –– a catastrophe that could destabilize the region.” That is Kofi Annan’s damning report. Perhaps, that was why the African Union summoned a response in its meeting last week at Addis Ababa. But the AU came short of declaring Dafur genocide.
They chose to deploy 300 African troops to Dafur, principally to protect the humanitarian observers who would be moving into the region. They also demanded from the el-Bashir’s government to arrest and prosecute the Arab militiamen –– the Janjaweed –– for the atrocities. Nothing will of course come out of this, for the el-Bashir government is complicit. But I personally agree with President Paul Kagame of Rwanda who is quoted as saying “I think there is the need to create a big force and go and deal with the problem. The thing is to protect the people who are targeted, not observers. That is what we will be prepared for in our contribution.” Nothing less is called for.
http://www.vanguardngr.com/articles/2002/columns/c311072004.html
Although each form of these violent penetrations of Africa remains the central basis of its historical instability, but a close study shows, that the Eastern –– that is Arab - penetration of Africa in the last one thousand years remains the most violent.
The Arab conquest of Africa which has been examined by key African scholars - Chinweizu for instance –– when it is taken into account has been the most vicious. It rose with the sword, and it continues, with the belligerent Arab worldview that the Black African is a kaffir, a slave, one not even worth more than camel dung. This worldview is the primary idea that has governed relations between the Arab-led government of Sudan, and the indigenous African population.
The Arabs have come to dominate the Sudan, and have consigned the indigenous Negroid population to the lowliest status, treating them as slaves, from a tradition which began as the Arabs moved into this stretch of Africa, which was once the site of Nubia, the great African civilization. Sudan has been mired in civil conflict, with the Christians rallying behind the John Garang led Sudan Peoples Liberation Army, SPLA, fighting for control of the South from the Arabs of the North.
Generally, Sudan has remained in a flux for most of its modern era. It was conquered by Egypt in 1821, which unified the northern part until the rise of the Mahdi, Muhammadu Ibn Abdalla who led a campaign of colonial resistance against the Anglo-Egyptian alliance with his party of the Ansas. This group remains the basis of the Umma party in Sudan to date led by descendants of the Mahdi.
The Mahdist movement in Sudan incidentally was happening about the same time as Uthman dan Fodio was declaring himself Caliph in Sokoto. Anyway, Lord Kitchener eventually crushed the Mahdist resistance, and the British established a joint authority with the Egyptians until 1956 when it was granted independence. Incidentally, Nigeria’s last colonial governor-general had served in the Sudan, as did many of the British colonial officers who also came to work in Nigeria.
So in fact, there are too many things, even aside from the cultural links to Nubia from which many Nigerian groups emerged, that Sudan and Nigeria have in common. The difference is that Nigeria did not, and does not have to endure the Arab menace, although what is happening in Sudan ought to be an eye opener to the threat of Arab racist objectives in Africa. The Arabs in Sudan view that country as an Arab Islamic state, irrespective of the wishes of the majority of the Negroid people, especially in the South of Sudan, around the Kodorfan.
The Arabs reneging of the agreement to create a federal union following the ceding of power led to the first Southern mutiny in Torit, and to the long civil war which has continued to date, with the only respite following the short-lived 1972 peace accord. Sudan remains at war, and the war is endless because the Arab Muslim population in the North is unwilling to grant the Black Negroid population its humanity.
In 1983, Jafaar El-Niemery imposed the Sharia law, and the Southern resistance led by John Garang indicates the futility of a state religious policy, although the current government of Omar el Bashir continues, and has even exacerbated the atrocities against the black population.
In 1998, the Newsweek magazine broke the story of slavery in Sudan, and this led to an international outcry. Very few governments in Africa reacted. No state in Africa called El-Bashir’s government to account. No African country withdrew its legation from Khartoum. The Organization of African Unity did not respond to these revelations.
Yet daily, the black African population is subjected to the worst forms of indignity including slavery in places like Sudan and Mauritania, by an Arab population. No other people or society could endure or tolerate this open sore, at this stage of human development. But by all accounts, the government in Khartoum is apparently made of a barbaric group intent on perpetuating the subjugation and further decimation of the black African population. That is the meaning of the tragedy that is unfolding in Dafur. It is genocide because of its pattern of operation.
Dafur is ethnic cleansing; it is a racist, state sponsored violence targeted towards the elimination of a particular racial and ethnic group. The Arab government of President Omar el-Bashir had armed and sponsored Sudanese troops and Arab militiamen called the Janjaweed to attack and destroy the pastoralist Fur, Massalit and Zagharwa group of the Negroid people found in Western Sudan. A low intensity war had started in April 2003 over what has been described as a struggle over land and resources, and by March 2004 thousands of displaced people in Dafur were seeking refuge in neighbouring Chad.
The Janjaweed entered villages and killed thousands of people, while an estimated one million black people have fled their homes from attacks by the Arab militia or Janjaweed.
They killed the men, and systematically raped the women with the purpose, according to reports, of impregnating them. In fact, according to a recent Human Rights watch report, “rape appears to be a feature of most of the attacks in Dafur.” Even the concept of “Moslem brotherhood” here has been put to rest because the people of Dafur whom the Arab Moslems kill, are almost all Sufi Moslems, and therein is the irony: it speaks to the singular truth that the Arab conquest of Africa is a continuous objective which rides on the false back of Islamic brotherhood; it is nothing but a racist movement, one whose implication is emphasized with this situation in which Arab Muslim militias kill and rape the black African Muslims of Dafur, whom they call slaves. This continuous violation of the rights of the black people is the open sore of a continent which must be healed with adequate strategic action.
The genocide in Dafur resembles so much of the atrocities that took place in Biafra from 1967-1968, especially the massacres in places like Asaba and Onitsha by a brutal, ill-trained horde armed by the Nigerian government to exterminate the Igbo.
While the rest of the world was mealy-mouthing about whether genocide was taking place or not in Biafra, and the Gowon government was covering up a vast scale of atrocities, over three million people were dying, many of them children and women, denied even the comfort of a morsel in death. The same silence pervaded the genocide in Rwanda. Luckily, international attention has been directed to the Dafur situation with the recent visit by US secretary of state, Colin Powell, and United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan. The UN has described what is going on in Dafur as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
“The ruined villages, the camps overflowing with women and children, the fear of the people, should be a clear warning to us all –– without action, the brutalities already inflicted on the civilian population of Dafur could prelude an even greater humanitarian catastrophe –– a catastrophe that could destabilize the region.” That is Kofi Annan’s damning report. Perhaps, that was why the African Union summoned a response in its meeting last week at Addis Ababa. But the AU came short of declaring Dafur genocide.
They chose to deploy 300 African troops to Dafur, principally to protect the humanitarian observers who would be moving into the region. They also demanded from the el-Bashir’s government to arrest and prosecute the Arab militiamen –– the Janjaweed –– for the atrocities. Nothing will of course come out of this, for the el-Bashir government is complicit. But I personally agree with President Paul Kagame of Rwanda who is quoted as saying “I think there is the need to create a big force and go and deal with the problem. The thing is to protect the people who are targeted, not observers. That is what we will be prepared for in our contribution.” Nothing less is called for.
http://www.vanguardngr.com/articles/2002/columns/c311072004.html
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Well, the UN has been called on to deal with this situation, but of course they are too busy bashing Jews to bother. The International Court could be prosecuting the leaders of Sudan for genocide, but of course they are too busy insisting that Israel tear down the security fence so more Arabs can kill Jews. The US has no place in this mess. Let the French deal with it - they aren't doing anything else.
Where is the Arab outrage and daily coverage (headlines) of the slaughter of non-Muslim Blacks in the Sudan? Why are the Arabs not at the forefront of sending troops and UN giving sanctions for this real genocide?
Here I am, in my crummy home, in a democratic society, reading about the atrocities taking place at Dafur, the Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, South America etc. Sure, my home isn't a mansion, there isn't a lot of food in the cupboard and as an Aboriginal, Indian, Native person of North America (whatever you choose to call me is fine as long as you know the race I am referring to), I often feel like a target of discrimination. Nevertheless, I have it soooo goood. I can speak my mind...walk around my town feeling rlatively safe and certain that I will return home in one piece...leave my children to go to work and know that they will be home when I return... I live in the comfort of knowing I can say what I want, eat when I want, sleep when I want, watch whatever I want on television, and travel where I want.
I am not particularly gifted. I am not a genius, or wealthy, artistic nor do I have even any quality that could possibly make me worth listening to. I am just a regular person who walks among you unnoticed (thank God for that because if you don't see me, you probably won't harm me) When I read about events like those taking place at Dafur, I can't imagine living in that kind of hell. I can't imagine being helpless and unable to protect my family. I can't imagine children sleeping in huddles by the hundreds, going to sleep without a hug or kiss from a loving parent or family member, feeling frightened and uncertain that they will live to see the next day's sunrise. I can't imagine witnessing the horrors that these people do each day. Where are the human beings? You know, the ones that have a conscience, that have a heart? No, not the leaders that allow, assist, or incite the murders and murderers because....(by the way what have they got to gain? What do they get out of this? Will they gain money, fame/infamy, love, immortality? Can they take their gains to the grave and beyond? See, I will never understand!!!)
Where are our world leaders? You know, the ones that shout 'NEVER AGAIN" (by the way, what evidence do they require in order to take action? Are eye-witness accounts, photographs, mass graves, and body-counts so important? See, I'll never understand!!!)
Where are our religious leaders? What do they all say? Should they not have a comment? Do they need a list of the dead, missing,maimed and tortured? What does the Pope say, or the Archbishop of Cantebury, or the Jewish Congress, Native Elders, the Dalai Lama or other Christian Church Leaders? As representatives of their God, should they not encourage their followers to voice their disapproval?
This world is full of horrible events, taking place in many countries, occurring repeatedly throughout history. Some have to do with conquering territories, or with religious differences, others with racial differences. I read about them all the time. Can you tell me that the Creator, God, Allah, whatever name you know HIM by..... looks upon us with love and pride? I am ignorant when it comes to the religion and politics of other nations but isn't life globally considered a precious gift ? Often, perpetrators cloak themselves with the false belief that they are the chosen...supreme in some way and therefore, heirs to some earthly throne, given the divine right to decide who lives and dies. From where do these beliefs originate? What will they say when they leave this world and face their Creator?
Mankind has not progressed. The value of life has decreased so much that we are all considered expendable. Some things have no explanation. Some things go far beyond the political and religous domain. Some events have words attached to give it meaning or justification (e.g. ethnic cleansing, genocide, holocaust, crusade, inquisition) We are incapable of learning lessons in long-term memories. We forget. We tend to lessen the meanings of events as time marches on. Intensity diminishes. We don't feel particularly concerned until the knock on our door means it's our turn to experience horror first-hand.
So here I am, feeling helpless to do anything for these victims. I watch events unfold from the comfort of my home, where the kids play happily unaware, that around the world there is so much suffering. It is most unlikely that we will ever have to see these things in person. To hear about it is to listen to a fairy tale that cannot possibly be real. I know it is true but I can choose to dismiss it.....or can I?
I am fortunate, but it would not take much to change that....just a leader that advocates hatred, people who are eager to blame my race, and people who are easily influenced and driven to carry out the hideous acts. No thinking, caring human can possibly inflict such suffering on others. How can that be? The perpetrators are people like you and I. I'm sure they have families, spouses, religious beliefs and are capable of love are they not??? What parasite invaded their minds and hearts that would enable them to do what they do? I couldn't imagine inflicting torture on any helpless, defenseless person.
Why can't we teach, lead, guide, brainwash... people to do the opposite and truly CARE with the same extreme intensity that they HATE.
I count my blessings because everything could change in a flash. It can happen anywhere because we keeping turning a blind eye until it is too late. How can anyone be sure, when, where? "NEVER AGAIN"??? How can anyone give this justification? I will never understand the evil that so easily takes over mankind in such vast numbers!!! Don't tell me that I will never be in danger because you can never guarantee it. Certain segments of society are always being singled out for their differences (races of every kind, religions of every kind, gays, HIV-positive people).
I believe that there will be an accounting of our actions/inaction at some point. In the scheme of things, I am not important, I am just a tiny miniscule, imperceptible, microscopic part of the universe. In that scale, my life is not important. Why then, do I feel that all those other lives are so very important?
When I am asked to give an account of my life, I will say what millions of others will have..."I did not help my fellow man" and make excuses "because I didn't really think I could be of any help" or "because I didn't know what to do" or "because I really didn't think it was that important" or "because I thought that others would take care of it"
So here I am sitting in my crummy home wondering if I can every really believe it can never happen to me... Trying desperately to remain ignorant about the terrible things that are happening in OUR WORLD because to know about it places some kind of responsibility upon me. How long can someone go on carrying the weight of that knowledge? Can I ever be complacent? How can I ever be 100% sure it will never happen to me??? I'm just one person who wants to try, but...I will never understand!!!
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