RE: An Open Letter about the June 21, 2006 event:
> Witnessing Darfur: A Benefit for the People of Darfur
>
>
> Sunday, 18 June 2006
> Dear Friends,
>
> We are writing to express our concern over the upcoming June 21
event:
> WITNESSING DARFUR, to be held at Smith College, for which many local
> religious, cultural or political organizations are co-sponsors
(see
> bottom*). Like you we deeply believe in the need to alleviate the
> people of Darfur's suffering, however, we strongly feel that the
> position being taken, which many local organizations have supported,
> namely that the Islamic government of Sudan is committing genocide
> against the "African" people of Darfur, does not accurately reflect
or
> fully address the complexities and realities of the situation.
>
> We strongly believe that the situation in Darfur should be placed in
a
> wider context and the role of the United States and other external
> actors MUST be acknowledged and dealt with honestly if there is to be
> peace and stability in Darfur, Sudan or indeed an improvement of
basic
> conditions. We encourage people to think carefully and examine the
> history of humanitarian aid organizations before making any financial
> contributions: it is well documented that certain organizations
> working in Sudan have been involved in very dubious activities
> counterproductive to expressed or publicized humanitarian aims.
>
> We respectfully ask that people actively seek out and examine
> different points of view. We emphasize that we are not trying to
> malign or attack either any sponsor of this event, the producers of
> the film(s) to be shown, or speaker Dr. Eric Reeves of Smith College;
> rather we are calling for an open dialogue now and in the future. If
> the U.S. wants to end the violence in Darfur and elsewhere its first
> step should be to stop participating in it. We believe that our first
> step as US citizens and residents should be to speak openly and
> honestly and to hold the US government accountable. We find it
> increasingly difficult to do so within the United States: can we
> expect that it will be done in a far away, oil-rich country like
> Sudan? (Petroleum is one of Darfur's several coveted resources.)
>
> We respectfully encourage all those who wish to allocate funds for
aid
> in Darfur to do so, but to write them after careful examination of
ALL
> the facts. We respectfully ask the Community Foundation of Western
> Massachusetts to HOLD all Sudan Aid Funds received, to date, or
> subsequently, for the same reasons. We call on co-sponsor Mayor Clare
> Higgins and the town of Northampton to hold a public hearing,
> immediately, where the entire spectrum of issues can be openly and
> publicly aired. Given the gravity of the situation and people's
desire
> to alleviate the very real suffering in Darfur, we ask the sponsors
of
> this event, and people concerned about the Darfur situation, to press
> for this hearing to occur immediately.
>
> We urge you to read the SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION we have provided
> below; this is by no means an exhaustive or comprehensive sampling of
> relevant issues. We also ask that you circulate this letter widely,
> forward to your organizations' mailing list, to all interested
> parties, and the press.
>
> With sincerity and best wishes,
>
> Deborah Chandler, graphic designer and activist, Northampton, MA
> 413-584-9160
>
> Dimitri Oram, writer & researcher, Northampton, MA
> , 413-330-2034
>
> Doug Wight, writer & activist, Northampton MA
> "Doug Wight"
>
> Keith Harmon Snow, genocide & human rights investigator,
Williamsburg, MA.
> <
www.allthingspass.com >, 413-626-3800.
> {Contractual experience in the human rights arena includes: [a]
> Consultant on Genocide, United Nations: Ethiopia, 2005; (b) Genocide
> Investigator, Genocide Watch : Sudan &
>
> Ethiopia, 2004; [c] Genocide Investigator, Survivor's Rights
> International <
www.survivorsrightsinternational.org >:
> Sudan and
> Ethiopia, 2004; [d] work at the International Criminal Tribunal on
> Rwanda (2001). Also independent human rights researcher in the Dem.
> Rep. of Congo, 2004-2006; ten years experience in 17 countries in
> Africa.
>
> ***************************************************************
>
> SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION
>
> Undisclosed information about the current geopolitical realities
> regarding the Darfur conflict include the facts about the U.S. was
> funding and supporting forces in Southern Sudan (Sudan People's
> Liberation Army & Movement: SPLA/M) throughout the 1990s and beyond.
> We believe the US is still supporting rebel forces in Darfur thus
> actively contributing to the conflict. We are aware these are strong
> charges but there is plenty of documented evidence for the former
> charge and a good deal of circumstantial evidence for the latter. A
> quick sampling reveals:
>
> • "The Clinton administration has launched a covert campaign to
> destabilize the government of Sudan which it considers a key
supporter
> of international terrorism and instability in the Middle East. More
> than $20 million of military equipment, including radios, uniforms
and
> tents will be shipped to Eritrea, Ethiopia and Uganda in the next few
> weeks. Although the equipment is earmarked for the armed forces of
> those countries, much of it will be passed on to the Sudan People's
> Liberation Army (SPLA), which is preparing an offensive against the
> government in Khartoum." (James Adams "Americans Move to Destabilize
> Sudanese Regime," Sunday Times, Nov. 17, 1996);
> • "U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright had a surprise meeting
> in Kampala (Uganda) Wednesday with Sudanese opposition leaders
> including SPLA rebel chief John Garang in what was seen as a move
> further pressuring Khartoum's Islamic fundamentalist leaders.
Albright
> told reporters that Washington sought to show top-level support for
> efforts to secure political change in Sudan, where Garang's Sudanese
> People's Liberation Army in the Christian and animist South has
fought
> troops of the Moslem North since 1983." (Dec. 10, 1997, Deutsch
Presse
> Agenteur);
> • "Welcome to the 1980s. Long live Ronald Reagan. Remember the
> scenario—a rebel group being trained and armed by the CIA to topple a
> sovereign government, cross-border incursions from secluded camps,
and
> the whole destabilization exercise backed by international sanctions
> and a massive propaganda campaign. It sounds like Nicaragua or Angola
> circa 1984. In fact it's Sudan 1998." (Jonathan Steele, "Stop this
war
> now; The US could remove the threat of starvation for thousands of
> Sudanese May 1, 1998 The Guardian);
> • "[T]o the peril of regional stability, the Clinton Administration
> has used northern Uganda as a military training ground for southern
> Sudanese rebels fighting the Muslim government of Khartoum...The
> people in Sudan want to resolve the conflict. The biggest obstacle is
> US government policy said former president Carter in an interview
last
> week in Mozambique "The US is committed to overthrowing the
government
> in Khartoum. Any sort of peace effort is aborted, basically by
> policies of the United States" Kurt Schillinger "Carter, Others say
> Clinton has faltered on Africa" Dec. 8, 1999 Boston Globe).
>
> A confirmed and egregious violation of international law was the U.S.
> bombing of Sudan's sole pharmaceutical plant in 1998 with all the
> misery and death that followed. With a background like that isn't it
> possible that the U.S. is still covertly intervening in Sudan
> especially Darfur? Is it mere coincidence that the rebels in Darfur
> launched their first major attacks the month that USAID set up its
> mission in Darfur?
>
> • "Under the Bush administration, the work of USAID has become
> increasingly politicized. But over Sudan, in particular, two of its
> most senior officials have long held strong personal views. Both
> Natsios, a former vice-president of the Christian charity World
> Vision, and [Roger] Winter have long been hostile to the Sudanese
> government." (U.S. 'hyping' Darfur Genocide Fears by Peter Beaumont,
> 03 October 2004, The Observer)
>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sudan/story/0,14658,1318643,00.html>
> The U.N., the European Union, Medecins Sans Frontieres, aid groups,
> U.N. officials and human rights groups have all questioned the
> genocide claims.
>
> While no one doubts there is horrendous death and suffering in Darfur
> use of the word genocide has been used to put all blame on the
> government, exonerate the rebels and prevent peace. Indeed, as Emily
> Wax writes "that label only seems to have strengthened Sudan's
rebels;
> they believe they don't need to negotiate with the government and
> think they will have U.S. support when they commit attacks. Peace
> talks have broken down seven times, partly because the rebel groups
> have walked out of negotiations." (Washington Post, "5 Truths About
> Darfur," April 21, 2006)
>
> The African Union "peacekeeping" mission in Darfur includes U.S.
> military personnel; training and logistical support by the U.S.
> military has also been provided. (See: Department of Defense, "U.S.
> Transports Rwanda Forces to Sudan":
>
>
> Rwandan Defense Forces sent to Darfur are themselves responsible for
> crimes against humanity and acts of genocide in the Democratic
> Republic of Congo, and these troops are highly linked to the U.S.
> military (Rwanda New Times, 15 May 2006). The U.S. military's
European
> Command (EUCOM) is also partnered with Uganda, and working with
> Ugandan troops, and Uganda's role in Sudanese affairs mirrors its
role
> in Congo: clandestine guerrilla activities, massacres, rapes,
> extortion, gun-running and plundering of natural resources. These
have
> all been widely documented by numerous international human rights
> bodies.
>
> The African Union mission also included supporting operations by
> private military contractor Dyncorp: Dyncorp was caught running a sex
> slave ring in Bosnia, was sued for illegally spraying toxic
herbicides
> in Ecuador, believed to have smuggled drugs from Colombia and is
> generally accused of brutal behavior wherever it goes. Pacific
> Architects and Engineers (PAE) is also on the AU job. According to
> Corpwatch: PAE "has a history of being accused of overcharging."
Also,
> PAE "already provides[d] staff for a so-called Civilian Protection
> Monitoring Team (CPMT) which monitors human rights in Sudan under the
> State Department contract. The CPMT office is run by Brigadier
General
> Frank Toney (retired), who was previously commander of Special Forces
> for the United States Army and organized covert missions into Iraq
and
> Kuwait in the first Gulf War."
>
> Could these mercenary groups be involved in helping the rebel groups?
> It is also uncomfortable that a State Department official connected
to
> Sudan issues who wished to remain anonymous said: "We are not allowed
> to fund a political party or agenda under United States law, so by
> using private contractors, we can get around those provisions. Think
> of this as somewhere between a covert program run by the CIA and an
> overt program run by the United States Agency for International
> Development. It is a way to avoid oversight by Congress." (CorpWatch
> Oct. 21, 2004)
>
> It's also true that a number of humanitarian groups are far from
> impartial. Several of them were and probably still are smuggling
> weapons into Sudan and working toward regime change. Norwegian
> People's Aid (NPA) was caught red-handed and its role in supplying
> arms to the SPLA was the subject of a 1999 Norwegian television
> documentary, entitled 'Weapons Smuggling in Sudan'. "CSI [Christian
> Solidarity International], along with the U.S.-based groups Voice of
> the Martyrs and Samaritan's Purse (run by Franklin Graham, the son of
> Billy Graham), are among a handful of Christian groups that have
taken
> sides in the dispute. They work exclusively in southern Sudan—and
> provide not only humanitarian aid but also political and sometimes
> logistical support for the southern rebels...Even during the peace
> talks, they've lobbied the U.S. government to provide military aid
and
> weaponry to the SPLM...According to Human Rights Watch, the SPLM,
like
> Khartoum, has committed numerous human-rights violations." (Fighting
a
> Peace Plan: Some Christian aid groups are supporting the rebels, by
E.
> Benjamin Skinner, August 18, 2003 NEWSWEEK INTERNATIONAL.)
>
> To the best of our knowledge Eric Reeves has never discussed the
> active US role in destabilizing Sudan despite his years of research.
> We feel compelled to ask why this is the case. We also believe that
he
> has not dealt straightforwardly with past SPLA crimes including
> attacks on humanitarian aid workers, sexual violence and the
> recruitment of child soldiers, bringing them up only while asserting
> that "there is no equivalence" between the rebels and the government
> of Sudan. We are also worried by Eric Reeves's publicly stated
> position of "regime change," where Sudan's government be "removed by
> whatever means are necessary", and by his call for "comprehensive
> economic sanctions" and the formation of a new government by external
> powers (Washington Post, Aug. 23, 2004). We feel such a stance is
> antithetical to an antiwar movement based on opposition to imperial
> violence and intervention in the affairs of other nations.
>
> We do not excuse violence, murder, or sexual atrocities committed by
> any side, but we question the predominant version of events in
> Darfur—which we believe is grossly disinformational and
> one-sided—presented by the mass media and by both Right- and
Left-wing
> political factions in the United States. We want to know where money
> marked for "Sudan Aid" is going, and we do not so quickly accept some
> of the answers that are being given. We are greatly disturbed by the
> fact that the ultra-Right Wing organization Center for Security
> Policy, a strong proponent of multi-billion dollar programs in
> National Missile Defense and a tool of the military industrial
complex
> is advocating divestment from the same firms Eric Reeves has and is
> targeting. [1]
>
> We note that the organization Save the Children is closely tied to
> USAID, its board of trustees includes one retired Rear Admiral, and
> almost all the others (15) are connected to the mainstream US media
> (ABC, CBS, Hollywood). More concerning, Save the Children is funded
in
> part by Exxon-Mobil (according to an Exxon-Mobil corporate report) to
> build a road through neighboring Chad—a country with a heavy U.S.
> military involvement—to the Darfur region: we are concerned that this
> may be for strategic and military purposes cloaked under the banner
of
> humanitarian aid and poverty alleviation.
>
> The role of USAID official Roger Winter with the U.S. Committee for
> Refugees includes organizing support for the Rwanda Patriotic Front
> invasion of Rwanda in 1990; the U.S. Committee for Refugees remains a
> highly unusual political organization with a specious agenda.
>
> The director/advisers of the International Rescue Committee include
> Henry Kissinger.
>
>
> [1] See: <
>
http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/index.jsp?section=papers&code=01-F_68> >;
> please also examine the CSP's take on the antiwar movement
> .
>
> ----------------------------------------------------
*> Sponsored by:
> Congregation B'nai Israel Darfur Action Group
>
> Co-sponsors include: Al-Baqin Mosque · American Friends Service
> Committee, Western Mass. · Amnesty International USA/Group 76 · Beit
> Ahavah · Catholic Social Justice Committee of Greater Northampton ·
> Edwards Church · Episcopal Peace Fellowship of Grace Church, Amherst
·
> Hampshire Interfaith Council · Jewish Family Services of Western
Mass.
> · Mayor Clare Higgins · National Association of Social Workers,
> Pioneer Valley Chapter · Northampton Committee to Stop the War in
Iraq
> · Northampton Friends Meeting · Physicians for Social Responsibility,
> Pioneer Valley · Progressive Christian Voice Task Force, The First
> Churches · Safe Passage · Smith College · Unitarian Society of
> Northampton and Florence · The Vestry of St. John's Episcopal Church,
> Northampton · Western Mass. Darfur Coalition