Sudan Militiamen Use Rape As Weapon
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| Mon, 07-19-2004 - 12:21pm |
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Powell said Friday that he expects to hear from U.S. experts next week on whether Sudan officials should be charged with genocide.>>
In other words, they've "taken it under advisement"...The genocide and ethnic cleansing that has been going on in Africa for all these years has gone unanswered by the US, while oil interests in Iraq have been well protected.
I guess we've already exhausted all of our military power in Iraq, so we have to tell those women and children that they just have to "lay back and enjoy" the rapes, right? I guess these victims should have been sitting on oil fields, how stupid of them.
Group: Sudan Militiamen Use Rape As Weapon
Mon Jul 19, 8:38 AM ET
By RODRIQUE NGOWI, Associated Press Writer
NAIROBI, Kenya - Sudanese Arab militiamen rape women and girls as young as eight in the violent campaign intended to hurt, humiliate and drive out black Africans from the troubled region of Darfur, a human rights organization said Monday.
The Sudanese Janjaweed Arab militiamen sometimes torture and break limbs of women to prevent them from escaping rape, abductions and sexual slavery, Amnesty International said in the report titled: "Sudan, Rape as a weapon of war in Darfur."
Thousands have been killed and more than a million black Africans have fled their homes in the face of attacks by the government-backed Arab militiamen known as Janjaweed, or "horsemen" in the local dialect.
The Janjaweed "are happy when they rape. They sing when they rape and they tell that we are just slaves and that they can do with us how they wish," a 37-year-old victim, identified only as A., says in the report.
Sudan on Saturday ordered that committees of women judges, police officers and legal consultants investigate rape accusations and help victims through criminal cases in the Iraq (news - web sites)-sized Darfur region.
The Arab militiamen routinely kill black African men in the western region and target women and girls for sexual violence, Amnesty International said, citing hundreds of interviews human rights workers conducted in camps sheltering people who fled the atrocities in Darfur.
"Women and girls are being attacked, not only to dehumanize the women themselves but also to humiliate, punish, control, inflict fear and displace women and to persecute the community to which they belong," the London-based group said.
"In many cases the Janjaweed have raped women in public, in the open air, in front of their husbands, relatives or the wider community," the group said. "The suffering and abuse endured by these women goes far beyond the actual rape ... survivors now face a lifetime of stigma and marginalisation from their own families and communities."
Women in Darfur who have undergone female genital mutilation are at an even greater risk of injury and face higher risks of infection by HIV (news - web sites)/AIDS (news - web sites) and other sexually transmitted diseases, the rights group said.
Darfur's troubles stem from long-standing tensions between nomadic Arab tribes and their African farming neighbors over dwindling water and agricultural land. Those tensions exploded into violence in February 2003 when two African rebel groups took up arms over what they regard as unjust treatment by the government in their struggle with Arab countrymen.
Aid workers and refugees accuse the government of arming and providing air support to the Janjaweed, who have torched hundreds of villages in a campaign equated with ethnic cleansing. The government denies any involvement in the militia attacks.
There are also reports that the Sudanese government is integrating members of the Jajaweed into army and police units deployed around Darfur, said Erwin Van der Borght, Amnesty International's deputy head of the Africa program.
The United Nations (news - web sites) estimates up to 30,000 people have been killed in Darfur, but some analysts put the figure much higher. The death toll could surge to more than 350,000 if aid doesn't reach more than 2 million people soon, the U.S. Agency for International Development has warned.
Pressure has mounted on Sudan to end the slaughter. The latest peace talks ended prematurely Saturday after rebels walked out saying the Sudanese government must first disarm the Janjaweed.
The rebels were also seeking government commitments to allow an international inquiry into the killings, prosecute those responsible, lift restrictions on aid workers and release prisoners of war.
The peace talks began after a concerted diplomatic push by the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan (news - web sites) and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites), who visited the region earlier this month.
Powell said Friday that he expects to hear from U.S. experts next week on whether Sudan officials should be charged with genocide.

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Clinton made mistakes, but nothing on the scale of Bush, and yet you people will blame Clinton for Bush's failings.
How sad.
AND THAT MAKES IT RIGHT AND DEFENSIBLE???
I guess since murder has been around since the beginning of time, that should be excused and ignored as well?
Oh pleeeeeeeease!
<<"So once again, you blame this administration's inadequacies on Clinton?">>... No.
Here's a challenge for you: try and find ANY post by me where I ever blamed Clinton for ánything Bush does.
<<"How nice for you Republicans to always have a scapegoat.">>.....I am not a republican.
<<"Clinton made mistakes, but nothing on the scale of Bush, and yet you people will blame Clinton for Bush's failings.">>....No.
How angry.
So what do you propose should be done? The militias are supported by the government and they are keeping out aid workers.
Renee ~~~
Renee ~~~
Renee ~~~
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