Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

US student protesters appeal to Clinton over Darfur violence

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

stand_at_state_dept_11From Sudan Tribune

February 7, 2009 (WASHINGTON) – Student protesters marched around the US State Department on Friday calling for stronger intervention in Darfur.

Student protesters demonstrating in front of the US State Department (ST) The protest was part of a campaign called “Darfur from Day One” organized by three main activist groups.

The ten students held signs saying “Protect Muhajiriya,” a reference to a South Darfur town of 30,000 residents targeted by Sudanese warplanes since a rebel incursion on January 15.

Humanitarian aid officials say that the recent hostilities in South Darfur displaced 30,000 people in Muhajaria and Shearia localities. The total number of Darfuris displaced in the conflict is about 3 million, including those who have fled across the border to Chad.

“President Obama, Secretary Clinton, and Ambassador Rice have shown that they can talk a big game on Darfur. Yet, they appear to be failing what is clearly Khartoum’s first test of their resolve,” said Sean Redding, a student activist spokesperson.

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US Radio Program Goes Soft On Sudan

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

ProPublica article by Sheri Fink:“It was an inspired idea — bring independent radio programming to one of the most isolated, war-scarred regions of the world, providing millions of displaced Darfuris with news about the political, military and humanitarian responses to their plight.

 

Funded with a million dollars from the U.S. State Department, Radio Afia Darfur, a half-hour shortwave radio program, is beamed three times a day into war-torn Darfur, Sudan, and refugee-packed eastern Chad.

“The idea was to accurately report what was going on,” former Special Envoy for Darfur Andrew Natsios, who left his post before the program was launched, told ProPublica. “Both the government and the rebels were manipulating the people by lying to them and withholding information.”

But critics charge that the program — meant to provide displaced people in Sudan with “accurate and objective information about their country” — is instead broadcasting in a language most of its target audience doesn’t understand and has watered-down criticisms of Sudanese officials (whom the U.S. government holds responsible for genocide in Darfur). An outspoken Darfuri-American news reader who repeatedly challenged the program’s non-Darfuri editors has also been fired.  Read more