|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Aid workers charge political motives in US claim of genocide
in Darfur
By Barbara Slaughter
16 October 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Citing international aid workers, an October 3 article in the
British Observer newspaper challenges the US governments
characterization of the crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan as
genocide.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell, in testimony last month
before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, declared that genocide
has been committed in Darfur...and that genocide may still be
continuing. Powell made his speech after the US Congress
had unanimously adopted a resolution labelling the events in Darfur
as genocide.
But in the Observer article, headlined US hyping
Darfur genocide fear, Peter Beaumont reports allegations
made by international aid workers in Sudan that American
warnings that Darfur is heading for an apocalyptic humanitarian
catastrophe have been widely exaggerated by administration officials....Washingtons
desire for a regime change in Khartoum has biased their reports.
Beaumont draws attention to reports by the US governments
aid agency, USAID, warning between 350,000 and a million
people could die in Darfur by the end of the year. He continues,
Other officials, including Secretary of State Colin Powell,
have accused the Sudanese government of presiding over a genocide
that could rival those in Bosnia and Rwanda.
He then writes, Concern about USAIDs role as an
honest broker in Darfur have been mounting for months, with diplomats
as well as aid workers puzzled over its pronouncements, and one
European diplomat accusing it of plucking figures from the
air.
According to Beaumont, eyewitness reports have comprehensively
challenged the US governments estimation of the situation
in Darfur. The nutritional survey of the region, by the United
Nations World Food Programme (WFP), makes clear that although
there are still high levels of malnutrition among under-fives
in some areas, the crisis is being brought under control.
One person involved in the WFP survey told Beaumont, Its
not disastrous, although it certainly was a disaster earlier this
year, and if humanitarian assistance declines, this will have
very serious negative consequences.
An aid worker told the reporter, Ive been to a
number of camps during my time here, and if you want to find death,
you have to go looking for it. Its easy to find very sick
and under-nourished children at the therapeutic feeding centres,
but thats the same wherever you go in Africa.
Another aid worker commented, It suited various governments
to talk it all up, but they dont seem to have thought about
the consequences. I have no idea what Colin Powells game
is, but to call it genocide and then effectively say, Oh,
shucks, but we are not going to do anything about that genocide
undermines the very word genocide.
Beaumont continues: While none of the aid workers and
officials interviewed by the Observer denied there was
a crisis in Darfuror that killings, rape and a large-scale
displacement of population had taken placemany were puzzled
that it had become the focus of such hyperbolic warnings when
there were crises of similar magnitude in both northern Uganda
and eastern Congo.
This is an important question, which was addressed in the recent
WSWS article: Sudan:
why Powell calls Darfur violence genocide.
The article stated that Colin Powells designation of
genocide in Darfur was not motivated by humanitarian
concern for the plight of the million displaced people of Darfur.
Rather, the choice of that highly charged term signalled an
escalation in American imperialisms efforts to establish
itself as the controlling power in North Africa and throughout
the continent. US interest in northern Africa, which has
substantial oil reserves, has grown along with its concern over
finite oil resources and social and political instability in Saudi
Arabia and other Persian Gulf sheikdoms.
See Also:
Sudan: why Powell calls Darfur
violence "genocide"
[20 September 2004]
An exchange on the crisis
in Sudans western Darfur region
[30 August 2004]
Humanitarian crisis in Sudan
used as cover for neo-colonial ambitions
[28 July 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |