DARFUR
HORROR: OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND
By Bruce Hitchner
and Glenn Ruga
Providence Journal
Opinion: Contributors
Tuesday, October 19, 2004
MEDFORD, Mass.
AS THE SITUATION in the Darfur region
of Sudan deteriorates, as thousands of civilians are murdered
by the Khartoum-sponsored Janjaweed militias, and as more
Western officials equivocate about how to respond to the crisis,
we are reminded of the tragic similarities with Bosnia in
1992.
In April of that year, Bosnian Serb paramilitaries
backed by Belgrade embarked on a vicious campaign of "ethnic
cleansing." By early 1993, most of the worst atrocities
(with a few notable exceptions, such as Srebrenica) had already
occurred. The Serb nationalists ethnically cleansed 71 percent
of Bosnian territory, nearly 200,000 civilians were dead,
and half of Bosnia's 4 million people were homeless. A desperate
stalemate ensued for the next 2 1/2 years as lightly armed
Bosnian soldiers held out against militias armed and trained
by the Yugoslav National Army.
Much like the current negotiations with
Khartoum, in the early '90s U.S. and European Union diplomats
sought to accommodate the Bosnian Serb authorities, in hopes
of ending the genocide. First there was the 1992 Lisbon Agreement,
then, later that year, the Vance-Owen plan, followed by the
Owen-Stoltenberg plan, in 1993, and, finally, the Contact
Group, in 1994. All failed to achieve their objective of creating
a sustainable peace.
It was not until after the 1995 execution
of more than 8,000 Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica by Serb forces,
the possible humiliation of a U.S.-assisted E.U. withdrawal
from Bosnia, and Congress's intervention to lift the arms
embargo against the Bosnian Muslims that President Clinton
authorized a sustained bombing campaign against Serb military
positions.
Within weeks, the Bosnian Serbs agreed
to all of the allied demands. Today, the world watches in
horror as genocide takes place in Darfur. Last month the international
community warned that the regime in Khartoum had 30 days to
rein in the Janjaweed or face economic sanctions. This month
Khartoum was given another 30 days to comply. Now the U.N.
Security Council is voting on whether to establish a commission
to determine if genocide is in fact occurring.
But, as a recent Public International Law and Policy Group
report determined, "A review of the nature of the attacks,
rapes, killings and property destruction that have been widely
reported indicates that there is sufficient evidence to satisfy
the legal requirements for determining that genocide is occurring
in Darfur, Sudan."
There is no lack of plans and contingencies
for dealing with the situation in Darfur. Tougher sanctions
and an arms embargo placed on Khartoum and U.S. and E.U. logistical
support for a robust African Union peacekeeping force vastly
increase humanitarian support for victims of Janjaweed assaults.
Yet, as with Bosnia in 1992, what is lacking is the will to
act.
Nothing will change until that will exists,
and sadly, as in 1992, the impetus must come from the United
States.
But how to engage a U.S. administration
preoccupied with the insurgency in Iraq, instability in Afghanistan,
and the struggle against terrorism? Here, again, the experience
of Bosnia provides the answer: The engagement of opinion makers,
the media, and Congress -- all appalled by the events in Bosnia
-- succeeded in getting the Clinton administration to intervene
there.
If there is to be any end to the genocide
in Darfur, that goal must become part of the domestic political
agenda of the United States. Elected officials in Washington
must feel sustained pressure from their constituents. And
this can be achieved only if the horrors of Darfur come home
to the American public, in the same way that the siege of
Sarajevo, the atrocities in Kosovo, and now the war in Iraq
have come home to us: through intensive media coverage.
Night after night, reports on the violence
in Iraq are broadcast on American television. By contrast,
there is virtually no coverage of events in Darfur apart from
the occasional visit of officials to the refugee camps and
the occasional mind-numbing reports of diplomatic initiatives.
Until the news media commit themselves
to systematic and unrelenting coverage of Sudan, Congress,
the American people, and the world will turn a blind eye on
yet another genocide in Africa. And the tragic lesson of Bosnia
-- the necessity of facing up to genocide -- will have been
lost.
Those who argue that the United States
cannot intervene-- unilaterally or as part of a coalition
-- everywhere in the world that oppressive regimes claim innocent
lives are correct. But those who oppose swift U.S. action
in a leadership role to stop ethnic cleansing are only advancing
the cause of genocide, and those who perpetrate it.
Bruce Hitchner is a professor of classics
and chairman of the Dayton Peace Accords Project at Tufts
University; Glenn Ruga is director of the Center for Balkan
Development, in Maynard, Mass.
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