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French and German Companies Tied to Slave Raids, Genocide in Sudan
American Anti-Slavery Group ^ | 3-17-3003

Posted on 04/02/2003 1:46:50 PM PST by Born in a Rage

French and German Companies Tied to Slave Raids, Genocide in Sudan, Human Rights Activists Reveal

Anti-Slavery Group Calls on France and Germany to Stop Human Rights Double Standard

March 17, 2003

BOSTON, MA - The American Anti-Slavery Group expressed deep concern today over French and German policies of placing economic objectives ahead of the human rights of Southern Sudanese people forced into human bondage as part of the Sudanese government's genocidal jihad.

Dr. Charles Jacobs, president of the American Anti-Slavery Group, said: "The language of human rights flows smoothly from the lips of the leaders of France and Germany. But Franco-German hegemony is bad news for human rights, especially for victims whose oppressors are European Union partners. For nations who speak so loudly about their high principles now to be found abetting a trade of human beings is simply shocking."

The United States Congress and the Bush Administration have forcefully condemned Khartoum's state sponsored international and domestic terrorism and slavery. France and Germany, on the other hand, have sought to tone down the issue. In fact, the Franco-German duo has subverted the cause of eradicating modern-day slavery by cooperating with Khartoum.

France has provided Khartoum with military intelligence for the prosecution of the jihad, while French and German helicopters have been used for ethnic cleansing in southern Sudan's oil fields. Further, their subversion does not stop there. In concert, the Franco-German contingent persuaded the United Nations Commission on Human Rights to censor any utilization of the word "slavery" from official documents on Sudan, favoring instead the terminology of "abduction".

For the past twenty years, Sudanese slaves - mainly women and children - have been routinely beaten, raped, genitally mutilated, forced to convert to Islam and racially abused. The scale of this "crime against humanity" -- as slavery is identified under international law -- is colossal. With estimates as high as 200,000 slaves in captivity, "Old Europe" needs to rethink its policy.

Founded in 1994, the American Anti-Slavery Group (AASG) is America's leading human rights organization combating modern-day slavery worldwide. Based in Boston, the historic center of the American abolitionist movement, AASG works to extend the wave of emancipation to the 27 million people trapped in slavery today.

Dr. Charles Jacobs is available for interviews.

# # #

See Dr. Jacobs' opinion piece on this topic in the Boston Globe.

For Immediate Release www.iAbolish.com Contact: Joyce Koo, 617-426-8161


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: france; germany; slavery; sudan

1 posted on 04/02/2003 1:46:51 PM PST by Born in a Rage
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To: Born in a Rage
Big bump for a good read.
2 posted on 04/02/2003 1:48:53 PM PST by xJones
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To: martianagent
bookmark for later reading
3 posted on 04/02/2003 1:49:49 PM PST by martianagent
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To: Born in a Rage
bump
4 posted on 04/02/2003 1:50:07 PM PST by Democratic_Machiavelli
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'Old Europe' and Sudan's jihad


The Boston Globe

March 15, 2003

By John Eibner and Charles Jacobs

John Eibner is executive director of Christian Solidarity International. Charles Jacobs is president of the American Anti-Slavery Group in Boston.

BOSTON, MA - The language of human rights flows smoothly from the lips of the leaders of France and Germany. But continuing Franco-German hegemony in Europe is bad news for human rights, especially for victims whose oppressors are European Union partners. Take, for example, the victims of the Sudanese government's genocidal jihad. In the words of US Secretary of State Colin Powell, there is ''no greater tragedy on the face of the earth than the tragedy that is unfolding in the Sudan.''

For the past 20 years, the regime in Khartoum has bombed, starved, and enslaved black Southern Sudanese with impunity in an effort to subject them to Islamic rule. As a result, over two million black non-Muslims have perished. A further five million have been driven off their land.

Sudanese slaves -- mainly women and children -- are routinely beaten, raped, genitally mutilated, forced to convert to Islam and racially abused. The scale of this ''crime against humanity'' -- as slavery is identified in international law -- is enormous. Credible estimates of the number of Sudan's slaves range from tens of thousands to over 200,000.

For years, these atrocities were largely ignored by the international community. Only in the mid-1990s did the Clinton administration finally wake up to mounting evidence of Khartoum's sponsorship of international and domestic terrorism. The response was robust. The US government declared Sudan to be a terrorist state. It sponsored strong resolutions at the UN Commission for Human Rights condemning Khartoum for slavery and a host of other crimes. Strict US economic sanctions were imposed.

What did the Franco-German duo do? It led the EU in the opposite direction. France provided Khartoum with military intelligence for the prosecution of the jihad, while French and German helicopters have been used for ethnic cleansing in southern Sudan's oil fields. Driving black, non-Muslims out of their homes creates greater security for the investments of oil firms like Total Fina (France/Belgium) and the German engineering giant Mannesmann.

The Sudanese government's role in the revival of the country's once-dormant slave trade formed the greatest single political obstacle to legitimizing the EU's appeasement policy. France and Germany therefore spearheaded a UN whitewash of this crime against humanity. With the rest of the EU and their new East European satellite states in tow, they overcame American objections and easily persuaded the UN Commission on Human Rights to censor any use of the word ''slavery'' from official documents on Sudan and replace it with the euphemism ''abduction'' -- a lesser offense.

Why work against American policy? By the mid-1990s, Paris and Berlin had already laid the foundations for the cultural and economic integration of the EU with the Islamic states of North Africa and the Middle East.

The expansion of Franco-German hegemony over an area that approximates the bounds of the Roman Empire would fulfill the ambition to counter America, the only remaining superpower.

What little hope there is for Sudan's slaves comes mainly from New World democracy, not from the failed powers of the Old Europe. A broad left-right, black-white coalition, including such polar opposites as the conservative former Senator Jesse Helms and liberal US Representative Donald Payne -- a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus, has pushed the Bush administration to invest significant financial and political capital in the first credible Sudan peace initiative.

The Bush peace plan is underpinned by the tough language of the Sudan Peace Act, passed overwhelmingly by both houses of Congress. It identifies slavery as one of the government of Sudan's many acts of ''genocide.'' This powerful legislation also combines the threat of prosecutions for slavery and other crimes against humanity with the possibility of massive US financial support for the armed opposition to Sudan's Islamist regime.

But there is another ray of hope. It comes from Central and Eastern Europe, whose populations recall the reality of tyranny. At the end of January, Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic -- no longer fearful candidates in danger of having the Old Europe veto their entry into the EU -- threatened an end to Franco-German hegemony by siding with the United States and five other European countries to apply maximum pressure on Saddam Hussein's dangerous dictatorship and his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction.

This expression of independence in the east of Europe raises the specter of isolation for the dangerously illusionary policies of France and Germany. A strong human rights alliance between the United States and the freedom-loving countries of Europe will improve the chances of liberty for Sudan's slaves, for the Kurds and Shiites of Iraq, and for other victims of crimes against humanity, whatever their race, creed, or gender.


© 2003 Boston Globe

5 posted on 04/02/2003 1:50:43 PM PST by Born in a Rage
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To: Born in a Rage; airedale; Eaker; habs4ever; Ditter; shaggy eel; general_re; dorben; ...
BOSTON, MA - The American Anti-Slavery Group expressed deep concern today over French and German policies of placing economic objectives ahead of the human rights

I'm shocked, SHOCKED I tell you, to find gambling going on in this establishment!

6 posted on 04/02/2003 1:56:21 PM PST by Terriergal (..in Your great compassion You gave them deliverers, who rescued them from the hand of their enemies)
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To: Terriergal
I need my smelling salts. France and Germany? It can't be so.
7 posted on 04/02/2003 2:01:52 PM PST by Catspaw
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direct link to article

Link to globe article on iabolish.org website

8 posted on 04/02/2003 2:02:56 PM PST by Terriergal (..in Your great compassion You gave them deliverers, who rescued them from the hand of their enemies)
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To: Born in a Rage
France poised for huge bribe scandal trial
By Philip Delves Broughton in Paris Click Here (Filed: 18/03/2003)

The most far-reaching financial scandal in French history reached court yesterday after eight years of investigation, the death and flight of several witnesses, and a concerted government effort to ensure the less savoury elements of France's Africa policy are not exposed to public scrutiny.

9 posted on 04/02/2003 2:05:17 PM PST by Kay Soze (For every 100 Osamas created in the fight - we will elect one more "W")
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To: Born in a Rage
How OLD Europe.


Koffi, what do you think since you support slavery and terrorism everywhere?


10 posted on 04/02/2003 2:06:54 PM PST by Diogenesis (If you mess with one of us, you mess with all of us.)
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To: Born in a Rage
Calling the United nations. Are you listening? I guess not, since it's not the U.S. who is enslaving Blacks in Africa. It's Turd World Muslims.
11 posted on 04/02/2003 2:11:16 PM PST by Free ThinkerNY (((The Left is part of the Axis of Evil )))
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To: Born in a Rage
bump
12 posted on 04/02/2003 2:12:36 PM PST by VOA
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To: Diogenesis
Kofi only cares about slavery in the 19th century.
13 posted on 04/02/2003 2:14:13 PM PST by samtheman
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To: Born in a Rage
The frogs and krauts MUST have their feet held to the fire on this and on Iraq. I'm so afraid GWB is going to let them get away with it and it's going to be back to business as usual.
14 posted on 04/02/2003 2:22:20 PM PST by johnb838 (Understand the root causes of American anger)
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To: Born in a Rage
France and Germany: Genocide, Slavery and Gas, Inc.
15 posted on 04/02/2003 2:35:12 PM PST by Uncle Miltie (Wheat is Murder! (Tilling slaughters worms.....))
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To: Born in a Rage
For the past 20 years, the regime in Khartoum has bombed, starved, and enslaved black Southern Sudanese with impunity in an effort to subject them to Islamic rule.

Guess they didn't get the memo on that religion of peace thing.

I've been wondering / praying about Sudan since W started beating the war drums over Saddam Hussein's treatment of his people. Seems Sudan and Syria fall in line somewhere behind (iraq,) N. Korea and Iran as far as the list of nations that need some help figuring out how to run a country in a sane manner.

16 posted on 04/02/2003 3:32:31 PM PST by GretchenEE (We export freedom)
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To: Born in a Rage
Your post at 5 is fascinating. One could almost say that this war in Iraq is also a war against France and Germany.

I cannot believe we have seen the end of the Franco-Germanic thrust to counter the US / UK / dominions / smaller EU countries. My only question is, What is the next step in their parade?

17 posted on 04/02/2003 3:45:35 PM PST by GretchenEE (We export freedom)
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