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Bush Points the Way [NYT Editorial Salutes Bush, Slams Kerry, Mandela]
The New York Times ^ | May 29, 2004 | NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Posted on 05/28/2004 10:42:45 PM PDT by nwrep

I doff my hat, briefly, to President Bush.

Sudanese peasants will be naming their sons "George Bush" because he scored a humanitarian victory this week that could be a momentous event around the globe — although almost nobody noticed. It was Bush administration diplomacy that led to an accord to end a 20-year civil war between Sudan's north and south after two million deaths.

If the peace holds, hundreds of thousands of lives will be saved, millions of refugees will return home, and a region of Africa may be revived.

But there's a larger lesson here as well: messy African wars are not insoluble, and Western pressure can help save the day. So it's all the more shameful that the world is failing to exert pressure on Sudan to halt genocide in its Darfur region. Darfur is unaffected by the new peace accords.

I'm still haunted by what I saw when I visited the region in March: a desert speckled with fresh graves of humans and the corpses of donkeys, the empty eyes of children who saw their fathers killed, the guilt of parents fumbling to explain how they had survived while their children did not.

The refugees tell of sudden attacks by the camel-riding Janjaweed Arab militia, which is financed by the Sudanese government, then a panic of shooting and fire. Girls and women are routinely branded after they are raped, to increase the humiliation.

One million Darfur people are displaced within Sudan, and 200,000 have fled to Chad. Many of those in Sudan are stuck in settlements like concentration camps.

I've obtained a report by a U.N. interagency team documenting conditions at a concentration camp in the town of Kailek: Eighty percent of the children are malnourished, there are no toilets, and girls are taken away each night by the guards to be raped. As inmates starve, food aid is diverted by guards to feed their camels.

The standard threshold for an "emergency" is one death per 10,000 people per day, but people in Kailek are dying at a staggering 41 per 10,000 per day — and for children under 5, the rate is 147 per 10,000 per day. "Children suffering from malnutrition, diarrhea, dehydration and other symptoms of the conditions under which they are being held live in filth, directly exposed to the sun," the report says.

"The team members, all of whom are experienced experts in humanitarian affairs, were visibly shaken," the report declares. It describes "a strategy of systematic and deliberate starvation being enforced by the GoS [government of Sudan] and its security forces on the ground." Read the 11-page report at www.nytimes.com/kristofresponds, Posting 426.

Demographers at the U.S. Agency for International Development estimate that at best, "only" 100,000 people will die in Darfur this year of malnutrition and disease. If things go badly, half a million will die.

This is not a natural famine, but a deliberate effort to eliminate three African tribes in Darfur so Arabs can take their land. The Genocide Convention defines such behavior as genocide, and it obliges nations to act to stop it. That is why nobody in the West wants to talk about Darfur — because of a fear that focusing on the horror will lead to a deployment in Sudan.

But it's not a question of sending troops, but of applying pressure — the same kind that succeeded in getting Sudan to the north-south peace agreement. If Mr. Bush would step up to the cameras and denounce this genocide, if he would send Colin Powell to the Chad-Sudan border, if he would telephone Sudan's president again to demand humanitarian access to the concentration camps, he might save hundreds of thousands of lives.

Yet while Mr. Bush has done far too little, he has at least issued a written statement, sent aides to speak forcefully at the U.N. and raised the matter with Sudan's leaders. That's more than the Europeans or the U.N. has done. Where are Tony Blair and Jacques Chirac? Where are African leaders, like Nelson Mandela? Why isn't John Kerry speaking out forcefully? And why are ordinary Americans silent?

Islamic leaders abroad have been particularly shameful in standing with the Sudanese government oppressors rather than with the Muslim victims in Darfur. Do they care about dead Muslims only when the killers are Israelis or Americans?

As for America, we have repeatedly failed to stand up to genocide, whether of Armenians, Jews, Cambodians or Rwandans. Now we're letting it happen again.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: bush; kerry; praise; sudan
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1 posted on 05/28/2004 10:42:45 PM PDT by nwrep
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To: StarFan; Dutchy; alisasny; BobFromNJ; BUNNY2003; Cacique; Clemenza; Coleus; cyborg; DKNY; ...
ping!

Please FReepmail me if you want on or off my infrequent ‘miscellaneous’ ping list.

2 posted on 05/28/2004 10:46:44 PM PDT by nutmeg (Land of the Free - Thanks to the Brave)
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To: nwrep

This can't be the New York Times. The chief editor must be on vacation.


3 posted on 05/28/2004 10:50:03 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: nwrep
I think the headline is misleading - it's an op-ed from the NY Times, not a house editorial as one might conclude from the headline.
4 posted on 05/28/2004 10:52:49 PM PDT by Keith in Iowa (Life's a beach, and liberals are the sand in your swimsuit that can't be washed away.)
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To: Jorge
It's an editorial in the Saturday edition,of a Memorial Day weekend...NO ONE IS GOING TO READ IT.So they allowed it to be published,so that they could later tout how "fair & balanced" they are.
5 posted on 05/28/2004 10:53:57 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

Well,well,well..... they finaly write a good story about President Bush and then they try to hide it


6 posted on 05/28/2004 10:57:37 PM PDT by Irish Eyes
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To: Irish Eyes

Just proving that the media has a right-wing bias ;)


7 posted on 05/28/2004 11:01:42 PM PDT by Goldilocks
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To: nwrep
Sounds like Nick's trying to 'out' himself while not shocking his friends. Doesn't want to be dis-invited, persona non-grata at the toni soirees, NY, DC .

Got Mugged? In denial? Oh, the pain!

8 posted on 05/28/2004 11:02:25 PM PDT by dasboot
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To: nwrep; section9; rdb3; mhking; Trueblackman; Travis McGee; blam; Howlin; Perlstein; LS; ...
Peace through direct diplomacy, and still they complain that President Bush should do more.
9 posted on 05/28/2004 11:02:32 PM PDT by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: nwrep; nuconvert; DoctorZIn; freedom44; Pan_Yans Wife; Valin; AdmSmith; Cindy; tiamat

PING!


10 posted on 05/28/2004 11:07:30 PM PDT by F14 Pilot (John ''Fedayeen" sKerry - the Mullahs' regime candidate)
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To: Irish Eyes

Par for the course,I'm afraid.


11 posted on 05/28/2004 11:10:09 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nwrep
If the idiots Dem destroy our efforts in Iraq, I for one will toss this back in their faces every time they bring up some humanitarian problem in Africa. I will move towards the Buchanan isolationist view. The reason we are in Iraq is strategic. If we can't effect strategic change then doing tactical stuff in Africa (like Clinton's strange Somalia mission) is just another way to slowly bleed the USA. Let Europe fix Africa. They have proximity and history there, we have neither.

Ordinary Americans are tired of trying to help people and seeing us get kicked in the teeth for it.

Give the underdogs lots of guns & ammo and tell 'em: good luck. You want freedom and security, you want the Islamic satanists to stop raping your children, you got to fight for it.

12 posted on 05/28/2004 11:15:08 PM PDT by Jack Black
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To: Keith in Iowa

True, but for many people, Kristof is representative and symbolic of everything wrong with the NYT.


13 posted on 05/28/2004 11:23:10 PM PDT by Choose Ye This Day (Dem Enthusiasm, 2004: "As long as John Kerry doesn't become a Michael Ducks, he's fine.")
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To: nwrep
a deliberate effort to eliminate three African tribes in Darfur so Arabs can take their land...

Did I just read this correctly? Are Arabs--quite possibly Arab Muslims--being criticized in the New York Times? What temperature is it in hell today?

14 posted on 05/28/2004 11:24:45 PM PDT by Choose Ye This Day (Dem Enthusiasm, 2004: "As long as John Kerry doesn't become a Michael Ducks, he's fine.")
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To: nwrep
And why are ordinary Americans silent?

Because until now "ordinary Americans" didn't know anything about it because most "reporters" were too busy trashing President Bush over PRISON ABUSE IN IRAQ (and other phony BS to help elect their choice poster boy, John Kerry, since they can't have Bill Clinton or John F. Kennedy).

15 posted on 05/28/2004 11:28:01 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: nutmeg

BTTT


16 posted on 05/28/2004 11:33:34 PM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades...And panties!)
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To: Goldilocks

That's right I totaly forgot ;)


17 posted on 05/29/2004 12:43:51 AM PDT by Irish Eyes
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To: nopardons

Bingo. This is the weekend when positive stuff editors disagree with gets buried and the skeletons come out of the politicians' closets to be buried in articles nobody will read. Keep your eyes peeled.


18 posted on 05/29/2004 12:44:06 AM PDT by conservative in nyc
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To: conservative in nyc
Absolutely!

This is such OLD "news",I don't know why nobody posted it before I did.

19 posted on 05/29/2004 12:45:31 AM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

It is par for the course, I guess that they will never change.


20 posted on 05/29/2004 12:48:28 AM PDT by Irish Eyes
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