(New York, NY ... August
2, 2004) The Save Darfur Coalition, comprised of a broadly
diverse group of faith-based, humanitarian and human rights
organizations, has issued a Unity Statement and Call to Action
in response to the massive humanitarian and human rights crisis
in Darfur, Sudan. The purpose of the statement and of the
newly formed Coalition is to raise public awareness and to
mobilize North Americans and members of the international
community to respond to and help end the atrocities that threaten
the lives of two million people in the region.
The Save Darfur Coalition presently
consists of more than 70 organizations, including representation
from all the major faiths and the Sudanese community, as well
as a number of humanitarian and human rights organizations.
Save Darfur will pursue several united actions to help stop
the displacement of the ethnic tribal Africans, end the crimes
against humanity and provide massive humanitarian support.
In addition to the Unity Statement, which can be found in
its entirety below, the Coalition is organizing a national
Interfaith Day of Conscience on Wednesday, August 25 in churches,
synagogues, mosques and community centers throughout the country.
The Coalition began on July 14 when
the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and American Jewish
World Service organized a Darfur Emergency Summit at the CUNY
Graduate Center in Manhattan featuring Holocaust survivor
and Nobel Peace Prize-winner Elie Wiesel. Mr. Wiesel inspired
the group with his impassioned remarks about the suffering
being inflicted on Darfurians: "How can I hope to move people
from indifference if I remain indifferent to the plight of
others? I cannot stand idly by or all my endeavors will be
unworthy. "
To learn more about the crisis in Sudan
and further actions people can take, or to add your group
to the Coalition, contact David Rubenstein at 202-368-6100
or any of the member groups listed below. Additionally, the
Save Darfur Coalition is building a Web site due to launch
by the end of this week: www.savedarfur.org.
UNITY STATEMENT AND CALL TO ACTION
The emergency in Sudan's western region
of Darfur presents the starkest challenge to the world since
the Rwanda genocide in 1994. A government-backed Arab militia
known as Janjaweed has been engaging in campaigns to displace
and wipe out communities of African tribal farmers.
Villages have been razed, women and
girls are systematically raped and branded, men and boys murdered,
and food and water supplies targeted and destroyed. Government
aerial bombardments support the Janjaweed by hurling explosives
as well as barrels of nails, car chassis and old appliances
from planes to crush people and property. Tens of thousands
have died. Well over a million people have been driven from
their homes, and only in the past few weeks have humanitarian
agencies gained limited access to some of the affected region.
Mukesh Kapila, the former United Nations
humanitarian coordinator for Sudan, said on March 19 that
the violence in Darfur is "more than a conflict, it's an organized
attempt to do away with one set of people. "The U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum has issued its first ever genocide emergency.
John Prendergast of International Crisis Group warns,"We have
not yet hit the apex of the crisis."
The United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) estimates that 350,000 people or more
could die in the coming months. Ongoing assessments by independent
organizations such as Medecins sans Frontieres (Doctors without
Borders) suggest that USAID ' s estimate may be conservative.
If aid is denied or unavailable, as many as a million people
could perish.
Lives are hanging in the balance on
a massive scale.
CALL TO ACTION
We commend the efforts of the U.S.
government in brokering a peace deal to end the gruesome 21-year
Civil War in the South and its generous pledge of $300 million
in U.S. humanitarian aid. We also applaud the recent visits
of Secretary of State Colin Powell and United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan to the region of Darfur to assess the atrocities
human rights organizations are calling the worst humanitarian
crisis in the world today. And we congratulate Congress for
taking decisive legislative action. But we must not wait for
a legal determination of "genocide" to ensure a massive worldwide
humanitarian response and call to end the violence and investigate
crimes against humanity.
As Elie Wiesel passionately declared
at our Darfur Emergency Summit on July 14, "the perils of
indifference enable killers to kill and tormentors to torment...we
cannot stand idly by [the crimes against humanity being committed
in Sudan] or all our endeavors will be unworthy...We must
act." We therefore call on people of conscience everywhere
to take any and all actions permitted by each individual's
or organization's abilities and constraints to:
- encourage worldwide efforts to stop
the displacement and end the crimes against humanity
- demand
massive worldwide governmental humanitarian support and
access to match the need
- help in the relief efforts by supporting
organizations giving aid
- promote efforts to rebuild villages
and return the displaced
- call for a UN Commission of Inquiry
to investigate war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide
This statement is hereby signed and
endorsed by the leaders of faith-based, humanitarian and human
rights organizations joining together as the Save Darfur Coalition.
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